Chapter Sixteen.Another Trip.The two lads had left the grammar-school in the county town about a year before in consequence of a terrible outbreak of fever; and, Mrs Winthorpe declaring against their going back, they had been kept at home. But though several plans had been proposed of sending them for another year’s education somewhere, the time had glided by, the business of the draining had cropped up, and as the lads proved useful at times, the school business kept on being deferred, to the delight of both, the elongated holiday growing greatly to their taste. Even though they were backward from a more modern point of view, they were not losing much, for they were acquiring knowledge which would be useful to them in their future careers, and in addition growing bone and muscle such as would make them strong men.Hence it was that the time glided pleasantly on, with the two lads finding plenty of opportunities for the various amusements which gratified them when not occupied in some way about the farms.It was a few days after the conversation with the squire that Tom proposed a turn after the fish in Hickathrift’s boat.“We could pole ourselves without Dave; and let’s ask Mr Marston to come. It’s a long time since he has had a holiday.”Dick’s brow was overcast, and he wore generally the aspect of a boy who had partaken of baking pears for a week, but his face cleared at this, and he eagerly joined in the plan.“We’ll get Hicky to lend us his boat, and pole down as far as we can, and then run across to Mr Marston.”Their preparations did not take long, and though they were made before they knew whether they could have the punt, they did not anticipate any objections, and they were right.Hickathrift was busy sawing, but he looked up with a broad grin, and leaving his work went down with them to the water side.“Course I’ll lend it to you, lads,” he said. “Wish I could come wi’ you.”“Do, then, Hicky. It’s a long time since we’ve had a fish.”“Nay; don’t ask me,” was the reply. “I wean’t leave the work. Ay, bud it’s nice to be a boy,” he added, with a smile.“Couldn’t you do your work afterward?” cried Tom.“Nay, nay, don’t tempt a poor weak fellow,” he cried. “I’m going to do that bit o’ sawing ’fore I leave it. Now, theer, in wi’ you!”The boys made another appeal to the great fellow to come; but he was staunch. Still he uttered a sigh of relief as he gave the punt a tremendous thrust from the bank into deep water, where it went rustling by the willow boughs and over the wild growth where the pink-blossomed persicaria sent up its pretty heads.“If we had pressed Hicky a little more, I believe he would have come,” said Dick.“No, he wouldn’t. He never will when he says he won’t.”Just at that moment Hickathrift was muttering to himself on the bank, as he watched the boat.“Straänge thing,” he said, “that a girt big man like I am should allus feel like a boy. I wanted to go wi’ they two straänge and badly. I will go next time.”Taking it in turns, the boys sent the punt quickly over the amber water, the exercise in the bright sunshine chasing the clouds from Dick’s countenance, so that before they reached their intended landing-place on the edge of the mere, as near as they could go to the spot where Mr Marston’s men were at work, he was once more his old self, laughing, reckoning on the fish they would catch with the trimmers that lay ready, and forgetting for the time all about the plots to injure the drain and its projectors.There was a low patch of alders at the spot where they intended to land, and Dick was just about to run the punt close in, when he suddenly ceased poling and stood motionless staring before him.“What’s the matter?” cried Tom.There was no answer, in fact none was needed, for at that moment Tom’s eyes fell upon the object which had arrested his companion’s action, to wit, the flabby, unpleasant-looking face of Thorpeley, the constable, that individual being seated by the low bushes smoking his pipe in a position where he must have been watching the lads ever since they started.Dick’s teeth gave forth a peculiar gritting sound, and then, thrusting down the pole, he ran in the punt, leaped on to the quivering shore with the rope, fastened it to a bush, and signed to Tom to follow.The man said nothing, but there was a curiously aggravating leering grin upon his countenance as he sat taking in every movement on the part of the boys, who walked away rapidly with the full knowledge that they were followed.“Don’t look back, Tom,” said Dick between his teeth. “Oh, how I should have liked to give him a topper with the pole!”“I wish old Dave was here to pitch him in the water,” growled Tom.“Did you ever see anything so aggravating? He’s following us. I can hear his boots. Don’t take any notice. Let’s go on fast as if he wasn’t there.”“I don’t know that I can,” grumbled Tom. “I feel alloverish like.”“Feel how?”“As if I couldn’t do as I liked. My head wants to turn round and look at him, my tongue wants to call him names, and my toes itch, and my fists want to feel as if it would be like punching a sack of corn to hit him in the nose.”“Come along!” cried Dick, who was too angry to laugh at his companion’s remarks. “Let’s make haste to Mr Marston.”As they reached the works the first man they encountered was big Bargle, who stuck his spade into the soft peat and came slowly up the embankment, to stand wiping his fist on his side, before opening it and holding it out, smiling broadly the while.He shook hands with both lads, and then went back to his work smiling; and as they walked on they could hear him say confidentially to all around him:“We’re mates, we are, lads; we’re mates.”The engineer was coming towards them; and as they met, Dick unfolded his plan, but before he had half-finished his words trailed off, and he stopped short. For the severe countenance before him checked his utterance.“No,” said Mr Marston, shortly. “I am too busy. Good day!”He went on to speak to his men, and Dick looked at Tom with a dismal expression of countenance which spoke volumes.“Come along back!” he said.Tom obeyed without a word, and glancing neither to the right nor left, the two boys walked heavily back over the dry surface of the quaking bog, so as to reach their boat.Before they had travelled half-way they met Thorpeley, who leered at them in a sinister way, and, as they passed on, turned and followed at a distance.“Look here, Dick,” whispered Tom, “let’s give him something to think about. Come along!”Tom started running as if in a great state of excitement, and Dick followed involuntarily, while after a momentary hesitation the constable also began to run.“I say, don’t go that way,” said Dick, as his companion struck off to the left. “Bog’s soft there.”“I know: come along! Keep on the tufts.”Dick understood Tom’s low chuckling laugh, which was just like that of a cuckoo in a bush, and divining that the object was to reach the boat by a détour, he did not slacken his speed.Long familiarity with the worst parts of the fen enabled the lads to pick their way exactly, and they went on bounding from tuft to tuft, finding fairly firm ground for their feet as if by instinct, though very often they were going gingerly over patches of bog which undulated and sprang beneath their tread, while now and then they only saved themselves from going through the dry coat of moss by making a tremendous leap.They had pretty well half a mile to run to reach the boat by the alder bush, and the constable soon began to go heavily; but he was so satisfied that the boys had some sinister design in view, and were trying to throw him off their scent, that he put forth all his energies, and as Dick glanced back once, it was to see him, hat in hand, toiling along in the hot sun right in their wake.“You’d better not go round there, Tom,” said Dick as they approached a patch of rushes. “It’s very soft.”“I don’t care if I go in; do you?” was the reply.“No, I don’t mind,” said Dick sadly. “I don’t seem to mind anything now.”“Come along then,” cried Tom; “and as we get round let’s both look back and then try to keep out of sight—pretend, you know.”They reached the patch of tall rushes and reeds, which was high enough to hide them, and giving a frightened look back at their pursuer, plunged out of sight.“Oh, I say, isn’t it soft?” cried Dick.“Never mind: some people like it soft,” said Tom. “Follow me.”He had arranged his plan so deftly that while keeping the patch of reeds between them and their pursuer, Tom managed, with no little risk of going through, to reach a second patch of the marsh growth, behind which he dodged, and threw himself down, Dick following closely; and they were well hidden and lay panting as the constable came round the first patch, glanced round, and then made for a third patch still more to the left, and beyond which was quite a copse of scrubby firs.“Ho—ho—ho!” laughed Tom in a low voice, as he nearly choked with mirth, for all at once there was a splash, a shout, a strange wallowing noise, and as the lads parted and peered through the rushes they could see that the constable was down and floundering in the bog.“Oh, Tom,” cried Dick, struggling up, “he’ll be smothered!”“Sit down; he won’t. It’ll be a lesson to him.”“But suppose—”“No, don’t suppose anything. He’ll get out right enough.”The constable had a hard struggle for a few minutes, and doubtless would have got out sooner if he had worked a little more with his brains; but finally he crawled to firmer ground, just as a scuffle began between Dick and Tom, the former being determined to go to his enemy’s help, the latter clinging to him with all his might to keep him back.“Now, come along down to the boat. We can get nearly there before he sees us,” whispered Tom.“But do you think he will get back safe?”“Of course he will. He won’t try to run any more.”Dick took a long look at the constable to see that he was really out of danger, and feeling satisfied at last that there was nothing to mind, he followed Tom once more, the two managing so well that after losing sight of them altogether for some time, their inquisitive pursuer had the mortification of seeing them enter the punt and push off, leaving him to make a long and tedious circuit, crawling part of the way, and when he stood erect, wanting as he was in the boys’ experience, making very slow progress to the regular track.As soon as the excitement was over, and the boat reached once more, Dick’s gloomy feelings came back, and but for his companion’s efforts he would have relapsed into a mournfully depressed condition, which would have done little towards making their trip agreeable.Tom, however, worked hard, and using the pole with vigour he drove the punt along, till Dick roused up from a fit of musing on his father’s severe looks and Mr Marston’s distant manner, to find that they were close to Dave’s home.“Why have you come here?” he cried.“To see how he is,” replied Tom; and, thrusting down his pole, he soon had the punt ashore.“Why, he isn’t at home!” said Dick.His words proved correct, for the punt was missing, and unless it lay on the other side of an alder patch or was drawn out to be repaired, the master must have it far away somewhere on the mere.It need not be supposed that the two lads were troubled with more curiosity than is the property of most boys of their age, because they landed and looked round, ending by going up to the fen-man’s hut and entering.It was not a particularly cleanly place, but everything there, dealing as it did with Dave’s pursuits, had its attraction, from the gun hanging upon a couple of wooden pegs to the nets and lines above the rough bed-place, with its sheep-skins and dingy-looking blanket.“I should like to take the gun and have a turn by ourselves,” said Dick, gazing at the long rusty piece longingly.But it remained untouched, and, returning to the boat, the boys pushed off and made for the more remote portion of the fen, passing from one open lake to another as they followed the long meandering lanes of water, in and out among reed-beds and alder patches, islands of bog-plants, islets of sedge, and others where the gravel and sand enabled the purple heather and lavender ling to blow profusely, in company with here and there a little gorgeous orange-yellow furze.The hours went by, and the sun was declining fast as they neared at length a spot which had attracted them for some time past. It was either a little promontory or an isthmus, where the ground was strong enough for fir-trees to flourish, and this promised dry ground, wood, and a good site for a little hut if they set one up.Dick brightened at the sight, for there was a cheering notion in his mind that he was going to find rest, peace, and happiness here in a little home of his own making, to which he could retire from the world to fish, shoot, and eat the fruits he would be able to gather in the season.In short, Dick Winthorpe, being in a marsh, was suffering from a sharp fit of goose, such as attacks many boys who, because matters do not go exactly as they like at home, consider that they are ill-used, and long for what they call their freedom—a freedom which is really slavery, inasmuch as they make themselves the bond-servants of their silly fancies, and it takes some time to win them back.The clump of firs here, which they had before seen at a distance, surpassed their expectations, for it was a good-sized island, far from the shore, and promised fishing, fowling, and security from interruption, for it was not likely that any one would venture there.But the evening was rapidly coming on, and the punt’s head was turned homewards, the distance they had come proving startling, as they began now to feel that they were very hungry, and that they had hours of work before them before they could reach the Toft.“Not many fish to land,” said Dick rather dismally.“Why, you wouldn’t fish!” replied Tom. “Never mind, we’ve found the island. Shall we build a place?”Dick’s reply was in the affirmative, and for the next two hours they debated on the subject of what they should take over, and how soon, and so passed the time away till after dark, when, being still quite a mile from home, there came the sharp report of a gun, and then they fancied that they heard a cry.“Why, who can be shooting now?” said Dick in an awe-stricken whisper. “Is anything wrong?”“I don’t know. Look! look!”Tom whispered these words, and pointed in the opposite direction, to a lambent light which seemed to be moving slowly over the marshy edge of the mere.The light was in a portion of the shore where the mere narrowed; and the two lads let the boat drift as they sat and watched, each thinking of the place in the light of experience.“Why, Tom, that can’t be a boat,” whispered Dick.“Boat! No, it’s land there.”“Land! It’s soft bog that nobody could walk on!”“Then it couldn’t be a boat. Why, it’s a will-o’-the-wisp.”“Yes,” said Dick, after a sceptical pause, during which he watched the lambent light as it played about in a slow fantastic way, just as if it were a softly-glowing lantern carried by a short-winged moth, which used it to inspect the flowering plants as it sought for a meal. “Let’s go over and look at it.”“No, no! no, no!” whispered Tom excitedly.“Why not? Are you afraid?”“No, not a bit; but I don’t want to go. I’m tired and hungry. I don’t believe you want to go either.”“Yes, I do,” said Dick eagerly. “I feel as if I wanted to go, but my body didn’t.”“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Tom, but very softly, as he kept his eyes fixed on the distant light. “That’s a nice way of backing out of it. Why, you’re as much afraid as I am, only I’m honest and you’re not.”“Yes, I am,” whispered Dick. “I’m as honest as you are, and I’ll show you that I am. There, I should feel afraid to go by myself.”“Will you go if I go with you?”Before Dick could answer there was a long, low, piteous cry from the other direction, that from whence they had heard the shot.“I say, what’s that?” whispered Tom in an awe-stricken tone.“I don’t know. It sounds very queer. There it is again.”“Is it a bird?” whispered Tom.“No. I never heard a bird cry like that.”“What is it then—a fox trapped?”“Nobody would trap the foxes, and it can’t be a rabbit, because that would be a squeal.”The cry came again over the dark water of the mere, and sounded so strange and weird that Dick shivered.“It’s something queer,” said Tom huskily. “Take the pole and let’s get away. Don’t make a noise.”“But—”“No, no; don’t stop. We don’t know what it is. Perhaps it’s one of those things Hicky talks about that he has heard sometimes.”“Father says it’s all nonsense, and there are no such things in the fens.”“He’d better say there are no will-o’-the-wisps to lead people astray,” whispered Tom.“He doesn’t say that. He says there are jack-o’-lanterns, but they don’t lead people astray—people go astray to try and catch them.”“Hist! there it is again!” said Tom, gripping his companion’s arm, as the long piteous cry came faintly over the water. “It is something horrible!”“It isn’t,” said Dick. “It’s someone in distress.”“People in distress never cry out like that.”“Why, Tom, it’s that Thorpeley stuck in the mud somewhere; and it’s our doing.”“It’s his own if he is stuck there. But I don’t believe it is. Why, it’s two miles nearer home than where we left him.”“Then it’s somebody else in trouble,” said Dick excitedly.“It isn’t. Let’s go home.”Tom was, as a rule, no coward; but he was faint and tired, and the very fact of being seated out on the dark waters with the gloom so thick that they could see but a short distance, and with an unnatural-looking light on one side and a strange marrow-thrilling cry coming on the other, was enough to startle stouter-hearted lads than he, and he held more tightly to his companion as Dick seized the pole.“Let’s get back home,” he said again.“You said I was afraid to go to the will o’ the wisp,” said Dick stoutly. “You’re afraid to go now and see what it is makes that noise.”“Well, I can’t help it,” said Tom appealingly; “but if you go I shall go with you. There, listen! Isn’t it horrible!”He spoke as the cry came again faintly but piteous in the extreme.Dick drove the pole down into the soft bottom of the mere and sent the punt surging through the water, determined now to go straight to the spot whence the cry seemed to come; and, guided by the sound, he toiled away for about ten minutes before giving way to Tom, who worked hard to reach the place.For, once the two lads had taken action, they seemed to forget their nervous dread, while what was more encouraging to them to proceed was the fact that as they reduced the distance the cries gradually seemed to be more human, and were evidently those of some person in peril or great distress.It was a weird strange journey over the water now, the excitement lent by their mission seeming to change the aspect of all around. The reeds whispered, the patches of growth looked black, and every now and then they disturbed some water-fowl, whose hurried flight seemed suddenly to have become mysterious and awe-inspiring, as if it were a creature of the darkness which had been watching their coming and had risen to hover round.But there was the cry again and again, sometimes faint and distant, sometimes sounding as if close at hand, and, as is often the case, apparently varying in position to right or left as it was borne by the soft night wind.“We cannot go any farther,” cried Dick at last as he drove the boat in amongst the broad belt of reeds which fringed the edge of the mere.“Yes, we can. There’s a way here,” cried Tom excitedly, pointing through the gloom to his left where there was an opening. “Coming!” he yelled as the cry rose once more.Dick backed the boat out, with the reeds whistling and rustling strangely, and the next minute he had it right in the gloomy opening, which proved to be quite a little bay, where, at the end of a few good thrusts of the pole, the prow of the punt bumped up against the quivering moss.The two boys got out cautiously; the pole was driven down into the peat, and the boat made fast; and then they paused and listened for the next cry.Everything now was perfectly silent, not so much as the whisper of a reed or the whir of the wing of a nightbird fell upon their ears; and at last, in an awe-stricken whisper, Tom said:“Hicky is right. It was something strange from out of the marsh. Let’s get away.”Dick was stouter-hearted than his companion, and lifting his voice he shouted, and then stood silent.“Help! help!” came faintly in reply.“There!” cried Dick turning sharply. “It’s a man.”“Think so?”“Why, of course! Come along! Here, I can see where we are now.”“Yes, I think I know where we are,” whispered Tom. “But is it safe to go after it?”“You mean afterhim,” said Dick. “Yes, it’s pretty firm here—yes, it’s all right. We’re amongst heath and bilberry as soon as we get by this bit of bog. Hoy! shout again,” he cried as he plodded on cautiously, with his feet sometimes sinking in the bog, sometimes finding it pretty firm.But there was no answer; and though as far as was possible Dick walked in the direction of the sound, the guidance was of the most unsatisfactory nature, and at the end of a minute or two they listened again.“It must be that Thorpeley regularly bogged,” said Dick at last, and a curious shiver ran through him. “I hope he hasn’t sunk in.”“He couldn’t,” said Tom. “I know this part. It’s all firm ground between the water and the track to the sea.”“I can’t quite make out where we are,” said Dick, staring about him.“I can. There’s the big alder clump, and beyond it there’s the river wall.” (Mud embankment.)“So it is. Yes, I know now. Why, it is all firm about here, and nobody could be bogged unless he got into a hole. Ahoy!”He shouted once more, but there was no answer; and when he raised his voice again it was only for the sound to seem to come back, just as if they were shut up in some large room.“He must be hereabout,” said Dick.“Shall we find our way back to the boat?” said Tom in a doubting tone.“I don’t know, but if we don’t we could walk home in half an hour. Come along. Ahoy!”Still no answer; and in spite of his companion’s suggestions and strange doubts Dick kept on hunting about in the darkness among the patches of alders and the heath that here grew freely. For, save in places, the ground was sandy and firm, and, dark as it was, they had no difficulty in making out the watery spots by their faint gleam or the different character of the growth.They shouted in turns and together, listening, going in different directions, and all to no purpose. Not a sound could they get in reply; and at last, with a curious feeling of horror stealing over him, compounded of equal parts of superstition and dread lest the person whose cry they had heard had sunk in the mire of some hole, Dick reluctantly gave way to Tom’s suggestion that they should go back to the boat.“I knew it was something queer,” whispered Tom. “If we had gone on, we should have been led into some dangerous hole and lost.”“Don’t believe it,” said Dick, as they trudged slowly back, utterly worn-out and hoarse with shouting.“You’re such a doubting fellow!” grumbled Tom. “If it had been anybody in distress we should have found him.”“Perhaps,” said Dick sadly. “It’s so dark, though, that we might have passed him over.”“Nonsense!” cried Tom; “we were sure to find him. There wasn’t anybody. It was a marsh cry, and—oh!”Tom uttered a yell and went headlong down, with the effect of so startling his companion that he ran a few steps before he could recover his nerve, when he returned to extend his hand to Tom, who rose trembling, while Dick stood staring aghast at the dark figure lying extended among the heath, and over which his friend had stumbled.“Why, Tom, it’s Thorpeley!” cried Dick, as he went down on one knee and peered into the upturned face. “Mr Thorpeley, Mr Thorpeley!” he cried; “what’s the matter?”There was no reply.“It must have been him,” whispered Dick. “He had lost his way.”“Then let him find it again,” grumbled Tom, “instead of watching us.”“But perhaps there is something the matter. Mr Thorpeley, Mr Thorpeley!”Dick laid his hand upon the man’s shoulder and shook him, but there was no response.“Is he dead?” said Tom in an awe-stricken whisper.“Dead!” cried Dick, leaping up and shrinking away at the suggestion. “No, he can’t be. He’s quite warm,” he added, going down on his knee again to shake the recumbent man, who now uttered a low groan.“What shall we do, Dick?” said Tom huskily. “I hate him, but we can’t leave him here.”“Well,” said Dick, “I’m not very fond of him, but it would be like leaving anybody to die to go away now. We must carry him down to the boat.”“Come on then, quick!”Dick placed his hands beneath the constable’s arms and locked his fingers across his breast, while Tom turned his back as he got between the man’s legs, stooped in turn, and proceeded to lift them as if they were the handles of a wheel-barrow.“Ready?”“Yes.”“Then both together.”The two lads lifted the constable, staggered along a few yards, and set him down again.“Oh, I say!” groaned Tom. “Isn’t he heavy?”“Come and try this end,” retorted Dick. “He’s an awful weight. We must go a few yards at a time, and we shall do it yet. Now then.”“Stop a minute,” said Tom, who had picked up a handful of moss, and was rubbing one hand. “I—it’s warm and sticky, and—oh, Dick, he’s bleeding.”Dick lowered the insensible man down again, and, shuddering with horror, stepped to his companion’s side.Then kneeling down he tried to examine the spot pointed out by Tom, to find out as well as was possible in the dim light that the constable was bleeding freely from one leg.“Dick, what shall we do?” cried Tom piteously.“Why, what would anybody do if he had cut his finger?” cried Dick manfully, as he undid his neckcloth and doubled it afresh.“I don’t know,” cried Tom, who was sadly scared.“You don’t know! Suppose you had cut your finger, wouldn’t you tie it up?”“Yes, I suppose so,” faltered Tom, whom the situation had completely unnerved.“Take off his neckerchief while I tie this on,” said Dick, whom the emergency had rendered more helpful. “How can he have hurt himself like this?”As he spoke he busied himself in tightly bandaging the man’s leg, and added to the bandage the cotton cloth that Tom handed to him.“I think that has stopped it,” said Dick. “Now then, we must carry him down.”“But we shall sink into the bog with him,” faltered Tom.“No, we sha’n’t if we are careful. Now, then, are you ready?”“I don’t like to try and lift him now,” said Tom. “It’s so horrible. The man’s bleeding to death.”“More shame for you to stand still and not try to help him,” said Dick hotly. “Here, you come and carry this end.”Tom hastened to obey, heedless of the fact that the task would be the harder; and setting to with a will, the lads carried their load a few yards before setting it down again to rest.This time, in spite of Tom’s appeal not to be left alone, Dick went on for a bit so as to explore and make sure of the best way to get back to the boat, and not without avail, for he was able, in spite of the darkness, to pick out the firmest ground, his knowledge of the growth of the fen and its choice of soil helping him.But it was a long and painful task. The lads were faint and terribly hungry. They had been working hard for several hours propelling the punt, and the load they were carrying would not have been an easy one for a couple of stout men. Still, by means of that wonderful aid to success, perseverance, they at last got past bog and water-pool, patch of sphagnum, bed of reed, and slimy hollow, where the cotton rushes nourished, and reached the belt of waving reeds which separated them from the water.It was not done without tremendous effort and a constant succession of rests; but they stood there at last bathed in perspiration, and waiting for a few minutes before lifting the sufferer into the boat.Up to this time they had been so busy and excited that they had not paused to ask the question: How was it that the man had been wounded? but as they lifted him carefully into the boat, Tom being in and Dick ashore, they both burst out with the query, as if moved by the same spring.“I know,” said Dick, as the truth seemed to flash upon him. “Some one must have shot him.”Tom had taken up the pole and was just about to force the boat along when this announcement seemed to paralyse him, and he stood there thinking of what had taken place before.“Why, Dick,” he whispered, “isn’t it very horrible?”“Don’t talk,” cried his companion, entering the boat; “let’s get home.”The pole plashed in the water, which rippled against the bows, and once more they glided over the surface, just as the injured man uttered a low groan.“We sha’n’t be very long,” said Dick, kneeling down and carefully feeling whether the kerchiefs he had bound round the leg were fulfilling their purpose. “Are you in much pain?”“Pain!” groaned the man. “Hah! Give me some water.”There was no vessel of any kind in the punt, and Dick had to scoop up some water in the hollow of his hand, and pour it between the injured man’s lips, with the result that he became sufficiently refreshed to sit up a little and begin muttering.Dick now took the pole, and it was Tom’s turn to try and administer a little comfort in the shape of words as to the time that would elapse before they could reach the Toft; but the only result was to produce an angry snarl from their patient.“How does he seem?” Dick asked, as Tom went to his relief.“Better not ask him.”“Why not?”“Perhaps he’ll bite you. He nearly did me. I say, how much farther is it?”“Take another quarter of an hour. Oh, I shall be glad, Tom! Work hard.”Tom looked in his companion’s face, and uttered a low laugh, as he toiled away at the poling, and that laugh seemed to say more than a dozen long speeches. Then there was nothing heard for some time but the regular plash and ripple of the water, as it was disturbed by pole and punt, while the darkness seemed to increase. At the same time, though, the hopes of the two lads rose high, for, standing as it were alone in the midst of the black darkness, there was a soft yellow light. At first it was so dull and lambent that it suggested thoughts of the will-o’-the-wisp. But this was no dancing flame, being a steady glow in one fixed spot, and Tom expressed his companion’s thoughts exactly as he exclaimed:“There’s Hicky’s old horn lanthorn!”A few minutes more and the big bluff voice of the wheelwright was heard in a loud hail.This was answered, and the sounds roused the wounded man.“Nearly there?” he said hoarsely.“Very close now,” replied Dick; and snatching the pole from Tom he drove it down vigorously, making a tremendous spurt to reach the patch of old pollard willows by the landing-place, on one of whose old posts the lanthorn had been hung, and beyond which could now be seen the light in the Hickathrifts’ cot.“Why, I was a-coming swimming after you, lads,” shouted Hickathrift. “You scarred me. Squire’s been down twiced to see if you’d got back, and the missus is in a fine way.”“Don’t talk, Hicky,” shouted back Dick. “Is Jacob there?”“Ay, lad. Why?”“You’ll want help. Look here, send for the doctor.”“Doctor, lad?”“Yes; I know. Let Jacob go and tell my father, and he’ll send down the old cob. Thorpeley’s hurt badly.”They heard a low whistle, then the wheelwright’s orders given sharply to his apprentice, followed by the dullthud, thudof his boots as he ran off; and directly after the punt glided in and its bow was seized by the big strong hand upon which the soft glowing light of the horn lanthorn shone.“Hey, but what’s the matter with the man?” cried Hickathrift. “We’ve been wondering why he didn’t come back.”“I don’t know, only we heard a shot,” said Dick excitedly; “and then we heard someone calling for help, and found him lying ashore.”“Let me get a good howd on him,” said the wheelwright; and with one foot in the boat he passed his great arm under the constable and lifted him out as tenderly as if he had been a child.But, gentle as was the wheelwright’s act, it roused the injured man, who seemed to be driven into a fit of fury by the pain he suffered, and he burst into a torrent of bad language against Hickathrift and the two boys, which he kept up till he had been carried into his lodging and laid upon his bed.“Hey, lads,” said the wheelwright with a low chuckle, as he walked down with the boys to where the lanthorn still hung upon the willow-stump, the care of the constable having been left to the women; “he don’t seem to hev lost his tongue.”“But he’s very bad, isn’t he?” said Dick anxiously.“I should say no,” replied Hickathrift. “Man who’s very badly don’t call people.”“But his leg?”“Ay, that’s badly. I give the hankycher a good tighten up, and that hot him, so that he had to howd his tongue.”“That made him hold his tongue, Hicky?”“Ay, lad. I med him feel that if he didn’t shoot his neb, I’d pull tighter, and so he quieted down. Now, tell us all about it.”“Give us some bread and butter first, Hicky; we’re nearly starved.”“Hey, lads,” cried the wheelwright. “Here, coom in to missus and—”Hickathrift’s speech was cut short by the coming of the squire, who hurried up.“Here, boys,” he cried; “what’s all this?”Dick told all he knew, and the squire drew a long breath and turned by the light of the lanthorn to gaze first in the lads’ faces, and then to speak to the wheelwright.“This is bad, Hickathrift,” he said hoarsely.As he spoke he gazed searchingly at the great workman.“Ay, squire; it is a straänge awkard thing.”Mr Winthorpe gazed in his great frank face again; and then, with his lips compressed, he went to the bed-side of the injured man.“Bad business,” said Hickathrift; “but lads mustn’t starve because a constable’s shot. Coom along. Here, missus, let’s hev bit o’— Nay, she’s gone to see the neighbours, and hev a bit o’ ruckatongue.” (A gossip.)That did not much matter, for Hickathrift knew the ways of his own house; and in a very short time had placed a loaf and a piece of cold bacon before the hungry boys.This they attacked furiously, for now that they were relieved of the responsibility of the injured man, their hunger had asserted itself. But they had not partaken of many mouthfuls before they heard the squire’s voice outside, in hurried conversation with Hickathrift.“Yes, I sent him off directly on the cob,” the squire said; “but it must be some hours before the doctor can get here.”“Think he’s very badly, squire?” came next, in Hickathrift’s deep bass.“No, not very bad as to his wound, my lad; but this is a terrible business.”“Ay, mester, it is trubble. Straänge thing to hev first one man shot and then another. Say, squire, hope it wean’t be our turn next.”“Go on eating, Tom,” whispered Dick, setting the example, and cutting a slice for his companion, while Tom hacked the bread.“I’m hard at work,” said Tom thickly. “I shall eat as much as ever I can, and make mother give Hicky a piece o’ chine.”“So will I,” said Dick; “and a couple o’ chickens.”The hungry lad had taken a piece of pink-fleshed bacon upon his fork, and was about to transfer it to his mouth, when he stopped short with his lips apart and eyes staring, while Tom let fall his knife and thrust his chair back over the stone floor.They had been eating and listening to the conversation outside, till it reached its climax in the following words:“What, man? You don’t know what he says.”“What he says!” chuckled the wheelwright. “Ay, I heerd what he said; a whole heap o’ bad words till I checked him, and let him feel he’d best howd his tongue.”“But you know what he says about who shot at him?”“Nay, but if he says as it were me, I’ll go and pitch him into the watter.”“You did not hear, then?” cried the squire, huskily. “Hickathrift, he says it was done by those boys!”“What!” roared the wheelwright.“It’s a lie, father!” shouted Dick, recovering himself and running out. “Here, ask Tom.”“Why, of course it’s a lie,” cried Tom.“But that man says—” cried the squire.“Yah!” shouted Hickathrift angrily, “they never shot him; they heven’t got no goon.”
The two lads had left the grammar-school in the county town about a year before in consequence of a terrible outbreak of fever; and, Mrs Winthorpe declaring against their going back, they had been kept at home. But though several plans had been proposed of sending them for another year’s education somewhere, the time had glided by, the business of the draining had cropped up, and as the lads proved useful at times, the school business kept on being deferred, to the delight of both, the elongated holiday growing greatly to their taste. Even though they were backward from a more modern point of view, they were not losing much, for they were acquiring knowledge which would be useful to them in their future careers, and in addition growing bone and muscle such as would make them strong men.
Hence it was that the time glided pleasantly on, with the two lads finding plenty of opportunities for the various amusements which gratified them when not occupied in some way about the farms.
It was a few days after the conversation with the squire that Tom proposed a turn after the fish in Hickathrift’s boat.
“We could pole ourselves without Dave; and let’s ask Mr Marston to come. It’s a long time since he has had a holiday.”
Dick’s brow was overcast, and he wore generally the aspect of a boy who had partaken of baking pears for a week, but his face cleared at this, and he eagerly joined in the plan.
“We’ll get Hicky to lend us his boat, and pole down as far as we can, and then run across to Mr Marston.”
Their preparations did not take long, and though they were made before they knew whether they could have the punt, they did not anticipate any objections, and they were right.
Hickathrift was busy sawing, but he looked up with a broad grin, and leaving his work went down with them to the water side.
“Course I’ll lend it to you, lads,” he said. “Wish I could come wi’ you.”
“Do, then, Hicky. It’s a long time since we’ve had a fish.”
“Nay; don’t ask me,” was the reply. “I wean’t leave the work. Ay, bud it’s nice to be a boy,” he added, with a smile.
“Couldn’t you do your work afterward?” cried Tom.
“Nay, nay, don’t tempt a poor weak fellow,” he cried. “I’m going to do that bit o’ sawing ’fore I leave it. Now, theer, in wi’ you!”
The boys made another appeal to the great fellow to come; but he was staunch. Still he uttered a sigh of relief as he gave the punt a tremendous thrust from the bank into deep water, where it went rustling by the willow boughs and over the wild growth where the pink-blossomed persicaria sent up its pretty heads.
“If we had pressed Hicky a little more, I believe he would have come,” said Dick.
“No, he wouldn’t. He never will when he says he won’t.”
Just at that moment Hickathrift was muttering to himself on the bank, as he watched the boat.
“Straänge thing,” he said, “that a girt big man like I am should allus feel like a boy. I wanted to go wi’ they two straänge and badly. I will go next time.”
Taking it in turns, the boys sent the punt quickly over the amber water, the exercise in the bright sunshine chasing the clouds from Dick’s countenance, so that before they reached their intended landing-place on the edge of the mere, as near as they could go to the spot where Mr Marston’s men were at work, he was once more his old self, laughing, reckoning on the fish they would catch with the trimmers that lay ready, and forgetting for the time all about the plots to injure the drain and its projectors.
There was a low patch of alders at the spot where they intended to land, and Dick was just about to run the punt close in, when he suddenly ceased poling and stood motionless staring before him.
“What’s the matter?” cried Tom.
There was no answer, in fact none was needed, for at that moment Tom’s eyes fell upon the object which had arrested his companion’s action, to wit, the flabby, unpleasant-looking face of Thorpeley, the constable, that individual being seated by the low bushes smoking his pipe in a position where he must have been watching the lads ever since they started.
Dick’s teeth gave forth a peculiar gritting sound, and then, thrusting down the pole, he ran in the punt, leaped on to the quivering shore with the rope, fastened it to a bush, and signed to Tom to follow.
The man said nothing, but there was a curiously aggravating leering grin upon his countenance as he sat taking in every movement on the part of the boys, who walked away rapidly with the full knowledge that they were followed.
“Don’t look back, Tom,” said Dick between his teeth. “Oh, how I should have liked to give him a topper with the pole!”
“I wish old Dave was here to pitch him in the water,” growled Tom.
“Did you ever see anything so aggravating? He’s following us. I can hear his boots. Don’t take any notice. Let’s go on fast as if he wasn’t there.”
“I don’t know that I can,” grumbled Tom. “I feel alloverish like.”
“Feel how?”
“As if I couldn’t do as I liked. My head wants to turn round and look at him, my tongue wants to call him names, and my toes itch, and my fists want to feel as if it would be like punching a sack of corn to hit him in the nose.”
“Come along!” cried Dick, who was too angry to laugh at his companion’s remarks. “Let’s make haste to Mr Marston.”
As they reached the works the first man they encountered was big Bargle, who stuck his spade into the soft peat and came slowly up the embankment, to stand wiping his fist on his side, before opening it and holding it out, smiling broadly the while.
He shook hands with both lads, and then went back to his work smiling; and as they walked on they could hear him say confidentially to all around him:
“We’re mates, we are, lads; we’re mates.”
The engineer was coming towards them; and as they met, Dick unfolded his plan, but before he had half-finished his words trailed off, and he stopped short. For the severe countenance before him checked his utterance.
“No,” said Mr Marston, shortly. “I am too busy. Good day!”
He went on to speak to his men, and Dick looked at Tom with a dismal expression of countenance which spoke volumes.
“Come along back!” he said.
Tom obeyed without a word, and glancing neither to the right nor left, the two boys walked heavily back over the dry surface of the quaking bog, so as to reach their boat.
Before they had travelled half-way they met Thorpeley, who leered at them in a sinister way, and, as they passed on, turned and followed at a distance.
“Look here, Dick,” whispered Tom, “let’s give him something to think about. Come along!”
Tom started running as if in a great state of excitement, and Dick followed involuntarily, while after a momentary hesitation the constable also began to run.
“I say, don’t go that way,” said Dick, as his companion struck off to the left. “Bog’s soft there.”
“I know: come along! Keep on the tufts.”
Dick understood Tom’s low chuckling laugh, which was just like that of a cuckoo in a bush, and divining that the object was to reach the boat by a détour, he did not slacken his speed.
Long familiarity with the worst parts of the fen enabled the lads to pick their way exactly, and they went on bounding from tuft to tuft, finding fairly firm ground for their feet as if by instinct, though very often they were going gingerly over patches of bog which undulated and sprang beneath their tread, while now and then they only saved themselves from going through the dry coat of moss by making a tremendous leap.
They had pretty well half a mile to run to reach the boat by the alder bush, and the constable soon began to go heavily; but he was so satisfied that the boys had some sinister design in view, and were trying to throw him off their scent, that he put forth all his energies, and as Dick glanced back once, it was to see him, hat in hand, toiling along in the hot sun right in their wake.
“You’d better not go round there, Tom,” said Dick as they approached a patch of rushes. “It’s very soft.”
“I don’t care if I go in; do you?” was the reply.
“No, I don’t mind,” said Dick sadly. “I don’t seem to mind anything now.”
“Come along then,” cried Tom; “and as we get round let’s both look back and then try to keep out of sight—pretend, you know.”
They reached the patch of tall rushes and reeds, which was high enough to hide them, and giving a frightened look back at their pursuer, plunged out of sight.
“Oh, I say, isn’t it soft?” cried Dick.
“Never mind: some people like it soft,” said Tom. “Follow me.”
He had arranged his plan so deftly that while keeping the patch of reeds between them and their pursuer, Tom managed, with no little risk of going through, to reach a second patch of the marsh growth, behind which he dodged, and threw himself down, Dick following closely; and they were well hidden and lay panting as the constable came round the first patch, glanced round, and then made for a third patch still more to the left, and beyond which was quite a copse of scrubby firs.
“Ho—ho—ho!” laughed Tom in a low voice, as he nearly choked with mirth, for all at once there was a splash, a shout, a strange wallowing noise, and as the lads parted and peered through the rushes they could see that the constable was down and floundering in the bog.
“Oh, Tom,” cried Dick, struggling up, “he’ll be smothered!”
“Sit down; he won’t. It’ll be a lesson to him.”
“But suppose—”
“No, don’t suppose anything. He’ll get out right enough.”
The constable had a hard struggle for a few minutes, and doubtless would have got out sooner if he had worked a little more with his brains; but finally he crawled to firmer ground, just as a scuffle began between Dick and Tom, the former being determined to go to his enemy’s help, the latter clinging to him with all his might to keep him back.
“Now, come along down to the boat. We can get nearly there before he sees us,” whispered Tom.
“But do you think he will get back safe?”
“Of course he will. He won’t try to run any more.”
Dick took a long look at the constable to see that he was really out of danger, and feeling satisfied at last that there was nothing to mind, he followed Tom once more, the two managing so well that after losing sight of them altogether for some time, their inquisitive pursuer had the mortification of seeing them enter the punt and push off, leaving him to make a long and tedious circuit, crawling part of the way, and when he stood erect, wanting as he was in the boys’ experience, making very slow progress to the regular track.
As soon as the excitement was over, and the boat reached once more, Dick’s gloomy feelings came back, and but for his companion’s efforts he would have relapsed into a mournfully depressed condition, which would have done little towards making their trip agreeable.
Tom, however, worked hard, and using the pole with vigour he drove the punt along, till Dick roused up from a fit of musing on his father’s severe looks and Mr Marston’s distant manner, to find that they were close to Dave’s home.
“Why have you come here?” he cried.
“To see how he is,” replied Tom; and, thrusting down his pole, he soon had the punt ashore.
“Why, he isn’t at home!” said Dick.
His words proved correct, for the punt was missing, and unless it lay on the other side of an alder patch or was drawn out to be repaired, the master must have it far away somewhere on the mere.
It need not be supposed that the two lads were troubled with more curiosity than is the property of most boys of their age, because they landed and looked round, ending by going up to the fen-man’s hut and entering.
It was not a particularly cleanly place, but everything there, dealing as it did with Dave’s pursuits, had its attraction, from the gun hanging upon a couple of wooden pegs to the nets and lines above the rough bed-place, with its sheep-skins and dingy-looking blanket.
“I should like to take the gun and have a turn by ourselves,” said Dick, gazing at the long rusty piece longingly.
But it remained untouched, and, returning to the boat, the boys pushed off and made for the more remote portion of the fen, passing from one open lake to another as they followed the long meandering lanes of water, in and out among reed-beds and alder patches, islands of bog-plants, islets of sedge, and others where the gravel and sand enabled the purple heather and lavender ling to blow profusely, in company with here and there a little gorgeous orange-yellow furze.
The hours went by, and the sun was declining fast as they neared at length a spot which had attracted them for some time past. It was either a little promontory or an isthmus, where the ground was strong enough for fir-trees to flourish, and this promised dry ground, wood, and a good site for a little hut if they set one up.
Dick brightened at the sight, for there was a cheering notion in his mind that he was going to find rest, peace, and happiness here in a little home of his own making, to which he could retire from the world to fish, shoot, and eat the fruits he would be able to gather in the season.
In short, Dick Winthorpe, being in a marsh, was suffering from a sharp fit of goose, such as attacks many boys who, because matters do not go exactly as they like at home, consider that they are ill-used, and long for what they call their freedom—a freedom which is really slavery, inasmuch as they make themselves the bond-servants of their silly fancies, and it takes some time to win them back.
The clump of firs here, which they had before seen at a distance, surpassed their expectations, for it was a good-sized island, far from the shore, and promised fishing, fowling, and security from interruption, for it was not likely that any one would venture there.
But the evening was rapidly coming on, and the punt’s head was turned homewards, the distance they had come proving startling, as they began now to feel that they were very hungry, and that they had hours of work before them before they could reach the Toft.
“Not many fish to land,” said Dick rather dismally.
“Why, you wouldn’t fish!” replied Tom. “Never mind, we’ve found the island. Shall we build a place?”
Dick’s reply was in the affirmative, and for the next two hours they debated on the subject of what they should take over, and how soon, and so passed the time away till after dark, when, being still quite a mile from home, there came the sharp report of a gun, and then they fancied that they heard a cry.
“Why, who can be shooting now?” said Dick in an awe-stricken whisper. “Is anything wrong?”
“I don’t know. Look! look!”
Tom whispered these words, and pointed in the opposite direction, to a lambent light which seemed to be moving slowly over the marshy edge of the mere.
The light was in a portion of the shore where the mere narrowed; and the two lads let the boat drift as they sat and watched, each thinking of the place in the light of experience.
“Why, Tom, that can’t be a boat,” whispered Dick.
“Boat! No, it’s land there.”
“Land! It’s soft bog that nobody could walk on!”
“Then it couldn’t be a boat. Why, it’s a will-o’-the-wisp.”
“Yes,” said Dick, after a sceptical pause, during which he watched the lambent light as it played about in a slow fantastic way, just as if it were a softly-glowing lantern carried by a short-winged moth, which used it to inspect the flowering plants as it sought for a meal. “Let’s go over and look at it.”
“No, no! no, no!” whispered Tom excitedly.
“Why not? Are you afraid?”
“No, not a bit; but I don’t want to go. I’m tired and hungry. I don’t believe you want to go either.”
“Yes, I do,” said Dick eagerly. “I feel as if I wanted to go, but my body didn’t.”
“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Tom, but very softly, as he kept his eyes fixed on the distant light. “That’s a nice way of backing out of it. Why, you’re as much afraid as I am, only I’m honest and you’re not.”
“Yes, I am,” whispered Dick. “I’m as honest as you are, and I’ll show you that I am. There, I should feel afraid to go by myself.”
“Will you go if I go with you?”
Before Dick could answer there was a long, low, piteous cry from the other direction, that from whence they had heard the shot.
“I say, what’s that?” whispered Tom in an awe-stricken tone.
“I don’t know. It sounds very queer. There it is again.”
“Is it a bird?” whispered Tom.
“No. I never heard a bird cry like that.”
“What is it then—a fox trapped?”
“Nobody would trap the foxes, and it can’t be a rabbit, because that would be a squeal.”
The cry came again over the dark water of the mere, and sounded so strange and weird that Dick shivered.
“It’s something queer,” said Tom huskily. “Take the pole and let’s get away. Don’t make a noise.”
“But—”
“No, no; don’t stop. We don’t know what it is. Perhaps it’s one of those things Hicky talks about that he has heard sometimes.”
“Father says it’s all nonsense, and there are no such things in the fens.”
“He’d better say there are no will-o’-the-wisps to lead people astray,” whispered Tom.
“He doesn’t say that. He says there are jack-o’-lanterns, but they don’t lead people astray—people go astray to try and catch them.”
“Hist! there it is again!” said Tom, gripping his companion’s arm, as the long piteous cry came faintly over the water. “It is something horrible!”
“It isn’t,” said Dick. “It’s someone in distress.”
“People in distress never cry out like that.”
“Why, Tom, it’s that Thorpeley stuck in the mud somewhere; and it’s our doing.”
“It’s his own if he is stuck there. But I don’t believe it is. Why, it’s two miles nearer home than where we left him.”
“Then it’s somebody else in trouble,” said Dick excitedly.
“It isn’t. Let’s go home.”
Tom was, as a rule, no coward; but he was faint and tired, and the very fact of being seated out on the dark waters with the gloom so thick that they could see but a short distance, and with an unnatural-looking light on one side and a strange marrow-thrilling cry coming on the other, was enough to startle stouter-hearted lads than he, and he held more tightly to his companion as Dick seized the pole.
“Let’s get back home,” he said again.
“You said I was afraid to go to the will o’ the wisp,” said Dick stoutly. “You’re afraid to go now and see what it is makes that noise.”
“Well, I can’t help it,” said Tom appealingly; “but if you go I shall go with you. There, listen! Isn’t it horrible!”
He spoke as the cry came again faintly but piteous in the extreme.
Dick drove the pole down into the soft bottom of the mere and sent the punt surging through the water, determined now to go straight to the spot whence the cry seemed to come; and, guided by the sound, he toiled away for about ten minutes before giving way to Tom, who worked hard to reach the place.
For, once the two lads had taken action, they seemed to forget their nervous dread, while what was more encouraging to them to proceed was the fact that as they reduced the distance the cries gradually seemed to be more human, and were evidently those of some person in peril or great distress.
It was a weird strange journey over the water now, the excitement lent by their mission seeming to change the aspect of all around. The reeds whispered, the patches of growth looked black, and every now and then they disturbed some water-fowl, whose hurried flight seemed suddenly to have become mysterious and awe-inspiring, as if it were a creature of the darkness which had been watching their coming and had risen to hover round.
But there was the cry again and again, sometimes faint and distant, sometimes sounding as if close at hand, and, as is often the case, apparently varying in position to right or left as it was borne by the soft night wind.
“We cannot go any farther,” cried Dick at last as he drove the boat in amongst the broad belt of reeds which fringed the edge of the mere.
“Yes, we can. There’s a way here,” cried Tom excitedly, pointing through the gloom to his left where there was an opening. “Coming!” he yelled as the cry rose once more.
Dick backed the boat out, with the reeds whistling and rustling strangely, and the next minute he had it right in the gloomy opening, which proved to be quite a little bay, where, at the end of a few good thrusts of the pole, the prow of the punt bumped up against the quivering moss.
The two boys got out cautiously; the pole was driven down into the peat, and the boat made fast; and then they paused and listened for the next cry.
Everything now was perfectly silent, not so much as the whisper of a reed or the whir of the wing of a nightbird fell upon their ears; and at last, in an awe-stricken whisper, Tom said:
“Hicky is right. It was something strange from out of the marsh. Let’s get away.”
Dick was stouter-hearted than his companion, and lifting his voice he shouted, and then stood silent.
“Help! help!” came faintly in reply.
“There!” cried Dick turning sharply. “It’s a man.”
“Think so?”
“Why, of course! Come along! Here, I can see where we are now.”
“Yes, I think I know where we are,” whispered Tom. “But is it safe to go after it?”
“You mean afterhim,” said Dick. “Yes, it’s pretty firm here—yes, it’s all right. We’re amongst heath and bilberry as soon as we get by this bit of bog. Hoy! shout again,” he cried as he plodded on cautiously, with his feet sometimes sinking in the bog, sometimes finding it pretty firm.
But there was no answer; and though as far as was possible Dick walked in the direction of the sound, the guidance was of the most unsatisfactory nature, and at the end of a minute or two they listened again.
“It must be that Thorpeley regularly bogged,” said Dick at last, and a curious shiver ran through him. “I hope he hasn’t sunk in.”
“He couldn’t,” said Tom. “I know this part. It’s all firm ground between the water and the track to the sea.”
“I can’t quite make out where we are,” said Dick, staring about him.
“I can. There’s the big alder clump, and beyond it there’s the river wall.” (Mud embankment.)
“So it is. Yes, I know now. Why, it is all firm about here, and nobody could be bogged unless he got into a hole. Ahoy!”
He shouted once more, but there was no answer; and when he raised his voice again it was only for the sound to seem to come back, just as if they were shut up in some large room.
“He must be hereabout,” said Dick.
“Shall we find our way back to the boat?” said Tom in a doubting tone.
“I don’t know, but if we don’t we could walk home in half an hour. Come along. Ahoy!”
Still no answer; and in spite of his companion’s suggestions and strange doubts Dick kept on hunting about in the darkness among the patches of alders and the heath that here grew freely. For, save in places, the ground was sandy and firm, and, dark as it was, they had no difficulty in making out the watery spots by their faint gleam or the different character of the growth.
They shouted in turns and together, listening, going in different directions, and all to no purpose. Not a sound could they get in reply; and at last, with a curious feeling of horror stealing over him, compounded of equal parts of superstition and dread lest the person whose cry they had heard had sunk in the mire of some hole, Dick reluctantly gave way to Tom’s suggestion that they should go back to the boat.
“I knew it was something queer,” whispered Tom. “If we had gone on, we should have been led into some dangerous hole and lost.”
“Don’t believe it,” said Dick, as they trudged slowly back, utterly worn-out and hoarse with shouting.
“You’re such a doubting fellow!” grumbled Tom. “If it had been anybody in distress we should have found him.”
“Perhaps,” said Dick sadly. “It’s so dark, though, that we might have passed him over.”
“Nonsense!” cried Tom; “we were sure to find him. There wasn’t anybody. It was a marsh cry, and—oh!”
Tom uttered a yell and went headlong down, with the effect of so startling his companion that he ran a few steps before he could recover his nerve, when he returned to extend his hand to Tom, who rose trembling, while Dick stood staring aghast at the dark figure lying extended among the heath, and over which his friend had stumbled.
“Why, Tom, it’s Thorpeley!” cried Dick, as he went down on one knee and peered into the upturned face. “Mr Thorpeley, Mr Thorpeley!” he cried; “what’s the matter?”
There was no reply.
“It must have been him,” whispered Dick. “He had lost his way.”
“Then let him find it again,” grumbled Tom, “instead of watching us.”
“But perhaps there is something the matter. Mr Thorpeley, Mr Thorpeley!”
Dick laid his hand upon the man’s shoulder and shook him, but there was no response.
“Is he dead?” said Tom in an awe-stricken whisper.
“Dead!” cried Dick, leaping up and shrinking away at the suggestion. “No, he can’t be. He’s quite warm,” he added, going down on his knee again to shake the recumbent man, who now uttered a low groan.
“What shall we do, Dick?” said Tom huskily. “I hate him, but we can’t leave him here.”
“Well,” said Dick, “I’m not very fond of him, but it would be like leaving anybody to die to go away now. We must carry him down to the boat.”
“Come on then, quick!”
Dick placed his hands beneath the constable’s arms and locked his fingers across his breast, while Tom turned his back as he got between the man’s legs, stooped in turn, and proceeded to lift them as if they were the handles of a wheel-barrow.
“Ready?”
“Yes.”
“Then both together.”
The two lads lifted the constable, staggered along a few yards, and set him down again.
“Oh, I say!” groaned Tom. “Isn’t he heavy?”
“Come and try this end,” retorted Dick. “He’s an awful weight. We must go a few yards at a time, and we shall do it yet. Now then.”
“Stop a minute,” said Tom, who had picked up a handful of moss, and was rubbing one hand. “I—it’s warm and sticky, and—oh, Dick, he’s bleeding.”
Dick lowered the insensible man down again, and, shuddering with horror, stepped to his companion’s side.
Then kneeling down he tried to examine the spot pointed out by Tom, to find out as well as was possible in the dim light that the constable was bleeding freely from one leg.
“Dick, what shall we do?” cried Tom piteously.
“Why, what would anybody do if he had cut his finger?” cried Dick manfully, as he undid his neckcloth and doubled it afresh.
“I don’t know,” cried Tom, who was sadly scared.
“You don’t know! Suppose you had cut your finger, wouldn’t you tie it up?”
“Yes, I suppose so,” faltered Tom, whom the situation had completely unnerved.
“Take off his neckerchief while I tie this on,” said Dick, whom the emergency had rendered more helpful. “How can he have hurt himself like this?”
As he spoke he busied himself in tightly bandaging the man’s leg, and added to the bandage the cotton cloth that Tom handed to him.
“I think that has stopped it,” said Dick. “Now then, we must carry him down.”
“But we shall sink into the bog with him,” faltered Tom.
“No, we sha’n’t if we are careful. Now, then, are you ready?”
“I don’t like to try and lift him now,” said Tom. “It’s so horrible. The man’s bleeding to death.”
“More shame for you to stand still and not try to help him,” said Dick hotly. “Here, you come and carry this end.”
Tom hastened to obey, heedless of the fact that the task would be the harder; and setting to with a will, the lads carried their load a few yards before setting it down again to rest.
This time, in spite of Tom’s appeal not to be left alone, Dick went on for a bit so as to explore and make sure of the best way to get back to the boat, and not without avail, for he was able, in spite of the darkness, to pick out the firmest ground, his knowledge of the growth of the fen and its choice of soil helping him.
But it was a long and painful task. The lads were faint and terribly hungry. They had been working hard for several hours propelling the punt, and the load they were carrying would not have been an easy one for a couple of stout men. Still, by means of that wonderful aid to success, perseverance, they at last got past bog and water-pool, patch of sphagnum, bed of reed, and slimy hollow, where the cotton rushes nourished, and reached the belt of waving reeds which separated them from the water.
It was not done without tremendous effort and a constant succession of rests; but they stood there at last bathed in perspiration, and waiting for a few minutes before lifting the sufferer into the boat.
Up to this time they had been so busy and excited that they had not paused to ask the question: How was it that the man had been wounded? but as they lifted him carefully into the boat, Tom being in and Dick ashore, they both burst out with the query, as if moved by the same spring.
“I know,” said Dick, as the truth seemed to flash upon him. “Some one must have shot him.”
Tom had taken up the pole and was just about to force the boat along when this announcement seemed to paralyse him, and he stood there thinking of what had taken place before.
“Why, Dick,” he whispered, “isn’t it very horrible?”
“Don’t talk,” cried his companion, entering the boat; “let’s get home.”
The pole plashed in the water, which rippled against the bows, and once more they glided over the surface, just as the injured man uttered a low groan.
“We sha’n’t be very long,” said Dick, kneeling down and carefully feeling whether the kerchiefs he had bound round the leg were fulfilling their purpose. “Are you in much pain?”
“Pain!” groaned the man. “Hah! Give me some water.”
There was no vessel of any kind in the punt, and Dick had to scoop up some water in the hollow of his hand, and pour it between the injured man’s lips, with the result that he became sufficiently refreshed to sit up a little and begin muttering.
Dick now took the pole, and it was Tom’s turn to try and administer a little comfort in the shape of words as to the time that would elapse before they could reach the Toft; but the only result was to produce an angry snarl from their patient.
“How does he seem?” Dick asked, as Tom went to his relief.
“Better not ask him.”
“Why not?”
“Perhaps he’ll bite you. He nearly did me. I say, how much farther is it?”
“Take another quarter of an hour. Oh, I shall be glad, Tom! Work hard.”
Tom looked in his companion’s face, and uttered a low laugh, as he toiled away at the poling, and that laugh seemed to say more than a dozen long speeches. Then there was nothing heard for some time but the regular plash and ripple of the water, as it was disturbed by pole and punt, while the darkness seemed to increase. At the same time, though, the hopes of the two lads rose high, for, standing as it were alone in the midst of the black darkness, there was a soft yellow light. At first it was so dull and lambent that it suggested thoughts of the will-o’-the-wisp. But this was no dancing flame, being a steady glow in one fixed spot, and Tom expressed his companion’s thoughts exactly as he exclaimed:
“There’s Hicky’s old horn lanthorn!”
A few minutes more and the big bluff voice of the wheelwright was heard in a loud hail.
This was answered, and the sounds roused the wounded man.
“Nearly there?” he said hoarsely.
“Very close now,” replied Dick; and snatching the pole from Tom he drove it down vigorously, making a tremendous spurt to reach the patch of old pollard willows by the landing-place, on one of whose old posts the lanthorn had been hung, and beyond which could now be seen the light in the Hickathrifts’ cot.
“Why, I was a-coming swimming after you, lads,” shouted Hickathrift. “You scarred me. Squire’s been down twiced to see if you’d got back, and the missus is in a fine way.”
“Don’t talk, Hicky,” shouted back Dick. “Is Jacob there?”
“Ay, lad. Why?”
“You’ll want help. Look here, send for the doctor.”
“Doctor, lad?”
“Yes; I know. Let Jacob go and tell my father, and he’ll send down the old cob. Thorpeley’s hurt badly.”
They heard a low whistle, then the wheelwright’s orders given sharply to his apprentice, followed by the dullthud, thudof his boots as he ran off; and directly after the punt glided in and its bow was seized by the big strong hand upon which the soft glowing light of the horn lanthorn shone.
“Hey, but what’s the matter with the man?” cried Hickathrift. “We’ve been wondering why he didn’t come back.”
“I don’t know, only we heard a shot,” said Dick excitedly; “and then we heard someone calling for help, and found him lying ashore.”
“Let me get a good howd on him,” said the wheelwright; and with one foot in the boat he passed his great arm under the constable and lifted him out as tenderly as if he had been a child.
But, gentle as was the wheelwright’s act, it roused the injured man, who seemed to be driven into a fit of fury by the pain he suffered, and he burst into a torrent of bad language against Hickathrift and the two boys, which he kept up till he had been carried into his lodging and laid upon his bed.
“Hey, lads,” said the wheelwright with a low chuckle, as he walked down with the boys to where the lanthorn still hung upon the willow-stump, the care of the constable having been left to the women; “he don’t seem to hev lost his tongue.”
“But he’s very bad, isn’t he?” said Dick anxiously.
“I should say no,” replied Hickathrift. “Man who’s very badly don’t call people.”
“But his leg?”
“Ay, that’s badly. I give the hankycher a good tighten up, and that hot him, so that he had to howd his tongue.”
“That made him hold his tongue, Hicky?”
“Ay, lad. I med him feel that if he didn’t shoot his neb, I’d pull tighter, and so he quieted down. Now, tell us all about it.”
“Give us some bread and butter first, Hicky; we’re nearly starved.”
“Hey, lads,” cried the wheelwright. “Here, coom in to missus and—”
Hickathrift’s speech was cut short by the coming of the squire, who hurried up.
“Here, boys,” he cried; “what’s all this?”
Dick told all he knew, and the squire drew a long breath and turned by the light of the lanthorn to gaze first in the lads’ faces, and then to speak to the wheelwright.
“This is bad, Hickathrift,” he said hoarsely.
As he spoke he gazed searchingly at the great workman.
“Ay, squire; it is a straänge awkard thing.”
Mr Winthorpe gazed in his great frank face again; and then, with his lips compressed, he went to the bed-side of the injured man.
“Bad business,” said Hickathrift; “but lads mustn’t starve because a constable’s shot. Coom along. Here, missus, let’s hev bit o’— Nay, she’s gone to see the neighbours, and hev a bit o’ ruckatongue.” (A gossip.)
That did not much matter, for Hickathrift knew the ways of his own house; and in a very short time had placed a loaf and a piece of cold bacon before the hungry boys.
This they attacked furiously, for now that they were relieved of the responsibility of the injured man, their hunger had asserted itself. But they had not partaken of many mouthfuls before they heard the squire’s voice outside, in hurried conversation with Hickathrift.
“Yes, I sent him off directly on the cob,” the squire said; “but it must be some hours before the doctor can get here.”
“Think he’s very badly, squire?” came next, in Hickathrift’s deep bass.
“No, not very bad as to his wound, my lad; but this is a terrible business.”
“Ay, mester, it is trubble. Straänge thing to hev first one man shot and then another. Say, squire, hope it wean’t be our turn next.”
“Go on eating, Tom,” whispered Dick, setting the example, and cutting a slice for his companion, while Tom hacked the bread.
“I’m hard at work,” said Tom thickly. “I shall eat as much as ever I can, and make mother give Hicky a piece o’ chine.”
“So will I,” said Dick; “and a couple o’ chickens.”
The hungry lad had taken a piece of pink-fleshed bacon upon his fork, and was about to transfer it to his mouth, when he stopped short with his lips apart and eyes staring, while Tom let fall his knife and thrust his chair back over the stone floor.
They had been eating and listening to the conversation outside, till it reached its climax in the following words:
“What, man? You don’t know what he says.”
“What he says!” chuckled the wheelwright. “Ay, I heerd what he said; a whole heap o’ bad words till I checked him, and let him feel he’d best howd his tongue.”
“But you know what he says about who shot at him?”
“Nay, but if he says as it were me, I’ll go and pitch him into the watter.”
“You did not hear, then?” cried the squire, huskily. “Hickathrift, he says it was done by those boys!”
“What!” roared the wheelwright.
“It’s a lie, father!” shouted Dick, recovering himself and running out. “Here, ask Tom.”
“Why, of course it’s a lie,” cried Tom.
“But that man says—” cried the squire.
“Yah!” shouted Hickathrift angrily, “they never shot him; they heven’t got no goon.”
Chapter Seventeen.Under Clouds.Thorpeley was not badly hurt, so the doctor said when he came; but, as usual, he added, “If it had been an inch or two more to the right an important vessel would have been divided, and he would have bled to death.”But if the constable was not badly wounded, though the injury caused by a bullet passing through his leg was an ugly one, the reputations of Dick Winthorpe and Tom Tallington had received such ugly wounds that their fathers found it difficult to get them cured.For Thorpeley stuck to his first story, that he suspected the two boys to be engaged in some nefarious trick, and he had watched them from the time they borrowed the wheelwright’s punt. He went on to describe how he had offended them by keeping his eye upon their movements, and told how they had tried to smother him by leading him into a dangerous morass, while just at dusk, as he was watching their boat, he saw them start towards him, and evidently believing that they were unseen from where they had tied their punt, they had deliberately taken aim at him and shot him.The squire questioned him very sharply, but he adhered to everything. He swore that he saw them thrust the punt away, and go into the misty darkness; and then when they had heard his cries, they came back and landed, evidently repentant and frightened, and then helped him down to the boat.“But,” said the squire, “it might have been two other people in a punt who shot at you.”“Two others!” shouted the man; “it weer they, and I heered ’em laughing and bragging about it as I lay theer in the bottom o’ the boat nearly in a swownd, bud I could hear what they said.”This charge was so serious that, as a matter of course, there was a magisterial inquiry, which was repeated as soon as the constable was sufficiently well to limp into the justice-room in the little town where he had been removed as soon as the doctor gave permission, the neighbourhood of the Toft and Hickathrift having grown uncomfortably warm.At that last examination the magistrates shook their heads, and, after hearing a great deal of speaking, decided that Thorpeley must have been deceived in the darkness, and the charge was dismissed.In those days the law had two qualities in an out-of-the-way place that have pretty well died out now. These qualities were laxity and severity—the disposition to go to extremes; and in this case some idea of the way in which the work of petty sessions was carried on will be grasped when it is told that after the examination the chairman of the bench of magistrates, an old landholder of the neighbourhood, shook hands with the squire, and then less freely with Farmer Tallington.“Look here, you two,” he said; “we’ve let off these two young scamps; but you had better send them to sea, or at all events away from here.”“I don’t understand you, sir,” said the squire hotly.“I can’t help that,” was the gruff reply. “You take my advice. Send ’em away before there’s more mischief done. I sha’n’t let ’em off next time.”Hickathrift, who had watched all the proceedings, heard these words; and as the two lads trudged home beside him, with the squire and Farmer Tallington in front, he told them all that had been said.Dick said nothing, but Tom fired up and exclaimed angrily, while the wheelwright kept on talking quietly to the former.“Niver yow mind, lad; we don’t think you shot at him. It’s some o’ they lads t’other side o’ the fen. They comes acrost and waits their chance, and then goes back, and nobody’s none the wiser. Niver you mind what owd magistrit said. Magistrit indeed! Why, I’d mak’ a better magistrit out of owd Solomon any day o’ the week.”It was kindly spoken; but if there is a difficult thing to do it is to “never mind” when the heart is sore through some accusation that rankles from its injustice.“Yes, Tom,” said Dick, when they were about half-way home; “they’d better send us away.”He looked longingly across the fen with its gleaming waters, waving reeds, and many-tinted flowers; and as he gazed in the bright afternoon sunshine it seemed as if it had never looked so beautiful before. To an agricultural-minded man it was a watery waste; but to a boy who had passed his life there, and found it the home of bird, insect, fish, and flower, and an ever-changing scene of pleasure, it was all that could be called attractive and bright.“I’m ready to go,” said Tom sturdily; “only I don’t know which to do.”“Which to do!” cried Dick, with his face growing red, and his eyes flashing. “Why, what do you mean?”“Whether to go for a soldier or a sailor.”“Haw! haw!”Hickathrift’s was a curious laugh. At a distance it might have been taken for a hail; but a fine heron standing heel-deep in the shallow water took it to be a cry to scare him, so spreading his great flap wings, and stooping so as to get a spring, he flew slowly off with outstretched legs, while the squire and Farmer Tallington looked back to see if they had been called.“What are you laughing at?” said Tom angrily.“Yow, lad, yow. Why, you arn’t big enew to carry a goon; and as for sailing, do you think a ship’s like a punt, and shoved along wi’ a pole!”“Never mind,” grumbled Tom. “I’m not going to stop here and be suspected for nothing.”“Nay, nay, don’t you lads talk nonsense.”“It’s no nonsense, Hicky,” said Dick bitterly. “I’ve made up my mind to go.”“Nay, nay, I tell thee. Thou wean’t goo, lads.”“Indeed but we will,” cried Dick energetically.“What, goo?”“Yes.”“Height awayer?”“Yes, right away.”“Then what’s to become of me?” cried the wheelwright excitedly.“Become of you! Why, what’s it got to do with you?” cried Tom surlily.“Do wi’ me! Why, iverything. What’s the good o’ my punt? what’s the good o’ me laying up a couple o’ good ash-poles for you, and putting a bit o’ wood up chimney to season, so as to hev it ready for new soles for your pattens (skates) next winter. Good, indeed! What call hev you to talk that clat?”“You’re a good old chap, Hicky,” said Dick, smiling up at the big fellow; “but you can’t understand what I feel over this.”“Hey, bud I can,” cried the wheelwright quickly; “you feel just the same as I did when Farmer Tallington—Tom’s father here—said I’d sent him in his bill after he’d sattled it; and as I did when my missus said I’d took half a guinea outer money-box to spend i’ town. I know, lads. Yes, I know.”“Well, I suppose it is something like that, Hicky,” said Dick sadly.“Ay, joost the same; bud I didn’t tell Farmer Tallington as I should go for a soldier, and I didn’t turn on my wife and tell her I should go to sea.”Dick was silent the rest of the way home, but he shook hands very solemnly with Tom, and Tom pressed his hand hard as they parted at the farm. Then Dick went on beside the wheelwright, while the squire walked swiftly ahead, evidently thinking deeply.There was a meaning in that grip of the hand which Hickathrift did not understand; but he kept on talking cheerily to the lad till they were close up to the Toft, when, just as the squire turned in and stopped for Dick to join him, the wheelwright shook hands with the lad.“Good day, Mester Dick!” he said aloud; and then in a whisper:“Don’t you go away, lad, for if you do they’ll be sure to say it was yow as fired the shot.”
Thorpeley was not badly hurt, so the doctor said when he came; but, as usual, he added, “If it had been an inch or two more to the right an important vessel would have been divided, and he would have bled to death.”
But if the constable was not badly wounded, though the injury caused by a bullet passing through his leg was an ugly one, the reputations of Dick Winthorpe and Tom Tallington had received such ugly wounds that their fathers found it difficult to get them cured.
For Thorpeley stuck to his first story, that he suspected the two boys to be engaged in some nefarious trick, and he had watched them from the time they borrowed the wheelwright’s punt. He went on to describe how he had offended them by keeping his eye upon their movements, and told how they had tried to smother him by leading him into a dangerous morass, while just at dusk, as he was watching their boat, he saw them start towards him, and evidently believing that they were unseen from where they had tied their punt, they had deliberately taken aim at him and shot him.
The squire questioned him very sharply, but he adhered to everything. He swore that he saw them thrust the punt away, and go into the misty darkness; and then when they had heard his cries, they came back and landed, evidently repentant and frightened, and then helped him down to the boat.
“But,” said the squire, “it might have been two other people in a punt who shot at you.”
“Two others!” shouted the man; “it weer they, and I heered ’em laughing and bragging about it as I lay theer in the bottom o’ the boat nearly in a swownd, bud I could hear what they said.”
This charge was so serious that, as a matter of course, there was a magisterial inquiry, which was repeated as soon as the constable was sufficiently well to limp into the justice-room in the little town where he had been removed as soon as the doctor gave permission, the neighbourhood of the Toft and Hickathrift having grown uncomfortably warm.
At that last examination the magistrates shook their heads, and, after hearing a great deal of speaking, decided that Thorpeley must have been deceived in the darkness, and the charge was dismissed.
In those days the law had two qualities in an out-of-the-way place that have pretty well died out now. These qualities were laxity and severity—the disposition to go to extremes; and in this case some idea of the way in which the work of petty sessions was carried on will be grasped when it is told that after the examination the chairman of the bench of magistrates, an old landholder of the neighbourhood, shook hands with the squire, and then less freely with Farmer Tallington.
“Look here, you two,” he said; “we’ve let off these two young scamps; but you had better send them to sea, or at all events away from here.”
“I don’t understand you, sir,” said the squire hotly.
“I can’t help that,” was the gruff reply. “You take my advice. Send ’em away before there’s more mischief done. I sha’n’t let ’em off next time.”
Hickathrift, who had watched all the proceedings, heard these words; and as the two lads trudged home beside him, with the squire and Farmer Tallington in front, he told them all that had been said.
Dick said nothing, but Tom fired up and exclaimed angrily, while the wheelwright kept on talking quietly to the former.
“Niver yow mind, lad; we don’t think you shot at him. It’s some o’ they lads t’other side o’ the fen. They comes acrost and waits their chance, and then goes back, and nobody’s none the wiser. Niver you mind what owd magistrit said. Magistrit indeed! Why, I’d mak’ a better magistrit out of owd Solomon any day o’ the week.”
It was kindly spoken; but if there is a difficult thing to do it is to “never mind” when the heart is sore through some accusation that rankles from its injustice.
“Yes, Tom,” said Dick, when they were about half-way home; “they’d better send us away.”
He looked longingly across the fen with its gleaming waters, waving reeds, and many-tinted flowers; and as he gazed in the bright afternoon sunshine it seemed as if it had never looked so beautiful before. To an agricultural-minded man it was a watery waste; but to a boy who had passed his life there, and found it the home of bird, insect, fish, and flower, and an ever-changing scene of pleasure, it was all that could be called attractive and bright.
“I’m ready to go,” said Tom sturdily; “only I don’t know which to do.”
“Which to do!” cried Dick, with his face growing red, and his eyes flashing. “Why, what do you mean?”
“Whether to go for a soldier or a sailor.”
“Haw! haw!”
Hickathrift’s was a curious laugh. At a distance it might have been taken for a hail; but a fine heron standing heel-deep in the shallow water took it to be a cry to scare him, so spreading his great flap wings, and stooping so as to get a spring, he flew slowly off with outstretched legs, while the squire and Farmer Tallington looked back to see if they had been called.
“What are you laughing at?” said Tom angrily.
“Yow, lad, yow. Why, you arn’t big enew to carry a goon; and as for sailing, do you think a ship’s like a punt, and shoved along wi’ a pole!”
“Never mind,” grumbled Tom. “I’m not going to stop here and be suspected for nothing.”
“Nay, nay, don’t you lads talk nonsense.”
“It’s no nonsense, Hicky,” said Dick bitterly. “I’ve made up my mind to go.”
“Nay, nay, I tell thee. Thou wean’t goo, lads.”
“Indeed but we will,” cried Dick energetically.
“What, goo?”
“Yes.”
“Height awayer?”
“Yes, right away.”
“Then what’s to become of me?” cried the wheelwright excitedly.
“Become of you! Why, what’s it got to do with you?” cried Tom surlily.
“Do wi’ me! Why, iverything. What’s the good o’ my punt? what’s the good o’ me laying up a couple o’ good ash-poles for you, and putting a bit o’ wood up chimney to season, so as to hev it ready for new soles for your pattens (skates) next winter. Good, indeed! What call hev you to talk that clat?”
“You’re a good old chap, Hicky,” said Dick, smiling up at the big fellow; “but you can’t understand what I feel over this.”
“Hey, bud I can,” cried the wheelwright quickly; “you feel just the same as I did when Farmer Tallington—Tom’s father here—said I’d sent him in his bill after he’d sattled it; and as I did when my missus said I’d took half a guinea outer money-box to spend i’ town. I know, lads. Yes, I know.”
“Well, I suppose it is something like that, Hicky,” said Dick sadly.
“Ay, joost the same; bud I didn’t tell Farmer Tallington as I should go for a soldier, and I didn’t turn on my wife and tell her I should go to sea.”
Dick was silent the rest of the way home, but he shook hands very solemnly with Tom, and Tom pressed his hand hard as they parted at the farm. Then Dick went on beside the wheelwright, while the squire walked swiftly ahead, evidently thinking deeply.
There was a meaning in that grip of the hand which Hickathrift did not understand; but he kept on talking cheerily to the lad till they were close up to the Toft, when, just as the squire turned in and stopped for Dick to join him, the wheelwright shook hands with the lad.
“Good day, Mester Dick!” he said aloud; and then in a whisper:
“Don’t you go away, lad, for if you do they’ll be sure to say it was yow as fired the shot.”
Chapter Eighteen.Preparations for Flight.The squire was very quiet over the evening meal, but he looked across at Dick very sternly two or three times, and the lad did not meet his eye.For certain plans which he had been concerting with Tom wore so strange an aspect in his eyes that he felt quite guilty, and the old frank light in his face seemed to have died out as he bent down over his supper, and listened to his father’s answers to his mother about the proceedings of the past day.Bed-time at last, and for the first time since he had returned Dick was alone with his mother, the squire having gone to take his customary look round the house.“Good-night, mother!” said Dick in a low sombre manner, very different to his usual way.Mrs Winthorpe did not answer for a moment or two, but gazed full at her son.“And so the magistrate thought you guilty, Dick?” she said.“Yes, mother,” he flashed out, “and—”“Ah!” exclaimed Mrs Winthorpe, flinging her arms about his neck. “That’s my boy who spoke out then. Dick, if you had spoken out like that to your father and everyone they would not have suspected you for a moment. There, good-night! It will all come right at last.”Dick said “good-night” to his father, who gave him a short nod, and then the lad went slowly up to his room, to sit on the edge of the bed and think of the possibility of building a hut out there in the island they had found in the fen, and then of how it would be if he and Tom did so, and went there to live; and when he had debated it well, he asked himself what would be the use, and confessed that it would be all nonsense, and that he had been thinking like a child.“No,” he said; “I’m no baby now. All this has made a man of me, and Tom Tallington is right; we must go and begin life somewhere else—where the world will not be so hard.”“He will not be here for an hour yet,” he thought; so he employed himself very busily in putting together the few things he meant to take on his journey into that little-known place beyond the fen, where there were big towns, and people different to themselves; and as Dick packed his bundle he tried to keep back a weak tear or two which would gather as if to drop on the lavender-scented linen, that reminded him of her who had that night called him her boy.But there was a stubborn feeling upon him which made him viciously knot together the handkerchief ends of his bundle, and then go and stand at the window and watch and listen for the coming of Tom.For he had made up his mind to go with Tom if he came, without him if he failed, for he told himself the world elsewhere would not be so hard.One hour—two hours passed. He heard them strike on the old eight-day clock below. But no Tom.Could he have repented and made up his mind not to keep faith, or was there some reason?Never mind, he would go alone and fight the world, and some day people would be sorry for having suspected him as they did now.He laughed bitterly, and stepped to the open window bundle in hand. He had but to swing himself out and drop to the ground, and trudge away into that romantic land—the unknown. Yes, he would go. “Good-bye, dear mother; father, good-bye!” he whispered softly; and the next moment one foot was over the window-sill, and he was about to drop, when a miserably absurd sound rose on the midnight air, a sound which made him dart back into his room like some guilty creature, as there rang out the strange cry:“He—haw, he—haw!” as dismal a bray as Solomon had ever uttered in his life; and for no reason whatever, as it seemed, Dick Winthorpe went back and sat upon his bed thinking of the wheelwright’s words:That if he went away people would declare he fired the shot.“I can’t help it,” cried Dick at last, after an hour’s bitter struggle there in the darkness of the night; and once more he ran to the window, meaning to drop out, when, as if he saw what was about to take place, Solomon roused the echoes about the old buildings with another dismal bray.“Who can run away with a donkey crying out at him like that!” said Dick to himself; and in spite of his misery, he once more seated himself upon the bed-side and laughed.It was more a hysterical than a natural laugh; but it relieved Dick Winthorpe’s feelings, and just then the clock struck two.Dick sat on the bed-side and thought. He was not afraid to go—far from it. A reckless spirit of determination had come over him, and he was ready to do anything, dare anything; but all the same the wheelwright’s words troubled him, and he could not master the feeling that it would be painful for the constant repetition to come to his mother’s knowledge, till even she began to think that there must be some truth in the matter, and he would not be there to defend himself.That was a painful thought, one which made Dick Winthorpe rise and go and seat himself on the window-sill and gaze out over the fen.From where he was seated his eyes ranged over the portion where the drain was being cut; and as he looked, it seemed to him that all his troubles had dated from the commencement of the venture by his father, and those who had joined in the experiment.Then he thought of the evening when Mr Marston had been brought in wounded, and the other cases which had evidently been the work of those opposed to the draining—the fire at Tallington’s, the houghing of the horses, the shots fired, the blowing up of the sluice-gate.“And they think I did it all,” he said to himself with a bitter laugh; “a boy like me!”Then he began considering as to who possibly could be the culprit, and thought and thought till his head ached, and he rose sadly and replaced the articles in his bundle in the drawer.“I can’t go,” he said softly. “I’ll face it out like a man, and they may say what they like.”He stood looking at his bed, with its white pillow just showing in the faint light which came through the open window, but it did not tempt him to undress.“I can’t sleep,” he said; “and perhaps, if I lie down, I may not hear Tom coming, if he comes. Why is one so miserable? What have I done?”There was no mental answer to his question, and he once more went softly across the room, and sat in the window-sill to gaze out across the fen.How long he had been watching he could not tell, for his brain felt dazed, and he was in a half-dreamy state, when all of a sudden he grew wakeful and alert, for right away out over the mere he saw a faint gleam of light which flashed upon the water and then expired.For a moment he thought that it might have been the reflection of a star, but it flashed out again, and then was gone.The marsh lights always had a strange fascination for him, and this appearance completely changed the current of his thoughts. A few moments before and they were dull and sluggish, now they were all excitement; and he sat there longing for the next appearance when, as of old, he expected to see the faint light go dancing along, as a moth dances over the moist herbage, disappearing from time to time.He strained his eyes, but there was no light, and he was beginning to think that it was fancy, when he heard a faint rustling apparently outside his door; and as he listened, he felt that someone must be going down stairs.Then there was complete silence for a few minutes, and he was ready to think that both the light and the sound were fancy, when all doubts were set at rest, for the door below opened and someone passed out.It was still very dark, in spite of a faint sign of dawn in the north-east; but the watcher had no difficulty in making out the figure which passed silently along in the shadow of the house, and close beneath him, to be that of his father.What did it mean? Dick asked himself as he sat there holding his breath, while he watched intently, and saw his father steal from place to place in the most secretive manner, taking advantage of bush, wall, and outbuilding, and every now and then pausing as if gazing out across the fen.“I know,” thought Dick, as a flash of comprehension came across his brain. “He saw that light, and he is watching too.”The thought was quite exciting.The reaction as depressing, for directly after he very naturally said to himself: “My father would not get out of bed to watch a will-o’-the-wisp.”But suppose it was not a will-o’-the-wisp, but a light!He sat thinking and trying to trace which way his father had gone; and as far as he could make out, he had gone right down to the nearest spot to the water, where, about a hundred yards away, there was fair landing, by one of the many clumps of alder.Dick had just come to the conclusion that he ought not to watch his father, who was angry enough with him as it was, and who would be more suspicious still if he again caught him at the window dressed, and he was about to close it, after wondering whether anyone would be on the water with a light—Dave, for instance—and if so, what form of fowling or netting it would be, when there was a low hiss—such a sound as is made by a snake—just beneath his window.“Dick!”“Hallo!”“Couldn’t come before. Ready?”“No,” said Dick shortly, for the plan to run away seemed now to belong to some project of the past.“I couldn’t come before,” whispered Tom. “I was all ready, but father did not go to bed for ever so long; and when at last I thought it was all right, and was ready to start, I heard him go down and open the back-door.”“And go out?” whispered Dick.“Yes. How did you know?”“I didn’t know, but my father has done just the same.”“Oh!”“Did yours come back?”“No,” said Tom; “and I daren’t start for ever so long. But I’ve come now, so let’s start off quick.”“Which way did your father go?”“I don’t know, but we’re wasting time.”“Did he take the boat?”“How should I know? I didn’t see him go. I only heard. Come, are you ready?”“No,” said Dick hoarsely, and not prepared to tell his companion that he had repented. “How can we go now with them both somewhere about? They would be sure to catch us and bring us back.”It was a subterfuge, and Dick’s face turned scarlet, as he knew by the burning sensation. The next instant he had felt so ashamed of his paltry excuse that he blurted out:“I sha’n’t go. I’m sorry I said I would. It’s cowardly, but I don’t mean to go—there!”The hot tears of vexation and misery stood in his eyes as he made this confession, and rose up prepared to resent his companion’s reproaches with angry words; but he was disarmed, for Tom whispered hastily:“Oh, Dick, I am so glad! I wouldn’t show the white feather and play sneak, but I didn’t want to go. It seemed too bad to mother and father. But you mean it?”“Yes, I mean it!” said Dick, with a load off his breast. “I felt that it would be like running away because we were afraid to face a charge.”“Hooray!” cried Tom in a whisper. “I say, Dick, don’t think me a coward, but I am so glad! I say, shall I go back now?”“No; stop a bit,” whispered Dick, with his heart beating, and a strange suspicion making its way into his breast. For in an incoherent vague manner he found himself thinking of Farmer Tallington stealing out of his house in the middle of the night. He had a boat, as most of the fen farmers had, for gunning, fishing, andcutting reeds. What was he doing on the water at night? For it must have been he with a light.Then a terrible suspicion flashed across him, and the vague ideas began to shape themselves and grow solid. Suppose it was Farmer Tallington who had been guilty of—Dick made a strong effort at this point to master his wandering imagination, and forced himself to think only of what he really knew to be the fact, namely, that Farmer Tallington was out somewhere, and that the squire was out too.“My father must have come to meet yours, Dick,” whispered Tom at that point. “I know they suspect there’s something wrong, and they have gone down to watch the drain, or to meet Mr Marston.”“Yes,” said Dick, in a tone which did not carry conviction with it. “That must be it.”“What shall we do? Go back to bed?”“Ye–es, we had better,” said Dick thoughtfully. “I say, Tom, we have done quite right. We couldn’t have gone away.”“Hist! did you hear that?”For answer Dick strained out of the window. He had heard that—a sudden splashing in the water, a shout—and the next moment there was a flash which cut the darkness apparently a couple of hundred yards away, and then came a dull report, and silence.The boys remained listening for some moments, but they could not hear a sound. The signs of the coming morning were growing plainer; there was a faint twittering in some bushes at a distance, followed by the sharp metallicchink chinkof a blackbird; and then all at once, loud and clear from the farm-yard, rang out the morning challenge of a cock.Then once more all was still. There was no footstep, no splash of pole in the water.For a few minutes neither spoke, but listened intently with every nerve upon the strain; and then with a catching of the breath as he realised what had gone before, and that he had seen his father steal carefully down in the direction of the mere, Dick sprang from the window and gripped his companion by the arm.“Tom,” he gasped, “quick! come on! Some one else has been—”He would have saidshot, but his voice failed, and with a cold chill of horror stealing over him he remained for a few moments as if paralysed.Then, with Tom Tallington close behind, he ran swiftly down towards the mere.
The squire was very quiet over the evening meal, but he looked across at Dick very sternly two or three times, and the lad did not meet his eye.
For certain plans which he had been concerting with Tom wore so strange an aspect in his eyes that he felt quite guilty, and the old frank light in his face seemed to have died out as he bent down over his supper, and listened to his father’s answers to his mother about the proceedings of the past day.
Bed-time at last, and for the first time since he had returned Dick was alone with his mother, the squire having gone to take his customary look round the house.
“Good-night, mother!” said Dick in a low sombre manner, very different to his usual way.
Mrs Winthorpe did not answer for a moment or two, but gazed full at her son.
“And so the magistrate thought you guilty, Dick?” she said.
“Yes, mother,” he flashed out, “and—”
“Ah!” exclaimed Mrs Winthorpe, flinging her arms about his neck. “That’s my boy who spoke out then. Dick, if you had spoken out like that to your father and everyone they would not have suspected you for a moment. There, good-night! It will all come right at last.”
Dick said “good-night” to his father, who gave him a short nod, and then the lad went slowly up to his room, to sit on the edge of the bed and think of the possibility of building a hut out there in the island they had found in the fen, and then of how it would be if he and Tom did so, and went there to live; and when he had debated it well, he asked himself what would be the use, and confessed that it would be all nonsense, and that he had been thinking like a child.
“No,” he said; “I’m no baby now. All this has made a man of me, and Tom Tallington is right; we must go and begin life somewhere else—where the world will not be so hard.”
“He will not be here for an hour yet,” he thought; so he employed himself very busily in putting together the few things he meant to take on his journey into that little-known place beyond the fen, where there were big towns, and people different to themselves; and as Dick packed his bundle he tried to keep back a weak tear or two which would gather as if to drop on the lavender-scented linen, that reminded him of her who had that night called him her boy.
But there was a stubborn feeling upon him which made him viciously knot together the handkerchief ends of his bundle, and then go and stand at the window and watch and listen for the coming of Tom.
For he had made up his mind to go with Tom if he came, without him if he failed, for he told himself the world elsewhere would not be so hard.
One hour—two hours passed. He heard them strike on the old eight-day clock below. But no Tom.
Could he have repented and made up his mind not to keep faith, or was there some reason?
Never mind, he would go alone and fight the world, and some day people would be sorry for having suspected him as they did now.
He laughed bitterly, and stepped to the open window bundle in hand. He had but to swing himself out and drop to the ground, and trudge away into that romantic land—the unknown. Yes, he would go. “Good-bye, dear mother; father, good-bye!” he whispered softly; and the next moment one foot was over the window-sill, and he was about to drop, when a miserably absurd sound rose on the midnight air, a sound which made him dart back into his room like some guilty creature, as there rang out the strange cry:
“He—haw, he—haw!” as dismal a bray as Solomon had ever uttered in his life; and for no reason whatever, as it seemed, Dick Winthorpe went back and sat upon his bed thinking of the wheelwright’s words:
That if he went away people would declare he fired the shot.
“I can’t help it,” cried Dick at last, after an hour’s bitter struggle there in the darkness of the night; and once more he ran to the window, meaning to drop out, when, as if he saw what was about to take place, Solomon roused the echoes about the old buildings with another dismal bray.
“Who can run away with a donkey crying out at him like that!” said Dick to himself; and in spite of his misery, he once more seated himself upon the bed-side and laughed.
It was more a hysterical than a natural laugh; but it relieved Dick Winthorpe’s feelings, and just then the clock struck two.
Dick sat on the bed-side and thought. He was not afraid to go—far from it. A reckless spirit of determination had come over him, and he was ready to do anything, dare anything; but all the same the wheelwright’s words troubled him, and he could not master the feeling that it would be painful for the constant repetition to come to his mother’s knowledge, till even she began to think that there must be some truth in the matter, and he would not be there to defend himself.
That was a painful thought, one which made Dick Winthorpe rise and go and seat himself on the window-sill and gaze out over the fen.
From where he was seated his eyes ranged over the portion where the drain was being cut; and as he looked, it seemed to him that all his troubles had dated from the commencement of the venture by his father, and those who had joined in the experiment.
Then he thought of the evening when Mr Marston had been brought in wounded, and the other cases which had evidently been the work of those opposed to the draining—the fire at Tallington’s, the houghing of the horses, the shots fired, the blowing up of the sluice-gate.
“And they think I did it all,” he said to himself with a bitter laugh; “a boy like me!”
Then he began considering as to who possibly could be the culprit, and thought and thought till his head ached, and he rose sadly and replaced the articles in his bundle in the drawer.
“I can’t go,” he said softly. “I’ll face it out like a man, and they may say what they like.”
He stood looking at his bed, with its white pillow just showing in the faint light which came through the open window, but it did not tempt him to undress.
“I can’t sleep,” he said; “and perhaps, if I lie down, I may not hear Tom coming, if he comes. Why is one so miserable? What have I done?”
There was no mental answer to his question, and he once more went softly across the room, and sat in the window-sill to gaze out across the fen.
How long he had been watching he could not tell, for his brain felt dazed, and he was in a half-dreamy state, when all of a sudden he grew wakeful and alert, for right away out over the mere he saw a faint gleam of light which flashed upon the water and then expired.
For a moment he thought that it might have been the reflection of a star, but it flashed out again, and then was gone.
The marsh lights always had a strange fascination for him, and this appearance completely changed the current of his thoughts. A few moments before and they were dull and sluggish, now they were all excitement; and he sat there longing for the next appearance when, as of old, he expected to see the faint light go dancing along, as a moth dances over the moist herbage, disappearing from time to time.
He strained his eyes, but there was no light, and he was beginning to think that it was fancy, when he heard a faint rustling apparently outside his door; and as he listened, he felt that someone must be going down stairs.
Then there was complete silence for a few minutes, and he was ready to think that both the light and the sound were fancy, when all doubts were set at rest, for the door below opened and someone passed out.
It was still very dark, in spite of a faint sign of dawn in the north-east; but the watcher had no difficulty in making out the figure which passed silently along in the shadow of the house, and close beneath him, to be that of his father.
What did it mean? Dick asked himself as he sat there holding his breath, while he watched intently, and saw his father steal from place to place in the most secretive manner, taking advantage of bush, wall, and outbuilding, and every now and then pausing as if gazing out across the fen.
“I know,” thought Dick, as a flash of comprehension came across his brain. “He saw that light, and he is watching too.”
The thought was quite exciting.
The reaction as depressing, for directly after he very naturally said to himself: “My father would not get out of bed to watch a will-o’-the-wisp.”
But suppose it was not a will-o’-the-wisp, but a light!
He sat thinking and trying to trace which way his father had gone; and as far as he could make out, he had gone right down to the nearest spot to the water, where, about a hundred yards away, there was fair landing, by one of the many clumps of alder.
Dick had just come to the conclusion that he ought not to watch his father, who was angry enough with him as it was, and who would be more suspicious still if he again caught him at the window dressed, and he was about to close it, after wondering whether anyone would be on the water with a light—Dave, for instance—and if so, what form of fowling or netting it would be, when there was a low hiss—such a sound as is made by a snake—just beneath his window.
“Dick!”
“Hallo!”
“Couldn’t come before. Ready?”
“No,” said Dick shortly, for the plan to run away seemed now to belong to some project of the past.
“I couldn’t come before,” whispered Tom. “I was all ready, but father did not go to bed for ever so long; and when at last I thought it was all right, and was ready to start, I heard him go down and open the back-door.”
“And go out?” whispered Dick.
“Yes. How did you know?”
“I didn’t know, but my father has done just the same.”
“Oh!”
“Did yours come back?”
“No,” said Tom; “and I daren’t start for ever so long. But I’ve come now, so let’s start off quick.”
“Which way did your father go?”
“I don’t know, but we’re wasting time.”
“Did he take the boat?”
“How should I know? I didn’t see him go. I only heard. Come, are you ready?”
“No,” said Dick hoarsely, and not prepared to tell his companion that he had repented. “How can we go now with them both somewhere about? They would be sure to catch us and bring us back.”
It was a subterfuge, and Dick’s face turned scarlet, as he knew by the burning sensation. The next instant he had felt so ashamed of his paltry excuse that he blurted out:
“I sha’n’t go. I’m sorry I said I would. It’s cowardly, but I don’t mean to go—there!”
The hot tears of vexation and misery stood in his eyes as he made this confession, and rose up prepared to resent his companion’s reproaches with angry words; but he was disarmed, for Tom whispered hastily:
“Oh, Dick, I am so glad! I wouldn’t show the white feather and play sneak, but I didn’t want to go. It seemed too bad to mother and father. But you mean it?”
“Yes, I mean it!” said Dick, with a load off his breast. “I felt that it would be like running away because we were afraid to face a charge.”
“Hooray!” cried Tom in a whisper. “I say, Dick, don’t think me a coward, but I am so glad! I say, shall I go back now?”
“No; stop a bit,” whispered Dick, with his heart beating, and a strange suspicion making its way into his breast. For in an incoherent vague manner he found himself thinking of Farmer Tallington stealing out of his house in the middle of the night. He had a boat, as most of the fen farmers had, for gunning, fishing, andcutting reeds. What was he doing on the water at night? For it must have been he with a light.
Then a terrible suspicion flashed across him, and the vague ideas began to shape themselves and grow solid. Suppose it was Farmer Tallington who had been guilty of—
Dick made a strong effort at this point to master his wandering imagination, and forced himself to think only of what he really knew to be the fact, namely, that Farmer Tallington was out somewhere, and that the squire was out too.
“My father must have come to meet yours, Dick,” whispered Tom at that point. “I know they suspect there’s something wrong, and they have gone down to watch the drain, or to meet Mr Marston.”
“Yes,” said Dick, in a tone which did not carry conviction with it. “That must be it.”
“What shall we do? Go back to bed?”
“Ye–es, we had better,” said Dick thoughtfully. “I say, Tom, we have done quite right. We couldn’t have gone away.”
“Hist! did you hear that?”
For answer Dick strained out of the window. He had heard that—a sudden splashing in the water, a shout—and the next moment there was a flash which cut the darkness apparently a couple of hundred yards away, and then came a dull report, and silence.
The boys remained listening for some moments, but they could not hear a sound. The signs of the coming morning were growing plainer; there was a faint twittering in some bushes at a distance, followed by the sharp metallicchink chinkof a blackbird; and then all at once, loud and clear from the farm-yard, rang out the morning challenge of a cock.
Then once more all was still. There was no footstep, no splash of pole in the water.
For a few minutes neither spoke, but listened intently with every nerve upon the strain; and then with a catching of the breath as he realised what had gone before, and that he had seen his father steal carefully down in the direction of the mere, Dick sprang from the window and gripped his companion by the arm.
“Tom,” he gasped, “quick! come on! Some one else has been—”
He would have saidshot, but his voice failed, and with a cold chill of horror stealing over him he remained for a few moments as if paralysed.
Then, with Tom Tallington close behind, he ran swiftly down towards the mere.