Heralds of Empire - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Heralds of Empire Part 7 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"So dear, Rebecca."
"She must be wondrous happy, Ramsay." A tumult of effort. "If I could only take her place----"
"Take her place, Rebecca?"
"My father hath the key--if--if--if I took her place, she might go free."
"Take her place, child! What folly is this--dear, kind Rebecca? Would 't be any better to send you to the rope than Hortense? No--no--dear child!"
At that her agitation abated, and she puzzled as if to say more.
"Dear Rebecca," said I, comforting her as I would a sister, "dear child, run home. Forget not little Hortense in thy prayers."
May the angel of forgiveness spread a broader mantle across our blunders than our sins, but could I have said worse?
"I have cooked dainties with my own hands. I have sent her cakes every day," sobbed Rebecca.
"Go home now, Rebecca," I begged.
But she stood silent.
"Rebecca--what is it?"
"You have not been to see me for a year, Ramsay."
I could scarce believe my ears.
"My father is away to-night. Will you not come?"
"But, Rebecca----"
"I have never asked a thing of you before."
"But, Rebecca----"
"Will you come for Hortense's sake?" she interrupted, with a little sharp, hard, falsetto note in her baby voice.
"Rebecca," I demanded, "what do you mean?"
But she snapped back like the peevish child that she was: "An you come not when I ask you, you may stay!" And she had gone.
What was she trying to say with her dark hints and overnice scruples of a Puritan conscience? And was not that Jack Battle greeting her outside in the dark?
I tore after Rebecca at such speed that I had cannoned into open arms before I saw a hulking form across the way.
"Fall-back--fall-edge!" roared Jack, closing his arms about me. "'Tis Ramsay himself, with a sword like a butcher's cleaver and a wit like a broadaxe!"
"Have you not heard, Jack?"
"Heard! s.h.i.+p ahoy!" cried Jack. "Split me to the chin like a cod!
Stood I not abaft of you all day long, packed like a herring in a pickle! 'Twas a pretty kettle of fish in your Noah's ark to-day! 'Tis all along o' goodness gone stale from too much salt," says Jack.
I told him of little Rebecca, and asked what he made of it. He said he made of it that fools didn't love in the right place--which was not to the point, whatever Jack thought of Rebecca. Linking his arm through mine, he headed me about.
"Captain Gillam, Ben's father, sails for England at sunrise," vouched Jack.
"What has that to do with Mistress Hortense?" I returned testily.
"'Tis a swift s.h.i.+p to sail in."
"To sail in, Jack Battle?"--I caught at the hope. "Out with your plan, man!"
"And be hanged for it," snaps Jack, falling silent.
We were opposite the prison. He pointed to a light behind the bars.
"They are the only prisoners," he said. "They must be in there."
"One could pa.s.s a note through those bars with a long pole," I observed, gazing over the yard wall.
"Or a key," answered Jack.
He paused before Rebecca's house to the left of the prison.
"Ramsay," inquired Jack quizzically, "do you happen to have heard who has the keys?"
"Rebecca's father is warden."
"And Rebecca's father is from home to-night," says he, facing me squarely to the lantern above the door.
How did he know that? Then I remembered the voices outside the church.
"Jack--what did Rebecca mean----"
"Not to be hanged," interrupts Jack. "'Tis all along o' having too much conscience, Ramsay. They must either lie like a Dutchman and be d.a.m.ned, or tell the truth and be hanged. Now, s.h.i.+p ahoy," says he, "to the quarterdeck!" and he flung me forcibly up the steps.
Rebecca, herself, red-eyed and reserved, threw wide the door. She motioned me to a bench seat opposite the fireplace and fastened her gaze above the mantel till mine followed there too. A bunch of keys hung from an iron rack.
"What are those, Rebecca?"
"The largest is for the gate," says she with the panic of conscience running from fire. "The bra.s.s one unlocks the great door, and--and--the--M. Picot's cell unbolts," she stammered.
"May I examine them, Rebecca?"
"I will even draw you a pint of cider," says Rebecca evasively, with great trepidation, "but come back soon," she called, tripping off to the wine-cellar door.
s.n.a.t.c.hing the keys, I was down the steps at a leap.
"The large one for the gate, Jack! The bra.s.s one for the big door, and the cell unbolts!"