"All who have ever seen his father or grandfather, bear witness if he is not their living image!" she cried.
Then with her failing breath she told the tale of the murder, and how she had pleaded for the child"s life. She dared Dirk Hatteraick to deny the truth of what she was saying. But the villain only kept his grim silence. Then suddenly the enthusiasm broke forth at the chance testimony of the driver of a return coach to Kippletringan, who exclaimed at sight of Bertram, "As sure as there"s breath in man, there"s auld Ellangowan risen from the dead!" The shouts of the people, many of whom had lived all their lives on his father"s land, came gratefully to the ear of the dying woman.
"Dinna ye hear?" she cried, "dinna ye hear? He"s owned--he"s owned! I am a sinfu" woman! It was my curse that brought the ill, but it has been my blessing that has ta"en it off! Stand oot o" the light that I may see him yince mair. But no--it may not be! The darkness is in my ain e"en.
It"s a" ended now:
"Pa.s.s breath, Come death!"
And sinking back on her bed of straw, Meg Merrilies died without a groan.
Mr. Pleydell having, as Sheriff of the county, formerly conducted the inquiry into Frank Kennedy"s death, was asked by the other magistrates to preside at this. The meeting was held in the court-house of Kippletringan, and many of the chief people in the neighbourhood hastened to the little town to be present at the examination of Hatteraick. Pleydell, among the evidence formerly collected, had by him the sizes and markings of the footmarks found round the place of Frank Kennedy"s death-struggle. These had, of course, been safely preserved, ever since the failure of justice on that occasion. One set evidently belonged to a long and heavy foot, and fitted the boots of Brown, the mate of Hatteraick"s vessel, the same who had been killed at the attack on Woodbourne. The stouter and thicker moulds fitted those of the prisoner himself.
At this Hatteraick cried out suddenly, "Der deyvil, how could there be footmarks at all on the ground when it was as hard as the heart of a Memel log?"
Instantly Pleydell noted the smuggler"s slip.
"In the evening," he said, "I grant you the ground was hard--not, however, in the morning. But, Captain Hatteraick, will you kindly tell me where you were on the day which you remember so exactly?"
Hatteraick, seeing his mistake, again relapsed into silence, and at that moment Glossin bustled in to take his place on the bench with his brother magistrates. He was, however, very coldly received indeed, though he did his best to curry favour with each in succession. Even Hatteraick only scowled at him, when he suggested that "the poor man, being only up for examination, need not be so heavily ironed."
"The poor man has escaped once before," said Mr. Mac-Morlan, drily. But something worse was in store for Glossin than the cold shoulder from his fellow-justices. In his search through the doc.u.ments found upon Hatteraick, Pleydell had come upon three slips of paper, being bills which had been drawn and signed by Hatteraick on the very day of the Kennedy murder, ordering large sums of money to be paid to Glossin. The bills had been duly honoured. Mr. Pleydell turned at once upon Glossin.
"That confirms the story which has been told by a second eye-witness of the murder, one Gabriel, or Gibbs Faa, a nephew of Meg Merrilies, that you were an accessory after the fact, in so far as, though you did not take part in the slaughter of Kennedy, you concealed the guilty persons on account of their giving you this sum of money."
In a few minutes Glossin found himself deserted by all, and he was even ordered to be confined in the prison of Kippletringan, in a room immediately underneath the cell occupied by Hatteraick. The smuggler, being under the accusation of murder and having once already escaped, was put for safety in the dungeon, called the "condemned cell," and there chained to a great bar of iron, upon which a thick ring ran from one side of the room to the other.
Left to his unpleasant reflections, Glossin began to count up the chances in his favour. Meg Merrilies was dead. Gabriel Faa, besides being a gipsy, was a vagrant and a deserter. The other witnesses--he did not greatly fear them! If only Dirk Hatteraick could be induced to be steady, and to put another meaning upon the sums of money which had been paid to him on the day of Kennedy"s murder!
He must see Hatteraick--that very night he must see him! He slipped two guineas into Mac-Guffog"s hand (who since the burning of Portanferry prison had been made under-turnkey at Kippletringan), and by the thief-taker"s connivance he was to be admitted that very night at locking-up time into the cell of Dirk Hatteraick.
"But you will have to remain there all night," said the man. "I have to take the keys of all the cells directly to the captain of the prison!"
So on his stocking-soles Glossin stole up after his guide, and was presently locked in with the savage and desperate smuggler. At first Hatteraick would neither speak to Glossin nor listen to a word concerning his plans.
"Plans," he cried at last, in a burst of fury, "you and your plans! You have planned me out of ship, cargo, and life. I dreamed this moment that Meg Merrilies dragged you here by the hair, and put her long clasp-knife into my hand. Ah, you don"t know what she said! Sturm-wetter, it will be your wisdom not to tempt me!"
"Why, Hatteraick," said Glossin, "have you turned driveller? Rise and speak with me!"
"Hagel, nein--let me alone!"
"Get up, at least! Up with you for an obstinate Dutch brute!" said Glossin, all at once losing his temper and kicking him with his heavy boot.
"Donner and blitzen," cried Hatteraick, leaping up and grappling with him, "you shall have it then!"
Glossin resisted as best he could, but his utmost strength was as nothing in the mighty grasp of the angry savage. He fell under Hatteraick, the back of his neck coming with a fearful crash upon the iron bar.
In the morning, true to his promise, Mac-Guffog called Glossin to come out of Hatteraick"s cell.
"Call louder!" answered a voice from within, grimly.
"Mr. Glossin, come away," repeated Mac-Guffog; "for Heaven"s sake come away!"
"He"ll hardly do that without help!" said Hatteraick.
"What are you standing chattering there for, Mac-Guffog?" cried the captain of the prison, coming up with a lantern. They found Glossin"s body doubled across the iron bar. He was stone dead. Hatteraick"s grip had choked the life out of him as he lay.
The murderer, having thus done justice on his accomplice, asked neither favour nor mercy for himself, save only that he might have paper whereon to write to his firm in Holland.
"I was always faithful to owners," he said, when they reproached him with his crimes. "I always accounted for cargo to the last stiver! As for that carrion," he added (pointing to Glossin), "I have only sent him to the devil a little ahead of me!"
They gave him what he asked for--pens, ink, and paper. And on their return, in a couple of hours, they found his body dangling from the wall. The smuggler had hanged himself by a cord taken from his own truckle-bed.
And though Mac-Guffog lost his place, on the suspicion of having introduced Glossin into Hatteraick"s cell, there were many who believed that it was the Evil One himself who had brought the rogue and the ruffian together in order that they might save the hangman the trouble of doing his office upon them.
The end can be told in a word. Harry Bertram was duly and legally returned as heir of Ellangowan. His father"s debts were soon paid, and the Colonel, in giving him his daughter, gave him also the means of rebuilding the ancient castle of the Ellangowan race. Sir Robert Hazlewood had no objections to Lucy Bertram as a daughter-in-law, so soon as he knew that she brought with her as a dowry the whole estate of Singleside, which her brother insisted on her taking in accordance with her aunt"s first intention. And lastly, in the new castle, there was one chamber bigger than all the others, called the Library, and just off it a little one, in which dwelt the happiest of men upon the earth. This chamber was called on the plans "Mr. Sampson"s Apartment."
THE END OF THE FOURTH AND LAST TALE FROM "GUY MANNERING."
INTERLUDE OF CONSULTATION
A unanimous sigh greeted the close of _Guy Mannering_. It was the narrator"s reward--the same which the orator hears, when, in a pause of speech, the strained attention relaxes, and the people, slowly bent forward like a field of corn across which the wind blows, settle back into their places.
"A jolly ending--and the cave part was ripping!"
summed up Hugh John, nodding his head in grave approval of Sir Walter, "but why can"t he always write like that?"
"Couldn"t keep it up," suggested Sir Toady Lion; "books can"t all be caves, you know."
"Well, anyhow, I"m not going to play any more heroes," said Hugh John, emphatically. "I bags Hatteraick--when we get out to the Den!"
The young man intimated by these cabalistic words that the part of Hatteraick was to be his in any future play-acting.
"Which being interpreted," said Sweetheart, with spirit, "means that I am to be Gilbert Faa the gipsy, and Glossin, and all these nasty sort of people. Now I don"t mind Meg Merrilies a bit. And being shot like that--that"s always something. But I warn you, Hugh John, that if you were Hatteraick ten times over, you couldn"t get me down over that iron bar!"
"No, that you couldn"t," said Sir Toady Lion, seeing a far-off chance for himself; "why, Sweetheart could just batter your head against the wall! And then when Mac-Guffog came in the morning with his lantern, he"d find that old Hatteraick hadn"t any need to go and hang himself! But don"t you two squabble over it; _I_ will do Hatteraick myself!"
"A very likely thing!" sneered Hugh John. "You heard me say "Bags Hatteraick," Toady Lion! Every one heard me--you can"t go back on that. You know you can"t!"
This was unanswerable. It was felt that to palter with such sacred formulas would be to renounce the most sacred obligations and to unsettle the very foundations of society.
Whereupon I hastened to keep his Majesty"s peace by proposing a compromise.