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The Countess Of Bellarmine
by
“‘Drive through Tregarrick,’ says she, ‘an’ don’t spare whip-cord.’
“Slam went the door, up climbed the postillion, an’ away they went like a house afire. There was half-a-moon up an’ a hoar frost gatherin’, an’ my lady, lean in’ back on the cushions, could see the head and shoulders of the postillion bob-bobbing, till it seemed his head must work loose and tumble out of his collar.
“The road they took, sir, is the same that runs down the valley afore our very eyes. An’ ‘pon the brow o’t, just when it comes in sight, the off horse turned restive. In a minute ’twas as much as the post-boy could ha’ done to hold ‘en. But he didn’ try. Instead, he fell to floggin’ harder, workin’ his arm up an’ down like a steam-engin’.
“‘What the jiminy are ‘ee doin?’ calls out her ladyship–or words to that effec’–clutchin’ at the side o’ the shay, an’ tryin’ to stiddy hersel’.
“‘I thought I wasn’ to spare whip-cord,’ calls back the post-boy.
“An’ with that he turned i’ the saddle; an’ ’twas the face o’ her own wedded husband, as ghastly white as if ‘t burned a’ready i’ the underground fires.
“Seem’ it, her joints were loosed, an’ she sat back white as he; an’ down over the hill they swung at a breakneck gallop, shay lurchin’ and stones flyin’.
“About thirty yards from where we’m sittin’, sir, Ould Wounds caught the near rein twice round his wrist an lean’t back, slowly pullin’ it, till his face was slewed round over his left shoulder an’ grinnin’ in my lady’s face.
“An’ that was the last look that passed atween ’em. For now feeling the wheels on grass and the end near, he loosed the rein and fetched the horse he rode a cut atween the ears–an’ that’s how ’twas,” concluded Seth, lamely.
Like most inferior narrators, he shied at the big fence, flinched before the climax. But as he ended, I flung a short glance downward at the birches and black water, and took up my rod again with a shiver.