Wessex Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about Wessex Tales.

Wessex Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about Wessex Tales.

But the figure which had occupied her so much during this and the previous days was not to be banished at night.  For the first time Gertrude Lodge visited the supplanted woman in her dreams.  Rhoda Brook dreamed—­since her assertion that she really saw, before falling asleep, was not to be believed—­that the young wife, in the pale silk dress and white bonnet, but with features shockingly distorted, and wrinkled as by age, was sitting upon her chest as she lay.  The pressure of Mrs. Lodge’s person grew heavier; the blue eyes peered cruelly into her face; and then the figure thrust forward its left hand mockingly, so as to make the wedding-ring it wore glitter in Rhoda’s eyes.  Maddened mentally, and nearly suffocated by pressure, the sleeper struggled; the incubus, still regarding her, withdrew to the foot of the bed, only, however, to come forward by degrees, resume her seat, and flash her left hand as before.

Gasping for breath, Rhoda, in a last desperate effort, swung out her right hand, seized the confronting spectre by its obtrusive left arm, and whirled it backward to the floor, starting up herself as she did so with a low cry.

‘O, merciful heaven!’ she cried, sitting on the edge of the bed in a cold sweat; ‘that was not a dream—­she was here!’

She could feel her antagonist’s arm within her grasp even now—­the very flesh and bone of it, as it seemed.  She looked on the floor whither she had whirled the spectre, but there was nothing to be seen.

Rhoda Brook slept no more that night, and when she went milking at the next dawn they noticed how pale and haggard she looked.  The milk that she drew quivered into the pail; her hand had not calmed even yet, and still retained the feel of the arm.  She came home to breakfast as wearily as if it had been suppertime.

‘What was that noise in your chimmer, mother, last night?’ said her son.  ‘You fell off the bed, surely?’

‘Did you hear anything fall?  At what time?’

‘Just when the clock struck two.’

She could not explain, and when the meal was done went silently about her household work, the boy assisting her, for he hated going afield on the farms, and she indulged his reluctance.  Between eleven and twelve the garden-gate clicked, and she lifted her eyes to the window.  At the bottom of the garden, within the gate, stood the woman of her vision.  Rhoda seemed transfixed.

‘Ah, she said she would come!’ exclaimed the boy, also observing her.

‘Said so—­when?  How does she know us?’

‘I have seen and spoken to her.  I talked to her yesterday.’

‘I told you,’ said the mother, flushing indignantly, ’never to speak to anybody in that house, or go near the place.’

’I did not speak to her till she spoke to me.  And I did not go near the place.  I met her in the road.’

‘What did you tell her?’

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Project Gutenberg
Wessex Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.