Before Tupcombe could think what to do,Phelipson had gone on;but not to the door of the house.Swerving to the left,he passed round to the east angle,where,as Tupcombe knew,were situated Betty's apartments.Dismounting,he left the horse tethered to a hanging bough,and walked on to the house.
Suddenly his eye caught sight of an object which explained the position immediately.It was a ladder stretching from beneath the trees,which there came pretty close to the house,up to a first-floor window--one which lighted Miss Betty's rooms.Yes,it was Betty's chamber;he knew every room in the house well.
The young horseman who had passed him,having evidently left his steed somewhere under the trees also,was perceptible at the top of the ladder,immediately outside Betty's window.While Tupcombe watched,a cloaked female figure stepped timidly over the sill,and the two cautiously descended,one before the other,the young man's arms enclosing the young woman between his grasp of the ladder,so that she could not fall.As soon as they reached the bottom,young Phelipson quickly removed the ladder and hid it under the bushes.
The pair disappeared;till,in a few minutes,Tupcombe could discern a horse emerging from a remoter part of the umbrage.The horse carried double,the girl being on a pillion behind her lover.
Tupcombe hardly knew what to do or think;yet,though this was not exactly the kind of flight that had been intended,she had certainly escaped.He went back to his own animal,and rode round to the servants'door,where he delivered the letter for Mrs.Dornell.To leave a verbal message for Betty was now impossible.
The Court servants desired him to stay over the night,but he would not do so,desiring to get back to the Squire as soon as possible and tell what he had seen.Whether he ought not to have intercepted the young people,and carried off Betty himself to her father,he did not know.However,it was too late to think of that now,and without wetting his lips or swallowing a crumb,Tupcombe turned his back upon King's-Hintock Court.
It was not till he had advanced a considerable distance on his way homeward that,halting under the lantern of a roadside-inn while the horse was watered,there came a traveller from the opposite direction in a hired coach;the lantern lit the stranger's face as he passed along and dropped into the shade.Tupcombe exulted for the moment,though he could hardly have justified his exultation.
The belated traveller was Reynard;and another had stepped in before him.
You may now be willing to know of the fortunes of Miss Betty.Left much to herself through the intervening days,she had ample time to brood over her desperate attempt at the stratagem of infection--thwarted,apparently,by her mother's promptitude.In what other way to gain time she could not think.Thus drew on the day and the hour of the evening on which her husband was expected to announce himself.
At some period after dark,when she could not tell,a tap at the window,twice and thrice repeated,became audible.It caused her to start up,for the only visitant in her mind was the one whose advances she had so feared as to risk health and life to repel them.
She crept to the window,and heard a whisper without.
'It is I--Charley,'said the voice.
Betty's face fired with excitement.She had latterly begun to doubt her admirer's staunchness,fancying his love to be going off in mere attentions which neither committed him nor herself very deeply.She opened the window,saying in a joyous whisper,'Oh Charley;Ithought you had deserted me quite!'
He assured her he had not done that,and that he had a horse in waiting,if she would ride off with him.'You must come quickly,'
he said;'for Reynard's on the way!'
To throw a cloak round herself was the work of a moment,and assuring herself that her door was locked against a surprise,she climbed over the window-sill and descended with him as we have seen.
Her mother meanwhile,having received Tupcombe's note,found the news of her husband's illness so serious,as to displace her thoughts of the coming son-in-law,and she hastened to tell her daughter of the Squire's dangerous condition,thinking it might be desirable to take her to her father's bedside.On trying the door of the girl's room,she found it still locked.Mrs.Dornell called,but there was no answer.Full of misgivings,she privately fetched the old house-steward and bade him burst open the door--an order by no means easy to execute,the joinery of the Court being massively constructed.However,the lock sprang open at last,and she entered Betty's chamber only to find the window unfastened and the bird flown.
For a moment Mrs.Dornell was staggered.Then it occurred to her that Betty might have privately obtained from Tupcombe the news of her father's serious illness,and,fearing she might be kept back to meet her husband,have gone off with that obstinate and biassed servitor to Falls-Park.The more she thought it over the more probable did the supposition appear;and binding her own head-man to secrecy as to Betty's movements,whether as she conjectured,or otherwise,Mrs.Dornell herself prepared to set out.
She had no suspicion how seriously her husband's malady had been aggravated by his ride to Bristol,and thought more of Betty's affairs than of her own.That Betty's husband should arrive by some other road to-night,and find neither wife nor mother-in-law to receive him,and no explanation of their absence,was possible;but never forgetting chances,Mrs.Dornell as she journeyed kept her eyes fixed upon the highway on the off-side,where,before she had reached the town of Ivell,the hired coach containing Stephen Reynard flashed into the lamplight of her own carriage.
Mrs.Dornell's coachman pulled up,in obedience to a direction she had given him at starting;the other coach was hailed,a few words passed,and Reynard alighted and came to Mrs.Dornell's carriage-window.