You’re not hurt, are
you?” asked Vibert, with some anxiety, for he loved
his sister next to himself, though, it must be confessed,
with a considerable space between.
Emmie scarcely knew whether she were injured or
not. She was too much agitated at first to be able
to answer her brother’s question.[91]
“I don’t think that there are any bones broken;
mud is soft,” said the shorter man. “I guess she’s
more frightened than hurt.”
“Be composed, dear lady; the storm is clearing
off,” observed the younger stranger, who had assisted
Vibert in releasing Emmie from her distressing position,
and who now helped to place her again in the
chaise. This person’s gallantry of manner contrasted
with the almost coarse bluntness of his elder and
shorter companion. Vibert at once concluded that
the two individuals who had accidentally appeared
together belonged respectively to very different
grades of society.
The man who had cut the traces had had string
in his capacious pocket as well as a knife, and now
occupied himself in making such a rough arrangement
with the harness as might enable the pony to
draw the chaise. He effected his purpose with no
small skill; considering the imperfect light by which
he worked.
“Are we in the right road for Myst Court?” inquired
Vibert of this individual, as he was tying the
last firm knot in the string.
“Myst Court!” repeated the man in a harsh,
croaking tone, at the same time raising his head from
its stooping position. “Are you some of the new
folk as are coming to the old haunted house?”[92]
The question was asked in a manner so peculiar
that it arrested the attention even of Emmie. A
flash of lightning occurred at the moment, not so vivid
as that which had terrified her so much, but sufficiently
so to light up the features of the elderly man.
Miss Trevor was again and again to see that strange
face, but at no time did she behold it without recalling
the impression which it made on her mind when
first shown by that gleam of blue lightning. The
man might be sixty years of age; his nose was
hooked, so that it resembled a beak; his eyes were
so sunken in his head that in that transient glimpse
they looked like dark eye-holes; his hair, rough,
unkempt, and grizzled, hung in wet strands as low
as his shoulders, surmounted by an old battered felt
hat. Emmie felt afraid of him, though she could
not have given any reason for her fear.
“Yes, we are to live at Myst Court,” replied
Vibert. “Our father has just come into possession
of the place.”
“Woe to him, then, for an evil spell is upon it!”
muttered the man; and a distant rumble succeeded
the words like an echo. “The thunder and lightning,
the darkness and storm, the mistaken way, the
stumbling horse,—omens of evil—omens of evil!
These things do not happen by chance.”
“I wish that, instead of muttering unpleasant[93]
things, you would give a plain answer to a plain
question, and not keep us shivering here!” said
Vibert impatiently. “Are we, or are we not, on
the direct road to Myst Court?”
“No, sir,” replied the taller stranger; “but by
yon lane you can reach the high-road which leads
straight from S—— to the place of your destination.”
“Then that urchin did misdirect us!” exclaimed
Vibert. “If I meet him again, I will break every
stick in his faggot over his back! Must we really
return through that slough of a lane, through which
we have scarcely been able to struggle?”
“You must retrace your way,” said the stranger.
“As far as the high-road my path is the same as
your own, as I am returning to my quarters at S——.
Perhaps you will permit me to occupy the vacant
place in your chaise (I perceive that there is a back
seat), as it would be a satisfaction to me to see the
lady so far safe on the road. I shall do myself the
honour of calling at Myst Court to-morrow, to inquire
after her health. My name is Colonel Standish,
at your service, and I serve beneath the star-spangled
banner.”
“We shall be glad of your company, sir,” said
Vibert; “and are much obliged for your ready
help.”
“It is lucky that old Harper and I were at hand,”[94]
observed Standish, as he stepped into the low basket-chaise.
Vibert sprang into the front seat beside his sister,
but before taking the reins from the hand of Harper,
young Trevor pulled a shilling out of his waistcoat-pocket,
and tendered it to the old man. There was
light now afforded by the moon, for the rain had
ceased, and through a rift in the clouds the radiant
orb shone clearly.
“A silver shilling to him who has helped you to
reach the haunted house,” said Harper, as he took
the coin and thrust it into a deep pocket. “I trow
there will be gold for him who shall show you the
way to leave it!”
Vibert laughed; Emmie shivered, but that may
have been from cold, for the night-air was clamp and
chilly, and her clothes were saturated with rain.
Vibert now turned the pony into the lane, but the
creature limped, and had evidently some difficulty in
dragging the chaise.
“The beast is lame,” observed Standish; “he has
probably strained a leg in the fall. We gentlemen
must walk through the lane, where the ground is so
boggy.” The colonel sprang from the chaise, and
his example was followed by Vibert.
At a slow pace the party proceeded along the tree-overshadowed
way. The recent rain had increased the[95]
heaviness of the road, and the trees dripped moisture
from their wet branches over the travellers’ heads.
To Emmie, cold and damp as she was, and longing
for shelter and rest, it seemed as if that wearisome
lane would never come to an end.
Harper, uninvited, had joined himself to the party,
and his peculiar croaking tones were frequently
heard blending in converse with the clear voice of
young Vibert, or the more manly accents of Standish.
Emmie alone kept silence.
“Our friend Harper is a near neighbour of yours,”
observed the colonel to Vibert. “He has fixed himself
just outside the gate of your father’s grounds.”
“But I never pass through that gate,” croaked
Harper. Neither Vibert nor Emmie felt any regret
that their forbidding-looking neighbour should keep
outside.
“You call the place haunted?” said Vibert.
“Haunted!” repeated Harper, muttering the
word between his clenched teeth; and the old man
shook his grizzled locks with so mysterious an air,
that Vibert’s curiosity was roused. He began to
question Harper on the traditions connected with
the place.
The old man was not loath to speak on the subject,
though he imparted his information, if such it
could be called, only in broken fragments; giving[96]
as it were, glimpses of grisly horrors, and leaving
his hearers to imagine the rest.
Then Standish followed up the theme, and recounted
strange stories from the New World,—all
“well-authenticated” as he declared; stories of
haunted houses and apparitions, each tale more horrible
than the last. Such relations would have tried
Emmie’s nerves, even had the stories been told on
some calm summer eve; but heard, as they were,
in a dark, dreary lane, on a chilly November night,
when she was wet, bruised, and trembling from the
shock of a recent accident, tales of horror seemed to
make the blood freeze to ice in her veins. Had
Bruce been present, he would have discouraged such
conversation; but sensational stories had charms for
Vibert, and he never considered that they might
work an evil effect on the sensitive mind of his
sister.
At last the open road was regained, and Standish
took leave of the Trevors. Rather to Emmie’s surprise,
the colonel familiarly shook hands with herself
as well as her brother, as if the night’s adventure
had converted them into old friends. Vibert again
sprang into the chaise; he was very impatient to
get at last to the end of his wearisome journey, and
urged the pony to as quick a pace as its lameness
permitted over the smoother road.[97]
The rest of the time of the drive was passed in
silence. The way to Myst Court was clear enough
from the brief directions given by Harper, of whom
the travellers soon lost sight in the darkness, though
he was following in the same track. Emmie had
thought of inviting the old man to take the back
seat in the chaise, but an intuitive feeling of repugnance
prevented her from making the offer.
Glad were the weary travellers to reach the large
iron gate which had been described as marking the
entrance to the grounds of Myst Court. The gate
had been left wide open to let them pass through.
The drive up to the house was rather a long one.
Emmie noticed only that it appeared to be through
a thick wood, and that the chaise occasionally jolted
over impediments in the way.
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