The Works of William Harrison Ainsworth

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by William Harrison Ainsworth


  The unexpected turn in affairs had not been without its effect upon Richard and Alizon, and tended to revive the spirits of both. The immediate danger by which they were threatened had vanished, and time was given for the consideration of new plans. Richard had been firmly resolved to take no further part in the affray than should be required for the protection of Alizon, and, consequently, it was no little satisfaction to him to reflect that the victory had been accomplished without him, and by means which could not afterwards be questioned.

  Meanwhile, Mistress Nutter had joined Nicholas, and the gates being unbarred by Blackadder, they passed through them. At a little distance stood Roger Nowell, now altogether abandoned, except by his own immediate followers, with Baldwyn and old Mitton. Poor Potts was lying on the ground, piteously bemoaning the lacerations his skin had undergone.

  “Well, you have got the worst of it, Master Nowell,” said Nicholas, as he and Mistress Nutter approached the discomfited magistrate, “and must own yourself fairly defeated.”

  “Defeated as I am, I would rather be in my place than in yours, sir,” retorted Nowell, sourly.

  “You have had a wholesome lesson read you, Master Nowell,” said Mistress Nutter; “but I do not come hither to taunt you. I am quite satisfied with the victory I have obtained, and am anxious to put an end to the misunderstanding between us.”

  “I have no misunderstanding with you, madam,” replied Nowell; “I do not quarrel with persons like you. But be assured, though you may escape now, a day of reckoning will come.”

  “Your chief cause of grievance against me, I am aware,” replied Mistress Nutter, calmly, “is, that I have beaten you in the matter of the land. Now, I have a proposal to make to you respecting it.”

  “I cannot listen to it,” rejoined Nowell, sternly; “I can have no dealings with a witch.”

  At this moment his cloak was plucked behind by Potts, who looked at him as much as to say, “Do not exasperate her. Hear what she has got to offer.”

  “I shall be happy to act as mediator between you, if possible,” observed Nicholas; “but in that case I must request you, Master Nowell, to abstain from any offensive language.”

  “What is it you have to propose to me, then, madam!” demanded the magistrate, gruffly.

  “Come with me into the house, and you shall hear,” replied Mistress Nutter.

  Nowell was about to refuse peremptorily, when his cloak was again plucked by Potts, who whispered him to go.

  “This is not a snare laid to entrap me, madam?” he said, regarding the lady suspiciously.

  “I will answer for her good faith,” interposed Nicholas.

  Nowell still hesitated, but the counsel of his legal adviser was enforced by a heavy shower of rain, which just then began to descend upon them.

  “You can take shelter beneath my roof,” said Mistress Nutter; “and before the shower is over we can settle the matter.”

  “And my wounds can be dressed at the same time,” said Potts, with a groan, “for they pain me sorely.”

  “Blackadder has a sovereign balsam, which, with a patch or two of diachylon, will make all right,” replied Nicholas, unable to repress a laugh. “Here, lift him up between you,” he added to the grooms, “and convey him into the house.”

  The orders were obeyed, and Mistress Nutter led the way through the now wide-opened gates; her slow and majestic march by no means accelerated by the drenching shower. What Roger Nowell’s sensations were at following her in such a way, after his previous threats and boastings, may be easily conceived.

  * * *

  CHAPTER X. — ROGER NOWELL AND HIS DOUBLE.

  The magistrate was ushered by the lady into a small chamber, opening out of the entrance-hall, which, in consequence of having only one small narrow window, with a clipped yew-tree before it, was extremely dark and gloomy. The walls were covered with sombre tapestry, and on entering, Mistress Nutter not only carefully closed the door, but drew the arras before it, so as to prevent the possibility of their conversation being heard outside. These precautions taken, she motioned the magistrate to a chair, and seated herself opposite him.

  “We can now deal unreservedly with each other, Master Nowell,” she said, fixing her eyes steadily upon him; “and, as our discourse cannot be overheard and repeated, may use perfect freedom of speech.”

  “I am glad of it,” replied Nowell, “because it will save circumlocution, which I dislike; and therefore, before proceeding further, I must tell you, directly and distinctly, that if there be aught of witchcraft in what you are about to propose to me, I will have nought to do with it, and our conference may as well never begin.”

  “Then you really believe me to be a witch?” said the lady.

  “I do,” replied Nowell, unflinchingly.

  “Since you believe this, you must also believe that I have absolute power over you,” rejoined Mistress Nutter, “and might strike you with sickness, cripple you, or kill you if I thought fit.”

  “I know not that,” returned Nowell. “There are limits even to the power of evil beings; and your charms and enchantments, however strong and baneful, may be wholly inoperative against a magistrate in the discharge of his duty. If it were not so, you would scarcely think it worth while to treat with me.”

  “Humph!” exclaimed the lady. “Now, tell me frankly, what you will do when you depart hence?”

  “Ride off with the utmost speed to Whalley,” replied Nowell, “and, acquainting Sir Ralph with all that has occurred, claim his assistance; and then, with all the force we can jointly muster, return hither, and finish the work I have left undone.”

  “You will forego this intention,” said Mistress Nutter, with a bitter smile.

  The magistrate shook his head.

  “I am not easily turned from my purpose,” he remarked.

  “But you have not yet quitted Rough Lee,” said the lady, “and after such an announcement I shall scarce think of parting with you.”

  “You dare not detain me,” replied Nowell. “I have Nicholas Assheton’s word for my security, and I know he will not break it. Besides, you will gain nothing by my detention. My absence will soon be discovered, and if living I shall be set free; if dead, avenged.”

  “That may, or may not be,” replied Mistress Nutter; “and in any case I can, if I choose, wreak my vengeance upon you. I am glad to have ascertained your intentions, for I now know how to treat with you. You shall not go hence, except on certain conditions. You have said you will proclaim me a witch, and will come back with sufficient force to accomplish my arrest. Instead of doing this, I advise you to return to Sir Ralph Assheton, and admit to him that you find yourself in error in respect to the boundaries of the land—”

  “Never,” interrupted Nowell.

  “I advise you to do this,” pursued the lady, calmly, “and I advise you, also, on quitting this room, to retract all you have uttered to my prejudice, in the presence of Nicholas Assheton and other credible witnesses; in which case I will not only lay aside all feelings of animosity towards you, but will make over to you the whole of the land under dispute, and that without purchase money on your part.”

  Roger Nowell was of an avaricious nature, and caught at the bait.

  “How, madam!” he cried, “the whole of the land mine without payment?”

  “The whole,” she replied.

  “If she should be arraigned and convicted it will be forfeited to the crown,” thought Nowell; “the offer is tempting.”

  “Your attorney is here, and can prepare the conveyance at once,” pursued Mistress Nutter; “a sum can be stated to lend a colour to the proceeding, and I will give you a private memorandum that I will not claim it. All I require is, that you clear me completely from the dark aspersions cast upon my character, and you abandon your projects against my adopted daughter, Alizon, as well as against those two poor old women, Mothers Demdike and Chattox.”

  “How can I be sure that I shall not be deluded in the matter?” asked Nowe
ll; “the writing may disappear from the parchment you give me, or the parchment itself may turn to ashes. Such things have occurred in transactions with witches. Or it be that, by consenting to the compact, I may imperil my own soul.”

  “Tush!” exclaimed Mistress Nutter; “these are idle fears. But it is no idle threat on my part, when I tell you you shall not go forth unless you consent.”

  “You cannot hinder me, woman,” cried Nowell, rising.

  “You shall see,” rejoined the lady, making two or three rapid passes before him, which instantly stiffened his limbs, and deprived him of the power of motion. “Now, stir if you can,” she added with a laugh.

  Nowell essayed to cry out, but his tongue refused its office. Hearing and sight, however, were left him, and he saw Mistress Nutter take a large volume, bound in black, from the shelf, and open it at a page covered with cabalistic characters, after which she pronounced some words that sounded like an invocation.

  As she concluded, the tapestry against the wall was raised, and from behind it appeared a figure in all respects resembling the magistrate: it had the same sharp features, the same keen eyes and bushy eyebrows, the same stoop in the shoulders, the same habiliments. It was, in short, his double.

  Mistress Nutter regarded him with a look of triumph.

  “Since you refuse, with my injunctions,” she said, “your double will prove more tractable. He will go forth and do all I would have you do, while I have but to stamp upon the floor and a dungeon will yawn beneath your feet, where you will lie immured till doomsday. The same fate will attend your crafty associate, Master Potts — so that neither of you will be missed — ha! ha!”

  The unfortunate magistrate fully comprehended his danger, but he could now neither offer remonstrance nor entreaty. What was passing in his breast seemed known to Mistress Nutter; for she motioned the double to stay, and, touching the brow of Nowell with the point of her forefinger, instantly restored his power of speech.

  “I will give you a last chance,” she said. “Will you obey me now?”

  “I must, perforce,” replied Nowell: “the contest is too unequal.”

  “You may retire, then,” she cried to the double. And stepping backwards, the figure lifted up the tapestry, and disappeared behind it.

  “I can breathe, now that infernal being is gone,” cried Nowell, sinking into the chair. “Oh! madam, you have indeed terrible power.”

  “You will do well not to brave it again,” she rejoined. “Shall I summon Master Potts to prepare the conveyance?”

  “Oh! no — no!” cried Nowell. “I do not desire the land. I will not have it. I shall pay too dearly for it. Only let me get out of this horrible place?”

  “Not so quickly, sir,” rejoined Mistress Nutter. “Before you go hence, I must bind you to the performance of my injunctions. Pronounce these words after me,— ‘May I become subject to the Fiend if I fail in my promise.’”

  “I will never utter them!” cried Nowell, shuddering.

  “Then I shall recall your double,” said the lady.

  “Hold, hold!” exclaimed Nowell. “Let me know what you require of me.”

  “I require absolute silence on your part, as to all you have seen and heard here, and cessation of hostility towards me and the persons I have already named,” replied Mistress Nutter; “and I require a declaration from you, in the presence of the two Asshetons, that you are fully satisfied of the justice of my claims in respect to the land; and that, mortified by your defeat, you have brought a false charge against me, which you now sincerely regret. This I require from you; and you must ratify the promise by the abjuration I have proposed. ‘May I become subject to the Fiend if I fail in my promise.’”

  The magistrate repeated the words after her. As he finished, mocking laughter, apparently resounding from below, smote his ears.

  “Enough!” cried Mistress Nutter, triumphantly; “and now take good heed that you swerve not in the slightest degree from your word, or you are for ever lost.”

  Again the mocking laughter was heard, and Nowell would have rushed forth, if Mistress Nutter had not withheld him.

  “Stay!” she cried, “I have not done with you yet! My witnesses must hear your declaration. Remember!”

  And placing her finger upon her lips, in token of silence, she stepped backwards, drew aside the tapestry, and, opening the door, called to the two Asshetons, both of whom instantly came to her, and were not a little surprised to learn that all differences had been adjusted, and that Roger Nowell acknowledged himself entirely in error, retracting all the charges he had brought against her; while, on her part, she was fully satisfied with his explanations and apologies, and promised not to entertain any feelings of resentment towards him.

  “You have made up the matter, indeed,” cried Nicholas, “and, as Master Roger Nowell is a widower, perhaps a match may come of it. Such an arrangement” —

  “This is no occasion for jesting, Nicholas,” interrupted the lady, sharply.

  “Nay, I but threw out a hint,” rejoined the squire. “It would set the question of the land for ever at rest.”

  “It is set at rest — for ever!” replied the lady, with a side look at the magistrate.

  “‘May I become subject to the Fiend if I fail in my promise,’” repeated Nowell to himself. “Those words bind me like a chain of iron. I must get out of this accursed house as fast as I can.”

  As if his thoughts had been divined by Mistress Nutter, she here observed to him, “To make our reconciliation complete, Master Nowell, I must entreat you to pass the day with me. I will give you the best entertainment my house affords — nay, I will take no denial; and you too, Nicholas, and you, Richard, you will stay and keep the worthy magistrate company.”

  The two Asshetons willingly assented, but Roger Nowell would fain have been excused. A look, however, from his hostess enforced compliance.

  “The proposal will be highly agreeable, I am sure, to Master Potts,” remarked Nicholas, with a laugh; “for though much better, in consequence of the balsam applied by Blackadder, he is scarcely in condition for the saddle.”

  “I will warrant him well to-morrow morning,” said Mistress Nutter.

  “Where is he?” inquired Nowell.

  “In the library with Parson Holden,” replied Nicholas; “making himself as comfortable as circumstances will permit, with a flask of Rhenish before him.”

  “I will go to him, then,” said Nowell.

  “Take care what you say to him,” observed Mistress Nutter, in a low tone, and raising her finger to her lips.

  Heaving a deep sigh, the magistrate then repaired to the library, a small room panelled with black oak, and furnished with a few cases of ancient tomes. The attorney and the divine were seated at a table, with a big square-built bottle and long-stemmed glasses before them, and Master Potts, with a wry grimace, excused himself from rising on his respected and singular good client’s approach.

  “Do not disturb yourself,” said Nowell, gruffly; “we shall not leave Rough Lee to-day.”

  “I am glad to hear it,” replied Potts, moving the cushions on his chair and eyeing the square-built bottle affectionately.

  “Nor to-morrow, it may be — nor the day after — nor at all, possibly,” said Nowell.

  “Indeed!” exclaimed Potts, starting, and wincing with pain. “What is the meaning of all this, worthy sir?”

  “‘May I become the subject of the Fiend if I fail in my promise,’” rejoined Nowell, with a groan.

  “What promise, worshipful sir?” cried Potts, staring with surprise.

  The magistrate got out the words, “My promise to—” and then he stopped suddenly.

  “To Mistress Nutter?” suggested Potts.

  “Don’t ask me,” exclaimed Nowell, fiercely. “Don’t draw any erroneous conclusions, man. I mean nothing — I say nothing!”

  “He is certainly bewitched,” observed Parson Holden in an under-tone to the attorney.

  “It was by your a
dvice I entered this house,” thundered Nowell, “and may all the ill arising from it alight upon your head!”

  “My respected client!” implored Potts.

  “I am no longer your client!” shrieked the infuriated magistrate. “I dismiss you. I will have nought to do with you more. I wish I had never seen your ugly little face!”

  “You were quite right, reverend sir,” observed Potts aside to the divine; “he is certainly bewitched, or he never would behave in this way to his best friend. My excellent sir,” he added to Nowell, “I beseech you to calm yourself, and listen to me. My motive for wishing you to comply with Mistress Nutter’s request was this: We were in a dilemma from which there was no escape, my wounded condition preventing me from flight, and all your followers being dispersed. Knowing your discretion, I apprehended that, finding the tables turned against you, you would not desire to play a losing game, and I therefore counselled apparent submission as the best means of disarming your antagonist. Whatever arrangement you have made with Mistress Nutter is neither morally nor legally binding upon you.”

  “You think not!” cried Nowell. “‘May I become subject to the Fiend if I violate my promise!’”

  “What promise have you made, sir?” inquired Potts and Holden together.

  “Do not question me,” cried Nowell; “it is sufficient that I am tied and bound by it.”

  The attorney reflected a little, and then observed to Holden, “It is evident some unfair practices have been resorted to with our respected friend, to extort a promise from him which he cannot violate. It is also possible, from what he let fall at first, that an attempt may be made to detain us prisoners within this house, and, for aught I know, Master Nowell may have given his word not to go forth without Mistress Nutter’s permission. Under these circumstances, I would beg of you, reverend sir, as an especial favour to us both, to ride over to Whalley, and acquaint Sir Ralph Assheton with our situation.”

 

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