The Broad Highway - Page 360/374

Justly to narrate all that befell me during my flight and journey

to London, would fill many pages, and therefore, as this book of

mine is already of a magnitude far beyond my first expectations,

I shall hurry on to the end of my story.

Acting upon the advice of the saturnine Jeremy, I lay hidden by

day, and traveled by night, avoiding the highway. But in so

doing I became so often involved in the maze of cross-roads,

bylanes, cow-paths, and cart-tracks, that twice the dawn found me

as completely lost as though I had been set down in the midst of

the Sahara. I thus wasted much time, and wandered many miles out

of my way; wherefore, to put an end to these futile ramblings, I

set my face westward, hoping to strike the highroad somewhere

between Tonbridge and Sevenoaks; determined rather to run the

extra chance of capture than follow haphazard these tortuous and

interminable byways.

It was, then, upon the third night since my escape that, faint

and spent with hunger, I saw before me the welcome sight of a

finger-post, and hurrying forward, eager to learn my whereabouts,

came full upon a man who sat beneath the finger-post, with a

hunch of bread and meat upon his knee, which he was eating by

means of a clasp-knife.

Now I had tasted nothing save two apples all day, and but little

the day before--thus, at sight of this appetizing food, my hunger

grew, and increased to a violent desire before which prudence

vanished and caution flew away. Therefore I approached the man,

with my eyes upon his bread and meat.

But, as I drew nearer, my attention was attracted by something

white that was nailed up against the finger-post, and I stopped

dead, with my eyes riveted by a word printed in great black

capitals, and stood oblivious alike of the man who had stopped

eating to stare at me, and the bread and meat that he had set

down upon the grass; for what I saw was this: G. R.

MURDER

L500------REWARD WHEREAS, PETER SMITH, blacksmith, late of

SISSINGHURST, in the county of Kent,

suspected of the crime of WILFUL MURDER,

did upon the Tenth of August last, make his

escape from his gaolers, upon the Tonbridge

road, somewhere between SISSINGHURST and

PEMBRY; the above REWARD, namely, FIVE HUNDRED

POUNDS, will be paid to such person, or persons

who shall give such INFORMATION as shall lead

to the ARREST, and APPREHENSION of the aforesaid

PETER SMITH. In the furtherance of which, is

hereunto added a just and close description of

the same--VIZ.--He is six foot tall, and a

sizable ROGUE. His hair, black, his eyes dark

and piercing. Clad, when last seen, in a worn

velveteen jacket, kneebreeches buckled at the

knees, gray worsted stockings, and patched shoes.

The coat TORN at the RIGHT shoulder. Upon his

wrists, a pair of steel HANDCUFFS. Last seen

in the vicinity of PEMBRY.