Part 63 (1/2)
These were her only thoughts. And the sole pa.s.sage in her Bible she could read, and which she read over and over again, was the story of the Importunate Widow who cried to the judge, ”Avenge me of mine adversary!”
and who was heard for her persistent asking.
Thus pa.s.sed a fortnight. She was visibly wasting in flesh, but the fire within her burned only the fiercer as her bodily strength failed.
Then, all at once, an idea shot like a meteor through her brain. She remembered to have heard of the Cursing Well of St. Elian, near Colwyn.
She recalled the fact that the last ”Priest of the Well,” an old man who had lived hard by, and who had initiated postulants into the mysteries of the well, had been brought before the magistrates for obtaining money under false pretences, and had been sent to gaol at Chester; and that the parson of Llanelian had taken a crowbar and had ripped up the wall that enclosed the spring, and had done what lay in his power to destroy it and blot out the remembrance of the powers of the well, or to ruin its efficacy.
But the spring still flowed. Had it lost its virtues? Could a parson, could magistrates bring to naught what had been for centuries?
She remembered, further, that the granddaughter of the ”Priest of the Well” was then an inmate of the workhouse at Denbigh. Was it not possible that she should know the ritual of St. Elian's spring?--should be able to a.s.sist her in the desire of her heart?
Mrs. Winifred Jones resolved on trying. She went to the workhouse and sought out the woman, an old and infirm creature, and had a conference with her. She found the woman, a poor, decrepit creature, very shy of speaking about the well, very unwilling to be drawn into a confession of the extent of her knowledge, very much afraid of the magistrates and the master of the workhouse punis.h.i.+ng her if she had anything to do with the well; but the intensity of Mrs. Jones, her vehemence in prosecuting her inquiries, and, above all, the gift of half a sovereign pressed into her palm, with the promise of another if she a.s.sisted Mrs. Winifred in the prosecution of her purpose, finally overcame her scruples, and she told all that she knew.
”You must visit St. Elian's, madam,” said she, ”when the moon is at the wane. You must write the name of him whose death you desire on a pebble, and drop it into the water, and recite the sixty-ninth Psalm.”
”But,” objected the widow, ”I do not know his name, and I have no means of discovering it. I want to kill the man who murdered my son.”
The old woman considered, and then said: ”In this case it is different.
There is a way under these circ.u.mstances. Murdered, was your son?”
”Yes, he was treacherously shot.”
”Then you will have to call on your son by name, as you let fall the pebble, and say: 'Let him be wiped out of the book of the living. Avenge me of mine adversary, O my G.o.d.' And you must go on dropping in pebbles, reciting the same prayer, till you see the water of the spring boil up black as ink. Then you will know that your prayer has been heard, and that the curse has wrought.”
Winifred Jones departed in some elation.
She waited till the moon changed, and then she went to the spring. It was near a hedge; there were trees by it. Apparently it had been unsought for many years. But it still flowed. About it lay scattered a few stones that had once formed the bounds.
She looked about her. No one was by. The sun was declining, and would soon set. She bent over the water--it was perfectly clear. She had collected a lapful of rounded stones.
Then she cried out: ”Aneurin! come to my aid against your murderer. Let him be blotted out of the book of the living. Avenge me on my adversary, O my G.o.d!” and she dropped a pebble into the water.
Then rose a bubble. That was all.
She paused but for a moment, then again she cried: ”Aneurin! come to my aid against your murderer. Let him be blotted out of the book of the living. Avenge me on my adversary, O my G.o.d!”
Once more a pebble was let fall. It splashed into the spring, but there was no change save that ripples were sent against the side.
A third--then a fourth--she went on; the sun sent a shaft of yellow glory through the trees over the spring.
Then someone pa.s.sed along the road hard by, and Mrs. Winifred Jones held her breath, and desisted till the footfall had died away.
But then she continued, stone after stone was dropped, and the ritual was followed, till the seventeenth had disappeared in the well, when up rose a column of black fluid boiling as it were from below, the colour of ink; and the widow pressed her hands together, and drew a sigh of relief; her prayer had been heard, and her curse had taken effect.
She cast away the rest of the pebbles, let down her skirt, and went away rejoicing.
It so fell out that on this very evening Jacob Van Heeren had gone to bed early, as he had risen before daybreak, and had been riding all day.