The Broad Highway - Page 65/374

"I guessed as much," I nodded, and forthwith plunged into an

account of my meeting with the "craggy one," the which seemed to

amuse Mr. Beverley mightily, more especially when I related

Cragg's mysterious disappearance.

"Oh, gad!" cried Beverley, wiping his eyes on the tattered lapel

of his coat, "the resemblance served you luckily there; your

cousin gave him the thrashing of his life, and poor Tom evidently

thought he was in for another. That was the last you saw of him,

I'll be bound."

"No, I met him afterwards beneath the gibbet on River Hill,

where, among other incomprehensible things, he gave me to

understand that he recognized me despite my disguise, assumed, as

he supposed, on account of his having kidnapped some one or

other, and 'laid out' a certain Sir Jasper Trent in Wych Street

according to my orders, or rather, it would seem, my cousin's

orders, the author of which outrage Sir Jasper had evidently

found out--"

"The devil!" exclaimed Mr. Beverley, and sat up with a jerk.

"And furthermore," I went on, "he informed me that the Prince

himself had given him the word to leave London until the affair

had blown over."

Now while I spoke, Mr. Beverley had been regarding me with a very

strange expression, his cheeks had gone even paler than before,

his eyes seemed to stare through, and beyond me, and his hands

were tight-clenched at his sides.

"Mr. Beverley," said I, "what ails you?"

For a moment he did not speak, then answered, with the same

strange look: "Sir Jasper Trent--is my cousin, sir."

My negro-head pipe slipped suddenly, and fell into the grass,

happily without injury.

"Indeed!" said I.

"Can you not see what this means, sir?" he went on hurriedly.

"Jasper will fight."

"Indeed," said I again, "I fear so."

"Jasper was always a bit of a fish, and with no particular

affection for his graceless kinsman, but I am his only relative;

and--and he hardly knows one end of a pistol from the other,

while your cousin is a dead shot."

"My cousin!" I exclaimed; "then if was he--to be sure I saw only

his back."

"Sir Jasper is unmarried--has no relations but myself," my

companion repeated, with the same fixed intentness of look; "can

you appreciate, I wonder, what this would mean to me?"

"Rank, and fortune, and London," said I.