The Works of William Harrison Ainsworth

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by William Harrison Ainsworth


  Seven moons had waned and flown — seven bitter, tearful moons — and each day Lady Rookwood’s situation claimed more soothing attention at the hand of her lord. About this time his wife’s brother, whom he hated, returned from the Dutch wars. Struck with his sister’s altered appearance, he readily divined the cause; indeed, all tongues were eager to proclaim it to him. Passionately attached to her, Lionel Vavasour implored an explanation of the cause of his sister’s griefs. The bewildered lady answered evasively, attributing her woe-begone looks to any other cause than her husband’s cruelty; and pressing her brother, as he valued her peace, her affection, never to allude to the subject again. The fiery youth departed. He next sought out his brother-in-law, and taxed him sharply with his inhumanity, adding threats to his upbraidings. Sir Reginald listened silently and calmly. When the other had finished, with a sarcastic obeisance, he replied: “Sir, I am much beholden for the trouble you have taken in your sister’s behalf. But when she entrusted herself to my keeping, she relinquished, I conceive, all claim on your guardianship: however, I thank you for the trouble you have taken; but, for your own sake, I would venture to caution you against a repetition of interference like the present.”

  “And I, sir, caution you. See that you give heed to my words, or, by the heaven above us! I will enforce attention to them.”

  “You will find me, sir, as prompt at all times to defend my conduct, as I am unalterable in my purposes. Your sister is my wife. What more would you have? Were she a harlot, you should have her back and welcome. The tool is virtuous. Devise some scheme, and take her with you hence — so you rid me of her I am content.”

  “Rookwood, you are a villain.” And Vavasour spat upon his brother’s cheek.

  Sir Reginald’s eyes blazed. His sword started from its scabbard. “Defend yourself!” he exclaimed, furiously attacking Vavasour. Pass after pass was exchanged. Fierce thrusts were made and parried. Feint and appeal, the most desperate and dexterous, were resorted to. Their swords glanced like lightning flashes. In the struggle, the blades became entangled. There was a moment’s cessation. Each glanced at the other with deadly, inextinguishable hate. Both were admirable masters of the art of defence. Both were so brimful of wrath as to be regardless of consequences. They tore back their weapons. Vavasour’s blade shivered. He was at the mercy of his adversary — an adversary who knew no mercy. Sir Reginald passed his rapier through his brother’s body. The hilt struck against his ribs.

  Sir Reginald’s ire was kindled, not extinguished, by the deed he had done. Like the tiger, he had tasted blood — like the tiger, he thirsted for more. He sought his home. He was greeted by his wife. Terrified by his looks, she yet summoned courage sufficient to approach him. She embraced his arm — she clasped his hand. Sir Reginald smiled. His smile was cutting as his dagger’s edge.

  “What ails you, sweetheart?” said he.

  “I know not; your smile frightens me.”

  “My smile frightens you — fool! be thankful that I frown not.”

  “Oh! do not frown. Be gentle, my Reginald, as you were when first I knew you. Smile not so coldly, but as you did then, that I may, for one instant, dream you love me.”

  “Silly wench! There — I do smile.”

  “That smile freezes me. Oh, Reginald, could you but know what I have endured this morning, on your account. My brother Lionel has been here.”

  “Indeed!”

  “Nay, look not so. He insisted on knowing the reason of my altered appearance.”

  “And no doubt you made him acquainted with the cause. You told him your version of the story.”

  “Not a word, as I hope to live.”

  “A lie!”

  “By my truth, no.”

  “A lie, I say. He avouched it to me himself.”

  “Impossible! He could not — would not disobey me.”

  Sir Reginald laughed bitterly.

  “He would not, I am sure, give utterance to any scandal,” continued Lady Rookwood. “You say this but to try me, do you not? — ha! what is this? Your hand is bloody. You have not harmed him? Whose blood is this?”

  “Your brother spat upon my check. I have washed out the stain,” replied Sir Reginald, coldly.

  “Then it is his blood!” shrieked Lady Rookwood, pressing her hand shuddering before her eyes. “Is he dead?”

  Sir Reginald turned away.

  “Stay,” she cried, exerting her feeble strength to retain him, and becoming white as ashes, “abide and hear me. You have killed me, I feel, by your cruelty. I am sinking fast — dying. I, who loved you, only you; yes, one besides — my brother, and you have slain him. Your hands are dripping in his blood, and I have kissed them — have clasped them! And now,” continued she, with an energy that shook Sir Reginald, “I hate you — I renounce you — forever! May my dying words ring in your ears on your death-bed, for that hour will come. You cannot shun that. Then think of him! think of me!”

  “Away!” interrupted Sir Reginald, endeavoring to shake her off.

  “I will not away! I will cling to you — will curse you. My unborn child shall live to curse you — to requite you — to visit my wrongs on you and yours. Weak as I am, you shall not cast me off. You shall learn to fear even me.”

  “I fear nothing living, much less a frantic woman.”

  “Fear the dead, then.”

  There was a struggle — a blow — and the wretched lady sank, shrieking, upon the floor. Convulsions seized her. A mother’s pains succeeded fierce and fast. She spoke no more, but died within the hour, giving birth to a female child.

  Eleanor Rookwood became her father’s idol — her father’s bane. All the love he had to bestow was centred in her. She returned it not. She fled from his caresses. With all her mother’s beauty, she had all her father’s pride. Sir Reginald’s every thought was for his daughter — for her aggrandizement. In vain. She seemed only to endure him, and while his affection waxed stronger, and entwined itself round her alone, she withered beneath his embraces as the shrub withers in the clasping folds of the parasite plant.

  She grew towards womanhood. Suitors thronged around her — gentle and noble ones. Sir Reginald watched them with a jealous eye. He was wealthy, powerful, high in royal favor; and could make his own election. He did so. For the first time, Eleanor promised obedience to his wishes. They accorded with her own humor. The day was appointed. It came. But with it came not the bride. She had fled, with the humblest and the meanest of the pretenders to her hand — with one upon whom Sir Reginald supposed she had not deigned to cast her eyes. He endeavored to forget her, and, to all outward seeming, was successful in the effort. But he felt that the curse was upon him; the undying flame scorched his heart.

  Once, and once only, they met again, in France, whither she had wandered. It was a dread encounter — terrible to both; but most so to Sir Reginald. He spoke not of her afterwards.

  Shortly after the death of his first wife, Sir Reginald had made proposals to a dowager of distinction, with a handsome jointure, one of his early attachments, and was, without scruple, accepted. The power of the family might then be said to be at its zenith; and but for certain untoward circumstances, and the growing influence of his enemies, Sir Reginald would have been elevated to the peerage. Like most reformed spend-thrifts, he had become proportionately avaricious, and his mind seemed engrossed in accumulating wealth. In the meantime, his second wife followed her predecessor, dying, it was said, of vexation and disappointment.

  The propensity to matrimony, always a distinguishing characteristic of the Rookwoods, largely displayed itself in Sir Reginald. Another dame followed — equally rich, younger, and far more beautiful than her immediate predecessor. She was a prodigious flirt, and soon set her husband at defiance. Sir Reginald did not condescend to expostulate. It was not his way. He effectually prevented any recurrence of her indiscretions. She was removed, and with her expired Sir Reginald’s waning popularity. So strong was the expression of odium against him, that he thought
it prudent to retire to his mansion, in the country, and there altogether seclude himself. One anomaly in Sir Reginald’s otherwise utterly selfish character was uncompromising devotion to the house of Stuart; and shortly after the abdication of James II., he followed that monarch to Saint Germain, having previously mixed largely in secret political intrigues; and only returned from the French court to lay his bones with those of his ancestry, in the family vault at Rookwood.

  * * *

  CHAPTER VI. — SIR PIERS ROOKWOOD

  My old master kept a good house, and twenty or thirty tall sword-and-buckler men about him; and in faith his son differs not much; he will have metal too; though he has no store of cutler’s blades, he will have plenty of vintners’ pots. His father kept a good house for honest men, his tenants that brought him in part; and his son keeps a bad house with knaves that help to consume all: ’tis but the change of time: why should any man repine at it? Crickets, good, loving, and lucky worms, were wont to feed, sing, and rejoice in the father’s chimney; and now carrion crows build in the son’s kitchen. — Wilkins: Miseries of Enforced Marriage.

  SIR REGINALD died, leaving issue three children: a daughter, the before-mentioned Eleanor — who, entirely discountenanced by the family, had been seemingly forgotten by all but her father — , and two sons by his third wife. Reginald, the eldest, whose military taste had early procured him the command of a company of horse, and whose politics did not coalesce with those of his sire, fell, during his father’s lifetime, at Killiecrankie, under the banners of William. Piers, therefore, the second son, succeeded to the title.

  A very different character, in many respects, from his father and brother, holding in supreme dislike courts and courtiers, party warfare, political intrigue, and all the subtleties of Jesuitical diplomacy, neither having any inordinate relish for camps or campaigns, Sir Piers Rookwood yet displayed in early life one family propensity, viz., unremitting devotion to the sex. Among his other mistresses was the unfortunate Susan Bradley, in whom by some he was supposed to have been clandestinely united. In early youth, as has been stated, Sir Piers professed the faith of Rome, but shortly after the death of his beautiful mistress — or wife, as it might be — , having quarreled with his father’s confessor, Checkley, he publicly abjured his heresies. Sir Piers subsequently allied himself to Maud, only daughter of Sir Thomas D’Aubeny, the last of a line as proud and intolerant as his own. The tables were then turned. Lady Rookwood usurped sovereign sway over her lord and Sir Piers, a cipher in his own house, scarce master of himself, much less of his dame, endured an existence so miserable, that he was often heard to regret, in his cups, that he had not inherited, with the estate of his forefathers, the family secret of shaking off the matrimonial yoke, when found to press too hardly.

  At the onset, Sir Piers struggled hard to burst his bondage. But in vain — he was fast fettered; and only bruised himself, like the caged lark, against the bars of his prison-house. Abandoning all further effort at emancipation, he gave himself up to the usual resource of a weak mind, debauchery; and drank so deeply to drown his cares, that, in the end, his hale constitution yielded to his excesses. It was even said, that remorse at his abandonment of the faith of his fathers had some share in his misery; and that his old spiritual, and if report spoke truly, sinful adviser, Father Checkley, had visited him secretly at the hall. Sir Piers was observed to shudder whenever the priest’s name was mentioned.

  Sir Piers Rookwood was a good-humored man in the main, had little of the old family leaven about him, and was esteemed by his associates. Of late, however, his temper became soured, and his friends deserted him; for, between his domestic annoyances, remorseful feelings, and the inroads already made upon his constitution by constant inebriety, he grew so desperate and insane in his revels, and committed such fearful extravagances, that even his boon companions shrank from his orgies. Fearful were the scenes between him and Lady Rookwood upon these occasions — appalling to the witnesses, dreadful to themselves. And it was, perhaps, their frequent recurrence, that, more than anything else, banished all decent society from the hall.

  At the time of Sir Piers’s decease, which brings us down to the date of our story, his son and successor, Ranulph, was absent on his travels. Shortly after the completion of his academical education, he had departed to make the tour of the Continent, and had been absent rather better than a year. He had quitted his father in displeasure, and was destined never again to see his face while living. The last intelligence received of young Rookwood was from Bordeaux, whence it was thought he had departed for the Pyrenees. A special messenger had been despatched in search of him, with tidings of the melancholy event. But, as it was deemed improbable by Lady Rookwood that her son could return within any reasonable space, she gave directions for the accomplishment of the funeral rites of her husband on the sixth night after his decease — it being the custom of the Rookwoods ever to inter their dead at midnight, — intrusting their solemnization entirely to the care of one of Sir Piers’s hangers-on — Dr. Titus Tyrconnel, — for which she was greatly scandalized in the neighborhood.

  Ranulph Rookwood was a youth of goodly promise. The stock from which he sprang would on neither side warrant such conclusion. But it sometimes happens that from the darkest elements are compounded the brightest and subtlest substances; and so it occurred in this instance. Fair, frank, and free — generous, open, unsuspicious — he seemed the very opposite of all his race — their antagonizing principle. Capriciously indulgent, his father had allowed him ample means, neither curbing nor restraining his expenditure; acceding at one moment to every inclination, and the next irresolutely opposing it. It was impossible, therefore, for him, in such a state of things, to act decidedly, without incurring his father’s displeasure; and the only measure he resolved upon, which was to absent himself for a time, was conjectured to have brought about the result he had endeavored to avoid. Other reasons, however, there were, which secretly influenced him, which it will be our business in due time to detail.

  * * *

  CHAPTER VII. — THE RETURN

  Flam. How croaks the raven?

  Is our good Duchess dead?

  Lod. Dead.

  — Webster.

  THE time of the sad ceremonial drew nigh. The hurrying of the domestics to and fro; the multifarious arrangements for the night; the distribution of the melancholy trappings, and the discussion of the “funeral-baked meats,” furnished abundant occupation within doors. Without, there was a constant stream of the tenantry, thronging down the avenue, mixed with an occasional horseman, once or twice intercepted by a large lumbering carriage, bringing friends of the deceased, some really anxious to pay the last tribute of regard, but the majority attracted by the anticipated spectacle of a funeral by torchlight. There were others, indeed, to whom it was not matter of choice; who were compelled, by a vassal tenure of their lands, held of the house of Rookwood, to lend a shoulder to the coffin, and a hand to the torch, on the burial of its lord. Of these there was a plentiful muster collected in the hall; they were to be marshalled by Peter Bradley, who was deemed to be well skilled in the proceedings, having been present at two solemnities of the kind. That mysterious personage, however, had not made his appearance — to the great dismay of the assemblage. Scouts were sent in search of him, but they returned with the intelligence that the door of his habitation was fastened, and its inmate apparently absent. No other tidings of the truant sexton could be obtained.

  It was a sultry August evening. No breeze was stirring in the garden; no cool dews refreshed the parched and heated earth; yet from the languishing flowers rich sweets exhaled. The plash of a fountain fell pleasantly upon the ear, conveying in its sound a sense of freshness to the fervid air; while deep and drowsy murmurs hummed heavily beneath the trees, making the twilight slumberously musical. The westering sun, which filled the atmosphere with flame throughout the day, was now wildly setting; and, as he sank behind the hall, its varied and picturesque tracery became each instan
t more darkly and distinctly defined against the crimson sky.

  At this juncture a little gate, communicating with the chase, was thrown open, and a young man entered the garden, passing through the shrubbery, and hurrying rapidly forward till he arrived at a vista opening upon the house. The spot at which the stranger halted was marked by a little basin, scantily supplied with water, streaming from a lion’s kingly jaws. His dress was travel-soiled, and dusty; and his whole appearance betokened great exhaustion from heat and fatigue. Seating himself upon an adjoining bench, he threw off his riding-cap, and unclasped his collar, displaying a finely-turned head and neck; and a countenance which, besides its beauty, had that rare nobility of feature which seldom falls to the lot of the aristocrat, but is never seen in one of an inferior order. A restless disquietude of manner showed that he was suffering from over-excitement of mind, as well as from bodily exertion. His look was wild and hurried; his black ringlets were dashed heedlessly over a pallid, lofty brow, upon which care was prematurely written; while his large melancholy eyes were bent, with a look almost of agony, upon the house before him.

  After a short pause, and as if struggling against violent emotions, and some overwhelming remembrance, the youth arose, and plunged his hand into the basin, applying the moist element to his burning brow. Apparently becoming more calm, he bent his steps towards the hall, when two figures, suddenly issuing from an adjoining copse, arrested his progress; neither saw him. Muttering a hurried farewell, one of the figures disappeared within the shrubbery, and the other, confronting the stranger, displayed the harsh features and gaunt form of Peter Bradley. Had Peter encountered the dead Sir Piers in corporeal form, he could not have manifested more surprise than he exhibited, for an instant or two, as he shrunk back from the stranger’s path.

 

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