The Works of William Harrison Ainsworth

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by William Harrison Ainsworth


  “It was,” replied Rochester, calmly.

  Amabel looked at him fixedly for a few minutes, as if she could not credit his assertion, and then receiving no contradiction, uttered a wild scream, and rushed out of the room. Rochester followed, and saw her dart with lightning swiftness across the court-yard. On gaining the street, he perceived her flying figure already at some distance; and greatly alarmed, started in pursuit. The unfortunate girl was not allowed to proceed far. Two persons who were approaching, and who proved to be Etherege and Pillichody, caught hold of her, and detained her till Rochester came up. When the latter attempted to touch her, she uttered such fearful shrieks, that Etherege entreated him to desist. With some difficulty she was taken back to the house. But it was evident that the shock had unsettled her reason. She alternately uttered wild, piercing screams, or broke into hysterical laughter. The earl’s presence so much increased her frenzy, that he gladly withdrew.

  “This is a melancholy business, my lord,” observed Etherege, as they quitted the room together, “and I am sorry for my share in it. We have both much to answer for.”

  “Do you think her life in danger?” rejoined Rochester.

  “It would be well if it were so,” returned the other; “but I fear she will live to be a perpetual memento to you of the crime you have committed.”

  Amabel’s delirium produced a high fever, which continued for three days. Her screams were at times so dreadful, that her betrayer shut himself up in the furthest part of the house, that he might not hear them. When at last she sank into a sleep like that of death, produced by powerful opiates, he stole into the room, and gazed at her with feelings which those who watched his countenance did not envy. It was hoped by the chirurgeon in attendance, that when the violence of the fever abated, Amabel’s reason would be restored. But it was not so. Her faculties were completely shaken, and the cause of her affliction being effaced from her memory, she now spoke of the Earl of Rochester with her former affection.

  Her betrayer once ventured into her presence, but he did not repeat the visit. Her looks and her tenderness were more than even his firmness could bear, and he hurried away to hide his emotion from the attendants. Several days passed on, and as no improvement took place, the earl, who began to find the stings of conscience too sharp for further endurance, resolved to try to deaden the pangs by again plunging into the dissipation of the court. Prudence had been seized by the plague, and removed to the pest-house, and not knowing to whom to entrust Amabel, it at last occurred to him that Judith Malmayns would be a fitting person, and he accordingly sent for her from Saint Paul’s, and communicated his wishes to her, offering her a considerable reward for the service. Judith readily undertook the office, and the earl delayed his departure for two days, to see how all went on; and finding the arrangements, to all appearances, answer perfectly, he departed with Etherege and Pillichody.

  Ever since the communication of the fatal truth had been made to her by the earl, his unfortunate victim had occupied the large oak-panelled chamber, on entering which so sad a presentiment had seized her; and she had never quitted the bed where she thought she would breathe her last. On the night of Rochester’s departure she made many inquiries concerning him from Judith Malmayns, who was seated in an old broad-cushioned, velvet-covered chair, beside her, and was told that the king required his attendance at Oxford, but that he would soon return. At this answer the tears gathered thickly in Amabel’s dark eyelashes, and she remained silent. By-and-by she resumed the conversation.

  “Do you know, nurse,” she said, with a look of extreme anxiety, “I have forgotten my prayers. Repeat them to me, and I will say them after you.”

  “My memory is as bad as your ladyship’s,” replied Judith, contemptuously. “It is so long since I said mine, that I have quite forgotten them.”

  “That is wrong in you,” returned Amabel, “very wrong. When I lived with my dear father, we had prayers morning and evening, and I was never so happy as then. I feel it would do me good if I could pray as I used to do.”

  “Well, well, all in good time,” replied Judith. “As soon as you are better, you shall go back to your father, and then you can do as you please.”

  “No, no, I cannot go back to him,” returned Amabel. “I am the Earl of

  Rochester’s wife — his wedded wife. Am I not Countess of Rochester?”

  “To be sure you are,” replied Judith— “to be sure.”

  “I sometimes think otherwise,” rejoined Amabel, mournfully.

  “And so my dear lord is gone to Oxford?”

  “He is,” returned Judith, “but he will be back soon. And now,” she added, with some impatience, “you have talked quite long enough. You must take your composing draught, and go to sleep.”

  With this she arose, and stepping to the table which stood by the side of the bed, filled a wine-glass with the contents of a silver flagon, and gave it to her. Amabel drank the mixture, and complaining of its nauseous taste, Judith handed her a plate of fruit from the table to remove it. Soon after this she dropped asleep, when the nurse arose, and taking a light from the table, cautiously possessed herself of a bunch of keys which were placed in a small pocket over Amabel’s head, and proceeded to unlock a large chest that stood near the foot of the bed. She found it filled with valuables — with chains of gold, necklaces of precious stones, loops of pearl, diamond crosses, and other ornaments. Besides these, there were shawls and stuffs of the richest description. While contemplating these treasures, and considering how she should carry them off without alarming the household, she was startled by a profound sigh; and looking towards the bed, perceived to her great alarm, that Amabel had opened her eyes, and was watching her.

  “What are you doing there, nurse?” she cried.

  “Only looking at these pretty things, your ladyship,” replied Judith, in an embarrassed tone.

  “I hope you are not going to steal them?” said Amabel.

  “Steal them?” echoed Judith, alarmed. “Oh, no! What should make your ladyship think so?”

  “I don’t know,” said Amabel; “but put them by, and bring the keys to me.”

  Judith feigned compliance, but long before she had restored the things to the chest, Amabel had again fallen asleep. Apprised by her tranquil breathing of this circumstance, Judith arose; and shading the candle with her hand, crept noiselessly towards the bed. Dark thoughts crossed her as she gazed at the unfortunate sleeper; and moving with the utmost caution, she set the light on the table behind the curtains, and had just grasped the pillow, with the intention of plucking it from under Amabel’s head, and of smothering her with it, when she felt herself restrained by a powerful grasp, and turning in utmost alarm, beheld the Earl of Rochester.

  VI.

  THE CERTIFICATE.

  “Wretch!” cried the earl. “An instinctive dread that you would do your poor charge some injury brought me back, and I thank Heaven I have arrived in time to prevent your atrocious purpose.”

  “Your lordship would have acted more discreetly in staying away,” replied Judith, recovering her resolution; “and I would recommend you not to meddle in the matter, but to leave it to me. No suspicion shall alight on you, nor shall it even be known that her end was hastened. Leave the house as secretly as you came, and proceed on your journey with a light heart. She will never trouble you further.”

  “What!” exclaimed Rochester, who was struck dumb for the moment by surprise and indignation, “do you imagine I would listen to such a proposal? Do you think I would sanction her murder?”

  “I am sure you would, if you knew as much as I do,” replied Judith, calmly. “Hear me, my lord,” she continued, drawing him to a little distance from the bed, and speaking in a deep low tone. “You cannot marry Mistress Mallet while this girl lives.”

  Rochester looked sternly and inquiringly at her. “You think your marriage was feigned,” pursued Judith; “that he was no priest who performed the ceremony; and that no other witnesses were present exc
ept Sir George Etherege and Pillichody. But you are mistaken. I and Chowles were present; and he who officiated was a priest. The marriage was a lawful one; and yon sleeping girl, who, but for your ill-timed interference, would, ere this, have breathed her last, is to all intents and purposes Countess of Rochester.”

  “A lie!” cried the earl, furiously.

  “I will soon prove it to be truth,” rejoined Judith. “Your retainer and unscrupulous agent, Major Pillichody, applied to Chowles to find some one to personate a clergyman in a mock marriage, which your lordship wished to have performed, and promised a handsome reward for the service. Chowles mentioned the subject to me, and we speedily contrived a plan to outwit your lordship, and turn the affair to our advantage.”

  The earl uttered an ejaculation of rage.

  “Being acquainted with one of the minor canons of Saint Paul’s, a worthy and pious young man, named Vincent,” pursued Judith, utterly unmoved by Rochester’s anger, “who resided hard by the cathedral, we hastened to him, and acquainted him with the design, representing ourselves as anxious to serve the poor girl, and defeat your lordship’s wicked design — for such we termed it. With a little persuasion, Mr. Vincent consented to the scheme. Pillichody was easily duped by Chowles’s statement, and the ceremony was fully performed.”

  “The whole story is a fabrication,” cried the earl, with affected incredulity.

  “I have a certificate of the marriage,” replied Judith, “signed by Mr. Vincent, and attested by Chowles and myself. If ever woman was wedded to man, Amabel is wedded to your lordship.”

  “If this is the case, why seek to destroy her?” demanded the earl. “Her life must be of more consequence to you than her removal.”

  “I will deal frankly with you,” replied Judith. “She discovered me in the act of emptying that chest, and an irresistible impulse prompted me to make away with her. But your lordship is in the right. Her life is valuable to me, and she shall live. But, I repeat, you cannot marry the rich heiress, Mistress Mallet.”

  “Temptress!” cried the earl, “you put frightful thoughts into my head.”

  “Go your ways,” replied Judith, “and think no more about her. All shall be done that you require. I claim as my reward the contents of that chest.”

  “Your reward shall be the gallows,” rejoined the earl, indignantly. “I reject your proposal at once. Begone, wretch! or I shall forget you are a woman, and sacrifice you to my fury. Begone!”

  “As your lordship pleases,” she replied; “but first, the Countess of Rochester shall be made acquainted with her rights.” So saying, she broke from him, and rushed to the bed.

  “What are you about to do?” he cried.

  “Waken her,” rejoined Judith, slightly shaking the sleeper.

  “Ah!” exclaimed Amabel, opening her eyes, and gazing at her with a terrified and bewildered look.

  “His lordship is returned,” said Judith.

  “Indeed!” exclaimed Amabel, raising herself in the bed. “Where is he? — Ah, I see him. — Come to me, my dear lord,” she added, stretching out her arms to him, “Come to me.”

  But evil thoughts kept Rochester motionless. “Oh! come to me, my lord,” cried Amabel, in a troubled tone, “or I shall begin to think what I have dreamed is true, and that I am not wedded to you.”

  “It was merely a dream, your ladyship,” observed Judith. “I will bear witness you are wedded to his lordship, for I was present at the ceremony.”

  “I did not see you,” remarked Amabel.

  “I was there, nevertheless,” replied Judith.

  “I am sorry to hear it,” replied Amabel.

  “Your ladyship would rejoice if you knew all,” returned Judith, significantly.

  “Why so?” inquired the other, curiously.

  “Because the clergyman who married you is dead of the plague,” was the answer; “and it may chance in these terrible times that the two gentlemen who were present at the ceremony may die of the same distemper, and then there will be no one left but me and another person to prove that your marriage was lawful.”

  “But its lawfulness will never be questioned, my dear lord, will it?” asked Amabel, looking beseechingly at Rochester.

  “Never,” replied Judith, producing a small piece of parchment, “while I hold this certificate.”

  “Give me that document,” said the earl, in an undertone, to her.

  Judith directed her eyes towards the chest. “It is yours,” said the earl, in the same tone as before.

  “What are you whispering, my lord?” inquired Amabel, uneasily.

  “I am merely telling her to remove that chest, sweetheart,” he replied.

  “Do not send it away,” cried Amabel. “It contains all the ornaments and trinkets you have given me. Do you know,” she added in a whisper, “I caught her looking into it just now, and I suspect she was about to steal something.”

  “Pshaw!” cried the earl, “she acted by my directions. Take the chest away,” he added to Judith.

  “Has your lordship no further orders?” she rejoined, significantly.

  “None whatever,” he replied, with a frown.

  “Before you go, give me the certificate,” cried Amabel. “I must have it.”

  Judith pretended not to hear her. “Give it her,” whispered the earl, “I will remove it when she falls asleep.”

  Nodding acquiescence, Judith took the parchment from her bosom, and returned with it to the bed. While this was passing, the earl walked towards the chest, and cast his eye over such of its contents as were scattered upon the floor. Judith watched him carefully, and when his back was turned, drew a small lancet, and affecting to arrange her dress, slightly punctured Amabel’s neck. The pain was trifling, but the poor girl uttered a cry.

  “What is the matter?” cried the earl, turning suddenly round.

  “Nothing — nothing,” replied Judith; “a pin in my sleeve pricked her as I was fastening her cap, that was all. Her death is certain,” she added to herself, “she is inoculated with the plague-venom.”

  She then went to the chest, and replacing everything within it, removed it, by the help of the Earl of Rochester, into the adjoining room. “I will send for it at midnight,” she said.

  “It shall be delivered to your messenger,” rejoined the earl; “but you will answer for Chowles’s secrecy?”

  “I will,” returned Judith, with a meaning smile. “But you may take my word for it you will not be troubled long with your wife. If I have any judgment respecting the plague, she is already infected.”

  “Indeed!” cried Rochester— “then—” but he checked himself, and added,

  “I do not believe it. Begone.”

  “He does believe it for all that,” muttered Judith, as he slunk away.

  Rochester returned to Amabel, and sat by her until she fell asleep, when he took the parchment from beneath the pillow where she had placed it. Examining it, he found it, as Judith had stated, a certificate of his marriage, signed by Mark Vincent, the clergyman who had officiated, and duly attested. Having carefully perused it, he held it towards the taper, with the intention of destroying it. As he was about to perpetrate this unworthy action, he looked towards the bed. The soft sweet smile that played upon the sleeper’s features, turned him from his purpose. Placing the parchment in his doublet, he left the room, and summoning a female attendant, alleged some reason for his unexpected return, and ordered her to watch by the bedside of her mistress. Giving some further directions, he threw himself upon a couch and sought a few hours’ repose. At daybreak, he repaired to Amabel’s chamber, and finding her wrapped in a peaceful slumber, he commended her to the attendant, and departed.

  On awaking, Amabel complained of an uneasy sensation on her neck, and the attendant examining the spot, found, to her great alarm, a small red pustule. Without making a single observation, she left the room, and despatched a messenger after the Earl of Rochester to acquaint him that the countess was attacked by the plague. Such wa
s the terror inspired by this dread disorder, that the moment it was known that Amabel was attacked by it, the whole household, except an old woman, fled. This old woman, whose name was Batley, and who acted as the earl’s housekeeper, took upon herself the office of nurse. Before evening, the poor sufferer, who had endured great agony during the whole of the day, became so much worse, that Mrs. Batley ran out in search of assistance. She met with a watchman, who told her that a famous apothecary, from Clerkenwell, named Sibbald, who was celebrated for the cures he had effected, had just entered a neighbouring house, and offered to await his coming forth, and send him to her. Thanking him, Mrs. Batley returned to the house, and presently afterwards, Sibbald made his appearance. His looks and person had become even more repulsive than formerly. He desired to be led to the patient, and on seeing her, shook his head. He examined the pustule, which had greatly increased in size, and turning away, muttered, “I can do nothing for her.”

  “At least make the attempt,” implored Mrs. Batley. “She is the Countess of Rochester. You shall be well rewarded — and if you cure her, the earl will make your fortune.”

  “If his lordship would change stations with me, I could not cure her,” replied Sibbald. “Let me look at her again,” he added, examining the pustule. “There is a strange appearance about this tumour. Has Judith Malmayns attended her?”

  “She was here yesterday,” replied Mrs. Batley.

  “I thought so,” he muttered. “I repeat it is all over with her.” And he turned to depart.

  “Do not leave her thus, in pity do not!” cried the old woman, detaining him. “Make some effort to save her. My lord loves her to distraction, and will abundantly reward you.”

  “All I can do is to give her something to allay the pain,” returned Sibbald. And drawing a small phial from his doublet, he poured its contents into a glass, and administered it to the patient.

  “That will throw her into a slumber,” he said, “and when she wakes, she will be without pain. But her end will be not far off.”

 

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