Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

man disclosing himself from a clump of underwood, exclaimed, "You are late, Whittaker. I have been whistling a duet with the wind this half hour, when I might have heard the popping of corks, and have emptied a flagon or two of Gascoigne wine. Who is that with the cart-Nat. Culpepper?"

"Ay, ay, Sir John; that's Nat. Culpepper, suré enough, and a steady old file he is. You may advance with the cart, Nat. ; it's only Sir John. And as to our being late, I am an old soldier, and after so many night alarms as we have had, while engaged in this ticklish service, you would hardly wish me to hurry forward, when it was your own orders that I should be careful in acting the scout."

"Right, old Truepenny!" eried Sir John ;-"don't I know you for a sly fox in an ambush, and a fearless dasher in an onset? But you have had no alarms to-night, my doughty serjeant; the black ghost has not again crossed your path, and you have heard no Scriptural ejaculations muttered "from the bushes."

"No, Sir John, we have started nothing as we came along but a mottled stag, who dashed away from us as fast as four legs could carry him; and we have seen nothing blacker than the night, which is pitchy enough even for us, who care not how dark it is while we are playing this secret game of neck or nothing."

"Noa, noa, Sir John," cried Culpepper, who had now come up with the cart, and who seemed by his

accent to be a north countryman, “I be pratty certain we sha'not see her to-night."

"See her!" exclaimed Sir John; "you have made up your mind, then, that 'twas a woman whom we have more than once so strangely encountered in our secret expeditions.”

""Twere a woman's voice, I'll take my Bible oath," cried Culpepper; “and I seed a bit of her black petticoat as she scudded away among the trees into the thick of the forest.-Dang it! d'ye think I don't know a woman from a will-o'-thewisp ?"

"I marked the figure myself, clearly enough,” continued Sir John, "and but that the sound of a pistol might have endangered a discovery of our enterprise, and brought all our necks into jeopardy, I would have tried whether the mumbling old Jezebel was as difficult to reach with powder and ball, as with our three pair of legs, which she so easily and so unaccountably distanced. However, I am prepared for her now; I have a cross-bow here," which will bring down its bird without blabbing; and be it hag or hobgoblin, witch or wizard, ghost or gossip, spy or spectre, the devil or the devil's dam, if I can but catch a glimpse of it, I'll have a shot at its hide, and try whether it be made of flesh or flummery."

"As to ghosts or goblins,” cried sergeant Whittaker, "they'll find they have got the wrong sow by the ear, if they think to frighten e'er a one of

us; but if it's a spy, we have a right to put him to death by the laws of war; and I vote for doing so, for if we have not his blood, he will have our's."

"She wo' not venture to show hersel," said Culpepper, "now we be just upon the open fields." "According to the old adage," replied Sir John, Iwe should not crow till we are fairly out of the wood; so we may as well move on as fast as we can, and make for Brambletye House."

[ocr errors]

"Anathema, maranatha! A curse light upon it, and upon all its sacrilegious inmates!" ejaculated a sepulchral voice, which seemed to be that of a female, and to proceed from a tangled cluster of underwood immediately upon their right.

"A murrain seize the pestilent jade!" cried Sir John, "there she is again!" and he instinctively discharged his cross-bow into the brake, whence the sound had appeared to issue. The arrow rattled among the branches, where there was a momentary silence, after which the same hollow and impressive voice ejaculated-"Ave Maria! Blessed be our lady of Ashurst! The arrow of the ungodly shall be turned aside."

Whittaker ran towards the spot with his lantern, directing its light full upon the bushes; and Sir John having drawn his rapier, followed close upon his heels, when, as they approached, a tall thin figure in black, apparently wearing the garb of a woman, was dimly visible, flitting from the covert towards another thicket at a little distance. Ani1*

VOL. I.

mated by the glimpse he had obtained, the impetuous Sir John hurried past his companion, and had just seen the figure glide, as he thought, into the brake before him, when he was suddenly left in total darkness; Whittaker, in the ardour of his pursuit, having stumbled over a root, and extinguished the light. Guided, however, by what he had already noticed, Sir John leapt fearlessly into the very midst of the tufted underwood, which he imagined the mysterious female to have entered, laying about him vigorously with his rapier, and cursing with no less vehemence the bow that had missed its object, the apparition that defied all their efforts for its apprehension, and the clumsy rascal who had lost the light at the very moment when it might have led to a discovery. After committing fearful devastation among the boughs and branches, he acceded to the request of Whittaker, who had now come up, that they should listen for awhile in silence, as they might perhaps hear the sound of retreating footsteps. They did so, but all was silent as the grave. "Curse her," cried Sir John, "I never heard her foot-fall when I was close upon her track, and it is not likely we should distinguish it when she has had time to make for the forest."

A parley was now held, and as it was deemed useless to make any further attempts at discovery, surrounded as they were by total darkness, and on the immediate edge of a trackless forest, they were unwillingly compelled to rejoin Culpepper and the

cart, both declaring that they would rather it should prove to be a supernatural visitant, or even a witch, than any lurking spy, who might have seen or heard enough to compromise their own safety, as well as the success of their perilous undertaking.

"She cannot know whither we are bound, at all events," exclaimed Sir John, "and she has dogged us no further than the opening of the forest."

"But you mentioned Brambletye House," said Whittaker, "and she instantly fired off her usual curses upon its walls, and all within them."

"Did I ?" inquired Sir John; "a pize upon me! I was a fool for my pains; but we must go the quicker to work, and surprise the enemy, to prevent a surprise upon ourselves; and as for this Jack-'0lantern's jade, since we cannot catch her, she may e'en go hang herself like Alderman Hoyle, though I must confess I should like to have given her a wipe of my whinyard.--Never fear, my brave boys; we are engaged in a good cause, with good men and true, to back us; so a fico for the lurking old beldame in black, and hey for Brambletye House !"

"Better name no names, Sir John," observed Whittaker, "for the witch may still be within earshot, and your voice is rather of the loudest, considering the nature of our business."

"Odso! that's true: body o' me! I forgot that; Culpepper, you dog, you are the cleverest fellow of us all, for you don't speak a word. Let us all move forwards; another ten minutes will bring us to

« ZurückWeiter »