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<h2> CHAPTER LXXIV </h2>
<h3> DRIVEN BEYOND ENDURANCE </h3>
<p>[Also known as BLOOD UPON THE ALTAR in other editions]</p>
<p>Everything was settled smoothly, and without any fear or fuss, that Lorna
might find end of troubles, and myself of eager waiting, with the help of
Parson Bowden, and the good wishes of two counties. I could scarce believe
my fortune, when I looked upon her beauty, gentleness, and sweetness,
mingled with enough of humour and warm woman's feeling, never to be dull
or tiring; never themselves to be weary.</p>
<p>For she might be called a woman now; although a very young one, and as
full of playful ways, or perhaps I may say ten times as full, as if she
had known no trouble. To wit, the spirit of bright childhood, having been
so curbed and straitened, ere its time was over, now broke forth, enriched
and varied with the garb of conscious maidenhood. And the sense of
steadfast love, and eager love enfolding her, coloured with so many tinges
all her looks, and words, and thoughts, that to me it was the noblest
vision even to think about her.</p>
<p>But this was far too bright to last, without bitter break, and the
plunging of happiness in horror, and of passionate joy in agony. My
darling in her softest moments, when she was alone with me, when the spark
of defiant eyes was veiled beneath dark lashes, and the challenge of gay
beauty passed into sweetest invitation; at such times of her purest love
and warmest faith in me, a deep abiding fear would flutter in her bounding
heart, as of deadly fate's approach. She would cling to me, and nestle to
me, being scared of coyishness, and lay one arm around my neck, and ask if
I could do without her.</p>
<p>Hence, as all emotions haply, of those who are more to us than ourselves,
find within us stronger echo, and more perfect answer, so I could not be
regardless of some hidden evil; and my dark misgivings deepened as the
time drew nearer. I kept a steadfast watch on Lorna, neglecting a field of
beans entirely, as well as a litter of young pigs, and a cow somewhat
given to jaundice. And I let Jem Slocombe go to sleep in the tallat, all
one afternoon, and Bill Dadds draw off a bucket of cider, without so much
as a 'by your leave.' For these men knew that my knighthood, and my coat
of arms, and (most of all) my love, were greatly against good farming; the
sense of our country being—and perhaps it may be sensible—that
a man who sticks up to be anything, must allow himself to be cheated.</p>
<p>But I never did stick up, nor would, though all the parish bade me; and I
whistled the same tunes to my horses, and held my plough-tree, just the
same as if no King, nor Queen, had ever come to spoil my tune or hand. For
this thing, nearly all the men around our parts upbraided me; but the
women praised me: and for the most part these are right, when themselves
are not concerned.</p>
<p>However humble I might be, no one knowing anything of our part of the
country, would for a moment doubt that now here was a great to do and talk
of John Ridd and his wedding. The fierce fight with the Doones so lately,
and my leading of the combat (though I fought not more than need be), and
the vanishing of Sir Counsellor, and the galloping madness of Carver, and
the religious fear of the women that this last was gone to hell—for
he himself had declared that his aim, while he cut through the yeomanry—also
their remorse, that he should have been made to go thither with all his
children left behind—these things, I say (if ever I can again
contrive to say anything), had led to the broadest excitement about my
wedding of Lorna. We heard that people meant to come from more than thirty
miles around, upon excuse of seeing my stature and Lorna's beauty; but in
good truth out of sheer curiosity, and the love of meddling.</p>
<p>Our clerk had given notice, that not a man should come inside the door of
his church without shilling-fee; and women (as sure to see twice as much)
must every one pay two shillings. I thought this wrong; and as
church-warden, begged that the money might be paid into mine own hands,
when taken. But the clerk said that was against all law; and he had orders
from the parson to pay it to him without any delay. So as I always obey
the parson, when I care not much about a thing, I let them have it their
own way; though feeling inclined to believe, sometimes, that I ought to
have some of the money.</p>
<p>Dear mother arranged all the ins and outs of the way in which it was to be
done; and Annie and Lizzie, and all the Snowes, and even Ruth Huckaback
(who was there, after great persuasion), made such a sweeping of dresses
that I scarcely knew where to place my feet, and longed for a staff, to
put by their gowns. Then Lorna came out of a pew half-way, in a manner
which quite astonished me, and took my left hand in her right, and I
prayed God that it were done with.</p>
<p>My darling looked so glorious, that I was afraid of glancing at her, yet
took in all her beauty. She was in a fright, no doubt; but nobody should
see it; whereas I said (to myself at least), 'I will go through it like a
grave-digger.'</p>
<p>Lorna's dress was of pure white, clouded with faint lavender (for the sake
of the old Earl Brandir), and as simple as need be, except for perfect
loveliness. I was afraid to look at her, as I said before, except when
each of us said, 'I will,' and then each dwelled upon the other.</p>
<p>It is impossible for any who have not loved as I have to conceive my joy
and pride, when after ring and all was done, and the parson had blessed
us, Lorna turned to look at me with her glances of subtle fun subdued by
this great act.</p>
<p>Her eyes, which none on earth may ever equal, or compare with, told me
such a depth of comfort, yet awaiting further commune, that I was almost
amazed, thoroughly as I knew them. Darling eyes, the sweetest eyes, the
loveliest, the most loving eyes—the sound of a shot rang through the
church, and those eyes were filled with death.</p>
<p>Lorna fell across my knees when I was going to kiss her, as the bridegroom
is allowed to do, and encouraged, if he needs it; a flood of blood came
out upon the yellow wood of the altar steps, and at my feet lay Lorna,
trying to tell me some last message out of her faithful eyes. I lifted her
up, and petted her, and coaxed her, but it was no good; the only sign of
life remaining was a spirt of bright red blood.</p>
<p>Some men know what things befall them in the supreme time of their life—far
above the time of death—but to me comes back as a hazy dream,
without any knowledge in it, what I did, or felt, or thought, with my
wife's arms flagging, flagging, around my neck, as I raised her up, and
softly put them there. She sighed a long sigh on my breast, for her last
farewell to life, and then she grew so cold, and cold, that I asked the
time of year.</p>
<p>It was Whit-Tuesday, and the lilacs all in blossom; and why I thought of
the time of year, with the young death in my arms, God or His angels, may
decide, having so strangely given us. Enough that so I did, and looked;
and our white lilacs were beautiful. Then I laid my wife in my mother's
arms, and begging that no one would make a noise, went forth for my
revenge.</p>
<p>Of course, I knew who had done it. There was but one man in the world, or
at any rate, in our part of it, who could have done such a thing—such
a thing. I use no harsher word about it, while I leaped upon our best
horse, with bridle but no saddle, and set the head of Kickums towards the
course now pointed out to me. Who showed me the course, I cannot tell. I
only know that I took it. And the men fell back before me.</p>
<p>Weapon of no sort had I. Unarmed, and wondering at my strange attire (with
a bridal vest, wrought by our Annie, and red with the blood of the bride),
I went forth just to find out this; whether in this world there be or be
not God of justice.</p>
<p>With my vicious horse at a furious speed, I came upon Black Barrow Down,
directed by some shout of men, which seemed to me but a whisper. And
there, about a furlong before me, rode a man on a great black horse, and I
knew that the man was Carver Doone.</p>
<p>'Your life or mine,' I said to myself; 'as the will of God may be. But we
two live not upon this earth, one more hour together.'</p>
<p>I knew the strength of this great man; and I knew that he was armed with a
gun—if he had time to load again, after shooting my Lorna—or
at any rate with pistols, and a horseman's sword as well. Nevertheless, I
had no more doubt of killing the man before me than a cook has of spitting
a headless fowl.</p>
<p>Sometimes seeing no ground beneath me, and sometimes heeding every leaf,
and the crossing of the grass-blades, I followed over the long moor,
reckless whether seen or not. But only once the other man turned round and
looked back again, and then I was beside a rock, with a reedy swamp behind
me.</p>
<p>Although he was so far before me, and riding as hard as ride he might, I
saw that he had something on the horse in front of him; something which
needed care, and stopped him from looking backward. In the whirling of my
wits, I fancied first that this was Lorna; until the scene I had been
through fell across hot brain and heart, like the drop at the close of a
tragedy. Rushing there through crag and quag, at utmost speed of a
maddened horse, I saw, as of another's fate, calmly (as on canvas laid),
the brutal deed, the piteous anguish, and the cold despair.</p>
<p>The man turned up the gully leading from the moor to Cloven Rocks, through
which John Fry had tracked Uncle Ben, as of old related. But as Carver
entered it, he turned round, and beheld me not a hundred yards behind; and
I saw that he was bearing his child, little Ensie, before him. Ensie also
descried me, and stretched his hands and cried to me; for the face of his
father frightened him.</p>
<p>Carver Doone, with a vile oath, thrust spurs into his flagging horse, and
laid one hand on a pistol-stock; whence I knew that his slung carbine had
received no bullet since the one that had pierced Lorna. And a cry of
triumph rose from the black depths of my heart. What cared I for pistols?
I had no spurs, neither was my horse one to need the rowel; I rather held
him in than urged him, for he was fresh as ever; and I knew that the black
steed in front, if he breasted the steep ascent, where the track divided,
must be in our reach at once.</p>
<p>His rider knew this; and, having no room in the rocky channel to turn and
fire, drew rein at the crossways sharply, and plunged into the black
ravine leading to the Wizard's Slough. 'Is it so?' I said to myself with a
brain and head cold as iron; 'though the foul fiend come from the slough,
to save thee; thou shalt carve it, Carver.'</p>
<p>I followed my enemy carefully, steadily, even leisurely; for I had him, as
in a pitfall, whence no escape might be. He thought that I feared to
approach him, for he knew not where he was: and his low disdainful laugh
came back. 'Laugh he who wins,' thought I.</p>
<p>A gnarled and half-starved oak, as stubborn as my own resolve, and smitten
by some storm of old, hung from the crag above me. Rising from my horse's
back, although I had no stirrups, I caught a limb, and tore it (like a
mere wheat-awn) from the socket. Men show the rent even now, with wonder;
none with more wonder than myself.</p>
<p>Carver Doone turned the corner suddenly on the black and bottomless bog;
with a start of fear he reined back his horse, and I thought he would have
turned upon me. But instead of that, he again rode on; hoping to find a
way round the side.</p>
<p>Now there is a way between cliff and slough for those who know the ground
thoroughly, or have time enough to search it; but for him there was no
road, and he lost some time in seeking it. Upon this he made up his mind;
and wheeling, fired, and then rode at me.</p>
<p>His bullet struck me somewhere, but I took no heed of that. Fearing only
his escape, I laid my horse across the way, and with the limb of the oak
struck full on the forehead his charging steed. Ere the slash of the sword
came nigh me, man and horse rolled over, and wellnigh bore my own horse
down, with the power of their onset.</p>
<p>Carver Doone was somewhat stunned, and could not arise for a moment.
Meanwhile I leaped on the ground and awaited, smoothing my hair back, and
baring my arms, as though in the ring for wrestling. Then the little boy
ran to me, clasped my leg, and looked up at me, and the terror in his eyes
made me almost fear myself.</p>
<p>'Ensie, dear,' I said quite gently, grieving that he should see his wicked
father killed, 'run up yonder round the corner and try to find a pretty
bunch of bluebells for the lady.' The child obeyed me, hanging back, and
looking back, and then laughing, while I prepared for business. There and
then I might have killed mine enemy, with a single blow, while he lay
unconscious; but it would have been foul play.</p>
<p>With a sullen and black scowl, the Carver gathered his mighty limbs, and
arose, and looked round for his weapons; but I had put them well away.
Then he came to me and gazed; being wont to frighten thus young men.</p>
<p>'I would not harm you, lad,' he said, with a lofty style of sneering: 'I
have punished you enough, for most of your impertinence. For the rest I
forgive you; because you have been good and gracious to my little son. Go,
and be contented.'</p>
<p>For answer, I smote him on the cheek, lightly, and not to hurt him: but to
make his blood leap up. I would not sully my tongue by speaking to a man
like this.</p>
<p>There was a level space of sward between us and the slough. With the
courtesy derived from London, and the processions I had seen, to this
place I led him. And that he might breathe himself, and have every fibre
cool, and every muscle ready, my hold upon his coat I loosed, and left him
to begin with me, whenever he thought proper.</p>
<p>I think that he felt that his time was come. I think he knew from my
knitted muscles, and the firm arch of my breast, and the way in which I
stood; but most of all from my stern blue eyes; that he had found his
master. At any rate a paleness came, an ashy paleness on his cheeks, and
the vast calves of his legs bowed in, as if he were out of training.</p>
<p>Seeing this, villain as he was, I offered him first chance. I stretched
forth my left hand, as I do to a weaker antagonist, and I let him have the
hug of me. But in this I was too generous; having forgotten my
pistol-wound, and the cracking of one of my short lower ribs. Carver Doone
caught me round the waist, with such a grip as never yet had been laid
upon me.</p>
<p>I heard my rib go; I grasped his arm, and tore the muscle out of it* (as
the string comes out of an orange); then I took him by the throat, which
is not allowed in wrestling; but he had snatched at mine; and now was no
time of dalliance. In vain he tugged, and strained, and writhed, dashed
his bleeding fist into my face, and flung himself on me with gnashing
jaws. Beneath the iron of my strength—for God that day was with me—I
had him helpless in two minutes, and his fiery eyes lolled out.</p>
<p>* A far more terrible clutch than this is handed down, to<br/>
weaker ages, of the great John Ridd.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p>'I will not harm thee any more,' I cried, so far as I could for panting,
the work being very furious: 'Carver Doone, thou art beaten: own it, and
thank God for it; and go thy way, and repent thyself.'</p>
<p>It was all too late. Even if he had yielded in his ravening frenzy—for
his beard was like a mad dog's jowl—even if he would have owned
that, for the first time in his life, he had found his master; it was all
too late.</p>
<p>The black bog had him by the feet; the sucking of the ground drew on him,
like the thirsty lips of death. In our fury, we had heeded neither wet nor
dry; nor thought of earth beneath us. I myself might scarcely leap, with
the last spring of o'er-laboured legs, from the engulfing grave of slime.
He fell back, with his swarthy breast (from which my gripe had rent all
clothing), like a hummock of bog-oak, standing out the quagmire; and then
he tossed his arms to heaven, and they were black to the elbow, and the
glare of his eyes was ghastly. I could only gaze and pant; for my strength
was no more than an infant's, from the fury and the horror. Scarcely could
I turn away, while, joint by joint, he sank from sight.</p>
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