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"Hallam! Hallam! In with you, lads: fetch him out."
"No, no; stop! stop! My deeds, my writings!" shrieked Gemp; but his voice was drowned in the yelling of the mob, who now forced their way in, filling the hall, the dining and drawing-rooms, and then making for the old-fas.h.i.+oned staircase.
"He's oop-stairs, lads; hev him down!" cried the leader, and the men pressed forward, with a yell, their faces looking wild and strange by the light of the lamp and the candle Thisbe had placed upon a bracket by the stairs.
But here their progress was stopped by Millicent, who, pale with dread, but with a spot as of fire in either cheek, stood at the foot of the staircase, holding the frightened child to her side, while Thisbe forced her way before her.
"What do you want?" she cried firmly.
"Thy master, missus. Stand aside, we won't hurt thee. We want Hallam."
"What do you want with him?" cried Millicent again.
"We want him to give oop the money he's stole, and the keys o' bank.
Stand aside wi' you. Hev him down."
There was a rush, a struggle, and Millicent and her shrieking child were dragged down roughly, but good-humouredly, by the crowd that filled the hall, while others kept forcing their way in. As for Thisbe, as she fought and struck out bravely, her hands were pinioned behind her, and the group were held in a corner of the hall, while with a shout the mob rushed upstairs.
"Here, let go," panted Thisbe to the men who held her. "I won't do so any more. Let me take the bairn."
The men loosed her at once, and they formed a ring about their prisoners.
"Let me have her, Miss Milly," she whispered, and she took Julie in her arms, while Millicent, freed from this charge, made an effort to get to the stairs.
"Nay, nay, missus. Thou'rt better down here," said one of her gaolers roughly; and the trembling woman was forced to stay, but only to keep imploring the men to let her pa.s.s.
Meanwhile the mob were running from room to room without success; and at each shout of disappointment a throb of hope and joy made Millicent's heart leap.
She exchanged glances with Thisbe.
"He has escaped," she whispered.
"More shame for him then," cried Thisbe. "Why arn't he here to protect his wife and bairn?"
At that moment a fierce yelling and cheering was heard upstairs, where the mob had reached the attic door and detected that it was locked on the inside.
The door was strong, but double the strength would not have held it against the fierce onslaught made, and in another minute, amidst fierce yelling, the tide began to set back, as the word was pa.s.sed down, "They've got him."
Millicent's brain reeled, and for a few moments she seemed to lose consciousness; but as she saw Hallam, pale, bleeding, his hair torn and dishevelled, dragged down the stairs by the infuriated mob, her love gave her strength. Wresting herself from those who would have restrained her, she forced her way to her husband's side, flung her arms about him as he was driven back against the wall, and, turning her defiant face to the mob, made of her own body a s.h.i.+eld.
There was a moment's pause, then a yell, and the leader's voice cried:
"Never mind her. Hev him out, lads, and then clear the house."
There was a fresh roar at this, and then blows were struck right and left in the dim light; the lamp was dashed over; while the curtains by the window, where it stood, blazed up, and cast a lurid light over the scene. For a moment the crowd recoiled as they saw the flushed and bleeding face of Christie Bayle, as he struck out right and left till he had fought his way to where he could plant himself before Millicent and her husband, and try to keep the a.s.sailants back.
The surprise was only of a few minutes' duration.
"You lads, he's only one. Come on! Hallam: Let's judge and jury him."
"You scoundrels!" roared Bayle, "a man must be judged by his country, and not by such ruffians as you."
"Hev him out, lads, 'fore the place is burnt over your heads."
"Back! stand back, cowards!" cried Bayle; "do you not see the woman and the child? Back! Out of the place, you dogs!"
"Dogs as can bite, too, parson," cried the leader. "Come on."
He made a dash at Hallam, getting him by the collar, but only to collapse with a groan, so fierce was the blow that struck him on the ear.
Again there was a pause--a murmur of rage, and the wooden support of the valance of the curtains began to crackle, while the hall was filling fast with stifling smoke.
One leader down, another sprang in his place, for the crowd was roused.
"Hev him out, lads! Quick, we have him now."
There was a rush, and Hallam was torn from Millicent's grasp--from Christie Bayle's protecting arms, and with a yell the crowd rushed out into the street, lit now by the glow from the smashed hall windows and the fire that burned within.
"My husband! Christie--dear friend--help, oh, help!" wailed Millicent, as she tottered out to the front, in time to see Bayle literally leap to Hallam's side and again strike the leader down.
It was the last effort of his strength; and now a score of hands were tearing and striking at the wretched victim, when there was the clattering of horses' hoofs and a mounted man rode right into the crowd with half-a-dozen followers at his side.
"Stop!" he roared. "I am a magistrate. Constables: your duty."
The mob fell back, and as five men, with whom was Thickens, seized upon Hallam, Millicent tottered into the circle and sank at her husband's knees.
"Saved!" she sobbed, "saved!"
For the first time Hallam found his voice, and cried, as he tried to shake himself free:
"This--this is a mistake--constables. Loose me. These men--"
"It is no mistake, Mr Hallam, you are arrested for embezzlement," said the mounted man sternly.
"Three cheers for Sir Gordon Bourne and Dixons'," shouted one in the crowd.
Christie Bayle had just time to catch Millicent Hallam in his arms as her senses left her, and with a piteous moan she sank back utterly stunned.
VOLUME TWO, CHAPTER FOURTEEN.
WRITHING IN HER AGONY.
"Mother!--father! Oh, in heaven's name, speak to me! I cannot bear it.
My heart is broken. What shall I do?"
"My poor darling!" sobbed Mrs Luttrell, holding her child to her breast and rocking to and fro, while the doctor sat with wrinkled face nursing and caressing Julia, who clung to him in a scared fas.h.i.+on, not having yet got over the terrors of the past night.
She had her arms about her grandfather, and nestled in his breast, but every now and then she started up to gaze piteously in his face.