<h2>XXVIII. ANNE DOES WONDERS</h2>
<p>Anne fearfully surveyed her position. The upper windows
of the cottage were of flimsiest lead-work, and to keep him out
would be hopeless. She felt that not a moment was to be
lost in getting away. Running downstairs she opened the
door, and then it occurred to her terrified understanding that
there would be no chance of escaping him by flight afoot across
such an extensive down, since he might mount his horse and easily
ride after her. The animal still remained tethered at the
corner of the garden; if she could release him and frighten him
away before Festus returned, there would not be quite such odds
against her. She accordingly unhooked the horse by reaching
over the bank, and then, pulling off her muslin neckerchief,
flapped it in his eyes to startle him. But the gallant
steed did not move or flinch; she tried again, and he seemed
rather pleased than otherwise. At this moment she heard a
cry from the cottage, and turning, beheld her adversary
approaching round the corner of the building.</p>
<p>‘I thought I should tole out the mouse by that
trick!’ cried Festus exultingly. Instead of going for
a ladder, he had simply hidden himself at the back to tempt her
down.</p>
<p>Poor Anne was now desperate. The bank on which she stood
was level with the horse’s back, and the creature seemed
quiet as a lamb. With a determination of which she was
capable in emergencies, she seized the rein, flung herself upon
the sheepskin, and held on by the mane. The amazed charger
lifted his head, sniffed, wrenched his ears hither and thither,
and started off at a frightful speed across the down.</p>
<p>‘O, my heart and limbs!’ said Festus under his
breath, as, thoroughly alarmed, he gazed after her.
‘She on Champion! She’ll break her neck, and I
shall be tried for manslaughter, and disgrace will be brought
upon the name of Derriman!’</p>
<p>Champion continued to go at a stretch-gallop, but he did
nothing worse. Had he plunged or reared, Derriman’s
fears might have been verified, and Anne have come with deadly
force to the ground. But the course was good, and in the
horse’s speed lay a comparative security. She was
scarcely shaken in her precarious half-horizontal position,
though she was awed to see the grass, loose stones, and other
objects pass her eyes like strokes whenever she opened them,
which was only just for a second at intervals of half a minute;
and to feel how wildly the stirrups swung, and that what struck
her knee was the bucket of the carbine, and that it was a
pistol-holster which hurt her arm.</p>
<p>They quickly cleared the down, and Anne became conscious that
the course of the horse was homeward. As soon as the ground
began to rise towards the outer belt of upland which lay between
her and the coast, Champion, now panting and reeking with
moisture, lessened his speed in sheer weariness, and proceeded at
a rapid jolting trot. Anne felt that she could not hold on
half so well; the gallop had been child’s play compared
with this. They were in a lane, ascending to a ridge, and
she made up her mind for a fall. Over the ridge rose an
animated spot, higher and higher; it turned out to be the upper
part of a man, and the man to be a soldier. Such was
Anne’s attitude that she only got an occasional glimpse of
him; and, though she feared that he might be a Frenchman, she
feared the horse more than the enemy, as she had feared Festus
more than the horse. Anne had energy enough left to cry,
‘Stop him; stop him!’ as the soldier drew near.</p>
<p>He, astonished at the sight of a military horse with a bundle
of drapery across his back, had already placed himself in the
middle of the lane, and he now held out his arms till his figure
assumed the form of a Latin cross planted in the roadway.
Champion drew near, swerved, and stood still almost suddenly, a
check sufficient to send Anne slipping down his flank to the
ground. The timely friend stepped forward and helped her to
her feet, when she saw that he was John Loveday.</p>
<p>‘Are you hurt?’ he said hastily, having turned
quite pale at seeing her fall.</p>
<p>‘O no; not a bit,’ said Anne, gathering herself up
with forced briskness, to make light of the misadventure.</p>
<p>‘But how did you get in such a place?’</p>
<p>‘There, he’s gone!’ she exclaimed, instead
of replying, as Champion swept round John Loveday and cantered
off triumphantly in the direction of Oxwell, a performance which
she followed with her eyes.</p>
<p>‘But how did you come upon his back, and whose horse is
it?’</p>
<p>‘I will tell you.’</p>
<p>‘Well?’</p>
<p>‘I—cannot tell you.’</p>
<p>John looked steadily at her, saying nothing.</p>
<p>‘How did you come here?’ she asked.
‘Is it true that the French have not landed at
all?’</p>
<p>‘Quite true; the alarm was groundless. I’ll
tell you all about it. You look very tired. You had
better sit down a few minutes. Let us sit on this
bank.’</p>
<p>He helped her to the slope indicated, and continued, still as
if his thoughts were more occupied with the mystery of her recent
situation than with what he was saying: ‘We arrived at
Budmouth Barracks this morning, and are to lie there all the
summer. I could not write to tell father we were
coming. It was not because of any rumour of the French, for
we knew nothing of that till we met the people on the road, and
the colonel said in a moment the news was false. Buonaparte
is not even at Boulogne just now. I was anxious to know how
you had borne the fright, so I hastened to Overcombe at once, as
soon as I could get out of barracks.’</p>
<p>Anne, who had not been at all responsive to his discourse, now
swayed heavily against him, and looking quickly down he found
that she had silently fainted. To support her in his arms
was of course the impulse of a moment. There was no water
to be had, and he could think of nothing else but to hold her
tenderly till she came round again. Certainly he desired
nothing more.</p>
<p>Again he asked himself, what did it all mean?</p>
<p>He waited, looking down upon her tired eyelids, and at the row
of lashes lying upon each cheek, whose natural roundness showed
itself in singular perfection now that the customary pink had
given place to a pale luminousness caught from the surrounding
atmosphere. The dumpy ringlets about her forehead and
behind her poll, which were usually as tight as springs, had been
partially uncoiled by the wildness of her ride, and hung in split
locks over her forehead and neck. John, who, during the
long months of his absence, had lived only to meet her again, was
in a state of ecstatic reverence, and bending down he gently
kissed her.</p>
<p>Anne was just becoming conscious.</p>
<p>‘O, Mr. Derriman, never, never!’ she murmured,
sweeping her face with her hand.</p>
<p>‘I thought he was at the bottom of it,’ said
John.</p>
<p>Anne opened her eyes, and started back from him.
‘What is it?’ she said wildly.</p>
<p>‘You are ill, my dear Miss Garland,’ replied John
in trembling anxiety, and taking her hand.</p>
<p>‘I am not ill, I am wearied out!’ she said.
‘Can’t we walk on? How far are we from
Overcombe?’</p>
<p>‘About a mile. But tell me, somebody has been
hurting you—frightening you. I know who it was; it
was Derriman, and that was his horse. Now do you tell me
all.’</p>
<p>Anne reflected. ‘Then if I tell you,’ she
said, ‘will you discuss with me what I had better do, and
not for the present let my mother and your father know? I
don’t want to alarm them, and I must not let my affairs
interrupt the business connexion between the mill and the hall
that has gone on for so many years.’</p>
<p>The trumpet-major promised, and Anne told the adventure.
His brow reddened as she went on, and when she had done she said,
‘Now you are angry. Don’t do anything dreadful,
will you? Remember that this Festus will most likely
succeed his uncle at Oxwell, in spite of present appearances, and
if Bob succeeds at the mill there should be no enmity between
them.’</p>
<p>‘That’s true. I won’t tell Bob.
Leave him to me. Where is Derriman now? On his way
home, I suppose. When I have seen you into the house I will
deal with him—quite quietly, so that he shall say nothing
about it.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, appeal to him, do! Perhaps he will be better
then.’</p>
<p>They walked on together, Loveday seeming to experience much
quiet bliss.</p>
<p>‘I came to look for you,’ he said, ‘because
of that dear, sweet letter you wrote.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I did write you a letter,’ she admitted,
with misgiving, now beginning to see her mistake. ‘It
was because I was sorry I had blamed you.’</p>
<p>‘I am almost glad you did blame me,’ said John
cheerfully, ‘since, if you had not, the letter would not
have come. I have read it fifty times a day.’</p>
<p>This put Anne into an unhappy mood, and they proceeded without
much further talk till the mill chimneys were visible below
them. John then said that he would leave her to go in by
herself.</p>
<p>‘Ah, you are going back to get into some danger on my
account?’</p>
<p>‘I can’t get into much danger with such a fellow
as he, can I?’ said John, smiling.</p>
<p>‘Well, no,’ she answered, with a sudden
carelessness of tone. It was indispensable that he should
be undeceived, and to begin the process by taking an affectedly
light view of his personal risks was perhaps as good a way to do
it as any. Where friendliness was construed as love, an
assumed indifference was the necessary expression for
friendliness.</p>
<p>So she let him go; and, bidding him hasten back as soon as he
could, went down the hill, while John’s feet retraced the
upland.</p>
<p>The trumpet-major spent the whole afternoon and evening in
that long and difficult search for Festus Derriman.
Crossing the down at the end of the second hour he met Molly and
Mrs. Loveday. The gig had been repaired, they had learnt
the groundlessness of the alarm, and they would have been
proceeding happily enough but for their anxiety about Anne.
John told them shortly that she had got a lift home, and
proceeded on his way.</p>
<p>The worthy object of his search had in the meantime been
plodding homeward on foot, sulky at the loss of his charger,
encumbered with his sword, belts, high boots, and uniform, and in
his own discomfiture careless whether Anne Garland’s life
had been endangered or not.</p>
<p>At length Derriman reached a place where the road ran between
high banks, one of which he mounted and paced along as a change
from the hard trackway. Ahead of him he saw an old man
sitting down, with eyes fixed on the dust of the road, as if
resting and meditating at one and the same time. Being
pretty sure that he recognized his uncle in that venerable
figure, Festus came forward stealthily, till he was immediately
above the old man’s back. The latter was clothed in
faded nankeen breeches, speckled stockings, a drab hat, and a
coat which had once been light blue, but from exposure as a
scarecrow had assumed the complexion and fibre of a dried
pudding-cloth. The farmer was, in fact, returning to the
hall, which he had left in the morning some time later than his
nephew, to seek an asylum in a hollow tree about two miles
off. The tree was so situated as to command a view of the
building, and Uncle Benjy had managed to clamber up inside this
natural fortification high enough to watch his residence through
a hole in the bark, till, gathering from the words of occasional
passers-by that the alarm was at least premature, he had ventured
into daylight again.</p>
<p>He was now engaged in abstractedly tracing a diagram in the
dust with his walking-stick, and muttered words to himself
aloud. Presently he arose and went on his way without
turning round. Festus was curious enough to descend and
look at the marks. They represented an oblong, with two
semi-diagonals, and a little square in the middle. Upon the
diagonals were the figures 20 and 17, and on each side of the
parallelogram stood a letter signifying the point of the
compass.</p>
<p>‘What crazy thing is running in his head now?’
said Festus to himself, with supercilious pity, recollecting that
the farmer had been singing those very numbers earlier in the
morning. Being able to make nothing of it, he lengthened
his strides, and treading on tiptoe overtook his relative,
saluting him by scratching his back like a hen. The
startled old farmer danced round like a top, and gasping, said,
as he perceived his nephew, ‘What, Festy! not thrown from
your horse and killed, then, after all!’</p>
<p>‘No, nunc. What made ye think that?’</p>
<p>‘Champion passed me about an hour ago, when I was in
hiding—poor timid soul of me, for I had nothing to lose by
the French coming—and he looked awful with the stirrups
dangling and the saddle empty. ’Tis a gloomy sight,
Festy, to see a horse cantering without a rider, and I thought
you had been—feared you had been thrown off and killed as
dead as a nit.’</p>
<p>‘Bless your dear old heart for being so anxious!
And what pretty picture were you drawing just now with your
walking-stick!’</p>
<p>‘O, that! That is only a way I have of amusing
myself. It showed how the French might have advanced to the
attack, you know. Such trifles fill the head of a weak old
man like me.’</p>
<p>‘Or the place where something is hid away—money,
for instance?’</p>
<p>‘Festy,’ said the farmer reproachfully, ‘you
always know I use the old glove in the bedroom cupboard for any
guinea or two I possess.’</p>
<p>‘Of course I do,’ said Festus ironically.</p>
<p>They had now reached a lonely inn about a mile and a half from
the hall, and, the farmer not responding to his nephew’s
kind invitation to come in and treat him, Festus entered
alone. He was dusty, draggled, and weary, and he remained
at the tavern long. The trumpet-major, in the meantime,
having searched the roads in vain, heard in the course of the
evening of the yeoman’s arrival at this place, and that he
would probably be found there still. He accordingly
approached the door, reaching it just as the dusk of evening
changed to darkness.</p>
<p>There was no light in the passage, but John pushed on at
hazard, inquired for Derriman, and was told that he would be
found in the back parlour alone. When Loveday first entered
the apartment he was unable to see anything, but following the
guidance of a vigorous snoring, he came to the settle, upon which
Festus lay asleep, his position being faintly signified by the
shine of his buttons and other parts of his uniform. John
laid his hand upon the reclining figure and shook him, and by
degrees Derriman stopped his snore and sat up.</p>
<p>‘Who are you?’ he said, in the accents of a man
who has been drinking hard. ‘Is it you, dear
Anne? Let me kiss you; yes, I will.’</p>
<p>‘Shut your mouth, you pitiful blockhead; I’ll
teach you genteeler manners than to persecute a young woman in
that way!’ and taking Festus by the ear, he gave it a good
pull. Festus broke out with an oath, and struck a vague
blow in the air with his fist; whereupon the trumpet-major dealt
him a box on the right ear, and a similar one on the left to
artistically balance the first. Festus jumped up and used
his fists wildly, but without any definite result.</p>
<p>‘Want to fight, do ye, eh?’ said John.
‘Nonsense! you can’t fight, you great baby, and never
could. You are only fit to be smacked!’ and he dealt
Festus a specimen of the same on the cheek with the palm of his
hand.</p>
<p>‘No, sir, no! O, you are Loveday, the young man
she’s going to be married to, I suppose? Dash me, I
didn’t want to hurt her, sir.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, my name is Loveday; and you’ll know where to
find me, since we can’t finish this to-night. Pistols
or swords, whichever you like, my boy. Take that, and that,
so that you may not forget to call upon me!’ and again he
smacked the yeoman’s ears and cheeks. ‘Do you
know what it is for, eh?’</p>
<p>‘No, Mr. Loveday, sir—yes, I mean, I
do.’</p>
<p>‘What is it for, then? I shall keep smacking until
you tell me. Gad! if you weren’t drunk, I’d
half kill you here to-night.’</p>
<p>‘It is because I served her badly. Damned if I
care! I’ll do it again, and be hanged to
’ee! Where’s my horse Champion? Tell me
that,’ and he hit at the trumpet-major.</p>
<p>John parried this attack, and taking him firmly by the collar,
pushed him down into the seat, saying, ‘Here I hold
’ee till you beg pardon for your doings to-day. Do
you want any more of it, do you?’ And he shook the
yeoman to a sort of jelly.</p>
<p>‘I do beg pardon—no, I don’t. I say
this, that you shall not take such liberties with old Squire
Derriman’s nephew, you dirty miller’s son, you
flour-worm, you smut in the corn! I’ll call you out
to-morrow morning, and have my revenge.’</p>
<p>‘Of course you will; that’s what I came
for.’ And pushing him back into the corner of the
settle, Loveday went out of the house, feeling considerable
satisfaction at having got himself into the beginning of as nice
a quarrel about Anne Garland as the most jealous lover could
desire.</p>
<p>But of one feature in this curious adventure he had not the
least notion—that Festus Derriman, misled by the darkness,
the fumes of his potations, and the constant sight of Anne and
Bob together, never once supposed his assailant to be any other
man than Bob, believing the trumpet-major miles away.</p>
<p>There was a moon during the early part of John’s walk
home, but when he had arrived within a mile of Overcombe the sky
clouded over, and rain suddenly began to fall with some
violence. Near him was a wooden granary on tall stone
staddles, and perceiving that the rain was only a thunderstorm
which would soon pass away, he ascended the steps and entered the
doorway, where he stood watching the half-obscured moon through
the streaming rain. Presently, to his surprise, he beheld a
female figure running forward with great rapidity, not towards
the granary for shelter, but towards open ground. What
could she be running for in that direction? The answer came
in the appearance of his brother Bob from that quarter, seated on
the back of his father’s heavy horse. As soon as the
woman met him, Bob dismounted and caught her in his arms.
They stood locked together, the rain beating into their
unconscious forms, and the horse looking on.</p>
<p>The trumpet-major fell back inside the granary, and threw
himself on a heap of empty sacks which lay in the corner: he had
recognized the woman to be Anne. Here he reclined in a
stupor till he was aroused by the sound of voices under him, the
voices of Anne and his brother, who, having at last discovered
that they were getting wet, had taken shelter under the granary
floor.</p>
<p>‘I have been home,’ said she. ‘Mother
and Molly have both got back long ago. We were all anxious
about you, and I came out to look for you. O, Bob, I am so
glad to see you again!’</p>
<p>John might have heard every word of the conversation, which
was continued in the same strain for a long time; but he stopped
his ears, and would not. Still they remained, and still was
he determined that they should not see him. With the
conserved hope of more than half a year dashed away in a moment,
he could yet feel that the cruelty of a protest would be even
greater than its inutility. It was absolutely by his own
contrivance that the situation had been shaped. Bob, left
to himself, would long ere this have been the husband of another
woman.</p>
<p>The rain decreased, and the lovers went on. John looked
after them as they strolled, aqua-tinted by the weak moon and
mist. Bob had thrust one of his arms through the rein of
the horse, and the other was round Anne’s waist. When
they were lost behind the declivity the trumpet-major came out,
and walked homeward even more slowly than they. As he went
on, his face put off its complexion of despair for one of serene
resolve. For the first time in his dealings with friends he
entered upon a course of counterfeiting, set his features to
conceal his thought, and instructed his tongue to do
likewise. He threw fictitiousness into his very gait, even
now, when there was nobody to see him, and struck at stems of
wild parsley with his regimental switch as he had used to do when
soldiering was new to him, and life in general a charming
experience.</p>
<p>Thus cloaking his sickly thought, he descended to the mill as
the others had done before him, occasionally looking down upon
the wet road to notice how close Anne’s little tracks were
to Bob’s all the way along, and how precisely a curve in
his course was followed by a curve in hers. But after this
he erected his head and walked so smartly up to the front door
that his spurs rang through the court.</p>
<p>They had all reached home, but before any of them could speak
he cried gaily, ‘Ah, Bob, I have been thinking of
you! By God, how are you, my boy? No French
cut-throats after all, you see. Here we are, well and happy
together again.’</p>
<p>‘A good Providence has watched over us,’ said Mrs.
Loveday cheerfully. ‘Yes, in all times and places we
are in God’s hand.’</p>
<p>‘So we be, so we be!’ said the miller, who still
shone in all the fierceness of uniform. ‘Well, now
we’ll ha’e a drop o’ drink.’</p>
<p>‘There’s none,’ said David, coming forward
with a drawn face.</p>
<p>‘What!’ said the miller.</p>
<p>‘Afore I went to church for a pike to defend my native
country from Boney, I pulled out the spigots of all the barrels,
maister; for, thinks I—damn him!—since we can’t
drink it ourselves, he shan’t have it, nor none of his
men.’</p>
<p>‘But you shouldn’t have done it till you was sure
he’d come!’ said the miller, aghast.</p>
<p>‘Chok’ it all, I was sure!’ said
David. ‘I’d sooner see churches fall than good
drink wasted; but how was I to know better?’</p>
<p>‘Well, well; what with one thing and another this day
will cost me a pretty penny!’ said Loveday, bustling off to
the cellar, which he found to be several inches deep in stagnant
liquor. ‘John, how can I welcome ’ee?’ he
continued hopelessly, on his return to the room.
‘Only go and see what he’s done!’</p>
<p>‘I’ve ladled up a drap wi’ a spoon,
trumpet-major,’ said David.
‘’Tisn’t bad drinking, though it do taste a
little of the floor, that’s true.’</p>
<p>John said that he did not require anything at all; and then
they all sat down to supper, and were very temperately gay with a
drop of mild elder-wine which Mrs. Loveday found in the bottom of
a jar. The trumpet-major, adhering to the part he meant to
play, gave humorous accounts of his adventures since he had last
sat there. He told them that the season was to be a very
lively one—that the royal family was coming, as usual, and
many other interesting things; so that when he left them to
return to barracks few would have supposed the British army to
contain a lighter-hearted man.</p>
<p>Anne was the only one who doubted the reality of this
behaviour. When she had gone up to her bedroom she stood
for some time looking at the wick of the candle as if it were a
painful object, the expression of her face being shaped by the
conviction that John’s afternoon words when he helped her
out of the way of Champion were not in accordance with his words
to-night, and that the dimly-realized kiss during her faintness
was no imaginary one. But in the blissful circumstances of
having Bob at hand again she took optimist views, and persuaded
herself that John would soon begin to see her in the light of a
sister.</p>
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