<h2 id="id03887" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER LXXII.</h2>
<h5 id="id03888">MARK WYLDER'S HAND.</h5>
<p id="id03889" style="margin-top: 2em">Just at the darkest point of the road, a little above the rude column
which I have mentioned, Lake's horse, a young one, shied, stopped short,
recoiling on its haunches, and snorted fiercely into the air. At the same
time, the two dogs which had accompanied us began to bark furiously
beneath in the ravine.</p>
<p id="id03890">The tall form of Uncle Lorne was leaning against a tree at the edge of
the ravine, with his left hand extended towards us, and his right
pointing down the precipice. Perhaps it was this odd apparition that
startled Lake's horse.</p>
<p id="id03891">'I told you he was coming up—lend him a hand,' yelled Uncle Lorne, in
great excitement.</p>
<p id="id03892">No one at such a moment minded his maunderings: but many people
afterwards thought that the crazed old man, in one of his night-rambles,
had seen that which, till now, no one had imagined; and that Captain Lake
himself, whose dislike of him was hardly disguised, suspected him, at
times of that alarming knowledge.</p>
<p id="id03893">Lake plunged the spurs into his beast, which reared so straight that she
toppled backward toward the edge of the ravine.</p>
<p id="id03894">'Strike her on the head; jump off,' shouted Wealdon.</p>
<p id="id03895">But he did neither.</p>
<p id="id03896">'D— it! put her head down; lean forward,' bellowed Wealdon again.</p>
<p id="id03897">But it would not do. With a crash among briars, and a heavy thump from
beneath that shook the earth, the mare and her rider went over. A shout
of horror broke from us all; and Jekyl, watching the catastrophe, was
very near pulling our horse over the edge, and launching us all together,
like the captain, into the defile.</p>
<p id="id03898">In a moment more we were all on the ground, and scrambling down the side
of the ravine, among rocks, boughs, brambles, and ferns, in the deep
shadows of the gorge, the dogs still yelling furiously from below.</p>
<p id="id03899">'Here he is,' cried Jekyl. 'How are you, Lake? Much hurt, old boy? By<br/>
Jove, he's killed, I think.'<br/></p>
<p id="id03900">Lake groaned.</p>
<p id="id03901">He lay about twelve feet below the edge. The mare, now lying near the
bottom of the gorge, had, I believe, fallen upon him, and then tumbled
over.</p>
<p id="id03902">Strange to say, Lake was conscious, and in a few seconds, he said, in
reply to the horrified questions of his friend—</p>
<p id="id03903">'I'm <i>all</i> smashed. Don't move me;' and, in a minute more—'Don't mind
that d—d brute; she's killed. Let her lie.'</p>
<p id="id03904">It appeared very odd, but so it was, he appeared eager upon this point,
and, faint as he was, almost savage.</p>
<p id="id03905">'Tell them to let her lie there.'</p>
<p id="id03906">Wealdon and I, however, scrambled down the bank. He was right. The mare
lay stone dead, on her side, at the bottom. He lifted her head, by the
ear, and let it fall back.</p>
<p id="id03907">In the meantime the dogs continued their unaccountable yelling close by.</p>
<p id="id03908">'What the devil's that?' said Wealdon.</p>
<p id="id03909">Something like a stunted, blackened branch was sticking out of the peat,
ending in a set of short, thickish twigs. This is what it seemed. The
dogs were barking at it. It was, really, a human hand and arm, disclosed
by the slipping of the bank; undermined by the brook, which was swollen
by the recent rains.</p>
<p id="id03910">The dogs were sniffing and yelping about it.</p>
<p id="id03911">'It's a hand!' cried Wealdon, with an oath.</p>
<p id="id03912">'A hand?' I echoed.</p>
<p id="id03913">We were both peering at it, having drawn near, stooping and hesitating as
men do in a curious horror.</p>
<p id="id03914">It was, indeed, a human hand and arm, disclosed from about the elbow,
enveloped in a discoloured coat-sleeve, which fell back from the limb,
and the fingers, like it black, were extended in the air. Nothing more of
the body to which it belonged, except the point of a knee, in stained and
muddy trousers, protruding from the peat, was visible.</p>
<p id="id03915">It must have lain there a considerable time, for, notwithstanding the
antiseptic properties of that sort of soil, mixed with the decayed bark
and fibre of trees, a portion of the flesh of the hand was decomposed,
and the naked bone disclosed. On the little finger something glimmered
dully.</p>
<p id="id03916">In this livid hand, rising from the earth, there was a character both of
menace and appeal; and on the finger, as I afterwards saw at the inquest,
glimmered the talismanic legend 'Resurgam—I will rise again!' It was the
corpse of Mark Wylder, which had lain buried here undiscovered for many
months. A horrible odour loaded the air. Perhaps it was this smell of
carrion, from which horses sometimes recoil with a special terror, that
caused the swerving and rearing which had ended so fatally. At that
moment we heard a voice calling, and raising our eyes, saw Uncle Lorne
looking down from the rock with an agitated scowl.</p>
<p id="id03917">'I've done with him now—<i>emeritus</i>—he touches me, no more. Take him by
the hand, merciful lads, or they'll draw him down again.'</p>
<p id="id03918">And with these words Uncle Lorne receded, and I saw him no more.</p>
<p id="id03919">As yet we had no suspicion whose was the body thus unexpectedly
discovered.</p>
<p id="id03920">We beat off the dogs, and on returning to Lake, found Jekyl trying to
raise him a little against a tree. We were not far from Redman's Farm,
and it was agreed, on hasty consultation, that our best course would be
to carry Lake thither at once by the footpath, and that one of
us—Wealdon undertook this—should drive the carriage on, and apprising
Rachel on the way of the accident which had happened, and that her
brother was on his way thither, should drive on to Buddle's house,
sending assistance to us from the town.</p>
<p id="id03921">It was plain that Stanley Lake's canvass was pretty well over. There was
not one of us who looked at him that did not feel convinced that he was
mortally hurt. I don't think he believed so himself then; but we could
not move him from the place where he lay without inflicting so much pain,
that we were obliged to wait for assistance.</p>
<p id="id03922">'D— the dogs, what are they barking for?' said Lake, faintly. He seemed
distressed by the noise.</p>
<p id="id03923">'There's a dead body partly disclosed down there—some one murdered and
buried; but one of Mr. Juke's young men is keeping them off.'</p>
<p id="id03924">Lake made an effort to raise himself, but with a grin and a suppressed
moan he abandoned it.</p>
<p id="id03925">'Is there no doctor—I'm very much hurt?' said Lake, faintly, after a
minute's silence.</p>
<p id="id03926">We told him that Buddle had been sent for; and that we only awaited help
to get him down to Redman's Farm.</p>
<p id="id03927">When Rachel heard the clang of hoofs and the rattle of the tax-cart
driving down the mill-road, at a pace so unusual, a vague augury of evil
smote her. She was standing in the porch of her tiny house, and old Tamar
was sitting knitting on the bench close by.</p>
<p id="id03928">'Tamar, they are galloping down the road, I think—what can it mean?'
exclaimed the young lady, scared she could not tell why; and old Tamar
stood up, and shaded her eyes with her shrunken hand.</p>
<p id="id03929">Tom Wealdon pulled up at the little wicket. He was pale. He had lost his
hat, too, among the thickets, and could not take time to recover it.
Altogether he looked wild.</p>
<p id="id03930">He put his hand to where his hat should have been in token of salutation,
and said he—</p>
<p id="id03931">'I beg pardon, Miss Lake, Ma'am, but I'm sorry to say your brother the
captain's badly hurt, and maybe you could have a shakedown in the parlour
ready for him by the time I come back with the doctor, Ma'am?'</p>
<p id="id03932">Rachel, she did not know how, was close by the wheel of the vehicle by
this time.</p>
<p id="id03933">'Is it Sir Harry Bracton? He's in the town, I know. Is Stanley shot?'</p>
<p id="id03934">'Not shot; only thrown, Miss, into the Dell; his mare shied at a dead
body that's there. You'd better stay where you are, Miss; but if you
could send up some water, I think he'd like it. Going for the doctor,
Ma'am; good-bye, Miss Lake.'</p>
<p id="id03935">And away went Wealdon, wild, pale, and hatless, like a man pursued by
robbers.</p>
<p id="id03936">'Oh! Tamar, he's killed—Stanley's killed—I'm sure he's killed, and
all's discovered'—and Rachel ran wildly up the hill a few steps, but
stopped and returned as swiftly.</p>
<p id="id03937">'Thank God, Miss,' said old Tamar, lifting up her trembling fingers and
white eyes to Heaven. 'Better dead, Miss, than living on in sin and
sorrow, better discovered than hid by daily falsehood and cruelty. Old
Tamar's tired of life; she's willing to go, and wishin' for death this
many a day. Oh! Master Stanley, my child!'</p>
<p id="id03938">Rachel went into the parlour and kneeled down, with white upturned face
and clasped hands. But she could not pray. She could only look her wild
supplication;—deliverance—an issue out of the terrors that beset her;
and 'oh! poor miserable lost Stanley!' It was just a look and an
inarticulate cry for mercy.</p>
<p id="id03939">An hour after Captain Stanley Brandon Lake, whose 'election address' was
figuring that evening in the 'Dollington Courier,' and in the 'County
Chronicle,' lay with his clothes still on, in the little drawing-room of
Redman's Farm, his injuries ascertained, his thigh broken near the hip,
and his spine fractured. No hope—no possibility of a physical
reascension, this time.</p>
<p id="id03940">Meanwhile, in the Blackberry Dell, Doctor Buddle was assisting at a
different sort of inquisition. The two policemen who constituted the
civil force of Gylingden, two justices of the peace, the doctor, and a
crowd of amateurs, among whom I rank myself, were grouped in the dismal
gorge, a little to windward of the dead body, which fate had brought to
light, while three men were now employed in cautiously disinterring it.</p>
<p id="id03941">When the operation was completed, there remained no doubt whatever on my
mind: discoloured and disfigured as were both clothes and body, I was
sure that the dead man was no other than Mark Wylder. When the clay with
which it was clotted was a little removed, it became indubitable. The
great whiskers; the teeth so white and even; and oddly enough, one black
lock of hair which he wore twisted in a formal curl flat on his forehead,
remained undisturbed in its position, as it was fixed there at his last
toilet for Brandon Hall.</p>
<p id="id03942">In the rude and shallow grave in which he lay, his purse was found, and
some loose silver mixed in the mould. The left hand, on which was the
ring of 'the Persian magician,' was bare; the right gloved, with the
glove of the other hand clutched firmly in it.</p>
<p id="id03943">The body was got up in a sheet to a sort of spring cart which awaited it,
and so conveyed to the 'Silver Lion,' in Gylingden, where it was placed
in a disused coach-house to await the inquest. There the examination was
continued, and his watch (the chain broken) found in his waistcoat
pocket. In his coat-pocket were found (of course, in no very presentable
condition) his cigar-case, his initials stamped on it, for Mark had, in
his day, a keen sense of property; his handkerchief, also marked; a
pocket-book with some entries nearly effaced; and a letter unopened, and
sealed with Lord Chelford's seal. The writing was nearly washed away, but
the letters 'lwich,' or 'twich,' were still legible near the corner, and
it turned out to be a letter to Dulwich, which Mark Wylder had undertaken
to put in the Gylingden post-office, on the last night on which he
appeared at Brandon.</p>
<p id="id03944">The whole town was in a ferment that night. Great debate and conjecture
in the reading-room, and even on the benches of the billiard-room. The
'Silver Lion' did a great business that night. Mine host might have
turned a good round sum only by showing the body, were it not that
Edwards, the chief policeman, had the keys of the coach-house. Much
to-ing and fro-ing there was between the town and Redman's Farm, the
respectable inhabitants all sending or going up to enquire how the
captain was doing. At last Doctor Buddle officially interfered. The
constant bustle was injurious to his patient. An hourly bulletin up to
twelve o'clock should be in the hall of the 'Brandon Arms;' and Redman's
Dell grew quiet once more.</p>
<p id="id03945">When William Wylder heard the news, he fainted; not altogether through
horror or grief, though he felt both; but the change in his circumstances
was so amazing and momentous. It was a strange shock—immense
relief—immense horror—quite overwhelming.</p>
<p id="id03946">Mark had done some good-natured things for him in a small five-pound way;
he had promised him that loan, too, which would have lifted him out of
his Slough of Despond, and he clung with an affectionate gratitude to
these exhibitions of brotherly love. Besides, he had accustomed
himself—the organ of veneration standing prominent on the top of the
vicar's head—to regard Mark in the light of a great practical
genius—'natus rebus agendis;' he knew men so thoroughly—he understood
the world so marvellously! The vicar was not in the least surprised when
Mark came in for a fortune. He had always predicted that Mark must become
<i>very</i> rich, and that nothing but indolence could prevent his ultimately
becoming a very great man. The sudden and total disappearance of so
colossal an object was itself amazing.</p>
<p id="id03947">There was another person very strongly, though differently, affected by
the news. Under pretext of business at Naunton, Jos. Larkin had driven
off early to Five Oaks, to make inspection of his purchase. He dined like
a king in disguise, at the humble little hostelry of Naunton Friars, and
returned in the twilight to the Lodge, which he would make the
dower-house of Five Oaks, with the Howard shield over the door. He was
gracious to his domestics, but the distance was increased: he was nearer
to the clouds, and they looked smaller.</p>
<p id="id03948">'Well, Mrs. Smithers,' said he, encouragingly, his long feet on the
fender, for the evening was sharp, and Mrs. S. knew that he liked a bit
of fire at his tea 'any letters—any calls—any news stirring?'</p>
<p id="id03949">'No letters, nor calls, Sir, please, except the butcher's book. I s'pose,<br/>
Sir, you were viewing the body?'<br/></p>
<p id="id03950">'What body?'</p>
<p id="id03951">'Mr. Wylder's, please, Sir.'</p>
<p id="id03952">'The vicar!' exclaimed Mr. Larkin, his smile of condescension suddenly
vanishing.</p>
<p id="id03953">'No, Sir; Mr. <i>Mark</i> Wylder, please; the gentleman, Sir, as was to 'av
married Miss Brandon.'</p>
<p id="id03954">'What the devil do you mean, woman?' ejaculated the attorney, his back to
the fire, standing erect, and a black shadow over his amazed and offended
countenance.</p>
<p id="id03955">'The devil,' in such a mouth, was so appalling and so amazing, that the
worthy woman gazed, thunder-struck, upon him for a moment.</p>
<p id="id03956">'Beg your pardon, Sir; but his body's bin found, Sir.'</p>
<p id="id03957">'You mean Mr. <i>Mark</i>?'</p>
<p id="id03958">'Yes, please, Sir; in a hole near the mill road—it's up in the "Silver<br/>
Lion" now, Sir.'<br/></p>
<p id="id03959">'It must be the vicar's—it must,' said Jos. Larkin, getting his hat on,
sternly, and thinking how likely he was to throw himself into the mill
race, and impossible it was that Mark, whom he and Larcom had both seen
alive and well last night—the latter, indeed, <i>this morning</i>—could
possibly be the man. And thus comforting himself, he met old Major
Jackson on the green, and that gentleman's statement ended with the
words; 'and in an advanced stage of decomposition.'</p>
<p id="id03960">'That settles the matter,' said Larkin, breathing again, and with a toss
of his head, and almost a smile of disdain: 'for I saw Mr. Mark Wylder
late last night at Shillingsworth.'</p>
<p id="id03961">Leaving Major Jackson in considerable surprise, Mr. Larkin walked off to
Edwards' dwelling, at the top of Church Street, and found that active
policeman at home. In his cool, grand, official way, Mr. Larkin requested
Mr. Edwards to accompany him to the 'Silver Lion,' where in the same calm
and commanding way, he desired him to attend him to view the corpse. In
virtue of his relation to Mark Wylder, and of his position as sole
resident and legal practitioner, he was obeyed.</p>
<p id="id03962">The odious spectacle occupied him for some minutes. He did not speak
while they remained in the room. On coming out there was a black cloud
upon the attorney's features, and he said, sulkily, to Edwards, who had
turned the key in the lock, and now touched his hat as he listened,</p>
<p id="id03963">'Yes, there is a resemblance, but it is all a mistake. I travelled as far
as Shillingsworth last night with Mr. Mark Wylder: he was perfectly well.
This can't be he.'</p>
<p id="id03964">But there was a terrible impression on Mr. Jos. Larkin's mind that this
certainly <i>was</i> he, and with a sulky nod to the policeman, he walked
darkly down to the vicar's house. The vicar had been sent for to Naunton
to pray with a dying person; and Mr. Larkin, disappointed, left a note to
state that in writing that morning, as he had done, in reference to the
purchase of the reversion, through Messrs. Burlington and Smith, he had
simply expressed his own surmises as to the probable withdrawal of the
intending purchaser, but had received no formal, nor, indeed, <i>any</i>
authentic information, from either the party or the solicitors referred
to, to that effect. That he mentioned this lest misapprehension should
arise, but not as attaching any importance to the supposed discovery
which seemed to imply Mr. Mark Wylder's death. That gentleman, on the
contrary, he had seen alive and well at Shillingsworth on the night
previous; and he had been seen in conference with Captain Lake at a
subsequent hour, at Brandon.</p>
<p id="id03965">From all this the reader may suppose that Mr. Jos. Larkin was not quite
in a comfortable state, and he resolved to get the deeds, and go down
again to the vicar's, and persuade him to execute them. He could make
William Wylder, of course, do whatever he pleased.</p>
<p id="id03966">There were a good many drunken fellows about the town, but there was an
end of election demonstrations in the Brandon interest. Captain Lake was
not going in for that race; he would be on another errand by the time the
writ came down.</p>
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