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“Aye! aye!”

“The rest is for the poor-box at Aldwark this time. Perhaps there’ll be more before the morn.”

“Captian…”

“Hush! don’t begin to lecture, John!” said Beau Brocade, with curious earnestness. “I tell thee, friend, there’s madness in my veins to-night. I pray thee go back home, and leave me to myself.”

“Don’t send me away, Captain,” pleaded John. “I… I … am uneasy, and …”

“Dear, kind, faithful John,” murmured Bathurst. “Zounds! but I’m an ungrateful wretch, for I vow thou dost love me, friend.”

“You know I do, Captain. I …I …I’d give …”

“Nay… nothing!” interrupted Jack, quickly, “give me nothing but that love of thine, friend… it is more precious than life … but I pray thee, let me be to-night … I swear to thee I’ll do no harm … I’ll see thee in the morn, John … I’ll be safe… never fear!”

John Stich sighed. He knew that further protest was useless. Already Beau Brocade had turned Jack o’ Lantern’s head once more towards the crest of the hill. The smith waited awhile, listening while he could to the sound of the horse’s hoofs on the rain-sodden earth. His honest heart was devoured with anxiety both for his friend and for the brave young lady who was journeying townwards to-night.

Suddenly it seemed to him as if far away he could hear the creaking of wheels on the distant Wirksworth road. The air was so still, that presently he could hear it quite distinctly. ‘Twas her ladyship’s coach, no doubt, plying its slow, wearying way along the quaggy road.

It would be midway to the little town by now.

The narrow track on which John stood cut the road at right angles, about a mile and a half away. The smith took to blaming himself that he had kept her ladyship’s journey a secret from Beau Brocade. The latter was a monarch on the Heath: he would have kept footpads at bay, watched and guarded the coach, and seen it, mayhap, safely as far as Wirksworth.

Never for a moment did the slightest fear cross the smith’s mind that the notorious highwayman would stop Lady Patience’s coach. Still, a warning would not have come amiss. Perhaps it was not too late. The road wound in and out a good deal, skirting bog-land or massive boulders. John hoped that on the path he might yet come across Jack o’ Lantern and his master, before they had met the coach.

He started to run and had covered nearly a mile when suddenly he heard a shout, which made his honest heart almost stop in its beating, a shout, followed by two pistol shots in rapid succession.

The shout had rung out clear and distinct in the fresh, lusty voice of Beau Brocade.

“Stand and deliver!”

John dared not think what the pistol shots had meant.

With elbows now pressed to his sides, he began running at a wild gallop along the rough, unbeaten track, towards the point whence shots and shout had come.

Chapter XVIII

Moonlight on the Heath

The jolting of the carriage along the quaggy road had been well nigh unendurable. Mistress Betty was groaning audibly. But Lady Patience, with her fair head resting against the cushions, was forgetting all bodily ailments, whilst absorbed in mental visions that flitted, swift and ever-changing, before her excited brain.

There was the dear brother in peril of his life, his young face looking wan and anxious, then Sir Humphrey Challoner, the man she instinctively, unreasonably dreaded, and John Stich, the faithful retainer, brave and burly, guarding his lord’s life with his own. These faces and figures wandered ghost-like before her eyes, and then vanished, leaving before her mental vision but one form and face, a pair of merry, deep-set grey eyes, that at times looked so inexpressibly sad, a head crowned with a mass of unruly curls, a figure, lithe and active, sitting upon a chestnut horse and riding away towards the sunset.

It was a pleasant picture: no wonder Patience allowed her mind to dwell on it, and in fancy to hear that full-toned voice either in lively song or gay repartee, or at times with that ring of tenderness in it, which had brought the tears of pity to her eyes.

The hours sped slowly on, the cumbrous vehicle jostled onwards, plunging and creaking, whilst Thomas urged the burdened horses along.

Suddenly a jerk, more vigorous than before, roused Patience from her half-wakeful dreams. The heavy coach had seemed to take a plunge on its side, there was fearful creaking, and much swearing from the driver’s box, a shout or two, panting efforts on the part of the horses, and finally the vehicle came to a complete standstill.

Mistress Betty had started up in alarm.

“Lud preserve us!” she shouted, putting a very sleepy head out of the carriage window, “what’s the matter now, Thomas?”

“We be stuck in a quagmire,” muttered the latter worthy, vainly trying to smother more forcible language, out of respect for her ladyship’s presence.

Timothy, the groom, had dismounted: lanthorn in hand, he was examining the cause of the catastrophe.

“Get the other lanthorn, Thomas!” he shouted to the driver, “and come and give me a hand, else we’ll have to spend the night on this God-forsaken heath.”

“Is it serious, Timothy?” queried Lady Patience, anxiously.

“I hope not, my lady. The axle is caked with mud on this side, and we do seem stuck in some kind of morass, but if Thomas’ll hurry himself …”

The latter, with many more suppressed oaths, had at last got down from his box, and had brought a second lanthorn round to the back of the coach, where Timothy had already started scraping shovelfuls of inky mud from the axle of the off-wheel.

It was at this moment, and when the two men were intent upon their work, that a voice, loud and distinct, suddenly shouted behind them,—

“Stand and deliver!”

Thomas, who was of a timorous disposition, dropped the lanthorn he held, and in his fright knocked over the other which was on the ground. He was a man of peace, and knew from past experience that ‘tis safer not to resist these gentlemen of the roads.

When therefore the highwayman’s well-known challenge rang out in the night, he threw up both hands in order to testify to his peaceful intentions; but Timothy, who was younger and more audacious, drew a couple of pistols from his belt, and at all hazards fired them off, one after the other, in the direction whence had come the challenge. The next moment he felt a vigorous blwo on his wrists and the pistols flew out of his hands.

“Hands up or I shoot!”

Thomas was already on his knees. Timothy, thus disarmed, thought it more prudent to follow suit.

From within the coach could be heard Mistress Betty’s shrill and terrified voice,—

“Nay! nay! your ladyship shall not go!” followed by her ladyship’s peremptory command,—

“Silence, child! Let me go! Stay you within an you are afraid!”

There was a moment’s silence, for at sound of her voice Beau Brocade had started, then he leaned forward on his horse, listening with all his might, wondering if indeed his ears had not miseld him, if ‘twas not a dream-voice that came to him out of the gloom.

“Have I the honour of addressing Lady Rounce?” he murmured mechanically.

At this moment the darkness, which up to now had been intense, began slowly to give place to a faint, silvery light. The moon, pale and hazy, tried to pierce the mist that still enveloped her as with a cold, blue mantle, and one by one tipped blackthorn and gorse with a cluster of shimmering diamonds.

Like a ghostly panorama the heath revealed its thousand beauties, its many mysteries: the deep, dark tangle of bramble and ling, beneath which hide the gnomes and ghouls, the tiny blue cups of the harebells, wherein the pixies have their home; the fairy rings in the grass, where the sprites dance their wild saraband on nights such as this, with the crickets to play the tunes, and the glow-worms to light them in their revels.

But to Beau Brocade the dim radiance of the moon, shy and golden through her veil of mist, only revealed one great, one wonderful picture: that of his dream made real, of his heavenly vision come down to earth, the picture of her stepping out of the coach that she might speak to him.

She came forward quickly, and the hood flew back from her face. She was looking at him with a half-puzzled, half-haughty expression in her eyes, and Beau Brocade thought he had never seen eyes that were so deeply blue. He murmured her name,—

“The Lady Patience!”

“Nay, sir, since you know my name,” she said, with a quaint, almost defiant toss of her small, graceful head, “I pray you, whoever you may be, to let me depart in peace. See,” she added, holding a heavy purse out to him, “I have brought you what money I have. Will you take it and let me go?”

But he dared not speak. He longed to turn Jack o’ Lantern’s head and to gallop away quickly out of her sight, before she had recognised him and learnt that the man on whom she had looked with such tender pity, and with such glowing admiration, was the highway robber, the outlaw, the notorious thief. Yet so potent was the spell of her voice, the moist shimmer of her lips, the depth and glitter of her blue eyes, that he felt as if iron fetters held him fast to the ground, there enchained before her, until at least she should speak again.

He dismounted and she stepped a little closer to him, so close now that, had he stretched out his hand, he might have touched her cloak, or even those white finger-tips which…

“Believe me, sir,” she said a little impatiently, seeing that he did not speak, “I give you all I have freely an you molest me no more. I have urgent, very urgent business in London, which brooks of no delay. Kindly allow my men to go free.”

She was pleading now, all the haughtiness vanished from her face. Her voice, too, shook perceptibly; the tall, silent figure before her was beginning to frighten her.

Yet he dared not trust himself to speak, lest by a word he should dispel this dream. This golden vision of paradise that heaven had so unaccountably sent to him this night! it might vanish again amidst the stars and leave the poor outlaw to his loneliness.

This moment was so precious, so wonderful.

Madly he longed for the god-like power to stop Time in its relentless way, to make sun, moon and stars, the earth and all eternity pause awhile, whilst he looked upon her, as she stood there, with the pleading look in her eyes, the honey-coloured moon above throwing a dim and flickering light upon her upturned face… her golden hair … that tiny hand stretched out to him.

She seemed to wait for his reply, and at last in a low voice, which he tried to disguise, he murmured,—

“Madam, I entreat you, have no fear! Believe me, I would sooner never see the sun set again than cause you even one short moment’s anxiety.”

Again that quaint puzzled look came into her eyes, she looked at the black mask that hid his face, as if she would penetrate the secret which it kept.

“Will you not take this purse?” she asked.

“Nay! I will not take the purse, fair lady,” he said, still speaking very low, “but I would fain, an you would permit it, hold but for one instant your hand in

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