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The Devil's Mastiff
THERE
had been a heavy fall throughout
the whole of that December day. The roads were white and in-
distinguishable in a thick pall of moonlight and dazzling snow;
here and there a drift betrayed the footing. In the sky a bright
moon pursued by clouds ran timidly up the ascent of the firmament; great arms of
darkness sometimes closed over it; sometimes it emerged and proceeded with its still luminous race, ran,
swayed, floated, glided forward intently, unfalteringly. Patrick
Curran, treading uncautiously the white uncertain flooring of
earth, stumbling into snowdrifts, scouting into temporary dark-
ness for his right road, cursed the weather and his fortunes.
"It is not enough," he complained, "that I
should be a proscribed fugitive hiding my head in every uncertain refuge from the
pursuit of this devil's Cromwell, doomed already to the gallows,
owing my life every day to the trembling compassion of my poor
father's tenants; it is not enough that I should have lost Alicia
and that Luke Walter should have her; but the very moon and
the snow and the night are his allies against me. Since God is
so hard on me, I wonder why the devil does not come to my
help — I would sell my soul to him this moment willingly. But
perhaps he too is afraid of Cromwell."
"It is hardly probable," said a voice at his side suddenly.
Patrick Curran turned with a fierce start and clutched at
his dagger. He was aware in the darkness of a dim form pacing
beside him with a step much quieter and more assured than his
own. -
"Who are you?" he cried, rigid and menacing.
"A wayfarer like yourself," said the other, "I travel earth
as a fugitive."
"From whom or what?" asked Patrick.
"How shall I say ?" said the shadow, "Perhaps from my own
thoughts, perhaps from a too powerful enemy."
Page –1047
After the discovery of the recent conspiracy to murder Corn-
well and restore Charles Stuart, the country was full of Royalist
fugitives, hiding by day, travelling by night, in the hope of
reaching a port whence they could sail for Ostende or Calais.
For the inquisitions of the Republican magistrates were imperative and undiscriminating.
"I would give," he said to himself, "my soul and the rest of
my allotted days as a free gift to Satan, if I might once clasp
Alicia in my arms and take with me into Hell the warm sense of
the joy of her body and if I might see Luke Walter dead before
me or be sure he was following me. Oh if I can once be sure of
that, let the brown dog of the Dacres leap on me the next moment, I care not."
"You may be sure of it," answered the voice at his side,
strangely sweet, yet to Patrick's ear formidable. He turned,
thrilling.
"You must be the devil himself," he almost shouted.
"I may be only one who can read your thoughts," said the
other in that sweet sinister voice which made the young man
fancy sometimes that a woman spoke to him. "And that I can,
you will easily judge when I have told you a very little of what I
know of you. You are Patrick, the second son of Sir Gerald
Curran who got his estate from his wife, Margaret Dacre, his
baronetcy from King James and his death from Cromwell who
took him prisoner at Worcester and hanged him. You were to
have married Lady Alicia Nevil, when the conspiracy of which
you were one of the heads as well as the hand destined to strike
down the Puritan tyrant, was discovered by the discernment,
luck and ruthless skill of Colonel Luke Walter."
The young Cavalier started and uttered a furious imprecation.
"It was he," said the other, "he has great brain-power and
penetration and a resolute genius. It is even possible he may
succeed Cromwell, if the God of the Puritans gives him a lease
long enough,"
"If I have the chance, I will shorten it," cried Patrick Curran.
"Or I," said the unknown, "for just now I too am a Royalist.
Page –1048
But to proceed. You were proclaimed and doomed to a felon's
death in your absence; the Earl, implicated in the conspiracy,
was compelled as the price of his pardon to betroth his daughter
to Luke Walter, and the marriage is fixed for tonight."
"Tonight!" groaned the young man, and he smote his thigh
miserably with his ,hand.
"At the Church of Worndale." '
"But will it matter if Luke Walter perishes before he has
consummated his nuptials?"
"I promise you that," said the unknown. "It does not suit
you that Alicia should marry another. It does not suit me that
there should be a strong successor to Cromwell. Charles Stuart
is my good friend, and I wish that he should rule England.
Therefore, Patrick, it is a bargain."
"Who the devil are you?" cried the young man
again, marvelling.
As if to answer the moon peeped out from between two
heavy angry masses of black cloud, illumining the earth's intense
and inclement whiteness. He saw beside him a young man of
remarkable beauty, whose face was perfectly familiar, but his
name could not be remembered.
"As for your soul and your life," said the stranger, and as
their eyes met, Patrick shuddered, "you need not give them to
the devil whether freely or as part of the bargain, for they are
already his."
He laughed a laugh of terrible and ominous sweetness, and
in a moment Patrick remembered. He knew that laugh, he knew
that face. They were his own.
At that moment the moon passed away into the second fragment of cloud. Patrick stood, unable to speak, looking at the
dim shadow in front of him. Then it vanished.
It was sometime before the young man could command him-
self sufficiently to pursue his way. He tried to think for a moment that it was John Dacre, the illegitimate son of Sir Gerald
by his sister-in-law Matilda Dacre, who resembled Patrick
strongly and was his sworn comrade and lover. But he knew it
was not John. That was not John's face or John's speech or
Page –1049
John's thinking. It must have been a vivid dream or a waking
illusion. He walked forward in the darkness, greatly disturbed,
but with recovered courage.
Again the moon shone out, this time with a clear gulf of sky
just in front of her. Before Patrick the white road stretched long,
straight and visible to a great distance and was marked out here
by high snow-covered hedge from the equally white indistinguish-
able country around.
"Come now, that is better," said Patrick Curran. As he
spoke, he saw far off on the road a dark object travelling towards
him; he slackened his pace and was minded to turn off the road
to avoid it. But it was approaching with phenomenal speed.
As it came nearer, he saw that it was only a dog. Again Patrick
stood still. A dog! There was nothing in that. It was not what
he had feared. But he remembered that singular conversation
and the impious prayer that had arisen in his heart about the
brown dog of the Dacres, — the dog which showed itself always
when a Dacre was about to die and leaped on him whenever
the doom was by violence. He smiled, but a little uncertainly.
Then the moonlight seemed to dwell on the swiftly-travelling
animal more intensely and he saw that it was brown.
Never had Patrick seen any earthly thing master of such a
terrible speed. It ran, it galloped, it bounded, and the wretched
man watching the terrific charge of that phantasmal monster, —-
for it was a gigantic mastiff, — felt his heart stop and his warm
youthful blood congeal in his veins. It was now within twenty
paces; he felt the huge eyes upon him and knew that it was
going to leap. He went down heavily with the ponderous frame
of the animal oppressing his breast, its leonine paws on his shoulders, its hot breathing moistening his face. And then there was
nothing.
That was the most terrible part of it, to have been borne
down physically by a semblance, an unearthly hallucination, a
thing that was this moment and the next was not. Patrick
struggled to his feet, overcome by a panic terror; his nerves
cried to him to run, to travel away quickly from this accursed
night and this road of ghastly encounters. But he felt as if hamstrung,
Page –1050
helpless, clutched by an intangible destruction. He sat
down on the snow, panted and waited.
After a few minutes the blood began to flow more quietly
through his veins, the pounding of his heart slackened and the
sick agitation of his nerves yielded to a sudden fiery inrush. He
leaped furiously (o his feet. "The Dog of the Dacres," he cried,
"the brown Dog, the Devil's Mastiff! And no doubt it was
his master spoke to me in my own semblance. I am doomed,
then. But not to the gallows. No, by God, not to the gallows.
God's doom and the devil's, since I can resist neither, but not
man's, not Cromwell's!" Then he paused. "Tonight!" he cried
again. "At Worndale Church! But I will see her once before I
go down to Hell. And it may be I shall take Luke Walter with
me. It may be that is what the Devil wants of me."
He looked about the landscape and thought he could
distinguish the trees that bordered the distant Church of Worn-
dale. That was in front of him. Also in front, but much more
to the left, was Trevesham Hall, the home of Alicia Nevil.
He began walking rapidly, no longer with his first cautious
and doubtful treading, but with a bold reckless stride. And it
was noticeable that he no longer stumbled or floundered into
snowdrifts. Patrick knew that he had only a few brief inches
of his life's road left to his treading; for no man of the Dacre
blood had ever lived more than twenty-four hours after the
Brown Dog leaped on him. A desperate courage had entered
into his veins. He would see
(Incomplete)
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