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"Certainly," I said, and my mother, evidently thinking that Bill had come relative to some matter connected with the estate, left us.
"Ave 'ee seed yer brother, sur?" said Bill, as soon as she was gone.
"Yes, last night."
"'Scuse me, sur; but was 'ee friendly?"
I did not resent this question, for Bill knew of our past relations, he knew what I had said when I heard of Wilfred's cruelty to Ruth.
"No," I said.
"You'll forgive me, Maaster Roger," went on Bill, "but I've got a raison for axin'; was anything said about Miss Ruth?"
"Nothing definite. Why?"
"Maaster Roger," said Bill, as if feeling his way, "people do zay as 'ow he will never stand no chance wi' Miss Ruth now, but do 'ee think 'ee wudd'n try to kip you from 'avin' 'er?"
"I think he would," I cried. "But what then?"
"Maaster Roger, I'm afraid he'll bait 'ee after all, ef you doan't maake haste."
"I don't understand; tell me what you mean quickly."
"Well, Maaster Roger, yesterday I was over to Polcoath Downs. As you knaw, 'tes 'bout fifteen mile from here. I've got a brother as do live there, the waun younger'n me. You remember Daniel, doan't 'ee?"
"Very well. Go on quickly."
"Well, I 'adn't seed un for a long time, so I stayed till nearly mornin', and as I was comin' on the road 'bout an hour afore daylight I heerd the sound of hosses. I was goin' down a steep hill when I heerd it, and I wondered who twas comin' at that time. In a minute more I seed two men comin' ridin'. They wa'ant goin' very vast, so I could hear 'em talkin. When I got to the bottom of the hill I sed to meself, I wan't let those chaps zee me, so I gets under a bush cloase to a pool beside the road. As luck wud 'ave it, they got off their 'osses right against where I was, so as to let um drink, and then I seed that one of them was yer brother, and tother a strange chap, as Maaster Wilfred 'ave got very thick wi'."
"Who was he?"
"I don't knaw, 'cept 'ee's a bad un. 'Ee don't do nothin' but loaf around the Manor and the kiddley-wink (beershop). I'm told as 'ow he's terrible thick wi' Maaster Wilfred, who do kip un to do all soarts ov dirty jobs. I've 'eerd 'ee's from Plymouth, and he goes by the name of Jake Blackburn."
"Well?"
"Well, Maaster Wilfred wur sayin' somethin' about his brother comin'
'ome again and wis.h.i.+n' he knawed he wur comin', as then Jake cud 'ave stopped un from comin' home. Then, Maaster Roger, I 'ad a sort o'
notion 'ow that you'd come 'ome again, and I wur glad."
"What then? Tell me quickly."
"Then your brother said as 'ow he'd pay you out now, and that, though you might get the old estate, which was mortgaged, you shud never 'ave the girl you loved."
"Why? How?"
"I couldn't rightly make out, but I heerd Maaster Wilfred zay that he'd kill yer weth hes own 'and rather than you shud ever 'ave her. Then I 'eerd Jake Blackburn ax what 'ee'd got to do wi' that, and your brother told 'im that ef Miss Ruth didn't come down from 'er 'igh 'oss, there'd be some work for 'im to do."
"You don't mean to say that Wilfred would use this villain to kill Ruth?"
"I don't say nothin', sur, but I knaw Maaster Wilfred wur awful mad, and wur tellin' Jake that ef 'ee ded'n do as he was told he'd put a 'angman's rope round es nudd.i.c.k. I 'eerd un zay, too, that he wud tell 'er you was dead, and that it wur 'er place to 'ave him, and if she wudden--well, and then they was whisperin' one to another."
"And are you sure they were going there?"
"As sure as I can be, sur. I 'eerd em zay they'd git to Morton Hall by ten o'clock."
"And now it's after two. Why did you not tell me before?"
"I've bin three times this mornin' sur, but they zaid they wudden wake 'ee. I've told 'ee as soon as ever I cud."
I could not believe in what Bill had said, it was too terrible, but I hurried madly back to the house, he keeping by my side.
"Do you really think he is capable of such a thing as you hinted at, Bill?" I said.
"I'm sure 'ee's capable of doin' any devilish thing," said Bill; "beside, 'e've bin drinkin' 'ard lately."
The thought was ghastly in the extreme, and yet as I remembered the look on his face the night before, when he said he would ever seek to curse my life, I felt the truth of Bill's words. He had tried to murder me in order to retain wealth, would he not murder her rather than see her make me happy? Then the thought came to me--was this a part of the curse? For the past eleven years I had never known real happiness. Before I had raised the cup to my lips it had been dashed out of my hand. Was it to be now as it had ever been? For a moment I believed that an evil power attended me, and that I could not rid myself of the evil to which I had been born. Then I thought of old Deborah Teague's words. "You ca'ant curse waun that do love everybody, and whose heart es full ov love." This comforted me; not that I believed particularly in anything she might say, but because her words sounded true.
Anyhow, if such were the case, I would resist my fate, I would struggle to the end, and G.o.d would help me.
I rushed to the stables, where two or three men lolled around.
"Are the horses all in the stables?" I asked.
"No, sur, there be two gone."
"Good ones?"
"The best we've got, sur. Brown Molly es a thora breed, sur, and will run till she do drop; and Prince is nearly so good."
"Have you a good horse now?"
"There's Bess. She's a bra mare, jist brok in, sur."
"Saddle her at once for me, and stop! Do you know who has the other two horses?"
"No, sur; but Master Wilfred do often take hosses without we knawin'
'bout it."
"Just so. Bring Bess to the hall door immediately."
I rushed into the house, where I found my mother. I told her all Bill had related to me. As I did so I saw her face pale to the very lips.
"Oh, Roger, oh Roger!" she cried, "save him."
"Do you think Bill's surmise correct?"
"Oh, Wilfred, Wilfred, you will kill me yet," she murmured. "Ride fast, Roger, ride for your life. Don't wait a moment if you would save her, and save him!"
The horse was brought up to the door at that moment, a powerful black mare, well fed and exercised.