Part 22 (2/2)
”Very civil, sir,” said Effie, compelling herself to answer, yet hardly knowing what she said.
”And your victuals,” continued Sharpitlaw, in the same condoling tone,--”do you get what you like?--or is there onything you would particularly fancy, as your health seems but silly?”
”It's a' very weel, sir, I thank ye,” said the poor prisoner, in a tone how different from the sportive vivacity of those of the Lily of St.
Leonard's!--”it's a' very gude--ower gude for me.”
”He must have been a great villain, Effie, who brought you to this pa.s.s,”
said Sharpitlaw.
The remark was dictated partly by a natural feeling, of which even he could not divest himself, though accustomed to practise on the pa.s.sions of others, and keep a most heedful guard over his own, and partly by his wish to introduce the sort of conversation which might, best serve his immediate purpose. Indeed, upon the present occasion, these mixed motives of feeling and cunning harmonised together wonderfully; for, said Sharpitlaw to himself, the greater rogue Robertson is, the more will be the merit of bringing him to justice. ”He must have been a great villain, indeed,” he again reiterated; ”and I wish I had the skelping o' him.”
”I may blame mysell mair than him,” said Effie; ”I was bred up to ken better; but he, poor fellow,”--(she stopped).
”Was a thorough blackguard a' his life, I dare say,” said Sharpitlaw.
”A stranger he was in this country, and a companion of that lawless vagabond, Wilson, I think, Effie?”
”It wad hae been dearly telling him that he had ne'er seen Wilson's face.”
”That's very true that you are saying, Effie,” said Sharpitlaw. ”Where was't that Robertson and you were used to howff thegither? Somegate about the Laigh Calton, I am thinking.”
The simple and dispirited girl had thus far followed Mr. Sharpitlaw's lead, because he had artfully adjusted his observations to the thoughts he was pretty certain must be pa.s.sing through her own mind, so that her answers became a kind of thinking aloud, a mood into which those who are either const.i.tutionally absent in mind, or are rendered so by the temporary pressure of misfortune, may be easily led by a skilful train of suggestions. But the last observation of the procurator-fiscal was too much of the nature of a direct interrogatory, and it broke the charm accordingly.
”What was it that I was saying?” said Effie, starting up from her reclining posture, seating herself upright, and hastily shading her dishevelled hair back from her wasted but still beautiful countenance.
She fixed her eyes boldly and keenly upon Sharpitlaw--”You are too much of a gentleman, sir,--too much of an honest man, to take any notice of what a poor creature like me says, that can hardly ca' my senses my ain--G.o.d help me!”
”Advantage!--I would be of some advantage to you if I could,” said Sharpitlaw, in a soothing tone; ”and I ken naething sae likely to serve ye, Effie, as gripping this rascal, Robertson.”
”O dinna misca' him, sir, that never misca'd you!--Robertson?--I am sure I had naething to say against ony man o' the name, and naething will I say.”
”But if you do not heed your own misfortune, Effie, you should mind what distress he has brought on your family,” said the man of law.
”O, Heaven help me!” exclaimed poor Effie--”My poor father--my dear Jeanie--O, that's sairest to bide of a'! O, sir, if you hae ony kindness--if ye hae ony touch of compa.s.sion--for a' the folk I see here are as hard as the wa'-stanes--If ye wad but bid them let my sister Jeanie in the next time she ca's! for when I hear them put her awa frae the door, and canna climb up to that high window to see sae muckle as her gown-tail, it's like to pit me out o' my judgment.” And she looked on him with a face of entreaty, so earnest, yet so humble, that she fairly shook the steadfast purpose of his mind.
”You shall see your sister,” he began, ”if you'll tell me,”--then interrupting himself, he added, in a more hurried tone,--”no, d--n it, you shall see your sister whether you tell me anything or no.” So saying, he rose up and left the apartment.
When he had rejoined Ratcliffe, he observed, ”You are right, Ratton; there's no making much of that la.s.sie. But ae thing I have cleared--that is, that Robertson has been the father of the bairn, and so I will wager a boddle it will be he that's to meet wi' Jeanie Deans this night at Muschat's Cairn, and there we'll nail him, Rat, or my name is not Gideon Sharpitlaw.”
”But,” said Ratcliffe, perhaps because he was in no hurry to see anything which was like to be connected with the discovery and apprehension of Robertson, ”an that were the case, Mr. Butler wad hae kend the man in the King's Park to be the same person wi' him in Madge Wildfire's claise, that headed the mob.”
”That makes nae difference, man,” replied Sharpitlaw--”the dress, the light, the confusion, and maybe a touch o' a blackit cork, or a slake o'
paint-hout, Ratton, I have seen ye dress your ainsell, that the deevil ye belang to durstna hae made oath t'ye.”
”And that's true, too,” said Ratcliffe.
”And besides, ye donnard carle,” continued Sharpitlaw, triumphantly, ”the minister _did_ say that he thought he knew something of the features of the birkie that spoke to him in the Park, though he could not charge his memory where or when he had seen them.”
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