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Minions Of The Moon
by
“Amen,” whispers Sophie Pemberthy.
“You saved me; you set me thinking of my young mother, who died when I was a lad and loved me much too well; and you taught me there were warm and loving hearts in the world; and when I went away from here I went away from the old life. I cannot say how that was; but,” shrugging his shoulders, “so it was.”
“It was a call,” said Sophie, piously.
“A call to arms, for I went to the wars. And what is it now that brings me back here to thank you–an old, time-worn reprobate, turned soldier and turned respectable!–what is that?”
“I don’t know.”
“Another call, depend upon it. A call to Maythorpe, where I expected to find a fat farmer and his buxom partner and a crowd of laughing boys and girls; where I hoped I might be of help to some of them, if help were needed. And,” he adds, “I find only you–and you just the same fair, bright girl I left behind me long ago.”
“Oh no.”
“It is like a dream; it is very remarkable to me. Yes, it’s another call, Mistress Pemberthy, depend upon it.”
And it is not the last call, either. The estate of Richard Isshaw lies not so many miles from Maythorpe Farm that a good long ride cannot overcome the distance between them. And the man turned respectable–the real baronet–is so very much alone and out of place in his big house that he knows not what to do.
And Mistress Pemberthy is very much alone too, and going out alone into the world, almost friendless, and with only two hundred pounds and perhaps the second-best bed–who knows?–as her share of her late loving, but rather hard and unsympathetic, husband’s worldly goods.
And folks do say, Finchley way, that pretty Mistress Pemberthy will be Lady Isshaw before the winter sets in, and that it will be exactly fifteen years since these two first set eyes upon each other.