St. George and St. Michael eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 593 pages of information about St. George and St. Michael.

St. George and St. Michael eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 593 pages of information about St. George and St. Michael.
a swelling in his throat as he had never felt but once before, when a favourite foal got staked in trying to clear a fence.  Having neither friend nor sister to whom to confess that he was in trouble—­have confided it he could not in any case, seeing it involved blame of the woman his love for whom now first, when on the point of losing her for ever, threatened to overmaster him—­he wandered to the stables, which he found empty of men and nearly so of horses, half-involuntarily sought the stall of the mare his father had given him on his last birthday, laid his head on the neck bent round to greet him, and sighed a sore response to her soft, low, tremulous whinny.

As he stood thus, overcome by the bitter sense of wrong from the one he loved best in the world, something darkened the stable-door, and a voice he knew reached his ear.  Mistaking the head she saw across an empty stall for that of one of the farm-servants, Goody Rees was calling aloud to know if he wanted a charm for the toothache.

Richard looked up.

‘And what may your charm be, mistress Rees?’ he asked.

‘Aha! is it thou, young master?’ returned the woman.  ’Thou wilt marvel to see me about the place so soon again, but verily desired to know how that godly man, Faithful Stopchase, found himself after his fall.’

’Nay, mistress Rees, make no apology for coming amongst thy friends.  I warrant thee against further rudeness of man or beast.  I have taken them to task, and truly I will break his head who wags tongue against thee.  As for Stopchase, he does well enough in all except owing thee thanks which he declines to pay.  But for thy charm, good mistress Rees, what is it—­tell me ?’

She took a step inside the door, sent her small eyes peering first into every corner her sight could reach, and then said: 

‘Are we alone—­we two, master Richard?’

’There’s a cat in the next stall, mistress:  if she can hear, she can’t speak.’

‘Don’t be too sure of that, master Richard.  Be there no one else?’

‘Not a body; soul there may be—­who knows?’

’I know there is none.  I will tell thee my charm, or what else I may that thou would wish to know; for he is a true gentleman who will help a woman because she is a woman, be she as old and ugly as Goody Rees herself.  Hearken, my pretty sir:  it is the tooth of a corpse, drawn after he hath lain a se’en-night in the mould:  wilt buy, my master?  Or did not I see thee now asking comfort from thy horse for the—­’

She paused a moment, peered narrowly at him from under lowered eyebrows, and went on: 

’—­heartache, eh, master Richard?  Old eyes can see through velvet doublets.’

‘All the world knows yours can see farther than other people’s,’ returned Richard.  ’Heaven knows whence they have their sharpness.  But suppose it were a heartache now, have you got e’er a charm to cure that?’

’The best of all charms, my young master, is a kiss from the maiden; and what would thou give me for the spell that should set her by thy side at the old dial, under a warm harvest moon, all the long hours ’twixt midnight and the crowing of the black cock—­eh, my master?  What wilt thou give me?’

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St. George and St. Michael from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.