CHAPTER VIII.
In the homestead of the Ritsons the wide old ingle was aglow with a cheerful fire, and Mrs. Ritson stood before it baking oaten cake on a "griddle." The table was laid for supper with beef and beer and milk and barley-bread. In the seat of a recessed window, Paul Ritson and Greta Lowther sat together.
At intervals that grew shorter, and with a grave face that became more anxious, Mrs. Ritson walked to the door and looked out into the thickening sky. The young people had been too much absorbed to notice her increasing perturbation, until she opened a clothes-chest and took out dry flannels and spread them on the hearth to air.
"Don"t worrit yourself, mother," said Paul. "He"ll be here soon. He had to cross the Coledale Pa.s.s, and that"s a long stroke of the ground, you know."
"It"s an hour past supper-time," said Mrs. Ritson, glancing aside at the old clock that ticked audibly from behind the great arm-chair. "The rain is coming again--listen!" There was a light patter of rain-drops against the window-panes. "If he"s on the fells now he"ll be wet to the skin."
"I wish I"d gone in place of him," said Paul, turning to Greta. "A bad wetting troubles him nowadays. Not same as of old, when he"d follow the fells all day long knee-deep in water and soaked to the skin with rain or snow."
The thunder-clap shook the house. The windows rattled, and the lamp that had been newly lighted and put on the table flickered slightly and burned red.
"Mercy, me, what a night! Was that a flash of lightning?" said Mrs.
Ritson, and she walked to the door once more and opened it.
"Don"t worrit, mother," repeated Paul. "Do come in. Father will be here soon, and if he gets a wetting there"s no help for it now."
Paul had turned aside from an animated conversation with Greta to interpolate this remonstrance against his mother"s anxiety. Resuming the narrative of his wrestling match, he described its incidents as much by gesture as by words.
"John Proudfoot took me--so--and tried to give me the cross-b.u.t.tock, but I caught his eye and twisted him on my hip--so--and down he went in a bash!"
A hurried knock came to the outer door. In an instant it was opened, and a white face looked in.
"What"s now, Reuben?" said Paul, rising to his feet.
"Come along with me--leave the women-folk behind--master"s down--the lightning has struck him--I"m afeart he"s dead!"
"My father!" said Paul, and stood for a moment with a bewildered look.
"Go on, Reuben, I"ll follow." Paul picked up his hat and was gone in an instant.
Mrs. Ritson had been stooping over the griddle when Reuben entered. She heard what he said, and rose up with a face of death-like pallor. But she said nothing, and sunk helplessly into a chair. Then Greta stepped up to her and kissed her.
"Mother--dear mother!" she said, and Mrs. Ritson dropped her head on the girl"s breast.
Hugh had been sitting over some papers in his own room off the first landing. He overheard the announcement, and came into the hall.
"Your father has been struck by the lightning," said Greta.
"They will fetch him home," said Hugh.
At the next moment there was the sound from without of burdened footsteps. They were bearing the injured man. Through the back of the house they carried him to his room.
"That is for my sake," said Mrs. Ritson, raising her tear-stained face to listen.
Paul entered. His ruddy cheeks had grown ashy white. His eyes, that had blinked with pleasure a minute ago, now stared wide with fear.
"Is he alive?"
"Yes."
"Thank G.o.d! oh, thank G.o.d forever and ever! Let me go in to him."
"He is unconscious--he breathes--but no more."
Mrs. Ritson, with Paul and Greta, went into the room in which they had placed the stricken man. He lay across the bed in his clothes, just as he had fallen. They bathed his forehead and applied leeches to his temples. He breathed heavily, but gave no sign of consciousness.
Paul sat at his father"s side with his face buried in his hands. He was recalling his boyish days, when his father would lift him in his arms and throw him on the bare back of the pony that he gave him on his thirteenth birthday. Could it be possible that the end was at hand!
He got up and led Greta out of the room.
"This house of mourning is no place for you," he said; "the storm is over: you must leave us; Natt can put the mare into the trap and drive you home."
"I will not go," said Greta; "this shall be my home to-night. Don"t send me away from you, Paul. You are in trouble, and my place is here."
"You could do no good, and might take some harm."
Mrs. Ritson came out.
"Where is Mr. Bonnithorne?" she asked. "He was to be here at eight. Your father might recover consciousness."
"The lawyer could do nothing to help him."
"If he is to leave us, may it please G.o.d to give him one little hour of consciousness."
"Yes, knowing us again--giving us a farewell word."
"There is another reason--a more terrible reason!"
"You are thinking of the will. Let that go by. Come, mother--and Greta, too--- come, let us go back."
Half an hour later the house was as still as the chamber of death. With hushed voices and noiseless steps the women-servants moved to and from the room where lay the dying man. The farming men sat together in an outer kitchen, and talked in whispers.
The storm had pa.s.sed away; the stars struggled one by one through a rack of flying cloud, and a silver fringe of moonlight sometimes fretted the black patches of the sky.
Hugh Ritson sat alone in the old hall, that was now desolate enough. His face rested on his hand, and his elbow on his knee. There was a strange light in his eyes. It was not sorrow, and it was not pain; it was anxiety, uncertainty, perturbation. Again and again he started up from a deep reverie, and then a half-smothered cry escaped him. He walked a few paces to and fro, and sat down once more.
A servant crossed the hall on tiptoe. Hugh raised his head.
"How is your patient now?" he said, quietly.
"Just breathing, sir; still quite unconscious."
Hugh got up uneasily. A mirror hung on the wall in front of him, and he stood and looked vacantly into it. His thoughts wandered, and when a gleam of consciousness returned the first object that he saw was the reflection of his own face. It was full of light and expression. Perhaps it wore a ghostly smile. He turned away from the sight impatiently.
Sitting down again he tried to compose himself. Point by point he revolved the situation. He thought of what the lawyer had said of his deserted wife and lost son of Lowther. Then, taking out of an inner pocket the medallion that Mr. Bonnithorne had lent him, he looked at it long and earnestly.