Aylwin eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 645 pages of information about Aylwin.

Aylwin eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 645 pages of information about Aylwin.
blood.  Where had she stood when she came and looked into the well and the rivulet?  On what exact spot had rested her feet—­those little rosy feet that on the sea-sands used to flash through the receding foam as she chased the ebbing billows to amuse me, while I sat between my crutches in the cove looking on?  It was, I found, possible to gaze in that water till it seemed alive with her—­seemed to hold the reflection of the little face which years ago peered anxiously into it for the behoof of the crippled child-lover pining for her at Raxton, and unable to ’get up or down the gangways without her.’

Holywell grew to have a fascination for me, and in the following spring I left the fishing-inn beneath Snowdon, and took rooms in this interesting old town.

VIII

One day, near the rivulet that runs from St. Winifred’s Well, I suddenly encountered Sinfi Lovell.

‘Sinfi,’ I said, ‘she’s dead, she’s surely dead.’

‘I tell ye, brother, she ain’t got to die!’ said Sinfi, as she came and stood beside me.  ’Winnie Wynne’s on’y got to beg her bread.  She’s alive.’

‘Where is she?’ I cried.  ‘Oh, Sinfi, I shall go mad!’

‘There you’re too fast for me, brother,’ said she, ’when you ask me where she is; but she’s alive, and I ain’t come quite emp’y-handed of news about her, brother.’

‘Oh, tell me!’ said I.

‘Well,’ said Sinfi, ’I’ve just met one of our people, Euri Lovell, as says that, the very mornin’ after we seed her on the hills, he met her close to Carnarvon at break of day.’

‘Then she did go to Carnarvon,’ I said.  ’What a distance for those dear feet!’

‘Euri knowed her by sight,’ said Sinfi, ’but didn’t know about her bein’ under the cuss, so he jist let her pass, sayin’ to hisself, “She looks jist like a crazy wench this mornin’, does Winnie Wynne.”  Euri was a-goin’ through Carnarvon to Bangor, on to Conway and Chester, and never heerd a word about her bein’ lost till he got back, six weeks ago.’

‘I must go to Carnarvon at once,’ said I.

‘No use, brother,’ said Sinfi.  ’If I han’t pretty well worked Carnarvon, it’s a pity.  I’ve bin there the last three weeks on the patrin-chase, and not a patrin could I find.  It’s my belief as she never went into Carnarvon town at all, but turned off and went into Llanbeblig churchyard.’

‘Why do you think so, Sinfi?’

‘’Cause her aunt, bein’ a Carnarvon woman, was buried among her own kin in Llanbeblig churchyard.

Leastwise, you won’t find a ghose of a trace on her at Carnarvon, and it’ll be a long kind of a wild-goose chase from here; but if you will go, go you must.’

She could not dissuade me from starting for Carnarvon at once; and, as I would go, she seemed to take it as a matter of course that she must accompany me.  Our journey was partly by coach and partly afoot.

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Aylwin from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.