Sweet Mace - Sweet Mace Part 37
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Sweet Mace Part 37

"We'll see, mother," said Mace, smiling, as taking a cup from a shelf the old woman hurried out of the cottage to where, out in the road by the side of the lane, a dipping-place for the clear, cool iron-impregnated water had been made.

Stooping down, after glancing right and left, she dipped the cup full of the clear water; and then, removing the cork from the little phial, she poured half its contents beneath the hand that covered the cup, recorked and hid the bottle, and then with an ugly smile about her lips returned to her visitor.

"Here, child," she said; "it be cool, and sweet, and pure. There be no curse in that;" and as she spoke she glanced involuntarily at the curtain, behind which Anne Beckley was listening, and, though no breeze penetrated the cottage, the hangings visibly shook as Mace took the cup.

Poison, a decoction of some imaginary power, or merely the juice of a plant full of tannin, the effect was the same. Mother Goodhugh was too deeply intent on watching her last visitor and the curtain to pay any heed to the contents of the cup. She had dipped it full of the iron-impregnated water, and seen that it was clear as crystal before holding it in her left hand, with the fingers extended round the rim and her palm acting as a cover. The pouring in of the liquid of the phial, too, had been done in a hasty way, without more than a glance at what she was doing.

To her surprise, then, as she handed the cup to her visitor, Mace passed it back.

"I asked you for a cup of cold water, mother," she said quietly, "and you gave me this!"

Mother Goodhugh looked down at the cup to see that the limpid crystal water she had dipped had turned of a livid black; and, startled and convicted by the change, she gazed at it, then at the girl, and then back at the cup.

"What did you put in it, mother?" said Mace, quietly.

"I--I--put anything in?" said the old woman, humbly; "what should I put in?"

"Some one or another of your silly mixtures," said Mace, sternly. "Why do you attempt to try them upon me?"

"Silly mixtures!" Such a term applied to her philtres in the presence of one whom she wished for her own reasons to impress fully with her potency! A moment before the old woman was shivering and cowed; now her visitor's words roused up the spirit of opposition within her, and, with her eyes flaming defiance, she called upon her powers of well-matured dissimulation as she half shrieked:--

"I put in mixtures! Go to, white witch that thou art. Did I not see thee cast an evil eye on the drinking water, and turn it black? Look here," she cried, seizing the cup, throwing out its contents, running to the spring, and returning with it full of clear fluid, "the water be bright and sweet. Nay, nay; thou shalt not touch it," she cried, as Mace stretched out her hand to take the cup--"I will have no more of thy juggling tricks here. Out upon thee, witch--witch, who triest to win decent maidens' lovers to thy side. When the time comes that justice overtakes thee for thy wicked enchantments, my voice shall be raised to tell of all I know. Go!--Away with thee!--Witch, witch!"

She stood waving her hands and stick at her who had brought her help, and a malignant look of spite and suppressed glee overspread her face, as she laughingly hugged herself upon the clever way in which she had turned the tables upon her accuser. The girl's lips parted to speak; but finding her adversary become more voluble and ready, Mace shrank away, staggered by the words of the old woman, who followed her to the door, and stood menacing her and shrieking threats as she hurried away with the words "witch, witch," ringing in her ears.

There was no lack of common-sense in the founder's daughter, but for the moment she was startled by Mother Goodhugh's words. No more superstitious than the educated people of her days, a faint belief in the sin of witchcraft lingered in her mind; and she knew by rumour of the terrible fate that had been reserved for women accused of such dealings. For, from time to time, account of fiery executions had reached the remote hamlet, and she shuddered as these memories came back.

To be accused of witchcraft by some malignant enemy meant placing the accused in a position wherein nothing she said would be believed; and, as she hurried homewards, Mace's face was pale with anxiety and dread.

This soon passed off, though, and she laughed at her childish terrors.

"Poor old thing, she is half mad," thought Mace; and even then she began to think about the cup; coming rapidly to the right conclusion that Mother Goodhugh had placed some one or another of her decoctions in the water.

"I'll go there no more," she said; "the old woman is dangerous, and to try to ward off her wishes by kindly acts seems to make things worse."

She was, in spite of the encounter, light-hearted and glad; for though the accusation against Gil troubled her, still she knew that he was innocent, and had hoped by propitiating Mother Goodhugh to get her in time to withdraw her words. That adventure had failed; but there was a change at home that made her heart leap. Sir Mark had gone, and an incubus seemed to have been removed from her heart as she felt that the old happy days would come again; and, laughing off the scene with Mother Goodhugh, she hastened on through the pleasant, sunlit glade, where the birds hardly fled at her approach.

"There will be no spells here," she said, laughingly, as she turned aside; and, parting the bushes, climbed down amongst the ferny stones to where the water dropped into a natural basin, from which, with a cup improvised with a broad burdock leaf, she sipped the pure sparkling fluid and quenched her thirst, seating herself afterwards to rest upon one of the mossy stones, and gazing dreamily down the ravine, through which the water flowed beneath a canopy of luxuriant ferns. As she gazed, a kingfisher, till then motionless upon a twig, suddenly darted down into a pool, rose with something silvery in its beak, and fled along the narrow valley like a streak of azure drawn across the verdure by a spirit-hand, while soon after the white coverts of a blue bar-winged jay were seen as the shy bird peered at her with corvine curiosity and then uttered an excited "Tchah--tchah!" and fled.

Mace thought not of kingfisher, jay, or the velvet-coated blackbird that came and perched so near to watch her intently, for she was considering whether Sir Mark would come back, and, if so, whether he would renew his suit. She was troubled, too, about her father, and his want of faith in Gil. It had seemed as if in his heart he did not dislike the attentions paid to her by Sir Mark; and at last, with a sigh, she rose and continued her little journey.

"Time smooths away a good many difficulties," she said, half-laughing; "and, if it does not, I must fain follow the example of the Virgin Queen."

To her surprise, before she was out of the wood she met her father, who rarely left the precincts of his own grounds, unless it was to visit ironstone pit, quarry, or the colliers busy charcoal-burning. He seemed to be examining her curiously as she came up to him, and laid her hand upon his arm.

"Where have you been, Tit?" he asked.

"To take Mother Goodhugh a chicken and a few little niceties, poor soul!"

"For cursing thy father so bitterly?"

"Nay, father; to try and make the poor half-crazed soul more sensible."

"And to pay her for muttering nonsense to please a silly girl. Tit, I thought better of thee," he said.

Mace looked at him half-wounded, half-amused.

"When did you know me guilty of such follies, father?" she asked.

"Never till now, when thy head was filled with love-nonsense by that scoundrel, Gil."

"Father, you hurt me when you speak thus of Gil," she cried sadly; "and when you doubt my truth."

"Thou hast been to Mother Goodhugh, like some silly wench, to ask her for love-charms; worse still, thou hast, the moment Sir Mark has gone, run off to keep tryst with a man I forbid thee to see."

The pained look grew deeper in Mace's eyes as she laid both her hands upon the broad chest of the founder, and gazed full in his eyes.

"Father, dear," she said, simply, "why should I go to bid a foolish old woman mutter silly spells, when I know that Gil loves me with all his heart."

"Out upon his love. As he loves Anno Beckley, and every woman he meets.

Shame on thee, girl--for shame!"

She smiled sadly as she still gazed up in his face.

"You don't mean this, father, dear," she said. "You don't think I should be so silly as to go to Mother Goodhugh for what you say?"

"I do," he cried, harshly.

"And you don't in your heart think that I have been to see Gil."

"I tell thee, I do," he cried.

"And what is more, you don't think your little girl would play you false."

"What?" he cried, "has not Gil been at thy window?"

"Yes, father," she said; "as he has scores of times when we were boy and girl together; but I have bidden him come no more. I never thought harm of it--only that it was pleasant folly," she added, dreamily.

"Out upon such folly!" he cried.

"Gil will not come again, and I shall try to see him no more, dear, till you bid us meet; and you do not believe that I should ever deceive you."

"You turn me round your finger, child," he cried, catching her to his breast, and kissing her passionately. "No, no, no; I don't believe you went to that old woman for such trash, nor to meet Gil Carr. I know you couldn't deceive me, my darling; and if I am harsh to thee it is for thy good. Ah! Tit, Tit, what a little witch thou art!"

"Don't, father!" she cried, starting from him with a cry of pain.

"What is it, my bird? What have I done?"