Читать книгу The Essential Works of William Harrison Ainsworth - William Harrison Ainsworth - Страница 157
CHAPTER 21.
WHAT BEFELL JACK SHEPPARD IN THE TURNER’S HOUSE.
ОглавлениеJack was scarcely concealed when the door opened, and the two persons of whom he had caught a glimpse below entered the room. What was his astonishment to recognise in the few words they uttered the voices of Kneebone and Winifred! The latter was apparently in great distress, and the former seemed to be using his best efforts to relieve her anxiety.
“How very fortunate it is,” he observed, “that I happened to call upon Mr. Bird, the turner, to give him an order this evening. It was quite an unexpected pleasure to meet you and your worthy father.”
“Pray cease these compliments,” returned Winifred, “and, if you have any communication to make, do not delay it. You told me just now that you wished to speak a few words to me in private, concerning Thames Darrell, and for that purpose I have left my father below with Mr. Bird and have come hither. What have you got to say?”
“Too much,” replied Kneebone, shaking his head; “sadly too much.”
“Do not needlessly alarm me, I beseech you,” replied Winifred. “Whatever your intelligence may be I will strive to bear it. But do not awaken my apprehension, unless you have good cause for so doing. — What do you know of Thames? — Where is he?”
“Don’t agitate yourself, dearest girl,” rejoined the woollen-draper; “or I shall never be able to commence my relation.”
“I am calm — perfectly calm,” replied Winifred. “Pray, make no further mystery; but tell me all without reserve.”
“Since you require it, I must obey,” replied Kneebone; “but prepare yourself for a terrible shock.”
“For mercy’s sake, go on!” cried Winifred.
“At all hazards then then you shall know the truth,” replied the woollen-draper, in a tone of affected solicitude — “but are you really prepared?”
“Quite — quite!” replied Winifred. “This suspense is worse than torture.”
“I am almost afraid to utter it,” said Kneebone; “but Thames Darrell is murdered.”
“Murdered!” ejaculated Winifred.
“Basely and inhumanly murdered, by Jack Sheppard and Blueskin,” continued Kneebone.
“Oh! no — no — no,” cried Winifred, “I cannot believe it. You must be misinformed, Mr. Kneebone. Jack may be capable of much that is wicked, but he would never lift his hand against his friend — of that I am assured.”
“Generous girl!” cried Jack from behind the skreen.
“I have proofs to the contrary,” replied Kneebone. “The murder was committed after the robbery of my house by Sheppard and his accomplices. I did not choose to mention my knowledge of this fact to your worthy father; but you may rely on its correctness.”
“You were right not to mention it to him,” rejoined Winifred, “for he is in such a state of distress at the mysterious disappearance of Mrs. Sheppard, that I fear any further anxiety might prove fatal to him. And yet I know not — for the object of his visit here to-night was to serve Jack, who, if your statement is correct, which I cannot however for a moment believe, does not deserve his assistance.”
“You may rest assured he does not,” rejoined Kneebone, emphatically, “but I am at a loss to understand in what way your father proposes to assist him.”
“Mr. Bird, the turner, who is an old friend of our’s, has some acquaintance with the turnkeys of Newgate,” replied Winifred, “and by his means my father hoped to convey some implements to Jack, by which he might effect another escape.”
“I see,” remarked Kneebone. “This must be prevented,” he added to himself.
“Heaven grant you may have been wrongly informed with respect to Thames!” exclaimed Winifred; “but, I beseech you, on no account to mention what you have told me to my poor father. He is not in a state of mind to bear it.”
“Rely on me,” rejoined Kneebone. “One word before we part, adorable girl — only one,” he continued, detaining her. “I would not venture to renew my suit while Thames lived, because I well knew your affections were fixed upon him. But now that this bar is removed, I trust I may, without impropriety, urge it.”
“No more of this,” said Winifred, angrily. “Is this a season to speak on such a subject?”
“Perhaps not,” rejoined the woollen-draper; “but the uncontrollable violence of my passion must plead my excuse. My whole life shall be devoted to you, beloved girl. And when you reflect how much at heart your poor mother, whose loss we must ever deplore, had our union, you will, I am persuaded, no longer refuse me.”
“Sir!” exclaimed Winifred.
“You will make me the happiest of mankind,” cried the woollen-draper, falling on his knees, and seizing her hand, which he devoured with kisses.
“Let me go,” cried Winifred. “I disbelieve the whole story you have told me.”
“By Heaven!” cried Kneebone, with increasing fervour, “it is true — as true as my affection for you.”
“I do not doubt it,” retorted Winifred, scornfully; “because I attach credit neither to one nor the other. If Thames is murdered, you are his assassin. Let me go, Sir.”
The woollen-draper made no answer, but hastily starting up, bolted the door.
“What do you mean?” cried Winifred in alarm.
“Nothing more than to obtain a favourable answer to my suit,” replied Kneebone.
“This is not the way to obtain it,” said Winifred, endeavouring to reach the door.
“You shall not go, adorable girl,” cried Kneebone, catching her in his arms, “till you have answered me. You must — you shall be mine.”
“Never,” replied Winifred. “Release me instantly, or I will call my father.”
“Do so,” replied Kneebone; “but remember the door is locked.”
“Monster!” cried Winifred. “Help! help!”
“You call in vain,” returned Kneebone.
“Not so,” replied Jack, throwing down the skreen. “Release her instantly, villain!”
Both Winifred and her suitor started at this sudden apparition. Jack, whose clothes were covered with dust, and whose face was deathly pale from his recent exertion, looked more like a phantom than a living person.
“In the devil’s name, is that you, Jack!” ejaculated Kneebone.
“It is,” replied Sheppard. “You have uttered a wilful and deliberate falsehood in asserting that I have murdered Thames, for whom you well know I would lay down my life. Retract your words instantly, or take the consequences.”
“What should I retract, villain?” cried the woollen-draper, who at the sound of Jack’s voice had regained his confidence. “To the best of my belief, Thames Darrell has been murdered by you.”
“A lie!” exclaimed Jack in a terrible tone. And before Kneebone could draw his sword, he felled him to the ground with the iron bar.
“You have killed him,” cried Winifred in alarm.
“No,” answered Jack, approaching her, “though, if I had done so, he would have merited his fate. You do not believe his statement?”
“I do not,” replied Winifred. “I could not believe you capable of so foul a deed. But oh! by what wonderful chance have you come hither so seasonably?”
“I have just escaped from Newgate,” replied Jack; “and am more than repaid for the severe toil I have undergone, in being able to save you. But tell me,” he added with much anxiety, “has nothing been heard of Thames since the night of my former escape?”
“Nothing whatever,” answered Winifred. “He left Dollis Hill at ten o’clock on that night, and has not since returned. My father has made every possible inquiry, and offered large rewards; but has not been able to discover the slightest trace of him. His suspicions at first fell upon you. But he has since acquitted you of any share in it.”
“Oh, Heaven!” exclaimed Jack.
“He has been indefatigable in his search,” continued Winifred, “and has even journeyed to Manchester. But though he visited Sir Rowland Trenchard’s seat, Ashton Hall, he could gain no tidings of him, or of his uncle, Sir Rowland, who, it seems, has left the country.”
“Never to return,” remarked Jack, gloomily. “Before to-morrow morning I will ascertain what has become of Thames, or perish in the attempt. And now tell me what has happened to my poor mother?”
“Ever since your last capture, and Thames’s mysterious disappearance, she has been dreadfully ill,” replied Winifred; “so ill, that each day was expected to be her last. She has also been afflicted with occasional returns of her terrible malady. On Tuesday night, she was rather better, and I had left her for a short time, as I thought, asleep on the sofa in the little parlour of which she is so fond —”
“Well,” exclaimed Jack.
“On my return, I found the window open, and the room vacant. She was gone.”
“Did you discover any trace of footsteps?” inquired Jack eagerly.
“There were some marks near the window; but whether recently made or not could not be ascertained,” replied Winifred.
“Oh God!” exclaimed Jack, in a tone of the bitterest anguish. “My worst fears are realized. She is in Wild’s power.”
“I ought to add,” continued Winifred, “that one of her shoes was picked up in the garden, and that prints of her feet were discovered along the soft mould; whether made in flying from any one, or from rushing forth in distracted terror, it is impossible to say. My father thought the latter. He has had the whole country searched; but hitherto without success.”
“I know where she will be found, and how,” rejoined Jack with a shudder.
“I have something further to tell you,” pursued Winifred. “Shortly after your last visit to Dollis Hill, my father was one evening waylaid by a man, who informed him that he had something to communicate respecting Thames, and had a large sum of money, and some important documents to deliver to him, which would be given up, provided he would undertake to procure your liberation.”
“It was Blueskin,” observed Jack.
“So my father thought,” replied Winifred; “and he therefore instantly fired upon him. But though the shot took effect, as was evident from the stains on the ground, the villain escaped.”
“Your father did right,” replied Jack, with some bitterness. “But if he had not fired that shot, he might have saved Thames, and possessed himself of papers which would have established his birth, and his right to the estates of the Trenchard family.”
“Would you have had him spare my mother’s murderer?” cried Winifred.
“Ho, no,” replied Jack. “And yet — but it is only part of the chain of ill-luck that seems wound around me. Listen to me, Winifred.”
And he hastily related the occurrences in Jonathan Wild’s house.
The account of the discovery of Sir Rowland’s murder filled Winifred with alarm; but when she learnt what had befallen Thames — how he had been stricken down by the thief-taker’s bludgeon, and left for dead, she uttered a piercing scream, fainted, and would have fallen, if Jack had not caught her in his arms.
Jack had well-nigh fallen too. The idea that he held in his arms the girl whom he had once so passionately loved, and for whom he still retained an ardent but hopeless attachment, almost overcame him. Gazing at her with eyes blinded with tears, he imprinted one brotherly kiss upon her lips. It was the first — and the last!
At this juncture, the handle of the door was tried, and the voice of Mr. Wood was heard without, angrily demanding admittance.
“What’s the matter?” he cried. “I thought I heard a scream. Why is the door fastened? Open it directly!”
“Are you alone?” asked Jack, mimicking the voice of Kneebone.
“What for?” demanded Wood. “Open the door, I say, or I’ll burst it open.”
Carefully depositing Winifred on a sofa, Jack then extinguished the light, and, as he unfastened the door, crept behind it. In rushed Mr. Wood, with a candle in his hand, which Jack instantly blew out, and darted down stairs. He upset some one — probably Mr. Bird — who was rushing up stairs, alarmed by Mr. Wood’s cries: but, regardless of this, he darted along a passage, gained the shop, and passed through an open door into the street.
And thus he was once more free, having effected one of the most wonderful escapes ever planned or accomplished.