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Just then a couple of gulls floated by, grey and ghostly in the dull mist, uttering their faint and peevish cry, and a few drops of rain began to fall.
"Are you ready, gentlemen?" said Sir Harry Payne hoa.r.s.ely.
No one spoke, but the princ.i.p.als bowed their heads.
"When I say 'three,'" said Sir Harry, "you will turn round and fire.
_One_--_two_--three!"
As the last word left Sir Harry Payne's lips, the princ.i.p.als turned quickly round, and almost simultaneously came two sharp echoing reports following the faint puffs of smoke that shrouded the duellists for the moment.
Then, as the seconds were starting forward, Mellersh saw that Rockley was looking up at the face of the cliff. Then he looked down at Richard Linnell, who, as the shots were fired, twisted himself sharply round, dropping his pistol, and now stood with one hand pressed to his temple.
Mellersh saw a curious smile on Rockley's face, and a hoa.r.s.e gasp came from his throat.
"It is my fate to shoot another man--dead!" he muttered; and he was just in time to catch Richard Linnell as he reeled and was about to fall.
The doctor was coming up quickly, and Sir Harry had run to his princ.i.p.al.
"You've killed him," he whispered.
"I hope so," was the cool reply. "I'm not sure, though. That cursed piece of chalk fell from the cliff as I fired, and spoiled my aim. Go and see where he is hurt."
As Sir Harry ran off, Rockley stooped and picked up a piece of chalk rock as big as his fist, and then threw it down, dusting his hand afterwards, and then removing the mark of the chalk where it had struck him upon his right shoulder.
"Pah!" he exclaimed, pressing his handkerchief to his lip, which was cut; "the thing bounced up. I hope it has not saved Mr Richard Linnell's life."
Judging from appearances it had not, for Richard Linnell lay upon the sand with his eyes half closed, and the blood trickling from a wound over the right temple, just where the hair began to grow.
"Is he much hurt?" whispered Sir Harry.
"Don't know yet," said the doctor sharply, as he examined the fallen man. "Not Rockley's fault if he is not."
"He's a perfect devil," muttered Sir Harry, as, looking very white, he gazed from one to the other, while the Major slowly walked down towards the sea and back.
"Well?" said Colonel Mellersh, as the doctor ceased his examination.
"Had my man better be off at once?" said Sir Harry. "Give him a chance to get away."
"If you do get him away, Sir Harry Payne, let me know where he is gone.
I may have a few words to say to Major Rockley."
"I can't tell what may supervene. There may be concussion of the brain," said the surgeon. "Yes, he is coming to now. The bullet has only scored his head. It was a marvellous escape."
"Blast!" muttered Major Rockley, as the news was conveyed to him.
"Here, let's be off back, I want my breakfast. Curse him, I've not done with him yet, Payne. There are other ways to touch the heart of a greenhorn like that, than with bullets. I'd got him dead as a hammer.
My arm felt like steel, and my shot would have had him right in the chest if that piece of chalk had not struck me and jerked my arm. Come along."
"Hadn't I better go and see if I can be of any help?"
"Hadn't you better go and nurse the scoundrel, and read to him a bit?
Bah! Come along, man. He has his second, and they can fetch help from the fishermen's cottages if they want it."
Sir Harry followed him up the cliff steps and along the Down path without a word.
"So, I shall not want a post-chaise," said Rockley, with a laugh. "No rus.h.i.+ng up to town and hiding for a while in chambers in St. James's, or running over to Boulogne. Good job, too. Save the money. I'm fearfully short. Why, man, you look white."
"Do I? It's cold. I'm glad that the affair has terminated so well."
"Terminated?" cried the Major, grasping him by the arm, "It has only begun. I tell you there are other ways than bullets to touch a man's heart, and I'll pierce his, curse him! so that he shall rue the day he ever crossed my path."
Sir Harry looked at him uneasily.
"Payne," he continued, "I'm a firm friend to those who help me--and lend me money," he added, with a laugh--"but I never forgive an insult, or a woman's slight."
Down on the beach, Colonel Mellersh was kneeling with the great drops of perspiration standing on his face, holding Richard Linnell's hand, while the surgeon was looking on anxiously at the returning signs of knowledge of his position on his patient's part.
The other princ.i.p.al and second had been gone some minutes when footsteps were heard, and James Bell and Fisherman d.i.c.k came quickly down the cliff.
"Is he much hurt, sir?" said the former, with real signs of trouble in his face.
"No, my man: you may tell the Major that it was a narrow escape."
"Poor lad!" muttered the soldier, going down on one knee, and making Colonel Mellersh look at him with surprise, as he took one cold hand, to hold it between his own for a few moments.
"Can we carry him to my house, gen'lemen," said Fisherman d.i.c.k roughly.
"'Taint very far."
"No, my man, no," said the doctor; "he has only been stunned. Narrow escape, though. He'll walk home."
"Do you mean it, sir?" cried James Bell. "Beg pardon, sir. Only glad the Major won't have to go. I'll get back to barracks now. He'll be wanting me."
"All right, my man. Take those confounded pistols with you. There: be off."
The soldier placed the pistols in the case, and, saluting both gentlemen, hurried away by the sh.o.r.e, while Fisherman d.i.c.k touched his hat again, and said in a whisper:
"I've got a drop of right Nantes sperrit at my cottage, gentlemen, if you can bring him in there."
"No, no," said the doctor. "There, he's coming round fast now," and he pointed to Linnell's staring eyes.
The doctor was right. Half an hour later, with no worse trouble to combat than a fierce headache, and the wound smarting under its strapping, Richard Linnell was able to take the Colonel's arm and walk home, a warning to other young men not to attempt to climb up the cliff to the Downs, and risk falling and cutting their heads!
For that was the version of Richard Linnell's mishap that ran through the town.
Volume Two, Chapter VII.
MISS CLODE IS OVERCOME.
It was a vain effort, for such an event was sure to be known to others besides the parties concerned.