登陆注册
15452000000087

第87章 CHAPTER XVI.(2)

"That is between you and me, sir. You will find a bystander may shoot a malefactor to save the life of a citizen. Confine your defense, at present, to the point at issue. Have you any excuse, as against this young man?" (To Henry.)--"You look pale. You can sit down till your turn comes."

"Not in this house."

"And why not in this house, pray? Is your own house a better?"

No answer from Henry. A look of amazement and alarm from Grace.

But she was afraid to utter a word, after the admonition she had received.

"Well, sir," said Cole, "he was desecrating a church."

"So he was, and I shall talk to him in his turn. But you desecrated it worse. He turned it into a blacksmith shop; you turned it into a shambles. I shall commit you. You will be taken to Hillsborough to-morrow; to-night you will remain in my strong-room. Fling him down a mattress and some blankets, and give him plenty to eat and drink; I wouldn't starve the devil on old Christmas Eve. There, take him away. Stop; search his pockets before you leave him alone."

Cole was taken away, and Henry's turn came.

Just before this examination commenced, Grace clasped her hands, and cast a deprecating look on Henry, as much as to say, "Be moderate."

And then her eyes roved to and fro, and the whole woman was in arms, and on the watch.

Mr. Raby began on him. "As for you, your offense is not so criminal in the eye of the law; but it is bad enough; you have broken into a church by unlawful means; you have turned it into a smithy, defiled the graves of the dead, and turned the tomb of a good knight into an oven, to the scandal of men and the dishonor of god. Have you any excuse to offer?"

"Plenty. I was plying an honest trade, in a country where freedom is the law. The Hillsborough Unions combined against me, and restrained my freedom, and threatened my life, ay, and attempted my life too, before to-day: and so the injustice and cruelty of men drove me to a sanctuary, me and my livelihood. Blame the Trades, blame the public laws, blame the useless police: but you can't blame me; a man must live."

"Why not set up your shop in the village? Why wantonly desecrate a church?"

"The church was more secret, and more safe: and nobody worships in it. The wind and the weather are allowed to destroy it; you care so little for it you let it molder; then why howl if a fellow uses it and keeps it warm?"

At this sally there was a broad rustic laugh, which, however, Mr. Raby quelled with one glance of his eye.

"Come, don't be impertinent," said he to Little.

"Then don't you provoke a fellow," cried Henry, raising his voice.

Grace clasped her hands in dismay.

Jael Dence said, in her gravest and most mellow voice, "You do forget the good Squire saved your life this very night."

This was like oil on all the waters.

"Well, certainly I oughtn't to forget that," said Henry, apologetically. Then he appealed piteously to Jael, whose power over him struck every body directly, including Grace Carden. "Look here, you mustn't think, because I don't keep howling, I'm all right. My arm is disabled: my back is almost broken: my thigh is cut. I'm in sharp pain, all this time: and that makes a fellow impatient of being lectured on the back of it all. Why doesn't he let me go? I don't want to affront him now. All I want is to go and get nursed a bit somewhere."

"Now that is the first word of reason and common sense you have uttered, young man. It decides me not to detain you. All I shall do, under the circumstances, is to clear your rubbish out of that holy building, and watch it by night as well as day. Your property, however, shall be collected, and delivered to you uninjured: so oblige me with your name and address."

Henry made no reply.

Raby turned his eye full upon him.

"Surely you do not object to tell me your name."

"I do."

"Why?"

"Excuse me."

"What are you afraid of? Do you doubt my word, when I tell you I shall not proceed against you?"

"No: it is not that at all. But this is no place for me to utter my father's name. We all have our secrets, sir. You have got yours.

There's a picture, with its face to the wall. Suppose I was to ask you to tell all the world whose face it is you insult and hide from the world?"

Raby turned red with wrath and surprise, at this sudden thrust.

"You insolent young scoundrel!" he cried. "What is that to you, and what connection can there be between that portrait and a man in your way of life?"

"There's a close connection," said Henry, trembling with anger, in his turn: "and the proof is that, when that picture is turned to the light, I'll tell you my name: and, till that picture is turned to the light, I'll not tell you my name; and if any body here knows my name, and tells it you, may that person's tongue be blistered at the root!"

"Oh, how fearful!" cried Grace, turning very pale. "But I'll put an end to it all. I've got the key, and I've his permission, and I'll--oh, Mr. Raby, there's something more in this than we know." She darted to the picture, and unlocked the padlock, and, with Jael's assistance, began to turn the picture. Then Mr. Raby rose and seemed to bend his mind inward, but he neither forbade, nor encouraged, this impulsive act of Grace Carden's.

Now there was not a man nor a woman in the room whose curiosity had not been more or less excited about this picture; so there was a general movement toward it, of all but Mr. Raby, who stood quite still, turning his eye inward, and evidently much moved, though passive.

There happened to be a strong light upon the picture, and the lovely olive face, the vivid features, and glorious black eyes and eyebrows, seemed to flash out of the canvas into life.

同类推荐
  • 药性赋

    药性赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 钓矶立谈

    钓矶立谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 无幻禅师语录

    无幻禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 四库辑本别集拾遗

    四库辑本别集拾遗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 益州名画录

    益州名画录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 异世情缘之伊凡

    异世情缘之伊凡

    简介应情而生,为爱而活….相见却不能相拥,咫尺在眼却要拱手让人….应情而生….应情而生….是天意?是宿命?……….顺天意?还是逆宿命?伊凡该何以抉择?……….请关注…异世情缘之伊凡
  • 七星天命

    七星天命

    上古六十万年,魔族向神族发动一场浩大的战争,此次战争波及五界,生灵涂炭,神帝以七星诀封印五界结界,随之陨落,换取五界几十万年的和平,随着时间的流逝,结界渐弱,五界表面依旧一片平和,实则暗流涌动,危机四伏,七星异变,男主降世,五年后,安泽凡一夜间父母双亡,父母身世成迷,莫珩希又是来自哪里,在父亲的遗嘱中得知一处叫青云崖的地方,背负七星天命,踏上了修真之路。
  • 逃妻妖娆:傲娇老公我不要

    逃妻妖娆:傲娇老公我不要

    神秘的身世伴随她的童年。陌路的相遇,他强势送走她九年回归。“这么点体力,你还是军队出来的么?”男人邪魅的笑,语言磁性般动人。她气的脸红,是人都受不住您这一天一夜的摧残好吧?猝不防及的阴谋,决绝转身离开。当一切阴谋真相揭开....男人挑眉,青筋微微起。黑手党少主?军队少将?学霸校草?“女人你最近桃花很旺嘛?”他气得咬牙,扛着她就来到民政局搞了两张红本本.....左皓拉着顾染的手,长尾白裙被这海边夕阳的余晖照的很浪漫。而身旁这个女人,这辈子爱她大概是他最全力以赴的事了吧。“仅此唯一”/本文小虐是剧情需要,宠的甜掉牙是本质。学生党周末更新(其实只要稍微闲一点上学还是能码字上传的qwq)愿你喜
  • 魔之后裔

    魔之后裔

    一对众人艳羡的金童玉女,各自背负与众不同的身份,拥有不为人知的过去,使命编织的一场相遇,最终成为打破天使与恶魔宿命的起源……
  • 融天寂,伏地寞

    融天寂,伏地寞

    古有九重天,十八重地狱...身负天意厄运,浩劫不断,雷震雨如何在逆境中蜕变,如何在乱世中涅槃重生,浴火成龙。翻手为云,覆手为雨...
  • 逆天之血

    逆天之血

    末世降临,地球物种异变!上古遗族重现人间,人类文明危在旦夕,看觉醒上古逆天血脉的武天语如何在末世拯救岌岌可危的地球!武天语:”我以我血逆苍天“
  • 远方我最亲爱的

    远方我最亲爱的

    青春一道明媚的忧伤。来来往往我们总是跌进别人的人生,窥见属于自己的光影。庆幸,迟漫离家出走后遇到一个叫鲁池的女子,听说了一段风花雪月的故事。才明白远方是最亲爱的,却不是归鸿。她带着关于她的记忆,开始踏上一个新的征程,不过还是会想起,会问自己,袁方是否真还记得门前的桂花,找得到回家的路,迟暮是否找到了玲子,臭老头是不是也见到了梳子,周倩倩是不是真的死在了枪淋到雨里,还有哪个可爱而固执的君威是不是脱离了黑暗活在阳光之下。还有那个频临死亡的她还能不能等到最后的一束阳光,这些对于迟漫来说都是一个未解之谜,她想用余下的时光,去代替鲁池,找寻她的远方。
  • 暴走君王

    暴走君王

    他是腹黑无比的暴走族传奇,无奈穿越到了一傻少爷身上,发现自己脑中竟藏了一本记载了无穷功法秘籍的“万卷书”!于是,他在神魔纵横的开元大陆重新开始了暴走生涯……他是敌人心中的噩梦,但能否成为世人心中的传奇?!
  • 绝世倾尘:紫魅天下

    绝世倾尘:紫魅天下

    隐门世家的大弟子,无奈掉落悬崖。天不亡我,你奈我何?她是废柴?那就看废柴如何玩转天下,什么狗屁家人,皇孙贵族,全部给她靠边站。‘心狠手辣,冷漠无情’最终惹下一声‘血莲。’血莲,雪莲,不过都是她而已。妖邪,腹黑,这个男人,妖魅入骨,邪魅众生,翻手为云,覆手为雨。却唯独看不懂她,无奈之下,男人双眉一皱,威胁道“你再不听话,我就将你就地正法。”女人嘴角一斜,露出本性,喊道“小景子,小纹子,我们离家出走。”某男心中一横,果然,应该先消灭情敌啊。
  • 脱线点心馆

    脱线点心馆

    一个偏僻的小乡村的商业街,有着跟周边风格格外不一样的点心馆。本作围绕着这个小点心馆发生的种种有趣欢乐感动的小故事。