登陆注册
20036100000139

第139章 CHAPTER XXXII.(1)

Coventry and Cole met that night near a little church.

Hill was to join them, and tell them the result.

Now, as it happens, Little went home rather late that night; so these confederates waited, alternately hoping and fearing, a considerable time.

Presently, something mysterious occurred that gave them a chill. An arrow descended, as if from the clouds, and stuck quivering on a grave not ten yards from them. The black and white feathers shone clear in the moonlight.

To Coventry it seemed as if Heaven was retaliating on him.

The more prosaic but quick-witted cutler, after the first stupefaction, suspected it was the very arrow destined for Little, and said so.

"And Heaven flings it back to us," said Coventry, and trembled in every limb.

"Heaven has naught to do in it. The fool has got drunk, and shot it in the air. Anyway, it mustn't stick there to tell tales."

Cole vaulted over the church-yard wall, drew it out of the grave, and told Coventry to hide it.

"Go you home," said he. "I'll find out what this means."

Hill's unexpected assailant dragged him back so suddenly and violently that the arrow went up at an angle of forty-five, and, as the man loosed the string to defend himself, flew up into the sky, and came down full a hundred yards from the place.

Hill twisted violently round and, dropping the bow, struck the woman in the face with his fist; he had not room to use all his force; yet the blow covered her face with blood. She cried out, but gripped him so tight by both shoulders that he could not strike again but he kicked her savagely. She screamed, but slipped her arms down and got him tight round the waist. Then he was done for; with one mighty whirl she tore him off his feet in a moment, then dashed herself and him under her to the ground with such ponderous violence that his head rang loud on the pavement and he was stunned for a few seconds. Ere he quite recovered she had him turned on his face, and her weighty knee grinding down his shoulders, while her nimble hands whipped off her kerchief and tied his hands behind him in a twinkling.

So quickly was it all done, that by the time Little heard the scrimmage, ascertained it was behind him, and came back to see, she was seated on her prisoner, trembling and crying after her athletic feat, and very little fit to cope with the man if he had not been tied.

Little took her by the hands. "Oh, my poor Jael! What is the matter? Has the blackguard been insulting you?" And, not waiting for an answer, gave him a kick that made him howl again.

"Yes, kill him, the villain! he wanted to murder you. Oh, oh, oh!"

She could say no more, but became hysterical.

Henry supported her tenderly, and wiped the blood from her face; and as several people came up, and a policeman, he gave the man in charge, on Jael's authority, and he was conveyed to the station accordingly, he and his bow.

They took Jael Dence to a chemist's shop, and gave her cold water and salts: the first thing she did, when she was quite herself, was to seize Henry Little's hand and kiss it with such a look of joy as brought tears into his eyes.

Then she told her story, and was taken in a cab to the police-office, and repeated her story there.

Then Henry took her to Woodbine Villa, and Grace Carden turned very pale at Henry's danger, though passed: she wept over Jael, and kissed her; and nobody could make enough of her.

Grace Carden looked wistfully at Henry and said, "Oh that I had a strong arm to defend you!"

"Oh, Miss Grace," said Jael, "don't you envy me. Go away with him from this wicked, murdering place. That will be a deal better than any thing I can do for him."

"Ah, would to Heaven I could this minute!" said Grace, clinging tenderly to his shoulder. She insisted on going home with him and sharing his peril for once.

Hill was locked up for the night.

In the morning a paper was slipped into his hand. "Say there was no arrow."

He took this hint, and said that he was innocent as a babe of any harm. He had got a bow to repair for a friend, and he went home twanging it, was attacked by a woman, and, in his confusion, struck her once, but did not repeat the blow.

Per contra, Jael Dence distinctly swore there was an arrow, with two white feathers and one black one, and that the prisoner was shooting at Mr. Little. She also swore that she had seen him colloguing with another man, who had been concerned in a former attempt on Mr. Little, and captured, but had escaped from Raby Hall.

On this the magistrate declined to discharge the prisoner; but, as no arrow could be found at present, admitted him to bail, two securities fifty pounds each, which was an indirect way of imprisoning him until the Assizes.

This attempt, though unsuccessful in one way, was very effective in another. It shook Henry Little terribly; and the effect was enhanced by an anonymous letter he received, reminding him there were plenty of noiseless weapons. Brinsley had been shot twice, and no sound heard. "When your time comes, you'll never know what hurt you." The sense of a noiseless assassin eternally dogging him preyed on Little's mind and spirits, and at last this life on the brink of the grave became so intolerable that he resolved to leave Hillsborough, but not alone.

He called on Grace Carden, pale and agitated.

"Grace," said he, "do you really love me?"

"Oh, Henry! Do I love you?"

"Then save me from this horrible existence. Oh, my love, if you knew what it is to have been a brave man, and to find your courage all oozing away under freezing threats, that you know, by experience, will be followed by some dark, subtle, bloody deed or other. There, they have brought me down to this, that I never go ten steps without looking behind me, and, when I go round a corner, I turn short and run back, and wait at the corner to see if an assassin is following me. I tremble at the wind. I start at my own shadow."

Grace threw her arms round his neck, and stopped him with tears and kisses.

"Ah, bless you, my love!" he cried, and kissed her fondly. "You pity me--you will save me from this miserable, degrading life?"

"Ah, that I will, if I can, my own."

"You can."

同类推荐
  • 谥法

    谥法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 十四经发挥

    十四经发挥

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 辋川集二十首·文杏

    辋川集二十首·文杏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Song of Hiawatha

    The Song of Hiawatha

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 古穰集

    古穰集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 他的女人他的病

    他的女人他的病

    经典个性的对白,看似无意的伏笔,似有若无的情意,像清泉般流淌在书中,沁人心脾。丰富的比喻是隽永的哲理,字里行间流露的是作者真实的感情,恣意汪洋。此书乍看来是校园文学,细看来却为时事而作。幽默诙谐的语言像带刺的玫瑰戏谑挑逗,放浪不羁的言语无不透露出80后的狂傲与叛逆。另类的思考角度,跳跃的思维模式,一触即发,犀利的笔锋只配针砭时弊,偏执的语言只得愤世嫉俗!不得不提的是,此书还向我们描述了一个异域的文化风土,你知道有种食物叫做馕吗?你知道白花花的棉花是怎么采摘吗?也许你对那里并不了解,那里除了漫漫的黄沙荒芜的戈壁滩还有你所不知的一切……
  • 梦幻婚礼:鲜妻,不要闹

    梦幻婚礼:鲜妻,不要闹

    她,出生在豪门世家过的生活却像乞丐,恶毒姐姐狠心妈,害死了她的亲生母亲还把她擢出家门,绝望之极,男人突然向她求婚“雪儿,嫁给我!”男人给了她梦幻的婚礼,原来重逢是这样甜呀!男人的奶奶对自己这么好,真是受宠若惊啊!小三?呵呵,你能比上我吗?可是最让欧阳瑞雪受不了的是,原以为自己嫁给了一个谦谦君子,可是万万没想到原来这个男的是一个腹黑的伪君子!!真是够了!于是,这个伪君子开启了饿狼的模式,“夜哥哥,虽然我知道我们重逢很不容易,但是……”伪君子被勾起了兴趣“怎么不说了呢?”“其实,我只想说……你能不能从我身上起来!!”(甜甜的宠文哦!)
  • 玄天记

    玄天记

    世上谁人不死,任你风华绝代,最终也只能化为一掊黄土。自古谣传,有真仙的存在,永生于世间。成仙,成仙,长生路上一堆骨。仙境漫漫无尽头,转眼之间已是沧海桑田。百族林立,强者争锋。一个少年从大荒中走出,征战九天。问世间谁主浮沉,唯我真仙!
  • 王牌保镖

    王牌保镖

    昆仑少年叶离武道入圣,医术无双,下山入世,调戏性感御姐,拯救傲娇警花,保家卫国,匡扶正义,成就一代宗师!
  • 扁鹊神应针灸玉龙经

    扁鹊神应针灸玉龙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 超痞强兵闯花都

    超痞强兵闯花都

    兵王赵逸回归花都,受上级指派,给启亚集团的美女总裁林晓纯当保镖。偶然获得十八佛珠,开启了风云涌起的新生活。
  • 仁斋直指方论(附补遗)

    仁斋直指方论(附补遗)

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 隋唐演义

    隋唐演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 九婴修神

    九婴修神

    一个普通的山村少年猎人,为了追求强大的力量,决定去深山中历练。在历练的途中偶遇六位遇难的修真者,从此踏上了修仙之路。寻常修士都只有一个丹田,修炼一种功法,而他却拥有九个丹田,修炼九种功法,实力强大却修为提升困难。仙路艰难,如何才能突破限制,获得永恒的生命与强大的力量。
  • 找到自己的北极星

    找到自己的北极星

    我们很多人在生活中往往迷失了自己的方向,难以找到自己的“北极星”。其实,在那迷茫的夜空,只要你撩开树叶,在云层飘散之后,你会发现自己的北极星依然在夜空中闪耀。本书作者贝克博士现为美国著名生活设计专家及杂志编辑,曾担任过当今顶尖领导学家约翰·科特的研究助理。本书将通过一系列自我训练,帮你全面了解并找到自己的北极星,过上自己本应过上的幸福生活。