<p><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER 30 </h3>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>t length the play came to an end, and Mr Isaac List rose the only winner.
Mat and the landlord bore their losses with professional fortitude. Isaac
pocketed his gains with the air of a man who had quite made up his mind to
win, all along, and was neither surprised nor pleased.</p>
<p>Nell’s little purse was exhausted; but although it lay empty by his side,
and the other players had now risen from the table, the old man sat poring
over the cards, dealing them as they had been dealt before, and turning up
the different hands to see what each man would have held if they had still
been playing. He was quite absorbed in this occupation, when the child
drew near and laid her hand upon his shoulder, telling him it was near
midnight.</p>
<p>‘See the curse of poverty, Nell,’ he said, pointing to the packs he had
spread out upon the table. ‘If I could have gone on a little longer, only
a little longer, the luck would have turned on my side. Yes, it’s as plain
as the marks upon the cards. See here—and there—and here
again.’</p>
<p>‘Put them away,’ urged the child. ‘Try to forget them.’</p>
<p>‘Try to forget them!’ he rejoined, raising his haggard face to hers, and
regarding her with an incredulous stare. ‘To forget them! How are we ever
to grow rich if I forget them?’</p>
<p>The child could only shake her head.</p>
<p>‘No, no, Nell,’ said the old man, patting her cheek; ‘they must not be
forgotten. We must make amends for this as soon as we can. Patience—patience,
and we’ll right thee yet, I promise thee. Lose to-day, win to-morrow. And
nothing can be won without anxiety and care—nothing. Come, I am
ready.’</p>
<p>‘Do you know what the time is?’ said Mr Groves, who was smoking with his
friends. ‘Past twelve o’clock—’</p>
<p>‘—And a rainy night,’ added the stout man.</p>
<p>‘The Valiant Soldier, by James Groves. Good beds. Cheap entertainment for
man and beast,’ said Mr Groves, quoting his sign-board. ‘Half-past twelve
o’clock.’</p>
<p>‘It’s very late,’ said the uneasy child. ‘I wish we had gone before. What
will they think of us! It will be two o’clock by the time we get back.
What would it cost, sir, if we stopped here?’</p>
<p>‘Two good beds, one-and-sixpence; supper and beer one shilling; total two
shillings and sixpence,’ replied the Valiant Soldier.</p>
<p>Now, Nell had still the piece of gold sewn in her dress; and when she came
to consider the lateness of the hour, and the somnolent habits of Mrs
Jarley, and to imagine the state of consternation in which they would
certainly throw that good lady by knocking her up in the middle of the
night—and when she reflected, on the other hand, that if they
remained where they were, and rose early in the morning, they might get
back before she awoke, and could plead the violence of the storm by which
they had been overtaken, as a good apology for their absence—she
decided, after a great deal of hesitation, to remain. She therefore took
her grandfather aside, and telling him that she had still enough left to
defray the cost of their lodging, proposed that they should stay there for
the night.</p>
<p>‘If I had had but that money before—If I had only known of it a few
minutes ago!’ muttered the old man.</p>
<p>‘We will decide to stop here if you please,’ said Nell, turning hastily to
the landlord.</p>
<p>‘I think that’s prudent,’ returned Mr Groves. ‘You shall have your suppers
directly.’</p>
<p>Accordingly, when Mr Groves had smoked his pipe out, knocked out the
ashes, and placed it carefully in a corner of the fire-place, with the
bowl downwards, he brought in the bread and cheese, and beer, with many
high encomiums upon their excellence, and bade his guests fall to, and
make themselves at home. Nell and her grandfather ate sparingly, for both
were occupied with their own reflections; the other gentlemen, for whose
constitutions beer was too weak and tame a liquid, consoled themselves
with spirits and tobacco.</p>
<p>As they would leave the house very early in the morning, the child was
anxious to pay for their entertainment before they retired to bed. But as
she felt the necessity of concealing her little hoard from her
grandfather, and had to change the piece of gold, she took it secretly
from its place of concealment, and embraced an opportunity of following
the landlord when he went out of the room, and tendered it to him in the
little bar.</p>
<p>‘Will you give me the change here, if you please?’ said the child.</p>
<p>Mr James Groves was evidently surprised, and looked at the money, and rang
it, and looked at the child, and at the money again, as though he had a
mind to inquire how she came by it. The coin being genuine, however, and
changed at his house, he probably felt, like a wise landlord, that it was
no business of his. At any rate, he counted out the change, and gave it
her. The child was returning to the room where they had passed the
evening, when she fancied she saw a figure just gliding in at the door.
There was nothing but a long dark passage between this door and the place
where she had changed the money, and, being very certain that no person
had passed in or out while she stood there, the thought struck her that
she had been watched.</p>
<p>But by whom? When she re-entered the room, she found its inmates exactly
as she had left them. The stout fellow lay upon two chairs, resting his
head on his hand, and the squinting man reposed in a similar attitude on
the opposite side of the table. Between them sat her grandfather, looking
intently at the winner with a kind of hungry admiration, and hanging upon
his words as if he were some superior being. She was puzzled for a moment,
and looked round to see if any else were there. No. Then she asked her
grandfather in a whisper whether anybody had left the room while she was
absent. ‘No,’ he said, ‘nobody.’</p>
<p>It must have been her fancy then; and yet it was strange, that, without
anything in her previous thoughts to lead to it, she should have imagined
this figure so very distinctly. She was still wondering and thinking of
it, when a girl came to light her to bed.</p>
<p>The old man took leave of the company at the same time, and they went up
stairs together. It was a great, rambling house, with dull corridors and
wide staircases which the flaring candles seemed to make more gloomy. She
left her grandfather in his chamber, and followed her guide to another,
which was at the end of a passage, and approached by some half-dozen crazy
steps. This was prepared for her. The girl lingered a little while to
talk, and tell her grievances. She had not a good place, she said; the
wages were low, and the work was hard. She was going to leave it in a
fortnight; the child couldn’t recommend her to another, she supposed?
Instead she was afraid another would be difficult to get after living
there, for the house had a very indifferent character; there was far too
much card-playing, and such like. She was very much mistaken if some of
the people who came there oftenest were quite as honest as they might be,
but she wouldn’t have it known that she had said so, for the world. Then
there were some rambling allusions to a rejected sweetheart, who had
threatened to go a soldiering—a final promise of knocking at the
door early in the morning—and ‘Good night.’</p>
<p>The child did not feel comfortable when she was left alone. She could not
help thinking of the figure stealing through the passage down stairs; and
what the girl had said did not tend to reassure her. The men were very
ill-looking. They might get their living by robbing and murdering
travellers. Who could tell?</p>
<p>Reasoning herself out of these fears, or losing sight of them for a little
while, there came the anxiety to which the adventures of the night gave
rise. Here was the old passion awakened again in her grandfather’s breast,
and to what further distraction it might tempt him Heaven only knew. What
fears their absence might have occasioned already! Persons might be
seeking for them even then. Would they be forgiven in the morning, or
turned adrift again! Oh! why had they stopped in that strange place? It
would have been better, under any circumstances, to have gone on!</p>
<p>At last, sleep gradually stole upon her—a broken, fitful sleep,
troubled by dreams of falling from high towers, and waking with a start
and in great terror. A deeper slumber followed this—and then—What!
That figure in the room.</p>
<p>A figure was there. Yes, she had drawn up the blind to admit the light
when it should be dawn, and there, between the foot of the bed and the
dark casement, it crouched and slunk along, groping its way with noiseless
hands, and stealing round the bed. She had no voice to cry for help, no
power to move, but lay still, watching it.</p>
<p>On it came—on, silently and stealthily, to the bed’s head. The
breath so near her pillow, that she shrunk back into it, lest those
wandering hands should light upon her face. Back again it stole to the
window—then turned its head towards her.</p>
<p>The dark form was a mere blot upon the lighter darkness of the room, but
she saw the turning of the head, and felt and knew how the eyes looked and
the ears listened. There it remained, motionless as she. At length, still
keeping the face towards her, it busied its hands in something, and she
heard the chink of money.</p>
<p>Then, on it came again, silent and stealthy as before, and replacing the
garments it had taken from the bedside, dropped upon its hands and knees,
and crawled away. How slowly it seemed to move, now that she could hear
but not see it, creeping along the floor! It reached the door at last, and
stood upon its feet. The steps creaked beneath its noiseless tread, and it
was gone.</p>
<p>The first impulse of the child was to fly from the terror of being by
herself in that room—to have somebody by—not to be alone—and
then her power of speech would be restored. With no consciousness of
having moved, she gained the door.</p>
<p>There was the dreadful shadow, pausing at the bottom of the steps.</p>
<p>She could not pass it; she might have done so, perhaps, in the darkness
without being seized, but her blood curdled at the thought. The figure
stood quite still, and so did she; not boldly, but of necessity; for going
back into the room was hardly less terrible than going on.</p>
<p>The rain beat fast and furiously without, and ran down in plashing streams
from the thatched roof. Some summer insect, with no escape into the air,
flew blindly to and fro, beating its body against the walls and ceiling,
and filling the silent place with murmurs. The figure moved again. The
child involuntarily did the same. Once in her grandfather’s room, she
would be safe.</p>
<p>It crept along the passage until it came to the very door she longed so
ardently to reach. The child, in the agony of being so near, had almost
darted forward with the design of bursting into the room and closing it
behind her, when the figure stopped again.</p>
<p>The idea flashed suddenly upon her—what if it entered there, and had
a design upon the old man’s life! She turned faint and sick. It did. It
went in. There was a light inside. The figure was now within the chamber,
and she, still dumb—quite dumb, and almost senseless—stood
looking on.</p>
<p>The door was partly open. Not knowing what she meant to do, but meaning to
preserve him or be killed herself, she staggered forward and looked in. What sight was that which met her view!</p>
<p>The bed had not been lain on, but was smooth and empty. And at a table sat
the old man himself; the only living creature there; his white face
pinched and sharpened by the greediness which made his eyes unnaturally
bright—counting the money of which his hands had robbed her.</p>
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