The Castle Inn - Page 9/559

'Oh, have done, have done, my dear!' cried a wailing, tearful voice; and

Sir George, almost cowed by the girl's fierce words and the fiercer

execration that was on her lips, hailed the intervention with relief.

The woman whom he had seen on her knees had risen and now approached the

girl, showing a face wrinkled, worn, and plain, but not ignoble; and for

the time lifted above the commonplace by the tears that rained down it.

'Oh, my lovey, have done,' she cried. 'And let the gentleman go. To kill

another will not help him that is dead. Nor us that are left alone!'

'It will not help him!' the girl answered, shrilly and wildly; and her

eyes, leaving Soane, strayed round the room as if she were that moment

awakened and missed some one. 'No! But is he to be murdered, and no one

suffer? Is he to die and no one pay? He who had a smile for us, go in or

out, and never a harsh word or thought; who never did any man wrong or

wished any man ill? Yet he lies there! Oh, mother, mother,' she

continued, her voice broken on a sudden by a tremor of pain, 'we are

alone! We are alone! We shall never see him come in at that door again!'

The old woman sobbed helplessly and made no answer; on which the girl,

with a gesture as simple as it was beautiful, drew the grey head to her

shoulder. Then she looked at Sir George. 'Go,' she said; but he saw that

the tears were welling up in her eyes, and that her frame was beginning

to tremble. 'Go! I was not myself--a while ago--when I fetched you. Go,

sir, and leave us.' Moved by the abrupt change, as well as by her beauty, Sir George

lingered; muttering that perhaps he could help her in another way. But

she shook her head, once and again; and, instinctively respecting the

grief which had found at length its proper vent, he turned and, softly

lifting the latch, went out into the court.

The night air cooled his brow, and recalled him to sober earnest and the

eighteenth century. In the room which he had left, he had marked nothing

out of the common except the girl. The mother, the furniture, the very

bed on which the dead man lay, all were appropriate, and such as he

would expect to find in the house of his under-steward. But the girl?

The girl was gloriously handsome; and as eccentric as she was

beautiful. Sir George's head turned and his eyes glowed as he thought of

her. He considered what a story he could make of it at White's; and he

put up his spying-glass, and looked through it to see if the towers of

the cathedral still overhung the court. 'Gad, sir!' he said aloud,

rehearsing the story, as much to get rid of an unfashionable sensation

he had in his throat as in pure whimsy, 'I was surprised to find that it

was Oxford. It should have been Granada, or Bagdad, or Florence! I give

you my word, the houris that the Montagu saw in the Hammam at Stamboul

were nothing to her!' The persons through whom he had passed on his way to the door were still

standing before the house. Glancing back when he had reached the mouth

of the court, he saw that they were watching him; and, obeying a sudden

impulse of curiosity, he turned on his heel and signed to the nearest to

come to him. 'Here, my man,' he said, 'a word with you.'