No sooner had the young lady taken her
seat than Vibert sprang in after her, seized the
reins, caught up the whip, and calling to the lad
who had acted as hostler, “My brother will pay
you,” gave a sharp cut to the pony, which made
the spirited little animal bound forward at a speed
which raised a feeling of alarm in the timorous
Emmie.
“Stop, Vibert, stop! you must not drive off;
you must wait for Bruce!” she exclaimed.
“I’ll wait for no one!” cried Vibert, still briskly
plying the whip. “Bruce would be wanting to
drive; but this time he has lost the chance,—ha! ha!
ha! There’s my brave little pony, does he not go
at a spanking pace?”[82]
“I wish that you would not drive so fast, it
frightens me!” cried Emmie.
“Frightens you! nonsense, you little coward!
Don’t you see that thick bank of clouds in which
the sun is setting? We’ll have a thunderstorm
soon, and that will frighten you more.”
“Oh, I hope and trust that the storm will not
burst till we reach shelter!” cried Emmie, whose
dread of thunder and lightning is already known to
the reader.
“We are running a race with it, and we’ll be at
the winning-post first!” exclaimed Vibert, who was
enjoying the excitement, and who was rather amused
than vexed to see his sister’s alarm.
“But, Vibert, you don’t even know the way to
Myst Court! Oh, I wish that you had waited for
Bruce!”
It had never occurred to the thoughtless lad that
he might be driving in a wrong direction; so long
as the pony went as fast as Vibert wished, he had
taken it for granted that Myst Court would soon be
reached. The station had been left far behind; the
road was lonesome and wild; only one solitary boy
was in sight; he was engaged in picking up boughs
and twigs which a recent gale had blown down from
the trees which bordered the way.
“We’ll ask yonder bare-footed bundle of rags to[83]
direct us,” said Vibert, and he drew up the panting
pony when he reached the spot where the boy was
standing.
“I say, young one, which is the way to Myst
Court?” asked Vibert in a tone of command.
The boy stared at him, as if unaccustomed to the
sight of strangers.
“Are we on the right road to the large house
where Mrs. Myers used to live?” inquired Emmie.
“Ay, ay, but you’ll have to turn down yon lane
just by the stile there,” said the urchin, pointing
with his brown finger, and grinning as if a chaise
with a lady in it were a rare and curious sight.
“I don’t believe that the rustic could have told
us whether to turn to left or right,” said Vibert, as
he whipped on the pony. “If he’s a fair specimen
of my father’s tenants, we shall feel as if we had
dropped down on the Fiji Islands.”
The direction given by the finger was, however,
perfectly clear, and the Trevors were soon driving
along a picturesque lane, where trees, still gay with
autumnal tints, overarched the narrow way, and with
their brown and golden leaves carpeted the sod
beneath them.
“What a pretty rural lane!” exclaimed Emmie,
as the chaise first turned off from the high-road; but
admiration was soon forgotten in discomfort and fear.[84]
The lane was apparently not intended as a thoroughfare
for carriages, at least in the season of winter.
The ground was miry and boggy, and the pony with
difficulty dragged the chaise. There were violent
jerks when one side or other dropped into one of the
deep ruts left by the wheels of the last cart that had
passed that way. Vibert plied the whip more
vigorously than before, and silenced his sister’s
remonstrances by remarking how darkly the clouds
were gathering in the evening sky. Young Trevor
was but an inexperienced driver, and ever and anon
the chaise was jolted violently over some loose stones,
or driven so near to the hedge that Emmie had to
bend sideways to avoid being struck by straggling
bramble or branch. She mentally resolved never
again to trust herself to Vibert’s driving.
“Will this lane never come to an end?” exclaimed
Emmie, as the first heavy drop from an
overshadowing mass of dark cloud fell on her knee.
She was but imperfectly protected from rain; for
Vibert, in his haste to dash off from the station
before his brother could join him, had never thought
of taking with him either umbrella or shawl for his
sister.
“Here comes the rain with a vengeance, and this
stupid beast flounders in the mud as if it were dragging
a cannon instead of a chaise,” cried Vibert.[85]
“These country lanes drive one out of all patience!
Ha! there’s the rumbling of distant thunder!”
“Oh! I trust that we shall reach home soon,”
exclaimed Emmie, who, exposed to the heavy downpour,
shivered alike from cold and from fear.
“I suspect that we shall never reach home at all
by this lane,” said Vibert. “Take my word for it,
that little wretch has directed us wrong; I have a
great mind to turn the pony round, and get back to
the high-road.”
“You can’t turn, the lane is too narrow; you
would land us in the hedge!” exclaimed Emmie,
who thought that the attempt would inevitably lead
to an upset of the chaise. On struggled the steaming
pony, down poured the pattering rain; Vibert,
almost blinded by the shower and the gathering
darkness, could scarcely see the road before him.
“The longest lane has a turning,—there is an opening
before us at last!” exclaimed the young driver,
as a turn in the winding road brought a highway to
view. “We shall reach Myst Court like two drowned
rats. Why on earth did you not bring an umbrella,
Emmie? I could not think of everything at once.”
Vibert had, indeed, thought but of himself.
The want of an umbrella was to Emmie by no
means the worst part of her troubles; she was afraid
that her brother had indeed been misdirected, and[86]
that they might be lost and benighted in a part of
the country where they as yet were strangers, exposed
to the perils of a thunderstorm, from which the
nervous girl shrank with instinctive terror. Emmie
had never hitherto even attempted to overcome her
fear; and though her uncle’s words now recurred to
her mind, the idea of encountering a thunderstorm
after nightfall, without even a roof to protect her,
put to flight any good resolutions that those words
might have roused in her mind.
“There was a flash!” exclaimed Emmie, starting
and putting her hands before her eyes. She pressed
closer to her brother as if for protection.
“We shall have more soon; the storm comes nearer,”
was the little comforting reply of Vibert. As he
ended the sentence, the thunder-clap followed the
flash. The pony pricked up his ears, and quickened
his pace.
“I am glad that we are out of this miserable
mouse-hole at last,” cried Vibert, pulling the left
rein sharply as the light vehicle emerged from the
narrow, miry lane into the broad and comparatively
smooth highway.
At this moment the darkening landscape was
suddenly lighted up by a flash intensely bright,
followed almost immediately by a peal over the
travellers’ heads. The terrified Emmie shrieked,[87]
and, losing all presence of mind, caught hold of her
brother’s arm. The sharp turning out of the lane,
the pony’s start at the flash, and the sudden grasp
on the driver’s arm, acting together, had the effect
which might have been expected. Down went
pony and chaise, down went driver and lady, precipitated
into the ditch which bordered the high-road.
[88]
CHAPTER IX.
NEW ACQUAINTANCE.
Vibert shouting for help, Emmie shrieking,
the pony kicking and struggling in vain
attempts to scramble out of the ditch, rain
rattling, thunder rolling, all made a confused medley
of sounds, while the deepening darkness was ever
and anon lit up by lightning-flashes.
“Oh, Vibert! dear Vibert! are you hurt?” cried
the terrified Emmie, with whom personal fear did
not counterbalance anxiety for her young brother’s
safety.
“I’m not hurt; I lighted on a bramble-bush; I’ve
got off with a few scratches,” answered Vibert, who
had regained the road. “But where on earth are
you, Emmie? Can’t you manage to get up?”
“No,” gasped Emmie; “the chaise keeps me down.
Oh, there is the lightning again!” and she shrieked.
“Never mind the lightning,” cried Vibert impatiently.
“How am I to get the pony on his legs?[89]
he’s kicking like mad; and, oh! do stop screaming,
Emmie, you’re enough to drive any one wild. It
was your pull and your shrieking that did all the
mischief.”
Vibert had had little experience with horses, and
to release, almost in darkness, a kicking pony from
its traces, or set free a lady imprisoned by an overturned
chaise, were tasks for which he had neither
sufficient presence of mind nor personal strength.
Glad would the poor lad then have been to have had
Bruce beside him, Bruce with his firm arm and his
strong sense, and that quiet self-possession which it
seemed as if nothing could shake. Vibert felt in
the emergency as helpless as a girl might have done.
Now he pulled at the upturned wheel of the chaise,
but without lifting it even an inch; then he caught
up the whip which had dropped from his hand in
the shock of the fall, but he knew not whether to
use it would not but make matters worse. Vibert
ran a few paces to seek for assistance, stopped irresolute,
then hurried back, thinking it unmanly to
leave his sister alone in her helpless condition.
Happily for poor Emmie, assistance was not long
delayed. Not a hundred yards from the spot where
the accident had taken place, two men were sheltering
themselves from the violence of the rain in a
half-ruined barn. The cries of the lady, the loud[90]
calls for aid from her brother, reached the ears of
these men. Two forms were seen by Vibert quickly
approaching towards him, and he shouted to them to
make haste to come to the help of his sister.
“There’s a lady there, under the wheel,” said the
shorter and elder man to the other, when the two
had reached the fallen chaise. “You’d better look
to her while I cut the beast’s traces; it’s lucky I
have my knife with me,” and the speaker pulled a
large clasp-knife out of his pocket.
The united efforts of the men, assisted by Vibert,
soon were crowned with success. The pony, frightened
and mud-bespattered, but not very seriously
hurt, as soon as it was released from the harness,
scrambled out of the ditch. The light basket-chaise
was, without much difficulty, raised to its right
position; and Vibert helped to lift up Emmie, who
was half covered with mud, and almost in hysterics
with fear.
“Come, come, there’s nothing to be terrified at
now; the danger is over.
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