Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 6,366 pages of information about Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill.

Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 6,366 pages of information about Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill.

There ensued a struggle that Honora will never forget.  And although she never again saw that farm-house, its details and surroundings come back to her in vivid colours when she closes her eyes.  The great horse in every conceivable pose, with veins standing out and knotty muscles twisting in his legs and neck and thighs.  Once, when he dashed into the apple trees, she gave a cry; a branch snapped, and Chiltern emerged, still seated, with his hat gone and the blood trickling from a scratch on his forehead.  She saw him strike with his spurs, and in a twinkling horse and rider had passed over the dilapidated remains of a fence and were flying down the hard clay road, disappearing into a dip.  A reverberating sound, like a single stroke, told them that the bridge at the bottom had been crossed.

In an agony of terror, Honora followed, her head on fire, her heart pounding faster than the hoof beats.  But the animal she rode, though a good one, was no match for the great infuriated beast which she pursued.  Presently she came to a wooded corner where the road forked thrice, and beyond, not without difficulty,—­brought her sweating mare to a stand.  The quality of her fear changed from wild terror to cold dread.  A hermit thrush, in the wood near by, broke the silence with a song inconceivably sweet.  At last she went back to the farm-house, hoping against hope that Hugh might have returned by another road.  But he was not there.  The farmer was still nonchalantly whittling.

“Oh, how could you let any one get on a horse like that?” she cried.

“You’re his wife, ain’t you?” he asked.

Something in the man’s manner seemed to compel her to answer, in spite of the form of the question.

“I am Mrs. Chiltern,” she said.

He was looking at her with an expression that she found incomprehensible.  His glance was penetrating, yet here again she seemed to read compassion.  He continued to gaze at her, and presently, when he spoke, it was as though he were not addressing her at all.

“You put me in mind of a young girl I used to know,” he said; “seems like a long time ago.  You’re pretty, and you’re young, and ye didn’t know what you were doin,’ I’ll warrant.  Lost your head.  He has a way of gittin’ ’em—­always had.”

Honora did not answer.  She would have liked to have gone away, but that which was stronger than her held her.

“She didn’t live here,” he explained, waving his hand deprecatingly towards the weather-beaten house.  “We lived over near Morrisville in them days.  And he don’t remember me, your husband don’t.  I ain’t surprised.  I’ve got considerable older.”

Honora was trembling from head to foot, and her hands were cold.

“I’ve got her picture in there, if ye’d like to look at it,” he said, after a while.

“Oh, no!” she cried.  “Oh, no!”

“Well, I don’t know as I blame you.”  He sat down again and began to whittle.  “Funny thing, chance,” he remarked; “who’d a thought I should have owned that there hoss, and he should have come around here to ride it?”

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Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.