“He must have amassed his riches by robbery, then,” remarked Leonard.
“True,” returned Rainbird. “He helps himself without scruple to the clothes, goods, and other property, of all who die of the pestilence; and after ransacking their houses, conveys his plunder in the dead-cart to his own dwelling.”
“In Saint Paul’s?” asked Leonard.
“No — a large house in Nicholas-lane, once belonging to a wealthy merchant, who perished, with his family, of the plague,” replied Rainbird. “He has filled it from cellar to garret with the spoil he has obtained.”
“And how has he preserved it?” inquired the apprentice.
“The plague has preserved it for him,” replied Rainbird. “The few authorities who now act have, perhaps, no knowledge of his proceedings; or if they have, have not cared to interfere, awaiting a more favourable season, if it should ever arrive, to dispossess him of his hoard, and punish him for his delinquencies; while, in the mean time, they are glad, on any terms, to avail themselves of his services as a burier. Other people do not care to meddle with him, and the most daring robber would be afraid to touch infected money or clothes.”
“If you are going towards Nicholas-lane,” said Leonard, as if struck with a sudden idea, “and will point out to me the house in question, you will do me a favour.”
Rainbird nodded assent, and they walked on together towards Fish-street-hill. Ascending it, and turning off on the right, they entered Great Eastcheap, but had not proceeded far when they were obliged to turn back, the street being literally choked up with a pile of carcasses deposited there by the burier’s assistants. Shaping their course along Gracechurch-street, they turned off into Lombard-street, and as Leonard gazed at the goldsmiths’ houses on either side, which were all shut up, with the fatal red cross on the doors, he could not help remarking to his companion, “The plague has not spared any of these on account of their riches.”
“True,” replied the other; “and of the thousands who used formerly to throng this street not one is left. Wo to London! — wo! — wo!”
Leonard echoed the sentiment, and fell into a melancholy train of reflection. It has been more than once remarked that the particular day now under consideration was the one in which the plague exercised its fiercest dominion over the city; and though at first its decline was as imperceptible as the gradual diminution of the day after the longest has passed, yet still the alteration began. On that day, as if death had known that his power was to be speedily arrested, he sharpened his fellest arrows, and discharged them with unerring aim. To pursue the course of the destroyer from house to house — to show with what unrelenting fury he assailed his victims — to describe their sufferings — to number the dead left within their beds, thrown into the streets, or conveyed to the plague-pits — would be to present a narrative as painful as revolting. On this terrible night it was as hot as if it had been the middle of June. No air was stirring, and the silence was so profound, that a slight noise was audible at a great distance. Hushed in the seemingly placid repose lay the great city, while hundreds of its inhabitants were groaning in agony, or breathing their last sigh.
On reaching the upper end of Nicholas-lane, Rainbird stood still for a moment, and pointed out a large house on the right, just below the old church dedicated to the saint from which the thoroughfare took its name. They were about to proceed towards it, when the smith again paused, and called Leonard’s attention to two figures quickly advancing from the lower end of the street. As the apprentice and his companion stood in the shade, they could not be seen, while the two persons, being in the moonlight, were fully revealed. One of them, it was easy to perceive, was Chowles. He stopped before the door of his dwelling and unfastened it, and while he was thus occupied, the other person turned his face so as to catch the full radiance of the moon, disclosing the features of Sir Paul Parravicin. Before Leonard recovered from the surprise into which he was thrown by this unexpected discovery, they had entered the house.
He then hurried forward, but, to his great disappointment, found the door locked. Anxious to get into the house without alarming those who had preceded him, he glanced at the windows; but the shutters were closed and strongly barred. While hesitating what to do, Rainbird came up, and guessing his wishes, told him there was a door at the back of the house by which he might probably gain admittance. Accordingly they hastened down a passage skirting the churchyard, which brought them to a narrow alley lying between Nicholas-lane and Abchurch-lane. Tracking it for about twenty yards, Rainbird paused before a small yard-door, and trying the latch, found it yielded to his touch.
Crossing the yard, they came to another door. It was locked, and though they could have easily burst it open, they preferred having recourse to an adjoining window, the shutter of which, being carelessly fastened, was removed without noise or difficulty. In another moment they gained a small dark room on the ground-floor, whence they issued into a passage, where, to their great joy, they found a lighted lantern placed on a chair. Leonard hastily possessed himself of it, and was about to enter a room on the left when his companion arrested him.
“Before we proceed further,” he said in a low voice, “I must know what you are about to do?”
“My purpose will be explained in a word,” replied the apprentice in the
same tone. “I suspect that Nizza Macascree is confined here by Sir Paul
Parravicin and Chowles, and if it turns out I am right in my conjecture,
I propose to liberate her. Will you help me?”
“Humph!” exclaimed Rainbird, “I don’t much fancy the job. However, since I am here, I’ll not go back. I am curious to see the coffin-maker’s hoards. Look at yon heap of clothes. There are velvet doublets and silken hose enow to furnish wardrobes for a dozen court gallants. And yet, rich as the stuffs are, I would not put the best of them on for all the wealth of London.”
“Nor I,” replied Leonard. “I shall make free, however, with a sword,” he added, selecting one from the heap. “I may need a weapon.”
“I require nothing more than my halberd,” observed the smith; “and I would advise you to throw away that velvet scabbard; it is a certain harbour for infection.”
Leonard did not neglect the caution, and pushing open the door, they entered a large room which resembled an upholsterer’s shop, being literally crammed with chairs, tables, cabinets, moveable cupboards, bedsteads, curtains, and hangings, all of the richest description.
“What I heard is true,” observed Rainbird, gazing around in astonishment. “Chowles must have carried off every thing he could lay hands upon. What can he do with all that furniture?”
“What the miser does with his store,” replied Leonard: “feast his eyes with it, but never use it.”
They then proceeded to the next room. It was crowded with books, looking-glasses, and pictures; many of them originally of great value, but greatly damaged by the careless manner in which they were piled one upon another. A third apartment was filled with flasks of wine, with casks probably containing spirits, and boxes, the contents of which they did not pause to examine. A fourth contained male and female habiliments, spread out like the dresses in a theatrical wardrobe. Most of these garments were of the gayest and costliest description, and of the latest fashion, and Leonard sighed as he looked upon them, and thought of the fate of those they had so lately adorned.
“There is contagion enough in those clothes to infect a whole city,” said Rainbird, who regarded them with different feelings. “I have half a mind to set fire to them.”
“It were a good deed to do so,” returned Leonard; “but it must not be done now. Let us go upstairs. These are the only rooms below.”
Accordingly, they ascended the staircase, and entered chamber after chamber, all of which were as full of spoil as those they had just visited; but they could find no one, nor was there any symptom that the house was tenanted. They next stood still within the gallery, and listened intently for some sound to reveal
those they sought, but all was still and silent as the grave.
“We cannot be mistaken,” observed Leonard. “It is clear this house is the receptacle for Chowles’s plunder. Besides, we should not have found the lantern burning if they had gone forth again. No, no; they must be hidden somewhere, and I will not quit the place till I find them.” Their search, however, was fruitless. They mounted to the garrets, opened every door, and glanced into every corner. Still, no one was to be seen.
“I begin to think Nizza cannot be here,” said the apprentice; “but I am resolved not to depart without questioning Chowles on the subject.”
“You must find him first,” rejoined Rainbird. “If he is anywhere, he must be in the cellar, for we have been into every room in this part of the house. For my own part, I think you had better abandon the search altogether. No good will come of it.”
Leonard, however, was not to be dissuaded, and they went downstairs. A short flight of stone steps brought them to a spacious kitchen, but it was quite empty, and seemed to have been long disused. They then peeped into the scullery adjoining, and were about to retrace their steps, when Rainbird plucked Leonard’s sleeve to call attention to a gleam of light issuing from a door which stood partly ajar, in a long narrow passage leading apparently to the cellars.
“They are there,” he said, in a whisper.
“So I see,” replied Leonard, in the same tone. And raising his finger to his lips in token of silence, he stole forward on the points of his feet and cautiously opened the door.
At the further end of the cellar — for such it was — knelt Chowles, examining with greedy eyes the contents of a large chest, which, from the hasty glance that Leonard caught of it, appeared to be filled with gold and silver plate. A link stuck against the wall threw a strong light over the scene, and showed that the coffin-maker was alone. As Leonard advanced, the sound of his footsteps caught Chowles’s ear, and uttering a cry of surprise and alarm, he let fall the lid of the chest, and sprang to his feet.
“What do you want?” he cried, looking uneasily round, as if in search of some weapon. “Are you come to rob me?”
“No,” replied Leonard; “neither are we come to reclaim the plunder you have taken from others. We are come in search of Nizza Macascree.”
“Then you have come on a fool’s errand,” replied Chowles, regaining his courage, “for she is not here. I know nothing of her.”
“That is false,” replied Leonard. “You have just conducted Sir Paul
Parravicin to her.”
This assertion on the part of the apprentice, which he thought himself justified under the circumstances in making, produced a strong effect on Chowles. He appeared startled and confounded. “What right have you to play the spy upon me thus?” he faltered.
“The right that every honest man possesses to check the designs of the wicked,” replied Leonard. “You admit she is here. Lead me to her hiding-place without more ado.”
“If you know where it is,” rejoined Chowles, who now perceived the trick that had been practised upon him, “you will not want me to conduct you to it. Neither Nizza nor Sir Paul Parravicin are here.”
“That is false, prevaricating scoundrel,” cried Leonard. “My companion and I saw you enter the house with your profligate employer. And as we gained admittance a few minutes after you, it is certain no one can have left it. Lead me to Nizza’s retreat instantly, or I will cut your throat.” And seizing Chowles by the collar, he held the point of his sword to his breast.
“Use no violence,” cried Chowles, struggling to free himself, “and I will take you wherever you please. This way — this way.” And he motioned as if he would take them upstairs.
“Do not think to mislead me, villain,” cried Leonard, tightening his grasp. “We have searched every room in the upper part of the house, and though we have discovered the whole of your ill-gotten hoards, we have found nothing else. No one is there.”
“Well, then,” rejoined Chowles, “since the truth must out, Sir Paul is in the next house. But it is his own abode. I have nothing to do with it, nothing whatever. He is accountable for his own actions, and you will be accountable to him if you intrude upon his privacy. Release me, and I swear to conduct you to him. But you will take the consequences of your rashness upon yourself. I only go upon compulsion.”
“I am ready to take any consequences,” replied Leonard, resolutely.
“Come along, then,” said Chowles, pointing down the passage.
“You mean us no mischief?” cried Leonard, suspiciously. “If you do, the attempt will cost you your life.”
Chowles made no answer, but moved along the passage as quickly as Leonard, who kept fast hold of him and walked by his side, would permit. Presently they reached a door, which neither the apprentice nor Rainbird had observed before, and which admitted them into an extensive vault, with a short staircase at the further end, communicating with a passage that Leonard did not require to be informed was in another house.
Here Chowles paused. “I think it right to warn you you are running into a danger from which ere long you will be glad to draw back, young man,” he said, to the apprentice. “As a friend, I advise you to proceed no further in the matter.”
“Waste no more time in talking,” cried Leonard, fiercely, and forcing him forward as he spoke, “where is Nizza? Lead me to her without an instant’s delay.”
“A wilful man must have his way,” returned Chowles, hurrying up the main staircase. “It is not my fault if any harm befalls you.”
They had just gained the landing when a door on the right was suddenly thrown open, and Sir Paul Parravicin stood before them. He looked surprised and startled at the sight of the apprentice, and angrily demanded his business. “I am come for Nizza Macascree,” replied Leonard, “whom you and Chowles have detained against her will.”
Parravicin glanced sternly and inquiringly at the coffin-maker.
“I have protested to him that she is not here, Sir Paul,” said the latter, “but he will not believe me, and has compelled me, by threats of taking my life, to bring him and his companion to you.”
“Then take them back again,” rejoined Parravicin, turning haughtily upon his heel.
“That answer will not suffice, Sir Paul,” cried Leonard— “I will not depart without her.”
“How!” exclaimed the knight, drawing his sword. “Do you dare to intrude upon my presence? Begone! or I will punish your presumption.” And he prepared to attack the apprentice.
“Advance a footstep,” rejoined Leonard, who had never relinquished his grasp of Chowles, “and I pass my sword through this man’s body. Speak, villain,” he continued, in a tone so formidable that the coffin-maker shook with apprehension— “is she here or not?” Chowles gazed from him to the knight, whose deportment was equally menacing and appeared bewildered with terror.
“It is needless,” said Leonard, “your looks answer for you. She is.”
“Yes, yes, I confess she is,” replied Chowles.
“You hear what he says, Sir Paul,” remarked Leonard.
“His fears would make him assert anything,” rejoined Parravicin, disdainfully. “If you do not depart instantly, I will drive you forth.”
“Sir Paul Parravicin,” rejoined Leonard, in an authoritative tone, “I command you in the king’s name, to deliver up this girl.”
Parravicin laughed scornfully. “The king has no authority here,” he said.
“Pardon me, Sir Paul,” rejoined Chowles, who began to be seriously alarmed at his own situation, and eagerly grasped at the opportunity that offered of extricating himself from it— “pardon me. If it is the king’s pleasure she should be removed, it materially alters the case, and I can be no party to her detention.”
“Both you and your employer will incur his majesty’s severest displeasure, by detaining her after this notice,” remarked Leonard.
“Before I listen to the young man’s request, let him declare that it is his intention to delive
r her up to the king,” rejoined Parravicin, coldly.
“It is my intention to deliver her up to one who has the best right to take charge of her,” returned Leonard.
“You mean her father,” sneered Parravicin.
“Ay, but not the person you suppose to be her father,” replied Leonard.
“An important discovery has been made respecting her parentage.”
“Indeed!” exclaimed Parravicin, with a look of surprise. “Who has the honour to be her father?”
“A gentleman named Thirlby,” replied Leonard.
“What!” cried Parravicin, starting, and turning pale. “Did you say
Thirlby?”
The apprentice reiterated his assertion. Parravicin uttered a deep groan, and pressed his hand forcibly against his brow for some moments, during which the apprentice watched him narrowly. He then controlled himself by a powerful effort, and returned his sword to its scabbard.
“Come into this room, young man,” he said to the apprentice, “and let your companion remain outside with Chowles. Fear nothing. I intend you no injury.”
“I do not distrust you,” replied Leonard, “and if I did, should have no apprehension.” And motioning Rainbird to remain where he was, he entered the room with the knight, who instantly closed the door.
Parravicin’s first proceeding was to question him as to his reasons for supposing Nizza to be Thirlby’s daughter, and clearly perceiving the deep interest his interrogator took in the matter, and the favourable change that, from some unknown cause, had been wrought in his sentiments, the apprentice did not think fit to hide anything from him. Parravicin’s agitation increased as he listened to the recital; and at last, overcome by emotion, he sank into a chair, and covered his face with his hands. Recovering himself in a short time, he arose, and began to pace the chamber to and fro.
“What I have told you seems to have disturbed you, Sir Paul,” remarked
The Works of William Harrison Ainsworth Page 268