call for at a little shop kept by an old servant of the Captain’s,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
who would not betray her. If possible, she would write on
Saturdays, so that I might get the letter on a Sunday morning;
and if anything were added to her troubles, I might come, and
try to let her know of it through Mrs. Wilcox, who kept the
little shop she had spoken of. With this I was obliged to be
content for the present; much as I longed for a bolder course,
she would not leave her father, without his full consent.</p>
<p>“But you shall have something to remember me by, and
something too that came from him,” she whispered, as her fears
began to grow again. “He gave me a watch on my last birthday,
a beautiful watch with a blue enamel back, and Kitty done
in little diamonds. She said that it was much too good for me,
and she gave it to Geraldine, her youngest girl. But oh, I
cheated them out of something, because I felt that they were
cheating me. They never knew that he had given me a gold
key for it, a lovely little key with a star in the centre. Here
it is, see how it sparkles in the dusk! Take it, my dear, and
wear it always, and you will think it is the key of my heart,
Kit, which you managed to steal down at Sunbury so. You
must not give me anything in return. Not now at least;
perhaps some day you may.”</p>
<p>It was now so dark that I ventured to lead her, and carry
her basket to the little side-door, for that part of the house was
dark and empty. Then she gave me a sweet farewell, with one
little sob to strengthen it; and the snow whirled into her
glistening eyes, and a shiver ran through me, when she was
gone.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.<br/> <small>HARO!</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">A strange</span> thing befell me on my way home, which I would
have avoided describing if I could; for my adventures have but
little interest, except so far as they are concerned with Kitty.
But this one unluckily did concern her deeply, inasmuch as it
brought great affliction on her, and left her without my assistance,
at a time when she stood in especial need of it.</p>
<p>She had made me promise that I would not attempt to walk
all the way to Sunbury in such a bitter night, and with the
storm increasing, till no one could tell what might come of it.
Accordingly I made my way to Notting Hill, intending to get<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
into an omnibus there, which would take me at least as far as
Richmond. There I meant to have a mutton chop or two, and
perhaps a pint of Mortlake ale, which is generally of good substance,
and thus be set up for the cold walk home. And if this
had been done, as was really intended, probably I might have
been at home in good time to tell my uncle all about it, before
he had finished his go-to-bed pipe.</p>
<p>But as it happened, when I came out at last, from all this
brick and mortar skittle-ground, into the broad Western road,
and knew pretty well where I was and how the land lay, not
an omnibus was to be found anywhere, except those that had
travelled out before the storm began, and were bound to get
home again somehow. And these had some trouble in getting
along, with the snow clouding up in the horses’ faces, and
forming great balls on their feet, and clogging the dumb, heavy
roll of the frozen wheels. All the ’busses that should have
been ploughing and rolling towards Shepherd’s Bush and Turnham
Green, had resolved to remain in their yards for the night.
Let other horses tug, and wallow, and smoke like beds of
mortar; let other coachmen flap their breasts and scowl instead
of answering; and let other threepenny fares look blue and
stamp in the straw to thaw their toes. It was worth much
more than the money would fetch, to cross their legs by the
taproom fire, or whisk their tails in stable.</p>
<p>At first I took it as a wholesome joke, that the fourteen miles
of road before me must be overcome by toe and heel. As for a
cab, I had never been inside any feminine bandbox of that
name, and if I would have condescended to it, there was no
such thing to be got to-night. I was young, and strong, and
full of spirit, with the sweet words kindling in my heart, as
memory stirred it from time to time; and if any one had bidden
me look out for danger, I should have said, “Let me see it
first.” And in this humour, I strode on, without even turning
my collar up.</p>
<p>But the world became wrapped up more and more in deep
white darkness, as I trudged on. As the houses along the road
grew scarcer, they seemed to go by me more heavily and slowly,
and with less and less power of companionship. There was
scarcely a man to say “Good-night” to; and the one or two I
met would not open mouth to answer. And when I came
through a great open space, with a white spire standing like a
giant’s ghost, I could hardly be sure that it was Turnham Green,
so entirely was distance huddled up with snow. But I ran into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
a white thing in the middle of the road, and the gleam of an
ostler’s lantern showed me that it was a brewer’s dray, with the
horses taken out, and standing with their heads between their
legs close by a sign-post. “You better turn in, mate,” the ostler
shouted; “you’re a fool if you go further, such a night as this.”
I saw a red steam in the bar, and knew that this must be the <i>Old
Pack-Horse Inn</i>, whose landlord had raised a famous apple;
and my better sense told me to follow advice. But the pride of
fool’s strength drove me on, and without slacking a foot I lost
sight of it in the solid daze.</p>
<p>There was nothing to be afraid of yet, and I felt no kind of
misgiving, but began to let my legs go on, instead walking consciously.
At one time I began to count, as if they were a
machine of which I was no longer master. I counted up to a
thousand, and thought—“About seven thousand more will do
it, and that they can manage without much trouble.” Then I
gave up counting, and must have passed through Brentford,
as in a dream, and so to Twickenham, and through that again.</p>
<p>There were nearer ways in better weather; but although I
could not think clearly now (through cold, and clogging feet,
and constant dazzle of white fall around me) I had sense
enough to stick to highways, as long as they would stick to me.
At Twickenham I had a mind to stop and get something to eat,
being faint with hunger, for I had seven and sixpence in my
waistcoat pocket. I cannot tell why I did not stop, and only
know that I went on.</p>
<p>The snow must have been ten inches deep on the level, and
as many feet in the drifts, for a strong wind urged it fiercely,
when I came at last to the <i>Bear</i> at Hanworth, an old-established
and good hotel. The principal entrance was snowed up, from
the sweep of the roads that meet there, for every road running
east and west was like a cannon exploding snow. But I went
in by the little door round the corner, and finding only the
barman there—for all neighbours had been glad to get home
while they could—I contrived, with some trouble, to ask for a
glass of hot brandy and water. So great was the change from
the storm and the whirl, that my brain seemed to beat like
a flail in a barn, and the chairs were all standing on the
ceiling.</p>
<p>“Don’t you go no further, sir; you stop here,” said the man,
who seemed to know me, though I did not know him. “It
would take a male helephant to get to Sunbury to-night
There’s been no such snow for six and forty year; old Jim<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
the ostler can call it to mind; and then it was over the roof,
he saith. You look uncommon queer already, seem to be
standing on your head a’most. Why, bless me, you be drinking
from the empty glass!”</p>
<p>But I found the right glass with his help, and swallowed
the hot brown draught without knowing it. Then I asked
him the time, and he said, “Nigh on ten o’clock. You take
my advice, and have a bed here. Well, wilful will, and woeful
won’t, when it’s too late to mend it.” He cast this at me as I
said “Good night,” and without sitting down, staggered out
again.</p>
<p>I believe that even now I should have reached home
safely, not having so very much further to go, if the roads
had been wide and straight as they were thus far. But two
things were very much against me now, and both of them
made a great difference. I had turned from the main road
into twisting narrow lanes, and my course was across the wind
instead of right before it. Without that strong wind at my
back I could scarcely have reached Hanworth by that time,
though it seemed a very long time to take from Notting
Hill, compared with the usual rate of walking. But now the
fierce wind was on my left side quite as often as behind me,
and it drove me from my line, as I grew more feeble, and
knocked my weary legs into one another. Moreover, it seemed
to go through me twice as much, and to rattle me like splinter
shaken up, and to drive the spikes of snow to my heart almost.</p>
<p>If I had walked as in a dream before, I was moving as in a
deep sleep now. I had some sort of sense of going on for ever,
as a man has a knowledge of his own snoring; and I have
some weak remembrance of beating with my hands—for my
stick must have gone away long ago—to keep off a blanket that
was smothering me. Then I seemed to be lifted, and set down
somewhere, and it did not matter where it was. And what
happened after that was not to me, but to people who told me
of it afterwards.</p>
<p>For my Uncle Corny went to bed that night, in a very bad
worry of mind, and fitter to grumble at the Lord than to say
his prayers. Not from anxiety about his nephew, who was sure
to turn up somehow; but because he had frightful misgivings
about his glass, and his trees, and his premises at large. The
roof of his long vinery was buckled in already, when he went
with a lantern to look at it; and many of his favourite apple-trees,
which he loved to go and gaze at on a Sunday, were bowed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span>
with the wind and the snow, and hanging in draggles, like so
much mistletoe. He never swore much at the weather; because
it seemed like swearing at heaven, and he had found it grow
worse under that sort of treatment. But our Tabby Tapscott
(who feared to go home, and tried to sleep on two chairs in the
kitchen) declared that he used some expressions that night,
which were quite enough to account for anything.</p>
<p>In the morning, however, there was no fault to find with
him, as soon as he had done a good hour’s work in the deep
snow and the nipping wind, and improved his circulation by
convincing everybody that he was still as young as he ever was.
He relieved the laden trees, wherever it was wise to do so, and
with the back of a hay-rake fetched the white incumbrance
from the glass, and stamped his feet and shook his coat, and
had a path swept here and there, and told himself and Selsey
Bill, that a good old-fashioned winter was the thing to send all
prices up. But when he sat down to breakfast, he kept looking
at the door, as if for me; and at last he said to Mrs. Tapscott,
who was shaking in her apron—“Why, where’s that lazy Kit
again? Is he frozen to his pillow? Go and give him a good
rattle up. He deserves cold victuals, and he shall have nothing
else.”</p>
<p>“Her bain’t coom home,” replied Tabby, looking as crossly
as she dared at him. “Much you care for the poor boy,
measter. I rackon the znow be his winding-shate. No more
coortin’ for he, this zide of kingdom coom, I’d lay a penny.”</p>
<p>“Kit not come home! Kit out all night, and you let me
go on with my trees and roofs! But you know where he is, or
you would not take it so, and you snoring away by the kitchen
fire. None of your secrets about him. Where is Kit?”</p>
<p>“The Lord A’mighty know’th where a’ be.” Poor Tabby
began to whine and cry. “The zecret be with Him, not me.
A’ wor to coom home, but her never didn’t. A vaine job for
e’e to zake for ’un. Vaind un dade as a stone, I reckon.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense! Kit can take care of himself. He is the
strongest young fellow for miles and miles, and accustomed to
all sorts of weather. What’s a bit of snow to a young man
like Kit? You women always make the worst of everything.”</p>
<p>“But her bain’t coom home;” answered Tabby with all
reason. “Her would ’a coom home, if so be her worn’t drowned
in the znow, I tull ’e, sir. No more coortin’ for Measter
Kit, in this laife. A’ may do what a’ wool, in kingdom
coom.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Stuff!” cried my uncle, not caring to discuss this extreme
test of my constancy. “He has stopped at some house on the
road, or up there. Perhaps the Professor would not let him
go, when he saw how bad the weather was. There is nothing
to be done, till the post comes in; though I am not sure that
the post will be able to get in. If the letters are not here by
ten o’clock, I shall go to Hampton to look for them. They are
pretty sure to get that far.”</p>
<p>The morning was fine, though bitterly cold after that very
heavy fall; and people began to get about again, though the
drifts were too deep in many places for a carriage to pass till
they had been cleared. My uncle set out on foot for Hampton,
and there found the mail cart just come in. The postmaster
was in a state of flurry, and would not open the Sunbury bag,
but sent it on by special messenger, as the cart could get no
further. My uncle had the pleasure of walking with it as far
as our post-office; and after all that there was nothing for him.
“Well, a man must eat,” was his sound reflection. “I shall
have a bit of dinner, and consider what to do.”</p>
<p>It was getting on for two o’clock, as they told me, when a
man who had come from the Bear at Hanworth, upon some
particular business in our village, knocked at my uncle’s door
on his return, to say that I had forgotten (which was the truth)
to pay for what I had the night before. He was also to ask
how I got home, because I looked “uncommon dickey,” as he
beautifully expressed it. In half an hour every man in Sunbury,
owning a good pair of legs, and even a number of women
and boys, set forth to search the roads and fields, for it was
hard sometimes to tell which was which, in the direction of
Hanworth. This was no small proof of the good-will and
brave humanity of our neighbourhood; for any of these people
might have lost themselves in the numb frost, and the depth of
drift; and there were signs of another storm in the north-east.</p>
<p>My uncle, with a big shovel on his shoulder, and a bottle
of brandy in his pocket, put a guinea upon me at first, and
then two, and then jumped to five pounds, and even ten, as
the hope of discovery waned; and at last, when some had
abandoned the search, and others were muffling themselves
against the new snowstorm, he mounted a gate and with both
hands to his mouth shouted—“Five and twenty pounds for
my nephew Kit—dead or alive; twenty-five pounds reward
to any one who finds Christopher Orchardson.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This may appear a great deal of money for anybody to put
me at (except my own mother, if I had one), and the people
who heard it were of that opinion, none of them being aware
perhaps that the reward would come out of my mother’s
property, which had no trustees to prevent it. And for many
years afterwards, if I dared to think anything said or done by
my uncle was anything short of perfection, the women, and even
the men would ask—as if I were made of ingratitude—“Who
offered five and twenty pounds for you?”</p>
<p>And they felt the effect of it now so strongly that a loud
hurrah went along the white plain, and several stout fellows
who were turning home turned back again, and flapped themselves,
saying, “Never say die!” With one accord a fresh
pursuit began, though perhaps of a ghost even whiter than
the snow; and taking care to keep in sight of one another,
they began to poke more holes, wherever they could poke
them. For some had kidney-bean sticks, and some had
garden forks, and some had sharp pitch-forks from the stable;
and if they had found me, I had surely been riddled, and
perhaps had both my eyes poked out. But the Lord was good to
me once more, and I escaped being trussed, as I might have been.</p>
<p>For just when it was growing dark, and another bitter
night was setting in, with spangles of hard snow driving, as
they said, like a glazier’s diamond into their eyes, and even
the heartiest man was saying that nothing more could be done
for it; through the drifting of the white, and the lowering of
the gray, a high-mettled horse came churning. It was beautiful,
everybody thought, to see him scattering the snow like highway
dust, flinging from his nostrils scornful volumes, with his
great eyes flashing like a lighthouse in the foam. Men
huddled aside, lest he should spurn them like a drift, for his
courage was roused, and he knew no fear, but gloried in the
power of his leap and plunge.</p>
<p>“Giving it over, are you all?” Sam Henderson shouted,
as he drew the rein, and his favourite stallion <i>Haro</i> stood, and
looked with the like contempt at them. “Then a horse and
dog shall shame your pluck.”</p>
<p>From beneath the short rough cloak he wore, a pair of
sharp eyes shone like jewels, and two little ears pricked up
like thorns.</p>
<p>“<i>Spike</i> is the best man here,” said Sam, as the wiseacres
crowded round him. “All you have done is to spoil the track.
Keep behind me, and let me see things for myself.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>My uncle, who never had been fond of Sam, said something
disdainful and turned away; but Henderson, without
even looking at him, rode on, and the best men followed him.
He took them almost to the <i>Bear</i> Hotel, watching both sides
of the road, as he went, and still keeping his dog before him.
Then he turned back, and said, “Keep you all on my left.
None of you tread any gap on the right. I saw the place as I
came along. When the moon gets clear, we shall find him.”</p>
<p>The snow-cloud in the east began to lift, and the moon
came out with a bronzy flush, as my uncle told me afterwards,
and the broad expanse of snow was flickered with wan light and
with gliding shades. Then all came back to the place where
Sam, being mounted and able to command the slope, had discovered
certain dimples—for they were nothing more—which
might be the trace of footsteps snowed over. Here he gave his
horse to be held, and leaving the road with his little Scotch
terrier <i>Spike</i>, scooped the light surface from one of the marks,
and found a hard clot beneath it. He put the dog’s nose in,
and patted him, and <i>Spike</i> gave a yelp, as if a rat were in prospect.</p>
<p>“Let him alone. Don’t say a word to him,” cried Sam, as
our people grew eager. “He don’t want you to teach him his
business. If you knew your own half as well, there’d be less
money in London than in Sunbury. Keep back, I say, all of
you.”</p>
<p>The little dog led them across a broad meadow, two or three
hundred yards from the highway, yet in a straighter line towards
Sunbury, and nearly in the track of an old foot-path.
Then he stopped in a dip, where a great rise of snow, like a
surge of ground-swell, swung away from them, and combed over
into the field beyond without breaking, like the ground-swell
frozen. They said that it was a most beautiful sight, such as
they never had seen before, and could scarcely hope to see again
in one lifetime; reminding them of the great wax-works, when
the wax is being bleached, at Teddington. But they could not
stop to look at it; and the little dog went round, and dived into
the tunnel on the further side.</p>
<p>Presently he yapped, as if in hot chase of a rabbit; and an
active young fellow jumped through the great wave, and was
swallowed up, leaving his hat behind. Then they heard him
crying faintly, “Here he is! Come round, and dig us out to
this side.”</p>
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