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"Now, don't put yourselves out of the way for me, my good friends,"
said the stranger; "all I want is something to eat at once, and a 'shake-down' here for a night or two."
"We've got nothing in the house to eat, I do believe," said Mr. Brown; "have us, Peggy? And as to a 'shake-down!'--why we don't have many visitors here to sleep!"
"Brown!" said his better half, in an authoritative tone, "go and look to the mare!"--and she pointed significantly to the door, through which Mr.
Brown made his escape, calling Billy, by way of covering his retreat, without being further exposed to the stranger; for he saw he had gone a little too far, in taking it upon himself to answer for what could or could not be had in the house.
The stranger, in the meantime, had thrown himself carelessly into Mrs.
Brown's seat, and extended his legs before him, as if he was quite at home, and was accustomed to make himself comfortable wherever he happened to be.
"Now then, Mrs. Brown," said he, "a gla.s.s of your best ale to begin with, and then something to eat, for I'm devilish hungry."
"I can give 'ee some eggs and a rasher at once, sar," replied Mrs.
Brown; "but ef you can wait 'bout half-an-hour or so, you shall have a roast fowl and taties."
"I'll have the eggs and bacon by all means," said he; "I couldn't wait half-an-hour for all the fowls in your yard;--and while you are dressing the eggs and bacon, I will try if I can get some one to fetch my carpet-bag." So he sauntered into the stable, where he found Mr. Brown admiring his mare Jessie.
"Isn't she a beauty, sir?" said the landlord, combing his horse's tail with a comb he kept in his pocket for the purpose.
"She is a handsome creature, certainly," said the stranger, looking at the mare with the eye of a connoisseur; "but what can you possibly want with a horse of that kind in this rough country?"
"That's to me, sir--asking your pardon," replied Mr. Brown, touching his hat.
"Oh! of course, of course," said the stranger; "I meant no offence. I came out to know if you could get anyone to go to Tol-pedn-Penwith signal-station, where I have been staying, for my bag."
"Tol-pedn-Penwith signal-station, sir!" replied Mr. Brown; "why that's Lieutenant Foster's 'cabin,' as he calls it, near Lamorna Cove?"
"That's the place," said the stranger;--"could you send anyone?"
"Yes, sir, certainly; when my boy Bill do come in, he shall take the mare and ride down there,--it'll be very good exercise for her this fine a'ternoon. Drat the boy, I wish he was come!"
Bill soon made his appearance, and was despatched on the mare with a note to Lieutenant Fowler, written on a leaf torn from the gentleman's pocket-book, while Mr. Brown walked round the mare twice, and used his comb on her tail and mane.
"Isn't she a beauty, sir?" said he, as the boy cantered off. "Easy!
easy, now!" exclaimed Mr. Brown, calling after the boy; "ride her gently. Wo! ho! Jessie! gently, la.s.s, gently!"
These remarks might as well have been addressed to the wind as to the boy or the mare, who seemed both intent on a gallop, and away they went at full speed.
"Drat the boy," said Mr. Brown; "he'll wind her--that's a sure thing--one of these days; and then where'll the money come from to buy another? But no money could do it! Why, I wouldn't take a hundred guineas for that mare, sir, if it was offered to me to-morrow morning!
she's worth her weight in gold, sir, that mare is!"
"Don't fidget about the mare, Mr. Brown," said the gentleman; "she'll be all right; a little gallop will do her good. And now I shall try Mrs.
Brown's cookery,--it smells very good;" and he returned into the house to appease his appet.i.te, while the landlord went into the stable to lament once more over the wilfulness of that scamp of a boy, as he called him, and to see that all things were ready for his pet when she came back. And, having done all this, he returned to the kitchen, where he found the stranger smoking a pipe in the chimney-corner after his frugal repast, and chatting with Mrs. Brown as if they had been old acquaintances.
"Come, Mr. Brown," said he, "I'm going to have a gla.s.s of brandy and water, and you must take one too; so mix them, if you please, and come and tell me all the news."
"Polly! come and get the hot water and sugar for the gentleman," said the landlord, calling to the maid, who was upstairs, as he went towards the bar to get the two brandies. "Come, Poll! Poll! Polly!" But as Polly did not come, he was obliged to bustle about himself; for he received no help from his wife, although he called to her several times from the bar. At length all things were placed on the little table, and the stranger began to ask about "The Conjuror."
"The what!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown, dropping her needles, and looking up in surprise and alarm,--while poor Mr. Brown stopped short in the act of putting his gla.s.s to his lips.
"Hallo!" exclaimed the stranger; "you look as if you had heard some fellow talking treason against His Most Gracious Majesty the King--G.o.d bless him!"--and the stranger lifted his hat, which he had kept on out of compliment to his host and hostess. "I mean Mr. Freeman, then," he said, correcting himself; "I have heard such wonderful accounts of him, that I should like to know what he can really do."
"He would shaw you what he could do, very soon, ef he heard you speak that word, I reckon," replied Mrs. Brown, getting up from her seat and going to the door of the kitchen, and looking into the pa.s.sage and closing the front door.
"He doesn't like being called a 'conjuror,' then," said the stranger.
"Like it?" said Mrs. Brown, drawing her chair nearer to the chimney-corner; "iss,--just as much as you would like to be called '_no conjuror_!'"
"That's very well," said Mr. Brown, venturing on a laugh, now that his courage was being wound up by the brandy and water.
At this moment there came a clatter down the road, as of a horse at full gallop.
"Drat the boy!" exclaimed Mr. Brown, rising in great excitement; "he can't be come a'ready, can aw? To ride the mare like that es too bad!
too bad! I'll kill 'n ef 'tes he. Iss fie! tes; for she's stopped at the stable-door. Dear lor'! Polly! Polly!"
When Mr. Brown went out, followed by the stranger and Mrs. Brown, there was the mare sure enough, standing at the stable-door without a rider, trembling from head to foot, and covered with foam and mud, with scarcely a dry hair on her body.
"Drat the boy!" exclaimed Mr. Brown; "he's killed--that's a sure thing--and the mare is ruined. Wo! ho! my darling; wo! ho!" And he took the mare's nose into his arms, and caressed it as if it had been a favourite daughter, while the stranger examined her all over, but could find no wound or injury whatever. She had evidently been frightened, for she was trembling still. They led her into the stable, and then began to think of the boy.
"I'd go and search for him," said the stranger, "but I don't know which way he went."
"No, nor yet I," said Mrs. Brown; "there's no knowing where that boy do go, when he's out; he's mighty fond of taking the narrow roads and bye lanes instead of the high road. There's two or three ways of going to Tol-pedn-Penwith from here; and like enough he went the way that n.o.body else would go ('cept 'The Maister')." This latter sentence she spoke almost in a whisper.
"While we are talking here, the boy may die," said the stranger, "if he's thrown and seriously hurt."
"The mare is all right," said Mr. Brown, coming out of the stable; "and now, if missus will get Polly to make a 'warm mash,' and give it to her at once, you and I'll go, sir, and see what can be done for the poor boy."
CHAPTER VI.
THE FAMILY PARTY.
The two young officers had been invited to dine at Pendrea-house on that day, at two o'clock--the squire's usual dinner-hour. Lieut. Fowler had some writing work to do--rather an unusual occupation for him. However, as it was a report to be sent to head-quarters, which he had put off from day to day, he said to his friend in the morning, during breakfast, "The writing be blowed! but 'needs must when the devil drives!' so you go out, old fellow, and take a stroll, and leave me here to kick my heels under the table for a few hours. Two o'clock sharp, mind, and then we'll put our legs under the squire's mahogany, and tuck into his old port like trumps. That's an amus.e.m.e.nt which suits me a devilish deal better than quill-driving, if I must tell the honest truth for once in my life."
Two o'clock arrived, but Morley did not make his appearance. "The deuce take the fellow," soliloquised the lieutenant; "he'll lose his dinner and get out of the squire's good books. By Jove! though, perhaps he went in to have a lark with the girls in the morning, and so he did not think it worth while to come back. I'll just wash the ink off my paws, and toddle down as quick as I can; the squire won't like being kept waiting.
'Tis devilish lucky the old chap doesn't require a fellow to dress for dinner every time he tucks his legs under his mahogany;--I don't like getting into harness very often, unless duty calls--and then we must obey."
While the jovial officer is was.h.i.+ng his hands, we will just look round his little "cabin," as he called it.
The little dwelling in which the commander of the signal-station resided, was certainly fitted up more to resemble a cabin on board s.h.i.+p, than the habitation of a landsman. On the ground floor there was a small room, or lobby, into which you entered at once from the front door.
Opposite this door there was a door leading into the sitting-room, and beyond that another door led from the sitting-room into the kitchen. On the right, as you entered the lobby, were the stairs, leading to the two bedrooms, which led one into the other, like the rooms below. And in the ceilings were fixed iron rings, to which the hammocks were slung at night, and uns.h.i.+pped by day, the same as on board s.h.i.+p, so that these rooms might also be used as sitting-rooms, if required, in the daytime.
There were three men kept at each of these stations, besides the officer, and they had a separate cabin appropriated to them, adjoining the princ.i.p.al one. Their duty was to attend upon the officer; hoist signals of flags and b.a.l.l.s, to give notice of the approach of an enemy's s.h.i.+p; or to signal to English s.h.i.+ps orders from head-quarters. And these signals could be communicated to and from London in a very short time,--although not so quickly, nor so accurately, as by the telegraph of the present day.
It was not long after two when Lieut. Fowler got down to Pendrea-house, where he found the squire with his watch in his hand.