Part 46 (1/2)
”On that I was so frighted that I went away back to my own room, and did not stir till they had gone out, and then--”
”What time was that?”
”About seven o'clock. Well--You put me out! where was I? Well, I went into Mr. Aram's, an' I seed they had been burning a fire, an' that all the ashes were taken out o' the grate; so I went an' looked at the rubbish behind the house, and there sure enough I seed the ashes, and among 'em several bits o' cloth and linen which seemed to belong to wearing apparel; and there, too, was a handkerchief which I had obsarved Houseman wear (for it was a very curious handkerchief, all spotted) many's the time, and there was blood on it, 'bout the size of a s.h.i.+lling. An' afterwards I seed Houseman, an' I showed him the handkerchief; and I said to him, 'What has come of Clarke?' An' he frowned, and, looking at me, said, 'Hark ye, I know not what you mean; but as sure as the devil keeps watch for souls, I will shoot you through the head if you ever let that d---d tongue of yours let slip a single word about Clarke or me or Mr. Aram,--so look to yourself!
”An' I was all scared, and trimbled from limb to limb; an' for two whole yearn afterwards (long arter Aram and Houseman were both gone) I never could so much as open my lips on the matter; and afore he went, Mr. Aram would sometimes look at me, not sternly-like, as the villain Houseman, but as if he would read to the bottom of my heart. Oh! I was as if you had taken a mountain off o' me when he an' Houseman left the town; for sure as the sun s.h.i.+nes I believes, from what I have now said, that they two murdered Clarke on that same February night. An' now, Mr. Summers, I feels more easy than I has felt for many a long day; an' if I have not told it afore, it is because I thought of Houseman's frown and his horrid words; but summut of it would ooze out of my tongue now an' then, for it's a hard thing, sir, to know a secret o' that sort and be quiet and still about it; and, indeed, I was not the same cretur when I knew it as I was afore, for it made me take to anything rather than thinking; and that's the reason, sir, I lost the good crackter I used to have.”
Such, somewhat abridged from its ”says he” and ”says I,” its involutions and its tautologies, was the story which Walter held his breath to hear.
But events thicken, and the maze is nearly thridden.
”Not a moment now should be lost,” said the curate, as they left the house. ”Let us at once proceed to a very able magistrate, to whom I can introduce you, and who lives a little way out of the town.”
”As you will,” said Walter, in an altered and hollow voice. ”I am as a man standing on an eminence, who views the whole scene he is to travel over, stretched before him, but is dizzy and bewildered by the height which he has reached. I know, I feel, that I am on the brink of fearful and dread discoveries; pray G.o.d that--But heed me not, sir, heed me not; let us on, on!”
It was now approaching towards the evening; and as they walked on, having left the town, the sun poured his last beams on a group of persons that appeared hastily collecting and gathering round a spot, well known in the neighborhood of Knaresborough, called Thistle Hill.
”Let us avoid the crowd,” said the curate. ”Yet what, I wonder, can be its cause?” While he spoke, two peasants hurried by towards the throng.
”What is the meaning of the crowd yonder?” asked the curate.
”I don't know exactly, your honor, but I hears as how Jem Ninnings, digging for stone for the limekiln, have dug out a big wooden chest.”
A shout from the group broke in on the peasant's explanation,--a sudden simultaneous shout, but not of joy; something of dismay and horror seemed to breathe in the sound.
Walter looked at the curate. An impulse, a sudden instinct, seemed to attract them involuntarily to the spot whence that sound arose; they quickened their pace, they made their way through the throng. A deep chest, that had been violently forced, stood before them; its contents had been dragged to day, and now lay on the sward--a bleached and mouldering skeleton! Several of the bones were loose, and detached from the body. A general hubbub of voices from the spectators,--inquiry, guess, fear, wonder,--rang confusedly around.
”Yes!” said one old man, with gray hair, leaning on a pickaxe, ”it is now about fourteen years since the Jew pedlar disappeared. These are probably his bones,--he was supposed to have been murdered!”
”Nay!” screeched a woman, drawing back a child who, all unalarmed, was about to touch the ghastly relics, ”nay, the pedlar was heard of afterwards. I'll tell ye, ye may be sure these are the bones of Clarke,--Daniel Clarke,--whom the country was so stirred about when we were young!”
”Right, dame, right! It is Clarke's skeleton,” was the simultaneous cry.
And Walter, pressing forward, stood over the bones, and waved his hand as to guard them from further insult. His sudden appearance, his tall stature, his wild gesture, the horror, the paleness, the grief of his countenance, struck and appalled all present. He remained speechless, and a sudden silence succeeded the late clamor.
”And what do you here, fools?” said a voice, abruptly. The spectators turned: a new comer had been added to the throng,--it was Richard Houseman. His dress loose and disarranged, his flushed cheeks and rolling eyes, betrayed the source of consolation to which he had flown from his domestic affliction. ”What do ye here?” said he, reeling forward. ”Ha! human bones? And whose may they be, think ye?”
”They are Clarke's!” said the woman, who had first given rise to that supposition.
”Yes, we think they are Daniel Clarke's,--he who disappeared some years ago!” cried two or three voices in concert. ”Clarke's?” repeated Houseman, stooping down and picking up a thigh-bone, which lay at a little distance from the rest; ”Clarke's? Ha! ha! they are no more Clarke's than mine!”
”Behold!” shouted Walter, in a voice that rang from cliff to plain; and springing forward, he seized Houseman with a giant's grasp,--”behold the murderer!”
As if the avenging voice of Heaven had spoken, a thrilling, an electric conviction darted through the crowd. Each of the elder spectators remembered at once the person of Houseman, and the suspicion that had attached to his name.
”Seize him! seize him!” burst forth from twenty voices. ”Houseman is the murderer!”
”Murderer!” faltered Houseman, trembling in the iron hands of Walter,--”murderer of whom? I tell ye these are not Clarke's bones!”
”Where then do they lie?” cried his arrester.