“Your reward!” replied Coates. “Make yourself easy on that score, my boy; you shall have your dues, depend upon it. Nay, for the matter of that, I’ll give you the money now, if you think proper.”
“Nothing like time present,” said Paterson. “We’ll make all square at once.”
“Well, then,” said Coates, taking out a pocket-book, “you shall have the hundred I promised. You won’t get Turpin’s reward, the three hundred pounds; but that can’t be helped. You shall have mine — always a man of my word, Paterson,” continued the attorney, counting out the money. “My father, the thief-taker, was a man of his word before me.”
“No doubt,” said the chief constable; “I shall always be happy to serve you.”
“And then there’s that other affair,” said the attorney, mysteriously, still occupied in doling out his bank-notes, “that Luke Bradley’s case; the fellow, I mean, who calls himself Sir Luke Rookwood — ha, ha! A rank impostor! Two fives, that makes fifty: you want another fifty, Paterson. As I was saying, we may make a good job of that — we must ferret him out. I know who will come down properly for that; and if we could only tuck him up with his brother blade, why it would be worth double. He’s all along been a thorn in my Lady Rookwood’s side; he’s an artful scoundrel.”
“Leave him to me,” said Paterson; “I’ll have him in less than a week. What’s your charge against him?”
“Felony, burglary, murder, every description of crime under the heavens,” said Coates. “He’s a very devil incarnate. Dick Turpin is as mild as milk compared with him. By-the-by, now I think of it, this Jem, Conkey Jem, as folks call him, may know something about him; he’s a keen file; I’ll sound him. Thirty, forty, fifty — there’s the exact amount. So much for Dick Turpin.”
“Dick Turpin thanks you for it in person,” said Dick, suddenly snatching the whole sum from Paterson’s hands, and felling the chief constable with a blow of one of his pistols. “I wish I was as sure of escaping the gallows as I am certain that Paterson has got his reward. You stare, sir. You are once more in the hands of the Philistines. See who is at your elbow.”
Coates, who was terrified almost out of his senses at the sight of Turpin, scarcely ventured to turn his head; but when he did so, he was perfectly horror-stricken at the threatening aspect of Luke, who held a cutlass in his hand, which he had picked up in the ferryman’s bedroom.
“So you would condemn me for crimes I have never committed,” said Luke. “I am tempted, I own, to add the destruction of your worthless existence to their number.”
“Mercy, for God’s sake, mercy!” cried Coates, throwing himself at Luke’s feet. “I meant not what I said.”
“Hence, reptile,” said Luke, pushing him aside; “I leave you to be dealt upon by others.”
At this juncture, the door of the hut was flung open, and in rushed Major Mowbray, sword in hand, followed by Conkey Jem.
“There he stands, sir,” cried the latter; “upon him!”
“What! Conkey Jem turned snitch upon his pals?” cried Dick; “I scarce believe my own ears.”
“Make yourself scarce, Dick,” growled Jem; “the jigger’s open, and the boat loose. Leave Luke to his fate. He’s sold.”
“Never! vile traitor,” shouted Dick; “’tis thou art sold, not he;” and, almost ere the words were spoken, a ball was lodged in the brain of the treacherous ferryman.
Major Mowbray, meanwhile, had rushed furiously upon Luke, who met his assault with determined calmness. The strife was sharp, and threatened a speedy and fatal issue. On the Major’s side it was a desperate attack of cut and thrust, which Luke had some difficulty in parrying; but as yet no wounds were inflicted. Soldier as was the Major, Luke was not a whit inferior to him in his knowledge of the science of defence, and in the exercise of the broadsword he was perhaps the more skilful of the two: upon the present occasion his coolness stood him in admirable stead. Seeing him hard pressed, Turpin would have come to his assistance; but Luke shouted to him to stand aside, and all that Dick could do, amid the terrific clash of steel, was to kick the tables out of the way of the combatants. Luke’s aim was now slightly grazed by a cut made by the Major, which he had parried. The smart of the wound roused his ire. He attacked his adversary in his turn, with so much vigor and good will, that, driven backwards by the irresistible assault, Major Mowbray stumbled over the ferryman’s body, which happened to lie in his way; and his sword being struck from his grasp, his life became at once at his assailant’s disposal.
Luke sheathed his sword. “Major Mowbray,” said he, sternly, “your life is in my power. I spare it for the blood that is between us — for your sister’s sake. I would not raise my hand against her brother.”
“I disclaim your kindred with me, villain!” wrathfully exclaimed the Major. “I hold you no otherwise than as a wretched impostor, who has set up claims he cannot justify; and as to my sister, if you dare to couple her name ——” and the Major made an ineffectual attempt to raise himself, and to regain his sword, which Turpin, however, removed.
“Dare!” echoed Luke, scornfully; “hereafter, you may learn to fear my threats, and acknowledge the extent of my daring; and in that confidence I give you life. Listen to me, sir. I am bound for Rookwood. I have private access to the house — to your sister’s chamber —her chamber— mark you that! I shall go armed — attended. This night she shall be mine. From you — from Ranulph — from Lady Rookwood, from all will I bear her off. She shall be mine, and you, before the dawn, my brother, or ——” And Luke paused.
“What further villainy remains untold?” inquired the Major, fiercely.
“You shall bewail your sister’s memory,” replied Luke, gloomily.
“I embrace the latter alternative with rapture,” replied the Major —“God grant her firmness to resist you. But I tremble for her.” And the stern soldier groaned aloud in his agony.
“Here is a cord to bind him,” said Turpin; “he must remain a prisoner here.”
“Right,” said Alan Rookwood, “unless — but enough blood has been shed already.”
“Ay, marry has there,” said Dick, “and I had rather not have given Conkey Jem a taste of blue plumb, had there been any other mode of silencing the snitching scoundrel, which there was not. As to the Major, he’s a gallant enemy, and shall have fair play as long as Dick Turpin stands by. Come, sir,” added he, to the Major, as he bound him hand and foot with the rope, “I’ll do it as gently as I can. You had better submit with a good grace. There’s no help for it. And now for my friend Paterson, who was so anxious to furnish me with a hempen cravat, before my neck was in order, he shall have an extra twist of the rope himself, to teach him the inconvenience of a tight neckcloth when he recovers.” Saying which, he bound Paterson in such a manner, that any attempt at liberation on the chief constable’s part would infallibly strangle him. “As to you, Mr. Coates,” said he, addressing the trembling man of law, “you shall proceed to Rookwood with us. You may yet be useful, and I’ll accommodate you with a seat behind my own saddle — a distinction I never yet conferred upon any of your tribe. Recollect the countryman at the Bowling-green at York — ha, ha! Come along, sir.” And having kicked out the turf fire, Dick prepared to depart.
It would be vain to describe the feelings of rage and despair which agitated the major’s bosom, as he saw the party quit the hovel, accompanied by Coates. Aware as he was of their destination, after one or two desperate but ineffectual attempts to liberate himself, by which he only increased the painful constriction of his bonds, without in the slightest degree ameliorating his condition, he resigned himself, with bitterest forebodings, to his fate. There was no one even to sympathize with his sufferings. Beside him lay the gory corpse of the ferryman, and, at a little distance, the scarcely more animate frame of the chief constable. And here we must leave him, to follow,