The apprentice made no reply, but, unlocking a box, took out a brace of large horse-pistols and a sword, and thrust them into his girdle.
“You do not mean to use those murderous weapons?” cried Amabel.
“It depends on circumstances,” replied Leonard. “Force must be met by force.”
“Nay, then,” she rejoined, “the affair assumes too serious an aspect to be trifled with. I will instantly alarm my father.”
“Do so,” retorted Leonard, “and he will cast you off for ever.”
“Better that, than be the cause of bloodshed,” she returned. “But is there nothing I can do to prevent this fatal result?”
“Yes,” replied Leonard. “Make your lover understand he is unwelcome to you. Dismiss him for ever. On that condition, he shall depart unharmed and freely.”
“I will do so,” she rejoined.
Nothing more was then said. Amabel seated herself and kept her eyes fixed on Leonard, who, avoiding her regards, stationed himself near the door.
By-and-by a slight tap was heard without, and the apprentice cautiously admitted Gregory Swindlehurst and his comrade. The latter was habited like the other watchman, in a blue night-rail, and was armed with a halberd. He appeared much stouter, much older, and, so far as could be discovered of his features — for a large handkerchief muffled his face — much uglier (if that were possible) than his companion. He answered to the name of Bernard Boutefeu. They had no sooner entered the shop, than Leonard locked the door.
“Who are these persons?” asked Amabel, rising in great alarm.
“Two watchmen whom I have hired to guard the house,” replied Leonard.
“We are come to protect you, fair mistress,” said Gregory, “and, if need be, to cut the Earl of Rochester’s throat.”
“Oh heavens!” exclaimed Amabel.
“Ghost of Tarquin!” cried Boutefeu, “we’ll teach him to break into the houses of quiet citizens, and attempt to carry off their daughters against their will. By the soul of Dick Whittington, Lord Mayor of London! we’ll maul and mangle him.”
“Silence! Bernard Boutefeu,” interposed Gregory. “You frighten Mistress
Amabel by your strange oaths.”
“I should be sorry to do that,” replied Boutefeu— “I only wish to show my zeal for her. Don’t be afraid of the Earl of Rochester, fair mistress. With all his audacity, he won’t dare to enter the house when he finds we are there.”
“Is it your pleasure that we should thrust a halberd through his body, or lodge a bullet in his brain?” asked Gregory, appealing to Amabel.
“Touch him not, I beseech you,” she rejoined. “Leonard, I have your promise that, if I can prevail upon him to depart, you will not molest him.”
“You have,” he replied.
“You hear that,” she observed to the watchmen.
“We are all obedience,” said Gregory.
“Bless your tender heart!” cried Boutefeu, “we would not pain you for the world.”
“A truce to this,” said Leonard. “Come to the yard, we will wait for him there.”
“I will go with you,” cried Amabel. “If any harm should befall him, I should never forgive myself.”
“Remember what I told you,” rejoined Leonard, sternly; “it depends upon yourself whether he leaves the house alive.”
“Heed him not,” whispered Gregory. “I and my comrade will obey no one but you.”
Amabel could not repress an exclamation of surprise.
“What are you muttering, sirrah?” demanded Leonard, angrily.
“Only that the young lady may depend on our fidelity,” replied Gregory.
“There can be no offence in that. Come with us,” he whispered to Amabel.
The latter part of his speech escaped Leonard, but the tone in which it was uttered was so significant, that Amabel, who began to entertain new suspicions, hesitated.
“You must come,” said Leonard, seizing her hand.
“The fault be his, not mine,” murmured Amabel, as she suffered herself to be drawn along.
The party then proceeded noiselessly towards the yard. On the way,
Amabel felt a slight pressure on her arm, but, afraid of alarming
Leonard, she made no remark.
The back-door was opened, and the little group stood in the darkness. They had not long to wait. Before they had been in the yard five minutes, a noise was heard of footsteps and muttered voices in the entry. This was followed by a sound like that occasioned by fastening a rope-ladder against the wall, and the next moment two figures were perceived above it. After dropping the ladder into the yard, these persons, the foremost of whom the apprentice concluded was the Earl of Rochester, descended. They had no sooner touched the ground than Leonard, drawing his pistols, advanced towards them.
“You are my prisoner, my lord,” he said, in a stern voice, “and shall not depart with life, unless you pledge your word never to come hither again on the same errand.”
“Betrayed!” cried the earl, laying his hand upon his sword.
“Resistance is in vain, my lord,” rejoined Leonard. “I am better armed than yourself.”
“Will nothing bribe you to silence, fellow?” cried the earl. “I will give you a thousand pounds, if you will hold your tongue, and conduct me to my mistress.”
“I can scarcely tell what stays my hand,” returned Leonard, in a furious tone. “But I will hold no further conversation with you. Amabel is present, and will give you your final dismissal herself.”
“If I receive it from her own lips,” replied the earl, “I will instantly retire — but not otherwise.”
“Amabel,” said Leonard in a low tone to her, “you hear what is said.
Fulfil your promise.”
“Do so,” cried a voice, which she instantly recognised, in her ear— “I am near you.”
“Ah!” she exclaimed.
“Do you hesitate?” cried the apprentice, sternly.
“My lord,” said Amabel, in a faint voice, “I must pray you to retire, your efforts are in vain. I will never fly with you.”
“That will not suffice,” whispered Leonard; “you must tell him you no longer love him.”
“Hear me,” pursued Amabel; “you who present yourself as Lord Rochester,
I entertain no affection for you, and never wish to behold you again.”
“Enough!” cried Leonard.
“Admirable!” whispered Gregory. “Nothing could be better.”
“Well,” cried the supposed earl, “since I no longer hold a place in your affections, it would be idle to pursue the matter further. Heaven be praised, there are other damsels quite as beautiful, though not so cruel. Farewell for ever, Amabel.”
So saying he mounted the ladder, and, followed by his companion, disappeared on the other side.
“He is gone,” said Leonard, “and I hope for ever. Now let us return to the house.”
“I am coming,” rejoined Amabel.
“Let him go,” whispered Gregory. “The ladder is still upon the wall; we will climb it.”
And as the apprentice moved towards the house, he tried to drag her in that direction.
“I cannot — will not fly thus,” she cried.
“What is the matter?” exclaimed Leonard, suddenly turning.
“Further disguise is useless,” replied the supposed Gregory
Swindlehurst. “I am the Earl of Rochester. The other was a counterfeit.”
“Ah!” exclaimed Leonard, rushing towards them, and placing a pistol against the breast of his mistress? “Have I been duped? But it is not yet too late to retrieve my error. Move a foot further, my lord, — and do you, Amabel, attempt to fly with him, and I fire.”
“You cannot mean this?” cried Rochester. “Raise your hand against the woman you love?”
“Against the woman who forgets her duty, and the libertine who tempts her, the arm that is raised is that of justice,” replied Leonard. “Stir another footstep, and I
fire.”
As he spoke, his arms were suddenly seized by a powerful grasp from behind, and, striking the pistols from his hold, the earl snatched up Amabel in his arms, and, mounting the ladder, made good his retreat.
A long and desperate struggle took place between Leonard and his assailant, who was no other than Pillichody, in his assumed character of Bernard Boutefeu. But notwithstanding the superior strength of the bully, and the advantage he had taken of the apprentice, he was worsted in the end.
Leonard had no sooner extricated himself, than, drawing his sword, he would have passed it through Pillichody’s body, if the latter had not stayed his hand by offering to tell him where he would find his mistress, provided his life were spared.
“Where has the earl taken her?” cried Leonard, scarcely able to articulate from excess of passion.
“He meant to take her to Saint Paul’s, — to the vaults below the cathedral, to avoid pursuit,” replied Pillichody. “I have no doubt you will find her there.”
“I will go there instantly and search,” cried Leonard, rushing up the ladder.
V.
THE BLIND PIPER AND HIS DAUGHTER
Scarcely knowing how he got there, Leonard Holt found himself at the great northern entrance of the cathedral. Burning with fury, he knocked at the door; but no answer being returned to the summons, though he repeated it still more loudly, he shook the heavy latch with such violence as to rouse the sullen echoes of the aisles. Driven almost to desperation, he retired a few paces, and surveyed the walls of the vast structure, in the hope of descrying some point by which he might obtain an entrance.
It was a bright moonlight night, and the reverend pile looked so beautiful, that, under any other frame of mind, Leonard must, have been struck with admiration. The ravages of time could not now be discerned, and the architectural incongruities which, seen in the broad glare of day, would have offended the eye of taste, were lost in the general grand effect. On the left ran the magnificent pointed windows of the choir, divided by massive buttresses, — the latter ornamented with crocketed pinnacles. On the right, the building had been new-faced, and its original character, in a great measure, destroyed by the tasteless manner in which the repairs had been executed. On this side, the lower windows were round-headed and separated by broad pilasters, while above them ran a range of small circular windows. At the western angle was seen one of the towers (since imitated by Wren), which flanked this side of the fane, together with a part of the portico erected, about twenty-five years previously, by Inigo Jones, and which, though beautiful in itself, was totally out of character with the edifice, and, in fact, a blemish to it.
Insensible alike to the beauties or defects of the majestic building, and regarding it only as the prison of his mistress, Leonard Holt scanned it carefully on either side. But his scrutiny was attended with no favourable result.
Before resorting to force to obtain admission, he determined to make the complete circuit of the structure, and with this view he shaped his course towards the east.
He found two small doors on the left of the northern transept, but both were fastened, and the low pointed windows beneath the choir, lighting the subterranean church of Saint Faith’s, were all barred. Running on, he presently came to a flight of stone steps at the north-east corner of the choir, leading to a portal opening upon a small chapel dedicated to Saint George. But this was secured like the others, and, thinking it vain to waste time in trying to force it, he pursued his course.
Skirting the eastern extremity of the fane — then the most beautiful part of the structure, from its magnificent rose window — he speeded past the low windows which opened on this side, as on the other upon Saint Faith’s, and did not pause till he came to the great southern portal, the pillars and arch of which differed but slightly in character from those of the northern entrance.
Here he knocked as before, and was answered, as on the former occasion, by sullen echoes from within. When these sounds died away, he placed his ear to the huge key-hole in the wicket, but could not even catch the fall of a footstep. Neither could he perceive any light, except that afforded by the moonbeams, which flooded the transept with radiance.
Again hurrying on, he passed the cloister-walls surrounding the Convocation House; tried another door between that building and the church of Saint Gregory, a small fane attached to the larger structure; and failing in opening it, turned the corner and approached the portico, — the principal entrance to the cathedral being then, as now, on the west.
Erected, as before mentioned, from the designs of the celebrated Inigo Jones, this magnificent colonnade was completed about 1640, at which time preparations were made for repairing the cathedral throughout, and for strengthening the tower, for enabling it to support a new spire. But this design, owing to the disorganised state of affairs, was never carried into execution.
At the time of the Commonwealth, while the interior of the sacred fabric underwent every sort of desecration and mutilation, — while stones were torn from the pavement, and monumental brasses from tombs, — while carved stalls were burnt, and statues plucked from their niches, — a similar fate attended the portico. Shops were built beneath it, and the sculptures ornamenting its majestic balustrade were thrown down.
Amongst other obstructions, it appears that there was a “high house in the north angle, which hindered the masons from repairing that part of it.” The marble door-cases, the capitals, cornices, and pillars were so much injured by the fires made against them, that it required months to put them in order. At the Restoration, Sir John Denham, the poet, was appointed surveyor-general of the works, and continued to hold the office at the period of this history.
As Leonard drew near the portico, he perceived, to his surprise, that a large concourse of people was collected in the area in front of it; and, rushing forward, he found the assemblage listening to the denunciations of Solomon Eagle, who was standing in the midst of them with his brazier on his head. The enthusiast appeared more than usually excited. He was tossing aloft his arms in a wild and frenzied manner, and seemed to be directing his menaces against the cathedral itself.
Hoping to obtain assistance from the crowd, Leonard resolved to await a fitting period to address them. Accordingly, he joined them, and listened to the discourse of the enthusiast.
“Hear me!” cried the latter, in a voice of thunder. “I had a vision last night and will relate it to you. During my brief slumbers, I thought I was standing on this very spot, and gazing as now upon yon mighty structure. On a sudden the day became overcast, and ere long it grew pitchy dark. Then was heard a noise of rushing wings in the air, and I could just discern many strange figures hovering above the tower, uttering doleful cries and lamentations. All at once these figures disappeared, and gave place to, or, it may be, were chased away by, others of more hideous appearance. The latter brought lighted brands which they hurled against the sacred fabric, and, in an instant, flames burst forth from it on all sides. My brethren, it was a fearful, yet a glorious sight to see that vast pile wrapped in the devouring element! The flames were so vivid — so intense — that I could not bear to look upon them, and I covered my face with my hands. On raising my eyes again the flames were extinguished, but the building was utterly in ruins — its columns cracked — its tower hurled from its place — its ponderous roof laid low. It was a mournful spectacle, and a terrible proof of the Divine wrath and vengeance. Yes, my brethren, the temple of the Lord has been profaned, and it will be razed to the ground. It has been the scene of abomination and impiety, and must be purified by fire. Theft, murder, sacrilege, and every other crime have been committed within its walls, and its destruction will follow. The ministers of Heaven’s vengeance are even now hovering above it. Repent, therefore, ye who listen to me, and repent speedily; for sudden death, plague, fire, and famine, are at hand. As the prophet Amos saith, ‘The Lord will send a fire, the Lord will commission a fire, the Lord will kindle a fire;’ and the fire so commissioned and so kin
dled shall consume you and your city; nor shall one stone of those walls be left standing on another. Repent, or burn, for he cometh to judge the earth. Repent, or burn, I say!”
As soon as he concluded, Leonard Holt ran up the steps of the portico, and in a loud voice claimed the attention of the crowd.
“Solomon Eagle is right,” he cried; “the vengeance of Heaven will descend upon this fabric, since it continues to be the scene of so much wickedness. Even now it forms the retreat of a profligate nobleman, who has this night forcibly carried off the daughter of a citizen.”
“What nobleman?” cried a bystander.
“The Earl of Rochester,” replied Leonard. “He has robbed Stephen Bloundel, the grocer of Wood-street, of his daughter, and has concealed her, to avoid pursuit, in the vaults of the cathedral.”
“I know Mr. Bloundel well,” rejoined the man who had made the inquiry, and whom Leonard recognised as a hosier named Lamplugh, “and I know the person who addresses us. It is his apprentice. We must restore the damsel to her father, friends.”
“Agreed!” cried several voices.
“Knock at the door,” cried a man, whose occupation of a smith was proclaimed by his leathern apron, brawny chest, and smoke-begrimed visage, as well as by the heavy hammer which he bore upon his shoulder. “If it is not instantly opened, we will break it down. I have an implement here which will soon do the business.”
A rush was then made to the portal, which rang with the heavy blows dealt against it. While this was passing, Solomon Eagle, whose excitement was increased by the tumult, planted himself in the centre of the colonnade, and vociferated— “I speak in the words of the prophet Ezekiel:— ‘Thou hast defiled thy sanctuaries by the multitude of thine iniquities, by the iniquity of thy traffic. Therefore will I bring forth a fire from the midst of thee, and will bring thee to ashes upon the earth, in the sight of all them that behold thee!’”
The Works of William Harrison Ainsworth Page 240