<h2 id="id02061" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER XL.</h2>
<h5 id="id02062">THE ATTORNEY'S ADVENTURES ON THE WAY HOME.</h5>
<p id="id02063" style="margin-top: 2em">Mr. Jos. Larkin was now moving alone, under the limbs of the Brandon
trees. He knew the path, as he had boasted to Lord Chelford, from his
boyhood; and, as he pursued his way, his mind got upon the accustomed
groove, and amused itself with speculations respecting the vagaries of
Mark Wylder.</p>
<p id="id02064">'I wonder what his lordship thinks. He was very close—very' ruminated
Larkin; 'no distinct ideas about it possibly; and did not seem to wish to
lead me to the subject. Can he <i>know</i> anything? Eh, can he possibly?
Those high fellows are very knowing often—so much on the turf, and all
that—very sharp and very deep.'</p>
<p id="id02065">He was thinking of a certain noble lord in difficulties, who had hit a
client of his rather hard, and whose affairs did not reflect much credit
upon their noble conductor.</p>
<p id="id02066">'Aye, I dare say, deep enough, and intimate with the Lakes. He expects to
be home in two months' time. <i>He's</i> a deep fellow too; he does not like
to let people know what he's about. I should not be surprised if he came
to-morrow. Lake and Lord Chelford may both know more than they say. Why
should they both object merely to receive and fund his money? They think
he wants to get them into a fix—hey? If I'm to conduct his business, I
ought to know it; if he keeps a secret from me, affecting all his
business relations, like this, and driving him about the world like an
absconding bankrupt, how can I advise him?'</p>
<p id="id02067">All this drifted slowly through his mind, and each suggestion had its
collateral speculations; and so it carried him pleasantly a good way on
his walk, and he was now in the shadow of the dense copsewood that
mantles the deep ravine which debouches into Redman's Dell.</p>
<p id="id02068">The road was hardly two yards wide, and the wood walled it in, and
overhung it occasionally in thick, irregular masses. As the attorney
marched leisurely onward, he saw, or fancied that he saw, now and then,
in uncertain glimpses, something white in motion among the trees beside
him.</p>
<p id="id02069">At first he did not mind; but it continued, and grew gradually
unpleasant. It might be a goat, a white goat; but no, it was too tall for
that. Had he seen it at all? Aye! there it was, no mistake now. A
poacher, maybe? But their poachers were not of the dangerous sort, and
there had not been a robber about Gylingden within the memory of man.
Besides, why on earth should either show himself in that absurd way?</p>
<p id="id02070">He stopped—he listened—he stared suspiciously into the profound
darkness. Then he thought he heard a rustling of the leaves near him, and
he hallooed, 'Who's there?' But no answer came.</p>
<p id="id02071">So, taking heart of grace, he marched on, still zealously peering among
the trees, until, coming to an opening in the pathway, he more distinctly
saw a tall, white figure, standing in an ape-like attitude, with its arms
extended, grasping two boughs, and stooping, as if peeping cautiously, as
he approached.</p>
<p id="id02072">The good attorney drew up and stared at this gray phantasm, saying to
himself, 'Yes,' in a sort of quiet hiss.</p>
<p id="id02073">He stopped in a horror, and as he gazed, the figure suddenly drew back
and disappeared.</p>
<p id="id02074">'Very pleasant this!' said the attorney, after a pause, recovering a
little. 'What on earth can it be?'</p>
<p id="id02075">Jos. Larkin could not tell which way it had gone. He had already passed
the midway point, where this dark path begins to descend through the
ravine into Redman's Dell. He did not like going forward—but to turn
back might bring him again beside the mysterious figure. And though he
was not, of course, afraid of ghosts, nor in this part of the world, of
robbers, yet somehow he did not know what to make of this gigantic gray
monkey.</p>
<p id="id02076">So, not caring to stay longer, and seeing nothing to be gained by turning
back, the attorney buttoned the top button of his coat, and holding his
head very erect, and placing as much as he could of the path between
himself and the side where the figure had disappeared, marched on
steadily. It was too dark, and the way not quite regular enough, to
render any greater speed practicable.</p>
<p id="id02077">From the thicket, as he proceeded, he heard a voice—he had often shot
woodcocks in that cover—calling in a tone that sounded in his ears like
banter, 'Mark—Mark—Mark—Mark.'</p>
<p id="id02078">He stopped, holding his breath, and the sound ceased.</p>
<p id="id02079">'Well, this certainly is not usual,' murmured Mr. Larkin, who was a
little more perturbed than perhaps he quite cared to acknowledge even to
himself. 'Some fellow perhaps watching for a friend—or tricks, maybe.'</p>
<p id="id02080">Then the attorney, trying his supercilious smile in the dark, listened
again for a good while, but nothing was heard except those whisperings of
the wind which poets speak of. He looked before him with his eyebrows
screwed, in a vain effort to pierce the darkness, and the same behind
him; and then after another pause, he began uncomfortably to move down
the path once more.</p>
<p id="id02081">In a short time the same voice, with the same uncertain echo among the
trees, cried faintly, 'Mark—Mark,' and then a pause; then again,
'Mark—Mark—Mark,' and then it grew more distant, and sounded among the
trees and reverberations of the glen like laughter.</p>
<p id="id02082">'Mark—ha—ha—hark—ha—ha—ha—hark—Mark—Mark—ha—ha—hark!'</p>
<p id="id02083">'Who's there?' cried the attorney, in a tone rather ferocious from
fright, and stamping on the path. But his summons and the provocation
died away together in the profoundest silence.</p>
<p id="id02084">Mr. Jos. Larkin did not repeat his challenge. This cry of 'Mark!' was
beginning to connect itself uncomfortably in his mind with his
speculations about his wealthy client, which in that solitude and
darkness began to seem not so entirely pure and disinterested as he was
in the habit of regarding them, and a sort of wood-demon, such as a queer
little schoolfellow used long ago to read a tale about in an old German
story-book, was now dogging his darksome steps, and hanging upon his
flank with a vindictive design.</p>
<p id="id02085">Jos. Larkin was not given to fancy, nor troubled with superstition. His
religion was of a comfortable, punctual, business-like cast, which
according with his genius—denied him, indeed, some things for which, in
truth, he had no taste—but in no respect interfered with his main
mission upon earth, which was getting money. He had found no difficulty
hitherto in serving God and Mammon. The joint business prospered. Let us
suppose it was one of those falterings of faith, which try the best men,
that just now made him feel a little queer, and gave his thoughts about
Mark Wylder, now grown habitual, that new and ghastly complexion which
made the situation so unpleasant.</p>
<p id="id02086">He wished himself more than once well out of this confounded pass, and
listened nervously for a good while, and stared once more,
half-frightened, in various directions, into the darkness.</p>
<p id="id02087">'If I thought there could be anything the least wrong or
reprehensible—we are all fallible—in my allowing my mind to turn so
much upon my client, I can certainly say I should be very far from
allowing it—I shall certainly consider it—and I may promise myself to
decide in a Christian spirit, and if there be a doubt, to give it against
myself.'</p>
<p id="id02088">This resolution, which was, he trusted, that of a righteous man, was, I
am afraid, the effect rather of fright than reflection, and employed in
that sense somewhat in the manner of an exorcism—whispered rather to the
ghost than to his conscience.</p>
<p id="id02089">I am sure Larkin did not himself suppose this. On the contrary, he really
believed, I am convinced, that he scouted the ghost, and had merely
volunteered this salutary self-examination as an exercise of conscience.
He could not, however, have doubted that he was very nervous—and that he
would have been glad of the companionship even of one of the Gylingden
shopkeepers, through this infested bit of wood.</p>
<p id="id02090">Having again addressed himself to his journey, he was now approaching
that part of the path where the trees recede a little, leaving a
considerable space unoccupied at either side of his line of march. Here
there was faint moonlight and starlight, very welcome; but a little in
advance of him, where the copsewood closed in again, just above those
stone steps which Lake and his sister Rachel had mounted together upon
the night of the memorable rendezvous, he fancied that he again saw the
gray figure cowering among the foremost stems of the wood.</p>
<p id="id02091">It was a great shock. He stopped short—and as he stared upon the object,
he felt that electric chill and rising of the hair which accompany
supernatural panic.</p>
<p id="id02092">As he gazed, however, it was gone. Yes. At all events, he could see it no
more. Had he seen it there at all? He was in such an odd state he could
not quite trust himself. He looked back hesitatingly. But he remembered
how very long and dark the path that way was, and how unpleasant his
adventures there had been. And although there was a chance that the gray
monkey was lurking somewhere near the path, still there was now but a
short space between him and the broad carriage track down Redman's Dell,
and once upon that he considered himself almost in the street of
Gylingden.</p>
<p id="id02093">So he made up his mind, and marched resolutely onward, and had nearly
reached that point at which the converging screen of thicket again
overshadows the pathway, when close at his side he saw the tall, white
figure push itself forward among the branches, and in a startling
under-tone of enquiry, like a conspirator challenging his brother, a
voice—the same which he had so often heard during this walk—cried over
his shoulder,</p>
<p id="id02094">'Mark <i>Wylder</i>!'</p>
<p id="id02095">Larkin sprung back a pace or two, turning his face full upon the
challenger, who in his turn was perhaps affrighted, for the same voice
uttered a sort of strangled shriek, and he heard the branches crack and
rustle as he pushed his sudden retreat through them—leaving the attorney
more horrified than ever.</p>
<p id="id02096">No other sound but the melancholy soughing of the night-breeze, and the
hoarse murmur of the stream rising from the stony channel of Redman's
Dell, were now, or during the remainder of his walk through these haunted
grounds, again audible.</p>
<p id="id02097">So, with rapid strides passing the dim gables of Redman's Farm, he at
length found himself, with a sense of indescribable relief, upon the
Gylingden road, and could see the twinkling lights in the windows of the
main street.</p>
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