“Hold!” exclaimed Amabel, springing from the horse; “I will not be the cause of bloodshed. I implore you, my lord, to desist from this outrage. You will gain nothing by it but my death.”
“Let him touch you at his peril,” cried John Lutcombe, rushing towards them, and interposing his stalwart person between her and the earl.
“Stand aside, dog!” cried Rochester furiously, “or I will trample you beneath my horse’s hoofs.”
“You must first get near me to do it,” rejoined the keeper. And as he spoke he struck the horse so violent a blow with a stout oaken cudgel with which he was provided, that the animal became unmanageable, and dashed across the downs to some distance with his rider.
Meanwhile, Parravicin having ridden up with Pillichody (for they proved to be the earl’s companions) assailed Blaize, and commanded him to deliver up Nizza Macascree. Scared almost out of his senses, the porter would have instantly complied, if the piper’s daughter had not kept fast hold of him, and reproaching him with his cowardice, screamed loudly for help. Heedless of her cries, Parravicin seized her, and strove to drag her from the horse; but she only clung the closer to Blaize, and the other, expecting every moment to pay another visit to the ground, added his vociferations for assistance to hers.
“Leave go your hold,” he cried, to Pillichody, who had seized him on the other side by the collar. “Leave go, I say, or you will rend my jerkin asunder. What are you doing here? I thought you were to help us to escape.”
“So I have done,” rejoined Pillichody, bursting into a loud laugh; “and I am now helping to catch you again. What a blind buzzard you must be not to perceive the net spread for you! Deliver up Nizza Macascree without more ado, or, by all the fiends, I will pay you off for your dastardly assault upon me this morning.”
“I cannot deliver her up,” cried Blaize; “she sticks to me as fast as a burr. I shall be torn asunder between you. Help! help!”
Parravicin, having dismounted, now tore away Nizza Macascree, and was just about to transfer her to his own steed, when John Lutcombe, having driven away the earl in the manner before described, came to the rescue. One blow from his cudgel stretched the knight on the sod, and liberated Nizza Macascree, who instantly flew to her preserver. Finding how matters stood, and that he was likely to be well backed, Blaize plucked up his courage, and grappled with Pillichody. In the struggle they both tumbled to the ground. The keeper rushed towards them, and seizing Pillichody, began to belabour him soundly. In vain the bully implored mercy. He underwent a severe chastisement, and Blaize added a few kicks to the shower of blows proceeding from the keeper, crying, as he dealt them, “Who is the buzzard now, I should like to know?”
By this time, Parravicin had regained his legs, and the Earl of Rochester having forced back his steed, both drew their swords, and, burning for vengeance, prepared to renew the charge. The affair might have assumed a serious aspect, if it had not chanced that at this juncture lights were seen hurrying along the avenue, and the next moment, a large party issued from it.
“It is the king?” cried Rochester. “What is to be done?”
“Our prey must be abandoned,” rejoined Parravicin; “it will never do to be caught here.”
With this he sprang upon his steed, and disappeared across the downs with the earl.
John Lutcombe, on perceiving the approach of the torch-bearers, instantly abandoned Pillichody, and assisting Blaize to the saddle, placed Nizza behind him. Leonard, likewise, who had dismounted to support Amabel, replaced her in the pillion, and in a few seconds the party were in motion. Pillichody, who was the only person now left, did not care to wait for the king’s arrival, but snatching the bridle of his steed, which was quietly grazing at a little distance, mounted him, and galloped off in the direction which he fancied had been taken by the earl and his companion.
Guided by the keeper, who ran beside them, the fugitives proceeded for a couple of miles at a rapid pace over the downs, when, it not appearing that they were followed, John Lutcombe halted for a moment to recover breath. The fresh air had in some degree revived Amabel, and the circumstance of their providential deliverance raised the spirits of the whole party. Soon after this, they reached the ridge of the downs, the magnificent view from which was completely hidden by the shades of night, and, tracking the old Roman road for about a mile, descended the steep hill in the direction of the Blowing Stone. Skirting a thick grove of trees, they presently came to a gate, which the keeper opened, and led them through an orchard towards what appeared to be in the gloom a moderately-sized and comfortable habitation.
“The owner of this house, Mrs. Compton,” observed John Lutcombe to Amabel, “is a widow, and the kindest lady in Berkshire. A message has been sent by your aunt to beg her to afford you an asylum for a few days, and I will answer for it you will be hospitably received.”
As he spoke, the loud barking of a dog was heard, and an old grey-headed butler was seen advancing towards them with a lantern in his hand. At the same time a groom issued from the stable on the right, accompanied by the dog in question, and, hastening towards them, assisted them to dismount. The dog seemed to recognise the keeper, and leaped upon him, licked his hand, and exhibited other symptoms of delight.
“What, Ringwood,” cried the keeper, patting his head, “dost thou know thy old master again? I see you have taken good care of him, Sam,” he added to the groom. “I knew I was placing him into good hands when I gave him to Mrs. Compton.”
“Ay, ay, he can’t find a better home, I fancy,” said the groom.
“Will it please you to walk this way, ladies?” interposed the butler. “My mistress has been expecting you for some time, and had become quite uneasy about you.” So saying, he led the way through a garden, filled with the odours of a hundred unseen flowers, and ushered them into the house.
Mrs. Compton, an elderly lady, of very pleasing exterior, received them with great kindness, and conducted them to a comfortable apartment, surrounded with book-shelves and old family portraits, where refreshments were spread out for them. The good old lady seemed particularly interested in Amabel, and pressed her, but in vain, to partake of the refreshments. With extreme delicacy, she refrained from inquiring into the cause of their visit, and seeing that they appeared, much fatigued, rang for a female attendant, and conducted them to a sleeping-chamber, where she took leave of them for the night. Amabel was delighted with her kind hostess, and, contrary to her expectations and to those of Nizza Macascree, enjoyed undisturbed repose. She awoke in the morning greatly refreshed, and, after attiring herself, gazed through her chamber window. It looked upon a trim and beautiful garden, with a green and mossy plot carved out into quaintly-fashioned beds, filled with the choicest flowers, and surrounded by fine timber, amid which a tall fir-tree appeared proudly conspicuous. Mrs. Compton, who, it appeared, always arose with the sun, was busied in tending her flowers, and as Amabel watched her interesting pursuits, she could scarcely help envying her.
“What a delightful life your mistress must lead,” she observed to a female attendant who was present; “I cannot imagine greater happiness than hers.”
“My mistress ought to be happy,” said the attendant; “for there is no one living who does more good. Not a cottage nor a farm-house in the neighbourhood but she visits to inquire whether she can be of any service to its inmates; and wherever her services _are_ required, they are always rendered. Mrs. Compton’s name will never be forgotten in Kingston Lisle.”
At this moment, Amabel caught sight of the benevolent countenance of the good old lady looking up at the window, and a kindly greeting passed between them. Ringwood, who was a privileged intruder, was careering round the garden, and though his mistress watched his gambols round her favourite flower-beds with some anxiety, she did not check him. Amabel and Nizza now went down stairs, and Mrs. Compton returning from the garden, all the household, including Leonard and Blaize, assembled in the breakfast-room for morning prayers.
Breakfast over, Mrs. Compton entered into conversation with Amabel, and ascertained all the particulars of her history. She was greatly interested in it, but did not affect to conceal the anxiety it gave her.
“Yours is really a very dangerous position,” she said, “and I should be acting unfairly towards you if I told you otherwise. However, I will give you all the protection in my power, and I trust your retreat may not be discovered.”
Mrs. Compton’s remark did not tend to dispel Amabel’s uneasiness, and both she and Nizza Macascree passed a day of great disquietude.
In the mean time, Leonard and Blaize were treated with great hospitality by the old butler in the servants’ hall; and though the former was not without apprehension that their retreat might be discovered, he trusted, if it were so, to some fortunate chance to effect their escape. He did not dare to confide his apprehensions to the butler, nor did the other make any inquiries; but it being understood that their visit was to be secret, every precaution was taken to keep it so. John Lutcombe had tarried no longer than enabled him to discuss a jug of ale, and then set out for Ashdown, promising to return on the following day; but he had not yet made his appearance. Evening arrived, and nothing alarming having occurred, all became comparatively easy; and Mrs. Compton herself, who had looked unusually grave throughout the day, now recovered her wonted cheerfulness.
Their satisfaction, however, was not long afterwards disturbed by the arrival of a large train of horsemen at the gate, and a stately personage alighted, and walked at the head of a gallant train, towards the house. At the sight of the new-comers, whom they instantly knew were the king and his suite, Amabel and Nizza Macascree flew upstairs, and shutting themselves in their chamber, awaited the result in the utmost trepidation. They were not kept long in suspense. Shortly after the king’s arrival, Mrs. Compton herself knocked at the door, and in a tone of deep commiseration, informed Amabel that his majesty desired to see her.
Knowing that refusal was impossible, Amabel complied, and descended to a room looking upon the garden, in which she found the king. He was attended only by Chiffinch, and received her with a somewhat severe aspect, and demanded why she had left Ashdown contrary to his express injunctions?
Amabel stated her motives.
“What you tell me is by no means satisfactory,” rejoined the king; “but since you have chosen to trust to yourself, you can no longer look for protection from me.”
“I beseech your majesty to consider the strait into which I was driven,” returned Amabel, imploringly.
“Summon the Earl of Rochester to the presence,” said the king, turning from her to Chiffinch.
“In pity, sire,” cried Amabel, throwing herself at his feet.
“Let the injunction be obeyed,” rejoined Charles, peremptorily.
And the chief page departed.
Amabel instantly arose, and drew herself proudly up. Soon afterwards, Rochester made his appearance, and on seeing Amabel, a flush of triumphant joy overspread his features.
“I withdraw my interdiction, my lord,” said the king to him. “You are at liberty to renew your suit to this girl.”
“Hear me, Lord Rochester,” said Amabel, addressing the earl; “I have conquered the passion I once felt for you, and regard you only as one who has sought my ruin, and from whom I have fortunately escaped. When you learn from my own lips that my heart is dead to you, that I never can love you more, and that I only desire to be freed from your addresses, I cannot doubt but you will discontinue them.”
“Your declaration only inflames me the more, lovely Amabel,” replied the earl, passionately. “You must, and shall be mine.”
“Then my death will rest at your door,” she rejoined.
“I will take my chance of that,” rejoined the earl, carelessly.
Amabel then quitted the king’s presence, and returned to her own chamber, where she found Nizza Macascree in a state of indescribable agitation.
“All has happened that I anticipated,” said she to Nizza Macascree. “The king will no longer protect me, and I am exposed to the persecutions of the Earl of Rochester, who is here.”
As she spoke, an usher entered, and informed Nizza Macascree that the king commanded her presence. The piper’s daughter looked at Amabel with a glance of unutterable anguish.
“I fear you must go,” said Amabel, “but Heaven will protect you!”
They then tenderly embraced each other, and Nizza Macascree departed with the usher.
Some time having elapsed, and Nizza not returning, Amabel became seriously uneasy. Hearing a noise below, she looked forth from the window, and perceived the king and all his train departing. A terrible foreboding shot through her heart. She gazed anxiously after them, but could not perceive Nizza Macascree. Overcome at last by her anxiety, she rushed down stairs, and had just reached the last step, when she was seized by two persons. A shawl was passed over her head, and she was forced out of the house.
* * * * *
BOOK THE FOURTH.
SEPTEMBER, 1665.
I.
THE PLAGUE AT ITS HEIGHT.
Amabel’s departure for Berkshire caused no change in her father’s mode of life. Everything proceeded as before within his quiet dwelling; and, except that the family were diminished in number, all appeared the same. It is true they wanted the interest, and indeed the occupation, afforded them by the gentle invalid, but in other respects, no difference was observable. Devotional exercises, meals, the various duties of the house, and cheerful discourse, filled up the day, which never proved wearisome. The result proved the correctness of Mr. Bloundel’s judgment. While the scourge continued weekly to extend its ravages throughout the city, it never crossed his threshold; and, except suffering in a slight degree from scorbutic affections, occasioned by the salt meats to which they were now confined, and for which the lemon and lime-juice, provided against such a contingency, proved an efficacious remedy, all the family enjoyed perfect health. For some weeks after her separation from her daughter, Mrs. Bloundel continued in a desponding state, but after that time she became more reconciled to the deprivation, and partially recovered her spirits. Mr. Bloundel did not dare to indulge a hope that Amabel would ever return; but though he suffered much in secret, he never allowed his grief to manifest itself. The circumstance that he had not received any intelligence of her did not weigh much with him, because the difficulty of communication became greater and greater, as each week the scourge increased in violence, and he was inclined to take no news as good news. It was not so in the present case, but of this he was happily ignorant.
In this way, a month passed on. And now every other consideration was merged in the alarm occasioned by the daily increasing fury of the pestilence. Throughout July the excessive heat of the weather underwent no abatement, but in place of the clear atmosphere that had prevailed during the preceding month, unwholesome blights filled the air, and, confining the pestilential effluvia, spread the contagion far and wide with extraordinary rapidity. Not only was the city suffocated with heat, but filled with noisome smells, arising from the carcasses with which the close alleys and other out-of-the-way places were crowded, and which were so far decomposed as not to be capable of removal. The aspect of the river was as much changed as that of the city. Numbers of bodies were thrown into it, and, floating up with the tide, were left to taint the air on its banks, while strange, ill-omened fowl, attracted thither by their instinct, preyed upon them. Below the bridge, all captains of ships moored in the Pool, or off Wapping, held as little communication as possible with those on shore, and only received fresh provisions with the greatest precaution. As the plague increased, most of these removed lower down the river, and many of them put out entirely to sea. Above the bridge, most of the wherries and other smaller craft had disappeared, their owners having taken them up the river, and moored them against its banks at different spots, where they lived in them under tilts. Many hundreds of persons remained upon the river in this way during the whole continuance of the visitation.
August had now arrived, but the distemper knew no cessation. On the contrary, it manifestly increased in violence and malignity. The deaths rose a thousand in each week, and in the last week in this fatal month amounted to upwards of sixty thousand!
But, terrible as this was, the pestilence had not yet reached its height. Hopes were entertained that when the weather became cooler, its fury would abate; but these anticipations were fearfully disappointed. The bills of mortality rose the first week in September to seven thousand, and though they slightly decreased during the second week–awakening a momentary hope–on the third they advanced to twelve thousand! In less than ten days, upwards of two thousand persons perished in the parish of Aldgate alone; while Whitechapel suffered equally severely. Out of the hundred parishes in and about the city, one only, that of Saint John the Evangelist in Watling-street, remained uninfected, and this merely because there was scarcely a soul left within it, the greater part of the inhabitants having quitted their houses, and fled into the country.
The deepest despair now seized upon all the survivors. Scarcely a family but had lost half of its number–many, more than half–while those who were left felt assured that their turn would speedily arrive. Even the reckless were appalled, and abandoned their evil courses. Not only were the dead lying in the passages and alleys, but even in the main thoroughfares, and none would remove them. The awful prediction of Solomon Eagle that “grass would grow in the streets, and that the living should not be able to bury the dead,” had come to pass. London had become one vast lazar-house, and seemed in a fair way of becoming a mighty sepulchre.
During all this time, Saint Paul’s continued to be used as a pest-house, but it was not so crowded as heretofore, because, as not one in fifty of the infected recovered when placed under medical care, it was not thought worth while to remove them from their own abodes. The number of attendants, too, had diminished. Some had died, but the greater part had abandoned their offices from a fear of sharing the fate of their patients. In consequence of these changes, Judith Malmayns had been advanced to the post of chief nurse at the cathedral. Both she and Chowles had been attacked by the plague, and both had recovered. Judith attended the coffin-maker, and it was mainly owing to her that he got through the attack. She never left him for a moment, and would never suffer any one to approach him–a necessary precaution, as he was so much alarmed by his situation that he would infallibly have made some awkward revelations. When Judith, in her turn, was seized, Chowles exhibited no such consideration for her, and scarcely affected to conceal his disappointment at her recovery. This want of feeling on his part greatly incensed her against him, and though he contrived in some degree to appease her, it was long before she entirely forgave him. Far from being amended by her sufferings, she seemed to have grown more obdurate, and instantly commenced a fresh career of crime. It was not, however, necessary now to hasten the end of the sick. The distemper had acquired such force and malignity that it did its work quickly enough–often too quickly–and all she sought was to obtain possession of the poor patients’ attire, or any valuables they might possess worth appropriating. To turn to the brighter side of the picture, it must not be omitted that when the pestilence was at its height, and no offers could induce the timorous to venture forth, or render assistance to the sufferers, Sir John Lawrence the Lord Mayor, the Duke of Albermarle, the Earl of Craven, and the Archbishop of Canterbury, devoted themselves to the care of the infected, and supplied them with every necessary they required. Among the physicians, no one deserves more honourable mention than Doctor Hodges, who was unremitting in his attentions to the sufferers.
To return to the grocer. While the plague was thus raging around him, and while every house in Wood-street except one or two, from which the inmates had fled, was attacked by the pestilence, he and his family had remained untouched. About the middle of August, he experienced a great alarm. His second son, Hubert, fell sick, and he removed him to one of the upper rooms which he had set aside as an hospital, and attended upon him himself. In a few days, however, his fears were removed and he found, to his great satisfaction, that the youth had not been attacked by the plague, but was only suffering from a slight fever, which quickly yielded to the remedies applied. About the same time, too, he lost his porter, Dallison. The poor fellow did not make his appearance as usual for two days, and intelligence of his fate was brought on the following day by his wife, who came to state that her husband was dead, and had been thrown into the plague-pit at Aldgate. The same night, however, she brought another man, named Allestry, who took the place of the late porter, and acquainted his employer with the deplorable state of the city.
Two days afterwards, Allestry himself died, and Mr. Bloundel had no one to replace him. He thus lost all means of ascertaining what was going forward; but the deathlike stillness around him, broken only by the hoarse tolling of a bell, by a wild shriek or other appalling cry, proclaimed too surely the terrible state of things. Sometimes, too, a passenger would go by, and would tell him the dreadful height to which the bills of mortality had risen, assuring him that ere another month had expired, not a soul would be left alive in London.
One night, as Solomon Eagle, who had likewise been miraculously preserved, pursued his course through the streets, he paused before Mr. Roundel’s house, and looking up at the window, at which the latter had chanced to be stationed, cried in a loud voice, “Be of good cheer. You have served God faithfully, and there shall no evil befall you, neither shall the plague come nigh your dwelling.” And raising his arms, as if invoking a blessing upon the habitation, he departed.
It was now the second week in September, and as yet Mr. Bloundel had received no tidings of his daughter. At any other season he would have been seriously uneasy, but now, as has been already stated, all private grief was swallowed up in the horror of the general calamity. Satisfied that she was in a healthful situation, and that her chance of preservation from the pestilence was better than that of any other member of his family, he turned his thoughts entirely to them. Redoubling his precautions, he tried by every means to keep up the failing spirits of his household, and but rarely ventured to open his shutter, and look forth on the external world.
On the tenth of September, which was afterwards accounted the most fatal day of this fatal month, a young man of a very dejected appearance, and wearing the traces of severe suffering in his countenance, entered the west end of London, and took his way slowly towards the city. He had passed Saint Giles’s without seeing a single living creature, or the sign of one in any of the houses. The broad thoroughfare was completely grown over with grass, and the habitations had the most melancholy and deserted air imaginable. Some doors and windows were wide open, discovering rooms with goods and furniture scattered about, having been left in this state by their inmates; but most part of them were closely fastened up.
As he proceeded along Holborn, the ravages of the scourge were yet more apparent. Every house, on either side of the way, had a red cross, with the fatal inscription above it, upon the door. Here and there, a watchman might be seen, looking more like a phantom than a living thing. Formerly, the dead were conveyed away at night, but now the carts went about in the daytime. On reaching Saint Andrew’s, Holborn, several persons were seen wheeling hand-barrows filled with corpses, scarcely covered with clothing, and revealing the blue and white stripes of the pestilence, towards a cart which was standing near the church gates. The driver of the vehicle, a tall, cadaverous-looking man, was ringing his bell, and jesting with another person, whom the young man recognised, with a shudder, as Chowles. The coffin-maker also recognised him at the same moment, and called to him, but the other paid no attention to the summons and passed on.
Crossing Holborn Bridge, he toiled faintly up the opposite hill, for he was evidently suffering from extreme debility, and on gaining the summit was obliged to support himself against a wall for a few minutes, before he could proceed. The same frightful evidences of the ravages of the pestilence were observable here, as elsewhere. The houses were all marked with the fatal cross, and shut up. Another dead-cart was heard rumbling along, accompanied by the harsh cries of the driver, and the doleful ringing of the bell. The next moment the loathly vehicle was seen coming along the Old Bailey. It paused before a house, from which four bodies were brought, and then passed on towards Smithfield. Watching its progress with fearful curiosity, the young man noted how often it paused to increase its load. His thoughts, coloured by the scene, were of the saddest and dreariest complexion. All around wore the aspect of death. The few figures in sight seemed staggering towards the grave, and the houses appeared to be plague-stricken like the inhabitants. The heat was intolerably oppressive, and the air tainted with noisome exhalations. Ever and anon, a window would be opened, and a ghastly face thrust from it, while a piercing shriek, or lamentable cry, was uttered. No business seemed going on–there were no passengers–no vehicles in the streets. The mighty city was completely laid prostrate.
After a short rest, the young man shaped his course towards Saint Paul’s, and on reaching its western precincts, gazed for some time at the reverend structure, as if its contemplation called up many and painful recollections. Tears started to his eyes, and he was about to turn away, when he perceived the figure of Solomon Eagle stationed near the cross at the western extremity of the roof. The enthusiast caught sight of him at the same moment, and motioned him to come nearer. “What has happened?” he demanded, as the other approached the steps of the portico.
The young man shook his head mournfully. “It is a sad tale,” he said, “and cannot be told now.”
“I can conjecture what it is,” replied Solomon Eagle. “But come to the small door near the northern entrance of the cathedral at midnight. I will meet you there.”
“I will not fail,” replied the young man.
“One of the terrible judgments which I predicted would befall this devoted city has come to pass,” cried Solomon Eagle. “Another yet remains–the judgment by fire–and if its surviving inhabitants repent not, of which there is as yet no sign, it will assuredly follow.”
“Heaven avert it!” groaned the other, turning away.
Proceeding along Cheapside, he entered Wood-street, and took his way towards the grocer’s dwelling. When at a little distance from it, he paused, and some minutes elapsed before he could muster strength to go forward. Here, as elsewhere, there were abundant indications of the havoc occasioned by the fell disease. Not far from the grocer’s shop, and in the middle of the street, lay the body of a man, with the face turned upwards, while crouching in an angle of the wall sat a young woman watching it. As the young man drew nearer, he recognised in the dead man the principal of the Brotherhood of Saint Michael, and in the poor mourner one of his profligate female associates. “What has become of your unhappy companions?” he demanded of the woman.
“The last of them lies there,” she rejoined mournfully. “All the rest died long ago. My lover was true to his vow; and instead of deploring their fate, lived with me and three other women in mirth and revelry till yesterday, when the three women died, and he fell sick. He did not, however, give in, but continued carousing until an hour before his death.”
Too much shocked to make any reply, the young man proceeded towards the hutch. Beneath a doorway, at a little distance from it, sat a watchman with a halberd on his shoulder, guarding the house; but it was evident he would be of little further use. His face was covered with his hands, and his groans proclaimed that he himself was attacked by the pestilence. Entering the hutch, the young man pulled the cord of the bell, and the summons was soon after answered by the grocer, who appeared at the window. “What, Leonard Holt!” he exclaimed, in surprise, on seeing the young man–“is it you?–what ails you?–you look frightfully ill.”
“I have been attacked a second time by the plague,” replied the apprentice, “and am only just recovered from it.”
“What of my child?” cried the grocer eagerly–“what of her?”
“Alas! alas!” exclaimed the apprentice.
“Do not keep me in suspense,” rejoined the grocer. “Is she dead?”
“No, not dead,” replied the apprentice, “but–“
“But what?” ejaculated the grocer. “In Heaven’s name, speak!”
“These letters will tell you all,” replied the apprentice, producing a packet. “I had prepared them to send to you in case of my death. I am not equal to further explanation now.”
With trembling eagerness the grocer lowered the rope, and Leonard having tied the packet to it, it was instantly drawn up. Notwithstanding his anxiety to ascertain the fate of Amabel, Mr. Bloundel would not touch the packet until he had guarded against the possibility of being infected by it. Seizing it with a pair of tongs, he plunged it into a pan containing a strong solution of vinegar and sulphur, which he had always in readiness in the chamber, and when thoroughly saturated, laid it in the sun to dry. On first opening the shutter to answer Leonard’s summons, he had flashed off a pistol, and he now thought to expel the external air by setting fire to a ball composed of quick brimstone, saltpetre, and yellow amber, which being placed on an iron plate, speedily filled the room with a thick vapour, and prevented the entrance of any obnoxious particles. These precautions taken, he again addressed himself, while the packet was drying, to Leonard, whom he found gazing anxiously at the window, and informed him that all his family had hitherto escaped contagion.
“A special providence must have watched over you, sir,” replied the apprentice, “and I believe yours is the only family in the whole city that has been so spared. I have reason to be grateful for my own extraordinary preservation, and yet I would rather it had pleased Heaven to take me away than leave me to my present misery.”
“You keep me in a frightful state of suspense, Leonard,” rejoined the grocer, regarding the packet wistfully, “for I dare not open your letters till they are thoroughly fumigated. You assure me my child is living. Has she been attacked by the plague?”
“Would she had!” groaned Leonard.
“Is she still at Ashdown?” pursued the grocer. “Ah! you shake your head. I see!–I must be beside myself not to have thought of it before. She is in the power of the Earl of Rochester.”
“She is,” cried Leonard, catching at the angle of the shed for support.
“And I am here!” exclaimed Mr. Bloundel, forgetting his caution, and thrusting himself far out of the window, as if with the intention of letting himself down by the rope–“I am here, when I ought to be near her!”
“Calm yourself, I beseech you, sir,” cried Leonard; “a moment’s rashness will undo all you have done.”
“True!” replied the grocer, checking himself. “I must think of others as well as of her. But where is she? Hide nothing from me.”
“I have reason to believe she is in London,” replied the apprentice. “I traced her hither, and should not have desisted from my search if I had not been checked by the plague, which attacked me on the night of my arrival. I was taken to the pesthouse near Westbourne Green, where I have been for the last three weeks.”
“If she was brought to London, as you state,” rejoined the grocer, “I cannot doubt but she has fallen a victim to the scourge.”
“It may be,” replied Leonard, moodily, “and I would almost hope it is so. When you peruse my letters, you will learn that she was carried off by the earl from the residence of a lady at Kingston Lisle, whither she had been removed for safety; and after being taken from place to place, was at last conveyed to an old hall in the neighbourhood of Oxford, where she was concealed for nearly a month.”
“Answer me, Leonard,” cried the grocer, “and do not attempt to deceive me. Has she preserved her honour?”
“Up to the time of quitting Oxford she had preserved it,” replied the apprentice. “She herself assured me she had resisted all the earl’s importunities, and would die rather than yield to him. But I will tell you how I obtained an interview with her. After a long search, I discovered the place of her concealment, the old hall I have just mentioned, and climbed in the night, and at the hazard of my life, to the window of the chamber where she was confined. I saw and spoke with her; and having arranged a plan by which I hoped to accomplish her deliverance on the following night, descended. Whether our brief conference was overheard, and communicated to the earl, I know not; but it would seem so, for he secretly departed with her the next morning, taking the road, as I subsequently learnt, to London. I instantly started in pursuit, and had reached Paddington, when I fell ill, as I have related.”
“What you tell me in some measure eases my mind,” replied Mr. Bloundel, after a pause; “for I feel that my daughter, if alive, will be able to resist her persecutor. What has become of your companions?”
“Nizza Macascree has met with the same fate as Amabel,” replied Leonard. “She was unfortunate enough to attract the king’s attention, when he visited Ashdown Lodge in company of the Earl of Rochester, and was conveyed to Oxford, where the court is now held, and must speedily have fallen a victim to her royal lover if she had not disappeared, having been carried off, it was supposed, by Sir Paul Parravicin. But the villain was frustrated in his infamous design. The king’s suspicion falling upon him, he was instantly arrested; and though he denied all knowledge of Nizza’s retreat, and was afterwards liberated, his movements were so strictly watched, that he had no opportunity of visiting her.”
“You do not mention Blaize,” said Mr. Bloundel. “No ill, I trust, has befallen him?”
“I grieve to say he has been attacked by the distemper he so much dreaded,” replied Leonard. “He accompanied me to London, but quitted me when I fell sick, and took refuge with a farmer named Wingfield, residing near Kensal Green. I accidentally met Wingfield this morning, and he informed me that Blaize was taken ill the day before yesterday, and removed to the pest-house in Finsbury Fields. I will go thither presently, and see what has become of him. Is Doctor Hodges still among the living?”
“I trust so,” replied Mr. Bloundel, “though I have not seen him for the last ten days.”
He then disappeared for a few minutes, and on his return lowered a small basket containing a flask of canary, a loaf which he himself had baked, and a piece of cold boiled beef. The apprentice thankfully received the provisions, and retiring to the hutch, began to discuss them, fortifying himself with a copious draught of canary. Having concluded his repast, he issued forth, and acquainting Mr. Bloundel, who had at length ventured to commence reading the contents of the packet by the aid of powerful glasses, that he was about to proceed to Dr. Hodges’s residence, to inquire after him, set off in that direction.
Arrived in Great Knightrider-street, he was greatly shocked at finding the door of the doctor’s habitation fastened, nor could he make any one hear, though he knocked loudly and repeatedly against it. The shutters of the lower windows were closed, and the place looked completely deserted. All the adjoining houses were shut up, and not a living being could be discerned in the street from whom information could be obtained relative to the physician. Here, as elsewhere, the pavement was overgrown with grass, and the very houses had a strange and melancholy look, as if sharing in the general desolation. On looking down a narrow street leading to the river, Leonard perceived a flock of poultry scratching among the staves in search of food, and instinctively calling them, they flew towards him, as if delighted at the unwonted sound of a human voice. These, and a half-starved cat, were the only things living that he could perceive. At the further end of the street he caught sight of the river, speeding in its course towards the bridge, and scarcely knowing whither he was going, sauntered to its edge. The tide had just turned, and the stream was sparkling in the sunshine, but no craft could be discovered upon its bosom; and except a few barges moored to its sides, all vestiges of the numberless vessels with which it was once crowded were gone. Its quays were completely deserted. Boxes and bales of goods lay untouched on the wharves; the cheering cries with which the workmen formerly animated their labour were hushed. There was no sound of creaking cords, no rattle of heavy chains–none of the busy hum ordinarily attending the discharge of freight from a vessel, or the packing of goods and stores on board. All traffic was at an end; and this scene, usually one of the liveliest possible, was now forlorn and desolate. On the opposite shore of the river it appeared to be the same–indeed, the borough of Southwark was now suffering the utmost rigour of the scourge, and except for the rows of houses on its banks, and the noble bridge by which it was spanned, the Thames appeared as undisturbed as it must have been before the great city was built upon its banks.
The apprentice viewed this scene with a singular kind of interest. He had become so accustomed to melancholy sights, that his feelings had lost their acuteness, and the contemplation of the deserted buildings and neglected wharves around him harmonized with his own gloomy thoughts. Pursuing his walk along the side of the river, he was checked by a horrible smell, and looking downward, he perceived a carcass in the last stage of decomposition lying in the mud. It had been washed ashore by the tide, and a large bird of prey was contending for the possession of it with a legion of water-rats. Sickened by the sight, he turned up a narrow thoroughfare near Baynard’s Castle, and crossing Thames-street, was about to ascend Addle-hill, when he perceived a man wheeling a hand-barrow, containing a couple of corpses, in the direction of the river, with the intention, doubtless, of throwing them into it, as the readiest means of disposing of them. Both bodies were stripped of their clothing, and the blue tint of the nails, as well as the blotches with which they were covered, left no doubt as to the disease of which they had died. Averting his gaze from the spectacle, Leonard turned off on the right along Carter-lane, and threading a short passage, approached the southern boundary of the cathedral; and proceeding towards the great door opposite him, passed through it. The mighty lazar-house was less crowded than he expected to find it, but its terrible condition far exceeded his worst conceptions. Not more than half the pallets were occupied; but as the sick were in a great measure left to themselves, the utmost disorder prevailed. A troop of lazars, with sheets folded around them, glided, like phantoms, along Paul’s Walk, and mimicked in a ghastly manner the air and deportment of the gallants who had formerly thronged the place. No attempt being made to maintain silence, the noise was perfectly stunning; some of the sick were shrieking–some laughing in a wild unearthly manner–some praying–some uttering loud execrations–others groaning and lamenting. The holy building seemed to have become the abode of evil and tormented spirits. Many dead were lying in the beds–the few attendants who were present not caring to remove them; and Leonard had little doubt, that before another sun went down the whole of the ghastly assemblage before him would share their fate. If the habitations he had recently gazed upon had appeared plague-stricken, the sacred structure in which he was now standing seemed yet more horribly contaminated. Ill-kept and ill-ventilated, the air was loaded with noxious effluvia, while the various abominations that met the eye at every turn would have been sufficient to produce the distemper in any one who had come in contact with them. They were, however, utterly disregarded by the miserable sufferers and their attendants. The magnificent painted windows were dimmed by a thick clammy steam, which could scarcely be washed off–while the carved oak screens, the sculptured tombs, the pillars, the walls, and the flagged floors were covered with impurities.
Satisfied with a brief survey of this frightful scene, Leonard turned to depart, and was passing the entrance to Saint Faith’s, which stood open, when he caught sight of Judith standing at the foot of the broad stone steps, and holding a lamp in her hand. She was conversing with a tall richly-dressed man, whose features he fancied he had seen before, though he could not at the moment call them to mind. After a brief conversation, they moved off into the depths of the vault, and he lost eight of them. All at once it occurred to Leonard that Judith’s companion was the unfortunate stranger whose child he had interred, and who had been so strangely affected at the sight of Nizza Macascree. Determined to ascertain the point, he hurried down the steps and plunged into the vault. It was buried in profound darkness, and he had not proceeded far when he stumbled over something lying in his path, and found from the groan that followed that it was a plague-patient. Before he could regain his feet, the unfortunate sufferer whom he had thus disturbed implored him, in piteous accents, which, with a shudder, he recognised as those of Blaize, to remove him. Leonard immediately gave the poor porter to understand that he was near him, and would render him every aid in his power.
“Your assistance comes too late, Leonard,” groaned Blaize–“it’s all over with me now, but I don’t like to breathe my last in this dismal vault, without medicine or food, both of which I am denied by that infernal hag Mother Malmayns, who calls herself a nurse, but who is in reality a robber and murderess. Oh! the frightful scenes I have witnessed since I have been brought here! I told you I should not escape the plague. I shall die of it–I am sure I shall.”
“I thought you were at the pest-house in Finsbury Fields,” said Leonard.
“I was taken there,” replied Blaize; “but the place was full, and they would not admit me, so I was sent to Saint Paul’s, where there was plenty of room. Yesterday I did pretty well, for I was in the great ward above, and one of the attendants obeyed my directions implicitly, and I am certain if they had been fully carried out, I should have got well. I will tell you what I did. As soon as I was placed on a pallet, and covered with blankets, I ordered a drink to be prepared of the inner bark of an ash-tree, green walnuts, scabious vervain, and saffron, boiled in two quarts of the strongest vinegar. Of this mixture I drank plentifully, and it soon produced a plentiful perspiration. I next had a hen–a live one, of course–stripped of the feathers, and brought to me. Its bill was held to the large blotch under my arm, and kept there till the fowl died from the noxious matter it drew forth. I next repeated the experiment with a pigeon, and derived the greatest benefit from it. The tumour had nearly subsided, and if I had been properly treated afterwards, I should now be in a fair way of recovery. But instead of nice strengthening chicken-broth, flavoured with succory and marigolds; or water-gruel, mixed with rosemary and winter-savory; or a panado, seasoned with verjuice or wood-sorrel; instead of swallowing large draughts of warm beer; or water boiled with carduus seeds; or a posset drink, made with sorrel, bugloss, and borage;–instead of these remedies, or any other, I was carried to this horrible place when I was asleep, and strapped to my pallet, as you perceive. Unloose me, if you can do nothing else.”
“That I will readily do,” replied Leonard; “but I must first procure a light.” With this, he groped his way among the close ranks of ponderous pillars, but though he proceeded with the utmost caution, he could not avoid coming in contact with the beds of some of the other patients, and disturbing them. At length he descried a glimmer of light issuing from a door which he knew to be that of the vestry, and which was standing slightly ajar. Opening it, he perceived a lamp burning on the table, and without stopping to look around him, seized it, and hurried back to the porter. Poor Blaize presented a lamentable, and yet grotesque appearance. His plump person was greatly reduced in bulk, and his round cheeks had become hollow and cadaverous. He was strapped, as he had stated, to the pallet, which in its turn was fastened to the adjoining pillar. A blanket was tightly swathed around him, and a large cloth was bound round his head in lieu of a nightcap. Leonard instantly set about releasing him, and had just unfastened the straps when he heard footsteps approaching, and looking up, perceived the stranger and Judith Malmayns advancing towards him.
II.
THE SECOND PLAGUE-PIT.
Judith, being a little in advance of her companion, took Leonard in the first instance for a chirurgeon’s assistant, and called to him, in a harsh and menacing voice, to let her charge alone. On drawing near, however, she perceived her mistake, and recognising the apprentice, halted with a disconcerted look. By this time, the stranger had come up, and remarking her embarrassment, inquired the cause of it.
“Look there,” cried Judith, pointing towards the apprentice. “Yonder stands the very man you seek.”
“What! Leonard Holt,” cried the other, in astonishment.
“Ay, Leonard Holt,” rejoined Judith. “You can now put any questions to him you think proper.”
The stranger did not require the suggestion to be repeated, but instantly hastened to the apprentice. “Do you remember me?” he asked.
Leonard answered in the affirmative. “I owe you a large debt of obligation,” continued the stranger, “and you shall not find me slow in paying it. But let it pass for the moment. Do you know aught of Nizza Macascree? I know she was taken to Oxford by the king, and subsequently disappeared.”
“Then you know as much as I do of her, sir,” rejoined Leonard.
“I was right, you see, Mr. Thirlby,” interposed Judith, with a malicious grin. “I told you this youth would be utterly ignorant of her retreat.”
“My firm conviction is, that she is in the power of Sir Paul Parravicin,” observed Leonard. “But it is impossible to say where she is concealed.”
“Then my last hope of finding her has fallen to the ground,” replied Thirlby, with a look of great distress. “Ever since my recovery from the plague, I have been in search of her. I traced her from Ashdown Park to Oxford, but she was gone before my arrival at the latter place; and though I made every possible inquiry after her, and kept strict and secret watch upon the villain whom I suspected, as you do, of carrying her off, I could gain no clue to her retreat. Having ascertained, however, that you were seen in the neighbourhood of Oxford about the time of her disappearance, I had persuaded myself you must have aided her escape. But now,” he added, with a groan, “I find I was mistaken.”
“You were so,” replied Leonard, mournfully; “I was in search of my master’s daughter, Amabel, who was carried off at the same time by the Earl of Rochester, and my anxiety about her made me neglectful of Nizza.”
“I am not ignorant of your devoted attachment to her,” remarked the stranger.
“You will never find Amabel again,” observed Judith, bitterly.
“What mean you woman?” asked Leonard.
“I mean what I say,” rejoined Judith. “I repeat, you will never see her again.”
“You would not speak thus positively without some motive,” returned Leonard, seizing her arm. “Where is she? What has happened to her?”
“That you shall never learn from me,” returned Judith, with a triumphant glance.
“Speak, or I will force you to do so,” cried Leonard, furiously.
“Force me!” cried Judith, laughing derisively; “you know not whom you threaten.”
“But _I_ do,” interposed Thirlby. “This young man _shall_ have an answer to this question,” he continued, addressing her in an authoritative tone. “Do you know anything of the girl?”
“No,” replied Judith; “I was merely jesting with him.”
“Shame on you, to trifle with his feelings thus,” rejoined Thirlby. “Step with me this way, young man, I wish to speak with you.”
“Do not leave me here, Leonard,” cried Blaize, “or I shall die before you come back.”
“I have no intention of leaving you,” rejoined Leonard. “Are you aware whether Doctor Hodges is still alive, sir?” he added to Thirlby. “I have just been to his residence in Great Knight-rider-street, and found it shut up.”
“He has removed to Watling-street,” replied the other; “but I have not seen him since my return to London. If you wish it, I will go to his house at once, and send him to look after your poor friend.”
Leonard was about to return thanks for the offer, when the design was frustrated by Blaize himself, who was so terrified by Judith’s looks, that he could pay no attention to what was going forward; and fearing, notwithstanding Leonard’s assurance to the contrary, that he should be left behind, he started to his feet, and wrapping the blanket about him, ran up the steps leading to the cathedral. Leonard and Thirlby followed, and seeing him dart into the southern aisle, would have pursued him along it, but were afraid of coming in contact with the many sick persons by whom it was thronged. They contented themselves, therefore, with watching his course, and were not a little surprised and alarmed to find the whole troop of lazars set off after him, making the sacred walls ring with their cries. Frightened by the clamour, Blaize redoubled his speed, and, with this ghastly train at his heels, crossed the lower part of the mid-aisle, and darting through the pillars, took refuge within Bishop Kempe’s Chapel, the door of which stood open, and which he instantly closed after him. Judith, who had followed the party from the subterranean church, laughed heartily at the chase of the poor porter, and uttered an exclamation of regret at its sudden conclusion. Leonard, however, being apprehensive of mischief from the crowd of sick persons collected before the door, some of whom were knocking against it and trying to force it open, addressed himself to a couple of the attendants, and prevailed on them to accompany him to the chapel. The assemblage was speedily dispersed, and Blaize hearing Leonard’s voice, instantly opened the door and admitted him; and, as soon as his fears were allayed, he was placed on a pallet within the chapel, and wrapped up in blankets, while such remedies as were deemed proper were administered to him. Committing him to the care of the attendants, and promising to reward them well for their trouble, Leonard told Blaize he should go and bring Doctor Hodges to him. Accordingly, he departed, and finding Thirlby waiting for him at the south door, they went forth together.
“I am almost afraid of leaving the poor fellow,” said Leonard, hesitating as he was about to descends the steps. “Judith Malmayns is so cunning and unscrupulous, that she may find some means of doing him an injury.”
“Have no fear,” replied Thirlby; “she has promised me not to molest him further.”
“You appear to have a strange influence over her, then,” observed Leonard. “May I ask how you have attained it?”
“No matter,” replied the other. “It must suffice that I am willing to exercise it in your behalf.”
“And you are not disposed to tell me the nature of the interest you feel in Nizza Macascree?” pursued Leonard.
“Not as yet,” replied Thirlby, with a look and tone calculated to put a stop to further inquiries.
Passing through Saint Austin’s Gate, they approached Watling-street, at the corner of which stood the house where Doctor Hodges had taken up his temporary abode, that he might visit the sick in the cathedral with greater convenience, and be more readily summoned whenever his attendance might be required. Thirlby’s knock at the door was answered, to Leonard’s great satisfaction, by the old porter, who was equally delighted to see him.
It did not escape Leonard that the porter treated the stranger with great respect, and he inferred from this that he was a person of some consideration, as indeed his deportment bespoke him. The old man informed them that his master had been summoned on a case of urgency early in the morning, and had not yet returned, neither was he aware whither he was gone. He promised, however, to acquaint him with Blaize’s condition immediately on his return–“and I need not assure you,” he added to Leonard, “that he will instantly go to him.” Thirlby then inquired of the porter whether Mike Macascree, the blind piper, was still at Dame Lucas’s cottage, in Finsbury Fields, and was answered in the affirmative by the old man, who added, however, in a voice of much emotion, that the good dame herself was no more.
“She died about a fortnight ago of the plague,” he said, “and is buried where she desired to be, beneath an old apple-tree in her garden.”
“Alas!” exclaimed Leonard, brushing away a tear, “her own foreboding is too truly realised.”
“I am about to visit the old piper,” observed Thirlby to the apprentice. “Will you go with me?”
The other readily acquiesced, only stipulating that they should call in Wood-street on the way, that he might inquire whether his master wanted him. Thirlby agreeing to this, and the old porter repeating his assurance that Leonard might make himself quite easy as to Blaize, for he would send his master to him the instant he returned, they set out. On reaching Wood-street the apprentice gave the customary signal, and the grocer answering it, he informed him of his unexpected meeting with Blaize, and of the state in which he had left him. Mr. Bloundel was much distressed by the intelligence, and telling Leonard that he should not require him again that night, besought him to observe the utmost caution. This the apprentice promised, and joining Thirlby, who had walked forward to a little distance, they struck into a narrow street on the right, and proceeding along Aldermanbury, soon arrived at the first postern in the city walls beyond Cripplegate.
Hitherto, Thirlby had maintained a profound silence, and appeared lost in melancholy reflection. Except now and then casting a commiserating glance at the wretched objects they encountered on the road, he kept his eyes steadily fixed upon the ground, and walked at a brisky pace, as if desirous of getting out of the city as quickly as possible. Notwithstanding his weakness, Leonard managed to keep up with him, and his curiosity being greatly aroused by what had just occurred, he began to study his appearance and features attentively. Thirlby was full six feet in height, and possessed a powerful and well-proportioned figure, and would have been considered extremely handsome but for a certain sinister expression about the eyes, which were large and dark, but lighted by a fierce and peculiar fire. His complexion was dark, and his countenance still bore the impress of the dreadful disease from which he had recently recovered. A gloomy shade sat about his brow, and it seemed to Leonard as if he had been led by his passions into the commission of crimes of which he had afterwards bitterly repented. His deportment was proud and commanding, and though he exhibited no haughtiness towards the apprentice, but, on the contrary, treated him with great familiarity, it was plain he did so merely from a sense of gratitude. His age was under forty, and his habiliments were rich, though of a sombre colour.
Passing through the postern, which stood wide open, the watchman having disappeared, they entered a narrow lane, skirted by a few detached houses, all of which were shut up, and marked by the fatal cross. As they passed one of these habitations, they were arrested by loud and continued shrieks of the most heart-rending nature, and questioning a watchman who stood at an adjoining door, as to the cause of them, he said they proceeded from a poor lady who had just lost the last of her family by the plague.
“Her husband and all her children, except one daughter, died last week,” said the man, “and though she seemed deeply afflicted, yet she bore her loss with resignation. Yesterday, her daughter was taken ill, and she died about two hours ago, since when the poor mother has done nothing but shriek in the way you hear. Poor soul! she will die of grief, as many have done before her at this awful time.”
“Something must be done to pacify her,” returned Thirlby, in a voice of much emotion,–“she must be removed from her child.”
“Where can she be removed to?” rejoined the watchman. “Who will receive her?”
“At all events, we can remove the object that occasions her affliction,” rejoined Thirlby. “My heart bleeds for her. I never heard shrieks so dreadful.”
“The dead-cart will pass by in an hour,” said the watchman; “and then the body can be taken away.”
“An hour will be too late,” rejoined Thirlby. “If she continues in this frantic state, she will be dead before that time. You have a hand-barrow there. Take the body to the plague-pit at once, and I will reward you for your trouble.”
“We shall find some difficulty in getting into the house,” said the watchman, who evidently felt some repugnance to the task.
“Not so,” replied Thirlby. And pushing forcibly against the door, he burst it open, and, directed by the cries, entered a room on the right. The watchman’s statement proved correct. Stretched upon a bed in one corner lay the body of a beautiful girl, while the poor mother was bending over it in a state bordering on distraction. On seeing Thirlby, she fled to the further end of the room, but did not desist from her cries. In fact, she was unable to do so, being under the dominion of the wildest hysterical passion. In vain Thirlby endeavoured to make her comprehend by signs the nature of his errand. Waving him off, she continued shrieking more loudly than ever. Half-stunned by the cries, and greatly agitated by the sight of the child, whose appearance reminded him of his own daughter, Thirlby motioned the watchman, who had followed him into the room, to bring away the body, and rushed forth. His injunctions were obeyed. The remains of the unfortunate girl were wrapped in a sheet, and deposited in the hand-barrow. The miserable mother followed the watchman to the door, but did not attempt to interfere with him, and having seen the body of her child disposed of in the manner above described, turned back. The next moment, a heavy sound proclaimed that she had fallen to the ground, and her shrieks were hushed. Thirlby and Leonard exchanged sad and significant looks, but neither of them went back to see what had happened to her. The watchman shook his head, and setting the barrow in motion, proceeded along a narrow footpath across the fields. Remarking that he did not take the direct road to the plague-pit, Leonard called to him, and pointed out the corner in which it lay.
“I know where the old plague-pit is, as well as you,” replied the watchman, “but it has been filled these three weeks. The new pit lies in this direction.” So saying, he pursued his course, and they presently entered a field, in the middle of which lay the plague-pit, as was evident from the immense mound of clay thrown out of the excavation.
“That pit is neither so deep nor so wide as the old one,” said the watchman, “and if the plague goes on at this rate, they will soon have to dig another–that is, if any one should be left alive to undertake the job.”
And chuckling as if he had said a good thing, he impelled his barrow forward more quickly. A few seconds brought them near the horrible chasm. It was more than half full, and in all respects resembled the other pit, except that it was somewhat smaller. There was the same heaving and putrefying mass,–the same ghastly objects of every kind,–the grey-headed old man, the dark-haired maiden, the tender infant,–all huddled together. Wheeling the barrow to the edge of the pit, the watchman cast his load into it; and without even tarrying to throw a handful of soil over it, turned back, and rejoined Thirlby, who had halted at some distance from the excavation. While the latter was searching for his purse to reward the watchman, they heard wild shrieks in the adjoining field, and the next moment perceived the wretched mother running towards them. Guessing her purpose from his former experience, Leonard called to the others to stop her, and stretching out his arms, placed himself in her path. But all their efforts were in vain. She darted past them, and though Leonard caught hold of her, she broke from him, and leaving a fragment of her dress in his grasp, flung herself into the chasm.
Well knowing that all help was vain, Thirlby placed a few pieces of money in the watchman’s hand, and hurried away. He was followed by Leonard, who was equally eager to quit the spot. It so chanced that the path they had taken led them near the site of the old plague-pit, and Leonard pointed it out to his companion. The latter stopped for a moment, and then, without saying a word, ran quickly towards it. On reaching the spot, they found that the pit was completely filled up. The vast cake of clay with which it was covered had swollen and cracked in an extraordinary manner, and emitted such a horrible effluvium that they both instantly retreated.
“And that is the grave of my poor child,” cried Thirlby, halting, and bursting into a passionate flood of tears. “It would have been a fitting resting-place for a guilty wretch like me; but for her it is horrible.”
Allowing time for the violence of his grief to subside, Leonard addressed a few words of consolation to him, and then tried to turn the current of his thoughts by introducing a different subject. With this view, he proceeded to detail the piper’s mysterious conduct as to the packet, and concluded by mentioning the piece of gold which Nizza wore as an amulet, and which she fancied must have some connection with her early history.
“I have heard of the packet and amulet from Doctor Hodges,” said Thirlby, “and should have visited the piper on my recovery from the plague, but I was all impatience to behold Nizza, and could not brook an instant’s delay. But you know his cottage. We cannot be far from it.”
“Yonder it is,” replied Leonard, pointing to the little habitation, which lay at a field’s distance from them–“and we are certain to meet with him, for I hear the notes of his pipe.”
Nor was he deceived, for as they crossed the field, and approached the cottage, the sounds of a melancholy air played on the pipe became each instant more distinct. Before entering the gate, they paused for a moment to listen to the music, and Leonard could not help contrasting the present neglected appearance of the garden with the neatness it exhibited when he last saw it. It was overgrown with weeds, while the drooping flowers seemed to bemoan the loss of their mistress. Leonard’s gaze involuntarily wandered in search of the old apple-tree, and he presently discovered it. It was loaded with fruit, and the rounded sod beneath it proclaimed the grave of the ill-fated Dame Lucas.
Satisfied with this survey, Leonard opened the gate, but had no sooner set foot in the garden than the loud barking of a dog was heard, and Bell rushed forth. Leonard instantly called to her, and on hearing his voice, the little animal instantly changed her angry tones to a gladsome whine, and, skipping towards him, fawned at his feet. While he stooped to caress her, the piper, who had been alarmed by the barking, appeared at the door, and called out to know who was there? At the sight of him, Thirlby, who was close behind Leonard, uttered a cry of surprise, and exclaiming, “It is he!” rushed towards him.
The cry of recognition uttered by the stranger caused the piper to start as if he had received a sudden and violent shock. The ruddy tint instantly deserted his cheek, and was succeeded by a deadly paleness; his limbs trembled, and he bent forward with a countenance of the utmost anxiety, as if awaiting a confirmation of his fears. When within a couple of yards of him, Thirlby paused, and having narrowly scrutinized his features, as if to satisfy himself he was not mistaken, again exclaimed, though in a lower and deeper tone than before, “It is he!” and seizing his arm, pushed him into the house, banging the door to after him in such a manner as to leave no doubt in the apprentice’s mind that his presence was not desired. Accordingly, though extremely anxious to hear what passed between them, certain their conversation must relate to Nizza Macascree, Leonard did not attempt to follow, but, accompanied by Bell, who continued to gambol round him, directed his steps towards the grave of Dame Lucas. Here he endeavoured to beguile the time in meditation, but in spite of his efforts to turn his thoughts into a different channel, they perpetually recurred to what he supposed to be taking place inside the house. The extraordinary effect produced by Nizza Macascree on Thirlby–the resemblance he had discovered between her and some person dear to him–the anxiety he appeared to feel for her, as evinced by his recent search for her–the mysterious connection which clearly subsisted between him and the piper–all these circumstances convinced Leonard that Thirlby was, or imagined himself, connected by ties of the closest relationship with the supposed piper’s daughter.
Leonard had never been able to discern the slightest resemblance either in manner or feature, or in those indescribably slight personal peculiarities that constitute a family likeness, between Nizza and her reputed father–neither could he now recall any particular resemblance between her and Thirlby; still he could not help thinking her beauty and high-bred looks savoured more of the latter than the former. He came, therefore, to the conclusion that she must be the offspring of some early and unfortunate attachment on the part of Thirlby, whose remorse might naturally be the consequence of his culpable conduct at that time. His sole perplexity was the piper’s connection with the affair; but he got over this difficulty by supposing that Nizza’s mother, whoever she was, must have committed her to Macascree’s care when an infant, probably with strict injunctions, which circumstances might render necessary, to conceal her even from her father. Such was Leonard’s solution of the mystery; and feeling convinced that he had made himself master of the stranger’s secret, he resolved to give him to understand as much as soon as he beheld him again.
More than half an hour having elapsed, and Thirlby not coming forth, Leonard began to think sufficient time had been allowed him for private conference with the piper, and he therefore walked towards the door, and coughing to announce his approach, raised the latch and entered the house. He found the pair seated close together, and conversing in a low and earnest tone. The piper had completely recovered from his alarm, and seemed perfectly at ease with his companion, while all traces of anger had disappeared from the countenance of the other. Before them on the table lay several letters, taken from a packet, the cover of which Leonard recognised as the one that had been formerly intrusted to him. Amidst them was the miniature of a lady–at least, it appeared so to Leonard, in the hasty glance he caught of it; but he could not be quite sure; for on seeing him, Thirlby closed the case, and placing his hand on the piper’s mouth, to check his further speech, arose.
“Forgive my rudeness,” he said to the apprentice; “but I have been so deeply interested in what I have just heard, that I quite forgot you were waiting without. I shall remain here some hours longer, but will not detain you, especially as I am unable to admit you to our conference. I will meet you at Doctor Hodges’s in the evening, and shall have much to say to you.”
“I can anticipate some part of your communication,” replied Leonard. “You will tell me you have a daughter still living.”
“You are inquisitive, young man,” rejoined Thirlby, sternly.
“You do me wrong, sir,” replied Leonard. “I have no curiosity as regards yourself; and if I had, would never lower myself in my own estimation to gratify it. Feeling a strong interest in Nizza Macascree, I am naturally anxious to know whether my suspicion that a near relationship subsists between yourself and her is correct.”
“I cannot enter into further explanation now,” returned Thirlby. “Meet me at Doctor Hodges’s this evening, and you shall know more. And now farewell. I am in the midst of a deeply-interesting conversation, which your presence interrupts. Do not think me rude–do not think me ungrateful. My anxiety must plead my excuse.”
“None is necessary, sir,” replied Leonard. “I will no longer place any restraint upon you.”
So saying, and taking care not to let Bell out, he passed through the door, and closed it after him. Having walked to some distance across the fields, musing on what had just occurred, and scarcely conscious whither he was going, he threw himself down on the grass, and fell asleep. He awoke after some time much refreshed, and finding he was considerably nearer Bishopsgate than any other entrance into the city, determined to make for it. A few minutes brought him to a row of houses without the walls, none of which appeared to have escaped infection, and passing them, he entered the city gate. As he proceeded along the once-crowded but now utterly-deserted thoroughfare that opened upon him, he could scarcely believe he was in a spot which had once been the busiest of the busy haunts of men–so silent, so desolate did it appear! On reaching Cornhill, he found it equally deserted. The Exchange was closed, and as Leonard looked at its barred gates, a saddening train of reflection passed through his mind. His head declined upon his breast, and he continued lost in a mournful reverie until he was roused by a hand laid upon his shoulder, and starting–for such a salutation at this season was alarming–he looked round, and beheld Solomon Eagle.
“You are looking upon that structure,” said the enthusiast, “and are thinking how much it is changed. Men who possess boundless riches imagine their power above that of their Maker, and suppose they may neglect and defy him. But they are mistaken. Where are now the wealthy merchants who used to haunt those courts and chambers?–why do they not come here as of old?–why do they not buy and sell, and send their messengers and ships to the farthest parts of the world? Because the Lord hath smitten them and driven them forth–‘From the least of them even to the greatest of them,’ as the prophet Jeremiah saith, ‘every one has been given to covetousness.’ The balances of deceit have been in their hands. They have cozened their neighbours, and greedily gained from them, and will find it true what the prophet Ezekiel hath written, that ‘the Lord will pour out his indignation upon them, and consume them with the fire of his wrath.’ Yea, I tell you, unless they turn from their evil ways–unless they cast aside the golden idol they now worship, and set up the Holy One of Israel in its stead, a fire will be sent to consume them, and that pile which they have erected as a temple to their god shall be burnt to the ground.”
Leonard’s heart was too full to make any answer, and the enthusiast, after a brief pause, again addressed him. “Have you seen Doctor Hodges pass this way? I am in search of him.”
“On what account?” asked Leonard anxiously. “His advice, I trust, is not needed on behalf of any one in whom I am interested.”
“No matter,” replied Solomon Eagle, in a sombre tone; “have you seen him?”
“I have not,” rejoined the apprentice; “but he is probably at Saint Paul’s.”
“I have just left the cathedral, and was told he had proceeded to some house near Cornhill,” rejoined the enthusiast.
“If you have been there, you can perhaps tell me how my master’s porter, Blaize Shotterel, is getting on,” said Leonard.
“I can,” replied the enthusiast. “I heard one of the chirurgeons say that Doctor Hodges had pronounced him in a fair way of recovery. But I must either find the doctor or go elsewhere. Farewell!”
“I will go with you in search of him,” said Leonard.
“No, no; you must not–shall not,” cried Solomon Eagle.
“Wherefore not?” asked the apprentice.
“Do not question me, but leave me,” rejoined the enthusiast.
“Do you know aught of Amabel–of her retreat?” persisted Leonard, who had a strange misgiving that the enthusiast’s errand in some way referred to her.
“I do,” replied Solomon Eagle, gloomily; “but I again advise you not to press me further.”
“Answer me one question at least,” cried Leonard. “Is she with the Earl of Rochester?”
“She is,” replied Solomon Eagle; “but I shall allay your fears in that respect when I tell you she is sick of the plague.”
Leonard heard nothing more, for, uttering a wild shriek, he fell to the ground insensible. He was aroused to consciousness by a sudden sense of strangulation, and opening his eyes, beheld two dark figures bending over him, one of whom was kneeling on his chest. A glance showed him that this person was Chowles; and instantly comprehending what was the matter, and aware that the coffin-maker was stripping him previously to throwing him into the dead-cart, which was standing hard by, he cried aloud, and struggled desperately to set himself free. Little opposition was offered; for, on hearing the cry, Chowles quitted his hold, and retreating to a short distance, exclaimed, with a look of surprise, “Why, the fellow is not dead, after all!”
“I am neither dead, nor likely to die, as you shall find to your cost, rascal, if you do not restore me the clothes you have robbed me of,” cried Leonard, furiously. And chancing to perceive a fork, dropped by Chowles in his hasty retreat, he snatched it up, and, brandishing it over his head, advanced towards him. Thus threatened, Chowles tossed him a rich suit of livery.
“These are not mine,” said the apprentice, gazing at the habiliments.
“They are better than your own,” replied Chowles, “and therefore you ought to be glad of the exchange. But give me them back again. I have no intention of making you a present.”
“This is the livery of the Earl of Rochester,” cried Leonard.
“To be sure it is,” replied Chowles, with a ghastly smile. “One of his servants is just dead.”
“Where is the profligate noble?” cried Leonard, eagerly.
“There is the person who owned these clothes,” replied Chowles, pointing to the dead-cart. “You had better ask him.”
“Where is the Earl of Rochester, I say, villain?” cried Leonard, menacingly.
“How should I know?” rejoined Chowles. “Here are your clothes,” he added, pushing them towards him.
“I will have an answer,” cried Leonard.
“Not from me,” replied Chowles. And hastily snatching up the livery, he put the cart in motion, and proceeded on his road. Leonard would have followed him, but the state of his attire did not permit him to do so. Having dressed himself, he hastened to the cathedral, where he soon found the attendant who had charge of Blaize.
“Doctor Hodges has been with him,” said the man, in reply to his inquiries after the porter, “and has good hopes of him. But the patient is not entirely satisfied with the treatment he has received, and wishes to try some remedies of his own. Were his request granted, all would soon be over with him.”
“That I am sure of,” replied Leonard. “But let us go to him.”
“You must not heed his complaints,” returned the attendant. “I assure you he is doing as well as possible; but he is so dreadfully frightened at a trifling operation which Doctor Hodges finds it necessary to perform upon him, that we have been obliged to fasten him to the bed.”
“Indeed!” exclaimed Leonard, suspiciously. “Has Judith Malmayns had no hand in this arrangement?”
“Judith Malmayns has been absent during the whole of the afternoon,” said the man, “and another nurse has taken her place in Saint Faith’s. She has never been near Blaize since I have had charge of him.”
By this time they had reached the pallet in which the porter was laid. His eyes and a small portion of his snub-nose were alone visible, his head being still enveloped by the linen cloth, while his mouth was covered by blankets. He looked so anxiously at the apprentice, that the latter removed the covering from his mouth, and enabled him to speak.
“I am glad to find you are getting on so well,” said Leonard, in a cheerful tone. “Doctor Hodges has been with you, I understand?”
“He has,” groaned Blaize; “but he has done me no good–none whatever. I could doctor myself much better, if I might be allowed; for I know every remedy that has been prescribed for the plague; but he would adopt none that I mentioned to him. I wanted him to place a hot loaf, fresh from the oven, to the tumour, to draw it; but he would not consent. Then I asked for a cataplasm, composed of radish-roots, mustard-seed, onions and garlic roasted, mithridate, salt, and soot from a chimney where wood only has been burnt. This he liked no better than the first. Next, I begged for an ale posset with pimpernel soaked in it, assuring him that by frequently drinking such a mixture, Secretary Naunton drew the infection from his very heart. But the doctor would have none of it, and seemed to doubt the fact.”
“What did he do?” inquired Leonard.
“He applied oil of St. John’s wort to the tumour,” replied Blaize, with a dismal groan, and said, “if the scar did not fall off, he must cauterize it. Oh! I shall never be able to bear the pain of the operation.”
“Recollect your life is at stake,” rejoined Leonard. “You must either submit to it or die.”
“I know I must,” replied Blaize, with a prolonged groan; “but it is a terrible alternative.”
“You will not find the operation so painful as you imagine,” rejoined Leonard; “and you know I speak from personal experience.”
“You give me great comfort,” said Blaize. “And so you really think I shall get better?”
“I have no doubt of it, if you keep up your spirits,” replied Leonard. “The worst is evidently over. Behave like a man.”
“I will try to do so,” rejoined Blaize. “I have been told that if a circle is drawn with a blue sapphire round a plague-blotch, it will fall off. Couldn’t we just try the experiment?”
“It will not do to rely upon it,” observed the attendant, with a smile. “You will find a small knob of red-hot iron, which we call the ‘button,’ much more efficacious.”
“Oh dear! oh dear!” exclaimed Blaize, “I already feel that dreadful button burning into my flesh.”
“On the contrary, you won’t feel it at all,” replied the attendant. “The iron only touches the point of the tumour, in which there is no sensibility.”
“In that case, I don’t care how soon the operation is performed,” replied Blaize.
“Doctor Hodges will choose his own time for it,” said the attendant. “In the mean time, here is a cup of barley-broth for you. You will find it do you good.”
While the man applied the cup to the poor porter’s lips–for he would not unloose the straps, for fear of mischief–Leonard, who was sickened by the terrible scene around him, took his departure, and quitted the cathedral by the great western entrance. Seating himself on one of the great blocks of stone left there by the workmen employed in repairing the cathedral, but who had long since abandoned their task, he thought over all that had recently occurred. Raising his eyes at length, he looked toward the cathedral. The oblique rays of the sun had quitted the columns of the portico, which looked cold and grey, while the roof and towers were glittering in light. In ten minutes more, only the summit of the central tower caught the last reflection of the declining orb. Leonard watched the rosy gleam till it disappeared, and then steadfastly regarded the reverend pile as its hue changed from grey to black, until at length each pinnacle and buttress, each battlement and tower, was lost in one vast indistinct mass. Night had fallen upon the city–a night destined to be more fatal than any that had preceded it; and yet it was so calm, so beautiful, so clear, that it was scarcely possible to imagine that it was unhealthy. The destroying angel was, however, fearfully at work. Hundreds were falling beneath his touch; and as Leonard wondered how many miserable wretches were at that moment released from suffering, it crossed him like an icy chill, that among the number might be Amabel. So forcibly was he impressed by this idea, that he fell on his knees and prayed aloud.
He was aroused by hearing the ringing of a bell, which announced the approach of the dead-cart, and presently afterwards the gloomy vehicle approached from Ludgate-hill, and moved slowly towards the portico of the cathedral, where it halted. A great number of the dead were placed within it, and the driver, ringing his bell, proceeded in the direction of Cheapside. A very heavy dew had fallen; for as Leonard put his hand to his clothes, they felt damp, and his long hair was filled with moisture. Reproaching himself with having needlessly exposed himself to risk, he was about to walk away, when he heard footsteps at a little distance, and looking in the direction of the sound, perceived the tall figure of Thirlby. Calling to him, the other, who appeared to be in haste, halted for a moment, and telling the apprentice he was going to Doctor Hodges’s, desired him to accompany him thither, and went on.
* * * * *
III.
THE HOUSE IN NICHOLAS-LANE.
On reaching Watling-street, Leonard and his companion found Doctor Hodges was from home. This did not much surprise the apprentice, after the information he had received from Solomon Eagle, but Thirlby was greatly disappointed, and eagerly questioned the porter as to the probable time of his master’s return. The man replied that it was quite uncertain, adding, “He has been in since you were last here, and has seen Blaize. He had not been gone to the cathedral many minutes when a gentleman arrived, desiring his instant attendance upon a young woman who was sick of the plague.”
“Did you hear her name?” asked Leonard and Thirlby, in a breath.
“No,” replied the porter, “neither did I obtain any information respecting her from the gentleman, who appeared in great distress. But I observed that my master, on his return, looked much surprised at seeing him, and treated him with a sort of cold respect.”
“Was the gentleman young or old?” demanded Leonard, hastily.
“As far as I noticed,” replied the porter, “for he kept his face covered with a handkerchief, I should say he was young–very young.”
“You are sure it was not Lord Rochester?” pursued Leonard.
“How should I be sure of it,” rejoined the porter, “since I have never seen his lordship that I am aware of? But I will tell you all that happened, and you can judge for yourselves. My master, as I have just said, on seeing the stranger, looked surprised and angry, and bowing gravely, conducted him to his study, taking care to close the door after him. I did not, of course, hear what passed, but the interview was brief enough, and the gentleman, issuing forth, said, as he quitted the room, ‘You will not fail to come?’ To which my master replied, ‘Certainly not, on the terms I have mentioned.’ With this, the gentleman hurried out of the house. Shortly afterwards the doctor came out, and said to me, ‘I am going to attend a young woman who is sick of the plague, and may be absent for some time. If Mr. Thirlby or Leonard Holt should call, detain them till my return.'”
“My heart tells me that the young woman he is gone to visit is no other than Amabel,” said Leonard Holt, sorrowfully.
“I suspect it is Nizza Macascree,” cried Thirlby. “Which way did your master take?”
“I did not observe,” replied the porter, “but he told me he should cross London Bridge.”
“I will go into Southwark in quest of him,” said Thirlby. “Every moment is of consequence now.”
“You had better stay where you are,” replied the old porter. “It is the surest way to meet with him.”
Thirlby, however, was too full of anxiety to listen to reason, and his impatience producing a corresponding effect upon Leonard, though from a different motive, they set forth together. “If I fail to find him, you may expect me back ere long,” were Thirlby’s last words to the porter. Hurrying along Watling-street, and taking the first turning on the right, he descended to Thames-street, and made the best of his way towards the bridge. Leonard followed him closely, and they pursued their rapid course in silence. By the time they reached the north gate of the bridge, Leonard found his strength failing him, and halting at one of the openings between the tall houses overlooking the river, where there was a wooden bench for the accommodation of passengers, he sank upon it, and begged Thirlby to go on, saying he would return to Watling-street as soon as he recovered from his exhaustion. Thirlby did not attempt to dissuade him from his purpose, but instantly disappeared.
The night, it has before been remarked, was singularly beautiful. It was almost as light as day, for the full harvest moon (alas! there was no harvest for it to smile upon!) having just risen, revealed every object with perfect distinctness. The bench on which Leonard was seated lay on the right side of the bridge, and commanded a magnificent reach of the river, that flowed beneath like a sheet of molten silver. The apprentice gazed along its banks, and noticed the tall spectral-looking houses on the right, until his eye finally settled on the massive fabric of Saint Paul’s, the roof and towers of which rose high above the lesser structures. His meditations were suddenly interrupted by the opening of a window in the house near him, while a loud splash in the water told that a body had been thrown into it. He turned away with a shudder, and at the same moment perceived a watchman, with a halberd upon his shoulder, advancing slowly towards him from the Southwark side of the bridge. Pausing as he drew near the apprentice, the watchman compassionately inquired whether he was sick, and being answered in the negative, was about to pass on, when Leonard, fancying he recognised his voice, stopped him.
“We have met somewhere before, friend,” he said, “though where, or under what circumstances, I cannot at this moment call to mind.”
“Not unlikely,” returned the other, roughly, “but the chances are against our meeting again.”
Leonard heaved a sigh at this remark. “I now recollect where I met you, friend,” he remarked. “It was at Saint Paul’s, when I was in search of my master’s daughter, who had been carried off by the Earl of Rochester. But you were then in the garb of a smith.”
“I recollect the circumstance, too, now you remind me of it,” replied the other. “Your name is Leonard Holt as surely as mine is Robert Rainbird. I recollect, also, that you offended me about a dog belonging to the piper’s pretty daughter, Nizza Macascree, which I was about to destroy in obedience to the Lord Mayor’s commands. However, I bear no malice, and if I did, this is not a time to rip up old quarrels.”
“You are right, friend,” returned Leonard. “The few of us left ought to be in charity with each other.”
“Truly, ought we,” rejoined Rainbird. “For my own part, I have seen so much misery within the last few weeks, that my disposition is wholly changed. I was obliged to abandon my old occupation of a smith, because my master died of the plague, and there was no one else to employ me. I have therefore served as a watchman, and in twenty days have stood at the doors of more than twenty houses. It would freeze your blood were I to relate the scenes I have witnessed.”
“It might have done formerly,” replied Leonard; “but my feelings are as much changed as your own. I have had the plague twice myself.”
“Then, indeed, you _can_ speak,” replied Rainbird. “Thank God, I have hitherto escaped it! Ah! these are terrible times–terrible times! The worst that ever London knew. Although I have been hitherto miraculously preserved myself, I am firmly persuaded no one will escape.”
“I am almost inclined to agree with you,” replied Leonard.
“For the last week the distemper has raged fearfully–fearfully, indeed,” said Rainbird; “but yesterday and to-day have far exceeded all that have gone before. The distempered have died quicker than cattle of the murrain. I visited upwards of a hundred houses in the Borough this morning, and only found ten persons alive; and out of those ten, not one, I will venture to say, is alive now. It will, in truth, be a mercy if they are gone. There were distracted mothers raving over their children,–a young husband lamenting his wife,–two little children weeping over their dead parents, with none to attend them, none to feed them,–an old man mourning over his son cut off in his prime. In short, misery and distress in their worst form,–the streets ringing with shrieks and groans, and the numbers of dead so great that it was impossible to carry them off. You remember Solomon Eagle’s prophecy?”
“Perfectly,” replied Leonard; “and I lament to see its fulfilment.”
“‘The streets shall be covered with grass, and the living shall not be able to bury their dead,’–so it ran,” said Rainbird. “And it has come to pass. Not a carriage of any description, save the dead-cart, is to be seen in the broadest streets of London, which are now as green as the fields without her walls, and as silent as the grave itself. Terrible times, as I said before–terrible times! The dead are rotting in heaps in the courts, in the alleys, in the very houses, and no one to remove them. What will be the end of it all? What will become of this great city?”
“It is not difficult to foresee what will become of it,” replied Leonard, “unless it pleases the Lord to stay his vengeful arm. And something whispers in my ear that we are now at the worst. The scourge cannot exceed its present violence without working our ruin; and deeply as we have sinned, little as we repent, I cannot bring myself to believe that God will sweep his people entirely from the face of the earth.”
“I dare not hope otherwise,” rejoined Rainbird, “though I would fain do so. I discern no symptoms of abatement of the distemper, but, on the contrary, an evident increase of malignity, and such is the opinion of all I have spoken with on the subject. Chowles told me he buried two hundred more yesterday than he had ever done before, and yet he did not carry a third of the dead to the plague-pit. He is a strange fellow that Chowles. But for his passion for his horrible calling there is no necessity for him to follow it, for he is now one of the richest men in London.”
“He must have amassed his riches by robbery, then,” remarked Leonard.
“True,” returned Rainbird. “He helps himself without scruple to the clothes, goods, and other property, of all who die of the pestilence; and after ransacking their houses, conveys his plunder in the dead-cart to his own dwelling.”
“In Saint Paul’s?” asked Leonard.
“No–a large house in Nicholas-lane, once belonging to a wealthy merchant, who perished, with his family, of the plague,” replied Rainbird. “He has filled it from cellar to garret with the spoil he has obtained.”
“And how has he preserved it?” inquired the apprentice.
“The plague has preserved it for him,” replied Rainbird. “The few authorities who now act have, perhaps, no knowledge of his proceedings; or if they have, have not cared to interfere, awaiting a more favourable season, if it should ever arrive, to dispossess him of his hoard, and punish him for his delinquencies; while, in the mean time, they are glad, on any terms, to avail themselves of his services as a burier. Other people do not care to meddle with him, and the most daring robber would be afraid to touch infected money or clothes.”
“If you are going towards Nicholas-lane,” said Leonard, as if struck with a sudden idea, “and will point out to me the house in question, you will do me a favour.”
Rainbird nodded assent, and they walked on together towards Fish-street-hill. Ascending it, and turning off on the right, they entered Great Eastcheap, but had not proceeded far when they were obliged to turn back, the street being literally choked up with a pile of carcasses deposited there by the burier’s assistants. Shaping their course along Gracechurch-street, they turned off into Lombard-street, and as Leonard gazed at the goldsmiths’ houses on either side, which were all shut up, with the fatal red cross on the doors, he could not help remarking to his companion, “The plague has not spared any of these on account of their riches.”
“True,” replied the other; “and of the thousands who used formerly to throng this street not one is left. Wo to London!–wo!–wo!”
Leonard echoed the sentiment, and fell into a melancholy train of reflection. It has been more than once remarked that the particular day now under consideration was the one in which the plague exercised its fiercest dominion over the city; and though at first its decline was as imperceptible as the gradual diminution of the day after the longest has passed, yet still the alteration began. On that day, as if death had known that his power was to be speedily arrested, he sharpened his fellest arrows, and discharged them with unerring aim. To pursue the course of the destroyer from house to house–to show with what unrelenting fury he assailed his victims–to describe their sufferings–to number the dead left within their beds, thrown into the streets, or conveyed to the plague-pits–would be to present a narrative as painful as revolting. On this terrible night it was as hot as if it had been the middle of June. No air was stirring, and the silence was so profound, that a slight noise was audible at a great distance. Hushed in the seemingly placid repose lay the great city, while hundreds of its inhabitants were groaning in agony, or breathing their last sigh.
On reaching the upper end of Nicholas-lane, Rainbird stood still for a moment, and pointed out a large house on the right, just below the old church dedicated to the saint from which the thoroughfare took its name. They were about to proceed towards it, when the smith again paused, and called Leonard’s attention to two figures quickly advancing from the lower end of the street. As the apprentice and his companion stood in the shade, they could not be seen, while the two persons, being in the moonlight, were fully revealed. One of them, it was easy to perceive, was Chowles. He stopped before the door of his dwelling and unfastened it, and while he was thus occupied, the other person turned his face so as to catch the full radiance of the moon, disclosing the features of Sir Paul Parravicin. Before Leonard recovered from the surprise into which he was thrown by this unexpected discovery, they had entered the house.
He then hurried forward, but, to his great disappointment, found the door locked. Anxious to get into the house without alarming those who had preceded him, he glanced at the windows; but the shutters were closed and strongly barred. While hesitating what to do, Rainbird came up, and guessing his wishes, told him there was a door at the back of the house by which he might probably gain admittance. Accordingly they hastened down a passage skirting the churchyard, which brought them to a narrow alley lying between Nicholas-lane and Abchurch-lane. Tracking it for about twenty yards, Rainbird paused before a small yard-door, and trying the latch, found it yielded to his touch.
Crossing the yard, they came to another door. It was locked, and though they could have easily burst it open, they preferred having recourse to an adjoining window, the shutter of which, being carelessly fastened, was removed without noise or difficulty. In another moment they gained a small dark room on the ground-floor, whence they issued into a passage, where, to their great joy, they found a lighted lantern placed on a chair. Leonard hastily possessed himself of it, and was about to enter a room on the left when his companion arrested him.
“Before we proceed further,” he said in a low voice, “I must know what you are about to do?”
“My purpose will be explained in a word,” replied the apprentice in the same tone. “I suspect that Nizza Macascree is confined here by Sir Paul Parravicin and Chowles, and if it turns out I am right in my conjecture, I propose to liberate her. Will you help me?”
“Humph!” exclaimed Rainbird, “I don’t much fancy the job. However, since I am here, I’ll not go back. I am curious to see the coffin-maker’s hoards. Look at yon heap of clothes. There are velvet doublets and silken hose enow to furnish wardrobes for a dozen court gallants. And yet, rich as the stuffs are, I would not put the best of them on for all the wealth of London.”
“Nor I,” replied Leonard. “I shall make free, however, with a sword,” he added, selecting one from the heap. “I may need a weapon.”
“I require nothing more than my halberd,” observed the smith; “and I would advise you to throw away that velvet scabbard; it is a certain harbour for infection.”
Leonard did not neglect the caution, and pushing open the door, they entered a large room which resembled an upholsterer’s shop, being literally crammed with chairs, tables, cabinets, moveable cupboards, bedsteads, curtains, and hangings, all of the richest description.
“What I heard is true,” observed Rainbird, gazing around in astonishment. “Chowles must have carried off every thing he could lay hands upon. What can he do with all that furniture?”
“What the miser does with his store,” replied Leonard: “feast his eyes with it, but never use it.”
They then proceeded to the next room. It was crowded with books, looking-glasses, and pictures; many of them originally of great value, but greatly damaged by the careless manner in which they were piled one upon another. A third apartment was filled with flasks of wine, with casks probably containing spirits, and boxes, the contents of which they did not pause to examine. A fourth contained male and female habiliments, spread out like the dresses in a theatrical wardrobe. Most of these garments were of the gayest and costliest description, and of the latest fashion, and Leonard sighed as he looked upon them, and thought of the fate of those they had so lately adorned.
“There is contagion enough in those clothes to infect a whole city,” said Rainbird, who regarded them with different feelings. “I have half a mind to set fire to them.”
“It were a good deed to do so,” returned Leonard; “but it must not be done now. Let us go upstairs. These are the only rooms below.”
Accordingly, they ascended the staircase, and entered chamber after chamber, all of which were as full of spoil as those they had just visited; but they could find no one, nor was there any symptom that the house was tenanted. They next stood still within the gallery, and listened intently for some sound to reveal those they sought, but all was still and silent as the grave.
“We cannot be mistaken,” observed Leonard. “It is clear this house is the receptacle for Chowles’s plunder. Besides, we should not have found the lantern burning if they had gone forth again. No, no; they must be hidden somewhere, and I will not quit the place till I find them.” Their search, however, was fruitless. They mounted to the garrets, opened every door, and glanced into every corner. Still, no one was to be seen.
“I begin to think Nizza cannot be here,” said the apprentice; “but I am resolved not to depart without questioning Chowles on the subject.”
“You must find him first,” rejoined Rainbird. “If he is anywhere, he must be in the cellar, for we have been into every room in this part of the house. For my own part, I think you had better abandon the search altogether. No good will come of it.”
Leonard, however, was not to be dissuaded, and they went downstairs. A short flight of stone steps brought them to a spacious kitchen, but it was quite empty, and seemed to have been long disused. They then peeped into the scullery adjoining, and were about to retrace their steps, when Rainbird plucked Leonard’s sleeve to call attention to a gleam of light issuing from a door which stood partly ajar, in a long narrow passage leading apparently to the cellars.
“They are there,” he said, in a whisper.
“So I see,” replied Leonard, in the same tone. And raising his finger to his lips in token of silence, he stole forward on the points of his feet and cautiously opened the door.
At the further end of the cellar–for such it was–knelt Chowles, examining with greedy eyes the contents of a large chest, which, from the hasty glance that Leonard caught of it, appeared to be filled with gold and silver plate. A link stuck against the wall threw a strong light over the scene, and showed that the coffin-maker was alone. As Leonard advanced, the sound of his footsteps caught Chowles’s ear, and uttering a cry of surprise and alarm, he let fall the lid of the chest, and sprang to his feet.
“What do you want?” he cried, looking uneasily round, as if in search of some weapon. “Are you come to rob me?”
“No,” replied Leonard; “neither are we come to reclaim the plunder you have taken from others. We are come in search of Nizza Macascree.”
“Then you have come on a fool’s errand,” replied Chowles, regaining his courage, “for she is not here. I know nothing of her.”
“That is false,” replied Leonard. “You have just conducted Sir Paul Parravicin to her.”
This assertion on the part of the apprentice, which he thought himself justified under the circumstances in making, produced a strong effect on Chowles. He appeared startled and confounded. “What right have you to play the spy upon me thus?” he faltered.
“The right that every honest man possesses to check the designs of the wicked,” replied Leonard. “You admit she is here. Lead me to her hiding-place without more ado.”
“If you know where it is,” rejoined Chowles, who now perceived the trick that had been practised upon him, “you will not want me to conduct you to it. Neither Nizza nor Sir Paul Parravicin are here.”
“That is false, prevaricating scoundrel,” cried Leonard. “My companion and I saw you enter the house with your profligate employer. And as we gained admittance a few minutes after you, it is certain no one can have left it. Lead me to Nizza’s retreat instantly, or I will cut your throat.” And seizing Chowles by the collar, he held the point of his sword to his breast.
“Use no violence,” cried Chowles, struggling to free himself, “and I will take you wherever you please. This way–this way.” And he motioned as if he would take them upstairs.
“Do not think to mislead me, villain,” cried Leonard, tightening his grasp. “We have searched every room in the upper part of the house, and though we have discovered the whole of your ill-gotten hoards, we have found nothing else. No one is there.”
“Well, then,” rejoined Chowles, “since the truth must out, Sir Paul is in the next house. But it is his own abode. I have nothing to do with it, nothing whatever. He is accountable for his own actions, and you will be accountable to _him_ if you intrude upon his privacy. Release me, and I swear to conduct you to him. But you will take the consequences of your rashness upon yourself. I only go upon compulsion.”
“I am ready to take any consequences,” replied Leonard, resolutely.
“Come along, then,” said Chowles, pointing down the passage.
“You mean us no mischief?” cried Leonard, suspiciously. “If you do, the attempt will cost you your life.”
Chowles made no answer, but moved along the passage as quickly as Leonard, who kept fast hold of him and walked by his side, would permit. Presently they reached a door, which neither the apprentice nor Rainbird had observed before, and which admitted them into an extensive vault, with a short staircase at the further end, communicating with a passage that Leonard did not require to be informed was in another house.
Here Chowles paused. “I think it right to warn you you are running into a danger from which ere long you will be glad to draw back, young man,” he said, to the apprentice. “As a friend, I advise you to proceed no further in the matter.”
“Waste no more time in talking,” cried Leonard, fiercely, and forcing him forward as he spoke, “where is Nizza? Lead me to her without an instant’s delay.”
“A wilful man must have his way,” returned Chowles, hurrying up the main staircase. “It is not my fault if any harm befalls you.”
They had just gained the landing when a door on the right was suddenly thrown open, and Sir Paul Parravicin stood before them. He looked surprised and startled at the sight of the apprentice, and angrily demanded his business. “I am come for Nizza Macascree,” replied Leonard, “whom you and Chowles have detained against her will.”
Parravicin glanced sternly and inquiringly at the coffin-maker.
“I have protested to him that she is not here, Sir Paul,” said the latter, “but he will not believe me, and has compelled me, by threats of taking my life, to bring him and his companion to you.”
“Then take them back again,” rejoined Parravicin, turning haughtily upon his heel.
“That answer will not suffice, Sir Paul,” cried Leonard–“I will not depart without her.”
“How!” exclaimed the knight, drawing his sword. “Do you dare to intrude upon my presence? Begone! or I will punish your presumption.” And he prepared to attack the apprentice.
“Advance a footstep,” rejoined Leonard, who had never relinquished his grasp of Chowles, “and I pass my sword through this man’s body. Speak,