<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<p class="p2">There was a little dog that crept and moaned
by Claytonʼs body, a little dog that knew no
better, never having been taught much. It was
a small black Swedish spaniel, skilful only in
woodcocks, and pretty well up to a snipe or two,
but actually afraid of a pheasant on account of
the dreadful noise he made. She knew not any
more than the others why her name was “Wena”,
and she was perfectly contented with it, though it
must have been a corruption. The men said it
ought to be “Winifred”; the maids, more romantic,
“Rowena”; but very likely John Rosedew
was right, being so strong in philology, when he
maintained that the name was a syncopated form
of “Wadstena”, and indicated her origin.</p>
<p>However, she knew her masterʼs name better
than her own. You had only to say “Clayton”,
anywhere or anywhen, and she would lift her
tangled ears in a moment, jerk her little whisk of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
a tail, till you feared for its continuity, and trot
about with a sprightly air, seeking all around for
him. Now she was cuddled close into his bosom,
moaning, and shivering, and licking him, staring
wistfully at his eyes and the wound where the
blood was welling. She would not let John Rosedew
touch him, but snapped as he leaned over;
and then she began to whimper softly, and nuzzle
her head in closer. “Wena”, he said, in a very
low voice—“pretty Wena, let me”. And then she
understood that he meant well, and stood up, and
watched him intently.</p>
<p>John knew in a moment that all was over between
this world and Clayton Nowell. He had
felt it from the first glance indeed, but could not
keep hope from fluttering. Afterwards he had no
idea what he did, or how he did it, but the impression
left by that short gaze was as stern as the
death it noted. Full in the throat was the ghastly
wound, and the charge had passed out at the back
of the neck, through the fatal grape–cluster.
Though the bright hair flowed in a pool of blood,
and the wreck of life was pitiful, the face looked
calm and unwrung by anguish, yet firm and
staunch, with the courage summoned to ward
death rather than meet it.</p>
<p>John Rosedew, shy and diffident in so many
little matters, was not a man to be dismayed when
the soul is moving vehemently. Now he leaped
straight to the one conclusion, fearful as it was.</p>
<p>“Holy God, have mercy on those we love<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
so much! No accident is this, but a savage
murder”.</p>
<p>He fell upon his knees one moment, and prayed
with a dead hand in his own. He knew, of course,
that the soul was gone, a distance thought can
never gaze; but prayer flies best in darkness.</p>
<p>Then, with the tears all down his cheeks, he
looked round once, as if to mark the things he
would have to tell of. In front of the corpse lay
the favourite gun, with the muzzle plunged into
the bushes, as if the owner had fallen with the
piece raised to his shoulder. The hammer of one
barrel was cocked, of the other on half–cock only;
both the nipples were capped, and, of course, both
barrels loaded. The line of its fire was not towards
Cradock, but commanded a little by–path leading
into the heart of the wood.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Cradock had fallen forward from
the steep brow of the hedge–bank; the branch to
which he clung in that staggering way had
broken. Slowly he rose from the ground, and
still intent and horror–struck, unable to come
nearer, looked more like one of the smitten trees
which they call in the forest “dead men”, than a
living and breathing body. John Rosedew, not
knowing what he did, ran to the wretched fellow,
and tried to take his hand, but the offer was quite
unnoticed. With his eyes still fixed on his twin–brotherʼs
corpse, the youth began fumbling clumsily
in the pocket of his shooting–coat; he pulled
out a powder–flask, and rapidly, never once looking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
at it, dropped a charge into either barrel.
John heard the click of the spring—one, two, as
quick as he could have said it. Then the young
man drew from his waistcoat–pocket two thick
patent wads, and squeezed one into either cylinder.
All at once it struck poor “Uncle John” what he
was going to do. Preparing to shoot himself!</p>
<p>“Cradock, my boy, is this all the fear of God
I have taught you”?</p>
<p>Cradock looked at him curiously, and nodded
his head in acknowledgment. It was plain that
his wits were wandering. The parson immediately
seized the gun, and sowed the powder broadcast,
then wrenched the flask away from him with a
hand there was no resisting. Then for the first
time he observed Caldo in the hedge, “down–charging”;
the well–trained dog had never moved
from the moment his master fired.</p>
<p>“Come with me at once, come home, Cradock;
boy, you <i>shall</i> come home with me”!</p>
<p>But the man of threescore was not quick enough
for the young despair. Cradock was out of sight
in the thicket, and Caldo galloped after him.
Wild with himself for his slowness of wit, John
Rosedew ran to poor Claytonʼs gun, for fear of his
brother finding it. Then he took from the dead
boyʼs pocket his new and burnished powder–flask,
though it went to his heart to do it, and leaped
upon the back of Coræbus, without a thought of
Xenophon. Only Wena was left to keep her
poor master company.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>How the rector got to the Hall I know not,
neither has he any recollection; but he must have
sat his horse like a Nimrod, and taken a hedge
and two ditches. All we know is that he did get
there, with Coræbus as frightened as he was, and
returned to the place of disaster and death, with
three men, of whom Dr. Hutton was one. Sir
Cradock was not yet come back to his home, and
the servants received proper orders.</p>
<p>As the four men, walking in awe and sorrow,
cast the light of a lamp through the bushes, they
heard a quick rustle of underwood, and crackle of
the dead twigs, but saw no one moving.</p>
<p>“Some one has been here since I left”, exclaimed
John Rosedew, trembling; “some one has lain
beside the body, and put marks of blood on the
forehead”.</p>
<p>Each of the men knew, of course, what it was—Cradock
embracing his brother!</p>
<p>“A good job you took the gun away; wonder
you had the sense, though”, said Rufus Hutton,
sharply, to pretend he wasnʼt crying; “I only
know what I should have done, if I had shot my
brother so—blown out the remains of my brains,
sir”!</p>
<p>“Hush”! said John Rosedew, solemnly, and
his deep voice made their hearts thrill; “it is not
our own life to will or to do with. In the hands
of the Lord are our life and our death”.</p>
<p>They knelt around the pale corpse tenderly,
shading the lamp from the eyes of it; even Rufus<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
could not handle it in a medical manner. One
of the men, who always declared that he had
saved Claytonʼs life in his childhood, fell flat on
the ground, and sobbed fearfully. I cannot dwell
on it any more; it makes a fellow cry to think
of it. Only, thank God, that I am not bound to
tell how they met his father.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span></p>
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