The Castle Inn - Page 317/559

Mr. Pomeroy laughed insolently. 'There is still Tommy,' he said. 'Try

him. See what he'll say to you. It amuses me to hear you plead, my dear;

you put so much spirit into it. As my lord said, before we came in, 'tis

as good as a play.' She flung him a look of scorn, but did not answer. For Mr. Thomasson, he

shuffled his feet uncomfortably. 'There are no horses,' he faltered,

cursing his indiscreet companion. 'Mr. Pomeroy means well, I know. And

as there are no horses, even if nothing prevented you, you could not go

to-night, you see.' Mr. Pomeroy burst into a shout of laughter and clapped the stammering

tutor (fallen miserably between two stools) on the back. 'There's a

champion for you!' he cried. 'Beauty in distress! Lord! how it fires his

blood and turns his look to flame! What! going, Tommy?' he continued, as

Mr. Thomasson, unable to bear his raillery or the girl's fiery scorn,

turned and fled ignobly. 'Well, my pretty dear, I see we are to be left

alone. And, damme! quite right too, for we are the only man and the only

woman of the party, and should come to an understanding.' Julia looked at him with shuddering abhorrence. They were alone; the

sound of the tutor's retreating footsteps was growing faint. She pointed

to the door. 'If you do not go,' she cried, her voice shaking with rage,

'I will rouse the house! I will call your people! Do you hear me? I

will so cry to your servants that you shall not for shame dare to keep

me! I will break this window and cry for help?' 'And what do you think I should be doing meanwhile?' he retorted with an

ugly leer. 'I thought I had shown you that two could play at that game.

But there, child, I like your spirit! I love you for it! You are a girl

after my own heart, and, damme! we'll live to laugh at those two old

women yet!' She shrank farther from him with an expression of loathing. He saw the

look, and scowled, but for the moment he kept his temper. 'Fie! the

Little Masterson playing the grand lady!' he said. 'But there, you are

too handsome to be crossed, my dear. You shall have your own way

to-night, and I'll come and talk to you to-morrow, when your head is

cooler and those two fools are out of the way. And if we quarrel then,

my beauty, we can but kiss and make it up. Look on me as your friend,'

he added, with a leer from which she shrank, 'and I vow you'll not

repent it.' She did not answer, she only pointed to the door, and finding that he

could draw nothing from her, he went at last. On the threshold he

turned, met her eyes with a grin of meaning, and took the key from the

inside of the lock. She heard him insert it on the outside, and turn it,

and had to grip one hand with the other to stay the scream that arose in

her throat. She was brave beyond most women; but the ease with which he

had mastered her, the humiliation of contact with him, the conviction of

her helplessness in his grasp lay on her still. They filled her with

fear; which grew more definite as the light, already low in the corners

of the room, began to fail, and the shadows thickened about the dingy

furniture, and she crouched alone against the barred window, listening

for the first tread of a coming foot--and dreading the night.