The Greatest Novels of Charles Reade. Charles Reade Reade

Читать онлайн.
Название The Greatest Novels of Charles Reade
Автор произведения Charles Reade Reade
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066383565



Скачать книгу

cried Gerard joyfully, and eyed the wall, but came down faster.

      In another minute his feet were at their hands. They seized him ere he touched the ground, and all three clung together in one embrace.

      “Hush! away in silence, dear one.”

      They stole along the shadow of the wall.

      Now, ere they had gone many yards, suddenly a stream of light shot from an angle of the building, and lay across their path like a barrier of fire, and they heard whispers and footsteps close at hand.

      “Back!” hissed Martin. “Keep in the shade.”

      They hurried back, passed the dangling rope, and made for a little square projecting tower. They had barely rounded it when the light shot trembling past them, and flickered uncertainly into the distance.

      “A lantern!” groaned Martin in a whisper. “They are after us.”

      “Give me my knife,” whispered Gerard. “I'll never be taken alive.”

      “No, no!” murmured Margaret; “is there no way out where we are?”

      “None! none! But I carry six lives at my shoulder;” and with the word, Martin strung his bow, and fitted an arrow to the string: “in war never wait to be struck: I will kill one or two ere they shall know where their death comes from:” then, motioning his companions to be quiet he began to draw his bow, and, ere the arrow was quite drawn to the head, he glided round the corner ready to loose the string the moment the enemy should offer a mark.

      Gerard and Margaret held their breath in horrible expectation: they had never seen a human being killed.

      And now a wild hope, but half repressed, thrilled through Gerard, that this watchful enemy might be the burgomaster in person. The soldier, he knew, would send an arrow through a burgher or burgomaster, as he would through a boar in a wood.

      But who may foretell the future, however near? The bow, instead of remaining firm, and loosing the deadly shaft, was seen to waver first, then shake violently, and the stout soldier staggered back to them, his knees knocking and his cheeks blanched with fear. He let his arrow fall, and clutched Gerard's shoulder.

      “Let me feel flesh and blood,” he gasped. “The haunted tower! the haunted tower!”

      His terror communicated itself to Margaret and Gerard. They gasped rather than uttered an inquiry.

      “Hush!” he cried, “it will hear you up the wall! it is going up the wall! Its head is on fire. Up the wall, as mortal creatures walk upon green sward. If you know a prayer, say it, for hell is loose to-night.”

      “I have power to exorcise spirits,” said Gerard, trembling. “I will venture forth.”

      “Go alone then,” said Martin; “I have looked on't once, and live.”

      CHAPTER XI

       Table of Contents

      The strange glance of hatred the burgomaster had cast on Gerard, coupled with his imprisonment, had filled the young man with a persuasion that Ghysbrecht was his enemy to the death, and he glided round the angle of the tower, fully expecting to see no supernatural appearance, but some cruel and treacherous contrivance of a bad man to do him a mischief in that prison, his escape from which could hardly be known.

      As he stole forth, a soft but brave hand crept into his; and Margaret was by his side, to share this new peril.

      No sooner was the haunted tower visible, than a sight struck their eyes that benumbed them as they stood. More than halfway up the tower, a creature with a fiery head, like an enormous glowworm, was steadily mounting the wall: the body was dark, but its outline visible through the glare from the head, and the whole creature not much less than four feet long.

      At the foot of the tower stood a thing in white, that looked exactly like the figure of a female. Gerard and Margaret palpitated with awe.

      “The rope! the rope! It is going up the rope,” gasped Gerard.

      As they gazed, the glowworm disappeared in Gerard's late prison, but its light illuminated the cell inside and reddened the window. The white figure stood motionless below.

      Such as can retain their senses after the first prostrating effect of the supernatural are apt to experience terror in one of its strangest forms, a wild desire to fling themselves upon the terrible object. It fascinates them as the snake the bird. The great tragedian Macready used to render this finely in Macbeth, at Banquo's second appearance. He flung himself with averted head at the horrible shadow. This strange impulse now seized Margaret. She put down Gerard's hand quietly, and stood bewildered; then, all in a moment, with a wild cry, darted towards the spectre. Gerard, not aware of the natural impulse I have spoken of, never doubted the evil one was drawing her to her perdition. He fell on his knees.

      “Exorcizo vos. In nomine beatae Mariae, exorcizo vos.”

      While the exorcist was shrieking his incantations in extremity of terror, to his infinite relief he heard the spectre utter a feeble cry of fear. To find that hell had also its little weaknesses was encouraging. He redoubled his exorcisms, and presently he saw the ghastly shape kneeling at Margaret's knees, and heard it praying piteously for mercy.

      Kate and Giles soon reached the haunted tower. Judge their surprise when they found a new rope dangling from the prisoner's window to the ground.

      “I see how it is,” said the inferior intelligence, taking facts as they came. “Our Gerard has come down this rope. He has got clear. Up I go, and see.”

      “No, Giles, no!” said the superior intelligence, blinded by prejudice. “See you not this is glamour? This rope is a line the evil one casts out to wile thee to destruction. He knows the weaknesses of all our hearts; he has seen how fond you are of going up things. Where should our Gerard procure a rope? how fasten it in the sky like this? It is not in nature. Holy saints protect us this night, for hell is abroad.”

      “Stuff!” said the dwarf; “the way to hell is down, and this rope leads up. I never had the luck to go up such a long rope. It may be years ere I fall in with such a long rope all ready for me. As well be knocked on the head at once as never know happiness.”

      And he sprung on to the rope with a cry of delight, as a cat jumps with a mew on to a table where fish is. All the gymnast was on fire; and the only concession Kate could gain from him was permission to fasten the lantern on his neck first.

      “A light scares the ill spirits,” said she.

      And so, with his huge arms, and his legs like feathers, Giles went up the rope faster than his brother came down it. The light at the nape of his neck made a glowworm of him. His sister watched his progress, with trembling anxiety. Suddenly a female figure started out of the solid masonry, and came flying at her with more than mortal velocity.

      Kate uttered a feeble cry. It was all she could, for her tongue clove to her palate with terror. Then she dropped her crutches, and sank upon her knees, hiding her face and moaning:

      “Take my body, but spare my soul!”

      Margaret (panting). “Why, it is a woman!”

      Kate (quivering). “Why, it is a woman!”

      Margaret. “How you scared me!”

      Kate. “I am scared enough myself. Oh! oh! oh!”

      “This is strange! But the fiery-headed thing? Yet it was with you, and you are harmless! But why are you here at this time of night?”

      “Nay, why are YOU?”

      “Perhaps we are on the same errand? Ah! you are his good sister, Kate!”

      “And you are Margaret Brandt.”

      “Yes.

      “All the better.