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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50388 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50388)
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-Project Gutenberg's My Lady Peggy Goes to Town, by Frances Aymar Mathews
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: My Lady Peggy Goes to Town
-
-Author: Frances Aymar Mathews
-
-Illustrator: Harrison Fisher
-
-Release Date: November 5, 2015 [EBook #50388]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Chris Curnow and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Minor errors in punctuation and formatting have been silently corrected.
-Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details
-regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered during its
-preparation.
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_.
-
-The full-page illustrations are referred to, in the list provided, by a
-quote from the text, and the page reference is to the quote, rather than
-the position of the illustration in the text. In some cases, these were
-re-positioned to fall nearer the scene referenced.
-
-These illustrations also had no captions. They are distinguished, here,
-by the first few words of the quoted text.
-
-[Illustration: Then Lady Peggy, laughing...]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- MY LADY PEGGY
- GOES TO TOWN
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- _By_
-
- FRANCES AYMAR MATHEWS
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY HARRISON FISHER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- _Copyright, 1901,
- By The Bowen-Merrill Company_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN]
-
- THE DECORATIONS DESIGNED BY VIRGINIA KEEP
- THE COVER DESIGNED BY FRANCIS HAZENPLUG
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: ILLUSTRATIONS]
-
- _Then Lady Peggy, laughing, humming such a gay _Frontispiece_
- snatch of a song, comes tripping down the
- stairs._
-
- _And Lady Peggy and her woman found themselves on _Page 40_
- the road to town._
-
- _“A touch, a hit!” cry all at once as a spurt of _Page 68_
- blood darts up the supposed Sir Robin’s blade._
-
- _Two watched her as she came in on Beau Brummell’s _Page 112_
- arm._
-
- _At the table sat Kennaston, inky-fingered, _Page 158_
- scribbling; eyes now rolling to the ceiling, now
- roving hither and yon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _The instant that Lady Peggy felt herself in the
- highwayman’s saddle, she knew that her wrists
- had met their match._ _Page 186_
-
-
- _“I am Sir Robin McTart! Who, the devil, are
- you?”_ _Page 278_
-
-
- _“Ah, Peggy, my adored one,” says he, devouring
- her pale face with his happy eyes._ _Page 336_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ENVOI
-
- When gay postillions cracked their whips,
- And gallants gemmed their chat with quips;
- When patches nestled o’er sweet lips
- At choc’late times; and, ’twixt the sips,
- Fair Ladies gave their gossips tips;
- Then, in Levantine gown and brooch,
- My Lady Peggy took the coach,
- For London Town!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN]
-
-
-
-
- _In the which My Lady Peggy sends off her
- lover broken-hearted and promptly
- falls into a swoon._
-
-
-Kennaston Castle lies in Surrey. The Earl of Exham is master of the
-picturesque old pile and of the estate, and decidedly the slave of the
-very considerable number of debts which were up to His Lordship’s ears
-when he came of age, some four and fifty years ago, and by this time
-have reached almost to the crown of his head. He is also father to his
-son and heir, Kennaston of Kennaston, and to the heir’s tall twin, My
-Lady Peggy.
-
-My Lady Peggy at this particular moment sits a-swinging on the top
-branch of a plum tree at the foot of the kitchen garden whence she
-commands a tolerable view of the highway.
-
-“Impertinent sun!” cries Peggy, shading her handsome eyes with her hand
-as she stares off along the dusty road. “How is’t you dare shine when
-there’s no fine gentleman a-comin’ from the east; no gallant with
-disheveled locks, powdered shoulders, disordered mien, distracted looks,
-spurs a-digging into his beast, lips apart, heart beating like spent
-rabbit’s, and ‘Peggy, lovely Peggy,’ the clapper to his eager tongue at
-every jolt of his saddle, every rut of his way? Go cloud yourself, I
-say! since Sir Percy tarries. I’d have the skies weep, even if I can’t.”
-A peal of merriest laughter concludes this sally, and an apronful of
-plums comes tumbling down all over the other young woman who stands
-under the tree in waiting on her mistress.
-
-“Is His Lordship not yet in sight, My Lady?” asks this one.
-
-“Nay! that is not he, Chockey, and whisk me! but when His Lordship does
-come, he’ll find a very sorry entertainment. I swear, as dad says, I’ll
-not see him when he does appear, that will not I. Nay, shake not your
-head, girl. Is’t not true that Lady Peggy had once a lover?”
-
-“’Twere truer say a dozen of that sort of gentry, Madam,” replies the
-buxom Chockey, as she sorts the plums, the best in her bonnet, the flaws
-over the wall where the chickens and hens cackle to the refuse.
-
-“Well, well, twenty if you like! but one more favored than the rest? the
-properest sort of man at saddle, gun, line, wrestle, toast, song, or
-dance? honest, straightforward, beautiful, as dad says the angels are he
-saw painted on the walls at Rome. Speak I truth, eh, Chockey?”
-
-“Madam, that you do.”
-
-“And this paragon so worshiped his Peggy as, when she went off a-three
-months since to visit her godmother in Kent, he vowed by all the saints
-in the calendar he’d scarce survive until her return. False or true, eh,
-Chockey?”
-
-My Lady Peggy punctuated this query by an accurate aim and hit, on the
-top of her waiting woman’s head, with an especially large plum.
-
-“True, Madam,” dodging the fruit, and still with an eye on the road.
-
-“And then, back comes My Lady Peggy, cutting short her stay in Kent,
-where she had much pleasure, to tell the truth, in the society of a very
-fine young nobleman.”
-
-“Lawk, Madam! another?” interrupted the faithful Chockey.
-
-“Another, Chock,” vouchsafes her mistress. “Sweet, sweet Sir Robin
-McTart!”
-
-“Oh, My Lady!” cries the girl, vainly endeavoring to conceal a smile.
-
-“Aye, Chock,” proceeds Peggy, “I say again, a sweet and most entrapping
-young man.”
-
-“Madam, a squint eye, a wry nose, an underlip that hangs, a pair of
-fox-teeth, and a chin that’s gone a-huntin’ for his throat!”
-
-“Tut, tut! Chock,” laughs Lady Peggy, leaning back in her leafy bower,
-“what’s all that to a nimble wit, a galloping conversation, and a
-faithful heart?” Lady Peggy’s tone is as light as the May breeze blowing
-her soft locks about her lovely blooming face, full of mockery,
-witchery,—and then a bit of a sigh, low as flowers’ whispers, and up
-with her drooped head higher than before, as in the half mannish tone
-her twinship and long play-fellowship with her brother have given her,
-she adds curtly—
-
-“D’ye see aught coming yet, Chock?”
-
-“No, My Lady, not yet,” answers the girl ruefully.
-
-Peggy bites her lips until they hurt.
-
-“As I was a-sayin’, Chock, your mistress cuts short her visit, sends
-word to her lover she’ll be home o’-Thursday, and, as I live! to-day’s
-the Monday after, and him still on the way! See him!” Peggy’s white
-teeth close tight, and her eyes flash, and her little hands clench. “Not
-I! Let him come now an’ he goes again faster than he ever traveled. The
-vain coxcomb! the deceitful, cozening, graceless poppet! He’ll ne’er set
-eyes on her he used to call his Peg again, or I die for’t.” And Peggy
-jumped to the ground.
-
-“Madam! Madam!” exclaims Chockey, pointing joyfully to a cloud of dust
-far up the highway. “Look! Yonder comes Sir Percy! Don’t I know? Ain’t I
-watched his long roan any day this twelve month a-turnin’ by the lodge?”
-
-Lady Peggy seizes Chockey’s arm, and runs breathless to the house; in,
-a-scrambling up the broad stairs to her chamber; a-pulling out of
-drawers from their chests; a-hunting of ribbons and fallals, combs,
-brushes, kerchiefs, perfumes, patches, powder, whatever else besides!
-
-“Hurry, Chock, do my hair as he likes it!” urges Lady Peggy.
-
-“Lawk, Madam! I thought you swore just now you’d never set eyes on Sir
-Percy again?”
-
-“You thought! Bless you, Chock, never be a-wastin’ your time a-thinking
-where a woman’s concerned. When her heart steps up and lays hold the
-reins, the steed gallops to the goal; she’s always time to think after
-she’s acted.”
-
-“Yes, Madam,” concurs Chockey, with a mental reservation back of her
-mouthful of pins. “There, My Lady, Your Ladyship’s hair is lovely; your
-Levantine gown becomes you like a pheasant do its plumage, and your eyes
-is a-shinin’ with love and—”
-
-“Tut, girl! It’s anger, wrath, temper,—so!” Peggy marches up and down
-before the mirror, tossing her lovely head. “Thus attired, Chock, a lady
-can flout, deride, harass, and madden one of the opposite sex, as can
-she not do in cotton frock and fruit-stained apron. Give me my comfit
-box, I pray. Tell me how long Sir Percy now hath been cooling his heels
-in the drawing-room?”
-
-“But little lacking the hour, Madam.”
-
-“Good! I’d keep him there until Thursday, an I could. Now go tell him
-I’ll be with him presently.”
-
-Chockey went.
-
-Lady Peggy stood at the door ajar; she heard the impatient footsteps of
-her lover below, but yet she tarried, tapping her high red heel on the
-sill.
-
-“Lud!” cried she, “an I show no proper spirit, Percy’s uncle’ll have the
-right of it when he says of one he’s never seen yet, ‘She’s a-hunting
-your bank-notes, boy! She’s heiress to debts, Sir, and by my life, Sir!
-I’ll never father-in-law her, so long as I’m above the sod, Sir!’
-Despicable old wretch! as if ’twere not Percy I adored, without a care
-if he have a farthing to his fortune, or a roof to his head!”
-
-And then Chockey, her palm warm with a sovereign, came with a rush.
-
-“My Lady!” cries she, “’f you could see Sir Percy! White as milk,
-tremblin’, shakin’, chatterin’, a-begging and a-praying as you’ll
-condescend to go to him inside of another hour!”
-
-“White, said you Chock?”
-
-The girl nods vehemently.
-
-“Shaking?”
-
-“Aye, Madam.”
-
-“Like to faint, think you?”
-
-“Like to die, My Lady!”
-
-Then Lady Peggy, laughing, humming such a gay snatch of a song, comes
-tripping down the stairs, pulling out her petticoats, stopping her
-lover’s outstretched arms of eagerness with such a splendid curtsy as
-any Court lady might have envied.
-
-Still laughing.—“Lud! Sir Percy! is’t you?” amazed.
-
-“Aye!” returns he, more amazed than she, and standing off with dropped
-arms. “Whom did you think it was?”
-
-“Another. My woman’s stupid, and when she described the gallant that she
-did, it matched a different sort of him than you, methinks. However,
-let’s be civil; the crops are good, the game likely to be, later; the
-King in health,—prithee have a chair.” And Peggy swept a second curtsy,
-motioning toward a seat.
-
-“Peggy! Sweet lips! Joy of my soul, what’s it? Not one warm word for him
-who only lives for thee? Who’s counted every hour since he parted from
-you, eh?” The young man draws nearer to her, and bends upon his knee,
-venturing, as he does so, to take her hand in his.
-
-“Since you spent your time a-counting the hours, Sir, pray you, how many
-hours have passed since in this same room we parted, now three months,
-three weeks, and a few days since?”
-
-Sir Percy sprang to his feet.
-
-“Zounds! Peggy, and you flout me so?”
-
-“Zounds! Sir Percy, did not I write you—and very well you know writing’s
-not my forte,—that I’d be home o’-Thursday?”
-
-“Aye, but I never got it until this morning; then did I put spurs and
-leave my uncle in the lurch to fly to you.”
-
-“What, Sir! not get my letter? An idle, silly, and foolish excuse. I
-sent it by Bickers, and trustier man ne’er breathed. He vowed me he’d
-put it in your hands.”
-
-“Peggy, believe whichever of the two you like; but, in mercy tell me!
-What kept you so long away? I’ve heard rumors of another. Eh, Peg, ’tis
-not true, swear me ’tis not true? Oh, by the hue of my visage must you
-know what jealous pangs have racked me!”
-
-Lady Peggy nods her head maliciously.
-
-“Jealous pangs, forsooth! and you thought to medicine them, I dare be
-sworn, with vaulting the country over in the wake of Lady Diana Weston,
-the greatest heiress in the market! Bah, Sir, and you’ve heard rumors!
-I’ll match ’em. I’ve seen the minx from afar. She is handsome, Sir; your
-taste does you credit.”
-
-“Peg, I swear ’twas but to please my uncle!” cries Sir Percy.
-
-“Aye, and so displease me!”
-
-“Nay, you know too well that I’ll never do that of my will; but my
-uncle, as I’ve told you, must be coaxed, and then when once I gain his
-consent to seeing you, our battle’s won. To see thee, Peg ’s to worship
-thee! Lord Gower’ll kneel when he beholds thee!”
-
-“Our me no ours, Sir!” returned Peggy. “Let’s here and now make an end
-on’t all. You go pound the roads after your new mistress with her acres
-and notes, and I—”
-
-“Well, you what?” asks the young man impetuously and yet with a certain
-grave dignity.
-
-“Oh, I’ll acquit myself to a certainty with one that’s faithful as the
-sun, and gallant from his head to his heels.”
-
-“What’s his name?” inquires Sir Percy in a hard, strained voice. “If
-he’s a better man, Peg, and you can say you love him—God keep me!”
-
-“His name’s a very honorable and ancient one, he’s Sir Robin McTart,
-twenty-third Baronet!”
-
-“Peggy!”
-
-If a thunderbolt had fallen betwixt Peggy’s red shoes and his brown
-ones, Percy could not have been more astounded.
-
-“Well, Sir?” returns she, scarce controlling the twitching of her lips.
-
-“A milk-sop, molly-coddle! Oh Peggy, an you drop me, take a better man!
-Peg, you’re a-joking. Not that bumpkin! I’ve never seen him, but report
-has it he’s afeard if one of his own dogs looks him in the eye and
-bays!”
-
-“Sir Percy, have you finished?” inquires Peggy with dignity.
-
-“No, have I not! By my soul, Peg, an you pitch me to hell for that
-jackanapes, I’ll go to hell as fast as wine and dice, and cards and
-brawls, and usurers, and all that sort of crew can carry me! I’ll up to
-London, and one morning when your brother sends you word he’s found me
-with a rapier stuck in my throat, my pockets empty, and ‘Peggy’ writ on
-the scrap o’ paper a-lying over my heart, then you’ll believe Percy
-loved you!”
-
-“Lud, Sir! Men are apt at such chatter, and a fortnight after, the
-vicar’s a-publishing their banns with the other lady!”
-
-“Peg!” He takes her kerchief end, as it droops away from her pretty long
-throat, in his fingers; he looks down deep into her eyes; his voice
-shakes, so does his hand.
-
-“Whatever betides, my bonny sweetheart, there’s only one that’ll ever
-have banns read with me, and that’s—” He takes her by surprise and by
-the shoulders, and squares her to the mirror in its niche.
-
-“Farewell, Peg—since you send me, it’s the devil and dice, for by the
-Lord! I can’t live a quiet life lacking your smiles.”
-
-In two minutes more Chockey, from the upper window, saw the long roan
-flying away from Kennaston faster than she ever galloped to it; and went
-down to find her young mistress a-lying prone in a fine wrinkled heap of
-silken gown, lace frills and furbelows, on the threadbare carpet of the
-big drawing-room.
-
-To rush across the wide hall to the dining-room, seize a game-knife,
-back again; cut her mistress’s stays; pour a glass of cider down Lady
-Peggy’s throat, willy-nilly; clap her palms; pound her back; set her on
-her feet; and half carry her to her chamber, occupied not many minutes
-for stout Chockey.
-
-“Lawk, My Lady,” said she, surveying the prostrate form on the couch,
-arms a-kimbo, eyes saucer-wide, “who’d ever have thought to see your
-haughty Ladyship so mauled for the sake of any gentleman as lives!”
-
-Lady Peggy lay still, but presently, from the depths of the pillows she
-spoke.
-
-“I ain’t mauled, Chock, not I!” Her Ladyship now sat up and stared
-around the big room. “It’s only for sorrow for havin’ had to disappoint
-Sir Percy, on account of dear Sir Robin.”
-
-“Oh!” ejaculates the worthy Chockey in a tone of undisguised and
-sarcastic disbelief.
-
-“Chockey!” exclaimed her mistress in the tone of a drill sergeant, now
-rising to her feet.
-
-“Lawk! My Lady, I didn’t mean nothin’.”
-
-“Chockey,” echoes Lady Peggy faintly, sinking to her knees, “whatever’ll
-I do? Oh Chock! Chock! and Sir Percy just the centre of my heart, and me
-to behave to him like a brute! Out of my sight, away with you! There’s
-the first bell a-ringin’ for dinner. Say to daddy I’m too deep in my
-hand-writin’ lessons to eat to-day! Say to him I’m gone out to break the
-new colt and not got back. Say to him I’m gone to the devil!”
-
-And Lady Peggy fell a-weeping with such violence as Chockey had never
-seen; and, being a wise damsel, she left her mistress alone and went
-down to soothe the gouty Earl, tied to his chair, as best she could for
-the absence of his daughter Peg from dinner.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- _In the which Her Ladyship wheedles her
- noble father and makes up her mind._
-
-
-The Earl forsooth was a testy gentleman, and his girl was his plague and
-his pride; on her, rather than on his heir, the old man’s fancy was set,
-for the reason that Kennaston, disclaiming all the country sports, the
-half wild outdoor life, the lusty joys and racing bumps and cups that
-had been vastly helpful in reducing the little his parent had started
-his career with, had elected instead to try his luck at that most
-inscrutable, vile trade of scribbling!
-
-Peg’s twin, her fellow in height and build, which made a slender youth
-of him indeed, had gone up to London quill-armed, ink-fingered,
-brain-possessed with rhymes; empty-pursed, determined to carve with such
-unlikely weapons as that apt bird, the goose, furnishes, a fame and
-fortune for himself, that should dazzle the world and recoup the
-fortunes of his well-nigh fallen house.
-
-While the Earl jeered, Peg, herself scarce able to spell a two-syllabled
-word, looked up to her brother as nothing short of whatever stood in her
-mind for Shakespeare; for, low be it spoke, the fair Peggy had small
-notion of books, their makers or their pleasurable usage. To her they
-represented waste time almost, and only as a means of communication with
-Kennaston did she, since his absence began, pore daily over a
-dictionary, a speller, and a copy-book.
-
-So sat she now, a couple of months after the parting betwixt her and Sir
-Percy; lips pursed, brows knit, goose-feather in finger, poring over a
-blank sheet of paper first, and from it turning to the closely-writ page
-of a letter from her twin.
-
-Chockey sat on a stool hard by,—they were both in the buttery, for Lady
-Peggy was apt with all the mysteries of housekeeping, and had as fine a
-churning, as big cheeses, as fat chickens, as nice eggs, as good hams as
-any other in the county,—had she not, the Earl, her father, had lacked
-something or all of his comfort. Chockey, then, sat working butter,
-squeezing all the white milky bubbles back and forth in the wooden bowl,
-and printing the pats in the trays, while her mistress sighed,
-swallowed, and at last burst forth in speech.
-
-“Chockey, I shall fall into a fit, an I’ve ever another letter to write
-in this world. The last I writ was for Sir Robin to introduce him to
-Lord Kennaston when he should go up to town—and belike, I forgot to give
-it to him as I promised and have it safe here. It took me a week to
-finish, and I’ve copied all the words out of it I can, yet do I lack
-thousands more, methinks, to say what I would to my brother. Lud!
-Learning’s a wonderful thing! Look at that, Chock!”
-
-Lady Peggy holds up the well covered pages of Kennaston’s letter before
-the eyes of the Abigail.
-
-“Aye, Madam,” giggles this one, “it has the air to me of where spiders
-has been a-fightin’! Now, for true, My Lady, do it say words as has a
-meanin’?”
-
-“Listen,” replies the mistress, reading off quite glibly, since ’tis the
-one hundredth time since she got it that she’s rehearsed the same to
-herself.
-
-
-“SWEET SISTER PEGGY: I’d have written before but that literature pays
-ill until a man hath contrived by preference and patronage, the rather
-than by his wits, to place himself at evens with the Great and the
-Distinguished. So far I find Fame’s hill hard in the Climbing, but do I
-not complain, for there’s that spirit reigning in my breast as bids me
-welcome Poverty, even Starvation, lead it but to the sometime
-recognition of my Talents. I take up my pen not to riddle your ears with
-plaints, but on another matter, which is Sir Percy.”
-
-Lady Peggy’s head droops a bit to match her voice, whilst Chockey’s
-bright little eyes sparkle, and she twists the yellow butter into heart
-shapes as she pricks her ears and sighs.
-
-“Sir Percy,” continues My Lady Peggy, reading, “as you know came up to
-town, now these seven weeks agone, straight as a die to my meagre
-chambers, where welcome was spelled, I can assure thee, all over the
-bare floor, barer board, and barer master thereof,—for of a truth I love
-him as should I the brother I had hoped he’d be! Peg, what’s this
-thou’st done to the lad? Thrown him, a gallant with as big a heart as
-God ever made, over into the Devil’s own mire, for sake of that little
-tow-haired sprat, Robin McTart! with his pate full of himself and none
-other,—so I’ve heard say, for never set I eyes upon the blackguard from
-Kent! Zounds! twin! What are ye women made of? And I write to say Percy,
-what with carousals and brawls, and drink and fights, and all night at
-the gaming-table, and all day God knows where, ’s fast a-throwing
-himself piecemeal into the grave he’s a-digging daily for your cruel
-sake. Could you but see him! A ghost! Wan, with eyes full of
-blood-spots, and hair unkempt! Madam, there’s love for you—and love’s
-what ladies like. Go match him, Sister, with McTart if you can, but twin
-me no more ever again an you and I wear black ribbons for Percy de
-Bohun!”
-
-
-Lady Peggy’s lip quivers; so does Chockey’s.
-
-“Lawk, My Lady!” cries the girl, splashing tears into the butter,
-reckless.
-
-“‘Black ribbons,’ Chock! ‘A ghost,’ Chock! ‘McTart,’ Chock! Lord ha’
-mercy! What’s to become o’ me?” Peggy’s tears smart her eyes as she
-flings the goose-quill over to a cheese on the shelf, where it sticks,
-and one day surprises the Vicar at his supper.
-
-“Get out of my sight!” she flings after it. “I can’t write! Who can
-write out her heart and soul, when it’s devilish hard even to speak it.
-Oh! Would I were my brother for one fine half-hour!” cries Peggy, rising
-and stamping up and down the stone floor of the buttery.
-
-“An’ if you were, Madam?” asks Chockey meekly, “what then?”
-
-“I’d swear! Yea, would I! Such a lot of splendid oaths as’d ease my mind
-and let me hear from my own lips what a fool’s part I’d played with my
-own—my adored Percy! Could I but see him! as Kennaston says.” Peggy in
-her progress now upsets a pan of cream, and has genuine pleasure in
-splashing it about over her slippers as she speaks.
-
-“But I! What am I? A girl! swaddled in petticoats and fallals; tethered
-to an apron, and a besom, and a harpsichord, and a needle,—yet can I
-snap a rapier, fire a pistol, jump a ditch, land a fish, for my brother
-taught me. Still it’s girl! girl! sit by the fire and spin! dawdle!
-dally!” The cream now spots up as far as Peggy’s chin and flecks its
-dimple.
-
-“Stop-at-home, nor stir-abroad! Smile, ogle!” each word emphasized with
-heel and toe.
-
-“And—” Lady Peggy now flops back into her chair, breathless, “wait on
-man’s will and whims,—that, Chock, ’s what ’tis to be a woman.”
-
-“Aye, ’tis,” assents the waiting woman. “But yet, My Lady, if I dared
-make bold, there’s summat Your Ladyship might do, an My Lady, Your
-Ladyship’s mother, came back home again from her visit to your uncle in
-York.”
-
-“Out with it!” says Peggy hopelessly, folding up her attempted letter
-and tucking it in her reticule.
-
-“Mayhap you could persuade, by much weeping and praying, falling into
-swoons and such like, that Her Ladyship would take you up to London!
-Once there, Sir Percy couldn’t keep his distance from you.”
-
-Peggy looks at Chockey as if she were a vision sent from on high; then,
-quickly succeeding derision curls her lip.
-
-“My Lady mother take a squealing chit like me up to town! Never! She’d
-say my manners weren’t fit, or my figger, or my wardrobe. Lud! Chock!
-Bethink thee, lass, of my gowns in London town! and me no more
-acquainted with the ways yonder, than our Brindle is with the family
-pew!”
-
-Lady Peggy walked out into the paddock, rubbed the cream from her
-slippers on the turf; caressed the ponies; munched the sweet cake she
-had in her apron-pocket, felt the keen sweet air blow over her hot
-forehead, and saw, dancing ever before her mind’s eye, that insidious
-sweet suggestion of “going up to London.”
-
-How did one go up to London?
-
-In the coach: aye to be sure; and the coach left the “Mermaid” in the
-village every Tuesday and Thursday at five in the morning. The coach!
-The splendid coach, a-swinging on its springs like a gigantic cradle;
-the postillions a-snapping their whips, the coachman a-cracking his long
-lash and a-shouting “All h’up for London!” and the ladies and
-gentlemen—well armed, these last, in dread of the highwaymen on the
-heath—all a-piling in and a-settling themselves; and the guards
-a-tooting their horns, the landlady and the boots and the maids and the
-hostlers all a-bowing and a-scraping and—off they go! for London
-town—where Percy was a-pining and a-dying for her, so her twin writ in
-his letter.
-
-Well, Lady Peggy went in, clapt on a fresh gown and shoes, and never was
-daughter more tender and patient with crabbed, gouty, crusty dad than
-she all through that lovely day. Playing backgammon; spelling out the
-newspaper; trouncing the cat when it jumped on His Lordship’s leg;
-blowing the fire; wheeling his chair from hither to yon; stroking the
-bald head; combing the white whiskers; and finally said she,
-
-“Daddy, London’s a very big sort of a place, now, isn’t it?”
-
-The Earl nods, coddling his leg into the slip of sunshine that’s walking
-westerly away from him.
-
-“My brother lodges, so he says, at the corner of Holywell Road and Lark
-Lane; tell me, dad, where should that be now?” Lady Peggy has a careless
-air, and flecks a buzzing fly out of His Lordship’s bowl of porridge.
-
-“Eh?” pursues she, “is’t for instance, in the city, or nigh London
-Bridge, or where the quality lives, or toward Southwark, or where?”
-
-“Rot me!” cries His Lordship, looking up at his daughter in surprise,
-“what’s my poppet got into her pretty head now, forsooth? Tut, tut,
-girl, what’s town to thee, or its bearings? hey? stick thy eye into thy
-churn an’ keep thy hand on the dasher,—’twere better’n all the shops in
-Piccadilly, or all the fops at Court.”
-
-“Slow, dad! I was only askin’ of my twin’s whereabouts. Shops and fops
-are not dizzyin’ your Peggy, you may swear; ’tis my brother, Sir, of
-whom I’d learn!”
-
-“’Twere better chase the scoundrel out’n my head, Peg, than hammer him
-in! A lad with every chance here in the county to raise his house, and
-make a good match with a nice plump girl, havin’ land joining his own;
-but no! Up and off to town to starve and scratch!”
-
-The Earl pommels the floor with his stick, causing the cat to leap into
-the air.
-
-“Let him die in want! Let him freeze, thirst, come to the gallows, say
-I! For such as leaves plenty to pursue want, gets no sympathy from me!”
-
-“He ain’t begged for’t yet, dad,” says Peggy very mildly. “All I was
-a-wonderin’ was this: When my brother took the coach at the Mermaid that
-mornin’ you mind? how far off the inn where he alighted was the lodgin’
-at the corner of Holywell Road and Lark Lane?—eh, dad? Surely”—and here
-Lady Peggy knelt and stroked his lordship’s gouty member, and her voice
-positively trembled, doubtless with excess of filial zeal and devotion.
-
-“Surely,” resumed she, “you, who were, I dare be sworn”—such arch eyes
-as Lady Peggy now made!—“a fine gallant not so many years ago, must
-remember that,—don’t you?”
-
-“Let’s see, let’s see,” responds His Lordship, rubbing his head. “They
-set ye down at the King’s Arms, nigh the Bridge, Southwark Bridge, yes;
-Well! Damme! I ought to know! Lark Lane? A devil of a hole; why, girl!
-it’s not a quarter hour’s trot from the inn, but it’s a beastly
-environment. Gad! that son of mine chooses pens, ink and writing-paper
-there, rather than—”
-
-“Lady Belinda here, weight fourteen stone; acres two thousand; guineas,
-countless; temper, amazin’; years, untold! ha! ha! ha! Oh, daddy!” Lady
-Peggy springs up and dances about a minute in most genuine gaiety, then
-she seizes her father’s head between her palms and hugs and kisses him
-with much grateful warmth; then flops down a-coddling of the gout again;
-laughing, giggling, pinching puss, and saying,—
-
-“Daddy, drop London! Care I no more for’t. Know I quite enough. Let’s
-chat of aught else in the world, until you fall a-napping, which will be
-soon now, guessing by the shadows.”
-
-’Twas very soon.
-
-Then Lady Peggy tiptoed off to her chamber; then she pulled the rope
-that rang in the kitchen, and presently Chockey came, chopper and bowl
-in hand, checkered apron over white one; for serving maids were scarce
-in Kennaston Hall, footmen there were none; butler there was when he was
-not doing t’other half his duty at the stables.
-
-“Come hither, Chockey,” says her mistress in a whisper, with a beckon.
-“Shut the door; go on with choppin’ your leeks and carrots, cook’ll want
-’em for the soup,—but listen, Chock; unlock your ears Jane Chockey, as
-never you did before in your life.”
-
-Chockey bobs as she chops, leaning against the headpost, for support of
-her occupation, and also of her curiosity.
-
-“You know my mother’s box, the small one that was re-covered last spring
-with the skin of the red calf that died natural? Bickers put it on with
-a gross of brass nails?”
-
-Chockey again bobs.
-
-“Put into it,” continues Lady Peggy, “a change of linen for yourself and
-me, two night-rails,” Chockey’s eyes dilate, “my gray taffeta gown with
-the flowered petticoat, my green hood and kerchief; powder, patch-box,
-lavender, musk, pins, needles; my red silken hose; your Sunday cap and
-sleeves”—Chockey’s chopper ceases to work, and the bed-post creaks. “All
-of which,” continues her mistress, “is but prelude to saying: ‘I’m going
-up to London by to-morrow’s coach, and I’m takin’ you with me!’”
-
-“Madam!” Down goes the bowl, leeks, carrots, chopper and all a-spilling
-over the floor.
-
-“Aye,” says Peggy calmly, “gather up thy mess, Chock, and to work with
-the duds. Lay out my Levantine gown, my blue kerchief, my black silk
-hose, my brown cloak; and, from my mother’s press, take the thick fall
-of Brussels lace and the brown bonnet it’s tied to, and bring ’em
-hither; put them under the bed beside thy trundle so’s my father’ll not
-see ’em when he stops to bid me good-night. Borrow cook’s hat she bought
-at the Fair when she was young, and her delaine veil for thyself; for,
-so appareled as not to be recognized, will you, dear Chock, and my Lady
-Peggy take the coach on April the twelfth. But, Chock, remember, mum’s
-the word, an you let your tongue wag to my undoing, but the thousandth
-part of a syllable, your mistress and you part company forever! Go.”
-
-Chockey picked up Lady Peggy’s waving hand between a pinch of her apron,
-lest her onion-smelling fingers should foul so dainty a morsel, kissed
-it, and off and obeyed, speechless from surprise and veneration, both.
-
-At night’s fall,—the Earl, somnolent again from fire’s warmth and the
-port he would take, despite the surgeon’s orders to the contrary,—Lady
-Peggy, Chockey in her wake, purse in hand, went scouting through the
-kitchen-garden, the paddocks, the cowyard to the stable where Bickers’s
-pipe shone in the gloaming like a fire-gem as he dodged and lurched
-after a refractory colt.
-
-Bickers, albeit sometimes the slave of beer, was all times Lady Peggy’s
-abject, and it took no effort nor persuasion to gain him to her will. He
-took his orders amiably,—they were to secure two places in the London
-mail for to-morrow morning, and strictly to hold his peace both now and
-forever about the whole concern.
-
-Peggy gave him the price of the seats and with wise Castle-mistress
-foresight, she showed Bickers a sovereign beside.
-
-“And Bickers,” said Lady Peggy, “considering that the devil walks abroad
-often in the Mermaid’s tap-room, I am told, I’ll keep the sovereign for
-you ’til you come back, lest he rob you of it, eh?”
-
-“Well, My Lady,” said Bickers; “a whole sovereign, My Lady, ain’t often
-seen out of the quality’s pockets, and the devil might think I’d stole
-it, My Lady, and try to get it from me. Keep it, My Lady, keep it!”
-
-With which the old man, having conquered the colt, set off for the
-village by a side-path all too well known to his tread. Presently by the
-spark in his pipe-bowl the two women saw that he had turned back; that,
-as he came close to them, he clapped his thumb over the glow, and,
-
-“My Lady Peggy,” mumbled he sheepishly.
-
-“Whatever is’t, Bickers?” cries his mistress in alarm.
-
-“Naught to fright ye, My Lady, only it’s been on my mind these many days
-to tell you as the letter you sent me with to Sir Percy de Bohun—”
-
-“Well, well?” Lady Peggy’s words came with a gasp, as the old man dead
-stops.
-
-“Go on Bickers, I say!” the mistress’s foot stamps with a thud on the
-damp earth.
-
-“Askin’ Your Ladyship’s parding, the devil caught me that time at the
-Kennaston Arms, My Lady, and he clawed that tight, My Lady, that I
-couldn’t stir, and—and—”
-
-Peggy now stooped, seized a billet of wood as big as her arm and gave
-Bickers a sound drub across his hands. The pipe fell in bits, the ash
-glowed; Bickers jumped, so did Chockey.
-
-“‘And, and’ what?” drubbed Peggy with a will. “Not so much as ha’ penny
-of the sovereign, unless you out with the whole truth!”
-
-“I will! I will!” cried the old man. “Sir Percy never got the letter, My
-Lady, until the very day I seen him on the long roan a-ridin’ for’s life
-away from the Castle yonder,” and Bickers jerked his thumb toward the
-house as he now made off.
-
-The devil did not catch Bickers that night; he earned his sovereign
-before the moon rose.
-
-As he sped, Lady Peggy took Chockey’s proffered arm.
-
-“You see, Chock, you see, how we that are born to wear petticoats are no
-better’n puppets! a-dancin’ and a-cryin’; or a-kneelin’ and a-weepin’,
-as it happens to suit the whim of what, Chock? Who, Chock? Tell me,
-Chock!” cries Lady Peggy excitedly.
-
-“Lawk, My Lady, that can I not!”
-
-“A man, Chock, a man! it’s a him that pulls the strings, girl, and all
-we’ve to do is to simper and jerk this way, that way. To think,” here
-Peggy’s voice falters, for they’ve gained the house and are clambering
-the back stairs in the dark. “To think that Bickers, Bickers! should ha’
-made me treat my worshiped Percy like a hog! Yes, Chockey, like a hog!
-even that name ain’t vile enough for me. But, oh, an I reach London in
-safety, and gain my brother’s chambers, and learn from him that ’tis for
-very love of me Sir Percy’s canterin’ to perdition, then, Chock, Lady
-Peggy’ll know how to spell paradise for him she’s riskin’ much to hear
-the truth about.”
-
-“But, My Lady,” ventures Chockey, who, notwithstanding the blissful
-prospect of seeing London, still had a practical eye toward the dangers
-that beset the path, both thereto, and once there.
-
-“But, My Lady, supposin’ we can’t find Lord Kennaston’s lodgin’s;
-supposin’ he’s away from home when we get there; or, a-havin’ a party,
-or ain’t got no place for us to sleep; or suppose—”
-
-“Suppose me no supposes, Chock!” Lady Peggy shakes out the Levantine
-gown from its wrinkles. “If London were the black pit, and an army of
-Satans a-sittin’ grinnin’ around the brim, still would I go and find out
-for myself if it’s for me he pines—or, if Lady Diana Weston is up in
-London too!” With which Her Ladyship gives the petticoat, she takes from
-its peg against the morrow, a somewhat emphatic, not to say malicious
-shake.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- _Wherein is recounted how Her Ladyship set
- forth, accompanied by her faithful
- woman, for London Town._
-
-
-Whoever knows the rare delights of an English dawn nowadays can figure
-for himself, to the letter, how ’twas when Lady Peggy and Chockey, after
-a make-haste toilet in the dark, slipped out into the sweetness that
-long-ago spring morning. The mists were rolling and creeping slowly back
-and over from the river-meadows; the brawl of the stream tinkled in
-their ears; the scents of the flower-garden next the court-yard of the
-Castle, came potently, lured by the flush that by now was tingeing all
-the pallid east with rose; the yellow moon hung low to her setting, and
-two stars for handmaidens still shone, of all her million troupe, at
-either side the disk; yonder, the steeple of the church pricked up to
-heaven; hither, the oaks, greening to their full leafage; there a brown
-rabbit scurried across the road; here the rooks hopped and ha-ha-ed to
-their fellows. Else, ’twas all a-hush with that recurring fond
-expectancy of hope, with which every day of every year so waits and
-wonders for “to-morrow” to be born.
-
-Lady Peggy took the lead, kirtle high upheld, shoes soon bedrabbled in
-the dust and dew. Chockey, bearing the newly-covered box in her stout
-arms, followed close at heel. Both women, veiled double, and being
-wholly unused to such matters, sighting the path much the worse for the
-covering; in fact Peggy stumbled along like some old crone, and yet
-laughed under her breath merrily back at floundering Chockey.
-
-“Hist! Chock, had I now but brought dad’s cane and snuff-box, I must
-sure be taken for some three-score dame come yawning out of bed before
-her hour, to overtake, mayhap, a recreant grandson! Zounds! as my twin’d
-say, were he here,” and hauling at the mischievous Brussels veil, down
-flopped Her Ladyship, on her knees betwixt two villainous ruts.
-
-“Oh, My Lady!” moaned the waiting-woman panting under cook’s delaine and
-the calf-skin box. “Lord ha’ mercy! an this be the way to London. I’d
-liefer be sittin’ in the kitchen chimney a-blessin’ my porridge and
-spoonin’ of’t, than this!” assisting her mistress to her feet.
-
-“Fie upon thee, Chock! Remember you’re waiting-woman now to a lady of
-fashion, to wit myself, and well used to journeys up to town in coaches
-every season! Lud!” Here Peggy stood in a puddle to take breath. “I
-wonder if we’ll ever pass muster at the inn; and yet I’m sure, landlord,
-or dame, or hostler’d never think o’ me.”
-
-“Haste, Madam,” returns Chockey, “for do not forget the coach starts at
-five on the stroke, and we’ve still the quarter-mile to go.”
-
-So on they went. My Lady Peggy unable to restrain, from time to time,
-however, the keen relishful overflow of her spirits. When one’s young
-and not ailing, a new day whips the blood and brain to such a pinnacle
-of unquestioning gladness as breaks bonds, be they never so weighty,
-and, pro tem., sweet few-years comrades him with the happiness of earth
-and air and sky.
-
-But once the curl of cheerful smoke from the “Mermaid” chimney full in
-view above the oak-tops, My Lady sobered much, and, clutching Chockey’s
-arm, both fell a-trembling; stood stock-still, and stared into each
-other’s eyes, as lace and wool would let.
-
-“Lady Peggy,” cries Chockey, “an it please Your Ladyship,” with
-tell-tale gasps of throat, “let’s go back home!”
-
-“Jane Chockey!” answered her mistress, only needing this spur to set her
-a-panting the more to her purpose, “we’ll go on.”
-
-And on they went. Peggy with a measured tread; Chockey plodding after.
-Into the inn-yard, where even now the great coach with its four bays
-waited the signal to start.
-
-The passengers were piling on; and, atop already, quipped a trio of
-college lads in beavers. There stood mine host and hostess, maids, men,
-boys, cooks, and scullions; tips were tossed, baggage packed in the
-boot; farewells spoken; candles held high, lashes cracked; prancing,
-pawing; a rattle, a door-bang, curtsies, bows,—
-
-“All h’up for the London mail!” shouted the coachman merrily.
-
-And Lady Peggy and her woman, neatly sandwiched between a fat, fussy
-dowager and a swearing, tearing old gentleman who together absorbed the
-most of the vehicle and all the attention of their fellow passengers,
-found themselves on the road to town.
-
-No one paid the least heed to them, save that, at the stops, the guard
-came civilly to ask Chockey if her mistress required any refreshment, to
-the which Chockey, well prepared, always answered “no”; since, to raise
-their veils might betray their identity. So ’twas in hunger, silence and
-oblivion that the momentous journey was taken.
-
-When they crossed the heath, the testy old gentleman did turn toward
-Peggy, thereby flattening her the more, and, pulling out a brace of
-pistols, said:
-
-“Have no fears, Madam, I’ve traveled this road these sixty years,
-probably you have yourself”—thus paying tribute to Peggy’s now trembling
-agitation, which he pleasantly mistook for age.
-
-“And the damned rascals, Madam, know better’n to attack the coach when
-I’m aboard. You’re not in fear?” now bending a pair of sharp old eyes on
-the Brussels lace.
-
-Lady Peggy, smothering her laughter, and recalling how often,
-half-a-score years ago, she’s sat on this old gentleman’s knee (he was a
-friend of her father’s), puts hand to ear, and nudges Chockey behind the
-broad back of the dowager.
-
-The old gentleman nods comprehendingly, turns square to Chockey, and
-says “deaf?”
-
-And Chockey, divided between terror and mirth, nods back again.
-
-Without other incident, the journey up to the great city is
-accomplished, and, by three in the afternoon, up pull the four horses
-before the door of the King’s Arms in the Strand, and Lady Peggy, and
-her woman, and her box, are set down in the yard, amid the din and
-bustle incident always to the arrival of travelers.
-
-[Illustration: And Lady Peggy and her woman...]
-
-Not much attention is bestowed on them. A couple of unpretending
-appearing women, evidently not persons of quality, as the meek little
-calf-skin box is their sole belonging; coming up to London too without
-even one man-servant,—bespeak but little consideration in the throng of
-ladies of fashion, gallants over their coffee, courtiers popping in for
-the news, sparks intent on ogling a pretty face or noting a trim ankle,
-that much o’er crowded the yard, ordinary and parlor of the King’s Arms.
-
-Just here once, for an instant, Lady Peggy’s brave heart failed her;
-most, when she espied at the door, just getting into her
-silken-curtained chair, a lady, so young and beautiful, so richly girt,
-so spick and span, with such wonderful patches and such snowy powdered
-locks, such sparkling eyes, such begemmed fingers glistening through her
-mitts,—and knew at once that Lady Diana Weston was indeed “in town”!
-
-She faltered a bit, indeed sank down on the box which Chockey had set in
-a corner of the yard, and, for a brief moment, both mistress and maid
-bedewed their masking falls with a few splashing tears.
-
-Then spoke Lady Peggy, rising and plucking up her spirits,—“Chock,” said
-she, “beckon me a boy from yonder group; inquire the path to the corner
-of Holywell Road and Lark Lane; order him shoulder the box and lead the
-way. Speak with a swagger, Chock; knock the drops out of your lashes
-with a laugh, girl! Let ’em think we’re old hands at the town and used
-to bein’ waited upon!” Lady Peggy straightened herself in her grimy
-shoes, and gave the Levantine a twitch which she hoped was quite the
-mode.
-
-Meantime Chockey did her mistress’s bidding, and in less time than it
-takes to set it down, the two were following the lad, in and out of such
-a net and mazework of streets and lanes as set their heads a-whirling;
-now they wheeled around this bend, now across that alley,—foul-smelling
-as a ditch or a dirty dog; anon up a broader way where knockers shone
-and chairs waited at the curb; then a cut down here, and at last this
-was Holywell Road and yonder the opening of Lark Lane.
-
-Well, to be sure, ’twas a sorry spot. As Lady Peggy paid the boy and
-stood on the step, she ruefully surveyed the environment; the
-wig-maker’s opposite, with a wig in the window, she half-laughingly
-noted, the very yellow counterpart of Sir Robin McTart’s round pate; a
-dingy chocolate-house at t’other end of the row of dark, timbered,
-nodding houses; and this one of the stretch, taller, grimier even than
-its forlorn neighbors, was where poor scribbling Kennaston hunted that
-jade called Fame!
-
-At double-knock, came hobbling the charwoman, loath to be disturbed at
-her twilight pipe, but brisking at sight of Lady Peggy’s now uncovered
-face and shilling between fingers.
-
-“Yes, indeed, here His Lordship lodged and ate; was His Lordship at
-’ome? Nay, that was he not! but surely might be before cock-crow
-to-morrow! His Lordship’s sister! Lawk! Would Her Ladyship and Her
-Ladyship’s woman condescend to come in and mount? What a beautiful
-surprise for ’is young Lordship when he did get ’ome to be sure! No, he
-’adn’t gone out alone, a gay spark, a gentleman of the first quality ’ad
-come, as often ’e did, and fetched h’off His Lordship with ’im, last
-night; ’is name? Was it Sir Robin McTart peradventure? No, no, that was
-a name she ’ad never ’eard! ’Twas no Duke nor Earl neither, but a—Sir,
-Sir—?”
-
-And as the old woman and Chockey, carrying the calf-skin box between
-them, reached the last landing and set their burden down in
-thankfulness, Lady Peggy, feeling the way, said:
-
-“Sir Percy de Bohun, perchance? Methinks my brother has a companion by
-some such title!”
-
-“Aye, that’s ’im! Ah, My Lady, as splendid a gentleman as ever sang ‘God
-save the King!’ free with ’is sovereigns, My Lady, as trees is with
-their nuts; and, to match ’im for oaths! there’s not that Prince o’ the
-blood as can swear so beautiful when ’e’s dead drunk. These is ‘is
-Lordship’s your brother’s chambers, My Lady!” throwing open the door and
-ushering Peggy and her servitor into as dingy, dirty, empty, sad, bare,
-and unkempt an appearing place as ever mortal and intrepid lady set two
-tired feet within.
-
-But Lady Peggy, for the nonce, was only eager on one point.
-
-“Drunk, say you, dame? and wherefore should so generous a young
-gentleman be a-gallopin‘ that silly road, eh?”
-
-“Lawk! Your Ladyship! ‘ow should I know? but His Lordship’s own
-gentleman, My Lady, what ‘olds ‘im up and steadies His Lordship in ‘is
-cups, do say”—the old charwoman, whisking the dust of ages from a wooden
-chair, sets it for Lady Peggy and bends to tidy the hearth and gather
-together the few shingles and faggots strewn about.
-
-“‘Say’ what?” urges Peggy, with eager eyes and a sixpence shining in her
-hand (another shilling’s more than she dare hazard of her slender
-store).
-
-“Do say, My Lady,—God bless Your Ladyship’s sweet face! as it’s h’all on
-account of a young lady!”
-
-Lady Peggy’s eyes sparkle and all at once the smoky room seems cheerful,
-and the tardy blaze in the fire-place glows and thaws her chilled bones
-and blood.
-
-“Ah?” she says, smiling.
-
-“Yes, My Lady, a splendid young lady of fashion, an heiress, a beauty,
-with half London a-danglin’ after ’er; and ’er that ’aughty, as if she
-was of the royal family, and ’im a-killin’ ’imself for ’er sake!”
-
-And back again slide Kennaston’s chambers into their original depravity
-of dirt and dreariness; and down goes the charwoman to her pipe; and
-Lady Peggy on the wooden chair, Chockey on the box, spread their fingers
-to the reluctant warmth and are silent; while the clock ticks on the
-mantel-shelf; while the slit of blue that peers in at the window, grays;
-while the noises that are all new to these two, come rasping, roaring,
-shouting up to them through the broken pane—the dizzying, multitudinous,
-incoherent surge of London town, as it first smites ears not yet wonted
-to its fascination or its meaning—merely lonely, forlorn, dispirited
-new-comers who have not yet learned the passion and the melody that lie
-hidden in its Babel.
-
-The waiting-woman is the first to move; with the homely excellent
-instincts of her class, she rises, and, after a slow glance around the
-place, falls “a-reddin’ of it up” as she mentally designated her
-attempt. She seized the stumpy broom from its corner and swept the
-floor, brushed the maze of cobwebs from ceiling and walls; beat the
-mats; wiped the stools and table, the broad window-sills and the
-shelves; shook out the dingy, ink-stained cloth; straightened the litter
-of books and papers, quills and horns; and finally went a-peering into
-the cupboards. A grimy coffee-pot and a well-matching kettle were fished
-out and rubbed; the kettle filled with water from the tubfull on the
-landing and straightway hung upon the crane; plates and cups and saucers
-and spoons brought forth; a paper of coffee, a jug of milk and a bottle
-of sugar discovered, and presently Chockey handed her mistress a cup of
-steaming mocha and modestly poured one for herself.
-
-“Oh, Chock!” cries Lady Peggy, setting down the empty cup. “What a fool
-was I to come! What am I, forsooth, in all this great desert but a grain
-of sand! And Percy, not,” Lady Peggy stamps her muddy red-heeled shoe
-fiercely, “a-dyin’ for me in the least! and my twin a-livin’ in such a
-hole! wherever does he sleep, Chock?” Surveying the barn-like apartment
-in disgust and dismay, her gaze finally arrested by a ladder slanting in
-the darkest corner and reaching up to an opening in the ceiling.
-
-“Up there, I dare be sworn! Lud! If this ’tis to be an author,” flouts
-Peggy, “God ha’ mercy on ’em! I tell you what, Chock. I’ll tarry a
-little, have a word with Kennaston; then we’ll back, girl, whence we
-came, quick; I’ll send word to Sir Robin McTart, and then let
-weddin’-bells ring as soon as ever he sees fit. No more o’ love for me,
-Chock. I’m done with it forever in this world; I’ll take marriage
-instead!”
-
-Chockey shakes her head ruefully as her mistress, more to emphasize her
-latest resolve than from any other motive, flings wide open the cracked
-doors of the clothes-press next the chimney-piece and gives a
-tempestuous shake-out to the garments a-hanging on the pegs.
-
-“Lud! look! Kennaston’s suit of gray velvets, not much the worse for
-wear! Small need has the poor lad for fine clothes, I warrant ye; most
-like a-keepin’ of ’em for pawn-shop use and bread and butter! Chock,
-unlock the box, and get out the waistcoat I broidered for my twin, at
-much expense of temper, against his birthday. So! Smooth it out! it’s
-brave, eh, Chock? Fit for Court, I should fancy, and, that’s right, the
-laced cravat! poor duck, I do misdoubt me, if he’s seen a frill on his
-wrist since quittin’ home! There!”
-
-Lady Peggy surveys the gifts she’s brought, as Chockey takes them out.
-
-“Lawk, Madam, ’twere better, were’t not, I bundle all Your Ladyship’s
-duds and mine up yonder against His Lordship’s comin’?”
-
-“Right, Chock! up with ’em, and I’ll steady the road while you climb!”
-Suiting action to word, as Chockey, bearing the calf-skin box,
-cautiously mounts the rickety ladder.
-
-“What’s it like, Chock?”
-
-“Nothin’ I ever seed afore, My Lady; dark, stuffy; a mattress
-a-sprawlin’ on the bare boards, and a pair of torn quilts, and a piller
-no bigger’n my fist, that’s all!”
-
-“Enough, Chock; you and I can sleep our one night in London there as
-soundly,” Lady Peggy’s proud lip quivers, “as I could on down or ’twixt
-my mother’s best lamb’s wool! Come down, Chock, by the fire; and list,
-to-morrow, at first crow, we’ll back to Kennaston. We’ll ’a’ been up to
-town, Chock! and, savin’ my twin, never will Lady Peggy look again on
-face of any man who now treads London street. I swear!”
-
-“Hark, Madam!”
-
-Chockey jumps from the ladder, eyes a-popping, while the hubbub in the
-street below cuts short her mistress’s valiant speech. Such a
-hullaballoo; such a shouting, echoing from one end of the precinct to
-t’other, as speeds mistress and maid both to the window, a-craning their
-necks far out; as sends the charwoman from her ingle-nook under ground,
-a-hobbling up the steep four flights.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- _In the which is rehearsed how Her Ladyship
- did nimbly slip into man’s
- attire and estate._
-
-
-Through the fast gathering mist, through the smoke that’s London’s own,
-the two women leaning behold a gay company of gallants rounding the far
-corner, two hundred feet away; linked arms, swords a-touching, heels
-a-clattering; one voice high and young, uplifted in a lilt like this:
-Lady Peggy had heard that voice before.
-
- _In years to come when gallants sing,
- In praise of ladies fair,
- All will allow, I pledge you square,
- That brighter eyes n’er banished care,
- Than those that bade us do and dare,
- When George the Third was King!
- Let roof and rafter chime and ring,
- Let echo shout it back: we sing
- The merry days, My Lords and Sirs!
- When George the Third is King!_
-
-And at the chorus, a brave dozen more of pairs of lusty lungs to take it
-up and urge it on with flashing rapiers, knocking points, in the flare
-of the lights from the coffee-house at hand; and good twelve of plumed
-hats a-tossing in the air, and catch-again; and laughter loud and long,
-then dying down as that fresh sweet voice begins its second verse, and
-just so the old charwoman knocks hastily at the door, calling in Lady
-Peggy’s head and Chockey’s from the open.
-
-“’H’askin’ Your Ladyship’s parding,” says she, “but I thought it no
-more’n my duty to acquaint Your Ladyship, as can’t see from this ’eight,
-that Your Ladyship’s brother, Lord Kennaston’s a-comin’ ’ome, and
-a-bringin’ with ’im ’is comrades, among ’em, Sir Percy de Bohun, and
-mayhap ’er Ladyship’d like best,”—now addressing Chockey, as Lady Peggy
-paced the floor in a too-evident agitation—“like best,” continued the
-dame, “to ’ide ’erself, and h’if so, the noble gentlemen h’all of ’em,
-I’m thinkin’, bein’ summat raised with wine, my ’umble bit of a place
-h’is h’at Her Ladyship’s service for the night or as long as Her
-Ladyship sees fit, for I am this minute sent for to go down into the
-country immediate, where, God help us all! my tenth daughter what’s
-married to her second husband lies at death’s door!”
-
-And all the while the old charwoman is speaking between her bits of
-broken teeth, Peggy hears that other voice uplifted, ringing, gay, glad,
-care-free, as it seems to her strained ears, up and down the darkening
-little street, tapping at the window-panes, tapping at her heart-strings
-and stretching them to such a tension of anger, outraged pride, and
-wounded affection as never Lady suffered before.
-
-She thanks the old woman and hastily dismisses her; then facing about
-from the window whence she has been able to descry the merry group
-making a rush into the coffee-house, Her Ladyship, seized by a sudden
-mad impulse, says to her woman:
-
-“Chock, take my purse, tumble as fast as your two legs can carry you
-down, out, across to the wigmaker’s we laughed at when we came in, buy
-me the yellow wig, Chock, that adorns the front, an’ come not back
-without it, an you love me, Chock; wheedle, coax, promise more’n there
-is here,” sticking the purse in the astounded woman’s hand, “but get me
-the wig that is the very double of dear Sir Robin’s own sweet pate!” She
-pushes Chockey out on the landing with an impetus that sends her well on
-her errand, and then, shutting and buttoning the door, Lady Peggy gets
-herself out of her furbelows and petticoats, her stays, her bodice, her
-collar, brooch, kerchief, pocket, hoop and hair pins, and into her
-brother’s suit of grays, the new waistcoat and cravat she’s brought him
-for a gift; she tips the coffee-pot and washes her face and pretty
-throat and hands in the brown liquid; she plaits her long hair and winds
-it close and tight about her head; she buckles on Kennaston’s
-Court-rapier, she fetches his gray plumed hat with its paste buckle from
-the press; she ogles herself in the six-inch mirror; she swaggers,
-swings, struts; and, says she, dipping her finger in the soot of the old
-chimney and marking out two black beetling brows over her own slender
-ones,—
-
-“An I know not how to play at being Sir Robin, Lady Peggy’s chosen
-sweetheart, boldly and with a loud voice; know not how to swear and
-prance and pick a pretty quarrel, crying ‘Match me your Lady Diana with
-my Lady Peggy!’ then never did I dozen times for sport don my twin’s
-breeches and coat and masquerade at being that sweet creature,—a man!
-Ha! I have it all at fingers’ ends!” cries Peggy, fumbling in her
-discarded pocket. “Here’s the very letter I writ for Sir Robin to take
-and present to my brother. ’Twill stand me in good stead to-night that I
-forgot to give it to him. If Chockey but succeed in cajoling the man out
-of his wig, an’ if the gallants come not ere I can fit it to my
-head!”—opening the door impetuously almost to bump against the returning
-Chockey’s nose.
-
-“Thou hast it! Oh Chock! ’Tis I! be not afraid. Come in; adjust it to my
-poll,—so! Lose not a moment; pick up my petticoats, leave not a scrap
-that bespeaks a woman; there! You’re dropping a hair-pin; now, up with
-ye to the loft! an’ no matter if rats nibble your toes, Chock, or mice
-come play bo-peep with your eye-winkers, or spiders weave across your
-mouth, an you stir, cry out, move an inch to the creaking of a board,
-I’ll leave you here your lone self to shift as best you may! Up girl!”
-touching the speechless Chockey with the rapier-tip urgingly, “and ’tis
-Sir Robin McTart that bids you!”
-
-The obedient and trembling waiting-woman was not much sooner out of
-sight in the loft, than again the voice echoed up to where Lady Peggy
-stood in the gruesome ambush of the landing, well back in the darkest
-corner behind a pile of boards and débris, bricks and dust, and
-what-not-else tumbled there from the chimney during the last and many
-previous storms.
-
-Nearer came the song, then the chorus, broken now with more of chat and
-laughter; the footsteps sound upon the street, the house-door opens,
-slams, and up they troop, stumbling in the blackness but knowing well
-the way, it seems; merry, jocund, up, up, with the refrain of the song
-still lingering amid their talk in snatches, until they gain the top.
-
-“Are we then indeed at your door, Kennaston?” cries the first to reach,
-as he feels at the latch.
-
-“Split me, Escombe, you’re there if you can go no farther. Egad! Sirs,”
-cries the young host, “an I never reach to pinnacle of Fame’s ladder, at
-the least do I lodge as high as I could get:—a roof that suits my empty
-purse!”
-
-“Nay, Kennaston.” Peggy, in her man’s gear, trembles at sound of that
-tone, for ’tis Percy who speaks now, whiles they all push pell-mell into
-her twin’s chambers, strike lights, pull out candles from cupboard, stir
-the fire.
-
-“Nay, Kennaston,” says this one, “while De Bohun lives there’s ever a
-full purse lad, t’ exchange for thy empty one,—and well thou know’st
-it.”
-
-“Tut, tut!” answers the young man of letters, adding as he glances
-about, “’pon my soul, gentlemen, my Hebe has been outdoing herself. Saw
-we ever before in this room, stools lacking dust? floor, riff-raff?
-walls their festoons? hearth its ashes? coffee-pot its rust? and, by my
-life, the kettle filled and steaming!”
-
-A peal of mirth greets this nimble sally, as the host pulls from the
-table drawer a pack of cards and his guests from their pockets a dozen
-bottles of Falernian.
-
-“Dead broke, am I, My Lords and Gentlemen,” says he, “but here’s the
-whole Court and the deuce,” flinging the pack in the midst of his
-guests, “play away an ye’ve a shilling left amongst ye. Let it be
-Commerce or Hazard; I’ll hold the counters; fill the glasses, as long as
-there’s a drop to pour; keep a lookout for sharpers,” laughing, “and
-thank God I’ve even a garret wherein to welcome men of vogue like
-yourselves!”
-
-A burst of applause follows this; plumed hats are tossed aside,
-wrist-frills upturned; His Grace of Escombe is shuffling the pack; Sir
-Percy stands with his back to the fire, coat-skirts held from the
-cheerful blaze he’s made; stools are drawn up; the host takes his silk
-kerchief from his throat and polishes the mugs. Chockey has her eye
-glued to a chink in the cover that divides her loft from the scene of
-revelry below;—when, a bold knock sounds at the door, and the master
-with a cheery:
-
-“Come along!” throws wide the portal.
-
-The fine gentleman who stands before him makes a profound bow, to which
-he responds with one not less magnificent.
-
-“Allow me, Lord Kennaston of Kennaston, since it is, I am persuaded, the
-brother of Lady Peggy Burgoyne whom I have the pleasure of addressing—?”
-and at her name, Sir Percy lets his brocaded skirts flop and starts
-forward eagerly—“of addressing, to present to you this note in the
-hand-writing of Your Lordship’s adorable sister, the which she gave me,
-wherewith to present and commend me to Your Lordship’s good offices
-while I am up in town!”
-
-Another salaam given and returned, while Kennaston, with grace, ushers
-his new acquaintance in, sets him a stool, all the while eye
-quick-perusing Lady Peggy’s scrawl.
-
-“Gentlemen!” says their host, “allow me to introduce to you, and, Sir,
-these gentlemen to you, Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, His Grace
-of Escombe, Sir Percy de Bohun, the Honorable Jack Chalmers, Sir Wyatt
-Lovell,” etc., etc., etc. The which ceremony being concluded amid many
-bows and all due forms of mutual delight, the new-comer was cordially
-invited to take a hand in the game.
-
-Now, as true ’twas that Lady Peggy had never been in a coach until the
-morning to which this was evening, so true was it that Her Ladyship had
-not a farthing to her pocket left, and although a good gamester’s
-daughter, she hesitated, making pretense of hanging her hat and of
-settling to its proper place her rapier, and pinching her ruffles. While
-she did so, the rest chatting, Sir Percy crossed the room, and, in a
-tone that was not heard save by the one he addressed, said to Kennaston:
-
-“As I live, Sir, now’s my chance; I’ll pick a quarrel with this
-jackanapes that’s dared to oust me from Peggy’s heart. Aye, will I! the
-sooner the better; blood’ll spill, Kennaston, or ever that puppet and I
-are thirty minutes older! Mark me! Your sister shall know and hear I’m
-willing to die for her sake, or—to kill!”
-
-Peggy, meantime, in this second, got her courage well screwed up, and,
-with a laugh, fitly disguising her voice, said she, seating herself with
-her legs well under the table—for, at this particular juncture, Her
-Ladyship, looking down, had beheld with dismay the womanish and
-forgotten fashion of her shoes.
-
-“Rot me! Gentlemen, your humble servant’s fresh from Will’s, where, ’pon
-my life! such an apt company of wits and beaux encountered I, as swept
-my pockets clean and left me not the jingle of a shilling wherewith to
-bless myself. Your Grace, My Lords, Sirs, and Gentlemen,” quoth Peggy
-with a fine inclusive wave of her hand, “will, I’m sure, thus excuse me
-from the game to-night.”
-
-But she had counted without either host or guests, for all of these save
-Sir Percy de Bohun on the instant pulled purses out and tendered them,
-crying, as with a single voice,—
-
-“Fie! Fie! Sir Robin! Are we highwaymen? tricksters? Honor us by using
-our sovereigns as they were your own, eh, Sir Percy, have we not the
-right of the matter?” asked Jack Chalmers, turning to the tall young
-man, who, having crossed the room again, now stood leaning moodily
-against the chimney-piece, frowning, tapping hearth with heel in too
-evident impatience of the subject of discussion.
-
-“I humbly ask your pardon, Mr. Chalmers,” he replies, “both for
-differing with you all, and for expressing the same. To my way of
-thinking”—adds Sir Percy, with deliberation, ill-matched by the flash of
-his eyes as they take a scornful measure of the supposed Sir Robin—“to
-my way of thinking, any gentleman who carries his company into any other
-gentleman’s chambers without the means of a paltry game of loo or écarté
-in ’s pocket’s not quite such a proper young man ’s he might be!” And
-with this, Sir Percy laid his hand upon his sword hilt, and Kennaston
-laid his upon that, attempting to stay the torrent.
-
-“Tut! tut!” cried this one and that.
-
-“His Lordship’s dead drunk with Cupid, Sir Robin, mind him not,”
-whispers another.
-
-“De Bohun breaks a joke,” exclaims a third, all at once.
-
-And in the same moment, also, upsprings my Lady Peggy, hand on hilt too,
-and says she loudly, same time as the rest:
-
-“A pox on ye for a libeler! Sir Percy de Bohun, mayhap it’s the errand
-Your Lordship’s up in town a-pursuing hath turned Your Lordship’s
-brain?” Here Lady Peggy laughs in derision and stands full height
-updrawn upon her girl’s red heels.
-
-“Curse me! but you are impertinent, Sir,” responds Percy, taking a step
-forward, his anger rising as he beholds his purpose galloping to the
-goal of its quick fulfilment. “What then, an it please you, is my
-‘errand up in town?’ since you are thus familiar with my gaits; tell ’em
-off, Sir Robin McTart, I give ye leave!”
-
-“With your leave, or without it,” cries Peggy in a voice that causes
-Chockey to lift the loft-cover an inch higher, and so, kneeling with
-nose flattened against floor, to behold her mistress’s fine and splendid
-show of valor. “I’d have you hear, Sir, that to persons of fashion the
-matter of your suit near Lady Diana Weston’s a jeer and jest of the
-first flavour,—for ’twere easy seen a lady of her quality, Sir, ’d not
-be a-wasting her time on you.”
-
-“Damme! Sir!” cries Sir Percy, now thoroughly aroused and far more in
-earnest than ever he was at the beginning. “You lie! Aye, My Lords,
-Sirs, and Gentlemen! Nay, ye can not stop my mouth,” unsheathing his
-rapier; Peggy does likewise, each pushing and warding from them the
-restraining hands and words of their associates.
-
-“A foul lie! My errand up in town, Sir Robin McTart, is to try to drown
-my sorrows as I may, because the only lady that ever I loved set me the
-pace to the devil by a-refusing of my suit come Easter-day, three months
-to an hour ago.”
-
-Lady Peggy flushes under the coffee stains; her arm trembles; but she is
-valiantly happy and confident, and her heart goes beating the joyfullest
-sort of a tune beneath the ’broidered waistcoat she’d made for her twin.
-
-“And her name,” cries Sir Percy with a glance of imperious, aggressive
-temper shot right into Peggy’s very face,—“her name’s not Lady Diana
-Weston, but ’tis Lady Peggy Burgoyne!—”
-
-Now Chock’s whole head slips leash, and she bends with bated breath and
-heaving breast to listen closer.
-
-Lady Peggy starts, but waving her rapier over her head, laughs loud,
-long and derisively.
-
-“Lady Peggy Burgoyne, Sir,” shaking the hilt of his weapon under Peg’s
-nose, repeats Sir Percy. “And until you, Sir, with your damnable arts
-and silly bumpkin ways, when she encountered you in Kent, had turned her
-from me, she was to me kindest of ladies and of loves. Your servant, Sir
-Robin McTart,” concludes Percy with a low bow, sticking the floor with
-his rapier-point, “when and where you please!”
-
-“Here and now!” cries Peg, her heart a-thumping for joy, but so
-pleasured and alas! so puzzled with the getting out of a scrape, which
-she has found so little difficulty in getting into, that she is feign
-on, and make the best cut she can with her cloth.
-
-“Here and now!” repeats Her Ladyship, “for I do throw back into Your
-Lordship’s teeth the lie”—Peg bows low to her opponent—“you gave me
-whiles, and affirm that for these many years, or ever you, Sir, set eyes
-upon her, Lady Peggy Burgoyne’s been mine, heart and soul, Sir!”
-
-“Damn you, Sir!” interrupts Percy hotly, unable to contain his
-choler,—“to so defame the noblest lady that ever was born!”
-
-“I repeat,” cries Peggy, glowing with suppressed delight at her lover’s
-fidelity, and eager for as much more as he may have to vent. “Lady
-Peggy’s eyes are glued fast of this face of mine! Peggy’s hands are my
-hands! Peggy’s lips are my lips! Peggy’s kisses have ever been my
-kisses!”
-
-At this, Sir Percy tears off his coat, waistcoat, cravat; flings them
-into the corner; rolls up his sleeves, while a confused murmur
-circulates amid the gallants over their cards and Falernian wine.
-
-“Peggy’s heart beats in my breast!” continues Her Ladyship, ranting and
-swashing up and down the room; upsetting a couple of candles in her
-path, and now all unrecking of her womanish shoes. “Gentlemen,” panting,
-smiling, triumphant, saluting her companions with her weapon, “Lady
-Peggy and I do so adore, love and worship one another that we are not
-two but one!”
-
-“Here and now!” shouts Sir Percy. “Off with your coat and ruffles, Sir,
-and choose any two of these gentlemen to your seconds, Sir; I’ll take
-who’s left!”
-
-Chalmers and Kennaston press forward to Lady Peggy, while His Grace of
-Escombe and Mr. Wyatt cross to Sir Percy.
-
-“Lord Kennaston, I pray you pace off the distance,” says Lady Peggy, now
-at the top of her bent and delirious with joy over Percy’s love of her,
-with no least intention of touching him, good fencer though she be, and
-willing enough—such a woman is she—to risk a prick at his hands for sake
-of the after-salve of the mighty gratitude and passion the minx is now
-sure of.
-
-“Off with your trappings, Sir,” cries Percy.
-
-“That will I not!” cries Peggy, taking the first position on the field
-of honor in all the bravery of her twin’s suit of gray velvets. “You’ll
-kill me, an you do’t at all, with my clothes on ready to my burial, and
-I swear ye all, with my latest breath, Lady Peggy and I’ll lie in the
-same coffin when it comes to that ceremony.”
-
-Then in the smoky flare from the dying fire and the slovening candles
-stuck in their bottles; ’mid the murmur and succeeding hush of the
-gallants, some with cups, some with cards in their hands, Peggy and her
-lover salute and take their stands.
-
-Says she: “What’s the word, My Lord?”
-
-Says he: “If you like, let Lord Kennaston shake the dice-box; at the
-third throw, Sir, I’m here, ready food for your steel to flesh in!”
-
-“It suits me well,” answers Peg, as her twin rattles the ivories.
-“Here’s for Lady Peggy!” cries she.
-
-“Here’s for Lady Peggy Burgoyne!” shouts he, as Kennaston makes the
-third throw, and Chockey, like to swoon and she a stout heart, never-ail
-or afeard of even a churchyard on the darkest night, shaking like an
-aspen-leaf, puts foot on the top rung of the ladder; and Peg and Percy
-thrust, lunge, withdraw, riposte, hither, yon, keen-eyed, pitched to
-highest note, nerves strung to cracking—just for a few seconds, shorter
-time’n it takes to set it down, far.
-
-“A touch, a hit!” cry all at once as a spurt of blood darts up the
-supposed Sir Robin’s blade, and Percy bows, declaring himself quite
-satisfied, as he must, though ’tis a state of mind he’s very remote from
-enjoying.
-
-[Illustration: A touch, a hit!...]
-
-My Lady Peggy winces under her wound, but she has not been Kennaston’s
-playfellow for naught, and as ugly pricks as this one have been her
-portion in the past; Chockey, nevertheless, from her nest, pales and
-utters a smothered shriek which is quite lost in the loud talking that
-follows, while Chalmers winds the kerchief Sir Percy tenders about the
-wrist of the wounded.
-
-“Now to the cards, gentlemen,” cries His Grace of Escombe, pulling out
-his purse. “To such a gallant as our friend Sir Robin here, my fingers
-itch to lose ten, twenty, nay as many pounds as his skill can rid me of;
-for such a pretty play of the steel as his must argue a lucky throw of
-the dice.”
-
-“Hear! hear! hear!” shout they all, drinking brimming mugs to the two
-who have lately fought, and settling themselves at the tables with a
-rattle and a rush of laughter and merry humor.
-
-Lady Peggy sits, gritting her teeth at the slit in her white flesh, with
-her back to the door and, betwixt the uproar and clinking and shuffling,
-she hears footsteps coming up the stairs. Some intuition bids her be the
-one to respond to the rapping that presently sounds out.
-
-“Asking your pardon,” murmurs Her Ladyship to her companions as she
-quits the table. When, as she opens, a new-caught street urchin speaks
-sharp, with saucer eyes in-peering at the quality.
-
-“An it please yer Lordships, there’s a fine gentlemen below as his name
-is Sir Robin McTart.”
-
-Peggy draws in, bangs the door in the boy’s face, squares about, and
-says:
-
-“By your leave, gentlemen, a most particular messenger awaits me below;
-for a few moments only, I crave your indulgence for my absence. I’ll be
-with you in ten minutes.”
-
-“No! no! no!” cry they all, save De Bohun, who is counting his cards,
-and Sir Wyatt who exclaims:
-
-“Yes, an it be a messenger on business for a fair lady; no, an it be
-otherwise. Gadzooks! Sir Robin, make a half-clean breast of it. Comes
-Mercury from Phyllis or from a mere man?”
-
-Peg answers: “I swear to you, Sirs, I go down on business of the gravest
-import to a lady,” and makes for the door.
-
-“Pledge her! Pledge her! a bumper! a bumper!” cry they all in one voice
-with much pleasant laughter.
-
-“Here’s to Sir Robin’s nameless fair! Zounds! but for so little yeared a
-personage to have two strings to his bow!”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- _Wherein Lady Peggy doth encounter her flouted
- lover, receiveth a rapier-prick: makes acquaintance
- of her hated rival and
- of Mr. Brummell._
-
-
-And much more of a like nature reaches Lady Peggy as she plunges down
-the stairs and presently finds herself, by the light of the lamp of his
-chair, a-confronting Sir Robin McTart himself!
-
-“Nay, nay, Sir! I am not Kennaston of Kennaston,” responds Peg, looking
-grave, and making excellent show of her blood-stained, linen-bound
-wrist.
-
-“’Tis here he dwells, and, as I know well by reputation, you are a
-peaceful, law-abiding man, I’d counsel you not to mount. Such a company
-of cut-throat, cut-purse brawlers, Sir, as would not leave a farthing in
-your pocket or lace upon your shirt.”
-
-Sir Robin, as Her Ladyship had shrewdly guessed, drew back and shivered
-at this lively description.
-
-“Trust me, Sir Robin: hist!” Peg’s voice sinks to a mere whisper. “I am
-Lady Peggy’s best friend and neighbor at home; ’twould be her will, an
-she stood here, that you should not adventure your precious life in the
-unseemly crowd with which her brother hath seen fit to surround
-himself.”
-
-“Lud, Sir! Who are you,” chatters Sir Robin trembling betwixt delight
-and terror, “that knows so well the temper of Lady Peggy Burgoyne’s
-disposition? What’s your name, Sir?”
-
-“No matter for my name, Sir, I have Lady Peggy’s best interests at
-heart, and yours. She bade me, did ever I encounter you in evil
-neighborhood, tell you, for her sake, eschew it. Hark ye! Sir Robin, out
-of this hole as fast as your men’s legs can carry you. Above yonder, ’s
-one who’s sworn to kill you!”
-
-“Who’s he?” demands Sir Robin, one foot now in his sedan, his little
-eyes twinkling both ways with fright.
-
-“Sir Percy de Bohun,” replies Peg in a hollow whisper. “Look you, Sir,”
-showing her bloody wrist, “there’s a taste of his quality. I warn
-you—’tis from Peggy’s own self—get back to Kent, whence you came, and
-tarry not, for your life’s at yonder desperado’s mercy while you linger
-up in town.”
-
-“Is My Lady Peggy returned to Kent to her godmother?” quavers Sir Robin,
-now well inside his chair.
-
-“Nay, Sir; as her brother supposes, she’s at home at Kennaston.”
-
-“I’ll seek her there!” cries Sir Robin, tendering his hand. “And, Sir,
-my humble duty and gratitude to you for your admirable condescension. I
-would I knew your name and station.”
-
-“I’m up in town incognito, Sir, for a lady’s sake,” smiles the minx.
-
-“When I return, Sir, I’ll seek you out at White’s or Will’s. I dare be
-sworn so fine a gentleman must needs be a buck of the first order.”
-
-“Seek me, Sir, and Godspeed you down to Kennaston or Kent!”
-
-At the word, Sir Robin in his chair sets forth a-swinging round the
-corner, light of heart and bright of hope, while the subject and object
-of his thoughts and passion stands for a moment leaning, sighing,
-betwixt laughter and tears, against the door-frame.
-
-My Lady Peggy’s first impulse is to cut and run; indeed her slim legs
-are so stretched to begin, when the remembrance of poor Chock in her
-garret cage comes to her mind, and, with a grimace, she turns in, jumps
-up the stairs, and is in the midst of the group, now well on in their
-cups and more hilarious than orderly in their conversation.
-
-Peg was not her father’s girl for naught that night. To the tune of
-three hundred pounds, fourteen and six, was she the richer, and rewarded
-for the many dreary evenings she had spent at Kennaston, a-watching her
-father win and lose with the Vicar and the Bishop, whenever the latter
-came on his visits.
-
-By dint of spilling her wine deftly under the table, she had emptied as
-many mugs as the best bibber among ’em, and at four in the morning found
-herself the only one who was sober, or even awake.
-
-’Twas not a beautiful sight thus to behold, in the pale pink of the
-dawn, a dozen or so of merry gentlemen a-sprawling about on floor,
-tables, chairs,—a-snoring and a-tossing in their sleep; but ’twas of the
-fashion of the times when, to be a fine gentleman, one must be drunk, at
-the least, once in the twenty-four hours.
-
-All save Sir Percy; almost at swords’ points he had quitted the company
-hours before, a little in his cups, but steady withal, murmuring to
-himself as he fumbled on the rickety stairs—Peg, leaning over the rail,
-unseen in the darkness, womanlike to watch lest he trip and fall, heard
-him:
-
-“’Sdeath! an what that popinjay say be true, I’ll marry Lady Diana out
-of hand, and show the minx I’m not to be cut out of a wife by such a
-flea-bitten rotten-rod as Sir Robin McTart!”
-
-“So easy taken then is my loss!” says Peggy, with a renewed fire of
-jealousy burning at her heart, as she returns to the scene of her
-winnings.
-
-Sick at heart, for a single instant she surveys the room, and then,
-finger on lip, it does not take her long to signal up to Chockey, motion
-her down with the calf-skin box, and to begin, with shamed face, in the
-darkest corner, to strip off her man’s attire.
-
-Lady Peggy has laid aside the yellow wig; Chockey weeping, praying that
-they may get away in safety, is spreading out the Levantine fit for her
-mistress to jump into it, when, for the second time within the twelve
-hours, Her Ladyship’s heart stands still to the patter and thump of
-footsteps climbing the last flight.
-
-“Hold, Chock!” cries she, clapping on the wig. “Bundle up my duds, tie
-’em tight; so! give me it; pick up the box, put on your cloak and bonnet
-and a bold face; follow and ape me. An you love me, Chock, an’ I thrust,
-thrust too! an’ I knock ’em down, follow suit! I’d sooner die, Chock,
-than be caught now!”
-
-With which, My Lady Peggy flung wide the door, pushed out the Abigail,
-drew her weapon, and, with a rush, the two of them tumbled down the
-stairs, taking on their way a giant of a man who struggled and struck
-out, and dropped fruits and flowers and curses, and yet gave in to the
-splendid tweeks and pinches which the lusty Chockey dealt him on his
-arms and legs, and, falling headlong, on the lower stairs, darted up the
-street crying:
-
-“Watch!” at the top of his lungs, nor getting any answer, for Watch was
-snoring in the tavern and the sun now shining broad.
-
-“Chock,” said her mistress, “go you on before me to the King’s Arms,
-where we alighted, engage the seats in the coach, and hark ye, child, an
-aught betide I come not, get you home without me and tell His Lordship
-I’m gone to Kent on a sick-call from my godmother. Lud! it’s lies all
-the way to being a man! I’ll not walk with you, lass; ’tis not seemly,
-and when I reach the inn I’ll pretend I know you not, hire a room,
-change my clothes and slip down to you, unseen if I can. Now, off with
-you, quickly, for I ache to follow. Would to God I could doff these
-garments and into my petticoats again!” added Lady Peggy ruefully,
-glancing at her hastily tied up bundle and, at the same moment, with the
-broad of her sword, pushing Chock into the street with a will that sent
-her a-spinning on her way.
-
-Indifferent then, as though the outgoing damsel were no concern of hers,
-presently, with a swagger, yet ill-concealing the anxiety she felt
-afresh as now sobs and female voices assailed her ears, the mock Sir
-Robin McTart emerged upon the street.
-
-There halted a chair between the posts. In the chair sat Lady Diana
-Weston accompanied by her woman. Both wept and trembled, while still
-afar the stout lungs of the terrified giant shouted:
-
-“Watch!”
-
-Peg stood still and stared; all the jealous blood in her burned in her
-cheeks. Lady Diana here! and wherefore? and at such an untoward hour;
-veil displaced, eyes red, but still most undeniably handsome, nay
-beautiful.
-
-“Oh Sir!” cried Lady Diana beseechingly, raising two imploring hands
-outside the chair door toward Lady Peggy.
-
-“I pray of your honor!” whimpered the Abigail in concert.
-
-“I implore your protection, Sir, as you are a gentleman and man of
-honor, as your mien disposes me. I came here but now and sent my footman
-up to the rooms of a—a friend, who is ill, Sir,—with a token of regard
-in the shape of fruit and flowers, when the man must have been set upon
-by thieves and beaten, for he—”
-
-“I heard him,” finishes Peg, stepping nearer to the chair. “And I assure
-you, Madam, I put the varlet who attacked him to his pace with a prick.
-If I can serve you further, command me.”
-
-As My Lady bows low, she is conscious that it now behooves her to state
-concisely her name and station; and, loathing and hating the deception
-more than she could express, she still adds (her motive not unmixed with
-the natural curiosity to discover who is the object of Lady Diana’s
-morning call):
-
-“Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, at Your Ladyship’s service.”
-
-Diana bows, blushes, almost ogles, minx that she is, noting well the
-fine eyes and beautiful mouth of the gallant at her side.
-
-“Lady Diana Weston, Sir Robin, daughter to the Earl of Brookwood, at
-your service.”
-
-Peg bows, hat in hand, bundle under arm. Swift as youth’s impulse ever
-is, says she, taking lightning-like measure of her chance and determined
-to probe matters to their core:
-
-“Your Ladyship’s name was on the lips above,” nodding up at Kennaston’s
-windows. “I drank the toast with a will, I do assure you, and would
-double it now. Surely, if you’ll allow me to say so, Sir Percy de
-Bohun’s a gentleman of a rare good taste, likewise Lord Kennaston, Sir
-Wyatt Lovell, half-a-dozen more a-pledging Your Ladyship to the tune of
-_nonpareil_ all night long.”
-
-“You flatter, Sir, I do protest!” cried the lady in the chair, blushing
-like the reddest rose that grows, but who might say for whose sake?
-since Peg had named so many.
-
-“Oh, Sir,” Lady Diana’s voice now lowered. “Your countenance is one to
-inspire confidence. I pray you judge me not harshly if I venture to
-inquire, since you were of their company, how fares poor Sir Percy de
-Bohun? The fruits and flowers I fetched were for him, since I am
-informed he pines, eats nothing, droops, mopes, and no longer is to be
-enticed among the fair. Can you give me news of him?—or of—Lord
-Kennaston?” adds Lady Diana wilily and with another magnificent
-accession of color. Thus did Slyboots pursue inquiry on that lame horse
-which is named Subterfuge.
-
-“Aye, Madam, that can I. ’Tis as you say; but as you yourself, if report
-speak true, be the cause of his distemper, methinks you should know how
-to effect the cure. I see Your Ladyship’s man returning; there is no
-more danger. I take my leave of you, Madam,” hand to heart, bundle
-sticking out under other arm. “It is to me one of the most fortunate
-chances of life to have had this encounter,” bending sweet eyes, which
-Diana returns with a will. “Fear nothing! the cut-throats have long
-since made off by a rear alley. The shouter is doubtless ere this at his
-cover. Did you need my further protection, ’twould be yours.”
-
-“From my heart, Sir, I thank you,” cries Lady Diana very sweetly. “May
-we meet again, and soon!”
-
-Peggy bowing, walks quickly off, her pretty teeth gritted together.
-
-“May we meet again! Never! Fruits and flowers! forsooth! Pines and
-droops! forsooth! ’Slife! and how the minx reddened at his name.
-A-seekin’ of him out like that at cock-crow too! Lud! an these be town
-fashions and morals I’ll be glad to get home! No I won’t! No I won’t!”
-spake out Lady Peggy’s heart fit to burst bonds. “Percy’s here, and my
-soul’s here, and ’tain’t no use to talk about having a spirit, and
-a-stoppin’ lovin’ when you ain’t loved! You can’t do it!”
-
-Peggy, recking not of her path, eyes glued to ground, paced on, having
-forgot the whole world else, in the misery of her discovery of Lady
-Diana’s passion for Sir Percy.
-
-There were few abroad at that early hour. Some market wagons leisuring
-to the city; an occasional chariot full of gallants getting home after
-the night’s frolic; and just now, at the cross of two streets, a
-handsome coach thrown open-windowed, with a gentleman, the very pink and
-model of all elegance, lolling back amid the cushions.
-
-By the lead of his eyes ’twas plainly to be seen he had not slept for
-forty-eight hours or so, but otherwise his aspect was as if newly out of
-a perfumed bandbox. Suddenly his gaze caught Peggy at the crossing,
-fixed itself upon the lace cravat at her throat, and then, with a spring
-as alert as that of any monkey throwing himself out of tree by his tail,
-this mirror of fashion thrust his head out at window, jerked his
-coachman’s arm, said in a voice not loud, but piercing:
-
-“Worthing, run down the young gentleman at the crossing; don’t hurt him,
-but run him down an’ I’ll give you twenty shillings!” He then sank back
-again amid the pillows.
-
-No sooner said than done.
-
-Just at the instant when Peggy recalled her position and was
-bewilderedly wondering where she had wandered to, clutching her bundle
-and all of a muddle, click! grazed coach-wheels against her shins, cock
-went her hat into the puddle, but, heaven be praised! her wig clung, and
-she clung to her bundle; out of coach the pink brocade gentleman, down
-from the rumble his footman, pick up Lady Peggy, hat and all, rubbing
-the mud out of her silk stockings, clapping her hands; yet relented she
-not from the bundle, and all a-breath the loller cries:
-
-“Into my coach, Sir! I do humbly crave pardon, Sir, I do indeed. I’ll
-not take no for an answer, Sir, not by my oath! Such a damage from one
-gentleman to another, Sir, demands all the reparation possible, Sir,”
-and forthwith Peggy is lifted into the splendid coach and the splendid
-gentleman springs in after her, and the footmen jump up and the whip
-cracks, and off they whirl before she can open her mouth.
-
-“Mr. Brummell at your service, Sir,” continues he, feeling of Peg’s
-palm, noting the wound at her wrist, and the pallor of her face which
-shines even though the coffee stains. “We’re en route to Peter’s Court
-where my surgeon shall attend you. ’Slife! Sir, you’re not hurt, I’m
-sure. I told Worthing not to endanger a hair of your head and it’s
-impossible he should have disobeyed me!”
-
-Peggy hears this singular string of speeches and, although stunned a bit
-and not a little alarmed in her mind, she has country breeding at her
-back and such a robust constitution as rallies on the spot.
-
-“I’d be obliged, Mr. Brummell, if you’d set me down at once, Sir! I’m
-none the worse, and I’ve business of import calling me far hence, and
-with dispatch.”
-
-“Never, Sir, never!” returns Beau Brummell, with an impressive wave of
-his jeweled hand. “Zounds! Sir, I had you spilled to get me the pattern
-and fashion of tying your cravat from you! and split me! if I let you go
-until I’ve mastered that adorable knot! I’ve my reputation at stake,
-Sir, for the tying of ’em. You’ve outdone me at your throat, Sir, and
-’tis Beau Brummell, the best dressed and worst imitated man in Europe,
-that has the honor of telling you so. Come, come, Sir,” continues this
-nonesuch, famed alike at Court and brawl for his finery and drollery,
-“out with your name, Sir, I beg, and render me your eternally grateful.”
-
-Lady Peggy’s gaze falls inadvertently on the bundle across her knees; it
-begins to bulge and burst the paper and string, indeed a tape of her
-petticoat is oozing out even now as she pokes it back, hiding its
-tell-tale under the skirt of her coat.
-
-“’Slife!” says Peggy to herself in a terrible heat. “An I must stop a
-man, I must. God’s will—or the Devil’s, as dad says—be done!” and
-forthwith she tucks up her knee, lays hand on sword-hilt, laughs quite
-merrily and answers:
-
-“Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, at your service, Mr. Brummell. I
-do protest, upon my oath! ’twas a marvelous device to spill me to borrow
-my tie. ’Tis yours, Sir, and the fashion of it, an you’ll do me the
-honor to accept a lesson.”
-
-“Sir Robin McTart!” echoes the Beau delightedly, “my old friend Sir
-Hector’s son and heir? I swear, boy, you favor not your sire. Peace to
-his soul, ’twas an ugly gentleman, while you, Sir,—Zounds! The ladies’ll
-make hay for you, I promise you. Where do you stop? Are you up in town
-long? What letters do you bring?”
-
-“The King’s Arms, Sir, in the Strand,” replies Peg glibly, while the
-Beau frowns. “I’m arrived but yesterday. I brought not a letter, Sir.
-There you have my history.”
-
-“No King’s Arms for Sir Hector’s son. You’ll home with me, lad; and I’ll
-show you what town life is. I’ll put you up at the best clubs, introduce
-you to the Prince; present you at Court; dine, wine, mount
-you,—Gadzooks, Sir Robin, the man that invented that tie of the lace!”
-tipping his finger at Lady Peggy’s home-made cravat, “deserves all and
-more than Brummell can do for him!”
-
-At which Peggy laughed the more heartily, as that she felt the paper
-beneath her coat skirts crack wider, and was spent wondering what she
-should do when they should reach Peter’s Court, and when she might be
-able to get into her Levantine once again.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- _In the which Sir Percy de Bohun’s own man
- goes on his master’s errand to Kennaston
- Castle, crossing Sir Robin
- McTart on the road._
-
-
-Somewhat later in the day, as the sun peeped in at the narrow windows of
-Kennaston’s garret in Lark Lane, it shone straight down upon the face of
-Peg’s twin, and also upon that of Sir Percy de Bohun, just returned,
-after a tub and a grooming at the hands of his faithful man Grigson, who
-even now was performing like offices for the young host. The other
-gentlemen had long since been set upon their legs and fetched off to
-their homes by their men.
-
-Percy held his chin between his palms, his elbows resting upon the table
-where cards and glasses still littered.
-
-“’Sdeath, Kennaston,” cries he, without moving. “I can live this fashion
-no longer! To be shot like a partridge would be better. Flouted by
-Peggy, derided by this upstart Sir Robin, who, by my life! is a pretty
-fellow all said and done, is past endurance! Give me a pistol, Grigson,
-and I’ll put an end of myself now and here.”
-
-To this passionate declaration, Kennaston merely makes answer by lifting
-an arm above the tub, waving it in the air, and, as Grigson scrubs him
-down, wagging his wet head and remarking:
-
-“Don’t be damned ridiculous, Percy, and pray hold your peace, since I am
-at this moment composing an ode to my mistress’s smile.”
-
-“Your mistress be hanged, Sir! What know you of love to sit in a tub and
-make verses to her?”
-
-“I know enough of’t,” sighs the host, “to have been in like case with
-yourself any time this twelve-month! and ’tis a monstrous thing for you
-to thus impeach me, when ’tis you whom My Lady Diana favors rather than
-myself.”
-
-“Lady Diana be damned!” cries Percy rising. “She’s a coquette, Sir, and
-at bottom adores you, as does the fish the bait the while she plays and
-sidles ’round it, being sure in th’ end she’ll swallow it, hook and
-all.”
-
-“Very fine, i’ faith, yet while I sigh, you’re the one she smiles upon.
-Oh, Percy! Had I but a fortune! Could I but make my name in letters!
-Then perchance I’d stand my chance; but as ’tis,”—Peg’s twin fetches a
-sigh that sends the water splashing about the wine-stained floor.
-
-“As ’tis, Sir, counsel me, an you love me. Shall I hie me to Kennaston
-and wait upon your sister?”
-
-“Write her a letter of fire and sword, and blood and famine; stuff it
-full of oaths, protests, suicides, murders, as is a Christmas pudding of
-plums! There’s quill, ink and paper to your hand.”
-
-“I’ll do it and send it by Grigson on my fastest horse this day. I
-should have the answer before Friday?”
-
-“Aye, you should,” allows the host with an evident reservation. “Now,
-for God’s sake, Sir, stop cackling and let me finish my ode.”
-
-Which he did a-sitting in his bath, while Grigson dressed his wig.
-
-The toilet, and the letter, and the poem, were all three finished at
-once, and, without more ado, Sir Percy dispatched his man with the
-missive to Lady Peggy.
-
-“Come not back until you deliver it in person,” quoth the lover; “an you
-show yourself minus an answer, I’ll ship you to the Colonies by the next
-packet.”
-
-After seeing him off the two young men repaired to the coffee-house they
-frequented, and there the first news that greeted them was an account,
-exaggerated to the last degree, as was the fashion of those times as
-well as these, of “Lady D—— W——’s adventure with footpads in Lark Lane,
-where her chair crossed en route to her mantua-maker’s; of how Sir R——n
-McT——t had rescued Her Ladyship and Her Ladyship’s Abigail from the
-clutches of these villains at the hazard of his own life; had,
-single-handed, put the whole gang to flight; and this, although
-suffering from a severe wound in the right wrist, the which this gallant
-young scion of a noble name had received in an affair of honor with Sir
-P——y de B——n only that very night previous.” In point of fact gossip
-cried, and print set forth, that “the town was ringing with the valor of
-Sir R——n McT——t, whose fame as a buck and man of fashion was no less
-than his expertness at the saving of Beauty in distress. For be it known
-that no other personage than the renowned Beau B——l had set his seal
-upon Sir R——n’s mould by begging from him the pattern of his cravat and
-the mode of his knot. That Sir R——n was now a guest at Mr. B——l’s home,
-and, being up in town for the season, let ladies fair beware and set
-their most adorable caps, for ’twas well understood so fine a young
-gentleman was nowhere else to be met with, nor one of such courage and
-skill at cards, saddle, or the dance.”
-
-The which as he read it gave Sir Percy no great food for congratulation,
-but the rather caused him to sink into a kind of melancholy from which
-no effort of his companion could arouse him. Like a dullard he sat,
-staring at the print or the walls, the livelong day, and far into the
-night, waiting for Grigson’s return, and beside himself with a silent
-jealous fury as each new entrance to the coffee-room gave his own
-particular version of Sir Robin’s vogue.
-
-The real little Sir Robin, meanwhile, on his journey down to Kennaston
-in search of My Lady Peggy, had got some three hours’ start of the
-faithful Grigson, and even now, he, for the first time in his life,
-stood in the long, bare drawing-room of Kennaston Castle, tip-toeing to
-the mirror, pulling his wig this way and that in instant expectation of
-beholding the object of his passion, and rewarding her for her devotion
-to him, so manifested in the person of the gentlemanly “Incognito” of
-his last night’s experience.
-
-Hark! Yes, her footstep on the stair, the swish of female garments, a
-halt at the door. Sir Robin minced the length of the room and, reaching
-the entrance, found himself face to face with Chockey!
-
-“Your mistress, bud, your mistress! Here!” thriftily pressing a shilling
-into Chock’s palm. “Go tell her I am consumed with impatience, and eaten
-up with desire for a glimpse of Her Ladyship’s form, and figure, and
-face. Go! Go!”
-
-But Chockey does not budge.
-
-“What ails the wench? Deaf?” cries Sir Robin, pinching her arm, for
-which he gets back a smart slap on his cheek.
-
-“Tut! tut! What manners is that, and you handsome enough to kiss,” adds
-the little Baronet diplomatically. “Come now, off and implore Lady Peggy
-to hasten.”
-
-“Her Ladyship’s from home,” finally Chockey says.
-
-“What! Not at Kennaston?” Sir Robin’s sharp eye can not help peering
-regretfully at the shilling Chockey twirls in her fingers.
-
-“In Kent, doubtless, a-visiting her godmother, and a-hoping to see me
-there! eh, in Kent?”
-
-“I don’t know, Sir,” replies the girl with a hint of tears in her voice.
-
-“Don’t know! What do you mean?” exclaims Sir Robin suspiciously.
-
-“I means, Sir,” fires up Chock, “that My Lady ain’t by way of telling me
-her matters. His Lordship, her father’s down with his leg; Her
-Ladyship’s mother is a-visitin’ the sick in York. As they supposes, Sir,
-Lady Peggy is in Kent, also, a-visitin’ the sick, Her Ladyship’s
-godmother.”
-
-Chockey curtsies and turns to the door, out of which Sir Robin
-reluctantly goes, putting spurs to his horse, dining at the Mermaid and
-then chartering a post-chaise to take him, sans delay, to Kent.
-
-He crossed but one traveler on his way from Kennaston Castle to the
-village inn; a man of stout and comely build on a steed that took even
-Sir Robin’s dull eye, so was its blood and lineage marked in its long
-splendid gait.
-
-This horseman too pulled rein at Kennaston, sprang from his saddle, and,
-as Bickers hobbled up to take his beast, Mr. Grigson, for ’twas he,
-jumped up on the steps and caught Chockey’s apron-string just as it was
-fluttering in the closing door.
-
-“Hey, missus!” cried he, twirling Chock about and chucking her under the
-chin, which was rewarded by as smart a slap as that which had erstwhile
-burned Sir Robin’s cheek.
-
-“I must see Lady Peggy Burgoyne on the spot, without ceremony or
-a-waitin’ ’ere coolin’ my heels. I’ve a letter for Her Ladyship meanin’
-life and death to my master, Sir Percy de Bohun.”
-
-“Have you?” says Chock, looking with admiring eyes upon the smart livery
-of Mr. Grigson, dust and mud-stained though it was.
-
-“Yes, straight from London town, where ’pon my life, there’s no sweeter
-mug than hers I sees before me now!”
-
-“Lawk!” cries Chock, appeased. “But my mistress is from home.”
-
-“Not here! where is she then? A-visiting in the neighborhood?” Mr.
-Grigson turns on his heel and chirrups for his mount.
-
-“No,” returns Chockey. “She ain’t.”
-
-“Well, whereabouts is she? For if it’s as far as the Injies, Grigson’s
-bound to find her and deliver this love-letter!”
-
-“I don’t know where she is, Sir,” whimpers Chock.
-
-“There, there! Don’t be a-cryin’ and a-sobbin’, Duckie, I ain’t gone,
-yet! Go ask His Lordship the address; bring me a mug of ale, and I’ll
-give you a kiss.”
-
-“Drat you, Sir,” cries Chockey. “Don’t you be talkin’ like that!” Yet
-sidles she quite cozily in the encircling arm of the admirable Grigson.
-
-“His Lordship, nor Her Ladyship, nor no one else knows where my mistress
-is.”
-
-“What! eloped? Scuttled! Flown the nest! When? How? Where?” cries Sir
-Percy’s man thunder-struck. “She ain’t gone with Sir Percy! Can it be
-with Sir Robin McTart?”
-
-Chockey shook her head vigorously.
-
-“Look a-here,” says Mr. Grigson, now regarding the girl attentively.
-“Damme, but you knows where she is. Tell me and I’ll give you two kisses
-and ten pounds to boot.”
-
-“Oh, Sir!” cries Chock, pushing away both kisses and pounds with one and
-the same hand. “I does know; leastways I knows my young lady’s up in
-London, but whereabouts in that pit of sin and willainy, I can’t say,
-nor who she’s with, nor how long she’s goin’ to stop; only she charged
-me make His Lordship and Her Lady mother believe she was gone to Kent,
-back again to see her godmother. There! I’ve been bursting to tell some
-one, and you’ll swear you’ll keep it secret, won’t you, Sir?”
-
-Grigson obligingly nods and caresses Chock’s arm.
-
-“Thank the Lord it’s out o’ me!” adds she.
-
-“Amen,” ejaculates Sir Percy’s man with fervor, at the same time fixing
-a contemplative and shrewd eye on his companion.
-
-“Her Ladyship up in town,—where, with whom, you doesn’t know; her father
-and mother thinks she’s in Kent; and you’re cock-sure she ain’t runned
-away with Sir Robin McTart?”
-
-“That I am!” cries the girl, warmly. “Little squint-eyed monster!”
-
-“Eh?” exclaims Mr. Grigson, who had beheld the supposed Sir Robin at
-Kennaston’s rooms the night before last, and clearly recollected that no
-such description fitted the slim, elegant, handsome young buck who had
-got a prick in the wrist from his own master’s rapier.
-
-“Monster! I said,” repeats the girl. “Hist, I’ll tell you more,” says
-she, drawing close, hand over mouth. “You’ve seen the puppy. He was here
-anon, a-askin’ and a-tearin’ as to where My Lady was!”
-
-Grigson stares.
-
-“Aye, you must have met him on the road not ten rods off the Castle
-gates, for, as you galloped in, the undersized cockatrice cantered out.
-Lady Peggy wed with him, indeed!”
-
-Grigson is now (recalling his having crossed a small squint-eyed
-gentleman as he came) morally certain that Chockey has been well drilled
-in her part, and that Lady Peggy has indeed run away up to London with
-Sir Robin McTart. So much for his thoughts; he says:
-
-“I did. Fortunately I beheld the personage what you describes. Your
-humble servant, missus. I must be off and no time for love-makin’
-to-day,” turning quickly on his heel and tossing sixpence to Bickers who
-holds his bridle at the stone.
-
-“I ain’t ‘missus,’” remarks she plaintively.
-
-“But you will be some day, lass, or my name ain’t James Grigson. Here’s
-to you and many thanks for putting me on the right track!”
-
-“Tush, Sir! For the love of heaven and of anybody else you thinks a deal
-of, find my young lady!”
-
-“Trust me,” flings Mr. Grigson from his saddle. “I’ll find her and him
-as holds her in durance wile!”
-
-Kissing his fingers to Chockey, off puts Sir Percy’s own man to the
-Mermaid; stables his horse; hires a fresh one; claps spurs, and up to
-town as fast as four spavined bay legs can carry him, firmly convinced
-that he has solved the greater portion of the mystery, and that his
-master’s lady fair is indeed, beyond a doubt, the bride of the gallant
-Sir Robin, or mayhap his unwilling prisoner.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- _In which is set down how My Lady is whisked
- off to a rout, willy-nilly, at the home
- of her hated rival._
-
-
-Mr. Brummell was a most shrewd and an altogether kindly personage as
-well; he had easily, on alighting from his carriage and assisting Lady
-Peggy to do the same, espied the disreputable looking parcel which the
-supposed son of his dear old friend vainly tried to conceal; and the
-Beau was not long of putting two and two together, and of concluding
-that young Sir Robin had lost his all at play, and had even perhaps
-pawned his wardrobe,—saving the ill-looking bundle—for the price of his
-last few days’ food. Therefore it was, that, in the most obliging
-manner, he not only installed Sir Robin in an elegant and spacious
-apartment, but vowed he would at once send for both his tailor and
-perruquier to wait upon him, and ended by assuring his guest that his
-own man Tempers would be up presently to make the young gentleman’s
-toilet for him.
-
-“Your pardon, Sir, Mr. Brummell,” quoth Peggy, while her maiden heart
-set off at such a race-horse flutter as it seemed must never quiet down.
-“But, pray you, remember I am country-bred, unused to town ways, have
-never had a man to wait upon me in my life” (the solemn truth!) “and
-should never know how to comport myself in such altered conditions.”
-
-The Beau shrugged his shoulders in the French fashion, lifted his
-eyebrows, thought ’twas amazing strange that Sir Hector’s son should
-have been so ill educated; said:
-
-“Your pleasure, Sir, whilst under my roof, shall be mine; nor can I
-misdoubt but that one who has had the genius to invent that tie is amply
-able to array and perfume himself, even to the dressing of his own wig.”
-
-“You flatter, Sir, I protest!” answered the guest. “I await with
-impatience the moment when, in cleaner case, I may have the honor of
-instructing you in the intricacies of the knot you are good enough to
-admire.”
-
-With any number of bows, the distinguished host closed the door, and My
-Lady Peggy was left to herself.
-
-For a moment she stood quite still, her heart yet a-clapping madly in
-her bosom, her eyes wandering about the princely room in which she found
-herself, and at last resting on the mirror wherein was reflected her own
-slim figure, tricked out in Kennaston’s suit of gray velvets, and in the
-yellow wig, which was indeed the counterpart of the real Sir Robin’s
-pate. Her countenance?—sure none would recognize it since neither twin
-nor quondam suitor had—was dark with the coffee-stains; her eyes were
-ringed with sleeplessness and unaccustomed wine; her general aspect that
-of a young gentleman very much the worse for whatever his most recent
-experiences might have been.
-
-Peg laughed, then she cried, then ran to the door and fastened it
-securely; then untied her bundle when out fell night-rail, green hood
-and kerchief, powder, patch-box, lavender, musk, pins, needles, red
-silken hose, Levantine gown, and veil of Brussels lace. She shook the
-skirt out of its wrinkles, laid off her wig and ’broidered waist-coat;
-unpinned her long plaited hair from its coil, and was stoutly making up
-her mind to brave all, get into her petticoats, and confess everything
-to Mr. Brummell. But, as she was about to wash the dark stains from her
-face, comes there a “rap-a-tap” at the door, and Peg, dropping the ewer,
-calls out fiercely:
-
-“Who’s there?”
-
-“An it please you, Sir Robin, Mr. Brummell bids me say to you that Mr.
-Chalk, the tailor, a person of the best fashion, will have the honor of
-waiting upon you for your measurements in a quarter of an hour, if
-you’ll be pleased to see him then, or later?”
-
-Peg hesitated; there was a battle fought within her those sixty seconds
-wherein all that was noblest and best struggled and strove to know which
-was the right thing to do; nor could she determine, save that, at second
-thought of confiding her sex to Mr. Brummell, it appeared to her she
-could not.
-
-“I shall be ready to see Chalk, I thank you, in fifteen minutes, more or
-less,” humming a tune with elaborate carelessness, rolling up the
-Levantine, the hood, veil, and night-rail into a ball, and pitching them
-into the chest of drawers; disposing the powder and perfumes and pins on
-the dressing-table; throwing the needles and patches into the fire;
-untying the kerchief and taking out soap, scissors, brushes.
-
-“’Tis clear as water, I’m to be a man yet awhile,” whispered she.
-“Heaven grant it may not be long! So!” seizing the scissors and shaking
-out the locks. “Snip! clip, and away with you! that I was once vain of,
-because a vile deceiver named Percy vowed he loved you!”
-
-And off came Peg’s hair, the which for silly liking of she stuffed into
-the drawer beside the Levantine and let fall a tear or two. Then snip,
-clip again as she had often done for her twin; so that, in no time at
-all, her head, with its short curly locks brushed back at this side and
-that of her broad forehead, had all the aspect of a man’s.
-
-“There,” cried she, sweeping the last litter of her black tresses into
-the flames. “An I be a gentleman, I’ll be a gallant one. I sighed once
-to taste the sweets of bein’ of t’other sex for only one-half an
-hour.—Zounds! as daddy’d say, would that I’d never quit my frocks. What
-hath it bettered me? To behold with mine own eyes the charms of her
-who’s routed me from his heart; to hear him a-pledgin’ me just to please
-my brother, and for the sake of spitin’ Sir Robin McTart; to get myself
-into a position that makes me burstin’ with shame and feelin’ sure I can
-never hold up my head again in this world. Me, that’s always loathed a
-hoyden! and even have I the muscle of a lad, and can I stride a horse,
-and jump any ditch was ever dug,—yet, yet,—oh! How did I ever bring
-myself to put on _these_?” And My Lady Peggy slaps her breeches with a
-whack, and promptly falls upon her knees a-praying for her father and
-mother, and brother, and Sir Percy, and Chock, and Bickers.
-
-“And, Oh God, high up in Heaven, forgive me for all my wilfulness and
-jealousy and foolhardiness, and stealin’ my twin’s clothes; and deceit,
-the which has got me into this foul station, wherein I have told naught
-but lies—and I do despise lies,—they are most disgustin’ and utterly
-wicked. Forgive me for all the horrible sins I’ve committed—”
-
-Footsteps now resound in the corridor and the voice of Mr. Brummell’s
-own man says blandly:
-
-“This way, Mr. Chalk,” as he raps gently at the door.
-
-“—And for all those I shall have to commit!” concludes Her Ladyship, as
-she springs to her feet and unfastens the door, admitting the tailor _a
-la mode_.
-
-That night, the suit of grays well brushed, her wig re-curled, and her
-pocket-napkin richly perfumed, her mother’s Brussels veil stripped up
-and made into a cravat of so ravishing a device as caused her host
-almost a spasm when he beheld it, Sir Robin McTart sat at honor-place at
-dinner, and was, to make a long story short, the cynosure and toast of
-the occasion.
-
-The duel with Sir Percy, the rescue of My Lady Diana, the invention of a
-cravat, the nimble wit, the handsome face, soon bespoke Peggy into a
-favor, that, considering all other things, was well-nigh incredible; and
-when, the following day; she appeared in one of the suits Mr. Chalk had
-made, with a dash of powder on her wig and a bronzed complexion due to
-surreptitious purchase at the players’ cosmetic shop in Drury Lane, of
-sundry brown, red, and black pastes while making feint of being a
-comedian, the satisfaction of her host was unbounded.
-
-“Robin, my boy,” said this one, with a side-glance at his guest, “an
-you’re a bit short of money, I’ll put a few hundreds to your account at
-my banker’s. Young gentlemen will be wild and spendthrift at times;
-London’s new to you I fancy, and—”
-
-“I thank you, Mr. Brummell, from my heart,” returned Peg, “but I’ve
-three hundred pounds now idle in my pocket. That will last me, I’m
-confident, until I reach home, and, by your leave, I’m thinking I’ll
-quit town this evening.”
-
-But Mr. Brummell has no ears for any such scheme. The Beau’s erratic
-fancy has not been caught by a new object for the mere sake of losing
-it; his joy in the dash and buoyancy, the originality and naïvete of his
-latest discovery is genuine, and no argument, of the very few Lady Peggy
-can offer, but he breaks down at once.
-
-“Zounds, Sir! Are you a fool, Sir? Your sire was not one before you. To
-have half London a-talkin’ about you; all the prints a-chronicling your
-movements; all the ladies a-dying for a glimpse of you, and you only up
-in town these few days; and a-proposing to go back and bury your talents
-for tying Brussels, in Kent! Fie upon you, Sir! I listen to no such
-whims. Here’s my basket loaded with invitations for you already. Lady
-Brookwood’s rout to-night!” with a sly glance at Peg’s really blushing
-face; “Lady Diana Weston’s mother, as you are doubtless aware? The
-Charity Bazaar at Selwyn’s to-morrow; dinner at Holland House;
-Almacks’s, and my own little plan for next Thursday which is an outing
-to my seat in Surrey a-horseback; dinner, bowls, a look over the
-stables, and home by the light o’ the moon. ‘Back to Kent,’ forsooth!
-No, Sir, not yet.”
-
-A few hours later, as Lady Peggy got into her magnificent suit of
-crimson satin, gold embroidered; as she beheld her image in the glass
-and caught the hilt of her sword in her hand, the blood that surged over
-her face and throat was ruby-red; and, at her wits’ ends for what to do,
-the girl’s tears forced themselves to her eyes once again.
-
-She was to be off soon to Lady Brookwood’s; here she should encounter
-not only Lady Diana, but doubtless Percy himself; mayhap Kennaston, if
-he had been able to get him a decent coat to wear in place of the gray
-velvets! Doubtless, too, all those others she had met in Lark Lane.
-
-For the hundredth time she cast wildly about in her mind as to how she
-could, now at this present moment, rid herself of the hated disguise,
-get into her Levantine, get home to her mother’s arms, hide her head
-forever, and never, no never! look into face of man again!
-
-But Peggy saw no road. Every path seemed barred, save those that would
-forever damn her in the eyes of foes and friends alike.
-
-“Oh,” cried she in desperation. “How easy ’tis to get into breeches, a
-coat, a waist-coat, and a wig, but God ha’ mercy! will I ever be able to
-get out of ’em?”
-
-It is to be put down to the credit of My Lady Peggy’s up-bringing in the
-country with most times only a lad for her playmate, that now she bore
-herself with not only a fine ease and grace, but also with as splendid a
-swagger and daring as any young macaroni that carried a sword.
-
-“An I’m to be a man, I’ll be one!” cried she, “and if Lady Diana ogles,
-lud! I’ll give as good as she sends. Little him as I love’ll know, ’tis
-of his sometime Peggy he’ll be jealous!”
-
-So it was with a prodigious fine flutter of her napkin and a mightily
-impudent twirl of her eye-glass (purchased not two hours since), that
-Her Ladyship made her bows and kissed the finger-tips of Lady
-Brookwood’s handsome daughter.
-
-“I am your most grateful, Sir Robin!” cried this one, “and more pleased
-than I can express to welcome you. I only regret that Lord Brookwood is
-at Brookwood Hall, and not here to thank you for rescuing his daughter.”
-And so forth and on, with presentations to a dozen of fine ladies,
-dowagers and damsels, and a precious lot of fine gentlemen; and it
-seemed to Peggy, in her simplicity, as if the whole of Mayfair were
-a-bowing and scraping and making her out a hero,—which indeed was not
-far off the fact.
-
-[Illustration: Two watched her as she came in...]
-
-Two watched her as she came in on Beau Brummell’s arm. These were Sir
-Percy and Kennaston; one green with anxiety for Grigson’s return from
-his errand, jumping at every sound; having left word both at Lark Lane,
-his coffee-house, as well as at home where he had gone, that Grigson
-should report to him at once he arrived; the other green with envy of
-Peggy and any other who neared his divinity, yet afraid and too
-diffident to approach her closer than with the devouring gaze of his
-eyes.
-
-“That damned puppy again!” cries Percy, under his breath, as he surveys
-Peg in her satins. “By Gad, Sir, every lady in the room’s turning spite
-eyes on t’other, your incomparable Diana included, for fear he won’t
-stop and pay her a compliment.”
-
-“Ah,” sighs the young poet. “Percy, an you loved like me ’twould be
-bliss to even gaze upon your fair. Think you I dare make bold now to
-cross and make my bow?”
-
-“Why not?” returns the other gloomily. “Forgive my humor, Kennaston.
-Truth is, Sir, I’m mad, mad for Peg, and my ears are cracking and my
-brain splitting until that rascal, Grigson, gets back with answer to my
-letter. He’s been gone long enough to have made the journey four times
-over!”
-
-“Oh, Percy,” returns Peg’s twin. “I love you as a brother, an could I
-but physic Your Lady into complaisance, I’d give my life for it. What
-owe I not to you?” adds the young man with deep feeling. “You’ve fed me,
-and zooks! Sir, to-night you’ve clothed me, for since the scurvy knaves
-that frightened Lady Di stole my suit of grays and my sword and hat,
-what had I left? Where would I be now, were’t not for you?”
-
-“Tush, Ken, lad, I love you for yourself,—and ten thousand times more
-for her sake. Ken, I love her so that as I told her, if Sir Robin were a
-better man I’d cry off, an she said she loved him.”
-
-“What said she?”
-
-“Not that she loved him, but that she might,” he continues with sadness,
-as his eyes follow Peg on her almost royal progress about the
-drawing-rooms. “’Tis a proper fellow, enough, and I’d always heard he
-was a fright and a coward.”
-
-Kennaston presently took heart of grace and crossed to pay his duty to
-Lady Diana, who, ’twas plain to be seen by every other than this bashful
-swain, was by no means the indifferent to him she would feign play off.
-Her color came and went as Kennaston, blushing to match his lady,
-ventured to spout his ode to her; and, leaving the pair to gallop on
-this pleasant path, Sir Percy at a distance unconsciously followed Lady
-Peggy, at least with his gaze.
-
-Peggy meantime, denying right and left the story of her prowess, with
-quips and jests and ogles of the fair, still kept her eye on Percy. Not
-yet had she seen him approach Lady Diana; yet hold! even now, catching
-her own gaze fixed upon him, he turned and was presently bending over
-the little beauty’s fingers.
-
-A pang shot through Peg’s heart, and the tears were like to force their
-way; she made an excuse and left the long drawing-room, taking refuge in
-a small apartment where the tables were ready for cards. She sank into a
-chair and buried her face in her hands. The candles were not yet lighted
-and she was totally unobserved. Dashing the salt drops from her lashes
-with her hand,—
-
-“What am I!” she cried in her bitterness, “that I can not abide to even
-see him a-bending over her hand! Ain’t you no spirit, Peg? No pride?
-He’s not thinking of you, my dear; didn’t he say plain, if Sir Robin was
-the better man he’d give up to him! What kind of a suitor’s that, Peg?
-Lud! I’d not give up him to any one, whether they were my betters or
-no!”
-
-Could My Lady but have postponed her exit for a few brief moments she
-would have beheld Sir Percy, at a word in his ear from a footman, quit
-Lady Diana’s side with but the smallest ceremony, dash out into the
-vestibule, seize with a vice-like grip the man who stood there pale and
-trembling, and gasp out:
-
-“At last! the letter, the letter?”
-
-Grigson shook his head and got even whiter.
-
-“No letter?” Percy says in a dazed way.
-
-“Only your own, Sir Percy,” handing back the missive. “Her Ladyship was
-from home, Sir.”
-
-“Well, what of that! you infernal, damned rascal, did I not command you
-seek her, if ’twere at the other end of the world!”
-
-“Aye, Sir, and the quickest way of settin’ about findin’ Her Ladyship
-was for me to get back to town, Sir, as fast as the cursed beast I was
-cheated into hirin’, Sir, would fetch me.”
-
-“Speak out, for God’s sake! Is Her Ladyship up in London?” asked Sir
-Percy, actually shaking with impatience and astonishment.
-
-Grigson nods and without more ado proceeds to give an exact if somewhat
-rambling account of his entire experiences, from the moment he had
-quitted his master until the present.
-
-’Twere idle to attempt to describe Sir Percy’s state of mind. Up to now
-there had ever lingered in his heart the hope, nay, one of those
-unconscious beliefs men have, that in the end Peggy would be his. This
-news that Grigson brought crushed every such thought from his brain, but
-put in its place such a hatred of the young man now tasting the sweets
-of hero-worship (in little), in the adjoining room, as caused his
-fingers to itch for his steel and t’other’s flesh to meet once more, and
-to the death.
-
-He drew Grigson in from the vestibule and, unobserved in the crush, down
-the corridor to the darkness of the card-room where Peggy still sat
-disconsolate in her far-off corner.
-
-She, for the moment, is even unconscious that any one has entered until
-the voices arrest her attention.
-
-“By Gad!” Sir Percy cries in a low tone, falling into a seat and
-clapping his brow. “Up in London! The woman, vowing Sir Robin had
-crossed your entrance, inquiring for Her Ladyship! Your meeting, not Sir
-Robin, but an ill-conditioned little popinjay with squint eyes and of
-the height of the dwarf that waits upon my Lady Brookwood?”
-
-“Aye, Sir Percy,” returns Grigson. “No more like Sir Robin, which, Sir,
-begging your honor’s parding, is a very pretty young nobleman, with a
-good eye and a proper height.”
-
-Sir Percy nods.
-
-“Then,” speaking as if to himself and motioning the man away, “since
-she’s up in town without her parents’ knowledge and with a cock-and-bull
-story stuck into her Abigail’s mouth, it must be she’s eloped with the
-scoundrel out of Kent!”
-
-Grigson going, ventures to ask: “Any more h’orders, Sir Percy? Will I
-cover the town, all the inns and taverns, Sir?”
-
-The young man shakes his head and the servant bows himself away.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- _Wherein Lady Peggy picks a very pretty quarrel
- with her presumed rival: and is
- later bid to Beau Brummell’s
- levee in her night rail._
-
-
-At this precise moment Lady Peggy, scarce able to contain herself longer
-and, reckless of every possible consequence, being about to cast herself
-upon her quondam lover’s protection, and to be rid forever of being a
-man, is stopped short of her purpose by the words that now fall slowly
-from the young man’s lips.
-
-“To deceive! to lie! to scheme! and plot, and bring shame and trouble
-upon her father and mother! Gad’s life!” Sir Percy brings his clenched
-hand down with a thump upon the card-table. “I had never believed that
-of Peggy! I’d have felled him that had hinted she could even plan a lie,
-or run off to a secret marriage with the best man that lives.”
-
-At which speech My Lady’s color burned as never before since she was
-born, and her choler rose at the double charge, both the one that was
-true as to her deceit, and the one that was not as to her secret
-nuptials.
-
-Palpitating with rage and wounded sensibility, with remorse and
-wretchedness; brought to bay with a situation she could not endure, Peg
-now utterly forgot her breeches or her shame at these, and, stepping
-boldly forth into the small circle of light shed in at the doorway, from
-the candles in the corridor, she saluted Sir Percy and spoke:
-
-“I bid you good-evening, Sir Percy de Bohun, and, having had either the
-good, or the ill fortune to unintentionally overhear your remarks
-concerning Lady Peggy Burgoyne, I feel it my duty and pleasure alike to
-defend her from the unjust and unworthy attack which you, Sir, have just
-been pleased to make.”
-
-“Sir Robin McTart!” exclaims Percy, with a start and in a prodigious
-anger. “I deny your charges, Sir, and would remind you that
-eaves-droppers are ever the cumberers of dangerous ground.”
-
-“Sir!” responds Lady Peggy, her temper rising the more at the sense of
-the injustice and falseness of her whole tenure. “You coupled just now
-the name of a lady with that of Sir Robin McTart. I demand how you dare
-to assume such a responsibility, Sir, until at least either the lady in
-question, or I, gives you our confidence, or our leave.”
-
-“‘Our’ forsooth! ‘Our!’” comes fiercely from between Sir Percy’s
-clenched teeth, while his hand flies to his sword-hilt.
-
-“Why the devil, Sir—an you’ve been so lucky as win the lady for your
-bride—make off with her i’ the dark, shut her up in some unfindable
-hole? cheat her parents, and go strutting like some vain peacock up and
-down other ladies’ drawing-rooms? Be a man, Sir, and publish your
-triumph broadcast, nor let the town presently go gossiping and
-countryside wagging with the scandal of an elopement! Zounds! Sir Robin
-McTart, that!” flipping a stray card from the table almost in Her
-Ladyship’s face, “for your gallantry and your honor!”
-
-“What do you mean, Sir?” cries Peggy, struck with horror all a-heap, and
-with terror as well, yet keeping up a brave show with her drawn rapier
-and sparkling eyes.
-
-“Whatever you damned please, Sir,” returns Percy, now white-heat too,
-and most reckless of time or place.
-
-“I’ve too much regard for Lady Peggy, Sir, not to postpone the climax of
-this matter until our next meeting, let it be when you see fit!” cries
-Peg with woman’s wit and wisdom too.
-
-“’Slife, Sir, I ask you as one gentleman to another, nay, I implore it
-of you,” cries Sir Percy, rent betwixt choler, love and apprehension,
-“most humbly, is Lady Peggy your wife?”
-
-Her Ladyship was now like to laugh, so near akin are mirth and sorrow,
-but she replied very loftily:
-
-“I decline to discuss the matter, Sir, and would remind you that report
-hath your attentions engaged in quite another direction.”
-
-“You know where Lady Peggy Burgoyne is at this moment?” says Sir Percy
-hotly, determined to push his matter to its ending this very night, and
-almost crazed by his passion and its balking.
-
-“That I do, Sir,” returns Her Ladyship with a covert smile.
-
-“Tell me, or I’ll brain you where you stand.” Percy makes an ugly lunge
-at his opponent with his fist, but merely as a threat.
-
-“That will I not,” says she firmly.
-
-What might have further ensued is, at this crisis, put out of the
-question by the entrance of Kennaston, who, espying Percy the first,
-cries out joyfully:
-
-“Percy, Percy, Lady Diana hath given me leave to tell you she consents—”
-
-“Tush, Sir!” interrupts Percy, jerking his head toward the other
-occupant of the room. “Sir Robin McTart and I have come near to blows,
-and must fight of a surety, on the subject of your sister, Sir; and ’tis
-for you to know without more delay that Lady Peggy is up in London,
-unknown to her parents; that Sir Robin hath her whereabouts and
-absolutely refuses to reveal the same.” Percy crosses the room, strikes
-a tinder and lights the candles on the mantel-shelf.
-
-“You are cursedly badly mistook, gentlemen, both of you,” says
-Kennaston, quietly enough. “I’ve got a letter which I found upon my
-table this very night, just come from my sister at Kennaston,” with
-which her twin pulls My Lady’s most ill-spelled and crumpled missive
-from his pocket and holds it up before the four astonished eyes that are
-staring at it.
-
-Peggy in amaze recognizes the letter she had written to her brother the
-day long since in the buttery, and which she had taken up to town in her
-reticule and must have dropped when she had paid her ill-starred visit
-to Kennaston’s chambers in Lark Lane.
-
-“Frowse, the charwoman’s daughter, vowed she’d found it a-lying in the
-entry under the water-tub. There’s an end of your dispute, Sirs, I
-trust,” glancing from one to the other. “Come, come, Sir Percy, and you,
-Sir Robin, whom indeed the letter you brought me from Lady Peggy the
-other night doth most highly commend to my good offices, must be
-friends,” taking a hand of each. “Nor let Dame Rumor split ye asunder
-with her lies about my little twin’s being up in town. Gadzooks, Sirs,
-the child’s not a notion of a difference betwixt Mayfair and—Drury Lane!
-I beg of you, Mr. Brummell,” as this one now comes mincing in together
-with Lord Escombe, Sir Wyatt, Mr. Jack Chalmers and others for their
-game, “for you’ve the graces I lack in such matters.—These two gallants
-have had a difference, and ’tis you, Mr. Brummell, can set ’em straight
-again.”
-
-“Cards! cards! Spades, clubs, diamonds, hearts,” exclaims the Beau,
-touching the Queen of Hearts with the toe of his high-heeled shoe, as it
-lies on the floor where it was shot from Sir Percy’s hand.
-
-“Split me! but ’tis them that are at the bottom of every quarrel, Sirs;
-whisk me, but if a spade, or a club, or a heart, provided it be a
-lady’s, or a diamond, which the Jews have a lien on, ain’t the only
-causes for disagreement in this world!”
-
-“Correct as your own toilet, Sir!” cries Wyatt.
-
-“Now, ’twas hearts of course, damn ’em, and the queen of ’em that’s
-roused both your tempers, but for God’s sake, gentlemen,” taking now the
-hand of each which has slipped clear of Kennaston’s fingers, “bethink
-you, if the lady, whose name I can’t even guess, whom you both adore,
-stood here, what would her pleasure be, Robin, my lad, answer me, for of
-brawling there can be none here and fighting no more. Speak, Sir!”
-
-“Faith!” answered Lady Peggy, with splendid valor and a rise in her
-color and her heels, “to my certain knowledge the lady’d have her name
-put out of the matter wholly, and she’d sooner die, Sir, than have any
-fighting over her preferences, by either Sir Percy de Bohun or Sir Robin
-McTart.”
-
-The which being taken to be, by all present, a most prodigious and
-amazing gentlemanlike and politic speech, Sir Percy was feign accept,
-mock-smile and bow, while all the rest blew their lungs hollow
-applauding and praising his still hated and still suspected rival.
-
-Peace restored outwardly, whatever else raged in the breasts of the two
-opponents, the gallants sat to their tables, Kennaston managing to
-whisper to Sir Percy across the deal:
-
-“As I was telling you when I entered, Percy, Lady Di permits me to let
-you know she consents to my dedicating the ode to her, and Lillie, at
-the corner of Beanford Buildings in the Strand, hath engaged to publish
-it at once!”
-
-But this, Lady Peggy, at a distant table, engaged in picquet with His
-Grace of Escombe, hears not; there rings in her ears naught save the
-words Kennaston uttered when he came into the card-room—“Lady Diana hath
-given me leave to tell you she _consents_.”
-
-“Consents!” To what else but his suit? Which, egged on by his noble
-uncle, has been pushing any time these ten years, since boy and girl Sir
-Percy and Lady Di had played, ridden, romped, quarreled as brother and
-sister together.
-
-“Consents!”
-
-It echoes and resounds in Her Ladyship’s head over and over again the
-night through, and ’tis quite of a piece with her mood that she seeks
-out Lady Diana when tea and cakes are passing, and, with sly looks,
-congratulates Her Ladyship on the happiness she has this night conferred
-on a very gallant gentleman not so many miles away!
-
-And quite in Lady Diana’s line of reasoning, having heard from Kennaston
-that Sir Robin has come up to town highly commended to him by his
-sister, and that, although he had been sorely jealous and distraught at
-the said Sir Robin’s good fortune in the matter of the rescue of Her
-Ladyship, he still believed him to be head over heels in love with his
-twin, etc., etc., etc., and so, Her Ladyship argued, Kennaston had
-doubtless confided to the said Sir Robin such tokens of her favor as the
-said Lady Diana had that evening seen fit to manifest; never for a
-moment misdoubting that any other swain was in the supposed Robin’s mind
-any more than he was in her own!
-
-“_Consents!_”
-
-’Twas reverberating in Peg’s ears and a-knocking at her heart for the
-hundredth time, when, returned to the card-room, she learned that Mr.
-Brummell was inviting the company for the Thursday to his seat Ivy Dene.
-’Twas to be a gentlemen’s party only; out on horseback, the twenty
-miles, leaving the White Horse at ten in the morning, with luncheon en
-route at the Merry Rabbit at Market Ossory; a look over the stables and
-paddocks on arriving at Ivy Dene,—a quiet game, maybe, and such a dinner
-as only, the Beau swore, his country cook could get up; with the ride
-back to town by the light of the near-full moon.
-
-Lady Peggy was soon made aware that this festivity was solely in her
-honor, and succumbed to it as cheerfully as she might.
-
-God keep her! All the while staring at the ribbon of her twin’s wig,
-a-longing to cast her arms about his neck and pray him cover her up in
-his wraprascal and fetch her home; vowing she’d run away from ’em all
-the next minute, but where? How? Which way could it be done so that
-capture, discovery, and humiliation would not follow? Peggy could
-contrive no method, and the girl was literally terrified both at the
-prospect before her and by the realization that easy as it had been to
-jump into man’s attire ’twas well-nigh impossible to get out of it
-again. Should she on returning to Peter’s Court lay off her satin suit,
-wig, and rapier, and resume her Levantine gown, hood, petticoats,
-patches, and reticule, how and of what hour of the day or night could
-she in safety leave the mansion and find her way unsuspected to the
-King’s Arms and the coach? ’Twould be out of the question; servants were
-up and about at all hours, and were a woman seen emerging from her room,
-what piece of scandal would not the next day ring from one end of the
-town to t’other.
-
-With “consents” tattooing in her brain, My Lady recklessly put all the
-heart there was left in her into the present moment, lost a hundred
-pounds to Escombe with a fine grace; won five hundred with no more ado;
-laughed, drank a little wine, went home with her host at four in the
-morning, and fell heavily asleep.
-
-At two of the afternoon the Beau usually held an informal levee attended
-by the more noted of the bucks and macaronis of the town; vastly
-entertaining half hours, wherein, while soundly abusing the newspapers
-for their being stuffed with lies, the company still eagerly devoured
-every scrap of gossip they contained; where the amount of frizz towering
-above Lady This’s brow was measured and scanned, the better appearance
-of Lady That in the new-fashioned gown discussed; and the horrid aspect
-of the Hon. Miss So and So’s toupee and her general resemblance to a
-malt-sack tied in the middle, talked over. This couplet and that comedy
-were torn to pieces by as many pretty wits as chanced to be present,
-while Tempers dressed his master’s wig in a corner and a footman and a
-negro page handed chocolate round in silver trays.
-
-The Beau, himself, reclined on his great bedstead with its fine tester,
-a half dozen of pillows richly laced at his head; a flowered gown about
-his shoulders, his night-cap on, a coverlet embroidered by the Chinese
-over him, his snuff-box at hand, reading aloud from the damp and freshly
-arrived print whilst Sir Wyatt, Lord Escombe, Mr. Jack Chalmers, and a
-dozen more sat or stood, cup in fingers, ’twixt lip and saucer,
-hearkening, eager, to the news.
-
-“’Tis by this on the tip of every tongue in town that there occurred
-last night at Lady B——d’s rout an encounter (the second within a
-se’ennight), betwixt Sir P——y de B——n and a certain young gentleman from
-Kent whose handsome face, genteel manners, and dashing behavior, have
-conspired to place him in so brief a time at the very height of favor in
-society, and more especially in the eyes of Lady D——a W——n. It had been
-supposed that the affair recounted in these pages as having taken place
-in the chambers of Lord K——n of K——n was on account solely of the above
-mentioned adorable young scion of a noble house. We are in a position to
-assure the world of fashion that such is not the case, and that both the
-unfortunate disputes betwixt these two gallants are to be laid to the
-door of Lady P——y B——e, sister to Lord K——n. Report hath it that Her
-Ladyship is in London; rumor contradicts report and avers that the fair
-one has not stirred from home. The issue is awaited with interest, as
-the verbatim account of an unsuspected elopement may be looked for at
-any moment. Safe to say the vivacious Lady P——y B——e, whom the town hath
-never had the pleasure of beholding, has succeeded in stirring Mayfair
-to its depths and has been the cause already of a very pretty pair of
-quarrels between two young gentlemen of the first quality.”
-
-“’Slife!” cried Beau Brummell. “Who now the devil’s Lady P——y?”
-
-“By the dragon, himself, I never heard that Kennaston had a sister!”
-said Lord Wootton and Mr. Vane at once.
-
-“Yes!” exclaims Sir Wyatt, tapping his forehead, recollectively, “I do
-recall that Sir Robin McTart, the night we were at Kennaston’s chambers,
-entered with the presentation of a letter of introduction from ‘Lady
-Peggy Burgoyne to her brother,’ and ’sdeath! ’twas, I believe, she about
-whom they fought, too!”
-
-“Ha! ’tis not only Lady Di, then, that’s at the bottom of their quarrel
-after all,” says Mr. Brummell, reflectively.
-
-“Where is the fair one?” asks Escombe. “Who knows that?”
-
-“Faith! no one. Stop! Sir Robin must know, since ’tis for her he
-unsheathes twice in a week,” cries the host.
-
-“Where is he?”
-
-“Bring him in!”
-
-“Send for Sir Robin!” is the cry of the company.
-
-“Zooks! Sirs, but our reputations as gallants are broken up, an we’ve
-not seen her of whom the prints speak thus!” says the Beau, adding at
-once:
-
-“Tempers, my compliments to Sir Robin McTart, and beg of him to join us,
-for, at the least, a few moments. I know he’s averse to early rising,
-but pray inform him to skip across in his dressing-gown and slippers,
-and night-cap, we’ve no ladies here about to ogle him!”
-
-The which message being conveyed to My Lady Peggy a-sitting by the
-pulled-out chest of drawers, mournfully contemplating her long shorn
-tresses with barred door, arouses in her such a fever of sorrow as
-well-nigh chokes her utterance.
-
-“Say to Mr. Brummell I’m asleep, Tempers, and crave to know his
-pleasure, the answer to which I’ll send as faithfully as Morpheus will
-permit, by you for Mercury! Off with you!” and Her Ladyship softly
-stroked her locks, and for the thousandth time went planning her escape.
-
-Peels of laughter, rattling of rapiers, click of heels, and now—
-
-“Rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat!” on the door.
-
-“McTart! McTart! Up with you from betwixt coverlets and into your
-Persian quilt!”
-
-“Out with ye, Sir Robin, or by Gad! Sir, we’ll in, the fifteen of us!
-and rout you up from Morpheus’s arms.”
-
-“Come, Sir Robin, dally no longer with sweet sleep; up, Sir, and bethink
-you of Beauty spelled with a P-E-G-G-Y!” shouts Sir Wyatt, chorused by
-the rest.
-
-At first clap of voices Peggy stuck her hair back into the drawer,
-jumped up, and stood, hand upon the dressing-table, her expression like
-nothing else so much as that of a fawn caught in a thicket.
-
-“’Sdeath! Gentlemen, I pray of you, a few moments grace!” cries she,
-trembling from the knees down, for ’tis quite of the temper of the
-manners of the day that in a second more the whole company should batter
-down the mahogany and burst in.
-
-“Three-and-thirty, an you like, Sir Robin!” says Escombe, who is soberer
-than the rest.
-
-“Give us the whereabouts of Lady Peggy Burgoyne,” shouts Mr. Chalmers,
-“and we’ll trouble you no more ’til doomsday!”
-
-“Lady Peggy Burgoyne!”
-
-“Lady Peggy Burgoyne!”
-
-“Where’s Lady Peggy Burgoyne?”
-
-“Where’s Lady Peggy Burgoyne?”
-
-“Where is the fair one for whom you and Sir Percy de Bohun have fought
-with blades and tongues, twice now, since this day last week?”
-
-“Lady Peggy Burgoyne!” cried they in hot concert, joined in most lustily
-by the Beau from his bed across the corridor, and accompanied by the
-pounding of fifteen rapier points on the parquet, and thirty fists on
-the woodwork, as well as the demoniacal screams of the Beau’s little
-negro and the parrot on his wrist.
-
-“Tell us where she is!” came high staccato last from Sir Wyatt’s
-exhausted lips.
-
-“My Lords and Gentlemen!” answers Her Ladyship, standing close to the
-door enveloped from top to toe in a sheet over her night-rail. “Would to
-God I could!”
-
-There was a ring of heartfelt truth in the reply, and its utterance was
-succeeded by a second’s surprised pause.
-
-The young bucks regarded each other with shrugs, pursed mouths, and
-interrogation points bristling in their eyes.
-
-Mr. Chalmers, recovered of his surprise sooner than the others, says:
-
-“Do you mean to say, Sir Robin, that the whereabouts of the lady with
-whose name the prints and the coffee-houses are ringing; for whose sake
-you came near to fighting Sir Percy only last night, and did fight him
-in Lark Lane o’ Thursday last, ain’t known to you?”
-
-“Is she in London?” pipes the Beau, pinching the little black till he
-squeaks again.
-
-“That I can not tell,” responds Her Ladyship. “I do know she’s not in
-Kent; and she’s not at Kennaston Castle. ’Slife! Sirs,” adds she, “I
-pray your consideration. Guess what you will; this matter of Lady Peggy
-sticks me closer than you dream, and I’d give my life to know her safe
-at home with her mother.”
-
-Silence ensues; the disappointed fifteen get them back to the Beau’s
-bedside to talk over this latest development as to the mysterious Lady
-Peggy.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- _In the which Lady Peg overhears a horrible
- plot to murder; and wherein
- Mr. Incognito encountereth
- Sir Robin._
-
-
-She herself falls into such an immediate flood of tears as shakes her
-well, and then up she rises from her depths, and with all the courage of
-her race and blood, she vows that, come another sunset she will quit
-Peter’s Court as if for a walk, and never return; that in small clothes,
-since it must be, she will journey back to Kennaston Castle, and risk
-all the discomfiture and disgrace her doing so may bring upon her.
-
-In point of fact, My Lady Peggy was at that state of mind when it seemed
-to her no degradation or humiliation, no sorrow that could be visited
-upon her, would be too much punishment, or enough, for the sins without
-number she had committed since the luckless day she took the coach for
-town.
-
-When she emerged from her room for dinner, ’twas to learn that Mr.
-Brummell had been summoned hastily to St. James’s on so important an
-affair as to initiate His Royal Highness into the mysteries of the new
-tie of Sir Robin’s own invention! and that he trusted in this audience
-to obtain permission to fetch Sir Robin to the Palace and present him
-within a few days to several august personages, etc., etc., etc.
-
-Her Ladyship, therefore, dined alone, scantily too; food choked her,
-wine burned her throat, and to speak truth she was heartily glad not to
-have to drink it, for Her Ladyship was an abstemious young lady and
-believed milk, Bohea and Pekoe the beverages for her sex, to the
-exclusion of any stronger.
-
-At twilight, having made her duds and her tresses up into a reputable
-enough parcel, Lady Peggy, in a suit of claret velvet, leaving all the
-rest of her man’s attire hanging in the presses, sauntered carelessly
-out of the house, declining the footman’s offer of a chair, or even a
-hackney chaise, or a page to carry her parcel, and set off at a swinging
-pace across the square and toward the river. It was her intention, by
-way of frustrating any attempts at tracing her which might be set afoot,
-the discovery of her flight once made, to so double on her own tracks,
-and to seek out such unimagined and unlikely streets to traverse, as
-must puzzle both bell-man, watch, and redbird alike, as well as her
-acquaintances.
-
-She swaggered along toward St. Stephen’s where a coach containing
-quality was occasionally met even now; then down Horseferry Road, almost
-to the river’s bank; then along Jackanapes Row, with little idea of the
-cut-throat locality she was haunting; back again toward better
-neighborhoods; then a lurch to the Thames making into Farthing Alley and
-Little Boy Yard, at the end of which she found herself at the old Dove
-Pier.
-
-Peg stood still, her heart beating both with her quick walk, and at the
-strangeness of all that surrounded her. She had no fear, because her arm
-was stout, her aim sure, pistols at her belt and a good sword at her
-side; and she was perfectly ignorant of any harm here to be found,
-greater than at the door of Beau Brummell’s house.
-
-The dark dwellings of the yard frowned at one another, with not an ell
-of sky to share between ’em at their roofs; the sign of the “Three Cups”
-swung and creaked in the slow breeze; the river, black and gruesome,
-lapped at the foot of the stone pile against which she leaned. On the
-river the tired bargemen rested at their oars, and the dip of a
-water-bird was the only sound that struck upon her ear. Peggy was
-casting about in her mind whether to enter the inn and inquire her road
-to the King’s Arms in the Strand, and had just turned to do so, when in
-the cavernous doorway of one of the gaunt-looking tenements she beheld
-three figures. The faces of two were toward her, and by the light of the
-fish-oil lamp swinging at the next-door tavern, she beheld them, so
-sinister and forbidding as to cause her to halt for a space, and then,
-overcoming her dread, to pursue her path, but slowly and by crossing the
-yard.
-
-As she did so, her weapon caught in her heel and as she bent to
-disengage it, a voice speaking in low muffled tones arrested her gait.
-
-It was the voice of Sir Robin McTart saying:
-
-“If I make it ten guineas apiece on the spot, you swear to leave him
-cold on the pier yonder, come Sunday night, or to tie a stone about his
-throat and throw him into the river?”
-
-“Aye, aye,” grunts one of the two companions of this most valorous
-gentleman. “’E’s h’always ’ulkin ’ereabouts o’ Sunday nights.”
-
-Lady Peggy, with such a pull-string of terror at her heart as she never
-had before, draws closer to the wall of the tenement before which she
-has halted, creeps nearer to the portal wherein these cavaliers are
-quartered.
-
-“Let it be five guineas apiece to-night,” squeaks the Baronet, “and the
-remainder when the business is done?”
-
-“The devil knock you into hell with your, ‘when the business is done!’”
-mutters the other. “We’s doin’ your job for you for little enough.
-Tain’t everyone as’d h’undertake the funeral of a h’Earl’s heir like Sir
-Percy de Bohun——”
-
-Her Ladyship’s like now to fall in a swoon; but not she; only leans she
-a bit against the bricks, her bosom heaving, her eyes dilating, her lips
-bitten in until they are almost bleeding.
-
-“Hush-h-h! no names, you varlets!” interrupts Sir Robin.
-
-“Hey?” responds the other, “the walls ain’t got no h’ears, and if they
-’ad wot I’m a-sayin’s the cussid truth, eh, Bloksey?”
-
-Bloksey grunts.
-
-“The town’ll be afire when it’s out that a gallant like ’im that’s heir
-to Lord Gower’s been done fer; and then, my fine gentleman, who’s to pay
-for’t, if we’s caught and if we ’appens to be seen by any one when we’re
-a doin’ of your job? No, money all down now, or Sir Percy lives as long
-as ’e likes, for us!”
-
-Peg’s hand’s upon the hilt of her sword.
-
-Shall she spring and run Sir Robin through?
-
-Shall she hide and buy the rascals out at a higher price than he has
-paid?
-
-But no sooner do these thoughts rush through her brain than the utter
-impossibility of compassing the one, or of performing the other,
-undetected, if even with her life, and she so at the mercy of these
-cut-throats, comes to steady her, and she realizes that her only part is
-to get away as fast as she may, and unseen if she can.
-
-Meantime Sir Robin concludes his bargain with the two desperadoes, and
-as they withdraw into their haunt, and he turns on his heel, he espies
-Lady Peggy rounding the corner with her bundle under her arm. The little
-Baronet with a sidelong glance in at the hallway to make sure his men
-are out of sight, darts to the opposite side of the court on tiptoe, and
-then, putting hands to mouth, calls across softly, but clearly, in a
-tone half of joy, half anger.
-
-“Mr. Incognito! Mr. Incognito! Ho! I say, Incognito!”
-
-Peg stops short. ’Twere wiser perhaps to try to discover what had put
-Sir Robin McTart up to the murder.
-
-“By Gad, Sir!” cries this one, making a dash now over to Peg’s side of
-the way. “Here have I scoured the town for you day and night, and no
-trace of you anywhere! ‘Incognito’ me no more, Sir! Who are you, Sir?
-Damme! I’ll stand no more such nonsense!” Sir Robin’s valor’s thoroughly
-based on the knowledge that, were blade to be unsheathed to his hurt, he
-could and would shout for his hirelings to the rescue.
-
-’Twas the first and only time in his life that he was ever known to
-urge, or even hint, a quarrel _in propria persona_.
-
-“I’ll ‘incognito’ you to the end of the chapter, Sir Robin McTart,”
-answers Lady Peggy, clapping hand to hilt.
-
-“Very well, Sir, very well,” says the Baronet, reflecting that another
-corpse might cost him ten guineas more, ere he were done with it; and
-besides yearning for the news of His Lady which he thinks he may glean.
-“I’ve small stomach for fightin’ any man. Religion don’t teach us that
-lesson, but ’tis a devilish trick you’ve played me, Sir.”
-
-“In what way, Sir? Out with it,” replies Peggy.
-
-“You, Sir, sent me to Kennaston a-seeking Lady Peggy Burgoyne, Sir; she
-was from home, and not a word else could I buy or wring out of her
-servant’s cursed mouth. Then I hied to Kent, believing, from your fine
-messages to me from Her Ladyship, that she must be there at her
-godmother’s. No, Sir! she was not; nor could any one tell but that she
-was at Kennaston Castle for all they knew. Back in town post-haste, I
-seek Lark Lane, where her brother lodges, so I had heard, only to learn
-that he has gone to stop with Sir Percy de Bohun, in Charlotte Street.”
-
-“Well, you sought him there?” inquires Peg quivering with suppressed
-excitement.
-
-“I did not, Sir!” replies Sir Robin with emphasis.
-
-“Thank heaven!” says his companion fervently, an exclamation which may
-do double duty, and is well taken by the little gentleman from Kent.
-
-“No, Sir; you do not suppose, Sir, that I’m a-going to risk a life
-that’s dear to Lady Peggy, at the hands of a ripping brawler and
-sure-kill like Sir Percy, do you?”
-
-“Ah, Sir Robin,” quoth Her Ladyship. “If you knew what a consolation it
-would be to Lady Peggy to hear of your unwillingness to hazard your
-precious person in such company, ’twould ease your mind and heart.”
-
-“Look you!” whispers Sir Robin, plucking at Peg’s sleeve. “But tell me
-where she is? This mystery’s killing me! How fares she? Does she pine
-for me? and is this true?” With shaking hands Sir Robin takes from his
-pocket a copy of a print of the day previous, and unfolding, reads to
-the astonished Peg the following paragraphs.
-
-“Town’s talk is all for the very pretty quarrel betwixt Sir P——y de
-B——n, and the gallant and handsome Sir R——n McT——t of Kent. ’Tis all
-over Mayfair, and far beyond, that the cause of the dispute’s the lovely
-but mysterious Lady P——y B——e.”
-
-“’Slife!” interrupts Peg, catching at straws. “You now perceive, Sir
-Robin, why ’tis that Her Ladyship must keep her whereabouts a secret,
-even,” she adds with sentimental deflection, “from you. Trust me, Sir,
-as you would trust her, and be guided by my counsel!”
-
-Sir Robin nods vigorously, fluttering his sheet with anxious fingers.
-“Listen, Sir, listen, to this further.” He reads on. “Sir P——y de B——n
-has sworn by all that’s sacred, so ’tis said, to stick Sir R——n McT——t
-to the death, and serious consequences are feared.”
-
-“Ah!” cries Lady Peggy, overjoyed to hear anything that may serve to
-keep the little Baronet and Sir Percy from meeting. “’Tis a gentleman of
-his word, I promise you. Better get back at once to Robinswold, and let
-London and Sir Percy gallop to the devil, an they see fit!”
-
-“Nay,” replies the one addressed. “Not I, Sir Incognito. It is not for a
-McTart to turn his back on danger, but the rather,” and here by the
-fish-oil gleam, the little gentleman’s squint eyes leer cunningly up
-into Her Ladyship’s face: “The rather,” continues he, glancing
-cautiously around, “take measures to protect myself.”
-
-“Very commendable of you, Sir Robin, by my faith,” cries Peggy, although
-she shudders, now linking her arm in her companion’s, and assuming an
-air of easy confidence, by the which she hopes to ensnare him into a
-complete revelation of his plans.
-
-“Since you go armed, and are, I doubt not, a master in the art of
-self-defense, what have you to fear from Sir Percy de Bohun?”
-
-“True,” responds the Baronet, with a reservation to himself and no mind
-at all to proceed any further with his revelations. “Gad! Sir, a fellow
-like that,” clutching at the newspaper stuck among his ruffles, “ain’t
-to be trusted as long as he’s above the ground. I swear, Sir! I fear to
-walk abroad and hold myself housed at my inn in Pimlico, close, not
-daring to show my face. A ruffian that’s publicly printed as seekin’
-life’d stick me in the back in the dark, an he got the chance.”
-
-“Nay, nay, Sir Robin,” says Peg, up for her sweetheart, “he’s not that
-sort of a gentleman—but, look you, keep close, frequent neither club,
-coffee or chocolate-house, or rout or drum; eschew Vauxhall, Richmond
-and the play-house, or any likely place where bucks gather, for trust
-me, Sir, an you do meet Sir Percy, there’ll be the devil to pay, and his
-blade’s his obedient slave.”
-
-Poor Peg! She has not only to protect Percy of his life, but, as before,
-to prevent any discovery of her usurpation of the little Baronet’s name.
-
-“Curse him! I fear him not!” responds this one, his itching fingers
-twisting about the empty purse in his pocket.
-
-“But of Her Ladyship, Sir Go-between?” adds he presently, as they emerge
-upon the broader and better lighted road. “’Pon my life, but to so find
-myself the hero of a romantic passion with the Lady secluded in a
-mystery, a nobleman thirsting for my blood, a nameless gentleman playin’
-Mercury betwixt me and my fair, ’tis amazing, Sir! prodigious amazing!”
-Sir Robin struts and takes snuff very comfortably, since he has got out
-of a very dangerous environment.
-
-Peg’s soul sickens within her as she listens to him.
-
-“Tell me now, how fares she?”
-
-“Not so well,” answers she.
-
-“You’ve seen her?”
-
-“Not I.”
-
-“Are like to?”
-
-“No, Sir.”
-
-“You can convey messages to her by some fond way she’s planned to get
-her news of me, eh?”
-
-“I can, Sir Robin.”
-
-“Sir, whoever you are, for pity’s sake, tell me where is she?”
-
-“Not far, Sir.”
-
-“Gad, Sir, to touch her hand, her cheek! You’re in her sure confidence?
-She does favor me? She will not give me hopes, Sir, to turn around and
-break my heart by marryin’ of another?”
-
-“Lady Peggy’ll never marry any man, Sir Robin, I’m of the opinion, so
-I’d not give that for your chances!” answers she.
-
-“Think you she ever cared for Sir Percy?” asks he.
-
-“Sir, who can fathom a woman’s heart? ’Tis deeper than the sea; so deep,
-methinks, ofttimes she herself holds not that plummet that can sound it.
-Sir Robin, I take my leave of you.”
-
-“Hold! hold! Sir, not so fast. Where next may I encounter you?”
-
-“That must be as Her Ladyship says,” answers Peggy. “Your inn’s in
-Pimlico?”
-
-“Yes, the Puffled Hen, not far off Battersea Bridge.”
-
-“Farewell, Sir, and look you keep close in-doors, and risk no quarrel
-with Sir Percy de Bohun.”
-
-“Farewell, Sir,” watching Her Ladyship turn down the street as he turns
-up. “Gad’s life! ’twas well he happened when he did, and not earlier, to
-eavesdrop my bargain with the wharf-rats! ’Sdeath! Risk no quarrel with
-Sir Percy! Not so long as there’s guineas left to buy corpses with!” and
-the little gentleman trots over to Pimlico, tolerably well pleased with
-his evening’s work; there, however, to be greeted with the reading of
-more newspapers, including that one which had earlier in the day so
-entertained Beau Brummell and his familiars.
-
-Not for a moment did the Baronet mistrust, or have a suspicion, other
-than that his fame had caused him to be made the subject of such a pack
-of pretty stories as was then the custom of the press, as now, regarding
-any gentleman of position and gallantry. Sir Robin’s vanity easily
-swallowed the dose, and he even slapped his thigh and laughed his little
-dice-rattle laugh, as he reflected how safe he really was with never a
-challenge or a brawl to his cowardly credit since he got his first
-flogging at Eton.
-
-He actually mouthed over his prospective wooing, and assured winning of
-Lady Peggy, and felt a calm satisfaction in the knowledge that the one
-rival he feared would so soon be beyond the reach of ladies’ smiles or
-tears. No qualms came to disturb his genial enjoyment of purposed
-assassination. In those days to kill was nearer men’s tempers than it is
-to-day. ’Twas with blackguard and man of honor alike, the first redress
-for even the pettiest sort of a dispute; with the difference of method
-only, that the gallant blade fought out his quarrel on the open field,
-while the craven bought a hireling’s dagger to do it in the dark.
-
-Meantime, My Lady, by as direct a route as she can fathom out of the
-labyrinth of her ignorance and her distracted state of mind, makes back
-to Peter’s Court with her parcel of duds still under her arm.
-
-She enters, mounts the stair-case, seeks her room, closes the door, and
-sits down.
-
-“’Tis now not to be doubted,” she says to herself, “but that the Devil’s
-at the helm of my ship—and that I am to be a man for the rest of my
-life. ’Sdeath! as dad says, I’ll stop over till Sunday night’s o’er
-past, and as surely as my name’s Peggy Burgoyne I’ll foil that little
-dastardly groat of a Baronet’s plot to murder him that I once l-loved.
-Bah!” cries she half aloud. “What’s the use of mincin’ matters that’s
-true? Him that I love! Even if he’s dyin’ for Lady Diana, and goin’ to
-be her husband instead of mine! ‘Consents!’” murmurs she, flinging
-herself on the bed in a flood of tempestuous tears.
-
-In vain regretting, she now too fully realized that her own wilful
-words, her jealousy, her falsehoods, her deceits, were the sole causes
-for Sir Robin’s terror, and, therefore, for the abominable scheme which
-he had just concocted.
-
-Presently she arose, tossed the bundle once more back into its
-hiding-place, and set to pacing up and down the floor as she’d seen her
-twin do at home when he was looking high and low for a rhyme.
-
-’Twas weightier matters kept Peg moving for an hour or more, and
-quick-spinning as were her heart and temper, her brain bore a more even
-balance.
-
-First she had thought to warn Percy by a letter unsigned; the which she
-knew he’d pitch into the fire and think no more about. Then, that she’d
-write one to Kennaston imploring him to keep Percy from the pier Sunday
-night or any other; this she soon recognized would have the fate of
-t’other. Then, ’twas to contrive some plan to fetch him to Richmond,
-Windsor, any place else for Sunday; but to this arose the objection that
-the blackguards cheated of one day, or place, would not fail to wait
-upon their prey some other. At the last, Her Ladyship’s shrewd
-common-sense and indomitable pluck plainly showed her there was but one
-safe plan out of the danger; and this must be to go herself to the river
-Sunday night, and there concealed, armed, await the coming of the
-cut-throats from their den, and from the rear, put a shot into each at
-one and the same moment.
-
-Could she do it?
-
-Her Ladyship had muscles of steel, no nerves, as the fine ladies of her
-day comprehended them; as brave and loyal a heart as ever beat in any
-breast; good faith in God, for all her frowardness; and that species of
-love burning within her for Sir Percy de Bohun, which has, not a few
-times in the world’s history, made frailest woman into man’s equal for
-courage.
-
-To Lady Peggy there seemed a divine compensation in the fact that it had
-come to her, to save the very one whom, by her lies and wilfulness, she
-alone had been the means of endangering.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: At the table sat Kennaston...]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- _In this same Her Ladyship’s mount is shot
- dead under her in Epstowe Forest, and
- she makes off on Tom Kidde’s horse._
-
-
-This young gentleman now stood looking from a window of his uncle’s
-house, upon all the dewy leafing beauty of the Park at May. His brow was
-knit, his lips tight shut, his hand amid his ruffles clenched.
-
-At the table sat Kennaston, inky-fingered, scribbling; eyes now rolling
-to the ceiling, now roving hither and yon.
-
-“Ah!” sighs this one. “If the critics do not find this canto to their
-taste, may I be damned!”
-
-“You’re like to go to Court to the Devil, I’m thinking then, dear lad,”
-speaks de Bohun over his shoulder.
-
-“Fame! Fame!” cries the young poet, pushing back in his chair, wig awry
-and quill poised in air. “I’ll hunt thee to my dying hour, and if thou
-escap’st me then, ’twill all be Lady Diana’s fault.”
-
-“How’s that?” asks Percy, with, however, but small ring of interest in
-his voice.
-
-“Oh!” exclaimed Peg’s twin, “the minx mocks me! ’Tis Monday, kindness
-and all smiles, to wake on Tuesday for indifference; pouts on Wednesday;
-lure-me-ons o’ Thursday; forgetfulness for Friday; radiance for
-Saturday, and all a-jumble, sweets-and-frowns! showers! sunshine! what
-you will!—and will not!—for my Sunday fare.”
-
-Percy sighs and smiles.
-
-“Percy, sometimes I think Diana does love you!”
-
-“No, Sir, never. We’re like brother and sister, nothing else, save my
-uncle’s absurd, obstinate (now-cured) whim, since childhood, to match
-his heir with Brookwood’s heiress. Odzooks! Ken, you’re like every other
-swain that ever sighed, always looking for a rival to be jealous of!
-Lady Di cares for you; an you doubted it before, ’tis time to take up
-hope, since you are asked to Brookwood for a visit, and go popping off
-to-night, with me left home to think alone on Peggy.”
-
-“Zounds! Sir, ’tis not you only that’s thinking of her!” cries the young
-man rising and crossing to the fire. “But, what would you! if I call out
-the bell-man, publish her disappearance in the newspapers; get word to
-my father and my mother; what comes of’t all, but scandal? and like as
-not dad an apoplexy, and My Lady mother a set of fits and a death-bed!”
-
-“Ken, I’m a damned fool ever to stop inside of doors or to cease pacing
-streets, haunting inns, shadowing Sir Robin McTart, until I find her!”
-
-“Fie, Sir, if she’s gone off with Sir Robin McTart, ’tis, I promise you,
-with a wedding-ring on her finger, and not else! An she loves him,
-what’s to be said or done, if he’s her lawful lord?”
-
-“Naught. I myself went down to Kennaston yesterday. I said nothing to
-you, Ken,” he adds, noting the other’s surprised and reproachful start,
-with a hand upon his junior’s shoulder.
-
-“I thought I’d not interrupt the epic and your frenzies about Lady Di,
-with my troubles.”
-
-“Well, what news of Peg? Any?” asks her twin anxiously.
-
-“None. I saw Chockey, and only got from her what Grigson had, the
-positive assurance that her mistress had gone up to London. ‘Of her own
-free will?’ I asked. ‘Yes, Sir Percy,’ said she. ‘Alone?’ I inquired.
-‘No, Sir Percy,’ was her answer, nor could I force, frighten, or buy the
-baggage into any further confidence. She did beg of me, however, seek
-out Her Ladyship, if I could, and find how she fared.”
-
-“Gad’s life, Sir! She has eloped. ’Tis clear as crystal!”
-
-“One thing more, I asked Chock: Had Her Ladyship money in her purse?
-‘Lawk, Sir Percy! cried she, ‘two hundred pounds I know of!’”
-
-“‘Two hundred pounds!’” repeats Peg’s twin in vast amazement. “’Tis sure
-more’n she ever saw before in our whole lives put together. Oh, the
-girl’s safely wedded, Sir, beyond a doubt!”
-
-“Sir!” says Percy, sitting at the table, with his head low in his hands.
-“The blackguard’s won her from me!”
-
-“I fear so, Sir.” The two men’s hands meet and grasp in the silent
-fashion of their sex: ofttimes more eloquent than any words e’er
-speeched.
-
-“Would I had made a hole in his heart that night in Lark Lane!” cried
-Sir Percy next.
-
-“Sir Robin’s nimble, Sir, and knows a trick or two with steel, as well
-as dice.”
-
-“Aye: a gallant every inch; ’tis for that I hate him all the more; and
-yet, Ken, sometimes, lad, when I’ve been a-staring at him from afar,
-I’ve caught something in his countenance resembling Peg, and it’s that’s
-made me halt like a chit at provoking of him further.”
-
-Kennaston nods. “Aye: I’ve remarked it; but held my peace, Percy, for
-’tis said man and wife often grow to look alike, and I doubt not,
-sometimes begin after the same pattern.”
-
-Sir Percy sighs again: turns up the room with drooped lids; in silence
-getting that grip upon his soul which noblest natures insist on with
-themselves, even in crises like his. ’Tis a bitter battle, closer fought
-and quicker, too, than any won or lost with swords and guns. The
-struggle’s writ upon his face as he goes; but when he comes his
-victory’s writ there too.
-
-“Kennaston,” says he, very quiet and off-hand, “I’m thinking I’ll go to
-the Colonies, to Virginia.”
-
-“What! no!” ejaculates the poet, placing a hand on either of his
-friend’s shoulders.
-
-“Yes, Ken, dear lad, I could not live in England without her; perhaps
-yonder, over the sea, in the new land that’s growing up, I may learn to
-lead a new, better life, just for her sake that’s lost to me forever. At
-the least I can strive, at such a distance, to serve my country and my
-King like a man—until the end I’ll pray for comes.”
-
-Kennaston turns off, with tears in his eyes.
-
-“Mostly,” says he brokenly, “were not Peggy my twin, I’d be in a ripe
-mood for a-cursing of her! When, Percy?” asks he, after a pause.
-
-“As soon as may be,” is the reply. “I’ve the promise of a commission by
-my uncle’s influence! Come, come, lad o’ my heart,” laughs he through
-his own misty eyes. “The wind’s not in my ship’s sails yet. I promised
-Mr. Brummell for his expedition to Ivy Dene for the morrow, and I’ll
-hardly be ready in all points to get under way before you’re back in
-town from your visit to Brookwood; whence I foresee you’ll fly with
-Diana’s ‘yes’ betwixt her kiss on your cheek.”
-
-’Twas now Mr. Brummell’s famous and long-talked-about party to Ivy Dene
-this very next day that dawned.
-
-Now, Her Ladyship had vowed to herself that, come what might, she would
-avoid this, even did Fate keep her in London. ’Twas no part of her
-program, although she could do it as well as any sporting squire, to
-make for her future any such memory as riding a horse astride for thirty
-miles out and back, in the company a half-score of gentlemen must
-furnish; yet, so is each of us rather the creature of circumstance than
-will, that the hour appointed found Peg mounted on a gray with blood in
-his veins, and a-pacing down Piccadilly to the White Horse beside Beau
-Brummell’s bay.
-
-She could not, with Sir Robin’s murderous pact in her perpetual view,
-make up her mind to omit a company that should include Sir Percy.
-
-It seemed to her that any day spent by him out of her sight might prove
-fatal; that Sir Robin’s hirelings might conceive it better to their
-purpose to put an end to their intended victim before the Sunday. So,
-aching with an insane but not unnatural impulse to pull rein and confess
-all; burning with shame to remember ’twas of Lady Diana’s sweetheart she
-was thinking; mortified beyond belief every time her saddle grazed her
-breeches; intent lest an unsuspected sword should flash from the
-hedge-rows, the sheep-cotes, or the shadows of Epstowe Forest, which
-they traversed on their way; My Lady Peggy, wishing amidst all this that
-she had never come to town, yet contrived to display a very cheerful
-mien, to laugh as loud as she dared, keeping her high notes cautiously
-to herself, as she had in her speech ever since the night, as Sir Robin,
-she had made her first appearance in Lark Lane—to join in jest, quip,
-prank, such as a gay cavalcade of jovial gentlemen were then wont to
-indulge in.
-
-Such are some of the strange vicissitudes incident to being that most
-amazingly delicious compound, a wilful and withal true-hearted woman.
-
-As Mr. Brummell had planned, they halted for refreshment at the Merry
-Rabbit at Market Ossory, and left, after a game of bowls on the green,
-to pursue their way. Percy lingered a bit in the rear: truth to tell,
-his reflections were none of the gayest, and the presence of the
-supposed Sir Robin McTart, and the conclusion, which, together with Ken,
-he had been forced to reach, that Lady Peggy had run off with the
-Baronet, did not by any means conspire to the lightening of his spirits.
-As he watched his presumed rival, heard the ringing laugh, the brilliant
-jest: noted the careless air, and thought of this cavalier as Lady
-Peggy’s lord, his choler knew no bounds, and it appeared to him that,
-come what might, he must invent cause of quarrel, and one or the other
-of ’em be left cold on the field.
-
-“Why,” a thousand times he asked himself, “this mystery regarding her
-marriage? Why not have wedded Sir Robin from her father’s home, and with
-her father’s blessing, since,” Sir Percy reluctantly admitted, “no fault
-could be found with so fine a young gentleman; and his fortune, he knew
-to be considerable.”
-
-He was aware that Her Ladyship was romantic to a degree, and he could
-but decide that this predilection had caused her to elope and to
-preserve the matter in a wrapping of secrecy for a time; no doubt even
-now from her retirement looking forward to the hour when she should
-emerge as Lady McTart!
-
-Sir Percy gritted his teeth together and struck his spurs so deep that
-his horse gave a plunge which brought him up, neck and neck, with the
-gray of the supposed Baronet, and the black of Mr. Chalmers.
-
-“To the rescue, Sir Percy!” cried this one jocularly. “Your assistance I
-beg, and the loan of your wits in our argument.”
-
-“With all my heart!” answers Percy, scenting a possible chance to worst
-his rival, even in a battle of words. “What’s the subject?”
-
-“A truce to ’t!” exclaims the Beau, with an expressive shake of his head
-at Mr. Chalmers, who, however, seldom notes any obstacle to the pleasure
-of his present moment.
-
-“No truce at all, Mr. Brummell!” answers he gaily. “’Tis—”
-
-“’Tis nothing whatever, Sir Percy,” interrupts Lord Escombe, putting his
-hand on Chalmers’s rein, and adding in an undertone: “Gadzooks! man,
-hold your peace. The matter’s like tow and tinder betwixt Percy and
-McTart.”
-
-“’Pon my soul, Gentlemen!” now cries Percy, “I insist upon Jack’s being
-allowed to proceed with his remarks. If he wants my counsels, they’re
-his. Come, Sir, speak.”
-
-“’Tis but this,” says Mr. Chalmers. “I say to Sir Robin that since the
-world’s busy with rumors of his secret marriage to Lady Peggy Burgoyne;
-since as I learn (by my man, who had it at the gate of the very best
-authority—Gad! Sirs, ’tis a fact, even if we don’t relish it, the gist
-of our gossip comes from below stairs, up!) that Lady Peggy is from
-home, her father believing her in Kent at her godmother’s!” Mr. Chalmers
-smiles, “her mother being in York, believing her safe at Kennaston, I
-say, My Lords and Gentlemen, it behooves Sir Robin confide the matter to
-his best friends, and give them chances to congratulate him and the
-Lady. Have I the right of’t, Percy, yes or no?”
-
-Percy is silent for a moment: it seems to him a desecration of the
-sweet, modest and womanly girl he has so long adored, thus to hear even
-her name, much less a discussion of her most private matters, made into
-mirthful subject on a morning’s ride.
-
-His anger, too, is great that the man whose name is coupled with hers
-has not already put a stop to such a conversation, even were it at the
-point of the sword.
-
-Shall he, here and now, so reply to Mr. Chalmers as shall breed an
-instant retort from Sir Robin, and a challenge on the spot? The wild
-thought even flashes through his brain that Sir Robin might, by the
-grace of God! be left dead on the ground, and that some time in the dim
-future he might win Peggy back to himself.
-
-But, with a tightening rein, he checks himself, as well as his horse, as
-he answers.
-
-“Mr. Chalmers, the Lady you name is one whom I honor most deeply, and it
-seems to me if she has seen fit to go into seclusion, or to marry
-secretly, that, while I may wish to God it had been in open church! I
-must continue to respect her preferences, until she elects to change
-them;” with which, breaking the little pause of silence which follows,
-Sir Percy gallops ahead, joining Mr. Brummell, who has put himself
-quickly out of the commotion he had foreseen as likely to arrive.
-
-Meantime, it may be correctly imagined that Her Ladyship, with all her
-sex’s exquisite ingenuity at plaguing itself whenever it possibly can,
-had seized upon those words of Sir Percy’s most easily twisted into a
-means of self-torture.
-
-“I wish to God it had been in open church!” instantly stuck itself in
-her thoughts beside “Consents;” the two forming just that species of
-flagellation which ladies so situated in mind are wont to inflict upon
-themselves.
-
-The supposed Sir Robin, from this on, until the arrival of the party at
-Ivy Dene, became taciturn, even morose, and not a syllable could be got
-from him in answer to the wildest gibes.
-
-Her eyes intent upon Sir Percy, who now kept to the fore with his host,
-My Lady Peggy, on the keen lookout for the possible assassin, and to the
-tune of “consents,” and its running-mate, “I would to God it had been in
-open church!” put in a very dolorous twenty miles; but, on dismounting
-at Mr. Brummell’s doorstep, she endeavored to infuse a little joyousness
-into her looks and speech.
-
-Indeed, ’twas difficult; yet no more so to-day than any other since she
-had been coerced by circumstances into an acceptance of the Beau’s
-hospitality. Every mouthful of bread and meat Peggy ate well-nigh choked
-her, as she remembered ’twas meant for Sir Robin McTart. She felt
-herself a trickster, a villain of the deepest dye, and yet saw no way
-out of her usurped character with honor and repute; no way of keeping in
-it save by the deeper dyeing of her soul in sin, which she promised
-herself, and heaven, to expiate as soon as Percy should be safe from Sir
-Robin’s men.
-
-The afternoon was spent as had been planned; the country cook’s dinner
-was voted a perfect success: Mr. Chalmers, slightly raised by wine, even
-going so far as to send her down, with his compliments, his favorite
-ruby heart-pin: when, on the spot, not a gentleman present but whipped
-out a jewel from ruffle, finger, pocket or fob, and Peggy herself tying
-’em up in a pocket-napkin laced with Brussels and perfumed like the
-civet-cat, sent them down to the astonished lass in the kitchen.
-
-A game of cards was in order after the repast: a tilt at politics: a
-wager on the question of tea in the Colonies; Lady Peggy and Sir Percy
-keeping, by the grace of each, well apart in all these encounters; and
-at twelve o’clock, just as the moon was rising behind a bank of splendid
-star-fringed clouds, Mr. Brummell and his guests set forth on their
-homeward road.
-
-The beauty of the night was such as soothes and casts its own mantle of
-peace over even those unquiet spirits which may be abroad.
-
-It reminded Lady Peggy, as she rode along, of just such another when she
-and Percy had wandered up and down together in the weedy gardens at
-Kennaston. Of that identical night Percy also was thinking, and of his
-wilful Lady’s bright sallies, quick smiles, frowns; yea, even of one
-little touch of her red lips, light as thistledown, which now he seemed
-to feel the ghost of, on his forehead.
-
-The cavalcade had left the highway some distance behind; the moon was
-fast being overtaken by the clouds whence she had, an hour or more ago,
-emerged; the dews fell thick, and the scent of the hawthorn was sweet in
-the air as they plunged into Epstowe Forest.
-
-“Ah, Gentlemen,” cried out Mr. Brummell, snapping his whip, “by Gad,
-Sirs, what a night for Tom Kidde and his merry men! the skies dark, the
-moon playin’ hide and seek, fifteen watches and purses, and as many
-rings, pins and seals between us as you left not at Ivy Dene with my
-cook Elizabeth!”
-
-“Ha! ha! ha! No fears of Tom Kidde, an he knows our caliber, jumping out
-upon us!” laughs Lord Wootton.
-
-“’Slife! Sir, he’s the sort of highwayman to jump out on the best mettle
-that strides horse-flesh or carries gold. The young devil’s afraid of
-nothing that breathes, and has been the terror of travelers now these
-three or four years gone,” says Vane.
-
-“He’s not above one-and-twenty, smooth-faced as a girl, those say who’ve
-caught a glimpse of him under his mask; dresses like a macaroni, voiced
-like a choir-singer, and nimble as an Indian monkey!”
-
-“Frequents he this neighborhood?” queries Lady Peggy, who at mention of
-the word “highwayman” has tightened her rein, clapped a hand on her
-holster, and felt her heart thump, as she involuntarily connects it with
-possible danger to Percy.
-
-“That he does,” said Mr. Chalmers. “His den, or one of ’em’s somewhere
-in the depths of Epstowe; and no one can tell when or where he’s like to
-turn up next.”
-
-“When did he turn up last?” says Sir Wyatt, laughing.
-
-“I can tell you,” returns Vane. “’Twas about Candlemas. I was down at
-home on a visit from town, when the news came, almost frightening my
-mother out of her wits, and setting the maids a-shivering like so many
-poppies in a storm. Tom Kidde had pounced on Lord Brookwood not a mile
-from his own gates, lifted him off his mount in the politest fashion
-imaginable, rifled His Lordship’s pockets, appropriated his weapons, and
-ridden off on his victim’s horse, leaving His Lordship tied to a tree at
-the roadside, where he was found by Biggs, the J.P., the next morning,
-a-bellowin’ and a-cursin’ like a wild bull.”
-
-A hearty laugh greets Mr. Vane’s description.
-
-“Yes, but that ain’t all of’t, My Lords and Gentlemen,” continues he.
-
-“By no means!” cries Beau Brummell, out of his fit of hilarity. “I
-recall now, that I rode over from Lauriston Castle, where I was
-visiting, that very morning, and heard the adventure from Brookwood
-himself. I fancy he had the laugh, or will have it some day, on Tom, or
-some of his men, for the stolen mare was none other than His Lordship’s
-famous ‘Homing Nell.’”
-
-“Is it possible!” exclaims Sir Percy, “the mare that’s been taken off a
-hundred miles, let loose, and finds her way home again; the mare that’s
-been sold and ridden fifty miles away, and then, when she felt a hand at
-her mouth she could master, has taken the bit between her teeth, and the
-one in the saddle’s only sometimes been able to keep his seat, and let
-her take him straight back whence she came?”
-
-“The very same ‘Homing Nell.’ Brookwood’s sure of her getting back
-sooner or later,” says the Beau.
-
-“They’ll never catch Tom, though,” cries Escombe.
-
-“If they do,” remarks Vane, “he’ll hang not two hours after he’s bagged;
-his death-warrant’s been lying signed in Mr. Biggs’s pocket-book any
-time this twelvemonth; and there’s still a gibbet standing on the hill
-above Brook-Armsleigh Village!”
-
-“Zounds! Sirs!” exclaims Mr. Chalmers, “what a life ’t must be, tho’;
-sleep o’ days, wake o’ nights, prowling under the branches, harkening
-for game from dusk till dawn, all seasons the same, one’s heart in one’s
-mouth, till the hoof’s heard, and then a masking dash, a brawl, a thrift
-quick as the lightning’s flash; a corpse or two, and your purse the
-heavier by as many guineas as the game’s had under cover—and all to the
-tune of the owl’s cry, and I doubt not for some sweet Maid Marian’s
-sake!”
-
-“’Slife! hear the boy!” cries Mr. Brummell. “One would think him sired
-by a Jack Sheppard rather than by the gentlest Sir that ever lived. For
-your froward tendencies, Sir, you shall pay a penalty.”
-
-“Yea, yea! a penalty! a penalty!” cry they all.
-
-“In what kind?” returns Jack, waving his hat over his head.
-
-“A song! a song!” they answer.
-
-“Which one?” asks he, nothing loath, for his lungs are lusty and his
-reputation for singing above the ordinary.
-
-“What you will,” they answer.
-
-“Well, then, what say you to ‘Lady Betty Takes the Air,’ since all can
-join me in the chorus?”
-
-“Good!”
-
-“Percy,” says Jack, “you’ve a pretty pipe in your throat; give me the
-key, will you? not too high, you rascal, I’m not vainglorious at my
-music. So, and, so—there,” as Percy does as he is asked.
-
- When all the May is deck’d about
- With hawthorn bud and blow;
- When pinkly shows the heather’s tip,
- And harebells nod a-row—
-
- Lady Betty takes the air,
- Sing ah fa, la-la-la!
- With a rush hat on her hair:
- Sing ah fa, la-la-la!
-
- When all the brown earth thrills to green,
- When rivers laugh and sing;
- When lark and thrush cajole and coax,
- And all the wood’s a-wing—
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When Corydon most sad, forlorn,
- With wrinkled hose, distraught,
- All flouted by his worshiped Fair,
- Walks forth as one that’s daft,
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When, at the turn-stile next the park,
- The sad swain stops to sigh—
- “No lady ever lived so dear
- As she for whom I’d die!”
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When, as the sun walks up the glade,
- And as the milkmaid hies
- Across the paddock with her pails,
- And as the lark doth rise—
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- Cries Betty, flaunting past, “Oh fie!
- A gallant all unkempt,
- Such ungenteel and woful sight
- Kind fortune me exempt!”
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When speaking thus, the May-breeze blew
- Her rush hat o’er the stile,
- And Corydon caught quick the gaze,
- And swift his sigh turned smile,
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- Thus, when the May is deck’d about
- With hawthorn bud and blow,
- Sweet Betty ties her hat-strings fast,
- A gallant in the bow!
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- ’Twas ever thus, dear maids and men,
- Whene’er ye walk abroad—
- ’Tis e’er the little breeze that blows
- Each lady to her lord!
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
-Every one joins in the chorus with a hearty good will; all save Her
-Ladyship. Peggy dares not lift her woman’s voice, lest Escombe at right,
-or Wootton at her left, shall hear its most unmannish lilt. She mouths
-the words, though, and listens, as she has many a time before, to Sir
-Percy’s tones, and wonders if the sentiment is making him think of the
-Lady Diana.
-
-The Lady Diana, however, is very far from Sir Percy’s imagination. He
-has been moodily ruminating on the possibilities of Tom Kidde (the most
-renowned desperado in all England of that day) suddenly bursting upon
-the party, and leaving a corpse behind him—that of Sir Robin McTart! He
-has been picturing to himself the profound pleasure it would give him to
-assist in fetching Sir Robin to the nearest church for decent burial,
-and the almost hilarious joy that would be his in attending his rival’s
-body to the grave! These were, according to the strict code, most
-murderous thoughts, and yet how pleasant, if how altogether unprofitable
-they were also.
-
-Mr. Chalmers is in the midst of his last verse, his voice echoing into,
-and back, from the depths of the great green wood; there is not a wisp
-of the moon visible by this, and no light, save the halo from her beauty
-which lines and rims the vast masses of clouds above them.
-
-Peggy is listening to the song; she hears it well: also the crunch of
-her horse’s hoofs on the narrow path; also, the crackle of the fresh
-twigs as they snap before the advance; and too, so sharp are her ears,
-the sleepy cheep of some disturbed bird in its nest, and, what else?
-
-What is this curious stealthy stir, far-off, and creeping nearer in the
-wood?
-
-And, hark! Peggy puts her hand to her ear to hear a subdued whistle,
-sweet, tuneful, underbreath, but patent to her sense, and too, to Sir
-Percy’s.
-
-Before either can move, or, indeed, had as yet gathered the impulse of
-even self-defense, into the midst of Mr. Chalmers and the rest, with
-their chorus, dashes a company of riders in masks.
-
-A shot, low-aimed, and merely intended as a slight warning of what may
-be expected, should occasion demand, strikes the ground at Her
-Ladyship’s right.
-
-With remorse and reparation at his heart-strings—’tis the kind of man
-who could be but generous to his worst enemy—Sir Percy’s horse is flung
-betwixt the supposed Sir Robin and the band.
-
-“Good evening, My Lords and Gentlemen,” says the leader, in a voice like
-a lute. “I thank you heartily for coming my way! Purses and watches,
-merry Sirs, jewels, trinkets, snuff-boxes, if of gold, pins, fobs,
-seals, these are all the toll I demand, and shall be forced to collect,
-if you show any disposition to deny.”
-
-It might he wisely argued that, while this speech was being made, any
-gentleman might have either run the highwayman through, or put an ounce
-of lead into his heart, but the fact of the matter was, each gentleman
-found himself face to face with another gentleman who held a blunderbuss
-up to within three inches of his nose.
-
-My Lady’s first thought had been that Sir Robin’s men had not waited for
-the Sunday night to come, but presently she recognized the truth, and,
-stung by the fact that Sir Percy had put himself between her and danger,
-she was the only one of the whole company who stirred in her saddle
-other than to do the bidding of Tom Kidde.
-
-While the rest were busily engaged in emptying their treasures, she,
-making feint to do the same, says very low and tauntingly to Sir Percy:
-
-“Had I but one to show fight with me, I’d ne’er give in to these
-scoundrels.”
-
-“As soon done as said, Sir Robin,” whispers Percy. “No man can say I’m
-his lesser in courage!” with which he wrests his bridle from the
-blackguard whose hand’s upon it, whips out his sword with one hand,
-picks out his pistol with the other, grips his reins in his teeth, and
-strikes with steel and shot, both at once.
-
-Peg’s his match, imitating him with such a will as sets every gentleman
-of ’em a-shooting, a-lunging and a-cursing with all the arms and breath
-he’s got; and sets the robbers for a second to their wits, for they are
-not used to any sort of encounter, save one that’s terror-stricken and
-submissive in the opponent.
-
-’Tis a bit of a mêlée quite in the dark; slashing and pounding betwixt
-the branches: now a man unhorsed, anon up again; shots resounding,
-powder flashing, until in about ten minutes or less the chief makes a
-plunge for Sir Percy, crying out,
-
-“So ’twas you said ‘fight,’ was’t! Have a care; no man can defy Tom
-Kidde and live to tell it!”
-
-“Nay!” shouts Her Ladyship, with spurs all inches into the gray’s sides,
-making him rear as she puts herself between Percy and the highwayman,
-“’twas I said ‘fight’!”
-
-Whizz! and a ball intended for Sir Percy strikes the gray dead under
-her.
-
-Whizz! and her ball strikes Tom Kidde from his mount.
-
-In less time than it takes to tell it, Peg was straight in the
-highwayman’s saddle; he was picked up by two of his men, bleeding, set
-before one of ’em, and off: My Lords and Gentlemen find themselves once
-more alone in the midst of Epstowe Forest, a-crawling about on their
-hands and knees a-gathering up their spilled guineas and trinkets by
-flash of tinder-box.
-
-Sir Percy, trying to explain to them who had been the means of their
-recovering their valuables and of putting the desperadoes to flight,
-cries out:
-
-“I tell you! we owe’t all to Sir Robin here! ’Slife, Gentlemen, I’d not
-have ventured to think of resistance had it not been for him. ’Twas he
-said, close in my ear, ‘fight,’ and by Gad! Sirs, he’s lost more’n any
-of us; the horse shot under him.”
-
-“The gray’s well lost teaching Tom Kidde he can’t terrify all the men in
-England,” answers the Beau from his sprawling search after his diamond
-snuff-box.
-
-“Ho, Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin!” Sir Wyatt shouts it out, and the
-rest of the company take it up with a long, mellow cadence that echoes
-for a mile.
-
-“Answer man, for, by the faith, if we can’t pledge you here in anything
-but a lap of May-dew out of a primrose leaf, we’ll drink you such a
-bumper, an we reach the White Horse, as never was filled before!
-London’ll toast you at every dinner-table in Mayfair. Odzooks, Sir, were
-you the fashion yesterday, what will you be to-morrow!” This from
-Escombe.
-
-“Where is Sir Robin?” asks Percy. “He was beside me not five seconds
-since, but now, by my tinder, nor yet by the coming dawn, can I descry
-him,” shading his eyes with his hand and peering about, for of a truth
-’tis close to four o’clock, and, notwithstanding the heavy clouds, the
-east begins to thrill with the touch of day.
-
-“Robin! Sir Robin! Ho, now! Think not to play a trick on us and
-presently spring from a greenwood tree,” says Wootton.
-
-“Sir Robin,” exclaims Percy loudly, “I pray you answer and leave not
-your friends to imagine evil.”
-
-“Tut, tut, ‘evil’,” puffs the Beau, rising from his knees. “Evil’ll
-never happen to him. Zounds! but my legs ache! He’s laughing in his
-sleeve now, hard by; Robin’s not one to court notice or praise—as modest
-a youth as I ever beheld.”
-
-“Worthy of Lady Peggy Burgoyne even, I suppose?” says Mr. Chalmers
-mischievously, as he adjusts his recovered fob. “I could embrace him for
-the rendering of me back my watch, but I think him a fool to eschew good
-company and make home alone to town.”
-
-“Jack,” says Percy, low, “I like not his quitting of us. ’Twas too
-sudden. I believe I’ll go a-hunting him,” pulling his rein as the
-cavalcade once more prepared to start.
-
-“Where?” asks Jack. “Bah! be not such a ninny; belike he’s off to his
-Lady, to win kisses off her lips by the rehearsal of his prowess. An a
-man chooses to flee me, I let him: do you the same, Percy; ’tis a good
-advice, I promise you!”
-
-“But suppose those devils attack him again when alone?” says this one,
-not all reassured, as he and Jack linger a bit in the rear of their
-companions.
-
-“Go to the devil!” remarks Mr. Chalmers, blithely. “I’m for breakfast at
-the White Horse, and for leavin’ the hero of the hour to eat his where
-he sees fit. He’s safe enough.”
-
-“I’ve a misgiving,” answers de Bohun, “and he risked his life for mine
-to-night. I’ll strike off here to the west and join you when I find
-him.”
-
-“Good luck to you for a fool!” laughs Jack, putting spurs and going on
-to tell this news to the others.
-
-[Illustration: The instant that Lady Peggy...]
-
-The instant that Lady Peggy felt herself in the highwayman’s saddle, she
-knew from long acquaintance with every colt Bickers had bred, raised, or
-broke, since she was six, that her wrists had met their match. Before
-she had time to utter a word, turn her head, or think, she felt the warm
-flesh under her quiver with that recovering impulse which horsemen know
-so well; that streak of untamed and untamable nature which lies, however
-deep-hidden, in every four-foot that breathes, and which never fails to
-spurt to the front when it gets exactly the right chance.
-
-Peggy’s light, nay, by this, weak hand, now gave the big black its
-chance, and with a snort, a toss of its head, and a vicious swell of its
-sides, it laid back its ears, took the bit between its teeth as if it
-had been a mess of oats, and reared a length on its forelegs: when,
-finding its rider still on, it started on a run which Her Ladyship had
-not the slightest power to check. All she could do was to keep her seat.
-
-Like a flash, out of the forest on to the width of the heath, plume
-waving, sword flapping, laces rippling, curls flying; the mare’s mane
-slapping in her face; legs and arms and will all at work to stop the
-beast or bring it into some sort of subjection. To no purpose. The black
-head now low, as if picking up a scent from the turf it tore; now up, as
-though snuffing its goal from afar, the mare skirted the heath, gained
-the meadows; over hedges where the birds rose in flocks behind its
-heels; ditches, where the muddy waters splashed over Her Ladyship’s
-satin clothes: here a bolt into an orchard, leaving a ribbon a-hanging
-on a limb; over the wall like a rocket, and, at breakneck gait, through
-a hamlet, rousing the people out of their beds to peep at pane, and
-wonder. Slap-dash into a pasture, scattering ewes and lambs like wool
-before the wind, taking a five-bar into a common, thence to highway;
-scampering a footbridge to leave it shivered behind them, and all Peg’s
-thought just a brave prayer to be kept alive, so that she might not fail
-of foiling Sir Robin’s men Sunday night!
-
-Where she was going, she knew not. Where she was, she had no smallest
-idea when, as the sun looked over the long low line of horizon before
-her, she with a shudder beheld a gibbet outlined against the morning
-sky. The black gave a lunge that knocked her feet out of the stirrups
-(quick in again), reared, whinnied like a devil, and, nose to ground,
-now made her rider understand that up to the present she had done
-nothing much in the way of speed, or of efforts at emptying the saddle.
-
-Yet Her Ladyship stuck on, with flying colors, too, and no loss of
-either wig, hat, weapon or will, and with grateful heart she now found
-herself being spun across a magnificent park, where the deer fled before
-her, it is true, but at the upper end of which she saw looming the
-turrets and towers of a fine castle.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- _Wherein Lady Peggy is condemned to be
- hanged, and sets forth, attended by the
- clergy, for the gallows._
-
-
-Although Sir Percy had cheerfully foretold for Kennaston the roseate
-picture of Lady Diana’s “Yes” crowning the young poet’s somewhat
-diffident suit with untold happiness, the fact was quite other. Her
-Ladyship, on the day of Mr. Brummell’s party to Ivy Dene, having
-overheard the Honorable Dolly Tarleton, in the library, laying six to
-four to Lady Biddy O’Toole, that their host’s daughter was “only waiting
-for the beautiful young poet’s asking, to jump into his arms
-immediately,” did, with such sudden change of demeanor from sweets to
-sours, languishing eyes to averted looks, smiles to pouts, corner chats
-to open flouts, put her lover into a state of mind, the like of which he
-presently described, as only he could, in a copy of verses, which the
-next night at White’s were pronounced to be, indeed, “the masterpiece of
-one whose heart pants, whose whole being’s but at the beck and call of
-her who wears a smocked petticoat, ogles with a witching eye, and should
-be vain that so much genius lays itself at her feet, to wit, Lady D——a
-W——n.”
-
-For, taking immediate fright at his Lady’s coldness, Kennaston had
-ordered a post-chaise from the Brookwood Arms, and without a word of
-farewell to Lady Diana, save that embodied in an ode, “To Chloe When
-Unkind,” which her woman found pinned to Her Ladyship’s cloak when she
-was putting it on her shoulders the following morning, had gone to town,
-and just in time at the White Horse to be haled into Mr. Brummell’s
-party for breakfast, and to learn of the adventure with Tom Kidde, the
-valor of Sir Robin McTart, and the absence of that young gentleman, as
-also Sir Percy, from the board.
-
-When Lady Diana’s woman hooked her mistress’s cloak about her ’twas at
-five o’clock in the morning, and of the party at the Castle every lady’s
-woman was performing the same office, adding hood over curls and puffs,
-and sticking the finest of cambric pocket-napkins into their mistress’
-hands by the half dozens; for ’twas easily seen that such early rising
-could be for no other cause than to go forth to bathe their Ladyships’
-faces in the May-dew; the which, when gathered from little copses and
-shadowy nooks before the sun had yet shone upon’t, was warranted to
-enhance that beauty which was already evident, and to create those
-charms which, alas! are occasionally lacking.
-
-Lady Diana spelled out her lover’s verses as best she could, tripping
-from door to door, and calling her young companions from their mirrors;
-sending a footman and a page to summon the gallants who were to
-accompany them in their expedition, and laughing heartily as she made
-out more from a footman than from Kennaston’s muse that he had betaken
-himself to town rather than longer incur her displeasure and her frowns.
-
-“Bless me, but my suitor’s in a fine pickle! Lud! though, I’m not
-disposed to have these hussies a-laying six to four on my bein’ ready to
-jump at his offer; still, I’d rather he’d stopped over, or else that
-some one most amusin’ were here; for instance Sir Robin McTart, which is
-not to be!”
-
-Then a-rapping at the doors, and laughter from girlish lips; pattering
-of heels down the hall and stair-case; out to meet the gentlemen, bowing
-and complimenting on the terrace; over the lawns, and through the
-flower-gardens, and past the offices and stables, where Lord Brookwood,
-even thus early, was sunning himself in the yard, and talking over
-county matters with Mr. Biggs, J.P.
-
-“Where to? Where to?” sings out His Lordship cheerily with hat in hand,
-and Mr. Biggs down to the ground before so much beauty, fashion and
-rank.
-
-“Off to the copse, father,” calls back Diana, “to gather the May-dew and
-wash our faces; when we come back you must tell us all how much more
-beautiful we are to-day than we were yesterday!”
-
-With which lively sally Lady Diana and the rest of ’em are crossing the
-hill and laughing as they pass out of sight on their two miles’ away
-walk to Armsleigh Copse.
-
-Lord Brookwood is about to resume his conversation with Biggs, while the
-half-dozen grinning stable boys, behind His Lordship’s back, are rubbing
-their fists in the wet turf of a paddock, and smearing their red faces
-with the dew, the head-groom touching them up with a lash; when a
-whinny, that sets every animal in the stalls and out of ’em a-replying,
-sets all the cocks crowing, hens cackling, chicks peeping, dogs barking,
-geese squawking, smites their startled ears, and yonder, hilly-o-ho!
-Sirs; in a cloud of upturned soil, in a shower of splash from the river,
-with a thud on the wooden bridge, a bound over the stone wall of the
-kitchen garden; comes a black with nigh every tooth in its mouth bared,
-foaming, smoking, bloody; rider bent double to saddle’s bow, clinging
-with legs and arms.
-
-“Homing Nell and the highwayman! Tom Kidde! Tom Kidde!”
-
-“Homing Nell!” the shout goes up from every throat there, from His
-Lordship to the ’ostlers and boys.
-
-“Tom Kidde! Tom Kidde!”
-
-“By Gad! Sir,” cries the Earl. “I knew Nell’d come back sooner or later!
-Surround him. Bag him!”
-
-Peggy hears the shouts as the ungovernable steed lunges, lurches, rears
-beneath her spurs and still tightly gripped reins; she takes in the
-situation, but not to its full import, until she now hears the voice of
-Biggs uplifted.
-
-“Lord Brookwood! Lord Brookwood! mind her heels, My Lord, mind her
-heels! Leave the takin’ of the damned cut-purse to me and the boys!”
-
-At the word “Brookwood,” Her Ladyship realizes that she is on the
-domains of Lady Diana’s father! and being mistaken for a Knight of the
-Road!
-
-The latter she felt she could easily abide, and as easily refute; but
-the former was more than even her spent spirit could stand. So, as
-Biggs, His Lordship, the grooms, the stable-boys and ’ostlers and
-helpers all formed into a ring with whips, canes, stones and halloos to
-take her prisoner, she plucked up courage from the depths, and, raising
-herself in her saddle and her head in the air, with one superhuman tug
-at the bridle and prick with the steels, she made to get off! and away!
-But Her Ladyship’s nerve was not the equal of Homing Nell’s, nor yet to
-be pitted with success against the waving arms and jumping legs of a
-dozen stout men. With the final crack of the head-groom’s lash about her
-heels, with the pop in the air above her hat of Mr. Biggs’s blunderbuss,
-caught from the hand of one of the lads, “Homing Nell” was brought to a
-quivering stand-still, and My Lady Peggy to bay in the stable-yard of
-Brookwood Castle!
-
-“Ha!” cries the Earl, “my pretty fellow, you’re trapped at last! The
-night you stole the black mare from me I shouted after you, as well as
-the gag at my mouth would permit, that she’d bring you no luck, and that
-muscles of iron wouldn’t hold her the day she made up her mind to get
-home.”
-
-Peggy, glad of the use of her lungs once more, and now nigh bursting
-with laughter at being so glibly mistook for one of the most reckless
-fellows in all England, took off her hat, bowed low, and said:
-
-“My Lord Brookwood, ’tis, I believe, I have the honor of addressing?”
-
-“Ho! ho! ho!” Mr. Biggs, from a survey of the saddle-bow now bursts out
-in triumphant joyfulness.
-
-“’Od’s blood, My Lord! but here’s luck, here’s justice, here’s what
-comes of my bein’ here when I am!” and Mr. Biggs now holds aloft upon
-the point of his stick the black mask of Master Tom Kidde, which the
-rogue had dropped when he was hit, and which had caught and hung by its
-riband from that moment to this, unseen by Lady Peg.
-
-“Highwayman! highwayman! highwayman!” yells every lung in the place,
-while the whole dozen, including His Lordship and the Justice, threaten
-Lady Peggy with their cudgels, lashes and stones.
-
-“I pray ye, My Lord, Gentlemen, and good fellows!” cries she,
-remembering now the entire history of the animal she bestrides, as
-rehearsed some six hours earlier by Beau Brummell and Mr. Vane. “I am no
-highwayman.”
-
-A groan of derision greets this announcement.
-
-“Nay, but the rather am I the victim of Tom Kidde, than he himself!
-Together with a party of my friends, being at mid-night last, on the
-return from a visit to Mr. Brummell’s seat, Ivy Dene, we were set upon
-by the rogues in the midst of Epstowe Forest; I had the luck, both good
-and bad, to put a ball into Tom, to get my horse shot under me, and to
-mount the scoundrel’s steed, the which has brought me to Your Lordship’s
-door, and the mare, herself, to where she belongs, it seems!”
-
-“A damned fine story, ’fore George!” exclaims Biggs, laughing
-triumphantly, now holding up two watches, three rings, a diamond
-snuff-box, a seal, two magnificent pins, and a most splendid jeweled
-stomacher, high above his head in the tip of the sunshine.
-
-“’Sdeath!” cried Lord Brookwood, seizing one of the trinkets and
-examining it with his spy-glass. “What’s this? ‘Percy de Bohun,
-Christmas from his aff. mother,’” reads His Lordship. Then another,
-“‘Wyatt Lovell souvenir of Italy!’ Gad, Biggs,” looking Her Ladyship
-over, where she still sits atop of the steaming black, “we’ve got the
-cursed blackguard this time! What else in his saddle pockets? aught?”
-
-These Biggs, assisted by the head-groom, is energetically emptying of a
-miscellaneous collection of valuables, while Lady Peggy looks on in
-amazement as yet only flavored with amusement, and one more vain regret
-for her abandoned petticoats.
-
-“Yes, My Lord, these thousands of pounds’ worth,” replied the Justice,
-holding aloft his treasure trove; “and it’ll be a short shrift for the
-devil, I can say that.”
-
-“Hark ye,” now says Her Ladyship, as she recalls with a not unnatural
-tremor the death-warrant she had heard was lying to hand in Mr. Biggs’s
-pocket. “Lord Brookwood, I am no highwayman; my story is true; I am”—the
-words stuck in Peggy’s throat; she coughed, the stable boys tittered;
-then the head-groom tilted the saddle and spilled her out of it to the
-ground; at a word from Biggs, a couple of the men tied her, hand and
-foot, with a stout rope, and a pair of farming reins about her middle.
-
-“Now who do you call yourself, my fine fellow?” says His Lordship.
-
-“Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent!” cries Peggy, glad to be able to
-answer without the lie direct. “And I demand instant freedom and
-immunity,” cries she, tortured and quivering beneath the rude hands and
-ruder gibes of the grooms and ’ostlers.
-
-“Demand away! my pretty buck-skin, with your jeweled hilt!” returns
-Biggs, stripping the weapon from her thigh. “Your satin breeches and
-gold-laced waistcoat! ’Tain’t no use denyin’ you your speech, and your
-will to palaver on whatever matter you will, for before the clock
-strikes eight, you’ll be home with your father in hell.”
-
-“Tut, tut, Mr. Biggs,” says His Lordship. “Call Mr. Frewen, the Curate,
-he’s at his studies in the library, we havin’ sat late over our cards
-last night; and let him have his prayer-book to hand, open at the page
-for malefactors after condemnation.”
-
-“Go, you, Michael,” this to one of the now awestruck lads hanging,
-staring at Peg over the paddock paling. “Ask Mr. Frewen to come
-quickly.”
-
-“But this is monstrous, Sir!” cries Her Ladyship, now thoroughly
-alarmed, and near to losing her wits betwixt her endeavors to keep up
-her man’s estate, her contempt of her own frowardness, her shame at
-being thus at the mercy of her rival’s parent, and her actual terror of
-her position.
-
-“I do beseech you, I am an honest person, my tale is true. Is it not but
-the justice due to any subject of His Majesty’s, however humble, that he
-should not be condemned before he is tried, or even his identity
-proven?”
-
-“I’ll be sworn, My Lord,” exclaims Biggs, “’tis a voice and air to
-wheedle fine ladies out of their stomachers and chains, but not to tempt
-the law. Sirrah!” he continues, addressing himself to Her Ladyship, who
-is by this firmly tied to a post like a colt about to be broken to
-harness. “’Tain’t no use for you to be imaginin’ as justice and His
-Majesty ain’t a-doing their best for you. Here have you been a terror to
-all God-fearing, law-abiding Englishmen any time these half-dozen of
-years. A-poundin’ every heath in England, Hornslow, Bagshott, and all
-the commons, Wimbledon, Wandsworth, Finchley; a-hulking in Epstowe with
-your mates, and making the lives of travelers a burden most horrible;
-ain’t you secreted uncountable pounds’ worth of plunder in your devilish
-caves and dens? Haven’t you left the earth strewed with corpses in your
-ugly path? Answer me, Sir!” and Mr. Biggs stamps his foot on the ground.
-
-“No, Sir!” shouts Peg, “I ain’t and haven’t, and I’m not! ’Slife, My
-Lord Brookwood,” cries she in a terrible way, twisting her tied hands
-together. “For God’s sake, send up to town post-haste, and find out Mr.
-Brummell, Mr. Vane, Mr. Chalmers, Lord Escombe, Sir Lovell Wyatt!”
-
-But His Lordship has turned up the path toward the Castle and met Mr.
-Frewen, to whom he is explaining the necessities of the situation.
-
-’Tis such a fair May day, with bud and blossom, bough and bird; fowls,
-men, beasts, all free of tether, and My Lady is like to weep; cry out
-her sex, her very name and estate, as she feels the gall upon her wrists
-and ankles, and knows what fate awaits her.
-
-She even, for one weak moment, thinks she will implore Lord Brookwood to
-send up to London for her rival, his own daughter, Lady Diana, and let
-her come down and tell him who is Sir Robin McTart—for Lady Peggy
-believes Lady Di to be in town and has no knowledge to the contrary.
-
-Yet, there in the stable-yard, with imprisonment as she supposes, and
-even death dangling for her at no great loss of time, with her liberty
-gone; her word no better than a thief’s; with no earthly hand upraised
-to sustain her, My Lady Peggy’s stout heart does not flutter to dismay.
-For that one brief instant ’tis, without doubt, in her mind to confess
-and fling herself upon the mercy of the Earl and the Curate, who now
-draw nigh; but when she reflects upon the monstrous tissue of her
-deceits, and the unutterable shame of the exposure of the cause of them,
-’tis then she is like to whimper, but for naught else.
-
-Mr. Frewen approaches; ’tis a young man of a pale cadaverous
-countenance, whose first bow to a highwayman is indeed, though he find
-him in durance vile, a timid one.
-
-The supposed Tom Kidde gives the man of the cloth eye for eye, so that
-this one quails and stumbles in his speech; and finally, leaving in the
-rear all his preconceived plans for a hasty reformation, he promptly
-remarks, opening his prayer-book to the riband:
-
-“You know your doom, Mr. Kidde; shall I pray for you here?”
-
-“Faith!” says Lady Peggy, plucking up heart, once her resolution is
-taken not to reveal her secret, come what may. “I do not know my doom,
-Sir! It seems sufficient ‘doom’ for an honest English gentleman, who has
-met with a mishap, to be brought to a nobleman’s threshold and get foul
-treatment rather than welcome. Pray for me, Sir, an you will, there’s
-none so much deserves or needs it. Pray on!”
-
-“Frewen!” beckons His Lordship, as he watches the ’ostlers rubbing down
-the restored Homing Nell, and confers with Mr. Biggs as to the plunder
-and the meting out of justice. “Frewen, gain the wretch’s confidence an
-you can, the whereabouts of all the gold and jewels he has stolen; my
-watch. And also, if he have wife or child, it might not be amiss, eh,
-Biggs? to inquire if he have any message for them?”
-
-“Aye, My Lord” puts in the pompous Biggs, up-looking from his perusal of
-a long, sealed, important-appearing parchment, unrolled before his eyes.
-“By ascertaining their whereabouts, we should perhaps get the clue to
-all the bloody rascal’s pelf.”
-
-A combination of Christian charity and official shrewdness, which
-commended itself highly to His Lordship, as he sent the Curate back to
-the comforting of the malefactor across the yard.
-
-“Hark ye, Mr. Kidde,” says Mr. Frewen, lowering his voice, and, for the
-credit of his soul, with gentleness at his heartstrings.
-
-“I’m not Mr. Kidde, I tell you, I swear’t!” says Her Ladyship firmly.
-
-“Well, well,” says the man of the Church, “mayhap that’s an assumed
-name; but surely, now, Sir, with not two hours of life left you, to me,
-me alone, Sir, it were wiser drop all disguises. Surely now you are not
-Sir Robin McTart?” in a soothing and sorrowful tone.
-
-Peggy winces.
-
-“Go seek and ask all the noblemen and gentlemen I’ve named, Sir, they’ll
-quickly set me to rights in your eyes, I pledge you. Oh, Sir, for the
-love of God!” cries she, whispering very low. “I speak the truth! I am
-no highwayman.”
-
-“I am used to quibbles, Mr. Kidde; I know that now you are no robber,
-but merely a prisoner under sentence of death.”
-
-“What!” cries she. “’Tis not possible that a man is taken, tried,
-disallowed to prove himself, and put out of the world, betwixt sunrise
-and breakfast, in the reign of His Majesty George the Third!”
-
-“’Tis so,” answers the Curate, pulling the rope and leathers, and
-pushing Her Ladyship around a bit toward the east, as he points what he
-considers a salutary finger. “Yonder’s the gibbet, Mr. Kidde, and from
-it you must hang by eight. I implore of you now—”
-
-Lady Peggy’s eyes are fastened upon the arms and cross-beams of the
-gallows, which are outlined clearly against the deep blue sky, and full
-in the shine of the spring sun.
-
-“Well,” says she to herself, all in a flash, as thoughts can travel
-three abreast ofttimes, and twelve times quicker than the scrivener can
-set ’em down—“I’ve been a very accursedly wicked girl; but, thank God!
-my pride ain’t all gone yet. I’ll hang! but I’ll never give up my
-secret! When I’m gone, if they find it out—I won’t be here to be
-a-hearin’ of the taunts and jeers and sympathies; and of my mother’s and
-father’s sorrows!” At this point Peggy is very near to tears, when the
-Curate says, interrupting their possible flow:
-
-“Now, Mr. Kidde, if you have any message for—your wife—perhaps?” he
-ejaculates hesitatingly, and with good knowledge that the marriage
-ceremony was one usually omitted from the code of gentlemen of the road.
-
-“I have no wife!” cries Her Ladyship, in a heat betwixt her remorse for
-her parents and the unconscious ridiculousness of Mr. Frewen’s question.
-
-“Or it might be,” suggests this one with a sigh, “you have a little
-child, Mr. Kidde—?”
-
-“No, Sir,” says My Lady very low and quick. “That I haven’t.”
-
-“A dear friend and comrade?” pursues the Curate.
-
-“Yes, I have,” answers she, for during all this hour just past, a
-thousand thoughts have come to Peggy about Sir Percy.
-
-“Ah,” responds Frewen joyously. “Now tell me where he’s to be found, and
-entrust me with the message, and be assured all will be carried out to
-your wishes.”
-
-“Thank you,” says Peggy. “Free my right hand if you will; give me
-something to write with, and the leaf out of your prayer-book, and I’ll
-ask you the favor.”
-
-The Curate, under the strict superintendence of Biggs, who has all this
-while been dispatching boys on horses, hither and yon, to notify the
-quality and the country side both, that Tom Kidde’s been taken and will
-hang at eight from the gibbet a-top of Armsleigh Hill, loosens Her
-Ladyship’s arm of the thong, and gives her a leaf and a pencil with the
-top of the post for a support.
-
-“To Sir Percy de Bohun, Charlotte Street, London,” writes she. “plese An
-you lov God And The Kinge goe not evar Again toe walke onne The dove
-peere at The Bottomme of littel Boye yarde Their isse onne swares Toe
-Kille you & you doe This isse writ bye onne now noe more.”
-
-Her Ladyship folds the scrap of paper over and over; hands back the
-pencil to Mr. Frewen; and then she says:
-
-“Sir, will you promise me on that Book you’re holding in your hand,
-you’ll not look at this or send it until I’m dead?”
-
-“I will,” answers the young man, more touched than he cares to admit,
-even to himself.
-
-“And further,” says she, “will you pledge me your word it shall reach
-him it’s intended for before this time Sunday?”
-
-“I will,” is the reply, “unless it be in the depths of Epstowe and
-inaccessible to my horse or myself.”
-
-“’Tis in London, Sir, and quite accessible. ’Tis a warning for life and
-death, and I’ll count you fail me not, nor him whose life you’d be the
-means of saving.”
-
-“I pledge my word, Mr. Kidde,” replies the Curate, backing away to make
-room for Justice Biggs, and with the very laudable sensation in his mind
-that he is to be the instrument of preserving some unknown from the
-clutches of the doubtless repentant outlaw’s own men.
-
-In less than five minutes after, Biggs had marshaled his cavalcade and
-rode forth of the stable-yard of Brookwood Castle; his white cob at the
-head, a-holding in his left hand the duly signed warrant for the
-execution of one Thomas Kidde. Following him, strode the hastily
-summoned Master William Lambe, the butcher, who was to do duty as
-hangman (sooth to say, hangings were rare in this county, and there was
-no one appointed by law to the office, it being thus left to the
-discretion of the Justice).
-
-The Earl, mounted, rode next with a dozen of his servants, and in the
-midst of these My Lady Peggy, astride of the black once more, but with
-face to tail, hands tied together, and no hat to her head; Mr. Frewen at
-her side walking; a motley crowd growing and gathering at every step,
-about her, of gaping, wondering, jubilant and curious persons of all
-ages, sexes, and conditions.
-
-Never a whimper out of My Lord, the Earl of Exham’s only daughter. A set
-rigid look about the drawn lips, and an unearthly pallor shining through
-all the dark stains Her Ladyship had been a-using of late.
-
-Not a word did she say, save to ask Mr. Frewen to read the Declaration
-of Absolution or Remission of Sins out of his prayer-book as they went;
-which he did under his breath, and much jolted by the rough highway,
-which now the procession had gained; and likewise laying much unction to
-his soul that, in so short a space of time, his comfortable
-ministrations had produced so seeming abundant godly results!
-
-When he had finished Her Ladyship said, “Amen,” and thereafter held up
-her head with that courage which is born of one of two things, conscious
-innocence or a profound repentance for sins, which, while to others they
-may appear puerile, to the offender are worthy of the wrath of the
-Creator and the condemnation of man.
-
-She noted the hawthorn in the hedges, the dew upon the turf; the tall
-mawkin swaying in the wind in the middle of a newly sown field; and, as
-her lids raised, the mustering crowds, all with steps bent, and greedy
-eyes fixed, yonder to the hill-top where the gibbet stood, and where the
-new rope dangled for her neck.
-
-Yet she made no sign.
-
-Not even when she heard the rabble laying their groats and sixpences,
-that Kidde would, or wouldn’t “die game.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- _Rehearseth how, in the very nick o’ time,
- Her Ladyship’s neck is saved from
- the noose by Sir Percy._
-
-
-As yet, in the depths of Armsleigh Copse, no news of the supposed
-highwayman’s capture had penetrated, although the Earl, with commendable
-foresight in behalf of the entertainment of his young daughter and her
-companions, had sent a messenger to impart the sight shortly to be had;
-the messenger, having a sweetheart in the other direction, must needs go
-apprise her first! So the gay Ladies and their cavaliers sat on fallen
-logs, strolled hither and yon, knelt to sop their bits of linen in the
-dewy hollows, laughed, chatted, dabbed their faces, now lacking any coat
-of crimson, save that which Nature might have vouchsafed, and made great
-show of a fine rural simplicity.
-
-“La!” cried the Honorable Dolly. “Water hasn’t touched my face before
-since know I not when!” pecking at her cheeks with the corner of her
-pocket-napkin. “But it has a monstrous refreshing sensation!”
-
-“Oh, Doll, ’tis not thus and so you must apply it, as ’twere some French
-essence worth its weight in guineas; but look!” cried Lady Diana,
-flopping down and burying her face in a bath of the dew-drops, and
-laughing as she looks up dripping.
-
-“That’s the way, faith,” coincides Lady Biddy, scrubbing her own round
-cheeks with her wrung out linen, then both fists into her blue eyes to
-dry off the winkers.
-
-“’Slife, Ladies!” exclaims one of the gentlemen, “but you almost tempt
-us to follow your example.”
-
-“Hither, ye gossoon,” answers Lady Biddy, “an’ I’ll be afther makin’
-your countenance shine. Hark! Hoofs!”
-
-“Hoofs! Hoofs!” cry all these fair ones, a-darting this way and that,
-stuffing their napkins into their bodices, as a courteous voice, with a—
-
-“By your leave, Ladies and Sirs!” greets them, and none other than Sir
-Percy, self and horse spent in his fruitless search for the supposed Sir
-Robin, emerges from the bridle-path across the common, at the edge of
-the copse.
-
-“The top of the morning to you, Sir Percy de Bohun,” laughs Lady Biddy.
-
-“Percy!” exclaims Lady Diana, “prithee, what are you doing out of doors
-at this hour?”
-
-“Seeking May-dew! mayhap,” suggests the Honorable Dolly.
-
-“But nay, Your Ladyships,” returns he. “I am seeking Sir Robin McTart.”
-
-And forthwith Sir Percy proceeds to give them a history of the
-adventures of the night, omitting no smallest detail of the prowess of
-Sir Robin. He has just concluded his recital amid a burst of tumultuous
-“Ohs! ahs! Luds!” and a vast deal of commiserating sympathy, and a
-monstrous collection of pretty oaths and curses for Tom Kidde, when into
-the center of this colloquy jumps Lord Brookwood’s messenger, nudging
-his sweetheart behind a tree, to tell as best he can his errand. To bid
-all the company at once to see the sight, it now not lacking more than
-the quarter to the hour when Mr. Lambe will adjust the noose, and send
-one of the boldest and most courtly young outlaws of his day a-swinging
-to his deserts.
-
-This information, it may be imagined, was received with acclaim of all,
-and by Sir Percy with positive joy; his only regret, as, dismounting and
-leading his jaded horse, he walked at Lady Diana’s side, being that Sir
-Robin had so contrived to give them the slip, and not even to have the
-happiness of witnessing justice done the rogue who had so near deprived
-him of existence.
-
-“Here’s to drive off the vapors an any one had ’em!” cried the lively
-Lady Biddy, swinging her hat by its ribands. “And sure’n it’s not
-believed I’ll be, when I get home to County Cork and tell ’em I saw a
-highwayman strung up!”
-
-“Faith, Di,” says Sir Percy, “’twas a lucky chance for the whole country
-when the rascal made off with your father’s famous black!”
-
-“That was it!” answered she. “The time always comes when no man’s muscle
-on earth can hold Homing Nell; and ’twas a fine fortune, by my life!
-when Tom Kidde essayed to ride her. ’Twas a wonder he didn’t jump and
-run for his life, though,” adds she thoughtfully.
-
-“Zounds! there’s a sort of devil-may-care humor in the composition of
-those fellows that keeps ’em sticking in any saddle they leap into,
-until the beast’s bestridden that can throw them out of it. They’re so
-used to taking chances, I doubt if they ever dream of danger until it’s
-too late!”
-
-“When’ll we see the gibbet?” asks the Honorable Dolly, panting with her
-quick pace.
-
-“Soon,” answers Lady Di.
-
-“Ochone, an’ I hope we’ll not be afther bein’ too late to see it all!”
-chimes in Lady Biddy short-breathed too.
-
-“Percy,” says Diana, “up in your saddle and spy, for I’d not have us
-miss so fine a sight for a hundred pounds!”
-
-“No sooner said than done!” answers Sir Percy de Bohun, from atop of his
-horse, where he shades his eyes with his hand and gazes off to the hill
-where the gibbet stands.
-
-“Good God!” cries he, clapping spurs that send spurts of blood into the
-eyes of one of the gentlemen, and a shower of sand all over the whole
-party, and away with him! Tearing up the turf as he goes; into the midst
-of the strings of gaping, jostling, hurrying folk; scattering ’em right
-and left, leaving ’em in his wake dumfounded, picking each other up.
-Through the high street of Brook-Armsleigh Village, clatter! dash!
-plunge! with prick and urge, and goad of thigh and lash! and straining,
-starting eyes fixed on the face he sees outlined against the fair blue
-morning sky; the brave undaunted face, dark, under its yellow hair,
-bearing the strange likeness to His Lady—His Lady! nay, this is His
-Lady’s lord and love, for whom he rides,—and with noose about his neck
-now, and man-of-cloth and man-of-blood both at hand; this one with book,
-that one with cap, the sea of open faces seething breathless all around.
-
-“On! on!” whispers Percy bending to the bow, and whispering hoarsely to
-the long roan, his very soul in tremor, his lips parched, his forehead
-and lip dripping sweat.
-
-Into the midst of ’em; nearly throwing Lord Brookwood from his seat; off
-his beast like a thunderbolt, and with a long leap up on the boards
-beside Lambe, the butcher, and Biggs, the Justice, and Frewen, the
-Curate.
-
-“By God! Sirs,” cries he, “what’s this ye’re doing? This gentleman’s Sir
-Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent!” tearing the hemp from Her Ladyship’s
-throat, from her wrists; pushing away the three of ’em, and half lifting
-the supposed Baronet in his lusty arms, he drags, carries, swings Peg
-down to the ground, and up into his own saddle.
-
-And then the explanations! the astonishments; the monstrous wonder of
-it. The humility, the subjection, the apologies; the supplications of
-all these Lords, Gentlemen, Ladies, worthies, worships, vagabonds and
-multitudes.
-
-Woman-like, as she sits there for a few moments, dazed, so sudden
-fetched from death to life, she has but the thought that ’tis to him she
-loves she owes deliverance.
-
-But none of their hospitality or amends will she have, or even listen
-to; no tarrying at Brookwood Castle; no smallest glance back for all the
-wheedles and coaxes of Lady Diana, Lady Biddy, the Honorable Dolly and
-the rest. All she asks, and gets, is her scrawl from Mr. Frewen.
-
-Courtly acceptance of Lord Brookwood’s abject attempts at amends;
-gracious bows, hands, words, laughter at last; and My Lady in a hastily
-procured post-chaise bids the gibbet at Brook-Armsleigh Village
-farewell, and starts for London, where she swears she’s due and must not
-fail of being, for to-morrow, Sunday.
-
-Sir Percy, too, affirms, he must up to town without delay, to have the
-honor and pleasure of himself rehearsing at Will’s the splendid courage
-of Sir Robin, and his almost miraculous escape from a horrible and
-ignominious death.
-
-In truth Percy longed, after the excitements of the past four-and-twenty
-hours, to be alone; to seek, as was his wont of late, in some
-unfrequented, obscure part of the town, such as the desolate
-neighborhood of the Dove Pier, an opportunity to ponder upon Lady Peggy;
-to guess fruitlessly of her whereabouts; to curse himself, and Sir Robin
-who had, with a good cause, he generously allowed, so known how to win
-her from him; to marvel how, at ev’ry turn, this same Baronet appeared
-to become entangled in his own matters; to question if Peggy were indeed
-now the lawful wedded wife of this gentleman from Kent. In brief, to
-pester Fate with queries and surmises far too numerous and intricate to
-set down.
-
-Thus upon reflection, he purposely absented himself, after his first
-visit to Will’s on reaching London, from either of the chocolate or
-coffee-houses, which he was accustomed to patronize, knowing full well
-that the most pressing and absorbing things he should hear would all
-have Sir Robin McTart for text. He did not even repair to Mr. Brummell’s
-house to give an account of the rescue of the Beau’s protégé from the
-hangman, feeling unwilling to recount his own part in the affair and but
-too certain that long since the whole matter would have traveled to
-Peter’s Court and into every other precinct of the town. Having, also,
-learned from Lady Diana that Kennaston had quitted Brookwood Castle in a
-dense of a melancholy humor, he did not either go to Lark Lane, (not
-finding Peg’s twin at the house in Charlotte Street), but moped the
-Sunday through, thankful that his uncle was gone down into the country;
-listening to the church-bells; thumbing a prayer-book Lady Peggy had
-given him one Easter-day, now five years since; finally flinging it from
-him; pacing up and down the hall; side-curls awry, waistcoat unbuttoned;
-ruffles tumbled; breeches wrinkled; mind distract, and altogether as
-valiant a young gentleman as ever made a wager or a toast, unsheathed a
-blade, or mounted a horse, rendered all of a-muddle by not knowing which
-way to turn to find the whereabouts and wherefores of a certain fair
-lady; which has been a state of affairs not uncommon to young gentlemen
-before this one’s day, and like to occur until the species is extinct.
-
-Yet, ’tis quite true, too, that Sir Percy’s case was a bit out of the
-usual, inasmuch as the mystery of Lady Peggy’s present abiding place
-remained as deep to-day as ’twas a fortnight ago.
-
-“Well, Grigson,” asked his master, as his man appeared unsummoned, “what
-is it?”
-
-“Asking Your Honor’s pardon,” replies this one, “but I made bold during
-Your Honor’s absence from town to go down to Kennaston Castle.”
-
-“Well, well?” cries Sir Percy excitedly, “what news?”
-
-“With submission, Sir,” replies the man, sadly. “None.”
-
-“’Od’s blood! you fool!” exclaimed the master. “Why do you seek me with
-your ‘none’! Is Her Ladyship still from home?”
-
-Grigson bows.
-
-“And her mother still in York?”
-
-Grigson bows.
-
-“And the Earl still believing his daughter to be in that damned Kent
-with her godmother?”
-
-Grigson bows for the third time.
-
-“And that cursed Abigail still affirming that her mistress is up in
-London?”
-
-Grigson bows for the fourth time.
-
-“Asking your pardon, Sir Percy,” he adds, noting with a keen and
-generous sympathy, which not infrequently exists in the hearts of
-serving-men for their masters, the deepening pallor of the young
-gentleman’s countenance, and his most disheveled appearance.
-
-“Asking your pardon, Sir, but whiles I might be doing your wig, which is
-most uncommon tousled, I’d make bold to tell you, Sir, that Mistress
-Jane Chockey, Lady Peggy’s own woman, Sir, is in an awful way, Sir!”
-
-“My wig may go to the devil, you idiot!” cries Percy. “What’s the
-blabbing jade’s tantrums to me! Get out of my sight.”
-
-“With submission, Sir Percy, but Chockey does nothing at all but cry out
-her eyes from morning till night, and went on her knees a-beseechin’ me
-to find Her Ladyship, which all I could coax out of her by my best
-endeavors at wheedlin’ the seck, Sir, was that she last saw Her Ladyship
-standin’—”
-
-“Where! where?” gasps Sir Percy, seizing Mr. Grigson by the arm with a
-grip of steel.
-
-“Before the door of Lord Kennaston’s lodgin’s, Sir, in Lark Lane—a—”
-
-“Yes? yes? go on!” with glaring, gazing eyes fixed on his man’s ruddy
-visage.
-
-“A-talkin’, Sir, to some one a-sittin’ inside of a most elegant chair!”
-
-“Did she see the man’s face?” he asks tensely.
-
-“No, Sir Percy; but Her Ladyship bade Chockey go home and not tarry for
-her, and make such excuse to His Lordship as you have learned before.
-And, asking your pardon humbly, Sir, Mistress Chockey is of the opinion
-that her young Lady got into that chair and was carried off, a willin’
-wictim, Sir, to the h’altar, and married to the contents of the chair,
-Sir, afore that wery noon.”
-
-“Damn Chockey and her opinions!” mutters Sir Percy, under his breath,
-picking up his hat from the table and rushing into the street, nigh to
-choking with his emotions and his despair.
-
-He turned the corner, almost knocking over a couple of link-boys in his
-path, tossed them some pennies for their tumble, and into Piccadilly.
-
-“Fare, Sir? fare, Your Honor? fare, Your Lordship?” cry a half-dozen of
-’em, and he jumps into a hackney chaise purposeless.
-
-“Where to, My Lord?” asks the man.
-
-“To the devil!” replies the passenger, “or anywhere else, only drive
-fast and let me down within walk of the river.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- _In the hereinunder Her Ladyship doth shoot
- two varlets at one fire; and appointeth
- a meeting with Sir Robin
- at Vauxhall._
-
-
-The man, who is shrewd, and has, in his time, fetched and carried many
-gentlemen of the first quality hither and yon, takes this one’s measure
-and sets off at a tearing pace down to the city, past the Tower, across
-the Bridge, into Southwark, back over Southwark, up to Westminster; to
-Pimlico,—past the very Puffled Hen where, at this very moment, Sir Robin
-McTart, himself, and not his _soidisant_, sits huddled in his upper room
-over a fire, cheering his small soul with dreams of murder and love. On
-to Chelsea, and a whirligig ’round again to that region which froths
-foully over to the Thames bank in Little Boy Yard, and the jutting,
-rotting, creaking old Dove Pier.
-
-“This be’s a young nobleman,” soliloquized the cabman, “wot’s in love,
-or else is a-meditatin’ on a-takin’ ’is own life, or a-runnin’ away from
-the Jews, or from his gamin’ debts, or I’m not James Finney. An’ this
-here’s the spot for him to be dropped at; the river most ’andy, also
-deep, and h’if he’s bound to make an end of hisself, no man wot owns a
-hoss is as worthy of the reward wot’ll be published for the recovery of
-His Lordship’s corp, as me.” With which pious reflection the chaise is
-brought to a sharp standstill, causing Percy to start from his
-melancholy and look out of the pane.
-
-“Where are we?” asks he, not at first, such is the depth of his
-suffering, recognizing a spot with which, as Sir Robin had been at pains
-and expense to have discovered for him, he was indeed of late most
-familiar.
-
-“This be Dove Pier, My Lord,” answered Mr. James Finney, now descending
-from his box and standing respectfully at the kennel.
-
-“Ha! Yes, to be sure. I’ll get out.”
-
-He does so and pays the fare with such a largess as makes Mr. Finney,
-through his tanned hide, almost blush to take it.
-
-“Wot’s the odds, though?” remarks he to himself, “three sovereigns is
-better off in my pocket than actin’ as sinkers to a nobleman’s body.” To
-Sir Percy he says:
-
-“I thought Your Lordship’d fancy this bit of the river; it’s lonesome
-and wery pleasant and wery deep. Good-night to Your Lordship, and good
-luck.”
-
-“Good luck!” echoes Sir Percy, under his breath, as he strides down the
-length of the rotten pier, his gaze now fixed on the black and swiftly
-ebbing tide, now raised to meet a sky no whit the brighter than the
-sobbing waters beneath it. No stars, nor moon; only a sickly thin gleam
-shot out of the lamp that swings far up Little Boy Yard over the door of
-the tavern.
-
-Dark, sad, despairing, the whole of it, with but the lap, lap of the
-Thames’s life beating against the old piles, as it swirls and swings on
-its hurrying way to fall once again into the sea.
-
-Percy de Bohun is no cowardly sort, even to think of ending his woes in
-a watery grave; he is merely a brave, sore-stricken young man, whose
-whole faith and heart have been pinned to one who has forsaken him
-forever (as he thinks); and, with the instincts of his kind, he is glad
-to be here, away from mankind or woman either, to get his grip once more
-on himself, to fight out for the last time, he swears, the wild, jealous
-covetousness which is tugging at his heartstrings, to quell the tumult
-in his soul, and then to get back home to his uncle’s house like a
-Christian; and, God helping him! to lead a decent life and a brave life,
-for King and country in the great new world across the seas.
-
-All this and more traverses his brain, the “more” being mostly
-tantalizing visions of Lady Peggy in all the gamut of her humors,
-slipping in and out of every resolution he makes, every fond farewell he
-swears he’ll take of her most dear, most faithless memory forever!
-
-His eyes are bent upon the ground. He neither sees nor hears, nor would
-heed if he did, aught about him.
-
-In truth there is not anything to hear, save the river on its journey.
-
-But there is something to see.
-
-Sir Robin’s two desperadoes, a-lurking yonder up in the close shadow of
-the timbered tenements, which line the precinct on the side where the
-oil-lamps shine.
-
-Across the narrow street, where the huddling houses, with their broken
-chimneys, rag-stuffed windows, flapping strings of bird-cages, old
-clothes, and forlorn archways, are deeper in gloom even than their
-opposites, there’s ambushed another.
-
-One who, arrived in town the night before, and set down at Mr.
-Brummell’s in Peter’s Court, made a change of garments and off again,
-since the master of the house was out, to a quiet inn in High Holborn;
-spent there a few hours; then out of doors and wandered as far as the
-Temple Church; back again to the inn, and, with rising excitement, and
-an almost frantic and curious impatience, awaited the fall of night;
-then a hackney coach to Westminster, alighting at Horseferry Road;
-dismissing the vehicle; thence afoot to the pier; hiring a boat; a pull
-alone down the river to Dove Pier; tying the skiff to a rusty hook; a
-quick run bent to ground; up, and across the yard to her present place
-of concealment.
-
-’Twas indeed Lady Peggy, her heart in her mouth, her breath coming
-fiercely betwixt her tight-shut lips, the drops standing on her
-forehead, each hand grasping a pistol ready cocked, and her dark eyes
-pinned to the two crouching objects not three yards away from her; anon,
-following the jerks of these worthies’ thumbs as they indicate the tall
-figure with bent head still pacing the pier back and forth, she knows
-her lover and his doom are nearing each the other.
-
-Will high Heaven help her?
-
-Her Ladyship can not hear them, if indeed they speak at all, which is
-unlikely; the language of such gentry at such crises consisting usually
-of signs. Luckily for her, the glint from the Three Cups, meager though
-it be, falls athwart the cut-throats, who now move stealthily down the
-yard toward the pier, timing their pace so that they shall reach t’other
-side of the rickety float when their victim shall attain the hither. It
-falls out as they have designed, and now, not ten paces separate Sir
-Percy de Bohun from his end, when Peggy darts light-footed, having cast
-aside her shoes, down her side the kennel to the pier, bringing her
-exactly behind the murderers.
-
-With the slow, precise tread of beings accustomed to such enterprises,
-not too hurried at the performance of a not unsavory task, they slip
-over into Sir Percy’s very wake, Peggy at their backs, noting now, with
-her pretty nose within twelve inches of their cat-like heels, the gleam
-of a dagger in the hand of each.
-
-Before she had thought, the two scoundrels seized Percy from the rear,
-the one clapping his hairy hand over the game’s mouth for a gag, the
-other grasping the young man’s two hands which had been hanging idly
-clasped at his back. Not a word, a whisper, even a gasp—
-
-But two shots! sounding like one, and striking Sir Robin McTart’s
-hirelings in their flanks, laying them on the ground, free Sir Percy de
-Bohun, stunned, bewildered, to yet catch merely a glimpse of a figure
-running to pier’s end, jumping into a boat; then the flash of quick oars
-fading into the silence and the blackness of the Thames.
-
-With drawn sword he gave himself a rap on the chest and believed he had
-been dreaming.
-
-But no, for at his feet lay two prostrate forms, each bleeding a bit,
-and feigning, as such apt rogues will, to be stone dead.
-
-Percy knelt, struck a tinder and essayed to look at their faces; they
-were unknown to him, and perceiving now their estate, he formed the
-conclusion that a couple of footpads had nearly made an end of him, and
-walked away.
-
-But of his rescue? the manner of it? the mysterious flight of his
-preserver? the boat ready at the pier’s end? the twin shots just in the
-nick of time! What of all this?
-
-Bah! Some bargeman with an honest heart a-passing by had seen the foul
-attempt, and paused to thwart it; some gentleman, maybe, on his way to
-rout or tryst, thinking to divert himself with a couple of pistols and
-so save a human life; some third desperado, envious of the chances of
-these two, making shift to rob them of their prey, since he was left out
-of their plot.
-
-But no! None of these explanations bore the least resemblance to
-probabilities, in fact showed not an atom of reason in their suggestion,
-and Percy was feign return to his uncle’s house, thrice puzzled now,
-since he had not alone Lady Peggy’s oblivion to unravel, but the
-miraculous saving of his own life to match it!
-
-Her Ladyship, once safe in the boat, pulled hard to the upper pier, paid
-the boatman, and back by devious ways to Peter’s Court and into her
-room; shut door and latched; down on her knees, wig thrown on the
-hearth, a-thanking God Percy was safe!
-
-Tears? A shower of ’em, and trembling legs and arms, and heart beating
-to burst after the mad strain of the past eight-and-forty hours.
-
-“Now,” said Her Ladyship to herself, “now I can go back to Kennaston and
-spend the remainder of my life making cheeses for the Vicar to munch o’
-Sundays; brewing cider for daddy to accelerate the pace of his gout
-withal; breeding chicks as will win prizes, and pigs as will be the envy
-of all! and—” a sob occurred here—“presently a-reading in the London
-print of the grand marriage of Sir Percy de Bohun with Lady Diana
-Weston! And me without the chance of weddin’ even that little ape, Sir
-Robin McTart! But it’s all right as ’tis,” adds Her Ladyship. “Had I
-hung on Armsleigh Hill, ’twould not have been too bad for one reared as
-I have been in a God-fearing fashion, and who, for naught save jealousy,
-envy and all uncharitableness, did go and so unsex myself! Lud! Is’t I?
-Peggy Burgoyne, spinster, a-sittin’ here in breeches and waistcoat, a
-guest in Mr. Beau Brummell’s house, without any other lady to keep me in
-countenance! ’Tis said one gets broke in to anything; but ’tis false!
-false! I’m not broke in to bein’ a man, and I never should be! I detest,
-abhor, and can’t endure the bein’ one! I that had always figured to
-myself the happy day when I’d be taken up to town!”
-
-Lady Peggy is now pacing the room, a trick, as has been set down
-earlier, that she’d borrowed from her twin.
-
-“I’d thought to be of the ton, a most genteel young lady, monstrous
-fine, a lovely creature; a-taking a dish of tea at Ranelagh; a-ridin’ to
-Court in dad’s old coronet-coach and with all the feathers I could
-borrow on top of my frizzes and powder; and two sweet patches set just
-at the corner of my dimples! That’s what I’d dreamed of, with Percy
-a-staring at me, lost in admiration, and—love!” Her Ladyship stamps her
-foot. “But what ’tis, is this!” and she now picks up the wig from the
-hearth and flings it on the couch beside her coat and sword.
-
-“’Taint no more in this world fine gentlemen sighin’ and dyin’ for me!
-no wedding favors and cake; no husband, no children; never! for there’s
-no marryin’ in heaven, an I ever get there! Nay, ‘Peggy Burgoyne’ ’ll be
-writ on my tombstone, and like as not the lines followin’ ’ll be ’a
-maker of most uncommon fine sweetmeats and cheeses’!”
-
-Another flood of tears, and then My Lady Peggy, obeying that
-well-balanced head of hers, brushes them away and proceeds to plan out
-her homeward journey, and to administer a cunning retouch of the
-cosmetics she had erstwhile bought of the players’ apothecary in Drury
-Lane.
-
-’Tis clear now, as it has been from the start, that she may not quit Mr.
-Brummell’s house in other than man’s attire, nor, so far as she can see,
-will it be possible for her to resume her own garments at any inn, or
-time, or place, before she reaches Kennaston, which she means to do ere
-night falls; and then the stableyard, where she knows Chockey will be
-milking, once gained, a cloak, the casting of Sir Robin’s wig, and Her
-Ladyship feels certain she can enter her father’s home unnoticed beneath
-the shelter of the faithful Chockey’s argus eye.
-
-But, though neatly laid, Her Ladyship’s project was not quite yet to go
-into execution. Even as she was once more taking out the bundle from its
-hiding-place and tying up in it the long tail of her cut hair, she heard
-a hum of noises, voices below, inquiring if Sir Robin had as yet reached
-the house, and evidently obtaining an affirmative answer, for,—
-
-“Where is the hero? Our hero! Our hero!”
-
-“Where is our highwayman? Our highwayman!”
-
-“Where is Tom Kidde, the gallant? The gallant of gallants!”
-
-And a lot of such merry cries came echoing up the staircase and corridor
-toward her room.
-
-Lady Peggy had utterly forgot the hanging.
-
-The more recent matter of Percy and the assassins had put her own
-adventure completely out of her head. For the first time she realized
-that she had not seen either Mr. Brummell or any of his company since
-she had unwillingly been borne away from them by Homing Nell in the
-midst of Epstowe Forest.
-
-’Twas a halt she had not counted on; but, clapping on wig and coat, she
-flung wide the door, and was presently raised on the shoulders of Sir
-Wyatt and His Grace of Escombe and borne triumphantly down to the
-dining-room and placed in a chair of honor at the supper-table, whence,
-what with toasts, songs, stories, acclaims, wonders, amazements,
-applause, Florence wine, cards, etc., etc., this gallant company did not
-arise (or some of them slip under) until seven on Monday morning.
-
-Her Ladyship got up from the mahogany with but one-pound-ten in her
-pockets, and a surmise in her head as to how far this sum would take her
-on her homeward way.
-
-But homeward way there could be none just yet, for before too many
-bumpers had been filled and drunk, Beau Brummell had made proposition of
-a most lively affair, which indeed he had already set afoot, for the
-celebrating of Sir Robin’s restoration to his friends by the timely
-arrival and prowess of Sir Percy. This was nothing else than going to
-Vauxhall by water on Tuesday night, and in masques. A score of ladies
-and gentlemen had been bidden to join, including the Ladies Diana and
-Biddy, the Honorable Dolly, the Misses Lovell, Lady Chelmsford, with
-Lady Brookwood to act as duenna for the unmarried fair.
-
-In vain Lady Peggy protested, swore she could not, would not. These
-gentlemen would not take no for an answer, and once again Her Ladyship
-perceived, as she reluctantly acceded to the masquerade, how far more
-difficult ’twas to be out of breeches than into ’em.
-
-Percy was to be there, at least he was invited; so much she knew from
-Mr. Brummell, and, as Lady Diana was positive to come up to town for
-such a novelty as a party in masquerade, of course her suitor was
-certain to attend her.
-
-Very well! Why should she, whose whole life was to be passed in the
-compounding of cream-cheeses and the visiting of poor old women, not
-give to herself one more cause of vain regretting? one more glimpse of
-him she adored?
-
-At that hour, when Mr. Brummell and his guests were doing honor to the
-supposed Sir Robin, the real Baronet was called upon to receive two most
-lamentable-looking blackguards who followed the Boots up to the
-gentleman’s room, unheeding both remonstrances and ugly words on the way
-thither.
-
-At sight of Mr. Bloksey and his companion-in-arms, each lame, bound-up
-and wound-up of leg and back, with their bonnets pulled down over their
-brows, Sir Robin skipped from his easy-chair with a gasp, half terrified
-at the appearance, wholly eager to learn the outcome of the plot.
-
-“Hist!” cries he, under his breath, and pointing to the door, finger on
-lip.
-
-“Heh?” responds the villain. “There’s no fear here. We’s well enough
-known down in our own neighbor’ood, but up ’ere we passes for two pious
-beggars wot lives by h’alms from the parish church!”
-
-A grim smile from his partner confirms this remark, and Sir Robin, thus
-reassured, says tremblingly:
-
-“Well, ’tis done?”
-
-“’Tis done,” both nodding in concert, “and,” adds Mr. Bloksey, “we’re
-both nigh done too! Wot with bullets apiece h’inside of us from the
-gentleman’s pistols, and wot with gettin’ our h’eyes knocked h’out of
-us, and most bein’ caught by the Watch when we was a-lowerin’ Lord
-Gower’s heir h’into the Thames, we’re ’ere, Sir Robin McTart, to ’umbly
-remind you that we wants more.”
-
-The Baronet shakes his head, hands thrust in pockets, clutching purse
-and pence.
-
-“Oh, no,” answers he, “the job was paid for in advance, my good men. Not
-another groat will you get.”
-
-“Werry good,” murmurs Bloksey, turning on his slip-shod heel. “We’ll
-just go down to the round house, and if it turns out as Your Lordship
-gets h’admission to the Tower free, you needn’t be too much surprised.
-We doesn’t mind a-tellin’ ’ow we saw you a-prickin’ Sir Percy de Bohun
-last night! and a-weightin’ of his mangled corp, and a-throwin’ of the
-same h’into the river at the old Dove Pier!—Oh, no! we doesn’t!” This at
-the door-sill.
-
-“What! what! you knaves! Here, come back! Come back, I say!” shrieks the
-terrified little gentleman, seizing a shoulder of each and forcing them
-into seats.
-
-After which simple application of primary methods, Mr. Bloksey and his
-friend find no difficulties whatever in the way of wresting from their
-patron another hundred pounds, with which they make off, again and again
-rehearsing to him how great risks they had run in decently interring the
-body of his hated rival.
-
-Once rid of them, Sir Robin rose, stretched himself, and yawned.
-
-’Twas an abject soul, one of those creatures born of a good and honest
-stock on either side, which sometimes cumber the earth as if in ribald
-jest against the accepted laws of birth and breeding.
-
-With no misgiving, save that of a possible detection, Sir Robin, now
-that this even had been disposed of at an expense of a hundred guineas,
-felt nothing if not jubilant, and on the morrow proceeded to order him a
-suit of satins in crimson, a hat of the latest fashion, ruffles,
-cravats, silk hose, a muff, and a lot of other fallals at Monsieur
-Jabot’s in Holborn. For the Baronet, freed, as he fancied, of his enemy,
-and feeling positive that Lady Peggy would soon, out of the overflow of
-her vast affection for him, contrive a message through her obliging Mr.
-Incognito, desired to be equipped in the latest mode for that summons to
-his Lady’s presence, which he believed must ultimately, and perhaps
-presently, arrive.
-
-It is true, he expected that his entrance into the gay world of fashion,
-which, he promised himself by way of introduction, should be at
-Vauxhall, might be a bit hampered by the accounts he must hear of the
-sudden disappearance of Sir Percy de Bohun, but this seemed a trifle in
-the path of a gentleman for whose sake Lady Peggy Burgoyne had come up
-to town, remained invisible, employed an Incognito as Mercury, and of
-whose name, albeit falsely, the prints had made most marvelous mention.
-
-Now, Sir Robin had not seen the tenth part of these last. No, not any of
-’em, in truth, save the one he had shown to Her Ladyship the evening
-they had encountered each other at the Dove Pier. To be entirely candid,
-Sir Robin was an indifferent scholar; write he could not; to read was a
-plague which he willingly deputed, when it was necessary, to his former
-instructor—that patient, worthy man, the Vicar of Friskingdean,
-incumbent of the living next Robinswold.
-
-This one was even now, so Sir Robin had got word, up in London to
-consult a great man for the benefit of his eyes, and ’twas presently
-agreed between ’em at the Bishop, where the Vicar stopped, that they
-should proceed together to Vauxhall on the Tuesday night.
-
-“I have heard, my dear Robin,” observed the excellent old man, “that
-there is to be a rare sight in the gardens that evening, nothing less
-than a most curious novelty just come into vogue in the world of
-fashion.”
-
-“Ha, and what’s that, Sir?” inquires the Baronet.
-
-“A party of Beau Brummell’s to come by water to the pier, every soul of
-’em in masks,—Lords, Ladies, and all persons of the first quality; some
-of the names I heard in the coffee-room. There’s to be Sir Wyatt Lovell,
-the Earl of Escombe, Lady Diana Weston, Lady Chelmsford, Lord Kennaston
-of Kennaston—”
-
-“Hold, Sir!” cried the Baronet, jumping about the room, like one
-demented, the idea bouncing into his pate that if Kennaston is to be
-there, his twin-sister will also form one of the distinguished party.
-“What’s to prevent me buying a couple of masks and, with our cloaks set
-out by our swords, a-joining in this gay diversion?” The little
-gentleman’s eyes twinkle with sweet anticipation.
-
-“But,” hesitates the Vicar, “would such levity be counted seemly for one
-of my years and profession?”
-
-“Tut, tut, Sir,” cries Sir Robin, “I’ll not take a refusal. Hark ye, I
-have reasons,” adds he mysteriously. “There’s one of the Fair likely to
-be present who pines to see me, Sir, and whom I yearn to behold once
-more. There hath been an obstacle,” continues the cold-blooded monkey,
-“but Providence hath removed it. I pray of you accompany me, Sir, and
-t’will lead mayhap to banns bein’ read on Sunday se’ennight in the
-church at Friskingdean.”
-
-The Vicar, being carried away by two natural and one of ’em a most
-laudable emotion, at last consented. He was quite in fatherly sympathy
-with his old pupil’s ambition to settle in life, and he had that curious
-hankering after just a nibble at the edge of the flesh-pots of Egypt,
-which is not uncommon to gentlemen of even his sedate years and failing
-sight.
-
-Sir Robin bought masks and cloaks of black and ordered them sent to the
-Bishop, where he had agreed to sup on Tuesday and go thence by land to
-Vauxhall. Indeed he had just now come out of the draper’s shop and
-turned down toward the Vicar’s inn, when he caught sight of Lady Peggy
-walking swiftly from him. She had been buying stains for her skin and
-eyebrows.
-
-“Mr. Incognito!” cried he, scampering hither and yon, into the kennel,
-onto the path, jostling fair ladies’ chairs, running into a porter’s
-pack, thumping a horse in the nose with his ill-worn weapon, and,
-finally, gaining on the one he pursues, and dealing Her Ladyship’s
-shoulder no gentle blow.
-
-“Ha, there!” cries she, turning, hand on hilt. Then, perceiving who
-’tis, she almost shudders and draws up to her full height.
-
-“Dear Mr. Incognito,” pants Sir Robin, “how fares My Lady? Tell me, I
-beseech you!”
-
-“She fares but ill, Sir,” answers she, making to proceed.
-
-“No, no, not so fast, I implore; oh, Sir, I die for her!”
-
-“Very well, Sir, she is willing. I am pressed for time and must away.”
-
-“One word. You say she’s willing I should die for her?”
-
-“Oh, Sir Robin, importune me no further. I know not what she’s willing
-for!”
-
-“Now, now,” soothes the Baronet. “We’re well met, Mr. Incognito, that
-I’m assured of; and that Lady Peggy’d far rather I’d live than die for
-her,” leers he, “since for the sake of communicating with me she’s at,
-no doubt, great expenses in maintaining you?”
-
-At this Her Ladyship laughs, as many a lady may do any day, at the
-strange construction a man who is blessed with vanity contrives to put
-upon her actions.
-
-“’Tis so, I know’t!” exclaims he, grinning unctuously. “Now, Sir, tell
-me, goes she—” his voice sinks to a whisper as he applies his mouth nigh
-to Peg’s ear—“goes she to Vauxhall in Beau Brummell’s party, along with
-her brother, o’ Tuesday night?”
-
-A thousand thoughts rush helter-skelter through Her Ladyship’s brain,
-pro and con the answering of this query.
-
-Presently, sedately, at the corner of the street, says she, with no
-smallest notion of the import or the outcome of her words, merely
-uttered as a light and easy means of make-off:
-
-“Go and see!” and she disappears from view.
-
-“By jingo!” rattles the gentleman from Kent to himself, as he jumps into
-a hackney-coach and tools out to the Puffled Hen. “But she loves me!
-Curse me! but I believe she’s had that incognito rascal at upwards
-probably of ten shillings a day, just on purpose to watch for my
-appearance, and so to glean tidings of my welfare! Without a doubt ’tis
-by her commands he said that ‘go and see.’ Zounds! I’ll do’t, with the
-Vicar to bear me out,” adds this prudent lover, “should any disagreeable
-incident occur between me and any one of these coxcombs with their town
-ways. Damn ’em, tho’! with a secret affair going on betwixt me and
-Peggy, I can snap my fingers at His Gracious Majesty himself, should we
-encounter!”
-
-Well pleased, therefore, with himself, Sir Robin descended at the
-Puffled Hen and bestowed upon the cabman out of that abundance of the
-heart which occasionally causes the pocket, as well as the heart, to
-speak—two-pence.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- _In this same Sir Robin believes he meets his
- Fair: and Lady Biddy O’Toole is the
- means of putting the whole Gardens
- into a vast commotion._
-
-
-After quitting Sir Robin, Her Ladyship, jingling the few shillings that
-now remained to her, since purchasing unguents and the mask and cloak
-necessary for the approaching festivity, suddenly made up her mind to
-escape at once, to leave the bundle of her clothes, her shorn tresses,
-and whatever else beside to tell what tale they might, and, here and
-now, to shake the dust of London from her feet forever. And to this end
-she was about to summon a chair to start her as far on her journey as
-her purse would permit, when out comes Mr. Brummell himself from the
-shop of Monsieur Jabot, and links his arm in hers with his accustomed
-pleasant familiarity and easy condescension.
-
-“’Pon honor!” exclaims the Beau. “Well met, Sir! Since you were nigh
-hanged, Sir, I’ve not had too much of your agreeable company. I’d have
-you know I’m just from Monsieur Jabot’s back room, where, the whiles I
-took a dish of tea, I explained the riddles of your most amazin’ twist
-of the lace. Faith, Robin, ’twas a lucky hour for me, when, having left
-a pile of failures, so high! in the corner of my dressing-room, I beheld
-your cravat and bade my man knock you down!”
-
-Lady Peggy laughs. The cool audacity of Beau Brummell is a relief after
-the mawkish sighs of the little scoundrel she has just parted from, and,
-hoping that Mr. Brummell will soon spy either one of the Fair or a Royal
-Highness, and so be diverted from her side, she bows and answers:
-
-“Robin McTart must ever account that a lucky day for him, Sir!”
-
-“Hark ye, my young buck,” proceeds the Beau. “Monsieur Jabot is so
-enchanted with your manner of the cravat that to-day, with my
-compliments, he introduces it at Court! And since I’ve been seen with
-it,” adds he pompously, “’tis sure, by this day week, to be the height
-of the mode!”
-
-“Aye?” responds Her Ladyship, a-wondering how she can best get away.
-
-“Aye!” echoes her companion in a monstrous amazement. “Rot me! Sir, but
-such a distinction’s not often conferred upon a young gentleman up in
-town for the first time. What’s the matter with you, boy?” cries he,
-turning to observe Her Ladyship’s somewhat absent-minded aspect.
-
-“Naught, I swear!” cries she, recovering herself.
-
-“’Sdeath! Robin, are ye in love?” asks the Beau, taking a pinch of snuff
-and tendering his box, as, attended by all eyes, the two make their way
-down Piccadilly, betwixt ogling ladies in their chairs and chariots,
-gallants, dowagers; each, all, mincing and la-la-ing as they go.
-
-Her Ladyship inclines her head. She is well pleased to speak truth when
-she can.
-
-“By Gad! Mr. Brummell, you’ve hit the mark,” says she.
-
-“Sleep not o’ nights? fickle at your meat? wake sighing? dream of
-patches, smiles, and dainty fingers? mistrust yourself? easily
-affronted? believe the whole world’s pointing at you in raillery? take
-no pleasure in horse, man, gun or dog? loathe all the Fair, save one?
-love solitude?”
-
-Her Ladyship’s feign to smile in the midst of the snuff, which she
-abhors, and has only taken because she had to. Sneezing, she nods as her
-companion continues:
-
-“Hate company? are cursin’ me now for an addle-pated fool, and wishing
-I’d leave you to yourself, eh? Don’t answer. I know it, Robin, well; a
-thousand times, more or less, have I been where you stand to-day, and
-had just cause, I fancied, to damn the Prince himself, since that which
-I was then pleased to dub his foolish prattle served to distract my
-ruminations from whichever Lady ’twas at the moment claimed my fancy. I
-cursed him then, Sir, for clinging to my arm, but now I bless him, as
-you will me some future day—for, Robin, hark ye, there’s not one of the
-jades but deceives us, no, Sir! and I’m goin’ to hang on to you, Sir,
-for keepin’ of you out of the vapors. Zounds, Sir! I’ll not leave you to
-any such ill company as himself proves to a young man in your
-predicament. Come, Sir, come; we’ll up and into Will’s, and there, me
-stickin’ faster than a burr, we’ll home to Peter’s Court and with a
-merry lot of gentlemen make a pretty night of’t against to-morrow with
-its evening at Vauxhall.”
-
-With which pleasant and most well-intentioned sally, Lady Peggy again
-finds herself constrained to put off that redemption of her true estate
-for which she so deeply yearns.
-
-Mr. Brummell’s party went by water to Vauxhall, and ’twas indeed a
-heavenly night for such an expedition, with no large lady-moon
-a-staring, but the rather a thin slip of a silver damsel hanging in the
-vault, and millions of stars a-waiting on her, not any of these
-a-revealing too much or a-telling any tales if a gentleman’s hand
-chanced to come in contact with a lady’s amid the folds of brocade, or
-under the long cloth of the black, crimson or blue cloaks in which all
-these merry masqueraders were enveloped.
-
-Sir Percy de Bohun was beside Lady Diana Weston; Peggy noted the same
-with jealous, despairing eyes; while at the left of Lord Brookwood’s
-daughter sat her own twin—only the second time she had seen him since
-the memorable night in Lark Lane; nor did she see him plainly now, for
-all the company had set forth in their masks, and only removed them
-between whiles to gain a breath of fresh air. ’Twas expected that the
-larger number of the party would meet them at the Gardens, and
-thereafter the sport and mystification would begin.
-
-So it turned out; not only all the rest of Mr. Brummell’s friends in
-their cloaks and masks, with glimpse now and then of satins, taffetas,
-laces, ribands, jeweled stomachers, bodices ablaze, and so forth, but a
-vast assemblage of other folk also awaited the arrival of the Beau’s
-barge at the bottom of the Gardens.
-
-Among these, two lurked in the shadow of the trees; they were Sir Robin
-and the Vicar. The former noted with deep joy that he had, by a happy
-chance, chosen a crimson color for his new suit, exactly corresponding
-to that of one of these gallants; that his cloak of sable hue was also
-quite the ton, and that he could thus, with ease, mingle with the party,
-and presently, no doubt, either discover Lady Peggy’s identity, or, more
-than likely, she herself would disclose the same to him, and at last
-reward his faithfulness and patience. No qualm visited the little
-gentleman’s conscience-pocket with regard to his supposed victim,
-although, it is true, he had given him a vicious thought as he had stood
-near the river’s bank waiting for Mr. Brummell’s barge to come in sight.
-So had Peggy, as she was being rowed past the old Dove Pier; into her
-mind and into Sir Percy’s had come the memory of the Sunday night, but
-he spoke of it no more than, certes, did she.
-
-Sir Robin, his cup overflowing with pleasurable anticipation and the
-gratified sense that the one who had sworn to take his life lay,
-fish-food, at the bottom of the Thames, flitted hither and yon, dragging
-the bewildered Vicar of Friskingdean in his wake.
-
-Wherever the company of Mr. Brummell wandered, there followed, hanging
-on to the fringe, as ’twere, these two, whom presently one-half the
-guests accepted as a matter of course to be of themselves.
-
-First, always followed by an admiring and gaping crowd, ’twas up and
-down the formal Walks somewhat sedately, for the masquerade, as has been
-said before, was at that period but just coming into vogue, and fine
-ladies and gentlemen were, at the outset of an evening, not as easy in
-their disguises as they became after a promenade in the unaccustomed
-duds; then, they formed a circle of mysterious appearance around the
-orchestra; then, ’twas into the Room to stare at the pictures through
-the peepholes of their masks; then a rush to gaze at the Cascade, which
-the whole of them, save Lady Peggy, Sir Robin and the Vicar, had seen a
-hundred times before; later, ’twas up and down the Walks again; and here
-Sir Robin at last made bold, having long since joined himself and the
-somewhat reluctant Vicar to a group of the Beau’s company, to address a
-few words, as it chanced, to the lively Lady Biddy O’Toole!
-
-It had seemed to him, after a careful survey of all, and having been
-able, by dint of his ears, to learn which was Kennaston, whose was the
-only personality so far in his possession, that Lady Biddy’s arch turn
-of the head was the most like to belong to the object of his passion. So
-up he springs, mincing, leaving the Vicar to huddle in the shade, and,
-pulling Her Ladyship’s mask-riband with a twitching finger and thumb, as
-he had seen others do just now, he said, very low, in her ear:
-
-“I’m sure I know who Your Ladyship is!”
-
-“Out with it,” says she, very low too.
-
-“It’s she whose image is writ on my heart,” answers he.
-
-“Sure,” answers she, “that’s a thing that can never be known until
-you’re dead, and maybe not as soon, since the surgeons don’t cut up
-everybody! Lud, Sir, give me your name, and we’ll talk of your heart
-anon.”
-
-“I am Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent,” exclaims he, feeling
-positive that this saucy minx is none other than his adored, for be it
-remembered Lady Biddy spoke under her breath and with a disguised tone
-to her voice.
-
-“’Od’s blood!” now whispers Her Ladyship, with an accent of mock terror,
-into Sir Robin’s ear. “You! the highwayman! the cut-throat! the robber!
-what, I’ve heard, sticks gentlemen in the back, or has your men do it
-for you, and profits by that same!” laughing fit to kill herself.
-
-But the little man does not laugh; the cold sweat stands out all over
-his sallow countenance, and he’s so terrified, recalling the threats of
-Mr. Bloksey, that he stands stock-still, and really can not move a leg.
-
-They are nigh the Dark Walks as Sir Robin comes to his halt, and Lady
-Biddy, not pausing even to note his silence, goes merrily on with her
-most apt discourse.
-
-“Oh,” proceeds she, “but you are the hero of the day, Sir Robin, and
-it’s myself that’s proud to be in your company, and faith! I’d like to
-have died running to see you hang on Saturday last!”
-
-“Hang!” gasps he, getting back the use of his voice, but not of his
-shaking legs. “Saturday last!”
-
-“Don’t be that bashful, Sir Robin, making as if you’d never heard of
-such before!” And Lady Biddy gives the Baronet’s cloak a playful tweak.
-“Lud, Sir! you and Sir Percy de Bohun’s the two most talked about, of
-all the bucks in town!”
-
-“Sir Percy de Bohun!” repeats he, his knees knocking together.
-
-“Sure’n didn’t he save you from the gibbet? Oh, go-along with you, Sir
-Robin, you can’t palaver Lady—”
-
-“Lady who?” he contrives to ejaculate, struck nearly dumb at this
-mention of his rival, while Lady Biddy now bridles and is mute.
-
-“You are Lady Peggy Burgoyne, are you not?” he goes on more softly,
-bending toward his companion, and concluding at last that the Lady’s
-words must have been the mere hap-hazards of a sparkling disposition.
-
-Now Lady Biddy, in common with other ladies of fashion and moving in
-certain high circles of society, had heard a deal of the mysterious and
-all unseen Lady Peggy. She well knew the supposition that was rife as to
-Lady Peggy’s being secretly the wife of Sir Robin McTart. She knew from
-her bosom friend, Lady Diana Weston, who had the same most direct from
-her suitor, Lord Kennaston, Lady Peggy’s own twin-brother, that his
-sister was from home, unknown her whereabouts to father or mother, kith
-or kin, maid or man, save that she was “up in London”; that Sir Percy de
-Bohun was mad for love and loss of her; that her brother, had he not
-been in like case by means of Lady Diana, would long since have made
-public search, as he was indeed making such privately, for the discovery
-of the eloping Fair. She likewise was aware that Sir Robin frequented
-the gay world, was not adverse to ogling a lady, as she herself could
-testify; stopped at Mr. Brummell’s house; and, albeit ’twas said had
-fought a duel with Sir Percy because of Lady Peggy, still did not absent
-himself from any rout, ridotto, or ball, on her always absent account.
-
-So, equipped with such a fund of knowledge and any amount of surmise,
-Her Ladyship replied coyly beneath her mask:
-
-“Why do you think so, Sir Robin, and pray if I were Lady Peggy, what,
-now, would you be afther saying to me?”
-
-“Zounds! ’tis she!” exclaims the Baronet, carried away by the fact that
-Lady Biddy’s hand beneath her cloak has more than half-way met his own
-moist and trembling fingers.
-
-“Loveliest of women! Oh, ’twas indeed by your express directions, was’t
-not, that Mr. Incognito on Monday, watching for me in High Holborn nigh
-the shop of Mounseer Jabot, bid me come here to-night to meet you?”
-
-Lady Biddy, although much averse to the clammy touch of her cavalier,
-gives his fingers an assuring pressure.
-
-“Why, oh, why!” pursues Sir Robin, now as much elated by this tacit
-confession of her passion for him, as he was but lately overwhelmed by
-the mention of such strange words as “hanging, highwayman, Sir Percy de
-Bohun,” etc., etc., “why have you seen fit to keep me in such a length
-of suspense? Why have I not been allowed, before this, to behold you,
-and renew the days of our sojourn in Kent? Speak, my angel, speak!”
-
-“La, Sir!” murmurs Lady Biddy, minx-like, ever anxious to get at the
-heart of this now much deepened enigma, “la, Sir, do you not know but
-too well the whys and wherefores of my secrecy?” Her Ladyship from Cork
-actually squeezes the little Baronet’s crooked little hand.
-
-“That do I not! Mr. Incognito never would tell me aught, but thus and
-so; and bade me, from your adorable lips, keep myself in seclusion and
-safety,—nor ever,” continues he, his tone sinking to a mere breath,
-“endanger my precious self,” now stooping to imprint a chaste kiss on
-Her Ladyship’s hand, “in the meeting even once of Sir Percy de Bohun,
-for he had sworn to kill me on beholding me. Dearest life,” proceeds Sir
-Robin, withdrawing Lady Biddy a bit into the shade of the great trees,
-“I have obeyed your commands. I have never set eyes upon the scoundrel,
-but have kept myself close housed at my inn in Pimlico, awaiting your
-dear pleasure.”
-
-“Have ye?” murmurs Lady Biddy, now more bewildered than she ever was
-before in her life, and seeing no clear way, either to read the puzzle
-or, truth to tell, to elude the gentleman. Yet the wits of a lady,
-especially if she happen to have been born in Ireland, may usually be
-trusted to extricate her from almost any dilemma; therefore, when Sir
-Robin has done swearing of his impatient probation passed at the Puffled
-Hen, says she, tweaking her hoop and making a courtesy:
-
-“Lud! Robin,” (the hussy!) “but you are a killing creature! Nay, nay!”
-drawing out a few steps, he after her, from the shade of the trees and
-more in the flare of the twinkling globe lamps. “Nay, tarry here but a
-moment; there are the same reasons for your not accompanying me now that
-have prevailed upon me to keep our matters secret hitherto. I pray you,
-stir not from the neighborhood of this wooden lion—see?—until I return,
-which I will do presently.”
-
-“Faith!” cries the Baronet, “I’ll not budge, my divine Peggy! until you
-are once more at my side!” and with a horrid leer through his peepholes,
-he essays to take Lady Biddy’s hand once more, but she’s off, balking
-him.
-
-Quick as thought, she scampered across to the edge of the orchestra,
-where she discovered a group of masks and among ’em one, whom, by the
-rose pinned to her bloom-colored bodice, she knew to be Lady Diana, and
-she made certain that two of the three bloods near her, canes dangling
-at their button-holes, must be Sir Percy and Lord Kennaston.
-
-“Hist!” exclaims Lady Biddy, panting partly from speed, partly from the
-fright a lady alone might experience in running the gauntlet of so many
-macaronis and fops, not to speak of thieves and pickpockets, as perforce
-was the case in progressing about Vauxhall.
-
-“What is’t Biddy, for I know you by your silver heels,” answers Lady Di.
-“Mischief, I’ll dare be sworn, or it’s not you! Speak your mind; there’s
-none here but what can keep a secret, and the whole of us have been
-a-watching you with some one, fie! at the entrance to the Dark Alleys.”
-
-“Is Sir Percy here? Is this he?” whispers Biddy.
-
-Sir Percy bows, for he is there; while the other two gentlemen,
-inferring from her tone that she seeks a private ear, instantly withdraw
-to one of the boxes for a glass of Burgundy to refresh their spirits.
-
-“I’ve news for you, of one you’re a-dyin’ for, of Lady Peggy Burgoyne!”
-exclaims she triumphantly.
-
-“What! What!” comes simultaneously from behind each of the masks she
-addresses.
-
-“Aye; I’m after learning from, whom, think you?”
-
-“Proceed, for the love of God, Madam!” says Percy, very low.
-
-“From him that’s supposed to be her husband, Sir Robin McTart, that
-mistook me for her,” Biddy titters, “that she’s here to-night by an
-appointment with him, made by a trusted servant of hers, called 'Mr.
-Incognito’; sent to meet Sir Robin before the shop of Monsieur Jabot in
-Holborn; and he’s not seen Her Ladyship,—I mean Sir Robin’s not seen her
-since they were sojourning in Kent together! and there’s a mystery for
-you! And I made excuses and left him a-standin’ by the lion, for I could
-no longer contain the news, but must run back to him now to extract the
-rest of it. Pray heaven, Lady Peggy herself comes not by, and lets out
-that I was not she at all, at all!”
-
-“Good God!” murmurs Percy under his breath, as Biddy rattles on. “Can
-this thing be? and what does it all mean?”
-
-Restraining Lady Biddy, both he and Lady Diana endeavor to quiet her
-abounding spirits, and to gain from her the detailed account of her
-encounter with Sir Robin. Percy, in the midst of her voluble tongue and
-her giggling, striving to form some plan of action which shall this
-night bring matters to the touch between himself and the Baronet and
-leave one or t’other of ’em stiff and stark.
-
-Meantime, Sir Robin, with greedy eyes fixed on Lady Biddy, so long as he
-can see her, and until she and her companions withdraw into a box,
-stands as if at one with the wooden lion; presently, however, his gaze
-is diverted hither and yon, not only by the playful and engaging remarks
-of various young ladies who challenge his mask in the most direct and
-obliging fashion, but by a certain Figure which he beholds moving about
-aimlessly, it would seem, and alone, beneath the dark shadows of the
-trees toward the river.
-
-There is something in this Figure’s motions, although cloaked and
-masked,—therefore, the Baronet notes, one of Mr. Brummell’s party,—which
-strikes him as familiar, and when, presently, the unknown lifts mask and
-reveals the countenance behind it, Sir Robin sidles up, one eye on the
-wooden lion of his tryst, however, and plucking Lady Peggy by the arm,
-says:
-
-“Ho! Mr. Incognito!”
-
-Peggy turns, and betwixt disgust, dismay, horror, and amusement, remains
-silent.
-
-“’Tis I, Sir, Robin McTart,” lifting his own mask a trifle to assure his
-companion of his identity.
-
-“Soh!” returns she, “I do perceive.”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Incognito, what do I not owe to your being in My Lady’s employ!
-She is indeed here.”
-
-Her Ladyship, taking this for a question, answers thus, with emphasis:
-“Yes, she’s here—indeed.”
-
-“I have seen her,” sighs the little Baronet, leaning his head, just
-exactly the height of Her Ladyship’s own, down on Peggy’s shoulder in an
-excess of sensibility.
-
-“Have you?” exclaims she, not daring to stir in the embarrassment of
-believing it possible that the scoundrel has discovered her identity.
-
-“Oh, yes,” sighs Sir Robin, “I have received a pressure, nay two of ’em,
-from her hand. I’ve kissed her fingers; I await her return to meet me at
-the wooden lion yonder.”
-
-“Do you?” says Lady Peggy, mystified beyond everything. “Did she look as
-you expected her to?”
-
-“Ah!” gasps Sir Robin, “she has not yet lifted her mask for me to behold
-her countenance, but when she returns, I shall beseech her for one
-glimpse!”
-
-“Ah!” returns Peggy, now fully persuaded that some one has been making a
-jest of her companion, but none the less disquieted on her own score.
-
-“Hark ye, Sir Robin,” says she, “you have ever found my counsels wise.
-Be advised by me now; leave Vauxhall at once. Lady Peggy Burgoyne is not
-safe, so long as you tarry here.”
-
-The little Baronet, doughtily, although trembling, puts his hand to his
-hilt.
-
-“Nay, Sir!” continues Peg, “your weapon would not avail for her
-preservation. She leaves town this very night for Kennaston. Do you the
-same, nor risk detection longer here.” Her Ladyship uses the word
-advisedly, and has the satisfaction of seeing Sir Robin shiver with
-terror, then steady again as he reflects that Her Ladyship’s fears can
-but be in connection with her own escapade; since, ’tis plain from all
-he can spy and eavesdrop, not a soul as yet has missed Sir Percy de
-Bohun from his accustomed haunts.
-
-“But she swore me she’d be back in a few moments, Mr. Incognito, and
-’sdeath! Sir!” perceiving Lady Biddy emerging from the box and advancing
-toward the lion alone, “there she is!”
-
-Off and away Sir Robin McTart to join his Fair, while Lady Peggy,
-screened by the increasing shadows, for the dripping lamps are one by
-one, by this, dying down in their globes, beholds one—she devines not
-which—of Beau Brummell’s lady guests, courtesying and greeting the
-Baronet with her finger-tips.
-
-Now My Lady’s heart’s a-thumping monstrous hard; she beholds, as well as
-Sir Robin and his supposed Peggy, two others—alas! she knows too well
-who they are, a-peeping out from the corner of the box-entrance whence
-Lady Biddy came just now, and watching her encounter with Sir Robin.
-
-These are Lady Diana and Sir Percy.
-
-Together? Aye and a-goin’ to be “together” for all their lives, she
-sadly thinks, both of them, quite forgetting, save perchance for a
-moment’s beguilement, her very existence. But it behooves her, if not
-for her own sake, of which she has come to the pass of recking but
-little, then for her father’s and mother’s, now to bid farewell forever
-to disguises, falsehoods, cheatings, man’s estate, and even the
-melancholy chance of seeing the countenance of Sir Percy. She will off
-presently, and reach home as best she may.
-
-A few minutes, more or less, can make no odds, and ’tis but too true
-that Her Ladyship stood there in ambush of the branches in the vain hope
-that Percy might lift his mask, if but for an instant, and thus allow
-her parting gaze to rest upon his features.
-
-It is quite true that mortals, although in never such haste to reach a
-desired crisis, still ofttimes halt at the threshhold of its attainment;
-so Her Ladyship, with now nothing to hinder her escape, still stood
-leaning against an oak, listless, but for the eager eyes fixed on the
-pair in the box entrance. These presently crossed into the throng and,
-joining others of the maskers, were lost to her view; but the Baronet
-and Lady Biddy had not been idle of their tongues this while.
-
-Much simpering, angling for news, tittering, and a neat show of wit in
-the manner of plying a gentleman with questions on a matter about which
-he was quite ignorant, on the lady’s side; ardor, impatience, as much
-daring as his little spirit permitted, on the gentleman’s. Finally said
-he:
-
-“Mr. Incognito says you start for Kennaston this very night, my dearest
-life, is’t so?”
-
-“Tell me who is Mr. Incognito?” says she, “and I’ll answer you
-straight.”
-
-“He’s your paid servant, sworn slave, and the bearer of all tender
-messages between us.—Now, go you to Kennaston to-night?”
-
-“As sure as I’m Lady Peggy Burgoyne,” returns Biddy. “I start for home
-ere cock-crow!”
-
-“I’ll follow you poste-haste, but,” cries Sir Robin, “loveliest of
-created beings, I beseech, I implore! one glimpse of your angelic
-countenance before we part—to meet only when I can claim you as my own!”
-
-“No! No!” exclaims Biddy, restraining the Baronet’s hand which is laid
-upon the lutestring of her mask.
-
-“But divine creature, I insist!” with one arm seizing the buxom Lady
-Biddy about the waist, while with the other he essays to untie the
-riband which hides her charms from view.
-
-Then Lady Biddy O’Toole, whose lungs were of the best, let such a bawl
-as rang far up and down the Thames, causing a score of red-stockinged
-boatmen to leave their wherries and dash up the Gardens; causing every
-tongue in Vauxhall to cease clacking, every glass to jingle to its
-table, every echo to resound; every other lady there to shriek; the
-musicians to stop; the waiters to drop their trays; each gentleman to
-draw sword; and a vast number of persons of both sexes to shout:
-
-“Watch! Watch! Murder! Thieves! Highwaymen!” and whatever else beside.
-
-While a concourse of people of every condition at once closed in around
-Sir Robin and Lady Biddy, at the outside rim of which, shivering betwixt
-terror and that lively curiosity which overrides even a desire for
-personal safety, gaped the now unmasked Vicar of Friskingdean, unable to
-find his natural protector and sometime pupil in all this hurly-burly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- _Wherein Sir Percy and Sir Robin come face
- to face, to the unfeigned amazement of
- each: and where My Lady takes
- to her heels and a wherry._
-
-
-When Lady Diana and Percy quitted the box, he, after conducting her to
-the care of Lady Brookwood, strode off into the Dark Alleys, taking with
-him, not Kennaston, for the hopeless youth, flouted still by Diana, had
-gone a-mooning by the river’s bank, but a company of valiant and merry
-gentlemen all raised a bit by the partaking of the famous Vauxhall
-punch; and to them he confided sufficient of his reasons and intentions,
-as made plain their course to them as his friends, to do aught and all
-in their several powers toward the promoting of a quarrel betwixt him
-and Sir Robin McTart; whom, he would presently point out to them, as
-they should stroll, seeming careless, the length of the walk.
-
-Thus, arm in arm, Sir Percy, Sir Wyatt Lovell, His Grace of Escombe, and
-Mr. Jack Chalmers, across the path, swaggering with sticks and tassels
-hanging, hats at a cock, perfumed with Venus oil, and most jocund of
-demeanor; with Beau Brummell behind ’em spying, waving his little muff,
-and chatting with Lord Wootton and one or two more gay sparks, all
-disporting themselves carelessly, but hilts eased for the drawing.
-
-Just as they were nearing the wooden lion of Sir Robin’s tryst, Lady
-Biddy’s shriek assailed their ears, and Sir Percy, thanking Providence
-for so opportune an occurrence, which, not to say that it was in any way
-premeditated, yet continued to ring out louder and louder, even after
-Sir Robin had ceased to pull at her mask-string and stood, held fast in
-Her Ladyship’s stout grasp, the very center of a blaze of light from
-footmen’s flambeaux,—they and the masses pushing every way, screaming
-and cursing.
-
-Into the thick of this mêlée dashed Sir Percy de Bohun, with his friends
-on either side of him.
-
-But a moment sufficed for him to wrest the Lady from her assailant and
-to deliver her over to the care of Diana and the Duchess, who carried
-her swooning (whether with laughter or emotion ’twould be difficult to
-set down), to the Room.
-
-In another second, taking his silver-fringed gloves from his pocket he
-threw them into the masked face of Sir Robin McTart.
-
-The little Baronet, who had both temper and vanity, which brace now got
-the upperhand of his cowardice, and, believing that Lady Peggy’s eyes
-were upon him, that Sir Percy was at the bottom of the Thames, and with
-full foreknowledge that he could run away before the meeting could be
-arranged, caught the gloves as they struck and flung them back into
-their owner’s covered countenance.
-
-“Take that! ’sdeath!” squeaked Sir Robin, now much the more valiant as
-he beheld the Vicar screwing his way toward him through the excited
-crowds.
-
-[Illustration: I am Sir Robin McTart!...]
-
-“Unmask, and show yourself for who you are!” cried Percy, every one of
-his companions echoing:
-
-“Unmask! Unmask! Unmask, or we’ll run ye!”
-
-“Willingly,” responded the trembling gentleman from Kent, tugging at the
-slip-knot in his mask-string.
-
-“I am Sir Robin McTart! Who, the devil, are you?”
-
-“I am Sir Percy de Bohun!” replied his opponent, as both masks came off
-at the same instant, and the two confronted one another, staring with
-four eyes that fairly popped in their sockets.
-
-’Twould be hard to say which of these two was the more astounded,
-although Sir Percy’s amazement had quite a different flavor from the
-Baronet’s abject terror.
-
-“You! Sir Percy de Bohun!” he quavered, turning ashy pale. “I’ll not
-believe it. ’Tis a lie!”
-
-“You! Sir Robin McTart!” replied Percy, hotly. “Gentlemen,” turning to
-his friends, “I pray you bear me out in this, not to the exclusion of my
-challenge of this impostor, which holds good until one or t’other of us
-sheds blood, but for the preservation of the honor of a valiant
-gentleman, who is not far off of us now. That this weazen wretch may
-meet his dues, for not only does he masquerade his face, but seeks to
-usurp the character and name of one whom we all know to be both
-handsome, brave and courageous.”
-
-Percy’s blood runs high as he speaks these generous words, while every
-soul about him stands breathless, staring, struck dumb with the
-singularity of the episode.
-
-“But I am Sir Robin McTart,” cries the Baronet, brandishing his weapon
-with a will, since there is none to oppose him, and the Vicar, now,
-although well-nigh choked, not above ten yards distant from him.
-
-“Tut, tut, Sir, whoever you are,” interposed Lord Escombe. “Your game’s
-up, and you’d better give your lies a rest.”
-
-“Hold!” cries Sir Percy to Robin, “whoever you are, I challenge you to
-fight me ten minutes hence, yonder in the open, towards the river, and
-those ten minutes my friends and I’ll spend in calling the actual Sir
-Robin McTart into your presence, and confronting your impudence with his
-reality. Lend me your lungs, My Lords and Gentlemen; Sir Robin’s in call
-somewhere in the Gardens as we all know.”
-
-And with one accord the shout went up, ringing up and down the river and
-far across to the highway, where it caused the horse-patrol to think
-that every highwayman in the kingdom had broken loose upon Vauxhall, and
-presently brought them rearing, plunging, swearing, firing, thumping
-cutlasses right and left, into the midst of the surging thousands, by
-this all shouting:
-
-“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin
-McTart!” at the top of their voices.
-
-But for all their bawling, no one answered, no one came, and but one of
-the vast throng went.
-
-This was Lady Peggy, at a loss to know the meaning of the shouts, not
-having been near enough to the scene of the encounter to learn its
-purport, and only now realizing that ’twas herself was sought and meant
-by the concerted cry that rent the air. Scenting a new if unknown
-danger, she followed her woman’s instinct, and, in the waiting pause
-that succeeded the tumultuous call, Peggy fled to the landing, pressed a
-handful of shillings, almost her last, into the palm of the only boatman
-there, jumped into the wherry and bade him get her as swiftly as he
-could to Queenhithe Stairs; for determined was she, now more than ever,
-to leave no traces in her wake, and to return, at all risks, to Mr.
-Brummell’s house for her bundle of woman’s clothes.
-
-For a long way down the Thames the renewed cry of the Vauxhall crush
-rang in her distracted ears:
-
-“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Where are
-you? Come forth! Show yourself!”
-
-But none other came forth, and the Baronet, taking such courage as he
-might through his astonishment at Sir Percy’s being alive,—and not
-forgetting, even at this point, to reckon how much the lying assassins
-had mulcted him of, now, in the second breathless halt of the calling
-his own name, waved his weapon and answered it, saying again:
-
-“I am Sir Robin McTart!”
-
-“Prove it,” shouted Chalmers, with a derisive shrug.
-
-“Faith! and so he can by me!” exclaimed the panting Vicar, as, borne
-rather by the surging of the people than by his slender legs, the tenant
-of the cloth was pitched somewhat unceremoniously head-first into his
-pupil’s middle. Sputtering, but yet winning the attention which truth
-and the clergy usually and righteously obtain, the Vicar raised his
-right hand, and, laying his left on the Baronet’s shoulder, he spoke:
-
-“This is Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent. I have known him from his
-birth; his father before him; he has been my pupil. Who dares use his
-name than himself is an impostor and a thief!”
-
-“What!” and now comes forward Mr. Brummell with open hand. “And my old
-friend,” says he, “’sdeath, Mr. What’s-your-name, you were a curate when
-we met last, twenty years ago, but I remember you, Sir, at Robinswold.
-So this,” surveying the Baronet, “is my old friend’s son and heir? Of a
-truth he favors his sire more than the pretty young rapscallion that’s
-been a-fooling us all for now these four weeks past; for gentlemen,”
-adds the Beau, turning to Sir Percy, “’tis as well we confess ourselves
-to have been duped. Gad, Sir,” this _sotto voce_ to Percy alone, “I
-always wondered where Sir Hector found that handsome lad, for he was as
-ugly a gentleman as ever was wedded to wife.”
-
-After the storm there came that calm which is the inevitable successor,
-save that, in this case, while the noise subsided, the wonder grew.
-Every one of Mr. Brummell’s company and all of the rest of the world
-beside, was rehearsing his and her own surmise as to the identity of the
-young gentleman who had, for above a month, been the town toast, and who
-had now disappeared as suddenly as he came. Some believed him to be Tom
-Kidde himself; some, a Lord out of France; some, a Prince of the blood;
-some, the Devil; some, an astrologer; there was no lack of inventions as
-to Her Ladyship’s identity by the time the ten minutes of Sir Percy’s
-setting had come to an end.
-
-He cast an eye about the place looking for Sir Robin, and his veins were
-fairly on fire to know the color of his rival’s blood and wring from
-his, he hoped, dying lips, a confession of where Lady Peggy was.
-Presently, not spying his opponent, he begged Escombe and Chalmers to
-have the goodness to seek him out; settle the spot; ask him to choose
-his seconds; call a surgeon (of whom there were always a score in
-attendance at Vauxhall, ready for just such affairs), while he himself
-swung down toward the river to look for Kennaston and give him one last
-word for Peggy, should Sir Robin run him through.
-
-Peg’s twin lay on the turf sleeping. Such are the effects of being at
-once a poet and a lover, not yet twenty, and quite fagged with
-wide-awake nights and days and a fair lady’s cruel caprices. Sir Percy
-looked at him, smiled, and whispered as he knelt:
-
-“Dear lad, thou that art My Lady’s twin, when next thou seest her, sure
-I know she’ll lay her dear lips on thy brow, and there she’ll find,
-this.” Percy kissed the boy as he spoke. “’Tis doubtless more than she’d
-care to discover, but, if death comes, ’twill ease the blow and charm
-the pain while I remember this message that I send her now.”
-
-He turned away and left Peg’s brother lying there to waken at his
-leisure.
-
-When he reached the Walk again, another clamor greeted him identical
-with its predecessor.
-
-“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Come forth of
-your seclusion. The time is up. Sir Robin, I say-y-y-y!”
-
-This Sir Robin McTart had vanished as mysteriously as the other one, and
-though the entire company made the welkin ring with the same cry over
-again:
-
-“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin McTart!” no Sir Robin
-appeared or could be found, and they were fain be content, reinforced by
-the ladies now well out of their swoons and terrors, to finish up the
-night with punch and loo in the boxes, all brains much of a muddle with
-the strange adventures and miraculous disappearances incident upon Beau
-Brummell’s never-to-be-forgotten masquerade party at Vauxhall.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- _Which doth set forth how My Lady Peg, Sir
- Percy and Sir Robin all put up at the
- “Queen and Artichoke:” and what a
- fine hurly-burly thereupon ensues._
-
-
-The moment that the excitement of the Vicar’s identification had
-subsided, the Baronet, leading the worthy old man to the gates and there
-quitting him under pretext of fetching a hackney coach, skipped without,
-and, hiring one with a couple of the horse-patrol at a squeezing price,
-jumped in and made off for his inn at Pimlico, leaving his whilom
-preceptor to shift for himself.
-
-Sir Robin had no mind at all for duels with any one, least of all with
-the resurrected Sir Percy de Bohun, whom his guilty conscience suspected
-to be fully cognizant of the author of his attempted assassination.
-Terrified with all this and, if possible, more so by the accounts he had
-listened to, right and left, of his valorous and most mysterious
-name-sake, the little gentleman at once made up his mind as to the
-course wisest for him to pursue, and forthwith pursued it.
-
-Back to Pimlico, and into bed, shivering betwixt the linen and feathers;
-up for a toilet of the best and neatest; curling his wig thriftily
-himself by the fire; a good breakfast; a coach at noon with Kennaston
-Castle for goal; and himself and his ardent and blissful hopes and
-beliefs for freight and luggage.
-
-For, not twelve hours since, had not My Lady Peggy’s own emissary, the
-delightful “Mr. Incognito,” told him that his mistress was leaving for
-home last night? Nay, had not Peggy herself, with her own lips, said
-that she started for Kennaston “ere cock-crow”? and whatever could such
-words mean but that he, the object of her tenderest solicitude, should
-follow her at once?
-
-Lady Biddy’s bawl, ’tis true, echoed in the Baronet’s recollection, but
-’twas, to his way of thinking merely an index of the liveliness of her
-disposition and the enchanting coyness of her moods.
-
-He adjusted his wig with a beaming smile, snapped his crooked little
-fingers at the mere memory of Sir Percy de Bohun, the Vicar, his
-spurious name-sake, and all the rest of it, as he blithely set off on
-his amorous quest, at high noon, from the Puffled Hen in Pimlico.
-
-That same morning toward dawn, Percy had ridden home alone, leaving
-Kennaston, cheered by a smile and a pressure of Lady Diana’s hand, to
-return to his chambers in Grub street, whither the young poet had
-removed some few days since from Lark Lane, at the instance of having
-had a piece of good fortune, in the way of a commendation from no less a
-personage than the great Doctor Johnson himself.
-
-The reflections of Peggy’s adorer were various and most tormenting; his
-brain, as he tossed in his bed, was a labyrinth wherein he wandered,
-vainly endeavoring to solve such riddles as—
-
-“Where was Lady Peggy? Was she indeed the bride of either of the Sir
-Robins? Who was the comely young gentlemanly rogue who had for weeks
-bewitched the fair and charmed the brave? Where had he disappeared? To
-whom, in reality, was he indebted for the saving of his own life at the
-Dove Pier; and whose were the St. Giles’s hirelings who had near made an
-end of him there?”
-
-Bewildered and at wits’ end, he finally, as the sun was at meridian,
-sprang from his uneasy couch, rang and rapped thrice for Grigson, made a
-sorry pretense at conversing on politics with his uncle, whom he
-presently encountered in the hall; inwardly cursed the old gentleman;
-and at last, by three o’clock, got his will, which was, astride of the
-long roan, Grigson on the black, to cross to the Surrey side of the
-river, and ride as fast as ever he could to Kennaston Castle.
-
-“By heavens!” cried he to himself, pounding Battersea Bridge. “It is
-time her father knew, and Her Lady mother too, that she is neither in
-Kent or anywhere else in their reckoning; and if it puts ’em both into
-their shrouds, they’ll hear the truth, and set about solving the riddle
-before sunrise to-morrow. I’m sailing on Thursday for the Colonies, but
-I go not until I am assured of her safety,—and her happiness.”
-
-Thus it happened that not above three hours after Sir Robin had started
-from Pimlico with his destination Kennaston, Sir Percy quitted Charlotte
-Street with the same beacon in view; and each, the one in his coach,
-t’other in his saddle, brain full and heart bursting with but one
-thought, and that Lady Peggy Burgoyne.
-
-Her Ladyship meantime, on landing from the wherry, fairly scampered her
-way to Mr. Brummell’s for fear of desperadoes and Mohocks. At one point
-wild cries of—
-
-“Watch!” greeted her ears from the open window of a gaming-house; at
-another a bullet whizzed above her head, the outcome of a duel being
-fought in a narrow street she traversed. In and out she threaded her
-path, until presently the pink flush of the dawn pierced the fog into a
-silvery mist and she had gained the Beau’s threshhold. Passing the
-sleepy servants, Peggy ran up to her room and once again drew the bundle
-from its hiding place, tucked the long tail of her dark hair well
-inside, cast a glance of pitiable amusement about the chamber, and says
-she, going:
-
-“God knows if I ever get leave to put on a lady’s garments again; but
-I’ll never come back here, that’s certain, since now am I no one, not
-even Sir Robin McTart!”
-
-So, challenged merely by the still drowsy footman who asks: “Beg pardon,
-and with submission, Sir Robin, but will you be home for dinner, Sir, or
-not until supper?”
-
-“For neither, to-day,” answers Her Ladyship, running out into Peter’s
-Court, and then coming to a dead halt.
-
-She drew a long deep breath, as deep as the fog would let her, much as a
-dog does before he starts on the scent; she jingled the little money
-left in her purse, gave her hat the cock as she beheld a passer-by, and
-struck out for London Bridge, which, at this early hour of the day, she
-found easy enough to cross afoot, barring the filth and mud.
-
-’Twas the first time she had been on it since the memorable afternoon
-when she and Chockey had first come up to town in the coach from the
-Kennaston Arms. Now stalking along with a will, and a swing to her
-bundle, My Lady had chance to note the tall gaunt houses lining the
-bridge at each side where the pin-makers dwelt and worked; the gigantic
-water-wheel under the arches which supplied the town with water; the
-increasing tide of wagons, carts, pedestrians, porters, whoever else
-(save the chairs or coaches of fine ladies and gentlemen of which, at
-this time of day, there were none). Arrived at Surrey side, Her Ladyship
-paused to consider and, wrapping herself well in her camlet cloak, the
-which she had used at the masquerade so lately, thereby hiding her blue
-velvet breeches, laced waistcoat, point ruffles, Mechlin lace cravat,
-rich coat, and jeweled hilt, soon obtained fare in the one-seated cart
-of a country clown who was off for Tooting.
-
-Her Ladyship decided very quickly that ’twas but a necessary precaution
-for her to avoid highways, stage-coaches, and inns of reputation, since
-probably by this a full description of the supposed Sir Robin would be
-word of mouth from Westminster to Mile End, and a dozen miles out of
-town with the Lord knows but a price set upon his head!
-
-Once arrived at Tooting, ’twas her intention to double on her tracks,
-return with some bumpkin’s load of vegetables to Garret Lane and thence
-to foot it across country or by penny’s-worth rides with village folk,
-reaching the neighborhood of Kennaston, perhaps late that night; or, if
-she should be compelled to sleep under some friendly farmer’s roof, at
-least by the next high noon.
-
-But Her Ladyship reckoned, if not without her hosts, most decidedly
-without taking count of the weary beast that dragged her, nor yet of any
-possible fellow-guests she might encounter on arriving at the Queen and
-Artichoke at Tooting.
-
-It was nightfall, when, limp and unnerved, possibly for the very first
-time in her life conscious of such physical conditions, the clown pulled
-her up before the inn in order to allow her to alight. Bundle under arm;
-feet and legs, up to calves, well bespattered with mud from the reek of
-her passage across London Bridge afoot; wig somewhat tangled for all
-that she had slipped her wig comb out of pocket and essayed to smooth it
-a bit; sleeves upturned, cloak dragging over her arm to heels,—a sorry,
-disheveled-appearing young personage jumped from among a pile of
-oat-bags, leathern aprons, chairs, unsold produce, wilted flowers, and
-under the askant eyes of ’ostler, boots, barmaid, mistress, and host,
-marched boldly into the parlor of the Queen and Artichoke.
-
-“Was there a chamber to be had?” for Her Ladyship plainly saw she must
-lie at Tooting and not proceed on her homeward journey until the morrow.
-
-There was a chamber; an admission hesitatingly made, even at this modest
-hostelry, to a young gentleman arriving without either servant, luggage,
-box, horse, coach, or dog, and by means of a vile rickety little cart.
-Yet, such was Her Ladyship’s swagger, notwithstanding a full splash of
-mud on the tip-end of her handsome little chin, she was presently
-conducted to a decent chamber, up-stairs, at the rear, it is true, yet
-overlooking the green, where a game of bowls was in progress, and with a
-fine trellis, thick with vines, beneath its small-paned window.
-
-“Was there an ordinary?”
-
-Oh, the shame and humiliation of it! that the daughter of the Earl of
-Exham should be put to such an ebb, instead of ordering the best the
-house afforded sent at once to her room.
-
-Aye, there was an ordinary of two dishes and a pastry at ten-pence, and
-it would be ready in the quarter hour.
-
-“Ten-pence.”
-
-Her Ladyship had just eleven pence ha’penny left in her purse.
-
-Yet, thought she, refreshed by a good meal and the leaving of her weapon
-as a hostage for her lodging, she would better eat than faint to-night,
-whatever might betide on the morrow.
-
-While she washed her hands, after hiding the bundle under the feather
-bed, Her Ladyship heard the ring of horses’ hoofs on the stone pave of
-the inn yard; and her quick ear even detected the fact that one of the
-steeds went lame.
-
-She peered out of window and beheld Sir Percy astride of his own long
-roan, with Grigson just dismounting from the smoking black.
-
-“This is cursed luck!” mutters the master, as he himself, out of saddle,
-stoops to examine the roan’s much swollen off hind-leg.
-
-“It is, Sir Percy,” returns the man, “but, by your leave, Sir, it may be
-we can hire a mount here, although it don’t look too promisin’.”
-
-“Unlikely,” says Sir Percy. “The best we can do is to lie in this hole
-for the night, and by a hot poultice and a bandage, the roan may be in
-condition by to-morrow forenoon.”
-
-“Very well, Sir; it be a damn poor place of entertainment, Sir Percy,
-with an ordinary at ten-pence, Sir.” Grigson’s tone of derision is
-marked by the guest who draws close about her face the cotton curtain of
-the upper rear chamber window.
-
-“Will you be pleased to be served in your room, Sir Percy, at once, and
-of whatever can be had? What wine, Sir?”
-
-“Tut, tut, Grigson. I’ll into the ordinary; off with you to the stables
-with the roan, rub her down and medicine her, then to your own supper in
-the kitchen.”
-
-“Host,” observes Mr. Grigson, loftily, as that worthy obsequiously
-appears in the yard with an attendant train, as is customary in
-welcoming persons of quality, “Sir Percy de Bohun has the condescension
-to say he will sup in the ordinary, and—”
-
-Whatever Mr. Grigson’s further remark may have intended to result in,
-was, at this crisis, lost to posterity by such a clattering from up on
-the high road ’round the corner of the green lane, where nestled the
-Queen and Artichoke, that every eye was turned to behold such a cloud of
-dust as joyed the soul of Boniface, whose tuned intelligence foresaw a
-coach and four horses; in the light of which Sir Percy de Bohun’s
-reeking lame roan and ill-kempt aspect faded into almost as much
-insignificance as had, long since, the traveler who had arrived in the
-clown’s cart.
-
-Boots alone was left to guide Sir Percy to his apartment, while the rest
-made a concerted dash for the yard entrance, just in time to make their
-most profound bows and courtesies before the spick little gentleman who
-thrust his inquiring little head out of window, keeping his door closed,
-as he beckoned the landlord to him with eager heavy eyes well under
-cover of his pulled-down hat.
-
-“What guests have you to-night?” asked the little gentleman.
-
-At the very moment he was propounding his query, Sir Percy, now sunk to
-ignominy even in the eyes of Boots by announcing he would sup at
-ten-pence, was being ushered into an upper chamber adjoining the very
-one in which sat, dejected, robbed of even the prospect of food by his
-presence, Lady Peggy Burgoyne.
-
-“Very few, My Lord,” answered the host glibly, “the very best chamber on
-the first floor with the sitting-room has been kept for Your Lordship,”
-applying hand to latch of coach-door, the which, however, is still
-firmly held by its occupant.
-
-“Their names?” asks the little gentleman, while at the fleck of one of
-the postilion’s lashes his wheelers begin to prance and advance so far
-into the yard as that their racket brings Peggy a second time to her
-narrow pane, a-squinting up her eyes to see who this may be. For, in the
-midst of her distress, as befalls often enough to all of us, she takes
-unconscious note of minor happenings, the which, those who study such
-matters affirm to be proof of the two-sided condition of men’s minds.
-
-“Your guests’ names?” reiterates the small gentleman, as, followed by
-the cortège of dame, maid, man, dog, cat, and tame magpie, the coach
-comes to a halt within excellent range of Her Ladyship’s coign of
-vantage and earshot. “I must know them before I alight.”
-
-“Well, My Lord, there’s Mr. Bigge, the Curate from Risley Commons, as
-stops over here on his way to Finchley every week; Mr. Blunt, the
-traveling tailor; His Grace the Duke of Courtleigh’s own man, off on his
-holiday; Mr. Townes and his new married wife a-goin’ to settle in the
-lodge at the Manor-house; a young spark drabbled with mud and havin’ no
-boxes and no servants, what arrived by means of a market cart just anon,
-and Sir Percy de Bohun, a fine gentleman what’s just ridden in the yard
-before Your Lordship’s coach, but”—
-
-“Who?” The little gentleman turned green in his pallor, and shot back in
-his cushions with a gasp.
-
-“Not much of any account, My Lord, I’m thinking, since Jenny here tells
-me he sups at the ordinary; of course Your Lordship’ll be served in your
-own sitting-room and dame and myself to humbly wait upon you.”
-
-“Hold your tongue!” says the little man, gathering his scattered wits
-and pausing to think, while his steeds paw noisily on the cobble
-pavement.
-
-Peggy, at the pane, almost laughs as she regards the shrinking weazened
-visage.
-
-“Sir Robert McTart!” she says to herself, shaking her head at the little
-vixen. “’Tis indeed a merry fate that puts me and Percy and you all
-under one roof this night. That is, if his presence don’t fright you
-into a gallop!”
-
-Sir Percy himself, also for a second standing moodily at his casement,
-could and did behold thence Sir Robin’s restive and hungry leaders, and
-had a passing wonder as to what the devil brought any gentleman to stop
-at such an inn, save as himself, by the misfortune of a nail in his
-animal’s foot.
-
-Sir Robin, however, with that discretion and prudence, not to say
-cowardice, which distinguished him, had purposely chosen the Queen and
-Artichoke, for, upon second thought, he had determined to sleep in
-comfort.
-
-Sir Robin loved his feathers and quilts of a night far better than the
-jolt of ruts and ditches, and dreaded highwaymen more than even the
-pangs of delayed love-making.
-
-By his choice he had hoped to escape the least chance of an encounter
-with Sir Percy, whom he believed to be in hot pursuit of him, and at
-this juncture his wise little pate quickly resolved that it were better
-for him to alight, gain his chamber, and harbor there in safety until
-such time as that Sir Percy should have unsuspectingly proceeded on his
-quest.
-
-“If you can ensure me a perfect privacy; to go unseen to my rooms, a
-fair service, and dry linen, with quiet as to cocks and neighbors, I
-will remain here for the present,” says Sir Robin, almost taking in Lady
-Peggy by the squint of his uncontrollable left eye.
-
-In a trice, Sir Robin is attended to his bower, and ere long the best in
-the larder is laid before him. Sir Percy partakes of the homely fare of
-the ordinary; and Her Ladyship sits, unheeding the tardy summons of the
-dame, supperless, hungry, fagged, in her tiny room where the warmth from
-the kitchen chimney reaches her, and where the goodly smells from Sir
-Robin’s fowls, sausages, eggs, and fruit-pie assail her senses.
-
-Mr. Grigson, doctoring the roan, endeavored with much creditable tact to
-get wind of the name or title of the master of the coach, but Sir
-Robin’s men had had their lesson, and not a hint was to be got out of
-either of them by Mr. Grigson, or by the curious host of the Queen and
-Artichoke himself.
-
-By eleven every candle was out in the house. All the guests, save two,
-slept the sleep of the presumably just.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- _Wherein Her Ladyship slips leash of all mankind,
- runs for her life, and finds goal in
- the arms of Sir Robin McTart._
-
-
-These were Peggy and the little Baronet. Her Ladyship, mind made up to
-flee in the darkness, leaving six-pence on the table to pay for her
-lodgings, even now stood, latch in hand, bundle once more under arm,
-still a man, not having dared to change her garments.
-
-Sir Robin lay ensconced betwixt the quilts; the realizing sense that his
-mortal enemy, one who sought his life, who coveted His Lady—from whom he
-was running away, to be veracious,—lay not many yards off him, seeming
-to banish that restful repose that had seldom hitherto forsaken this
-worthy and exemplary little person.
-
-A mouse squeaked, and Sir Robin shivered; a beetle pattered across the
-hearth, his hair stood on end.
-
-Surely a footstep sounded in the hallway; the boards creaked; something
-metallic struck against the panel of his door, and he sprang from his
-couch and chattered to his sword.
-
-Lady Peggy’s blade had struck the woodwork as she made her way
-stealthily down in the darkness; while Sir Robin shook, she gained the
-lower end of the hall but, not being acquainted with its ways and
-turnings, above all, having forgot the two broad steps that cut the
-straight road to the entrance in two, Her Ladyship, with much clanking
-of her weapon on the brick flooring, fell sprawling; her bundle shooting
-off into the unseen, she up on hands and knees, hither, yon, seeking it;
-Sir Robin beating on his wainscot such a tattoo as was fit to wake the
-dead, shrieking, from the safe shelter of the muffling pillows where he
-huddled:
-
-“Murder! Thieves! Ho there! Landlord! Tom! James! Ho there, I say! Help!
-Help!”
-
-Sir Percy, out of his four-post up-stairs in a flash, tinder struck,
-door flung open; in night-rail and cap, with rapier drawn, hanger
-uplifted, and—
-
-“’Sdeath! What the devil is the matter!” cries he at top of lung. “Speak
-or I’ll fire!” and down the stair he plunges to Sir Robin’s very sill.
-
-This one, having successfully summoned those more doughty than himself
-to cope with the supposed danger, now recognizing Sir Percy’s voice,
-shivers and sweats as he cowers and pulls the counterpane over his head,
-grasping his purse in his sharp little fingers; wisely never undoing of
-his door.
-
-“Speak or I’ll fire,” repeats Sir Percy, whose candle has been blown out
-by the draught. He takes a few steps down the hallway where he hears the
-curious scratching noise Her Ladyship is making as she distractedly
-feels around for the bundle.
-
-At last she grasps it and creeps up unwittingly to Sir Percy’s very
-side; _de facto_ her arm grazes his as she now raises herself to a
-standing posture, exactly as her lover, no answer being vouchsafed him,
-pulls his trigger and the ball goes a-whizzing through Sir Robin’s door
-panel and finds lodgement in the chimney bricks.
-
-Peggy, her customary composure being much the worse for hunger and the
-general excitement, jumps when the shot pops, and thus inadvertently now
-palpably touches Percy’s elbow. He turns upon her and seizes her wrists
-in a grip of steel; she, as tightly hugging the bundle under her armpit,
-utters no sound, but wriggles and twists to such a purpose that she is
-about to get free when her opponent renews his endeavors with an oath.
-
-“Speak!” says he, “or I’ll brain you!” making to hold Peg’s two hands
-prisoner in one of his, the while he may seize his rapier and put a
-finish to the matter.
-
-She does not speak, but to the scene jump now the heavy cumbrous
-country-folk, rattled out of their deep slumber by Sir Percy’s ball and
-no less by the piercing and prolonged shrieks of Sir Robin, each Colin
-Clout and Dowsabel of ’em, armed with whatever they could catch; yet,
-luckily for Her Ladyship, no one of them with sense enough to fetch a
-candle.
-
-“A light! a light! you damnable idiots!” cried Sir Percy, while Her
-Ladyship makes a final twist to free herself, fruitless as before. She
-feels her ebbing strength at its last pinch and feels, too, the bundle
-loosening in her hold.
-
-Then, as landlord stumbles to his tinder-box, amid an uproar from all
-the travelers, especially the new made bride and her spouse, Peggy finds
-herself let go, nay, almost thrust aside as her captor ejaculates
-testily:
-
-“Zounds! girl, why did you not proclaim your sex, and not leave me to
-find it out by a long wisp of woman’s hair between my fingers? Lights!
-Lights! I say! and we’ll get the fellow yet! He must be in the house,
-for no one’s left it.”
-
-Sir Percy has been for the moment meshed in his Lady’s long tresses,
-which, in the skirmish, have broke leash of the bundle and dangle out
-yard’s length.
-
-For an instant she stands on the landing at bay. To unbolt the big door
-and make an open dash for freedom would mean certain death; to turn up
-therefrom and regain her chamber was her sole chance, and this must be
-done before a light could be struck.
-
-She wheeled around and rushed up the hall, up the stairs among the
-clustering folk, nudging she knew not whom, skipped along the narrow
-rear passage, and into her room before candle flames revealed to the
-amazed company that neither bolt, bar, or latch had been disturbed, nor
-anything in the house taken!
-
-Even while they rummaged in the bar-room till, counted the forks and
-spoons—pewter though they were, Her Ladyship, tying the luckless bundle
-about her waist with a hastily cut bed-cord, cautiously opened the
-casement, crawled out on the trellis, which unsteadied a bit beneath her
-weight but did not break; clambered in and out the vines to the edge,
-and then, lightly, thanks to her twin’s training, swung herself to the
-ground clear, crept across the yard, leaped the stone wall, with a bound
-and over; flew the width of the meadow; struck the lane, up to the high
-road; by the moon, took a southerly course which she knew made for
-Kennaston, and paused not much for breath until she had left a matter of
-five miles betwixt her and the Queen and Artichoke.
-
-It was coming three o’clock by this, and, all the little night winds
-hushed, all the earth and trees and grasses, flowers, shrubs and weeds
-expectant, vibrant of the nearing dawn, whose pink and beauteous herald
-now looked over the hill-tops at the east, and put the lingering stars
-to shame, and woke the little birds, and bade every drop of dew flash on
-cup and blade; and all the things that breathe to grow and pulsate; to
-thrill through all their veins with joy that still another day was born.
-
-Her Ladyship too was glad, for, brave as she had been through all the
-brief ordeal of her manhood, this last adventure had broken her spirit a
-bit, and hunger and fatigue had sadly weakened her flesh. As the lark
-mounted, singing to the now risen sun, she struck in a bit from the road
-and began an endeavor to calculate how far she might be from Kennaston
-village, or from any place familiar to her. But it was vain to
-speculate. Peggy, in all her cross-country rides, could not place the
-spot in which she now found herself.
-
-Food was what she needed most and she came out into the open, shading
-her eyes with her hand and looking everywhere about for a curl of smoke
-that might guide her to a cottage. But no friendly film greeted her, and
-her hand fell listless at her side.
-
-Hark! The tinkle of a bell, the soft lowing of a cow; not far off
-either. She ran a piece up the road and presently descried the herd
-huddling at the pasture bars waiting for their milking, yet no maid nor
-man in sight, no milking-stool nor pail nor cup, only the soft inviting
-lowing of the kine. Her bundle still tied about her waist, Her Ladyship
-let down the top bars, edged through, off with her once splendid but now
-much tarnished hat, set it under the nearest cow, knelt, and presently
-had the cock full of as fine foaming milk as one might wish to see. She
-rose and drank thankfully, rubbing the cow’s nose in gratitude; then;
-amid the concerted cries of the herd, she made off, a little refreshed,
-still keeping her southerly course; still haphazarding her way, for no
-house came in sight.
-
-After a matter of a dozen miles, and now reaching the edge of a woods,
-with the tower of a Castle just sticking up out of the horizon for her
-only beacon, Peggy halted and, the refreshment of the milk having been
-by this exhausted, the tears forced their way to her eyes and even
-ploughed two small furrows the length of her cheeks, cupping in the
-dimple of her chin, and splashing at last, on her much rumpled Mechlin
-lace cravat.
-
-“Bah!” cried she. “I weep only because I am hungry. I am not afraid.
-Odzooks! She that has had the hemp about her neck to be strung up for a
-highwayman must not fear to encounter one of her own ilk,” and Her
-Ladyship essays to laugh as she plunges into the wood.
-
-It proves a harmless, peaceful, if somewhat devious neighborhood, where
-an occasional rabbit scurries over the dry leaves of last autumn’s
-falling, and where a large company of rooks are holding a caucus, but
-’tis interminable; and Peggy’s legs are not of steel, it seems, but of
-that lusty flesh and blood and bone which, when made to do duty fasting,
-now these twenty hours, begin to give out. Her head, too, spins, the
-knot of her cravat seems to choke her as she loosens it; the weight of
-the bundle appears like twenty stone at the least about her waist, and
-she cuts the bed-cord and lets it drop, just for a few moments’ ease,
-she tells herself, as, at last, the other side of the forest is gained
-and she beholds a wide stretch of downs and naught but the elusive tower
-of the distant Castle, appearing farther away even than at first.
-
-What common can this be?
-
-Once again she shades her blood-shot eyes and stares up at the sky. In
-crossing the woods, she must have struck mistakenly to the west. The sun
-is nearing the set, and Peggy now knows she has come to Farnham Heath
-where, report has it, some of the boldest cut-throats in the country
-rule the roost.
-
-Shall she start to cross it? Kennaston Village lies only ten miles on
-t’other side of it. That will-o’-the-wisp tower? that castle yonder? yes
-’tis home! and she such a dullard as not to have mistrusted it before!
-
-She will push on. Why not? What has she, forsooth, to tempt any thief,
-unless he took her for ransom.
-
-Well, let him, since Percy de Bohun at this very moment, in all
-liklihood, kneels at the feet of Lady Diana; if highwaymen want to bear
-her off, why should she complain? And just then the tinkle of the little
-brook at the wayside beckons in Her Ladyship’s ear, the Castle tower
-appears to he dancing up and down against the sky; the two stark trees,
-yonder on the heath, are surely turning somersaults; the bundle drags
-all forgotten at her heels, and presently lies in the tall grasses which
-she threaded on her way to the brook. Her head swam, ten thousand
-blunderbusses seemed to be firing off inside of it; she pulled off her
-wig and threw it far from her; she unbuttoned her coat and waistcoat,
-and drew her cloak in a twist about her; she staggered, caught at an
-elder; it swayed with her to the water, as she fell swooning with her
-thirsty lips just in touch of the sparkling bubbles; her wan face
-shining in the glint of sunshine, the whole round world and all the men
-and women in it quite forgot, even her sword, unbuckled with the
-bed-cord, now lay glinting its jewels in the sedges half a dozen rods
-away.
-
-A pair of robins eyed her from the bushes, a bee swerved and swung above
-her mouth; the minnows darted next her cheek, but My Lady did not wake
-for any or all of these. She lay there motionless until the sun had gone
-down and all the sweet scents and drowsy sounds and whirrs and flutters
-of twilight had come up; until a fine coach with four horses and two
-postilions came prancing and pawing at a great rate of speed out of the
-wood to the heath. Until a little weazened fine gentleman, who had dozed
-in his bed until long past noon for fear of encountering a certain other
-gentleman, had risen leisurely, dined with relish, set out from the
-Queen and Artichoke only after being assured that the other gentleman
-had gone off on a ruined horse back to Garratt Lane in the hopes of
-obtaining a suitable mount, which same was not to be had short of the
-ten mile return; until the little gentleman, then, thrusting his face
-out of his coach window as the vehicle came to a sudden standstill,
-spoke:
-
-“Is this the heath?” he asks with blinking eyes and a shiver.
-
-“Yes, Sir Robin, Farnham Heath, Sir!” answers one of the postilions.
-
-“Your pleasure, Sir Robin?” asks the second man respectfully, quieting
-his horses.
-
-“Well,” returns the little Baronet, “if you think can gallop across
-faster than those devils could overtake us, I say, proceed. If not—” he
-glances back over his shoulder.
-
-To tell the truth, the gentleman from Kent considered himself as betwixt
-two very impending fires, and, ’tis safe to say, he dreaded Sir Percy de
-Bohun’s possibility at his back as much, if not more, than he did the
-robbers in front of him.
-
-“We’re in the best condition, Sir,” returned the man, “and fifty minutes
-ought to take us out of all chances of danger.”
-
-“Unless,” replies the master, again casting an apprehensive eye to the
-rear, “they might close in on us from behind.”
-
-“No fear, Sir,” cries the lackey, “our pistols are loaded and cocked;
-with your own rapier, pistols and the blunderbuss, Sir Robin, we
-should—”
-
-“What’s that?” exclaims the second man, eyes bulging, as with the handle
-of his whip he points to the fallen figure by the brookside.
-
-“Zounds!” cries the first, rising in his seat to peer.
-
-“’Sdeath! Damnation!” squeaks Sir Robin, pulling down the coach-sash.
-“On with ye, you devils! On, I say!” thumping impatiently on the pane
-with his signet ring.
-
-“No fear, Sir, no fear, Sir Robin!” exclaims the second man, jumping to
-the ground and inspecting Her Ladyship. “It’s only a corp.”
-
-“Are you sure?” opening the door cautiously. “Sure?”
-
-“Aye, Sir Robin, a quality corp, Sir. Mayhap shot down by them vagabones
-out of the heath. Had I best see if there’s any life left in the young
-gentleman, Sir?”
-
-Sir Robin descends from his coach, a pistol in one hand, a drawn rapier
-in the other.
-
-“Keep an eye on the lookout, James,” he whispers to the postilion who
-remains in his seat, and the Baronet minces in and out of the tall
-grasses, shaking the dew daintily from his sprawling feet, until he
-gains the spot, where his man kneels above the prostrate form.
-
-“Ugh!” says he, turning aside his head in a species of disgust, “I never
-could abide the sight of the dead.”
-
-’Twas the very first time in his life he’d ever had a chance to behold
-such!
-
-“He ain’t quite cold yet, Sir Robin,” says the postilion. “There’s a
-flicker to his eye-lids, Sir, look!”
-
-The Baronet looks; out of his hands tumble rapier and pistol.
-
-“’Slife!” he cries, down on his knees, feeling at Her Ladyship’s pulse,
-pulling his flask from his pocket and trying vainly to pour the liquor
-between the firmly shut lips.
-
-As he tries, the little gentleman’s wits work nimbly, which they could
-do on occasions, and, not stopping even to wonder at his discovery, only
-to accept instantly as a fact that his Lady had been struck down while
-pursuing him, he is so overjoyed at the beauty, sentiment, and
-opportuneness of the adventure, as to be scarce able to restrain his
-elation, even in the face of a serious swoon.
-
-“Into the coach at once, James,” he says, raising Her Ladyship’s head
-himself, “your gentlest endeavors and a guinea apiece to you,” nodding
-to the other, as between them they carry the limp form to the coach, “if
-you bring me to Kennaston Castle before curfew.”
-
-“Never fear, Sir Robin; if the young gentleman only holds out for a
-single hour, I swear, Sir, in the teeth of all the highwaymen in the
-kingdom, we’ll have you there.”
-
-“Tut, tut,” says Sir Robin, smiling, no longer restraining an expression
-of his happiness and triumph, as he makes ready the rugs and cushions
-within to receive the burden James, for the moment, bears alone.
-
-“’Tis no young gentleman, you rogues, ’tis My Lady Peggy Burgoyne, my
-bride that is to be. Wait a moment, Thomas, while I spread this shawl;
-and James, look you sharp behind us, for there’s a gentleman in pursuit
-of this Lady would kill me on sight if he can.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- _In the which Sir Percy steals a coach and
- four and the living contents thereof and
- makes off therewith at breakneck
- speed for life and death._
-
-
-At this very moment, two horsemen, sorry mounted enough, especially the
-master, are rounding the turn of the woodland path and about to emerge
-upon the open next the heath. He who rides the lame roan has his eyes
-bent upon the ground, a thousand sad and conflicting thoughts crowding
-his brain, as ’tis impossible even to urge his hurt steed, and a
-jog-trot is all that can be got out of her ever again. Garratt Lane had
-sent him away only with his own again.
-
-“Sir Percy, with submission, Sir,” exclaims Grigson, “this be Farnham
-Heath, Sir, and, ’pon my life, Sir!” jumping from his saddle and darting
-to the grassy side of the way, “a rapier, Sir Percy!” picking it up and
-dragging with it the straggling bed-cord and its appending bundle.
-
-Percy leaped to the ground and seized the weapon.
-
-“Grigson!” cried he, “there’s been foul work hereabouts. This is the
-sword of a gentleman I know, or my name’s not Percy de Bohun! He is a
-scurvy fellow, and my enemy, but if he has fallen among thieves, by the
-heaven above us! I’ll rescue him, even if ’tis to punish him later
-according to my own will. Take the rapier.”
-
-As he hands it back to his man, the bed-cord from the Queen and
-Artichoke, being a full century old, gives entirely away and My Lady
-Peggy’s duds, long tail of dark hair, pins, needles, whatever else
-beside, fall, scatter, topsy-turvy to the ground, and at the very same
-moment Percy sees before him, as in a nest among the sedges and ferns of
-the marshy brookland, the wig that Her Ladyship had flung off, and a
-scrap of tumbled paper addressed to himself, flapping, spiked on a
-thistle-top near it! Thunderstruck, he is about to read it, when
-Grigson, who has gone on afoot a few steps, starts back, and, reckless
-of all things, seizes his master’s arm and drags him to the turn of the
-road.
-
-“Sir Percy! Hist! For the love of God, Sir, look!”
-
-Thrusting the bit of paper into his waistcoat, Percy gasps and gazes. He
-beholds Sir Robin and his man lifting a limp and slender form,
-ill-defined, ’tis true, in its swathe of camlet cloak, into the coach;
-he beholds a head of dark short hair, a face of ashen pallor, and, in
-two seconds more, before he can rush back and leap into his saddle,
-motioning Grigson to do the same, the coach containing Sir Robin and his
-prize is dashing as fast as whip, spur, sixteen thoroughbred legs, and a
-backing-up of wholesome terror can urge it, over the bleak and gruesome
-waste of Farnham Heath!
-
-“’Slife! Grigson, man,” cries Percy, digging steel into the poor roan’s
-flanks till they spurt blood in a stream. “We must overtake ’em, unhorse
-’em, spill out the wretch inside; I’ll into the coach then to protect
-the lady, you mount the leader and gallop us over the heath for your
-life!”
-
-“Trust me, Sir Percy,” answers Grigson from a length behind his master.
-“God grant, Sir, that the roan drop not out of the race and leave us but
-one saddle betwixt you and me, Sir.”
-
-“Poor beast,” says Percy, pricking her hard and striking her shoulder
-with the flat of his rapier. “She’ll die, and in a good cause if she
-gain me the goal.”
-
-And all the while they’re speaking, flash and crack go the whips of Sir
-Robin’s postilions, and Sir Robin’s splendid beasts cover the ground
-with a swing and a will that keeps the coach rocking, but yet awakens
-not Lady Peggy, whose dark cropped head reposes on the crooked shoulder
-of Sir Robin, while her white eyelids remain sealed and no quiver of
-returning consciousness thrills about her drawn and bloodless lips.
-
-“Gad!” exclaims Percy, as he beholds the vehicle swinging and spinning
-farther and farther from him, and as Grigson’s black now is up nose and
-nose with his own expiring mare. “Gad, girl,” bending his lips to the
-roan’s laid-back ear, “go on! help me to save her! to reach her; go on,
-I say, in God’s name!”
-
-As if the faithful creature comprehended her master’s entreaty, with
-that not uncommon last flash of superhuman strength that inheres in man
-and beast alike, the roan raised her fine head in the air, pricked her
-ears, stretched out her neck, gathered herself up with a twitch of her
-nerves that thrilled to her rider’s heart, and off! as in her best days,
-when she could distance the fleetest mount in the county; off, with the
-whirl and whirr of those coach-wheels beckoning to her; off, with that
-pair of straining eyes, those parted lips, blessing her as she began to
-gain on Sir Robin,—began to? nay, ’twas all a matter of beginning and
-ending in a breath. Before the postilions, amid their own clatter and
-calling, had caught hint of the pursuit, the roan was up with the
-windows out of which the apprehensive little Baronet was peering; his
-scream of terror:
-
-“Highwaymen! Faster! On! lads, on! A hundred pounds if we outrun ’em!
-On!” was their first advertisement of danger.
-
-But while the two were drawing their hangers from their belts, Sir
-Percy, with a swerving dash, pulled the roan on her hind legs directly
-in front of the galloping leaders. ’Twas but an interposition of
-Providence (coupled with very excellent cool-headed horsemanship) that
-he was not then and there dispatched into the hereafter.
-
-The leaders plunged, grinding the wheelers with their hind hoofs; the
-wheelers fell back of a heap, smashing in the fine front glass and
-cutting Sir Robin across the lip, but not so much as waking his burden
-from her deathlike sleep.
-
-“Down with ye!” cries Sir Percy, a pistol in each hand, as Grigson rides
-up with another brace to reinforce his master, putting a hand as well to
-the quieting of the coach horses.
-
-“Aye, aye, Sir! but spare our lives and we’ll do your bidding!” cry Sir
-Robin’s lackeys, leaping to the ground.
-
-“We’ve not a groat betwixt us, Your Honor, on our life!”
-
-“I want no groats, nor guineas either!” says Percy, now leaving his man
-to cover the steeds and the postilions, while he jumps off the roan’s
-back and springs to the side of the coach.
-
-To wrest the door from the feeble clutch of the shrieking little
-gentleman from Kent; to open it; seize him, stopping his frantic and
-craven cries with a thrust of a pocket napkin in his mouth; to haul him
-out and send him spinning over the turf with his gold and silver
-scattering from purse and pockets, is, with Sir Percy, the work of a
-very few seconds.
-
-“Mercy! Mercy! Mr. Highwayman!” whimpers the Baronet, cringing on his
-knees, as Grigson lifts himself up on the off leader’s back and Percy
-props the swooning figure within the coach.
-
-“’Slife, Sir, whoever you are! Raise your eyes! I am Sir Percy de Bohun,
-at your service any time three hours hence.”
-
-Sir Robin glances up, his crooked little legs now bowing more into an
-arc than before, as he hears the dread name of his rival.
-
-Clapping hand to hilt, however, he stands up.
-
-“Sir,” says he, pushed into a valiance he has no smallest sympathy with,
-solely from fear that Lady Peggy may have open ears by this time. “Sir,
-that Lady is my affianced. I command you, quit her and leave us to
-pursue our journey in peace. D’ye hear, Sir?” Sir Robin brandishes his
-weapon, now reinforced by the approach of his servants. “I’ll stick you
-where you stand, Sir!” shouts McTart, prancing a bit nearer and actually
-touching Percy’s shoulder with the point of his weapon,—be it remembered
-de Bohun’s back was toward him as he leaned into the coach arranging the
-cushions.
-
-“Will you!” says Sir Percy, coolly turning and seizing the little man’s
-blade and administering therewith to its owner a smart box on his
-out-flapping ears. “Had I time to waste,” adds Percy, now jumping into
-the coach, “I’d leave your carcass here. Put up your pistol, Sir,” says
-he, aiming his own straight at Sir Robin’s now un-wigged pate, “or, damn
-you! you’ll be cold inside a second. On with you, Grigson,” calls master
-to man. “Life and death are in this matter. If the four beasts, and you,
-too, drop at the finish, get us to Kennaston faster than the wind
-travels.”
-
-Even while he speaks, he watches the still white face so near him with
-his finger on his trigger, Sir Robin discreetly backing away and rending
-the air with noisy and impotent curses; then a plunge, a long,
-resounding call from Grigson; the two lackeys agog at finding themselves
-alive, Sir Robin’s coach starts on as if the very devil himself were in
-its wake.
-
-Percy does not draw Peggy to him; he lays her back among the pillows; he
-bathes her head and lips and hands with liquor from his flask; he holds
-the slender fingers in his palm, as, amid awful terror lest his Lady
-die, he is racked with consternation and wonder at the present outcome,
-and in his distraught mind endeavors to patch and piece out the strange
-network of the mystery now beginning to solve itself before his eyes.
-
-As he prays God to spare her, if not for him, for some better man, a
-shrill, weird sound smites his ear.
-
-Percy throws back his head and listens; ’tis the long roan neighing for
-the last time back on Farnham Heath, where Sir Robin, picking up his
-money, dejectedly shivering like an aspen (since he would rake hell with
-a nail to secure a ha’penny, and fairly weeps at the six-pences he can’t
-recover), presently and ruefully, one of his men behind him, pillion
-fashion, t’other running at his side, turns back to Tooting on top of
-Grigson’s black, his fox teeth chattering in his wide mouth as he
-congratulates himself on his second and miraculous escape from the
-famous Sir Percy de Bohun.
-
-’Twas, in sooth, for this latter a bitterly sad hour which was spent in
-covering the distance between the heath and the Castle. Revived a bit,
-no doubt by the fumes of the liquor, Her Ladyship’s lids quivered,
-contracted, and finally opened, but it was with a distraught and
-unrecognizing stare that she surveyed her companion.
-
-“’S death!” cries she aloud, her feeble right hand seeking her
-sword-side, “I tell ye, Chock, your mistress is now full-fledged a man!
-Hist, girl, an you love me, keep it close. Sir Percy’s wed to Lady
-Diana! Aye!” Peggy laughs with such a heart-break in her voice and such
-tears in her winkers as causes Percy a pang of cruelest misery.
-
-“Tut, tut, Chock! What’s his marriage to me? Fetch the pack, Mr.
-Brummell; aye, I’m at your service, loo, crimp, or whist! I, Sir Robin
-McTart, ’ll lay you a thousand to nothing! Zounds! Sir, fetch coffee to
-stain my face with! and where, oh, where’s my precious bundle with my
-woman’s duds in’t, my patch-box that I burned, and the long tail of my
-hair I cut off when you, Chock, bought me the counterfeit of Sir Robin’s
-own wig at the perruquier’s in Lark Lane. Aye! So!—No! No! No!” and now
-a shiver and a lower tone, as Lady Peggy, with her wide wild eyes,
-shrank back in the far corner of the jolting coach.
-
-“My Lady Mother,—I command you, Chock, tell her not of my escapades; and
-when Percy comes home with his bride, swear him, as will I, I was off
-pleasuring in Kent at my godmother’s. Mother! Mother!” cries she,
-piteously now, as Percy’s arms enfold her, and a thousand fond words
-jostle each other on his lips.
-
-Then she sinks into the stupor again, and remains so until the great
-coach rolls through the park and up to the entrance of her home; until
-Percy, with few words, lays her in the stout arms of the faithful
-Chockey and sees her mother bending above her; her father distract in
-his night-rail and cap; cook wailing, being from Kerry and prompt at any
-sort of hubbub; Bickers’ toothless mouth agape with groans; sees his
-Lady carried up, limp, little hands down-hanging, to her chamber out of
-his sight.
-
-Sir Percy leaves Peggy’s bundle, which he had gathered up as best he
-could and slung about his shoulders, on the table in the hall. The
-little scrap of paper he carries away with him and reads when he reaches
-home that night; ’tis Her Ladyship’s note to him, written on the
-fly-leaf of the prayer-book of the young Curate of Brook-Armsleigh
-Village. As he scans it, presses it to his lips, sits until dawn,
-remembering many things since he parted from his Lady long ago in the
-parlor at Kennaston, the most of the mystery is unraveled by light of
-the scrawl; and the delirium of his joy at knowing himself to have been
-in her heart almost equals the mad anxiety that consumes him now as to
-her life and well-being.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- _Which sets forth how My Lady Peggy recovers
- of her illness—gets once more into
- hoops and petticoats—and puts
- a very fine and noble young
- gentleman into an
- earthly paradise._
-
-
-Until midsummer he rides over to Kennaston twice each day, morning and
-night, to find out how it fares with her, and ’twas not until then that
-the Earl gave him hopes he might see her, perhaps within the se’ennight.
-
-Notes there had been, daily, as soon as Chockey had let him know that
-her mistress was in her head once more, and the two surgeons, down from
-London, had pronounced Her Ladyship on the mend; notes, and flowers and
-fruits, and game and fish to tempt her appetite; a little dog from
-Pomerania; a Persian boy to wait upon her whims; a mare, as white as
-milk; sweetmeats from the Indies; damasks from China and France; shells
-and curious beadwork slippers from the American Colonies—whither, it is
-needless to say, a certain good ship had sailed, leaving a certain young
-gentleman behind—all these things, and many more besides, were offered
-up at Her Ladyship’s shrine, but never yet had she been able to bring
-herself to scribble one line to her suitor, or to send any message, save
-polite civilities by Chockey.
-
-’Twas only after the buxom damsel (having the night previous heard from
-Grigson that his master was like to die of suspense, and having imparted
-the same to Her Ladyship), together with the Lady Mother and the Earl,
-had argued and preached into her the great and chivalrous devotion of
-Sir Percy, that Peggy at last had brought her mind into a condition of
-acquiescing in his coming up to her morning-room on the Thursday (being
-St. James’s Day) after the sixth Sunday after Trinity; which same she
-carefully marked in her prayer-book with a dab of the crimson her mother
-sent in to beautify her pale cheeks with, against Sir Percy’s advent.
-
-“Oh, slitterkins! Madam,” cries the Abigail under her breath, “and
-asking Your Ladyship’s pardon, but how can I do up Your Ladyship’s hair
-an’ it no longer than the peltry of a meadow-mouse!”
-
-“True enough, Jane Chockey,” replies her mistress, contemplating her
-countenance in the mirror. “Of a fact, I resemble nothing so much as one
-of those weazen little vermin; my nose is sharp, too, and my cheeks—”
-
-“Stay, My Lady,” says Chock, taking up the rouge, and putting on layer
-after layer. “Who’ll say Your Ladyship ain’t handsome now? Lawk, Madam!
-You look like an angel! What a blessing of Providence the French is with
-their nostrums!”
-
-Peggy regards herself.
-
-“Now, My Lady,” cries Chockey, “would you but borrow your Lady Mother’s
-worked head, a cup of powder, and Her Ladyship’s pink feathers atop of
-it! What a sight would you be for Sir Percy to behold!”
-
-Peggy shakes her head. The three feet of wire, wool, pommade, frizz and
-plumage the hand-maiden suggests, even causes her to laugh aloud as she
-figures it above her own face.
-
-“Nay, Chock, none o’ that!” says she, “I’ll do as I am. Sir Percy has
-seen my cropped head; faith, he ’twas, you tell me, that fetched the
-tail of my locks to Kennaston in his saddle-pocket, or tied upon him
-somewhere?”
-
-“Aye, My Lady, Mr. Grigson says never, since Adam and Eve began courtin’
-under the fig-tree, has any young nobleman been seen in such a frenzy as
-Sir Percy about Your Ladyship. Lawk, Lady Peggy! When a young gentleman
-goes off his feed, ceases swearin’ and cursin’ his man, and stops down
-in the country nigh three months in the season, a-readin’ loud to his
-deaf aunt, there ain’t no sort of doubt as to the quality of his
-passion!”
-
-Her Ladyship smiles as she spreads her train and glances at it over her
-shoulder.
-
-“Chock,” says she, “look you, now, while I cross the room; does the
-paduasoy stand out well over my hoop?”
-
-“Like the dish-clout, My Lady, when I spreads it to dry over one of the
-biggest hen-coops. ’Tis monstrous fine, finer, I should swear, than
-anything Lady Diana could have!” Chockey sighs, lost in admiration.
-“Though belike Lord Kennaston wouldn’t think so.”
-
-“And, Chock, look again.” Her Ladyship crosses back to the divan. “’Tis
-thus the town ladies give the true quality sweep to their trains. Give
-me the trinket Sir Percy sent me last night.” Peggy takes a fan of most
-beautiful feathers from a mother-of-pearl box and waves it back and
-forth. “’Tis so, Chock, the London fine ladies flutter the fan, as ’tis
-called, and every wriggle hath a different meaning!”
-
-“Oh!” Chockey is well-nigh speechless as she watches her mistress
-sidling, bridling, agitating the fan back, forth, hither, and yon.
-“Madam, ’tis amazin’ grand! A glass of port now, My Lady, as by the
-orders of the surgeons?”
-
-“Nay,” says Peggy, “I ain’t in need of such.”
-
-“A mug of ale? cider? milk?”
-
-“I’ll none of ’em, Chock,” returns Her Ladyship, seating herself on the
-divan, and spreading out the paduasoy as ’twere a tail and she the
-peacock owning it.
-
-“Set my _étui_ beside me on the stand; place that large chair far off
-yonder by the window for Sir Percy, that he may not disturb my
-furbelows, and—”
-
-“Hark, Madam! Hoofs!”
-
-“Lud!” cries Her Ladyship, “his new horse’s hoofs! I’ve learned the ring
-of ’em as well as I once knew that of the poor long roan.” Peggy sighs;
-she has heard much during her convalescence by way of Mr. Grigson and
-the Abigail.
-
-“Go you down, Chock, and, after a suitable period of waiting,—I mean
-such decent few minutes,” cries she after the girl, “as may be occupied
-in dutiful greetings to Dad and Her Ladyship, you may send Sir Percy up
-to see me.”
-
-She hears his voice in the hall greeting her father and mother; she
-glances over at the mirror, and, snatching her pocket-napkin from her
-bag, Peggy tips it to the top of the essence-bottle and rubs the red
-from her cheeks; she flings the fan down, draws in her splendid train to
-a crumpled heap about her, gives the hoop as smart a thrust as her
-feeble strength will permit, hears a footstep, and promptly buries her
-shamed face in the cushions of the divan.
-
-She does not answer the light rap on the half-open door, nor does her
-lover wait; he enters, and in a second, kneeling at her feet, his two
-arms about her, he raises her sweet face and lays his yearning lips on
-Her Ladyship’s own beautiful mouth.
-
-“Ah, Peggy, my adored one,” says he, devouring her pale face with his
-happy eyes, stroking her cropped head with caressing fingers.
-
-“Oh, Percy!” says she, with real roses blooming in her cheeks.
-
-[Illustration: Ah, Peggy, my adored one...]
-
-“I know a deal,” whispers he, “but one thing I must ask. You’ll tell me
-at once, will you?”
-
-“What is’t?” says she, smiling, as she leaves her two hands in the hold
-of one of his.
-
-“Why did you adventure so much? for what, for whom, whose sake?
-Wherefore?” The young man’s voice is feverish with anxiety.
-
-She hangs her head; raises it proudly; wishes she had him at a distance,
-and so, leave to swing her train and use her fan indifferent.
-
-“My beloved,” cries he, “answer me! ’Tis your own Percy, him that
-worships the ground you tread upon; who has never had a thought apart
-from you; to whom every other lady on God’s earth’s but a puppet—that
-asks—eh, Peg, for whom, who?” coaxes he with eyes, lips, hands,
-heart-beats.
-
-“For your sake, Sir, and none other,” she answers. “’Twas because I knew
-I’d done wrong and sent you from me careless; I would not give in; but,
-you up in town, Ken writin’ me as he did—I could abide it no longer—and
-I went.”
-
-“Now the God above us, bless you,” says he, taking her in his arms, and
-at the same instant pulling from his waistcoat pocket the scrap of a
-note she’d written him in the eye of the scaffold.
-
-“Peg, Peg! I’m not worthy to mate with you, and when I learned of all
-your hairbreadth ’scapes, your twice saving of my life—when I read this,
-’slife! My Lady, what’s a man like me to such as you!”
-
-“I’ll tell you,” says she, laying her head on his shoulder, “he’s the
-man she loves.”
-
-“Will you marry me in a fortnight, Peggy?” asks he, rapturous.
-
-“Nay!” answers she, laughing. “I’ve another suitor to consider, Sir.”
-
-“And who is he?”
-
-“Sir Robin McTart! He was over yesterday to ask my hand from Daddy.”
-
-“The devil!”
-
-“Nay, Sir, not enough courage for that!”
-
-“Peggy, sweetlips, will you be mine the Tuesday after Transfiguration?”
-
-“Lud! No, Sir Percy! that will I not!”
-
-“When will you, then, love?”
-
-“Next Christmas.”
-
-“Split it,” cries he, imploringly, “make it the first quarter of the
-October moon?”
-
-“Well,” she answers, looking up to where her father and mother stand in
-the doorway, “an Daddy and my Lady Mother consent, you shall have your
-way, Sir.”
-
-The young man glances up, following Peggy’s eyes, springs to his feet,
-raises her from the old divan and leads her before them.
-
-“My Lord and Your Ladyship,” says he, “will you consent, as Peggy has,
-to our being made man and wife on October the fifth? and will you give
-My Lady and my unworthy self your blessing?”
-
-They kneel down and the Earl puts out his hands above their heads; the
-words stumble, for there are drops in his old eyes, as he looks and
-beholds about their faces that most splendid of all aureoles, the light
-of love and faith, honor with youth, and hope and wholesome minds to
-guide.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
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-
- A FEW OF
- GROSSET & DUNLAP’S
- Great Books at Little Prices
- NEW, CLEVER, ENTERTAINING.
-
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-
-GRET: The Story of a Pagan. By Beatrice Mantle. Illustrated by C.M.
- Relyea.
-
-The wild free life of an Oregon lumber camp furnishes the setting for
-this strong original story. Gret is the daughter of the camp and is
-utterly content with the wild life—until love comes. A fine book,
-unmarred by convention.
-
-OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated by Howard Pyle.
-
-A vivid yet delicate portrayal of characters in an old New England town.
-
-Dr. Lavendar’s fine, kindly wisdom is brought to bear upon the lives of
-all, permeating the whole volume like the pungent odor of pine,
-healthful and life giving. “Old Chester Tales” will surely be among the
-books that abide.
-
-THE MEMOIRS OF A BABY. By Josephine Daskam. Illustrated by F.Y. Cory.
-
-The dawning intelligence of the baby was grappled with by its great
-aunt, an elderly maiden, whose book knowledge of babies was something at
-which even the infant himself winked. A delicious bit of humor.
-
-REBECCA MARY. By Annie Hamilton Donnell. Illustrated by Elizabeth
- Shippen Green.
-
-The heart tragedies of this little girl with no one near to share them,
-are told with a delicate art, a keen appreciation of the needs of the
-childish heart and a humorous knowledge of the workings of the childish
-mind.
-
-THE FLY ON THE WHEEL. By Katherine Cecil Thurston. Frontispiece by
- Harrison Fisher.
-
-An Irish story of real power, perfect in development and showing a true
-conception of the spirited Hibernian character as displayed in the
-tragic as well as the tender phases of life.
-
-THE MAN FROM BRODNEY’S. By George Barr McCutcheon. Illustrated by
- Harrison Fisher.
-
-An island in the South Sea is the setting for this entertaining tale,
-and an all-conquering hero and a beautiful princess figure in a most
-complicated plot. One of Mr. McCutcheon’s best books.
-
-TOLD BY UNCLE REMUS. By Joel Chandler Harris. Illustrated by A.B. Frost,
- J.M. Conde and Frank Verbeck.
-
-Again Uncle Remus enters the fields of childhood, and leads another
-little boy to that non-locatable land called “Brer Rabbit’s Laughing
-Place,” and again the quaint animals spring into active life and play
-their parts, for the edification of a small but appreciative audience.
-
-THE CLIMBER. By E.F. Benson. With frontispiece.
-
-An unsparing analysis of an ambitious woman’s soul—a woman who believed
-that in social supremacy she would find happiness, and who finds instead
-the utter despair of one who has chosen the things that pass away.
-
-LYNCH’S DAUGHTER. By Leonard Merrick. Illustrated by Geo. Brehm.
-
-A story of to-day, telling how a rich girl acquires ideals of beautiful
-and simple living, and of men and love, quite apart from the teachings
-of her father, “Old Man Lynch” of Wall St. True to life, clever in
-treatment.
-
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-
- GROSSETT & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26TH ST., NEW YORK
-
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-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP’S
- DRAMATIZED NOVELS
- A Few that are Making Theatrical History
-
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-
-MARY JANE’S PA. By Norman Way. Illustrated with scenes from the play.
-
-Delightful, irresponsible “Mary Jane’s Pa” awakes one morning to find
-himself famous, and, genius being ill adapted to domestic joys, he
-wanders from home to work out his own unique destiny. One of the most
-humorous bits of recent fiction.
-
-CHERUB DEVINE. By Sewell Ford.
-
-“Cherub,” a good hearted but not over refined young man is brought in
-touch with the aristocracy. Of sprightly wit, he is sometimes a
-merciless analyst, but he proves in the end that manhood counts for more
-than ancient lineage by winning the love of the fairest girl in the
-flock.
-
-A WOMAN’S WAY. By Charles Somerville. Illustrated with scenes from the
- play.
-
-A story in which a woman’s wit and self-sacrificing love save her
-husband from the toils of an adventuress, and change an apparently
-tragic situation into one of delicious comedy.
-
-THE CLIMAX. By George C. Jenks.
-
-With ambition luring her on, a young choir soprano leaves the little
-village where she was born and the limited audience of St. Jude’s to
-train for the opera in New York. She leaves love behind her and meets
-love more ardent but not more sincere in her new environment. How she
-works, how she studies, how she suffers, are vividly portrayed.
-
-A FOOL THERE WAS. By Porter Emerson Browne. Illustrated by Edmund
- Magrath and W.W. Fawcett.
-
-A relentless portrayal of the career of a man who comes under the
-influence of a beautiful but evil woman; how she lures him on and on,
-how he struggles, falls and rises, only to fall again into her net, make
-a story of unflinching realism.
-
-THE SQUAW MAN. By Julie Opp Faversham and Edwin Milton Royle.
- Illustrated with scenes from the play.
-
-A glowing story, rapid in action, bright in dialogue with a fine
-courageous hero and a beautiful English heroine.
-
-THE GIRL IN WAITING. By Archibald Eyre. Illustrated with scenes from the
- play.
-
-A droll little comedy of misunderstandings, told with a light touch, a
-venturesome spirit and an eye for human oddities.
-
-THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL. By Baroness Orczy. Illustrated with scenes from
- the play.
-
-A realistic story of the days of the French Revolution, abounding in
-dramatic incident, with a young English soldier of fortune, daring,
-mysterious as the hero.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26TH ST., NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A FEW OF
- GROSSET & DUNLAP’S
- Great Books at Little Prices
-
-CY WHITTAKER’S PLACE. By Joseph C. Lincoln. Illustrated by Wallace
- Morgan.
-
-A Cape Cod story describing the amusing efforts of an elderly bachelor
-and his two cronies to rear and educate a little girl. Full of honest
-fun—a rural drama.
-
-THE FORGE IN THE FOREST. By Charles G.D. Roberts. Illustrated by H.
- Sandham.
-
-A story of the conflict in Acadia after its conquest by the British. A
-dramatic picture that lives and shines with the indefinable charm of
-poetic romance.
-
-A SISTER TO EVANGELINE. By Charles G.D. Roberts. Illustrated by E.
- McConnell.
-
-Being the story of Yvonne de Lamourie, and how she went into exile with
-the villagers of Grand Prè. Swift action, fresh atmosphere, wholesome
-purity, deep passion and searching analysis characterize this strong
-novel.
-
-THE OPENED SHUTTERS. By Clara Louise Burnham. Frontispiece by Harrison
- Fisher.
-
-A summer haunt on an island in Casco Bay is the background for this
-romance. A beautiful woman, at discord with life, is brought to realize,
-by her new friends, that she may open the shutters of her soul to the
-blessed sunlight of joy by casting aside vanity and self love. A
-delicately humorous work with a lofty motive underlying it all.
-
-THE RIGHT PRINCESS. By Clara Louise Burnham.
-
-An amusing story, opening at a fashionable Long Island resort, where a
-stately Englishwoman employs a forcible New England housekeeper to serve
-in her interesting home. How types so widely apart react on each others’
-lives, all to ultimate good, makes a story both humorous and rich in
-sentiment.
-
-THE LEAVEN OF LOVE. By Clara Louise Burnham. Frontispiece by Harrison
- Fisher.
-
-At a Southern California resort a world-weary woman, young and beautiful
-but disillusioned, meets a girl who has learned the art of living—of
-tasting life in all its richness, opulence and joy. The story hinges
-upon the change wrought in the soul of the blasè woman by this glimpse
-into a cheery life.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26TH ST., NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A FEW OF
- GROSSET & DUNLAP’S
- Great Books at Little Prices
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. A Picture of New England Home Life. With
- illustrations by C.W. Reed, and Scenes Reproduced from the Play.
-
-One of the best New England stories ever written. It is full of homely
-human interest * * * there is a wealth of New England village character,
-scenes and incidents * * * forcibly, vividly and truthfully drawn. Few
-books have enjoyed a greater sale and popularity. Dramatized, it made
-the greatest rural play of recent times.
-
-THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. By Charles Felton Pidgin.
- Illustrated by Henry Roth.
-
-All who love honest sentiment, quaint and sunny humor, and homespun
-philosophy will find these “Further Adventures” a book after their own
-heart.
-
-HALF A CHANCE. By Frederic S. Isham. Illustrated by Herman Pfeifer.
-
-The thrill of excitement will keep the reader in a state of suspense,
-and he will become personally concerned from the start, as to the
-central character, a very real man who suffers, dares—and achieves!
-
-VIRGINIA OF THE AIR LANES. By Herbert Quick. Illustrated by William R.
- Leigh.
-
-The author has seized the romantic moment for the airship novel, and
-created the pretty story of “a lover and his lass” contending with an
-elderly relative for the monopoly of the skies. An exciting tale of
-adventure in midair.
-
-THE GAME AND THE CANDLE. By Eleanor M. Ingram. Illustrated by P.D.
- Johnson.
-
-The hero is a young American, who, to save his family from poverty,
-deliberately commits a felony. Then follow his capture and imprisonment,
-and his rescue by a Russian Grand Duke. A stirring story, rich in
-sentiment.
-
-WHEN A MAN MARRIES. By Mary Roberts Rinehart. Illustrated by Harrison
- Fisher and Mayo Bunker.
-
-A young artist, whose wife had recently divorced him, finds that a visit
-is due from his Aunt Selina, an elderly lady having ideas about things
-quite apart from the Bohemian set in which her nephew is a shining
-light. The way in which matters are temporarily adjusted forms the motif
-of the story.
-
-A farcical extravaganza, dramatized under the title of “Seven Days”
-
-THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF JOSHUA CRAIG. By David Graham Phillips.
- Illustrated.
-
-A young westerner, uncouth and unconventional, appears in political and
-social life in Washington. He attains power in politics, and a young
-woman of the exclusive set becomes his wife, undertaking his education
-in social amenities.
-
-“DOC.” GORDON. By Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman. Illustrated by Frank T.
- Merrill.
-
-Against the familiar background of American town life, the author
-portrays a group of people strangely involved in a mystery. “Doc.”
-Gordon, the one physician of the place, Dr. Elliot, his assistant, a
-beautiful woman and her altogether charming daughter are all involved in
-the plot. A novel of great interest.
-
-HOLY ORDERS. By Marie Corelli.
-
-A dramatic story, in which is pictured a clergyman in touch with society
-people, stage favorites, simple village folk, powerful financiers and
-others, each presenting vital problems to this man “in holy
-orders”—problems that we are now struggling with in America.
-
-KATRINE. By Elinor Macartney Lane. With frontispiece.
-
-Katrine, the heroine of this story, is a lovely Irish girl, of lowly
-birth, but gifted with a beautiful voice.
-
-The narrative is based on the facts of an actual singer’s career, and
-the viewpoint throughout is a most exalted one.
-
-THE FORTUNES OF FIFI. By Molly Elliot Seawell. Illustrated by T. de
- Thulstrup.
-
-A story of life in France at the time of the first Napoleon. Fifi, a
-glad, mad little actress of eighteen, is the star performer in a third
-rate Parisian theatre. A story as dainty as a Watteau painting.
-
-SHE THAT HESITATES. By Harris Dickson. Illustrated by C.W. Relyea.
-
-The scene of this dashing romance shifts from Dresden to St. Petersburg
-in the reign of Peter the Great, and then to New Orleans.
-
-The hero is a French Soldier of Fortune, and the princess, who
-hesitates—but you must read the story to know how she that hesitates may
-be lost and yet saved.
-
-THE MUSIC MASTER. By Charles Klein. Illustrated by John Rae.
-
-This marvelously vivid narrative turns upon the search of a German
-musician in New York for his little daughter. Mr. Klein has well
-portrayed his pathetic struggle with poverty, his varied experiences in
-endeavoring to meet the demands of a public not trained to an
-appreciation of the classic, and his final great hour when, in the
-rapidly shifting events of a big city, his little daughter, now a
-beautiful young woman, is brought to his very door. A superb bit of
-fiction, palpitating with the life of the great metropolis. The play in
-which David Warfield scored his highest success.
-
-DR. LAVENDAR’S PEOPLE. By Margaret Deland.
-
-Mrs. Deland won so many friends through Old Chester Tales that this
-volume needs no introduction beyond its title. The lovable doctor is
-more ripened in this later book, and the simple comedies and tragedies
-of the old village are told with dramatic charm.
-
-OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated by Howard Pyle.
-
-Stories portraying with delightful humor and pathos a quaint people in a
-sleepy old town. Dr. Lavendar, a very human and lovable “preacher,” is
-the connecting link between these dramatic stories from life.
-
-HE FELL IN LOVE WITH HIS WIFE. By E.P. Roe. With frontispiece.
-
-The hero is a farmer—a man with honest, sincere views of life. Bereft of
-his wife, his home is cared for by a succession of domestics of varying
-degrees of inefficiency until, from a most unpromising source, comes a
-young woman who not only becomes his wife but commands his respect and
-eventually wins his love. A bright and delicate romance, revealing on
-both sides a love that surmounts all difficulties and survives the
-censure of friends as well as the bitterness of enemies.
-
-THE YOKE. By Elizabeth Miller.
-
-Against the historical background of the days when the children of
-Israel were delivered from the bondage of Egypt, the author has sketched
-a romance of compelling charm. A biblical novel as great as any since
-“Ben Hur.”
-
-SAUL OF TARSUS. By Elizabeth Miller. Illustrated by André Castaigne.
-
-The scenes of this story are laid in Jerusalem, Alexandria, Rome and
-Damascus. The Apostle Paul, the Martyr Stephen, Herod Agrippa and the
-Emperors Tiberius and Caligula are among the mighty figures that move
-through the pages. Wonderful descriptions, and a love story of the
-purest and noblest type mark this most remarkable religious romance.
-
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-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26TH ST., NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-In several cases, the author (or printer) uses an apostrophe
-incorrectly; three times as the possessive pronoun, and once as 3rd
-person present (‘let’s’). Each has been corrected. Other minor lapses in
-punctuation have been corrected as well, without further mention.
-
- p. 43 even than [it’s] forlorn neighbors
- p. 85 hiding [it’s] tell-tale under the skirt of her coat
- p. 251 links his arm in [her’s]
- p. 266 and [let’s] out that I was not she at all
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of My Lady Peggy Goes to Town, by
-Frances Aymar Mathews
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-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN ***
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-Project Gutenberg's My Lady Peggy Goes to Town, by Frances Aymar Mathews
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: My Lady Peggy Goes to Town
-
-Author: Frances Aymar Mathews
-
-Illustrator: Harrison Fisher
-
-Release Date: November 5, 2015 [EBook #50388]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Chris Curnow and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
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- Transcriber's Note:
-
-Minor errors in punctuation and formatting have been silently corrected.
-Please see the transcriber's note at the end of this text for details
-regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered during its
-preparation.
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the '_' character as _italic_.
-
-The full-page illustrations are referred to, in the list provided, by a
-quote from the text, and the page reference is to the quote, rather than
-the position of the illustration in the text. In some cases, these were
-re-positioned to fall nearer the scene referenced.
-
-These illustrations also had no captions. They are distinguished, here,
-by the first few words of the quoted text.
-
-[Illustration: Then Lady Peggy, laughing...]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- MY LADY PEGGY
- GOES TO TOWN
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- _By_
-
- FRANCES AYMAR MATHEWS
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY HARRISON FISHER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- _Copyright, 1901,
- By The Bowen-Merrill Company_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN]
-
- THE DECORATIONS DESIGNED BY VIRGINIA KEEP
- THE COVER DESIGNED BY FRANCIS HAZENPLUG
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: ILLUSTRATIONS]
-
- _Then Lady Peggy, laughing, humming such a gay _Frontispiece_
- snatch of a song, comes tripping down the
- stairs._
-
- _And Lady Peggy and her woman found themselves on _Page 40_
- the road to town._
-
- _"A touch, a hit!" cry all at once as a spurt of _Page 68_
- blood darts up the supposed Sir Robin's blade._
-
- _Two watched her as she came in on Beau Brummell's _Page 112_
- arm._
-
- _At the table sat Kennaston, inky-fingered, _Page 158_
- scribbling; eyes now rolling to the ceiling, now
- roving hither and yon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _The instant that Lady Peggy felt herself in the
- highwayman's saddle, she knew that her wrists
- had met their match._ _Page 186_
-
-
- _"I am Sir Robin McTart! Who, the devil, are
- you?"_ _Page 278_
-
-
- _"Ah, Peggy, my adored one," says he, devouring
- her pale face with his happy eyes._ _Page 336_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ENVOI
-
- When gay postillions cracked their whips,
- And gallants gemmed their chat with quips;
- When patches nestled o'er sweet lips
- At choc'late times; and, 'twixt the sips,
- Fair Ladies gave their gossips tips;
- Then, in Levantine gown and brooch,
- My Lady Peggy took the coach,
- For London Town!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN]
-
-
-
-
- _In the which My Lady Peggy sends off her
- lover broken-hearted and promptly
- falls into a swoon._
-
-
-Kennaston Castle lies in Surrey. The Earl of Exham is master of the
-picturesque old pile and of the estate, and decidedly the slave of the
-very considerable number of debts which were up to His Lordship's ears
-when he came of age, some four and fifty years ago, and by this time
-have reached almost to the crown of his head. He is also father to his
-son and heir, Kennaston of Kennaston, and to the heir's tall twin, My
-Lady Peggy.
-
-My Lady Peggy at this particular moment sits a-swinging on the top
-branch of a plum tree at the foot of the kitchen garden whence she
-commands a tolerable view of the highway.
-
-"Impertinent sun!" cries Peggy, shading her handsome eyes with her hand
-as she stares off along the dusty road. "How is't you dare shine when
-there's no fine gentleman a-comin' from the east; no gallant with
-disheveled locks, powdered shoulders, disordered mien, distracted looks,
-spurs a-digging into his beast, lips apart, heart beating like spent
-rabbit's, and 'Peggy, lovely Peggy,' the clapper to his eager tongue at
-every jolt of his saddle, every rut of his way? Go cloud yourself, I
-say! since Sir Percy tarries. I'd have the skies weep, even if I can't."
-A peal of merriest laughter concludes this sally, and an apronful of
-plums comes tumbling down all over the other young woman who stands
-under the tree in waiting on her mistress.
-
-"Is His Lordship not yet in sight, My Lady?" asks this one.
-
-"Nay! that is not he, Chockey, and whisk me! but when His Lordship does
-come, he'll find a very sorry entertainment. I swear, as dad says, I'll
-not see him when he does appear, that will not I. Nay, shake not your
-head, girl. Is't not true that Lady Peggy had once a lover?"
-
-"'Twere truer say a dozen of that sort of gentry, Madam," replies the
-buxom Chockey, as she sorts the plums, the best in her bonnet, the flaws
-over the wall where the chickens and hens cackle to the refuse.
-
-"Well, well, twenty if you like! but one more favored than the rest? the
-properest sort of man at saddle, gun, line, wrestle, toast, song, or
-dance? honest, straightforward, beautiful, as dad says the angels are he
-saw painted on the walls at Rome. Speak I truth, eh, Chockey?"
-
-"Madam, that you do."
-
-"And this paragon so worshiped his Peggy as, when she went off a-three
-months since to visit her godmother in Kent, he vowed by all the saints
-in the calendar he'd scarce survive until her return. False or true, eh,
-Chockey?"
-
-My Lady Peggy punctuated this query by an accurate aim and hit, on the
-top of her waiting woman's head, with an especially large plum.
-
-"True, Madam," dodging the fruit, and still with an eye on the road.
-
-"And then, back comes My Lady Peggy, cutting short her stay in Kent,
-where she had much pleasure, to tell the truth, in the society of a very
-fine young nobleman."
-
-"Lawk, Madam! another?" interrupted the faithful Chockey.
-
-"Another, Chock," vouchsafes her mistress. "Sweet, sweet Sir Robin
-McTart!"
-
-"Oh, My Lady!" cries the girl, vainly endeavoring to conceal a smile.
-
-"Aye, Chock," proceeds Peggy, "I say again, a sweet and most entrapping
-young man."
-
-"Madam, a squint eye, a wry nose, an underlip that hangs, a pair of
-fox-teeth, and a chin that's gone a-huntin' for his throat!"
-
-"Tut, tut! Chock," laughs Lady Peggy, leaning back in her leafy bower,
-"what's all that to a nimble wit, a galloping conversation, and a
-faithful heart?" Lady Peggy's tone is as light as the May breeze blowing
-her soft locks about her lovely blooming face, full of mockery,
-witchery,--and then a bit of a sigh, low as flowers' whispers, and up
-with her drooped head higher than before, as in the half mannish tone
-her twinship and long play-fellowship with her brother have given her,
-she adds curtly--
-
-"D'ye see aught coming yet, Chock?"
-
-"No, My Lady, not yet," answers the girl ruefully.
-
-Peggy bites her lips until they hurt.
-
-"As I was a-sayin', Chock, your mistress cuts short her visit, sends
-word to her lover she'll be home o'-Thursday, and, as I live! to-day's
-the Monday after, and him still on the way! See him!" Peggy's white
-teeth close tight, and her eyes flash, and her little hands clench. "Not
-I! Let him come now an' he goes again faster than he ever traveled. The
-vain coxcomb! the deceitful, cozening, graceless poppet! He'll ne'er set
-eyes on her he used to call his Peg again, or I die for't." And Peggy
-jumped to the ground.
-
-"Madam! Madam!" exclaims Chockey, pointing joyfully to a cloud of dust
-far up the highway. "Look! Yonder comes Sir Percy! Don't I know? Ain't I
-watched his long roan any day this twelve month a-turnin' by the lodge?"
-
-Lady Peggy seizes Chockey's arm, and runs breathless to the house; in,
-a-scrambling up the broad stairs to her chamber; a-pulling out of
-drawers from their chests; a-hunting of ribbons and fallals, combs,
-brushes, kerchiefs, perfumes, patches, powder, whatever else besides!
-
-"Hurry, Chock, do my hair as he likes it!" urges Lady Peggy.
-
-"Lawk, Madam! I thought you swore just now you'd never set eyes on Sir
-Percy again?"
-
-"You thought! Bless you, Chock, never be a-wastin' your time a-thinking
-where a woman's concerned. When her heart steps up and lays hold the
-reins, the steed gallops to the goal; she's always time to think after
-she's acted."
-
-"Yes, Madam," concurs Chockey, with a mental reservation back of her
-mouthful of pins. "There, My Lady, Your Ladyship's hair is lovely; your
-Levantine gown becomes you like a pheasant do its plumage, and your eyes
-is a-shinin' with love and--"
-
-"Tut, girl! It's anger, wrath, temper,--so!" Peggy marches up and down
-before the mirror, tossing her lovely head. "Thus attired, Chock, a lady
-can flout, deride, harass, and madden one of the opposite sex, as can
-she not do in cotton frock and fruit-stained apron. Give me my comfit
-box, I pray. Tell me how long Sir Percy now hath been cooling his heels
-in the drawing-room?"
-
-"But little lacking the hour, Madam."
-
-"Good! I'd keep him there until Thursday, an I could. Now go tell him
-I'll be with him presently."
-
-Chockey went.
-
-Lady Peggy stood at the door ajar; she heard the impatient footsteps of
-her lover below, but yet she tarried, tapping her high red heel on the
-sill.
-
-"Lud!" cried she, "an I show no proper spirit, Percy's uncle'll have the
-right of it when he says of one he's never seen yet, 'She's a-hunting
-your bank-notes, boy! She's heiress to debts, Sir, and by my life, Sir!
-I'll never father-in-law her, so long as I'm above the sod, Sir!'
-Despicable old wretch! as if 'twere not Percy I adored, without a care
-if he have a farthing to his fortune, or a roof to his head!"
-
-And then Chockey, her palm warm with a sovereign, came with a rush.
-
-"My Lady!" cries she, "'f you could see Sir Percy! White as milk,
-tremblin', shakin', chatterin', a-begging and a-praying as you'll
-condescend to go to him inside of another hour!"
-
-"White, said you Chock?"
-
-The girl nods vehemently.
-
-"Shaking?"
-
-"Aye, Madam."
-
-"Like to faint, think you?"
-
-"Like to die, My Lady!"
-
-Then Lady Peggy, laughing, humming such a gay snatch of a song, comes
-tripping down the stairs, pulling out her petticoats, stopping her
-lover's outstretched arms of eagerness with such a splendid curtsy as
-any Court lady might have envied.
-
-Still laughing.--"Lud! Sir Percy! is't you?" amazed.
-
-"Aye!" returns he, more amazed than she, and standing off with dropped
-arms. "Whom did you think it was?"
-
-"Another. My woman's stupid, and when she described the gallant that she
-did, it matched a different sort of him than you, methinks. However,
-let's be civil; the crops are good, the game likely to be, later; the
-King in health,--prithee have a chair." And Peggy swept a second curtsy,
-motioning toward a seat.
-
-"Peggy! Sweet lips! Joy of my soul, what's it? Not one warm word for him
-who only lives for thee? Who's counted every hour since he parted from
-you, eh?" The young man draws nearer to her, and bends upon his knee,
-venturing, as he does so, to take her hand in his.
-
-"Since you spent your time a-counting the hours, Sir, pray you, how many
-hours have passed since in this same room we parted, now three months,
-three weeks, and a few days since?"
-
-Sir Percy sprang to his feet.
-
-"Zounds! Peggy, and you flout me so?"
-
-"Zounds! Sir Percy, did not I write you--and very well you know
-writing's not my forte,--that I'd be home o'-Thursday?"
-
-"Aye, but I never got it until this morning; then did I put spurs and
-leave my uncle in the lurch to fly to you."
-
-"What, Sir! not get my letter? An idle, silly, and foolish excuse. I
-sent it by Bickers, and trustier man ne'er breathed. He vowed me he'd
-put it in your hands."
-
-"Peggy, believe whichever of the two you like; but, in mercy tell me!
-What kept you so long away? I've heard rumors of another. Eh, Peg, 'tis
-not true, swear me 'tis not true? Oh, by the hue of my visage must you
-know what jealous pangs have racked me!"
-
-Lady Peggy nods her head maliciously.
-
-"Jealous pangs, forsooth! and you thought to medicine them, I dare be
-sworn, with vaulting the country over in the wake of Lady Diana Weston,
-the greatest heiress in the market! Bah, Sir, and you've heard rumors!
-I'll match 'em. I've seen the minx from afar. She is handsome, Sir; your
-taste does you credit."
-
-"Peg, I swear 'twas but to please my uncle!" cries Sir Percy.
-
-"Aye, and so displease me!"
-
-"Nay, you know too well that I'll never do that of my will; but my
-uncle, as I've told you, must be coaxed, and then when once I gain his
-consent to seeing you, our battle's won. To see thee, Peg 's to worship
-thee! Lord Gower'll kneel when he beholds thee!"
-
-"Our me no ours, Sir!" returned Peggy. "Let's here and now make an end
-on't all. You go pound the roads after your new mistress with her acres
-and notes, and I--"
-
-"Well, you what?" asks the young man impetuously and yet with a certain
-grave dignity.
-
-"Oh, I'll acquit myself to a certainty with one that's faithful as the
-sun, and gallant from his head to his heels."
-
-"What's his name?" inquires Sir Percy in a hard, strained voice. "If
-he's a better man, Peg, and you can say you love him--God keep me!"
-
-"His name's a very honorable and ancient one, he's Sir Robin McTart,
-twenty-third Baronet!"
-
-"Peggy!"
-
-If a thunderbolt had fallen betwixt Peggy's red shoes and his brown
-ones, Percy could not have been more astounded.
-
-"Well, Sir?" returns she, scarce controlling the twitching of her lips.
-
-"A milk-sop, molly-coddle! Oh Peggy, an you drop me, take a better man!
-Peg, you're a-joking. Not that bumpkin! I've never seen him, but report
-has it he's afeard if one of his own dogs looks him in the eye and
-bays!"
-
-"Sir Percy, have you finished?" inquires Peggy with dignity.
-
-"No, have I not! By my soul, Peg, an you pitch me to hell for that
-jackanapes, I'll go to hell as fast as wine and dice, and cards and
-brawls, and usurers, and all that sort of crew can carry me! I'll up to
-London, and one morning when your brother sends you word he's found me
-with a rapier stuck in my throat, my pockets empty, and 'Peggy' writ on
-the scrap o' paper a-lying over my heart, then you'll believe Percy
-loved you!"
-
-"Lud, Sir! Men are apt at such chatter, and a fortnight after, the
-vicar's a-publishing their banns with the other lady!"
-
-"Peg!" He takes her kerchief end, as it droops away from her pretty long
-throat, in his fingers; he looks down deep into her eyes; his voice
-shakes, so does his hand.
-
-"Whatever betides, my bonny sweetheart, there's only one that'll ever
-have banns read with me, and that's--" He takes her by surprise and by
-the shoulders, and squares her to the mirror in its niche.
-
-"Farewell, Peg--since you send me, it's the devil and dice, for by the
-Lord! I can't live a quiet life lacking your smiles."
-
-In two minutes more Chockey, from the upper window, saw the long roan
-flying away from Kennaston faster than she ever galloped to it; and went
-down to find her young mistress a-lying prone in a fine wrinkled heap of
-silken gown, lace frills and furbelows, on the threadbare carpet of the
-big drawing-room.
-
-To rush across the wide hall to the dining-room, seize a game-knife,
-back again; cut her mistress's stays; pour a glass of cider down Lady
-Peggy's throat, willy-nilly; clap her palms; pound her back; set her on
-her feet; and half carry her to her chamber, occupied not many minutes
-for stout Chockey.
-
-"Lawk, My Lady," said she, surveying the prostrate form on the couch,
-arms a-kimbo, eyes saucer-wide, "who'd ever have thought to see your
-haughty Ladyship so mauled for the sake of any gentleman as lives!"
-
-Lady Peggy lay still, but presently, from the depths of the pillows she
-spoke.
-
-"I ain't mauled, Chock, not I!" Her Ladyship now sat up and stared
-around the big room. "It's only for sorrow for havin' had to disappoint
-Sir Percy, on account of dear Sir Robin."
-
-"Oh!" ejaculates the worthy Chockey in a tone of undisguised and
-sarcastic disbelief.
-
-"Chockey!" exclaimed her mistress in the tone of a drill sergeant, now
-rising to her feet.
-
-"Lawk! My Lady, I didn't mean nothin'."
-
-"Chockey," echoes Lady Peggy faintly, sinking to her knees, "whatever'll
-I do? Oh Chock! Chock! and Sir Percy just the centre of my heart, and me
-to behave to him like a brute! Out of my sight, away with you! There's
-the first bell a-ringin' for dinner. Say to daddy I'm too deep in my
-hand-writin' lessons to eat to-day! Say to him I'm gone out to break the
-new colt and not got back. Say to him I'm gone to the devil!"
-
-And Lady Peggy fell a-weeping with such violence as Chockey had never
-seen; and, being a wise damsel, she left her mistress alone and went
-down to soothe the gouty Earl, tied to his chair, as best she could for
-the absence of his daughter Peg from dinner.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- _In the which Her Ladyship wheedles her
- noble father and makes up her mind._
-
-
-The Earl forsooth was a testy gentleman, and his girl was his plague and
-his pride; on her, rather than on his heir, the old man's fancy was set,
-for the reason that Kennaston, disclaiming all the country sports, the
-half wild outdoor life, the lusty joys and racing bumps and cups that
-had been vastly helpful in reducing the little his parent had started
-his career with, had elected instead to try his luck at that most
-inscrutable, vile trade of scribbling!
-
-Peg's twin, her fellow in height and build, which made a slender youth
-of him indeed, had gone up to London quill-armed, ink-fingered,
-brain-possessed with rhymes; empty-pursed, determined to carve with such
-unlikely weapons as that apt bird, the goose, furnishes, a fame and
-fortune for himself, that should dazzle the world and recoup the
-fortunes of his well-nigh fallen house.
-
-While the Earl jeered, Peg, herself scarce able to spell a two-syllabled
-word, looked up to her brother as nothing short of whatever stood in her
-mind for Shakespeare; for, low be it spoke, the fair Peggy had small
-notion of books, their makers or their pleasurable usage. To her they
-represented waste time almost, and only as a means of communication with
-Kennaston did she, since his absence began, pore daily over a
-dictionary, a speller, and a copy-book.
-
-So sat she now, a couple of months after the parting betwixt her and Sir
-Percy; lips pursed, brows knit, goose-feather in finger, poring over a
-blank sheet of paper first, and from it turning to the closely-writ page
-of a letter from her twin.
-
-Chockey sat on a stool hard by,--they were both in the buttery, for Lady
-Peggy was apt with all the mysteries of housekeeping, and had as fine a
-churning, as big cheeses, as fat chickens, as nice eggs, as good hams as
-any other in the county,--had she not, the Earl, her father, had lacked
-something or all of his comfort. Chockey, then, sat working butter,
-squeezing all the white milky bubbles back and forth in the wooden bowl,
-and printing the pats in the trays, while her mistress sighed,
-swallowed, and at last burst forth in speech.
-
-"Chockey, I shall fall into a fit, an I've ever another letter to write
-in this world. The last I writ was for Sir Robin to introduce him to
-Lord Kennaston when he should go up to town--and belike, I forgot to
-give it to him as I promised and have it safe here. It took me a week to
-finish, and I've copied all the words out of it I can, yet do I lack
-thousands more, methinks, to say what I would to my brother. Lud!
-Learning's a wonderful thing! Look at that, Chock!"
-
-Lady Peggy holds up the well covered pages of Kennaston's letter before
-the eyes of the Abigail.
-
-"Aye, Madam," giggles this one, "it has the air to me of where spiders
-has been a-fightin'! Now, for true, My Lady, do it say words as has a
-meanin'?"
-
-"Listen," replies the mistress, reading off quite glibly, since 'tis the
-one hundredth time since she got it that she's rehearsed the same to
-herself.
-
-
-"SWEET SISTER PEGGY: I'd have written before but that literature pays
-ill until a man hath contrived by preference and patronage, the rather
-than by his wits, to place himself at evens with the Great and the
-Distinguished. So far I find Fame's hill hard in the Climbing, but do I
-not complain, for there's that spirit reigning in my breast as bids me
-welcome Poverty, even Starvation, lead it but to the sometime
-recognition of my Talents. I take up my pen not to riddle your ears with
-plaints, but on another matter, which is Sir Percy."
-
-Lady Peggy's head droops a bit to match her voice, whilst Chockey's
-bright little eyes sparkle, and she twists the yellow butter into heart
-shapes as she pricks her ears and sighs.
-
-"Sir Percy," continues My Lady Peggy, reading, "as you know came up to
-town, now these seven weeks agone, straight as a die to my meagre
-chambers, where welcome was spelled, I can assure thee, all over the
-bare floor, barer board, and barer master thereof,--for of a truth I
-love him as should I the brother I had hoped he'd be! Peg, what's this
-thou'st done to the lad? Thrown him, a gallant with as big a heart as
-God ever made, over into the Devil's own mire, for sake of that little
-tow-haired sprat, Robin McTart! with his pate full of himself and none
-other,--so I've heard say, for never set I eyes upon the blackguard from
-Kent! Zounds! twin! What are ye women made of? And I write to say Percy,
-what with carousals and brawls, and drink and fights, and all night at
-the gaming-table, and all day God knows where, 's fast a-throwing
-himself piecemeal into the grave he's a-digging daily for your cruel
-sake. Could you but see him! A ghost! Wan, with eyes full of
-blood-spots, and hair unkempt! Madam, there's love for you--and love's
-what ladies like. Go match him, Sister, with McTart if you can, but twin
-me no more ever again an you and I wear black ribbons for Percy de
-Bohun!"
-
-
-Lady Peggy's lip quivers; so does Chockey's.
-
-"Lawk, My Lady!" cries the girl, splashing tears into the butter,
-reckless.
-
-"'Black ribbons,' Chock! 'A ghost,' Chock! 'McTart,' Chock! Lord ha'
-mercy! What's to become o' me?" Peggy's tears smart her eyes as she
-flings the goose-quill over to a cheese on the shelf, where it sticks,
-and one day surprises the Vicar at his supper.
-
-"Get out of my sight!" she flings after it. "I can't write! Who can
-write out her heart and soul, when it's devilish hard even to speak it.
-Oh! Would I were my brother for one fine half-hour!" cries Peggy, rising
-and stamping up and down the stone floor of the buttery.
-
-"An' if you were, Madam?" asks Chockey meekly, "what then?"
-
-"I'd swear! Yea, would I! Such a lot of splendid oaths as'd ease my mind
-and let me hear from my own lips what a fool's part I'd played with my
-own--my adored Percy! Could I but see him! as Kennaston says." Peggy in
-her progress now upsets a pan of cream, and has genuine pleasure in
-splashing it about over her slippers as she speaks.
-
-"But I! What am I? A girl! swaddled in petticoats and fallals; tethered
-to an apron, and a besom, and a harpsichord, and a needle,--yet can I
-snap a rapier, fire a pistol, jump a ditch, land a fish, for my brother
-taught me. Still it's girl! girl! sit by the fire and spin! dawdle!
-dally!" The cream now spots up as far as Peggy's chin and flecks its
-dimple.
-
-"Stop-at-home, nor stir-abroad! Smile, ogle!" each word emphasized with
-heel and toe.
-
-"And--" Lady Peggy now flops back into her chair, breathless, "wait on
-man's will and whims,--that, Chock, 's what 'tis to be a woman."
-
-"Aye, 'tis," assents the waiting woman. "But yet, My Lady, if I dared
-make bold, there's summat Your Ladyship might do, an My Lady, Your
-Ladyship's mother, came back home again from her visit to your uncle in
-York."
-
-"Out with it!" says Peggy hopelessly, folding up her attempted letter
-and tucking it in her reticule.
-
-"Mayhap you could persuade, by much weeping and praying, falling into
-swoons and such like, that Her Ladyship would take you up to London!
-Once there, Sir Percy couldn't keep his distance from you."
-
-Peggy looks at Chockey as if she were a vision sent from on high; then,
-quickly succeeding derision curls her lip.
-
-"My Lady mother take a squealing chit like me up to town! Never! She'd
-say my manners weren't fit, or my figger, or my wardrobe. Lud! Chock!
-Bethink thee, lass, of my gowns in London town! and me no more
-acquainted with the ways yonder, than our Brindle is with the family
-pew!"
-
-Lady Peggy walked out into the paddock, rubbed the cream from her
-slippers on the turf; caressed the ponies; munched the sweet cake she
-had in her apron-pocket, felt the keen sweet air blow over her hot
-forehead, and saw, dancing ever before her mind's eye, that insidious
-sweet suggestion of "going up to London."
-
-How did one go up to London?
-
-In the coach: aye to be sure; and the coach left the "Mermaid" in the
-village every Tuesday and Thursday at five in the morning. The coach!
-The splendid coach, a-swinging on its springs like a gigantic cradle;
-the postillions a-snapping their whips, the coachman a-cracking his long
-lash and a-shouting "All h'up for London!" and the ladies and
-gentlemen--well armed, these last, in dread of the highwaymen on the
-heath--all a-piling in and a-settling themselves; and the guards
-a-tooting their horns, the landlady and the boots and the maids and the
-hostlers all a-bowing and a-scraping and--off they go! for London
-town--where Percy was a-pining and a-dying for her, so her twin writ in
-his letter.
-
-Well, Lady Peggy went in, clapt on a fresh gown and shoes, and never was
-daughter more tender and patient with crabbed, gouty, crusty dad than
-she all through that lovely day. Playing backgammon; spelling out the
-newspaper; trouncing the cat when it jumped on His Lordship's leg;
-blowing the fire; wheeling his chair from hither to yon; stroking the
-bald head; combing the white whiskers; and finally said she,
-
-"Daddy, London's a very big sort of a place, now, isn't it?"
-
-The Earl nods, coddling his leg into the slip of sunshine that's walking
-westerly away from him.
-
-"My brother lodges, so he says, at the corner of Holywell Road and Lark
-Lane; tell me, dad, where should that be now?" Lady Peggy has a careless
-air, and flecks a buzzing fly out of His Lordship's bowl of porridge.
-
-"Eh?" pursues she, "is't for instance, in the city, or nigh London
-Bridge, or where the quality lives, or toward Southwark, or where?"
-
-"Rot me!" cries His Lordship, looking up at his daughter in surprise,
-"what's my poppet got into her pretty head now, forsooth? Tut, tut,
-girl, what's town to thee, or its bearings? hey? stick thy eye into thy
-churn an' keep thy hand on the dasher,--'twere better'n all the shops in
-Piccadilly, or all the fops at Court."
-
-"Slow, dad! I was only askin' of my twin's whereabouts. Shops and fops
-are not dizzyin' your Peggy, you may swear; 'tis my brother, Sir, of
-whom I'd learn!"
-
-"'Twere better chase the scoundrel out'n my head, Peg, than hammer him
-in! A lad with every chance here in the county to raise his house, and
-make a good match with a nice plump girl, havin' land joining his own;
-but no! Up and off to town to starve and scratch!"
-
-The Earl pommels the floor with his stick, causing the cat to leap into
-the air.
-
-"Let him die in want! Let him freeze, thirst, come to the gallows, say
-I! For such as leaves plenty to pursue want, gets no sympathy from me!"
-
-"He ain't begged for't yet, dad," says Peggy very mildly. "All I was
-a-wonderin' was this: When my brother took the coach at the Mermaid that
-mornin' you mind? how far off the inn where he alighted was the lodgin'
-at the corner of Holywell Road and Lark Lane?--eh, dad? Surely"--and
-here Lady Peggy knelt and stroked his lordship's gouty member, and her
-voice positively trembled, doubtless with excess of filial zeal and
-devotion.
-
-"Surely," resumed she, "you, who were, I dare be sworn"--such arch eyes
-as Lady Peggy now made!--"a fine gallant not so many years ago, must
-remember that,--don't you?"
-
-"Let's see, let's see," responds His Lordship, rubbing his head. "They
-set ye down at the King's Arms, nigh the Bridge, Southwark Bridge, yes;
-Well! Damme! I ought to know! Lark Lane? A devil of a hole; why, girl!
-it's not a quarter hour's trot from the inn, but it's a beastly
-environment. Gad! that son of mine chooses pens, ink and writing-paper
-there, rather than--"
-
-"Lady Belinda here, weight fourteen stone; acres two thousand; guineas,
-countless; temper, amazin'; years, untold! ha! ha! ha! Oh, daddy!" Lady
-Peggy springs up and dances about a minute in most genuine gaiety, then
-she seizes her father's head between her palms and hugs and kisses him
-with much grateful warmth; then flops down a-coddling of the gout again;
-laughing, giggling, pinching puss, and saying,--
-
-"Daddy, drop London! Care I no more for't. Know I quite enough. Let's
-chat of aught else in the world, until you fall a-napping, which will be
-soon now, guessing by the shadows."
-
-'Twas very soon.
-
-Then Lady Peggy tiptoed off to her chamber; then she pulled the rope
-that rang in the kitchen, and presently Chockey came, chopper and bowl
-in hand, checkered apron over white one; for serving maids were scarce
-in Kennaston Hall, footmen there were none; butler there was when he was
-not doing t'other half his duty at the stables.
-
-"Come hither, Chockey," says her mistress in a whisper, with a beckon.
-"Shut the door; go on with choppin' your leeks and carrots, cook'll want
-'em for the soup,--but listen, Chock; unlock your ears Jane Chockey, as
-never you did before in your life."
-
-Chockey bobs as she chops, leaning against the headpost, for support of
-her occupation, and also of her curiosity.
-
-"You know my mother's box, the small one that was re-covered last spring
-with the skin of the red calf that died natural? Bickers put it on with
-a gross of brass nails?"
-
-Chockey again bobs.
-
-"Put into it," continues Lady Peggy, "a change of linen for yourself and
-me, two night-rails," Chockey's eyes dilate, "my gray taffeta gown with
-the flowered petticoat, my green hood and kerchief; powder, patch-box,
-lavender, musk, pins, needles; my red silken hose; your Sunday cap and
-sleeves"--Chockey's chopper ceases to work, and the bed-post creaks.
-"All of which," continues her mistress, "is but prelude to saying: 'I'm
-going up to London by to-morrow's coach, and I'm takin' you with me!'"
-
-"Madam!" Down goes the bowl, leeks, carrots, chopper and all a-spilling
-over the floor.
-
-"Aye," says Peggy calmly, "gather up thy mess, Chock, and to work with
-the duds. Lay out my Levantine gown, my blue kerchief, my black silk
-hose, my brown cloak; and, from my mother's press, take the thick fall
-of Brussels lace and the brown bonnet it's tied to, and bring 'em
-hither; put them under the bed beside thy trundle so's my father'll not
-see 'em when he stops to bid me good-night. Borrow cook's hat she bought
-at the Fair when she was young, and her delaine veil for thyself; for,
-so appareled as not to be recognized, will you, dear Chock, and my Lady
-Peggy take the coach on April the twelfth. But, Chock, remember, mum's
-the word, an you let your tongue wag to my undoing, but the thousandth
-part of a syllable, your mistress and you part company forever! Go."
-
-Chockey picked up Lady Peggy's waving hand between a pinch of her apron,
-lest her onion-smelling fingers should foul so dainty a morsel, kissed
-it, and off and obeyed, speechless from surprise and veneration, both.
-
-At night's fall,--the Earl, somnolent again from fire's warmth and the
-port he would take, despite the surgeon's orders to the contrary,--Lady
-Peggy, Chockey in her wake, purse in hand, went scouting through the
-kitchen-garden, the paddocks, the cowyard to the stable where Bickers's
-pipe shone in the gloaming like a fire-gem as he dodged and lurched
-after a refractory colt.
-
-Bickers, albeit sometimes the slave of beer, was all times Lady Peggy's
-abject, and it took no effort nor persuasion to gain him to her will. He
-took his orders amiably,--they were to secure two places in the London
-mail for to-morrow morning, and strictly to hold his peace both now and
-forever about the whole concern.
-
-Peggy gave him the price of the seats and with wise Castle-mistress
-foresight, she showed Bickers a sovereign beside.
-
-"And Bickers," said Lady Peggy, "considering that the devil walks abroad
-often in the Mermaid's tap-room, I am told, I'll keep the sovereign for
-you 'til you come back, lest he rob you of it, eh?"
-
-"Well, My Lady," said Bickers; "a whole sovereign, My Lady, ain't often
-seen out of the quality's pockets, and the devil might think I'd stole
-it, My Lady, and try to get it from me. Keep it, My Lady, keep it!"
-
-With which the old man, having conquered the colt, set off for the
-village by a side-path all too well known to his tread. Presently by the
-spark in his pipe-bowl the two women saw that he had turned back; that,
-as he came close to them, he clapped his thumb over the glow, and,
-
-"My Lady Peggy," mumbled he sheepishly.
-
-"Whatever is't, Bickers?" cries his mistress in alarm.
-
-"Naught to fright ye, My Lady, only it's been on my mind these many days
-to tell you as the letter you sent me with to Sir Percy de Bohun--"
-
-"Well, well?" Lady Peggy's words came with a gasp, as the old man dead
-stops.
-
-"Go on Bickers, I say!" the mistress's foot stamps with a thud on the
-damp earth.
-
-"Askin' Your Ladyship's parding, the devil caught me that time at the
-Kennaston Arms, My Lady, and he clawed that tight, My Lady, that I
-couldn't stir, and--and--"
-
-Peggy now stooped, seized a billet of wood as big as her arm and gave
-Bickers a sound drub across his hands. The pipe fell in bits, the ash
-glowed; Bickers jumped, so did Chockey.
-
-"'And, and' what?" drubbed Peggy with a will. "Not so much as ha' penny
-of the sovereign, unless you out with the whole truth!"
-
-"I will! I will!" cried the old man. "Sir Percy never got the letter, My
-Lady, until the very day I seen him on the long roan a-ridin' for's life
-away from the Castle yonder," and Bickers jerked his thumb toward the
-house as he now made off.
-
-The devil did not catch Bickers that night; he earned his sovereign
-before the moon rose.
-
-As he sped, Lady Peggy took Chockey's proffered arm.
-
-"You see, Chock, you see, how we that are born to wear petticoats are no
-better'n puppets! a-dancin' and a-cryin'; or a-kneelin' and a-weepin',
-as it happens to suit the whim of what, Chock? Who, Chock? Tell me,
-Chock!" cries Lady Peggy excitedly.
-
-"Lawk, My Lady, that can I not!"
-
-"A man, Chock, a man! it's a him that pulls the strings, girl, and all
-we've to do is to simper and jerk this way, that way. To think," here
-Peggy's voice falters, for they've gained the house and are clambering
-the back stairs in the dark. "To think that Bickers, Bickers! should ha'
-made me treat my worshiped Percy like a hog! Yes, Chockey, like a hog!
-even that name ain't vile enough for me. But, oh, an I reach London in
-safety, and gain my brother's chambers, and learn from him that 'tis for
-very love of me Sir Percy's canterin' to perdition, then, Chock, Lady
-Peggy'll know how to spell paradise for him she's riskin' much to hear
-the truth about."
-
-"But, My Lady," ventures Chockey, who, notwithstanding the blissful
-prospect of seeing London, still had a practical eye toward the dangers
-that beset the path, both thereto, and once there.
-
-"But, My Lady, supposin' we can't find Lord Kennaston's lodgin's;
-supposin' he's away from home when we get there; or, a-havin' a party,
-or ain't got no place for us to sleep; or suppose--"
-
-"Suppose me no supposes, Chock!" Lady Peggy shakes out the Levantine
-gown from its wrinkles. "If London were the black pit, and an army of
-Satans a-sittin' grinnin' around the brim, still would I go and find out
-for myself if it's for me he pines--or, if Lady Diana Weston is up in
-London too!" With which Her Ladyship gives the petticoat, she takes from
-its peg against the morrow, a somewhat emphatic, not to say malicious
-shake.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- _Wherein is recounted how Her Ladyship set
- forth, accompanied by her faithful
- woman, for London Town._
-
-
-Whoever knows the rare delights of an English dawn nowadays can figure
-for himself, to the letter, how 'twas when Lady Peggy and Chockey, after
-a make-haste toilet in the dark, slipped out into the sweetness that
-long-ago spring morning. The mists were rolling and creeping slowly back
-and over from the river-meadows; the brawl of the stream tinkled in
-their ears; the scents of the flower-garden next the court-yard of the
-Castle, came potently, lured by the flush that by now was tingeing all
-the pallid east with rose; the yellow moon hung low to her setting, and
-two stars for handmaidens still shone, of all her million troupe, at
-either side the disk; yonder, the steeple of the church pricked up to
-heaven; hither, the oaks, greening to their full leafage; there a brown
-rabbit scurried across the road; here the rooks hopped and ha-ha-ed to
-their fellows. Else, 'twas all a-hush with that recurring fond
-expectancy of hope, with which every day of every year so waits and
-wonders for "to-morrow" to be born.
-
-Lady Peggy took the lead, kirtle high upheld, shoes soon bedrabbled in
-the dust and dew. Chockey, bearing the newly-covered box in her stout
-arms, followed close at heel. Both women, veiled double, and being
-wholly unused to such matters, sighting the path much the worse for the
-covering; in fact Peggy stumbled along like some old crone, and yet
-laughed under her breath merrily back at floundering Chockey.
-
-"Hist! Chock, had I now but brought dad's cane and snuff-box, I must
-sure be taken for some three-score dame come yawning out of bed before
-her hour, to overtake, mayhap, a recreant grandson! Zounds! as my twin'd
-say, were he here," and hauling at the mischievous Brussels veil, down
-flopped Her Ladyship, on her knees betwixt two villainous ruts.
-
-"Oh, My Lady!" moaned the waiting-woman panting under cook's delaine and
-the calf-skin box. "Lord ha' mercy! an this be the way to London. I'd
-liefer be sittin' in the kitchen chimney a-blessin' my porridge and
-spoonin' of't, than this!" assisting her mistress to her feet.
-
-"Fie upon thee, Chock! Remember you're waiting-woman now to a lady of
-fashion, to wit myself, and well used to journeys up to town in coaches
-every season! Lud!" Here Peggy stood in a puddle to take breath. "I
-wonder if we'll ever pass muster at the inn; and yet I'm sure, landlord,
-or dame, or hostler'd never think o' me."
-
-"Haste, Madam," returns Chockey, "for do not forget the coach starts at
-five on the stroke, and we've still the quarter-mile to go."
-
-So on they went. My Lady Peggy unable to restrain, from time to time,
-however, the keen relishful overflow of her spirits. When one's young
-and not ailing, a new day whips the blood and brain to such a pinnacle
-of unquestioning gladness as breaks bonds, be they never so weighty,
-and, pro tem., sweet few-years comrades him with the happiness of earth
-and air and sky.
-
-But once the curl of cheerful smoke from the "Mermaid" chimney full in
-view above the oak-tops, My Lady sobered much, and, clutching Chockey's
-arm, both fell a-trembling; stood stock-still, and stared into each
-other's eyes, as lace and wool would let.
-
-"Lady Peggy," cries Chockey, "an it please Your Ladyship," with
-tell-tale gasps of throat, "let's go back home!"
-
-"Jane Chockey!" answered her mistress, only needing this spur to set her
-a-panting the more to her purpose, "we'll go on."
-
-And on they went. Peggy with a measured tread; Chockey plodding after.
-Into the inn-yard, where even now the great coach with its four bays
-waited the signal to start.
-
-The passengers were piling on; and, atop already, quipped a trio of
-college lads in beavers. There stood mine host and hostess, maids, men,
-boys, cooks, and scullions; tips were tossed, baggage packed in the
-boot; farewells spoken; candles held high, lashes cracked; prancing,
-pawing; a rattle, a door-bang, curtsies, bows,--
-
-"All h'up for the London mail!" shouted the coachman merrily.
-
-And Lady Peggy and her woman, neatly sandwiched between a fat, fussy
-dowager and a swearing, tearing old gentleman who together absorbed the
-most of the vehicle and all the attention of their fellow passengers,
-found themselves on the road to town.
-
-No one paid the least heed to them, save that, at the stops, the guard
-came civilly to ask Chockey if her mistress required any refreshment, to
-the which Chockey, well prepared, always answered "no"; since, to raise
-their veils might betray their identity. So 'twas in hunger, silence and
-oblivion that the momentous journey was taken.
-
-When they crossed the heath, the testy old gentleman did turn toward
-Peggy, thereby flattening her the more, and, pulling out a brace of
-pistols, said:
-
-"Have no fears, Madam, I've traveled this road these sixty years,
-probably you have yourself"--thus paying tribute to Peggy's now
-trembling agitation, which he pleasantly mistook for age.
-
-"And the damned rascals, Madam, know better'n to attack the coach when
-I'm aboard. You're not in fear?" now bending a pair of sharp old eyes on
-the Brussels lace.
-
-Lady Peggy, smothering her laughter, and recalling how often,
-half-a-score years ago, she's sat on this old gentleman's knee (he was a
-friend of her father's), puts hand to ear, and nudges Chockey behind the
-broad back of the dowager.
-
-The old gentleman nods comprehendingly, turns square to Chockey, and
-says "deaf?"
-
-And Chockey, divided between terror and mirth, nods back again.
-
-Without other incident, the journey up to the great city is
-accomplished, and, by three in the afternoon, up pull the four horses
-before the door of the King's Arms in the Strand, and Lady Peggy, and
-her woman, and her box, are set down in the yard, amid the din and
-bustle incident always to the arrival of travelers.
-
-[Illustration: And Lady Peggy and her woman...]
-
-Not much attention is bestowed on them. A couple of unpretending
-appearing women, evidently not persons of quality, as the meek little
-calf-skin box is their sole belonging; coming up to London too without
-even one man-servant,--bespeak but little consideration in the throng of
-ladies of fashion, gallants over their coffee, courtiers popping in for
-the news, sparks intent on ogling a pretty face or noting a trim ankle,
-that much o'er crowded the yard, ordinary and parlor of the King's Arms.
-
-Just here once, for an instant, Lady Peggy's brave heart failed her;
-most, when she espied at the door, just getting into her
-silken-curtained chair, a lady, so young and beautiful, so richly girt,
-so spick and span, with such wonderful patches and such snowy powdered
-locks, such sparkling eyes, such begemmed fingers glistening through her
-mitts,--and knew at once that Lady Diana Weston was indeed "in town"!
-
-She faltered a bit, indeed sank down on the box which Chockey had set in
-a corner of the yard, and, for a brief moment, both mistress and maid
-bedewed their masking falls with a few splashing tears.
-
-Then spoke Lady Peggy, rising and plucking up her spirits,--"Chock,"
-said she, "beckon me a boy from yonder group; inquire the path to the
-corner of Holywell Road and Lark Lane; order him shoulder the box and
-lead the way. Speak with a swagger, Chock; knock the drops out of your
-lashes with a laugh, girl! Let 'em think we're old hands at the town and
-used to bein' waited upon!" Lady Peggy straightened herself in her grimy
-shoes, and gave the Levantine a twitch which she hoped was quite the
-mode.
-
-Meantime Chockey did her mistress's bidding, and in less time than it
-takes to set it down, the two were following the lad, in and out of such
-a net and mazework of streets and lanes as set their heads a-whirling;
-now they wheeled around this bend, now across that alley,--foul-smelling
-as a ditch or a dirty dog; anon up a broader way where knockers shone
-and chairs waited at the curb; then a cut down here, and at last this
-was Holywell Road and yonder the opening of Lark Lane.
-
-Well, to be sure, 'twas a sorry spot. As Lady Peggy paid the boy and
-stood on the step, she ruefully surveyed the environment; the
-wig-maker's opposite, with a wig in the window, she half-laughingly
-noted, the very yellow counterpart of Sir Robin McTart's round pate; a
-dingy chocolate-house at t'other end of the row of dark, timbered,
-nodding houses; and this one of the stretch, taller, grimier even than
-its forlorn neighbors, was where poor scribbling Kennaston hunted that
-jade called Fame!
-
-At double-knock, came hobbling the charwoman, loath to be disturbed at
-her twilight pipe, but brisking at sight of Lady Peggy's now uncovered
-face and shilling between fingers.
-
-"Yes, indeed, here His Lordship lodged and ate; was His Lordship at
-'ome? Nay, that was he not! but surely might be before cock-crow
-to-morrow! His Lordship's sister! Lawk! Would Her Ladyship and Her
-Ladyship's woman condescend to come in and mount? What a beautiful
-surprise for 'is young Lordship when he did get 'ome to be sure! No, he
-'adn't gone out alone, a gay spark, a gentleman of the first quality 'ad
-come, as often 'e did, and fetched h'off His Lordship with 'im, last
-night; 'is name? Was it Sir Robin McTart peradventure? No, no, that was
-a name she 'ad never 'eard! 'Twas no Duke nor Earl neither, but a--Sir,
-Sir--?"
-
-And as the old woman and Chockey, carrying the calf-skin box between
-them, reached the last landing and set their burden down in
-thankfulness, Lady Peggy, feeling the way, said:
-
-"Sir Percy de Bohun, perchance? Methinks my brother has a companion by
-some such title!"
-
-"Aye, that's 'im! Ah, My Lady, as splendid a gentleman as ever sang 'God
-save the King!' free with 'is sovereigns, My Lady, as trees is with
-their nuts; and, to match 'im for oaths! there's not that Prince o' the
-blood as can swear so beautiful when 'e's dead drunk. These is 'is
-Lordship's your brother's chambers, My Lady!" throwing open the door and
-ushering Peggy and her servitor into as dingy, dirty, empty, sad, bare,
-and unkempt an appearing place as ever mortal and intrepid lady set two
-tired feet within.
-
-But Lady Peggy, for the nonce, was only eager on one point.
-
-"Drunk, say you, dame? and wherefore should so generous a young
-gentleman be a-gallopin' that silly road, eh?"
-
-"Lawk! Your Ladyship! 'ow should I know? but His Lordship's own
-gentleman, My Lady, what 'olds 'im up and steadies His Lordship in 'is
-cups, do say"--the old charwoman, whisking the dust of ages from a
-wooden chair, sets it for Lady Peggy and bends to tidy the hearth and
-gather together the few shingles and faggots strewn about.
-
-"'Say' what?" urges Peggy, with eager eyes and a sixpence shining in her
-hand (another shilling's more than she dare hazard of her slender
-store).
-
-"Do say, My Lady,--God bless Your Ladyship's sweet face! as it's h'all
-on account of a young lady!"
-
-Lady Peggy's eyes sparkle and all at once the smoky room seems cheerful,
-and the tardy blaze in the fire-place glows and thaws her chilled bones
-and blood.
-
-"Ah?" she says, smiling.
-
-"Yes, My Lady, a splendid young lady of fashion, an heiress, a beauty,
-with half London a-danglin' after 'er; and 'er that 'aughty, as if she
-was of the royal family, and 'im a-killin' 'imself for 'er sake!"
-
-And back again slide Kennaston's chambers into their original depravity
-of dirt and dreariness; and down goes the charwoman to her pipe; and
-Lady Peggy on the wooden chair, Chockey on the box, spread their fingers
-to the reluctant warmth and are silent; while the clock ticks on the
-mantel-shelf; while the slit of blue that peers in at the window, grays;
-while the noises that are all new to these two, come rasping, roaring,
-shouting up to them through the broken pane--the dizzying,
-multitudinous, incoherent surge of London town, as it first smites ears
-not yet wonted to its fascination or its meaning--merely lonely,
-forlorn, dispirited new-comers who have not yet learned the passion and
-the melody that lie hidden in its Babel.
-
-The waiting-woman is the first to move; with the homely excellent
-instincts of her class, she rises, and, after a slow glance around the
-place, falls "a-reddin' of it up" as she mentally designated her
-attempt. She seized the stumpy broom from its corner and swept the
-floor, brushed the maze of cobwebs from ceiling and walls; beat the
-mats; wiped the stools and table, the broad window-sills and the
-shelves; shook out the dingy, ink-stained cloth; straightened the litter
-of books and papers, quills and horns; and finally went a-peering into
-the cupboards. A grimy coffee-pot and a well-matching kettle were fished
-out and rubbed; the kettle filled with water from the tubfull on the
-landing and straightway hung upon the crane; plates and cups and saucers
-and spoons brought forth; a paper of coffee, a jug of milk and a bottle
-of sugar discovered, and presently Chockey handed her mistress a cup of
-steaming mocha and modestly poured one for herself.
-
-"Oh, Chock!" cries Lady Peggy, setting down the empty cup. "What a fool
-was I to come! What am I, forsooth, in all this great desert but a grain
-of sand! And Percy, not," Lady Peggy stamps her muddy red-heeled shoe
-fiercely, "a-dyin' for me in the least! and my twin a-livin' in such a
-hole! wherever does he sleep, Chock?" Surveying the barn-like apartment
-in disgust and dismay, her gaze finally arrested by a ladder slanting in
-the darkest corner and reaching up to an opening in the ceiling.
-
-"Up there, I dare be sworn! Lud! If this 'tis to be an author," flouts
-Peggy, "God ha' mercy on 'em! I tell you what, Chock. I'll tarry a
-little, have a word with Kennaston; then we'll back, girl, whence we
-came, quick; I'll send word to Sir Robin McTart, and then let
-weddin'-bells ring as soon as ever he sees fit. No more o' love for me,
-Chock. I'm done with it forever in this world; I'll take marriage
-instead!"
-
-Chockey shakes her head ruefully as her mistress, more to emphasize her
-latest resolve than from any other motive, flings wide open the cracked
-doors of the clothes-press next the chimney-piece and gives a
-tempestuous shake-out to the garments a-hanging on the pegs.
-
-"Lud! look! Kennaston's suit of gray velvets, not much the worse for
-wear! Small need has the poor lad for fine clothes, I warrant ye; most
-like a-keepin' of 'em for pawn-shop use and bread and butter! Chock,
-unlock the box, and get out the waistcoat I broidered for my twin, at
-much expense of temper, against his birthday. So! Smooth it out! it's
-brave, eh, Chock? Fit for Court, I should fancy, and, that's right, the
-laced cravat! poor duck, I do misdoubt me, if he's seen a frill on his
-wrist since quittin' home! There!"
-
-Lady Peggy surveys the gifts she's brought, as Chockey takes them out.
-
-"Lawk, Madam, 'twere better, were't not, I bundle all Your Ladyship's
-duds and mine up yonder against His Lordship's comin'?"
-
-"Right, Chock! up with 'em, and I'll steady the road while you climb!"
-Suiting action to word, as Chockey, bearing the calf-skin box,
-cautiously mounts the rickety ladder.
-
-"What's it like, Chock?"
-
-"Nothin' I ever seed afore, My Lady; dark, stuffy; a mattress
-a-sprawlin' on the bare boards, and a pair of torn quilts, and a piller
-no bigger'n my fist, that's all!"
-
-"Enough, Chock; you and I can sleep our one night in London there as
-soundly," Lady Peggy's proud lip quivers, "as I could on down or 'twixt
-my mother's best lamb's wool! Come down, Chock, by the fire; and list,
-to-morrow, at first crow, we'll back to Kennaston. We'll 'a' been up to
-town, Chock! and, savin' my twin, never will Lady Peggy look again on
-face of any man who now treads London street. I swear!"
-
-"Hark, Madam!"
-
-Chockey jumps from the ladder, eyes a-popping, while the hubbub in the
-street below cuts short her mistress's valiant speech. Such a
-hullaballoo; such a shouting, echoing from one end of the precinct to
-t'other, as speeds mistress and maid both to the window, a-craning their
-necks far out; as sends the charwoman from her ingle-nook under ground,
-a-hobbling up the steep four flights.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- _In the which is rehearsed how Her Ladyship
- did nimbly slip into man's
- attire and estate._
-
-
-Through the fast gathering mist, through the smoke that's London's own,
-the two women leaning behold a gay company of gallants rounding the far
-corner, two hundred feet away; linked arms, swords a-touching, heels
-a-clattering; one voice high and young, uplifted in a lilt like this:
-Lady Peggy had heard that voice before.
-
- _In years to come when gallants sing,
- In praise of ladies fair,
- All will allow, I pledge you square,
- That brighter eyes n'er banished care,
- Than those that bade us do and dare,
- When George the Third was King!
- Let roof and rafter chime and ring,
- Let echo shout it back: we sing
- The merry days, My Lords and Sirs!
- When George the Third is King!_
-
-And at the chorus, a brave dozen more of pairs of lusty lungs to take it
-up and urge it on with flashing rapiers, knocking points, in the flare
-of the lights from the coffee-house at hand; and good twelve of plumed
-hats a-tossing in the air, and catch-again; and laughter loud and long,
-then dying down as that fresh sweet voice begins its second verse, and
-just so the old charwoman knocks hastily at the door, calling in Lady
-Peggy's head and Chockey's from the open.
-
-"'H'askin' Your Ladyship's parding," says she, "but I thought it no
-more'n my duty to acquaint Your Ladyship, as can't see from this 'eight,
-that Your Ladyship's brother, Lord Kennaston's a-comin' 'ome, and
-a-bringin' with 'im 'is comrades, among 'em, Sir Percy de Bohun, and
-mayhap 'er Ladyship'd like best,"--now addressing Chockey, as Lady Peggy
-paced the floor in a too-evident agitation--"like best," continued the
-dame, "to 'ide 'erself, and h'if so, the noble gentlemen h'all of 'em,
-I'm thinkin', bein' summat raised with wine, my 'umble bit of a place
-h'is h'at Her Ladyship's service for the night or as long as Her
-Ladyship sees fit, for I am this minute sent for to go down into the
-country immediate, where, God help us all! my tenth daughter what's
-married to her second husband lies at death's door!"
-
-And all the while the old charwoman is speaking between her bits of
-broken teeth, Peggy hears that other voice uplifted, ringing, gay, glad,
-care-free, as it seems to her strained ears, up and down the darkening
-little street, tapping at the window-panes, tapping at her heart-strings
-and stretching them to such a tension of anger, outraged pride, and
-wounded affection as never Lady suffered before.
-
-She thanks the old woman and hastily dismisses her; then facing about
-from the window whence she has been able to descry the merry group
-making a rush into the coffee-house, Her Ladyship, seized by a sudden
-mad impulse, says to her woman:
-
-"Chock, take my purse, tumble as fast as your two legs can carry you
-down, out, across to the wigmaker's we laughed at when we came in, buy
-me the yellow wig, Chock, that adorns the front, an' come not back
-without it, an you love me, Chock; wheedle, coax, promise more'n there
-is here," sticking the purse in the astounded woman's hand, "but get me
-the wig that is the very double of dear Sir Robin's own sweet pate!" She
-pushes Chockey out on the landing with an impetus that sends her well on
-her errand, and then, shutting and buttoning the door, Lady Peggy gets
-herself out of her furbelows and petticoats, her stays, her bodice, her
-collar, brooch, kerchief, pocket, hoop and hair pins, and into her
-brother's suit of grays, the new waistcoat and cravat she's brought him
-for a gift; she tips the coffee-pot and washes her face and pretty
-throat and hands in the brown liquid; she plaits her long hair and winds
-it close and tight about her head; she buckles on Kennaston's
-Court-rapier, she fetches his gray plumed hat with its paste buckle from
-the press; she ogles herself in the six-inch mirror; she swaggers,
-swings, struts; and, says she, dipping her finger in the soot of the old
-chimney and marking out two black beetling brows over her own slender
-ones,--
-
-"An I know not how to play at being Sir Robin, Lady Peggy's chosen
-sweetheart, boldly and with a loud voice; know not how to swear and
-prance and pick a pretty quarrel, crying 'Match me your Lady Diana with
-my Lady Peggy!' then never did I dozen times for sport don my twin's
-breeches and coat and masquerade at being that sweet creature,--a man!
-Ha! I have it all at fingers' ends!" cries Peggy, fumbling in her
-discarded pocket. "Here's the very letter I writ for Sir Robin to take
-and present to my brother. 'Twill stand me in good stead to-night that I
-forgot to give it to him. If Chockey but succeed in cajoling the man out
-of his wig, an' if the gallants come not ere I can fit it to my
-head!"--opening the door impetuously almost to bump against the
-returning Chockey's nose.
-
-"Thou hast it! Oh Chock! 'Tis I! be not afraid. Come in; adjust it to my
-poll,--so! Lose not a moment; pick up my petticoats, leave not a scrap
-that bespeaks a woman; there! You're dropping a hair-pin; now, up with
-ye to the loft! an' no matter if rats nibble your toes, Chock, or mice
-come play bo-peep with your eye-winkers, or spiders weave across your
-mouth, an you stir, cry out, move an inch to the creaking of a board,
-I'll leave you here your lone self to shift as best you may! Up girl!"
-touching the speechless Chockey with the rapier-tip urgingly, "and 'tis
-Sir Robin McTart that bids you!"
-
-The obedient and trembling waiting-woman was not much sooner out of
-sight in the loft, than again the voice echoed up to where Lady Peggy
-stood in the gruesome ambush of the landing, well back in the darkest
-corner behind a pile of boards and dbris, bricks and dust, and
-what-not-else tumbled there from the chimney during the last and many
-previous storms.
-
-Nearer came the song, then the chorus, broken now with more of chat and
-laughter; the footsteps sound upon the street, the house-door opens,
-slams, and up they troop, stumbling in the blackness but knowing well
-the way, it seems; merry, jocund, up, up, with the refrain of the song
-still lingering amid their talk in snatches, until they gain the top.
-
-"Are we then indeed at your door, Kennaston?" cries the first to reach,
-as he feels at the latch.
-
-"Split me, Escombe, you're there if you can go no farther. Egad! Sirs,"
-cries the young host, "an I never reach to pinnacle of Fame's ladder, at
-the least do I lodge as high as I could get:--a roof that suits my empty
-purse!"
-
-"Nay, Kennaston." Peggy, in her man's gear, trembles at sound of that
-tone, for 'tis Percy who speaks now, whiles they all push pell-mell into
-her twin's chambers, strike lights, pull out candles from cupboard, stir
-the fire.
-
-"Nay, Kennaston," says this one, "while De Bohun lives there's ever a
-full purse lad, t' exchange for thy empty one,--and well thou know'st
-it."
-
-"Tut, tut!" answers the young man of letters, adding as he glances
-about, "'pon my soul, gentlemen, my Hebe has been outdoing herself. Saw
-we ever before in this room, stools lacking dust? floor, riff-raff?
-walls their festoons? hearth its ashes? coffee-pot its rust? and, by my
-life, the kettle filled and steaming!"
-
-A peal of mirth greets this nimble sally, as the host pulls from the
-table drawer a pack of cards and his guests from their pockets a dozen
-bottles of Falernian.
-
-"Dead broke, am I, My Lords and Gentlemen," says he, "but here's the
-whole Court and the deuce," flinging the pack in the midst of his
-guests, "play away an ye've a shilling left amongst ye. Let it be
-Commerce or Hazard; I'll hold the counters; fill the glasses, as long as
-there's a drop to pour; keep a lookout for sharpers," laughing, "and
-thank God I've even a garret wherein to welcome men of vogue like
-yourselves!"
-
-A burst of applause follows this; plumed hats are tossed aside,
-wrist-frills upturned; His Grace of Escombe is shuffling the pack; Sir
-Percy stands with his back to the fire, coat-skirts held from the
-cheerful blaze he's made; stools are drawn up; the host takes his silk
-kerchief from his throat and polishes the mugs. Chockey has her eye
-glued to a chink in the cover that divides her loft from the scene of
-revelry below;--when, a bold knock sounds at the door, and the master
-with a cheery:
-
-"Come along!" throws wide the portal.
-
-The fine gentleman who stands before him makes a profound bow, to which
-he responds with one not less magnificent.
-
-"Allow me, Lord Kennaston of Kennaston, since it is, I am persuaded, the
-brother of Lady Peggy Burgoyne whom I have the pleasure of
-addressing--?" and at her name, Sir Percy lets his brocaded skirts flop
-and starts forward eagerly--"of addressing, to present to you this note
-in the hand-writing of Your Lordship's adorable sister, the which she
-gave me, wherewith to present and commend me to Your Lordship's good
-offices while I am up in town!"
-
-Another salaam given and returned, while Kennaston, with grace, ushers
-his new acquaintance in, sets him a stool, all the while eye
-quick-perusing Lady Peggy's scrawl.
-
-"Gentlemen!" says their host, "allow me to introduce to you, and, Sir,
-these gentlemen to you, Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, His Grace
-of Escombe, Sir Percy de Bohun, the Honorable Jack Chalmers, Sir Wyatt
-Lovell," etc., etc., etc. The which ceremony being concluded amid many
-bows and all due forms of mutual delight, the new-comer was cordially
-invited to take a hand in the game.
-
-Now, as true 'twas that Lady Peggy had never been in a coach until the
-morning to which this was evening, so true was it that Her Ladyship had
-not a farthing to her pocket left, and although a good gamester's
-daughter, she hesitated, making pretense of hanging her hat and of
-settling to its proper place her rapier, and pinching her ruffles. While
-she did so, the rest chatting, Sir Percy crossed the room, and, in a
-tone that was not heard save by the one he addressed, said to Kennaston:
-
-"As I live, Sir, now's my chance; I'll pick a quarrel with this
-jackanapes that's dared to oust me from Peggy's heart. Aye, will I! the
-sooner the better; blood'll spill, Kennaston, or ever that puppet and I
-are thirty minutes older! Mark me! Your sister shall know and hear I'm
-willing to die for her sake, or--to kill!"
-
-Peggy, meantime, in this second, got her courage well screwed up, and,
-with a laugh, fitly disguising her voice, said she, seating herself with
-her legs well under the table--for, at this particular juncture, Her
-Ladyship, looking down, had beheld with dismay the womanish and
-forgotten fashion of her shoes.
-
-"Rot me! Gentlemen, your humble servant's fresh from Will's, where, 'pon
-my life! such an apt company of wits and beaux encountered I, as swept
-my pockets clean and left me not the jingle of a shilling wherewith to
-bless myself. Your Grace, My Lords, Sirs, and Gentlemen," quoth Peggy
-with a fine inclusive wave of her hand, "will, I'm sure, thus excuse me
-from the game to-night."
-
-But she had counted without either host or guests, for all of these save
-Sir Percy de Bohun on the instant pulled purses out and tendered them,
-crying, as with a single voice,--
-
-"Fie! Fie! Sir Robin! Are we highwaymen? tricksters? Honor us by using
-our sovereigns as they were your own, eh, Sir Percy, have we not the
-right of the matter?" asked Jack Chalmers, turning to the tall young
-man, who, having crossed the room again, now stood leaning moodily
-against the chimney-piece, frowning, tapping hearth with heel in too
-evident impatience of the subject of discussion.
-
-"I humbly ask your pardon, Mr. Chalmers," he replies, "both for
-differing with you all, and for expressing the same. To my way of
-thinking"--adds Sir Percy, with deliberation, ill-matched by the flash
-of his eyes as they take a scornful measure of the supposed Sir
-Robin--"to my way of thinking, any gentleman who carries his company
-into any other gentleman's chambers without the means of a paltry game
-of loo or cart in 's pocket's not quite such a proper young man 's he
-might be!" And with this, Sir Percy laid his hand upon his sword hilt,
-and Kennaston laid his upon that, attempting to stay the torrent.
-
-"Tut! tut!" cried this one and that.
-
-"His Lordship's dead drunk with Cupid, Sir Robin, mind him not,"
-whispers another.
-
-"De Bohun breaks a joke," exclaims a third, all at once.
-
-And in the same moment, also, upsprings my Lady Peggy, hand on hilt too,
-and says she loudly, same time as the rest:
-
-"A pox on ye for a libeler! Sir Percy de Bohun, mayhap it's the errand
-Your Lordship's up in town a-pursuing hath turned Your Lordship's
-brain?" Here Lady Peggy laughs in derision and stands full height
-updrawn upon her girl's red heels.
-
-"Curse me! but you are impertinent, Sir," responds Percy, taking a step
-forward, his anger rising as he beholds his purpose galloping to the
-goal of its quick fulfilment. "What then, an it please you, is my
-'errand up in town?' since you are thus familiar with my gaits; tell 'em
-off, Sir Robin McTart, I give ye leave!"
-
-"With your leave, or without it," cries Peggy in a voice that causes
-Chockey to lift the loft-cover an inch higher, and so, kneeling with
-nose flattened against floor, to behold her mistress's fine and splendid
-show of valor. "I'd have you hear, Sir, that to persons of fashion the
-matter of your suit near Lady Diana Weston's a jeer and jest of the
-first flavour,--for 'twere easy seen a lady of her quality, Sir, 'd not
-be a-wasting her time on you."
-
-"Damme! Sir!" cries Sir Percy, now thoroughly aroused and far more in
-earnest than ever he was at the beginning. "You lie! Aye, My Lords,
-Sirs, and Gentlemen! Nay, ye can not stop my mouth," unsheathing his
-rapier; Peggy does likewise, each pushing and warding from them the
-restraining hands and words of their associates.
-
-"A foul lie! My errand up in town, Sir Robin McTart, is to try to drown
-my sorrows as I may, because the only lady that ever I loved set me the
-pace to the devil by a-refusing of my suit come Easter-day, three months
-to an hour ago."
-
-Lady Peggy flushes under the coffee stains; her arm trembles; but she is
-valiantly happy and confident, and her heart goes beating the joyfullest
-sort of a tune beneath the 'broidered waistcoat she'd made for her twin.
-
-"And her name," cries Sir Percy with a glance of imperious, aggressive
-temper shot right into Peggy's very face,--"her name's not Lady Diana
-Weston, but 'tis Lady Peggy Burgoyne!--"
-
-Now Chock's whole head slips leash, and she bends with bated breath and
-heaving breast to listen closer.
-
-Lady Peggy starts, but waving her rapier over her head, laughs loud,
-long and derisively.
-
-"Lady Peggy Burgoyne, Sir," shaking the hilt of his weapon under Peg's
-nose, repeats Sir Percy. "And until you, Sir, with your damnable arts
-and silly bumpkin ways, when she encountered you in Kent, had turned her
-from me, she was to me kindest of ladies and of loves. Your servant, Sir
-Robin McTart," concludes Percy with a low bow, sticking the floor with
-his rapier-point, "when and where you please!"
-
-"Here and now!" cries Peg, her heart a-thumping for joy, but so
-pleasured and alas! so puzzled with the getting out of a scrape, which
-she has found so little difficulty in getting into, that she is feign
-on, and make the best cut she can with her cloth.
-
-"Here and now!" repeats Her Ladyship, "for I do throw back into Your
-Lordship's teeth the lie"--Peg bows low to her opponent--"you gave me
-whiles, and affirm that for these many years, or ever you, Sir, set eyes
-upon her, Lady Peggy Burgoyne's been mine, heart and soul, Sir!"
-
-"Damn you, Sir!" interrupts Percy hotly, unable to contain his
-choler,--"to so defame the noblest lady that ever was born!"
-
-"I repeat," cries Peggy, glowing with suppressed delight at her lover's
-fidelity, and eager for as much more as he may have to vent. "Lady
-Peggy's eyes are glued fast of this face of mine! Peggy's hands are my
-hands! Peggy's lips are my lips! Peggy's kisses have ever been my
-kisses!"
-
-At this, Sir Percy tears off his coat, waistcoat, cravat; flings them
-into the corner; rolls up his sleeves, while a confused murmur
-circulates amid the gallants over their cards and Falernian wine.
-
-"Peggy's heart beats in my breast!" continues Her Ladyship, ranting and
-swashing up and down the room; upsetting a couple of candles in her
-path, and now all unrecking of her womanish shoes. "Gentlemen," panting,
-smiling, triumphant, saluting her companions with her weapon, "Lady
-Peggy and I do so adore, love and worship one another that we are not
-two but one!"
-
-"Here and now!" shouts Sir Percy. "Off with your coat and ruffles, Sir,
-and choose any two of these gentlemen to your seconds, Sir; I'll take
-who's left!"
-
-Chalmers and Kennaston press forward to Lady Peggy, while His Grace of
-Escombe and Mr. Wyatt cross to Sir Percy.
-
-"Lord Kennaston, I pray you pace off the distance," says Lady Peggy, now
-at the top of her bent and delirious with joy over Percy's love of her,
-with no least intention of touching him, good fencer though she be, and
-willing enough--such a woman is she--to risk a prick at his hands for
-sake of the after-salve of the mighty gratitude and passion the minx is
-now sure of.
-
-"Off with your trappings, Sir," cries Percy.
-
-"That will I not!" cries Peggy, taking the first position on the field
-of honor in all the bravery of her twin's suit of gray velvets. "You'll
-kill me, an you do't at all, with my clothes on ready to my burial, and
-I swear ye all, with my latest breath, Lady Peggy and I'll lie in the
-same coffin when it comes to that ceremony."
-
-Then in the smoky flare from the dying fire and the slovening candles
-stuck in their bottles; 'mid the murmur and succeeding hush of the
-gallants, some with cups, some with cards in their hands, Peggy and her
-lover salute and take their stands.
-
-Says she: "What's the word, My Lord?"
-
-Says he: "If you like, let Lord Kennaston shake the dice-box; at the
-third throw, Sir, I'm here, ready food for your steel to flesh in!"
-
-"It suits me well," answers Peg, as her twin rattles the ivories.
-"Here's for Lady Peggy!" cries she.
-
-"Here's for Lady Peggy Burgoyne!" shouts he, as Kennaston makes the
-third throw, and Chockey, like to swoon and she a stout heart, never-ail
-or afeard of even a churchyard on the darkest night, shaking like an
-aspen-leaf, puts foot on the top rung of the ladder; and Peg and Percy
-thrust, lunge, withdraw, riposte, hither, yon, keen-eyed, pitched to
-highest note, nerves strung to cracking--just for a few seconds, shorter
-time'n it takes to set it down, far.
-
-"A touch, a hit!" cry all at once as a spurt of blood darts up the
-supposed Sir Robin's blade, and Percy bows, declaring himself quite
-satisfied, as he must, though 'tis a state of mind he's very remote from
-enjoying.
-
-[Illustration: A touch, a hit!...]
-
-My Lady Peggy winces under her wound, but she has not been Kennaston's
-playfellow for naught, and as ugly pricks as this one have been her
-portion in the past; Chockey, nevertheless, from her nest, pales and
-utters a smothered shriek which is quite lost in the loud talking that
-follows, while Chalmers winds the kerchief Sir Percy tenders about the
-wrist of the wounded.
-
-"Now to the cards, gentlemen," cries His Grace of Escombe, pulling out
-his purse. "To such a gallant as our friend Sir Robin here, my fingers
-itch to lose ten, twenty, nay as many pounds as his skill can rid me of;
-for such a pretty play of the steel as his must argue a lucky throw of
-the dice."
-
-"Hear! hear! hear!" shout they all, drinking brimming mugs to the two
-who have lately fought, and settling themselves at the tables with a
-rattle and a rush of laughter and merry humor.
-
-Lady Peggy sits, gritting her teeth at the slit in her white flesh, with
-her back to the door and, betwixt the uproar and clinking and shuffling,
-she hears footsteps coming up the stairs. Some intuition bids her be the
-one to respond to the rapping that presently sounds out.
-
-"Asking your pardon," murmurs Her Ladyship to her companions as she
-quits the table. When, as she opens, a new-caught street urchin speaks
-sharp, with saucer eyes in-peering at the quality.
-
-"An it please yer Lordships, there's a fine gentlemen below as his name
-is Sir Robin McTart."
-
-Peggy draws in, bangs the door in the boy's face, squares about, and
-says:
-
-"By your leave, gentlemen, a most particular messenger awaits me below;
-for a few moments only, I crave your indulgence for my absence. I'll be
-with you in ten minutes."
-
-"No! no! no!" cry they all, save De Bohun, who is counting his cards,
-and Sir Wyatt who exclaims:
-
-"Yes, an it be a messenger on business for a fair lady; no, an it be
-otherwise. Gadzooks! Sir Robin, make a half-clean breast of it. Comes
-Mercury from Phyllis or from a mere man?"
-
-Peg answers: "I swear to you, Sirs, I go down on business of the gravest
-import to a lady," and makes for the door.
-
-"Pledge her! Pledge her! a bumper! a bumper!" cry they all in one voice
-with much pleasant laughter.
-
-"Here's to Sir Robin's nameless fair! Zounds! but for so little yeared a
-personage to have two strings to his bow!"
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- _Wherein Lady Peggy doth encounter her flouted
- lover, receiveth a rapier-prick: makes acquaintance
- of her hated rival and
- of Mr. Brummell._
-
-
-And much more of a like nature reaches Lady Peggy as she plunges down
-the stairs and presently finds herself, by the light of the lamp of his
-chair, a-confronting Sir Robin McTart himself!
-
-"Nay, nay, Sir! I am not Kennaston of Kennaston," responds Peg, looking
-grave, and making excellent show of her blood-stained, linen-bound
-wrist.
-
-"'Tis here he dwells, and, as I know well by reputation, you are a
-peaceful, law-abiding man, I'd counsel you not to mount. Such a company
-of cut-throat, cut-purse brawlers, Sir, as would not leave a farthing in
-your pocket or lace upon your shirt."
-
-Sir Robin, as Her Ladyship had shrewdly guessed, drew back and shivered
-at this lively description.
-
-"Trust me, Sir Robin: hist!" Peg's voice sinks to a mere whisper. "I am
-Lady Peggy's best friend and neighbor at home; 'twould be her will, an
-she stood here, that you should not adventure your precious life in the
-unseemly crowd with which her brother hath seen fit to surround
-himself."
-
-"Lud, Sir! Who are you," chatters Sir Robin trembling betwixt delight
-and terror, "that knows so well the temper of Lady Peggy Burgoyne's
-disposition? What's your name, Sir?"
-
-"No matter for my name, Sir, I have Lady Peggy's best interests at
-heart, and yours. She bade me, did ever I encounter you in evil
-neighborhood, tell you, for her sake, eschew it. Hark ye! Sir Robin, out
-of this hole as fast as your men's legs can carry you. Above yonder, 's
-one who's sworn to kill you!"
-
-"Who's he?" demands Sir Robin, one foot now in his sedan, his little
-eyes twinkling both ways with fright.
-
-"Sir Percy de Bohun," replies Peg in a hollow whisper. "Look you, Sir,"
-showing her bloody wrist, "there's a taste of his quality. I warn
-you--'tis from Peggy's own self--get back to Kent, whence you came, and
-tarry not, for your life's at yonder desperado's mercy while you linger
-up in town."
-
-"Is My Lady Peggy returned to Kent to her godmother?" quavers Sir Robin,
-now well inside his chair.
-
-"Nay, Sir; as her brother supposes, she's at home at Kennaston."
-
-"I'll seek her there!" cries Sir Robin, tendering his hand. "And, Sir,
-my humble duty and gratitude to you for your admirable condescension. I
-would I knew your name and station."
-
-"I'm up in town incognito, Sir, for a lady's sake," smiles the minx.
-
-"When I return, Sir, I'll seek you out at White's or Will's. I dare be
-sworn so fine a gentleman must needs be a buck of the first order."
-
-"Seek me, Sir, and Godspeed you down to Kennaston or Kent!"
-
-At the word, Sir Robin in his chair sets forth a-swinging round the
-corner, light of heart and bright of hope, while the subject and object
-of his thoughts and passion stands for a moment leaning, sighing,
-betwixt laughter and tears, against the door-frame.
-
-My Lady Peggy's first impulse is to cut and run; indeed her slim legs
-are so stretched to begin, when the remembrance of poor Chock in her
-garret cage comes to her mind, and, with a grimace, she turns in, jumps
-up the stairs, and is in the midst of the group, now well on in their
-cups and more hilarious than orderly in their conversation.
-
-Peg was not her father's girl for naught that night. To the tune of
-three hundred pounds, fourteen and six, was she the richer, and rewarded
-for the many dreary evenings she had spent at Kennaston, a-watching her
-father win and lose with the Vicar and the Bishop, whenever the latter
-came on his visits.
-
-By dint of spilling her wine deftly under the table, she had emptied as
-many mugs as the best bibber among 'em, and at four in the morning found
-herself the only one who was sober, or even awake.
-
-'Twas not a beautiful sight thus to behold, in the pale pink of the
-dawn, a dozen or so of merry gentlemen a-sprawling about on floor,
-tables, chairs,--a-snoring and a-tossing in their sleep; but 'twas of
-the fashion of the times when, to be a fine gentleman, one must be
-drunk, at the least, once in the twenty-four hours.
-
-All save Sir Percy; almost at swords' points he had quitted the company
-hours before, a little in his cups, but steady withal, murmuring to
-himself as he fumbled on the rickety stairs--Peg, leaning over the rail,
-unseen in the darkness, womanlike to watch lest he trip and fall, heard
-him:
-
-"'Sdeath! an what that popinjay say be true, I'll marry Lady Diana out
-of hand, and show the minx I'm not to be cut out of a wife by such a
-flea-bitten rotten-rod as Sir Robin McTart!"
-
-"So easy taken then is my loss!" says Peggy, with a renewed fire of
-jealousy burning at her heart, as she returns to the scene of her
-winnings.
-
-Sick at heart, for a single instant she surveys the room, and then,
-finger on lip, it does not take her long to signal up to Chockey, motion
-her down with the calf-skin box, and to begin, with shamed face, in the
-darkest corner, to strip off her man's attire.
-
-Lady Peggy has laid aside the yellow wig; Chockey weeping, praying that
-they may get away in safety, is spreading out the Levantine fit for her
-mistress to jump into it, when, for the second time within the twelve
-hours, Her Ladyship's heart stands still to the patter and thump of
-footsteps climbing the last flight.
-
-"Hold, Chock!" cries she, clapping on the wig. "Bundle up my duds, tie
-'em tight; so! give me it; pick up the box, put on your cloak and bonnet
-and a bold face; follow and ape me. An you love me, Chock, an' I thrust,
-thrust too! an' I knock 'em down, follow suit! I'd sooner die, Chock,
-than be caught now!"
-
-With which, My Lady Peggy flung wide the door, pushed out the Abigail,
-drew her weapon, and, with a rush, the two of them tumbled down the
-stairs, taking on their way a giant of a man who struggled and struck
-out, and dropped fruits and flowers and curses, and yet gave in to the
-splendid tweeks and pinches which the lusty Chockey dealt him on his
-arms and legs, and, falling headlong, on the lower stairs, darted up the
-street crying:
-
-"Watch!" at the top of his lungs, nor getting any answer, for Watch was
-snoring in the tavern and the sun now shining broad.
-
-"Chock," said her mistress, "go you on before me to the King's Arms,
-where we alighted, engage the seats in the coach, and hark ye, child, an
-aught betide I come not, get you home without me and tell His Lordship
-I'm gone to Kent on a sick-call from my godmother. Lud! it's lies all
-the way to being a man! I'll not walk with you, lass; 'tis not seemly,
-and when I reach the inn I'll pretend I know you not, hire a room,
-change my clothes and slip down to you, unseen if I can. Now, off with
-you, quickly, for I ache to follow. Would to God I could doff these
-garments and into my petticoats again!" added Lady Peggy ruefully,
-glancing at her hastily tied up bundle and, at the same moment, with the
-broad of her sword, pushing Chock into the street with a will that sent
-her a-spinning on her way.
-
-Indifferent then, as though the outgoing damsel were no concern of hers,
-presently, with a swagger, yet ill-concealing the anxiety she felt
-afresh as now sobs and female voices assailed her ears, the mock Sir
-Robin McTart emerged upon the street.
-
-There halted a chair between the posts. In the chair sat Lady Diana
-Weston accompanied by her woman. Both wept and trembled, while still
-afar the stout lungs of the terrified giant shouted:
-
-"Watch!"
-
-Peg stood still and stared; all the jealous blood in her burned in her
-cheeks. Lady Diana here! and wherefore? and at such an untoward hour;
-veil displaced, eyes red, but still most undeniably handsome, nay
-beautiful.
-
-"Oh Sir!" cried Lady Diana beseechingly, raising two imploring hands
-outside the chair door toward Lady Peggy.
-
-"I pray of your honor!" whimpered the Abigail in concert.
-
-"I implore your protection, Sir, as you are a gentleman and man of
-honor, as your mien disposes me. I came here but now and sent my footman
-up to the rooms of a--a friend, who is ill, Sir,--with a token of regard
-in the shape of fruit and flowers, when the man must have been set upon
-by thieves and beaten, for he--"
-
-"I heard him," finishes Peg, stepping nearer to the chair. "And I assure
-you, Madam, I put the varlet who attacked him to his pace with a prick.
-If I can serve you further, command me."
-
-As My Lady bows low, she is conscious that it now behooves her to state
-concisely her name and station; and, loathing and hating the deception
-more than she could express, she still adds (her motive not unmixed with
-the natural curiosity to discover who is the object of Lady Diana's
-morning call):
-
-"Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, at Your Ladyship's service."
-
-Diana bows, blushes, almost ogles, minx that she is, noting well the
-fine eyes and beautiful mouth of the gallant at her side.
-
-"Lady Diana Weston, Sir Robin, daughter to the Earl of Brookwood, at
-your service."
-
-Peg bows, hat in hand, bundle under arm. Swift as youth's impulse ever
-is, says she, taking lightning-like measure of her chance and determined
-to probe matters to their core:
-
-"Your Ladyship's name was on the lips above," nodding up at Kennaston's
-windows. "I drank the toast with a will, I do assure you, and would
-double it now. Surely, if you'll allow me to say so, Sir Percy de
-Bohun's a gentleman of a rare good taste, likewise Lord Kennaston, Sir
-Wyatt Lovell, half-a-dozen more a-pledging Your Ladyship to the tune of
-_nonpareil_ all night long."
-
-"You flatter, Sir, I do protest!" cried the lady in the chair, blushing
-like the reddest rose that grows, but who might say for whose sake?
-since Peg had named so many.
-
-"Oh, Sir," Lady Diana's voice now lowered. "Your countenance is one to
-inspire confidence. I pray you judge me not harshly if I venture to
-inquire, since you were of their company, how fares poor Sir Percy de
-Bohun? The fruits and flowers I fetched were for him, since I am
-informed he pines, eats nothing, droops, mopes, and no longer is to be
-enticed among the fair. Can you give me news of him?--or of--Lord
-Kennaston?" adds Lady Diana wilily and with another magnificent
-accession of color. Thus did Slyboots pursue inquiry on that lame horse
-which is named Subterfuge.
-
-"Aye, Madam, that can I. 'Tis as you say; but as you yourself, if report
-speak true, be the cause of his distemper, methinks you should know how
-to effect the cure. I see Your Ladyship's man returning; there is no
-more danger. I take my leave of you, Madam," hand to heart, bundle
-sticking out under other arm. "It is to me one of the most fortunate
-chances of life to have had this encounter," bending sweet eyes, which
-Diana returns with a will. "Fear nothing! the cut-throats have long
-since made off by a rear alley. The shouter is doubtless ere this at his
-cover. Did you need my further protection, 'twould be yours."
-
-"From my heart, Sir, I thank you," cries Lady Diana very sweetly. "May
-we meet again, and soon!"
-
-Peggy bowing, walks quickly off, her pretty teeth gritted together.
-
-"May we meet again! Never! Fruits and flowers! forsooth! Pines and
-droops! forsooth! 'Slife! and how the minx reddened at his name.
-A-seekin' of him out like that at cock-crow too! Lud! an these be town
-fashions and morals I'll be glad to get home! No I won't! No I won't!"
-spake out Lady Peggy's heart fit to burst bonds. "Percy's here, and my
-soul's here, and 'tain't no use to talk about having a spirit, and
-a-stoppin' lovin' when you ain't loved! You can't do it!"
-
-Peggy, recking not of her path, eyes glued to ground, paced on, having
-forgot the whole world else, in the misery of her discovery of Lady
-Diana's passion for Sir Percy.
-
-There were few abroad at that early hour. Some market wagons leisuring
-to the city; an occasional chariot full of gallants getting home after
-the night's frolic; and just now, at the cross of two streets, a
-handsome coach thrown open-windowed, with a gentleman, the very pink and
-model of all elegance, lolling back amid the cushions.
-
-By the lead of his eyes 'twas plainly to be seen he had not slept for
-forty-eight hours or so, but otherwise his aspect was as if newly out of
-a perfumed bandbox. Suddenly his gaze caught Peggy at the crossing,
-fixed itself upon the lace cravat at her throat, and then, with a spring
-as alert as that of any monkey throwing himself out of tree by his tail,
-this mirror of fashion thrust his head out at window, jerked his
-coachman's arm, said in a voice not loud, but piercing:
-
-"Worthing, run down the young gentleman at the crossing; don't hurt him,
-but run him down an' I'll give you twenty shillings!" He then sank back
-again amid the pillows.
-
-No sooner said than done.
-
-Just at the instant when Peggy recalled her position and was
-bewilderedly wondering where she had wandered to, clutching her bundle
-and all of a muddle, click! grazed coach-wheels against her shins, cock
-went her hat into the puddle, but, heaven be praised! her wig clung, and
-she clung to her bundle; out of coach the pink brocade gentleman, down
-from the rumble his footman, pick up Lady Peggy, hat and all, rubbing
-the mud out of her silk stockings, clapping her hands; yet relented she
-not from the bundle, and all a-breath the loller cries:
-
-"Into my coach, Sir! I do humbly crave pardon, Sir, I do indeed. I'll
-not take no for an answer, Sir, not by my oath! Such a damage from one
-gentleman to another, Sir, demands all the reparation possible, Sir,"
-and forthwith Peggy is lifted into the splendid coach and the splendid
-gentleman springs in after her, and the footmen jump up and the whip
-cracks, and off they whirl before she can open her mouth.
-
-"Mr. Brummell at your service, Sir," continues he, feeling of Peg's
-palm, noting the wound at her wrist, and the pallor of her face which
-shines even though the coffee stains. "We're en route to Peter's Court
-where my surgeon shall attend you. 'Slife! Sir, you're not hurt, I'm
-sure. I told Worthing not to endanger a hair of your head and it's
-impossible he should have disobeyed me!"
-
-Peggy hears this singular string of speeches and, although stunned a bit
-and not a little alarmed in her mind, she has country breeding at her
-back and such a robust constitution as rallies on the spot.
-
-"I'd be obliged, Mr. Brummell, if you'd set me down at once, Sir! I'm
-none the worse, and I've business of import calling me far hence, and
-with dispatch."
-
-"Never, Sir, never!" returns Beau Brummell, with an impressive wave of
-his jeweled hand. "Zounds! Sir, I had you spilled to get me the pattern
-and fashion of tying your cravat from you! and split me! if I let you go
-until I've mastered that adorable knot! I've my reputation at stake,
-Sir, for the tying of 'em. You've outdone me at your throat, Sir, and
-'tis Beau Brummell, the best dressed and worst imitated man in Europe,
-that has the honor of telling you so. Come, come, Sir," continues this
-nonesuch, famed alike at Court and brawl for his finery and drollery,
-"out with your name, Sir, I beg, and render me your eternally grateful."
-
-Lady Peggy's gaze falls inadvertently on the bundle across her knees; it
-begins to bulge and burst the paper and string, indeed a tape of her
-petticoat is oozing out even now as she pokes it back, hiding its
-tell-tale under the skirt of her coat.
-
-"'Slife!" says Peggy to herself in a terrible heat. "An I must stop a
-man, I must. God's will--or the Devil's, as dad says--be done!" and
-forthwith she tucks up her knee, lays hand on sword-hilt, laughs quite
-merrily and answers:
-
-"Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, at your service, Mr. Brummell. I
-do protest, upon my oath! 'twas a marvelous device to spill me to borrow
-my tie. 'Tis yours, Sir, and the fashion of it, an you'll do me the
-honor to accept a lesson."
-
-"Sir Robin McTart!" echoes the Beau delightedly, "my old friend Sir
-Hector's son and heir? I swear, boy, you favor not your sire. Peace to
-his soul, 'twas an ugly gentleman, while you, Sir,--Zounds! The
-ladies'll make hay for you, I promise you. Where do you stop? Are you up
-in town long? What letters do you bring?"
-
-"The King's Arms, Sir, in the Strand," replies Peg glibly, while the
-Beau frowns. "I'm arrived but yesterday. I brought not a letter, Sir.
-There you have my history."
-
-"No King's Arms for Sir Hector's son. You'll home with me, lad; and I'll
-show you what town life is. I'll put you up at the best clubs, introduce
-you to the Prince; present you at Court; dine, wine, mount
-you,--Gadzooks, Sir Robin, the man that invented that tie of the lace!"
-tipping his finger at Lady Peggy's home-made cravat, "deserves all and
-more than Brummell can do for him!"
-
-At which Peggy laughed the more heartily, as that she felt the paper
-beneath her coat skirts crack wider, and was spent wondering what she
-should do when they should reach Peter's Court, and when she might be
-able to get into her Levantine once again.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- _In the which Sir Percy de Bohun's own man
- goes on his master's errand to Kennaston
- Castle, crossing Sir Robin
- McTart on the road._
-
-
-Somewhat later in the day, as the sun peeped in at the narrow windows of
-Kennaston's garret in Lark Lane, it shone straight down upon the face of
-Peg's twin, and also upon that of Sir Percy de Bohun, just returned,
-after a tub and a grooming at the hands of his faithful man Grigson, who
-even now was performing like offices for the young host. The other
-gentlemen had long since been set upon their legs and fetched off to
-their homes by their men.
-
-Percy held his chin between his palms, his elbows resting upon the table
-where cards and glasses still littered.
-
-"'Sdeath, Kennaston," cries he, without moving. "I can live this fashion
-no longer! To be shot like a partridge would be better. Flouted by
-Peggy, derided by this upstart Sir Robin, who, by my life! is a pretty
-fellow all said and done, is past endurance! Give me a pistol, Grigson,
-and I'll put an end of myself now and here."
-
-To this passionate declaration, Kennaston merely makes answer by lifting
-an arm above the tub, waving it in the air, and, as Grigson scrubs him
-down, wagging his wet head and remarking:
-
-"Don't be damned ridiculous, Percy, and pray hold your peace, since I am
-at this moment composing an ode to my mistress's smile."
-
-"Your mistress be hanged, Sir! What know you of love to sit in a tub and
-make verses to her?"
-
-"I know enough of't," sighs the host, "to have been in like case with
-yourself any time this twelve-month! and 'tis a monstrous thing for you
-to thus impeach me, when 'tis you whom My Lady Diana favors rather than
-myself."
-
-"Lady Diana be damned!" cries Percy rising. "She's a coquette, Sir, and
-at bottom adores you, as does the fish the bait the while she plays and
-sidles 'round it, being sure in th' end she'll swallow it, hook and
-all."
-
-"Very fine, i' faith, yet while I sigh, you're the one she smiles upon.
-Oh, Percy! Had I but a fortune! Could I but make my name in letters!
-Then perchance I'd stand my chance; but as 'tis,"--Peg's twin fetches a
-sigh that sends the water splashing about the wine-stained floor.
-
-"As 'tis, Sir, counsel me, an you love me. Shall I hie me to Kennaston
-and wait upon your sister?"
-
-"Write her a letter of fire and sword, and blood and famine; stuff it
-full of oaths, protests, suicides, murders, as is a Christmas pudding of
-plums! There's quill, ink and paper to your hand."
-
-"I'll do it and send it by Grigson on my fastest horse this day. I
-should have the answer before Friday?"
-
-"Aye, you should," allows the host with an evident reservation. "Now,
-for God's sake, Sir, stop cackling and let me finish my ode."
-
-Which he did a-sitting in his bath, while Grigson dressed his wig.
-
-The toilet, and the letter, and the poem, were all three finished at
-once, and, without more ado, Sir Percy dispatched his man with the
-missive to Lady Peggy.
-
-"Come not back until you deliver it in person," quoth the lover; "an you
-show yourself minus an answer, I'll ship you to the Colonies by the next
-packet."
-
-After seeing him off the two young men repaired to the coffee-house they
-frequented, and there the first news that greeted them was an account,
-exaggerated to the last degree, as was the fashion of those times as
-well as these, of "Lady D---- W----'s adventure with footpads in Lark
-Lane, where her chair crossed en route to her mantua-maker's; of how Sir
-R----n McT----t had rescued Her Ladyship and Her Ladyship's Abigail from
-the clutches of these villains at the hazard of his own life; had,
-single-handed, put the whole gang to flight; and this, although
-suffering from a severe wound in the right wrist, the which this gallant
-young scion of a noble name had received in an affair of honor with Sir
-P----y de B----n only that very night previous." In point of fact gossip
-cried, and print set forth, that "the town was ringing with the valor of
-Sir R----n McT----t, whose fame as a buck and man of fashion was no less
-than his expertness at the saving of Beauty in distress. For be it known
-that no other personage than the renowned Beau B----l had set his seal
-upon Sir R----n's mould by begging from him the pattern of his cravat
-and the mode of his knot. That Sir R----n was now a guest at Mr.
-B----l's home, and, being up in town for the season, let ladies fair
-beware and set their most adorable caps, for 'twas well understood so
-fine a young gentleman was nowhere else to be met with, nor one of such
-courage and skill at cards, saddle, or the dance."
-
-The which as he read it gave Sir Percy no great food for congratulation,
-but the rather caused him to sink into a kind of melancholy from which
-no effort of his companion could arouse him. Like a dullard he sat,
-staring at the print or the walls, the livelong day, and far into the
-night, waiting for Grigson's return, and beside himself with a silent
-jealous fury as each new entrance to the coffee-room gave his own
-particular version of Sir Robin's vogue.
-
-The real little Sir Robin, meanwhile, on his journey down to Kennaston
-in search of My Lady Peggy, had got some three hours' start of the
-faithful Grigson, and even now, he, for the first time in his life,
-stood in the long, bare drawing-room of Kennaston Castle, tip-toeing to
-the mirror, pulling his wig this way and that in instant expectation of
-beholding the object of his passion, and rewarding her for her devotion
-to him, so manifested in the person of the gentlemanly "Incognito" of
-his last night's experience.
-
-Hark! Yes, her footstep on the stair, the swish of female garments, a
-halt at the door. Sir Robin minced the length of the room and, reaching
-the entrance, found himself face to face with Chockey!
-
-"Your mistress, bud, your mistress! Here!" thriftily pressing a shilling
-into Chock's palm. "Go tell her I am consumed with impatience, and eaten
-up with desire for a glimpse of Her Ladyship's form, and figure, and
-face. Go! Go!"
-
-But Chockey does not budge.
-
-"What ails the wench? Deaf?" cries Sir Robin, pinching her arm, for
-which he gets back a smart slap on his cheek.
-
-"Tut! tut! What manners is that, and you handsome enough to kiss," adds
-the little Baronet diplomatically. "Come now, off and implore Lady Peggy
-to hasten."
-
-"Her Ladyship's from home," finally Chockey says.
-
-"What! Not at Kennaston?" Sir Robin's sharp eye can not help peering
-regretfully at the shilling Chockey twirls in her fingers.
-
-"In Kent, doubtless, a-visiting her godmother, and a-hoping to see me
-there! eh, in Kent?"
-
-"I don't know, Sir," replies the girl with a hint of tears in her voice.
-
-"Don't know! What do you mean?" exclaims Sir Robin suspiciously.
-
-"I means, Sir," fires up Chock, "that My Lady ain't by way of telling me
-her matters. His Lordship, her father's down with his leg; Her
-Ladyship's mother is a-visitin' the sick in York. As they supposes, Sir,
-Lady Peggy is in Kent, also, a-visitin' the sick, Her Ladyship's
-godmother."
-
-Chockey curtsies and turns to the door, out of which Sir Robin
-reluctantly goes, putting spurs to his horse, dining at the Mermaid and
-then chartering a post-chaise to take him, sans delay, to Kent.
-
-He crossed but one traveler on his way from Kennaston Castle to the
-village inn; a man of stout and comely build on a steed that took even
-Sir Robin's dull eye, so was its blood and lineage marked in its long
-splendid gait.
-
-This horseman too pulled rein at Kennaston, sprang from his saddle, and,
-as Bickers hobbled up to take his beast, Mr. Grigson, for 'twas he,
-jumped up on the steps and caught Chockey's apron-string just as it was
-fluttering in the closing door.
-
-"Hey, missus!" cried he, twirling Chock about and chucking her under the
-chin, which was rewarded by as smart a slap as that which had erstwhile
-burned Sir Robin's cheek.
-
-"I must see Lady Peggy Burgoyne on the spot, without ceremony or
-a-waitin' 'ere coolin' my heels. I've a letter for Her Ladyship meanin'
-life and death to my master, Sir Percy de Bohun."
-
-"Have you?" says Chock, looking with admiring eyes upon the smart livery
-of Mr. Grigson, dust and mud-stained though it was.
-
-"Yes, straight from London town, where 'pon my life, there's no sweeter
-mug than hers I sees before me now!"
-
-"Lawk!" cries Chock, appeased. "But my mistress is from home."
-
-"Not here! where is she then? A-visiting in the neighborhood?" Mr.
-Grigson turns on his heel and chirrups for his mount.
-
-"No," returns Chockey. "She ain't."
-
-"Well, whereabouts is she? For if it's as far as the Injies, Grigson's
-bound to find her and deliver this love-letter!"
-
-"I don't know where she is, Sir," whimpers Chock.
-
-"There, there! Don't be a-cryin' and a-sobbin', Duckie, I ain't gone,
-yet! Go ask His Lordship the address; bring me a mug of ale, and I'll
-give you a kiss."
-
-"Drat you, Sir," cries Chockey. "Don't you be talkin' like that!" Yet
-sidles she quite cozily in the encircling arm of the admirable Grigson.
-
-"His Lordship, nor Her Ladyship, nor no one else knows where my mistress
-is."
-
-"What! eloped? Scuttled! Flown the nest! When? How? Where?" cries Sir
-Percy's man thunder-struck. "She ain't gone with Sir Percy! Can it be
-with Sir Robin McTart?"
-
-Chockey shook her head vigorously.
-
-"Look a-here," says Mr. Grigson, now regarding the girl attentively.
-"Damme, but you knows where she is. Tell me and I'll give you two kisses
-and ten pounds to boot."
-
-"Oh, Sir!" cries Chock, pushing away both kisses and pounds with one and
-the same hand. "I does know; leastways I knows my young lady's up in
-London, but whereabouts in that pit of sin and willainy, I can't say,
-nor who she's with, nor how long she's goin' to stop; only she charged
-me make His Lordship and Her Lady mother believe she was gone to Kent,
-back again to see her godmother. There! I've been bursting to tell some
-one, and you'll swear you'll keep it secret, won't you, Sir?"
-
-Grigson obligingly nods and caresses Chock's arm.
-
-"Thank the Lord it's out o' me!" adds she.
-
-"Amen," ejaculates Sir Percy's man with fervor, at the same time fixing
-a contemplative and shrewd eye on his companion.
-
-"Her Ladyship up in town,--where, with whom, you doesn't know; her
-father and mother thinks she's in Kent; and you're cock-sure she ain't
-runned away with Sir Robin McTart?"
-
-"That I am!" cries the girl, warmly. "Little squint-eyed monster!"
-
-"Eh?" exclaims Mr. Grigson, who had beheld the supposed Sir Robin at
-Kennaston's rooms the night before last, and clearly recollected that no
-such description fitted the slim, elegant, handsome young buck who had
-got a prick in the wrist from his own master's rapier.
-
-"Monster! I said," repeats the girl. "Hist, I'll tell you more," says
-she, drawing close, hand over mouth. "You've seen the puppy. He was here
-anon, a-askin' and a-tearin' as to where My Lady was!"
-
-Grigson stares.
-
-"Aye, you must have met him on the road not ten rods off the Castle
-gates, for, as you galloped in, the undersized cockatrice cantered out.
-Lady Peggy wed with him, indeed!"
-
-Grigson is now (recalling his having crossed a small squint-eyed
-gentleman as he came) morally certain that Chockey has been well drilled
-in her part, and that Lady Peggy has indeed run away up to London with
-Sir Robin McTart. So much for his thoughts; he says:
-
-"I did. Fortunately I beheld the personage what you describes. Your
-humble servant, missus. I must be off and no time for love-makin'
-to-day," turning quickly on his heel and tossing sixpence to Bickers who
-holds his bridle at the stone.
-
-"I ain't 'missus,'" remarks she plaintively.
-
-"But you will be some day, lass, or my name ain't James Grigson. Here's
-to you and many thanks for putting me on the right track!"
-
-"Tush, Sir! For the love of heaven and of anybody else you thinks a deal
-of, find my young lady!"
-
-"Trust me," flings Mr. Grigson from his saddle. "I'll find her and him
-as holds her in durance wile!"
-
-Kissing his fingers to Chockey, off puts Sir Percy's own man to the
-Mermaid; stables his horse; hires a fresh one; claps spurs, and up to
-town as fast as four spavined bay legs can carry him, firmly convinced
-that he has solved the greater portion of the mystery, and that his
-master's lady fair is indeed, beyond a doubt, the bride of the gallant
-Sir Robin, or mayhap his unwilling prisoner.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- _In which is set down how My Lady is whisked
- off to a rout, willy-nilly, at the home
- of her hated rival._
-
-
-Mr. Brummell was a most shrewd and an altogether kindly personage as
-well; he had easily, on alighting from his carriage and assisting Lady
-Peggy to do the same, espied the disreputable looking parcel which the
-supposed son of his dear old friend vainly tried to conceal; and the
-Beau was not long of putting two and two together, and of concluding
-that young Sir Robin had lost his all at play, and had even perhaps
-pawned his wardrobe,--saving the ill-looking bundle--for the price of
-his last few days' food. Therefore it was, that, in the most obliging
-manner, he not only installed Sir Robin in an elegant and spacious
-apartment, but vowed he would at once send for both his tailor and
-perruquier to wait upon him, and ended by assuring his guest that his
-own man Tempers would be up presently to make the young gentleman's
-toilet for him.
-
-"Your pardon, Sir, Mr. Brummell," quoth Peggy, while her maiden heart
-set off at such a race-horse flutter as it seemed must never quiet down.
-"But, pray you, remember I am country-bred, unused to town ways, have
-never had a man to wait upon me in my life" (the solemn truth!) "and
-should never know how to comport myself in such altered conditions."
-
-The Beau shrugged his shoulders in the French fashion, lifted his
-eyebrows, thought 'twas amazing strange that Sir Hector's son should
-have been so ill educated; said:
-
-"Your pleasure, Sir, whilst under my roof, shall be mine; nor can I
-misdoubt but that one who has had the genius to invent that tie is amply
-able to array and perfume himself, even to the dressing of his own wig."
-
-"You flatter, Sir, I protest!" answered the guest. "I await with
-impatience the moment when, in cleaner case, I may have the honor of
-instructing you in the intricacies of the knot you are good enough to
-admire."
-
-With any number of bows, the distinguished host closed the door, and My
-Lady Peggy was left to herself.
-
-For a moment she stood quite still, her heart yet a-clapping madly in
-her bosom, her eyes wandering about the princely room in which she found
-herself, and at last resting on the mirror wherein was reflected her own
-slim figure, tricked out in Kennaston's suit of gray velvets, and in the
-yellow wig, which was indeed the counterpart of the real Sir Robin's
-pate. Her countenance?--sure none would recognize it since neither twin
-nor quondam suitor had--was dark with the coffee-stains; her eyes were
-ringed with sleeplessness and unaccustomed wine; her general aspect that
-of a young gentleman very much the worse for whatever his most recent
-experiences might have been.
-
-Peg laughed, then she cried, then ran to the door and fastened it
-securely; then untied her bundle when out fell night-rail, green hood
-and kerchief, powder, patch-box, lavender, musk, pins, needles, red
-silken hose, Levantine gown, and veil of Brussels lace. She shook the
-skirt out of its wrinkles, laid off her wig and 'broidered waist-coat;
-unpinned her long plaited hair from its coil, and was stoutly making up
-her mind to brave all, get into her petticoats, and confess everything
-to Mr. Brummell. But, as she was about to wash the dark stains from her
-face, comes there a "rap-a-tap" at the door, and Peg, dropping the ewer,
-calls out fiercely:
-
-"Who's there?"
-
-"An it please you, Sir Robin, Mr. Brummell bids me say to you that Mr.
-Chalk, the tailor, a person of the best fashion, will have the honor of
-waiting upon you for your measurements in a quarter of an hour, if
-you'll be pleased to see him then, or later?"
-
-Peg hesitated; there was a battle fought within her those sixty seconds
-wherein all that was noblest and best struggled and strove to know which
-was the right thing to do; nor could she determine, save that, at second
-thought of confiding her sex to Mr. Brummell, it appeared to her she
-could not.
-
-"I shall be ready to see Chalk, I thank you, in fifteen minutes, more or
-less," humming a tune with elaborate carelessness, rolling up the
-Levantine, the hood, veil, and night-rail into a ball, and pitching them
-into the chest of drawers; disposing the powder and perfumes and pins on
-the dressing-table; throwing the needles and patches into the fire;
-untying the kerchief and taking out soap, scissors, brushes.
-
-"'Tis clear as water, I'm to be a man yet awhile," whispered she.
-"Heaven grant it may not be long! So!" seizing the scissors and shaking
-out the locks. "Snip! clip, and away with you! that I was once vain of,
-because a vile deceiver named Percy vowed he loved you!"
-
-And off came Peg's hair, the which for silly liking of she stuffed into
-the drawer beside the Levantine and let fall a tear or two. Then snip,
-clip again as she had often done for her twin; so that, in no time at
-all, her head, with its short curly locks brushed back at this side and
-that of her broad forehead, had all the aspect of a man's.
-
-"There," cried she, sweeping the last litter of her black tresses into
-the flames. "An I be a gentleman, I'll be a gallant one. I sighed once
-to taste the sweets of bein' of t'other sex for only one-half an
-hour.--Zounds! as daddy'd say, would that I'd never quit my frocks. What
-hath it bettered me? To behold with mine own eyes the charms of her
-who's routed me from his heart; to hear him a-pledgin' me just to please
-my brother, and for the sake of spitin' Sir Robin McTart; to get myself
-into a position that makes me burstin' with shame and feelin' sure I can
-never hold up my head again in this world. Me, that's always loathed a
-hoyden! and even have I the muscle of a lad, and can I stride a horse,
-and jump any ditch was ever dug,--yet, yet,--oh! How did I ever bring
-myself to put on _these_?" And My Lady Peggy slaps her breeches with a
-whack, and promptly falls upon her knees a-praying for her father and
-mother, and brother, and Sir Percy, and Chock, and Bickers.
-
-"And, Oh God, high up in Heaven, forgive me for all my wilfulness and
-jealousy and foolhardiness, and stealin' my twin's clothes; and deceit,
-the which has got me into this foul station, wherein I have told naught
-but lies--and I do despise lies,--they are most disgustin' and utterly
-wicked. Forgive me for all the horrible sins I've committed--"
-
-Footsteps now resound in the corridor and the voice of Mr. Brummell's
-own man says blandly:
-
-"This way, Mr. Chalk," as he raps gently at the door.
-
-"--And for all those I shall have to commit!" concludes Her Ladyship, as
-she springs to her feet and unfastens the door, admitting the tailor _a
-la mode_.
-
-That night, the suit of grays well brushed, her wig re-curled, and her
-pocket-napkin richly perfumed, her mother's Brussels veil stripped up
-and made into a cravat of so ravishing a device as caused her host
-almost a spasm when he beheld it, Sir Robin McTart sat at honor-place at
-dinner, and was, to make a long story short, the cynosure and toast of
-the occasion.
-
-The duel with Sir Percy, the rescue of My Lady Diana, the invention of a
-cravat, the nimble wit, the handsome face, soon bespoke Peggy into a
-favor, that, considering all other things, was well-nigh incredible; and
-when, the following day; she appeared in one of the suits Mr. Chalk had
-made, with a dash of powder on her wig and a bronzed complexion due to
-surreptitious purchase at the players' cosmetic shop in Drury Lane, of
-sundry brown, red, and black pastes while making feint of being a
-comedian, the satisfaction of her host was unbounded.
-
-"Robin, my boy," said this one, with a side-glance at his guest, "an
-you're a bit short of money, I'll put a few hundreds to your account at
-my banker's. Young gentlemen will be wild and spendthrift at times;
-London's new to you I fancy, and--"
-
-"I thank you, Mr. Brummell, from my heart," returned Peg, "but I've
-three hundred pounds now idle in my pocket. That will last me, I'm
-confident, until I reach home, and, by your leave, I'm thinking I'll
-quit town this evening."
-
-But Mr. Brummell has no ears for any such scheme. The Beau's erratic
-fancy has not been caught by a new object for the mere sake of losing
-it; his joy in the dash and buoyancy, the originality and navete of his
-latest discovery is genuine, and no argument, of the very few Lady Peggy
-can offer, but he breaks down at once.
-
-"Zounds, Sir! Are you a fool, Sir? Your sire was not one before you. To
-have half London a-talkin' about you; all the prints a-chronicling your
-movements; all the ladies a-dying for a glimpse of you, and you only up
-in town these few days; and a-proposing to go back and bury your talents
-for tying Brussels, in Kent! Fie upon you, Sir! I listen to no such
-whims. Here's my basket loaded with invitations for you already. Lady
-Brookwood's rout to-night!" with a sly glance at Peg's really blushing
-face; "Lady Diana Weston's mother, as you are doubtless aware? The
-Charity Bazaar at Selwyn's to-morrow; dinner at Holland House;
-Almacks's, and my own little plan for next Thursday which is an outing
-to my seat in Surrey a-horseback; dinner, bowls, a look over the
-stables, and home by the light o' the moon. 'Back to Kent,' forsooth!
-No, Sir, not yet."
-
-A few hours later, as Lady Peggy got into her magnificent suit of
-crimson satin, gold embroidered; as she beheld her image in the glass
-and caught the hilt of her sword in her hand, the blood that surged over
-her face and throat was ruby-red; and, at her wits' ends for what to do,
-the girl's tears forced themselves to her eyes once again.
-
-She was to be off soon to Lady Brookwood's; here she should encounter
-not only Lady Diana, but doubtless Percy himself; mayhap Kennaston, if
-he had been able to get him a decent coat to wear in place of the gray
-velvets! Doubtless, too, all those others she had met in Lark Lane.
-
-For the hundredth time she cast wildly about in her mind as to how she
-could, now at this present moment, rid herself of the hated disguise,
-get into her Levantine, get home to her mother's arms, hide her head
-forever, and never, no never! look into face of man again!
-
-But Peggy saw no road. Every path seemed barred, save those that would
-forever damn her in the eyes of foes and friends alike.
-
-"Oh," cried she in desperation. "How easy 'tis to get into breeches, a
-coat, a waist-coat, and a wig, but God ha' mercy! will I ever be able to
-get out of 'em?"
-
-It is to be put down to the credit of My Lady Peggy's up-bringing in the
-country with most times only a lad for her playmate, that now she bore
-herself with not only a fine ease and grace, but also with as splendid a
-swagger and daring as any young macaroni that carried a sword.
-
-"An I'm to be a man, I'll be one!" cried she, "and if Lady Diana ogles,
-lud! I'll give as good as she sends. Little him as I love'll know, 'tis
-of his sometime Peggy he'll be jealous!"
-
-So it was with a prodigious fine flutter of her napkin and a mightily
-impudent twirl of her eye-glass (purchased not two hours since), that
-Her Ladyship made her bows and kissed the finger-tips of Lady
-Brookwood's handsome daughter.
-
-"I am your most grateful, Sir Robin!" cried this one, "and more pleased
-than I can express to welcome you. I only regret that Lord Brookwood is
-at Brookwood Hall, and not here to thank you for rescuing his daughter."
-And so forth and on, with presentations to a dozen of fine ladies,
-dowagers and damsels, and a precious lot of fine gentlemen; and it
-seemed to Peggy, in her simplicity, as if the whole of Mayfair were
-a-bowing and scraping and making her out a hero,--which indeed was not
-far off the fact.
-
-[Illustration: Two watched her as she came in...]
-
-Two watched her as she came in on Beau Brummell's arm. These were Sir
-Percy and Kennaston; one green with anxiety for Grigson's return from
-his errand, jumping at every sound; having left word both at Lark Lane,
-his coffee-house, as well as at home where he had gone, that Grigson
-should report to him at once he arrived; the other green with envy of
-Peggy and any other who neared his divinity, yet afraid and too
-diffident to approach her closer than with the devouring gaze of his
-eyes.
-
-"That damned puppy again!" cries Percy, under his breath, as he surveys
-Peg in her satins. "By Gad, Sir, every lady in the room's turning spite
-eyes on t'other, your incomparable Diana included, for fear he won't
-stop and pay her a compliment."
-
-"Ah," sighs the young poet. "Percy, an you loved like me 'twould be
-bliss to even gaze upon your fair. Think you I dare make bold now to
-cross and make my bow?"
-
-"Why not?" returns the other gloomily. "Forgive my humor, Kennaston.
-Truth is, Sir, I'm mad, mad for Peg, and my ears are cracking and my
-brain splitting until that rascal, Grigson, gets back with answer to my
-letter. He's been gone long enough to have made the journey four times
-over!"
-
-"Oh, Percy," returns Peg's twin. "I love you as a brother, an could I
-but physic Your Lady into complaisance, I'd give my life for it. What
-owe I not to you?" adds the young man with deep feeling. "You've fed me,
-and zooks! Sir, to-night you've clothed me, for since the scurvy knaves
-that frightened Lady Di stole my suit of grays and my sword and hat,
-what had I left? Where would I be now, were't not for you?"
-
-"Tush, Ken, lad, I love you for yourself,--and ten thousand times more
-for her sake. Ken, I love her so that as I told her, if Sir Robin were a
-better man I'd cry off, an she said she loved him."
-
-"What said she?"
-
-"Not that she loved him, but that she might," he continues with sadness,
-as his eyes follow Peg on her almost royal progress about the
-drawing-rooms. "'Tis a proper fellow, enough, and I'd always heard he
-was a fright and a coward."
-
-Kennaston presently took heart of grace and crossed to pay his duty to
-Lady Diana, who, 'twas plain to be seen by every other than this bashful
-swain, was by no means the indifferent to him she would feign play off.
-Her color came and went as Kennaston, blushing to match his lady,
-ventured to spout his ode to her; and, leaving the pair to gallop on
-this pleasant path, Sir Percy at a distance unconsciously followed Lady
-Peggy, at least with his gaze.
-
-Peggy meantime, denying right and left the story of her prowess, with
-quips and jests and ogles of the fair, still kept her eye on Percy. Not
-yet had she seen him approach Lady Diana; yet hold! even now, catching
-her own gaze fixed upon him, he turned and was presently bending over
-the little beauty's fingers.
-
-A pang shot through Peg's heart, and the tears were like to force their
-way; she made an excuse and left the long drawing-room, taking refuge in
-a small apartment where the tables were ready for cards. She sank into a
-chair and buried her face in her hands. The candles were not yet lighted
-and she was totally unobserved. Dashing the salt drops from her lashes
-with her hand,--
-
-"What am I!" she cried in her bitterness, "that I can not abide to even
-see him a-bending over her hand! Ain't you no spirit, Peg? No pride?
-He's not thinking of you, my dear; didn't he say plain, if Sir Robin was
-the better man he'd give up to him! What kind of a suitor's that, Peg?
-Lud! I'd not give up him to any one, whether they were my betters or
-no!"
-
-Could My Lady but have postponed her exit for a few brief moments she
-would have beheld Sir Percy, at a word in his ear from a footman, quit
-Lady Diana's side with but the smallest ceremony, dash out into the
-vestibule, seize with a vice-like grip the man who stood there pale and
-trembling, and gasp out:
-
-"At last! the letter, the letter?"
-
-Grigson shook his head and got even whiter.
-
-"No letter?" Percy says in a dazed way.
-
-"Only your own, Sir Percy," handing back the missive. "Her Ladyship was
-from home, Sir."
-
-"Well, what of that! you infernal, damned rascal, did I not command you
-seek her, if 'twere at the other end of the world!"
-
-"Aye, Sir, and the quickest way of settin' about findin' Her Ladyship
-was for me to get back to town, Sir, as fast as the cursed beast I was
-cheated into hirin', Sir, would fetch me."
-
-"Speak out, for God's sake! Is Her Ladyship up in London?" asked Sir
-Percy, actually shaking with impatience and astonishment.
-
-Grigson nods and without more ado proceeds to give an exact if somewhat
-rambling account of his entire experiences, from the moment he had
-quitted his master until the present.
-
-'Twere idle to attempt to describe Sir Percy's state of mind. Up to now
-there had ever lingered in his heart the hope, nay, one of those
-unconscious beliefs men have, that in the end Peggy would be his. This
-news that Grigson brought crushed every such thought from his brain, but
-put in its place such a hatred of the young man now tasting the sweets
-of hero-worship (in little), in the adjoining room, as caused his
-fingers to itch for his steel and t'other's flesh to meet once more, and
-to the death.
-
-He drew Grigson in from the vestibule and, unobserved in the crush, down
-the corridor to the darkness of the card-room where Peggy still sat
-disconsolate in her far-off corner.
-
-She, for the moment, is even unconscious that any one has entered until
-the voices arrest her attention.
-
-"By Gad!" Sir Percy cries in a low tone, falling into a seat and
-clapping his brow. "Up in London! The woman, vowing Sir Robin had
-crossed your entrance, inquiring for Her Ladyship! Your meeting, not Sir
-Robin, but an ill-conditioned little popinjay with squint eyes and of
-the height of the dwarf that waits upon my Lady Brookwood?"
-
-"Aye, Sir Percy," returns Grigson. "No more like Sir Robin, which, Sir,
-begging your honor's parding, is a very pretty young nobleman, with a
-good eye and a proper height."
-
-Sir Percy nods.
-
-"Then," speaking as if to himself and motioning the man away, "since
-she's up in town without her parents' knowledge and with a cock-and-bull
-story stuck into her Abigail's mouth, it must be she's eloped with the
-scoundrel out of Kent!"
-
-Grigson going, ventures to ask: "Any more h'orders, Sir Percy? Will I
-cover the town, all the inns and taverns, Sir?"
-
-The young man shakes his head and the servant bows himself away.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- _Wherein Lady Peggy picks a very pretty quarrel
- with her presumed rival: and is
- later bid to Beau Brummell's
- levee in her night rail._
-
-
-At this precise moment Lady Peggy, scarce able to contain herself longer
-and, reckless of every possible consequence, being about to cast herself
-upon her quondam lover's protection, and to be rid forever of being a
-man, is stopped short of her purpose by the words that now fall slowly
-from the young man's lips.
-
-"To deceive! to lie! to scheme! and plot, and bring shame and trouble
-upon her father and mother! Gad's life!" Sir Percy brings his clenched
-hand down with a thump upon the card-table. "I had never believed that
-of Peggy! I'd have felled him that had hinted she could even plan a lie,
-or run off to a secret marriage with the best man that lives."
-
-At which speech My Lady's color burned as never before since she was
-born, and her choler rose at the double charge, both the one that was
-true as to her deceit, and the one that was not as to her secret
-nuptials.
-
-Palpitating with rage and wounded sensibility, with remorse and
-wretchedness; brought to bay with a situation she could not endure, Peg
-now utterly forgot her breeches or her shame at these, and, stepping
-boldly forth into the small circle of light shed in at the doorway, from
-the candles in the corridor, she saluted Sir Percy and spoke:
-
-"I bid you good-evening, Sir Percy de Bohun, and, having had either the
-good, or the ill fortune to unintentionally overhear your remarks
-concerning Lady Peggy Burgoyne, I feel it my duty and pleasure alike to
-defend her from the unjust and unworthy attack which you, Sir, have just
-been pleased to make."
-
-"Sir Robin McTart!" exclaims Percy, with a start and in a prodigious
-anger. "I deny your charges, Sir, and would remind you that
-eaves-droppers are ever the cumberers of dangerous ground."
-
-"Sir!" responds Lady Peggy, her temper rising the more at the sense of
-the injustice and falseness of her whole tenure. "You coupled just now
-the name of a lady with that of Sir Robin McTart. I demand how you dare
-to assume such a responsibility, Sir, until at least either the lady in
-question, or I, gives you our confidence, or our leave."
-
-"'Our' forsooth! 'Our!'" comes fiercely from between Sir Percy's
-clenched teeth, while his hand flies to his sword-hilt.
-
-"Why the devil, Sir--an you've been so lucky as win the lady for your
-bride--make off with her i' the dark, shut her up in some unfindable
-hole? cheat her parents, and go strutting like some vain peacock up and
-down other ladies' drawing-rooms? Be a man, Sir, and publish your
-triumph broadcast, nor let the town presently go gossiping and
-countryside wagging with the scandal of an elopement! Zounds! Sir Robin
-McTart, that!" flipping a stray card from the table almost in Her
-Ladyship's face, "for your gallantry and your honor!"
-
-"What do you mean, Sir?" cries Peggy, struck with horror all a-heap, and
-with terror as well, yet keeping up a brave show with her drawn rapier
-and sparkling eyes.
-
-"Whatever you damned please, Sir," returns Percy, now white-heat too,
-and most reckless of time or place.
-
-"I've too much regard for Lady Peggy, Sir, not to postpone the climax of
-this matter until our next meeting, let it be when you see fit!" cries
-Peg with woman's wit and wisdom too.
-
-"'Slife, Sir, I ask you as one gentleman to another, nay, I implore it
-of you," cries Sir Percy, rent betwixt choler, love and apprehension,
-"most humbly, is Lady Peggy your wife?"
-
-Her Ladyship was now like to laugh, so near akin are mirth and sorrow,
-but she replied very loftily:
-
-"I decline to discuss the matter, Sir, and would remind you that report
-hath your attentions engaged in quite another direction."
-
-"You know where Lady Peggy Burgoyne is at this moment?" says Sir Percy
-hotly, determined to push his matter to its ending this very night, and
-almost crazed by his passion and its balking.
-
-"That I do, Sir," returns Her Ladyship with a covert smile.
-
-"Tell me, or I'll brain you where you stand." Percy makes an ugly lunge
-at his opponent with his fist, but merely as a threat.
-
-"That will I not," says she firmly.
-
-What might have further ensued is, at this crisis, put out of the
-question by the entrance of Kennaston, who, espying Percy the first,
-cries out joyfully:
-
-"Percy, Percy, Lady Diana hath given me leave to tell you she
-consents--"
-
-"Tush, Sir!" interrupts Percy, jerking his head toward the other
-occupant of the room. "Sir Robin McTart and I have come near to blows,
-and must fight of a surety, on the subject of your sister, Sir; and 'tis
-for you to know without more delay that Lady Peggy is up in London,
-unknown to her parents; that Sir Robin hath her whereabouts and
-absolutely refuses to reveal the same." Percy crosses the room, strikes
-a tinder and lights the candles on the mantel-shelf.
-
-"You are cursedly badly mistook, gentlemen, both of you," says
-Kennaston, quietly enough. "I've got a letter which I found upon my
-table this very night, just come from my sister at Kennaston," with
-which her twin pulls My Lady's most ill-spelled and crumpled missive
-from his pocket and holds it up before the four astonished eyes that are
-staring at it.
-
-Peggy in amaze recognizes the letter she had written to her brother the
-day long since in the buttery, and which she had taken up to town in her
-reticule and must have dropped when she had paid her ill-starred visit
-to Kennaston's chambers in Lark Lane.
-
-"Frowse, the charwoman's daughter, vowed she'd found it a-lying in the
-entry under the water-tub. There's an end of your dispute, Sirs, I
-trust," glancing from one to the other. "Come, come, Sir Percy, and you,
-Sir Robin, whom indeed the letter you brought me from Lady Peggy the
-other night doth most highly commend to my good offices, must be
-friends," taking a hand of each. "Nor let Dame Rumor split ye asunder
-with her lies about my little twin's being up in town. Gadzooks, Sirs,
-the child's not a notion of a difference betwixt Mayfair and--Drury
-Lane! I beg of you, Mr. Brummell," as this one now comes mincing in
-together with Lord Escombe, Sir Wyatt, Mr. Jack Chalmers and others for
-their game, "for you've the graces I lack in such matters.--These two
-gallants have had a difference, and 'tis you, Mr. Brummell, can set 'em
-straight again."
-
-"Cards! cards! Spades, clubs, diamonds, hearts," exclaims the Beau,
-touching the Queen of Hearts with the toe of his high-heeled shoe, as it
-lies on the floor where it was shot from Sir Percy's hand.
-
-"Split me! but 'tis them that are at the bottom of every quarrel, Sirs;
-whisk me, but if a spade, or a club, or a heart, provided it be a
-lady's, or a diamond, which the Jews have a lien on, ain't the only
-causes for disagreement in this world!"
-
-"Correct as your own toilet, Sir!" cries Wyatt.
-
-"Now, 'twas hearts of course, damn 'em, and the queen of 'em that's
-roused both your tempers, but for God's sake, gentlemen," taking now the
-hand of each which has slipped clear of Kennaston's fingers, "bethink
-you, if the lady, whose name I can't even guess, whom you both adore,
-stood here, what would her pleasure be, Robin, my lad, answer me, for of
-brawling there can be none here and fighting no more. Speak, Sir!"
-
-"Faith!" answered Lady Peggy, with splendid valor and a rise in her
-color and her heels, "to my certain knowledge the lady'd have her name
-put out of the matter wholly, and she'd sooner die, Sir, than have any
-fighting over her preferences, by either Sir Percy de Bohun or Sir Robin
-McTart."
-
-The which being taken to be, by all present, a most prodigious and
-amazing gentlemanlike and politic speech, Sir Percy was feign accept,
-mock-smile and bow, while all the rest blew their lungs hollow
-applauding and praising his still hated and still suspected rival.
-
-Peace restored outwardly, whatever else raged in the breasts of the two
-opponents, the gallants sat to their tables, Kennaston managing to
-whisper to Sir Percy across the deal:
-
-"As I was telling you when I entered, Percy, Lady Di permits me to let
-you know she consents to my dedicating the ode to her, and Lillie, at
-the corner of Beanford Buildings in the Strand, hath engaged to publish
-it at once!"
-
-But this, Lady Peggy, at a distant table, engaged in picquet with His
-Grace of Escombe, hears not; there rings in her ears naught save the
-words Kennaston uttered when he came into the card-room--"Lady Diana
-hath given me leave to tell you she _consents_."
-
-"Consents!" To what else but his suit? Which, egged on by his noble
-uncle, has been pushing any time these ten years, since boy and girl Sir
-Percy and Lady Di had played, ridden, romped, quarreled as brother and
-sister together.
-
-"Consents!"
-
-It echoes and resounds in Her Ladyship's head over and over again the
-night through, and 'tis quite of a piece with her mood that she seeks
-out Lady Diana when tea and cakes are passing, and, with sly looks,
-congratulates Her Ladyship on the happiness she has this night conferred
-on a very gallant gentleman not so many miles away!
-
-And quite in Lady Diana's line of reasoning, having heard from Kennaston
-that Sir Robin has come up to town highly commended to him by his
-sister, and that, although he had been sorely jealous and distraught at
-the said Sir Robin's good fortune in the matter of the rescue of Her
-Ladyship, he still believed him to be head over heels in love with his
-twin, etc., etc., etc., and so, Her Ladyship argued, Kennaston had
-doubtless confided to the said Sir Robin such tokens of her favor as the
-said Lady Diana had that evening seen fit to manifest; never for a
-moment misdoubting that any other swain was in the supposed Robin's mind
-any more than he was in her own!
-
-"_Consents!_"
-
-'Twas reverberating in Peg's ears and a-knocking at her heart for the
-hundredth time, when, returned to the card-room, she learned that Mr.
-Brummell was inviting the company for the Thursday to his seat Ivy Dene.
-'Twas to be a gentlemen's party only; out on horseback, the twenty
-miles, leaving the White Horse at ten in the morning, with luncheon en
-route at the Merry Rabbit at Market Ossory; a look over the stables and
-paddocks on arriving at Ivy Dene,--a quiet game, maybe, and such a
-dinner as only, the Beau swore, his country cook could get up; with the
-ride back to town by the light of the near-full moon.
-
-Lady Peggy was soon made aware that this festivity was solely in her
-honor, and succumbed to it as cheerfully as she might.
-
-God keep her! All the while staring at the ribbon of her twin's wig,
-a-longing to cast her arms about his neck and pray him cover her up in
-his wraprascal and fetch her home; vowing she'd run away from 'em all
-the next minute, but where? How? Which way could it be done so that
-capture, discovery, and humiliation would not follow? Peggy could
-contrive no method, and the girl was literally terrified both at the
-prospect before her and by the realization that easy as it had been to
-jump into man's attire 'twas well-nigh impossible to get out of it
-again. Should she on returning to Peter's Court lay off her satin suit,
-wig, and rapier, and resume her Levantine gown, hood, petticoats,
-patches, and reticule, how and of what hour of the day or night could
-she in safety leave the mansion and find her way unsuspected to the
-King's Arms and the coach? 'Twould be out of the question; servants were
-up and about at all hours, and were a woman seen emerging from her room,
-what piece of scandal would not the next day ring from one end of the
-town to t'other.
-
-With "consents" tattooing in her brain, My Lady recklessly put all the
-heart there was left in her into the present moment, lost a hundred
-pounds to Escombe with a fine grace; won five hundred with no more ado;
-laughed, drank a little wine, went home with her host at four in the
-morning, and fell heavily asleep.
-
-At two of the afternoon the Beau usually held an informal levee attended
-by the more noted of the bucks and macaronis of the town; vastly
-entertaining half hours, wherein, while soundly abusing the newspapers
-for their being stuffed with lies, the company still eagerly devoured
-every scrap of gossip they contained; where the amount of frizz towering
-above Lady This's brow was measured and scanned, the better appearance
-of Lady That in the new-fashioned gown discussed; and the horrid aspect
-of the Hon. Miss So and So's toupee and her general resemblance to a
-malt-sack tied in the middle, talked over. This couplet and that comedy
-were torn to pieces by as many pretty wits as chanced to be present,
-while Tempers dressed his master's wig in a corner and a footman and a
-negro page handed chocolate round in silver trays.
-
-The Beau, himself, reclined on his great bedstead with its fine tester,
-a half dozen of pillows richly laced at his head; a flowered gown about
-his shoulders, his night-cap on, a coverlet embroidered by the Chinese
-over him, his snuff-box at hand, reading aloud from the damp and freshly
-arrived print whilst Sir Wyatt, Lord Escombe, Mr. Jack Chalmers, and a
-dozen more sat or stood, cup in fingers, 'twixt lip and saucer,
-hearkening, eager, to the news.
-
-"'Tis by this on the tip of every tongue in town that there occurred
-last night at Lady B----d's rout an encounter (the second within a
-se'ennight), betwixt Sir P----y de B----n and a certain young gentleman
-from Kent whose handsome face, genteel manners, and dashing behavior,
-have conspired to place him in so brief a time at the very height of
-favor in society, and more especially in the eyes of Lady D----a W----n.
-It had been supposed that the affair recounted in these pages as having
-taken place in the chambers of Lord K----n of K----n was on account
-solely of the above mentioned adorable young scion of a noble house. We
-are in a position to assure the world of fashion that such is not the
-case, and that both the unfortunate disputes betwixt these two gallants
-are to be laid to the door of Lady P----y B----e, sister to Lord K----n.
-Report hath it that Her Ladyship is in London; rumor contradicts report
-and avers that the fair one has not stirred from home. The issue is
-awaited with interest, as the verbatim account of an unsuspected
-elopement may be looked for at any moment. Safe to say the vivacious
-Lady P----y B----e, whom the town hath never had the pleasure of
-beholding, has succeeded in stirring Mayfair to its depths and has been
-the cause already of a very pretty pair of quarrels between two young
-gentlemen of the first quality."
-
-"'Slife!" cried Beau Brummell. "Who now the devil's Lady P----y?"
-
-"By the dragon, himself, I never heard that Kennaston had a sister!"
-said Lord Wootton and Mr. Vane at once.
-
-"Yes!" exclaims Sir Wyatt, tapping his forehead, recollectively, "I do
-recall that Sir Robin McTart, the night we were at Kennaston's chambers,
-entered with the presentation of a letter of introduction from 'Lady
-Peggy Burgoyne to her brother,' and 'sdeath! 'twas, I believe, she about
-whom they fought, too!"
-
-"Ha! 'tis not only Lady Di, then, that's at the bottom of their quarrel
-after all," says Mr. Brummell, reflectively.
-
-"Where is the fair one?" asks Escombe. "Who knows that?"
-
-"Faith! no one. Stop! Sir Robin must know, since 'tis for her he
-unsheathes twice in a week," cries the host.
-
-"Where is he?"
-
-"Bring him in!"
-
-"Send for Sir Robin!" is the cry of the company.
-
-"Zooks! Sirs, but our reputations as gallants are broken up, an we've
-not seen her of whom the prints speak thus!" says the Beau, adding at
-once:
-
-"Tempers, my compliments to Sir Robin McTart, and beg of him to join us,
-for, at the least, a few moments. I know he's averse to early rising,
-but pray inform him to skip across in his dressing-gown and slippers,
-and night-cap, we've no ladies here about to ogle him!"
-
-The which message being conveyed to My Lady Peggy a-sitting by the
-pulled-out chest of drawers, mournfully contemplating her long shorn
-tresses with barred door, arouses in her such a fever of sorrow as
-well-nigh chokes her utterance.
-
-"Say to Mr. Brummell I'm asleep, Tempers, and crave to know his
-pleasure, the answer to which I'll send as faithfully as Morpheus will
-permit, by you for Mercury! Off with you!" and Her Ladyship softly
-stroked her locks, and for the thousandth time went planning her escape.
-
-Peels of laughter, rattling of rapiers, click of heels, and now--
-
-"Rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat!" on the door.
-
-"McTart! McTart! Up with you from betwixt coverlets and into your
-Persian quilt!"
-
-"Out with ye, Sir Robin, or by Gad! Sir, we'll in, the fifteen of us!
-and rout you up from Morpheus's arms."
-
-"Come, Sir Robin, dally no longer with sweet sleep; up, Sir, and bethink
-you of Beauty spelled with a P-E-G-G-Y!" shouts Sir Wyatt, chorused by
-the rest.
-
-At first clap of voices Peggy stuck her hair back into the drawer,
-jumped up, and stood, hand upon the dressing-table, her expression like
-nothing else so much as that of a fawn caught in a thicket.
-
-"'Sdeath! Gentlemen, I pray of you, a few moments grace!" cries she,
-trembling from the knees down, for 'tis quite of the temper of the
-manners of the day that in a second more the whole company should batter
-down the mahogany and burst in.
-
-"Three-and-thirty, an you like, Sir Robin!" says Escombe, who is soberer
-than the rest.
-
-"Give us the whereabouts of Lady Peggy Burgoyne," shouts Mr. Chalmers,
-"and we'll trouble you no more 'til doomsday!"
-
-"Lady Peggy Burgoyne!"
-
-"Lady Peggy Burgoyne!"
-
-"Where's Lady Peggy Burgoyne?"
-
-"Where's Lady Peggy Burgoyne?"
-
-"Where is the fair one for whom you and Sir Percy de Bohun have fought
-with blades and tongues, twice now, since this day last week?"
-
-"Lady Peggy Burgoyne!" cried they in hot concert, joined in most lustily
-by the Beau from his bed across the corridor, and accompanied by the
-pounding of fifteen rapier points on the parquet, and thirty fists on
-the woodwork, as well as the demoniacal screams of the Beau's little
-negro and the parrot on his wrist.
-
-"Tell us where she is!" came high staccato last from Sir Wyatt's
-exhausted lips.
-
-"My Lords and Gentlemen!" answers Her Ladyship, standing close to the
-door enveloped from top to toe in a sheet over her night-rail. "Would to
-God I could!"
-
-There was a ring of heartfelt truth in the reply, and its utterance was
-succeeded by a second's surprised pause.
-
-The young bucks regarded each other with shrugs, pursed mouths, and
-interrogation points bristling in their eyes.
-
-Mr. Chalmers, recovered of his surprise sooner than the others, says:
-
-"Do you mean to say, Sir Robin, that the whereabouts of the lady with
-whose name the prints and the coffee-houses are ringing; for whose sake
-you came near to fighting Sir Percy only last night, and did fight him
-in Lark Lane o' Thursday last, ain't known to you?"
-
-"Is she in London?" pipes the Beau, pinching the little black till he
-squeaks again.
-
-"That I can not tell," responds Her Ladyship. "I do know she's not in
-Kent; and she's not at Kennaston Castle. 'Slife! Sirs," adds she, "I
-pray your consideration. Guess what you will; this matter of Lady Peggy
-sticks me closer than you dream, and I'd give my life to know her safe
-at home with her mother."
-
-Silence ensues; the disappointed fifteen get them back to the Beau's
-bedside to talk over this latest development as to the mysterious Lady
-Peggy.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- _In the which Lady Peg overhears a horrible
- plot to murder; and wherein
- Mr. Incognito encountereth
- Sir Robin._
-
-
-She herself falls into such an immediate flood of tears as shakes her
-well, and then up she rises from her depths, and with all the courage of
-her race and blood, she vows that, come another sunset she will quit
-Peter's Court as if for a walk, and never return; that in small clothes,
-since it must be, she will journey back to Kennaston Castle, and risk
-all the discomfiture and disgrace her doing so may bring upon her.
-
-In point of fact, My Lady Peggy was at that state of mind when it seemed
-to her no degradation or humiliation, no sorrow that could be visited
-upon her, would be too much punishment, or enough, for the sins without
-number she had committed since the luckless day she took the coach for
-town.
-
-When she emerged from her room for dinner, 'twas to learn that Mr.
-Brummell had been summoned hastily to St. James's on so important an
-affair as to initiate His Royal Highness into the mysteries of the new
-tie of Sir Robin's own invention! and that he trusted in this audience
-to obtain permission to fetch Sir Robin to the Palace and present him
-within a few days to several august personages, etc., etc., etc.
-
-Her Ladyship, therefore, dined alone, scantily too; food choked her,
-wine burned her throat, and to speak truth she was heartily glad not to
-have to drink it, for Her Ladyship was an abstemious young lady and
-believed milk, Bohea and Pekoe the beverages for her sex, to the
-exclusion of any stronger.
-
-At twilight, having made her duds and her tresses up into a reputable
-enough parcel, Lady Peggy, in a suit of claret velvet, leaving all the
-rest of her man's attire hanging in the presses, sauntered carelessly
-out of the house, declining the footman's offer of a chair, or even a
-hackney chaise, or a page to carry her parcel, and set off at a swinging
-pace across the square and toward the river. It was her intention, by
-way of frustrating any attempts at tracing her which might be set afoot,
-the discovery of her flight once made, to so double on her own tracks,
-and to seek out such unimagined and unlikely streets to traverse, as
-must puzzle both bell-man, watch, and redbird alike, as well as her
-acquaintances.
-
-She swaggered along toward St. Stephen's where a coach containing
-quality was occasionally met even now; then down Horseferry Road, almost
-to the river's bank; then along Jackanapes Row, with little idea of the
-cut-throat locality she was haunting; back again toward better
-neighborhoods; then a lurch to the Thames making into Farthing Alley and
-Little Boy Yard, at the end of which she found herself at the old Dove
-Pier.
-
-Peg stood still, her heart beating both with her quick walk, and at the
-strangeness of all that surrounded her. She had no fear, because her arm
-was stout, her aim sure, pistols at her belt and a good sword at her
-side; and she was perfectly ignorant of any harm here to be found,
-greater than at the door of Beau Brummell's house.
-
-The dark dwellings of the yard frowned at one another, with not an ell
-of sky to share between 'em at their roofs; the sign of the "Three Cups"
-swung and creaked in the slow breeze; the river, black and gruesome,
-lapped at the foot of the stone pile against which she leaned. On the
-river the tired bargemen rested at their oars, and the dip of a
-water-bird was the only sound that struck upon her ear. Peggy was
-casting about in her mind whether to enter the inn and inquire her road
-to the King's Arms in the Strand, and had just turned to do so, when in
-the cavernous doorway of one of the gaunt-looking tenements she beheld
-three figures. The faces of two were toward her, and by the light of the
-fish-oil lamp swinging at the next-door tavern, she beheld them, so
-sinister and forbidding as to cause her to halt for a space, and then,
-overcoming her dread, to pursue her path, but slowly and by crossing the
-yard.
-
-As she did so, her weapon caught in her heel and as she bent to
-disengage it, a voice speaking in low muffled tones arrested her gait.
-
-It was the voice of Sir Robin McTart saying:
-
-"If I make it ten guineas apiece on the spot, you swear to leave him
-cold on the pier yonder, come Sunday night, or to tie a stone about his
-throat and throw him into the river?"
-
-"Aye, aye," grunts one of the two companions of this most valorous
-gentleman. "'E's h'always 'ulkin 'ereabouts o' Sunday nights."
-
-Lady Peggy, with such a pull-string of terror at her heart as she never
-had before, draws closer to the wall of the tenement before which she
-has halted, creeps nearer to the portal wherein these cavaliers are
-quartered.
-
-"Let it be five guineas apiece to-night," squeaks the Baronet, "and the
-remainder when the business is done?"
-
-"The devil knock you into hell with your, 'when the business is done!'"
-mutters the other. "We's doin' your job for you for little enough.
-Tain't everyone as'd h'undertake the funeral of a h'Earl's heir like Sir
-Percy de Bohun----"
-
-Her Ladyship's like now to fall in a swoon; but not she; only leans she
-a bit against the bricks, her bosom heaving, her eyes dilating, her lips
-bitten in until they are almost bleeding.
-
-"Hush-h-h! no names, you varlets!" interrupts Sir Robin.
-
-"Hey?" responds the other, "the walls ain't got no h'ears, and if they
-'ad wot I'm a-sayin's the cussid truth, eh, Bloksey?"
-
-Bloksey grunts.
-
-"The town'll be afire when it's out that a gallant like 'im that's heir
-to Lord Gower's been done fer; and then, my fine gentleman, who's to pay
-for't, if we's caught and if we 'appens to be seen by any one when we're
-a doin' of your job? No, money all down now, or Sir Percy lives as long
-as 'e likes, for us!"
-
-Peg's hand's upon the hilt of her sword.
-
-Shall she spring and run Sir Robin through?
-
-Shall she hide and buy the rascals out at a higher price than he has
-paid?
-
-But no sooner do these thoughts rush through her brain than the utter
-impossibility of compassing the one, or of performing the other,
-undetected, if even with her life, and she so at the mercy of these
-cut-throats, comes to steady her, and she realizes that her only part is
-to get away as fast as she may, and unseen if she can.
-
-Meantime Sir Robin concludes his bargain with the two desperadoes, and
-as they withdraw into their haunt, and he turns on his heel, he espies
-Lady Peggy rounding the corner with her bundle under her arm. The little
-Baronet with a sidelong glance in at the hallway to make sure his men
-are out of sight, darts to the opposite side of the court on tiptoe, and
-then, putting hands to mouth, calls across softly, but clearly, in a
-tone half of joy, half anger.
-
-"Mr. Incognito! Mr. Incognito! Ho! I say, Incognito!"
-
-Peg stops short. 'Twere wiser perhaps to try to discover what had put
-Sir Robin McTart up to the murder.
-
-"By Gad, Sir!" cries this one, making a dash now over to Peg's side of
-the way. "Here have I scoured the town for you day and night, and no
-trace of you anywhere! 'Incognito' me no more, Sir! Who are you, Sir?
-Damme! I'll stand no more such nonsense!" Sir Robin's valor's thoroughly
-based on the knowledge that, were blade to be unsheathed to his hurt, he
-could and would shout for his hirelings to the rescue.
-
-'Twas the first and only time in his life that he was ever known to
-urge, or even hint, a quarrel _in propria persona_.
-
-"I'll 'incognito' you to the end of the chapter, Sir Robin McTart,"
-answers Lady Peggy, clapping hand to hilt.
-
-"Very well, Sir, very well," says the Baronet, reflecting that another
-corpse might cost him ten guineas more, ere he were done with it; and
-besides yearning for the news of His Lady which he thinks he may glean.
-"I've small stomach for fightin' any man. Religion don't teach us that
-lesson, but 'tis a devilish trick you've played me, Sir."
-
-"In what way, Sir? Out with it," replies Peggy.
-
-"You, Sir, sent me to Kennaston a-seeking Lady Peggy Burgoyne, Sir; she
-was from home, and not a word else could I buy or wring out of her
-servant's cursed mouth. Then I hied to Kent, believing, from your fine
-messages to me from Her Ladyship, that she must be there at her
-godmother's. No, Sir! she was not; nor could any one tell but that she
-was at Kennaston Castle for all they knew. Back in town post-haste, I
-seek Lark Lane, where her brother lodges, so I had heard, only to learn
-that he has gone to stop with Sir Percy de Bohun, in Charlotte Street."
-
-"Well, you sought him there?" inquires Peg quivering with suppressed
-excitement.
-
-"I did not, Sir!" replies Sir Robin with emphasis.
-
-"Thank heaven!" says his companion fervently, an exclamation which may
-do double duty, and is well taken by the little gentleman from Kent.
-
-"No, Sir; you do not suppose, Sir, that I'm a-going to risk a life
-that's dear to Lady Peggy, at the hands of a ripping brawler and
-sure-kill like Sir Percy, do you?"
-
-"Ah, Sir Robin," quoth Her Ladyship. "If you knew what a consolation it
-would be to Lady Peggy to hear of your unwillingness to hazard your
-precious person in such company, 'twould ease your mind and heart."
-
-"Look you!" whispers Sir Robin, plucking at Peg's sleeve. "But tell me
-where she is? This mystery's killing me! How fares she? Does she pine
-for me? and is this true?" With shaking hands Sir Robin takes from his
-pocket a copy of a print of the day previous, and unfolding, reads to
-the astonished Peg the following paragraphs.
-
-"Town's talk is all for the very pretty quarrel betwixt Sir P----y de
-B----n, and the gallant and handsome Sir R----n McT----t of Kent. 'Tis
-all over Mayfair, and far beyond, that the cause of the dispute's the
-lovely but mysterious Lady P----y B----e."
-
-"'Slife!" interrupts Peg, catching at straws. "You now perceive, Sir
-Robin, why 'tis that Her Ladyship must keep her whereabouts a secret,
-even," she adds with sentimental deflection, "from you. Trust me, Sir,
-as you would trust her, and be guided by my counsel!"
-
-Sir Robin nods vigorously, fluttering his sheet with anxious fingers.
-"Listen, Sir, listen, to this further." He reads on. "Sir P----y de
-B----n has sworn by all that's sacred, so 'tis said, to stick Sir R----n
-McT----t to the death, and serious consequences are feared."
-
-"Ah!" cries Lady Peggy, overjoyed to hear anything that may serve to
-keep the little Baronet and Sir Percy from meeting. "'Tis a gentleman of
-his word, I promise you. Better get back at once to Robinswold, and let
-London and Sir Percy gallop to the devil, an they see fit!"
-
-"Nay," replies the one addressed. "Not I, Sir Incognito. It is not for a
-McTart to turn his back on danger, but the rather," and here by the
-fish-oil gleam, the little gentleman's squint eyes leer cunningly up
-into Her Ladyship's face: "The rather," continues he, glancing
-cautiously around, "take measures to protect myself."
-
-"Very commendable of you, Sir Robin, by my faith," cries Peggy, although
-she shudders, now linking her arm in her companion's, and assuming an
-air of easy confidence, by the which she hopes to ensnare him into a
-complete revelation of his plans.
-
-"Since you go armed, and are, I doubt not, a master in the art of
-self-defense, what have you to fear from Sir Percy de Bohun?"
-
-"True," responds the Baronet, with a reservation to himself and no mind
-at all to proceed any further with his revelations. "Gad! Sir, a fellow
-like that," clutching at the newspaper stuck among his ruffles, "ain't
-to be trusted as long as he's above the ground. I swear, Sir! I fear to
-walk abroad and hold myself housed at my inn in Pimlico, close, not
-daring to show my face. A ruffian that's publicly printed as seekin'
-life'd stick me in the back in the dark, an he got the chance."
-
-"Nay, nay, Sir Robin," says Peg, up for her sweetheart, "he's not that
-sort of a gentleman--but, look you, keep close, frequent neither club,
-coffee or chocolate-house, or rout or drum; eschew Vauxhall, Richmond
-and the play-house, or any likely place where bucks gather, for trust
-me, Sir, an you do meet Sir Percy, there'll be the devil to pay, and his
-blade's his obedient slave."
-
-Poor Peg! She has not only to protect Percy of his life, but, as before,
-to prevent any discovery of her usurpation of the little Baronet's name.
-
-"Curse him! I fear him not!" responds this one, his itching fingers
-twisting about the empty purse in his pocket.
-
-"But of Her Ladyship, Sir Go-between?" adds he presently, as they emerge
-upon the broader and better lighted road. "'Pon my life, but to so find
-myself the hero of a romantic passion with the Lady secluded in a
-mystery, a nobleman thirsting for my blood, a nameless gentleman playin'
-Mercury betwixt me and my fair, 'tis amazing, Sir! prodigious amazing!"
-Sir Robin struts and takes snuff very comfortably, since he has got out
-of a very dangerous environment.
-
-Peg's soul sickens within her as she listens to him.
-
-"Tell me now, how fares she?"
-
-"Not so well," answers she.
-
-"You've seen her?"
-
-"Not I."
-
-"Are like to?"
-
-"No, Sir."
-
-"You can convey messages to her by some fond way she's planned to get
-her news of me, eh?"
-
-"I can, Sir Robin."
-
-"Sir, whoever you are, for pity's sake, tell me where is she?"
-
-"Not far, Sir."
-
-"Gad, Sir, to touch her hand, her cheek! You're in her sure confidence?
-She does favor me? She will not give me hopes, Sir, to turn around and
-break my heart by marryin' of another?"
-
-"Lady Peggy'll never marry any man, Sir Robin, I'm of the opinion, so
-I'd not give that for your chances!" answers she.
-
-"Think you she ever cared for Sir Percy?" asks he.
-
-"Sir, who can fathom a woman's heart? 'Tis deeper than the sea; so deep,
-methinks, ofttimes she herself holds not that plummet that can sound it.
-Sir Robin, I take my leave of you."
-
-"Hold! hold! Sir, not so fast. Where next may I encounter you?"
-
-"That must be as Her Ladyship says," answers Peggy. "Your inn's in
-Pimlico?"
-
-"Yes, the Puffled Hen, not far off Battersea Bridge."
-
-"Farewell, Sir, and look you keep close in-doors, and risk no quarrel
-with Sir Percy de Bohun."
-
-"Farewell, Sir," watching Her Ladyship turn down the street as he turns
-up. "Gad's life! 'twas well he happened when he did, and not earlier, to
-eavesdrop my bargain with the wharf-rats! 'Sdeath! Risk no quarrel with
-Sir Percy! Not so long as there's guineas left to buy corpses with!" and
-the little gentleman trots over to Pimlico, tolerably well pleased with
-his evening's work; there, however, to be greeted with the reading of
-more newspapers, including that one which had earlier in the day so
-entertained Beau Brummell and his familiars.
-
-Not for a moment did the Baronet mistrust, or have a suspicion, other
-than that his fame had caused him to be made the subject of such a pack
-of pretty stories as was then the custom of the press, as now, regarding
-any gentleman of position and gallantry. Sir Robin's vanity easily
-swallowed the dose, and he even slapped his thigh and laughed his little
-dice-rattle laugh, as he reflected how safe he really was with never a
-challenge or a brawl to his cowardly credit since he got his first
-flogging at Eton.
-
-He actually mouthed over his prospective wooing, and assured winning of
-Lady Peggy, and felt a calm satisfaction in the knowledge that the one
-rival he feared would so soon be beyond the reach of ladies' smiles or
-tears. No qualms came to disturb his genial enjoyment of purposed
-assassination. In those days to kill was nearer men's tempers than it is
-to-day. 'Twas with blackguard and man of honor alike, the first redress
-for even the pettiest sort of a dispute; with the difference of method
-only, that the gallant blade fought out his quarrel on the open field,
-while the craven bought a hireling's dagger to do it in the dark.
-
-Meantime, My Lady, by as direct a route as she can fathom out of the
-labyrinth of her ignorance and her distracted state of mind, makes back
-to Peter's Court with her parcel of duds still under her arm.
-
-She enters, mounts the stair-case, seeks her room, closes the door, and
-sits down.
-
-"'Tis now not to be doubted," she says to herself, "but that the Devil's
-at the helm of my ship--and that I am to be a man for the rest of my
-life. 'Sdeath! as dad says, I'll stop over till Sunday night's o'er
-past, and as surely as my name's Peggy Burgoyne I'll foil that little
-dastardly groat of a Baronet's plot to murder him that I once l-loved.
-Bah!" cries she half aloud. "What's the use of mincin' matters that's
-true? Him that I love! Even if he's dyin' for Lady Diana, and goin' to
-be her husband instead of mine! 'Consents!'" murmurs she, flinging
-herself on the bed in a flood of tempestuous tears.
-
-In vain regretting, she now too fully realized that her own wilful
-words, her jealousy, her falsehoods, her deceits, were the sole causes
-for Sir Robin's terror, and, therefore, for the abominable scheme which
-he had just concocted.
-
-Presently she arose, tossed the bundle once more back into its
-hiding-place, and set to pacing up and down the floor as she'd seen her
-twin do at home when he was looking high and low for a rhyme.
-
-'Twas weightier matters kept Peg moving for an hour or more, and
-quick-spinning as were her heart and temper, her brain bore a more even
-balance.
-
-First she had thought to warn Percy by a letter unsigned; the which she
-knew he'd pitch into the fire and think no more about. Then, that she'd
-write one to Kennaston imploring him to keep Percy from the pier Sunday
-night or any other; this she soon recognized would have the fate of
-t'other. Then, 'twas to contrive some plan to fetch him to Richmond,
-Windsor, any place else for Sunday; but to this arose the objection that
-the blackguards cheated of one day, or place, would not fail to wait
-upon their prey some other. At the last, Her Ladyship's shrewd
-common-sense and indomitable pluck plainly showed her there was but one
-safe plan out of the danger; and this must be to go herself to the river
-Sunday night, and there concealed, armed, await the coming of the
-cut-throats from their den, and from the rear, put a shot into each at
-one and the same moment.
-
-Could she do it?
-
-Her Ladyship had muscles of steel, no nerves, as the fine ladies of her
-day comprehended them; as brave and loyal a heart as ever beat in any
-breast; good faith in God, for all her frowardness; and that species of
-love burning within her for Sir Percy de Bohun, which has, not a few
-times in the world's history, made frailest woman into man's equal for
-courage.
-
-To Lady Peggy there seemed a divine compensation in the fact that it had
-come to her, to save the very one whom, by her lies and wilfulness, she
-alone had been the means of endangering.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: At the table sat Kennaston...]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- _In this same Her Ladyship's mount is shot
- dead under her in Epstowe Forest, and
- she makes off on Tom Kidde's horse._
-
-
-This young gentleman now stood looking from a window of his uncle's
-house, upon all the dewy leafing beauty of the Park at May. His brow was
-knit, his lips tight shut, his hand amid his ruffles clenched.
-
-At the table sat Kennaston, inky-fingered, scribbling; eyes now rolling
-to the ceiling, now roving hither and yon.
-
-"Ah!" sighs this one. "If the critics do not find this canto to their
-taste, may I be damned!"
-
-"You're like to go to Court to the Devil, I'm thinking then, dear lad,"
-speaks de Bohun over his shoulder.
-
-"Fame! Fame!" cries the young poet, pushing back in his chair, wig awry
-and quill poised in air. "I'll hunt thee to my dying hour, and if thou
-escap'st me then, 'twill all be Lady Diana's fault."
-
-"How's that?" asks Percy, with, however, but small ring of interest in
-his voice.
-
-"Oh!" exclaimed Peg's twin, "the minx mocks me! 'Tis Monday, kindness
-and all smiles, to wake on Tuesday for indifference; pouts on Wednesday;
-lure-me-ons o' Thursday; forgetfulness for Friday; radiance for
-Saturday, and all a-jumble, sweets-and-frowns! showers! sunshine! what
-you will!--and will not!--for my Sunday fare."
-
-Percy sighs and smiles.
-
-"Percy, sometimes I think Diana does love you!"
-
-"No, Sir, never. We're like brother and sister, nothing else, save my
-uncle's absurd, obstinate (now-cured) whim, since childhood, to match
-his heir with Brookwood's heiress. Odzooks! Ken, you're like every other
-swain that ever sighed, always looking for a rival to be jealous of!
-Lady Di cares for you; an you doubted it before, 'tis time to take up
-hope, since you are asked to Brookwood for a visit, and go popping off
-to-night, with me left home to think alone on Peggy."
-
-"Zounds! Sir, 'tis not you only that's thinking of her!" cries the young
-man rising and crossing to the fire. "But, what would you! if I call out
-the bell-man, publish her disappearance in the newspapers; get word to
-my father and my mother; what comes of't all, but scandal? and like as
-not dad an apoplexy, and My Lady mother a set of fits and a death-bed!"
-
-"Ken, I'm a damned fool ever to stop inside of doors or to cease pacing
-streets, haunting inns, shadowing Sir Robin McTart, until I find her!"
-
-"Fie, Sir, if she's gone off with Sir Robin McTart, 'tis, I promise you,
-with a wedding-ring on her finger, and not else! An she loves him,
-what's to be said or done, if he's her lawful lord?"
-
-"Naught. I myself went down to Kennaston yesterday. I said nothing to
-you, Ken," he adds, noting the other's surprised and reproachful start,
-with a hand upon his junior's shoulder.
-
-"I thought I'd not interrupt the epic and your frenzies about Lady Di,
-with my troubles."
-
-"Well, what news of Peg? Any?" asks her twin anxiously.
-
-"None. I saw Chockey, and only got from her what Grigson had, the
-positive assurance that her mistress had gone up to London. 'Of her own
-free will?' I asked. 'Yes, Sir Percy,' said she. 'Alone?' I inquired.
-'No, Sir Percy,' was her answer, nor could I force, frighten, or buy the
-baggage into any further confidence. She did beg of me, however, seek
-out Her Ladyship, if I could, and find how she fared."
-
-"Gad's life, Sir! She has eloped. 'Tis clear as crystal!"
-
-"One thing more, I asked Chock: Had Her Ladyship money in her purse?
-'Lawk, Sir Percy! cried she, 'two hundred pounds I know of!'"
-
-"'Two hundred pounds!'" repeats Peg's twin in vast amazement. "'Tis sure
-more'n she ever saw before in our whole lives put together. Oh, the
-girl's safely wedded, Sir, beyond a doubt!"
-
-"Sir!" says Percy, sitting at the table, with his head low in his hands.
-"The blackguard's won her from me!"
-
-"I fear so, Sir." The two men's hands meet and grasp in the silent
-fashion of their sex: ofttimes more eloquent than any words e'er
-speeched.
-
-"Would I had made a hole in his heart that night in Lark Lane!" cried
-Sir Percy next.
-
-"Sir Robin's nimble, Sir, and knows a trick or two with steel, as well
-as dice."
-
-"Aye: a gallant every inch; 'tis for that I hate him all the more; and
-yet, Ken, sometimes, lad, when I've been a-staring at him from afar,
-I've caught something in his countenance resembling Peg, and it's that's
-made me halt like a chit at provoking of him further."
-
-Kennaston nods. "Aye: I've remarked it; but held my peace, Percy, for
-'tis said man and wife often grow to look alike, and I doubt not,
-sometimes begin after the same pattern."
-
-Sir Percy sighs again: turns up the room with drooped lids; in silence
-getting that grip upon his soul which noblest natures insist on with
-themselves, even in crises like his. 'Tis a bitter battle, closer fought
-and quicker, too, than any won or lost with swords and guns. The
-struggle's writ upon his face as he goes; but when he comes his
-victory's writ there too.
-
-"Kennaston," says he, very quiet and off-hand, "I'm thinking I'll go to
-the Colonies, to Virginia."
-
-"What! no!" ejaculates the poet, placing a hand on either of his
-friend's shoulders.
-
-"Yes, Ken, dear lad, I could not live in England without her; perhaps
-yonder, over the sea, in the new land that's growing up, I may learn to
-lead a new, better life, just for her sake that's lost to me forever. At
-the least I can strive, at such a distance, to serve my country and my
-King like a man--until the end I'll pray for comes."
-
-Kennaston turns off, with tears in his eyes.
-
-"Mostly," says he brokenly, "were not Peggy my twin, I'd be in a ripe
-mood for a-cursing of her! When, Percy?" asks he, after a pause.
-
-"As soon as may be," is the reply. "I've the promise of a commission by
-my uncle's influence! Come, come, lad o' my heart," laughs he through
-his own misty eyes. "The wind's not in my ship's sails yet. I promised
-Mr. Brummell for his expedition to Ivy Dene for the morrow, and I'll
-hardly be ready in all points to get under way before you're back in
-town from your visit to Brookwood; whence I foresee you'll fly with
-Diana's 'yes' betwixt her kiss on your cheek."
-
-'Twas now Mr. Brummell's famous and long-talked-about party to Ivy Dene
-this very next day that dawned.
-
-Now, Her Ladyship had vowed to herself that, come what might, she would
-avoid this, even did Fate keep her in London. 'Twas no part of her
-program, although she could do it as well as any sporting squire, to
-make for her future any such memory as riding a horse astride for thirty
-miles out and back, in the company a half-score of gentlemen must
-furnish; yet, so is each of us rather the creature of circumstance than
-will, that the hour appointed found Peg mounted on a gray with blood in
-his veins, and a-pacing down Piccadilly to the White Horse beside Beau
-Brummell's bay.
-
-She could not, with Sir Robin's murderous pact in her perpetual view,
-make up her mind to omit a company that should include Sir Percy.
-
-It seemed to her that any day spent by him out of her sight might prove
-fatal; that Sir Robin's hirelings might conceive it better to their
-purpose to put an end to their intended victim before the Sunday. So,
-aching with an insane but not unnatural impulse to pull rein and confess
-all; burning with shame to remember 'twas of Lady Diana's sweetheart she
-was thinking; mortified beyond belief every time her saddle grazed her
-breeches; intent lest an unsuspected sword should flash from the
-hedge-rows, the sheep-cotes, or the shadows of Epstowe Forest, which
-they traversed on their way; My Lady Peggy, wishing amidst all this that
-she had never come to town, yet contrived to display a very cheerful
-mien, to laugh as loud as she dared, keeping her high notes cautiously
-to herself, as she had in her speech ever since the night, as Sir Robin,
-she had made her first appearance in Lark Lane--to join in jest, quip,
-prank, such as a gay cavalcade of jovial gentlemen were then wont to
-indulge in.
-
-Such are some of the strange vicissitudes incident to being that most
-amazingly delicious compound, a wilful and withal true-hearted woman.
-
-As Mr. Brummell had planned, they halted for refreshment at the Merry
-Rabbit at Market Ossory, and left, after a game of bowls on the green,
-to pursue their way. Percy lingered a bit in the rear: truth to tell,
-his reflections were none of the gayest, and the presence of the
-supposed Sir Robin McTart, and the conclusion, which, together with Ken,
-he had been forced to reach, that Lady Peggy had run off with the
-Baronet, did not by any means conspire to the lightening of his spirits.
-As he watched his presumed rival, heard the ringing laugh, the brilliant
-jest: noted the careless air, and thought of this cavalier as Lady
-Peggy's lord, his choler knew no bounds, and it appeared to him that,
-come what might, he must invent cause of quarrel, and one or the other
-of 'em be left cold on the field.
-
-"Why," a thousand times he asked himself, "this mystery regarding her
-marriage? Why not have wedded Sir Robin from her father's home, and with
-her father's blessing, since," Sir Percy reluctantly admitted, "no fault
-could be found with so fine a young gentleman; and his fortune, he knew
-to be considerable."
-
-He was aware that Her Ladyship was romantic to a degree, and he could
-but decide that this predilection had caused her to elope and to
-preserve the matter in a wrapping of secrecy for a time; no doubt even
-now from her retirement looking forward to the hour when she should
-emerge as Lady McTart!
-
-Sir Percy gritted his teeth together and struck his spurs so deep that
-his horse gave a plunge which brought him up, neck and neck, with the
-gray of the supposed Baronet, and the black of Mr. Chalmers.
-
-"To the rescue, Sir Percy!" cried this one jocularly. "Your assistance I
-beg, and the loan of your wits in our argument."
-
-"With all my heart!" answers Percy, scenting a possible chance to worst
-his rival, even in a battle of words. "What's the subject?"
-
-"A truce to 't!" exclaims the Beau, with an expressive shake of his head
-at Mr. Chalmers, who, however, seldom notes any obstacle to the pleasure
-of his present moment.
-
-"No truce at all, Mr. Brummell!" answers he gaily. "'Tis--"
-
-"'Tis nothing whatever, Sir Percy," interrupts Lord Escombe, putting his
-hand on Chalmers's rein, and adding in an undertone: "Gadzooks! man,
-hold your peace. The matter's like tow and tinder betwixt Percy and
-McTart."
-
-"'Pon my soul, Gentlemen!" now cries Percy, "I insist upon Jack's being
-allowed to proceed with his remarks. If he wants my counsels, they're
-his. Come, Sir, speak."
-
-"'Tis but this," says Mr. Chalmers. "I say to Sir Robin that since the
-world's busy with rumors of his secret marriage to Lady Peggy Burgoyne;
-since as I learn (by my man, who had it at the gate of the very best
-authority--Gad! Sirs, 'tis a fact, even if we don't relish it, the gist
-of our gossip comes from below stairs, up!) that Lady Peggy is from
-home, her father believing her in Kent at her godmother's!" Mr. Chalmers
-smiles, "her mother being in York, believing her safe at Kennaston, I
-say, My Lords and Gentlemen, it behooves Sir Robin confide the matter to
-his best friends, and give them chances to congratulate him and the
-Lady. Have I the right of't, Percy, yes or no?"
-
-Percy is silent for a moment: it seems to him a desecration of the
-sweet, modest and womanly girl he has so long adored, thus to hear even
-her name, much less a discussion of her most private matters, made into
-mirthful subject on a morning's ride.
-
-His anger, too, is great that the man whose name is coupled with hers
-has not already put a stop to such a conversation, even were it at the
-point of the sword.
-
-Shall he, here and now, so reply to Mr. Chalmers as shall breed an
-instant retort from Sir Robin, and a challenge on the spot? The wild
-thought even flashes through his brain that Sir Robin might, by the
-grace of God! be left dead on the ground, and that some time in the dim
-future he might win Peggy back to himself.
-
-But, with a tightening rein, he checks himself, as well as his horse, as
-he answers.
-
-"Mr. Chalmers, the Lady you name is one whom I honor most deeply, and it
-seems to me if she has seen fit to go into seclusion, or to marry
-secretly, that, while I may wish to God it had been in open church! I
-must continue to respect her preferences, until she elects to change
-them;" with which, breaking the little pause of silence which follows,
-Sir Percy gallops ahead, joining Mr. Brummell, who has put himself
-quickly out of the commotion he had foreseen as likely to arrive.
-
-Meantime, it may be correctly imagined that Her Ladyship, with all her
-sex's exquisite ingenuity at plaguing itself whenever it possibly can,
-had seized upon those words of Sir Percy's most easily twisted into a
-means of self-torture.
-
-"I wish to God it had been in open church!" instantly stuck itself in
-her thoughts beside "Consents;" the two forming just that species of
-flagellation which ladies so situated in mind are wont to inflict upon
-themselves.
-
-The supposed Sir Robin, from this on, until the arrival of the party at
-Ivy Dene, became taciturn, even morose, and not a syllable could be got
-from him in answer to the wildest gibes.
-
-Her eyes intent upon Sir Percy, who now kept to the fore with his host,
-My Lady Peggy, on the keen lookout for the possible assassin, and to the
-tune of "consents," and its running-mate, "I would to God it had been in
-open church!" put in a very dolorous twenty miles; but, on dismounting
-at Mr. Brummell's doorstep, she endeavored to infuse a little joyousness
-into her looks and speech.
-
-Indeed, 'twas difficult; yet no more so to-day than any other since she
-had been coerced by circumstances into an acceptance of the Beau's
-hospitality. Every mouthful of bread and meat Peggy ate well-nigh choked
-her, as she remembered 'twas meant for Sir Robin McTart. She felt
-herself a trickster, a villain of the deepest dye, and yet saw no way
-out of her usurped character with honor and repute; no way of keeping in
-it save by the deeper dyeing of her soul in sin, which she promised
-herself, and heaven, to expiate as soon as Percy should be safe from Sir
-Robin's men.
-
-The afternoon was spent as had been planned; the country cook's dinner
-was voted a perfect success: Mr. Chalmers, slightly raised by wine, even
-going so far as to send her down, with his compliments, his favorite
-ruby heart-pin: when, on the spot, not a gentleman present but whipped
-out a jewel from ruffle, finger, pocket or fob, and Peggy herself tying
-'em up in a pocket-napkin laced with Brussels and perfumed like the
-civet-cat, sent them down to the astonished lass in the kitchen.
-
-A game of cards was in order after the repast: a tilt at politics: a
-wager on the question of tea in the Colonies; Lady Peggy and Sir Percy
-keeping, by the grace of each, well apart in all these encounters; and
-at twelve o'clock, just as the moon was rising behind a bank of splendid
-star-fringed clouds, Mr. Brummell and his guests set forth on their
-homeward road.
-
-The beauty of the night was such as soothes and casts its own mantle of
-peace over even those unquiet spirits which may be abroad.
-
-It reminded Lady Peggy, as she rode along, of just such another when she
-and Percy had wandered up and down together in the weedy gardens at
-Kennaston. Of that identical night Percy also was thinking, and of his
-wilful Lady's bright sallies, quick smiles, frowns; yea, even of one
-little touch of her red lips, light as thistledown, which now he seemed
-to feel the ghost of, on his forehead.
-
-The cavalcade had left the highway some distance behind; the moon was
-fast being overtaken by the clouds whence she had, an hour or more ago,
-emerged; the dews fell thick, and the scent of the hawthorn was sweet in
-the air as they plunged into Epstowe Forest.
-
-"Ah, Gentlemen," cried out Mr. Brummell, snapping his whip, "by Gad,
-Sirs, what a night for Tom Kidde and his merry men! the skies dark, the
-moon playin' hide and seek, fifteen watches and purses, and as many
-rings, pins and seals between us as you left not at Ivy Dene with my
-cook Elizabeth!"
-
-"Ha! ha! ha! No fears of Tom Kidde, an he knows our caliber, jumping out
-upon us!" laughs Lord Wootton.
-
-"'Slife! Sir, he's the sort of highwayman to jump out on the best mettle
-that strides horse-flesh or carries gold. The young devil's afraid of
-nothing that breathes, and has been the terror of travelers now these
-three or four years gone," says Vane.
-
-"He's not above one-and-twenty, smooth-faced as a girl, those say who've
-caught a glimpse of him under his mask; dresses like a macaroni, voiced
-like a choir-singer, and nimble as an Indian monkey!"
-
-"Frequents he this neighborhood?" queries Lady Peggy, who at mention of
-the word "highwayman" has tightened her rein, clapped a hand on her
-holster, and felt her heart thump, as she involuntarily connects it with
-possible danger to Percy.
-
-"That he does," said Mr. Chalmers. "His den, or one of 'em's somewhere
-in the depths of Epstowe; and no one can tell when or where he's like to
-turn up next."
-
-"When did he turn up last?" says Sir Wyatt, laughing.
-
-"I can tell you," returns Vane. "'Twas about Candlemas. I was down at
-home on a visit from town, when the news came, almost frightening my
-mother out of her wits, and setting the maids a-shivering like so many
-poppies in a storm. Tom Kidde had pounced on Lord Brookwood not a mile
-from his own gates, lifted him off his mount in the politest fashion
-imaginable, rifled His Lordship's pockets, appropriated his weapons, and
-ridden off on his victim's horse, leaving His Lordship tied to a tree at
-the roadside, where he was found by Biggs, the J.P., the next morning,
-a-bellowin' and a-cursin' like a wild bull."
-
-A hearty laugh greets Mr. Vane's description.
-
-"Yes, but that ain't all of't, My Lords and Gentlemen," continues he.
-
-"By no means!" cries Beau Brummell, out of his fit of hilarity. "I
-recall now, that I rode over from Lauriston Castle, where I was
-visiting, that very morning, and heard the adventure from Brookwood
-himself. I fancy he had the laugh, or will have it some day, on Tom, or
-some of his men, for the stolen mare was none other than His Lordship's
-famous 'Homing Nell.'"
-
-"Is it possible!" exclaims Sir Percy, "the mare that's been taken off a
-hundred miles, let loose, and finds her way home again; the mare that's
-been sold and ridden fifty miles away, and then, when she felt a hand at
-her mouth she could master, has taken the bit between her teeth, and the
-one in the saddle's only sometimes been able to keep his seat, and let
-her take him straight back whence she came?"
-
-"The very same 'Homing Nell.' Brookwood's sure of her getting back
-sooner or later," says the Beau.
-
-"They'll never catch Tom, though," cries Escombe.
-
-"If they do," remarks Vane, "he'll hang not two hours after he's bagged;
-his death-warrant's been lying signed in Mr. Biggs's pocket-book any
-time this twelvemonth; and there's still a gibbet standing on the hill
-above Brook-Armsleigh Village!"
-
-"Zounds! Sirs!" exclaims Mr. Chalmers, "what a life 't must be, tho';
-sleep o' days, wake o' nights, prowling under the branches, harkening
-for game from dusk till dawn, all seasons the same, one's heart in one's
-mouth, till the hoof's heard, and then a masking dash, a brawl, a thrift
-quick as the lightning's flash; a corpse or two, and your purse the
-heavier by as many guineas as the game's had under cover--and all to the
-tune of the owl's cry, and I doubt not for some sweet Maid Marian's
-sake!"
-
-"'Slife! hear the boy!" cries Mr. Brummell. "One would think him sired
-by a Jack Sheppard rather than by the gentlest Sir that ever lived. For
-your froward tendencies, Sir, you shall pay a penalty."
-
-"Yea, yea! a penalty! a penalty!" cry they all.
-
-"In what kind?" returns Jack, waving his hat over his head.
-
-"A song! a song!" they answer.
-
-"Which one?" asks he, nothing loath, for his lungs are lusty and his
-reputation for singing above the ordinary.
-
-"What you will," they answer.
-
-"Well, then, what say you to 'Lady Betty Takes the Air,' since all can
-join me in the chorus?"
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Percy," says Jack, "you've a pretty pipe in your throat; give me the
-key, will you? not too high, you rascal, I'm not vainglorious at my
-music. So, and, so--there," as Percy does as he is asked.
-
- When all the May is deck'd about
- With hawthorn bud and blow;
- When pinkly shows the heather's tip,
- And harebells nod a-row--
-
- Lady Betty takes the air,
- Sing ah fa, la-la-la!
- With a rush hat on her hair:
- Sing ah fa, la-la-la!
-
- When all the brown earth thrills to green,
- When rivers laugh and sing;
- When lark and thrush cajole and coax,
- And all the wood's a-wing--
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When Corydon most sad, forlorn,
- With wrinkled hose, distraught,
- All flouted by his worshiped Fair,
- Walks forth as one that's daft,
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When, at the turn-stile next the park,
- The sad swain stops to sigh--
- "No lady ever lived so dear
- As she for whom I'd die!"
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When, as the sun walks up the glade,
- And as the milkmaid hies
- Across the paddock with her pails,
- And as the lark doth rise--
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- Cries Betty, flaunting past, "Oh fie!
- A gallant all unkempt,
- Such ungenteel and woful sight
- Kind fortune me exempt!"
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- When speaking thus, the May-breeze blew
- Her rush hat o'er the stile,
- And Corydon caught quick the gaze,
- And swift his sigh turned smile,
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- Thus, when the May is deck'd about
- With hawthorn bud and blow,
- Sweet Betty ties her hat-strings fast,
- A gallant in the bow!
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
- 'Twas ever thus, dear maids and men,
- Whene'er ye walk abroad--
- 'Tis e'er the little breeze that blows
- Each lady to her lord!
- Lady Betty takes the air, etc.
-
-Every one joins in the chorus with a hearty good will; all save Her
-Ladyship. Peggy dares not lift her woman's voice, lest Escombe at right,
-or Wootton at her left, shall hear its most unmannish lilt. She mouths
-the words, though, and listens, as she has many a time before, to Sir
-Percy's tones, and wonders if the sentiment is making him think of the
-Lady Diana.
-
-The Lady Diana, however, is very far from Sir Percy's imagination. He
-has been moodily ruminating on the possibilities of Tom Kidde (the most
-renowned desperado in all England of that day) suddenly bursting upon
-the party, and leaving a corpse behind him--that of Sir Robin McTart! He
-has been picturing to himself the profound pleasure it would give him to
-assist in fetching Sir Robin to the nearest church for decent burial,
-and the almost hilarious joy that would be his in attending his rival's
-body to the grave! These were, according to the strict code, most
-murderous thoughts, and yet how pleasant, if how altogether unprofitable
-they were also.
-
-Mr. Chalmers is in the midst of his last verse, his voice echoing into,
-and back, from the depths of the great green wood; there is not a wisp
-of the moon visible by this, and no light, save the halo from her beauty
-which lines and rims the vast masses of clouds above them.
-
-Peggy is listening to the song; she hears it well: also the crunch of
-her horse's hoofs on the narrow path; also, the crackle of the fresh
-twigs as they snap before the advance; and too, so sharp are her ears,
-the sleepy cheep of some disturbed bird in its nest, and, what else?
-
-What is this curious stealthy stir, far-off, and creeping nearer in the
-wood?
-
-And, hark! Peggy puts her hand to her ear to hear a subdued whistle,
-sweet, tuneful, underbreath, but patent to her sense, and too, to Sir
-Percy's.
-
-Before either can move, or, indeed, had as yet gathered the impulse of
-even self-defense, into the midst of Mr. Chalmers and the rest, with
-their chorus, dashes a company of riders in masks.
-
-A shot, low-aimed, and merely intended as a slight warning of what may
-be expected, should occasion demand, strikes the ground at Her
-Ladyship's right.
-
-With remorse and reparation at his heart-strings--'tis the kind of man
-who could be but generous to his worst enemy--Sir Percy's horse is flung
-betwixt the supposed Sir Robin and the band.
-
-"Good evening, My Lords and Gentlemen," says the leader, in a voice like
-a lute. "I thank you heartily for coming my way! Purses and watches,
-merry Sirs, jewels, trinkets, snuff-boxes, if of gold, pins, fobs,
-seals, these are all the toll I demand, and shall be forced to collect,
-if you show any disposition to deny."
-
-It might he wisely argued that, while this speech was being made, any
-gentleman might have either run the highwayman through, or put an ounce
-of lead into his heart, but the fact of the matter was, each gentleman
-found himself face to face with another gentleman who held a blunderbuss
-up to within three inches of his nose.
-
-My Lady's first thought had been that Sir Robin's men had not waited for
-the Sunday night to come, but presently she recognized the truth, and,
-stung by the fact that Sir Percy had put himself between her and danger,
-she was the only one of the whole company who stirred in her saddle
-other than to do the bidding of Tom Kidde.
-
-While the rest were busily engaged in emptying their treasures, she,
-making feint to do the same, says very low and tauntingly to Sir Percy:
-
-"Had I but one to show fight with me, I'd ne'er give in to these
-scoundrels."
-
-"As soon done as said, Sir Robin," whispers Percy. "No man can say I'm
-his lesser in courage!" with which he wrests his bridle from the
-blackguard whose hand's upon it, whips out his sword with one hand,
-picks out his pistol with the other, grips his reins in his teeth, and
-strikes with steel and shot, both at once.
-
-Peg's his match, imitating him with such a will as sets every gentleman
-of 'em a-shooting, a-lunging and a-cursing with all the arms and breath
-he's got; and sets the robbers for a second to their wits, for they are
-not used to any sort of encounter, save one that's terror-stricken and
-submissive in the opponent.
-
-'Tis a bit of a mle quite in the dark; slashing and pounding betwixt
-the branches: now a man unhorsed, anon up again; shots resounding,
-powder flashing, until in about ten minutes or less the chief makes a
-plunge for Sir Percy, crying out,
-
-"So 'twas you said 'fight,' was't! Have a care; no man can defy Tom
-Kidde and live to tell it!"
-
-"Nay!" shouts Her Ladyship, with spurs all inches into the gray's sides,
-making him rear as she puts herself between Percy and the highwayman,
-"'twas I said 'fight'!"
-
-Whizz! and a ball intended for Sir Percy strikes the gray dead under
-her.
-
-Whizz! and her ball strikes Tom Kidde from his mount.
-
-In less time than it takes to tell it, Peg was straight in the
-highwayman's saddle; he was picked up by two of his men, bleeding, set
-before one of 'em, and off: My Lords and Gentlemen find themselves once
-more alone in the midst of Epstowe Forest, a-crawling about on their
-hands and knees a-gathering up their spilled guineas and trinkets by
-flash of tinder-box.
-
-Sir Percy, trying to explain to them who had been the means of their
-recovering their valuables and of putting the desperadoes to flight,
-cries out:
-
-"I tell you! we owe't all to Sir Robin here! 'Slife, Gentlemen, I'd not
-have ventured to think of resistance had it not been for him. 'Twas he
-said, close in my ear, 'fight,' and by Gad! Sirs, he's lost more'n any
-of us; the horse shot under him."
-
-"The gray's well lost teaching Tom Kidde he can't terrify all the men in
-England," answers the Beau from his sprawling search after his diamond
-snuff-box.
-
-"Ho, Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin!" Sir Wyatt shouts it out, and the
-rest of the company take it up with a long, mellow cadence that echoes
-for a mile.
-
-"Answer man, for, by the faith, if we can't pledge you here in anything
-but a lap of May-dew out of a primrose leaf, we'll drink you such a
-bumper, an we reach the White Horse, as never was filled before!
-London'll toast you at every dinner-table in Mayfair. Odzooks, Sir, were
-you the fashion yesterday, what will you be to-morrow!" This from
-Escombe.
-
-"Where is Sir Robin?" asks Percy. "He was beside me not five seconds
-since, but now, by my tinder, nor yet by the coming dawn, can I descry
-him," shading his eyes with his hand and peering about, for of a truth
-'tis close to four o'clock, and, notwithstanding the heavy clouds, the
-east begins to thrill with the touch of day.
-
-"Robin! Sir Robin! Ho, now! Think not to play a trick on us and
-presently spring from a greenwood tree," says Wootton.
-
-"Sir Robin," exclaims Percy loudly, "I pray you answer and leave not
-your friends to imagine evil."
-
-"Tut, tut, 'evil'," puffs the Beau, rising from his knees. "Evil'll
-never happen to him. Zounds! but my legs ache! He's laughing in his
-sleeve now, hard by; Robin's not one to court notice or praise--as
-modest a youth as I ever beheld."
-
-"Worthy of Lady Peggy Burgoyne even, I suppose?" says Mr. Chalmers
-mischievously, as he adjusts his recovered fob. "I could embrace him for
-the rendering of me back my watch, but I think him a fool to eschew good
-company and make home alone to town."
-
-"Jack," says Percy, low, "I like not his quitting of us. 'Twas too
-sudden. I believe I'll go a-hunting him," pulling his rein as the
-cavalcade once more prepared to start.
-
-"Where?" asks Jack. "Bah! be not such a ninny; belike he's off to his
-Lady, to win kisses off her lips by the rehearsal of his prowess. An a
-man chooses to flee me, I let him: do you the same, Percy; 'tis a good
-advice, I promise you!"
-
-"But suppose those devils attack him again when alone?" says this one,
-not all reassured, as he and Jack linger a bit in the rear of their
-companions.
-
-"Go to the devil!" remarks Mr. Chalmers, blithely. "I'm for breakfast at
-the White Horse, and for leavin' the hero of the hour to eat his where
-he sees fit. He's safe enough."
-
-"I've a misgiving," answers de Bohun, "and he risked his life for mine
-to-night. I'll strike off here to the west and join you when I find
-him."
-
-"Good luck to you for a fool!" laughs Jack, putting spurs and going on
-to tell this news to the others.
-
-[Illustration: The instant that Lady Peggy...]
-
-The instant that Lady Peggy felt herself in the highwayman's saddle, she
-knew from long acquaintance with every colt Bickers had bred, raised, or
-broke, since she was six, that her wrists had met their match. Before
-she had time to utter a word, turn her head, or think, she felt the warm
-flesh under her quiver with that recovering impulse which horsemen know
-so well; that streak of untamed and untamable nature which lies, however
-deep-hidden, in every four-foot that breathes, and which never fails to
-spurt to the front when it gets exactly the right chance.
-
-Peggy's light, nay, by this, weak hand, now gave the big black its
-chance, and with a snort, a toss of its head, and a vicious swell of its
-sides, it laid back its ears, took the bit between its teeth as if it
-had been a mess of oats, and reared a length on its forelegs: when,
-finding its rider still on, it started on a run which Her Ladyship had
-not the slightest power to check. All she could do was to keep her seat.
-
-Like a flash, out of the forest on to the width of the heath, plume
-waving, sword flapping, laces rippling, curls flying; the mare's mane
-slapping in her face; legs and arms and will all at work to stop the
-beast or bring it into some sort of subjection. To no purpose. The black
-head now low, as if picking up a scent from the turf it tore; now up, as
-though snuffing its goal from afar, the mare skirted the heath, gained
-the meadows; over hedges where the birds rose in flocks behind its
-heels; ditches, where the muddy waters splashed over Her Ladyship's
-satin clothes: here a bolt into an orchard, leaving a ribbon a-hanging
-on a limb; over the wall like a rocket, and, at breakneck gait, through
-a hamlet, rousing the people out of their beds to peep at pane, and
-wonder. Slap-dash into a pasture, scattering ewes and lambs like wool
-before the wind, taking a five-bar into a common, thence to highway;
-scampering a footbridge to leave it shivered behind them, and all Peg's
-thought just a brave prayer to be kept alive, so that she might not fail
-of foiling Sir Robin's men Sunday night!
-
-Where she was going, she knew not. Where she was, she had no smallest
-idea when, as the sun looked over the long low line of horizon before
-her, she with a shudder beheld a gibbet outlined against the morning
-sky. The black gave a lunge that knocked her feet out of the stirrups
-(quick in again), reared, whinnied like a devil, and, nose to ground,
-now made her rider understand that up to the present she had done
-nothing much in the way of speed, or of efforts at emptying the saddle.
-
-Yet Her Ladyship stuck on, with flying colors, too, and no loss of
-either wig, hat, weapon or will, and with grateful heart she now found
-herself being spun across a magnificent park, where the deer fled before
-her, it is true, but at the upper end of which she saw looming the
-turrets and towers of a fine castle.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- _Wherein Lady Peggy is condemned to be
- hanged, and sets forth, attended by the
- clergy, for the gallows._
-
-
-Although Sir Percy had cheerfully foretold for Kennaston the roseate
-picture of Lady Diana's "Yes" crowning the young poet's somewhat
-diffident suit with untold happiness, the fact was quite other. Her
-Ladyship, on the day of Mr. Brummell's party to Ivy Dene, having
-overheard the Honorable Dolly Tarleton, in the library, laying six to
-four to Lady Biddy O'Toole, that their host's daughter was "only waiting
-for the beautiful young poet's asking, to jump into his arms
-immediately," did, with such sudden change of demeanor from sweets to
-sours, languishing eyes to averted looks, smiles to pouts, corner chats
-to open flouts, put her lover into a state of mind, the like of which he
-presently described, as only he could, in a copy of verses, which the
-next night at White's were pronounced to be, indeed, "the masterpiece of
-one whose heart pants, whose whole being's but at the beck and call of
-her who wears a smocked petticoat, ogles with a witching eye, and should
-be vain that so much genius lays itself at her feet, to wit, Lady D----a
-W----n."
-
-For, taking immediate fright at his Lady's coldness, Kennaston had
-ordered a post-chaise from the Brookwood Arms, and without a word of
-farewell to Lady Diana, save that embodied in an ode, "To Chloe When
-Unkind," which her woman found pinned to Her Ladyship's cloak when she
-was putting it on her shoulders the following morning, had gone to town,
-and just in time at the White Horse to be haled into Mr. Brummell's
-party for breakfast, and to learn of the adventure with Tom Kidde, the
-valor of Sir Robin McTart, and the absence of that young gentleman, as
-also Sir Percy, from the board.
-
-When Lady Diana's woman hooked her mistress's cloak about her 'twas at
-five o'clock in the morning, and of the party at the Castle every lady's
-woman was performing the same office, adding hood over curls and puffs,
-and sticking the finest of cambric pocket-napkins into their mistress'
-hands by the half dozens; for 'twas easily seen that such early rising
-could be for no other cause than to go forth to bathe their Ladyships'
-faces in the May-dew; the which, when gathered from little copses and
-shadowy nooks before the sun had yet shone upon't, was warranted to
-enhance that beauty which was already evident, and to create those
-charms which, alas! are occasionally lacking.
-
-Lady Diana spelled out her lover's verses as best she could, tripping
-from door to door, and calling her young companions from their mirrors;
-sending a footman and a page to summon the gallants who were to
-accompany them in their expedition, and laughing heartily as she made
-out more from a footman than from Kennaston's muse that he had betaken
-himself to town rather than longer incur her displeasure and her frowns.
-
-"Bless me, but my suitor's in a fine pickle! Lud! though, I'm not
-disposed to have these hussies a-laying six to four on my bein' ready to
-jump at his offer; still, I'd rather he'd stopped over, or else that
-some one most amusin' were here; for instance Sir Robin McTart, which is
-not to be!"
-
-Then a-rapping at the doors, and laughter from girlish lips; pattering
-of heels down the hall and stair-case; out to meet the gentlemen, bowing
-and complimenting on the terrace; over the lawns, and through the
-flower-gardens, and past the offices and stables, where Lord Brookwood,
-even thus early, was sunning himself in the yard, and talking over
-county matters with Mr. Biggs, J.P.
-
-"Where to? Where to?" sings out His Lordship cheerily with hat in hand,
-and Mr. Biggs down to the ground before so much beauty, fashion and
-rank.
-
-"Off to the copse, father," calls back Diana, "to gather the May-dew and
-wash our faces; when we come back you must tell us all how much more
-beautiful we are to-day than we were yesterday!"
-
-With which lively sally Lady Diana and the rest of 'em are crossing the
-hill and laughing as they pass out of sight on their two miles' away
-walk to Armsleigh Copse.
-
-Lord Brookwood is about to resume his conversation with Biggs, while the
-half-dozen grinning stable boys, behind His Lordship's back, are rubbing
-their fists in the wet turf of a paddock, and smearing their red faces
-with the dew, the head-groom touching them up with a lash; when a
-whinny, that sets every animal in the stalls and out of 'em a-replying,
-sets all the cocks crowing, hens cackling, chicks peeping, dogs barking,
-geese squawking, smites their startled ears, and yonder, hilly-o-ho!
-Sirs; in a cloud of upturned soil, in a shower of splash from the river,
-with a thud on the wooden bridge, a bound over the stone wall of the
-kitchen garden; comes a black with nigh every tooth in its mouth bared,
-foaming, smoking, bloody; rider bent double to saddle's bow, clinging
-with legs and arms.
-
-"Homing Nell and the highwayman! Tom Kidde! Tom Kidde!"
-
-"Homing Nell!" the shout goes up from every throat there, from His
-Lordship to the 'ostlers and boys.
-
-"Tom Kidde! Tom Kidde!"
-
-"By Gad! Sir," cries the Earl. "I knew Nell'd come back sooner or later!
-Surround him. Bag him!"
-
-Peggy hears the shouts as the ungovernable steed lunges, lurches, rears
-beneath her spurs and still tightly gripped reins; she takes in the
-situation, but not to its full import, until she now hears the voice of
-Biggs uplifted.
-
-"Lord Brookwood! Lord Brookwood! mind her heels, My Lord, mind her
-heels! Leave the takin' of the damned cut-purse to me and the boys!"
-
-At the word "Brookwood," Her Ladyship realizes that she is on the
-domains of Lady Diana's father! and being mistaken for a Knight of the
-Road!
-
-The latter she felt she could easily abide, and as easily refute; but
-the former was more than even her spent spirit could stand. So, as
-Biggs, His Lordship, the grooms, the stable-boys and 'ostlers and
-helpers all formed into a ring with whips, canes, stones and halloos to
-take her prisoner, she plucked up courage from the depths, and, raising
-herself in her saddle and her head in the air, with one superhuman tug
-at the bridle and prick with the steels, she made to get off! and away!
-But Her Ladyship's nerve was not the equal of Homing Nell's, nor yet to
-be pitted with success against the waving arms and jumping legs of a
-dozen stout men. With the final crack of the head-groom's lash about her
-heels, with the pop in the air above her hat of Mr. Biggs's blunderbuss,
-caught from the hand of one of the lads, "Homing Nell" was brought to a
-quivering stand-still, and My Lady Peggy to bay in the stable-yard of
-Brookwood Castle!
-
-"Ha!" cries the Earl, "my pretty fellow, you're trapped at last! The
-night you stole the black mare from me I shouted after you, as well as
-the gag at my mouth would permit, that she'd bring you no luck, and that
-muscles of iron wouldn't hold her the day she made up her mind to get
-home."
-
-Peggy, glad of the use of her lungs once more, and now nigh bursting
-with laughter at being so glibly mistook for one of the most reckless
-fellows in all England, took off her hat, bowed low, and said:
-
-"My Lord Brookwood, 'tis, I believe, I have the honor of addressing?"
-
-"Ho! ho! ho!" Mr. Biggs, from a survey of the saddle-bow now bursts out
-in triumphant joyfulness.
-
-"'Od's blood, My Lord! but here's luck, here's justice, here's what
-comes of my bein' here when I am!" and Mr. Biggs now holds aloft upon
-the point of his stick the black mask of Master Tom Kidde, which the
-rogue had dropped when he was hit, and which had caught and hung by its
-riband from that moment to this, unseen by Lady Peg.
-
-"Highwayman! highwayman! highwayman!" yells every lung in the place,
-while the whole dozen, including His Lordship and the Justice, threaten
-Lady Peggy with their cudgels, lashes and stones.
-
-"I pray ye, My Lord, Gentlemen, and good fellows!" cries she,
-remembering now the entire history of the animal she bestrides, as
-rehearsed some six hours earlier by Beau Brummell and Mr. Vane. "I am no
-highwayman."
-
-A groan of derision greets this announcement.
-
-"Nay, but the rather am I the victim of Tom Kidde, than he himself!
-Together with a party of my friends, being at mid-night last, on the
-return from a visit to Mr. Brummell's seat, Ivy Dene, we were set upon
-by the rogues in the midst of Epstowe Forest; I had the luck, both good
-and bad, to put a ball into Tom, to get my horse shot under me, and to
-mount the scoundrel's steed, the which has brought me to Your Lordship's
-door, and the mare, herself, to where she belongs, it seems!"
-
-"A damned fine story, 'fore George!" exclaims Biggs, laughing
-triumphantly, now holding up two watches, three rings, a diamond
-snuff-box, a seal, two magnificent pins, and a most splendid jeweled
-stomacher, high above his head in the tip of the sunshine.
-
-"'Sdeath!" cried Lord Brookwood, seizing one of the trinkets and
-examining it with his spy-glass. "What's this? 'Percy de Bohun,
-Christmas from his aff. mother,'" reads His Lordship. Then another,
-"'Wyatt Lovell souvenir of Italy!' Gad, Biggs," looking Her Ladyship
-over, where she still sits atop of the steaming black, "we've got the
-cursed blackguard this time! What else in his saddle pockets? aught?"
-
-These Biggs, assisted by the head-groom, is energetically emptying of a
-miscellaneous collection of valuables, while Lady Peggy looks on in
-amazement as yet only flavored with amusement, and one more vain regret
-for her abandoned petticoats.
-
-"Yes, My Lord, these thousands of pounds' worth," replied the Justice,
-holding aloft his treasure trove; "and it'll be a short shrift for the
-devil, I can say that."
-
-"Hark ye," now says Her Ladyship, as she recalls with a not unnatural
-tremor the death-warrant she had heard was lying to hand in Mr. Biggs's
-pocket. "Lord Brookwood, I am no highwayman; my story is true; I
-am"--the words stuck in Peggy's throat; she coughed, the stable boys
-tittered; then the head-groom tilted the saddle and spilled her out of
-it to the ground; at a word from Biggs, a couple of the men tied her,
-hand and foot, with a stout rope, and a pair of farming reins about her
-middle.
-
-"Now who do you call yourself, my fine fellow?" says His Lordship.
-
-"Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent!" cries Peggy, glad to be able to
-answer without the lie direct. "And I demand instant freedom and
-immunity," cries she, tortured and quivering beneath the rude hands and
-ruder gibes of the grooms and 'ostlers.
-
-"Demand away! my pretty buck-skin, with your jeweled hilt!" returns
-Biggs, stripping the weapon from her thigh. "Your satin breeches and
-gold-laced waistcoat! 'Tain't no use denyin' you your speech, and your
-will to palaver on whatever matter you will, for before the clock
-strikes eight, you'll be home with your father in hell."
-
-"Tut, tut, Mr. Biggs," says His Lordship. "Call Mr. Frewen, the Curate,
-he's at his studies in the library, we havin' sat late over our cards
-last night; and let him have his prayer-book to hand, open at the page
-for malefactors after condemnation."
-
-"Go, you, Michael," this to one of the now awestruck lads hanging,
-staring at Peg over the paddock paling. "Ask Mr. Frewen to come
-quickly."
-
-"But this is monstrous, Sir!" cries Her Ladyship, now thoroughly
-alarmed, and near to losing her wits betwixt her endeavors to keep up
-her man's estate, her contempt of her own frowardness, her shame at
-being thus at the mercy of her rival's parent, and her actual terror of
-her position.
-
-"I do beseech you, I am an honest person, my tale is true. Is it not but
-the justice due to any subject of His Majesty's, however humble, that he
-should not be condemned before he is tried, or even his identity
-proven?"
-
-"I'll be sworn, My Lord," exclaims Biggs, "'tis a voice and air to
-wheedle fine ladies out of their stomachers and chains, but not to tempt
-the law. Sirrah!" he continues, addressing himself to Her Ladyship, who
-is by this firmly tied to a post like a colt about to be broken to
-harness. "'Tain't no use for you to be imaginin' as justice and His
-Majesty ain't a-doing their best for you. Here have you been a terror to
-all God-fearing, law-abiding Englishmen any time these half-dozen of
-years. A-poundin' every heath in England, Hornslow, Bagshott, and all
-the commons, Wimbledon, Wandsworth, Finchley; a-hulking in Epstowe with
-your mates, and making the lives of travelers a burden most horrible;
-ain't you secreted uncountable pounds' worth of plunder in your devilish
-caves and dens? Haven't you left the earth strewed with corpses in your
-ugly path? Answer me, Sir!" and Mr. Biggs stamps his foot on the ground.
-
-"No, Sir!" shouts Peg, "I ain't and haven't, and I'm not! 'Slife, My
-Lord Brookwood," cries she in a terrible way, twisting her tied hands
-together. "For God's sake, send up to town post-haste, and find out Mr.
-Brummell, Mr. Vane, Mr. Chalmers, Lord Escombe, Sir Lovell Wyatt!"
-
-But His Lordship has turned up the path toward the Castle and met Mr.
-Frewen, to whom he is explaining the necessities of the situation.
-
-'Tis such a fair May day, with bud and blossom, bough and bird; fowls,
-men, beasts, all free of tether, and My Lady is like to weep; cry out
-her sex, her very name and estate, as she feels the gall upon her wrists
-and ankles, and knows what fate awaits her.
-
-She even, for one weak moment, thinks she will implore Lord Brookwood to
-send up to London for her rival, his own daughter, Lady Diana, and let
-her come down and tell him who is Sir Robin McTart--for Lady Peggy
-believes Lady Di to be in town and has no knowledge to the contrary.
-
-Yet, there in the stable-yard, with imprisonment as she supposes, and
-even death dangling for her at no great loss of time, with her liberty
-gone; her word no better than a thief's; with no earthly hand upraised
-to sustain her, My Lady Peggy's stout heart does not flutter to dismay.
-For that one brief instant 'tis, without doubt, in her mind to confess
-and fling herself upon the mercy of the Earl and the Curate, who now
-draw nigh; but when she reflects upon the monstrous tissue of her
-deceits, and the unutterable shame of the exposure of the cause of them,
-'tis then she is like to whimper, but for naught else.
-
-Mr. Frewen approaches; 'tis a young man of a pale cadaverous
-countenance, whose first bow to a highwayman is indeed, though he find
-him in durance vile, a timid one.
-
-The supposed Tom Kidde gives the man of the cloth eye for eye, so that
-this one quails and stumbles in his speech; and finally, leaving in the
-rear all his preconceived plans for a hasty reformation, he promptly
-remarks, opening his prayer-book to the riband:
-
-"You know your doom, Mr. Kidde; shall I pray for you here?"
-
-"Faith!" says Lady Peggy, plucking up heart, once her resolution is
-taken not to reveal her secret, come what may. "I do not know my doom,
-Sir! It seems sufficient 'doom' for an honest English gentleman, who has
-met with a mishap, to be brought to a nobleman's threshold and get foul
-treatment rather than welcome. Pray for me, Sir, an you will, there's
-none so much deserves or needs it. Pray on!"
-
-"Frewen!" beckons His Lordship, as he watches the 'ostlers rubbing down
-the restored Homing Nell, and confers with Mr. Biggs as to the plunder
-and the meting out of justice. "Frewen, gain the wretch's confidence an
-you can, the whereabouts of all the gold and jewels he has stolen; my
-watch. And also, if he have wife or child, it might not be amiss, eh,
-Biggs? to inquire if he have any message for them?"
-
-"Aye, My Lord" puts in the pompous Biggs, up-looking from his perusal of
-a long, sealed, important-appearing parchment, unrolled before his eyes.
-"By ascertaining their whereabouts, we should perhaps get the clue to
-all the bloody rascal's pelf."
-
-A combination of Christian charity and official shrewdness, which
-commended itself highly to His Lordship, as he sent the Curate back to
-the comforting of the malefactor across the yard.
-
-"Hark ye, Mr. Kidde," says Mr. Frewen, lowering his voice, and, for the
-credit of his soul, with gentleness at his heartstrings.
-
-"I'm not Mr. Kidde, I tell you, I swear't!" says Her Ladyship firmly.
-
-"Well, well," says the man of the Church, "mayhap that's an assumed
-name; but surely, now, Sir, with not two hours of life left you, to me,
-me alone, Sir, it were wiser drop all disguises. Surely now you are not
-Sir Robin McTart?" in a soothing and sorrowful tone.
-
-Peggy winces.
-
-"Go seek and ask all the noblemen and gentlemen I've named, Sir, they'll
-quickly set me to rights in your eyes, I pledge you. Oh, Sir, for the
-love of God!" cries she, whispering very low. "I speak the truth! I am
-no highwayman."
-
-"I am used to quibbles, Mr. Kidde; I know that now you are no robber,
-but merely a prisoner under sentence of death."
-
-"What!" cries she. "'Tis not possible that a man is taken, tried,
-disallowed to prove himself, and put out of the world, betwixt sunrise
-and breakfast, in the reign of His Majesty George the Third!"
-
-"'Tis so," answers the Curate, pulling the rope and leathers, and
-pushing Her Ladyship around a bit toward the east, as he points what he
-considers a salutary finger. "Yonder's the gibbet, Mr. Kidde, and from
-it you must hang by eight. I implore of you now--"
-
-Lady Peggy's eyes are fastened upon the arms and cross-beams of the
-gallows, which are outlined clearly against the deep blue sky, and full
-in the shine of the spring sun.
-
-"Well," says she to herself, all in a flash, as thoughts can travel
-three abreast ofttimes, and twelve times quicker than the scrivener can
-set 'em down--"I've been a very accursedly wicked girl; but, thank God!
-my pride ain't all gone yet. I'll hang! but I'll never give up my
-secret! When I'm gone, if they find it out--I won't be here to be
-a-hearin' of the taunts and jeers and sympathies; and of my mother's and
-father's sorrows!" At this point Peggy is very near to tears, when the
-Curate says, interrupting their possible flow:
-
-"Now, Mr. Kidde, if you have any message for--your wife--perhaps?" he
-ejaculates hesitatingly, and with good knowledge that the marriage
-ceremony was one usually omitted from the code of gentlemen of the road.
-
-"I have no wife!" cries Her Ladyship, in a heat betwixt her remorse for
-her parents and the unconscious ridiculousness of Mr. Frewen's question.
-
-"Or it might be," suggests this one with a sigh, "you have a little
-child, Mr. Kidde--?"
-
-"No, Sir," says My Lady very low and quick. "That I haven't."
-
-"A dear friend and comrade?" pursues the Curate.
-
-"Yes, I have," answers she, for during all this hour just past, a
-thousand thoughts have come to Peggy about Sir Percy.
-
-"Ah," responds Frewen joyously. "Now tell me where he's to be found, and
-entrust me with the message, and be assured all will be carried out to
-your wishes."
-
-"Thank you," says Peggy. "Free my right hand if you will; give me
-something to write with, and the leaf out of your prayer-book, and I'll
-ask you the favor."
-
-The Curate, under the strict superintendence of Biggs, who has all this
-while been dispatching boys on horses, hither and yon, to notify the
-quality and the country side both, that Tom Kidde's been taken and will
-hang at eight from the gibbet a-top of Armsleigh Hill, loosens Her
-Ladyship's arm of the thong, and gives her a leaf and a pencil with the
-top of the post for a support.
-
-"To Sir Percy de Bohun, Charlotte Street, London," writes she. "plese An
-you lov God And The Kinge goe not evar Again toe walke onne The dove
-peere at The Bottomme of littel Boye yarde Their isse onne swares Toe
-Kille you & you doe This isse writ bye onne now noe more."
-
-Her Ladyship folds the scrap of paper over and over; hands back the
-pencil to Mr. Frewen; and then she says:
-
-"Sir, will you promise me on that Book you're holding in your hand,
-you'll not look at this or send it until I'm dead?"
-
-"I will," answers the young man, more touched than he cares to admit,
-even to himself.
-
-"And further," says she, "will you pledge me your word it shall reach
-him it's intended for before this time Sunday?"
-
-"I will," is the reply, "unless it be in the depths of Epstowe and
-inaccessible to my horse or myself."
-
-"'Tis in London, Sir, and quite accessible. 'Tis a warning for life and
-death, and I'll count you fail me not, nor him whose life you'd be the
-means of saving."
-
-"I pledge my word, Mr. Kidde," replies the Curate, backing away to make
-room for Justice Biggs, and with the very laudable sensation in his mind
-that he is to be the instrument of preserving some unknown from the
-clutches of the doubtless repentant outlaw's own men.
-
-In less than five minutes after, Biggs had marshaled his cavalcade and
-rode forth of the stable-yard of Brookwood Castle; his white cob at the
-head, a-holding in his left hand the duly signed warrant for the
-execution of one Thomas Kidde. Following him, strode the hastily
-summoned Master William Lambe, the butcher, who was to do duty as
-hangman (sooth to say, hangings were rare in this county, and there was
-no one appointed by law to the office, it being thus left to the
-discretion of the Justice).
-
-The Earl, mounted, rode next with a dozen of his servants, and in the
-midst of these My Lady Peggy, astride of the black once more, but with
-face to tail, hands tied together, and no hat to her head; Mr. Frewen at
-her side walking; a motley crowd growing and gathering at every step,
-about her, of gaping, wondering, jubilant and curious persons of all
-ages, sexes, and conditions.
-
-Never a whimper out of My Lord, the Earl of Exham's only daughter. A set
-rigid look about the drawn lips, and an unearthly pallor shining through
-all the dark stains Her Ladyship had been a-using of late.
-
-Not a word did she say, save to ask Mr. Frewen to read the Declaration
-of Absolution or Remission of Sins out of his prayer-book as they went;
-which he did under his breath, and much jolted by the rough highway,
-which now the procession had gained; and likewise laying much unction to
-his soul that, in so short a space of time, his comfortable
-ministrations had produced so seeming abundant godly results!
-
-When he had finished Her Ladyship said, "Amen," and thereafter held up
-her head with that courage which is born of one of two things, conscious
-innocence or a profound repentance for sins, which, while to others they
-may appear puerile, to the offender are worthy of the wrath of the
-Creator and the condemnation of man.
-
-She noted the hawthorn in the hedges, the dew upon the turf; the tall
-mawkin swaying in the wind in the middle of a newly sown field; and, as
-her lids raised, the mustering crowds, all with steps bent, and greedy
-eyes fixed, yonder to the hill-top where the gibbet stood, and where the
-new rope dangled for her neck.
-
-Yet she made no sign.
-
-Not even when she heard the rabble laying their groats and sixpences,
-that Kidde would, or wouldn't "die game."
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- _Rehearseth how, in the very nick o' time,
- Her Ladyship's neck is saved from
- the noose by Sir Percy._
-
-
-As yet, in the depths of Armsleigh Copse, no news of the supposed
-highwayman's capture had penetrated, although the Earl, with commendable
-foresight in behalf of the entertainment of his young daughter and her
-companions, had sent a messenger to impart the sight shortly to be had;
-the messenger, having a sweetheart in the other direction, must needs go
-apprise her first! So the gay Ladies and their cavaliers sat on fallen
-logs, strolled hither and yon, knelt to sop their bits of linen in the
-dewy hollows, laughed, chatted, dabbed their faces, now lacking any coat
-of crimson, save that which Nature might have vouchsafed, and made great
-show of a fine rural simplicity.
-
-"La!" cried the Honorable Dolly. "Water hasn't touched my face before
-since know I not when!" pecking at her cheeks with the corner of her
-pocket-napkin. "But it has a monstrous refreshing sensation!"
-
-"Oh, Doll, 'tis not thus and so you must apply it, as 'twere some French
-essence worth its weight in guineas; but look!" cried Lady Diana,
-flopping down and burying her face in a bath of the dew-drops, and
-laughing as she looks up dripping.
-
-"That's the way, faith," coincides Lady Biddy, scrubbing her own round
-cheeks with her wrung out linen, then both fists into her blue eyes to
-dry off the winkers.
-
-"'Slife, Ladies!" exclaims one of the gentlemen, "but you almost tempt
-us to follow your example."
-
-"Hither, ye gossoon," answers Lady Biddy, "an' I'll be afther makin'
-your countenance shine. Hark! Hoofs!"
-
-"Hoofs! Hoofs!" cry all these fair ones, a-darting this way and that,
-stuffing their napkins into their bodices, as a courteous voice, with
-a--
-
-"By your leave, Ladies and Sirs!" greets them, and none other than Sir
-Percy, self and horse spent in his fruitless search for the supposed Sir
-Robin, emerges from the bridle-path across the common, at the edge of
-the copse.
-
-"The top of the morning to you, Sir Percy de Bohun," laughs Lady Biddy.
-
-"Percy!" exclaims Lady Diana, "prithee, what are you doing out of doors
-at this hour?"
-
-"Seeking May-dew! mayhap," suggests the Honorable Dolly.
-
-"But nay, Your Ladyships," returns he. "I am seeking Sir Robin McTart."
-
-And forthwith Sir Percy proceeds to give them a history of the
-adventures of the night, omitting no smallest detail of the prowess of
-Sir Robin. He has just concluded his recital amid a burst of tumultuous
-"Ohs! ahs! Luds!" and a vast deal of commiserating sympathy, and a
-monstrous collection of pretty oaths and curses for Tom Kidde, when into
-the center of this colloquy jumps Lord Brookwood's messenger, nudging
-his sweetheart behind a tree, to tell as best he can his errand. To bid
-all the company at once to see the sight, it now not lacking more than
-the quarter to the hour when Mr. Lambe will adjust the noose, and send
-one of the boldest and most courtly young outlaws of his day a-swinging
-to his deserts.
-
-This information, it may be imagined, was received with acclaim of all,
-and by Sir Percy with positive joy; his only regret, as, dismounting and
-leading his jaded horse, he walked at Lady Diana's side, being that Sir
-Robin had so contrived to give them the slip, and not even to have the
-happiness of witnessing justice done the rogue who had so near deprived
-him of existence.
-
-"Here's to drive off the vapors an any one had 'em!" cried the lively
-Lady Biddy, swinging her hat by its ribands. "And sure'n it's not
-believed I'll be, when I get home to County Cork and tell 'em I saw a
-highwayman strung up!"
-
-"Faith, Di," says Sir Percy, "'twas a lucky chance for the whole country
-when the rascal made off with your father's famous black!"
-
-"That was it!" answered she. "The time always comes when no man's muscle
-on earth can hold Homing Nell; and 'twas a fine fortune, by my life!
-when Tom Kidde essayed to ride her. 'Twas a wonder he didn't jump and
-run for his life, though," adds she thoughtfully.
-
-"Zounds! there's a sort of devil-may-care humor in the composition of
-those fellows that keeps 'em sticking in any saddle they leap into,
-until the beast's bestridden that can throw them out of it. They're so
-used to taking chances, I doubt if they ever dream of danger until it's
-too late!"
-
-"When'll we see the gibbet?" asks the Honorable Dolly, panting with her
-quick pace.
-
-"Soon," answers Lady Di.
-
-"Ochone, an' I hope we'll not be afther bein' too late to see it all!"
-chimes in Lady Biddy short-breathed too.
-
-"Percy," says Diana, "up in your saddle and spy, for I'd not have us
-miss so fine a sight for a hundred pounds!"
-
-"No sooner said than done!" answers Sir Percy de Bohun, from atop of his
-horse, where he shades his eyes with his hand and gazes off to the hill
-where the gibbet stands.
-
-"Good God!" cries he, clapping spurs that send spurts of blood into the
-eyes of one of the gentlemen, and a shower of sand all over the whole
-party, and away with him! Tearing up the turf as he goes; into the midst
-of the strings of gaping, jostling, hurrying folk; scattering 'em right
-and left, leaving 'em in his wake dumfounded, picking each other up.
-Through the high street of Brook-Armsleigh Village, clatter! dash!
-plunge! with prick and urge, and goad of thigh and lash! and straining,
-starting eyes fixed on the face he sees outlined against the fair blue
-morning sky; the brave undaunted face, dark, under its yellow hair,
-bearing the strange likeness to His Lady--His Lady! nay, this is His
-Lady's lord and love, for whom he rides,--and with noose about his neck
-now, and man-of-cloth and man-of-blood both at hand; this one with book,
-that one with cap, the sea of open faces seething breathless all around.
-
-"On! on!" whispers Percy bending to the bow, and whispering hoarsely to
-the long roan, his very soul in tremor, his lips parched, his forehead
-and lip dripping sweat.
-
-Into the midst of 'em; nearly throwing Lord Brookwood from his seat; off
-his beast like a thunderbolt, and with a long leap up on the boards
-beside Lambe, the butcher, and Biggs, the Justice, and Frewen, the
-Curate.
-
-"By God! Sirs," cries he, "what's this ye're doing? This gentleman's Sir
-Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent!" tearing the hemp from Her Ladyship's
-throat, from her wrists; pushing away the three of 'em, and half lifting
-the supposed Baronet in his lusty arms, he drags, carries, swings Peg
-down to the ground, and up into his own saddle.
-
-And then the explanations! the astonishments; the monstrous wonder of
-it. The humility, the subjection, the apologies; the supplications of
-all these Lords, Gentlemen, Ladies, worthies, worships, vagabonds and
-multitudes.
-
-Woman-like, as she sits there for a few moments, dazed, so sudden
-fetched from death to life, she has but the thought that 'tis to him she
-loves she owes deliverance.
-
-But none of their hospitality or amends will she have, or even listen
-to; no tarrying at Brookwood Castle; no smallest glance back for all the
-wheedles and coaxes of Lady Diana, Lady Biddy, the Honorable Dolly and
-the rest. All she asks, and gets, is her scrawl from Mr. Frewen.
-
-Courtly acceptance of Lord Brookwood's abject attempts at amends;
-gracious bows, hands, words, laughter at last; and My Lady in a hastily
-procured post-chaise bids the gibbet at Brook-Armsleigh Village
-farewell, and starts for London, where she swears she's due and must not
-fail of being, for to-morrow, Sunday.
-
-Sir Percy, too, affirms, he must up to town without delay, to have the
-honor and pleasure of himself rehearsing at Will's the splendid courage
-of Sir Robin, and his almost miraculous escape from a horrible and
-ignominious death.
-
-In truth Percy longed, after the excitements of the past four-and-twenty
-hours, to be alone; to seek, as was his wont of late, in some
-unfrequented, obscure part of the town, such as the desolate
-neighborhood of the Dove Pier, an opportunity to ponder upon Lady Peggy;
-to guess fruitlessly of her whereabouts; to curse himself, and Sir Robin
-who had, with a good cause, he generously allowed, so known how to win
-her from him; to marvel how, at ev'ry turn, this same Baronet appeared
-to become entangled in his own matters; to question if Peggy were indeed
-now the lawful wedded wife of this gentleman from Kent. In brief, to
-pester Fate with queries and surmises far too numerous and intricate to
-set down.
-
-Thus upon reflection, he purposely absented himself, after his first
-visit to Will's on reaching London, from either of the chocolate or
-coffee-houses, which he was accustomed to patronize, knowing full well
-that the most pressing and absorbing things he should hear would all
-have Sir Robin McTart for text. He did not even repair to Mr. Brummell's
-house to give an account of the rescue of the Beau's protg from the
-hangman, feeling unwilling to recount his own part in the affair and but
-too certain that long since the whole matter would have traveled to
-Peter's Court and into every other precinct of the town. Having, also,
-learned from Lady Diana that Kennaston had quitted Brookwood Castle in a
-dense of a melancholy humor, he did not either go to Lark Lane, (not
-finding Peg's twin at the house in Charlotte Street), but moped the
-Sunday through, thankful that his uncle was gone down into the country;
-listening to the church-bells; thumbing a prayer-book Lady Peggy had
-given him one Easter-day, now five years since; finally flinging it from
-him; pacing up and down the hall; side-curls awry, waistcoat unbuttoned;
-ruffles tumbled; breeches wrinkled; mind distract, and altogether as
-valiant a young gentleman as ever made a wager or a toast, unsheathed a
-blade, or mounted a horse, rendered all of a-muddle by not knowing which
-way to turn to find the whereabouts and wherefores of a certain fair
-lady; which has been a state of affairs not uncommon to young gentlemen
-before this one's day, and like to occur until the species is extinct.
-
-Yet, 'tis quite true, too, that Sir Percy's case was a bit out of the
-usual, inasmuch as the mystery of Lady Peggy's present abiding place
-remained as deep to-day as 'twas a fortnight ago.
-
-"Well, Grigson," asked his master, as his man appeared unsummoned, "what
-is it?"
-
-"Asking Your Honor's pardon," replies this one, "but I made bold during
-Your Honor's absence from town to go down to Kennaston Castle."
-
-"Well, well?" cries Sir Percy excitedly, "what news?"
-
-"With submission, Sir," replies the man, sadly. "None."
-
-"'Od's blood! you fool!" exclaimed the master. "Why do you seek me with
-your 'none'! Is Her Ladyship still from home?"
-
-Grigson bows.
-
-"And her mother still in York?"
-
-Grigson bows.
-
-"And the Earl still believing his daughter to be in that damned Kent
-with her godmother?"
-
-Grigson bows for the third time.
-
-"And that cursed Abigail still affirming that her mistress is up in
-London?"
-
-Grigson bows for the fourth time.
-
-"Asking your pardon, Sir Percy," he adds, noting with a keen and
-generous sympathy, which not infrequently exists in the hearts of
-serving-men for their masters, the deepening pallor of the young
-gentleman's countenance, and his most disheveled appearance.
-
-"Asking your pardon, Sir, but whiles I might be doing your wig, which is
-most uncommon tousled, I'd make bold to tell you, Sir, that Mistress
-Jane Chockey, Lady Peggy's own woman, Sir, is in an awful way, Sir!"
-
-"My wig may go to the devil, you idiot!" cries Percy. "What's the
-blabbing jade's tantrums to me! Get out of my sight."
-
-"With submission, Sir Percy, but Chockey does nothing at all but cry out
-her eyes from morning till night, and went on her knees a-beseechin' me
-to find Her Ladyship, which all I could coax out of her by my best
-endeavors at wheedlin' the seck, Sir, was that she last saw Her Ladyship
-standin'--"
-
-"Where! where?" gasps Sir Percy, seizing Mr. Grigson by the arm with a
-grip of steel.
-
-"Before the door of Lord Kennaston's lodgin's, Sir, in Lark Lane--a--"
-
-"Yes? yes? go on!" with glaring, gazing eyes fixed on his man's ruddy
-visage.
-
-"A-talkin', Sir, to some one a-sittin' inside of a most elegant chair!"
-
-"Did she see the man's face?" he asks tensely.
-
-"No, Sir Percy; but Her Ladyship bade Chockey go home and not tarry for
-her, and make such excuse to His Lordship as you have learned before.
-And, asking your pardon humbly, Sir, Mistress Chockey is of the opinion
-that her young Lady got into that chair and was carried off, a willin'
-wictim, Sir, to the h'altar, and married to the contents of the chair,
-Sir, afore that wery noon."
-
-"Damn Chockey and her opinions!" mutters Sir Percy, under his breath,
-picking up his hat from the table and rushing into the street, nigh to
-choking with his emotions and his despair.
-
-He turned the corner, almost knocking over a couple of link-boys in his
-path, tossed them some pennies for their tumble, and into Piccadilly.
-
-"Fare, Sir? fare, Your Honor? fare, Your Lordship?" cry a half-dozen of
-'em, and he jumps into a hackney chaise purposeless.
-
-"Where to, My Lord?" asks the man.
-
-"To the devil!" replies the passenger, "or anywhere else, only drive
-fast and let me down within walk of the river."
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- _In the hereinunder Her Ladyship doth shoot
- two varlets at one fire; and appointeth
- a meeting with Sir Robin
- at Vauxhall._
-
-
-The man, who is shrewd, and has, in his time, fetched and carried many
-gentlemen of the first quality hither and yon, takes this one's measure
-and sets off at a tearing pace down to the city, past the Tower, across
-the Bridge, into Southwark, back over Southwark, up to Westminster; to
-Pimlico,--past the very Puffled Hen where, at this very moment, Sir
-Robin McTart, himself, and not his _soidisant_, sits huddled in his
-upper room over a fire, cheering his small soul with dreams of murder
-and love. On to Chelsea, and a whirligig 'round again to that region
-which froths foully over to the Thames bank in Little Boy Yard, and the
-jutting, rotting, creaking old Dove Pier.
-
-"This be's a young nobleman," soliloquized the cabman, "wot's in love,
-or else is a-meditatin' on a-takin' 'is own life, or a-runnin' away from
-the Jews, or from his gamin' debts, or I'm not James Finney. An' this
-here's the spot for him to be dropped at; the river most 'andy, also
-deep, and h'if he's bound to make an end of hisself, no man wot owns a
-hoss is as worthy of the reward wot'll be published for the recovery of
-His Lordship's corp, as me." With which pious reflection the chaise is
-brought to a sharp standstill, causing Percy to start from his
-melancholy and look out of the pane.
-
-"Where are we?" asks he, not at first, such is the depth of his
-suffering, recognizing a spot with which, as Sir Robin had been at pains
-and expense to have discovered for him, he was indeed of late most
-familiar.
-
-"This be Dove Pier, My Lord," answered Mr. James Finney, now descending
-from his box and standing respectfully at the kennel.
-
-"Ha! Yes, to be sure. I'll get out."
-
-He does so and pays the fare with such a largess as makes Mr. Finney,
-through his tanned hide, almost blush to take it.
-
-"Wot's the odds, though?" remarks he to himself, "three sovereigns is
-better off in my pocket than actin' as sinkers to a nobleman's body." To
-Sir Percy he says:
-
-"I thought Your Lordship'd fancy this bit of the river; it's lonesome
-and wery pleasant and wery deep. Good-night to Your Lordship, and good
-luck."
-
-"Good luck!" echoes Sir Percy, under his breath, as he strides down the
-length of the rotten pier, his gaze now fixed on the black and swiftly
-ebbing tide, now raised to meet a sky no whit the brighter than the
-sobbing waters beneath it. No stars, nor moon; only a sickly thin gleam
-shot out of the lamp that swings far up Little Boy Yard over the door of
-the tavern.
-
-Dark, sad, despairing, the whole of it, with but the lap, lap of the
-Thames's life beating against the old piles, as it swirls and swings on
-its hurrying way to fall once again into the sea.
-
-Percy de Bohun is no cowardly sort, even to think of ending his woes in
-a watery grave; he is merely a brave, sore-stricken young man, whose
-whole faith and heart have been pinned to one who has forsaken him
-forever (as he thinks); and, with the instincts of his kind, he is glad
-to be here, away from mankind or woman either, to get his grip once more
-on himself, to fight out for the last time, he swears, the wild, jealous
-covetousness which is tugging at his heartstrings, to quell the tumult
-in his soul, and then to get back home to his uncle's house like a
-Christian; and, God helping him! to lead a decent life and a brave life,
-for King and country in the great new world across the seas.
-
-All this and more traverses his brain, the "more" being mostly
-tantalizing visions of Lady Peggy in all the gamut of her humors,
-slipping in and out of every resolution he makes, every fond farewell he
-swears he'll take of her most dear, most faithless memory forever!
-
-His eyes are bent upon the ground. He neither sees nor hears, nor would
-heed if he did, aught about him.
-
-In truth there is not anything to hear, save the river on its journey.
-
-But there is something to see.
-
-Sir Robin's two desperadoes, a-lurking yonder up in the close shadow of
-the timbered tenements, which line the precinct on the side where the
-oil-lamps shine.
-
-Across the narrow street, where the huddling houses, with their broken
-chimneys, rag-stuffed windows, flapping strings of bird-cages, old
-clothes, and forlorn archways, are deeper in gloom even than their
-opposites, there's ambushed another.
-
-One who, arrived in town the night before, and set down at Mr.
-Brummell's in Peter's Court, made a change of garments and off again,
-since the master of the house was out, to a quiet inn in High Holborn;
-spent there a few hours; then out of doors and wandered as far as the
-Temple Church; back again to the inn, and, with rising excitement, and
-an almost frantic and curious impatience, awaited the fall of night;
-then a hackney coach to Westminster, alighting at Horseferry Road;
-dismissing the vehicle; thence afoot to the pier; hiring a boat; a pull
-alone down the river to Dove Pier; tying the skiff to a rusty hook; a
-quick run bent to ground; up, and across the yard to her present place
-of concealment.
-
-'Twas indeed Lady Peggy, her heart in her mouth, her breath coming
-fiercely betwixt her tight-shut lips, the drops standing on her
-forehead, each hand grasping a pistol ready cocked, and her dark eyes
-pinned to the two crouching objects not three yards away from her; anon,
-following the jerks of these worthies' thumbs as they indicate the tall
-figure with bent head still pacing the pier back and forth, she knows
-her lover and his doom are nearing each the other.
-
-Will high Heaven help her?
-
-Her Ladyship can not hear them, if indeed they speak at all, which is
-unlikely; the language of such gentry at such crises consisting usually
-of signs. Luckily for her, the glint from the Three Cups, meager though
-it be, falls athwart the cut-throats, who now move stealthily down the
-yard toward the pier, timing their pace so that they shall reach t'other
-side of the rickety float when their victim shall attain the hither. It
-falls out as they have designed, and now, not ten paces separate Sir
-Percy de Bohun from his end, when Peggy darts light-footed, having cast
-aside her shoes, down her side the kennel to the pier, bringing her
-exactly behind the murderers.
-
-With the slow, precise tread of beings accustomed to such enterprises,
-not too hurried at the performance of a not unsavory task, they slip
-over into Sir Percy's very wake, Peggy at their backs, noting now, with
-her pretty nose within twelve inches of their cat-like heels, the gleam
-of a dagger in the hand of each.
-
-Before she had thought, the two scoundrels seized Percy from the rear,
-the one clapping his hairy hand over the game's mouth for a gag, the
-other grasping the young man's two hands which had been hanging idly
-clasped at his back. Not a word, a whisper, even a gasp--
-
-But two shots! sounding like one, and striking Sir Robin McTart's
-hirelings in their flanks, laying them on the ground, free Sir Percy de
-Bohun, stunned, bewildered, to yet catch merely a glimpse of a figure
-running to pier's end, jumping into a boat; then the flash of quick oars
-fading into the silence and the blackness of the Thames.
-
-With drawn sword he gave himself a rap on the chest and believed he had
-been dreaming.
-
-But no, for at his feet lay two prostrate forms, each bleeding a bit,
-and feigning, as such apt rogues will, to be stone dead.
-
-Percy knelt, struck a tinder and essayed to look at their faces; they
-were unknown to him, and perceiving now their estate, he formed the
-conclusion that a couple of footpads had nearly made an end of him, and
-walked away.
-
-But of his rescue? the manner of it? the mysterious flight of his
-preserver? the boat ready at the pier's end? the twin shots just in the
-nick of time! What of all this?
-
-Bah! Some bargeman with an honest heart a-passing by had seen the foul
-attempt, and paused to thwart it; some gentleman, maybe, on his way to
-rout or tryst, thinking to divert himself with a couple of pistols and
-so save a human life; some third desperado, envious of the chances of
-these two, making shift to rob them of their prey, since he was left out
-of their plot.
-
-But no! None of these explanations bore the least resemblance to
-probabilities, in fact showed not an atom of reason in their suggestion,
-and Percy was feign return to his uncle's house, thrice puzzled now,
-since he had not alone Lady Peggy's oblivion to unravel, but the
-miraculous saving of his own life to match it!
-
-Her Ladyship, once safe in the boat, pulled hard to the upper pier, paid
-the boatman, and back by devious ways to Peter's Court and into her
-room; shut door and latched; down on her knees, wig thrown on the
-hearth, a-thanking God Percy was safe!
-
-Tears? A shower of 'em, and trembling legs and arms, and heart beating
-to burst after the mad strain of the past eight-and-forty hours.
-
-"Now," said Her Ladyship to herself, "now I can go back to Kennaston and
-spend the remainder of my life making cheeses for the Vicar to munch o'
-Sundays; brewing cider for daddy to accelerate the pace of his gout
-withal; breeding chicks as will win prizes, and pigs as will be the envy
-of all! and--" a sob occurred here--"presently a-reading in the London
-print of the grand marriage of Sir Percy de Bohun with Lady Diana
-Weston! And me without the chance of weddin' even that little ape, Sir
-Robin McTart! But it's all right as 'tis," adds Her Ladyship. "Had I
-hung on Armsleigh Hill, 'twould not have been too bad for one reared as
-I have been in a God-fearing fashion, and who, for naught save jealousy,
-envy and all uncharitableness, did go and so unsex myself! Lud! Is't I?
-Peggy Burgoyne, spinster, a-sittin' here in breeches and waistcoat, a
-guest in Mr. Beau Brummell's house, without any other lady to keep me in
-countenance! 'Tis said one gets broke in to anything; but 'tis false!
-false! I'm not broke in to bein' a man, and I never should be! I detest,
-abhor, and can't endure the bein' one! I that had always figured to
-myself the happy day when I'd be taken up to town!"
-
-Lady Peggy is now pacing the room, a trick, as has been set down
-earlier, that she'd borrowed from her twin.
-
-"I'd thought to be of the ton, a most genteel young lady, monstrous
-fine, a lovely creature; a-taking a dish of tea at Ranelagh; a-ridin' to
-Court in dad's old coronet-coach and with all the feathers I could
-borrow on top of my frizzes and powder; and two sweet patches set just
-at the corner of my dimples! That's what I'd dreamed of, with Percy
-a-staring at me, lost in admiration, and--love!" Her Ladyship stamps her
-foot. "But what 'tis, is this!" and she now picks up the wig from the
-hearth and flings it on the couch beside her coat and sword.
-
-"'Taint no more in this world fine gentlemen sighin' and dyin' for me!
-no wedding favors and cake; no husband, no children; never! for there's
-no marryin' in heaven, an I ever get there! Nay, 'Peggy Burgoyne' 'll be
-writ on my tombstone, and like as not the lines followin' 'll be 'a
-maker of most uncommon fine sweetmeats and cheeses'!"
-
-Another flood of tears, and then My Lady Peggy, obeying that
-well-balanced head of hers, brushes them away and proceeds to plan out
-her homeward journey, and to administer a cunning retouch of the
-cosmetics she had erstwhile bought of the players' apothecary in Drury
-Lane.
-
-'Tis clear now, as it has been from the start, that she may not quit Mr.
-Brummell's house in other than man's attire, nor, so far as she can see,
-will it be possible for her to resume her own garments at any inn, or
-time, or place, before she reaches Kennaston, which she means to do ere
-night falls; and then the stableyard, where she knows Chockey will be
-milking, once gained, a cloak, the casting of Sir Robin's wig, and Her
-Ladyship feels certain she can enter her father's home unnoticed beneath
-the shelter of the faithful Chockey's argus eye.
-
-But, though neatly laid, Her Ladyship's project was not quite yet to go
-into execution. Even as she was once more taking out the bundle from its
-hiding-place and tying up in it the long tail of her cut hair, she heard
-a hum of noises, voices below, inquiring if Sir Robin had as yet reached
-the house, and evidently obtaining an affirmative answer, for,--
-
-"Where is the hero? Our hero! Our hero!"
-
-"Where is our highwayman? Our highwayman!"
-
-"Where is Tom Kidde, the gallant? The gallant of gallants!"
-
-And a lot of such merry cries came echoing up the staircase and corridor
-toward her room.
-
-Lady Peggy had utterly forgot the hanging.
-
-The more recent matter of Percy and the assassins had put her own
-adventure completely out of her head. For the first time she realized
-that she had not seen either Mr. Brummell or any of his company since
-she had unwillingly been borne away from them by Homing Nell in the
-midst of Epstowe Forest.
-
-'Twas a halt she had not counted on; but, clapping on wig and coat, she
-flung wide the door, and was presently raised on the shoulders of Sir
-Wyatt and His Grace of Escombe and borne triumphantly down to the
-dining-room and placed in a chair of honor at the supper-table, whence,
-what with toasts, songs, stories, acclaims, wonders, amazements,
-applause, Florence wine, cards, etc., etc., this gallant company did not
-arise (or some of them slip under) until seven on Monday morning.
-
-Her Ladyship got up from the mahogany with but one-pound-ten in her
-pockets, and a surmise in her head as to how far this sum would take her
-on her homeward way.
-
-But homeward way there could be none just yet, for before too many
-bumpers had been filled and drunk, Beau Brummell had made proposition of
-a most lively affair, which indeed he had already set afoot, for the
-celebrating of Sir Robin's restoration to his friends by the timely
-arrival and prowess of Sir Percy. This was nothing else than going to
-Vauxhall by water on Tuesday night, and in masques. A score of ladies
-and gentlemen had been bidden to join, including the Ladies Diana and
-Biddy, the Honorable Dolly, the Misses Lovell, Lady Chelmsford, with
-Lady Brookwood to act as duenna for the unmarried fair.
-
-In vain Lady Peggy protested, swore she could not, would not. These
-gentlemen would not take no for an answer, and once again Her Ladyship
-perceived, as she reluctantly acceded to the masquerade, how far more
-difficult 'twas to be out of breeches than into 'em.
-
-Percy was to be there, at least he was invited; so much she knew from
-Mr. Brummell, and, as Lady Diana was positive to come up to town for
-such a novelty as a party in masquerade, of course her suitor was
-certain to attend her.
-
-Very well! Why should she, whose whole life was to be passed in the
-compounding of cream-cheeses and the visiting of poor old women, not
-give to herself one more cause of vain regretting? one more glimpse of
-him she adored?
-
-At that hour, when Mr. Brummell and his guests were doing honor to the
-supposed Sir Robin, the real Baronet was called upon to receive two most
-lamentable-looking blackguards who followed the Boots up to the
-gentleman's room, unheeding both remonstrances and ugly words on the way
-thither.
-
-At sight of Mr. Bloksey and his companion-in-arms, each lame, bound-up
-and wound-up of leg and back, with their bonnets pulled down over their
-brows, Sir Robin skipped from his easy-chair with a gasp, half terrified
-at the appearance, wholly eager to learn the outcome of the plot.
-
-"Hist!" cries he, under his breath, and pointing to the door, finger on
-lip.
-
-"Heh?" responds the villain. "There's no fear here. We's well enough
-known down in our own neighbor'ood, but up 'ere we passes for two pious
-beggars wot lives by h'alms from the parish church!"
-
-A grim smile from his partner confirms this remark, and Sir Robin, thus
-reassured, says tremblingly:
-
-"Well, 'tis done?"
-
-"'Tis done," both nodding in concert, "and," adds Mr. Bloksey, "we're
-both nigh done too! Wot with bullets apiece h'inside of us from the
-gentleman's pistols, and wot with gettin' our h'eyes knocked h'out of
-us, and most bein' caught by the Watch when we was a-lowerin' Lord
-Gower's heir h'into the Thames, we're 'ere, Sir Robin McTart, to 'umbly
-remind you that we wants more."
-
-The Baronet shakes his head, hands thrust in pockets, clutching purse
-and pence.
-
-"Oh, no," answers he, "the job was paid for in advance, my good men. Not
-another groat will you get."
-
-"Werry good," murmurs Bloksey, turning on his slip-shod heel. "We'll
-just go down to the round house, and if it turns out as Your Lordship
-gets h'admission to the Tower free, you needn't be too much surprised.
-We doesn't mind a-tellin' 'ow we saw you a-prickin' Sir Percy de Bohun
-last night! and a-weightin' of his mangled corp, and a-throwin' of the
-same h'into the river at the old Dove Pier!--Oh, no! we doesn't!" This
-at the door-sill.
-
-"What! what! you knaves! Here, come back! Come back, I say!" shrieks the
-terrified little gentleman, seizing a shoulder of each and forcing them
-into seats.
-
-After which simple application of primary methods, Mr. Bloksey and his
-friend find no difficulties whatever in the way of wresting from their
-patron another hundred pounds, with which they make off, again and again
-rehearsing to him how great risks they had run in decently interring the
-body of his hated rival.
-
-Once rid of them, Sir Robin rose, stretched himself, and yawned.
-
-'Twas an abject soul, one of those creatures born of a good and honest
-stock on either side, which sometimes cumber the earth as if in ribald
-jest against the accepted laws of birth and breeding.
-
-With no misgiving, save that of a possible detection, Sir Robin, now
-that this even had been disposed of at an expense of a hundred guineas,
-felt nothing if not jubilant, and on the morrow proceeded to order him a
-suit of satins in crimson, a hat of the latest fashion, ruffles,
-cravats, silk hose, a muff, and a lot of other fallals at Monsieur
-Jabot's in Holborn. For the Baronet, freed, as he fancied, of his enemy,
-and feeling positive that Lady Peggy would soon, out of the overflow of
-her vast affection for him, contrive a message through her obliging Mr.
-Incognito, desired to be equipped in the latest mode for that summons to
-his Lady's presence, which he believed must ultimately, and perhaps
-presently, arrive.
-
-It is true, he expected that his entrance into the gay world of fashion,
-which, he promised himself by way of introduction, should be at
-Vauxhall, might be a bit hampered by the accounts he must hear of the
-sudden disappearance of Sir Percy de Bohun, but this seemed a trifle in
-the path of a gentleman for whose sake Lady Peggy Burgoyne had come up
-to town, remained invisible, employed an Incognito as Mercury, and of
-whose name, albeit falsely, the prints had made most marvelous mention.
-
-Now, Sir Robin had not seen the tenth part of these last. No, not any of
-'em, in truth, save the one he had shown to Her Ladyship the evening
-they had encountered each other at the Dove Pier. To be entirely candid,
-Sir Robin was an indifferent scholar; write he could not; to read was a
-plague which he willingly deputed, when it was necessary, to his former
-instructor--that patient, worthy man, the Vicar of Friskingdean,
-incumbent of the living next Robinswold.
-
-This one was even now, so Sir Robin had got word, up in London to
-consult a great man for the benefit of his eyes, and 'twas presently
-agreed between 'em at the Bishop, where the Vicar stopped, that they
-should proceed together to Vauxhall on the Tuesday night.
-
-"I have heard, my dear Robin," observed the excellent old man, "that
-there is to be a rare sight in the gardens that evening, nothing less
-than a most curious novelty just come into vogue in the world of
-fashion."
-
-"Ha, and what's that, Sir?" inquires the Baronet.
-
-"A party of Beau Brummell's to come by water to the pier, every soul of
-'em in masks,--Lords, Ladies, and all persons of the first quality; some
-of the names I heard in the coffee-room. There's to be Sir Wyatt Lovell,
-the Earl of Escombe, Lady Diana Weston, Lady Chelmsford, Lord Kennaston
-of Kennaston--"
-
-"Hold, Sir!" cried the Baronet, jumping about the room, like one
-demented, the idea bouncing into his pate that if Kennaston is to be
-there, his twin-sister will also form one of the distinguished party.
-"What's to prevent me buying a couple of masks and, with our cloaks set
-out by our swords, a-joining in this gay diversion?" The little
-gentleman's eyes twinkle with sweet anticipation.
-
-"But," hesitates the Vicar, "would such levity be counted seemly for one
-of my years and profession?"
-
-"Tut, tut, Sir," cries Sir Robin, "I'll not take a refusal. Hark ye, I
-have reasons," adds he mysteriously. "There's one of the Fair likely to
-be present who pines to see me, Sir, and whom I yearn to behold once
-more. There hath been an obstacle," continues the cold-blooded monkey,
-"but Providence hath removed it. I pray of you accompany me, Sir, and
-t'will lead mayhap to banns bein' read on Sunday se'ennight in the
-church at Friskingdean."
-
-The Vicar, being carried away by two natural and one of 'em a most
-laudable emotion, at last consented. He was quite in fatherly sympathy
-with his old pupil's ambition to settle in life, and he had that curious
-hankering after just a nibble at the edge of the flesh-pots of Egypt,
-which is not uncommon to gentlemen of even his sedate years and failing
-sight.
-
-Sir Robin bought masks and cloaks of black and ordered them sent to the
-Bishop, where he had agreed to sup on Tuesday and go thence by land to
-Vauxhall. Indeed he had just now come out of the draper's shop and
-turned down toward the Vicar's inn, when he caught sight of Lady Peggy
-walking swiftly from him. She had been buying stains for her skin and
-eyebrows.
-
-"Mr. Incognito!" cried he, scampering hither and yon, into the kennel,
-onto the path, jostling fair ladies' chairs, running into a porter's
-pack, thumping a horse in the nose with his ill-worn weapon, and,
-finally, gaining on the one he pursues, and dealing Her Ladyship's
-shoulder no gentle blow.
-
-"Ha, there!" cries she, turning, hand on hilt. Then, perceiving who
-'tis, she almost shudders and draws up to her full height.
-
-"Dear Mr. Incognito," pants Sir Robin, "how fares My Lady? Tell me, I
-beseech you!"
-
-"She fares but ill, Sir," answers she, making to proceed.
-
-"No, no, not so fast, I implore; oh, Sir, I die for her!"
-
-"Very well, Sir, she is willing. I am pressed for time and must away."
-
-"One word. You say she's willing I should die for her?"
-
-"Oh, Sir Robin, importune me no further. I know not what she's willing
-for!"
-
-"Now, now," soothes the Baronet. "We're well met, Mr. Incognito, that
-I'm assured of; and that Lady Peggy'd far rather I'd live than die for
-her," leers he, "since for the sake of communicating with me she's at,
-no doubt, great expenses in maintaining you?"
-
-At this Her Ladyship laughs, as many a lady may do any day, at the
-strange construction a man who is blessed with vanity contrives to put
-upon her actions.
-
-"'Tis so, I know't!" exclaims he, grinning unctuously. "Now, Sir, tell
-me, goes she--" his voice sinks to a whisper as he applies his mouth
-nigh to Peg's ear--"goes she to Vauxhall in Beau Brummell's party, along
-with her brother, o' Tuesday night?"
-
-A thousand thoughts rush helter-skelter through Her Ladyship's brain,
-pro and con the answering of this query.
-
-Presently, sedately, at the corner of the street, says she, with no
-smallest notion of the import or the outcome of her words, merely
-uttered as a light and easy means of make-off:
-
-"Go and see!" and she disappears from view.
-
-"By jingo!" rattles the gentleman from Kent to himself, as he jumps into
-a hackney-coach and tools out to the Puffled Hen. "But she loves me!
-Curse me! but I believe she's had that incognito rascal at upwards
-probably of ten shillings a day, just on purpose to watch for my
-appearance, and so to glean tidings of my welfare! Without a doubt 'tis
-by her commands he said that 'go and see.' Zounds! I'll do't, with the
-Vicar to bear me out," adds this prudent lover, "should any disagreeable
-incident occur between me and any one of these coxcombs with their town
-ways. Damn 'em, tho'! with a secret affair going on betwixt me and
-Peggy, I can snap my fingers at His Gracious Majesty himself, should we
-encounter!"
-
-Well pleased, therefore, with himself, Sir Robin descended at the
-Puffled Hen and bestowed upon the cabman out of that abundance of the
-heart which occasionally causes the pocket, as well as the heart, to
-speak--two-pence.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- _In this same Sir Robin believes he meets his
- Fair: and Lady Biddy O'Toole is the
- means of putting the whole Gardens
- into a vast commotion._
-
-
-After quitting Sir Robin, Her Ladyship, jingling the few shillings that
-now remained to her, since purchasing unguents and the mask and cloak
-necessary for the approaching festivity, suddenly made up her mind to
-escape at once, to leave the bundle of her clothes, her shorn tresses,
-and whatever else beside to tell what tale they might, and, here and
-now, to shake the dust of London from her feet forever. And to this end
-she was about to summon a chair to start her as far on her journey as
-her purse would permit, when out comes Mr. Brummell himself from the
-shop of Monsieur Jabot, and links his arm in hers with his accustomed
-pleasant familiarity and easy condescension.
-
-"'Pon honor!" exclaims the Beau. "Well met, Sir! Since you were nigh
-hanged, Sir, I've not had too much of your agreeable company. I'd have
-you know I'm just from Monsieur Jabot's back room, where, the whiles I
-took a dish of tea, I explained the riddles of your most amazin' twist
-of the lace. Faith, Robin, 'twas a lucky hour for me, when, having left
-a pile of failures, so high! in the corner of my dressing-room, I beheld
-your cravat and bade my man knock you down!"
-
-Lady Peggy laughs. The cool audacity of Beau Brummell is a relief after
-the mawkish sighs of the little scoundrel she has just parted from, and,
-hoping that Mr. Brummell will soon spy either one of the Fair or a Royal
-Highness, and so be diverted from her side, she bows and answers:
-
-"Robin McTart must ever account that a lucky day for him, Sir!"
-
-"Hark ye, my young buck," proceeds the Beau. "Monsieur Jabot is so
-enchanted with your manner of the cravat that to-day, with my
-compliments, he introduces it at Court! And since I've been seen with
-it," adds he pompously, "'tis sure, by this day week, to be the height
-of the mode!"
-
-"Aye?" responds Her Ladyship, a-wondering how she can best get away.
-
-"Aye!" echoes her companion in a monstrous amazement. "Rot me! Sir, but
-such a distinction's not often conferred upon a young gentleman up in
-town for the first time. What's the matter with you, boy?" cries he,
-turning to observe Her Ladyship's somewhat absent-minded aspect.
-
-"Naught, I swear!" cries she, recovering herself.
-
-"'Sdeath! Robin, are ye in love?" asks the Beau, taking a pinch of snuff
-and tendering his box, as, attended by all eyes, the two make their way
-down Piccadilly, betwixt ogling ladies in their chairs and chariots,
-gallants, dowagers; each, all, mincing and la-la-ing as they go.
-
-Her Ladyship inclines her head. She is well pleased to speak truth when
-she can.
-
-"By Gad! Mr. Brummell, you've hit the mark," says she.
-
-"Sleep not o' nights? fickle at your meat? wake sighing? dream of
-patches, smiles, and dainty fingers? mistrust yourself? easily
-affronted? believe the whole world's pointing at you in raillery? take
-no pleasure in horse, man, gun or dog? loathe all the Fair, save one?
-love solitude?"
-
-Her Ladyship's feign to smile in the midst of the snuff, which she
-abhors, and has only taken because she had to. Sneezing, she nods as her
-companion continues:
-
-"Hate company? are cursin' me now for an addle-pated fool, and wishing
-I'd leave you to yourself, eh? Don't answer. I know it, Robin, well; a
-thousand times, more or less, have I been where you stand to-day, and
-had just cause, I fancied, to damn the Prince himself, since that which
-I was then pleased to dub his foolish prattle served to distract my
-ruminations from whichever Lady 'twas at the moment claimed my fancy. I
-cursed him then, Sir, for clinging to my arm, but now I bless him, as
-you will me some future day--for, Robin, hark ye, there's not one of the
-jades but deceives us, no, Sir! and I'm goin' to hang on to you, Sir,
-for keepin' of you out of the vapors. Zounds, Sir! I'll not leave you to
-any such ill company as himself proves to a young man in your
-predicament. Come, Sir, come; we'll up and into Will's, and there, me
-stickin' faster than a burr, we'll home to Peter's Court and with a
-merry lot of gentlemen make a pretty night of't against to-morrow with
-its evening at Vauxhall."
-
-With which pleasant and most well-intentioned sally, Lady Peggy again
-finds herself constrained to put off that redemption of her true estate
-for which she so deeply yearns.
-
-Mr. Brummell's party went by water to Vauxhall, and 'twas indeed a
-heavenly night for such an expedition, with no large lady-moon
-a-staring, but the rather a thin slip of a silver damsel hanging in the
-vault, and millions of stars a-waiting on her, not any of these
-a-revealing too much or a-telling any tales if a gentleman's hand
-chanced to come in contact with a lady's amid the folds of brocade, or
-under the long cloth of the black, crimson or blue cloaks in which all
-these merry masqueraders were enveloped.
-
-Sir Percy de Bohun was beside Lady Diana Weston; Peggy noted the same
-with jealous, despairing eyes; while at the left of Lord Brookwood's
-daughter sat her own twin--only the second time she had seen him since
-the memorable night in Lark Lane; nor did she see him plainly now, for
-all the company had set forth in their masks, and only removed them
-between whiles to gain a breath of fresh air. 'Twas expected that the
-larger number of the party would meet them at the Gardens, and
-thereafter the sport and mystification would begin.
-
-So it turned out; not only all the rest of Mr. Brummell's friends in
-their cloaks and masks, with glimpse now and then of satins, taffetas,
-laces, ribands, jeweled stomachers, bodices ablaze, and so forth, but a
-vast assemblage of other folk also awaited the arrival of the Beau's
-barge at the bottom of the Gardens.
-
-Among these, two lurked in the shadow of the trees; they were Sir Robin
-and the Vicar. The former noted with deep joy that he had, by a happy
-chance, chosen a crimson color for his new suit, exactly corresponding
-to that of one of these gallants; that his cloak of sable hue was also
-quite the ton, and that he could thus, with ease, mingle with the party,
-and presently, no doubt, either discover Lady Peggy's identity, or, more
-than likely, she herself would disclose the same to him, and at last
-reward his faithfulness and patience. No qualm visited the little
-gentleman's conscience-pocket with regard to his supposed victim,
-although, it is true, he had given him a vicious thought as he had stood
-near the river's bank waiting for Mr. Brummell's barge to come in sight.
-So had Peggy, as she was being rowed past the old Dove Pier; into her
-mind and into Sir Percy's had come the memory of the Sunday night, but
-he spoke of it no more than, certes, did she.
-
-Sir Robin, his cup overflowing with pleasurable anticipation and the
-gratified sense that the one who had sworn to take his life lay,
-fish-food, at the bottom of the Thames, flitted hither and yon, dragging
-the bewildered Vicar of Friskingdean in his wake.
-
-Wherever the company of Mr. Brummell wandered, there followed, hanging
-on to the fringe, as 'twere, these two, whom presently one-half the
-guests accepted as a matter of course to be of themselves.
-
-First, always followed by an admiring and gaping crowd, 'twas up and
-down the formal Walks somewhat sedately, for the masquerade, as has been
-said before, was at that period but just coming into vogue, and fine
-ladies and gentlemen were, at the outset of an evening, not as easy in
-their disguises as they became after a promenade in the unaccustomed
-duds; then, they formed a circle of mysterious appearance around the
-orchestra; then, 'twas into the Room to stare at the pictures through
-the peepholes of their masks; then a rush to gaze at the Cascade, which
-the whole of them, save Lady Peggy, Sir Robin and the Vicar, had seen a
-hundred times before; later, 'twas up and down the Walks again; and here
-Sir Robin at last made bold, having long since joined himself and the
-somewhat reluctant Vicar to a group of the Beau's company, to address a
-few words, as it chanced, to the lively Lady Biddy O'Toole!
-
-It had seemed to him, after a careful survey of all, and having been
-able, by dint of his ears, to learn which was Kennaston, whose was the
-only personality so far in his possession, that Lady Biddy's arch turn
-of the head was the most like to belong to the object of his passion. So
-up he springs, mincing, leaving the Vicar to huddle in the shade, and,
-pulling Her Ladyship's mask-riband with a twitching finger and thumb, as
-he had seen others do just now, he said, very low, in her ear:
-
-"I'm sure I know who Your Ladyship is!"
-
-"Out with it," says she, very low too.
-
-"It's she whose image is writ on my heart," answers he.
-
-"Sure," answers she, "that's a thing that can never be known until
-you're dead, and maybe not as soon, since the surgeons don't cut up
-everybody! Lud, Sir, give me your name, and we'll talk of your heart
-anon."
-
-"I am Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent," exclaims he, feeling
-positive that this saucy minx is none other than his adored, for be it
-remembered Lady Biddy spoke under her breath and with a disguised tone
-to her voice.
-
-"'Od's blood!" now whispers Her Ladyship, with an accent of mock terror,
-into Sir Robin's ear. "You! the highwayman! the cut-throat! the robber!
-what, I've heard, sticks gentlemen in the back, or has your men do it
-for you, and profits by that same!" laughing fit to kill herself.
-
-But the little man does not laugh; the cold sweat stands out all over
-his sallow countenance, and he's so terrified, recalling the threats of
-Mr. Bloksey, that he stands stock-still, and really can not move a leg.
-
-They are nigh the Dark Walks as Sir Robin comes to his halt, and Lady
-Biddy, not pausing even to note his silence, goes merrily on with her
-most apt discourse.
-
-"Oh," proceeds she, "but you are the hero of the day, Sir Robin, and
-it's myself that's proud to be in your company, and faith! I'd like to
-have died running to see you hang on Saturday last!"
-
-"Hang!" gasps he, getting back the use of his voice, but not of his
-shaking legs. "Saturday last!"
-
-"Don't be that bashful, Sir Robin, making as if you'd never heard of
-such before!" And Lady Biddy gives the Baronet's cloak a playful tweak.
-"Lud, Sir! you and Sir Percy de Bohun's the two most talked about, of
-all the bucks in town!"
-
-"Sir Percy de Bohun!" repeats he, his knees knocking together.
-
-"Sure'n didn't he save you from the gibbet? Oh, go-along with you, Sir
-Robin, you can't palaver Lady--"
-
-"Lady who?" he contrives to ejaculate, struck nearly dumb at this
-mention of his rival, while Lady Biddy now bridles and is mute.
-
-"You are Lady Peggy Burgoyne, are you not?" he goes on more softly,
-bending toward his companion, and concluding at last that the Lady's
-words must have been the mere hap-hazards of a sparkling disposition.
-
-Now Lady Biddy, in common with other ladies of fashion and moving in
-certain high circles of society, had heard a deal of the mysterious and
-all unseen Lady Peggy. She well knew the supposition that was rife as to
-Lady Peggy's being secretly the wife of Sir Robin McTart. She knew from
-her bosom friend, Lady Diana Weston, who had the same most direct from
-her suitor, Lord Kennaston, Lady Peggy's own twin-brother, that his
-sister was from home, unknown her whereabouts to father or mother, kith
-or kin, maid or man, save that she was "up in London"; that Sir Percy de
-Bohun was mad for love and loss of her; that her brother, had he not
-been in like case by means of Lady Diana, would long since have made
-public search, as he was indeed making such privately, for the discovery
-of the eloping Fair. She likewise was aware that Sir Robin frequented
-the gay world, was not adverse to ogling a lady, as she herself could
-testify; stopped at Mr. Brummell's house; and, albeit 'twas said had
-fought a duel with Sir Percy because of Lady Peggy, still did not absent
-himself from any rout, ridotto, or ball, on her always absent account.
-
-So, equipped with such a fund of knowledge and any amount of surmise,
-Her Ladyship replied coyly beneath her mask:
-
-"Why do you think so, Sir Robin, and pray if I were Lady Peggy, what,
-now, would you be afther saying to me?"
-
-"Zounds! 'tis she!" exclaims the Baronet, carried away by the fact that
-Lady Biddy's hand beneath her cloak has more than half-way met his own
-moist and trembling fingers.
-
-"Loveliest of women! Oh, 'twas indeed by your express directions, was't
-not, that Mr. Incognito on Monday, watching for me in High Holborn nigh
-the shop of Mounseer Jabot, bid me come here to-night to meet you?"
-
-Lady Biddy, although much averse to the clammy touch of her cavalier,
-gives his fingers an assuring pressure.
-
-"Why, oh, why!" pursues Sir Robin, now as much elated by this tacit
-confession of her passion for him, as he was but lately overwhelmed by
-the mention of such strange words as "hanging, highwayman, Sir Percy de
-Bohun," etc., etc., "why have you seen fit to keep me in such a length
-of suspense? Why have I not been allowed, before this, to behold you,
-and renew the days of our sojourn in Kent? Speak, my angel, speak!"
-
-"La, Sir!" murmurs Lady Biddy, minx-like, ever anxious to get at the
-heart of this now much deepened enigma, "la, Sir, do you not know but
-too well the whys and wherefores of my secrecy?" Her Ladyship from Cork
-actually squeezes the little Baronet's crooked little hand.
-
-"That do I not! Mr. Incognito never would tell me aught, but thus and
-so; and bade me, from your adorable lips, keep myself in seclusion and
-safety,--nor ever," continues he, his tone sinking to a mere breath,
-"endanger my precious self," now stooping to imprint a chaste kiss on
-Her Ladyship's hand, "in the meeting even once of Sir Percy de Bohun,
-for he had sworn to kill me on beholding me. Dearest life," proceeds Sir
-Robin, withdrawing Lady Biddy a bit into the shade of the great trees,
-"I have obeyed your commands. I have never set eyes upon the scoundrel,
-but have kept myself close housed at my inn in Pimlico, awaiting your
-dear pleasure."
-
-"Have ye?" murmurs Lady Biddy, now more bewildered than she ever was
-before in her life, and seeing no clear way, either to read the puzzle
-or, truth to tell, to elude the gentleman. Yet the wits of a lady,
-especially if she happen to have been born in Ireland, may usually be
-trusted to extricate her from almost any dilemma; therefore, when Sir
-Robin has done swearing of his impatient probation passed at the Puffled
-Hen, says she, tweaking her hoop and making a courtesy:
-
-"Lud! Robin," (the hussy!) "but you are a killing creature! Nay, nay!"
-drawing out a few steps, he after her, from the shade of the trees and
-more in the flare of the twinkling globe lamps. "Nay, tarry here but a
-moment; there are the same reasons for your not accompanying me now that
-have prevailed upon me to keep our matters secret hitherto. I pray you,
-stir not from the neighborhood of this wooden lion--see?--until I
-return, which I will do presently."
-
-"Faith!" cries the Baronet, "I'll not budge, my divine Peggy! until you
-are once more at my side!" and with a horrid leer through his peepholes,
-he essays to take Lady Biddy's hand once more, but she's off, balking
-him.
-
-Quick as thought, she scampered across to the edge of the orchestra,
-where she discovered a group of masks and among 'em one, whom, by the
-rose pinned to her bloom-colored bodice, she knew to be Lady Diana, and
-she made certain that two of the three bloods near her, canes dangling
-at their button-holes, must be Sir Percy and Lord Kennaston.
-
-"Hist!" exclaims Lady Biddy, panting partly from speed, partly from the
-fright a lady alone might experience in running the gauntlet of so many
-macaronis and fops, not to speak of thieves and pickpockets, as perforce
-was the case in progressing about Vauxhall.
-
-"What is't Biddy, for I know you by your silver heels," answers Lady Di.
-"Mischief, I'll dare be sworn, or it's not you! Speak your mind; there's
-none here but what can keep a secret, and the whole of us have been
-a-watching you with some one, fie! at the entrance to the Dark Alleys."
-
-"Is Sir Percy here? Is this he?" whispers Biddy.
-
-Sir Percy bows, for he is there; while the other two gentlemen,
-inferring from her tone that she seeks a private ear, instantly withdraw
-to one of the boxes for a glass of Burgundy to refresh their spirits.
-
-"I've news for you, of one you're a-dyin' for, of Lady Peggy Burgoyne!"
-exclaims she triumphantly.
-
-"What! What!" comes simultaneously from behind each of the masks she
-addresses.
-
-"Aye; I'm after learning from, whom, think you?"
-
-"Proceed, for the love of God, Madam!" says Percy, very low.
-
-"From him that's supposed to be her husband, Sir Robin McTart, that
-mistook me for her," Biddy titters, "that she's here to-night by an
-appointment with him, made by a trusted servant of hers, called 'Mr.
-Incognito'; sent to meet Sir Robin before the shop of Monsieur Jabot in
-Holborn; and he's not seen Her Ladyship,--I mean Sir Robin's not seen
-her since they were sojourning in Kent together! and there's a mystery
-for you! And I made excuses and left him a-standin' by the lion, for I
-could no longer contain the news, but must run back to him now to
-extract the rest of it. Pray heaven, Lady Peggy herself comes not by,
-and lets out that I was not she at all, at all!"
-
-"Good God!" murmurs Percy under his breath, as Biddy rattles on. "Can
-this thing be? and what does it all mean?"
-
-Restraining Lady Biddy, both he and Lady Diana endeavor to quiet her
-abounding spirits, and to gain from her the detailed account of her
-encounter with Sir Robin. Percy, in the midst of her voluble tongue and
-her giggling, striving to form some plan of action which shall this
-night bring matters to the touch between himself and the Baronet and
-leave one or t'other of 'em stiff and stark.
-
-Meantime, Sir Robin, with greedy eyes fixed on Lady Biddy, so long as he
-can see her, and until she and her companions withdraw into a box,
-stands as if at one with the wooden lion; presently, however, his gaze
-is diverted hither and yon, not only by the playful and engaging remarks
-of various young ladies who challenge his mask in the most direct and
-obliging fashion, but by a certain Figure which he beholds moving about
-aimlessly, it would seem, and alone, beneath the dark shadows of the
-trees toward the river.
-
-There is something in this Figure's motions, although cloaked and
-masked,--therefore, the Baronet notes, one of Mr. Brummell's
-party,--which strikes him as familiar, and when, presently, the unknown
-lifts mask and reveals the countenance behind it, Sir Robin sidles up,
-one eye on the wooden lion of his tryst, however, and plucking Lady
-Peggy by the arm, says:
-
-"Ho! Mr. Incognito!"
-
-Peggy turns, and betwixt disgust, dismay, horror, and amusement, remains
-silent.
-
-"'Tis I, Sir, Robin McTart," lifting his own mask a trifle to assure his
-companion of his identity.
-
-"Soh!" returns she, "I do perceive."
-
-"Oh, Mr. Incognito, what do I not owe to your being in My Lady's employ!
-She is indeed here."
-
-Her Ladyship, taking this for a question, answers thus, with emphasis:
-"Yes, she's here--indeed."
-
-"I have seen her," sighs the little Baronet, leaning his head, just
-exactly the height of Her Ladyship's own, down on Peggy's shoulder in an
-excess of sensibility.
-
-"Have you?" exclaims she, not daring to stir in the embarrassment of
-believing it possible that the scoundrel has discovered her identity.
-
-"Oh, yes," sighs Sir Robin, "I have received a pressure, nay two of 'em,
-from her hand. I've kissed her fingers; I await her return to meet me at
-the wooden lion yonder."
-
-"Do you?" says Lady Peggy, mystified beyond everything. "Did she look as
-you expected her to?"
-
-"Ah!" gasps Sir Robin, "she has not yet lifted her mask for me to behold
-her countenance, but when she returns, I shall beseech her for one
-glimpse!"
-
-"Ah!" returns Peggy, now fully persuaded that some one has been making a
-jest of her companion, but none the less disquieted on her own score.
-
-"Hark ye, Sir Robin," says she, "you have ever found my counsels wise.
-Be advised by me now; leave Vauxhall at once. Lady Peggy Burgoyne is not
-safe, so long as you tarry here."
-
-The little Baronet, doughtily, although trembling, puts his hand to his
-hilt.
-
-"Nay, Sir!" continues Peg, "your weapon would not avail for her
-preservation. She leaves town this very night for Kennaston. Do you the
-same, nor risk detection longer here." Her Ladyship uses the word
-advisedly, and has the satisfaction of seeing Sir Robin shiver with
-terror, then steady again as he reflects that Her Ladyship's fears can
-but be in connection with her own escapade; since, 'tis plain from all
-he can spy and eavesdrop, not a soul as yet has missed Sir Percy de
-Bohun from his accustomed haunts.
-
-"But she swore me she'd be back in a few moments, Mr. Incognito, and
-'sdeath! Sir!" perceiving Lady Biddy emerging from the box and advancing
-toward the lion alone, "there she is!"
-
-Off and away Sir Robin McTart to join his Fair, while Lady Peggy,
-screened by the increasing shadows, for the dripping lamps are one by
-one, by this, dying down in their globes, beholds one--she devines not
-which--of Beau Brummell's lady guests, courtesying and greeting the
-Baronet with her finger-tips.
-
-Now My Lady's heart's a-thumping monstrous hard; she beholds, as well as
-Sir Robin and his supposed Peggy, two others--alas! she knows too well
-who they are, a-peeping out from the corner of the box-entrance whence
-Lady Biddy came just now, and watching her encounter with Sir Robin.
-
-These are Lady Diana and Sir Percy.
-
-Together? Aye and a-goin' to be "together" for all their lives, she
-sadly thinks, both of them, quite forgetting, save perchance for a
-moment's beguilement, her very existence. But it behooves her, if not
-for her own sake, of which she has come to the pass of recking but
-little, then for her father's and mother's, now to bid farewell forever
-to disguises, falsehoods, cheatings, man's estate, and even the
-melancholy chance of seeing the countenance of Sir Percy. She will off
-presently, and reach home as best she may.
-
-A few minutes, more or less, can make no odds, and 'tis but too true
-that Her Ladyship stood there in ambush of the branches in the vain hope
-that Percy might lift his mask, if but for an instant, and thus allow
-her parting gaze to rest upon his features.
-
-It is quite true that mortals, although in never such haste to reach a
-desired crisis, still ofttimes halt at the threshhold of its attainment;
-so Her Ladyship, with now nothing to hinder her escape, still stood
-leaning against an oak, listless, but for the eager eyes fixed on the
-pair in the box entrance. These presently crossed into the throng and,
-joining others of the maskers, were lost to her view; but the Baronet
-and Lady Biddy had not been idle of their tongues this while.
-
-Much simpering, angling for news, tittering, and a neat show of wit in
-the manner of plying a gentleman with questions on a matter about which
-he was quite ignorant, on the lady's side; ardor, impatience, as much
-daring as his little spirit permitted, on the gentleman's. Finally said
-he:
-
-"Mr. Incognito says you start for Kennaston this very night, my dearest
-life, is't so?"
-
-"Tell me who is Mr. Incognito?" says she, "and I'll answer you
-straight."
-
-"He's your paid servant, sworn slave, and the bearer of all tender
-messages between us.--Now, go you to Kennaston to-night?"
-
-"As sure as I'm Lady Peggy Burgoyne," returns Biddy. "I start for home
-ere cock-crow!"
-
-"I'll follow you poste-haste, but," cries Sir Robin, "loveliest of
-created beings, I beseech, I implore! one glimpse of your angelic
-countenance before we part--to meet only when I can claim you as my
-own!"
-
-"No! No!" exclaims Biddy, restraining the Baronet's hand which is laid
-upon the lutestring of her mask.
-
-"But divine creature, I insist!" with one arm seizing the buxom Lady
-Biddy about the waist, while with the other he essays to untie the
-riband which hides her charms from view.
-
-Then Lady Biddy O'Toole, whose lungs were of the best, let such a bawl
-as rang far up and down the Thames, causing a score of red-stockinged
-boatmen to leave their wherries and dash up the Gardens; causing every
-tongue in Vauxhall to cease clacking, every glass to jingle to its
-table, every echo to resound; every other lady there to shriek; the
-musicians to stop; the waiters to drop their trays; each gentleman to
-draw sword; and a vast number of persons of both sexes to shout:
-
-"Watch! Watch! Murder! Thieves! Highwaymen!" and whatever else beside.
-
-While a concourse of people of every condition at once closed in around
-Sir Robin and Lady Biddy, at the outside rim of which, shivering betwixt
-terror and that lively curiosity which overrides even a desire for
-personal safety, gaped the now unmasked Vicar of Friskingdean, unable to
-find his natural protector and sometime pupil in all this hurly-burly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- _Wherein Sir Percy and Sir Robin come face
- to face, to the unfeigned amazement of
- each: and where My Lady takes
- to her heels and a wherry._
-
-
-When Lady Diana and Percy quitted the box, he, after conducting her to
-the care of Lady Brookwood, strode off into the Dark Alleys, taking with
-him, not Kennaston, for the hopeless youth, flouted still by Diana, had
-gone a-mooning by the river's bank, but a company of valiant and merry
-gentlemen all raised a bit by the partaking of the famous Vauxhall
-punch; and to them he confided sufficient of his reasons and intentions,
-as made plain their course to them as his friends, to do aught and all
-in their several powers toward the promoting of a quarrel betwixt him
-and Sir Robin McTart; whom, he would presently point out to them, as
-they should stroll, seeming careless, the length of the walk.
-
-Thus, arm in arm, Sir Percy, Sir Wyatt Lovell, His Grace of Escombe, and
-Mr. Jack Chalmers, across the path, swaggering with sticks and tassels
-hanging, hats at a cock, perfumed with Venus oil, and most jocund of
-demeanor; with Beau Brummell behind 'em spying, waving his little muff,
-and chatting with Lord Wootton and one or two more gay sparks, all
-disporting themselves carelessly, but hilts eased for the drawing.
-
-Just as they were nearing the wooden lion of Sir Robin's tryst, Lady
-Biddy's shriek assailed their ears, and Sir Percy, thanking Providence
-for so opportune an occurrence, which, not to say that it was in any way
-premeditated, yet continued to ring out louder and louder, even after
-Sir Robin had ceased to pull at her mask-string and stood, held fast in
-Her Ladyship's stout grasp, the very center of a blaze of light from
-footmen's flambeaux,--they and the masses pushing every way, screaming
-and cursing.
-
-Into the thick of this mle dashed Sir Percy de Bohun, with his friends
-on either side of him.
-
-But a moment sufficed for him to wrest the Lady from her assailant and
-to deliver her over to the care of Diana and the Duchess, who carried
-her swooning (whether with laughter or emotion 'twould be difficult to
-set down), to the Room.
-
-In another second, taking his silver-fringed gloves from his pocket he
-threw them into the masked face of Sir Robin McTart.
-
-The little Baronet, who had both temper and vanity, which brace now got
-the upperhand of his cowardice, and, believing that Lady Peggy's eyes
-were upon him, that Sir Percy was at the bottom of the Thames, and with
-full foreknowledge that he could run away before the meeting could be
-arranged, caught the gloves as they struck and flung them back into
-their owner's covered countenance.
-
-"Take that! 'sdeath!" squeaked Sir Robin, now much the more valiant as
-he beheld the Vicar screwing his way toward him through the excited
-crowds.
-
-[Illustration: I am Sir Robin McTart!...]
-
-"Unmask, and show yourself for who you are!" cried Percy, every one of
-his companions echoing:
-
-"Unmask! Unmask! Unmask, or we'll run ye!"
-
-"Willingly," responded the trembling gentleman from Kent, tugging at the
-slip-knot in his mask-string.
-
-"I am Sir Robin McTart! Who, the devil, are you?"
-
-"I am Sir Percy de Bohun!" replied his opponent, as both masks came off
-at the same instant, and the two confronted one another, staring with
-four eyes that fairly popped in their sockets.
-
-'Twould be hard to say which of these two was the more astounded,
-although Sir Percy's amazement had quite a different flavor from the
-Baronet's abject terror.
-
-"You! Sir Percy de Bohun!" he quavered, turning ashy pale. "I'll not
-believe it. 'Tis a lie!"
-
-"You! Sir Robin McTart!" replied Percy, hotly. "Gentlemen," turning to
-his friends, "I pray you bear me out in this, not to the exclusion of my
-challenge of this impostor, which holds good until one or t'other of us
-sheds blood, but for the preservation of the honor of a valiant
-gentleman, who is not far off of us now. That this weazen wretch may
-meet his dues, for not only does he masquerade his face, but seeks to
-usurp the character and name of one whom we all know to be both
-handsome, brave and courageous."
-
-Percy's blood runs high as he speaks these generous words, while every
-soul about him stands breathless, staring, struck dumb with the
-singularity of the episode.
-
-"But I am Sir Robin McTart," cries the Baronet, brandishing his weapon
-with a will, since there is none to oppose him, and the Vicar, now,
-although well-nigh choked, not above ten yards distant from him.
-
-"Tut, tut, Sir, whoever you are," interposed Lord Escombe. "Your game's
-up, and you'd better give your lies a rest."
-
-"Hold!" cries Sir Percy to Robin, "whoever you are, I challenge you to
-fight me ten minutes hence, yonder in the open, towards the river, and
-those ten minutes my friends and I'll spend in calling the actual Sir
-Robin McTart into your presence, and confronting your impudence with his
-reality. Lend me your lungs, My Lords and Gentlemen; Sir Robin's in call
-somewhere in the Gardens as we all know."
-
-And with one accord the shout went up, ringing up and down the river and
-far across to the highway, where it caused the horse-patrol to think
-that every highwayman in the kingdom had broken loose upon Vauxhall, and
-presently brought them rearing, plunging, swearing, firing, thumping
-cutlasses right and left, into the midst of the surging thousands, by
-this all shouting:
-
-"Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin
-McTart!" at the top of their voices.
-
-But for all their bawling, no one answered, no one came, and but one of
-the vast throng went.
-
-This was Lady Peggy, at a loss to know the meaning of the shouts, not
-having been near enough to the scene of the encounter to learn its
-purport, and only now realizing that 'twas herself was sought and meant
-by the concerted cry that rent the air. Scenting a new if unknown
-danger, she followed her woman's instinct, and, in the waiting pause
-that succeeded the tumultuous call, Peggy fled to the landing, pressed a
-handful of shillings, almost her last, into the palm of the only boatman
-there, jumped into the wherry and bade him get her as swiftly as he
-could to Queenhithe Stairs; for determined was she, now more than ever,
-to leave no traces in her wake, and to return, at all risks, to Mr.
-Brummell's house for her bundle of woman's clothes.
-
-For a long way down the Thames the renewed cry of the Vauxhall crush
-rang in her distracted ears:
-
-"Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Where are
-you? Come forth! Show yourself!"
-
-But none other came forth, and the Baronet, taking such courage as he
-might through his astonishment at Sir Percy's being alive,--and not
-forgetting, even at this point, to reckon how much the lying assassins
-had mulcted him of, now, in the second breathless halt of the calling
-his own name, waved his weapon and answered it, saying again:
-
-"I am Sir Robin McTart!"
-
-"Prove it," shouted Chalmers, with a derisive shrug.
-
-"Faith! and so he can by me!" exclaimed the panting Vicar, as, borne
-rather by the surging of the people than by his slender legs, the tenant
-of the cloth was pitched somewhat unceremoniously head-first into his
-pupil's middle. Sputtering, but yet winning the attention which truth
-and the clergy usually and righteously obtain, the Vicar raised his
-right hand, and, laying his left on the Baronet's shoulder, he spoke:
-
-"This is Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent. I have known him from his
-birth; his father before him; he has been my pupil. Who dares use his
-name than himself is an impostor and a thief!"
-
-"What!" and now comes forward Mr. Brummell with open hand. "And my old
-friend," says he, "'sdeath, Mr. What's-your-name, you were a curate when
-we met last, twenty years ago, but I remember you, Sir, at Robinswold.
-So this," surveying the Baronet, "is my old friend's son and heir? Of a
-truth he favors his sire more than the pretty young rapscallion that's
-been a-fooling us all for now these four weeks past; for gentlemen,"
-adds the Beau, turning to Sir Percy, "'tis as well we confess ourselves
-to have been duped. Gad, Sir," this _sotto voce_ to Percy alone, "I
-always wondered where Sir Hector found that handsome lad, for he was as
-ugly a gentleman as ever was wedded to wife."
-
-After the storm there came that calm which is the inevitable successor,
-save that, in this case, while the noise subsided, the wonder grew.
-Every one of Mr. Brummell's company and all of the rest of the world
-beside, was rehearsing his and her own surmise as to the identity of the
-young gentleman who had, for above a month, been the town toast, and who
-had now disappeared as suddenly as he came. Some believed him to be Tom
-Kidde himself; some, a Lord out of France; some, a Prince of the blood;
-some, the Devil; some, an astrologer; there was no lack of inventions as
-to Her Ladyship's identity by the time the ten minutes of Sir Percy's
-setting had come to an end.
-
-He cast an eye about the place looking for Sir Robin, and his veins were
-fairly on fire to know the color of his rival's blood and wring from
-his, he hoped, dying lips, a confession of where Lady Peggy was.
-Presently, not spying his opponent, he begged Escombe and Chalmers to
-have the goodness to seek him out; settle the spot; ask him to choose
-his seconds; call a surgeon (of whom there were always a score in
-attendance at Vauxhall, ready for just such affairs), while he himself
-swung down toward the river to look for Kennaston and give him one last
-word for Peggy, should Sir Robin run him through.
-
-Peg's twin lay on the turf sleeping. Such are the effects of being at
-once a poet and a lover, not yet twenty, and quite fagged with
-wide-awake nights and days and a fair lady's cruel caprices. Sir Percy
-looked at him, smiled, and whispered as he knelt:
-
-"Dear lad, thou that art My Lady's twin, when next thou seest her, sure
-I know she'll lay her dear lips on thy brow, and there she'll find,
-this." Percy kissed the boy as he spoke. "'Tis doubtless more than she'd
-care to discover, but, if death comes, 'twill ease the blow and charm
-the pain while I remember this message that I send her now."
-
-He turned away and left Peg's brother lying there to waken at his
-leisure.
-
-When he reached the Walk again, another clamor greeted him identical
-with its predecessor.
-
-"Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Come forth of
-your seclusion. The time is up. Sir Robin, I say-y-y-y!"
-
-This Sir Robin McTart had vanished as mysteriously as the other one, and
-though the entire company made the welkin ring with the same cry over
-again:
-
-"Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin McTart!" no Sir Robin
-appeared or could be found, and they were fain be content, reinforced by
-the ladies now well out of their swoons and terrors, to finish up the
-night with punch and loo in the boxes, all brains much of a muddle with
-the strange adventures and miraculous disappearances incident upon Beau
-Brummell's never-to-be-forgotten masquerade party at Vauxhall.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- _Which doth set forth how My Lady Peg, Sir
- Percy and Sir Robin all put up at the
- "Queen and Artichoke:" and what a
- fine hurly-burly thereupon ensues._
-
-
-The moment that the excitement of the Vicar's identification had
-subsided, the Baronet, leading the worthy old man to the gates and there
-quitting him under pretext of fetching a hackney coach, skipped without,
-and, hiring one with a couple of the horse-patrol at a squeezing price,
-jumped in and made off for his inn at Pimlico, leaving his whilom
-preceptor to shift for himself.
-
-Sir Robin had no mind at all for duels with any one, least of all with
-the resurrected Sir Percy de Bohun, whom his guilty conscience suspected
-to be fully cognizant of the author of his attempted assassination.
-Terrified with all this and, if possible, more so by the accounts he had
-listened to, right and left, of his valorous and most mysterious
-name-sake, the little gentleman at once made up his mind as to the
-course wisest for him to pursue, and forthwith pursued it.
-
-Back to Pimlico, and into bed, shivering betwixt the linen and feathers;
-up for a toilet of the best and neatest; curling his wig thriftily
-himself by the fire; a good breakfast; a coach at noon with Kennaston
-Castle for goal; and himself and his ardent and blissful hopes and
-beliefs for freight and luggage.
-
-For, not twelve hours since, had not My Lady Peggy's own emissary, the
-delightful "Mr. Incognito," told him that his mistress was leaving for
-home last night? Nay, had not Peggy herself, with her own lips, said
-that she started for Kennaston "ere cock-crow"? and whatever could such
-words mean but that he, the object of her tenderest solicitude, should
-follow her at once?
-
-Lady Biddy's bawl, 'tis true, echoed in the Baronet's recollection, but
-'twas, to his way of thinking merely an index of the liveliness of her
-disposition and the enchanting coyness of her moods.
-
-He adjusted his wig with a beaming smile, snapped his crooked little
-fingers at the mere memory of Sir Percy de Bohun, the Vicar, his
-spurious name-sake, and all the rest of it, as he blithely set off on
-his amorous quest, at high noon, from the Puffled Hen in Pimlico.
-
-That same morning toward dawn, Percy had ridden home alone, leaving
-Kennaston, cheered by a smile and a pressure of Lady Diana's hand, to
-return to his chambers in Grub street, whither the young poet had
-removed some few days since from Lark Lane, at the instance of having
-had a piece of good fortune, in the way of a commendation from no less a
-personage than the great Doctor Johnson himself.
-
-The reflections of Peggy's adorer were various and most tormenting; his
-brain, as he tossed in his bed, was a labyrinth wherein he wandered,
-vainly endeavoring to solve such riddles as--
-
-"Where was Lady Peggy? Was she indeed the bride of either of the Sir
-Robins? Who was the comely young gentlemanly rogue who had for weeks
-bewitched the fair and charmed the brave? Where had he disappeared? To
-whom, in reality, was he indebted for the saving of his own life at the
-Dove Pier; and whose were the St. Giles's hirelings who had near made an
-end of him there?"
-
-Bewildered and at wits' end, he finally, as the sun was at meridian,
-sprang from his uneasy couch, rang and rapped thrice for Grigson, made a
-sorry pretense at conversing on politics with his uncle, whom he
-presently encountered in the hall; inwardly cursed the old gentleman;
-and at last, by three o'clock, got his will, which was, astride of the
-long roan, Grigson on the black, to cross to the Surrey side of the
-river, and ride as fast as ever he could to Kennaston Castle.
-
-"By heavens!" cried he to himself, pounding Battersea Bridge. "It is
-time her father knew, and Her Lady mother too, that she is neither in
-Kent or anywhere else in their reckoning; and if it puts 'em both into
-their shrouds, they'll hear the truth, and set about solving the riddle
-before sunrise to-morrow. I'm sailing on Thursday for the Colonies, but
-I go not until I am assured of her safety,--and her happiness."
-
-Thus it happened that not above three hours after Sir Robin had started
-from Pimlico with his destination Kennaston, Sir Percy quitted Charlotte
-Street with the same beacon in view; and each, the one in his coach,
-t'other in his saddle, brain full and heart bursting with but one
-thought, and that Lady Peggy Burgoyne.
-
-Her Ladyship meantime, on landing from the wherry, fairly scampered her
-way to Mr. Brummell's for fear of desperadoes and Mohocks. At one point
-wild cries of--
-
-"Watch!" greeted her ears from the open window of a gaming-house; at
-another a bullet whizzed above her head, the outcome of a duel being
-fought in a narrow street she traversed. In and out she threaded her
-path, until presently the pink flush of the dawn pierced the fog into a
-silvery mist and she had gained the Beau's threshhold. Passing the
-sleepy servants, Peggy ran up to her room and once again drew the bundle
-from its hiding place, tucked the long tail of her dark hair well
-inside, cast a glance of pitiable amusement about the chamber, and says
-she, going:
-
-"God knows if I ever get leave to put on a lady's garments again; but
-I'll never come back here, that's certain, since now am I no one, not
-even Sir Robin McTart!"
-
-So, challenged merely by the still drowsy footman who asks: "Beg pardon,
-and with submission, Sir Robin, but will you be home for dinner, Sir, or
-not until supper?"
-
-"For neither, to-day," answers Her Ladyship, running out into Peter's
-Court, and then coming to a dead halt.
-
-She drew a long deep breath, as deep as the fog would let her, much as a
-dog does before he starts on the scent; she jingled the little money
-left in her purse, gave her hat the cock as she beheld a passer-by, and
-struck out for London Bridge, which, at this early hour of the day, she
-found easy enough to cross afoot, barring the filth and mud.
-
-'Twas the first time she had been on it since the memorable afternoon
-when she and Chockey had first come up to town in the coach from the
-Kennaston Arms. Now stalking along with a will, and a swing to her
-bundle, My Lady had chance to note the tall gaunt houses lining the
-bridge at each side where the pin-makers dwelt and worked; the gigantic
-water-wheel under the arches which supplied the town with water; the
-increasing tide of wagons, carts, pedestrians, porters, whoever else
-(save the chairs or coaches of fine ladies and gentlemen of which, at
-this time of day, there were none). Arrived at Surrey side, Her Ladyship
-paused to consider and, wrapping herself well in her camlet cloak, the
-which she had used at the masquerade so lately, thereby hiding her blue
-velvet breeches, laced waistcoat, point ruffles, Mechlin lace cravat,
-rich coat, and jeweled hilt, soon obtained fare in the one-seated cart
-of a country clown who was off for Tooting.
-
-Her Ladyship decided very quickly that 'twas but a necessary precaution
-for her to avoid highways, stage-coaches, and inns of reputation, since
-probably by this a full description of the supposed Sir Robin would be
-word of mouth from Westminster to Mile End, and a dozen miles out of
-town with the Lord knows but a price set upon his head!
-
-Once arrived at Tooting, 'twas her intention to double on her tracks,
-return with some bumpkin's load of vegetables to Garret Lane and thence
-to foot it across country or by penny's-worth rides with village folk,
-reaching the neighborhood of Kennaston, perhaps late that night; or, if
-she should be compelled to sleep under some friendly farmer's roof, at
-least by the next high noon.
-
-But Her Ladyship reckoned, if not without her hosts, most decidedly
-without taking count of the weary beast that dragged her, nor yet of any
-possible fellow-guests she might encounter on arriving at the Queen and
-Artichoke at Tooting.
-
-It was nightfall, when, limp and unnerved, possibly for the very first
-time in her life conscious of such physical conditions, the clown pulled
-her up before the inn in order to allow her to alight. Bundle under arm;
-feet and legs, up to calves, well bespattered with mud from the reek of
-her passage across London Bridge afoot; wig somewhat tangled for all
-that she had slipped her wig comb out of pocket and essayed to smooth it
-a bit; sleeves upturned, cloak dragging over her arm to heels,--a sorry,
-disheveled-appearing young personage jumped from among a pile of
-oat-bags, leathern aprons, chairs, unsold produce, wilted flowers, and
-under the askant eyes of 'ostler, boots, barmaid, mistress, and host,
-marched boldly into the parlor of the Queen and Artichoke.
-
-"Was there a chamber to be had?" for Her Ladyship plainly saw she must
-lie at Tooting and not proceed on her homeward journey until the morrow.
-
-There was a chamber; an admission hesitatingly made, even at this modest
-hostelry, to a young gentleman arriving without either servant, luggage,
-box, horse, coach, or dog, and by means of a vile rickety little cart.
-Yet, such was Her Ladyship's swagger, notwithstanding a full splash of
-mud on the tip-end of her handsome little chin, she was presently
-conducted to a decent chamber, up-stairs, at the rear, it is true, yet
-overlooking the green, where a game of bowls was in progress, and with a
-fine trellis, thick with vines, beneath its small-paned window.
-
-"Was there an ordinary?"
-
-Oh, the shame and humiliation of it! that the daughter of the Earl of
-Exham should be put to such an ebb, instead of ordering the best the
-house afforded sent at once to her room.
-
-Aye, there was an ordinary of two dishes and a pastry at ten-pence, and
-it would be ready in the quarter hour.
-
-"Ten-pence."
-
-Her Ladyship had just eleven pence ha'penny left in her purse.
-
-Yet, thought she, refreshed by a good meal and the leaving of her weapon
-as a hostage for her lodging, she would better eat than faint to-night,
-whatever might betide on the morrow.
-
-While she washed her hands, after hiding the bundle under the feather
-bed, Her Ladyship heard the ring of horses' hoofs on the stone pave of
-the inn yard; and her quick ear even detected the fact that one of the
-steeds went lame.
-
-She peered out of window and beheld Sir Percy astride of his own long
-roan, with Grigson just dismounting from the smoking black.
-
-"This is cursed luck!" mutters the master, as he himself, out of saddle,
-stoops to examine the roan's much swollen off hind-leg.
-
-"It is, Sir Percy," returns the man, "but, by your leave, Sir, it may be
-we can hire a mount here, although it don't look too promisin'."
-
-"Unlikely," says Sir Percy. "The best we can do is to lie in this hole
-for the night, and by a hot poultice and a bandage, the roan may be in
-condition by to-morrow forenoon."
-
-"Very well, Sir; it be a damn poor place of entertainment, Sir Percy,
-with an ordinary at ten-pence, Sir." Grigson's tone of derision is
-marked by the guest who draws close about her face the cotton curtain of
-the upper rear chamber window.
-
-"Will you be pleased to be served in your room, Sir Percy, at once, and
-of whatever can be had? What wine, Sir?"
-
-"Tut, tut, Grigson. I'll into the ordinary; off with you to the stables
-with the roan, rub her down and medicine her, then to your own supper in
-the kitchen."
-
-"Host," observes Mr. Grigson, loftily, as that worthy obsequiously
-appears in the yard with an attendant train, as is customary in
-welcoming persons of quality, "Sir Percy de Bohun has the condescension
-to say he will sup in the ordinary, and--"
-
-Whatever Mr. Grigson's further remark may have intended to result in,
-was, at this crisis, lost to posterity by such a clattering from up on
-the high road 'round the corner of the green lane, where nestled the
-Queen and Artichoke, that every eye was turned to behold such a cloud of
-dust as joyed the soul of Boniface, whose tuned intelligence foresaw a
-coach and four horses; in the light of which Sir Percy de Bohun's
-reeking lame roan and ill-kempt aspect faded into almost as much
-insignificance as had, long since, the traveler who had arrived in the
-clown's cart.
-
-Boots alone was left to guide Sir Percy to his apartment, while the rest
-made a concerted dash for the yard entrance, just in time to make their
-most profound bows and courtesies before the spick little gentleman who
-thrust his inquiring little head out of window, keeping his door closed,
-as he beckoned the landlord to him with eager heavy eyes well under
-cover of his pulled-down hat.
-
-"What guests have you to-night?" asked the little gentleman.
-
-At the very moment he was propounding his query, Sir Percy, now sunk to
-ignominy even in the eyes of Boots by announcing he would sup at
-ten-pence, was being ushered into an upper chamber adjoining the very
-one in which sat, dejected, robbed of even the prospect of food by his
-presence, Lady Peggy Burgoyne.
-
-"Very few, My Lord," answered the host glibly, "the very best chamber on
-the first floor with the sitting-room has been kept for Your Lordship,"
-applying hand to latch of coach-door, the which, however, is still
-firmly held by its occupant.
-
-"Their names?" asks the little gentleman, while at the fleck of one of
-the postilion's lashes his wheelers begin to prance and advance so far
-into the yard as that their racket brings Peggy a second time to her
-narrow pane, a-squinting up her eyes to see who this may be. For, in the
-midst of her distress, as befalls often enough to all of us, she takes
-unconscious note of minor happenings, the which, those who study such
-matters affirm to be proof of the two-sided condition of men's minds.
-
-"Your guests' names?" reiterates the small gentleman, as, followed by
-the cortge of dame, maid, man, dog, cat, and tame magpie, the coach
-comes to a halt within excellent range of Her Ladyship's coign of
-vantage and earshot. "I must know them before I alight."
-
-"Well, My Lord, there's Mr. Bigge, the Curate from Risley Commons, as
-stops over here on his way to Finchley every week; Mr. Blunt, the
-traveling tailor; His Grace the Duke of Courtleigh's own man, off on his
-holiday; Mr. Townes and his new married wife a-goin' to settle in the
-lodge at the Manor-house; a young spark drabbled with mud and havin' no
-boxes and no servants, what arrived by means of a market cart just anon,
-and Sir Percy de Bohun, a fine gentleman what's just ridden in the yard
-before Your Lordship's coach, but"--
-
-"Who?" The little gentleman turned green in his pallor, and shot back in
-his cushions with a gasp.
-
-"Not much of any account, My Lord, I'm thinking, since Jenny here tells
-me he sups at the ordinary; of course Your Lordship'll be served in your
-own sitting-room and dame and myself to humbly wait upon you."
-
-"Hold your tongue!" says the little man, gathering his scattered wits
-and pausing to think, while his steeds paw noisily on the cobble
-pavement.
-
-Peggy, at the pane, almost laughs as she regards the shrinking weazened
-visage.
-
-"Sir Robert McTart!" she says to herself, shaking her head at the little
-vixen. "'Tis indeed a merry fate that puts me and Percy and you all
-under one roof this night. That is, if his presence don't fright you
-into a gallop!"
-
-Sir Percy himself, also for a second standing moodily at his casement,
-could and did behold thence Sir Robin's restive and hungry leaders, and
-had a passing wonder as to what the devil brought any gentleman to stop
-at such an inn, save as himself, by the misfortune of a nail in his
-animal's foot.
-
-Sir Robin, however, with that discretion and prudence, not to say
-cowardice, which distinguished him, had purposely chosen the Queen and
-Artichoke, for, upon second thought, he had determined to sleep in
-comfort.
-
-Sir Robin loved his feathers and quilts of a night far better than the
-jolt of ruts and ditches, and dreaded highwaymen more than even the
-pangs of delayed love-making.
-
-By his choice he had hoped to escape the least chance of an encounter
-with Sir Percy, whom he believed to be in hot pursuit of him, and at
-this juncture his wise little pate quickly resolved that it were better
-for him to alight, gain his chamber, and harbor there in safety until
-such time as that Sir Percy should have unsuspectingly proceeded on his
-quest.
-
-"If you can ensure me a perfect privacy; to go unseen to my rooms, a
-fair service, and dry linen, with quiet as to cocks and neighbors, I
-will remain here for the present," says Sir Robin, almost taking in Lady
-Peggy by the squint of his uncontrollable left eye.
-
-In a trice, Sir Robin is attended to his bower, and ere long the best in
-the larder is laid before him. Sir Percy partakes of the homely fare of
-the ordinary; and Her Ladyship sits, unheeding the tardy summons of the
-dame, supperless, hungry, fagged, in her tiny room where the warmth from
-the kitchen chimney reaches her, and where the goodly smells from Sir
-Robin's fowls, sausages, eggs, and fruit-pie assail her senses.
-
-Mr. Grigson, doctoring the roan, endeavored with much creditable tact to
-get wind of the name or title of the master of the coach, but Sir
-Robin's men had had their lesson, and not a hint was to be got out of
-either of them by Mr. Grigson, or by the curious host of the Queen and
-Artichoke himself.
-
-By eleven every candle was out in the house. All the guests, save two,
-slept the sleep of the presumably just.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- _Wherein Her Ladyship slips leash of all mankind,
- runs for her life, and finds goal in
- the arms of Sir Robin McTart._
-
-
-These were Peggy and the little Baronet. Her Ladyship, mind made up to
-flee in the darkness, leaving six-pence on the table to pay for her
-lodgings, even now stood, latch in hand, bundle once more under arm,
-still a man, not having dared to change her garments.
-
-Sir Robin lay ensconced betwixt the quilts; the realizing sense that his
-mortal enemy, one who sought his life, who coveted His Lady--from whom
-he was running away, to be veracious,--lay not many yards off him,
-seeming to banish that restful repose that had seldom hitherto forsaken
-this worthy and exemplary little person.
-
-A mouse squeaked, and Sir Robin shivered; a beetle pattered across the
-hearth, his hair stood on end.
-
-Surely a footstep sounded in the hallway; the boards creaked; something
-metallic struck against the panel of his door, and he sprang from his
-couch and chattered to his sword.
-
-Lady Peggy's blade had struck the woodwork as she made her way
-stealthily down in the darkness; while Sir Robin shook, she gained the
-lower end of the hall but, not being acquainted with its ways and
-turnings, above all, having forgot the two broad steps that cut the
-straight road to the entrance in two, Her Ladyship, with much clanking
-of her weapon on the brick flooring, fell sprawling; her bundle shooting
-off into the unseen, she up on hands and knees, hither, yon, seeking it;
-Sir Robin beating on his wainscot such a tattoo as was fit to wake the
-dead, shrieking, from the safe shelter of the muffling pillows where he
-huddled:
-
-"Murder! Thieves! Ho there! Landlord! Tom! James! Ho there, I say! Help!
-Help!"
-
-Sir Percy, out of his four-post up-stairs in a flash, tinder struck,
-door flung open; in night-rail and cap, with rapier drawn, hanger
-uplifted, and--
-
-"'Sdeath! What the devil is the matter!" cries he at top of lung. "Speak
-or I'll fire!" and down the stair he plunges to Sir Robin's very sill.
-
-This one, having successfully summoned those more doughty than himself
-to cope with the supposed danger, now recognizing Sir Percy's voice,
-shivers and sweats as he cowers and pulls the counterpane over his head,
-grasping his purse in his sharp little fingers; wisely never undoing of
-his door.
-
-"Speak or I'll fire," repeats Sir Percy, whose candle has been blown out
-by the draught. He takes a few steps down the hallway where he hears the
-curious scratching noise Her Ladyship is making as she distractedly
-feels around for the bundle.
-
-At last she grasps it and creeps up unwittingly to Sir Percy's very
-side; _de facto_ her arm grazes his as she now raises herself to a
-standing posture, exactly as her lover, no answer being vouchsafed him,
-pulls his trigger and the ball goes a-whizzing through Sir Robin's door
-panel and finds lodgement in the chimney bricks.
-
-Peggy, her customary composure being much the worse for hunger and the
-general excitement, jumps when the shot pops, and thus inadvertently now
-palpably touches Percy's elbow. He turns upon her and seizes her wrists
-in a grip of steel; she, as tightly hugging the bundle under her armpit,
-utters no sound, but wriggles and twists to such a purpose that she is
-about to get free when her opponent renews his endeavors with an oath.
-
-"Speak!" says he, "or I'll brain you!" making to hold Peg's two hands
-prisoner in one of his, the while he may seize his rapier and put a
-finish to the matter.
-
-She does not speak, but to the scene jump now the heavy cumbrous
-country-folk, rattled out of their deep slumber by Sir Percy's ball and
-no less by the piercing and prolonged shrieks of Sir Robin, each Colin
-Clout and Dowsabel of 'em, armed with whatever they could catch; yet,
-luckily for Her Ladyship, no one of them with sense enough to fetch a
-candle.
-
-"A light! a light! you damnable idiots!" cried Sir Percy, while Her
-Ladyship makes a final twist to free herself, fruitless as before. She
-feels her ebbing strength at its last pinch and feels, too, the bundle
-loosening in her hold.
-
-Then, as landlord stumbles to his tinder-box, amid an uproar from all
-the travelers, especially the new made bride and her spouse, Peggy finds
-herself let go, nay, almost thrust aside as her captor ejaculates
-testily:
-
-"Zounds! girl, why did you not proclaim your sex, and not leave me to
-find it out by a long wisp of woman's hair between my fingers? Lights!
-Lights! I say! and we'll get the fellow yet! He must be in the house,
-for no one's left it."
-
-Sir Percy has been for the moment meshed in his Lady's long tresses,
-which, in the skirmish, have broke leash of the bundle and dangle out
-yard's length.
-
-For an instant she stands on the landing at bay. To unbolt the big door
-and make an open dash for freedom would mean certain death; to turn up
-therefrom and regain her chamber was her sole chance, and this must be
-done before a light could be struck.
-
-She wheeled around and rushed up the hall, up the stairs among the
-clustering folk, nudging she knew not whom, skipped along the narrow
-rear passage, and into her room before candle flames revealed to the
-amazed company that neither bolt, bar, or latch had been disturbed, nor
-anything in the house taken!
-
-Even while they rummaged in the bar-room till, counted the forks and
-spoons--pewter though they were, Her Ladyship, tying the luckless bundle
-about her waist with a hastily cut bed-cord, cautiously opened the
-casement, crawled out on the trellis, which unsteadied a bit beneath her
-weight but did not break; clambered in and out the vines to the edge,
-and then, lightly, thanks to her twin's training, swung herself to the
-ground clear, crept across the yard, leaped the stone wall, with a bound
-and over; flew the width of the meadow; struck the lane, up to the high
-road; by the moon, took a southerly course which she knew made for
-Kennaston, and paused not much for breath until she had left a matter of
-five miles betwixt her and the Queen and Artichoke.
-
-It was coming three o'clock by this, and, all the little night winds
-hushed, all the earth and trees and grasses, flowers, shrubs and weeds
-expectant, vibrant of the nearing dawn, whose pink and beauteous herald
-now looked over the hill-tops at the east, and put the lingering stars
-to shame, and woke the little birds, and bade every drop of dew flash on
-cup and blade; and all the things that breathe to grow and pulsate; to
-thrill through all their veins with joy that still another day was born.
-
-Her Ladyship too was glad, for, brave as she had been through all the
-brief ordeal of her manhood, this last adventure had broken her spirit a
-bit, and hunger and fatigue had sadly weakened her flesh. As the lark
-mounted, singing to the now risen sun, she struck in a bit from the road
-and began an endeavor to calculate how far she might be from Kennaston
-village, or from any place familiar to her. But it was vain to
-speculate. Peggy, in all her cross-country rides, could not place the
-spot in which she now found herself.
-
-Food was what she needed most and she came out into the open, shading
-her eyes with her hand and looking everywhere about for a curl of smoke
-that might guide her to a cottage. But no friendly film greeted her, and
-her hand fell listless at her side.
-
-Hark! The tinkle of a bell, the soft lowing of a cow; not far off
-either. She ran a piece up the road and presently descried the herd
-huddling at the pasture bars waiting for their milking, yet no maid nor
-man in sight, no milking-stool nor pail nor cup, only the soft inviting
-lowing of the kine. Her bundle still tied about her waist, Her Ladyship
-let down the top bars, edged through, off with her once splendid but now
-much tarnished hat, set it under the nearest cow, knelt, and presently
-had the cock full of as fine foaming milk as one might wish to see. She
-rose and drank thankfully, rubbing the cow's nose in gratitude; then;
-amid the concerted cries of the herd, she made off, a little refreshed,
-still keeping her southerly course; still haphazarding her way, for no
-house came in sight.
-
-After a matter of a dozen miles, and now reaching the edge of a woods,
-with the tower of a Castle just sticking up out of the horizon for her
-only beacon, Peggy halted and, the refreshment of the milk having been
-by this exhausted, the tears forced their way to her eyes and even
-ploughed two small furrows the length of her cheeks, cupping in the
-dimple of her chin, and splashing at last, on her much rumpled Mechlin
-lace cravat.
-
-"Bah!" cried she. "I weep only because I am hungry. I am not afraid.
-Odzooks! She that has had the hemp about her neck to be strung up for a
-highwayman must not fear to encounter one of her own ilk," and Her
-Ladyship essays to laugh as she plunges into the wood.
-
-It proves a harmless, peaceful, if somewhat devious neighborhood, where
-an occasional rabbit scurries over the dry leaves of last autumn's
-falling, and where a large company of rooks are holding a caucus, but
-'tis interminable; and Peggy's legs are not of steel, it seems, but of
-that lusty flesh and blood and bone which, when made to do duty fasting,
-now these twenty hours, begin to give out. Her head, too, spins, the
-knot of her cravat seems to choke her as she loosens it; the weight of
-the bundle appears like twenty stone at the least about her waist, and
-she cuts the bed-cord and lets it drop, just for a few moments' ease,
-she tells herself, as, at last, the other side of the forest is gained
-and she beholds a wide stretch of downs and naught but the elusive tower
-of the distant Castle, appearing farther away even than at first.
-
-What common can this be?
-
-Once again she shades her blood-shot eyes and stares up at the sky. In
-crossing the woods, she must have struck mistakenly to the west. The sun
-is nearing the set, and Peggy now knows she has come to Farnham Heath
-where, report has it, some of the boldest cut-throats in the country
-rule the roost.
-
-Shall she start to cross it? Kennaston Village lies only ten miles on
-t'other side of it. That will-o'-the-wisp tower? that castle yonder? yes
-'tis home! and she such a dullard as not to have mistrusted it before!
-
-She will push on. Why not? What has she, forsooth, to tempt any thief,
-unless he took her for ransom.
-
-Well, let him, since Percy de Bohun at this very moment, in all
-liklihood, kneels at the feet of Lady Diana; if highwaymen want to bear
-her off, why should she complain? And just then the tinkle of the little
-brook at the wayside beckons in Her Ladyship's ear, the Castle tower
-appears to he dancing up and down against the sky; the two stark trees,
-yonder on the heath, are surely turning somersaults; the bundle drags
-all forgotten at her heels, and presently lies in the tall grasses which
-she threaded on her way to the brook. Her head swam, ten thousand
-blunderbusses seemed to be firing off inside of it; she pulled off her
-wig and threw it far from her; she unbuttoned her coat and waistcoat,
-and drew her cloak in a twist about her; she staggered, caught at an
-elder; it swayed with her to the water, as she fell swooning with her
-thirsty lips just in touch of the sparkling bubbles; her wan face
-shining in the glint of sunshine, the whole round world and all the men
-and women in it quite forgot, even her sword, unbuckled with the
-bed-cord, now lay glinting its jewels in the sedges half a dozen rods
-away.
-
-A pair of robins eyed her from the bushes, a bee swerved and swung above
-her mouth; the minnows darted next her cheek, but My Lady did not wake
-for any or all of these. She lay there motionless until the sun had gone
-down and all the sweet scents and drowsy sounds and whirrs and flutters
-of twilight had come up; until a fine coach with four horses and two
-postilions came prancing and pawing at a great rate of speed out of the
-wood to the heath. Until a little weazened fine gentleman, who had dozed
-in his bed until long past noon for fear of encountering a certain other
-gentleman, had risen leisurely, dined with relish, set out from the
-Queen and Artichoke only after being assured that the other gentleman
-had gone off on a ruined horse back to Garratt Lane in the hopes of
-obtaining a suitable mount, which same was not to be had short of the
-ten mile return; until the little gentleman, then, thrusting his face
-out of his coach window as the vehicle came to a sudden standstill,
-spoke:
-
-"Is this the heath?" he asks with blinking eyes and a shiver.
-
-"Yes, Sir Robin, Farnham Heath, Sir!" answers one of the postilions.
-
-"Your pleasure, Sir Robin?" asks the second man respectfully, quieting
-his horses.
-
-"Well," returns the little Baronet, "if you think can gallop across
-faster than those devils could overtake us, I say, proceed. If not--" he
-glances back over his shoulder.
-
-To tell the truth, the gentleman from Kent considered himself as betwixt
-two very impending fires, and, 'tis safe to say, he dreaded Sir Percy de
-Bohun's possibility at his back as much, if not more, than he did the
-robbers in front of him.
-
-"We're in the best condition, Sir," returned the man, "and fifty minutes
-ought to take us out of all chances of danger."
-
-"Unless," replies the master, again casting an apprehensive eye to the
-rear, "they might close in on us from behind."
-
-"No fear, Sir," cries the lackey, "our pistols are loaded and cocked;
-with your own rapier, pistols and the blunderbuss, Sir Robin, we
-should--"
-
-"What's that?" exclaims the second man, eyes bulging, as with the handle
-of his whip he points to the fallen figure by the brookside.
-
-"Zounds!" cries the first, rising in his seat to peer.
-
-"'Sdeath! Damnation!" squeaks Sir Robin, pulling down the coach-sash.
-"On with ye, you devils! On, I say!" thumping impatiently on the pane
-with his signet ring.
-
-"No fear, Sir, no fear, Sir Robin!" exclaims the second man, jumping to
-the ground and inspecting Her Ladyship. "It's only a corp."
-
-"Are you sure?" opening the door cautiously. "Sure?"
-
-"Aye, Sir Robin, a quality corp, Sir. Mayhap shot down by them vagabones
-out of the heath. Had I best see if there's any life left in the young
-gentleman, Sir?"
-
-Sir Robin descends from his coach, a pistol in one hand, a drawn rapier
-in the other.
-
-"Keep an eye on the lookout, James," he whispers to the postilion who
-remains in his seat, and the Baronet minces in and out of the tall
-grasses, shaking the dew daintily from his sprawling feet, until he
-gains the spot, where his man kneels above the prostrate form.
-
-"Ugh!" says he, turning aside his head in a species of disgust, "I never
-could abide the sight of the dead."
-
-'Twas the very first time in his life he'd ever had a chance to behold
-such!
-
-"He ain't quite cold yet, Sir Robin," says the postilion. "There's a
-flicker to his eye-lids, Sir, look!"
-
-The Baronet looks; out of his hands tumble rapier and pistol.
-
-"'Slife!" he cries, down on his knees, feeling at Her Ladyship's pulse,
-pulling his flask from his pocket and trying vainly to pour the liquor
-between the firmly shut lips.
-
-As he tries, the little gentleman's wits work nimbly, which they could
-do on occasions, and, not stopping even to wonder at his discovery, only
-to accept instantly as a fact that his Lady had been struck down while
-pursuing him, he is so overjoyed at the beauty, sentiment, and
-opportuneness of the adventure, as to be scarce able to restrain his
-elation, even in the face of a serious swoon.
-
-"Into the coach at once, James," he says, raising Her Ladyship's head
-himself, "your gentlest endeavors and a guinea apiece to you," nodding
-to the other, as between them they carry the limp form to the coach, "if
-you bring me to Kennaston Castle before curfew."
-
-"Never fear, Sir Robin; if the young gentleman only holds out for a
-single hour, I swear, Sir, in the teeth of all the highwaymen in the
-kingdom, we'll have you there."
-
-"Tut, tut," says Sir Robin, smiling, no longer restraining an expression
-of his happiness and triumph, as he makes ready the rugs and cushions
-within to receive the burden James, for the moment, bears alone.
-
-"'Tis no young gentleman, you rogues, 'tis My Lady Peggy Burgoyne, my
-bride that is to be. Wait a moment, Thomas, while I spread this shawl;
-and James, look you sharp behind us, for there's a gentleman in pursuit
-of this Lady would kill me on sight if he can."
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- _In the which Sir Percy steals a coach and
- four and the living contents thereof and
- makes off therewith at breakneck
- speed for life and death._
-
-
-At this very moment, two horsemen, sorry mounted enough, especially the
-master, are rounding the turn of the woodland path and about to emerge
-upon the open next the heath. He who rides the lame roan has his eyes
-bent upon the ground, a thousand sad and conflicting thoughts crowding
-his brain, as 'tis impossible even to urge his hurt steed, and a
-jog-trot is all that can be got out of her ever again. Garratt Lane had
-sent him away only with his own again.
-
-"Sir Percy, with submission, Sir," exclaims Grigson, "this be Farnham
-Heath, Sir, and, 'pon my life, Sir!" jumping from his saddle and darting
-to the grassy side of the way, "a rapier, Sir Percy!" picking it up and
-dragging with it the straggling bed-cord and its appending bundle.
-
-Percy leaped to the ground and seized the weapon.
-
-"Grigson!" cried he, "there's been foul work hereabouts. This is the
-sword of a gentleman I know, or my name's not Percy de Bohun! He is a
-scurvy fellow, and my enemy, but if he has fallen among thieves, by the
-heaven above us! I'll rescue him, even if 'tis to punish him later
-according to my own will. Take the rapier."
-
-As he hands it back to his man, the bed-cord from the Queen and
-Artichoke, being a full century old, gives entirely away and My Lady
-Peggy's duds, long tail of dark hair, pins, needles, whatever else
-beside, fall, scatter, topsy-turvy to the ground, and at the very same
-moment Percy sees before him, as in a nest among the sedges and ferns of
-the marshy brookland, the wig that Her Ladyship had flung off, and a
-scrap of tumbled paper addressed to himself, flapping, spiked on a
-thistle-top near it! Thunderstruck, he is about to read it, when
-Grigson, who has gone on afoot a few steps, starts back, and, reckless
-of all things, seizes his master's arm and drags him to the turn of the
-road.
-
-"Sir Percy! Hist! For the love of God, Sir, look!"
-
-Thrusting the bit of paper into his waistcoat, Percy gasps and gazes. He
-beholds Sir Robin and his man lifting a limp and slender form,
-ill-defined, 'tis true, in its swathe of camlet cloak, into the coach;
-he beholds a head of dark short hair, a face of ashen pallor, and, in
-two seconds more, before he can rush back and leap into his saddle,
-motioning Grigson to do the same, the coach containing Sir Robin and his
-prize is dashing as fast as whip, spur, sixteen thoroughbred legs, and a
-backing-up of wholesome terror can urge it, over the bleak and gruesome
-waste of Farnham Heath!
-
-"'Slife! Grigson, man," cries Percy, digging steel into the poor roan's
-flanks till they spurt blood in a stream. "We must overtake 'em, unhorse
-'em, spill out the wretch inside; I'll into the coach then to protect
-the lady, you mount the leader and gallop us over the heath for your
-life!"
-
-"Trust me, Sir Percy," answers Grigson from a length behind his master.
-"God grant, Sir, that the roan drop not out of the race and leave us but
-one saddle betwixt you and me, Sir."
-
-"Poor beast," says Percy, pricking her hard and striking her shoulder
-with the flat of his rapier. "She'll die, and in a good cause if she
-gain me the goal."
-
-And all the while they're speaking, flash and crack go the whips of Sir
-Robin's postilions, and Sir Robin's splendid beasts cover the ground
-with a swing and a will that keeps the coach rocking, but yet awakens
-not Lady Peggy, whose dark cropped head reposes on the crooked shoulder
-of Sir Robin, while her white eyelids remain sealed and no quiver of
-returning consciousness thrills about her drawn and bloodless lips.
-
-"Gad!" exclaims Percy, as he beholds the vehicle swinging and spinning
-farther and farther from him, and as Grigson's black now is up nose and
-nose with his own expiring mare. "Gad, girl," bending his lips to the
-roan's laid-back ear, "go on! help me to save her! to reach her; go on,
-I say, in God's name!"
-
-As if the faithful creature comprehended her master's entreaty, with
-that not uncommon last flash of superhuman strength that inheres in man
-and beast alike, the roan raised her fine head in the air, pricked her
-ears, stretched out her neck, gathered herself up with a twitch of her
-nerves that thrilled to her rider's heart, and off! as in her best days,
-when she could distance the fleetest mount in the county; off, with the
-whirl and whirr of those coach-wheels beckoning to her; off, with that
-pair of straining eyes, those parted lips, blessing her as she began to
-gain on Sir Robin,--began to? nay, 'twas all a matter of beginning and
-ending in a breath. Before the postilions, amid their own clatter and
-calling, had caught hint of the pursuit, the roan was up with the
-windows out of which the apprehensive little Baronet was peering; his
-scream of terror:
-
-"Highwaymen! Faster! On! lads, on! A hundred pounds if we outrun 'em!
-On!" was their first advertisement of danger.
-
-But while the two were drawing their hangers from their belts, Sir
-Percy, with a swerving dash, pulled the roan on her hind legs directly
-in front of the galloping leaders. 'Twas but an interposition of
-Providence (coupled with very excellent cool-headed horsemanship) that
-he was not then and there dispatched into the hereafter.
-
-The leaders plunged, grinding the wheelers with their hind hoofs; the
-wheelers fell back of a heap, smashing in the fine front glass and
-cutting Sir Robin across the lip, but not so much as waking his burden
-from her deathlike sleep.
-
-"Down with ye!" cries Sir Percy, a pistol in each hand, as Grigson rides
-up with another brace to reinforce his master, putting a hand as well to
-the quieting of the coach horses.
-
-"Aye, aye, Sir! but spare our lives and we'll do your bidding!" cry Sir
-Robin's lackeys, leaping to the ground.
-
-"We've not a groat betwixt us, Your Honor, on our life!"
-
-"I want no groats, nor guineas either!" says Percy, now leaving his man
-to cover the steeds and the postilions, while he jumps off the roan's
-back and springs to the side of the coach.
-
-To wrest the door from the feeble clutch of the shrieking little
-gentleman from Kent; to open it; seize him, stopping his frantic and
-craven cries with a thrust of a pocket napkin in his mouth; to haul him
-out and send him spinning over the turf with his gold and silver
-scattering from purse and pockets, is, with Sir Percy, the work of a
-very few seconds.
-
-"Mercy! Mercy! Mr. Highwayman!" whimpers the Baronet, cringing on his
-knees, as Grigson lifts himself up on the off leader's back and Percy
-props the swooning figure within the coach.
-
-"'Slife, Sir, whoever you are! Raise your eyes! I am Sir Percy de Bohun,
-at your service any time three hours hence."
-
-Sir Robin glances up, his crooked little legs now bowing more into an
-arc than before, as he hears the dread name of his rival.
-
-Clapping hand to hilt, however, he stands up.
-
-"Sir," says he, pushed into a valiance he has no smallest sympathy with,
-solely from fear that Lady Peggy may have open ears by this time. "Sir,
-that Lady is my affianced. I command you, quit her and leave us to
-pursue our journey in peace. D'ye hear, Sir?" Sir Robin brandishes his
-weapon, now reinforced by the approach of his servants. "I'll stick you
-where you stand, Sir!" shouts McTart, prancing a bit nearer and actually
-touching Percy's shoulder with the point of his weapon,--be it
-remembered de Bohun's back was toward him as he leaned into the coach
-arranging the cushions.
-
-"Will you!" says Sir Percy, coolly turning and seizing the little man's
-blade and administering therewith to its owner a smart box on his
-out-flapping ears. "Had I time to waste," adds Percy, now jumping into
-the coach, "I'd leave your carcass here. Put up your pistol, Sir," says
-he, aiming his own straight at Sir Robin's now un-wigged pate, "or, damn
-you! you'll be cold inside a second. On with you, Grigson," calls master
-to man. "Life and death are in this matter. If the four beasts, and you,
-too, drop at the finish, get us to Kennaston faster than the wind
-travels."
-
-Even while he speaks, he watches the still white face so near him with
-his finger on his trigger, Sir Robin discreetly backing away and rending
-the air with noisy and impotent curses; then a plunge, a long,
-resounding call from Grigson; the two lackeys agog at finding themselves
-alive, Sir Robin's coach starts on as if the very devil himself were in
-its wake.
-
-Percy does not draw Peggy to him; he lays her back among the pillows; he
-bathes her head and lips and hands with liquor from his flask; he holds
-the slender fingers in his palm, as, amid awful terror lest his Lady
-die, he is racked with consternation and wonder at the present outcome,
-and in his distraught mind endeavors to patch and piece out the strange
-network of the mystery now beginning to solve itself before his eyes.
-
-As he prays God to spare her, if not for him, for some better man, a
-shrill, weird sound smites his ear.
-
-Percy throws back his head and listens; 'tis the long roan neighing for
-the last time back on Farnham Heath, where Sir Robin, picking up his
-money, dejectedly shivering like an aspen (since he would rake hell with
-a nail to secure a ha'penny, and fairly weeps at the six-pences he can't
-recover), presently and ruefully, one of his men behind him, pillion
-fashion, t'other running at his side, turns back to Tooting on top of
-Grigson's black, his fox teeth chattering in his wide mouth as he
-congratulates himself on his second and miraculous escape from the
-famous Sir Percy de Bohun.
-
-'Twas, in sooth, for this latter a bitterly sad hour which was spent in
-covering the distance between the heath and the Castle. Revived a bit,
-no doubt by the fumes of the liquor, Her Ladyship's lids quivered,
-contracted, and finally opened, but it was with a distraught and
-unrecognizing stare that she surveyed her companion.
-
-"'S death!" cries she aloud, her feeble right hand seeking her
-sword-side, "I tell ye, Chock, your mistress is now full-fledged a man!
-Hist, girl, an you love me, keep it close. Sir Percy's wed to Lady
-Diana! Aye!" Peggy laughs with such a heart-break in her voice and such
-tears in her winkers as causes Percy a pang of cruelest misery.
-
-"Tut, tut, Chock! What's his marriage to me? Fetch the pack, Mr.
-Brummell; aye, I'm at your service, loo, crimp, or whist! I, Sir Robin
-McTart, 'll lay you a thousand to nothing! Zounds! Sir, fetch coffee to
-stain my face with! and where, oh, where's my precious bundle with my
-woman's duds in't, my patch-box that I burned, and the long tail of my
-hair I cut off when you, Chock, bought me the counterfeit of Sir Robin's
-own wig at the perruquier's in Lark Lane. Aye! So!--No! No! No!" and now
-a shiver and a lower tone, as Lady Peggy, with her wide wild eyes,
-shrank back in the far corner of the jolting coach.
-
-"My Lady Mother,--I command you, Chock, tell her not of my escapades;
-and when Percy comes home with his bride, swear him, as will I, I was
-off pleasuring in Kent at my godmother's. Mother! Mother!" cries she,
-piteously now, as Percy's arms enfold her, and a thousand fond words
-jostle each other on his lips.
-
-Then she sinks into the stupor again, and remains so until the great
-coach rolls through the park and up to the entrance of her home; until
-Percy, with few words, lays her in the stout arms of the faithful
-Chockey and sees her mother bending above her; her father distract in
-his night-rail and cap; cook wailing, being from Kerry and prompt at any
-sort of hubbub; Bickers' toothless mouth agape with groans; sees his
-Lady carried up, limp, little hands down-hanging, to her chamber out of
-his sight.
-
-Sir Percy leaves Peggy's bundle, which he had gathered up as best he
-could and slung about his shoulders, on the table in the hall. The
-little scrap of paper he carries away with him and reads when he reaches
-home that night; 'tis Her Ladyship's note to him, written on the
-fly-leaf of the prayer-book of the young Curate of Brook-Armsleigh
-Village. As he scans it, presses it to his lips, sits until dawn,
-remembering many things since he parted from his Lady long ago in the
-parlor at Kennaston, the most of the mystery is unraveled by light of
-the scrawl; and the delirium of his joy at knowing himself to have been
-in her heart almost equals the mad anxiety that consumes him now as to
-her life and well-being.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- _Which sets forth how My Lady Peggy recovers
- of her illness--gets once more into
- hoops and petticoats--and puts
- a very fine and noble young
- gentleman into an
- earthly paradise._
-
-
-Until midsummer he rides over to Kennaston twice each day, morning and
-night, to find out how it fares with her, and 'twas not until then that
-the Earl gave him hopes he might see her, perhaps within the se'ennight.
-
-Notes there had been, daily, as soon as Chockey had let him know that
-her mistress was in her head once more, and the two surgeons, down from
-London, had pronounced Her Ladyship on the mend; notes, and flowers and
-fruits, and game and fish to tempt her appetite; a little dog from
-Pomerania; a Persian boy to wait upon her whims; a mare, as white as
-milk; sweetmeats from the Indies; damasks from China and France; shells
-and curious beadwork slippers from the American Colonies--whither, it is
-needless to say, a certain good ship had sailed, leaving a certain young
-gentleman behind--all these things, and many more besides, were offered
-up at Her Ladyship's shrine, but never yet had she been able to bring
-herself to scribble one line to her suitor, or to send any message, save
-polite civilities by Chockey.
-
-'Twas only after the buxom damsel (having the night previous heard from
-Grigson that his master was like to die of suspense, and having imparted
-the same to Her Ladyship), together with the Lady Mother and the Earl,
-had argued and preached into her the great and chivalrous devotion of
-Sir Percy, that Peggy at last had brought her mind into a condition of
-acquiescing in his coming up to her morning-room on the Thursday (being
-St. James's Day) after the sixth Sunday after Trinity; which same she
-carefully marked in her prayer-book with a dab of the crimson her mother
-sent in to beautify her pale cheeks with, against Sir Percy's advent.
-
-"Oh, slitterkins! Madam," cries the Abigail under her breath, "and
-asking Your Ladyship's pardon, but how can I do up Your Ladyship's hair
-an' it no longer than the peltry of a meadow-mouse!"
-
-"True enough, Jane Chockey," replies her mistress, contemplating her
-countenance in the mirror. "Of a fact, I resemble nothing so much as one
-of those weazen little vermin; my nose is sharp, too, and my cheeks--"
-
-"Stay, My Lady," says Chock, taking up the rouge, and putting on layer
-after layer. "Who'll say Your Ladyship ain't handsome now? Lawk, Madam!
-You look like an angel! What a blessing of Providence the French is with
-their nostrums!"
-
-Peggy regards herself.
-
-"Now, My Lady," cries Chockey, "would you but borrow your Lady Mother's
-worked head, a cup of powder, and Her Ladyship's pink feathers atop of
-it! What a sight would you be for Sir Percy to behold!"
-
-Peggy shakes her head. The three feet of wire, wool, pommade, frizz and
-plumage the hand-maiden suggests, even causes her to laugh aloud as she
-figures it above her own face.
-
-"Nay, Chock, none o' that!" says she, "I'll do as I am. Sir Percy has
-seen my cropped head; faith, he 'twas, you tell me, that fetched the
-tail of my locks to Kennaston in his saddle-pocket, or tied upon him
-somewhere?"
-
-"Aye, My Lady, Mr. Grigson says never, since Adam and Eve began courtin'
-under the fig-tree, has any young nobleman been seen in such a frenzy as
-Sir Percy about Your Ladyship. Lawk, Lady Peggy! When a young gentleman
-goes off his feed, ceases swearin' and cursin' his man, and stops down
-in the country nigh three months in the season, a-readin' loud to his
-deaf aunt, there ain't no sort of doubt as to the quality of his
-passion!"
-
-Her Ladyship smiles as she spreads her train and glances at it over her
-shoulder.
-
-"Chock," says she, "look you, now, while I cross the room; does the
-paduasoy stand out well over my hoop?"
-
-"Like the dish-clout, My Lady, when I spreads it to dry over one of the
-biggest hen-coops. 'Tis monstrous fine, finer, I should swear, than
-anything Lady Diana could have!" Chockey sighs, lost in admiration.
-"Though belike Lord Kennaston wouldn't think so."
-
-"And, Chock, look again." Her Ladyship crosses back to the divan. "'Tis
-thus the town ladies give the true quality sweep to their trains. Give
-me the trinket Sir Percy sent me last night." Peggy takes a fan of most
-beautiful feathers from a mother-of-pearl box and waves it back and
-forth. "'Tis so, Chock, the London fine ladies flutter the fan, as 'tis
-called, and every wriggle hath a different meaning!"
-
-"Oh!" Chockey is well-nigh speechless as she watches her mistress
-sidling, bridling, agitating the fan back, forth, hither, and yon.
-"Madam, 'tis amazin' grand! A glass of port now, My Lady, as by the
-orders of the surgeons?"
-
-"Nay," says Peggy, "I ain't in need of such."
-
-"A mug of ale? cider? milk?"
-
-"I'll none of 'em, Chock," returns Her Ladyship, seating herself on the
-divan, and spreading out the paduasoy as 'twere a tail and she the
-peacock owning it.
-
-"Set my _tui_ beside me on the stand; place that large chair far off
-yonder by the window for Sir Percy, that he may not disturb my
-furbelows, and--"
-
-"Hark, Madam! Hoofs!"
-
-"Lud!" cries Her Ladyship, "his new horse's hoofs! I've learned the ring
-of 'em as well as I once knew that of the poor long roan." Peggy sighs;
-she has heard much during her convalescence by way of Mr. Grigson and
-the Abigail.
-
-"Go you down, Chock, and, after a suitable period of waiting,--I mean
-such decent few minutes," cries she after the girl, "as may be occupied
-in dutiful greetings to Dad and Her Ladyship, you may send Sir Percy up
-to see me."
-
-She hears his voice in the hall greeting her father and mother; she
-glances over at the mirror, and, snatching her pocket-napkin from her
-bag, Peggy tips it to the top of the essence-bottle and rubs the red
-from her cheeks; she flings the fan down, draws in her splendid train to
-a crumpled heap about her, gives the hoop as smart a thrust as her
-feeble strength will permit, hears a footstep, and promptly buries her
-shamed face in the cushions of the divan.
-
-She does not answer the light rap on the half-open door, nor does her
-lover wait; he enters, and in a second, kneeling at her feet, his two
-arms about her, he raises her sweet face and lays his yearning lips on
-Her Ladyship's own beautiful mouth.
-
-"Ah, Peggy, my adored one," says he, devouring her pale face with his
-happy eyes, stroking her cropped head with caressing fingers.
-
-"Oh, Percy!" says she, with real roses blooming in her cheeks.
-
-[Illustration: Ah, Peggy, my adored one...]
-
-"I know a deal," whispers he, "but one thing I must ask. You'll tell me
-at once, will you?"
-
-"What is't?" says she, smiling, as she leaves her two hands in the hold
-of one of his.
-
-"Why did you adventure so much? for what, for whom, whose sake?
-Wherefore?" The young man's voice is feverish with anxiety.
-
-She hangs her head; raises it proudly; wishes she had him at a distance,
-and so, leave to swing her train and use her fan indifferent.
-
-"My beloved," cries he, "answer me! 'Tis your own Percy, him that
-worships the ground you tread upon; who has never had a thought apart
-from you; to whom every other lady on God's earth's but a puppet--that
-asks--eh, Peg, for whom, who?" coaxes he with eyes, lips, hands,
-heart-beats.
-
-"For your sake, Sir, and none other," she answers. "'Twas because I knew
-I'd done wrong and sent you from me careless; I would not give in; but,
-you up in town, Ken writin' me as he did--I could abide it no
-longer--and I went."
-
-"Now the God above us, bless you," says he, taking her in his arms, and
-at the same instant pulling from his waistcoat pocket the scrap of a
-note she'd written him in the eye of the scaffold.
-
-"Peg, Peg! I'm not worthy to mate with you, and when I learned of all
-your hairbreadth 'scapes, your twice saving of my life--when I read
-this, 'slife! My Lady, what's a man like me to such as you!"
-
-"I'll tell you," says she, laying her head on his shoulder, "he's the
-man she loves."
-
-"Will you marry me in a fortnight, Peggy?" asks he, rapturous.
-
-"Nay!" answers she, laughing. "I've another suitor to consider, Sir."
-
-"And who is he?"
-
-"Sir Robin McTart! He was over yesterday to ask my hand from Daddy."
-
-"The devil!"
-
-"Nay, Sir, not enough courage for that!"
-
-"Peggy, sweetlips, will you be mine the Tuesday after Transfiguration?"
-
-"Lud! No, Sir Percy! that will I not!"
-
-"When will you, then, love?"
-
-"Next Christmas."
-
-"Split it," cries he, imploringly, "make it the first quarter of the
-October moon?"
-
-"Well," she answers, looking up to where her father and mother stand in
-the doorway, "an Daddy and my Lady Mother consent, you shall have your
-way, Sir."
-
-The young man glances up, following Peggy's eyes, springs to his feet,
-raises her from the old divan and leads her before them.
-
-"My Lord and Your Ladyship," says he, "will you consent, as Peggy has,
-to our being made man and wife on October the fifth? and will you give
-My Lady and my unworthy self your blessing?"
-
-They kneel down and the Earl puts out his hands above their heads; the
-words stumble, for there are drops in his old eyes, as he looks and
-beholds about their faces that most splendid of all aureoles, the light
-of love and faith, honor with youth, and hope and wholesome minds to
-guide.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
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-
- A FEW OF
- GROSSET & DUNLAP'S
- Great Books at Little Prices
- NEW, CLEVER, ENTERTAINING.
-
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-
-GRET: The Story of a Pagan. By Beatrice Mantle. Illustrated by C.M.
- Relyea.
-
-The wild free life of an Oregon lumber camp furnishes the setting for
-this strong original story. Gret is the daughter of the camp and is
-utterly content with the wild life--until love comes. A fine book,
-unmarred by convention.
-
-OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated by Howard Pyle.
-
-A vivid yet delicate portrayal of characters in an old New England town.
-
-Dr. Lavendar's fine, kindly wisdom is brought to bear upon the lives of
-all, permeating the whole volume like the pungent odor of pine,
-healthful and life giving. "Old Chester Tales" will surely be among the
-books that abide.
-
-THE MEMOIRS OF A BABY. By Josephine Daskam. Illustrated by F.Y. Cory.
-
-The dawning intelligence of the baby was grappled with by its great
-aunt, an elderly maiden, whose book knowledge of babies was something at
-which even the infant himself winked. A delicious bit of humor.
-
-REBECCA MARY. By Annie Hamilton Donnell. Illustrated by Elizabeth
- Shippen Green.
-
-The heart tragedies of this little girl with no one near to share them,
-are told with a delicate art, a keen appreciation of the needs of the
-childish heart and a humorous knowledge of the workings of the childish
-mind.
-
-THE FLY ON THE WHEEL. By Katherine Cecil Thurston. Frontispiece by
- Harrison Fisher.
-
-An Irish story of real power, perfect in development and showing a true
-conception of the spirited Hibernian character as displayed in the
-tragic as well as the tender phases of life.
-
-THE MAN FROM BRODNEY'S. By George Barr McCutcheon. Illustrated by
- Harrison Fisher.
-
-An island in the South Sea is the setting for this entertaining tale,
-and an all-conquering hero and a beautiful princess figure in a most
-complicated plot. One of Mr. McCutcheon's best books.
-
-TOLD BY UNCLE REMUS. By Joel Chandler Harris. Illustrated by A.B. Frost,
- J.M. Conde and Frank Verbeck.
-
-Again Uncle Remus enters the fields of childhood, and leads another
-little boy to that non-locatable land called "Brer Rabbit's Laughing
-Place," and again the quaint animals spring into active life and play
-their parts, for the edification of a small but appreciative audience.
-
-THE CLIMBER. By E.F. Benson. With frontispiece.
-
-An unsparing analysis of an ambitious woman's soul--a woman who believed
-that in social supremacy she would find happiness, and who finds instead
-the utter despair of one who has chosen the things that pass away.
-
-LYNCH'S DAUGHTER. By Leonard Merrick. Illustrated by Geo. Brehm.
-
-A story of to-day, telling how a rich girl acquires ideals of beautiful
-and simple living, and of men and love, quite apart from the teachings
-of her father, "Old Man Lynch" of Wall St. True to life, clever in
-treatment.
-
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- DRAMATIZED NOVELS
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-
-MARY JANE'S PA. By Norman Way. Illustrated with scenes from the play.
-
-Delightful, irresponsible "Mary Jane's Pa" awakes one morning to find
-himself famous, and, genius being ill adapted to domestic joys, he
-wanders from home to work out his own unique destiny. One of the most
-humorous bits of recent fiction.
-
-CHERUB DEVINE. By Sewell Ford.
-
-"Cherub," a good hearted but not over refined young man is brought in
-touch with the aristocracy. Of sprightly wit, he is sometimes a
-merciless analyst, but he proves in the end that manhood counts for more
-than ancient lineage by winning the love of the fairest girl in the
-flock.
-
-A WOMAN'S WAY. By Charles Somerville. Illustrated with scenes from the
- play.
-
-A story in which a woman's wit and self-sacrificing love save her
-husband from the toils of an adventuress, and change an apparently
-tragic situation into one of delicious comedy.
-
-THE CLIMAX. By George C. Jenks.
-
-With ambition luring her on, a young choir soprano leaves the little
-village where she was born and the limited audience of St. Jude's to
-train for the opera in New York. She leaves love behind her and meets
-love more ardent but not more sincere in her new environment. How she
-works, how she studies, how she suffers, are vividly portrayed.
-
-A FOOL THERE WAS. By Porter Emerson Browne. Illustrated by Edmund
- Magrath and W.W. Fawcett.
-
-A relentless portrayal of the career of a man who comes under the
-influence of a beautiful but evil woman; how she lures him on and on,
-how he struggles, falls and rises, only to fall again into her net, make
-a story of unflinching realism.
-
-THE SQUAW MAN. By Julie Opp Faversham and Edwin Milton Royle.
- Illustrated with scenes from the play.
-
-A glowing story, rapid in action, bright in dialogue with a fine
-courageous hero and a beautiful English heroine.
-
-THE GIRL IN WAITING. By Archibald Eyre. Illustrated with scenes from the
- play.
-
-A droll little comedy of misunderstandings, told with a light touch, a
-venturesome spirit and an eye for human oddities.
-
-THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL. By Baroness Orczy. Illustrated with scenes from
- the play.
-
-A realistic story of the days of the French Revolution, abounding in
-dramatic incident, with a young English soldier of fortune, daring,
-mysterious as the hero.
-
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-
-CY WHITTAKER'S PLACE. By Joseph C. Lincoln. Illustrated by Wallace
- Morgan.
-
-A Cape Cod story describing the amusing efforts of an elderly bachelor
-and his two cronies to rear and educate a little girl. Full of honest
-fun--a rural drama.
-
-THE FORGE IN THE FOREST. By Charles G.D. Roberts. Illustrated by H.
- Sandham.
-
-A story of the conflict in Acadia after its conquest by the British. A
-dramatic picture that lives and shines with the indefinable charm of
-poetic romance.
-
-A SISTER TO EVANGELINE. By Charles G.D. Roberts. Illustrated by E.
- McConnell.
-
-Being the story of Yvonne de Lamourie, and how she went into exile with
-the villagers of Grand Pr. Swift action, fresh atmosphere, wholesome
-purity, deep passion and searching analysis characterize this strong
-novel.
-
-THE OPENED SHUTTERS. By Clara Louise Burnham. Frontispiece by Harrison
- Fisher.
-
-A summer haunt on an island in Casco Bay is the background for this
-romance. A beautiful woman, at discord with life, is brought to realize,
-by her new friends, that she may open the shutters of her soul to the
-blessed sunlight of joy by casting aside vanity and self love. A
-delicately humorous work with a lofty motive underlying it all.
-
-THE RIGHT PRINCESS. By Clara Louise Burnham.
-
-An amusing story, opening at a fashionable Long Island resort, where a
-stately Englishwoman employs a forcible New England housekeeper to serve
-in her interesting home. How types so widely apart react on each others'
-lives, all to ultimate good, makes a story both humorous and rich in
-sentiment.
-
-THE LEAVEN OF LOVE. By Clara Louise Burnham. Frontispiece by Harrison
- Fisher.
-
-At a Southern California resort a world-weary woman, young and beautiful
-but disillusioned, meets a girl who has learned the art of living--of
-tasting life in all its richness, opulence and joy. The story hinges
-upon the change wrought in the soul of the blas woman by this glimpse
-into a cheery life.
-
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-
-QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. A Picture of New England Home Life. With
- illustrations by C.W. Reed, and Scenes Reproduced from the Play.
-
-One of the best New England stories ever written. It is full of homely
-human interest * * * there is a wealth of New England village character,
-scenes and incidents * * * forcibly, vividly and truthfully drawn. Few
-books have enjoyed a greater sale and popularity. Dramatized, it made
-the greatest rural play of recent times.
-
-THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. By Charles Felton Pidgin.
- Illustrated by Henry Roth.
-
-All who love honest sentiment, quaint and sunny humor, and homespun
-philosophy will find these "Further Adventures" a book after their own
-heart.
-
-HALF A CHANCE. By Frederic S. Isham. Illustrated by Herman Pfeifer.
-
-The thrill of excitement will keep the reader in a state of suspense,
-and he will become personally concerned from the start, as to the
-central character, a very real man who suffers, dares--and achieves!
-
-VIRGINIA OF THE AIR LANES. By Herbert Quick. Illustrated by William R.
- Leigh.
-
-The author has seized the romantic moment for the airship novel, and
-created the pretty story of "a lover and his lass" contending with an
-elderly relative for the monopoly of the skies. An exciting tale of
-adventure in midair.
-
-THE GAME AND THE CANDLE. By Eleanor M. Ingram. Illustrated by P.D.
- Johnson.
-
-The hero is a young American, who, to save his family from poverty,
-deliberately commits a felony. Then follow his capture and imprisonment,
-and his rescue by a Russian Grand Duke. A stirring story, rich in
-sentiment.
-
-WHEN A MAN MARRIES. By Mary Roberts Rinehart. Illustrated by Harrison
- Fisher and Mayo Bunker.
-
-A young artist, whose wife had recently divorced him, finds that a visit
-is due from his Aunt Selina, an elderly lady having ideas about things
-quite apart from the Bohemian set in which her nephew is a shining
-light. The way in which matters are temporarily adjusted forms the motif
-of the story.
-
-A farcical extravaganza, dramatized under the title of "Seven Days"
-
-THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF JOSHUA CRAIG. By David Graham Phillips.
- Illustrated.
-
-A young westerner, uncouth and unconventional, appears in political and
-social life in Washington. He attains power in politics, and a young
-woman of the exclusive set becomes his wife, undertaking his education
-in social amenities.
-
-"DOC." GORDON. By Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman. Illustrated by Frank T.
- Merrill.
-
-Against the familiar background of American town life, the author
-portrays a group of people strangely involved in a mystery. "Doc."
-Gordon, the one physician of the place, Dr. Elliot, his assistant, a
-beautiful woman and her altogether charming daughter are all involved in
-the plot. A novel of great interest.
-
-HOLY ORDERS. By Marie Corelli.
-
-A dramatic story, in which is pictured a clergyman in touch with society
-people, stage favorites, simple village folk, powerful financiers and
-others, each presenting vital problems to this man "in holy
-orders"--problems that we are now struggling with in America.
-
-KATRINE. By Elinor Macartney Lane. With frontispiece.
-
-Katrine, the heroine of this story, is a lovely Irish girl, of lowly
-birth, but gifted with a beautiful voice.
-
-The narrative is based on the facts of an actual singer's career, and
-the viewpoint throughout is a most exalted one.
-
-THE FORTUNES OF FIFI. By Molly Elliot Seawell. Illustrated by T. de
- Thulstrup.
-
-A story of life in France at the time of the first Napoleon. Fifi, a
-glad, mad little actress of eighteen, is the star performer in a third
-rate Parisian theatre. A story as dainty as a Watteau painting.
-
-SHE THAT HESITATES. By Harris Dickson. Illustrated by C.W. Relyea.
-
-The scene of this dashing romance shifts from Dresden to St. Petersburg
-in the reign of Peter the Great, and then to New Orleans.
-
-The hero is a French Soldier of Fortune, and the princess, who
-hesitates--but you must read the story to know how she that hesitates
-may be lost and yet saved.
-
-THE MUSIC MASTER. By Charles Klein. Illustrated by John Rae.
-
-This marvelously vivid narrative turns upon the search of a German
-musician in New York for his little daughter. Mr. Klein has well
-portrayed his pathetic struggle with poverty, his varied experiences in
-endeavoring to meet the demands of a public not trained to an
-appreciation of the classic, and his final great hour when, in the
-rapidly shifting events of a big city, his little daughter, now a
-beautiful young woman, is brought to his very door. A superb bit of
-fiction, palpitating with the life of the great metropolis. The play in
-which David Warfield scored his highest success.
-
-DR. LAVENDAR'S PEOPLE. By Margaret Deland.
-
-Mrs. Deland won so many friends through Old Chester Tales that this
-volume needs no introduction beyond its title. The lovable doctor is
-more ripened in this later book, and the simple comedies and tragedies
-of the old village are told with dramatic charm.
-
-OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated by Howard Pyle.
-
-Stories portraying with delightful humor and pathos a quaint people in a
-sleepy old town. Dr. Lavendar, a very human and lovable "preacher," is
-the connecting link between these dramatic stories from life.
-
-HE FELL IN LOVE WITH HIS WIFE. By E.P. Roe. With frontispiece.
-
-The hero is a farmer--a man with honest, sincere views of life. Bereft
-of his wife, his home is cared for by a succession of domestics of
-varying degrees of inefficiency until, from a most unpromising source,
-comes a young woman who not only becomes his wife but commands his
-respect and eventually wins his love. A bright and delicate romance,
-revealing on both sides a love that surmounts all difficulties and
-survives the censure of friends as well as the bitterness of enemies.
-
-THE YOKE. By Elizabeth Miller.
-
-Against the historical background of the days when the children of
-Israel were delivered from the bondage of Egypt, the author has sketched
-a romance of compelling charm. A biblical novel as great as any since
-"Ben Hur."
-
-SAUL OF TARSUS. By Elizabeth Miller. Illustrated by Andr Castaigne.
-
-The scenes of this story are laid in Jerusalem, Alexandria, Rome and
-Damascus. The Apostle Paul, the Martyr Stephen, Herod Agrippa and the
-Emperors Tiberius and Caligula are among the mighty figures that move
-through the pages. Wonderful descriptions, and a love story of the
-purest and noblest type mark this most remarkable religious romance.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26TH ST., NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Note
-
-In several cases, the author (or printer) uses an apostrophe
-incorrectly; three times as the possessive pronoun, and once as 3rd
-person present ('let's'). Each has been corrected. Other minor lapses in
-punctuation have been corrected as well, without further mention.
-
- p. 43 even than [it's] forlorn neighbors
- p. 85 hiding [it's] tell-tale under the skirt of her coat
- p. 251 links his arm in [her's]
- p. 266 and [let's] out that I was not she at all
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of My Lady Peggy Goes to Town, by
-Frances Aymar Mathews
-
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's My Lady Peggy Goes to Town, by Frances Aymar Mathews
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-
-Title: My Lady Peggy Goes to Town
-
-Author: Frances Aymar Mathews
-
-Illustrator: Harrison Fisher
-
-Release Date: November 5, 2015 [EBook #50388]
-
-Language: English
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- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
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-<p class='c000'>Minor errors in punctuation and formatting have been silently
-corrected. Please see the transcriber’s <a href='#endnote'>note</a> at the end of this
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-
-<div id='frontis' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_frontis.jpg' alt='Then Lady Peggy, laughing...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'>MY LADY PEGGY <br /> GOES TO TOWN</h1>
-</div>
-<hr class='c003' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>By</em></span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='large'>FRANCES AYMAR MATHEWS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>ILLUSTRATED BY HARRISON FISHER</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_ii.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</div>
- <div>PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Copyright, 1901,</em></div>
- <div><em>By The Bowen-Merrill Company</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i_iv.jpg' alt='MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>THE DECORATIONS DESIGNED BY VIRGINIA KEEP</div>
- <div class='line'>THE COVER DESIGNED BY FRANCIS HAZENPLUG</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_v_a.jpg' alt='ILLUSTRATIONS' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='71%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>Then Lady Peggy, laughing, humming such a gay snatch of a song, comes tripping down the stairs.</em></td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#frontis'><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>And Lady Peggy and her woman found themselves on the road to town.</em></td>
- <td class='c006'><em><a href='#i_040fp'>Page 40</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>“A touch, a hit!” cry all at once as a spurt of blood darts up the supposed Sir Robin’s blade.</em></td>
- <td class='c006'><em><a href='#i_068fp'>Page 68</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>Two watched her as she came in on Beau Brummell’s arm.</em></td>
- <td class='c006'><em><a href='#i_112fp'>Page 112</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>At the table sat Kennaston, inky-fingered, scribbling; eyes now rolling to the ceiling, now roving hither and yon.</em></td>
- <td class='c006'><em><a href='#i_158fp'>Page 158</a></em></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_v_b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_v_b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='71%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>The instant that Lady Peggy felt herself in the highwayman’s saddle, she knew that her wrists had met their match.</em></td>
- <td class='c007'><em><a href='#i_180fp'>Page 186</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>“I am Sir Robin McTart! Who, the devil, are you?”</em></td>
- <td class='c007'><em><a href='#i_278fp'>Page 278</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'><em>“Ah, Peggy, my adored one,” says he, devouring her pale face with his happy eyes.</em></td>
- <td class='c007'><em><a href='#i_336fp'>Page 336</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_v_b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>ENVOI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c009'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When gay postillions cracked their whips,</div>
- <div class='line'>And gallants gemmed their chat with quips;</div>
- <div class='line'>When patches nestled o’er sweet lips</div>
- <div class='line'>At choc’late times; and, ’twixt the sips,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fair Ladies gave their gossips tips;</div>
- <div class='line'>Then, in Levantine gown and brooch,</div>
- <div class='line'>My Lady Peggy took the coach,</div>
- <div class='line in10'>For London Town!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='I—In the which My Lady Peggy sends off her lover broken-hearted...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_001.jpg' alt='MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOWN' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><em>In the which My Lady Peggy sends off her</em></div>
- <div><em>lover broken-hearted and promptly</em></div>
- <div><em>falls into a swoon.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Kennaston Castle lies in Surrey. The Earl of
-Exham is master of the picturesque old pile and
-of the estate, and decidedly the slave of the very
-considerable number of debts which were up to
-His Lordship’s ears when he came of age, some
-four and fifty years ago, and by this time have
-reached almost to the crown of his head. He is
-also father to his son and heir, Kennaston of Kennaston,
-and to the heir’s tall twin, My Lady Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>My Lady Peggy at this particular moment sits
-a-swinging on the top branch of a plum tree at the
-foot of the kitchen garden whence she commands
-a tolerable view of the highway.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Impertinent sun!” cries Peggy, shading her
-handsome eyes with her hand as she stares off along
-the dusty road. “How is’t you dare shine when
-there’s no fine gentleman a-comin’ from the east;
-no gallant with disheveled locks, powdered shoulders,
-disordered mien, distracted looks, spurs a-digging
-into his beast, lips apart, heart beating like
-spent rabbit’s, and ‘Peggy, lovely Peggy,’ the clapper
-to his eager tongue at every jolt of his saddle,
-every rut of his way? Go cloud yourself, I say!
-since Sir Percy tarries. I’d have the skies weep,
-even if I can’t.” A peal of merriest laughter concludes
-this sally, and an apronful of plums comes
-tumbling down all over the other young woman
-who stands under the tree in waiting on her mistress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is His Lordship not yet in sight, My Lady?”
-asks this one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay! that is not he, Chockey, and whisk me!
-but when His Lordship does come, he’ll find a very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>sorry entertainment. I swear, as dad says, I’ll not
-see him when he does appear, that will not I. Nay,
-shake not your head, girl. Is’t not true that Lady
-Peggy had once a lover?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Twere truer say a dozen of that sort of gentry,
-Madam,” replies the buxom Chockey, as she sorts
-the plums, the best in her bonnet, the flaws over
-the wall where the chickens and hens cackle to the
-refuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, well, twenty if you like! but one more
-favored than the rest? the properest sort of
-man at saddle, gun, line, wrestle, toast, song, or
-dance? honest, straightforward, beautiful, as dad
-says the angels are he saw painted on the walls at
-Rome. Speak I truth, eh, Chockey?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Madam, that you do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And this paragon so worshiped his Peggy as,
-when she went off a-three months since to visit her
-godmother in Kent, he vowed by all the saints in
-the calendar he’d scarce survive until her return.
-False or true, eh, Chockey?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>My Lady Peggy punctuated this query by an
-accurate aim and hit, on the top of her waiting
-woman’s head, with an especially large plum.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>“True, Madam,” dodging the fruit, and still
-with an eye on the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And then, back comes My Lady Peggy, cutting
-short her stay in Kent, where she had much pleasure,
-to tell the truth, in the society of a very fine
-young nobleman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk, Madam! another?” interrupted the
-faithful Chockey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Another, Chock,” vouchsafes her mistress.
-“Sweet, sweet Sir Robin McTart!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, My Lady!” cries the girl, vainly endeavoring
-to conceal a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Chock,” proceeds Peggy, “I say again, a
-sweet and most entrapping young man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Madam, a squint eye, a wry nose, an underlip
-that hangs, a pair of fox-teeth, and a chin that’s
-gone a-huntin’ for his throat!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut! Chock,” laughs Lady Peggy, leaning
-back in her leafy bower, “what’s all that to a
-nimble wit, a galloping conversation, and a faithful
-heart?” Lady Peggy’s tone is as light as the
-May breeze blowing her soft locks about her lovely
-blooming face, full of mockery, witchery,—and
-then a bit of a sigh, low as flowers’ whispers, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>up with her drooped head higher than before, as in
-the half mannish tone her twinship and long play-fellowship
-with her brother have given her, she
-adds curtly—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“D’ye see aught coming yet, Chock?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, My Lady, not yet,” answers the girl ruefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy bites her lips until they hurt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As I was a-sayin’, Chock, your mistress cuts
-short her visit, sends word to her lover she’ll be
-home o’-Thursday, and, as I live! to-day’s the Monday
-after, and him still on the way! See him!”
-Peggy’s white teeth close tight, and her eyes flash,
-and her little hands clench. “Not I! Let him
-come now an’ he goes again faster than he ever
-traveled. The vain coxcomb! the deceitful, cozening,
-graceless poppet! He’ll ne’er set eyes on her
-he used to call his Peg again, or I die for’t.” And
-Peggy jumped to the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Madam! Madam!” exclaims Chockey, pointing
-joyfully to a cloud of dust far up the highway.
-“Look! Yonder comes Sir Percy! Don’t I know?
-Ain’t I watched his long roan any day this twelve
-month a-turnin’ by the lodge?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>Lady Peggy seizes Chockey’s arm, and runs
-breathless to the house; in, a-scrambling up the
-broad stairs to her chamber; a-pulling out of drawers
-from their chests; a-hunting of ribbons and
-fallals, combs, brushes, kerchiefs, perfumes,
-patches, powder, whatever else besides!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hurry, Chock, do my hair as he likes it!” urges
-Lady Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk, Madam! I thought you swore just now
-you’d never set eyes on Sir Percy again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You thought! Bless you, Chock, never be a-wastin’
-your time a-thinking where a woman’s concerned.
-When her heart steps up and lays hold the
-reins, the steed gallops to the goal; she’s always
-time to think after she’s acted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, Madam,” concurs Chockey, with a mental
-reservation back of her mouthful of pins. “There,
-My Lady, Your Ladyship’s hair is lovely; your
-Levantine gown becomes you like a pheasant do its
-plumage, and your eyes is a-shinin’ with love
-and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, girl! It’s anger, wrath, temper,—so!”
-Peggy marches up and down before the mirror,
-tossing her lovely head. “Thus attired, Chock, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>lady can flout, deride, harass, and madden one of
-the opposite sex, as can she not do in cotton frock
-and fruit-stained apron. Give me my comfit box,
-I pray. Tell me how long Sir Percy now hath
-been cooling his heels in the drawing-room?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But little lacking the hour, Madam.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good! I’d keep him there until Thursday, an
-I could. Now go tell him I’ll be with him presently.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey went.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy stood at the door ajar; she heard
-the impatient footsteps of her lover below, but yet
-she tarried, tapping her high red heel on the sill.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud!” cried she, “an I show no proper spirit,
-Percy’s uncle’ll have the right of it when he says
-of one he’s never seen yet, ‘She’s a-hunting your
-bank-notes, boy! She’s heiress to debts, Sir, and by
-my life, Sir! I’ll never father-in-law her, so long
-as I’m above the sod, Sir!’ Despicable old wretch!
-as if ’twere not Percy I adored, without a care if
-he have a farthing to his fortune, or a roof to his
-head!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then Chockey, her palm warm with a
-sovereign, came with a rush.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>“My Lady!” cries she, “’f you could see Sir
-Percy! White as milk, tremblin’, shakin’, chatterin’,
-a-begging and a-praying as you’ll condescend
-to go to him inside of another hour!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“White, said you Chock?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The girl nods vehemently.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Shaking?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Madam.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Like to faint, think you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Like to die, My Lady!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then Lady Peggy, laughing, humming such a
-gay snatch of a song, comes tripping down the
-stairs, pulling out her petticoats, stopping her
-lover’s outstretched arms of eagerness with such a
-splendid curtsy as any Court lady might have
-envied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still laughing.—“Lud! Sir Percy! is’t you?”
-amazed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye!” returns he, more amazed than she, and
-standing off with dropped arms. “Whom did you
-think it was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Another. My woman’s stupid, and when she
-described the gallant that she did, it matched a
-different sort of him than you, methinks. However,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>let’s be civil; the crops are good, the game
-likely to be, later; the King in health,—prithee
-have a chair.” And Peggy swept a second curtsy,
-motioning toward a seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peggy! Sweet lips! Joy of my soul, what’s it?
-Not one warm word for him who only lives for
-thee? Who’s counted every hour since he parted
-from you, eh?” The young man draws nearer to
-her, and bends upon his knee, venturing, as he does
-so, to take her hand in his.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Since you spent your time a-counting the hours,
-Sir, pray you, how many hours have passed since
-in this same room we parted, now three months,
-three weeks, and a few days since?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy sprang to his feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! Peggy, and you flout me so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! Sir Percy, did not I write you—and
-very well you know writing’s not my forte,—that
-I’d be home o’-Thursday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, but I never got it until this morning; then
-did I put spurs and leave my uncle in the lurch
-to fly to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What, Sir! not get my letter? An idle, silly,
-and foolish excuse. I sent it by Bickers, and trustier
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>man ne’er breathed. He vowed me he’d put it
-in your hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peggy, believe whichever of the two you like;
-but, in mercy tell me! What kept you so long
-away? I’ve heard rumors of another. Eh, Peg,
-’tis not true, swear me ’tis not true? Oh, by the
-hue of my visage must you know what jealous
-pangs have racked me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy nods her head maliciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Jealous pangs, forsooth! and you thought to
-medicine them, I dare be sworn, with vaulting the
-country over in the wake of Lady Diana Weston,
-the greatest heiress in the market! Bah, Sir, and
-you’ve heard rumors! I’ll match ’em. I’ve seen
-the minx from afar. She is handsome, Sir; your
-taste does you credit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peg, I swear ’twas but to please my uncle!”
-cries Sir Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, and so displease me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, you know too well that I’ll never do that
-of my will; but my uncle, as I’ve told you, must
-be coaxed, and then when once I gain his consent
-to seeing you, our battle’s won. To see thee, Peg
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>’s to worship thee! Lord Gower’ll kneel when he
-beholds thee!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Our me no ours, Sir!” returned Peggy. “Let’s
-here and now make an end on’t all. You go pound
-the roads after your new mistress with her acres
-and notes, and I—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, you what?” asks the young man impetuously
-and yet with a certain grave dignity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, I’ll acquit myself to a certainty with one
-that’s faithful as the sun, and gallant from his
-head to his heels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s his name?” inquires Sir Percy in a hard,
-strained voice. “If he’s a better man, Peg, and you
-can say you love him—God keep me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“His name’s a very honorable and ancient one,
-he’s Sir Robin McTart, twenty-third Baronet!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peggy!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If a thunderbolt had fallen betwixt Peggy’s red
-shoes and his brown ones, Percy could not have
-been more astounded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, Sir?” returns she, scarce controlling the
-twitching of her lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A milk-sop, molly-coddle! Oh Peggy, an you
-drop me, take a better man! Peg, you’re a-joking.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>Not that bumpkin! I’ve never seen him, but report
-has it he’s afeard if one of his own dogs looks
-him in the eye and bays!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy, have you finished?” inquires Peggy
-with dignity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, have I not! By my soul, Peg, an you
-pitch me to hell for that jackanapes, I’ll go to hell
-as fast as wine and dice, and cards and brawls, and
-usurers, and all that sort of crew can carry me!
-I’ll up to London, and one morning when your
-brother sends you word he’s found me with a rapier
-stuck in my throat, my pockets empty, and ‘Peggy’
-writ on the scrap o’ paper a-lying over my heart,
-then you’ll believe Percy loved you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud, Sir! Men are apt at such chatter, and a
-fortnight after, the vicar’s a-publishing their banns
-with the other lady!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peg!” He takes her kerchief end, as it droops
-away from her pretty long throat, in his fingers;
-he looks down deep into her eyes; his voice shakes,
-so does his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Whatever betides, my bonny sweetheart, there’s
-only one that’ll ever have banns read with me, and
-that’s—” He takes her by surprise and by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>shoulders, and squares her to the mirror in its
-niche.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Farewell, Peg—since you send me, it’s the devil
-and dice, for by the Lord! I can’t live a quiet life
-lacking your smiles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In two minutes more Chockey, from the upper
-window, saw the long roan flying away from Kennaston
-faster than she ever galloped to it; and
-went down to find her young mistress a-lying prone
-in a fine wrinkled heap of silken gown, lace frills
-and furbelows, on the threadbare carpet of the big
-drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To rush across the wide hall to the dining-room,
-seize a game-knife, back again; cut her mistress’s
-stays; pour a glass of cider down Lady Peggy’s
-throat, willy-nilly; clap her palms; pound her
-back; set her on her feet; and half carry her to her
-chamber, occupied not many minutes for stout
-Chockey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk, My Lady,” said she, surveying the prostrate
-form on the couch, arms a-kimbo, eyes saucer-wide,
-“who’d ever have thought to see your haughty
-Ladyship so mauled for the sake of any gentleman
-as lives!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>Lady Peggy lay still, but presently, from the
-depths of the pillows she spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ain’t mauled, Chock, not I!” Her Ladyship
-now sat up and stared around the big room. “It’s
-only for sorrow for havin’ had to disappoint Sir
-Percy, on account of dear Sir Robin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh!” ejaculates the worthy Chockey in a tone
-of undisguised and sarcastic disbelief.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Chockey!” exclaimed her mistress in the tone
-of a drill sergeant, now rising to her feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk! My Lady, I didn’t mean nothin’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Chockey,” echoes Lady Peggy faintly, sinking
-to her knees, “whatever’ll I do? Oh Chock! Chock!
-and Sir Percy just the centre of my heart, and me
-to behave to him like a brute! Out of my sight,
-away with you! There’s the first bell a-ringin’ for
-dinner. Say to daddy I’m too deep in my hand-writin’
-lessons to eat to-day! Say to him I’m gone
-out to break the new colt and not got back. Say
-to him I’m gone to the devil!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Lady Peggy fell a-weeping with such violence
-as Chockey had never seen; and, being a
-wise damsel, she left her mistress alone and went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>down to soothe the gouty Earl, tied to his chair,
-as best she could for the absence of his daughter
-Peg from dinner.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_015.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='II—In the which Her Ladyship wheedles her noble father...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>II</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In the which Her Ladyship wheedles her</em></div>
- <div><em>noble father and makes up her mind.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Earl forsooth was a testy gentleman, and
-his girl was his plague and his pride; on her,
-rather than on his heir, the old man’s fancy was
-set, for the reason that Kennaston, disclaiming
-all the country sports, the half wild outdoor life,
-the lusty joys and racing bumps and cups that had
-been vastly helpful in reducing the little his parent
-had started his career with, had elected instead to
-try his luck at that most inscrutable, vile trade of
-scribbling!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg’s twin, her fellow in height and build, which
-made a slender youth of him indeed, had gone up
-to London quill-armed, ink-fingered, brain-possessed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>with rhymes; empty-pursed, determined to
-carve with such unlikely weapons as that apt bird,
-the goose, furnishes, a fame and fortune for himself,
-that should dazzle the world and recoup the
-fortunes of his well-nigh fallen house.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the Earl jeered, Peg, herself scarce able
-to spell a two-syllabled word, looked up to her
-brother as nothing short of whatever stood in her
-mind for Shakespeare; for, low be it spoke, the
-fair Peggy had small notion of books, their makers
-or their pleasurable usage. To her they represented
-waste time almost, and only as a means of
-communication with Kennaston did she, since his
-absence began, pore daily over a dictionary, a
-speller, and a copy-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So sat she now, a couple of months after the
-parting betwixt her and Sir Percy; lips pursed,
-brows knit, goose-feather in finger, poring over a
-blank sheet of paper first, and from it turning to
-the closely-writ page of a letter from her twin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey sat on a stool hard by,—they were both
-in the buttery, for Lady Peggy was apt with all
-the mysteries of housekeeping, and had as fine a
-churning, as big cheeses, as fat chickens, as nice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>eggs, as good hams as any other in the county,—had
-she not, the Earl, her father, had lacked something
-or all of his comfort. Chockey, then, sat
-working butter, squeezing all the white milky bubbles
-back and forth in the wooden bowl, and printing
-the pats in the trays, while her mistress sighed,
-swallowed, and at last burst forth in speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Chockey, I shall fall into a fit, an I’ve ever
-another letter to write in this world. The last I
-writ was for Sir Robin to introduce him to Lord
-Kennaston when he should go up to town—and belike,
-I forgot to give it to him as I promised and
-have it safe here. It took me a week to finish, and
-I’ve copied all the words out of it I can, yet do I
-lack thousands more, methinks, to say what I
-would to my brother. Lud! Learning’s a wonderful
-thing! Look at that, Chock!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy holds up the well covered pages of
-Kennaston’s letter before the eyes of the Abigail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Madam,” giggles this one, “it has the air
-to me of where spiders has been a-fightin’! Now,
-for true, My Lady, do it say words as has a meanin’?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listen,” replies the mistress, reading off quite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>glibly, since ’tis the one hundredth time since she
-got it that she’s rehearsed the same to herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<span class='sc'>Sweet Sister Peggy</span>: I’d have written before
-but that literature pays ill until a man hath contrived
-by preference and patronage, the rather
-than by his wits, to place himself at evens with the
-Great and the Distinguished. So far I find Fame’s
-hill hard in the Climbing, but do I not complain,
-for there’s that spirit reigning in my breast as bids
-me welcome Poverty, even Starvation, lead it but
-to the sometime recognition of my Talents. I take
-up my pen not to riddle your ears with plaints,
-but on another matter, which is Sir Percy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy’s head droops a bit to match her
-voice, whilst Chockey’s bright little eyes sparkle,
-and she twists the yellow butter into heart shapes
-as she pricks her ears and sighs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy,” continues My Lady Peggy, reading,
-“as you know came up to town, now these seven
-weeks agone, straight as a die to my meagre chambers,
-where welcome was spelled, I can assure thee,
-all over the bare floor, barer board, and barer master
-thereof,—for of a truth I love him as should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>I the brother I had hoped he’d be! Peg, what’s
-this thou’st done to the lad? Thrown him, a gallant
-with as big a heart as God ever made, over
-into the Devil’s own mire, for sake of that little
-tow-haired sprat, Robin McTart! with his pate
-full of himself and none other,—so I’ve heard say,
-for never set I eyes upon the blackguard from
-Kent! Zounds! twin! What are ye women made
-of? And I write to say Percy, what with carousals
-and brawls, and drink and fights, and all night
-at the gaming-table, and all day God knows where,
-’s fast a-throwing himself piecemeal into the grave
-he’s a-digging daily for your cruel sake. Could
-you but see him! A ghost! Wan, with eyes full
-of blood-spots, and hair unkempt! Madam, there’s
-love for you—and love’s what ladies like. Go
-match him, Sister, with McTart if you can, but
-twin me no more ever again an you and I wear
-black ribbons for Percy de Bohun!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lady Peggy’s lip quivers; so does Chockey’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk, My Lady!” cries the girl, splashing tears
-into the butter, reckless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“‘Black ribbons,’ Chock! ‘A ghost,’ Chock! ‘McTart,’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>Chock! Lord ha’ mercy! What’s to become
-o’ me?” Peggy’s tears smart her eyes as she flings
-the goose-quill over to a cheese on the shelf, where
-it sticks, and one day surprises the Vicar at his
-supper.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Get out of my sight!” she flings after it. “I
-can’t write! Who can write out her heart and
-soul, when it’s devilish hard even to speak it. Oh!
-Would I were my brother for one fine half-hour!”
-cries Peggy, rising and stamping up and down the
-stone floor of the buttery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“An’ if you were, Madam?” asks Chockey
-meekly, “what then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’d swear! Yea, would I! Such a lot of splendid
-oaths as’d ease my mind and let me hear from
-my own lips what a fool’s part I’d played with my
-own—my adored Percy! Could I but see him!
-as Kennaston says.” Peggy in her progress now
-upsets a pan of cream, and has genuine pleasure in
-splashing it about over her slippers as she speaks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But I! What am I? A girl! swaddled in petticoats
-and fallals; tethered to an apron, and a
-besom, and a harpsichord, and a needle,—yet can
-I snap a rapier, fire a pistol, jump a ditch, land a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>fish, for my brother taught me. Still it’s girl!
-girl! sit by the fire and spin! dawdle! dally!”
-The cream now spots up as far as Peggy’s chin and
-flecks its dimple.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stop-at-home, nor stir-abroad! Smile, ogle!”
-each word emphasized with heel and toe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And—” Lady Peggy now flops back into her
-chair, breathless, “wait on man’s will and whims,—that,
-Chock, ’s what ’tis to be a woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, ’tis,” assents the waiting woman. “But
-yet, My Lady, if I dared make bold, there’s summat
-Your Ladyship might do, an My Lady, Your
-Ladyship’s mother, came back home again from
-her visit to your uncle in York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Out with it!” says Peggy hopelessly, folding
-up her attempted letter and tucking it in her
-reticule.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mayhap you could persuade, by much weeping
-and praying, falling into swoons and such like,
-that Her Ladyship would take you up to London!
-Once there, Sir Percy couldn’t keep his distance
-from you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy looks at Chockey as if she were a vision
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>sent from on high; then, quickly succeeding derision
-curls her lip.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Lady mother take a squealing chit like me
-up to town! Never! She’d say my manners
-weren’t fit, or my figger, or my wardrobe. Lud!
-Chock! Bethink thee, lass, of my gowns in London
-town! and me no more acquainted with the
-ways yonder, than our Brindle is with the family
-pew!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy walked out into the paddock,
-rubbed the cream from her slippers on the turf;
-caressed the ponies; munched the sweet cake she
-had in her apron-pocket, felt the keen sweet air
-blow over her hot forehead, and saw, dancing ever
-before her mind’s eye, that insidious sweet suggestion
-of “going up to London.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>How did one go up to London?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the coach: aye to be sure; and the coach left
-the “Mermaid” in the village every Tuesday and
-Thursday at five in the morning. The coach! The
-splendid coach, a-swinging on its springs like a
-gigantic cradle; the postillions a-snapping their
-whips, the coachman a-cracking his long lash and a-shouting
-“All h’up for London!” and the ladies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>and gentlemen—well armed, these last, in dread of
-the highwaymen on the heath—all a-piling in and
-a-settling themselves; and the guards a-tooting
-their horns, the landlady and the boots and the
-maids and the hostlers all a-bowing and a-scraping
-and—off they go! for London town—where
-Percy was a-pining and a-dying for her, so her
-twin writ in his letter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Well, Lady Peggy went in, clapt on a fresh gown
-and shoes, and never was daughter more tender
-and patient with crabbed, gouty, crusty dad than
-she all through that lovely day. Playing backgammon;
-spelling out the newspaper; trouncing
-the cat when it jumped on His Lordship’s leg;
-blowing the fire; wheeling his chair from hither to
-yon; stroking the bald head; combing the white
-whiskers; and finally said she,</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Daddy, London’s a very big sort of a place,
-now, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Earl nods, coddling his leg into the slip
-of sunshine that’s walking westerly away from
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My brother lodges, so he says, at the corner of
-Holywell Road and Lark Lane; tell me, dad,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>where should that be now?” Lady Peggy has a
-careless air, and flecks a buzzing fly out of His
-Lordship’s bowl of porridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Eh?” pursues she, “is’t for instance, in the
-city, or nigh London Bridge, or where the quality
-lives, or toward Southwark, or where?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Rot me!” cries His Lordship, looking up at his
-daughter in surprise, “what’s my poppet got into
-her pretty head now, forsooth? Tut, tut, girl,
-what’s town to thee, or its bearings? hey? stick
-thy eye into thy churn an’ keep thy hand on the
-dasher,—’twere better’n all the shops in Piccadilly,
-or all the fops at Court.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Slow, dad! I was only askin’ of my twin’s
-whereabouts. Shops and fops are not dizzyin’ your
-Peggy, you may swear; ’tis my brother, Sir, of
-whom I’d learn!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Twere better chase the scoundrel out’n my
-head, Peg, than hammer him in! A lad with every
-chance here in the county to raise his house, and
-make a good match with a nice plump girl, havin’
-land joining his own; but no! Up and off to town
-to starve and scratch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>The Earl pommels the floor with his stick, causing
-the cat to leap into the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let him die in want! Let him freeze, thirst,
-come to the gallows, say I! For such as leaves
-plenty to pursue want, gets no sympathy from
-me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He ain’t begged for’t yet, dad,” says Peggy
-very mildly. “All I was a-wonderin’ was this:
-When my brother took the coach at the Mermaid
-that mornin’ you mind? how far off the inn where
-he alighted was the lodgin’ at the corner of Holywell
-Road and Lark Lane?—eh, dad? Surely”—and
-here Lady Peggy knelt and stroked his lordship’s
-gouty member, and her voice positively
-trembled, doubtless with excess of filial zeal and
-devotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Surely,” resumed she, “you, who were, I dare
-be sworn”—such arch eyes as Lady Peggy now
-made!—“a fine gallant not so many years ago,
-must remember that,—don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let’s see, let’s see,” responds His Lordship, rubbing
-his head. “They set ye down at the King’s
-Arms, nigh the Bridge, Southwark Bridge, yes;
-Well! Damme! I ought to know! Lark Lane?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>A devil of a hole; why, girl! it’s not a quarter
-hour’s trot from the inn, but it’s a beastly environment.
-Gad! that son of mine chooses pens,
-ink and writing-paper there, rather than—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Belinda here, weight fourteen stone;
-acres two thousand; guineas, countless; temper,
-amazin’; years, untold! ha! ha! ha! Oh, daddy!”
-Lady Peggy springs up and dances about a minute
-in most genuine gaiety, then she seizes her father’s
-head between her palms and hugs and kisses him
-with much grateful warmth; then flops down
-a-coddling of the gout again; laughing, giggling,
-pinching puss, and saying,—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Daddy, drop London! Care I no more for’t.
-Know I quite enough. Let’s chat of aught else in
-the world, until you fall a-napping, which will be
-soon now, guessing by the shadows.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas very soon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then Lady Peggy tiptoed off to her chamber;
-then she pulled the rope that rang in the kitchen,
-and presently Chockey came, chopper and bowl
-in hand, checkered apron over white one; for serving
-maids were scarce in Kennaston Hall, footmen
-there were none; butler there was when he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>was not doing t’other half his duty at the stables.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come hither, Chockey,” says her mistress in a
-whisper, with a beckon. “Shut the door; go on
-with choppin’ your leeks and carrots, cook’ll want
-’em for the soup,—but listen, Chock; unlock your
-ears Jane Chockey, as never you did before in your
-life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey bobs as she chops, leaning against the
-headpost, for support of her occupation, and also
-of her curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You know my mother’s box, the small one that
-was re-covered last spring with the skin of the
-red calf that died natural? Bickers put it on with
-a gross of brass nails?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey again bobs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Put into it,” continues Lady Peggy, “a change
-of linen for yourself and me, two night-rails,”
-Chockey’s eyes dilate, “my gray taffeta gown with
-the flowered petticoat, my green hood and kerchief;
-powder, patch-box, lavender, musk, pins, needles;
-my red silken hose; your Sunday cap and sleeves”—Chockey’s
-chopper ceases to work, and the bed-post
-creaks. “All of which,” continues her mistress,
-“is but prelude to saying: ‘I’m going up to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>London by to-morrow’s coach, and I’m takin’ you
-with me!’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Madam!” Down goes the bowl, leeks, carrots,
-chopper and all a-spilling over the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye,” says Peggy calmly, “gather up thy mess,
-Chock, and to work with the duds. Lay out my
-Levantine gown, my blue kerchief, my black silk
-hose, my brown cloak; and, from my mother’s
-press, take the thick fall of Brussels lace and the
-brown bonnet it’s tied to, and bring ’em hither;
-put them under the bed beside thy trundle so’s
-my father’ll not see ’em when he stops to bid me
-good-night. Borrow cook’s hat she bought at the
-Fair when she was young, and her delaine veil
-for thyself; for, so appareled as not to be recognized,
-will you, dear Chock, and my Lady Peggy
-take the coach on April the twelfth. But, Chock,
-remember, mum’s the word, an you let your tongue
-wag to my undoing, but the thousandth part of a
-syllable, your mistress and you part company forever!
-Go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey picked up Lady Peggy’s waving hand
-between a pinch of her apron, lest her onion-smelling
-fingers should foul so dainty a morsel,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>kissed it, and off and obeyed, speechless from surprise
-and veneration, both.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At night’s fall,—the Earl, somnolent again
-from fire’s warmth and the port he would take,
-despite the surgeon’s orders to the contrary,—Lady
-Peggy, Chockey in her wake, purse in hand, went
-scouting through the kitchen-garden, the paddocks,
-the cowyard to the stable where Bickers’s pipe
-shone in the gloaming like a fire-gem as he dodged
-and lurched after a refractory colt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bickers, albeit sometimes the slave of beer, was
-all times Lady Peggy’s abject, and it took no effort
-nor persuasion to gain him to her will. He
-took his orders amiably,—they were to secure
-two places in the London mail for to-morrow morning,
-and strictly to hold his peace both now and
-forever about the whole concern.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy gave him the price of the seats and with
-wise Castle-mistress foresight, she showed Bickers
-a sovereign beside.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And Bickers,” said Lady Peggy, “considering
-that the devil walks abroad often in the Mermaid’s
-tap-room, I am told, I’ll keep the sovereign for
-you ’til you come back, lest he rob you of it, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>“Well, My Lady,” said Bickers; “a whole sovereign,
-My Lady, ain’t often seen out of the quality’s
-pockets, and the devil might think I’d stole it, My
-Lady, and try to get it from me. Keep it, My
-Lady, keep it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With which the old man, having conquered the
-colt, set off for the village by a side-path all too
-well known to his tread. Presently by the spark
-in his pipe-bowl the two women saw that he had
-turned back; that, as he came close to them, he
-clapped his thumb over the glow, and,</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Lady Peggy,” mumbled he sheepishly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Whatever is’t, Bickers?” cries his mistress in
-alarm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Naught to fright ye, My Lady, only it’s been on
-my mind these many days to tell you as the letter
-you sent me with to Sir Percy de Bohun—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, well?” Lady Peggy’s words came with
-a gasp, as the old man dead stops.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go on Bickers, I say!” the mistress’s foot stamps
-with a thud on the damp earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Askin’ Your Ladyship’s parding, the devil
-caught me that time at the Kennaston Arms, My
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>Lady, and he clawed that tight, My Lady, that I
-couldn’t stir, and—and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy now stooped, seized a billet of wood as
-big as her arm and gave Bickers a sound drub
-across his hands. The pipe fell in bits, the ash
-glowed; Bickers jumped, so did Chockey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“‘And, and’ what?” drubbed Peggy with a will.
-“Not so much as ha’ penny of the sovereign, unless
-you out with the whole truth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I will! I will!” cried the old man. “Sir Percy
-never got the letter, My Lady, until the very day I
-seen him on the long roan a-ridin’ for’s life away
-from the Castle yonder,” and Bickers jerked his
-thumb toward the house as he now made off.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The devil did not catch Bickers that night; he
-earned his sovereign before the moon rose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As he sped, Lady Peggy took Chockey’s proffered
-arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You see, Chock, you see, how we that are born
-to wear petticoats are no better’n puppets! a-dancin’
-and a-cryin’; or a-kneelin’ and a-weepin’, as
-it happens to suit the whim of what, Chock? Who,
-Chock? Tell me, Chock!” cries Lady Peggy excitedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>“Lawk, My Lady, that can I not!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A man, Chock, a man! it’s a him that pulls the
-strings, girl, and all we’ve to do is to simper and
-jerk this way, that way. To think,” here Peggy’s
-voice falters, for they’ve gained the house and
-are clambering the back stairs in the dark. “To
-think that Bickers, Bickers! should ha’ made me
-treat my worshiped Percy like a hog! Yes, Chockey,
-like a hog! even that name ain’t vile enough
-for me. But, oh, an I reach London in safety,
-and gain my brother’s chambers, and learn from
-him that ’tis for very love of me Sir Percy’s canterin’
-to perdition, then, Chock, Lady Peggy’ll
-know how to spell paradise for him she’s riskin’
-much to hear the truth about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But, My Lady,” ventures Chockey, who, notwithstanding
-the blissful prospect of seeing London,
-still had a practical eye toward the dangers
-that beset the path, both thereto, and once there.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But, My Lady, supposin’ we can’t find Lord
-Kennaston’s lodgin’s; supposin’ he’s away from
-home when we get there; or, a-havin’ a party, or
-ain’t got no place for us to sleep; or suppose—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Suppose me no supposes, Chock!” Lady Peggy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>shakes out the Levantine gown from its wrinkles.
-“If London were the black pit, and an army of
-Satans a-sittin’ grinnin’ around the brim, still
-would I go and find out for myself if it’s for me
-he pines—or, if Lady Diana Weston is up in London
-too!” With which Her Ladyship gives the petticoat,
-she takes from its peg against the morrow,
-a somewhat emphatic, not to say malicious shake.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='III—Wherein is recounted how Her Ladyship set forth...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_035.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>III</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Wherein is recounted how Her Ladyship set</em></div>
- <div><em>forth, accompanied by her faithful</em></div>
- <div><em>woman, for London Town.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Whoever knows the rare delights of an English
-dawn nowadays can figure for himself, to the letter,
-how ’twas when Lady Peggy and Chockey, after
-a make-haste toilet in the dark, slipped out into
-the sweetness that long-ago spring morning. The
-mists were rolling and creeping slowly back and
-over from the river-meadows; the brawl of the
-stream tinkled in their ears; the scents of the
-flower-garden next the court-yard of the Castle,
-came potently, lured by the flush that by now was
-tingeing all the pallid east with rose; the yellow
-moon hung low to her setting, and two stars for
-handmaidens still shone, of all her million troupe,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>at either side the disk; yonder, the steeple of the
-church pricked up to heaven; hither, the oaks,
-greening to their full leafage; there a brown rabbit
-scurried across the road; here the rooks hopped
-and ha-ha-ed to their fellows. Else, ’twas all a-hush
-with that recurring fond expectancy of hope,
-with which every day of every year so waits and
-wonders for “to-morrow” to be born.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy took the lead, kirtle high upheld,
-shoes soon bedrabbled in the dust and dew. Chockey,
-bearing the newly-covered box in her stout
-arms, followed close at heel. Both women, veiled
-double, and being wholly unused to such matters,
-sighting the path much the worse for the covering;
-in fact Peggy stumbled along like some old crone,
-and yet laughed under her breath merrily back at
-floundering Chockey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hist! Chock, had I now but brought dad’s
-cane and snuff-box, I must sure be taken for some
-three-score dame come yawning out of bed before
-her hour, to overtake, mayhap, a recreant grandson!
-Zounds! as my twin’d say, were he here,” and
-hauling at the mischievous Brussels veil, down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>flopped Her Ladyship, on her knees betwixt two
-villainous ruts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, My Lady!” moaned the waiting-woman
-panting under cook’s delaine and the calf-skin
-box. “Lord ha’ mercy! an this be the way to London.
-I’d liefer be sittin’ in the kitchen chimney
-a-blessin’ my porridge and spoonin’ of’t, than
-this!” assisting her mistress to her feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fie upon thee, Chock! Remember you’re waiting-woman
-now to a lady of fashion, to wit myself,
-and well used to journeys up to town in coaches
-every season! Lud!” Here Peggy stood in a puddle
-to take breath. “I wonder if we’ll ever pass
-muster at the inn; and yet I’m sure, landlord, or
-dame, or hostler’d never think o’ me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Haste, Madam,” returns Chockey, “for do not
-forget the coach starts at five on the stroke, and
-we’ve still the quarter-mile to go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So on they went. My Lady Peggy unable to
-restrain, from time to time, however, the keen
-relishful overflow of her spirits. When one’s young
-and not ailing, a new day whips the blood and
-brain to such a pinnacle of unquestioning gladness
-as breaks bonds, be they never so weighty, and,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>pro tem., sweet few-years comrades him with the
-happiness of earth and air and sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But once the curl of cheerful smoke from the
-“Mermaid” chimney full in view above the oak-tops,
-My Lady sobered much, and, clutching Chockey’s
-arm, both fell a-trembling; stood stock-still,
-and stared into each other’s eyes, as lace and wool
-would let.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Peggy,” cries Chockey, “an it please
-Your Ladyship,” with tell-tale gasps of throat,
-“let’s go back home!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Jane Chockey!” answered her mistress, only
-needing this spur to set her a-panting the more
-to her purpose, “we’ll go on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And on they went. Peggy with a measured tread;
-Chockey plodding after. Into the inn-yard, where
-even now the great coach with its four bays waited
-the signal to start.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The passengers were piling on; and, atop already,
-quipped a trio of college lads in beavers. There
-stood mine host and hostess, maids, men, boys,
-cooks, and scullions; tips were tossed, baggage
-packed in the boot; farewells spoken; candles held
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>high, lashes cracked; prancing, pawing; a rattle,
-a door-bang, curtsies, bows,—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All h’up for the London mail!” shouted the
-coachman merrily.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Lady Peggy and her woman, neatly sandwiched
-between a fat, fussy dowager and a swearing,
-tearing old gentleman who together absorbed
-the most of the vehicle and all the attention of
-their fellow passengers, found themselves on the
-road to town.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No one paid the least heed to them, save that,
-at the stops, the guard came civilly to ask Chockey
-if her mistress required any refreshment, to the
-which Chockey, well prepared, always answered
-“no”; since, to raise their veils might betray their
-identity. So ’twas in hunger, silence and oblivion
-that the momentous journey was taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When they crossed the heath, the testy old gentleman
-did turn toward Peggy, thereby flattening
-her the more, and, pulling out a brace of pistols,
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have no fears, Madam, I’ve traveled this road
-these sixty years, probably you have yourself”—thus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>paying tribute to Peggy’s now trembling agitation,
-which he pleasantly mistook for age.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the damned rascals, Madam, know better’n
-to attack the coach when I’m aboard. You’re
-not in fear?” now bending a pair of sharp old eyes
-on the Brussels lace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy, smothering her laughter, and recalling
-how often, half-a-score years ago, she’s sat
-on this old gentleman’s knee (he was a friend of
-her father’s), puts hand to ear, and nudges Chockey
-behind the broad back of the dowager.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old gentleman nods comprehendingly, turns
-square to Chockey, and says “deaf?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Chockey, divided between terror and mirth,
-nods back again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Without other incident, the journey up to the
-great city is accomplished, and, by three in the
-afternoon, up pull the four horses before the door
-of the King’s Arms in the Strand, and Lady Peggy,
-and her woman, and her box, are set down in
-the yard, amid the din and bustle incident always
-to the arrival of travelers.</p>
-
-<div id='i_040fp' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_040fp.jpg' alt='And Lady Peggy and her woman...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not much attention is bestowed on them. A
-couple of unpretending appearing women, evidently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>not persons of quality, as the meek little calf-skin
-box is their sole belonging; coming up to
-London too without even one man-servant,—bespeak
-but little consideration in the throng of
-ladies of fashion, gallants over their coffee, courtiers
-popping in for the news, sparks intent on
-ogling a pretty face or noting a trim ankle, that
-much o’er crowded the yard, ordinary and parlor
-of the King’s Arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just here once, for an instant, Lady Peggy’s
-brave heart failed her; most, when she espied at
-the door, just getting into her silken-curtained
-chair, a lady, so young and beautiful, so richly
-girt, so spick and span, with such wonderful
-patches and such snowy powdered locks, such
-sparkling eyes, such begemmed fingers glistening
-through her mitts,—and knew at once that Lady
-Diana Weston was indeed “in town”!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She faltered a bit, indeed sank down on the box
-which Chockey had set in a corner of the yard, and,
-for a brief moment, both mistress and maid bedewed
-their masking falls with a few splashing
-tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then spoke Lady Peggy, rising and plucking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>up her spirits,—“Chock,” said she, “beckon me a
-boy from yonder group; inquire the path to the
-corner of Holywell Road and Lark Lane; order
-him shoulder the box and lead the way. Speak
-with a swagger, Chock; knock the drops out of your
-lashes with a laugh, girl! Let ’em think we’re old
-hands at the town and used to bein’ waited upon!”
-Lady Peggy straightened herself in her grimy
-shoes, and gave the Levantine a twitch which she
-hoped was quite the mode.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meantime Chockey did her mistress’s bidding,
-and in less time than it takes to set it down, the
-two were following the lad, in and out of such a net
-and mazework of streets and lanes as set their
-heads a-whirling; now they wheeled around this
-bend, now across that alley,—foul-smelling as a
-ditch or a dirty dog; anon up a broader way where
-knockers shone and chairs waited at the curb;
-then a cut down here, and at last this was Holywell
-Road and yonder the opening of Lark Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Well, to be sure, ’twas a sorry spot. As Lady
-Peggy paid the boy and stood on the step, she ruefully
-surveyed the environment; the wig-maker’s
-opposite, with a wig in the window, she half-laughingly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>noted, the very yellow counterpart of
-Sir Robin McTart’s round pate; a dingy chocolate-house
-at t’other end of the row of dark, timbered,
-nodding houses; and this one of the stretch, taller,
-grimier even than its forlorn neighbors, was
-where poor scribbling Kennaston hunted that jade
-called Fame!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At double-knock, came hobbling the charwoman,
-loath to be disturbed at her twilight pipe, but
-brisking at sight of Lady Peggy’s now uncovered
-face and shilling between fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, indeed, here His Lordship lodged and ate;
-was His Lordship at ’ome? Nay, that was he not!
-but surely might be before cock-crow to-morrow!
-His Lordship’s sister! Lawk! Would Her Ladyship
-and Her Ladyship’s woman condescend to come
-in and mount? What a beautiful surprise for ’is
-young Lordship when he did get ’ome to be sure!
-No, he ’adn’t gone out alone, a gay spark, a gentleman
-of the first quality ’ad come, as often ’e
-did, and fetched h’off His Lordship with ’im, last
-night; ’is name? Was it Sir Robin McTart peradventure?
-No, no, that was a name she ’ad never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>’eard! ’Twas no Duke nor Earl neither, but a—Sir,
-Sir—?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And as the old woman and Chockey, carrying
-the calf-skin box between them, reached the last
-landing and set their burden down in thankfulness,
-Lady Peggy, feeling the way, said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy de Bohun, perchance? Methinks
-my brother has a companion by some such title!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, that’s ’im! Ah, My Lady, as splendid a
-gentleman as ever sang ‘God save the King!’ free
-with ’is sovereigns, My Lady, as trees is with their
-nuts; and, to match ’im for oaths! there’s not that
-Prince o’ the blood as can swear so beautiful when
-’e’s dead drunk. These is ‘is Lordship’s your
-brother’s chambers, My Lady!” throwing open the
-door and ushering Peggy and her servitor into
-as dingy, dirty, empty, sad, bare, and unkempt an
-appearing place as ever mortal and intrepid lady
-set two tired feet within.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Lady Peggy, for the nonce, was only eager
-on one point.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Drunk, say you, dame? and wherefore should
-so generous a young gentleman be a-gallopin‘ that
-silly road, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>“Lawk! Your Ladyship! ‘ow should I know? but
-His Lordship’s own gentleman, My Lady, what
-‘olds ‘im up and steadies His Lordship in ‘is cups,
-do say”—the old charwoman, whisking the dust of
-ages from a wooden chair, sets it for Lady Peggy
-and bends to tidy the hearth and gather together
-the few shingles and faggots strewn about.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“‘Say’ what?” urges Peggy, with eager eyes
-and a sixpence shining in her hand (another shilling’s
-more than she dare hazard of her slender
-store).</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do say, My Lady,—God bless Your Ladyship’s
-sweet face! as it’s h’all on account of a young
-lady!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy’s eyes sparkle and all at once the
-smoky room seems cheerful, and the tardy blaze
-in the fire-place glows and thaws her chilled bones
-and blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah?” she says, smiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, My Lady, a splendid young lady of fashion,
-an heiress, a beauty, with half London a-danglin’
-after ’er; and ’er that ’aughty, as if she was
-of the royal family, and ’im a-killin’ ’imself for
-’er sake!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>And back again slide Kennaston’s chambers into
-their original depravity of dirt and dreariness;
-and down goes the charwoman to her pipe; and
-Lady Peggy on the wooden chair, Chockey on the
-box, spread their fingers to the reluctant warmth
-and are silent; while the clock ticks on the mantel-shelf;
-while the slit of blue that peers in at the
-window, grays; while the noises that are all new
-to these two, come rasping, roaring, shouting up
-to them through the broken pane—the dizzying,
-multitudinous, incoherent surge of London town,
-as it first smites ears not yet wonted to its fascination
-or its meaning—merely lonely, forlorn, dispirited
-new-comers who have not yet learned the
-passion and the melody that lie hidden in its
-Babel.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The waiting-woman is the first to move; with
-the homely excellent instincts of her class, she
-rises, and, after a slow glance around the place,
-falls “a-reddin’ of it up” as she mentally designated
-her attempt. She seized the stumpy broom
-from its corner and swept the floor, brushed the
-maze of cobwebs from ceiling and walls; beat the
-mats; wiped the stools and table, the broad window-sills
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>and the shelves; shook out the dingy,
-ink-stained cloth; straightened the litter of books
-and papers, quills and horns; and finally went a-peering
-into the cupboards. A grimy coffee-pot
-and a well-matching kettle were fished out and
-rubbed; the kettle filled with water from the tubfull
-on the landing and straightway hung upon
-the crane; plates and cups and saucers and spoons
-brought forth; a paper of coffee, a jug of milk
-and a bottle of sugar discovered, and presently
-Chockey handed her mistress a cup of steaming
-mocha and modestly poured one for herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Chock!” cries Lady Peggy, setting down
-the empty cup. “What a fool was I to come!
-What am I, forsooth, in all this great desert but
-a grain of sand! And Percy, not,” Lady Peggy
-stamps her muddy red-heeled shoe fiercely, “a-dyin’
-for me in the least! and my twin a-livin’ in
-such a hole! wherever does he sleep, Chock?” Surveying
-the barn-like apartment in disgust and dismay,
-her gaze finally arrested by a ladder slanting
-in the darkest corner and reaching up to an
-opening in the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Up there, I dare be sworn! Lud! If this ’tis
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>to be an author,” flouts Peggy, “God ha’ mercy on
-’em! I tell you what, Chock. I’ll tarry a little,
-have a word with Kennaston; then we’ll back, girl,
-whence we came, quick; I’ll send word to Sir Robin
-McTart, and then let weddin’-bells ring as soon as
-ever he sees fit. No more o’ love for me, Chock.
-I’m done with it forever in this world; I’ll take
-marriage instead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey shakes her head ruefully as her mistress,
-more to emphasize her latest resolve than
-from any other motive, flings wide open the
-cracked doors of the clothes-press next the chimney-piece
-and gives a tempestuous shake-out to
-the garments a-hanging on the pegs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud! look! Kennaston’s suit of gray velvets,
-not much the worse for wear! Small need has
-the poor lad for fine clothes, I warrant ye; most
-like a-keepin’ of ’em for pawn-shop use and bread
-and butter! Chock, unlock the box, and get out
-the waistcoat I broidered for my twin, at much expense
-of temper, against his birthday. So! Smooth
-it out! it’s brave, eh, Chock? Fit for Court, I
-should fancy, and, that’s right, the laced cravat!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>poor duck, I do misdoubt me, if he’s seen a frill
-on his wrist since quittin’ home! There!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy surveys the gifts she’s brought, as
-Chockey takes them out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk, Madam, ’twere better, were’t not, I bundle
-all Your Ladyship’s duds and mine up yonder
-against His Lordship’s comin’?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Right, Chock! up with ’em, and I’ll steady the
-road while you climb!” Suiting action to word,
-as Chockey, bearing the calf-skin box, cautiously
-mounts the rickety ladder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s it like, Chock?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nothin’ I ever seed afore, My Lady; dark,
-stuffy; a mattress a-sprawlin’ on the bare boards,
-and a pair of torn quilts, and a piller no bigger’n
-my fist, that’s all!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Enough, Chock; you and I can sleep our one
-night in London there as soundly,” Lady Peggy’s
-proud lip quivers, “as I could on down or ’twixt
-my mother’s best lamb’s wool! Come down, Chock,
-by the fire; and list, to-morrow, at first crow, we’ll
-back to Kennaston. We’ll ’a’ been up to town,
-Chock! and, savin’ my twin, never will Lady Peggy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>look again on face of any man who now treads
-London street. I swear!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hark, Madam!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey jumps from the ladder, eyes a-popping,
-while the hubbub in the street below cuts short
-her mistress’s valiant speech. Such a hullaballoo;
-such a shouting, echoing from one end of the precinct
-to t’other, as speeds mistress and maid both
-to the window, a-craning their necks far out; as
-sends the charwoman from her ingle-nook under
-ground, a-hobbling up the steep four flights.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_050.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='IV—In the which is rehearsed how Her Ladyship did nimbly slip...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_051.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>IV</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In the which is rehearsed how Her Ladyship</em></div>
- <div><em>did nimbly slip into man’s</em></div>
- <div><em>attire and estate.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Through the fast gathering mist, through the
-smoke that’s London’s own, the two women leaning
-behold a gay company of gallants rounding the
-far corner, two hundred feet away; linked arms,
-swords a-touching, heels a-clattering; one voice
-high and young, uplifted in a lilt like this: Lady
-Peggy had heard that voice before.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>In years to come when gallants sing,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>In praise of ladies fair,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>All will allow, I pledge you square,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>That brighter eyes n’er banished care,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Than those that bade us do and dare,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>When George the Third was King!</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Let roof and rafter chime and ring,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Let echo shout it back: we sing</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>The merry days, My Lords and Sirs!</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>When George the Third is King!</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And at the chorus, a brave dozen more of pairs
-of lusty lungs to take it up and urge it on with
-flashing rapiers, knocking points, in the flare of
-the lights from the coffee-house at hand; and good
-twelve of plumed hats a-tossing in the air, and
-catch-again; and laughter loud and long, then
-dying down as that fresh sweet voice begins its
-second verse, and just so the old charwoman
-knocks hastily at the door, calling in Lady Peggy’s
-head and Chockey’s from the open.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’H’askin’ Your Ladyship’s parding,” says she,
-“but I thought it no more’n my duty to acquaint
-Your Ladyship, as can’t see from this ’eight, that
-Your Ladyship’s brother, Lord Kennaston’s a-comin’
-’ome, and a-bringin’ with ’im ’is comrades,
-among ’em, Sir Percy de Bohun, and mayhap ’er
-Ladyship’d like best,”—now addressing Chockey, as
-Lady Peggy paced the floor in a too-evident agitation—“like
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>best,” continued the dame, “to ’ide
-’erself, and h’if so, the noble gentlemen h’all of
-’em, I’m thinkin’, bein’ summat raised with wine,
-my ’umble bit of a place h’is h’at Her Ladyship’s
-service for the night or as long as Her Ladyship
-sees fit, for I am this minute sent for to go down
-into the country immediate, where, God help us
-all! my tenth daughter what’s married to her
-second husband lies at death’s door!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And all the while the old charwoman is speaking
-between her bits of broken teeth, Peggy hears that
-other voice uplifted, ringing, gay, glad, care-free,
-as it seems to her strained ears, up and down the
-darkening little street, tapping at the window-panes,
-tapping at her heart-strings and stretching
-them to such a tension of anger, outraged pride,
-and wounded affection as never Lady suffered before.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She thanks the old woman and hastily dismisses
-her; then facing about from the window whence
-she has been able to descry the merry group making
-a rush into the coffee-house, Her Ladyship,
-seized by a sudden mad impulse, says to her
-woman:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>“Chock, take my purse, tumble as fast as your
-two legs can carry you down, out, across to the
-wigmaker’s we laughed at when we came in, buy
-me the yellow wig, Chock, that adorns the front,
-an’ come not back without it, an you love me,
-Chock; wheedle, coax, promise more’n there is
-here,” sticking the purse in the astounded woman’s
-hand, “but get me the wig that is the very double
-of dear Sir Robin’s own sweet pate!” She pushes
-Chockey out on the landing with an impetus that
-sends her well on her errand, and then, shutting
-and buttoning the door, Lady Peggy gets herself
-out of her furbelows and petticoats, her stays, her
-bodice, her collar, brooch, kerchief, pocket, hoop
-and hair pins, and into her brother’s suit of grays,
-the new waistcoat and cravat she’s brought him
-for a gift; she tips the coffee-pot and washes her
-face and pretty throat and hands in the brown
-liquid; she plaits her long hair and winds it close
-and tight about her head; she buckles on Kennaston’s
-Court-rapier, she fetches his gray plumed hat
-with its paste buckle from the press; she ogles
-herself in the six-inch mirror; she swaggers, swings,
-struts; and, says she, dipping her finger in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>soot of the old chimney and marking out two black
-beetling brows over her own slender ones,—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“An I know not how to play at being Sir Robin,
-Lady Peggy’s chosen sweetheart, boldly and with
-a loud voice; know not how to swear and prance
-and pick a pretty quarrel, crying ‘Match me your
-Lady Diana with my Lady Peggy!’ then never did
-I dozen times for sport don my twin’s breeches
-and coat and masquerade at being that sweet
-creature,—a man! Ha! I have it all at fingers’
-ends!” cries Peggy, fumbling in her discarded
-pocket. “Here’s the very letter I writ for Sir
-Robin to take and present to my brother. ’Twill
-stand me in good stead to-night that I forgot to
-give it to him. If Chockey but succeed in cajoling
-the man out of his wig, an’ if the gallants come
-not ere I can fit it to my head!”—opening the door
-impetuously almost to bump against the returning
-Chockey’s nose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thou hast it! Oh Chock! ’Tis I! be not afraid.
-Come in; adjust it to my poll,—so! Lose not a
-moment; pick up my petticoats, leave not a scrap
-that bespeaks a woman; there! You’re dropping
-a hair-pin; now, up with ye to the loft! an’ no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>matter if rats nibble your toes, Chock, or mice
-come play bo-peep with your eye-winkers, or
-spiders weave across your mouth, an you stir, cry
-out, move an inch to the creaking of a board, I’ll
-leave you here your lone self to shift as best you
-may! Up girl!” touching the speechless Chockey
-with the rapier-tip urgingly, “and ’tis Sir Robin
-McTart that bids you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The obedient and trembling waiting-woman was
-not much sooner out of sight in the loft, than
-again the voice echoed up to where Lady Peggy
-stood in the gruesome ambush of the landing,
-well back in the darkest corner behind a pile of
-boards and débris, bricks and dust, and what-not-else
-tumbled there from the chimney during the
-last and many previous storms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nearer came the song, then the chorus, broken
-now with more of chat and laughter; the footsteps
-sound upon the street, the house-door opens, slams,
-and up they troop, stumbling in the blackness but
-knowing well the way, it seems; merry, jocund,
-up, up, with the refrain of the song still lingering
-amid their talk in snatches, until they gain the
-top.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>“Are we then indeed at your door, Kennaston?”
-cries the first to reach, as he feels at the latch.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Split me, Escombe, you’re there if you can
-go no farther. Egad! Sirs,” cries the young host,
-“an I never reach to pinnacle of Fame’s ladder,
-at the least do I lodge as high as I could get:—a
-roof that suits my empty purse!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, Kennaston.” Peggy, in her man’s gear,
-trembles at sound of that tone, for ’tis Percy who
-speaks now, whiles they all push pell-mell into her
-twin’s chambers, strike lights, pull out candles
-from cupboard, stir the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, Kennaston,” says this one, “while De
-Bohun lives there’s ever a full purse lad, t’ exchange
-for thy empty one,—and well thou know’st
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut!” answers the young man of letters,
-adding as he glances about, “’pon my soul, gentlemen,
-my Hebe has been outdoing herself. Saw
-we ever before in this room, stools lacking dust?
-floor, riff-raff? walls their festoons? hearth its
-ashes? coffee-pot its rust? and, by my life, the
-kettle filled and steaming!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A peal of mirth greets this nimble sally, as the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>host pulls from the table drawer a pack of cards
-and his guests from their pockets a dozen bottles
-of Falernian.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Dead broke, am I, My Lords and Gentlemen,”
-says he, “but here’s the whole Court and the
-deuce,” flinging the pack in the midst of his guests,
-“play away an ye’ve a shilling left amongst ye.
-Let it be Commerce or Hazard; I’ll hold the
-counters; fill the glasses, as long as there’s a drop
-to pour; keep a lookout for sharpers,” laughing,
-“and thank God I’ve even a garret wherein to welcome
-men of vogue like yourselves!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A burst of applause follows this; plumed hats
-are tossed aside, wrist-frills upturned; His Grace
-of Escombe is shuffling the pack; Sir Percy stands
-with his back to the fire, coat-skirts held from the
-cheerful blaze he’s made; stools are drawn up;
-the host takes his silk kerchief from his throat
-and polishes the mugs. Chockey has her eye glued
-to a chink in the cover that divides her loft from
-the scene of revelry below;—when, a bold knock
-sounds at the door, and the master with a cheery:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come along!” throws wide the portal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>The fine gentleman who stands before him
-makes a profound bow, to which he responds with
-one not less magnificent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Allow me, Lord Kennaston of Kennaston, since
-it is, I am persuaded, the brother of Lady Peggy
-Burgoyne whom I have the pleasure of addressing—?”
-and at her name, Sir Percy lets his
-brocaded skirts flop and starts forward eagerly—“of
-addressing, to present to you this note
-in the hand-writing of Your Lordship’s adorable
-sister, the which she gave me, wherewith to present
-and commend me to Your Lordship’s good offices
-while I am up in town!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another salaam given and returned, while Kennaston,
-with grace, ushers his new acquaintance
-in, sets him a stool, all the while eye quick-perusing
-Lady Peggy’s scrawl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gentlemen!” says their host, “allow me to
-introduce to you, and, Sir, these gentlemen to you,
-Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, His Grace
-of Escombe, Sir Percy de Bohun, the Honorable
-Jack Chalmers, Sir Wyatt Lovell,” etc., etc., etc.
-The which ceremony being concluded amid many
-bows and all due forms of mutual delight, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>new-comer was cordially invited to take a hand in
-the game.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now, as true ’twas that Lady Peggy had never
-been in a coach until the morning to which this
-was evening, so true was it that Her Ladyship had
-not a farthing to her pocket left, and although a
-good gamester’s daughter, she hesitated, making
-pretense of hanging her hat and of settling to its
-proper place her rapier, and pinching her ruffles.
-While she did so, the rest chatting, Sir Percy
-crossed the room, and, in a tone that was not
-heard save by the one he addressed, said to Kennaston:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As I live, Sir, now’s my chance; I’ll pick a
-quarrel with this jackanapes that’s dared to oust
-me from Peggy’s heart. Aye, will I! the sooner
-the better; blood’ll spill, Kennaston, or ever that
-puppet and I are thirty minutes older! Mark me!
-Your sister shall know and hear I’m willing to die
-for her sake, or—to kill!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy, meantime, in this second, got her courage
-well screwed up, and, with a laugh, fitly disguising
-her voice, said she, seating herself with
-her legs well under the table—for, at this particular
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>juncture, Her Ladyship, looking down, had
-beheld with dismay the womanish and forgotten
-fashion of her shoes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Rot me! Gentlemen, your humble servant’s fresh
-from Will’s, where, ’pon my life! such an apt company
-of wits and beaux encountered I, as swept
-my pockets clean and left me not the jingle of a
-shilling wherewith to bless myself. Your Grace,
-My Lords, Sirs, and Gentlemen,” quoth Peggy
-with a fine inclusive wave of her hand, “will, I’m
-sure, thus excuse me from the game to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But she had counted without either host or
-guests, for all of these save Sir Percy de Bohun
-on the instant pulled purses out and tendered
-them, crying, as with a single voice,—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fie! Fie! Sir Robin! Are we highwaymen?
-tricksters? Honor us by using our sovereigns as
-they were your own, eh, Sir Percy, have we not
-the right of the matter?” asked Jack Chalmers,
-turning to the tall young man, who, having crossed
-the room again, now stood leaning moodily against
-the chimney-piece, frowning, tapping hearth with
-heel in too evident impatience of the subject of
-discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>“I humbly ask your pardon, Mr. Chalmers,” he
-replies, “both for differing with you all, and for
-expressing the same. To my way of thinking”—adds
-Sir Percy, with deliberation, ill-matched by
-the flash of his eyes as they take a scornful measure
-of the supposed Sir Robin—“to my way
-of thinking, any gentleman who carries his
-company into any other gentleman’s chambers
-without the means of a paltry game of
-loo or écarté in ’s pocket’s not quite such a proper
-young man ’s he might be!” And with this, Sir
-Percy laid his hand upon his sword hilt, and Kennaston
-laid his upon that, attempting to stay the
-torrent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut! tut!” cried this one and that.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“His Lordship’s dead drunk with Cupid, Sir
-Robin, mind him not,” whispers another.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“De Bohun breaks a joke,” exclaims a third, all
-at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And in the same moment, also, upsprings my
-Lady Peggy, hand on hilt too, and says she loudly,
-same time as the rest:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A pox on ye for a libeler! Sir Percy de Bohun,
-mayhap it’s the errand Your Lordship’s up in town
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>a-pursuing hath turned Your Lordship’s brain?”
-Here Lady Peggy laughs in derision and stands full
-height updrawn upon her girl’s red heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Curse me! but you are impertinent, Sir,” responds
-Percy, taking a step forward, his anger
-rising as he beholds his purpose galloping to the
-goal of its quick fulfilment. “What then, an it
-please you, is my ‘errand up in town?’ since you
-are thus familiar with my gaits; tell ’em off, Sir
-Robin McTart, I give ye leave!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With your leave, or without it,” cries Peggy
-in a voice that causes Chockey to lift the loft-cover
-an inch higher, and so, kneeling with nose
-flattened against floor, to behold her mistress’s fine
-and splendid show of valor. “I’d have you hear,
-Sir, that to persons of fashion the matter of your
-suit near Lady Diana Weston’s a jeer and jest of
-the first flavour,—for ’twere easy seen a lady of her
-quality, Sir, ’d not be a-wasting her time on
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Damme! Sir!” cries Sir Percy, now thoroughly
-aroused and far more in earnest than ever he was
-at the beginning. “You lie! Aye, My Lords, Sirs,
-and Gentlemen! Nay, ye can not stop my mouth,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>unsheathing his rapier; Peggy does likewise, each
-pushing and warding from them the restraining
-hands and words of their associates.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A foul lie! My errand up in town, Sir Robin
-McTart, is to try to drown my sorrows as I may,
-because the only lady that ever I loved set me the
-pace to the devil by a-refusing of my suit come
-Easter-day, three months to an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy flushes under the coffee stains; her
-arm trembles; but she is valiantly happy and confident,
-and her heart goes beating the joyfullest
-sort of a tune beneath the ’broidered waistcoat
-she’d made for her twin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And her name,” cries Sir Percy with a glance
-of imperious, aggressive temper shot right into
-Peggy’s very face,—“her name’s not Lady Diana
-Weston, but ’tis Lady Peggy Burgoyne!—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now Chock’s whole head slips leash, and she
-bends with bated breath and heaving breast to
-listen closer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy starts, but waving her rapier over
-her head, laughs loud, long and derisively.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Peggy Burgoyne, Sir,” shaking the hilt
-of his weapon under Peg’s nose, repeats Sir Percy.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>“And until you, Sir, with your damnable arts and
-silly bumpkin ways, when she encountered you in
-Kent, had turned her from me, she was to me kindest
-of ladies and of loves. Your servant, Sir Robin
-McTart,” concludes Percy with a low bow, sticking
-the floor with his rapier-point, “when and
-where you please!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here and now!” cries Peg, her heart a-thumping
-for joy, but so pleasured and alas! so puzzled
-with the getting out of a scrape, which she has
-found so little difficulty in getting into, that she
-is feign on, and make the best cut she can with
-her cloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here and now!” repeats Her Ladyship, “for
-I do throw back into Your Lordship’s teeth the lie”—Peg
-bows low to her opponent—“you gave me
-whiles, and affirm that for these many years, or
-ever you, Sir, set eyes upon her, Lady Peggy
-Burgoyne’s been mine, heart and soul, Sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Damn you, Sir!” interrupts Percy hotly, unable
-to contain his choler,—“to so defame the
-noblest lady that ever was born!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I repeat,” cries Peggy, glowing with suppressed
-delight at her lover’s fidelity, and eager for as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>much more as he may have to vent. “Lady Peggy’s
-eyes are glued fast of this face of mine! Peggy’s
-hands are my hands! Peggy’s lips are my lips!
-Peggy’s kisses have ever been my kisses!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this, Sir Percy tears off his coat, waistcoat,
-cravat; flings them into the corner; rolls up his
-sleeves, while a confused murmur circulates amid
-the gallants over their cards and Falernian wine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peggy’s heart beats in my breast!” continues
-Her Ladyship, ranting and swashing up and down
-the room; upsetting a couple of candles in her
-path, and now all unrecking of her womanish
-shoes. “Gentlemen,” panting, smiling, triumphant,
-saluting her companions with her weapon,
-“Lady Peggy and I do so adore, love and worship
-one another that we are not two but one!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here and now!” shouts Sir Percy. “Off with
-your coat and ruffles, Sir, and choose any two of
-these gentlemen to your seconds, Sir; I’ll take
-who’s left!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chalmers and Kennaston press forward to Lady
-Peggy, while His Grace of Escombe and Mr. Wyatt
-cross to Sir Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lord Kennaston, I pray you pace off the distance,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>says Lady Peggy, now at the top of her
-bent and delirious with joy over Percy’s love of
-her, with no least intention of touching him, good
-fencer though she be, and willing enough—such a
-woman is she—to risk a prick at his hands for sake
-of the after-salve of the mighty gratitude and passion
-the minx is now sure of.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Off with your trappings, Sir,” cries Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That will I not!” cries Peggy, taking the first
-position on the field of honor in all the bravery of
-her twin’s suit of gray velvets. “You’ll kill me,
-an you do’t at all, with my clothes on ready to
-my burial, and I swear ye all, with my latest
-breath, Lady Peggy and I’ll lie in the same coffin
-when it comes to that ceremony.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then in the smoky flare from the dying fire and
-the slovening candles stuck in their bottles; ’mid
-the murmur and succeeding hush of the gallants,
-some with cups, some with cards in their hands,
-Peggy and her lover salute and take their stands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Says she: “What’s the word, My Lord?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Says he: “If you like, let Lord Kennaston shake
-the dice-box; at the third throw, Sir, I’m here,
-ready food for your steel to flesh in!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>“It suits me well,” answers Peg, as her twin
-rattles the ivories. “Here’s for Lady Peggy!”
-cries she.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here’s for Lady Peggy Burgoyne!” shouts he,
-as Kennaston makes the third throw, and Chockey,
-like to swoon and she a stout heart, never-ail or
-afeard of even a churchyard on the darkest night,
-shaking like an aspen-leaf, puts foot on the top
-rung of the ladder; and Peg and Percy thrust,
-lunge, withdraw, riposte, hither, yon, keen-eyed,
-pitched to highest note, nerves strung to cracking—just
-for a few seconds, shorter time’n it takes
-to set it down, far.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A touch, a hit!” cry all at once as a spurt of
-blood darts up the supposed Sir Robin’s blade, and
-Percy bows, declaring himself quite satisfied, as
-he must, though ’tis a state of mind he’s very remote
-from enjoying.</p>
-
-<div id='i_068fp' class='figcenter id007'>
-<img src='images/i_068fp.jpg' alt='A touch, a hit!...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>My Lady Peggy winces under her wound, but
-she has not been Kennaston’s playfellow for
-naught, and as ugly pricks as this one have been
-her portion in the past; Chockey, nevertheless,
-from her nest, pales and utters a smothered shriek
-which is quite lost in the loud talking that follows,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>while Chalmers winds the kerchief Sir Percy tenders
-about the wrist of the wounded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now to the cards, gentlemen,” cries His Grace
-of Escombe, pulling out his purse. “To such a gallant
-as our friend Sir Robin here, my fingers itch
-to lose ten, twenty, nay as many pounds as his
-skill can rid me of; for such a pretty play of the
-steel as his must argue a lucky throw of the
-dice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hear! hear! hear!” shout they all, drinking
-brimming mugs to the two who have lately fought,
-and settling themselves at the tables with a rattle
-and a rush of laughter and merry humor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy sits, gritting her teeth at the slit in
-her white flesh, with her back to the door and,
-betwixt the uproar and clinking and shuffling, she
-hears footsteps coming up the stairs. Some intuition
-bids her be the one to respond to the rapping
-that presently sounds out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Asking your pardon,” murmurs Her Ladyship
-to her companions as she quits the table. When,
-as she opens, a new-caught street urchin speaks
-sharp, with saucer eyes in-peering at the quality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>“An it please yer Lordships, there’s a fine gentlemen
-below as his name is Sir Robin McTart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy draws in, bangs the door in the boy’s
-face, squares about, and says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By your leave, gentlemen, a most particular
-messenger awaits me below; for a few moments
-only, I crave your indulgence for my absence. I’ll
-be with you in ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No! no! no!” cry they all, save De Bohun,
-who is counting his cards, and Sir Wyatt who exclaims:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, an it be a messenger on business for a
-fair lady; no, an it be otherwise. Gadzooks! Sir
-Robin, make a half-clean breast of it. Comes
-Mercury from Phyllis or from a mere man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg answers: “I swear to you, Sirs, I go down
-on business of the gravest import to a lady,” and
-makes for the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pledge her! Pledge her! a bumper! a bumper!”
-cry they all in one voice with much pleasant
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here’s to Sir Robin’s nameless fair! Zounds!
-but for so little yeared a personage to have two
-strings to his bow!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='V—Wherein Lady Peggy doth encounter her flouted lover...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>V</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Wherein Lady Peggy doth encounter her flouted</em></div>
- <div><em>lover, receiveth a rapier-prick: makes acquaintance</em></div>
- <div><em>of her hated rival and</em></div>
- <div><em>of Mr. Brummell.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>And much more of a like nature reaches Lady
-Peggy as she plunges down the stairs and presently
-finds herself, by the light of the lamp of
-his chair, a-confronting Sir Robin McTart himself!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, nay, Sir! I am not Kennaston of Kennaston,”
-responds Peg, looking grave, and making
-excellent show of her blood-stained, linen-bound
-wrist.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis here he dwells, and, as I know well by
-reputation, you are a peaceful, law-abiding man,
-I’d counsel you not to mount. Such a company
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>of cut-throat, cut-purse brawlers, Sir, as would not
-leave a farthing in your pocket or lace upon your
-shirt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin, as Her Ladyship had shrewdly
-guessed, drew back and shivered at this lively
-description.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Trust me, Sir Robin: hist!” Peg’s voice sinks
-to a mere whisper. “I am Lady Peggy’s best
-friend and neighbor at home; ’twould be her will,
-an she stood here, that you should not adventure
-your precious life in the unseemly crowd with
-which her brother hath seen fit to surround himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud, Sir! Who are you,” chatters Sir Robin
-trembling betwixt delight and terror, “that knows
-so well the temper of Lady Peggy Burgoyne’s disposition?
-What’s your name, Sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No matter for my name, Sir, I have Lady
-Peggy’s best interests at heart, and yours. She
-bade me, did ever I encounter you in evil neighborhood,
-tell you, for her sake, eschew it. Hark
-ye! Sir Robin, out of this hole as fast as your
-men’s legs can carry you. Above yonder, ’s one
-who’s sworn to kill you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>“Who’s he?” demands Sir Robin, one foot now
-in his sedan, his little eyes twinkling both ways
-with fright.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy de Bohun,” replies Peg in a hollow
-whisper. “Look you, Sir,” showing her bloody
-wrist, “there’s a taste of his quality. I warn
-you—’tis from Peggy’s own self—get back to Kent,
-whence you came, and tarry not, for your life’s at
-yonder desperado’s mercy while you linger up in
-town.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is My Lady Peggy returned to Kent to her godmother?”
-quavers Sir Robin, now well inside his
-chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, Sir; as her brother supposes, she’s at home
-at Kennaston.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll seek her there!” cries Sir Robin, tendering
-his hand. “And, Sir, my humble duty and gratitude
-to you for your admirable condescension. I
-would I knew your name and station.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m up in town incognito, Sir, for a lady’s
-sake,” smiles the minx.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When I return, Sir, I’ll seek you out at White’s
-or Will’s. I dare be sworn so fine a gentleman
-must needs be a buck of the first order.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>“Seek me, Sir, and Godspeed you down to Kennaston
-or Kent!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the word, Sir Robin in his chair sets forth
-a-swinging round the corner, light of heart and
-bright of hope, while the subject and object of his
-thoughts and passion stands for a moment leaning,
-sighing, betwixt laughter and tears, against the
-door-frame.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>My Lady Peggy’s first impulse is to cut and
-run; indeed her slim legs are so stretched to begin,
-when the remembrance of poor Chock in her garret
-cage comes to her mind, and, with a grimace, she
-turns in, jumps up the stairs, and is in the midst
-of the group, now well on in their cups and more
-hilarious than orderly in their conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg was not her father’s girl for naught that
-night. To the tune of three hundred pounds, fourteen
-and six, was she the richer, and rewarded for
-the many dreary evenings she had spent at Kennaston,
-a-watching her father win and lose with
-the Vicar and the Bishop, whenever the latter came
-on his visits.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By dint of spilling her wine deftly under the
-table, she had emptied as many mugs as the best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>bibber among ’em, and at four in the morning
-found herself the only one who was sober, or even
-awake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas not a beautiful sight thus to behold, in
-the pale pink of the dawn, a dozen or so of merry
-gentlemen a-sprawling about on floor, tables,
-chairs,—a-snoring and a-tossing in their sleep;
-but ’twas of the fashion of the times when, to be a
-fine gentleman, one must be drunk, at the least,
-once in the twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All save Sir Percy; almost at swords’ points he
-had quitted the company hours before, a little in
-his cups, but steady withal, murmuring to himself
-as he fumbled on the rickety stairs—Peg, leaning
-over the rail, unseen in the darkness, womanlike
-to watch lest he trip and fall, heard him:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath! an what that popinjay say be true,
-I’ll marry Lady Diana out of hand, and show the
-minx I’m not to be cut out of a wife by such a
-flea-bitten rotten-rod as Sir Robin McTart!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So easy taken then is my loss!” says Peggy,
-with a renewed fire of jealousy burning at her
-heart, as she returns to the scene of her winnings.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sick at heart, for a single instant she surveys
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>the room, and then, finger on lip, it does not take
-her long to signal up to Chockey, motion her down
-with the calf-skin box, and to begin, with shamed
-face, in the darkest corner, to strip off her man’s
-attire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy has laid aside the yellow wig;
-Chockey weeping, praying that they may get away
-in safety, is spreading out the Levantine fit for her
-mistress to jump into it, when, for the second
-time within the twelve hours, Her Ladyship’s
-heart stands still to the patter and thump of footsteps
-climbing the last flight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold, Chock!” cries she, clapping on the wig.
-“Bundle up my duds, tie ’em tight; so! give me
-it; pick up the box, put on your cloak and bonnet
-and a bold face; follow and ape me. An you love
-me, Chock, an’ I thrust, thrust too! an’ I knock
-’em down, follow suit! I’d sooner die, Chock,
-than be caught now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With which, My Lady Peggy flung wide the
-door, pushed out the Abigail, drew her weapon,
-and, with a rush, the two of them tumbled down
-the stairs, taking on their way a giant of a man
-who struggled and struck out, and dropped fruits
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>and flowers and curses, and yet gave in to the
-splendid tweeks and pinches which the lusty
-Chockey dealt him on his arms and legs, and, falling
-headlong, on the lower stairs, darted up the
-street crying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Watch!” at the top of his lungs, nor getting
-any answer, for Watch was snoring in the tavern
-and the sun now shining broad.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Chock,” said her mistress, “go you on before
-me to the King’s Arms, where we alighted, engage
-the seats in the coach, and hark ye, child, an
-aught betide I come not, get you home without me
-and tell His Lordship I’m gone to Kent on a sick-call
-from my godmother. Lud! it’s lies all the
-way to being a man! I’ll not walk with you, lass;
-’tis not seemly, and when I reach the inn I’ll
-pretend I know you not, hire a room, change my
-clothes and slip down to you, unseen if I can.
-Now, off with you, quickly, for I ache to follow.
-Would to God I could doff these garments and into
-my petticoats again!” added Lady Peggy ruefully,
-glancing at her hastily tied up bundle and, at the
-same moment, with the broad of her sword,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>pushing Chock into the street with a will that sent
-her a-spinning on her way.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Indifferent then, as though the outgoing damsel
-were no concern of hers, presently, with a swagger,
-yet ill-concealing the anxiety she felt afresh as
-now sobs and female voices assailed her ears, the
-mock Sir Robin McTart emerged upon the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There halted a chair between the posts. In the
-chair sat Lady Diana Weston accompanied by her
-woman. Both wept and trembled, while still afar
-the stout lungs of the terrified giant shouted:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Watch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg stood still and stared; all the jealous blood
-in her burned in her cheeks. Lady Diana here!
-and wherefore? and at such an untoward hour;
-veil displaced, eyes red, but still most undeniably
-handsome, nay beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh Sir!” cried Lady Diana beseechingly, raising
-two imploring hands outside the chair door
-toward Lady Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I pray of your honor!” whimpered the Abigail
-in concert.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I implore your protection, Sir, as you are a
-gentleman and man of honor, as your mien disposes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>me. I came here but now and sent my footman
-up to the rooms of a—a friend, who is ill,
-Sir,—with a token of regard in the shape of fruit
-and flowers, when the man must have been set upon
-by thieves and beaten, for he—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I heard him,” finishes Peg, stepping nearer to
-the chair. “And I assure you, Madam, I put the
-varlet who attacked him to his pace with a prick.
-If I can serve you further, command me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As My Lady bows low, she is conscious that it
-now behooves her to state concisely her name and
-station; and, loathing and hating the deception
-more than she could express, she still adds (her
-motive not unmixed with the natural curiosity to
-discover who is the object of Lady Diana’s morning
-call):</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, at
-Your Ladyship’s service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Diana bows, blushes, almost ogles, minx that she
-is, noting well the fine eyes and beautiful mouth
-of the gallant at her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Diana Weston, Sir Robin, daughter to
-the Earl of Brookwood, at your service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg bows, hat in hand, bundle under arm. Swift
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>as youth’s impulse ever is, says she, taking lightning-like
-measure of her chance and determined
-to probe matters to their core:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your Ladyship’s name was on the lips above,”
-nodding up at Kennaston’s windows. “I drank the
-toast with a will, I do assure you, and would
-double it now. Surely, if you’ll allow me to say
-so, Sir Percy de Bohun’s a gentleman of a rare
-good taste, likewise Lord Kennaston, Sir Wyatt
-Lovell, half-a-dozen more a-pledging Your Ladyship
-to the tune of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>nonpareil</em></span> all night long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You flatter, Sir, I do protest!” cried the lady
-in the chair, blushing like the reddest rose that
-grows, but who might say for whose sake? since
-Peg had named so many.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Sir,” Lady Diana’s voice now lowered.
-“Your countenance is one to inspire confidence. I
-pray you judge me not harshly if I venture to inquire,
-since you were of their company, how fares
-poor Sir Percy de Bohun? The fruits and flowers
-I fetched were for him, since I am informed he
-pines, eats nothing, droops, mopes, and no longer
-is to be enticed among the fair. Can you give
-me news of him?—or of—Lord Kennaston?” adds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Lady Diana wilily and with another magnificent
-accession of color. Thus did Slyboots pursue inquiry
-on that lame horse which is named Subterfuge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Madam, that can I. ’Tis as you say; but
-as you yourself, if report speak true, be the cause
-of his distemper, methinks you should know how
-to effect the cure. I see Your Ladyship’s man returning;
-there is no more danger. I take my leave
-of you, Madam,” hand to heart, bundle sticking
-out under other arm. “It is to me one of the
-most fortunate chances of life to have had this
-encounter,” bending sweet eyes, which Diana returns
-with a will. “Fear nothing! the cut-throats
-have long since made off by a rear alley. The
-shouter is doubtless ere this at his cover. Did you
-need my further protection, ’twould be yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From my heart, Sir, I thank you,” cries Lady
-Diana very sweetly. “May we meet again, and
-soon!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy bowing, walks quickly off, her pretty
-teeth gritted together.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“May we meet again! Never! Fruits and
-flowers! forsooth! Pines and droops! forsooth!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>’Slife! and how the minx reddened at his name.
-A-seekin’ of him out like that at cock-crow too!
-Lud! an these be town fashions and morals I’ll
-be glad to get home! No I won’t! No I won’t!”
-spake out Lady Peggy’s heart fit to burst bonds.
-“Percy’s here, and my soul’s here, and ’tain’t no
-use to talk about having a spirit, and a-stoppin’
-lovin’ when you ain’t loved! You can’t do it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy, recking not of her path, eyes glued to
-ground, paced on, having forgot the whole world
-else, in the misery of her discovery of Lady
-Diana’s passion for Sir Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There were few abroad at that early hour.
-Some market wagons leisuring to the city; an occasional
-chariot full of gallants getting home after
-the night’s frolic; and just now, at the cross of two
-streets, a handsome coach thrown open-windowed,
-with a gentleman, the very pink and model of all
-elegance, lolling back amid the cushions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By the lead of his eyes ’twas plainly to be seen
-he had not slept for forty-eight hours or so, but
-otherwise his aspect was as if newly out of a perfumed
-bandbox. Suddenly his gaze caught Peggy
-at the crossing, fixed itself upon the lace cravat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>at her throat, and then, with a spring as alert as
-that of any monkey throwing himself out of tree by
-his tail, this mirror of fashion thrust his head out
-at window, jerked his coachman’s arm, said in a
-voice not loud, but piercing:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Worthing, run down the young gentleman at
-the crossing; don’t hurt him, but run him down
-an’ I’ll give you twenty shillings!” He then sank
-back again amid the pillows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No sooner said than done.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just at the instant when Peggy recalled her
-position and was bewilderedly wondering where
-she had wandered to, clutching her bundle and all
-of a muddle, click! grazed coach-wheels against
-her shins, cock went her hat into the puddle, but,
-heaven be praised! her wig clung, and she clung
-to her bundle; out of coach the pink brocade gentleman,
-down from the rumble his footman, pick
-up Lady Peggy, hat and all, rubbing the mud out
-of her silk stockings, clapping her hands; yet relented
-she not from the bundle, and all a-breath
-the loller cries:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Into my coach, Sir! I do humbly crave pardon,
-Sir, I do indeed. I’ll not take no for an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>answer, Sir, not by my oath! Such a damage from
-one gentleman to another, Sir, demands all the
-reparation possible, Sir,” and forthwith Peggy is
-lifted into the splendid coach and the splendid
-gentleman springs in after her, and the footmen
-jump up and the whip cracks, and off they whirl
-before she can open her mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Brummell at your service, Sir,” continues
-he, feeling of Peg’s palm, noting the wound at her
-wrist, and the pallor of her face which shines
-even though the coffee stains. “We’re en route
-to Peter’s Court where my surgeon shall attend
-you. ’Slife! Sir, you’re not hurt, I’m sure. I told
-Worthing not to endanger a hair of your head and
-it’s impossible he should have disobeyed me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy hears this singular string of speeches and,
-although stunned a bit and not a little alarmed in
-her mind, she has country breeding at her back
-and such a robust constitution as rallies on the
-spot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’d be obliged, Mr. Brummell, if you’d set me
-down at once, Sir! I’m none the worse, and I’ve
-business of import calling me far hence, and with
-dispatch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>“Never, Sir, never!” returns Beau Brummell,
-with an impressive wave of his jeweled hand.
-“Zounds! Sir, I had you spilled to get me the
-pattern and fashion of tying your cravat from
-you! and split me! if I let you go until I’ve mastered
-that adorable knot! I’ve my reputation at
-stake, Sir, for the tying of ’em. You’ve outdone
-me at your throat, Sir, and ’tis Beau Brummell,
-the best dressed and worst imitated man in Europe,
-that has the honor of telling you so. Come, come,
-Sir,” continues this nonesuch, famed alike at
-Court and brawl for his finery and drollery, “out
-with your name, Sir, I beg, and render me your
-eternally grateful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy’s gaze falls inadvertently on the
-bundle across her knees; it begins to bulge and
-burst the paper and string, indeed a tape of her
-petticoat is oozing out even now as she pokes it
-back, hiding its tell-tale under the skirt of her
-coat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife!” says Peggy to herself in a terrible heat.
-“An I must stop a man, I must. God’s will—or
-the Devil’s, as dad says—be done!” and forthwith
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>she tucks up her knee, lays hand on sword-hilt,
-laughs quite merrily and answers:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent, at your
-service, Mr. Brummell. I do protest, upon my
-oath! ’twas a marvelous device to spill me to borrow
-my tie. ’Tis yours, Sir, and the fashion of it,
-an you’ll do me the honor to accept a lesson.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart!” echoes the Beau delightedly,
-“my old friend Sir Hector’s son and heir? I
-swear, boy, you favor not your sire. Peace to his
-soul, ’twas an ugly gentleman, while you, Sir,—Zounds!
-The ladies’ll make hay for you, I promise
-you. Where do you stop? Are you up in town
-long? What letters do you bring?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The King’s Arms, Sir, in the Strand,” replies
-Peg glibly, while the Beau frowns. “I’m arrived
-but yesterday. I brought not a letter, Sir. There
-you have my history.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No King’s Arms for Sir Hector’s son. You’ll
-home with me, lad; and I’ll show you what town
-life is. I’ll put you up at the best clubs, introduce
-you to the Prince; present you at Court; dine,
-wine, mount you,—Gadzooks, Sir Robin, the man
-that invented that tie of the lace!” tipping his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>finger at Lady Peggy’s home-made cravat, “deserves
-all and more than Brummell can do for
-him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At which Peggy laughed the more heartily,
-as that she felt the paper beneath her coat skirts
-crack wider, and was spent wondering what she
-should do when they should reach Peter’s Court,
-and when she might be able to get into her Levantine
-once again.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_015.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='VI—In the which Sir Percy de Bohun’s own man goes on his master’s errand...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_035.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>VI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In the which Sir Percy de Bohun’s own man</em></div>
- <div><em>goes on his master’s errand to Kennaston</em></div>
- <div><em>Castle, crossing Sir Robin</em></div>
- <div><em>McTart on the road.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Somewhat later in the day, as the sun peeped in
-at the narrow windows of Kennaston’s garret in
-Lark Lane, it shone straight down upon the face
-of Peg’s twin, and also upon that of Sir Percy de
-Bohun, just returned, after a tub and a grooming
-at the hands of his faithful man Grigson, who even
-now was performing like offices for the young host.
-The other gentlemen had long since been set upon
-their legs and fetched off to their homes by their
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy held his chin between his palms, his elbows
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>resting upon the table where cards and
-glasses still littered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath, Kennaston,” cries he, without moving.
-“I can live this fashion no longer! To be shot
-like a partridge would be better. Flouted by
-Peggy, derided by this upstart Sir Robin, who, by
-my life! is a pretty fellow all said and done, is
-past endurance! Give me a pistol, Grigson, and
-I’ll put an end of myself now and here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this passionate declaration, Kennaston merely
-makes answer by lifting an arm above the tub,
-waving it in the air, and, as Grigson scrubs him
-down, wagging his wet head and remarking:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t be damned ridiculous, Percy, and pray
-hold your peace, since I am at this moment composing
-an ode to my mistress’s smile.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your mistress be hanged, Sir! What know you
-of love to sit in a tub and make verses to her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I know enough of’t,” sighs the host, “to have
-been in like case with yourself any time this twelve-month!
-and ’tis a monstrous thing for you to thus
-impeach me, when ’tis you whom My Lady Diana
-favors rather than myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Diana be damned!” cries Percy rising.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>“She’s a coquette, Sir, and at bottom adores you,
-as does the fish the bait the while she plays and
-sidles ’round it, being sure in th’ end she’ll swallow
-it, hook and all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very fine, i’ faith, yet while I sigh, you’re the
-one she smiles upon. Oh, Percy! Had I but a
-fortune! Could I but make my name in letters!
-Then perchance I’d stand my chance; but as ’tis,”—Peg’s
-twin fetches a sigh that sends the water
-splashing about the wine-stained floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As ’tis, Sir, counsel me, an you love me.
-Shall I hie me to Kennaston and wait upon your
-sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Write her a letter of fire and sword, and blood
-and famine; stuff it full of oaths, protests, suicides,
-murders, as is a Christmas pudding of
-plums! There’s quill, ink and paper to your
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll do it and send it by Grigson on my fastest
-horse this day. I should have the answer before
-Friday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, you should,” allows the host with an evident
-reservation. “Now, for God’s sake, Sir, stop
-cackling and let me finish my ode.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Which he did a-sitting in his bath, while Grigson
-dressed his wig.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The toilet, and the letter, and the poem, were
-all three finished at once, and, without more ado,
-Sir Percy dispatched his man with the missive to
-Lady Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come not back until you deliver it in person,”
-quoth the lover; “an you show yourself minus an
-answer, I’ll ship you to the Colonies by the next
-packet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After seeing him off the two young men repaired
-to the coffee-house they frequented, and there the
-first news that greeted them was an account, exaggerated
-to the last degree, as was the fashion of
-those times as well as these, of “Lady D——
-W——’s adventure with footpads in Lark Lane,
-where her chair crossed en route to her mantua-maker’s;
-of how Sir R——n McT——t had rescued
-Her Ladyship and Her Ladyship’s Abigail
-from the clutches of these villains at the hazard of
-his own life; had, single-handed, put the whole
-gang to flight; and this, although suffering from a
-severe wound in the right wrist, the which this gallant
-young scion of a noble name had received in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>an affair of honor with Sir P——y de B——n only
-that very night previous.” In point of fact gossip
-cried, and print set forth, that “the town was ringing
-with the valor of Sir R——n McT——t, whose
-fame as a buck and man of fashion was no less
-than his expertness at the saving of Beauty in distress.
-For be it known that no other personage
-than the renowned Beau B——l had set his seal
-upon Sir R——n’s mould by begging from him
-the pattern of his cravat and the mode of his
-knot. That Sir R——n was now a guest at Mr.
-B——l’s home, and, being up in town for the season,
-let ladies fair beware and set their most adorable
-caps, for ’twas well understood so fine a young
-gentleman was nowhere else to be met with, nor
-one of such courage and skill at cards, saddle, or
-the dance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The which as he read it gave Sir Percy no great
-food for congratulation, but the rather caused him
-to sink into a kind of melancholy from which no
-effort of his companion could arouse him. Like a
-dullard he sat, staring at the print or the walls,
-the livelong day, and far into the night, waiting
-for Grigson’s return, and beside himself with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>silent jealous fury as each new entrance to the
-coffee-room gave his own particular version of Sir
-Robin’s vogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The real little Sir Robin, meanwhile, on his
-journey down to Kennaston in search of My Lady
-Peggy, had got some three hours’ start of the
-faithful Grigson, and even now, he, for the first
-time in his life, stood in the long, bare drawing-room
-of Kennaston Castle, tip-toeing to the mirror,
-pulling his wig this way and that in instant
-expectation of beholding the object of his passion,
-and rewarding her for her devotion to him, so
-manifested in the person of the gentlemanly “Incognito”
-of his last night’s experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hark! Yes, her footstep on the stair, the swish
-of female garments, a halt at the door. Sir Robin
-minced the length of the room and, reaching the
-entrance, found himself face to face with Chockey!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your mistress, bud, your mistress! Here!”
-thriftily pressing a shilling into Chock’s palm.
-“Go tell her I am consumed with impatience, and
-eaten up with desire for a glimpse of Her Ladyship’s
-form, and figure, and face. Go! Go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Chockey does not budge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>“What ails the wench? Deaf?” cries Sir Robin,
-pinching her arm, for which he gets back a smart
-slap on his cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut! tut! What manners is that, and you
-handsome enough to kiss,” adds the little Baronet
-diplomatically. “Come now, off and implore Lady
-Peggy to hasten.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Her Ladyship’s from home,” finally Chockey
-says.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What! Not at Kennaston?” Sir Robin’s sharp
-eye can not help peering regretfully at the shilling
-Chockey twirls in her fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In Kent, doubtless, a-visiting her godmother,
-and a-hoping to see me there! eh, in Kent?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t know, Sir,” replies the girl with a hint
-of tears in her voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t know! What do you mean?” exclaims
-Sir Robin suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I means, Sir,” fires up Chock, “that My Lady
-ain’t by way of telling me her matters. His
-Lordship, her father’s down with his leg; Her
-Ladyship’s mother is a-visitin’ the sick in York.
-As they supposes, Sir, Lady Peggy is in Kent,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>also, a-visitin’ the sick, Her Ladyship’s godmother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey curtsies and turns to the door, out of
-which Sir Robin reluctantly goes, putting spurs
-to his horse, dining at the Mermaid and then chartering
-a post-chaise to take him, sans delay, to
-Kent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He crossed but one traveler on his way from
-Kennaston Castle to the village inn; a man of stout
-and comely build on a steed that took even Sir
-Robin’s dull eye, so was its blood and lineage
-marked in its long splendid gait.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This horseman too pulled rein at Kennaston,
-sprang from his saddle, and, as Bickers hobbled
-up to take his beast, Mr. Grigson, for ’twas he,
-jumped up on the steps and caught Chockey’s
-apron-string just as it was fluttering in the closing
-door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hey, missus!” cried he, twirling Chock about
-and chucking her under the chin, which was rewarded
-by as smart a slap as that which had erstwhile
-burned Sir Robin’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I must see Lady Peggy Burgoyne on the spot,
-without ceremony or a-waitin’ ’ere coolin’ my heels.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>I’ve a letter for Her Ladyship meanin’ life and
-death to my master, Sir Percy de Bohun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you?” says Chock, looking with admiring
-eyes upon the smart livery of Mr. Grigson,
-dust and mud-stained though it was.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, straight from London town, where ’pon
-my life, there’s no sweeter mug than hers I sees
-before me now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lawk!” cries Chock, appeased. “But my mistress
-is from home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not here! where is she then? A-visiting in
-the neighborhood?” Mr. Grigson turns on his
-heel and chirrups for his mount.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” returns Chockey. “She ain’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, whereabouts is she? For if it’s as far as
-the Injies, Grigson’s bound to find her and deliver
-this love-letter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t know where she is, Sir,” whimpers
-Chock.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There, there! Don’t be a-cryin’ and a-sobbin’,
-Duckie, I ain’t gone, yet! Go ask His Lordship
-the address; bring me a mug of ale, and I’ll give
-you a kiss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Drat you, Sir,” cries Chockey. “Don’t you be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>talkin’ like that!” Yet sidles she quite cozily in
-the encircling arm of the admirable Grigson.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“His Lordship, nor Her Ladyship, nor no one
-else knows where my mistress is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What! eloped? Scuttled! Flown the nest!
-When? How? Where?” cries Sir Percy’s man
-thunder-struck. “She ain’t gone with Sir Percy!
-Can it be with Sir Robin McTart?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chockey shook her head vigorously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Look a-here,” says Mr. Grigson, now regarding
-the girl attentively. “Damme, but you knows
-where she is. Tell me and I’ll give you two kisses
-and ten pounds to boot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Sir!” cries Chock, pushing away both kisses
-and pounds with one and the same hand. “I does
-know; leastways I knows my young lady’s up in
-London, but whereabouts in that pit of sin and
-willainy, I can’t say, nor who she’s with, nor how
-long she’s goin’ to stop; only she charged me make
-His Lordship and Her Lady mother believe she
-was gone to Kent, back again to see her godmother.
-There! I’ve been bursting to tell some
-one, and you’ll swear you’ll keep it secret, won’t
-you, Sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>Grigson obligingly nods and caresses Chock’s
-arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thank the Lord it’s out o’ me!” adds she.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Amen,” ejaculates Sir Percy’s man with
-fervor, at the same time fixing a contemplative
-and shrewd eye on his companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Her Ladyship up in town,—where, with
-whom, you doesn’t know; her father and mother
-thinks she’s in Kent; and you’re cock-sure she
-ain’t runned away with Sir Robin McTart?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That I am!” cries the girl, warmly. “Little
-squint-eyed monster!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Eh?” exclaims Mr. Grigson, who had beheld
-the supposed Sir Robin at Kennaston’s rooms the
-night before last, and clearly recollected that no
-such description fitted the slim, elegant, handsome
-young buck who had got a prick in the wrist from
-his own master’s rapier.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Monster! I said,” repeats the girl. “Hist, I’ll
-tell you more,” says she, drawing close, hand over
-mouth. “You’ve seen the puppy. He was here
-anon, a-askin’ and a-tearin’ as to where My Lady
-was!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson stares.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>“Aye, you must have met him on the road not
-ten rods off the Castle gates, for, as you galloped
-in, the undersized cockatrice cantered out. Lady
-Peggy wed with him, indeed!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson is now (recalling his having crossed a
-small squint-eyed gentleman as he came) morally
-certain that Chockey has been well drilled in her
-part, and that Lady Peggy has indeed run away
-up to London with Sir Robin McTart. So much
-for his thoughts; he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I did. Fortunately I beheld the personage
-what you describes. Your humble servant, missus.
-I must be off and no time for love-makin’ to-day,”
-turning quickly on his heel and tossing sixpence
-to Bickers who holds his bridle at the stone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ain’t ‘missus,’” remarks she plaintively.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you will be some day, lass, or my name
-ain’t James Grigson. Here’s to you and many
-thanks for putting me on the right track!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tush, Sir! For the love of heaven and of anybody
-else you thinks a deal of, find my young
-lady!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Trust me,” flings Mr. Grigson from his saddle.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>“I’ll find her and him as holds her in durance
-wile!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Kissing his fingers to Chockey, off puts Sir
-Percy’s own man to the Mermaid; stables his
-horse; hires a fresh one; claps spurs, and up to
-town as fast as four spavined bay legs can carry
-him, firmly convinced that he has solved the greater
-portion of the mystery, and that his master’s
-lady fair is indeed, beyond a doubt, the bride of the
-gallant Sir Robin, or mayhap his unwilling prisoner.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='VII—In which is set down how My Lady is whisked off to a rout...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_051.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>VII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In which is set down how My Lady is whisked</em></div>
- <div><em>off to a rout, willy-nilly, at the home</em></div>
- <div><em>of her hated rival.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Brummell was a most shrewd and an altogether
-kindly personage as well; he had easily, on
-alighting from his carriage and assisting Lady
-Peggy to do the same, espied the disreputable looking
-parcel which the supposed son of his dear old
-friend vainly tried to conceal; and the Beau was
-not long of putting two and two together, and of
-concluding that young Sir Robin had lost his all
-at play, and had even perhaps pawned his wardrobe,—saving
-the ill-looking bundle—for the price
-of his last few days’ food. Therefore it was, that,
-in the most obliging manner, he not only installed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Sir Robin in an elegant and spacious apartment,
-but vowed he would at once send for both his tailor
-and perruquier to wait upon him, and ended by
-assuring his guest that his own man Tempers
-would be up presently to make the young gentleman’s
-toilet for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your pardon, Sir, Mr. Brummell,” quoth
-Peggy, while her maiden heart set off at such a
-race-horse flutter as it seemed must never quiet
-down. “But, pray you, remember I am country-bred,
-unused to town ways, have never had a man
-to wait upon me in my life” (the solemn truth!)
-“and should never know how to comport myself in
-such altered conditions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Beau shrugged his shoulders in the French
-fashion, lifted his eyebrows, thought ’twas amazing
-strange that Sir Hector’s son should have been
-so ill educated; said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your pleasure, Sir, whilst under my roof, shall
-be mine; nor can I misdoubt but that one who has
-had the genius to invent that tie is amply able to
-array and perfume himself, even to the dressing
-of his own wig.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You flatter, Sir, I protest!” answered the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>guest. “I await with impatience the moment
-when, in cleaner case, I may have the honor of
-instructing you in the intricacies of the knot you
-are good enough to admire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With any number of bows, the distinguished
-host closed the door, and My Lady Peggy was
-left to herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For a moment she stood quite still, her heart yet
-a-clapping madly in her bosom, her eyes wandering
-about the princely room in which she found
-herself, and at last resting on the mirror wherein
-was reflected her own slim figure, tricked out in
-Kennaston’s suit of gray velvets, and in the yellow
-wig, which was indeed the counterpart of the
-real Sir Robin’s pate. Her countenance?—sure
-none would recognize it since neither twin nor
-quondam suitor had—was dark with the coffee-stains;
-her eyes were ringed with sleeplessness and
-unaccustomed wine; her general aspect that of a
-young gentleman very much the worse for whatever
-his most recent experiences might have been.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg laughed, then she cried, then ran to the
-door and fastened it securely; then untied her
-bundle when out fell night-rail, green hood and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>kerchief, powder, patch-box, lavender, musk, pins,
-needles, red silken hose, Levantine gown, and veil
-of Brussels lace. She shook the skirt out of its
-wrinkles, laid off her wig and ’broidered waist-coat;
-unpinned her long plaited hair from its coil,
-and was stoutly making up her mind to brave all,
-get into her petticoats, and confess everything to
-Mr. Brummell. But, as she was about to wash
-the dark stains from her face, comes there a “rap-a-tap”
-at the door, and Peg, dropping the ewer,
-calls out fiercely:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who’s there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“An it please you, Sir Robin, Mr. Brummell
-bids me say to you that Mr. Chalk, the tailor, a
-person of the best fashion, will have the honor of
-waiting upon you for your measurements in a quarter
-of an hour, if you’ll be pleased to see him then,
-or later?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg hesitated; there was a battle fought within
-her those sixty seconds wherein all that was noblest
-and best struggled and strove to know which was
-the right thing to do; nor could she determine, save
-that, at second thought of confiding her sex to Mr.
-Brummell, it appeared to her she could not.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>“I shall be ready to see Chalk, I thank you, in
-fifteen minutes, more or less,” humming a tune
-with elaborate carelessness, rolling up the Levantine,
-the hood, veil, and night-rail into a ball, and
-pitching them into the chest of drawers; disposing
-the powder and perfumes and pins on the dressing-table;
-throwing the needles and patches into the
-fire; untying the kerchief and taking out soap,
-scissors, brushes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis clear as water, I’m to be a man yet
-awhile,” whispered she. “Heaven grant it may not
-be long! So!” seizing the scissors and shaking
-out the locks. “Snip! clip, and away with you!
-that I was once vain of, because a vile deceiver
-named Percy vowed he loved you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And off came Peg’s hair, the which for silly
-liking of she stuffed into the drawer beside the
-Levantine and let fall a tear or two. Then snip,
-clip again as she had often done for her twin; so
-that, in no time at all, her head, with its short
-curly locks brushed back at this side and that of
-her broad forehead, had all the aspect of a man’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There,” cried she, sweeping the last litter of
-her black tresses into the flames. “An I be a gentleman,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>I’ll be a gallant one. I sighed once to
-taste the sweets of bein’ of t’other sex for only
-one-half an hour.—Zounds! as daddy’d say, would
-that I’d never quit my frocks. What hath it bettered
-me? To behold with mine own eyes the
-charms of her who’s routed me from his heart;
-to hear him a-pledgin’ me just to please my brother,
-and for the sake of spitin’ Sir Robin McTart;
-to get myself into a position that makes me burstin’
-with shame and feelin’ sure I can never hold
-up my head again in this world. Me, that’s always
-loathed a hoyden! and even have I the muscle of a
-lad, and can I stride a horse, and jump any ditch
-was ever dug,—yet, yet,—oh! How did I ever
-bring myself to put on <em>these</em>?” And My Lady
-Peggy slaps her breeches with a whack, and
-promptly falls upon her knees a-praying for her
-father and mother, and brother, and Sir Percy,
-and Chock, and Bickers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And, Oh God, high up in Heaven, forgive me
-for all my wilfulness and jealousy and foolhardiness,
-and stealin’ my twin’s clothes; and deceit,
-the which has got me into this foul station,
-wherein I have told naught but lies—and I do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>despise lies,—they are most disgustin’ and utterly
-wicked. Forgive me for all the horrible sins I’ve
-committed—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Footsteps now resound in the corridor and the
-voice of Mr. Brummell’s own man says blandly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This way, Mr. Chalk,” as he raps gently at the
-door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“—And for all those I shall have to commit!”
-concludes Her Ladyship, as she springs to her feet
-and unfastens the door, admitting the tailor <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>a
-la mode</em></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That night, the suit of grays well brushed, her
-wig re-curled, and her pocket-napkin richly perfumed,
-her mother’s Brussels veil stripped up and
-made into a cravat of so ravishing a device as
-caused her host almost a spasm when he beheld
-it, Sir Robin McTart sat at honor-place at dinner,
-and was, to make a long story short, the cynosure
-and toast of the occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The duel with Sir Percy, the rescue of My Lady
-Diana, the invention of a cravat, the nimble wit,
-the handsome face, soon bespoke Peggy into a
-favor, that, considering all other things, was well-nigh
-incredible; and when, the following day; she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>appeared in one of the suits Mr. Chalk had made,
-with a dash of powder on her wig and a bronzed
-complexion due to surreptitious purchase at the
-players’ cosmetic shop in Drury Lane, of sundry
-brown, red, and black pastes while making feint
-of being a comedian, the satisfaction of her host
-was unbounded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Robin, my boy,” said this one, with a side-glance
-at his guest, “an you’re a bit short of
-money, I’ll put a few hundreds to your account at
-my banker’s. Young gentlemen will be wild and
-spendthrift at times; London’s new to you I fancy,
-and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I thank you, Mr. Brummell, from my heart,”
-returned Peg, “but I’ve three hundred pounds now
-idle in my pocket. That will last me, I’m confident,
-until I reach home, and, by your leave, I’m
-thinking I’ll quit town this evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Mr. Brummell has no ears for any such
-scheme. The Beau’s erratic fancy has not been
-caught by a new object for the mere sake of losing
-it; his joy in the dash and buoyancy, the originality
-and naïvete of his latest discovery is genuine,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>and no argument, of the very few Lady Peggy can
-offer, but he breaks down at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds, Sir! Are you a fool, Sir? Your sire
-was not one before you. To have half London a-talkin’
-about you; all the prints a-chronicling your
-movements; all the ladies a-dying for a glimpse of
-you, and you only up in town these few days; and
-a-proposing to go back and bury your talents for
-tying Brussels, in Kent! Fie upon you, Sir! I
-listen to no such whims. Here’s my basket loaded
-with invitations for you already. Lady Brookwood’s
-rout to-night!” with a sly glance at Peg’s
-really blushing face; “Lady Diana Weston’s mother,
-as you are doubtless aware? The Charity Bazaar
-at Selwyn’s to-morrow; dinner at Holland House;
-Almacks’s, and my own little plan for next Thursday
-which is an outing to my seat in Surrey a-horseback;
-dinner, bowls, a look over the stables,
-and home by the light o’ the moon. ‘Back to Kent,’
-forsooth! No, Sir, not yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A few hours later, as Lady Peggy got into her
-magnificent suit of crimson satin, gold embroidered;
-as she beheld her image in the glass and
-caught the hilt of her sword in her hand, the blood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>that surged over her face and throat was ruby-red;
-and, at her wits’ ends for what to do, the girl’s tears
-forced themselves to her eyes once again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She was to be off soon to Lady Brookwood’s; here
-she should encounter not only Lady Diana, but
-doubtless Percy himself; mayhap Kennaston, if he
-had been able to get him a decent coat to wear in
-place of the gray velvets! Doubtless, too, all those
-others she had met in Lark Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the hundredth time she cast wildly about in
-her mind as to how she could, now at this present
-moment, rid herself of the hated disguise, get into
-her Levantine, get home to her mother’s arms, hide
-her head forever, and never, no never! look into
-face of man again!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Peggy saw no road. Every path seemed
-barred, save those that would forever damn her in
-the eyes of foes and friends alike.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh,” cried she in desperation. “How easy ’tis
-to get into breeches, a coat, a waist-coat, and a wig,
-but God ha’ mercy! will I ever be able to get out
-of ’em?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is to be put down to the credit of My Lady
-Peggy’s up-bringing in the country with most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>times only a lad for her playmate, that now she bore
-herself with not only a fine ease and grace, but also
-with as splendid a swagger and daring as any
-young macaroni that carried a sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“An I’m to be a man, I’ll be one!” cried she,
-“and if Lady Diana ogles, lud! I’ll give as good as
-she sends. Little him as I love’ll know, ’tis of his
-sometime Peggy he’ll be jealous!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So it was with a prodigious fine flutter of her
-napkin and a mightily impudent twirl of her eye-glass
-(purchased not two hours since), that Her
-Ladyship made her bows and kissed the finger-tips
-of Lady Brookwood’s handsome daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am your most grateful, Sir Robin!” cried this
-one, “and more pleased than I can express to welcome
-you. I only regret that Lord Brookwood is at
-Brookwood Hall, and not here to thank you for
-rescuing his daughter.” And so forth and on, with
-presentations to a dozen of fine ladies, dowagers and
-damsels, and a precious lot of fine gentlemen; and
-it seemed to Peggy, in her simplicity, as if the whole
-of Mayfair were a-bowing and scraping and making
-her out a hero,—which indeed was not far off
-the fact.</p>
-
-<div id='i_112fp' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i_112fp.jpg' alt='Two watched her as she came in...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>Two watched her as she came in on Beau Brummell’s
-arm. These were Sir Percy and Kennaston;
-one green with anxiety for Grigson’s return from
-his errand, jumping at every sound; having left
-word both at Lark Lane, his coffee-house, as well as
-at home where he had gone, that Grigson should report
-to him at once he arrived; the other green
-with envy of Peggy and any other who neared his
-divinity, yet afraid and too diffident to approach
-her closer than with the devouring gaze of his
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That damned puppy again!” cries Percy, under
-his breath, as he surveys Peg in her satins. “By
-Gad, Sir, every lady in the room’s turning spite
-eyes on t’other, your incomparable Diana included,
-for fear he won’t stop and pay her a compliment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah,” sighs the young poet. “Percy, an you
-loved like me ’twould be bliss to even gaze upon
-your fair. Think you I dare make bold now to
-cross and make my bow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why not?” returns the other gloomily. “Forgive
-my humor, Kennaston. Truth is, Sir, I’m
-mad, mad for Peg, and my ears are cracking and
-my brain splitting until that rascal, Grigson, gets
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>back with answer to my letter. He’s been gone
-long enough to have made the journey four times
-over!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Percy,” returns Peg’s twin. “I love you
-as a brother, an could I but physic Your Lady
-into complaisance, I’d give my life for it. What
-owe I not to you?” adds the young man with deep
-feeling. “You’ve fed me, and zooks! Sir, to-night
-you’ve clothed me, for since the scurvy knaves that
-frightened Lady Di stole my suit of grays and my
-sword and hat, what had I left? Where would I
-be now, were’t not for you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tush, Ken, lad, I love you for yourself,—and
-ten thousand times more for her sake. Ken, I
-love her so that as I told her, if Sir Robin were a
-better man I’d cry off, an she said she loved
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What said she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not that she loved him, but that she might,”
-he continues with sadness, as his eyes follow Peg
-on her almost royal progress about the drawing-rooms.
-“’Tis a proper fellow, enough, and I’d
-always heard he was a fright and a coward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Kennaston presently took heart of grace and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>crossed to pay his duty to Lady Diana, who, ’twas
-plain to be seen by every other than this bashful
-swain, was by no means the indifferent to him she
-would feign play off. Her color came and went as
-Kennaston, blushing to match his lady, ventured to
-spout his ode to her; and, leaving the pair to gallop
-on this pleasant path, Sir Percy at a distance unconsciously
-followed Lady Peggy, at least with his
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy meantime, denying right and left the
-story of her prowess, with quips and jests and ogles
-of the fair, still kept her eye on Percy. Not yet had
-she seen him approach Lady Diana; yet hold!
-even now, catching her own gaze fixed upon him,
-he turned and was presently bending over the little
-beauty’s fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A pang shot through Peg’s heart, and the tears
-were like to force their way; she made an excuse
-and left the long drawing-room, taking refuge in a
-small apartment where the tables were ready for
-cards. She sank into a chair and buried her face
-in her hands. The candles were not yet lighted
-and she was totally unobserved. Dashing the salt
-drops from her lashes with her hand,—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>“What am I!” she cried in her bitterness, “that
-I can not abide to even see him a-bending over her
-hand! Ain’t you no spirit, Peg? No pride? He’s
-not thinking of you, my dear; didn’t he say plain,
-if Sir Robin was the better man he’d give up to
-him! What kind of a suitor’s that, Peg? Lud!
-I’d not give up him to any one, whether they were
-my betters or no!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Could My Lady but have postponed her exit for
-a few brief moments she would have beheld Sir
-Percy, at a word in his ear from a footman, quit
-Lady Diana’s side with but the smallest ceremony,
-dash out into the vestibule, seize with a vice-like
-grip the man who stood there pale and trembling,
-and gasp out:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At last! the letter, the letter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson shook his head and got even whiter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No letter?” Percy says in a dazed way.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Only your own, Sir Percy,” handing back the
-missive. “Her Ladyship was from home, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, what of that! you infernal, damned
-rascal, did I not command you seek her, if ’twere
-at the other end of the world!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Sir, and the quickest way of settin’ about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>findin’ Her Ladyship was for me to get back to
-town, Sir, as fast as the cursed beast I was cheated
-into hirin’, Sir, would fetch me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Speak out, for God’s sake! Is Her Ladyship up
-in London?” asked Sir Percy, actually shaking
-with impatience and astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson nods and without more ado proceeds to
-give an exact if somewhat rambling account of his
-entire experiences, from the moment he had
-quitted his master until the present.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twere idle to attempt to describe Sir Percy’s
-state of mind. Up to now there had ever lingered
-in his heart the hope, nay, one of those unconscious
-beliefs men have, that in the end Peggy would be
-his. This news that Grigson brought crushed
-every such thought from his brain, but put in its
-place such a hatred of the young man now tasting
-the sweets of hero-worship (in little), in the adjoining
-room, as caused his fingers to itch for his
-steel and t’other’s flesh to meet once more, and to
-the death.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He drew Grigson in from the vestibule and, unobserved
-in the crush, down the corridor to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>darkness of the card-room where Peggy still sat
-disconsolate in her far-off corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She, for the moment, is even unconscious that
-any one has entered until the voices arrest her attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By Gad!” Sir Percy cries in a low tone, falling
-into a seat and clapping his brow. “Up in London!
-The woman, vowing Sir Robin had crossed
-your entrance, inquiring for Her Ladyship! Your
-meeting, not Sir Robin, but an ill-conditioned little
-popinjay with squint eyes and of the height of
-the dwarf that waits upon my Lady Brookwood?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Sir Percy,” returns Grigson. “No more
-like Sir Robin, which, Sir, begging your honor’s
-parding, is a very pretty young nobleman, with a
-good eye and a proper height.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy nods.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then,” speaking as if to himself and motioning
-the man away, “since she’s up in town without
-her parents’ knowledge and with a cock-and-bull
-story stuck into her Abigail’s mouth, it must be
-she’s eloped with the scoundrel out of Kent!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson going, ventures to ask: “Any more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>h’orders, Sir Percy? Will I cover the town, all
-the inns and taverns, Sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The young man shakes his head and the servant
-bows himself away.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='VIII—Wherein Lady Peggy picks a very pretty quarrel...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_051.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>VIII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Wherein Lady Peggy picks a very pretty quarrel</em></div>
- <div><em>with her presumed rival: and is</em></div>
- <div><em>later bid to Beau Brummell’s</em></div>
- <div><em>levee in her night rail.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this precise moment Lady Peggy, scarce able
-to contain herself longer and, reckless of every possible
-consequence, being about to cast herself upon
-her quondam lover’s protection, and to be rid forever
-of being a man, is stopped short of her purpose
-by the words that now fall slowly from the
-young man’s lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To deceive! to lie! to scheme! and plot, and
-bring shame and trouble upon her father and
-mother! Gad’s life!” Sir Percy brings his
-clenched hand down with a thump upon the card-table.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>“I had never believed that of Peggy! I’d
-have felled him that had hinted she could even
-plan a lie, or run off to a secret marriage with the
-best man that lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At which speech My Lady’s color burned as
-never before since she was born, and her choler
-rose at the double charge, both the one that was
-true as to her deceit, and the one that was not as
-to her secret nuptials.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Palpitating with rage and wounded sensibility,
-with remorse and wretchedness; brought to bay
-with a situation she could not endure, Peg now
-utterly forgot her breeches or her shame at these,
-and, stepping boldly forth into the small circle of
-light shed in at the doorway, from the candles in
-the corridor, she saluted Sir Percy and spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I bid you good-evening, Sir Percy de Bohun,
-and, having had either the good, or the ill fortune
-to unintentionally overhear your remarks concerning
-Lady Peggy Burgoyne, I feel it my duty and
-pleasure alike to defend her from the unjust and
-unworthy attack which you, Sir, have just been
-pleased to make.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart!” exclaims Percy, with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>start and in a prodigious anger. “I deny your
-charges, Sir, and would remind you that eaves-droppers
-are ever the cumberers of dangerous
-ground.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir!” responds Lady Peggy, her temper rising
-the more at the sense of the injustice and falseness
-of her whole tenure. “You coupled just now the
-name of a lady with that of Sir Robin McTart. I
-demand how you dare to assume such a responsibility,
-Sir, until at least either the lady in question,
-or I, gives you our confidence, or our leave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“‘Our’ forsooth! ‘Our!’” comes fiercely from
-between Sir Percy’s clenched teeth, while his hand
-flies to his sword-hilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why the devil, Sir—an you’ve been so lucky
-as win the lady for your bride—make off with her
-i’ the dark, shut her up in some unfindable hole?
-cheat her parents, and go strutting like some vain
-peacock up and down other ladies’ drawing-rooms?
-Be a man, Sir, and publish your triumph broadcast,
-nor let the town presently go gossiping and
-countryside wagging with the scandal of an elopement!
-Zounds! Sir Robin McTart, that!” flipping
-a stray card from the table almost in Her Ladyship’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>face, “for your gallantry and your honor!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What do you mean, Sir?” cries Peggy, struck
-with horror all a-heap, and with terror as well, yet
-keeping up a brave show with her drawn rapier
-and sparkling eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Whatever you damned please, Sir,” returns
-Percy, now white-heat too, and most reckless of
-time or place.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve too much regard for Lady Peggy, Sir, not
-to postpone the climax of this matter until our
-next meeting, let it be when you see fit!” cries Peg
-with woman’s wit and wisdom too.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife, Sir, I ask you as one gentleman to another,
-nay, I implore it of you,” cries Sir Percy,
-rent betwixt choler, love and apprehension, “most
-humbly, is Lady Peggy your wife?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship was now like to laugh, so near
-akin are mirth and sorrow, but she replied very
-loftily:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I decline to discuss the matter, Sir, and would
-remind you that report hath your attentions engaged
-in quite another direction.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You know where Lady Peggy Burgoyne is at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>this moment?” says Sir Percy hotly, determined
-to push his matter to its ending this very night,
-and almost crazed by his passion and its balking.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That I do, Sir,” returns Her Ladyship with a
-covert smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell me, or I’ll brain you where you stand.”
-Percy makes an ugly lunge at his opponent with
-his fist, but merely as a threat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That will I not,” says she firmly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What might have further ensued is, at this
-crisis, put out of the question by the entrance of
-Kennaston, who, espying Percy the first, cries out
-joyfully:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Percy, Percy, Lady Diana hath given me leave
-to tell you she consents—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tush, Sir!” interrupts Percy, jerking his head
-toward the other occupant of the room. “Sir Robin
-McTart and I have come near to blows, and must
-fight of a surety, on the subject of your sister, Sir;
-and ’tis for you to know without more delay that
-Lady Peggy is up in London, unknown to her parents;
-that Sir Robin hath her whereabouts and
-absolutely refuses to reveal the same.” Percy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>crosses the room, strikes a tinder and lights the
-candles on the mantel-shelf.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are cursedly badly mistook, gentlemen,
-both of you,” says Kennaston, quietly enough. “I’ve
-got a letter which I found upon my table this very
-night, just come from my sister at Kennaston,”
-with which her twin pulls My Lady’s most ill-spelled
-and crumpled missive from his pocket and
-holds it up before the four astonished eyes that are
-staring at it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy in amaze recognizes the letter she had
-written to her brother the day long since in the
-buttery, and which she had taken up to town in her
-reticule and must have dropped when she had paid
-her ill-starred visit to Kennaston’s chambers in
-Lark Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Frowse, the charwoman’s daughter, vowed she’d
-found it a-lying in the entry under the water-tub.
-There’s an end of your dispute, Sirs, I trust,”
-glancing from one to the other. “Come, come, Sir
-Percy, and you, Sir Robin, whom indeed the letter
-you brought me from Lady Peggy the other night
-doth most highly commend to my good offices,
-must be friends,” taking a hand of each. “Nor let
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>Dame Rumor split ye asunder with her lies about
-my little twin’s being up in town. Gadzooks, Sirs,
-the child’s not a notion of a difference betwixt Mayfair
-and—Drury Lane! I beg of you, Mr. Brummell,”
-as this one now comes mincing in together
-with Lord Escombe, Sir Wyatt, Mr. Jack Chalmers
-and others for their game, “for you’ve the graces
-I lack in such matters.—These two gallants have
-had a difference, and ’tis you, Mr. Brummell, can
-set ’em straight again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Cards! cards! Spades, clubs, diamonds, hearts,”
-exclaims the Beau, touching the Queen of Hearts
-with the toe of his high-heeled shoe, as it lies on
-the floor where it was shot from Sir Percy’s hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Split me! but ’tis them that are at the bottom
-of every quarrel, Sirs; whisk me, but if a spade,
-or a club, or a heart, provided it be a lady’s, or a
-diamond, which the Jews have a lien on, ain’t the
-only causes for disagreement in this world!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Correct as your own toilet, Sir!” cries Wyatt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, ’twas hearts of course, damn ’em, and the
-queen of ’em that’s roused both your tempers, but
-for God’s sake, gentlemen,” taking now the hand
-of each which has slipped clear of Kennaston’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>fingers, “bethink you, if the lady, whose name I
-can’t even guess, whom you both adore, stood here,
-what would her pleasure be, Robin, my lad, answer
-me, for of brawling there can be none here and
-fighting no more. Speak, Sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Faith!” answered Lady Peggy, with splendid
-valor and a rise in her color and her heels, “to
-my certain knowledge the lady’d have her name put
-out of the matter wholly, and she’d sooner die, Sir,
-than have any fighting over her preferences, by
-either Sir Percy de Bohun or Sir Robin McTart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The which being taken to be, by all present, a
-most prodigious and amazing gentlemanlike and
-politic speech, Sir Percy was feign accept, mock-smile
-and bow, while all the rest blew their lungs
-hollow applauding and praising his still hated and
-still suspected rival.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peace restored outwardly, whatever else raged
-in the breasts of the two opponents, the gallants
-sat to their tables, Kennaston managing to whisper
-to Sir Percy across the deal:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As I was telling you when I entered, Percy,
-Lady Di permits me to let you know she consents
-to my dedicating the ode to her, and Lillie, at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>corner of Beanford Buildings in the Strand, hath
-engaged to publish it at once!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But this, Lady Peggy, at a distant table, engaged
-in picquet with His Grace of Escombe, hears not;
-there rings in her ears naught save the words Kennaston
-uttered when he came into the card-room—“Lady
-Diana hath given me leave to tell you she
-<em>consents</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Consents!” To what else but his suit? Which,
-egged on by his noble uncle, has been pushing any
-time these ten years, since boy and girl Sir Percy
-and Lady Di had played, ridden, romped, quarreled
-as brother and sister together.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Consents!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It echoes and resounds in Her Ladyship’s head
-over and over again the night through, and ’tis
-quite of a piece with her mood that she seeks out
-Lady Diana when tea and cakes are passing, and,
-with sly looks, congratulates Her Ladyship on the
-happiness she has this night conferred on a very
-gallant gentleman not so many miles away!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And quite in Lady Diana’s line of reasoning,
-having heard from Kennaston that Sir Robin has
-come up to town highly commended to him by his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>sister, and that, although he had been sorely jealous
-and distraught at the said Sir Robin’s good
-fortune in the matter of the rescue of Her Ladyship,
-he still believed him to be head over heels
-in love with his twin, etc., etc., etc., and so, Her
-Ladyship argued, Kennaston had doubtless confided
-to the said Sir Robin such tokens of her
-favor as the said Lady Diana had that evening
-seen fit to manifest; never for a moment misdoubting
-that any other swain was in the supposed
-Robin’s mind any more than he was in her own!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>Consents!</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas reverberating in Peg’s ears and a-knocking
-at her heart for the hundredth time, when, returned
-to the card-room, she learned that Mr.
-Brummell was inviting the company for the Thursday
-to his seat Ivy Dene. ’Twas to be a gentlemen’s
-party only; out on horseback, the twenty
-miles, leaving the White Horse at ten in the morning,
-with luncheon en route at the Merry Rabbit
-at Market Ossory; a look over the stables and paddocks
-on arriving at Ivy Dene,—a quiet game,
-maybe, and such a dinner as only, the Beau swore,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>his country cook could get up; with the ride back
-to town by the light of the near-full moon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy was soon made aware that this festivity
-was solely in her honor, and succumbed to
-it as cheerfully as she might.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>God keep her! All the while staring at the ribbon
-of her twin’s wig, a-longing to cast her arms
-about his neck and pray him cover her up in his
-wraprascal and fetch her home; vowing she’d run
-away from ’em all the next minute, but where?
-How? Which way could it be done so that capture,
-discovery, and humiliation would not follow?
-Peggy could contrive no method, and the girl was
-literally terrified both at the prospect before her
-and by the realization that easy as it had been to
-jump into man’s attire ’twas well-nigh impossible
-to get out of it again. Should she on returning
-to Peter’s Court lay off her satin suit, wig, and
-rapier, and resume her Levantine gown, hood, petticoats,
-patches, and reticule, how and of what hour
-of the day or night could she in safety leave the
-mansion and find her way unsuspected to the
-King’s Arms and the coach? ’Twould be out of
-the question; servants were up and about at all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>hours, and were a woman seen emerging from her
-room, what piece of scandal would not the next
-day ring from one end of the town to t’other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With “consents” tattooing in her brain, My Lady
-recklessly put all the heart there was left in her
-into the present moment, lost a hundred pounds
-to Escombe with a fine grace; won five hundred
-with no more ado; laughed, drank a little wine,
-went home with her host at four in the morning,
-and fell heavily asleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At two of the afternoon the Beau usually held
-an informal levee attended by the more noted of
-the bucks and macaronis of the town; vastly entertaining
-half hours, wherein, while soundly abusing
-the newspapers for their being stuffed with
-lies, the company still eagerly devoured every scrap
-of gossip they contained; where the amount of frizz
-towering above Lady This’s brow was measured
-and scanned, the better appearance of Lady That
-in the new-fashioned gown discussed; and the horrid
-aspect of the Hon. Miss So and So’s toupee and
-her general resemblance to a malt-sack tied in the
-middle, talked over. This couplet and that comedy
-were torn to pieces by as many pretty wits as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>chanced to be present, while Tempers dressed his
-master’s wig in a corner and a footman and a
-negro page handed chocolate round in silver trays.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Beau, himself, reclined on his great bedstead
-with its fine tester, a half dozen of pillows
-richly laced at his head; a flowered gown about his
-shoulders, his night-cap on, a coverlet embroidered
-by the Chinese over him, his snuff-box at hand,
-reading aloud from the damp and freshly arrived
-print whilst Sir Wyatt, Lord Escombe, Mr. Jack
-Chalmers, and a dozen more sat or stood, cup in
-fingers, ’twixt lip and saucer, hearkening, eager,
-to the news.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis by this on the tip of every tongue in town
-that there occurred last night at Lady B——d’s
-rout an encounter (the second within a se’ennight),
-betwixt Sir P——y de B——n and a certain young
-gentleman from Kent whose handsome face, genteel
-manners, and dashing behavior, have conspired
-to place him in so brief a time at the very height
-of favor in society, and more especially in the eyes
-of Lady D——a W——n. It had been supposed
-that the affair recounted in these pages as having
-taken place in the chambers of Lord K——n of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>K——n was on account solely of the above mentioned
-adorable young scion of a noble house. We
-are in a position to assure the world of fashion
-that such is not the case, and that both the unfortunate
-disputes betwixt these two gallants are to
-be laid to the door of Lady P——y B——e, sister
-to Lord K——n. Report hath it that Her Ladyship
-is in London; rumor contradicts report and
-avers that the fair one has not stirred from home.
-The issue is awaited with interest, as the verbatim
-account of an unsuspected elopement may be
-looked for at any moment. Safe to say the vivacious
-Lady P——y B——e, whom the town hath
-never had the pleasure of beholding, has succeeded
-in stirring Mayfair to its depths and has been
-the cause already of a very pretty pair of quarrels
-between two young gentlemen of the first quality.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife!” cried Beau Brummell. “Who now
-the devil’s Lady P——y?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By the dragon, himself, I never heard that
-Kennaston had a sister!” said Lord Wootton and
-Mr. Vane at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes!” exclaims Sir Wyatt, tapping his forehead,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>recollectively, “I do recall that Sir Robin
-McTart, the night we were at Kennaston’s chambers,
-entered with the presentation of a letter of
-introduction from ‘Lady Peggy Burgoyne to her
-brother,’ and ’sdeath! ’twas, I believe, she about
-whom they fought, too!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ha! ’tis not only Lady Di, then, that’s at the
-bottom of their quarrel after all,” says Mr. Brummell,
-reflectively.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is the fair one?” asks Escombe. “Who
-knows that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Faith! no one. Stop! Sir Robin must know,
-since ’tis for her he unsheathes twice in a week,”
-cries the host.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Bring him in!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Send for Sir Robin!” is the cry of the company.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zooks! Sirs, but our reputations as gallants
-are broken up, an we’ve not seen her of whom the
-prints speak thus!” says the Beau, adding at once:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tempers, my compliments to Sir Robin McTart,
-and beg of him to join us, for, at the least,
-a few moments. I know he’s averse to early rising,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>but pray inform him to skip across in his
-dressing-gown and slippers, and night-cap, we’ve
-no ladies here about to ogle him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The which message being conveyed to My Lady
-Peggy a-sitting by the pulled-out chest of drawers,
-mournfully contemplating her long shorn tresses
-with barred door, arouses in her such a fever of
-sorrow as well-nigh chokes her utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say to Mr. Brummell I’m asleep, Tempers,
-and crave to know his pleasure, the answer to
-which I’ll send as faithfully as Morpheus will
-permit, by you for Mercury! Off with you!” and
-Her Ladyship softly stroked her locks, and for the
-thousandth time went planning her escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peels of laughter, rattling of rapiers, click of
-heels, and now—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat!” on the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“McTart! McTart! Up with you from betwixt
-coverlets and into your Persian quilt!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Out with ye, Sir Robin, or by Gad! Sir, we’ll
-in, the fifteen of us! and rout you up from
-Morpheus’s arms.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come, Sir Robin, dally no longer with sweet
-sleep; up, Sir, and bethink you of Beauty spelled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>with a P-E-G-G-Y!” shouts Sir Wyatt, chorused
-by the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At first clap of voices Peggy stuck her hair back
-into the drawer, jumped up, and stood, hand upon
-the dressing-table, her expression like nothing else
-so much as that of a fawn caught in a thicket.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath! Gentlemen, I pray of you, a few
-moments grace!” cries she, trembling from the
-knees down, for ’tis quite of the temper of the
-manners of the day that in a second more the
-whole company should batter down the mahogany
-and burst in.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Three-and-thirty, an you like, Sir Robin!” says
-Escombe, who is soberer than the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Give us the whereabouts of Lady Peggy Burgoyne,”
-shouts Mr. Chalmers, “and we’ll trouble
-you no more ’til doomsday!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Peggy Burgoyne!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Peggy Burgoyne!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where’s Lady Peggy Burgoyne?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where’s Lady Peggy Burgoyne?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is the fair one for whom you and Sir
-Percy de Bohun have fought with blades and
-tongues, twice now, since this day last week?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>“Lady Peggy Burgoyne!” cried they in hot concert,
-joined in most lustily by the Beau from his
-bed across the corridor, and accompanied by the
-pounding of fifteen rapier points on the parquet,
-and thirty fists on the woodwork, as well as the
-demoniacal screams of the Beau’s little negro and
-the parrot on his wrist.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell us where she is!” came high staccato last
-from Sir Wyatt’s exhausted lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Lords and Gentlemen!” answers Her
-Ladyship, standing close to the door enveloped
-from top to toe in a sheet over her night-rail.
-“Would to God I could!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There was a ring of heartfelt truth in the reply,
-and its utterance was succeeded by a second’s surprised
-pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The young bucks regarded each other with
-shrugs, pursed mouths, and interrogation points
-bristling in their eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Chalmers, recovered of his surprise sooner
-than the others, says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you mean to say, Sir Robin, that the whereabouts
-of the lady with whose name the prints
-and the coffee-houses are ringing; for whose sake
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>you came near to fighting Sir Percy only last night,
-and did fight him in Lark Lane o’ Thursday last,
-ain’t known to you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is she in London?” pipes the Beau, pinching
-the little black till he squeaks again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That I can not tell,” responds Her Ladyship.
-“I do know she’s not in Kent; and she’s not at
-Kennaston Castle. ’Slife! Sirs,” adds she, “I
-pray your consideration. Guess what you will;
-this matter of Lady Peggy sticks me closer than
-you dream, and I’d give my life to know her safe
-at home with her mother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Silence ensues; the disappointed fifteen get
-them back to the Beau’s bedside to talk over this
-latest development as to the mysterious Lady
-Peggy.</p>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_050.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='IX—In the which Lady Peg overhears a horrible plot to murder...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_035.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>IX</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In the which Lady Peg overhears a horrible</em></div>
- <div><em>plot to murder; and wherein</em></div>
- <div><em>Mr. Incognito encountereth</em></div>
- <div><em>Sir Robin.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>She herself falls into such an immediate flood
-of tears as shakes her well, and then up she rises
-from her depths, and with all the courage of her
-race and blood, she vows that, come another sunset
-she will quit Peter’s Court as if for a walk,
-and never return; that in small clothes, since it
-must be, she will journey back to Kennaston
-Castle, and risk all the discomfiture and disgrace
-her doing so may bring upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In point of fact, My Lady Peggy was at that
-state of mind when it seemed to her no degradation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>or humiliation, no sorrow that could be visited
-upon her, would be too much punishment, or
-enough, for the sins without number she had committed
-since the luckless day she took the coach
-for town.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When she emerged from her room for dinner,
-’twas to learn that Mr. Brummell had been summoned
-hastily to St. James’s on so important an
-affair as to initiate His Royal Highness into the
-mysteries of the new tie of Sir Robin’s own invention!
-and that he trusted in this audience to obtain
-permission to fetch Sir Robin to the Palace and
-present him within a few days to several august
-personages, etc., etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship, therefore, dined alone, scantily
-too; food choked her, wine burned her throat, and
-to speak truth she was heartily glad not to have
-to drink it, for Her Ladyship was an abstemious
-young lady and believed milk, Bohea and Pekoe the
-beverages for her sex, to the exclusion of any
-stronger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At twilight, having made her duds and her
-tresses up into a reputable enough parcel, Lady
-Peggy, in a suit of claret velvet, leaving all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>rest of her man’s attire hanging in the presses,
-sauntered carelessly out of the house, declining
-the footman’s offer of a chair, or even a hackney
-chaise, or a page to carry her parcel, and set off at
-a swinging pace across the square and toward the
-river. It was her intention, by way of frustrating
-any attempts at tracing her which might be set
-afoot, the discovery of her flight once made, to so
-double on her own tracks, and to seek out such unimagined
-and unlikely streets to traverse, as must
-puzzle both bell-man, watch, and redbird alike, as
-well as her acquaintances.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She swaggered along toward St. Stephen’s where
-a coach containing quality was occasionally met
-even now; then down Horseferry Road, almost to
-the river’s bank; then along Jackanapes Row, with
-little idea of the cut-throat locality she was haunting;
-back again toward better neighborhoods; then
-a lurch to the Thames making into Farthing Alley
-and Little Boy Yard, at the end of which she
-found herself at the old Dove Pier.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg stood still, her heart beating both with her
-quick walk, and at the strangeness of all that surrounded
-her. She had no fear, because her arm
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>was stout, her aim sure, pistols at her belt and a
-good sword at her side; and she was perfectly
-ignorant of any harm here to be found, greater
-than at the door of Beau Brummell’s house.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The dark dwellings of the yard frowned at one
-another, with not an ell of sky to share between
-’em at their roofs; the sign of the “Three Cups”
-swung and creaked in the slow breeze; the river,
-black and gruesome, lapped at the foot of the
-stone pile against which she leaned. On the river
-the tired bargemen rested at their oars, and the
-dip of a water-bird was the only sound that struck
-upon her ear. Peggy was casting about in her
-mind whether to enter the inn and inquire her
-road to the King’s Arms in the Strand, and had
-just turned to do so, when in the cavernous doorway
-of one of the gaunt-looking tenements she
-beheld three figures. The faces of two were toward
-her, and by the light of the fish-oil lamp swinging
-at the next-door tavern, she beheld them, so sinister
-and forbidding as to cause her to halt for a space,
-and then, overcoming her dread, to pursue her
-path, but slowly and by crossing the yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As she did so, her weapon caught in her heel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>and as she bent to disengage it, a voice speaking
-in low muffled tones arrested her gait.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was the voice of Sir Robin McTart saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If I make it ten guineas apiece on the spot,
-you swear to leave him cold on the pier yonder,
-come Sunday night, or to tie a stone about his
-throat and throw him into the river?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, aye,” grunts one of the two companions
-of this most valorous gentleman. “’E’s h’always
-’ulkin ’ereabouts o’ Sunday nights.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy, with such a pull-string of terror
-at her heart as she never had before, draws closer
-to the wall of the tenement before which she has
-halted, creeps nearer to the portal wherein these
-cavaliers are quartered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let it be five guineas apiece to-night,” squeaks
-the Baronet, “and the remainder when the business
-is done?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The devil knock you into hell with your, ‘when
-the business is done!’” mutters the other. “We’s
-doin’ your job for you for little enough. Tain’t
-everyone as’d h’undertake the funeral of a h’Earl’s
-heir like Sir Percy de Bohun——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship’s like now to fall in a swoon; but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>not she; only leans she a bit against the bricks,
-her bosom heaving, her eyes dilating, her lips bitten
-in until they are almost bleeding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hush-h-h! no names, you varlets!” interrupts
-Sir Robin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hey?” responds the other, “the walls ain’t got
-no h’ears, and if they ’ad wot I’m a-sayin’s the
-cussid truth, eh, Bloksey?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bloksey grunts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The town’ll be afire when it’s out that a gallant
-like ’im that’s heir to Lord Gower’s been done
-fer; and then, my fine gentleman, who’s to pay
-for’t, if we’s caught and if we ’appens to be seen
-by any one when we’re a doin’ of your job? No,
-money all down now, or Sir Percy lives as long as
-’e likes, for us!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg’s hand’s upon the hilt of her sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shall she spring and run Sir Robin through?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shall she hide and buy the rascals out at a higher
-price than he has paid?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But no sooner do these thoughts rush through
-her brain than the utter impossibility of compassing
-the one, or of performing the other, undetected,
-if even with her life, and she so at the mercy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>of these cut-throats, comes to steady her, and she
-realizes that her only part is to get away as fast
-as she may, and unseen if she can.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meantime Sir Robin concludes his bargain with
-the two desperadoes, and as they withdraw into
-their haunt, and he turns on his heel, he espies
-Lady Peggy rounding the corner with her bundle
-under her arm. The little Baronet with a sidelong
-glance in at the hallway to make sure his men are
-out of sight, darts to the opposite side of the court
-on tiptoe, and then, putting hands to mouth, calls
-across softly, but clearly, in a tone half of joy, half
-anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Incognito! Mr. Incognito! Ho! I say,
-Incognito!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg stops short. ’Twere wiser perhaps to try
-to discover what had put Sir Robin McTart up to
-the murder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By Gad, Sir!” cries this one, making a dash
-now over to Peg’s side of the way. “Here have I
-scoured the town for you day and night, and no
-trace of you anywhere! ‘Incognito’ me no more,
-Sir! Who are you, Sir? Damme! I’ll stand no
-more such nonsense!” Sir Robin’s valor’s thoroughly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>based on the knowledge that, were blade to
-be unsheathed to his hurt, he could and would
-shout for his hirelings to the rescue.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas the first and only time in his life that he
-was ever known to urge, or even hint, a quarrel <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in
-propria persona</em></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll ‘incognito’ you to the end of the chapter,
-Sir Robin McTart,” answers Lady Peggy, clapping
-hand to hilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well, Sir, very well,” says the Baronet,
-reflecting that another corpse might cost him ten
-guineas more, ere he were done with it; and besides
-yearning for the news of His Lady which he thinks
-he may glean. “I’ve small stomach for fightin’
-any man. Religion don’t teach us that lesson, but
-’tis a devilish trick you’ve played me, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In what way, Sir? Out with it,” replies
-Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You, Sir, sent me to Kennaston a-seeking Lady
-Peggy Burgoyne, Sir; she was from home, and
-not a word else could I buy or wring out of her
-servant’s cursed mouth. Then I hied to Kent, believing,
-from your fine messages to me from Her
-Ladyship, that she must be there at her godmother’s.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>No, Sir! she was not; nor could any one tell
-but that she was at Kennaston Castle for all they
-knew. Back in town post-haste, I seek Lark Lane,
-where her brother lodges, so I had heard, only to
-learn that he has gone to stop with Sir Percy de
-Bohun, in Charlotte Street.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, you sought him there?” inquires Peg
-quivering with suppressed excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I did not, Sir!” replies Sir Robin with emphasis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thank heaven!” says his companion fervently,
-an exclamation which may do double duty, and is
-well taken by the little gentleman from Kent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Sir; you do not suppose, Sir, that I’m a-going
-to risk a life that’s dear to Lady Peggy, at
-the hands of a ripping brawler and sure-kill like
-Sir Percy, do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, Sir Robin,” quoth Her Ladyship. “If you
-knew what a consolation it would be to Lady Peggy
-to hear of your unwillingness to hazard your
-precious person in such company, ’twould ease
-your mind and heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Look you!” whispers Sir Robin, plucking at
-Peg’s sleeve. “But tell me where she is? This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>mystery’s killing me! How fares she? Does she
-pine for me? and is this true?” With shaking
-hands Sir Robin takes from his pocket a copy of a
-print of the day previous, and unfolding, reads
-to the astonished Peg the following paragraphs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Town’s talk is all for the very pretty quarrel
-betwixt Sir P——y de B——n, and the gallant and
-handsome Sir R——n McT——t of Kent. ’Tis
-all over Mayfair, and far beyond, that the cause
-of the dispute’s the lovely but mysterious Lady
-P——y B——e.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife!” interrupts Peg, catching at straws.
-“You now perceive, Sir Robin, why ’tis that Her
-Ladyship must keep her whereabouts a secret,
-even,” she adds with sentimental deflection, “from
-you. Trust me, Sir, as you would trust her, and
-be guided by my counsel!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin nods vigorously, fluttering his sheet
-with anxious fingers. “Listen, Sir, listen, to this
-further.” He reads on. “Sir P——y de B——n
-has sworn by all that’s sacred, so ’tis said, to stick
-Sir R——n McT——t to the death, and serious
-consequences are feared.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah!” cries Lady Peggy, overjoyed to hear anything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>that may serve to keep the little Baronet and
-Sir Percy from meeting. “’Tis a gentleman of
-his word, I promise you. Better get back at once
-to Robinswold, and let London and Sir Percy gallop
-to the devil, an they see fit!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay,” replies the one addressed. “Not I, Sir
-Incognito. It is not for a McTart to turn his back
-on danger, but the rather,” and here by the fish-oil
-gleam, the little gentleman’s squint eyes leer
-cunningly up into Her Ladyship’s face: “The
-rather,” continues he, glancing cautiously around,
-“take measures to protect myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very commendable of you, Sir Robin, by my
-faith,” cries Peggy, although she shudders, now
-linking her arm in her companion’s, and assuming
-an air of easy confidence, by the which she hopes
-to ensnare him into a complete revelation of his
-plans.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Since you go armed, and are, I doubt not, a
-master in the art of self-defense, what have you
-to fear from Sir Percy de Bohun?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“True,” responds the Baronet, with a reservation
-to himself and no mind at all to proceed any
-further with his revelations. “Gad! Sir, a fellow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>like that,” clutching at the newspaper stuck among
-his ruffles, “ain’t to be trusted as long as he’s
-above the ground. I swear, Sir! I fear to walk
-abroad and hold myself housed at my inn in
-Pimlico, close, not daring to show my face. A
-ruffian that’s publicly printed as seekin’ life’d
-stick me in the back in the dark, an he got the
-chance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, nay, Sir Robin,” says Peg, up for her
-sweetheart, “he’s not that sort of a gentleman—but,
-look you, keep close, frequent neither club,
-coffee or chocolate-house, or rout or drum; eschew
-Vauxhall, Richmond and the play-house, or any
-likely place where bucks gather, for trust me, Sir,
-an you do meet Sir Percy, there’ll be the devil to
-pay, and his blade’s his obedient slave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Poor Peg! She has not only to protect Percy
-of his life, but, as before, to prevent any discovery
-of her usurpation of the little Baronet’s
-name.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Curse him! I fear him not!” responds this
-one, his itching fingers twisting about the empty
-purse in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But of Her Ladyship, Sir Go-between?” adds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>he presently, as they emerge upon the broader and
-better lighted road. “’Pon my life, but to so find
-myself the hero of a romantic passion with the
-Lady secluded in a mystery, a nobleman thirsting
-for my blood, a nameless gentleman playin’ Mercury
-betwixt me and my fair, ’tis amazing, Sir!
-prodigious amazing!” Sir Robin struts and takes
-snuff very comfortably, since he has got out of
-a very dangerous environment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg’s soul sickens within her as she listens to
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell me now, how fares she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not so well,” answers she.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’ve seen her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not I.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are like to?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You can convey messages to her by some fond
-way she’s planned to get her news of me, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I can, Sir Robin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir, whoever you are, for pity’s sake, tell me
-where is she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not far, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gad, Sir, to touch her hand, her cheek!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>You’re in her sure confidence? She does favor
-me? She will not give me hopes, Sir, to turn
-around and break my heart by marryin’ of another?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady Peggy’ll never marry any man, Sir Robin,
-I’m of the opinion, so I’d not give that for your
-chances!” answers she.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Think you she ever cared for Sir Percy?” asks
-he.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir, who can fathom a woman’s heart? ’Tis
-deeper than the sea; so deep, methinks, ofttimes
-she herself holds not that plummet that can sound
-it. Sir Robin, I take my leave of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold! hold! Sir, not so fast. Where next may
-I encounter you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That must be as Her Ladyship says,” answers
-Peggy. “Your inn’s in Pimlico?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, the Puffled Hen, not far off Battersea
-Bridge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Farewell, Sir, and look you keep close in-doors,
-and risk no quarrel with Sir Percy de Bohun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Farewell, Sir,” watching Her Ladyship turn
-down the street as he turns up. “Gad’s life! ’twas
-well he happened when he did, and not earlier,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>to eavesdrop my bargain with the wharf-rats!
-’Sdeath! Risk no quarrel with Sir Percy! Not
-so long as there’s guineas left to buy corpses with!”
-and the little gentleman trots over to Pimlico,
-tolerably well pleased with his evening’s work;
-there, however, to be greeted with the reading of
-more newspapers, including that one which had
-earlier in the day so entertained Beau Brummell
-and his familiars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not for a moment did the Baronet mistrust, or
-have a suspicion, other than that his fame had
-caused him to be made the subject of such a pack
-of pretty stories as was then the custom of the
-press, as now, regarding any gentleman of position
-and gallantry. Sir Robin’s vanity easily swallowed
-the dose, and he even slapped his thigh and
-laughed his little dice-rattle laugh, as he reflected
-how safe he really was with never a challenge or
-a brawl to his cowardly credit since he got his
-first flogging at Eton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He actually mouthed over his prospective wooing,
-and assured winning of Lady Peggy, and felt
-a calm satisfaction in the knowledge that the one
-rival he feared would so soon be beyond the reach
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>of ladies’ smiles or tears. No qualms came to
-disturb his genial enjoyment of purposed assassination.
-In those days to kill was nearer men’s tempers
-than it is to-day. ’Twas with blackguard
-and man of honor alike, the first redress for even
-the pettiest sort of a dispute; with the difference
-of method only, that the gallant blade fought out
-his quarrel on the open field, while the craven
-bought a hireling’s dagger to do it in the dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meantime, My Lady, by as direct a route as she
-can fathom out of the labyrinth of her ignorance
-and her distracted state of mind, makes back to
-Peter’s Court with her parcel of duds still under
-her arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She enters, mounts the stair-case, seeks her
-room, closes the door, and sits down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis now not to be doubted,” she says to herself,
-“but that the Devil’s at the helm of my ship—and
-that I am to be a man for the rest of my life.
-’Sdeath! as dad says, I’ll stop over till Sunday
-night’s o’er past, and as surely as my name’s
-Peggy Burgoyne I’ll foil that little dastardly
-groat of a Baronet’s plot to murder him that I once
-l-loved. Bah!” cries she half aloud. “What’s the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>use of mincin’ matters that’s true? Him that I
-love! Even if he’s dyin’ for Lady Diana, and
-goin’ to be her husband instead of mine! ‘Consents!’”
-murmurs she, flinging herself on the bed
-in a flood of tempestuous tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In vain regretting, she now too fully realized
-that her own wilful words, her jealousy, her falsehoods,
-her deceits, were the sole causes for Sir
-Robin’s terror, and, therefore, for the abominable
-scheme which he had just concocted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Presently she arose, tossed the bundle once
-more back into its hiding-place, and set to pacing
-up and down the floor as she’d seen her twin do at
-home when he was looking high and low for a
-rhyme.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas weightier matters kept Peg moving for
-an hour or more, and quick-spinning as were her
-heart and temper, her brain bore a more even
-balance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>First she had thought to warn Percy by a letter
-unsigned; the which she knew he’d pitch into the
-fire and think no more about. Then, that she’d
-write one to Kennaston imploring him to keep
-Percy from the pier Sunday night or any other;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>this she soon recognized would have the fate of
-t’other. Then, ’twas to contrive some plan to
-fetch him to Richmond, Windsor, any place else
-for Sunday; but to this arose the objection that
-the blackguards cheated of one day, or place, would
-not fail to wait upon their prey some other. At
-the last, Her Ladyship’s shrewd common-sense and
-indomitable pluck plainly showed her there was
-but one safe plan out of the danger; and this must
-be to go herself to the river Sunday night, and
-there concealed, armed, await the coming of the
-cut-throats from their den, and from the rear, put
-a shot into each at one and the same moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Could she do it?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship had muscles of steel, no nerves,
-as the fine ladies of her day comprehended them;
-as brave and loyal a heart as ever beat in any
-breast; good faith in God, for all her frowardness;
-and that species of love burning within her for Sir
-Percy de Bohun, which has, not a few times in the
-world’s history, made frailest woman into man’s
-equal for courage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To Lady Peggy there seemed a divine compensation
-in the fact that it had come to her, to save
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>the very one whom, by her lies and wilfulness, she
-alone had been the means of endangering.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div id='i_158fp' class='figcenter id009'>
-<img src='images/i_158fp.jpg' alt='At the table sat Kennaston...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008' title='X—In this same Her Ladyship’s mount is shot dead under her...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_035.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>X</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In this same Her Ladyship’s mount is shot</em></div>
- <div><em>dead under her in Epstowe Forest, and</em></div>
- <div><em>she makes off on Tom Kidde’s horse.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This young gentleman now stood looking from
-a window of his uncle’s house, upon all the dewy
-leafing beauty of the Park at May. His brow was
-knit, his lips tight shut, his hand amid his ruffles
-clenched.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the table sat Kennaston, inky-fingered, scribbling;
-eyes now rolling to the ceiling, now roving
-hither and yon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah!” sighs this one. “If the critics do not
-find this canto to their taste, may I be damned!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’re like to go to Court to the Devil, I’m
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>thinking then, dear lad,” speaks de Bohun over his
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fame! Fame!” cries the young poet, pushing
-back in his chair, wig awry and quill poised in
-air. “I’ll hunt thee to my dying hour, and if
-thou escap’st me then, ’twill all be Lady Diana’s
-fault.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How’s that?” asks Percy, with, however, but
-small ring of interest in his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh!” exclaimed Peg’s twin, “the minx mocks
-me! ’Tis Monday, kindness and all smiles, to
-wake on Tuesday for indifference; pouts on
-Wednesday; lure-me-ons o’ Thursday; forgetfulness
-for Friday; radiance for Saturday, and all a-jumble,
-sweets-and-frowns! showers! sunshine!
-what you will!—and will not!—for my Sunday
-fare.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy sighs and smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Percy, sometimes I think Diana does love
-you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Sir, never. We’re like brother and sister,
-nothing else, save my uncle’s absurd, obstinate
-(now-cured) whim, since childhood, to match his
-heir with Brookwood’s heiress. Odzooks! Ken,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>you’re like every other swain that ever sighed,
-always looking for a rival to be jealous of! Lady
-Di cares for you; an you doubted it before, ’tis
-time to take up hope, since you are asked to
-Brookwood for a visit, and go popping off to-night,
-with me left home to think alone on Peggy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! Sir, ’tis not you only that’s thinking
-of her!” cries the young man rising and crossing
-to the fire. “But, what would you! if I call out
-the bell-man, publish her disappearance in the
-newspapers; get word to my father and my mother;
-what comes of’t all, but scandal? and like as
-not dad an apoplexy, and My Lady mother a set of
-fits and a death-bed!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ken, I’m a damned fool ever to stop inside of
-doors or to cease pacing streets, haunting inns,
-shadowing Sir Robin McTart, until I find her!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fie, Sir, if she’s gone off with Sir Robin McTart,
-’tis, I promise you, with a wedding-ring on
-her finger, and not else! An she loves him, what’s
-to be said or done, if he’s her lawful lord?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Naught. I myself went down to Kennaston
-yesterday. I said nothing to you, Ken,” he adds,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>noting the other’s surprised and reproachful start,
-with a hand upon his junior’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I thought I’d not interrupt the epic and your
-frenzies about Lady Di, with my troubles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, what news of Peg? Any?” asks her
-twin anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“None. I saw Chockey, and only got from her
-what Grigson had, the positive assurance that her
-mistress had gone up to London. ‘Of her own free
-will?’ I asked. ‘Yes, Sir Percy,’ said she.
-‘Alone?’ I inquired. ‘No, Sir Percy,’ was her
-answer, nor could I force, frighten, or buy the
-baggage into any further confidence. She did
-beg of me, however, seek out Her Ladyship, if I
-could, and find how she fared.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gad’s life, Sir! She has eloped. ’Tis clear as
-crystal!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One thing more, I asked Chock: Had Her
-Ladyship money in her purse? ‘Lawk, Sir Percy!
-cried she, ‘two hundred pounds I know of!’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“‘Two hundred pounds!’” repeats Peg’s twin
-in vast amazement. “’Tis sure more’n she ever
-saw before in our whole lives put together. Oh,
-the girl’s safely wedded, Sir, beyond a doubt!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>“Sir!” says Percy, sitting at the table, with his
-head low in his hands. “The blackguard’s won
-her from me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I fear so, Sir.” The two men’s hands meet
-and grasp in the silent fashion of their sex: ofttimes
-more eloquent than any words e’er speeched.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Would I had made a hole in his heart that
-night in Lark Lane!” cried Sir Percy next.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin’s nimble, Sir, and knows a trick or
-two with steel, as well as dice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye: a gallant every inch; ’tis for that I hate
-him all the more; and yet, Ken, sometimes, lad,
-when I’ve been a-staring at him from afar, I’ve
-caught something in his countenance resembling
-Peg, and it’s that’s made me halt like a chit at provoking
-of him further.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Kennaston nods. “Aye: I’ve remarked it; but
-held my peace, Percy, for ’tis said man and wife
-often grow to look alike, and I doubt not, sometimes
-begin after the same pattern.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy sighs again: turns up the room with
-drooped lids; in silence getting that grip upon his
-soul which noblest natures insist on with themselves,
-even in crises like his. ’Tis a bitter battle,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>closer fought and quicker, too, than any won or
-lost with swords and guns. The struggle’s writ
-upon his face as he goes; but when he comes his
-victory’s writ there too.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Kennaston,” says he, very quiet and off-hand,
-“I’m thinking I’ll go to the Colonies, to Virginia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What! no!” ejaculates the poet, placing a hand
-on either of his friend’s shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, Ken, dear lad, I could not live in England
-without her; perhaps yonder, over the sea, in
-the new land that’s growing up, I may learn to
-lead a new, better life, just for her sake that’s lost
-to me forever. At the least I can strive, at such a
-distance, to serve my country and my King like a
-man—until the end I’ll pray for comes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Kennaston turns off, with tears in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mostly,” says he brokenly, “were not Peggy my
-twin, I’d be in a ripe mood for a-cursing of her!
-When, Percy?” asks he, after a pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As soon as may be,” is the reply. “I’ve the
-promise of a commission by my uncle’s influence!
-Come, come, lad o’ my heart,” laughs he through
-his own misty eyes. “The wind’s not in my ship’s
-sails yet. I promised Mr. Brummell for his expedition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>to Ivy Dene for the morrow, and I’ll
-hardly be ready in all points to get under way before
-you’re back in town from your visit to Brookwood;
-whence I foresee you’ll fly with Diana’s
-‘yes’ betwixt her kiss on your cheek.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas now Mr. Brummell’s famous and long-talked-about
-party to Ivy Dene this very next day
-that dawned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now, Her Ladyship had vowed to herself that,
-come what might, she would avoid this, even did
-Fate keep her in London. ’Twas no part of her
-program, although she could do it as well as
-any sporting squire, to make for her future any
-such memory as riding a horse astride for thirty
-miles out and back, in the company a half-score
-of gentlemen must furnish; yet, so is each of
-us rather the creature of circumstance than will,
-that the hour appointed found Peg mounted on a
-gray with blood in his veins, and a-pacing down
-Piccadilly to the White Horse beside Beau Brummell’s
-bay.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She could not, with Sir Robin’s murderous pact
-in her perpetual view, make up her mind to omit
-a company that should include Sir Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>It seemed to her that any day spent by him out
-of her sight might prove fatal; that Sir Robin’s
-hirelings might conceive it better to their purpose
-to put an end to their intended victim before the
-Sunday. So, aching with an insane but not unnatural
-impulse to pull rein and confess all; burning
-with shame to remember ’twas of Lady Diana’s
-sweetheart she was thinking; mortified beyond belief
-every time her saddle grazed her breeches;
-intent lest an unsuspected sword should flash
-from the hedge-rows, the sheep-cotes, or the
-shadows of Epstowe Forest, which they traversed
-on their way; My Lady Peggy, wishing amidst all
-this that she had never come to town, yet contrived
-to display a very cheerful mien, to laugh as
-loud as she dared, keeping her high notes cautiously
-to herself, as she had in her speech ever
-since the night, as Sir Robin, she had made her
-first appearance in Lark Lane—to join in jest,
-quip, prank, such as a gay cavalcade of jovial gentlemen
-were then wont to indulge in.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such are some of the strange vicissitudes incident
-to being that most amazingly delicious compound,
-a wilful and withal true-hearted woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>As Mr. Brummell had planned, they halted for
-refreshment at the Merry Rabbit at Market Ossory,
-and left, after a game of bowls on the green, to
-pursue their way. Percy lingered a bit in the
-rear: truth to tell, his reflections were none of the
-gayest, and the presence of the supposed Sir Robin
-McTart, and the conclusion, which, together with
-Ken, he had been forced to reach, that Lady Peggy
-had run off with the Baronet, did not by any means
-conspire to the lightening of his spirits. As he
-watched his presumed rival, heard the ringing
-laugh, the brilliant jest: noted the careless air,
-and thought of this cavalier as Lady Peggy’s lord,
-his choler knew no bounds, and it appeared to him
-that, come what might, he must invent cause of
-quarrel, and one or the other of ’em be left cold on
-the field.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why,” a thousand times he asked himself,
-“this mystery regarding her marriage? Why not
-have wedded Sir Robin from her father’s home,
-and with her father’s blessing, since,” Sir Percy
-reluctantly admitted, “no fault could be found
-with so fine a young gentleman; and his fortune,
-he knew to be considerable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>He was aware that Her Ladyship was romantic
-to a degree, and he could but decide that this
-predilection had caused her to elope and to preserve
-the matter in a wrapping of secrecy for a
-time; no doubt even now from her retirement
-looking forward to the hour when she should
-emerge as Lady McTart!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy gritted his teeth together and struck
-his spurs so deep that his horse gave a plunge
-which brought him up, neck and neck, with the
-gray of the supposed Baronet, and the black of
-Mr. Chalmers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To the rescue, Sir Percy!” cried this one jocularly.
-“Your assistance I beg, and the loan of
-your wits in our argument.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With all my heart!” answers Percy, scenting a
-possible chance to worst his rival, even in a battle
-of words. “What’s the subject?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A truce to ’t!” exclaims the Beau, with an expressive
-shake of his head at Mr. Chalmers, who,
-however, seldom notes any obstacle to the pleasure
-of his present moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No truce at all, Mr. Brummell!” answers he
-gaily. “’Tis—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>“’Tis nothing whatever, Sir Percy,” interrupts
-Lord Escombe, putting his hand on Chalmers’s
-rein, and adding in an undertone: “Gadzooks!
-man, hold your peace. The matter’s like tow and
-tinder betwixt Percy and McTart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Pon my soul, Gentlemen!” now cries Percy,
-“I insist upon Jack’s being allowed to proceed
-with his remarks. If he wants my counsels,
-they’re his. Come, Sir, speak.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis but this,” says Mr. Chalmers. “I say to
-Sir Robin that since the world’s busy with rumors
-of his secret marriage to Lady Peggy Burgoyne;
-since as I learn (by my man, who had it at the
-gate of the very best authority—Gad! Sirs, ’tis a
-fact, even if we don’t relish it, the gist of our
-gossip comes from below stairs, up!) that Lady
-Peggy is from home, her father believing her in
-Kent at her godmother’s!” Mr. Chalmers smiles,
-“her mother being in York, believing her safe at
-Kennaston, I say, My Lords and Gentlemen, it
-behooves Sir Robin confide the matter to his best
-friends, and give them chances to congratulate
-him and the Lady. Have I the right of’t, Percy,
-yes or no?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>Percy is silent for a moment: it seems to him a
-desecration of the sweet, modest and womanly girl
-he has so long adored, thus to hear even her name,
-much less a discussion of her most private matters,
-made into mirthful subject on a morning’s ride.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His anger, too, is great that the man whose
-name is coupled with hers has not already put a
-stop to such a conversation, even were it at the
-point of the sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shall he, here and now, so reply to Mr. Chalmers
-as shall breed an instant retort from Sir Robin,
-and a challenge on the spot? The wild thought
-even flashes through his brain that Sir Robin
-might, by the grace of God! be left dead on the
-ground, and that some time in the dim future he
-might win Peggy back to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, with a tightening rein, he checks himself,
-as well as his horse, as he answers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Chalmers, the Lady you name is one whom
-I honor most deeply, and it seems to me if she has
-seen fit to go into seclusion, or to marry secretly,
-that, while I may wish to God it had been in open
-church! I must continue to respect her preferences,
-until she elects to change them;” with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>which, breaking the little pause of silence which
-follows, Sir Percy gallops ahead, joining Mr.
-Brummell, who has put himself quickly out of the
-commotion he had foreseen as likely to arrive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meantime, it may be correctly imagined that
-Her Ladyship, with all her sex’s exquisite ingenuity
-at plaguing itself whenever it possibly can,
-had seized upon those words of Sir Percy’s most
-easily twisted into a means of self-torture.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I wish to God it had been in open church!”
-instantly stuck itself in her thoughts beside “Consents;”
-the two forming just that species of
-flagellation which ladies so situated in mind are
-wont to inflict upon themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The supposed Sir Robin, from this on, until the
-arrival of the party at Ivy Dene, became taciturn,
-even morose, and not a syllable could be got
-from him in answer to the wildest gibes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her eyes intent upon Sir Percy, who now kept
-to the fore with his host, My Lady Peggy, on the
-keen lookout for the possible assassin, and to the
-tune of “consents,” and its running-mate, “I
-would to God it had been in open church!” put in
-a very dolorous twenty miles; but, on dismounting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>at Mr. Brummell’s doorstep, she endeavored to
-infuse a little joyousness into her looks and speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Indeed, ’twas difficult; yet no more so to-day
-than any other since she had been coerced by circumstances
-into an acceptance of the Beau’s hospitality.
-Every mouthful of bread and meat
-Peggy ate well-nigh choked her, as she remembered
-’twas meant for Sir Robin McTart. She
-felt herself a trickster, a villain of the deepest
-dye, and yet saw no way out of her usurped character
-with honor and repute; no way of keeping
-in it save by the deeper dyeing of her soul in sin,
-which she promised herself, and heaven, to expiate
-as soon as Percy should be safe from Sir Robin’s
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The afternoon was spent as had been planned;
-the country cook’s dinner was voted a perfect success:
-Mr. Chalmers, slightly raised by wine, even
-going so far as to send her down, with his compliments,
-his favorite ruby heart-pin: when, on the
-spot, not a gentleman present but whipped out a
-jewel from ruffle, finger, pocket or fob, and Peggy
-herself tying ’em up in a pocket-napkin laced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>with Brussels and perfumed like the civet-cat, sent
-them down to the astonished lass in the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A game of cards was in order after the repast:
-a tilt at politics: a wager on the question of tea
-in the Colonies; Lady Peggy and Sir Percy keeping,
-by the grace of each, well apart in all these
-encounters; and at twelve o’clock, just as the moon
-was rising behind a bank of splendid star-fringed
-clouds, Mr. Brummell and his guests set forth on
-their homeward road.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The beauty of the night was such as soothes and
-casts its own mantle of peace over even those unquiet
-spirits which may be abroad.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It reminded Lady Peggy, as she rode along, of
-just such another when she and Percy had wandered
-up and down together in the weedy gardens
-at Kennaston. Of that identical night Percy also
-was thinking, and of his wilful Lady’s bright
-sallies, quick smiles, frowns; yea, even of one little
-touch of her red lips, light as thistledown, which
-now he seemed to feel the ghost of, on his forehead.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cavalcade had left the highway some distance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>behind; the moon was fast being overtaken
-by the clouds whence she had, an hour or more
-ago, emerged; the dews fell thick, and the scent
-of the hawthorn was sweet in the air as they
-plunged into Epstowe Forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, Gentlemen,” cried out Mr. Brummell,
-snapping his whip, “by Gad, Sirs, what a night for
-Tom Kidde and his merry men! the skies dark, the
-moon playin’ hide and seek, fifteen watches and
-purses, and as many rings, pins and seals between
-us as you left not at Ivy Dene with my cook
-Elizabeth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ha! ha! ha! No fears of Tom Kidde, an he
-knows our caliber, jumping out upon us!” laughs
-Lord Wootton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife! Sir, he’s the sort of highwayman to
-jump out on the best mettle that strides horse-flesh
-or carries gold. The young devil’s afraid of
-nothing that breathes, and has been the terror of
-travelers now these three or four years gone,” says
-Vane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s not above one-and-twenty, smooth-faced
-as a girl, those say who’ve caught a glimpse of him
-under his mask; dresses like a macaroni, voiced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>like a choir-singer, and nimble as an Indian
-monkey!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Frequents he this neighborhood?” queries Lady
-Peggy, who at mention of the word “highwayman”
-has tightened her rein, clapped a hand on her
-holster, and felt her heart thump, as she involuntarily
-connects it with possible danger to Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That he does,” said Mr. Chalmers. “His den,
-or one of ’em’s somewhere in the depths of Epstowe;
-and no one can tell when or where he’s like
-to turn up next.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When did he turn up last?” says Sir Wyatt,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I can tell you,” returns Vane. “’Twas about
-Candlemas. I was down at home on a visit from
-town, when the news came, almost frightening
-my mother out of her wits, and setting the maids
-a-shivering like so many poppies in a storm. Tom
-Kidde had pounced on Lord Brookwood not a mile
-from his own gates, lifted him off his mount in
-the politest fashion imaginable, rifled His Lordship’s
-pockets, appropriated his weapons, and ridden
-off on his victim’s horse, leaving His Lordship
-tied to a tree at the roadside, where he was found
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>by Biggs, the J.P., the next morning, a-bellowin’
-and a-cursin’ like a wild bull.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A hearty laugh greets Mr. Vane’s description.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, but that ain’t all of’t, My Lords and Gentlemen,”
-continues he.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By no means!” cries Beau Brummell, out of
-his fit of hilarity. “I recall now, that I rode over
-from Lauriston Castle, where I was visiting, that
-very morning, and heard the adventure from
-Brookwood himself. I fancy he had the laugh, or
-will have it some day, on Tom, or some of his men,
-for the stolen mare was none other than His Lordship’s
-famous ‘Homing Nell.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is it possible!” exclaims Sir Percy, “the mare
-that’s been taken off a hundred miles, let loose,
-and finds her way home again; the mare that’s
-been sold and ridden fifty miles away, and then,
-when she felt a hand at her mouth she could
-master, has taken the bit between her teeth, and
-the one in the saddle’s only sometimes been able to
-keep his seat, and let her take him straight back
-whence she came?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The very same ‘Homing Nell.’ Brookwood’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>sure of her getting back sooner or later,” says the
-Beau.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They’ll never catch Tom, though,” cries Escombe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If they do,” remarks Vane, “he’ll hang not two
-hours after he’s bagged; his death-warrant’s been
-lying signed in Mr. Biggs’s pocket-book any time
-this twelvemonth; and there’s still a gibbet standing
-on the hill above Brook-Armsleigh Village!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! Sirs!” exclaims Mr. Chalmers, “what
-a life ’t must be, tho’; sleep o’ days, wake o’ nights,
-prowling under the branches, harkening for game
-from dusk till dawn, all seasons the same, one’s
-heart in one’s mouth, till the hoof’s heard, and
-then a masking dash, a brawl, a thrift quick as the
-lightning’s flash; a corpse or two, and your purse
-the heavier by as many guineas as the game’s had
-under cover—and all to the tune of the owl’s cry,
-and I doubt not for some sweet Maid Marian’s
-sake!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife! hear the boy!” cries Mr. Brummell.
-“One would think him sired by a Jack Sheppard
-rather than by the gentlest Sir that ever lived.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>For your froward tendencies, Sir, you shall pay a
-penalty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yea, yea! a penalty! a penalty!” cry they all.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In what kind?” returns Jack, waving his hat
-over his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A song! a song!” they answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which one?” asks he, nothing loath, for his
-lungs are lusty and his reputation for singing
-above the ordinary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What you will,” they answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, then, what say you to ‘Lady Betty Takes
-the Air,’ since all can join me in the chorus?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Percy,” says Jack, “you’ve a pretty pipe in your
-throat; give me the key, will you? not too high,
-you rascal, I’m not vainglorious at my music.
-So, and, so—there,” as Percy does as he is asked.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When all the May is deck’d about</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With hawthorn bud and blow;</div>
- <div class='line'>When pinkly shows the heather’s tip,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And harebells nod a-row—</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>Lady Betty takes the air,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Sing ah fa, la-la-la!</div>
- <div class='line in4'>With a rush hat on her hair:</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Sing ah fa, la-la-la!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When all the brown earth thrills to green,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>When rivers laugh and sing;</div>
- <div class='line'>When lark and thrush cajole and coax,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And all the wood’s a-wing—</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When Corydon most sad, forlorn,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With wrinkled hose, distraught,</div>
- <div class='line'>All flouted by his worshiped Fair,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Walks forth as one that’s daft,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When, at the turn-stile next the park,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The sad swain stops to sigh—</div>
- <div class='line'>“No lady ever lived so dear</div>
- <div class='line in2'>As she for whom I’d die!”</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When, as the sun walks up the glade,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And as the milkmaid hies</div>
- <div class='line'>Across the paddock with her pails,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And as the lark doth rise—</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>Cries Betty, flaunting past, “Oh fie!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>A gallant all unkempt,</div>
- <div class='line'>Such ungenteel and woful sight</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Kind fortune me exempt!”</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When speaking thus, the May-breeze blew</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Her rush hat o’er the stile,</div>
- <div class='line'>And Corydon caught quick the gaze,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And swift his sigh turned smile,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Thus, when the May is deck’d about</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With hawthorn bud and blow,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sweet Betty ties her hat-strings fast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>A gallant in the bow!</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>’Twas ever thus, dear maids and men,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Whene’er ye walk abroad—</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis e’er the little breeze that blows</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Each lady to her lord!</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Lady Betty takes the air, etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every one joins in the chorus with a hearty good
-will; all save Her Ladyship. Peggy dares not lift
-her woman’s voice, lest Escombe at right, or
-Wootton at her left, shall hear its most unmannish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>lilt. She mouths the words, though, and listens,
-as she has many a time before, to Sir Percy’s
-tones, and wonders if the sentiment is making him
-think of the Lady Diana.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Lady Diana, however, is very far from Sir
-Percy’s imagination. He has been moodily ruminating
-on the possibilities of Tom Kidde (the
-most renowned desperado in all England of that
-day) suddenly bursting upon the party, and leaving
-a corpse behind him—that of Sir Robin McTart!
-He has been picturing to himself the profound
-pleasure it would give him to assist in
-fetching Sir Robin to the nearest church for decent
-burial, and the almost hilarious joy that would be
-his in attending his rival’s body to the grave!
-These were, according to the strict code, most murderous
-thoughts, and yet how pleasant, if how
-altogether unprofitable they were also.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Chalmers is in the midst of his last verse,
-his voice echoing into, and back, from the depths
-of the great green wood; there is not a wisp of the
-moon visible by this, and no light, save the halo
-from her beauty which lines and rims the vast
-masses of clouds above them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>Peggy is listening to the song; she hears it well:
-also the crunch of her horse’s hoofs on the narrow
-path; also, the crackle of the fresh twigs as they
-snap before the advance; and too, so sharp are her
-ears, the sleepy cheep of some disturbed bird in
-its nest, and, what else?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What is this curious stealthy stir, far-off, and
-creeping nearer in the wood?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, hark! Peggy puts her hand to her ear to
-hear a subdued whistle, sweet, tuneful, underbreath,
-but patent to her sense, and too, to Sir
-Percy’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before either can move, or, indeed, had as yet
-gathered the impulse of even self-defense, into the
-midst of Mr. Chalmers and the rest, with their
-chorus, dashes a company of riders in masks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A shot, low-aimed, and merely intended as a
-slight warning of what may be expected, should
-occasion demand, strikes the ground at Her Ladyship’s
-right.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With remorse and reparation at his heart-strings—’tis
-the kind of man who could be but generous
-to his worst enemy—Sir Percy’s horse is flung betwixt
-the supposed Sir Robin and the band.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>“Good evening, My Lords and Gentlemen,” says
-the leader, in a voice like a lute. “I thank you
-heartily for coming my way! Purses and watches,
-merry Sirs, jewels, trinkets, snuff-boxes, if of gold,
-pins, fobs, seals, these are all the toll I demand,
-and shall be forced to collect, if you show any disposition
-to deny.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It might he wisely argued that, while this speech
-was being made, any gentleman might have either
-run the highwayman through, or put an ounce of
-lead into his heart, but the fact of the matter was,
-each gentleman found himself face to face with
-another gentleman who held a blunderbuss up to
-within three inches of his nose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>My Lady’s first thought had been that Sir
-Robin’s men had not waited for the Sunday night
-to come, but presently she recognized the truth,
-and, stung by the fact that Sir Percy had put
-himself between her and danger, she was the only
-one of the whole company who stirred in her saddle
-other than to do the bidding of Tom Kidde.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the rest were busily engaged in emptying
-their treasures, she, making feint to do the same,
-says very low and tauntingly to Sir Percy:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>“Had I but one to show fight with me, I’d ne’er
-give in to these scoundrels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As soon done as said, Sir Robin,” whispers
-Percy. “No man can say I’m his lesser in courage!”
-with which he wrests his bridle from the
-blackguard whose hand’s upon it, whips out his
-sword with one hand, picks out his pistol with the
-other, grips his reins in his teeth, and strikes with
-steel and shot, both at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg’s his match, imitating him with such a will
-as sets every gentleman of ’em a-shooting, a-lunging
-and a-cursing with all the arms and breath he’s
-got; and sets the robbers for a second to their wits,
-for they are not used to any sort of encounter, save
-one that’s terror-stricken and submissive in the
-opponent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Tis a bit of a mêlée quite in the dark; slashing
-and pounding betwixt the branches: now a man
-unhorsed, anon up again; shots resounding, powder
-flashing, until in about ten minutes or less
-the chief makes a plunge for Sir Percy, crying out,</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So ’twas you said ‘fight,’ was’t! Have a care;
-no man can defy Tom Kidde and live to tell it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay!” shouts Her Ladyship, with spurs all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>inches into the gray’s sides, making him rear as
-she puts herself between Percy and the highwayman,
-“’twas I said ‘fight’!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whizz! and a ball intended for Sir Percy strikes
-the gray dead under her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whizz! and her ball strikes Tom Kidde from
-his mount.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In less time than it takes to tell it, Peg was
-straight in the highwayman’s saddle; he was
-picked up by two of his men, bleeding, set before
-one of ’em, and off: My Lords and Gentlemen find
-themselves once more alone in the midst of Epstowe
-Forest, a-crawling about on their hands and
-knees a-gathering up their spilled guineas and
-trinkets by flash of tinder-box.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy, trying to explain to them who had
-been the means of their recovering their valuables
-and of putting the desperadoes to flight, cries out:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I tell you! we owe’t all to Sir Robin here!
-’Slife, Gentlemen, I’d not have ventured to think
-of resistance had it not been for him. ’Twas he
-said, close in my ear, ‘fight,’ and by Gad! Sirs,
-he’s lost more’n any of us; the horse shot under
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>“The gray’s well lost teaching Tom Kidde he
-can’t terrify all the men in England,” answers the
-Beau from his sprawling search after his diamond
-snuff-box.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ho, Sir Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin!” Sir
-Wyatt shouts it out, and the rest of the company
-take it up with a long, mellow cadence that echoes
-for a mile.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Answer man, for, by the faith, if we can’t
-pledge you here in anything but a lap of May-dew
-out of a primrose leaf, we’ll drink you such a
-bumper, an we reach the White Horse, as never
-was filled before! London’ll toast you at every
-dinner-table in Mayfair. Odzooks, Sir, were you
-the fashion yesterday, what will you be to-morrow!”
-This from Escombe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is Sir Robin?” asks Percy. “He was
-beside me not five seconds since, but now, by my
-tinder, nor yet by the coming dawn, can I descry
-him,” shading his eyes with his hand and peering
-about, for of a truth ’tis close to four o’clock, and,
-notwithstanding the heavy clouds, the east begins
-to thrill with the touch of day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Robin! Sir Robin! Ho, now! Think not to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>play a trick on us and presently spring from a
-greenwood tree,” says Wootton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin,” exclaims Percy loudly, “I pray you
-answer and leave not your friends to imagine evil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut, ‘evil’,” puffs the Beau, rising from his
-knees. “Evil’ll never happen to him. Zounds!
-but my legs ache! He’s laughing in his sleeve
-now, hard by; Robin’s not one to court notice or
-praise—as modest a youth as I ever beheld.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Worthy of Lady Peggy Burgoyne even, I suppose?”
-says Mr. Chalmers mischievously, as he
-adjusts his recovered fob. “I could embrace him
-for the rendering of me back my watch, but I think
-him a fool to eschew good company and make
-home alone to town.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Jack,” says Percy, low, “I like not his quitting
-of us. ’Twas too sudden. I believe I’ll go a-hunting
-him,” pulling his rein as the cavalcade
-once more prepared to start.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where?” asks Jack. “Bah! be not such a
-ninny; belike he’s off to his Lady, to win kisses off
-her lips by the rehearsal of his prowess. An a
-man chooses to flee me, I let him: do you the same,
-Percy; ’tis a good advice, I promise you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>“But suppose those devils attack him again when
-alone?” says this one, not all reassured, as he and
-Jack linger a bit in the rear of their companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go to the devil!” remarks Mr. Chalmers,
-blithely. “I’m for breakfast at the White Horse,
-and for leavin’ the hero of the hour to eat his
-where he sees fit. He’s safe enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve a misgiving,” answers de Bohun, “and he
-risked his life for mine to-night. I’ll strike off
-here to the west and join you when I find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good luck to you for a fool!” laughs Jack,
-putting spurs and going on to tell this news to the
-others.</p>
-
-<div id='i_180fp' class='figcenter id010'>
-<img src='images/i_180fp.jpg' alt='The instant that Lady Peggy...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The instant that Lady Peggy felt herself in the
-highwayman’s saddle, she knew from long acquaintance
-with every colt Bickers had bred,
-raised, or broke, since she was six, that her wrists
-had met their match. Before she had time to
-utter a word, turn her head, or think, she felt the
-warm flesh under her quiver with that recovering
-impulse which horsemen know so well; that streak
-of untamed and untamable nature which lies,
-however deep-hidden, in every four-foot that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>breathes, and which never fails to spurt to the
-front when it gets exactly the right chance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy’s light, nay, by this, weak hand, now gave
-the big black its chance, and with a snort, a toss
-of its head, and a vicious swell of its sides, it laid
-back its ears, took the bit between its teeth as if it
-had been a mess of oats, and reared a length on its
-forelegs: when, finding its rider still on, it started
-on a run which Her Ladyship had not the slightest
-power to check. All she could do was to keep her
-seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Like a flash, out of the forest on to the width of
-the heath, plume waving, sword flapping, laces
-rippling, curls flying; the mare’s mane slapping
-in her face; legs and arms and will all at work to
-stop the beast or bring it into some sort of subjection.
-To no purpose. The black head now
-low, as if picking up a scent from the turf it tore;
-now up, as though snuffing its goal from afar, the
-mare skirted the heath, gained the meadows; over
-hedges where the birds rose in flocks behind its
-heels; ditches, where the muddy waters splashed
-over Her Ladyship’s satin clothes: here a bolt into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>an orchard, leaving a ribbon a-hanging on a limb;
-over the wall like a rocket, and, at breakneck gait,
-through a hamlet, rousing the people out of their
-beds to peep at pane, and wonder. Slap-dash into
-a pasture, scattering ewes and lambs like wool before
-the wind, taking a five-bar into a common,
-thence to highway; scampering a footbridge to
-leave it shivered behind them, and all Peg’s
-thought just a brave prayer to be kept alive, so that
-she might not fail of foiling Sir Robin’s men Sunday
-night!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Where she was going, she knew not. Where she
-was, she had no smallest idea when, as the sun
-looked over the long low line of horizon before her,
-she with a shudder beheld a gibbet outlined against
-the morning sky. The black gave a lunge that
-knocked her feet out of the stirrups (quick in
-again), reared, whinnied like a devil, and, nose to
-ground, now made her rider understand that up to
-the present she had done nothing much in the way
-of speed, or of efforts at emptying the saddle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet Her Ladyship stuck on, with flying colors,
-too, and no loss of either wig, hat, weapon or will,
-and with grateful heart she now found herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>being spun across a magnificent park, where the
-deer fled before her, it is true, but at the upper end
-of which she saw looming the turrets and towers of
-a fine castle.</p>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XI—Wherein Lady Peggy is condemned to be hanged...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_051.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Wherein Lady Peggy is condemned to be</em></div>
- <div><em>hanged, and sets forth, attended by the</em></div>
- <div><em>clergy, for the gallows.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Although Sir Percy had cheerfully foretold for
-Kennaston the roseate picture of Lady Diana’s
-“Yes” crowning the young poet’s somewhat diffident
-suit with untold happiness, the fact was quite
-other. Her Ladyship, on the day of Mr. Brummell’s
-party to Ivy Dene, having overheard the
-Honorable Dolly Tarleton, in the library, laying
-six to four to Lady Biddy O’Toole, that their
-host’s daughter was “only waiting for the beautiful
-young poet’s asking, to jump into his arms
-immediately,” did, with such sudden change of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>demeanor from sweets to sours, languishing eyes
-to averted looks, smiles to pouts, corner chats to
-open flouts, put her lover into a state of mind, the
-like of which he presently described, as only he
-could, in a copy of verses, which the next night at
-White’s were pronounced to be, indeed, “the masterpiece
-of one whose heart pants, whose whole
-being’s but at the beck and call of her who wears a
-smocked petticoat, ogles with a witching eye, and
-should be vain that so much genius lays itself at
-her feet, to wit, Lady D——a W——n.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For, taking immediate fright at his Lady’s coldness,
-Kennaston had ordered a post-chaise from
-the Brookwood Arms, and without a word of farewell
-to Lady Diana, save that embodied in an ode,
-“To Chloe When Unkind,” which her woman
-found pinned to Her Ladyship’s cloak when she
-was putting it on her shoulders the following
-morning, had gone to town, and just in time at the
-White Horse to be haled into Mr. Brummell’s
-party for breakfast, and to learn of the adventure
-with Tom Kidde, the valor of Sir Robin McTart,
-and the absence of that young gentleman, as also
-Sir Percy, from the board.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>When Lady Diana’s woman hooked her mistress’s
-cloak about her ’twas at five o’clock in the morning,
-and of the party at the Castle every lady’s woman
-was performing the same office, adding hood over
-curls and puffs, and sticking the finest of cambric
-pocket-napkins into their mistress’ hands by the
-half dozens; for ’twas easily seen that such early
-rising could be for no other cause than to go forth
-to bathe their Ladyships’ faces in the May-dew;
-the which, when gathered from little copses and
-shadowy nooks before the sun had yet shone
-upon’t, was warranted to enhance that beauty
-which was already evident, and to create those
-charms which, alas! are occasionally lacking.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Diana spelled out her lover’s verses as best
-she could, tripping from door to door, and calling
-her young companions from their mirrors; sending
-a footman and a page to summon the gallants who
-were to accompany them in their expedition, and
-laughing heartily as she made out more from a
-footman than from Kennaston’s muse that he had
-betaken himself to town rather than longer incur
-her displeasure and her frowns.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Bless me, but my suitor’s in a fine pickle!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>Lud! though, I’m not disposed to have these
-hussies a-laying six to four on my bein’ ready to
-jump at his offer; still, I’d rather he’d stopped
-over, or else that some one most amusin’ were here;
-for instance Sir Robin McTart, which is not to
-be!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then a-rapping at the doors, and laughter
-from girlish lips; pattering of heels down the
-hall and stair-case; out to meet the gentlemen,
-bowing and complimenting on the terrace; over
-the lawns, and through the flower-gardens, and
-past the offices and stables, where Lord Brookwood,
-even thus early, was sunning himself in the yard,
-and talking over county matters with Mr. Biggs,
-J.P.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where to? Where to?” sings out His Lordship
-cheerily with hat in hand, and Mr. Biggs
-down to the ground before so much beauty, fashion
-and rank.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Off to the copse, father,” calls back Diana, “to
-gather the May-dew and wash our faces; when we
-come back you must tell us all how much more
-beautiful we are to-day than we were yesterday!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With which lively sally Lady Diana and the rest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>of ’em are crossing the hill and laughing as they
-pass out of sight on their two miles’ away walk to
-Armsleigh Copse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lord Brookwood is about to resume his conversation
-with Biggs, while the half-dozen grinning
-stable boys, behind His Lordship’s back, are
-rubbing their fists in the wet turf of a paddock,
-and smearing their red faces with the dew, the
-head-groom touching them up with a lash; when
-a whinny, that sets every animal in the stalls and
-out of ’em a-replying, sets all the cocks crowing,
-hens cackling, chicks peeping, dogs barking, geese
-squawking, smites their startled ears, and yonder,
-hilly-o-ho! Sirs; in a cloud of upturned soil, in a
-shower of splash from the river, with a thud on
-the wooden bridge, a bound over the stone wall
-of the kitchen garden; comes a black with nigh
-every tooth in its mouth bared, foaming, smoking,
-bloody; rider bent double to saddle’s bow, clinging
-with legs and arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Homing Nell and the highwayman! Tom
-Kidde! Tom Kidde!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Homing Nell!” the shout goes up from every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>throat there, from His Lordship to the ’ostlers and
-boys.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tom Kidde! Tom Kidde!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By Gad! Sir,” cries the Earl. “I knew Nell’d
-come back sooner or later! Surround him. Bag
-him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy hears the shouts as the ungovernable
-steed lunges, lurches, rears beneath her spurs and
-still tightly gripped reins; she takes in the situation,
-but not to its full import, until she now hears
-the voice of Biggs uplifted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lord Brookwood! Lord Brookwood! mind her
-heels, My Lord, mind her heels! Leave the takin’
-of the damned cut-purse to me and the boys!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the word “Brookwood,” Her Ladyship realizes
-that she is on the domains of Lady Diana’s
-father! and being mistaken for a Knight of the
-Road!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The latter she felt she could easily abide, and
-as easily refute; but the former was more than even
-her spent spirit could stand. So, as Biggs, His
-Lordship, the grooms, the stable-boys and ’ostlers
-and helpers all formed into a ring with whips,
-canes, stones and halloos to take her prisoner, she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>plucked up courage from the depths, and, raising
-herself in her saddle and her head in the air, with
-one superhuman tug at the bridle and prick with
-the steels, she made to get off! and away! But Her
-Ladyship’s nerve was not the equal of Homing
-Nell’s, nor yet to be pitted with success against the
-waving arms and jumping legs of a dozen stout
-men. With the final crack of the head-groom’s
-lash about her heels, with the pop in the air above
-her hat of Mr. Biggs’s blunderbuss, caught from
-the hand of one of the lads, “Homing Nell” was
-brought to a quivering stand-still, and My Lady
-Peggy to bay in the stable-yard of Brookwood
-Castle!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ha!” cries the Earl, “my pretty fellow, you’re
-trapped at last! The night you stole the black
-mare from me I shouted after you, as well as the
-gag at my mouth would permit, that she’d bring
-you no luck, and that muscles of iron wouldn’t
-hold her the day she made up her mind to get
-home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy, glad of the use of her lungs once more,
-and now nigh bursting with laughter at being so
-glibly mistook for one of the most reckless fellows
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>in all England, took off her hat, bowed low, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Lord Brookwood, ’tis, I believe, I have the
-honor of addressing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ho! ho! ho!” Mr. Biggs, from a survey of the
-saddle-bow now bursts out in triumphant joyfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Od’s blood, My Lord! but here’s luck, here’s
-justice, here’s what comes of my bein’ here when I
-am!” and Mr. Biggs now holds aloft upon the
-point of his stick the black mask of Master Tom
-Kidde, which the rogue had dropped when he was
-hit, and which had caught and hung by its riband
-from that moment to this, unseen by Lady Peg.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Highwayman! highwayman! highwayman!”
-yells every lung in the place, while the whole dozen,
-including His Lordship and the Justice, threaten
-Lady Peggy with their cudgels, lashes and stones.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I pray ye, My Lord, Gentlemen, and good fellows!”
-cries she, remembering now the entire history
-of the animal she bestrides, as rehearsed some
-six hours earlier by Beau Brummell and Mr. Vane.
-“I am no highwayman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A groan of derision greets this announcement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>“Nay, but the rather am I the victim of Tom
-Kidde, than he himself! Together with a party
-of my friends, being at mid-night last, on the
-return from a visit to Mr. Brummell’s seat, Ivy
-Dene, we were set upon by the rogues in the midst
-of Epstowe Forest; I had the luck, both good and
-bad, to put a ball into Tom, to get my horse shot
-under me, and to mount the scoundrel’s steed, the
-which has brought me to Your Lordship’s door,
-and the mare, herself, to where she belongs, it
-seems!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A damned fine story, ’fore George!” exclaims
-Biggs, laughing triumphantly, now holding up two
-watches, three rings, a diamond snuff-box, a seal,
-two magnificent pins, and a most splendid jeweled
-stomacher, high above his head in the tip of the
-sunshine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath!” cried Lord Brookwood, seizing one
-of the trinkets and examining it with his spy-glass.
-“What’s this? ‘Percy de Bohun, Christmas from
-his aff. mother,’” reads His Lordship. Then another,
-“‘Wyatt Lovell souvenir of Italy!’ Gad,
-Biggs,” looking Her Ladyship over, where she still
-sits atop of the steaming black, “we’ve got the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>cursed blackguard this time! What else in his
-saddle pockets? aught?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These Biggs, assisted by the head-groom, is energetically
-emptying of a miscellaneous collection of
-valuables, while Lady Peggy looks on in amazement
-as yet only flavored with amusement, and one
-more vain regret for her abandoned petticoats.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, My Lord, these thousands of pounds’
-worth,” replied the Justice, holding aloft his
-treasure trove; “and it’ll be a short shrift for the
-devil, I can say that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hark ye,” now says Her Ladyship, as she recalls
-with a not unnatural tremor the death-warrant
-she had heard was lying to hand in Mr.
-Biggs’s pocket. “Lord Brookwood, I am no highwayman;
-my story is true; I am”—the words
-stuck in Peggy’s throat; she coughed, the stable
-boys tittered; then the head-groom tilted the saddle
-and spilled her out of it to the ground; at a
-word from Biggs, a couple of the men tied her,
-hand and foot, with a stout rope, and a pair of
-farming reins about her middle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now who do you call yourself, my fine fellow?”
-says His Lordship.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>“Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent!” cries
-Peggy, glad to be able to answer without the lie
-direct. “And I demand instant freedom and immunity,”
-cries she, tortured and quivering beneath
-the rude hands and ruder gibes of the grooms and
-’ostlers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Demand away! my pretty buck-skin, with your
-jeweled hilt!” returns Biggs, stripping the weapon
-from her thigh. “Your satin breeches and gold-laced
-waistcoat! ’Tain’t no use denyin’ you your
-speech, and your will to palaver on whatever matter
-you will, for before the clock strikes eight,
-you’ll be home with your father in hell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut, Mr. Biggs,” says His Lordship. “Call
-Mr. Frewen, the Curate, he’s at his studies in the
-library, we havin’ sat late over our cards last night;
-and let him have his prayer-book to hand, open at
-the page for malefactors after condemnation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go, you, Michael,” this to one of the now awestruck
-lads hanging, staring at Peg over the paddock
-paling. “Ask Mr. Frewen to come quickly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But this is monstrous, Sir!” cries Her Ladyship,
-now thoroughly alarmed, and near to losing
-her wits betwixt her endeavors to keep up her man’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>estate, her contempt of her own frowardness, her
-shame at being thus at the mercy of her rival’s
-parent, and her actual terror of her position.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I do beseech you, I am an honest person, my
-tale is true. Is it not but the justice due to any
-subject of His Majesty’s, however humble, that he
-should not be condemned before he is tried, or
-even his identity proven?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll be sworn, My Lord,” exclaims Biggs, “’tis
-a voice and air to wheedle fine ladies out of their
-stomachers and chains, but not to tempt the law.
-Sirrah!” he continues, addressing himself to Her
-Ladyship, who is by this firmly tied to a post like
-a colt about to be broken to harness. “’Tain’t no
-use for you to be imaginin’ as justice and His
-Majesty ain’t a-doing their best for you. Here
-have you been a terror to all God-fearing, law-abiding
-Englishmen any time these half-dozen of years.
-A-poundin’ every heath in England, Hornslow,
-Bagshott, and all the commons, Wimbledon,
-Wandsworth, Finchley; a-hulking in Epstowe with
-your mates, and making the lives of travelers a
-burden most horrible; ain’t you secreted uncountable
-pounds’ worth of plunder in your devilish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>caves and dens? Haven’t you left the earth
-strewed with corpses in your ugly path? Answer
-me, Sir!” and Mr. Biggs stamps his foot on the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Sir!” shouts Peg, “I ain’t and haven’t, and
-I’m not! ’Slife, My Lord Brookwood,” cries she
-in a terrible way, twisting her tied hands together.
-“For God’s sake, send up to town post-haste, and
-find out Mr. Brummell, Mr. Vane, Mr. Chalmers,
-Lord Escombe, Sir Lovell Wyatt!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But His Lordship has turned up the path toward
-the Castle and met Mr. Frewen, to whom he is
-explaining the necessities of the situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Tis such a fair May day, with bud and blossom,
-bough and bird; fowls, men, beasts, all free of
-tether, and My Lady is like to weep; cry out her
-sex, her very name and estate, as she feels the gall
-upon her wrists and ankles, and knows what fate
-awaits her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She even, for one weak moment, thinks she will
-implore Lord Brookwood to send up to London
-for her rival, his own daughter, Lady Diana, and
-let her come down and tell him who is Sir Robin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>McTart—for Lady Peggy believes Lady Di to be
-in town and has no knowledge to the contrary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet, there in the stable-yard, with imprisonment
-as she supposes, and even death dangling for her
-at no great loss of time, with her liberty gone;
-her word no better than a thief’s; with no earthly
-hand upraised to sustain her, My Lady Peggy’s
-stout heart does not flutter to dismay. For that
-one brief instant ’tis, without doubt, in her mind
-to confess and fling herself upon the mercy of the
-Earl and the Curate, who now draw nigh; but
-when she reflects upon the monstrous tissue of her
-deceits, and the unutterable shame of the exposure
-of the cause of them, ’tis then she is like to whimper,
-but for naught else.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Frewen approaches; ’tis a young man of a
-pale cadaverous countenance, whose first bow to a
-highwayman is indeed, though he find him in
-durance vile, a timid one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The supposed Tom Kidde gives the man of the
-cloth eye for eye, so that this one quails and
-stumbles in his speech; and finally, leaving in the
-rear all his preconceived plans for a hasty reformation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>he promptly remarks, opening his prayer-book
-to the riband:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You know your doom, Mr. Kidde; shall I pray
-for you here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Faith!” says Lady Peggy, plucking up heart,
-once her resolution is taken not to reveal her secret,
-come what may. “I do not know my doom, Sir!
-It seems sufficient ‘doom’ for an honest English
-gentleman, who has met with a mishap, to be
-brought to a nobleman’s threshold and get foul
-treatment rather than welcome. Pray for me, Sir,
-an you will, there’s none so much deserves or needs
-it. Pray on!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Frewen!” beckons His Lordship, as he watches
-the ’ostlers rubbing down the restored Homing
-Nell, and confers with Mr. Biggs as to the plunder
-and the meting out of justice. “Frewen, gain the
-wretch’s confidence an you can, the whereabouts of
-all the gold and jewels he has stolen; my watch.
-And also, if he have wife or child, it might not be
-amiss, eh, Biggs? to inquire if he have any message
-for them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, My Lord” puts in the pompous Biggs,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>up-looking from his perusal of a long, sealed, important-appearing
-parchment, unrolled before his
-eyes. “By ascertaining their whereabouts, we
-should perhaps get the clue to all the bloody rascal’s
-pelf.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A combination of Christian charity and official
-shrewdness, which commended itself highly to His
-Lordship, as he sent the Curate back to the comforting
-of the malefactor across the yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hark ye, Mr. Kidde,” says Mr. Frewen, lowering
-his voice, and, for the credit of his soul, with
-gentleness at his heartstrings.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m not Mr. Kidde, I tell you, I swear’t!” says
-Her Ladyship firmly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, well,” says the man of the Church, “mayhap
-that’s an assumed name; but surely, now, Sir,
-with not two hours of life left you, to me, me alone,
-Sir, it were wiser drop all disguises. Surely now
-you are not Sir Robin McTart?” in a soothing
-and sorrowful tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy winces.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go seek and ask all the noblemen and gentlemen
-I’ve named, Sir, they’ll quickly set me to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>rights in your eyes, I pledge you. Oh, Sir, for
-the love of God!” cries she, whispering very low.
-“I speak the truth! I am no highwayman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am used to quibbles, Mr. Kidde; I know that
-now you are no robber, but merely a prisoner under
-sentence of death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What!” cries she. “’Tis not possible that a
-man is taken, tried, disallowed to prove himself,
-and put out of the world, betwixt sunrise and
-breakfast, in the reign of His Majesty George the
-Third!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis so,” answers the Curate, pulling the rope
-and leathers, and pushing Her Ladyship around a
-bit toward the east, as he points what he considers
-a salutary finger. “Yonder’s the gibbet, Mr.
-Kidde, and from it you must hang by eight. I
-implore of you now—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy’s eyes are fastened upon the arms
-and cross-beams of the gallows, which are outlined
-clearly against the deep blue sky, and full in the
-shine of the spring sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well,” says she to herself, all in a flash, as
-thoughts can travel three abreast ofttimes, and
-twelve times quicker than the scrivener can set
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>’em down—“I’ve been a very accursedly wicked
-girl; but, thank God! my pride ain’t all gone yet.
-I’ll hang! but I’ll never give up my secret! When
-I’m gone, if they find it out—I won’t be here to be
-a-hearin’ of the taunts and jeers and sympathies;
-and of my mother’s and father’s sorrows!” At
-this point Peggy is very near to tears, when the
-Curate says, interrupting their possible flow:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, Mr. Kidde, if you have any message for—your
-wife—perhaps?” he ejaculates hesitatingly,
-and with good knowledge that the marriage ceremony
-was one usually omitted from the code of
-gentlemen of the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have no wife!” cries Her Ladyship, in a heat
-betwixt her remorse for her parents and the unconscious
-ridiculousness of Mr. Frewen’s question.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Or it might be,” suggests this one with a sigh,
-“you have a little child, Mr. Kidde—?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Sir,” says My Lady very low and quick.
-“That I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A dear friend and comrade?” pursues the
-Curate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, I have,” answers she, for during all this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>hour just past, a thousand thoughts have come to
-Peggy about Sir Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah,” responds Frewen joyously. “Now tell
-me where he’s to be found, and entrust me with the
-message, and be assured all will be carried out to
-your wishes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thank you,” says Peggy. “Free my right hand
-if you will; give me something to write with, and
-the leaf out of your prayer-book, and I’ll ask you
-the favor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Curate, under the strict superintendence of
-Biggs, who has all this while been dispatching boys
-on horses, hither and yon, to notify the quality and
-the country side both, that Tom Kidde’s been taken
-and will hang at eight from the gibbet a-top of
-Armsleigh Hill, loosens Her Ladyship’s arm of the
-thong, and gives her a leaf and a pencil with the
-top of the post for a support.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To Sir Percy de Bohun, Charlotte Street, London,”
-writes she. “plese An you lov God And The
-Kinge goe not evar Again toe walke onne The dove
-peere at The Bottomme of littel Boye yarde
-Their isse onne swares Toe Kille you &amp; you doe
-This isse writ bye onne now noe more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Her Ladyship folds the scrap of paper over and
-over; hands back the pencil to Mr. Frewen; and
-then she says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir, will you promise me on that Book you’re
-holding in your hand, you’ll not look at this or
-send it until I’m dead?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I will,” answers the young man, more touched
-than he cares to admit, even to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And further,” says she, “will you pledge me
-your word it shall reach him it’s intended for before
-this time Sunday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I will,” is the reply, “unless it be in the depths
-of Epstowe and inaccessible to my horse or myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis in London, Sir, and quite accessible. ’Tis
-a warning for life and death, and I’ll count you
-fail me not, nor him whose life you’d be the
-means of saving.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I pledge my word, Mr. Kidde,” replies the
-Curate, backing away to make room for Justice
-Biggs, and with the very laudable sensation in his
-mind that he is to be the instrument of preserving
-some unknown from the clutches of the doubtless
-repentant outlaw’s own men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>In less than five minutes after, Biggs had marshaled
-his cavalcade and rode forth of the stable-yard
-of Brookwood Castle; his white cob at the
-head, a-holding in his left hand the duly signed
-warrant for the execution of one Thomas Kidde.
-Following him, strode the hastily summoned Master
-William Lambe, the butcher, who was to do
-duty as hangman (sooth to say, hangings were
-rare in this county, and there was no one appointed
-by law to the office, it being thus left to the discretion
-of the Justice).</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Earl, mounted, rode next with a dozen of
-his servants, and in the midst of these My Lady
-Peggy, astride of the black once more, but with
-face to tail, hands tied together, and no hat to her
-head; Mr. Frewen at her side walking; a motley
-crowd growing and gathering at every step, about
-her, of gaping, wondering, jubilant and curious
-persons of all ages, sexes, and conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Never a whimper out of My Lord, the Earl of
-Exham’s only daughter. A set rigid look about the
-drawn lips, and an unearthly pallor shining
-through all the dark stains Her Ladyship had
-been a-using of late.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>Not a word did she say, save to ask Mr. Frewen
-to read the Declaration of Absolution or Remission
-of Sins out of his prayer-book as they went; which
-he did under his breath, and much jolted by the
-rough highway, which now the procession had
-gained; and likewise laying much unction to his
-soul that, in so short a space of time, his comfortable
-ministrations had produced so seeming
-abundant godly results!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When he had finished Her Ladyship said,
-“Amen,” and thereafter held up her head with that
-courage which is born of one of two things, conscious
-innocence or a profound repentance for sins,
-which, while to others they may appear puerile,
-to the offender are worthy of the wrath of the
-Creator and the condemnation of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She noted the hawthorn in the hedges, the dew
-upon the turf; the tall mawkin swaying in the
-wind in the middle of a newly sown field; and, as
-her lids raised, the mustering crowds, all with
-steps bent, and greedy eyes fixed, yonder to the
-hill-top where the gibbet stood, and where the new
-rope dangled for her neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet she made no sign.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>Not even when she heard the rabble laying their
-groats and sixpences, that Kidde would, or
-wouldn’t “die game.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_015.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XII—Rehearseth how, in the very nick o’ time'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Rehearseth how, in the very nick o’ time,</em></div>
- <div><em>Her Ladyship’s neck is saved from</em></div>
- <div><em>the noose by Sir Percy.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>As yet, in the depths of Armsleigh Copse, no
-news of the supposed highwayman’s capture had
-penetrated, although the Earl, with commendable
-foresight in behalf of the entertainment of his
-young daughter and her companions, had sent a
-messenger to impart the sight shortly to be had;
-the messenger, having a sweetheart in the other direction,
-must needs go apprise her first! So the
-gay Ladies and their cavaliers sat on fallen logs,
-strolled hither and yon, knelt to sop their bits of
-linen in the dewy hollows, laughed, chatted, dabbed
-their faces, now lacking any coat of crimson, save
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>that which Nature might have vouchsafed, and
-made great show of a fine rural simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“La!” cried the Honorable Dolly. “Water
-hasn’t touched my face before since know I not
-when!” pecking at her cheeks with the corner of
-her pocket-napkin. “But it has a monstrous refreshing
-sensation!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Doll, ’tis not thus and so you must apply
-it, as ’twere some French essence worth its weight
-in guineas; but look!” cried Lady Diana, flopping
-down and burying her face in a bath of the dew-drops,
-and laughing as she looks up dripping.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s the way, faith,” coincides Lady Biddy,
-scrubbing her own round cheeks with her wrung
-out linen, then both fists into her blue eyes to dry
-off the winkers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife, Ladies!” exclaims one of the gentlemen,
-“but you almost tempt us to follow your example.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hither, ye gossoon,” answers Lady Biddy, “an’
-I’ll be afther makin’ your countenance shine.
-Hark! Hoofs!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hoofs! Hoofs!” cry all these fair ones, a-darting
-this way and that, stuffing their napkins into
-their bodices, as a courteous voice, with a—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“By your leave, Ladies and Sirs!” greets them,
-and none other than Sir Percy, self and horse
-spent in his fruitless search for the supposed Sir
-Robin, emerges from the bridle-path across the
-common, at the edge of the copse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The top of the morning to you, Sir Percy de
-Bohun,” laughs Lady Biddy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Percy!” exclaims Lady Diana, “prithee, what
-are you doing out of doors at this hour?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Seeking May-dew! mayhap,” suggests the Honorable
-Dolly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But nay, Your Ladyships,” returns he. “I am
-seeking Sir Robin McTart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And forthwith Sir Percy proceeds to give them
-a history of the adventures of the night, omitting
-no smallest detail of the prowess of Sir Robin.
-He has just concluded his recital amid a burst of
-tumultuous “Ohs! ahs! Luds!” and a vast deal of
-commiserating sympathy, and a monstrous collection
-of pretty oaths and curses for Tom Kidde,
-when into the center of this colloquy jumps Lord
-Brookwood’s messenger, nudging his sweetheart
-behind a tree, to tell as best he can his errand. To
-bid all the company at once to see the sight, it now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>not lacking more than the quarter to the hour
-when Mr. Lambe will adjust the noose, and send
-one of the boldest and most courtly young outlaws
-of his day a-swinging to his deserts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This information, it may be imagined, was received
-with acclaim of all, and by Sir Percy with
-positive joy; his only regret, as, dismounting and
-leading his jaded horse, he walked at Lady Diana’s
-side, being that Sir Robin had so contrived to give
-them the slip, and not even to have the happiness
-of witnessing justice done the rogue who had so
-near deprived him of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here’s to drive off the vapors an any one had
-’em!” cried the lively Lady Biddy, swinging her
-hat by its ribands. “And sure’n it’s not believed
-I’ll be, when I get home to County Cork and tell
-’em I saw a highwayman strung up!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Faith, Di,” says Sir Percy, “’twas a lucky
-chance for the whole country when the rascal made
-off with your father’s famous black!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That was it!” answered she. “The time always
-comes when no man’s muscle on earth can hold
-Homing Nell; and ’twas a fine fortune, by my
-life! when Tom Kidde essayed to ride her. ’Twas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>a wonder he didn’t jump and run for his life,
-though,” adds she thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! there’s a sort of devil-may-care humor
-in the composition of those fellows that keeps ’em
-sticking in any saddle they leap into, until the
-beast’s bestridden that can throw them out of it.
-They’re so used to taking chances, I doubt if they
-ever dream of danger until it’s too late!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When’ll we see the gibbet?” asks the Honorable
-Dolly, panting with her quick pace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Soon,” answers Lady Di.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ochone, an’ I hope we’ll not be afther bein’ too
-late to see it all!” chimes in Lady Biddy short-breathed
-too.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Percy,” says Diana, “up in your saddle and
-spy, for I’d not have us miss so fine a sight for a
-hundred pounds!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No sooner said than done!” answers Sir Percy
-de Bohun, from atop of his horse, where he shades
-his eyes with his hand and gazes off to the hill
-where the gibbet stands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good God!” cries he, clapping spurs that send
-spurts of blood into the eyes of one of the gentlemen,
-and a shower of sand all over the whole
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>party, and away with him! Tearing up the turf
-as he goes; into the midst of the strings of gaping,
-jostling, hurrying folk; scattering ’em right and
-left, leaving ’em in his wake dumfounded, picking
-each other up. Through the high street of
-Brook-Armsleigh Village, clatter! dash! plunge!
-with prick and urge, and goad of thigh and lash!
-and straining, starting eyes fixed on the face he
-sees outlined against the fair blue morning sky;
-the brave undaunted face, dark, under its yellow
-hair, bearing the strange likeness to His Lady—His
-Lady! nay, this is His Lady’s lord and love,
-for whom he rides,—and with noose about his
-neck now, and man-of-cloth and man-of-blood
-both at hand; this one with book, that one with
-cap, the sea of open faces seething breathless all
-around.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“On! on!” whispers Percy bending to the bow,
-and whispering hoarsely to the long roan, his very
-soul in tremor, his lips parched, his forehead and
-lip dripping sweat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Into the midst of ’em; nearly throwing Lord
-Brookwood from his seat; off his beast like a
-thunderbolt, and with a long leap up on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>boards beside Lambe, the butcher, and Biggs, the
-Justice, and Frewen, the Curate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By God! Sirs,” cries he, “what’s this ye’re doing?
-This gentleman’s Sir Robin McTart of
-Robinswold, Kent!” tearing the hemp from Her
-Ladyship’s throat, from her wrists; pushing away
-the three of ’em, and half lifting the supposed
-Baronet in his lusty arms, he drags, carries, swings
-Peg down to the ground, and up into his own
-saddle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then the explanations! the astonishments;
-the monstrous wonder of it. The humility, the
-subjection, the apologies; the supplications of all
-these Lords, Gentlemen, Ladies, worthies, worships,
-vagabonds and multitudes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Woman-like, as she sits there for a few moments,
-dazed, so sudden fetched from death to life, she
-has but the thought that ’tis to him she loves she
-owes deliverance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But none of their hospitality or amends will she
-have, or even listen to; no tarrying at Brookwood
-Castle; no smallest glance back for all the wheedles
-and coaxes of Lady Diana, Lady Biddy, the Honorable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>Dolly and the rest. All she asks, and gets,
-is her scrawl from Mr. Frewen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Courtly acceptance of Lord Brookwood’s abject
-attempts at amends; gracious bows, hands, words,
-laughter at last; and My Lady in a hastily procured
-post-chaise bids the gibbet at Brook-Armsleigh
-Village farewell, and starts for London,
-where she swears she’s due and must not fail of
-being, for to-morrow, Sunday.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy, too, affirms, he must up to town without
-delay, to have the honor and pleasure of himself
-rehearsing at Will’s the splendid courage of
-Sir Robin, and his almost miraculous escape from
-a horrible and ignominious death.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In truth Percy longed, after the excitements of
-the past four-and-twenty hours, to be alone; to
-seek, as was his wont of late, in some unfrequented,
-obscure part of the town, such as the desolate
-neighborhood of the Dove Pier, an opportunity to
-ponder upon Lady Peggy; to guess fruitlessly of
-her whereabouts; to curse himself, and Sir Robin
-who had, with a good cause, he generously allowed,
-so known how to win her from him; to marvel
-how, at ev’ry turn, this same Baronet appeared to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>become entangled in his own matters; to question
-if Peggy were indeed now the lawful wedded wife
-of this gentleman from Kent. In brief, to pester
-Fate with queries and surmises far too numerous
-and intricate to set down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus upon reflection, he purposely absented himself,
-after his first visit to Will’s on reaching London,
-from either of the chocolate or coffee-houses,
-which he was accustomed to patronize, knowing
-full well that the most pressing and absorbing
-things he should hear would all have Sir Robin
-McTart for text. He did not even repair to Mr.
-Brummell’s house to give an account of the rescue
-of the Beau’s protégé from the hangman, feeling
-unwilling to recount his own part in the affair and
-but too certain that long since the whole matter
-would have traveled to Peter’s Court and into
-every other precinct of the town. Having, also,
-learned from Lady Diana that Kennaston had
-quitted Brookwood Castle in a dense of a melancholy
-humor, he did not either go to Lark Lane,
-(not finding Peg’s twin at the house in Charlotte
-Street), but moped the Sunday through, thankful
-that his uncle was gone down into the country;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>listening to the church-bells; thumbing a prayer-book
-Lady Peggy had given him one Easter-day,
-now five years since; finally flinging it from him;
-pacing up and down the hall; side-curls awry,
-waistcoat unbuttoned; ruffles tumbled; breeches
-wrinkled; mind distract, and altogether as valiant
-a young gentleman as ever made a wager or a toast,
-unsheathed a blade, or mounted a horse, rendered
-all of a-muddle by not knowing which way to turn
-to find the whereabouts and wherefores of a certain
-fair lady; which has been a state of affairs
-not uncommon to young gentlemen before this
-one’s day, and like to occur until the species is
-extinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet, ’tis quite true, too, that Sir Percy’s case
-was a bit out of the usual, inasmuch as the mystery
-of Lady Peggy’s present abiding place remained
-as deep to-day as ’twas a fortnight ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, Grigson,” asked his master, as his man
-appeared unsummoned, “what is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Asking Your Honor’s pardon,” replies this one,
-“but I made bold during Your Honor’s absence
-from town to go down to Kennaston Castle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>“Well, well?” cries Sir Percy excitedly, “what
-news?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With submission, Sir,” replies the man, sadly.
-“None.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Od’s blood! you fool!” exclaimed the master.
-“Why do you seek me with your ‘none’! Is Her
-Ladyship still from home?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson bows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And her mother still in York?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson bows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the Earl still believing his daughter to be
-in that damned Kent with her godmother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson bows for the third time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And that cursed Abigail still affirming that
-her mistress is up in London?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grigson bows for the fourth time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Asking your pardon, Sir Percy,” he adds,
-noting with a keen and generous sympathy, which
-not infrequently exists in the hearts of serving-men
-for their masters, the deepening pallor of the
-young gentleman’s countenance, and his most disheveled
-appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Asking your pardon, Sir, but whiles I might
-be doing your wig, which is most uncommon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>tousled, I’d make bold to tell you, Sir, that Mistress
-Jane Chockey, Lady Peggy’s own woman, Sir,
-is in an awful way, Sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My wig may go to the devil, you idiot!” cries
-Percy. “What’s the blabbing jade’s tantrums to
-me! Get out of my sight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With submission, Sir Percy, but Chockey does
-nothing at all but cry out her eyes from morning
-till night, and went on her knees a-beseechin’ me
-to find Her Ladyship, which all I could coax out
-of her by my best endeavors at wheedlin’ the
-seck, Sir, was that she last saw Her Ladyship
-standin’—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where! where?” gasps Sir Percy, seizing Mr.
-Grigson by the arm with a grip of steel.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Before the door of Lord Kennaston’s lodgin’s,
-Sir, in Lark Lane—a—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes? yes? go on!” with glaring, gazing eyes
-fixed on his man’s ruddy visage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A-talkin’, Sir, to some one a-sittin’ inside of a
-most elegant chair!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Did she see the man’s face?” he asks tensely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Sir Percy; but Her Ladyship bade Chockey
-go home and not tarry for her, and make such excuse
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>to His Lordship as you have learned before.
-And, asking your pardon humbly, Sir, Mistress
-Chockey is of the opinion that her young Lady got
-into that chair and was carried off, a willin’ wictim,
-Sir, to the h’altar, and married to the contents
-of the chair, Sir, afore that wery noon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Damn Chockey and her opinions!” mutters
-Sir Percy, under his breath, picking up his hat
-from the table and rushing into the street, nigh
-to choking with his emotions and his despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He turned the corner, almost knocking over a
-couple of link-boys in his path, tossed them some
-pennies for their tumble, and into Piccadilly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fare, Sir? fare, Your Honor? fare, Your
-Lordship?” cry a half-dozen of ’em, and he jumps
-into a hackney chaise purposeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where to, My Lord?” asks the man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To the devil!” replies the passenger, “or anywhere
-else, only drive fast and let me down within
-walk of the river.”</p>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_050.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XIII—In the hereinunder Her Ladyship doth shoot two varlets at one fire...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_035.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XIII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In the hereinunder Her Ladyship doth shoot</em></div>
- <div><em>two varlets at one fire; and appointeth</em></div>
- <div><em>a meeting with Sir Robin</em></div>
- <div><em>at Vauxhall.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The man, who is shrewd, and has, in his time,
-fetched and carried many gentlemen of the first
-quality hither and yon, takes this one’s measure
-and sets off at a tearing pace down to the city, past
-the Tower, across the Bridge, into Southwark, back
-over Southwark, up to Westminster; to Pimlico,—past
-the very Puffled Hen where, at this very moment,
-Sir Robin McTart, himself, and not his <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>soidisant</em></span>,
-sits huddled in his upper room over a fire,
-cheering his small soul with dreams of murder
-and love. On to Chelsea, and a whirligig ’round
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>again to that region which froths foully over to
-the Thames bank in Little Boy Yard, and the
-jutting, rotting, creaking old Dove Pier.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This be’s a young nobleman,” soliloquized the
-cabman, “wot’s in love, or else is a-meditatin’ on
-a-takin’ ’is own life, or a-runnin’ away from the
-Jews, or from his gamin’ debts, or I’m not James
-Finney. An’ this here’s the spot for him to be
-dropped at; the river most ’andy, also deep, and
-h’if he’s bound to make an end of hisself, no man
-wot owns a hoss is as worthy of the reward wot’ll
-be published for the recovery of His Lordship’s
-corp, as me.” With which pious reflection the
-chaise is brought to a sharp standstill, causing
-Percy to start from his melancholy and look out
-of the pane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where are we?” asks he, not at first, such is
-the depth of his suffering, recognizing a spot with
-which, as Sir Robin had been at pains and expense
-to have discovered for him, he was indeed of late
-most familiar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This be Dove Pier, My Lord,” answered Mr.
-James Finney, now descending from his box and
-standing respectfully at the kennel.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>“Ha! Yes, to be sure. I’ll get out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He does so and pays the fare with such a largess
-as makes Mr. Finney, through his tanned hide,
-almost blush to take it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wot’s the odds, though?” remarks he to himself,
-“three sovereigns is better off in my pocket
-than actin’ as sinkers to a nobleman’s body.” To
-Sir Percy he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I thought Your Lordship’d fancy this bit of
-the river; it’s lonesome and wery pleasant and
-wery deep. Good-night to Your Lordship, and
-good luck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good luck!” echoes Sir Percy, under his breath,
-as he strides down the length of the rotten pier,
-his gaze now fixed on the black and swiftly ebbing
-tide, now raised to meet a sky no whit the brighter
-than the sobbing waters beneath it. No stars, nor
-moon; only a sickly thin gleam shot out of the
-lamp that swings far up Little Boy Yard over the
-door of the tavern.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dark, sad, despairing, the whole of it, with but
-the lap, lap of the Thames’s life beating against
-the old piles, as it swirls and swings on its hurrying
-way to fall once again into the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>Percy de Bohun is no cowardly sort, even to
-think of ending his woes in a watery grave; he is
-merely a brave, sore-stricken young man, whose
-whole faith and heart have been pinned to one who
-has forsaken him forever (as he thinks); and, with
-the instincts of his kind, he is glad to be here,
-away from mankind or woman either, to get his
-grip once more on himself, to fight out for the last
-time, he swears, the wild, jealous covetousness
-which is tugging at his heartstrings, to quell the
-tumult in his soul, and then to get back home to
-his uncle’s house like a Christian; and, God helping
-him! to lead a decent life and a brave life, for
-King and country in the great new world across
-the seas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All this and more traverses his brain, the “more”
-being mostly tantalizing visions of Lady Peggy in
-all the gamut of her humors, slipping in and out
-of every resolution he makes, every fond farewell
-he swears he’ll take of her most dear, most faithless
-memory forever!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His eyes are bent upon the ground. He neither
-sees nor hears, nor would heed if he did, aught
-about him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>In truth there is not anything to hear, save the
-river on its journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But there is something to see.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin’s two desperadoes, a-lurking yonder
-up in the close shadow of the timbered tenements,
-which line the precinct on the side where the oil-lamps
-shine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Across the narrow street, where the huddling
-houses, with their broken chimneys, rag-stuffed
-windows, flapping strings of bird-cages, old clothes,
-and forlorn archways, are deeper in gloom even
-than their opposites, there’s ambushed another.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One who, arrived in town the night before, and
-set down at Mr. Brummell’s in Peter’s Court,
-made a change of garments and off again, since
-the master of the house was out, to a quiet inn in
-High Holborn; spent there a few hours; then out
-of doors and wandered as far as the Temple
-Church; back again to the inn, and, with rising
-excitement, and an almost frantic and curious impatience,
-awaited the fall of night; then a hackney
-coach to Westminster, alighting at Horseferry
-Road; dismissing the vehicle; thence afoot to the
-pier; hiring a boat; a pull alone down the river
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>to Dove Pier; tying the skiff to a rusty hook; a
-quick run bent to ground; up, and across the yard
-to her present place of concealment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas indeed Lady Peggy, her heart in her
-mouth, her breath coming fiercely betwixt her
-tight-shut lips, the drops standing on her forehead,
-each hand grasping a pistol ready cocked,
-and her dark eyes pinned to the two crouching
-objects not three yards away from her; anon, following
-the jerks of these worthies’ thumbs as they
-indicate the tall figure with bent head still pacing
-the pier back and forth, she knows her lover and
-his doom are nearing each the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Will high Heaven help her?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship can not hear them, if indeed they
-speak at all, which is unlikely; the language of
-such gentry at such crises consisting usually of
-signs. Luckily for her, the glint from the Three
-Cups, meager though it be, falls athwart the cut-throats,
-who now move stealthily down the yard
-toward the pier, timing their pace so that they
-shall reach t’other side of the rickety float when
-their victim shall attain the hither. It falls out
-as they have designed, and now, not ten paces separate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>Sir Percy de Bohun from his end, when
-Peggy darts light-footed, having cast aside her
-shoes, down her side the kennel to the pier, bringing
-her exactly behind the murderers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With the slow, precise tread of beings accustomed
-to such enterprises, not too hurried at the
-performance of a not unsavory task, they slip over
-into Sir Percy’s very wake, Peggy at their backs,
-noting now, with her pretty nose within twelve
-inches of their cat-like heels, the gleam of a dagger
-in the hand of each.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before she had thought, the two scoundrels
-seized Percy from the rear, the one clapping his
-hairy hand over the game’s mouth for a gag, the
-other grasping the young man’s two hands which
-had been hanging idly clasped at his back. Not
-a word, a whisper, even a gasp—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But two shots! sounding like one, and striking
-Sir Robin McTart’s hirelings in their flanks, laying
-them on the ground, free Sir Percy de Bohun,
-stunned, bewildered, to yet catch merely a glimpse
-of a figure running to pier’s end, jumping into a
-boat; then the flash of quick oars fading into the
-silence and the blackness of the Thames.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>With drawn sword he gave himself a rap on the
-chest and believed he had been dreaming.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But no, for at his feet lay two prostrate forms,
-each bleeding a bit, and feigning, as such apt
-rogues will, to be stone dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy knelt, struck a tinder and essayed to look
-at their faces; they were unknown to him, and perceiving
-now their estate, he formed the conclusion
-that a couple of footpads had nearly made an end
-of him, and walked away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But of his rescue? the manner of it? the mysterious
-flight of his preserver? the boat ready at
-the pier’s end? the twin shots just in the nick of
-time! What of all this?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bah! Some bargeman with an honest heart
-a-passing by had seen the foul attempt, and paused
-to thwart it; some gentleman, maybe, on his way
-to rout or tryst, thinking to divert himself with a
-couple of pistols and so save a human life; some
-third desperado, envious of the chances of these
-two, making shift to rob them of their prey, since
-he was left out of their plot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But no! None of these explanations bore the
-least resemblance to probabilities, in fact showed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>not an atom of reason in their suggestion, and
-Percy was feign return to his uncle’s house, thrice
-puzzled now, since he had not alone Lady Peggy’s
-oblivion to unravel, but the miraculous saving of
-his own life to match it!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship, once safe in the boat, pulled hard
-to the upper pier, paid the boatman, and back by
-devious ways to Peter’s Court and into her room;
-shut door and latched; down on her knees, wig
-thrown on the hearth, a-thanking God Percy was
-safe!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Tears? A shower of ’em, and trembling legs
-and arms, and heart beating to burst after the mad
-strain of the past eight-and-forty hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now,” said Her Ladyship to herself, “now I
-can go back to Kennaston and spend the remainder
-of my life making cheeses for the Vicar to munch
-o’ Sundays; brewing cider for daddy to accelerate
-the pace of his gout withal; breeding chicks as
-will win prizes, and pigs as will be the envy of all!
-and—” a sob occurred here—“presently a-reading
-in the London print of the grand marriage of Sir
-Percy de Bohun with Lady Diana Weston! And
-me without the chance of weddin’ even that little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>ape, Sir Robin McTart! But it’s all right as
-’tis,” adds Her Ladyship. “Had I hung on Armsleigh
-Hill, ’twould not have been too bad for one
-reared as I have been in a God-fearing fashion,
-and who, for naught save jealousy, envy and all
-uncharitableness, did go and so unsex myself!
-Lud! Is’t I? Peggy Burgoyne, spinster, a-sittin’
-here in breeches and waistcoat, a guest in Mr. Beau
-Brummell’s house, without any other lady to keep
-me in countenance! ’Tis said one gets broke in
-to anything; but ’tis false! false! I’m not broke
-in to bein’ a man, and I never should be! I detest,
-abhor, and can’t endure the bein’ one! I that
-had always figured to myself the happy day when
-I’d be taken up to town!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy is now pacing the room, a trick, as
-has been set down earlier, that she’d borrowed from
-her twin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’d thought to be of the ton, a most genteel
-young lady, monstrous fine, a lovely creature; a-taking
-a dish of tea at Ranelagh; a-ridin’ to
-Court in dad’s old coronet-coach and with all the
-feathers I could borrow on top of my frizzes and
-powder; and two sweet patches set just at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>corner of my dimples! That’s what I’d dreamed
-of, with Percy a-staring at me, lost in admiration,
-and—love!” Her Ladyship stamps her foot.
-“But what ’tis, is this!” and she now picks up the
-wig from the hearth and flings it on the couch beside
-her coat and sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Taint no more in this world fine gentlemen
-sighin’ and dyin’ for me! no wedding favors and
-cake; no husband, no children; never! for there’s
-no marryin’ in heaven, an I ever get there! Nay,
-‘Peggy Burgoyne’ ’ll be writ on my tombstone, and
-like as not the lines followin’ ’ll be ’a maker of
-most uncommon fine sweetmeats and cheeses’!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another flood of tears, and then My Lady Peggy,
-obeying that well-balanced head of hers, brushes
-them away and proceeds to plan out her homeward
-journey, and to administer a cunning retouch of
-the cosmetics she had erstwhile bought of the
-players’ apothecary in Drury Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Tis clear now, as it has been from the start, that
-she may not quit Mr. Brummell’s house in other
-than man’s attire, nor, so far as she can see, will it
-be possible for her to resume her own garments at
-any inn, or time, or place, before she reaches Kennaston,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>which she means to do ere night falls;
-and then the stableyard, where she knows Chockey
-will be milking, once gained, a cloak, the casting
-of Sir Robin’s wig, and Her Ladyship feels certain
-she can enter her father’s home unnoticed
-beneath the shelter of the faithful Chockey’s argus
-eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, though neatly laid, Her Ladyship’s project
-was not quite yet to go into execution. Even as
-she was once more taking out the bundle from its
-hiding-place and tying up in it the long tail of her
-cut hair, she heard a hum of noises, voices below,
-inquiring if Sir Robin had as yet reached the
-house, and evidently obtaining an affirmative answer,
-for,—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is the hero? Our hero! Our hero!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is our highwayman? Our highwayman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is Tom Kidde, the gallant? The gallant
-of gallants!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And a lot of such merry cries came echoing up
-the staircase and corridor toward her room.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy had utterly forgot the hanging.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The more recent matter of Percy and the assassins
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>had put her own adventure completely out of
-her head. For the first time she realized that
-she had not seen either Mr. Brummell or any of
-his company since she had unwillingly been borne
-away from them by Homing Nell in the midst of
-Epstowe Forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas a halt she had not counted on; but, clapping
-on wig and coat, she flung wide the door, and
-was presently raised on the shoulders of Sir Wyatt
-and His Grace of Escombe and borne triumphantly
-down to the dining-room and placed in a chair of
-honor at the supper-table, whence, what with
-toasts, songs, stories, acclaims, wonders, amazements,
-applause, Florence wine, cards, etc., etc.,
-this gallant company did not arise (or some of
-them slip under) until seven on Monday morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship got up from the mahogany with
-but one-pound-ten in her pockets, and a surmise
-in her head as to how far this sum would take her
-on her homeward way.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But homeward way there could be none just yet,
-for before too many bumpers had been filled and
-drunk, Beau Brummell had made proposition of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>most lively affair, which indeed he had already set
-afoot, for the celebrating of Sir Robin’s restoration
-to his friends by the timely arrival and prowess of
-Sir Percy. This was nothing else than going to
-Vauxhall by water on Tuesday night, and in
-masques. A score of ladies and gentlemen had
-been bidden to join, including the Ladies Diana
-and Biddy, the Honorable Dolly, the Misses Lovell,
-Lady Chelmsford, with Lady Brookwood to act as
-duenna for the unmarried fair.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In vain Lady Peggy protested, swore she could
-not, would not. These gentlemen would not take
-no for an answer, and once again Her Ladyship
-perceived, as she reluctantly acceded to the masquerade,
-how far more difficult ’twas to be out of
-breeches than into ’em.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy was to be there, at least he was invited; so
-much she knew from Mr. Brummell, and, as Lady
-Diana was positive to come up to town for such a
-novelty as a party in masquerade, of course her
-suitor was certain to attend her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Very well! Why should she, whose whole life
-was to be passed in the compounding of cream-cheeses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>and the visiting of poor old women, not
-give to herself one more cause of vain regretting?
-one more glimpse of him she adored?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At that hour, when Mr. Brummell and his
-guests were doing honor to the supposed Sir Robin,
-the real Baronet was called upon to receive two
-most lamentable-looking blackguards who followed
-the Boots up to the gentleman’s room, unheeding
-both remonstrances and ugly words on the way
-thither.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At sight of Mr. Bloksey and his companion-in-arms,
-each lame, bound-up and wound-up of leg
-and back, with their bonnets pulled down over
-their brows, Sir Robin skipped from his easy-chair
-with a gasp, half terrified at the appearance, wholly
-eager to learn the outcome of the plot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hist!” cries he, under his breath, and pointing
-to the door, finger on lip.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Heh?” responds the villain. “There’s no fear
-here. We’s well enough known down in our own
-neighbor’ood, but up ’ere we passes for two pious
-beggars wot lives by h’alms from the parish
-church!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A grim smile from his partner confirms this remark,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>and Sir Robin, thus reassured, says tremblingly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, ’tis done?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis done,” both nodding in concert, “and,”
-adds Mr. Bloksey, “we’re both nigh done too!
-Wot with bullets apiece h’inside of us from the
-gentleman’s pistols, and wot with gettin’ our
-h’eyes knocked h’out of us, and most bein’ caught
-by the Watch when we was a-lowerin’ Lord Gower’s
-heir h’into the Thames, we’re ’ere, Sir Robin McTart,
-to ’umbly remind you that we wants more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Baronet shakes his head, hands thrust in
-pockets, clutching purse and pence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, no,” answers he, “the job was paid for in
-advance, my good men. Not another groat will
-you get.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Werry good,” murmurs Bloksey, turning on his
-slip-shod heel. “We’ll just go down to the round
-house, and if it turns out as Your Lordship gets
-h’admission to the Tower free, you needn’t be too
-much surprised. We doesn’t mind a-tellin’ ’ow
-we saw you a-prickin’ Sir Percy de Bohun last
-night! and a-weightin’ of his mangled corp, and
-a-throwin’ of the same h’into the river at the old
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>Dove Pier!—Oh, no! we doesn’t!” This at the
-door-sill.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What! what! you knaves! Here, come back!
-Come back, I say!” shrieks the terrified little gentleman,
-seizing a shoulder of each and forcing
-them into seats.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After which simple application of primary
-methods, Mr. Bloksey and his friend find no difficulties
-whatever in the way of wresting from their
-patron another hundred pounds, with which they
-make off, again and again rehearsing to him how
-great risks they had run in decently interring the
-body of his hated rival.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once rid of them, Sir Robin rose, stretched himself,
-and yawned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas an abject soul, one of those creatures born
-of a good and honest stock on either side, which
-sometimes cumber the earth as if in ribald jest
-against the accepted laws of birth and breeding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With no misgiving, save that of a possible detection,
-Sir Robin, now that this even had been
-disposed of at an expense of a hundred guineas,
-felt nothing if not jubilant, and on the morrow
-proceeded to order him a suit of satins in crimson,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>a hat of the latest fashion, ruffles, cravats, silk
-hose, a muff, and a lot of other fallals at Monsieur
-Jabot’s in Holborn. For the Baronet, freed, as he
-fancied, of his enemy, and feeling positive that
-Lady Peggy would soon, out of the overflow of her
-vast affection for him, contrive a message through
-her obliging Mr. Incognito, desired to be equipped
-in the latest mode for that summons to his Lady’s
-presence, which he believed must ultimately, and
-perhaps presently, arrive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is true, he expected that his entrance into the
-gay world of fashion, which, he promised himself
-by way of introduction, should be at Vauxhall,
-might be a bit hampered by the accounts he must
-hear of the sudden disappearance of Sir Percy de
-Bohun, but this seemed a trifle in the path of a
-gentleman for whose sake Lady Peggy Burgoyne
-had come up to town, remained invisible, employed
-an Incognito as Mercury, and of whose name,
-albeit falsely, the prints had made most marvelous
-mention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now, Sir Robin had not seen the tenth part of
-these last. No, not any of ’em, in truth, save the
-one he had shown to Her Ladyship the evening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>they had encountered each other at the Dove Pier.
-To be entirely candid, Sir Robin was an indifferent
-scholar; write he could not; to read was a plague
-which he willingly deputed, when it was necessary,
-to his former instructor—that patient, worthy
-man, the Vicar of Friskingdean, incumbent of the
-living next Robinswold.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This one was even now, so Sir Robin had got
-word, up in London to consult a great man for the
-benefit of his eyes, and ’twas presently agreed between
-’em at the Bishop, where the Vicar stopped,
-that they should proceed together to Vauxhall on
-the Tuesday night.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have heard, my dear Robin,” observed the excellent
-old man, “that there is to be a rare sight in
-the gardens that evening, nothing less than a most
-curious novelty just come into vogue in the world
-of fashion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ha, and what’s that, Sir?” inquires the Baronet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A party of Beau Brummell’s to come by water
-to the pier, every soul of ’em in masks,—Lords,
-Ladies, and all persons of the first quality; some
-of the names I heard in the coffee-room. There’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>to be Sir Wyatt Lovell, the Earl of Escombe, Lady
-Diana Weston, Lady Chelmsford, Lord Kennaston
-of Kennaston—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold, Sir!” cried the Baronet, jumping about
-the room, like one demented, the idea bouncing
-into his pate that if Kennaston is to be there, his
-twin-sister will also form one of the distinguished
-party. “What’s to prevent me buying a couple of
-masks and, with our cloaks set out by our swords,
-a-joining in this gay diversion?” The little gentleman’s
-eyes twinkle with sweet anticipation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But,” hesitates the Vicar, “would such levity
-be counted seemly for one of my years and profession?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut, Sir,” cries Sir Robin, “I’ll not take a
-refusal. Hark ye, I have reasons,” adds he mysteriously.
-“There’s one of the Fair likely to be
-present who pines to see me, Sir, and whom I yearn
-to behold once more. There hath been an obstacle,”
-continues the cold-blooded monkey, “but
-Providence hath removed it. I pray of you accompany
-me, Sir, and t’will lead mayhap to banns
-bein’ read on Sunday se’ennight in the church at
-Friskingdean.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>The Vicar, being carried away by two natural
-and one of ’em a most laudable emotion, at last
-consented. He was quite in fatherly sympathy
-with his old pupil’s ambition to settle in life, and
-he had that curious hankering after just a nibble
-at the edge of the flesh-pots of Egypt, which is not
-uncommon to gentlemen of even his sedate years
-and failing sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin bought masks and cloaks of black and
-ordered them sent to the Bishop, where he had
-agreed to sup on Tuesday and go thence by land to
-Vauxhall. Indeed he had just now come out of
-the draper’s shop and turned down toward the
-Vicar’s inn, when he caught sight of Lady Peggy
-walking swiftly from him. She had been buying
-stains for her skin and eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Incognito!” cried he, scampering hither
-and yon, into the kennel, onto the path, jostling
-fair ladies’ chairs, running into a porter’s pack,
-thumping a horse in the nose with his ill-worn
-weapon, and, finally, gaining on the one he pursues,
-and dealing Her Ladyship’s shoulder no
-gentle blow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ha, there!” cries she, turning, hand on hilt.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>Then, perceiving who ’tis, she almost shudders and
-draws up to her full height.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Dear Mr. Incognito,” pants Sir Robin, “how
-fares My Lady? Tell me, I beseech you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She fares but ill, Sir,” answers she, making to
-proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, no, not so fast, I implore; oh, Sir, I die
-for her!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well, Sir, she is willing. I am pressed
-for time and must away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One word. You say she’s willing I should die
-for her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Sir Robin, importune me no further. I
-know not what she’s willing for!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, now,” soothes the Baronet. “We’re well
-met, Mr. Incognito, that I’m assured of; and that
-Lady Peggy’d far rather I’d live than die for her,”
-leers he, “since for the sake of communicating with
-me she’s at, no doubt, great expenses in maintaining
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this Her Ladyship laughs, as many a lady
-may do any day, at the strange construction a man
-who is blessed with vanity contrives to put upon
-her actions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>“’Tis so, I know’t!” exclaims he, grinning unctuously.
-“Now, Sir, tell me, goes she—” his voice
-sinks to a whisper as he applies his mouth nigh to
-Peg’s ear—“goes she to Vauxhall in Beau Brummell’s
-party, along with her brother, o’ Tuesday
-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A thousand thoughts rush helter-skelter through
-Her Ladyship’s brain, pro and con the answering
-of this query.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Presently, sedately, at the corner of the street,
-says she, with no smallest notion of the import or
-the outcome of her words, merely uttered as a light
-and easy means of make-off:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go and see!” and she disappears from view.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By jingo!” rattles the gentleman from Kent
-to himself, as he jumps into a hackney-coach and
-tools out to the Puffled Hen. “But she loves me!
-Curse me! but I believe she’s had that incognito
-rascal at upwards probably of ten shillings a day,
-just on purpose to watch for my appearance, and
-so to glean tidings of my welfare! Without a
-doubt ’tis by her commands he said that ‘go and
-see.’ Zounds! I’ll do’t, with the Vicar to bear
-me out,” adds this prudent lover, “should any disagreeable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>incident occur between me and any one
-of these coxcombs with their town ways. Damn
-’em, tho’! with a secret affair going on betwixt me
-and Peggy, I can snap my fingers at His Gracious
-Majesty himself, should we encounter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Well pleased, therefore, with himself, Sir Robin
-descended at the Puffled Hen and bestowed upon
-the cabman out of that abundance of the heart
-which occasionally causes the pocket, as well as the
-heart, to speak—two-pence.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XIV—In this same Sir Robin believes he meets his Fair...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XIV</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In this same Sir Robin believes he meets his</em></div>
- <div><em>Fair: and Lady Biddy O’Toole is the</em></div>
- <div><em>means of putting the whole Gardens</em></div>
- <div><em>into a vast commotion.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>After quitting Sir Robin, Her Ladyship, jingling
-the few shillings that now remained to her,
-since purchasing unguents and the mask and cloak
-necessary for the approaching festivity, suddenly
-made up her mind to escape at once, to leave the
-bundle of her clothes, her shorn tresses, and whatever
-else beside to tell what tale they might, and,
-here and now, to shake the dust of London from
-her feet forever. And to this end she was about
-to summon a chair to start her as far on her journey
-as her purse would permit, when out comes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>Mr. Brummell himself from the shop of Monsieur
-Jabot, and links his arm in hers with his accustomed
-pleasant familiarity and easy condescension.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Pon honor!” exclaims the Beau. “Well met,
-Sir! Since you were nigh hanged, Sir, I’ve not
-had too much of your agreeable company. I’d
-have you know I’m just from Monsieur Jabot’s
-back room, where, the whiles I took a dish of tea,
-I explained the riddles of your most amazin’ twist
-of the lace. Faith, Robin, ’twas a lucky hour for
-me, when, having left a pile of failures, so high!
-in the corner of my dressing-room, I beheld your
-cravat and bade my man knock you down!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy laughs. The cool audacity of Beau
-Brummell is a relief after the mawkish sighs of
-the little scoundrel she has just parted from, and,
-hoping that Mr. Brummell will soon spy either
-one of the Fair or a Royal Highness, and so be
-diverted from her side, she bows and answers:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Robin McTart must ever account that a lucky
-day for him, Sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hark ye, my young buck,” proceeds the Beau.
-“Monsieur Jabot is so enchanted with your manner
-of the cravat that to-day, with my compliments,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>he introduces it at Court! And since I’ve
-been seen with it,” adds he pompously, “’tis sure,
-by this day week, to be the height of the mode!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye?” responds Her Ladyship, a-wondering
-how she can best get away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye!” echoes her companion in a monstrous
-amazement. “Rot me! Sir, but such a distinction’s
-not often conferred upon a young gentleman
-up in town for the first time. What’s the
-matter with you, boy?” cries he, turning to observe
-Her Ladyship’s somewhat absent-minded aspect.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Naught, I swear!” cries she, recovering herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath! Robin, are ye in love?” asks the
-Beau, taking a pinch of snuff and tendering his
-box, as, attended by all eyes, the two make their
-way down Piccadilly, betwixt ogling ladies in their
-chairs and chariots, gallants, dowagers; each, all,
-mincing and la-la-ing as they go.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship inclines her head. She is well
-pleased to speak truth when she can.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By Gad! Mr. Brummell, you’ve hit the mark,”
-says she.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sleep not o’ nights? fickle at your meat? wake
-sighing? dream of patches, smiles, and dainty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>fingers? mistrust yourself? easily affronted? believe
-the whole world’s pointing at you in raillery?
-take no pleasure in horse, man, gun or dog? loathe
-all the Fair, save one? love solitude?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship’s feign to smile in the midst of
-the snuff, which she abhors, and has only taken
-because she had to. Sneezing, she nods as her
-companion continues:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hate company? are cursin’ me now for an
-addle-pated fool, and wishing I’d leave you to yourself,
-eh? Don’t answer. I know it, Robin, well;
-a thousand times, more or less, have I been where
-you stand to-day, and had just cause, I fancied, to
-damn the Prince himself, since that which I was
-then pleased to dub his foolish prattle served to
-distract my ruminations from whichever Lady
-’twas at the moment claimed my fancy. I cursed
-him then, Sir, for clinging to my arm, but now I
-bless him, as you will me some future day—for,
-Robin, hark ye, there’s not one of the jades but
-deceives us, no, Sir! and I’m goin’ to hang on to
-you, Sir, for keepin’ of you out of the vapors.
-Zounds, Sir! I’ll not leave you to any such ill company
-as himself proves to a young man in your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>predicament. Come, Sir, come; we’ll up and into
-Will’s, and there, me stickin’ faster than a burr,
-we’ll home to Peter’s Court and with a merry lot
-of gentlemen make a pretty night of’t against to-morrow
-with its evening at Vauxhall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With which pleasant and most well-intentioned
-sally, Lady Peggy again finds herself constrained
-to put off that redemption of her true estate for
-which she so deeply yearns.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Brummell’s party went by water to Vauxhall,
-and ’twas indeed a heavenly night for such
-an expedition, with no large lady-moon a-staring,
-but the rather a thin slip of a silver damsel hanging
-in the vault, and millions of stars a-waiting on
-her, not any of these a-revealing too much or
-a-telling any tales if a gentleman’s hand chanced
-to come in contact with a lady’s amid the folds of
-brocade, or under the long cloth of the black,
-crimson or blue cloaks in which all these merry
-masqueraders were enveloped.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy de Bohun was beside Lady Diana
-Weston; Peggy noted the same with jealous, despairing
-eyes; while at the left of Lord Brookwood’s
-daughter sat her own twin—only the second
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>time she had seen him since the memorable night
-in Lark Lane; nor did she see him plainly now,
-for all the company had set forth in their masks,
-and only removed them between whiles to gain a
-breath of fresh air. ’Twas expected that the
-larger number of the party would meet them at
-the Gardens, and thereafter the sport and mystification
-would begin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So it turned out; not only all the rest of Mr.
-Brummell’s friends in their cloaks and masks,
-with glimpse now and then of satins, taffetas, laces,
-ribands, jeweled stomachers, bodices ablaze, and so
-forth, but a vast assemblage of other folk also
-awaited the arrival of the Beau’s barge at the
-bottom of the Gardens.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Among these, two lurked in the shadow of the
-trees; they were Sir Robin and the Vicar. The
-former noted with deep joy that he had, by a happy
-chance, chosen a crimson color for his new suit,
-exactly corresponding to that of one of these gallants;
-that his cloak of sable hue was also quite the
-ton, and that he could thus, with ease, mingle
-with the party, and presently, no doubt, either discover
-Lady Peggy’s identity, or, more than likely,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>she herself would disclose the same to him, and at
-last reward his faithfulness and patience. No
-qualm visited the little gentleman’s conscience-pocket
-with regard to his supposed victim, although,
-it is true, he had given him a vicious
-thought as he had stood near the river’s bank
-waiting for Mr. Brummell’s barge to come in
-sight. So had Peggy, as she was being rowed past
-the old Dove Pier; into her mind and into Sir
-Percy’s had come the memory of the Sunday night,
-but he spoke of it no more than, certes, did she.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin, his cup overflowing with pleasurable
-anticipation and the gratified sense that the one
-who had sworn to take his life lay, fish-food, at
-the bottom of the Thames, flitted hither and yon,
-dragging the bewildered Vicar of Friskingdean in
-his wake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Wherever the company of Mr. Brummell wandered,
-there followed, hanging on to the fringe, as
-’twere, these two, whom presently one-half the
-guests accepted as a matter of course to be of
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>First, always followed by an admiring and gaping
-crowd, ’twas up and down the formal Walks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>somewhat sedately, for the masquerade, as has been
-said before, was at that period but just coming
-into vogue, and fine ladies and gentlemen were,
-at the outset of an evening, not as easy in their
-disguises as they became after a promenade in the
-unaccustomed duds; then, they formed a circle of
-mysterious appearance around the orchestra; then,
-’twas into the Room to stare at the pictures
-through the peepholes of their masks; then a rush
-to gaze at the Cascade, which the whole of them,
-save Lady Peggy, Sir Robin and the Vicar, had
-seen a hundred times before; later, ’twas up and
-down the Walks again; and here Sir Robin at last
-made bold, having long since joined himself and
-the somewhat reluctant Vicar to a group of the
-Beau’s company, to address a few words, as it
-chanced, to the lively Lady Biddy O’Toole!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It had seemed to him, after a careful survey of
-all, and having been able, by dint of his ears, to
-learn which was Kennaston, whose was the only
-personality so far in his possession, that Lady
-Biddy’s arch turn of the head was the most like to
-belong to the object of his passion. So up he
-springs, mincing, leaving the Vicar to huddle in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>the shade, and, pulling Her Ladyship’s mask-riband
-with a twitching finger and thumb, as he
-had seen others do just now, he said, very low, in
-her ear:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m sure I know who Your Ladyship is!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Out with it,” says she, very low too.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s she whose image is writ on my heart,” answers
-he.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure,” answers she, “that’s a thing that can
-never be known until you’re dead, and maybe not
-as soon, since the surgeons don’t cut up everybody!
-Lud, Sir, give me your name, and we’ll
-talk of your heart anon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent,”
-exclaims he, feeling positive that this saucy minx
-is none other than his adored, for be it remembered
-Lady Biddy spoke under her breath and with
-a disguised tone to her voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Od’s blood!” now whispers Her Ladyship,
-with an accent of mock terror, into Sir Robin’s
-ear. “You! the highwayman! the cut-throat! the
-robber! what, I’ve heard, sticks gentlemen in the
-back, or has your men do it for you, and profits by
-that same!” laughing fit to kill herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>But the little man does not laugh; the cold
-sweat stands out all over his sallow countenance,
-and he’s so terrified, recalling the threats of Mr.
-Bloksey, that he stands stock-still, and really can
-not move a leg.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They are nigh the Dark Walks as Sir Robin
-comes to his halt, and Lady Biddy, not pausing
-even to note his silence, goes merrily on with her
-most apt discourse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh,” proceeds she, “but you are the hero of the
-day, Sir Robin, and it’s myself that’s proud to be
-in your company, and faith! I’d like to have died
-running to see you hang on Saturday last!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hang!” gasps he, getting back the use of his
-voice, but not of his shaking legs. “Saturday
-last!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t be that bashful, Sir Robin, making as if
-you’d never heard of such before!” And Lady
-Biddy gives the Baronet’s cloak a playful tweak.
-“Lud, Sir! you and Sir Percy de Bohun’s the two
-most talked about, of all the bucks in town!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy de Bohun!” repeats he, his knees
-knocking together.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure’n didn’t he save you from the gibbet?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>Oh, go-along with you, Sir Robin, you can’t palaver
-Lady—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lady who?” he contrives to ejaculate, struck
-nearly dumb at this mention of his rival, while
-Lady Biddy now bridles and is mute.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are Lady Peggy Burgoyne, are you not?”
-he goes on more softly, bending toward his companion,
-and concluding at last that the Lady’s
-words must have been the mere hap-hazards of a
-sparkling disposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now Lady Biddy, in common with other ladies
-of fashion and moving in certain high circles of
-society, had heard a deal of the mysterious and all
-unseen Lady Peggy. She well knew the supposition
-that was rife as to Lady Peggy’s being secretly
-the wife of Sir Robin McTart. She knew
-from her bosom friend, Lady Diana Weston, who
-had the same most direct from her suitor, Lord
-Kennaston, Lady Peggy’s own twin-brother, that
-his sister was from home, unknown her whereabouts
-to father or mother, kith or kin, maid or
-man, save that she was “up in London”; that Sir
-Percy de Bohun was mad for love and loss of her;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>that her brother, had he not been in like case by
-means of Lady Diana, would long since have made
-public search, as he was indeed making such privately,
-for the discovery of the eloping Fair. She
-likewise was aware that Sir Robin frequented the
-gay world, was not adverse to ogling a lady, as she
-herself could testify; stopped at Mr. Brummell’s
-house; and, albeit ’twas said had fought a duel
-with Sir Percy because of Lady Peggy, still did not
-absent himself from any rout, ridotto, or ball, on
-her always absent account.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So, equipped with such a fund of knowledge
-and any amount of surmise, Her Ladyship replied
-coyly beneath her mask:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why do you think so, Sir Robin, and pray if I
-were Lady Peggy, what, now, would you be afther
-saying to me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! ’tis she!” exclaims the Baronet, carried
-away by the fact that Lady Biddy’s hand beneath
-her cloak has more than half-way met his
-own moist and trembling fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Loveliest of women! Oh, ’twas indeed by your
-express directions, was’t not, that Mr. Incognito
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>on Monday, watching for me in High Holborn
-nigh the shop of Mounseer Jabot, bid me come here
-to-night to meet you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Biddy, although much averse to the clammy
-touch of her cavalier, gives his fingers an assuring
-pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why, oh, why!” pursues Sir Robin, now as
-much elated by this tacit confession of her passion
-for him, as he was but lately overwhelmed by the
-mention of such strange words as “hanging, highwayman,
-Sir Percy de Bohun,” etc., etc., “why
-have you seen fit to keep me in such a length of
-suspense? Why have I not been allowed, before
-this, to behold you, and renew the days of our
-sojourn in Kent? Speak, my angel, speak!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“La, Sir!” murmurs Lady Biddy, minx-like,
-ever anxious to get at the heart of this now much
-deepened enigma, “la, Sir, do you not know but
-too well the whys and wherefores of my secrecy?”
-Her Ladyship from Cork actually squeezes the
-little Baronet’s crooked little hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That do I not! Mr. Incognito never would tell
-me aught, but thus and so; and bade me, from your
-adorable lips, keep myself in seclusion and safety,—nor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>ever,” continues he, his tone sinking to a
-mere breath, “endanger my precious self,” now
-stooping to imprint a chaste kiss on Her Ladyship’s
-hand, “in the meeting even once of Sir
-Percy de Bohun, for he had sworn to kill me on
-beholding me. Dearest life,” proceeds Sir Robin,
-withdrawing Lady Biddy a bit into the shade of
-the great trees, “I have obeyed your commands.
-I have never set eyes upon the scoundrel, but have
-kept myself close housed at my inn in Pimlico,
-awaiting your dear pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have ye?” murmurs Lady Biddy, now more
-bewildered than she ever was before in her life,
-and seeing no clear way, either to read the puzzle
-or, truth to tell, to elude the gentleman. Yet the
-wits of a lady, especially if she happen to have
-been born in Ireland, may usually be trusted to
-extricate her from almost any dilemma; therefore,
-when Sir Robin has done swearing of his impatient
-probation passed at the Puffled Hen, says she,
-tweaking her hoop and making a courtesy:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud! Robin,” (the hussy!) “but you are a killing
-creature! Nay, nay!” drawing out a few
-steps, he after her, from the shade of the trees
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>and more in the flare of the twinkling globe lamps.
-“Nay, tarry here but a moment; there are the same
-reasons for your not accompanying me now that
-have prevailed upon me to keep our matters secret
-hitherto. I pray you, stir not from the neighborhood
-of this wooden lion—see?—until I return,
-which I will do presently.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Faith!” cries the Baronet, “I’ll not budge, my
-divine Peggy! until you are once more at my
-side!” and with a horrid leer through his peepholes,
-he essays to take Lady Biddy’s hand once
-more, but she’s off, balking him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Quick as thought, she scampered across to the
-edge of the orchestra, where she discovered a group
-of masks and among ’em one, whom, by the rose
-pinned to her bloom-colored bodice, she knew to be
-Lady Diana, and she made certain that two of the
-three bloods near her, canes dangling at their
-button-holes, must be Sir Percy and Lord Kennaston.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hist!” exclaims Lady Biddy, panting partly
-from speed, partly from the fright a lady alone
-might experience in running the gauntlet of so
-many macaronis and fops, not to speak of thieves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>and pickpockets, as perforce was the case in progressing
-about Vauxhall.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What is’t Biddy, for I know you by your silver
-heels,” answers Lady Di. “Mischief, I’ll dare be
-sworn, or it’s not you! Speak your mind; there’s
-none here but what can keep a secret, and the whole
-of us have been a-watching you with some one, fie!
-at the entrance to the Dark Alleys.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is Sir Percy here? Is this he?” whispers
-Biddy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy bows, for he is there; while the other
-two gentlemen, inferring from her tone that she
-seeks a private ear, instantly withdraw to one of
-the boxes for a glass of Burgundy to refresh their
-spirits.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve news for you, of one you’re a-dyin’ for, of
-Lady Peggy Burgoyne!” exclaims she triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What! What!” comes simultaneously from
-behind each of the masks she addresses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye; I’m after learning from, whom, think
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Proceed, for the love of God, Madam!” says
-Percy, very low.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>“From him that’s supposed to be her husband,
-Sir Robin McTart, that mistook me for her,” Biddy
-titters, “that she’s here to-night by an appointment
-with him, made by a trusted servant of hers,
-called 'Mr. Incognito’; sent to meet Sir Robin before
-the shop of Monsieur Jabot in Holborn; and
-he’s not seen Her Ladyship,—I mean Sir Robin’s
-not seen her since they were sojourning in Kent
-together! and there’s a mystery for you! And I
-made excuses and left him a-standin’ by the lion,
-for I could no longer contain the news, but must
-run back to him now to extract the rest of it.
-Pray heaven, Lady Peggy herself comes not by,
-and lets out that I was not she at all, at all!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good God!” murmurs Percy under his breath,
-as Biddy rattles on. “Can this thing be? and what
-does it all mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Restraining Lady Biddy, both he and Lady
-Diana endeavor to quiet her abounding spirits,
-and to gain from her the detailed account of her
-encounter with Sir Robin. Percy, in the midst
-of her voluble tongue and her giggling, striving to
-form some plan of action which shall this night
-bring matters to the touch between himself and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>the Baronet and leave one or t’other of ’em stiff
-and stark.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meantime, Sir Robin, with greedy eyes fixed on
-Lady Biddy, so long as he can see her, and until
-she and her companions withdraw into a box,
-stands as if at one with the wooden lion; presently,
-however, his gaze is diverted hither and yon, not
-only by the playful and engaging remarks of various
-young ladies who challenge his mask in the
-most direct and obliging fashion, but by a certain
-Figure which he beholds moving about aimlessly,
-it would seem, and alone, beneath the dark shadows
-of the trees toward the river.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is something in this Figure’s motions, although
-cloaked and masked,—therefore, the Baronet
-notes, one of Mr. Brummell’s party,—which
-strikes him as familiar, and when, presently, the
-unknown lifts mask and reveals the countenance
-behind it, Sir Robin sidles up, one eye on the
-wooden lion of his tryst, however, and plucking
-Lady Peggy by the arm, says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ho! Mr. Incognito!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy turns, and betwixt disgust, dismay, horror,
-and amusement, remains silent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>“’Tis I, Sir, Robin McTart,” lifting his own
-mask a trifle to assure his companion of his identity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Soh!” returns she, “I do perceive.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Mr. Incognito, what do I not owe to your
-being in My Lady’s employ! She is indeed here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship, taking this for a question, answers
-thus, with emphasis: “Yes, she’s here—indeed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have seen her,” sighs the little Baronet, leaning
-his head, just exactly the height of Her Ladyship’s
-own, down on Peggy’s shoulder in an excess
-of sensibility.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you?” exclaims she, not daring to stir in
-the embarrassment of believing it possible that the
-scoundrel has discovered her identity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, yes,” sighs Sir Robin, “I have received a
-pressure, nay two of ’em, from her hand. I’ve
-kissed her fingers; I await her return to meet me
-at the wooden lion yonder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you?” says Lady Peggy, mystified beyond
-everything. “Did she look as you expected her
-to?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah!” gasps Sir Robin, “she has not yet lifted
-her mask for me to behold her countenance, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>when she returns, I shall beseech her for one
-glimpse!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah!” returns Peggy, now fully persuaded that
-some one has been making a jest of her companion,
-but none the less disquieted on her own score.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hark ye, Sir Robin,” says she, “you have ever
-found my counsels wise. Be advised by me now;
-leave Vauxhall at once. Lady Peggy Burgoyne
-is not safe, so long as you tarry here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The little Baronet, doughtily, although trembling,
-puts his hand to his hilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, Sir!” continues Peg, “your weapon would
-not avail for her preservation. She leaves town
-this very night for Kennaston. Do you the same,
-nor risk detection longer here.” Her Ladyship
-uses the word advisedly, and has the satisfaction
-of seeing Sir Robin shiver with terror, then steady
-again as he reflects that Her Ladyship’s fears can
-but be in connection with her own escapade; since,
-’tis plain from all he can spy and eavesdrop, not a
-soul as yet has missed Sir Percy de Bohun from his
-accustomed haunts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But she swore me she’d be back in a few moments,
-Mr. Incognito, and ’sdeath! Sir!” perceiving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>Lady Biddy emerging from the box and
-advancing toward the lion alone, “there she is!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Off and away Sir Robin McTart to join his
-Fair, while Lady Peggy, screened by the increasing
-shadows, for the dripping lamps are one by
-one, by this, dying down in their globes, beholds
-one—she devines not which—of Beau Brummell’s
-lady guests, courtesying and greeting the Baronet
-with her finger-tips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now My Lady’s heart’s a-thumping monstrous
-hard; she beholds, as well as Sir Robin and his
-supposed Peggy, two others—alas! she knows too
-well who they are, a-peeping out from the corner
-of the box-entrance whence Lady Biddy came just
-now, and watching her encounter with Sir Robin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These are Lady Diana and Sir Percy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Together? Aye and a-goin’ to be “together” for
-all their lives, she sadly thinks, both of them,
-quite forgetting, save perchance for a moment’s beguilement,
-her very existence. But it behooves her,
-if not for her own sake, of which she has come to
-the pass of recking but little, then for her father’s
-and mother’s, now to bid farewell forever to disguises,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>falsehoods, cheatings, man’s estate, and
-even the melancholy chance of seeing the countenance
-of Sir Percy. She will off presently, and
-reach home as best she may.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A few minutes, more or less, can make no odds,
-and ’tis but too true that Her Ladyship stood
-there in ambush of the branches in the vain hope
-that Percy might lift his mask, if but for an instant,
-and thus allow her parting gaze to rest upon
-his features.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is quite true that mortals, although in never
-such haste to reach a desired crisis, still ofttimes
-halt at the threshhold of its attainment; so Her
-Ladyship, with now nothing to hinder her escape,
-still stood leaning against an oak, listless, but for
-the eager eyes fixed on the pair in the box entrance.
-These presently crossed into the throng and, joining
-others of the maskers, were lost to her view;
-but the Baronet and Lady Biddy had not been idle
-of their tongues this while.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Much simpering, angling for news, tittering,
-and a neat show of wit in the manner of plying a
-gentleman with questions on a matter about which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>he was quite ignorant, on the lady’s side; ardor,
-impatience, as much daring as his little spirit permitted,
-on the gentleman’s. Finally said he:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Incognito says you start for Kennaston
-this very night, my dearest life, is’t so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell me who is Mr. Incognito?” says she, “and
-I’ll answer you straight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s your paid servant, sworn slave, and the
-bearer of all tender messages between us.—Now, go
-you to Kennaston to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As sure as I’m Lady Peggy Burgoyne,” returns
-Biddy. “I start for home ere cock-crow!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll follow you poste-haste, but,” cries Sir
-Robin, “loveliest of created beings, I beseech, I
-implore! one glimpse of your angelic countenance
-before we part—to meet only when I can claim
-you as my own!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No! No!” exclaims Biddy, restraining the
-Baronet’s hand which is laid upon the lutestring
-of her mask.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But divine creature, I insist!” with one arm
-seizing the buxom Lady Biddy about the waist,
-while with the other he essays to untie the riband
-which hides her charms from view.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>Then Lady Biddy O’Toole, whose lungs were of
-the best, let such a bawl as rang far up and down
-the Thames, causing a score of red-stockinged boatmen
-to leave their wherries and dash up the Gardens;
-causing every tongue in Vauxhall to cease
-clacking, every glass to jingle to its table, every
-echo to resound; every other lady there to shriek;
-the musicians to stop; the waiters to drop their
-trays; each gentleman to draw sword; and a vast
-number of persons of both sexes to shout:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Watch! Watch! Murder! Thieves! Highwaymen!”
-and whatever else beside.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While a concourse of people of every condition
-at once closed in around Sir Robin and Lady
-Biddy, at the outside rim of which, shivering betwixt
-terror and that lively curiosity which overrides
-even a desire for personal safety, gaped the
-now unmasked Vicar of Friskingdean, unable to
-find his natural protector and sometime pupil in
-all this hurly-burly.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_050.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XV—Wherein'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_051.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XV</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Wherein Sir Percy and Sir Robin come face</em></div>
- <div><em>to face, to the unfeigned amazement of</em></div>
- <div><em>each: and where My Lady takes</em></div>
- <div><em>to her heels and a wherry.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Lady Diana and Percy quitted the box,
-he, after conducting her to the care of Lady Brookwood,
-strode off into the Dark Alleys, taking with
-him, not Kennaston, for the hopeless youth, flouted
-still by Diana, had gone a-mooning by the river’s
-bank, but a company of valiant and merry gentlemen
-all raised a bit by the partaking of the famous
-Vauxhall punch; and to them he confided sufficient
-of his reasons and intentions, as made plain
-their course to them as his friends, to do aught
-and all in their several powers toward the promoting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>of a quarrel betwixt him and Sir Robin McTart;
-whom, he would presently point out to them,
-as they should stroll, seeming careless, the length
-of the walk.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus, arm in arm, Sir Percy, Sir Wyatt Lovell,
-His Grace of Escombe, and Mr. Jack Chalmers,
-across the path, swaggering with sticks and tassels
-hanging, hats at a cock, perfumed with Venus oil,
-and most jocund of demeanor; with Beau Brummell
-behind ’em spying, waving his little muff,
-and chatting with Lord Wootton and one or two
-more gay sparks, all disporting themselves carelessly,
-but hilts eased for the drawing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just as they were nearing the wooden lion of Sir
-Robin’s tryst, Lady Biddy’s shriek assailed their
-ears, and Sir Percy, thanking Providence for so
-opportune an occurrence, which, not to say that it
-was in any way premeditated, yet continued to
-ring out louder and louder, even after Sir Robin
-had ceased to pull at her mask-string and stood,
-held fast in Her Ladyship’s stout grasp, the very
-center of a blaze of light from footmen’s flambeaux,—they
-and the masses pushing every way,
-screaming and cursing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>Into the thick of this mêlée dashed Sir Percy de
-Bohun, with his friends on either side of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But a moment sufficed for him to wrest the Lady
-from her assailant and to deliver her over to the
-care of Diana and the Duchess, who carried her
-swooning (whether with laughter or emotion
-’twould be difficult to set down), to the Room.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In another second, taking his silver-fringed
-gloves from his pocket he threw them into the
-masked face of Sir Robin McTart.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The little Baronet, who had both temper and
-vanity, which brace now got the upperhand of
-his cowardice, and, believing that Lady Peggy’s
-eyes were upon him, that Sir Percy was at the
-bottom of the Thames, and with full foreknowledge
-that he could run away before the meeting
-could be arranged, caught the gloves as they struck
-and flung them back into their owner’s covered
-countenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Take that! ’sdeath!” squeaked Sir Robin, now
-much the more valiant as he beheld the Vicar
-screwing his way toward him through the excited
-crowds.</p>
-
-<div id='i_278fp' class='figcenter id011'>
-<img src='images/i_278fp.jpg' alt='I am Sir Robin McTart!...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Unmask, and show yourself for who you are!”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>cried Percy, every one of his companions echoing:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Unmask! Unmask! Unmask, or we’ll run
-ye!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Willingly,” responded the trembling gentleman
-from Kent, tugging at the slip-knot in his mask-string.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Sir Robin McTart! Who, the devil, are
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Sir Percy de Bohun!” replied his opponent,
-as both masks came off at the same instant,
-and the two confronted one another, staring with
-four eyes that fairly popped in their sockets.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twould be hard to say which of these two was
-the more astounded, although Sir Percy’s amazement
-had quite a different flavor from the Baronet’s
-abject terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You! Sir Percy de Bohun!” he quavered, turning
-ashy pale. “I’ll not believe it. ’Tis a lie!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You! Sir Robin McTart!” replied Percy, hotly.
-“Gentlemen,” turning to his friends, “I pray
-you bear me out in this, not to the exclusion of
-my challenge of this impostor, which holds good
-until one or t’other of us sheds blood, but for the
-preservation of the honor of a valiant gentleman,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>who is not far off of us now. That this weazen
-wretch may meet his dues, for not only does he
-masquerade his face, but seeks to usurp the character
-and name of one whom we all know to be
-both handsome, brave and courageous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy’s blood runs high as he speaks these generous
-words, while every soul about him stands
-breathless, staring, struck dumb with the singularity
-of the episode.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But I am Sir Robin McTart,” cries the Baronet,
-brandishing his weapon with a will, since there is
-none to oppose him, and the Vicar, now, although
-well-nigh choked, not above ten yards distant from
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut, Sir, whoever you are,” interposed
-Lord Escombe. “Your game’s up, and you’d better
-give your lies a rest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold!” cries Sir Percy to Robin, “whoever
-you are, I challenge you to fight me ten minutes
-hence, yonder in the open, towards the river, and
-those ten minutes my friends and I’ll spend in
-calling the actual Sir Robin McTart into your
-presence, and confronting your impudence with
-his reality. Lend me your lungs, My Lords and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>Gentlemen; Sir Robin’s in call somewhere in the
-Gardens as we all know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And with one accord the shout went up, ringing
-up and down the river and far across to the highway,
-where it caused the horse-patrol to think that
-every highwayman in the kingdom had broken
-loose upon Vauxhall, and presently brought them
-rearing, plunging, swearing, firing, thumping cutlasses
-right and left, into the midst of the surging
-thousands, by this all shouting:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir
-Robin! Sir Robin! Sir Robin McTart!” at the
-top of their voices.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But for all their bawling, no one answered, no
-one came, and but one of the vast throng went.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This was Lady Peggy, at a loss to know the
-meaning of the shouts, not having been near
-enough to the scene of the encounter to learn its
-purport, and only now realizing that ’twas herself
-was sought and meant by the concerted cry that
-rent the air. Scenting a new if unknown danger,
-she followed her woman’s instinct, and, in the
-waiting pause that succeeded the tumultuous call,
-Peggy fled to the landing, pressed a handful of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>shillings, almost her last, into the palm of the
-only boatman there, jumped into the wherry and
-bade him get her as swiftly as he could to Queenhithe
-Stairs; for determined was she, now more
-than ever, to leave no traces in her wake, and to
-return, at all risks, to Mr. Brummell’s house for
-her bundle of woman’s clothes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For a long way down the Thames the renewed
-cry of the Vauxhall crush rang in her distracted
-ears:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir
-Robin! Sir Robin! Where are you? Come forth!
-Show yourself!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But none other came forth, and the Baronet,
-taking such courage as he might through his astonishment
-at Sir Percy’s being alive,—and not forgetting,
-even at this point, to reckon how much
-the lying assassins had mulcted him of, now,
-in the second breathless halt of the calling his own
-name, waved his weapon and answered it, saying
-again:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Sir Robin McTart!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Prove it,” shouted Chalmers, with a derisive
-shrug.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>“Faith! and so he can by me!” exclaimed the
-panting Vicar, as, borne rather by the surging of
-the people than by his slender legs, the tenant of
-the cloth was pitched somewhat unceremoniously
-head-first into his pupil’s middle. Sputtering, but
-yet winning the attention which truth and the
-clergy usually and righteously obtain, the Vicar
-raised his right hand, and, laying his left on the
-Baronet’s shoulder, he spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is Sir Robin McTart of Robinswold, Kent.
-I have known him from his birth; his father before
-him; he has been my pupil. Who dares use
-his name than himself is an impostor and a thief!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What!” and now comes forward Mr. Brummell
-with open hand. “And my old friend,” says he,
-“’sdeath, Mr. What’s-your-name, you were a
-curate when we met last, twenty years ago, but I
-remember you, Sir, at Robinswold. So this,”
-surveying the Baronet, “is my old friend’s son and
-heir? Of a truth he favors his sire more than the
-pretty young rapscallion that’s been a-fooling us
-all for now these four weeks past; for gentlemen,”
-adds the Beau, turning to Sir Percy, “’tis as well
-we confess ourselves to have been duped. Gad,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>Sir,” this <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>sotto voce</em></span> to Percy alone, “I always
-wondered where Sir Hector found that handsome
-lad, for he was as ugly a gentleman as ever was
-wedded to wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After the storm there came that calm which is
-the inevitable successor, save that, in this case,
-while the noise subsided, the wonder grew. Every
-one of Mr. Brummell’s company and all of the
-rest of the world beside, was rehearsing his and her
-own surmise as to the identity of the young gentleman
-who had, for above a month, been the town
-toast, and who had now disappeared as suddenly
-as he came. Some believed him to be Tom Kidde
-himself; some, a Lord out of France; some, a
-Prince of the blood; some, the Devil; some, an
-astrologer; there was no lack of inventions as to
-Her Ladyship’s identity by the time the ten minutes
-of Sir Percy’s setting had come to an end.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He cast an eye about the place looking for Sir
-Robin, and his veins were fairly on fire to know
-the color of his rival’s blood and wring from his, he
-hoped, dying lips, a confession of where Lady
-Peggy was. Presently, not spying his opponent,
-he begged Escombe and Chalmers to have the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>goodness to seek him out; settle the spot; ask him
-to choose his seconds; call a surgeon (of whom
-there were always a score in attendance at Vauxhall,
-ready for just such affairs), while he himself
-swung down toward the river to look for Kennaston
-and give him one last word for Peggy, should
-Sir Robin run him through.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peg’s twin lay on the turf sleeping. Such are
-the effects of being at once a poet and a lover, not
-yet twenty, and quite fagged with wide-awake
-nights and days and a fair lady’s cruel caprices.
-Sir Percy looked at him, smiled, and whispered
-as he knelt:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Dear lad, thou that art My Lady’s twin, when
-next thou seest her, sure I know she’ll lay her dear
-lips on thy brow, and there she’ll find, this.” Percy
-kissed the boy as he spoke. “’Tis doubtless more
-than she’d care to discover, but, if death comes,
-’twill ease the blow and charm the pain while I
-remember this message that I send her now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He turned away and left Peg’s brother lying
-there to waken at his leisure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When he reached the Walk again, another clamor
-greeted him identical with its predecessor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin McTart! Sir
-Robin! Sir Robin! Come forth of your seclusion.
-The time is up. Sir Robin, I say-y-y-y!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This Sir Robin McTart had vanished as mysteriously
-as the other one, and though the entire
-company made the welkin ring with the same cry
-over again:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart! Sir Robin! Sir Robin!
-Sir Robin McTart!” no Sir Robin appeared or
-could be found, and they were fain be content,
-reinforced by the ladies now well out of their
-swoons and terrors, to finish up the night with
-punch and loo in the boxes, all brains much of a
-muddle with the strange adventures and miraculous
-disappearances incident upon Beau Brummell’s
-never-to-be-forgotten masquerade party at
-Vauxhall.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_050.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XVI—Which doth set forth how My Lady Peg, Sir Percy and Sir Robin...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XVI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Which doth set forth how My Lady Peg, Sir</em></div>
- <div><em>Percy and Sir Robin all put up at the</em></div>
- <div><em>“Queen and Artichoke:” and what a</em></div>
- <div><em>fine hurly-burly thereupon ensues.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The moment that the excitement of the Vicar’s
-identification had subsided, the Baronet, leading
-the worthy old man to the gates and there quitting
-him under pretext of fetching a hackney coach,
-skipped without, and, hiring one with a couple of
-the horse-patrol at a squeezing price, jumped in
-and made off for his inn at Pimlico, leaving his
-whilom preceptor to shift for himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin had no mind at all for duels with any
-one, least of all with the resurrected Sir Percy de
-Bohun, whom his guilty conscience suspected to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>fully cognizant of the author of his attempted
-assassination. Terrified with all this and, if possible,
-more so by the accounts he had listened to,
-right and left, of his valorous and most mysterious
-name-sake, the little gentleman at once made up
-his mind as to the course wisest for him to pursue,
-and forthwith pursued it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Back to Pimlico, and into bed, shivering betwixt
-the linen and feathers; up for a toilet of the best
-and neatest; curling his wig thriftily himself by
-the fire; a good breakfast; a coach at noon with
-Kennaston Castle for goal; and himself and his
-ardent and blissful hopes and beliefs for freight
-and luggage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For, not twelve hours since, had not My Lady
-Peggy’s own emissary, the delightful “Mr. Incognito,”
-told him that his mistress was leaving
-for home last night? Nay, had not Peggy herself,
-with her own lips, said that she started for
-Kennaston “ere cock-crow”? and whatever could
-such words mean but that he, the object of her
-tenderest solicitude, should follow her at once?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Biddy’s bawl, ’tis true, echoed in the
-Baronet’s recollection, but ’twas, to his way of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>thinking merely an index of the liveliness of her
-disposition and the enchanting coyness of her
-moods.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He adjusted his wig with a beaming smile,
-snapped his crooked little fingers at the mere memory
-of Sir Percy de Bohun, the Vicar, his spurious
-name-sake, and all the rest of it, as he blithely
-set off on his amorous quest, at high noon, from
-the Puffled Hen in Pimlico.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That same morning toward dawn, Percy had
-ridden home alone, leaving Kennaston, cheered
-by a smile and a pressure of Lady Diana’s hand,
-to return to his chambers in Grub street, whither
-the young poet had removed some few days since
-from Lark Lane, at the instance of having had a
-piece of good fortune, in the way of a commendation
-from no less a personage than the great Doctor
-Johnson himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The reflections of Peggy’s adorer were various
-and most tormenting; his brain, as he tossed in
-his bed, was a labyrinth wherein he wandered, vainly
-endeavoring to solve such riddles as—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where was Lady Peggy? Was she indeed the
-bride of either of the Sir Robins? Who was the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>comely young gentlemanly rogue who had for
-weeks bewitched the fair and charmed the brave?
-Where had he disappeared? To whom, in reality,
-was he indebted for the saving of his own life
-at the Dove Pier; and whose were the St. Giles’s
-hirelings who had near made an end of him
-there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bewildered and at wits’ end, he finally, as the sun
-was at meridian, sprang from his uneasy couch,
-rang and rapped thrice for Grigson, made a sorry
-pretense at conversing on politics with his uncle,
-whom he presently encountered in the hall; inwardly
-cursed the old gentleman; and at last, by
-three o’clock, got his will, which was, astride of
-the long roan, Grigson on the black, to cross to the
-Surrey side of the river, and ride as fast as ever
-he could to Kennaston Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By heavens!” cried he to himself, pounding
-Battersea Bridge. “It is time her father knew, and
-Her Lady mother too, that she is neither in Kent
-or anywhere else in their reckoning; and if it puts
-’em both into their shrouds, they’ll hear the truth,
-and set about solving the riddle before sunrise to-morrow.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>I’m sailing on Thursday for the Colonies,
-but I go not until I am assured of her safety,—and
-her happiness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus it happened that not above three hours
-after Sir Robin had started from Pimlico with his
-destination Kennaston, Sir Percy quitted Charlotte
-Street with the same beacon in view; and
-each, the one in his coach, t’other in his saddle,
-brain full and heart bursting with but one thought,
-and that Lady Peggy Burgoyne.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship meantime, on landing from the
-wherry, fairly scampered her way to Mr. Brummell’s
-for fear of desperadoes and Mohocks. At
-one point wild cries of—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Watch!” greeted her ears from the open window
-of a gaming-house; at another a bullet whizzed
-above her head, the outcome of a duel being fought
-in a narrow street she traversed. In and out she
-threaded her path, until presently the pink flush
-of the dawn pierced the fog into a silvery mist
-and she had gained the Beau’s threshhold. Passing
-the sleepy servants, Peggy ran up to her room
-and once again drew the bundle from its hiding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>place, tucked the long tail of her dark hair well
-inside, cast a glance of pitiable amusement about
-the chamber, and says she, going:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“God knows if I ever get leave to put on a lady’s
-garments again; but I’ll never come back here,
-that’s certain, since now am I no one, not even Sir
-Robin McTart!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So, challenged merely by the still drowsy footman
-who asks: “Beg pardon, and with submission,
-Sir Robin, but will you be home for dinner, Sir, or
-not until supper?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For neither, to-day,” answers Her Ladyship,
-running out into Peter’s Court, and then coming
-to a dead halt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She drew a long deep breath, as deep as the fog
-would let her, much as a dog does before he starts
-on the scent; she jingled the little money left in
-her purse, gave her hat the cock as she beheld a
-passer-by, and struck out for London Bridge,
-which, at this early hour of the day, she found
-easy enough to cross afoot, barring the filth and
-mud.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas the first time she had been on it since the
-memorable afternoon when she and Chockey had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>first come up to town in the coach from the Kennaston
-Arms. Now stalking along with a will,
-and a swing to her bundle, My Lady had chance
-to note the tall gaunt houses lining the bridge at
-each side where the pin-makers dwelt and worked;
-the gigantic water-wheel under the arches which
-supplied the town with water; the increasing tide
-of wagons, carts, pedestrians, porters, whoever else
-(save the chairs or coaches of fine ladies and gentlemen
-of which, at this time of day, there were
-none). Arrived at Surrey side, Her Ladyship
-paused to consider and, wrapping herself well in
-her camlet cloak, the which she had used at the
-masquerade so lately, thereby hiding her blue velvet
-breeches, laced waistcoat, point ruffles, Mechlin
-lace cravat, rich coat, and jeweled hilt, soon
-obtained fare in the one-seated cart of a country
-clown who was off for Tooting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship decided very quickly that ’twas
-but a necessary precaution for her to avoid highways,
-stage-coaches, and inns of reputation, since
-probably by this a full description of the supposed
-Sir Robin would be word of mouth from Westminster
-to Mile End, and a dozen miles out of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>town with the Lord knows but a price set upon
-his head!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once arrived at Tooting, ’twas her intention to
-double on her tracks, return with some bumpkin’s
-load of vegetables to Garret Lane and thence to
-foot it across country or by penny’s-worth rides
-with village folk, reaching the neighborhood of
-Kennaston, perhaps late that night; or, if she
-should be compelled to sleep under some friendly
-farmer’s roof, at least by the next high noon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Her Ladyship reckoned, if not without her
-hosts, most decidedly without taking count of the
-weary beast that dragged her, nor yet of any possible
-fellow-guests she might encounter on arriving
-at the Queen and Artichoke at Tooting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was nightfall, when, limp and unnerved, possibly
-for the very first time in her life conscious
-of such physical conditions, the clown pulled her
-up before the inn in order to allow her to alight.
-Bundle under arm; feet and legs, up to calves, well
-bespattered with mud from the reek of her passage
-across London Bridge afoot; wig somewhat tangled
-for all that she had slipped her wig comb out
-of pocket and essayed to smooth it a bit; sleeves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>upturned, cloak dragging over her arm to heels,—a
-sorry, disheveled-appearing young personage
-jumped from among a pile of oat-bags, leathern
-aprons, chairs, unsold produce, wilted flowers, and
-under the askant eyes of ’ostler, boots, barmaid,
-mistress, and host, marched boldly into the parlor
-of the Queen and Artichoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Was there a chamber to be had?” for Her Ladyship
-plainly saw she must lie at Tooting and not
-proceed on her homeward journey until the morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There was a chamber; an admission hesitatingly
-made, even at this modest hostelry, to a young
-gentleman arriving without either servant, luggage,
-box, horse, coach, or dog, and by means of a vile
-rickety little cart. Yet, such was Her Ladyship’s
-swagger, notwithstanding a full splash of mud on
-the tip-end of her handsome little chin, she was
-presently conducted to a decent chamber, up-stairs,
-at the rear, it is true, yet overlooking the green,
-where a game of bowls was in progress, and with a
-fine trellis, thick with vines, beneath its small-paned
-window.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Was there an ordinary?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>Oh, the shame and humiliation of it! that the
-daughter of the Earl of Exham should be put to
-such an ebb, instead of ordering the best the house
-afforded sent at once to her room.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Aye, there was an ordinary of two dishes and a
-pastry at ten-pence, and it would be ready in the
-quarter hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ten-pence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship had just eleven pence ha’penny
-left in her purse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet, thought she, refreshed by a good meal and
-the leaving of her weapon as a hostage for her
-lodging, she would better eat than faint to-night,
-whatever might betide on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While she washed her hands, after hiding the
-bundle under the feather bed, Her Ladyship heard
-the ring of horses’ hoofs on the stone pave of the
-inn yard; and her quick ear even detected the fact
-that one of the steeds went lame.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She peered out of window and beheld Sir Percy
-astride of his own long roan, with Grigson just
-dismounting from the smoking black.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is cursed luck!” mutters the master, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>he himself, out of saddle, stoops to examine the
-roan’s much swollen off hind-leg.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is, Sir Percy,” returns the man, “but, by
-your leave, Sir, it may be we can hire a mount here,
-although it don’t look too promisin’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Unlikely,” says Sir Percy. “The best we can
-do is to lie in this hole for the night, and by a hot
-poultice and a bandage, the roan may be in condition
-by to-morrow forenoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well, Sir; it be a damn poor place of entertainment,
-Sir Percy, with an ordinary at ten-pence,
-Sir.” Grigson’s tone of derision is marked
-by the guest who draws close about her face the
-cotton curtain of the upper rear chamber window.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Will you be pleased to be served in your room,
-Sir Percy, at once, and of whatever can be had?
-What wine, Sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut, Grigson. I’ll into the ordinary; off
-with you to the stables with the roan, rub her down
-and medicine her, then to your own supper in the
-kitchen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Host,” observes Mr. Grigson, loftily, as that
-worthy obsequiously appears in the yard with an
-attendant train, as is customary in welcoming persons
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>of quality, “Sir Percy de Bohun has the condescension
-to say he will sup in the ordinary,
-and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whatever Mr. Grigson’s further remark may
-have intended to result in, was, at this crisis, lost
-to posterity by such a clattering from up on the
-high road ’round the corner of the green lane,
-where nestled the Queen and Artichoke, that every
-eye was turned to behold such a cloud of dust as
-joyed the soul of Boniface, whose tuned intelligence
-foresaw a coach and four horses; in the
-light of which Sir Percy de Bohun’s reeking lame
-roan and ill-kempt aspect faded into almost as
-much insignificance as had, long since, the traveler
-who had arrived in the clown’s cart.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Boots alone was left to guide Sir Percy to his
-apartment, while the rest made a concerted dash
-for the yard entrance, just in time to make their
-most profound bows and courtesies before the
-spick little gentleman who thrust his inquiring
-little head out of window, keeping his door closed,
-as he beckoned the landlord to him with eager
-heavy eyes well under cover of his pulled-down
-hat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>“What guests have you to-night?” asked the little
-gentleman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the very moment he was propounding his
-query, Sir Percy, now sunk to ignominy even in the
-eyes of Boots by announcing he would sup at
-ten-pence, was being ushered into an upper chamber
-adjoining the very one in which sat, dejected,
-robbed of even the prospect of food by his presence,
-Lady Peggy Burgoyne.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very few, My Lord,” answered the host glibly,
-“the very best chamber on the first floor with the
-sitting-room has been kept for Your Lordship,”
-applying hand to latch of coach-door, the which,
-however, is still firmly held by its occupant.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Their names?” asks the little gentleman, while
-at the fleck of one of the postilion’s lashes his
-wheelers begin to prance and advance so far into
-the yard as that their racket brings Peggy a second
-time to her narrow pane, a-squinting up her eyes
-to see who this may be. For, in the midst of her
-distress, as befalls often enough to all of us, she
-takes unconscious note of minor happenings, the
-which, those who study such matters affirm to be
-proof of the two-sided condition of men’s minds.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>“Your guests’ names?” reiterates the small gentleman,
-as, followed by the cortège of dame, maid,
-man, dog, cat, and tame magpie, the coach comes
-to a halt within excellent range of Her Ladyship’s
-coign of vantage and earshot. “I must know them
-before I alight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, My Lord, there’s Mr. Bigge, the Curate
-from Risley Commons, as stops over here on his
-way to Finchley every week; Mr. Blunt, the traveling
-tailor; His Grace the Duke of Courtleigh’s
-own man, off on his holiday; Mr. Townes and his
-new married wife a-goin’ to settle in the lodge at
-the Manor-house; a young spark drabbled with
-mud and havin’ no boxes and no servants, what arrived
-by means of a market cart just anon, and Sir
-Percy de Bohun, a fine gentleman what’s just ridden
-in the yard before Your Lordship’s coach,
-but”—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who?” The little gentleman turned green in
-his pallor, and shot back in his cushions with a
-gasp.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not much of any account, My Lord, I’m thinking,
-since Jenny here tells me he sups at the ordinary;
-of course Your Lordship’ll be served in your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>own sitting-room and dame and myself to humbly
-wait upon you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold your tongue!” says the little man, gathering
-his scattered wits and pausing to think, while
-his steeds paw noisily on the cobble pavement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy, at the pane, almost laughs as she regards
-the shrinking weazened visage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robert McTart!” she says to herself, shaking
-her head at the little vixen. “’Tis indeed a
-merry fate that puts me and Percy and you all
-under one roof this night. That is, if his presence
-don’t fright you into a gallop!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy himself, also for a second standing
-moodily at his casement, could and did behold
-thence Sir Robin’s restive and hungry leaders, and
-had a passing wonder as to what the devil brought
-any gentleman to stop at such an inn, save as himself,
-by the misfortune of a nail in his animal’s
-foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin, however, with that discretion and
-prudence, not to say cowardice, which distinguished
-him, had purposely chosen the Queen and Artichoke,
-for, upon second thought, he had determined
-to sleep in comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>Sir Robin loved his feathers and quilts of a
-night far better than the jolt of ruts and ditches,
-and dreaded highwaymen more than even the pangs
-of delayed love-making.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By his choice he had hoped to escape the least
-chance of an encounter with Sir Percy, whom he
-believed to be in hot pursuit of him, and at this
-juncture his wise little pate quickly resolved that
-it were better for him to alight, gain his chamber,
-and harbor there in safety until such time as that
-Sir Percy should have unsuspectingly proceeded
-on his quest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If you can ensure me a perfect privacy; to go
-unseen to my rooms, a fair service, and dry linen,
-with quiet as to cocks and neighbors, I will remain
-here for the present,” says Sir Robin, almost taking
-in Lady Peggy by the squint of his uncontrollable
-left eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a trice, Sir Robin is attended to his bower,
-and ere long the best in the larder is laid before
-him. Sir Percy partakes of the homely fare of
-the ordinary; and Her Ladyship sits, unheeding
-the tardy summons of the dame, supperless, hungry,
-fagged, in her tiny room where the warmth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>from the kitchen chimney reaches her, and where
-the goodly smells from Sir Robin’s fowls, sausages,
-eggs, and fruit-pie assail her senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Grigson, doctoring the roan, endeavored
-with much creditable tact to get wind of the name
-or title of the master of the coach, but Sir Robin’s
-men had had their lesson, and not a hint was to
-be got out of either of them by Mr. Grigson, or
-by the curious host of the Queen and Artichoke
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By eleven every candle was out in the house. All
-the guests, save two, slept the sleep of the presumably
-just.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_015.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XVII—Wherein Her Ladyship slips leash of all mankind...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_035.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XVII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Wherein Her Ladyship slips leash of all mankind,</em></div>
- <div><em>runs for her life, and finds goal in</em></div>
- <div><em>the arms of Sir Robin McTart.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>These were Peggy and the little Baronet.
-Her Ladyship, mind made up to flee in the darkness,
-leaving six-pence on the table to pay for her
-lodgings, even now stood, latch in hand, bundle
-once more under arm, still a man, not having dared
-to change her garments.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin lay ensconced betwixt the quilts; the
-realizing sense that his mortal enemy, one who
-sought his life, who coveted His Lady—from whom
-he was running away, to be veracious,—lay not
-many yards off him, seeming to banish that restful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>repose that had seldom hitherto forsaken this
-worthy and exemplary little person.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A mouse squeaked, and Sir Robin shivered; a
-beetle pattered across the hearth, his hair stood
-on end.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Surely a footstep sounded in the hallway; the
-boards creaked; something metallic struck against
-the panel of his door, and he sprang from his
-couch and chattered to his sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lady Peggy’s blade had struck the woodwork as
-she made her way stealthily down in the darkness;
-while Sir Robin shook, she gained the lower end
-of the hall but, not being acquainted with its ways
-and turnings, above all, having forgot the two
-broad steps that cut the straight road to the entrance
-in two, Her Ladyship, with much clanking
-of her weapon on the brick flooring, fell sprawling;
-her bundle shooting off into the unseen, she up on
-hands and knees, hither, yon, seeking it; Sir Robin
-beating on his wainscot such a tattoo as was fit to
-wake the dead, shrieking, from the safe shelter of
-the muffling pillows where he huddled:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Murder! Thieves! Ho there! Landlord!
-Tom! James! Ho there, I say! Help! Help!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>Sir Percy, out of his four-post up-stairs in a
-flash, tinder struck, door flung open; in night-rail
-and cap, with rapier drawn, hanger uplifted, and—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath! What the devil is the matter!” cries
-he at top of lung. “Speak or I’ll fire!” and down
-the stair he plunges to Sir Robin’s very sill.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This one, having successfully summoned those
-more doughty than himself to cope with the supposed
-danger, now recognizing Sir Percy’s voice,
-shivers and sweats as he cowers and pulls the
-counterpane over his head, grasping his purse in
-his sharp little fingers; wisely never undoing of
-his door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Speak or I’ll fire,” repeats Sir Percy, whose
-candle has been blown out by the draught. He
-takes a few steps down the hallway where he hears
-the curious scratching noise Her Ladyship is making
-as she distractedly feels around for the bundle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At last she grasps it and creeps up unwittingly
-to Sir Percy’s very side; <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>de facto</em></span> her arm grazes
-his as she now raises herself to a standing posture,
-exactly as her lover, no answer being vouchsafed
-him, pulls his trigger and the ball goes a-whizzing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>through Sir Robin’s door panel and finds lodgement
-in the chimney bricks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy, her customary composure being much
-the worse for hunger and the general excitement,
-jumps when the shot pops, and thus inadvertently
-now palpably touches Percy’s elbow. He turns
-upon her and seizes her wrists in a grip of steel;
-she, as tightly hugging the bundle under her armpit,
-utters no sound, but wriggles and twists to
-such a purpose that she is about to get free when
-her opponent renews his endeavors with an oath.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Speak!” says he, “or I’ll brain you!” making
-to hold Peg’s two hands prisoner in one of his, the
-while he may seize his rapier and put a finish to
-the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She does not speak, but to the scene jump now
-the heavy cumbrous country-folk, rattled out of
-their deep slumber by Sir Percy’s ball and no less
-by the piercing and prolonged shrieks of Sir Robin,
-each Colin Clout and Dowsabel of ’em, armed with
-whatever they could catch; yet, luckily for Her
-Ladyship, no one of them with sense enough to
-fetch a candle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A light! a light! you damnable idiots!” cried
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>Sir Percy, while Her Ladyship makes a final
-twist to free herself, fruitless as before. She feels
-her ebbing strength at its last pinch and feels,
-too, the bundle loosening in her hold.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then, as landlord stumbles to his tinder-box,
-amid an uproar from all the travelers, especially
-the new made bride and her spouse, Peggy finds
-herself let go, nay, almost thrust aside as her
-captor ejaculates testily:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds! girl, why did you not proclaim your
-sex, and not leave me to find it out by a long wisp
-of woman’s hair between my fingers? Lights!
-Lights! I say! and we’ll get the fellow yet! He
-must be in the house, for no one’s left it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy has been for the moment meshed in
-his Lady’s long tresses, which, in the skirmish,
-have broke leash of the bundle and dangle out
-yard’s length.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For an instant she stands on the landing at bay.
-To unbolt the big door and make an open dash
-for freedom would mean certain death; to turn up
-therefrom and regain her chamber was her sole
-chance, and this must be done before a light could
-be struck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>She wheeled around and rushed up the hall, up
-the stairs among the clustering folk, nudging
-she knew not whom, skipped along the narrow
-rear passage, and into her room before candle
-flames revealed to the amazed company that neither
-bolt, bar, or latch had been disturbed, nor anything
-in the house taken!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Even while they rummaged in the bar-room till,
-counted the forks and spoons—pewter though they
-were, Her Ladyship, tying the luckless bundle
-about her waist with a hastily cut bed-cord, cautiously
-opened the casement, crawled out on the
-trellis, which unsteadied a bit beneath her weight
-but did not break; clambered in and out the vines
-to the edge, and then, lightly, thanks to her twin’s
-training, swung herself to the ground clear, crept
-across the yard, leaped the stone wall, with a bound
-and over; flew the width of the meadow; struck
-the lane, up to the high road; by the moon, took
-a southerly course which she knew made for Kennaston,
-and paused not much for breath until she
-had left a matter of five miles betwixt her and the
-Queen and Artichoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was coming three o’clock by this, and, all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>little night winds hushed, all the earth and trees
-and grasses, flowers, shrubs and weeds expectant,
-vibrant of the nearing dawn, whose pink and beauteous
-herald now looked over the hill-tops at the
-east, and put the lingering stars to shame, and
-woke the little birds, and bade every drop of dew
-flash on cup and blade; and all the things that
-breathe to grow and pulsate; to thrill through all
-their veins with joy that still another day was born.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship too was glad, for, brave as she
-had been through all the brief ordeal of her manhood,
-this last adventure had broken her spirit a
-bit, and hunger and fatigue had sadly weakened
-her flesh. As the lark mounted, singing to the now
-risen sun, she struck in a bit from the road and
-began an endeavor to calculate how far she might
-be from Kennaston village, or from any place familiar
-to her. But it was vain to speculate. Peggy,
-in all her cross-country rides, could not place
-the spot in which she now found herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Food was what she needed most and she came
-out into the open, shading her eyes with her hand
-and looking everywhere about for a curl of smoke
-that might guide her to a cottage. But no friendly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>film greeted her, and her hand fell listless at her
-side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hark! The tinkle of a bell, the soft lowing of
-a cow; not far off either. She ran a piece up the
-road and presently descried the herd huddling at
-the pasture bars waiting for their milking, yet no
-maid nor man in sight, no milking-stool nor pail
-nor cup, only the soft inviting lowing of the kine.
-Her bundle still tied about her waist, Her Ladyship
-let down the top bars, edged through, off with her
-once splendid but now much tarnished hat, set it
-under the nearest cow, knelt, and presently had the
-cock full of as fine foaming milk as one might
-wish to see. She rose and drank thankfully, rubbing
-the cow’s nose in gratitude; then; amid the
-concerted cries of the herd, she made off, a little
-refreshed, still keeping her southerly course; still
-haphazarding her way, for no house came in
-sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a matter of a dozen miles, and now reaching
-the edge of a woods, with the tower of a
-Castle just sticking up out of the horizon for her
-only beacon, Peggy halted and, the refreshment of
-the milk having been by this exhausted, the tears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>forced their way to her eyes and even ploughed two
-small furrows the length of her cheeks, cupping
-in the dimple of her chin, and splashing at last,
-on her much rumpled Mechlin lace cravat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Bah!” cried she. “I weep only because I am
-hungry. I am not afraid. Odzooks! She that
-has had the hemp about her neck to be strung up
-for a highwayman must not fear to encounter one
-of her own ilk,” and Her Ladyship essays to laugh
-as she plunges into the wood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It proves a harmless, peaceful, if somewhat
-devious neighborhood, where an occasional rabbit
-scurries over the dry leaves of last autumn’s falling,
-and where a large company of rooks are holding
-a caucus, but ’tis interminable; and Peggy’s
-legs are not of steel, it seems, but of that lusty
-flesh and blood and bone which, when made to do
-duty fasting, now these twenty hours, begin to
-give out. Her head, too, spins, the knot of her
-cravat seems to choke her as she loosens it; the
-weight of the bundle appears like twenty stone at
-the least about her waist, and she cuts the bed-cord
-and lets it drop, just for a few moments’ ease, she
-tells herself, as, at last, the other side of the forest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>is gained and she beholds a wide stretch of downs
-and naught but the elusive tower of the distant
-Castle, appearing farther away even than at first.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What common can this be?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once again she shades her blood-shot eyes and
-stares up at the sky. In crossing the woods, she
-must have struck mistakenly to the west. The
-sun is nearing the set, and Peggy now knows she
-has come to Farnham Heath where, report has it,
-some of the boldest cut-throats in the country rule
-the roost.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shall she start to cross it? Kennaston Village
-lies only ten miles on t’other side of it. That will-o’-the-wisp
-tower? that castle yonder? yes ’tis
-home! and she such a dullard as not to have mistrusted
-it before!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She will push on. Why not? What has she,
-forsooth, to tempt any thief, unless he took her for
-ransom.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Well, let him, since Percy de Bohun at this
-very moment, in all liklihood, kneels at the feet of
-Lady Diana; if highwaymen want to bear her off,
-why should she complain? And just then the
-tinkle of the little brook at the wayside beckons in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>Her Ladyship’s ear, the Castle tower appears to he
-dancing up and down against the sky; the two
-stark trees, yonder on the heath, are surely turning
-somersaults; the bundle drags all forgotten at her
-heels, and presently lies in the tall grasses which
-she threaded on her way to the brook. Her head
-swam, ten thousand blunderbusses seemed to be
-firing off inside of it; she pulled off her wig and
-threw it far from her; she unbuttoned her coat
-and waistcoat, and drew her cloak in a twist about
-her; she staggered, caught at an elder; it swayed
-with her to the water, as she fell swooning with her
-thirsty lips just in touch of the sparkling bubbles;
-her wan face shining in the glint of sunshine,
-the whole round world and all the men and
-women in it quite forgot, even her sword, unbuckled
-with the bed-cord, now lay glinting its
-jewels in the sedges half a dozen rods away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A pair of robins eyed her from the bushes, a bee
-swerved and swung above her mouth; the minnows
-darted next her cheek, but My Lady did not wake
-for any or all of these. She lay there motionless
-until the sun had gone down and all the sweet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>scents and drowsy sounds and whirrs and flutters
-of twilight had come up; until a fine coach with
-four horses and two postilions came prancing and
-pawing at a great rate of speed out of the wood to
-the heath. Until a little weazened fine gentleman,
-who had dozed in his bed until long past noon for
-fear of encountering a certain other gentleman,
-had risen leisurely, dined with relish, set out from
-the Queen and Artichoke only after being assured
-that the other gentleman had gone off on a ruined
-horse back to Garratt Lane in the hopes of obtaining
-a suitable mount, which same was not to be
-had short of the ten mile return; until the little
-gentleman, then, thrusting his face out of his
-coach window as the vehicle came to a sudden
-standstill, spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is this the heath?” he asks with blinking eyes
-and a shiver.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, Sir Robin, Farnham Heath, Sir!” answers
-one of the postilions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your pleasure, Sir Robin?” asks the second
-man respectfully, quieting his horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well,” returns the little Baronet, “if you think
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>can gallop across faster than those devils could
-overtake us, I say, proceed. If not—” he glances
-back over his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To tell the truth, the gentleman from Kent considered
-himself as betwixt two very impending
-fires, and, ’tis safe to say, he dreaded Sir Percy de
-Bohun’s possibility at his back as much, if not
-more, than he did the robbers in front of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We’re in the best condition, Sir,” returned
-the man, “and fifty minutes ought to take us out
-of all chances of danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Unless,” replies the master, again casting an
-apprehensive eye to the rear, “they might close in
-on us from behind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No fear, Sir,” cries the lackey, “our pistols
-are loaded and cocked; with your own rapier, pistols
-and the blunderbuss, Sir Robin, we should—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s that?” exclaims the second man, eyes
-bulging, as with the handle of his whip he points
-to the fallen figure by the brookside.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Zounds!” cries the first, rising in his seat to
-peer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Sdeath! Damnation!” squeaks Sir Robin,
-pulling down the coach-sash. “On with ye, you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>devils! On, I say!” thumping impatiently on the
-pane with his signet ring.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No fear, Sir, no fear, Sir Robin!” exclaims the
-second man, jumping to the ground and inspecting
-Her Ladyship. “It’s only a corp.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you sure?” opening the door cautiously.
-“Sure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, Sir Robin, a quality corp, Sir. Mayhap
-shot down by them vagabones out of the heath.
-Had I best see if there’s any life left in the young
-gentleman, Sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin descends from his coach, a pistol in
-one hand, a drawn rapier in the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Keep an eye on the lookout, James,” he whispers
-to the postilion who remains in his seat, and
-the Baronet minces in and out of the tall grasses,
-shaking the dew daintily from his sprawling feet,
-until he gains the spot, where his man kneels
-above the prostrate form.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ugh!” says he, turning aside his head in a
-species of disgust, “I never could abide the sight
-of the dead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas the very first time in his life he’d ever
-had a chance to behold such!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>“He ain’t quite cold yet, Sir Robin,” says the
-postilion. “There’s a flicker to his eye-lids, Sir,
-look!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Baronet looks; out of his hands tumble
-rapier and pistol.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife!” he cries, down on his knees, feeling at
-Her Ladyship’s pulse, pulling his flask from his
-pocket and trying vainly to pour the liquor between
-the firmly shut lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As he tries, the little gentleman’s wits work
-nimbly, which they could do on occasions, and, not
-stopping even to wonder at his discovery, only to
-accept instantly as a fact that his Lady had been
-struck down while pursuing him, he is so overjoyed
-at the beauty, sentiment, and opportuneness of the
-adventure, as to be scarce able to restrain his elation,
-even in the face of a serious swoon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Into the coach at once, James,” he says, raising
-Her Ladyship’s head himself, “your gentlest
-endeavors and a guinea apiece to you,” nodding to
-the other, as between them they carry the limp
-form to the coach, “if you bring me to Kennaston
-Castle before curfew.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Never fear, Sir Robin; if the young gentleman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>only holds out for a single hour, I swear, Sir, in
-the teeth of all the highwaymen in the kingdom,
-we’ll have you there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut,” says Sir Robin, smiling, no longer
-restraining an expression of his happiness and
-triumph, as he makes ready the rugs and cushions
-within to receive the burden James, for the moment,
-bears alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Tis no young gentleman, you rogues, ’tis My
-Lady Peggy Burgoyne, my bride that is to be.
-Wait a moment, Thomas, while I spread this
-shawl; and James, look you sharp behind us, for
-there’s a gentleman in pursuit of this Lady would
-kill me on sight if he can.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_034.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XVIII—In'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XVIII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>In the which Sir Percy steals a coach and</em></div>
- <div><em>four and the living contents thereof and</em></div>
- <div><em>makes off therewith at breakneck</em></div>
- <div><em>speed for life and death.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this very moment, two horsemen, sorry
-mounted enough, especially the master, are rounding
-the turn of the woodland path and about to
-emerge upon the open next the heath. He who
-rides the lame roan has his eyes bent upon the
-ground, a thousand sad and conflicting thoughts
-crowding his brain, as ’tis impossible even to urge
-his hurt steed, and a jog-trot is all that can be got
-out of her ever again. Garratt Lane had sent him
-away only with his own again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy, with submission, Sir,” exclaims
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>Grigson, “this be Farnham Heath, Sir, and, ’pon
-my life, Sir!” jumping from his saddle and darting
-to the grassy side of the way, “a rapier, Sir
-Percy!” picking it up and dragging with it the
-straggling bed-cord and its appending bundle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy leaped to the ground and seized the
-weapon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Grigson!” cried he, “there’s been foul work
-hereabouts. This is the sword of a gentleman I
-know, or my name’s not Percy de Bohun! He is
-a scurvy fellow, and my enemy, but if he has fallen
-among thieves, by the heaven above us! I’ll rescue
-him, even if ’tis to punish him later according to
-my own will. Take the rapier.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As he hands it back to his man, the bed-cord
-from the Queen and Artichoke, being a full century
-old, gives entirely away and My Lady Peggy’s
-duds, long tail of dark hair, pins, needles, whatever
-else beside, fall, scatter, topsy-turvy to the
-ground, and at the very same moment Percy sees
-before him, as in a nest among the sedges and ferns
-of the marshy brookland, the wig that Her Ladyship
-had flung off, and a scrap of tumbled paper
-addressed to himself, flapping, spiked on a thistle-top
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>near it! Thunderstruck, he is about to read
-it, when Grigson, who has gone on afoot a few
-steps, starts back, and, reckless of all things,
-seizes his master’s arm and drags him to the turn
-of the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Percy! Hist! For the love of God, Sir,
-look!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thrusting the bit of paper into his waistcoat,
-Percy gasps and gazes. He beholds Sir Robin and
-his man lifting a limp and slender form, ill-defined,
-’tis true, in its swathe of camlet cloak, into
-the coach; he beholds a head of dark short hair, a
-face of ashen pallor, and, in two seconds more,
-before he can rush back and leap into his saddle,
-motioning Grigson to do the same, the coach containing
-Sir Robin and his prize is dashing as fast
-as whip, spur, sixteen thoroughbred legs, and a
-backing-up of wholesome terror can urge it, over
-the bleak and gruesome waste of Farnham Heath!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife! Grigson, man,” cries Percy, digging
-steel into the poor roan’s flanks till they spurt
-blood in a stream. “We must overtake ’em, unhorse
-’em, spill out the wretch inside; I’ll into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>coach then to protect the lady, you mount the
-leader and gallop us over the heath for your life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Trust me, Sir Percy,” answers Grigson from a
-length behind his master. “God grant, Sir, that
-the roan drop not out of the race and leave us but
-one saddle betwixt you and me, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Poor beast,” says Percy, pricking her hard and
-striking her shoulder with the flat of his rapier.
-“She’ll die, and in a good cause if she gain me the
-goal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And all the while they’re speaking, flash and
-crack go the whips of Sir Robin’s postilions, and
-Sir Robin’s splendid beasts cover the ground with
-a swing and a will that keeps the coach rocking,
-but yet awakens not Lady Peggy, whose dark
-cropped head reposes on the crooked shoulder of
-Sir Robin, while her white eyelids remain sealed
-and no quiver of returning consciousness thrills
-about her drawn and bloodless lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gad!” exclaims Percy, as he beholds the vehicle
-swinging and spinning farther and farther from
-him, and as Grigson’s black now is up nose and
-nose with his own expiring mare. “Gad, girl,”
-bending his lips to the roan’s laid-back ear, “go
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>on! help me to save her! to reach her; go on, I say,
-in God’s name!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As if the faithful creature comprehended her
-master’s entreaty, with that not uncommon last
-flash of superhuman strength that inheres in man
-and beast alike, the roan raised her fine head in
-the air, pricked her ears, stretched out her neck,
-gathered herself up with a twitch of her nerves
-that thrilled to her rider’s heart, and off! as in her
-best days, when she could distance the fleetest
-mount in the county; off, with the whirl and whirr
-of those coach-wheels beckoning to her; off, with
-that pair of straining eyes, those parted lips, blessing
-her as she began to gain on Sir Robin,—began
-to? nay, ’twas all a matter of beginning and ending
-in a breath. Before the postilions, amid
-their own clatter and calling, had caught hint of
-the pursuit, the roan was up with the windows out
-of which the apprehensive little Baronet was peering;
-his scream of terror:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Highwaymen! Faster! On! lads, on! A hundred
-pounds if we outrun ’em! On!” was their
-first advertisement of danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But while the two were drawing their hangers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>from their belts, Sir Percy, with a swerving dash,
-pulled the roan on her hind legs directly in front
-of the galloping leaders. ’Twas but an interposition
-of Providence (coupled with very excellent
-cool-headed horsemanship) that he was not then
-and there dispatched into the hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The leaders plunged, grinding the wheelers with
-their hind hoofs; the wheelers fell back of a heap,
-smashing in the fine front glass and cutting Sir
-Robin across the lip, but not so much as waking
-his burden from her deathlike sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Down with ye!” cries Sir Percy, a pistol in
-each hand, as Grigson rides up with another
-brace to reinforce his master, putting a hand as
-well to the quieting of the coach horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, aye, Sir! but spare our lives and we’ll do
-your bidding!” cry Sir Robin’s lackeys, leaping
-to the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We’ve not a groat betwixt us, Your Honor, on
-our life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I want no groats, nor guineas either!” says
-Percy, now leaving his man to cover the steeds and
-the postilions, while he jumps off the roan’s back
-and springs to the side of the coach.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>To wrest the door from the feeble clutch of the
-shrieking little gentleman from Kent; to open it;
-seize him, stopping his frantic and craven cries
-with a thrust of a pocket napkin in his mouth; to
-haul him out and send him spinning over the turf
-with his gold and silver scattering from purse and
-pockets, is, with Sir Percy, the work of a very few
-seconds.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mercy! Mercy! Mr. Highwayman!” whimpers
-the Baronet, cringing on his knees, as Grigson lifts
-himself up on the off leader’s back and Percy
-props the swooning figure within the coach.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’Slife, Sir, whoever you are! Raise your eyes!
-I am Sir Percy de Bohun, at your service any time
-three hours hence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Robin glances up, his crooked little legs now
-bowing more into an arc than before, as he hears
-the dread name of his rival.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Clapping hand to hilt, however, he stands up.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir,” says he, pushed into a valiance he has no
-smallest sympathy with, solely from fear that Lady
-Peggy may have open ears by this time. “Sir, that
-Lady is my affianced. I command you, quit her
-and leave us to pursue our journey in peace.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>D’ye hear, Sir?” Sir Robin brandishes his
-weapon, now reinforced by the approach of his
-servants. “I’ll stick you where you stand, Sir!”
-shouts McTart, prancing a bit nearer and actually
-touching Percy’s shoulder with the point of his
-weapon,—be it remembered de Bohun’s back was
-toward him as he leaned into the coach arranging
-the cushions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Will you!” says Sir Percy, coolly turning and
-seizing the little man’s blade and administering
-therewith to its owner a smart box on his out-flapping
-ears. “Had I time to waste,” adds Percy,
-now jumping into the coach, “I’d leave your carcass
-here. Put up your pistol, Sir,” says he, aiming
-his own straight at Sir Robin’s now un-wigged
-pate, “or, damn you! you’ll be cold inside a second.
-On with you, Grigson,” calls master to man. “Life
-and death are in this matter. If the four beasts,
-and you, too, drop at the finish, get us to Kennaston
-faster than the wind travels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Even while he speaks, he watches the still white
-face so near him with his finger on his trigger, Sir
-Robin discreetly backing away and rending the air
-with noisy and impotent curses; then a plunge, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>long, resounding call from Grigson; the two
-lackeys agog at finding themselves alive, Sir
-Robin’s coach starts on as if the very devil himself
-were in its wake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy does not draw Peggy to him; he lays her
-back among the pillows; he bathes her head and
-lips and hands with liquor from his flask; he holds
-the slender fingers in his palm, as, amid awful
-terror lest his Lady die, he is racked with consternation
-and wonder at the present outcome, and
-in his distraught mind endeavors to patch and
-piece out the strange network of the mystery now
-beginning to solve itself before his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As he prays God to spare her, if not for him, for
-some better man, a shrill, weird sound smites his
-ear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Percy throws back his head and listens; ’tis the
-long roan neighing for the last time back on Farnham
-Heath, where Sir Robin, picking up his
-money, dejectedly shivering like an aspen (since
-he would rake hell with a nail to secure a ha’penny,
-and fairly weeps at the six-pences he can’t recover),
-presently and ruefully, one of his men behind
-him, pillion fashion, t’other running at his side,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>turns back to Tooting on top of Grigson’s black,
-his fox teeth chattering in his wide mouth as he
-congratulates himself on his second and miraculous
-escape from the famous Sir Percy de Bohun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas, in sooth, for this latter a bitterly sad
-hour which was spent in covering the distance between
-the heath and the Castle. Revived a bit,
-no doubt by the fumes of the liquor, Her Ladyship’s
-lids quivered, contracted, and finally opened,
-but it was with a distraught and unrecognizing
-stare that she surveyed her companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“’S death!” cries she aloud, her feeble right
-hand seeking her sword-side, “I tell ye, Chock,
-your mistress is now full-fledged a man! Hist,
-girl, an you love me, keep it close. Sir Percy’s
-wed to Lady Diana! Aye!” Peggy laughs with
-such a heart-break in her voice and such tears in
-her winkers as causes Percy a pang of cruelest
-misery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tut, tut, Chock! What’s his marriage to me?
-Fetch the pack, Mr. Brummell; aye, I’m at your
-service, loo, crimp, or whist! I, Sir Robin McTart,
-’ll lay you a thousand to nothing! Zounds!
-Sir, fetch coffee to stain my face with! and where,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>oh, where’s my precious bundle with my woman’s
-duds in’t, my patch-box that I burned, and the
-long tail of my hair I cut off when you, Chock,
-bought me the counterfeit of Sir Robin’s own wig
-at the perruquier’s in Lark Lane. Aye! So!—No!
-No! No!” and now a shiver and a lower tone,
-as Lady Peggy, with her wide wild eyes, shrank
-back in the far corner of the jolting coach.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Lady Mother,—I command you, Chock, tell
-her not of my escapades; and when Percy comes
-home with his bride, swear him, as will I, I was off
-pleasuring in Kent at my godmother’s. Mother!
-Mother!” cries she, piteously now, as Percy’s arms
-enfold her, and a thousand fond words jostle each
-other on his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then she sinks into the stupor again, and remains
-so until the great coach rolls through the
-park and up to the entrance of her home; until
-Percy, with few words, lays her in the stout arms
-of the faithful Chockey and sees her mother bending
-above her; her father distract in his night-rail
-and cap; cook wailing, being from Kerry and
-prompt at any sort of hubbub; Bickers’ toothless
-mouth agape with groans; sees his Lady carried
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>up, limp, little hands down-hanging, to her chamber
-out of his sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sir Percy leaves Peggy’s bundle, which he had
-gathered up as best he could and slung about his
-shoulders, on the table in the hall. The little
-scrap of paper he carries away with him and reads
-when he reaches home that night; ’tis Her Ladyship’s
-note to him, written on the fly-leaf of the
-prayer-book of the young Curate of Brook-Armsleigh
-Village. As he scans it, presses it to his
-lips, sits until dawn, remembering many things
-since he parted from his Lady long ago in the
-parlor at Kennaston, the most of the mystery is
-unraveled by light of the scrawl; and the delirium
-of his joy at knowing himself to have been in her
-heart almost equals the mad anxiety that consumes
-him now as to her life and well-being.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_050.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>
- <h2 class='c008' title='XIX—Which sets forth how My Lady Peggy recovers of her illness...'></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_051.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'>XIX</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em>Which sets forth how My Lady Peggy recovers</em></div>
- <div><em>of her illness—gets once more into</em></div>
- <div><em>hoops and petticoats—and puts</em></div>
- <div><em>a very fine and noble young</em></div>
- <div><em>gentleman into an</em></div>
- <div><em>earthly paradise.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Until midsummer he rides over to Kennaston
-twice each day, morning and night, to find out how
-it fares with her, and ’twas not until then that the
-Earl gave him hopes he might see her, perhaps
-within the se’ennight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Notes there had been, daily, as soon as Chockey
-had let him know that her mistress was in her
-head once more, and the two surgeons, down from
-London, had pronounced Her Ladyship on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>mend; notes, and flowers and fruits, and game and
-fish to tempt her appetite; a little dog from Pomerania;
-a Persian boy to wait upon her whims; a
-mare, as white as milk; sweetmeats from the Indies;
-damasks from China and France; shells and
-curious beadwork slippers from the American Colonies—whither,
-it is needless to say, a certain good
-ship had sailed, leaving a certain young gentleman
-behind—all these things, and many more besides,
-were offered up at Her Ladyship’s shrine, but
-never yet had she been able to bring herself to
-scribble one line to her suitor, or to send any message,
-save polite civilities by Chockey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>’Twas only after the buxom damsel (having the
-night previous heard from Grigson that his master
-was like to die of suspense, and having imparted
-the same to Her Ladyship), together with the
-Lady Mother and the Earl, had argued and
-preached into her the great and chivalrous devotion
-of Sir Percy, that Peggy at last had brought her
-mind into a condition of acquiescing in his coming
-up to her morning-room on the Thursday (being
-St. James’s Day) after the sixth Sunday after
-Trinity; which same she carefully marked in her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>prayer-book with a dab of the crimson her mother
-sent in to beautify her pale cheeks with, against
-Sir Percy’s advent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, slitterkins! Madam,” cries the Abigail
-under her breath, “and asking Your Ladyship’s
-pardon, but how can I do up Your Ladyship’s hair
-an’ it no longer than the peltry of a meadow-mouse!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“True enough, Jane Chockey,” replies her mistress,
-contemplating her countenance in the mirror.
-“Of a fact, I resemble nothing so much as one of
-those weazen little vermin; my nose is sharp, too,
-and my cheeks—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stay, My Lady,” says Chock, taking up the
-rouge, and putting on layer after layer. “Who’ll
-say Your Ladyship ain’t handsome now? Lawk,
-Madam! You look like an angel! What a blessing
-of Providence the French is with their nostrums!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy regards herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, My Lady,” cries Chockey, “would you
-but borrow your Lady Mother’s worked head, a
-cup of powder, and Her Ladyship’s pink feathers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>atop of it! What a sight would you be for Sir
-Percy to behold!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peggy shakes her head. The three feet of wire,
-wool, pommade, frizz and plumage the hand-maiden
-suggests, even causes her to laugh aloud as
-she figures it above her own face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, Chock, none o’ that!” says she, “I’ll do as
-I am. Sir Percy has seen my cropped head; faith,
-he ’twas, you tell me, that fetched the tail of my
-locks to Kennaston in his saddle-pocket, or tied
-upon him somewhere?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Aye, My Lady, Mr. Grigson says never, since
-Adam and Eve began courtin’ under the fig-tree,
-has any young nobleman been seen in such a frenzy
-as Sir Percy about Your Ladyship. Lawk, Lady
-Peggy! When a young gentleman goes off his
-feed, ceases swearin’ and cursin’ his man, and stops
-down in the country nigh three months in the
-season, a-readin’ loud to his deaf aunt, there ain’t
-no sort of doubt as to the quality of his passion!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her Ladyship smiles as she spreads her train
-and glances at it over her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Chock,” says she, “look you, now, while I cross
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>the room; does the paduasoy stand out well over
-my hoop?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Like the dish-clout, My Lady, when I spreads
-it to dry over one of the biggest hen-coops. ’Tis
-monstrous fine, finer, I should swear, than anything
-Lady Diana could have!” Chockey sighs,
-lost in admiration. “Though belike Lord Kennaston
-wouldn’t think so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And, Chock, look again.” Her Ladyship
-crosses back to the divan. “’Tis thus the town
-ladies give the true quality sweep to their trains.
-Give me the trinket Sir Percy sent me last night.”
-Peggy takes a fan of most beautiful feathers from
-a mother-of-pearl box and waves it back and forth.
-“’Tis so, Chock, the London fine ladies flutter the
-fan, as ’tis called, and every wriggle hath a different
-meaning!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh!” Chockey is well-nigh speechless as she
-watches her mistress sidling, bridling, agitating
-the fan back, forth, hither, and yon. “Madam,
-’tis amazin’ grand! A glass of port now, My
-Lady, as by the orders of the surgeons?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay,” says Peggy, “I ain’t in need of such.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A mug of ale? cider? milk?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>“I’ll none of ’em, Chock,” returns Her Ladyship,
-seating herself on the divan, and spreading
-out the paduasoy as ’twere a tail and she the peacock
-owning it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Set my <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>étui</em></span> beside me on the stand; place that
-large chair far off yonder by the window for Sir
-Percy, that he may not disturb my furbelows,
-and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hark, Madam! Hoofs!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud!” cries Her Ladyship, “his new horse’s
-hoofs! I’ve learned the ring of ’em as well as I
-once knew that of the poor long roan.” Peggy
-sighs; she has heard much during her convalescence
-by way of Mr. Grigson and the Abigail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go you down, Chock, and, after a suitable
-period of waiting,—I mean such decent few minutes,”
-cries she after the girl, “as may be occupied
-in dutiful greetings to Dad and Her Ladyship, you
-may send Sir Percy up to see me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She hears his voice in the hall greeting her
-father and mother; she glances over at the mirror,
-and, snatching her pocket-napkin from her bag,
-Peggy tips it to the top of the essence-bottle and
-rubs the red from her cheeks; she flings the fan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>down, draws in her splendid train to a crumpled
-heap about her, gives the hoop as smart a thrust as
-her feeble strength will permit, hears a footstep,
-and promptly buries her shamed face in the cushions
-of the divan.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She does not answer the light rap on the half-open
-door, nor does her lover wait; he enters, and
-in a second, kneeling at her feet, his two arms
-about her, he raises her sweet face and lays his
-yearning lips on Her Ladyship’s own beautiful
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, Peggy, my adored one,” says he, devouring
-her pale face with his happy eyes, stroking her
-cropped head with caressing fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Percy!” says she, with real roses blooming
-in her cheeks.</p>
-
-<div id='i_336fp' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i_336fp.jpg' alt='Ah, Peggy, my adored one...' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I know a deal,” whispers he, “but one thing I
-must ask. You’ll tell me at once, will you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What is’t?” says she, smiling, as she leaves her
-two hands in the hold of one of his.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why did you adventure so much? for what, for
-whom, whose sake? Wherefore?” The young
-man’s voice is feverish with anxiety.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She hangs her head; raises it proudly; wishes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>she had him at a distance, and so, leave to swing
-her train and use her fan indifferent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My beloved,” cries he, “answer me! ’Tis your
-own Percy, him that worships the ground you tread
-upon; who has never had a thought apart from
-you; to whom every other lady on God’s earth’s
-but a puppet—that asks—eh, Peg, for whom,
-who?” coaxes he with eyes, lips, hands, heart-beats.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For your sake, Sir, and none other,” she answers.
-“’Twas because I knew I’d done wrong
-and sent you from me careless; I would not give
-in; but, you up in town, Ken writin’ me as he
-did—I could abide it no longer—and I went.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now the God above us, bless you,” says he,
-taking her in his arms, and at the same instant
-pulling from his waistcoat pocket the scrap of a
-note she’d written him in the eye of the scaffold.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peg, Peg! I’m not worthy to mate with you,
-and when I learned of all your hairbreadth ’scapes,
-your twice saving of my life—when I read this,
-’slife! My Lady, what’s a man like me to such as
-you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll tell you,” says she, laying her head on his
-shoulder, “he’s the man she loves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>“Will you marry me in a fortnight, Peggy?”
-asks he, rapturous.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay!” answers she, laughing. “I’ve another
-suitor to consider, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who is he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Robin McTart! He was over yesterday to
-ask my hand from Daddy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The devil!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nay, Sir, not enough courage for that!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Peggy, sweetlips, will you be mine the Tuesday
-after Transfiguration?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lud! No, Sir Percy! that will I not!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When will you, then, love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Next Christmas.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Split it,” cries he, imploringly, “make it the
-first quarter of the October moon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well,” she answers, looking up to where her
-father and mother stand in the doorway, “an
-Daddy and my Lady Mother consent, you shall
-have your way, Sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The young man glances up, following Peggy’s
-eyes, springs to his feet, raises her from the old
-divan and leads her before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Lord and Your Ladyship,” says he, “will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>you consent, as Peggy has, to our being made man
-and wife on October the fifth? and will you give
-My Lady and my unworthy self your blessing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They kneel down and the Earl puts out his
-hands above their heads; the words stumble, for
-there are drops in his old eyes, as he looks and
-beholds about their faces that most splendid of all
-aureoles, the light of love and faith, honor with
-youth, and hope and wholesome minds to guide.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_339.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>A FEW OF</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP’S</span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>Great Books at Little Prices</span></div>
- <div>NEW, CLEVER, ENTERTAINING.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-<p class='c013'>GRET: The Story of a Pagan. By Beatrice Mantle. Illustrated
-by C.M. Relyea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The wild free life of an Oregon lumber camp furnishes the setting for this
-strong original story. Gret is the daughter of the camp and is utterly content
-with the wild life—until love comes. A fine book, unmarred by convention.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated
-by Howard Pyle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A vivid yet delicate portrayal of characters in an old New England town.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Dr. Lavendar’s fine, kindly wisdom is brought to bear upon the lives of
-all, permeating the whole volume like the pungent odor of pine, healthful
-and life giving. “Old Chester Tales” will surely be among the books that
-abide.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE MEMOIRS OF A BABY. By Josephine Daskam. Illustrated
-by F.Y. Cory.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The dawning intelligence of the baby was grappled with by its great aunt,
-an elderly maiden, whose book knowledge of babies was something at which
-even the infant himself winked. A delicious bit of humor.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>REBECCA MARY. By Annie Hamilton Donnell. Illustrated
-by Elizabeth Shippen Green.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The heart tragedies of this little girl with no one near to share them, are
-told with a delicate art, a keen appreciation of the needs of the childish
-heart and a humorous knowledge of the workings of the childish mind.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE FLY ON THE WHEEL. By Katherine Cecil Thurston.
-Frontispiece by Harrison Fisher.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>An Irish story of real power, perfect in development and showing a true
-conception of the spirited Hibernian character as displayed in the tragic as
-well as the tender phases of life.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE MAN FROM BRODNEY’S. By George Barr McCutcheon.
-Illustrated by Harrison Fisher.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>An island in the South Sea is the setting for this entertaining tale, and
-an all-conquering hero and a beautiful princess figure in a most complicated
-plot. One of Mr. McCutcheon’s best books.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>TOLD BY UNCLE REMUS. By Joel Chandler Harris. Illustrated
-by A.B. Frost, J.M. Conde and Frank Verbeck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Again Uncle Remus enters the fields of childhood, and leads another
-little boy to that non-locatable land called “Brer Rabbit’s Laughing
-Place,” and again the quaint animals spring into active life and play their
-parts, for the edification of a small but appreciative audience.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE CLIMBER. By E.F. Benson. With frontispiece.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>An unsparing analysis of an ambitious woman’s soul—a woman who
-believed that in social supremacy she would find happiness, and who finds
-instead the utter despair of one who has chosen the things that pass away.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>LYNCH’S DAUGHTER. By Leonard Merrick. Illustrated by
-Geo. Brehm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A story of to-day, telling how a rich girl acquires ideals of beautiful and
-simple living, and of men and love, quite apart from the teachings of her
-father, “Old Man Lynch” of Wall St. True to life, clever in treatment.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Grossett &amp; Dunlap, 526 West 26th St., New York</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span><span class='large'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP’S</span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>DRAMATIZED NOVELS</span></div>
- <div>A Few that are Making Theatrical History</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<p class='c013'>MARY JANE’S PA. By Norman Way. Illustrated with scenes
-from the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Delightful, irresponsible “Mary Jane’s Pa” awakes one morning to find
-himself famous, and, genius being ill adapted to domestic joys, he wanders
-from home to work out his own unique destiny. One of the most humorous
-bits of recent fiction.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>CHERUB DEVINE. By Sewell Ford.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>“Cherub,” a good hearted but not over refined young man is brought in
-touch with the aristocracy. Of sprightly wit, he is sometimes a merciless
-analyst, but he proves in the end that manhood counts for more than ancient
-lineage by winning the love of the fairest girl in the flock.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A WOMAN’S WAY. By Charles Somerville. Illustrated with
-scenes from the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A story in which a woman’s wit and self-sacrificing love save her husband
-from the toils of an adventuress, and change an apparently tragic situation
-into one of delicious comedy.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE CLIMAX. By George C. Jenks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>With ambition luring her on, a young choir soprano leaves the little village
-where she was born and the limited audience of St. Jude’s to train for the
-opera in New York. She leaves love behind her and meets love more ardent
-but not more sincere in her new environment. How she works, how she
-studies, how she suffers, are vividly portrayed.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A FOOL THERE WAS. By Porter Emerson Browne. Illustrated
-by Edmund Magrath and W.W. Fawcett.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A relentless portrayal of the career of a man who comes under the influence
-of a beautiful but evil woman; how she lures him on and on, how he
-struggles, falls and rises, only to fall again into her net, make a story of
-unflinching realism.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE SQUAW MAN. By Julie Opp Faversham and Edwin
-Milton Royle. Illustrated with scenes from the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A glowing story, rapid in action, bright in dialogue with a fine courageous
-hero and a beautiful English heroine.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE GIRL IN WAITING. By Archibald Eyre. Illustrated
-with scenes from the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A droll little comedy of misunderstandings, told with a light touch, a venturesome
-spirit and an eye for human oddities.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL. By Baroness Orczy. Illustrated
-with scenes from the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A realistic story of the days of the French Revolution, abounding in
-dramatic incident, with a young English soldier of fortune, daring, mysterious
-as the hero.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>Grosset &amp; Dunlap, 526 West 26th St., New York</span></p>
-<hr class='c001' />
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-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
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- <div><span class='large'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP’S</span></div>
- <div>Great Books at Little Prices</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>CY WHITTAKER’S PLACE. By Joseph C. Lincoln.
-Illustrated by Wallace Morgan.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A Cape Cod story describing the amusing efforts of an elderly
-bachelor and his two cronies to rear and educate a little
-girl. Full of honest fun—a rural drama.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE FORGE IN THE FOREST. By Charles G.D.
-Roberts. Illustrated by H. Sandham.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A story of the conflict in Acadia after its conquest by the
-British. A dramatic picture that lives and shines with the indefinable
-charm of poetic romance.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A SISTER TO EVANGELINE. By Charles G.D.
-Roberts. Illustrated by E. McConnell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Being the story of Yvonne de Lamourie, and how she went
-into exile with the villagers of Grand Prè. Swift action,
-fresh atmosphere, wholesome purity, deep passion and searching
-analysis characterize this strong novel.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE OPENED SHUTTERS. By Clara Louise Burnham.
-Frontispiece by Harrison Fisher.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A summer haunt on an island in Casco Bay is the background
-for this romance. A beautiful woman, at discord with
-life, is brought to realize, by her new friends, that she may
-open the shutters of her soul to the blessed sunlight of joy by
-casting aside vanity and self love. A delicately humorous
-work with a lofty motive underlying it all.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE RIGHT PRINCESS. By Clara Louise Burnham.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>An amusing story, opening at a fashionable Long Island resort,
-where a stately Englishwoman employs a forcible New
-England housekeeper to serve in her interesting home. How
-types so widely apart react on each others’ lives, all to ultimate
-good, makes a story both humorous and rich in sentiment.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE LEAVEN OF LOVE. By Clara Louise Burnham.
-Frontispiece by Harrison Fisher.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>At a Southern California resort a world-weary woman, young
-and beautiful but disillusioned, meets a girl who has learned
-the art of living—of tasting life in all its richness, opulence and
-joy. The story hinges upon the change wrought in the soul
-of the blasè woman by this glimpse into a cheery life.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Grosset &amp; Dunlap, 526 West 26th St., New York</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>A FEW OF</div>
- <div><span class='large'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP’S</span></div>
- <div>Great Books at Little Prices</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<p class='c013'>QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. A Picture of New
-England Home Life. With illustrations by C.W.
-Reed, and Scenes Reproduced from the Play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>One of the best New England stories ever written. It is
-full of homely human interest * * * there is a wealth of New
-England village character, scenes and incidents * * * forcibly,
-vividly and truthfully drawn. Few books have enjoyed a
-greater sale and popularity. Dramatized, it made the greatest
-rural play of recent times.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF QUINCY
-ADAMS SAWYER. By Charles Felton Pidgin.
-Illustrated by Henry Roth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>All who love honest sentiment, quaint and sunny humor,
-and homespun philosophy will find these “Further Adventures”
-a book after their own heart.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>HALF A CHANCE. By Frederic S. Isham. Illustrated
-by Herman Pfeifer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The thrill of excitement will keep the reader in a state of
-suspense, and he will become personally concerned from the
-start, as to the central character, a very real man who suffers,
-dares—and achieves!</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>VIRGINIA OF THE AIR LANES. By Herbert
-Quick. Illustrated by William R. Leigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The author has seized the romantic moment for the airship
-novel, and created the pretty story of “a lover and his lass”
-contending with an elderly relative for the monopoly of the
-skies. An exciting tale of adventure in midair.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE GAME AND THE CANDLE. By Eleanor M.
-Ingram. Illustrated by P.D. Johnson.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The hero is a young American, who, to save his family from
-poverty, deliberately commits a felony. Then follow his capture
-and imprisonment, and his rescue by a Russian Grand
-Duke. A stirring story, rich in sentiment.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>WHEN A MAN MARRIES. By Mary Roberts Rinehart.
-Illustrated by Harrison Fisher and Mayo Bunker.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A young artist, whose wife had recently divorced him, finds that
-a visit is due from his Aunt Selina, an elderly lady having ideas
-about things quite apart from the Bohemian set in which her
-nephew is a shining light. The way in which matters are temporarily
-adjusted forms the motif of the story.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A farcical extravaganza, dramatized under the title of “Seven Days”</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE FASHIONABLE ADVENTURES OF JOSHUA
-CRAIG. By David Graham Phillips. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A young westerner, uncouth and unconventional, appears in
-political and social life in Washington. He attains power in politics,
-and a young woman of the exclusive set becomes his wife, undertaking
-his education in social amenities.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“DOC.” GORDON. By Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman. Illustrated
-by Frank T. Merrill.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Against the familiar background of American town life, the
-author portrays a group of people strangely involved in a mystery.
-“Doc.” Gordon, the one physician of the place, Dr. Elliot, his
-assistant, a beautiful woman and her altogether charming daughter
-are all involved in the plot. A novel of great interest.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>HOLY ORDERS. By Marie Corelli.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A dramatic story, in which is pictured a clergyman in touch with
-society people, stage favorites, simple village folk, powerful financiers
-and others, each presenting vital problems to this man “in
-holy orders”—problems that we are now struggling with in America.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>KATRINE. By Elinor Macartney Lane. With frontispiece.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Katrine, the heroine of this story, is a lovely Irish girl, of lowly
-birth, but gifted with a beautiful voice.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The narrative is based on the facts of an actual singer’s career,
-and the viewpoint throughout is a most exalted one.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE FORTUNES OF FIFI. By Molly Elliot Seawell.
-Illustrated by T. de Thulstrup.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>A story of life in France at the time of the first Napoleon. Fifi,
-a glad, mad little actress of eighteen, is the star performer in a third
-rate Parisian theatre. A story as dainty as a Watteau painting.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>SHE THAT HESITATES. By Harris Dickson. Illustrated
-by C.W. Relyea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The scene of this dashing romance shifts from Dresden to St.
-Petersburg in the reign of Peter the Great, and then to New Orleans.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The hero is a French Soldier of Fortune, and the princess, who
-hesitates—but you must read the story to know how she that hesitates
-may be lost and yet saved.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>THE MUSIC MASTER. By Charles Klein. Illustrated
-by John Rae.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>This marvelously vivid narrative turns upon the search of a German
-musician in New York for his little daughter. Mr. Klein has
-well portrayed his pathetic struggle with poverty, his varied experiences
-in endeavoring to meet the demands of a public not trained
-to an appreciation of the classic, and his final great hour when, in
-the rapidly shifting events of a big city, his little daughter, now a
-beautiful young woman, is brought to his very door. A superb bit
-of fiction, palpitating with the life of the great metropolis. The
-play in which David Warfield scored his highest success.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>DR. LAVENDAR’S PEOPLE. By Margaret Deland.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Mrs. Deland won so many friends through Old Chester Tales
-that this volume needs no introduction beyond its title. The lovable
-doctor is more ripened in this later book, and the simple comedies
-and tragedies of the old village are told with dramatic charm.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated
-by Howard Pyle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Stories portraying with delightful humor and pathos a quaint people
-in a sleepy old town. Dr. Lavendar, a very human and lovable
-“preacher,” is the connecting link between these dramatic stories
-from life.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>HE FELL IN LOVE WITH HIS WIFE. By E.P. Roe.
-With frontispiece.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The hero is a farmer—a man with honest, sincere views of life.
-Bereft of his wife, his home is cared for by a succession of domestics
-of varying degrees of inefficiency until, from a most unpromising
-source, comes a young woman who not only becomes his wife
-but commands his respect and eventually wins his love. A bright
-and delicate romance, revealing on both sides a love that surmounts
-all difficulties and survives the censure of friends as well as the bitterness
-of enemies.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>THE YOKE. By Elizabeth Miller.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>Against the historical background of the days when the children
-of Israel were delivered from the bondage of Egypt, the author has
-sketched a romance of compelling charm. A biblical novel as great
-as any since “Ben Hur.”</span></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>SAUL OF TARSUS. By Elizabeth Miller. Illustrated by
-André Castaigne.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'>The scenes of this story are laid in Jerusalem, Alexandria, Rome
-and Damascus. The Apostle Paul, the Martyr Stephen, Herod
-Agrippa and the Emperors Tiberius and Caligula are among the
-mighty figures that move through the pages. Wonderful descriptions,
-and a love story of the purest and noblest type mark this
-most remarkable religious romance.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Grosset &amp; Dunlap, 526 West 26th St., New York</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-<p class='c014'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In several cases, the author (or printer) uses an apostrophe incorrectly;
-three times as the possessive pronoun, and once as 3rd person present (‘let’s’).
-Each has been corrected. Other minor lapses in punctuation have been
-corrected as well, without further mention.</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='14%' />
-<col width='85%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>p. 43</td>
- <td class='c016'>even than [it’s] forlorn neighbors</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>p. 85</td>
- <td class='c016'>hiding [it’s] tell-tale under the skirt of her coat</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>p. 251</td>
- <td class='c016'>links his arm in [her’s]</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>p. 266</td>
- <td class='c016'>and [let’s] out that I was not she at all</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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