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<h2> CHAPTER XLVIII </h2>
<h3> EVERY MAN MUST DEFEND HIMSELF </h3>
<p>It was only right in Jeremy Stickles, and of the simplest common sense,
that he would not tell, before our girls, what the result of his journey
was. But he led me aside in the course of the evening, and told me all
about it; saying that I knew, as well as he did, that it was not woman's
business. This I took, as it was meant, for a gentle caution that Lorna
(whom he had not seen as yet) must not be informed of any of his doings.
Herein I quite agreed with him; not only for his furtherance, but because
I always think that women, of whatever mind, are best when least they
meddle with the things that appertain to men.</p>
<p>Master Stickles complained that the weather had been against him bitterly,
closing all the roads around him; even as it had done with us. It had
taken him eight days, he said, to get from Exeter to Plymouth; whither he
found that most of the troops had been drafted off from Exeter. When all
were told, there was but a battalion of one of the King's horse regiments,
and two companies of foot soldiers; and their commanders had orders, later
than the date of Jeremy's commission, on no account to quit the southern
coast, and march inland. Therefore, although they would gladly have come
for a brush with the celebrated Doones, it was more than they durst
attempt, in the face of their instructions. However, they spared him a
single trooper, as a companion of the road, and to prove to the justices
of the county, and the lord lieutenant, that he had their approval.</p>
<p>To these authorities Master Stickles now was forced to address himself,
although he would rather have had one trooper than a score from the very
best trained bands. For these trained bands had afforded very good
soldiers, in the time of the civil wars, and for some years afterwards;
but now their discipline was gone; and the younger generation had seen no
real fighting. Each would have his own opinion, and would want to argue
it; and if he were not allowed, he went about his duty in such a temper as
to prove that his own way was the best.</p>
<p>Neither was this the worst of it; for Jeremy made no doubt but what (if he
could only get the militia to turn out in force) he might manage, with the
help of his own men, to force the stronghold of the enemy; but the truth
was that the officers, knowing how hard it would be to collect their men
at that time of the year, and in that state of the weather, began with one
accord to make every possible excuse. And especially they pressed this
point, that Bagworthy was not in their county; the Devonshire people
affirming vehemently that it lay in the shire of Somerset, and the
Somersetshire folk averring, even with imprecations, that it lay in
Devonshire. Now I believe the truth to be that the boundary of the two
counties, as well as of Oare and Brendon parishes, is defined by the
Bagworthy river; so that the disputants on both sides were both right and
wrong.</p>
<p>Upon this, Master Stickles suggested, and as I thought very sensibly, that
the two counties should unite, and equally contribute to the extirpation
of this pest, which shamed and injured them both alike. But hence arose
another difficulty; for the men of Devon said they would march when
Somerset had taken the field; and the sons of Somerset replied that indeed
they were quite ready, but what were their cousins of Devonshire doing?
And so it came to pass that the King's Commissioner returned without any
army whatever; but with promise of two hundred men when the roads should
be more passable. And meanwhile, what were we to do, abandoned as we were
to the mercies of the Doones, with only our own hands to help us? And
herein I grieved at my own folly, in having let Tom Faggus go, whose wit
and courage would have been worth at least half a dozen men to us. Upon
this matter I held long council with my good friend Stickles; telling him
all about Lorna's presence, and what I knew of her history. He agreed with
me that we could not hope to escape an attack from the outlaws, and the
more especially now that they knew himself to be returned to us. Also he
praised me for my forethought in having threshed out all our corn, and
hidden the produce in such a manner that they were not likely to find it.
Furthermore, he recommended that all the entrances to the house should at
once be strengthened, and a watch must be maintained at night; and he
thought it wiser that I should go (late as it was) to Lynmouth, if a horse
could pass the valley, and fetch every one of his mounted troopers, who
might now be quartered there. Also if any men of courage, though capable
only of handling a pitchfork, could be found in the neighbourhood, I was
to try to summon them. But our district is so thinly peopled, that I had
little faith in this; however my errand was given me, and I set forth upon
it; for John Fry was afraid of the waters.</p>
<p>Knowing how fiercely the floods were out, I resolved to travel the higher
road, by Cosgate and through Countisbury; therefore I swam my horse
through the Lynn, at the ford below our house (where sometimes you may
step across), and thence galloped up and along the hills. I could see all
the inland valleys ribbon'd with broad waters; and in every winding crook,
the banks of snow that fed them; while on my right the turbid sea was
flaked with April showers. But when I descended the hill towards Lynmouth,
I feared that my journey was all in vain.</p>
<p>For the East Lynn (which is our river) was ramping and roaring
frightfully, lashing whole trunks of trees on the rocks, and rending them,
and grinding them. And into it rushed, from the opposite side, a torrent
even madder; upsetting what it came to aid; shattering wave with boiling
billow, and scattering wrath with fury. It was certain death to attempt
the passage: and the little wooden footbridge had been carried away long
ago. And the men I was seeking must be, of course, on the other side of
this deluge, for on my side there was not a single house.</p>
<p>I followed the bank of the flood to the beach, some two or three hundred
yards below; and there had the luck to see Will Watcombe on the opposite
side, caulking an old boat. Though I could not make him hear a word, from
the deafening roar of the torrent, I got him to understand at last that I
wanted to cross over. Upon this he fetched another man, and the two of
them launched a boat; and paddling well out to sea, fetched round the
mouth of the frantic river. The other man proved to be Stickles's chief
mate; and so he went back and fetched his comrades, bringing their
weapons, but leaving their horses behind. As it happened there were but
four of them; however, to have even these was a help; and I started again
at full speed for my home; for the men must follow afoot, and cross our
river high up on the moorland.</p>
<p>This took them a long way round, and the track was rather bad to find, and
the sky already darkening; so that I arrived at Plover's Barrows more than
two hours before them. But they had done a sagacious thing, which was well
worth the delay; for by hoisting their flag upon the hill, they fetched
the two watchmen from the Foreland, and added them to their number.</p>
<p>It was lucky that I came home so soon; for I found the house in a great
commotion, and all the women trembling. When I asked what the matter was,
Lorna, who seemed the most self-possessed, answered that it was all her
fault, for she alone had frightened them. And this in the following
manner. She had stolen out to the garden towards dusk, to watch some
favourite hyacinths just pushing up, like a baby's teeth, and just
attracting the fatal notice of a great house-snail at night-time. Lorna at
last had discovered the glutton, and was bearing him off in triumph to the
tribunal of the ducks, when she descried two glittering eyes glaring at
her steadfastly, from the elder-bush beyond the stream. The elder was
smoothing its wrinkled leaves, being at least two months behind time; and
among them this calm cruel face appeared; and she knew it was the face of
Carver Doone.</p>
<p>The maiden, although so used to terror (as she told me once before), lost
all presence of mind hereat, and could neither shriek nor fly, but only
gaze, as if bewitched. Then Carver Doone, with his deadly smile, gloating
upon her horror, lifted his long gun, and pointed full at Lorna's heart.
In vain she strove to turn away; fright had stricken her stiff as stone.
With the inborn love of life, she tried to cover the vital part wherein
the winged death must lodge—for she knew Carver's certain aim—but
her hands hung numbed, and heavy; in nothing but her eyes was life.</p>
<p>With no sign of pity in his face, no quiver of relenting, but a
well-pleased grin at all the charming palsy of his victim, Carver Doone
lowered, inch by inch, the muzzle of his gun. When it pointed to the
ground, between her delicate arched insteps, he pulled the trigger, and
the bullet flung the mould all over her. It was a refinement of bullying,
for which I swore to God that night, upon my knees, in secret, that I
would smite down Carver Doone or else he should smite me down. Base beast!
what largest humanity, or what dreams of divinity, could make a man put up
with this?</p>
<p>My darling (the loveliest, and most harmless, in the world of maidens),
fell away on a bank of grass, and wept at her own cowardice; and trembled,
and wondered where I was; and what I would think of this. Good God! What
could I think of it? She over-rated my slow nature, to admit the question.</p>
<p>While she leaned there, quite unable yet to save herself, Carver came to
the brink of the flood, which alone was between them; and then he stroked
his jet-black beard, and waited for Lorna to begin. Very likely, he
thought that she would thank him for his kindness to her. But she was now
recovering the power of her nimble limbs; and ready to be off like hope,
and wonder at her own cowardice.</p>
<p>'I have spared you this time,' he said, in his deep calm voice, 'only
because it suits my plans; and I never yield to temper. But unless you
come back to-morrow, pure, and with all you took away, and teach me to
destroy that fool, who has destroyed himself for you, your death is here,
your death is here, where it has long been waiting.'</p>
<p>Although his gun was empty, he struck the breech of it with his finger;
and then he turned away, not deigning even once to look back again; and
Lorna saw his giant figure striding across the meadow-land, as if the
Ridds were nobodies, and he the proper owner. Both mother and I were
greatly hurt at hearing of this insolence: for we had owned that meadow,
from the time of the great Alfred; and even when that good king lay in the
Isle of Athelney, he had a Ridd along with him.</p>
<p>Now I spoke to Lorna gently, seeing how much she had been tried; and I
praised her for her courage, in not having run away, when she was so
unable; and my darling was pleased with this, and smiled upon me for
saying it; though she knew right well that, in this matter, my judgment
was not impartial. But you may take this as a general rule, that a woman
likes praise from the man whom she loves, and cannot stop always to
balance it.</p>
<p>Now expecting a sharp attack that night—when Jeremy Stickles the
more expected, after the words of Carver, which seemed to be meant to
mislead us—we prepared a great quantity of knuckles of pork, and a
ham in full cut, and a fillet of hung mutton. For we would almost
surrender rather than keep our garrison hungry. And all our men were
exceedingly brave; and counted their rounds of the house in half-pints.</p>
<p>Before the maidens went to bed, Lorna made a remark which seemed to me a
very clever one, and then I wondered how on earth it had never occurred to
me before. But first she had done a thing which I could not in the least
approve of: for she had gone up to my mother, and thrown herself into her
arms, and begged to be allowed to return to Glen Doone.</p>
<p>'My child, are you unhappy here?' mother asked her, very gently, for she
had begun to regard her now as a daughter of her own.</p>
<p>'Oh, no! Too happy, by far too happy, Mrs. Ridd. I never knew rest or
peace before, or met with real kindness. But I cannot be so ungrateful, I
cannot be so wicked, as to bring you all into deadly peril, for my sake
alone. Let me go: you must not pay this great price for my happiness.'</p>
<p>'Dear child, we are paying no price at all,' replied my mother, embracing
her; 'we are not threatened for your sake only. Ask John, he will tell
you. He knows every bit about politics, and this is a political matter.'</p>
<p>Dear mother was rather proud in her heart, as well as terribly frightened,
at the importance now accruing to Plover's Barrows farm; and she often
declared that it would be as famous in history as the Rye House, or the
Meal-tub, or even the great black box, in which she was a firm believer:
and even my knowledge of politics could not move her upon that matter.
'Such things had happened before,' she would say, shaking her head with
its wisdom, 'and why might they not happen again? Women would be women,
and men would be men, to the end of the chapter; and if she had been in
Lucy Water's place, she would keep it quiet, as she had done'; and then
she would look round, for fear, lest either of her daughters had heard
her; 'but now, can you give me any reason, why it may not have been so?
You are so fearfully positive, John: just as men always are.' 'No,' I used
to say; 'I can give you no reason, why it may not have been so, mother.
But the question is, if it was so, or not; rather than what it might have
been. And, I think, it is pretty good proof against it, that what nine men
of every ten in England would only too gladly believe, if true, is
nevertheless kept dark from them.' 'There you are again, John,' mother
would reply, 'all about men, and not a single word about women. If you had
any argument at all, you would own that marriage is a question upon which
women are the best judges.' 'Oh!' I would groan in my spirit, and go;
leaving my dearest mother quite sure, that now at last she must have
convinced me. But if mother had known that Jeremy Stickles was working
against the black box, and its issue, I doubt whether he would have fared
so well, even though he was a visitor. However, she knew that something
was doing and something of importance; and she trusted in God for the rest
of it. Only she used te tell me, very seriously, of an evening, 'The very
least they can give you, dear John, is a coat of arms. Be sure you take
nothing less, dear; and the farm can well support it.'</p>
<p>But lo! I have left Lorna ever so long, anxious to consult me upon
political matters. She came to me, and her eyes alone asked a hundred
questions, which I rather had answered upon her lips than troubled her
pretty ears with them. Therefore I told her nothing at all, save that the
attack (if any should be) would not be made on her account; and that if
she should hear, by any chance, a trifle of a noise in the night, she was
to wrap the clothes around her, and shut her beautiful eyes again. On no
account, whatever she did, was she to go to the window. She liked my
expression about her eyes, and promised to do the very best she could and
then she crept so very close, that I needs must have her closer; and with
her head on my breast she asked,—</p>
<p>'Can't you keep out of this fight, John?'</p>
<p>'My own one,' I answered, gazing through the long black lashes, at the
depths of radiant love; 'I believe there will be nothing: but what there
is I must see out.'</p>
<p>'Shall I tell you what I think, John? It is only a fancy of mine, and
perhaps it is not worth telling.'</p>
<p>'Let us have it, dear, by all means. You know so much about their ways.'</p>
<p>'What I believe is this, John. You know how high the rivers are, higher
than ever they were before, and twice as high, you have told me. I believe
that Glen Doone is flooded, and all the houses under water.'</p>
<p>'You little witch,' I answered; 'what a fool I must be not to think of it!
Of course it is: it must be. The torrent from all the Bagworthy forest,
and all the valleys above it, and the great drifts in the glen itself,
never could have outlet down my famous waterslide. The valley must be
under water twenty feet at least. Well, if ever there was a fool, I am he,
for not having thought of it.'</p>
<p>'I remember once before,' said Lorna, reckoning on her fingers, 'when
there was heavy rain, all through the autumn and winter, five or it may be
six years ago, the river came down with such a rush that the water was two
feet deep in our rooms, and we all had to camp by the cliff-edge. But you
think that the floods are higher now, I believe I heard you say, John.'</p>
<p>'I don't think about it, my treasure,' I answered; 'you may trust me for
understanding floods, after our work at Tiverton. And I know that the
deluge in all our valleys is such that no living man can remember, neither
will ever behold again. Consider three months of snow, snow, snow, and a
fortnight of rain on the top of it, and all to be drained in a few days
away! And great barricades of ice still in the rivers blocking them up,
and ponding them. You may take my word for it, Mistress Lorna, that your
pretty bower is six feet deep.'</p>
<p>'Well, my bower has served its time', said Lorna, blushing as she
remembered all that had happened there; 'and my bower now is here, John.
But I am so sorry to think of all the poor women flooded out of their
houses and sheltering in the snowdrifts. However, there is one good of it:
they cannot send many men against us, with all this trouble upon them.'</p>
<p>'You are right,' I replied; 'how clever you are! and that is why there
were only three to cut off Master Stickles. And now we shall beat them, I
make no doubt, even if they come at all. And I defy them to fire the
house: the thatch is too wet for burning.'</p>
<p>We sent all the women to bed quite early, except Gwenny Carfax and our old
Betty. These two we allowed to stay up, because they might be useful to
us, if they could keep from quarreling. For my part, I had little fear,
after what Lorna had told me, as to the result of the combat. It was not
likely that the Doones could bring more than eight or ten men against us,
while their homes were in such danger: and to meet these we had eight good
men, including Jeremy, and myself, all well armed and resolute, besides
our three farm-servants, and the parish-clerk, and the shoemaker. These
five could not be trusted much for any valiant conduct, although they
spoke very confidently over their cans of cider. Neither were their
weapons fitted for much execution, unless it were at close quarters, which
they would be likely to avoid. Bill Dadds had a sickle, Jem Slocombe a
flail, the cobbler had borrowed the constable's staff (for the constable
would not attend, because there was no warrant), and the parish clerk had
brought his pitch-pipe, which was enough to break any man's head. But John
Fry, of course, had his blunderbuss, loaded with tin-tacks and marbles,
and more likely to kill the man who discharged it than any other person:
but we knew that John had it only for show, and to describe its qualities.</p>
<p>Now it was my great desire, and my chiefest hope, to come across Carver
Doone that night, and settle the score between us; not by any shot in the
dark, but by a conflict man to man. As yet, since I came to full-grown
power, I had never met any one whom I could not play teetotum with: but
now at last I had found a man whose strength was not to be laughed at. I
could guess it in his face, I could tell it in his arms, I could see it in
his stride and gait, which more than all the rest betray the substance of
a man. And being so well used to wrestling, and to judge antagonists, I
felt that here (if anywhere) I had found my match.</p>
<p>Therefore I was not content to abide within the house, or go the rounds
with the troopers; but betook myself to the rick yard, knowing that the
Doones were likely to begin their onset there. For they had a pleasant
custom, when they visited farm-houses, of lighting themselves towards
picking up anything they wanted, or stabbing the inhabitants, by first
creating a blaze in the rick yard. And though our ricks were all now of
mere straw (except indeed two of prime clover-hay), and although on the
top they were so wet that no firebrands might hurt them; I was both
unwilling to have them burned, and fearful that they might kindle, if well
roused up with fire upon the windward side.</p>
<p>By the bye, these Doones had got the worst of this pleasant trick one
time. For happening to fire the ricks of a lonely farm called Yeanworthy,
not far above Glenthorne, they approached the house to get people's goods,
and to enjoy their terror. The master of the farm was lately dead, and had
left, inside the clock-case, loaded, the great long gun, wherewith he had
used to sport at the ducks and the geese on the shore. Now Widow Fisher
took out this gun, and not caring much what became of her (for she had
loved her husband dearly), she laid it upon the window-sill, which looked
upon the rick-yard; and she backed up the butt with a chest of oak
drawers, and she opened the window a little back, and let the muzzle out
on the slope. Presently five or six fine young Doones came dancing a reel
(as their manner was) betwixt her and the flaming rick. Upon which she
pulled the trigger with all the force of her thumb, and a quarter of a
pound of duck-shot went out with a blaze on the dancers. You may suppose
what their dancing was, and their reeling how changed to staggering, and
their music none of the sweetest. One of them fell into the rick, and was
burned, and buried in a ditch next day; but the others were set upon their
horses, and carried home on a path of blood. And strange to say, they
never avenged this very dreadful injury; but having heard that a woman had
fired this desperate shot among them, they said that she ought to be a
Doone, and inquired how old she was.</p>
<p>Now I had not been so very long waiting in our mow-yard, with my best gun
ready, and a big club by me, before a heaviness of sleep began to creep
upon me. The flow of water was in my ears, and in my eyes a hazy
spreading, and upon my brain a closure, as a cobbler sews a vamp up. So I
leaned back in the clover-rick, and the dust of the seed and the smell
came round me, without any trouble; and I dozed about Lorna, just once or
twice, and what she had said about new-mown hay; and then back went my
head, and my chin went up; and if ever a man was blest with slumber, down
it came upon me, and away went I into it.</p>
<p>Now this was very vile of me, and against all good resolutions, even such
as I would have sworn to an hour ago or less. But if you had been in the
water as I had, ay, and had long fight with it, after a good day's work,
and then great anxiety afterwards, and brain-work (which is not fair for
me), and upon that a stout supper, mayhap you would not be so hard on my
sleep; though you felt it your duty to wake me.</p>
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