天下书楼
会员中心 我的书架

CHAPTER IV

(快捷键←)[上一章]  [回目录]  [没有了](快捷键→)

gentle snow fell through a grey night as a party of men and women marched up red hill upon the following tuesday evening. an invisible moon made all this clear. parson yates led the way with his cassock hitched out of the snow and with a stout boy on either side of him. one lad bore a candle, and the other, a little bell.

“butivul night for a holy deed, i’m sure,” said mr. cramphorn. mrs. pearn, jenifer and mr. bluett walked beside him and a dozen villagers accompanied them. the matter, however, at their pastor’s desire had been kept as far as possible from the general ear.

“i hope as you’m lookin’ sharp to the roads an’ the quay an’ smugglers’ lane as usual,” whispered johnny to robert bluett. “some long tongue be sure to blab this business; an’ if the frenchman’s laying off, they might signal her in to-night, ’stead of to-morrow.”

“not so much as a sea-otter could go from sea to shore without one of my men would know it,” answered the other.

“then a great load be off my mind, i assure ’e.”

p. 347red hill above daleham was a sandstone bluff that sprang up near three hundred feet abruptly from the sea, and, save at low tides, deep water always ran beneath. upon its head a rough tonsure of wind-worn pine trees circled the grey ruins of stapledon manor-house, and inland therefrom extended the fishermen’s gardens and stretched two roads. one of these ways led to daleham church and the country; the other was that up which parson yates and his company now climbed from the village.

“here will we stand,” said the good man, “and should anything in the nature of a superhuman visitation occur, you must light your candle, richard trout, and you, noah collins, after i have lifted my voice the first time, must strike upon the bell thrice—for each person of the ever-blessed trinity. and see no wax falls from the candle on to my book, boy.”

they drew up outside the belt of fir and all endured half an hour of misery, for the snow, though slight, persisted and the air and earth were bitter cold. presently, however, the snow thinned to scattered flakes, then stopped; a star stole out and touched the white carpet with silver. then came the beat of the church clock telling ten, and, as if in answer, a sigh ran through the woods, and gloomy figures moved beneath the trees.

p. 348silent as a dream and darker than night itself against the snow, a black pageant crept from the forest, and crossed the open land. one tall figure, above man’s common stature, moved in front and, following him, came horses that drew a plumed hearse, while certain footmen moved orderly behind. then did dick trout, with shaking blue fingers, strike tinder and make a flame, and noah collins prepared to beat a triple tattoo upon his bell. only mr. yates himself unhappily failed at the critical pinch.

“give it ’em; give it to ’em, my dear soul, or they’ll be gone!” implored mr. cramphorn in frantic accents. but the little man had dropped his book from a numbed and shaking hand, and, by the time he had picked it up again, the ghostly funeral was sweeping along the church road, already half swallowed up by night.

“i lacked the power of speech,” stuttered mr. yates. “i cannot deny it—the spirit of fear came upon me and i dropped my book.”

“give ’em a broadside coming back, your reverence—if ’tis true as they do come back,” suggested bluett.

twenty minutes later a man approached by the road from the church, and cramphorn eagerly enquired of him whether he had seen the funeral.

“funeral? no, i seed no funeral,” answered the p. 349voice of merry jonathan. “be that parson yates huntin’ ghostes again?”

“we have come to liberate these unhappy phantoms and so far failed. they passed before i summoned presence of mind to address them.”

“‘passed?’ when? why for didn’t i see ’em?”

“you!” snorted johnny cramphorn. “who be the likes of you to see such holy things?”

jonathan growled and approached jenifer and her mother.

“best you women come home, else you’ll get your noses frozen off, an’ the spirits won’t thaw ’em for ’e, ’cepting those at home.”

“let us have no irreverence, jonathan godbeer,” said the clergyman. “you will do better to add your prayers to ours, that my courage may be sustained and my voice strengthened for the coming ordeal.”

the captain of the smugglers did not answer, but strode forth and walked over white ground lately traversed by the procession of spirits.

“doan’t ’e cross theer track, my dear man,” cried mrs. pearn; “else ten to one they’ll blast ’e crooked for the rest of your days!”

but her caution came too late. godbeer stood and gazed upon the snow where the spectral hearse had passed. then he lifted his voice and shouted with all his might.

p. 350“gauger bluett! gauger bluett! this here be your job, not parson’s. quick, man, quick! ghostes or no ghostes, the snow’s took their shoe marks if i see right. boots an’ hoofs an’ wheels—no bogies them. ha-ha! the spirits that passed along here was inside the hearse, not outside!”

the exciseman and others rushed forward to find merry jonathan’s words were true, for the new-fallen snow had been trampled with feet of men and horses, and seamed with tracks of heavy wheels.

“theer now! i’ve often thought they rascals might have ’e that way, cap’n,” said godbeer, with deep concern. “to think of the wickedness o’ the world! just come in the trees behind the ruin. ’tweern’t my business, of course, but more’n wance walkin’ ’pon the beach below, takin’ the air at low tide, i’ve looked up at the face of the cliff by night and fancied i seed ropes pulling things up the precipice. then i thought, ‘no—surely not. can’t be no hookem-snivey doings under darkness wi’ such a man as cap’n bluett amongst us.’”

jonathan grinned and the moon came out and touched his white teeth. cramphorn held up a lantern, and bluett himself uttered words not seemly for the ear of parson yates.

then he turned to follow the direction of the smugglers’ funeral.

“i bid every honest man come along with me in p. 351the king’s name,” he cried. “them as have done this deed shall smart for theer night’s work yet!”

“us’ll all help ’e heart an’ soul, i’m sure,” declared merry jonathan. “we’m a thought behind the rogues, i fear. but what’s that with right ’pon our side?”

they scrambled and hastened along the rutted snow, and cramphorn and godbeer commented in cheerful chorus on the event as they trotted beside the furious officer.

“what i’m fearin’ is that these scamps have been at theer games all the week,” gasped the aged johnny while he shuffled forward. “theer’s a dark plot against our good name, and while we’ve all been countin’ to rub it in to-morrow night, they’ve run theer cargo and hid it in the ruin of the manor this longful time—pulled it up the cliff an’ been takin’ it away reg’lar night after night, while honest men was on the watch—some place else.”

“makes me near burst wi’ rage,” said jonathan, “an’ all them fine fellows ready, an’ the cutter sailin’ about over the sea so butivul! an’ perhaps the cargo was run that very night cap’n bluett comed amongst us at the ‘golden anchor,’ an’ told us what a great man he was. all play-actin’, an’ even my own girl jenifer to come home so frightened. to think a man’s own girl would deceive him so wicked!”

p. 352“wi’ pastor yates at his post tu, tryin’ so hard to larn us all better!” panted cramphorn.

now ahead loomed a huge black object where crossways met at a lonely spot nearly a mile inland. it was empty and proved to be the skeleton of a farm waggon painted black, boarded up, and adorned with tufts of shavings dipped in tar. the snow had been trampled for twenty yards round about it and indications of other wheels diverged landward on three sides into the night.

cramphorn, godbeer and robert bluett, now far ahead of their companions, stood before this spectacle.

“they’ve done you, by g—!” gasped the old man. “an’ to think of all your bold heroes with theer swords an’ cutlasses an’ pistols a-sitting freezing in every lane and by every drain an’ rat-hole around the village! ’tis amazin’ such things be allowed to fall out.”

the officer did not answer. he had seen the ancient and godbeer grin amiably each upon the other, and now his thick skull appreciated the truth and he turned to chew his gall alone.

merry jonathan shouted after him.

“ten to one they’ll tell ’e that maypole chap as walked in front of the funeral was a man by the name of godbeer. but don’t you b’lieve it, cap’n. you’ll never catch me an’ master cramphorn in no such job.”

p. 353“though we’ve made up our difference, as becomes christian men,” declared johnny.

bluett turned and addressed them.

“they cry loudest who cry last,” he said. “the stones be piled as’ll hold you tight yet, you bowldacious thieves; an’ the wood be seasoned as you’ll swing from.”

cramphorn wagged his beard.

“my stars! hark to un! theer’s a sour temper! theer’s sorry thanks for all we’ve done! ’tis a very thankless generation for sartain. gimme your arm back-along, merry. we’m most tu good to mix wi’ common men—you an’ me—that’s the naked truth of it.”

先看到这(加入书签) | 推荐本书 | 打开书架 | 返回首页 | 返回书页 | 错误报告 | 返回顶部