The Works of William Harrison Ainsworth

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by William Harrison Ainsworth


  Thus urged, the damsels began to raise their voices in loud lamentation.

  “What the devil are you howling about?” cried Langley. “Do you think we are to be disturbed in this way? Make less noise, hussies, or I’ll turn you out of the Lodge.”

  “For shame, Mr. Langley,” rejoined Mrs. Spurling: “I blush for you, Sir! To call yourself a man, and interfere with the natural course of affection! Have you no feeling for the situation of those poor disconsolate creatures, about to be bereaved of all they hold dear? Is it nothing to part with a husband to the gallows? I’ve lost four in the same way, and know what it is.” Here she began to blubber loudly for sympathy.

  “Comfort yourself, my charmer,” said Mr. Marvel, in a tone intended to be consolatory. “I’ll be their substitute.”

  “You!” cried the tapstress, with a look of horror: “Never!”

  “Confusion!” muttered Jack, suddenly pausing in his task, “the saw has broken just as I am through the spike.”

  “Can’t we break it off?” replied Mrs. Maggot.

  “I fear not,” replied Jack, despondingly.

  “Let’s try, at all events,” returned the Amazon.

  And grasping the thick iron rod, she pushed with all her force against it, while Jack seconded her efforts from within. After great exertions on both parts, the spike yielded to their combined strength, and snapped suddenly off.

  “Holloa — what’s that?” cried Austin, starting up.

  “Only my darbies,” returned Jack, clinking his chains.

  “Oh! that was all, was it?” said the turnkey, quietly reseating himself.

  “Now, give me the woollen cloth to tie round my fetters,” whispered Sheppard. “Quick.”

  “Here it is,” replied Edgeworth Bess.

  “Give me your hand, Poll, to help me through,” cried Jack, as he accomplished the operation. “Keep a sharp look out, Bess.”

  “Stop!” interposed Edgeworth Bess; “Mr. Langley is getting up, and coming this way. We’re lost.”

  “Help me through at all hazards, Poll,” cried Jack, straining towards the opening.

  “The danger’s past,” whispered Bess. “Mrs. Spurling has induced him to sit down again. Ah! she looks this way, and puts her finger to her lips. She comprehends what we’re about. We’re all safe!”

  “Don’t lose a moment then,” cried Jack, forcing himself into the aperture, while the Amazon, assisted by Bess, pulled him through it.

  * * *

  “There!” cried Mrs. Maggot, as she placed him without noise upon the ground; “you’re safe so far.”

  “Come, my disconsolate darlings,” cried Austin, “it only wants five minutes to six. I expect Mr. Wild here presently. Cut it as short as you can.”

  “Only two minutes more, Sir,” intreated Edgeworth Bess, advancing towards him in such a manner as to screen Jack, who crept into the farthest part of the angle,— “only two minutes, and we’ve done.”

  “Well, well, I’m not within a minute,” rejoined the turnkey.

  “We shall never be able to get you out unseen, Jack,” whispered Poll Maggot. “You must make a bold push.”

  “Impossible,” replied Sheppard, in the same tone. “That would be certain destruction. I can’t run in these heavy fetters. No: I must face it out. Tell Bess to slip out, and I’ll put on her cloak and hood.”

  Meanwhile, the party at the table continued drinking and chatting as merrily as before.

  “I can’t help thinking of Jack Sheppard’s speech to Mr. Kneebone,” observed Shotbolt, as he emptied his tenth tumbler; “I’m sure he’s meditating an escape, and hopes to accomplish it to-night.”

  “Poh! poh!” rejoined Ireton; “it was mere idle boasting. I examined the Condemned Hold myself carefully this morning, and didn’t find a nail out of its place. Recollect, he’s chained to the ground by a great horse-padlock, and is never unloosed except when he comes to that hatch. If he escapes at all, it must be before our faces.”

  “It wouldn’t surprise me if he did,” remarked Griffin. “He’s audacity enough for anything. He got out in much the same way from the Gatehouse, — stole the keys, and passed through a room where I was sitting half-asleep in a chair.”

  “Caught you napping, eh?” rejoined Ireton, with a laugh. “Well, he won’t do that here. I’ll forgive him if he does.”

  “And so will I,” said Austin. “We’re too wide awake for that. Ain’t we, partner?” he added, appealing to Langley, whom punch had made rather dozy.

  “I should think so,” responded the lethargic turnkey, with a yawn.

  During this colloquy, Jack had contrived unobserved to put on the hood and cloak, and being about the size of the rightful owner, presented a very tolerable resemblance to her. This done, Edgeworth Bess, who watched her opportunity, slipped out of the Lodge.

  “Halloa!” exclaimed Austin, who had caught a glimpse of her departing figure, “one of the women is gone!”

  “No — no,” hastily interposed Mrs. Spurling; “they’re both here. Don’t you see they’re putting on their cloaks?”

  “That’s false!” rejoined Marvel, in a low tone; “I perceive what has taken place.”

  “Oh! goodness!” ejaculated the tapstress, in alarm. “You won’t betray him.”

  “Say the word, and I’m mum,” returned the executioner.

  “Will you be mine!”

  “It’s a very unfair advantage to take — very,” replied Mrs. Spurling; “however I consent.”

  “Then I’ll lend a helping hand. I shall lose my fees and the laced coat. But it’s better to have the bride without the weddin’ dress, than the weddin’ dress without the bride.”

  At this moment, Saint Sepulchre’s clock struck six.

  “Close the wicket, Austin,” vociferated Ireton, in an authoritative tone.

  “Good bye!” cried Jack, as if taking leave of his mistresses, “to-morrow, at the same time.”

  “We’ll be punctual,” replied Mrs. Maggot. “Good bye, Jack! Keep up your spirits.”

  “Now for it! — life or death!” exclaimed Jack, assuming the gait of a female, and stepping towards the door.

  As Austin rose to execute his principal’s commands, and usher the women to the gate, Mrs. Spurling and Marvel rose too. The latter walked carelessly towards the hatch, and leaning his back against the place whence the spike had been removed, so as completely to hide it, continued smoking his pipe as coolly as if nothing had happened.

  Just as Jack gained the entrance, he heard a man’s footstep behind him, and aware that the slightest indiscretion would betray him, he halted, uncertain what to do.

  “Stop a minute, my dear,” cried Austin. “You forget that you promised me a kiss the last time you were here.”

  “Won’t one from me do as well?” interposed Mrs. Maggot.

  “Much better,” said Mrs. Spurling, hastening to the rescue. “I want to speak to Edgeworth Bess myself.”

  So saying, she planted herself between Jack and the turnkey. It was a moment of breathless interest to all engaged in the attempt.

  “Come — the kiss!” cried Austin, endeavouring to pass his arm familiarly round the Amazon’s waist.

  “Hands off!” she exclaimed, “or you’ll repent it.”

  “Why, what’ll you do?” demanded the turnkey.

  “Teach you to keep your distance!” retorted Mrs. Maggot, dealing him a buffet that sent him reeling several yards backwards.

  “There! off with you!” whispered Mrs. Spurling, squeezing Jack’s arm, and pushing him towards the door, “and, don’t come here again.”

  Before Austin could recover himself, Jack and Mrs. Maggot had disappeared.

  “Bolt the wicket!” shouted Ireton, who, with the others, had been not a little entertained by the gallant turnkey’s discomfiture.

  This was done, and Austin returned with a crest-fallen look to the table. Upon which Mrs. Spurling, and her now accepted suitor, resumed their seats.

  “You’l
l be as good as your word, my charmer,” whispered the executioner.

  “Of course,” responded the widow, heaving a deep sigh. “Oh! Jack! Jack! — you little know what a price I’ve paid for you!”

  “Well, I’m glad those women are gone,” remarked Shotbolt. “Coupling their presence with Jack’s speech, I couldn’t help fearing some mischief might ensue.”

  “That reminds me he’s still at large,” returned Ireton. “Here, Caliban, go and fasten his padlock.”

  “Iss, Massa Ireton,” replied the black.

  “Stop, Caliban,” interposed Mrs. Spurling, who wished to protract the discovery of the escape as long as possible. “Before you go, bring me the bottle of pine-apple rum I opened yesterday. I should like Mr. Ireton and his friends to taste it. It is in the lower cupboard. Oh! you haven’t got the key — then I must have it, I suppose. How provoking!” she added, pretending to rummage her pockets; “one never can find a thing when one wants it.”

  “Never mind it, my dear Mrs. Spurling,” rejoined Ireton; “we can taste the rum when he returns. We shall have Mr. Wild here presently, and I wouldn’t for the world — Zounds!” he exclaimed, as the figure of the thief-taker appeared at the wicket, “here he is. Off with you, Caliban! Fly, you rascal!”

  “Mr. Wild here!” exclaimed Mrs. Spurling in alarm. “Oh gracious! he’s lost.”

  “Who’s lost?” demanded Ireton.

  “The key,” replied the widow.

  All the turnkeys rose to salute the thief-taker, whose habitually-sullen countenance looked gloomier than usual. Ireton rushed forward to open the wicket for him.

  “No Blueskin, I perceive, Sir,” he observed, in a deferential tone, as Wild entered the Lodge.

  “No,” replied Jonathan, moodily. “I’ve been deceived by false information. But the wench who tricked me shall bitterly repent it. I hope this is all. I begin to fear I might be purposely go out of the way. Nothing has gone wrong here?”

  “Nothing whatever,” replied Ireton. “Jack is just gone back to the Condemned Hold. His two wives have been here.”

  “Ha!” exclaimed Jonathan, with a sudden vehemence that electrified the chief turnkey; “what’s this! a spike gone! ‘Sdeath! the women, you say, have been here. He has escaped.”

  “Impossible, Sir,” replied Ireton, greatly alarmed.

  “Impossible!” echoed Wild, with a fearful imprecation. “No, Sir, it’s quite possible — more than possible. It’s certain. I’ll lay my life he’s gone. Come with me to the Condemned Hold directly, and, if I find my fears confirmed, I’ll—”

  He was here interrupted by the sudden entrance of the black, who rushed precipitately into the room, letting fall the heavy bunch of keys in his fright.

  “O Massa Ireton! Massa Wild!” ejaculated Caliban, “Shack Sheppart gone!”

  “Gone? you black devil! — Gone?” cried Ireton.

  “Iss, Massa. Caliban sarch ebery hole in de place, but Shack no dere. Only him big hoss padlock — noting else.”

  “I knew it,” rejoined Wild, with concentrated rage; “and he escaped you all, in broad day, before your faces. You may well say it’s impossible! His Majesty’s jail of Newgate is admirably guarded, I must say. Ireton, you are in league with him.”

  “Sir,” said the chief turnkey, indignantly.

  “You are, Sir,” thundered Jonathan; “and, unless you find him, you shan’t hold your place a week. I don’t threaten idly, as you know. And you, Austin; and you Langley, I say the same thing to you.”

  “But, Mr. Wild,” implored the turnkeys.

  “I’ve said it,” rejoined Jonathan, peremptorily. “And you, Marvel, you must have been a party—”

  “I, Sir!”

  “If he’s not found, I’ll get a new hangman.”

  “Zounds!” cried Marvel, “I—”

  “Hush!” whispered the tapstress, “or I retract my promise.”

  “Mrs. Spurling,” said Jonathan, who overheard the whisper, “you owe your situation to me. If you have aided Jack Sheppard’s escape, you shall owe your discharge to me also.”

  “As you please, Sir,” replied the tapstress, coolly. “And the next time Captain Darrell wants a witness, I promise you he shan’t look for one in vain.”

  “Ha! hussy, dare you threaten?” cried Wild; but, checking himself, he turned to Ireton and asked, “How long have the women been gone?”

  “Scarcely five minutes,” replied the latter.

  “One of you fly to the market,” returned Jonathan; “another to the river; a third to the New Mint. Disperse in every direction. We’ll have him yet. A hundred pounds to the man who takes him.”

  So saying, he rushed out, followed by Ireton and Langley.

  “A hundred pounds!” exclaimed Shotbolt. “That’s a glorious reward. Do you think he’ll pay it?”

  “I’m sure of it,” replied Austin.

  “Then I’ll have it before to-morrow morning,” said the keeper of the New Prison, to himself. “If Jack Sheppard sups with Mr. Kneebone, I’ll make one of the party.”

  CHAPTER XI. DOLLIS HILL REVISITED.

  About an hour after the occurrences at Newgate, the door of the small back-parlour already described at Dollis Hill was opened by Winifred, who, gliding noiselessly across the room, approached a couch, on which was extended a sleeping female, and, gazing anxiously at her pale careworn countenance, murmured,— “Heaven be praised! she still slumbers — slumbers peacefully. The opiate has done its duty. Poor thing! how beautiful she looks! but how like death!”

  Deathlike, indeed, was the repose of the sleeper, — deathlike and deep. Its very calmness was frightful. Her lips were apart, but no breath seemed to issue from them; and, but for a slight — very slight palpitation of the bosom, the vital principle might be supposed to be extinct. This lifeless appearance was heightened by the extreme sharpness of her features — especially the nose and chin, — and by the emaciation of her limbs, which was painfully distinct through her drapery. Her attenuated arms were crossed upon her breast; and her black brows and eyelashes contrasted fearfully with the livid whiteness of her skin. A few short, dark locks, escaping from beneath her head-dress, showed that her hair had been removed, and had only been recently allowed to grow again.

  “Poor Mrs. Sheppard!” sighed Winifred, as she contemplated the beautiful wreck before her,— “Poor Mrs. Sheppard! when I see her thus, and think of all she has endured, of all she may yet have to endure, I could almost pray for her release from trouble. I dare not reflect upon the effect that her son’s fate, — if the efforts to save him are ineffectual, — may have upon her enfeebled frame, and still worse upon her mind. What a mercy that the blow aimed at her by the ruffian, Wild, though it brought her to the brink of the grave, should have restored her to reason! Ah! she stirs.”

  As she said this, she drew a little aside, while Mrs. Sheppard heaved a deep sigh, and opened her eyes, which now looked larger, blacker, and more melancholy than ever.

  “Where am I?” she cried, passing her hand across her brow.

  “With your friends, dear Mrs. Sheppard,” replied Winifred, advancing.

  “Ah! you are there, my dear young lady,” said the widow, smiling faintly; “when I first waken, I’m always in dread of finding myself again in that horrible asylum.”

  “You need never be afraid of that,” returned Winifred, affectionately; “my father will take care you never leave him more.”

  “Oh! how much I owe him!” said the widow, with fervour, “for bringing me here, and removing me from those dreadful sights and sounds, that would have driven me distracted, even if I had been in my right mind. And how much I owe you, too, dearest Winifred, for your kindness and attention. Without you I should never have recovered either health or reason. I can never be grateful enough. But, though I cannot reward you, Heaven will.”

  “Don’t say anything about it, dear Mrs. Sheppard,” rejoined Winifred, controlling her emotion, and speaking as cheerfully as she could; “I would do anythi
ng in the world for you, and so would my father, and so would Thames; but he ought, for he’s your nephew, you know. We all love you dearly.”

  “Bless you! bless you!” cried Mrs. Sheppard, averting her face to hide her tears.

  “I mustn’t tell you what Thames means to do for you if ever he gains his rights,” continued Winifred; “but I may tell you what my father means to do.”

  “He has done too much already,” answered the widow. “I shall need little more.”

  “But, do hear what it is,” rejoined Winifred; “you know I’m shortly to be united to your nephew, — that is,” she added, blushing, “when he can be married by his right name, for my father won’t consent to it before.”

  “Your father will never oppose your happiness, my dear, I’m sure,” said Mrs. Sheppard; “but, what has this to do with me?”

  “You shall hear,” replied Winifred; “when this marriage takes place, you and I shall be closely allied, but my father wishes for a still closer alliance.”

  “I don’t understand you,” returned Mrs. Sheppard.

  “To be plain, then,” said Winifred, “he has asked me whether I have any objection to you as a mother.”

  “And what — what was your answer?” demanded the widow, eagerly.

  “Can’t you guess?” returned Winifred, throwing her arms about her neck. “That he couldn’t choose any one so agreeable to me.”

  “Winifred,” said Mrs. Sheppard, after a brief pause, during which she appeared overcome by her feelings, — she said, gently disengaging herself from the young girl’s embrace, and speaking in a firm voice, “you must dissuade your father from this step.”

  “How?” exclaimed the other. “Can you not love him?”

  “Love him!” echoed the widow. “The feeling is dead within my breast. My only love is for my poor lost son. I can esteem him, regard him; but, love him as he ought to be loved — that I cannot do.”

  “Your esteem is all he will require,” urged Winifred.

  “He has it, and will ever have it,” replied Mrs. Sheppard, passionately,— “he has my boundless gratitude, and devotion. But I am not worthy to be any man’s wife — far less his wife. Winifred, you are deceived in me. You know not what a wretched guilty thing I am. You know not in what dark places my life has been cast; with what crimes it has been stained. But the offences I have committed are venial in comparison with what I should commit were I to wed your father. No — no, it must never be.”

 

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