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<h2> CHAPTER XXXVI </h2>
<h3> JOHN RETURNS TO BUSINESS </h3>
<p>Now November was upon us, and we had kept Allhallowmass, with roasting of
skewered apples (like so many shuttlecocks), and after that the day of
Fawkes, as became good Protestants, with merry bonfires and burned
batatas, and plenty of good feeding in honour of our religion; and then
while we were at wheat-sowing, another visitor arrived.</p>
<p>This was Master Jeremy Stickles, who had been a good friend to me (as
described before) in London, and had earned my mother's gratitude, so far
as ever he chose to have it. And he seemed inclined to have it all; for he
made our farm-house his headquarters, and kept us quite at his beck and
call, going out at any time of the evening, and coming back at any time of
the morning, and always expecting us to be ready, whether with horse, or
man, or maiden, or fire, or provisions. We knew that he was employed
somehow upon the service of the King, and had at different stations
certain troopers and orderlies quite at his disposal; also we knew that he
never went out, nor even slept in his bedroom, without heavy firearms well
loaded, and a sharp sword nigh his hand; and that he held a great
commission, under royal signet, requiring all good subjects, all officers
of whatever degree, and especially justices of the peace, to aid him to
the utmost, with person, beast, and chattel, or to answer it at their
peril.</p>
<p>Now Master Jeremy Stickles, of course, knowing well what women are, durst
not open to any of them the nature of his instructions. But, after awhile,
perceiving that I could be relied upon, and that it was a great discomfort
not to have me with him, he took me aside in a lonely place, and told me
nearly everything; having bound me first by oath, not to impart to any
one, without his own permission, until all was over.</p>
<p>But at this present time of writing, all is over long ago; ay and
forgotten too, I ween, except by those who suffered. Therefore may I tell
the whole without any breach of confidence. Master Stickles was going
forth upon his usual night journey, when he met me coming home, and I said
something half in jest, about his zeal and secrecy; upon which he looked
all round the yard, and led me to an open space in the clover field
adjoining.</p>
<p>'John,' he said, 'you have some right to know the meaning of all this,
being trusted as you were by the Lord Chief Justice. But he found you
scarcely supple enough, neither gifted with due brains.'</p>
<p>'Thank God for that same,' I answered, while he tapped his head, to
signify his own much larger allowance. Then he made me bind myself, which
in an evil hour I did, to retain his secret; and after that he went on
solemnly, and with much importance,—</p>
<p>'There be some people fit to plot, and others to be plotted against, and
others to unravel plots, which is the highest gift of all. This last hath
fallen to my share, and a very thankless gift it is, although a rare and
choice one. Much of peril too attends it; daring courage and great
coolness are as needful for the work as ready wit and spotless honour.
Therefore His Majesty's advisers have chosen me for this high task, and
they could not have chosen a better man. Although you have been in London,
Jack, much longer than you wished it, you are wholly ignorant, of course,
in matters of state, and the public weal.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said I, 'no doubt but I am, and all the better for me. Although I
heard a deal of them; for everybody was talking, and ready to come to
blows; if only it could be done without danger. But one said this, and one
said that; and they talked so much about Birminghams, and Tantivies, and
Whigs and Tories, and Protestant flails and such like, that I was only too
glad to have my glass and clink my spoon for answer.'</p>
<p>'Right, John, thou art right as usual. Let the King go his own gait. He
hath too many mistresses to be ever England's master. Nobody need fear
him, for he is not like his father: he will have his own way, 'tis true,
but without stopping other folk of theirs: and well he knows what women
are, for he never asks them questions. Now heard you much in London town
about the Duke of Monmouth?'</p>
<p>'Not so very much,' I answered; 'not half so much as in Devonshire: only
that he was a hearty man, and a very handsome one, and now was banished by
the Tories; and most people wished he was coming back, instead of the Duke
of York, who was trying boots in Scotland.'</p>
<p>'Things are changed since you were in town. The Whigs are getting up
again, through the folly of the Tories killing poor Lord Russell; and now
this Master Sidney (if my Lord condemns him) will make it worse again.
There is much disaffection everywhere, and it must grow to an outbreak.
The King hath many troops in London, and meaneth to bring more from
Tangier; but he cannot command these country places; and the trained bands
cannot help him much, even if they would. Now, do you understand me,
John?'</p>
<p>'In truth, not I. I see not what Tangier hath to do with Exmoor; nor the
Duke of Monmouth with Jeremy Stickles.'</p>
<p>'Thou great clod, put it the other way. Jeremy Stickles may have much to
do about the Duke of Monmouth. The Whigs having failed of Exclusion, and
having been punished bitterly for the blood they shed, are ripe for any
violence. And the turn of the balance is now to them. See-saw is the
fashion of England always; and the Whigs will soon be the top-sawyers.'</p>
<p>'But,' said I, still more confused, '"The King is the top-sawyer,"
according to our proverb. How then can the Whigs be?'</p>
<p>'Thou art a hopeless ass, John. Better to sew with a chestnut than to
teach thee the constitution. Let it be so, let it be. I have seen a boy of
five years old more apt at politics than thou. Nay, look not offended,
lad. It is my fault for being over-deep to thee. I should have considered
thy intellect.'</p>
<p>'Nay, Master Jeremy, make no apologies. It is I that should excuse myself;
but, God knows, I have no politics.'</p>
<p>'Stick to that, my lad,' he answered; 'so shalt thou die easier. Now, in
ten words (without parties, or trying thy poor brain too much), I am here
to watch the gathering of a secret plot, not so much against the King as
against the due succession.'</p>
<p>'Now I understand at last. But, Master Stickles, you might have said all
that an hour ago almost.'</p>
<p>'It would have been better, if I had, to thee,' he replied with much
compassion; 'thy hat is nearly off thy head with the swelling of brain I
have given thee. Blows, blows, are thy business, Jack. There thou art in
thine element. And, haply, this business will bring thee plenty even for
thy great head to take. Now hearken to one who wishes thee well, and
plainly sees the end of it—stick thou to the winning side, and have
naught to do with the other one.'</p>
<p>'That,' said I, in great haste and hurry, 'is the very thing I want to do,
if I only knew which was the winning side, for the sake of Lorna—that
is to say, for the sake of my dear mother and sisters, and the farm.'</p>
<p>'Ha!' cried Jeremy Stickles, laughing at the redness of my face—'Lorna,
saidst thou; now what Lorna? Is it the name of a maiden, or a
light-o'-love?'</p>
<p>'Keep to your own business,' I answered, very proudly; 'spy as much as
e'er thou wilt, and use our house for doing it, without asking leave or
telling; but if I ever find thee spying into my affairs, all the King's
lifeguards in London, and the dragoons thou bringest hither, shall not
save thee from my hand—or one finger is enough for thee.'</p>
<p>Being carried beyond myself by his insolence about Lorna, I looked at
Master Stickles so, and spake in such a voice, that all his daring courage
and his spotless honour quailed within him, and he shrank—as if I
would strike so small a man.</p>
<p>Then I left him, and went to work at the sacks upon the corn-floor, to
take my evil spirit from me before I should see mother. For (to tell the
truth) now my strength was full, and troubles were gathering round me, and
people took advantage so much of my easy temper, sometimes when I was
over-tried, a sudden heat ran over me, and a glowing of all my muscles,
and a tingling for a mighty throw, such as my utmost self-command, and
fear of hurting any one, could but ill refrain. Afterwards, I was always
very sadly ashamed of myself, knowing how poor a thing bodily strength is,
as compared with power of mind, and that it is a coward's part to misuse
it upon weaker folk. For the present there was a little breach between
Master Stickles and me, for which I blamed myself very sorely. But though,
in full memory of his kindness and faithfulness in London, I asked his
pardon many times for my foolish anger with him, and offered to undergo
any penalty he would lay upon me, he only said it was no matter, there was
nothing to forgive. When people say that, the truth often is that they can
forgive nothing.</p>
<p>So for the present a breach was made between Master Jeremy and myself,
which to me seemed no great loss, inasmuch as it relieved me from any
privity to his dealings, for which I had small liking. All I feared was
lest I might, in any way, be ungrateful to him; but when he would have no
more of me, what could I do to help it? However, in a few days' time I was
of good service to him, as you shall see in its proper place.</p>
<p>But now my own affairs were thrown into such disorder that I could think
of nothing else, and had the greatest difficulty in hiding my uneasiness.
For suddenly, without any warning, or a word of message, all my Lorna's
signals ceased, which I had been accustomed to watch for daily, and as it
were to feed upon them, with a glowing heart. The first time I stood on
the wooded crest, and found no change from yesterday, I could hardly
believe my eyes, or thought at least that it must be some great mistake on
the part of my love. However, even that oppressed me with a heavy heart,
which grew heavier, as I found from day to day no token.</p>
<p>Three times I went and waited long at the bottom of the valley, where now
the stream was brown and angry with the rains of autumn, and the weeping
trees hung leafless. But though I waited at every hour of day, and far
into the night, no light footstep came to meet me, no sweet voice was in
the air; all was lonely, drear, and drenched with sodden desolation. It
seemed as if my love was dead, and the winds were at her funeral.</p>
<p>Once I sought far up the valley, where I had never been before, even
beyond the copse where Lorna had found and lost her brave young cousin.
Following up the river channel, in shelter of the evening fog, I gained a
corner within stone's throw of the last outlying cot. This was a gloomy,
low, square house, without any light in the windows, roughly built of wood
and stone, as I saw when I drew nearer. For knowing it to be Carver's
dwelling (or at least suspecting so, from some words of Lorna's), I was
led by curiosity, and perhaps by jealousy, to have a closer look at it.
Therefore, I crept up the stream, losing half my sense of fear, by reason
of anxiety. And in truth there was not much to fear, the sky being now too
dark for even a shooter of wild fowl to make good aim. And nothing else
but guns could hurt me, as in the pride of my strength I thought, and in
my skill of single-stick.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I went warily, being now almost among this nest of
cockatrices. The back of Carver's house abutted on the waves of the
rushing stream; and seeing a loop-hole, vacant for muskets, I looked in,
but all was quiet. So far as I could judge by listening, there was no one
now inside, and my heart for a moment leaped with joy, for I had feared to
find Lorna there. Then I took a careful survey of the dwelling, and its
windows, and its door, and aspect, as if I had been a robber meaning to
make privy entrance. It was well for me that I did this, as you will find
hereafter.</p>
<p>Having impressed upon my mind (a slow but, perhaps retentive mind), all
the bearings of the place, and all its opportunities, and even the curve
of the stream along it, and the bushes near the door, I was much inclined
to go farther up, and understand all the village. But a bar of red light
across the river, some forty yards on above me, and crossing from the
opposite side like a chain, prevented me. In that second house there was a
gathering of loud and merry outlaws, making as much noise as if they had
the law upon their side. Some, indeed, as I approached, were laying down
both right and wrong, as purely, and with as high a sense, as if they knew
the difference. Cold and troubled as I was, I could hardly keep from
laughing.</p>
<p>Before I betook myself home that night, and eased dear mother's heart so
much, and made her pale face spread with smiles, I had resolved to
penetrate Glen Doone from the upper end, and learn all about my Lorna. Not
but what I might have entered from my unsuspected channel, as so often I
had done; but that I saw fearful need for knowing something more than
that. Here was every sort of trouble gathering upon me, here was Jeremy
Stickles stealing upon every one in the dark; here was Uncle Reuben
plotting Satan only could tell what; here was a white night-capped man
coming bodily from the grave; here was my own sister Annie committed to a
highwayman, and mother in distraction; most of all—here, there, and
where—was my Lorna stolen, dungeoned, perhaps outraged. It was no
time for shilly shally, for the balance of this and that, or for a man
with blood and muscle to pat his nose and ponder. If I left my Lorna so;
if I let those black-soul'd villains work their pleasure on my love; if
the heart that clave to mine could find no vigour in it—then let
maidens cease from men, and rest their faith in tabby-cats.</p>
<p>Rudely rolling these ideas in my heavy head and brain I resolved to let
the morrow put them into form and order, but not contradict them. And
then, as my constitution willed (being like that of England), I slept, and
there was no stopping me.</p>
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