Run to Earth by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (ready player one ebook TXT) 📕
Other people were taking very little notice of the singer. The regularpatrons of the 'Jolly Tar' were accustomed to her beauty and hersinging, and thought very little about her. The girl was very quiet,very modest. She came and went under the care of the old blind pianist,whom she called her grandfather, and she seemed to shrink alike fromobservation or admiration.
She began to sing again presently.
She stood by the piano, facing the audience, calm as a statue, with herlarge black eyes looking straight before her. The old man listened toher eagerly, as he played, and nodded fond approval every now and then,as the full, rich
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first place I have come to, and of all men on earth I least expected to
meet you here.”
“And from your tone, youngster, it seems as if the surprise were by no
means a pleasant one,” cried Joseph Duncombe. “May I ask how Rosamond
Duncombe’s husband comes to address his wife’s father in the tone you
have just used to me?”
“You are Rosamond’s father,” answered George; “that is sufficient
reason that Valentine Jernam’s brother should keep aloof from you.”
“The man’s mad,” muttered Captain Duncombe; “undoubtedly mad.”
“No,” answered George Jernam, “I am not mad—I am only too acutely
conscious of the misery of my position. I love your daughter, Joseph
Duncombe; love her as fondly and truly as ever a man loved the wife of
his choice. And yet here am I skulking in London, alone and miserable,
at the hour when I should be hurrying back to the home of my darling.
Dear though she is to me—truly as I love her—I dare not go back to
her; for between her and me there rises the phantom of my murdered
brother Valentine!”
“What on earth has my daughter Rosamond to do with the wretched fate of
your brother?” asked the captain.
“In her own person, nothing; but it is her misfortune to be allied to
one who was in league with the assassin, or assassins, of my unhappy
brother.”
“What, in heaven’s name, do you mean?” asked the bewildered captain of
the “Vixen.”
“Do not press me for my meaning, Captain Duncombe,” answered George, in
a repellant tone; “you are my father-in-law. The knowledge which
accident revealed to me of one dark secret in your life of seeming
honesty came too late to prevent that tie between us. When the fatal
truth revealed itself to me I was already your daughter’s husband. That
secures my silence. Do not force yourself upon me. I shall do my duty
to your daughter as if you and your crime had never been upon this
earth. But you and I can never meet again except as foes. The
remembrance of my brother Valentine is part and parcel of my life, and
a wrong done to him is twice a wrong to myself.”
The captain of the “Vixen” had arisen from his chair. He stood before
his son-in-law, breathless, crimson with passion.
“George Jernam,” he cried, “do you want me to knock you down? Egad, my
fine gentleman, you may consider yourself lucky that I have not done it
before this. What do you mean by all that balderdash you’ve been
talking? What does it all mean, I say? Are you drunk, or mad, or both?”
“Captain Duncombe,” said George, calmly, “do you really wish me to
speak plainly?”
“It will be very much the worse for you if you don’t,” retorted the
infuriated captain.
“First, then, let me tell you that before I left River View Cottage
last July, your daughter pressed me to avail myself of the contents of
your desk one day when I was in want of foreign letter-paper.”
“Well, what then?”
“Very much against my own inclination, I consented to open that desk
with a key in Rosamond’s possession. I did not pry into the secrets of
its contents; but before me, in the tray intended for pens, I saw an
object which could not fail to attract my attention—which riveted my
gaze as surely as if I had ‘lighted on a snake.”
“What in the name of all that’s bewildering could that object have
been?” cried the captain. “I don’t keep many curiosities in my writing-desk!”
“I will show you what I found that day,” answered George. “The finding
of it changed the whole current of my life, and sent me away from that
once happy home a restless and miserable wanderer.”
“The man’s mad,” muttered Captain Duncombe to himself; “he must be
mad!”
George Jernam took from his waistcoat pocket a tiny parcel, and
unfolding the paper covering, revealed a gold coin—the bent Brazilian
coin—which he placed in the captain’s hands.
“Why! heaven have mercy on us!” cried Joseph Duncombe, “if that isn’t
the ghost’s money!”
There was astonishment plainly depicted on his countenance; but no look
of guilt. George Jernam watched his face as he contemplated the token,
and saw that it was not the face of a guilty man.
“Oh, captain, captain!” he exclaimed, remorsefully, “if I have
suspected you all this time for nothing?”
“Suspected me of what?”
“Of being concerned, more or less, in my brother’s murder. That piece
of gold which you now hold in your hand was a farewell token, given by
me to him; you may see my initials scratched upon it. I found it in
your desk.”
“And therefore suspected that I was the aider and abettor of thieves
and murderers!” exclaimed the captain of the “Vixen.” “George Jernam, I
am ashamed of you.”
There was a depth of reproach in the words, common-place though they
were.
George Jernam covered his face with his hands, and sat with bent head
before the man he had so cruelly wronged.
“If I was a proud man,” said Joseph Duncombe, “I shouldn’t stoop to
make any explanation to you. But as I am not a proud man, and as you
are my daughter’s husband, I’ll tell you how that bit of gold came into
my keeping; and when I’ve told you my story, I’ll bring witnesses to
prove that it’s true. Yes, George, I’ll not ask you to believe my word;
for how can you take the word of a man you have thought base enough to
be the accomplice of a murderer? Oh, George, it was too cruel—too
cruel!”
There was a brief silence; and then Captain Duncombe told the story of
the appearance of old Screwton’s ghost, and the coin found in the
kitchen at River View Cottage after the departure of that apparition.
“I’ve faced many a danger in my lifetime, George Jernam,” said Captain
Duncombe; “and I don’t think there’s any man who ever walked the ship’s
deck beside me that would call me coward; and yet I’ll confess to you I
was frightened that night. Flesh and blood I’ll face anywhere and
anyhow; I’ll stand up alone, and fight for my life, one against six—
one against twenty, if needs be; but when it comes to a visit from the
other world, Joseph Duncombe is done. He shuts up, sir, like an
oyster.”
“And do you really believe the man you saw that night was a visitant
from the other world?”
“What else can I believe? I’d heard the description of old Screwton’s
ghost, and what I saw answered to the description as close as could
be.”
“Visitors from the other world do not leave substantial evidences of
their presence behind them,” answered George. “The man who dropped that
gold coin was no ghost. We’ll see into this business, Captain Duncombe;
we’ll fathom it, mysterious as it is. I expect Joyce Harker back from
Ceylon in a month or so. He knows more of my brother’s fate than any
man living, except those who were concerned in the doing of the deed.
He’ll get to the bottom of this business, depend upon it, if any man
can. And now, friend—father, can you find it in your heart to forgive
me for the bitter wrong I have done you?”
“Well, George,” answered Joseph Duncombe, gravely, “I’m not an
unforgiving chap; but there are some things try the easiest of men
rather hard, and this is one of them. However, for my little Rosy’s
sake, and out of remembrance of the long night-watches you and I have
kept together out upon the lonesome sea, I forgive you. There’s my hand
and my heart with it.”
George’s eyes were full of tears as he grasped his old captain’s strong
hand.
“God bless you,” he murmured; “and heaven be praised that I came into
this room to-night! You don’t know the weight you’ve lifted off my
heart; you don’t know what I’ve suffered.”
“More fool you,” cried Joe Duncombe; “and now say no more. We’ll start
for Devonshire together by the first coach that leaves London to-morrow
morning.”
*
CHAPTER XXXIII.
“TREASON HAS DONE HIS WORST.”
Black Milsom, otherwise Mr. Maunders, kept a close watch on Raynham
Castle, through the agency of his friend, James Harwood, whose visits
he encouraged by the most liberal treatment, and for whom he was always
ready to brew a steaming jorum of punch.
Mr. Maunders showed a great deal of curiosity concerning the details of
life within the castle, and was particularly fond of leading Harwood to
talk about the excessive care taken of the baby-heiress, and the
precautions observed by Lady Eversleigh’s orders. One day, when he had
led the conversation in the accustomed direction, he said:
“One would think they were afraid somebody would try to steal the
child.”
“So you would, Mr. Maunders. But you see every situation in life has
its trials, and a child can’t be a great heiress for nothing. One day,
when I was sitting in the rumble of the open carriage, I heard Captain
Copplestone let drop in his conversation with Mrs. Morden as how the
child has enemies—bitter enemies, he said, as might try to do her
harm, if she wern’t looked after sharp.”
“I’ve known you a good long time now, Mr. Harwood, and you’ve partaken
of many a glass of rum-punch in my parlour,” said Black Milsom,
otherwise Mr. Maunders, of the “Cat and Fiddle “; “and in all that time
you’ve never once offered to introduce me to one of your fellow-servants, or asked me to take so much as a cup of tea in your
servants’-hall.”
“Begging your pardon, Mr. Maunders,” said the groom, in an insinuating
tone; “as to askin’ a friend to take a cup of tea, or a little bit of
supper, without leave from Mrs. Smithson, the housekeeper, is more than
my place is worth.”
“But you might get leave I should think, eh, James Harwood?” returned
Milsom; “especially if your friend happened to be a respectable
householder, and able to offer a comfortable glass to any of your
fellow-servants.”
“I’m sure if I had thought as you’d accept a invitation to the
servants’-‘all, I’d have asked leave before now,” replied James
Harwood; “but I’m sure I thought as you wouldn’t demean yourself to
take your glass of ale, or your cup of tea, anywheres below the
housekeeper’s room—and she’s a rare starched one is Mrs. Smithson.”
“I’m not proud,” said Mr. Milsom. “I like a convivial evening, whether
it’s in the housekeeper’s room or the servants’-hall.”
“Then I’ll ask leave to-night,” answered James Harwood.
He sent a little scrawl to Milsom next day, by the hands of a stable-boy, inviting that gentleman to a social rubber and a friendly supper
in the servants’-hall that evening at seven o’clock.
To spend a few hours inside Raynham Castle was the privilege which
Black Milsom most desired, and a triumphant grin broke out upon his
face, as he deciphered James Harwood’s clumsy scrawl.
“How easy it’s done,” he muttered to himself; “how easy it’s done, if a
man has only the patience to wait.”
The servants’-hall was a pleasant place to live in, but if Mrs.
Smithson, the housekeeper, was liberal in her ideas she was also
strict, and on some points especially severe; and the chief of these
was the precision with which she required the doors of the castle to be
locked for the night at half-past ten o’clock.
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