Guy Livingstone; eBook

George Alfred Lawrence
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Guy Livingstone;.

Guy Livingstone; eBook

George Alfred Lawrence
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Guy Livingstone;.

When the dragoons came up at a hard gallop, there was nothing left in the court-yard but the dead and dying.  Mohun had followed the flyers to get a last stroke at the hindmost.  We clambered down into the hall, and, just as we reached the door, we saw a miserable crippled being clinging round his knees, crying for quarter.  Poor wretch! he might as well have asked it from a famished jungle-tiger.  The arm that had fallen so often that night, and never in vain, came down once more; the piteous appeal ended in a death-yell, and, as we reached him, Mohun was wiping coolly his dripping sabre:  it had no more work to do.

I could not help shuddering as I took his offered hand, and I saw Connell tremble for the first time as he made the sign of the cross.

The Dragoons were returning from the pursuit; they had only made two prisoners; the darkness and broken ground prevented their doing more.  Ralph went up to the officer in command.

“How very good of you to come yourself, Harding, when I only asked you for a troop.  Come in; you shall have some supper in half an hour, and Fritz will take care of your men.  Throw all that carrion out,” he went on, as we entered the hall, strewn with corpses.  “We’ll give them a truce to take up their dead.”

Clontarf came to meet us; he had only been stunned and bruised by the fall.  His pale face flushed up as he said, “I shall never forget that I have to thank you for my life.”

“It’s not worth mentioning,” Mohun replied, carelessly.  “I hope you are not much the worse for the tumble.  Gad! it was a near thing, though.  The quarryman’s arms were a rough necklace.”

At that moment they were carrying by the disfigured remains of the dead Colossus.  His slayer stopped them, and bent over the hideous face with a grim satisfaction.

“My good friend Delaney,” he muttered, “you will own that I have kept my word.  If ever we meet again, I think I shall know you. Au revoir,” and he passed on.

I need not go through the congratulatory scene, nor describe how Kate blushed as they complimented her on her nerve.  Fortunately for her, she had seen nothing, though she had heard all.  Just as we were sitting down to supper, which Fritz prepared with his usual stolid coolness, and when Kate was about to leave us, for she needed rest, we remarked the attorney hovering about us with an exultation on his face yet more servile and repulsive than its late abject terror.

“Mrs. Carew,” said Mohun, “if you have quite done with your protege, I think we’ll send him down stairs.  Give him something to eat, Fritz; not with the soldiers, though; and let some one take him home as soon as it’s light.  If you say one word, sir, I’ll have you turned out now.”

Mr. Kelly crept out of the room, almost as frightened as he had been two hours before.

The supper was more cheerful than the dinner, though there was a certain constraint on the party, who were not all so seasoned as their host. He was in unusual spirits; so much so that Clontarf confided to a cornet, his particular friend, that “it was a pity the colonel could not have such a bear-fight once a fortnight, it put him into such a charming humor.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Guy Livingstone; from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.