None Other Gods eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about None Other Gods.

None Other Gods eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about None Other Gods.

“Oh, you have, have you?” said the monk keenly.  “That’s quite new.  And when did you touch food last?  Yesterday morning? (Don’t say ‘S’elp me!’ It’s not necessary.)”

“We last touched food about twelve o’clock to-day.  We had beans and cold bacon,” said Frank deliberately.  “We’re perfectly willing to pay for shelter and food, if we’re obliged.  But, of course, we don’t want to.”

The monk eyed him very keenly indeed a minute or two without speaking.  This seemed a new type.

“Come in and sit down a minute,” he said.  “I’ll fetch the guest-master.”

It was a very plain little room in which Frank sat, and seemed designed, on purpose, to furnish no temptation to pilferers.  There was a table, two chairs, a painted plaster statue of a gray-bearded man in black standing on a small bracket with a crook in his hand; a pious book, much thumb-marked, lay face downwards on the table beside the oil lamp.  There was another door through which the monk had disappeared, and that was absolutely all.  There was no carpet and no curtains, but a bright little coal fire burned on the hearth, and two windows looked, one up the drive down which Frank had come, and the other into some sort of courtyard on the opposite side.

About ten minutes passed away without anything at all happening.  Frank heard more than one gust of rain-laden wind dash against the little barred window to the south, and he wondered how his friends were getting on.  The Major, at any rate, he knew, would manage to keep himself tolerably dry.  Then he began to think about this place, and was surprised that he was not surprised at running into it like this in the dark.  He knew nothing at all about monasteries—­he hardly knew that there were such things in England (one must remember that he had only been a Catholic for about five months), and yet somehow, now that he had come here, it all seemed inevitable. (I cannot put it better than that:  it is what he himself says in his diary.)

Then, as he meditated, the door opened, and there came in a thin, eager-looking elderly man, dressed like the brother who followed him, except that over his frock he wore a broad strip of black stuff, something like a long loose apron, hanging from his throat to his feet, and his head was enveloped in a black hood.

Frank stood up and bowed with some difficulty.  He was beginning to feel stiff.

“Well,” said the priest sharply, with his bright gray eyes, puckered at the corners, running over and taking in the whole of Frank’s figure from close-cut hair to earthy boots.  “Brother James tells me you wish to see me.”

“It was Brother James who said so, father,” said Frank.

“What is it you want?”

“I’ve got two friends on the road who want shelter—­man and woman.  We’ll pay, if necessary, but—­”

“Never mind about that,” interrupted the priest sharply.  “Who are you?”

“The name I go by is Frank Gregory.”

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Project Gutenberg
None Other Gods from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.