The Shadow of a Crime - Part 32
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Part 32

"And dunnet ye threep me down. I'll serve ye all out, and soon too."

Mrs. Garth had now reached the porch. She had by this time forgotten her visit of consolation and the poor invalid, who lay on the bed gazing vacantly at her angry countenance.

"Good evening, Sarah," cried Liza, with an air of provoking familiarity. "May you live all the days o' your life!"

Mrs. Garth was gone by this time.

Rotha stood perplexed, and looked after her as she disappeared down the lonnin. Liza burst into a prolonged fit of uproarious laughter.

"Hush, Liza; I'm afraid she means mischief."

"The old witch-wife!" cried Liza. "If tempers were up at the Lion for sale, what a fortune yon woman's would fetch!"

CHAPTER XXII. THE THREATENED OUTLAWRY.

Rotha's apprehension of mischief, either as a result of Mrs. Garth's menace or as having occasioned it, was speedily to find realization.

A day or two after the rencontre, three strangers arrived at Shoulthwaite, who, without much ceremony, entered the house, and took seats on the long settle in the kitchen.

Rotha and w.i.l.l.y were there at the moment, the one baking oaten cake, and the other tying a piece of cord about a whip which was falling to pieces. The men wore plain attire, but a glance was enough to satisfy w.i.l.l.y that one of them was the taller of the two constables who had tried to capture Ralph on Stye Head.

"What do you want?" he asked abruptly.

"A little courtesy," answered the stalwart constable, who apparently const.i.tuted himself spokesman to his party.

"From whom do you come?"

"_From_ whom and _for_ whom!--you shall know both, young man. We come from the High Sheriff of Carlisle, and we come for--so please you--Ralph Ray."

"He's not here."

"So we thought." The constables exchanged glances and broad smiles.

"He's not here, I tell you," said w.i.l.l.y, obviously losing his self-command as he became excited.

"Then go and fetch him."

"I would not if I could; I could not if I would. So be off."

"We might ask you for the welcome that is due to the commissioners of a sheriff."

"You _take_ it. But you'll be better welcome to take yourselves after it."

"Listen, young master, and let it be to your profit. We want Ralph Ray, sometime captain in the rebel army of the late usurper in possession. We hold a warrant for his arrest. Here it is." And the man tapped with his fingers a paper which he drew from his belt.

"I tell you once more he is not here," said w.i.l.l.y.

"And we tell you again, Go and fetch him, and G.o.d send you may find him! It will be better for all of you," added the constable, glancing about the room.

w.i.l.l.y was now almost beyond speech with excitement. He walked nervously across the kitchen, while the constable, with the utmost calmness of voice and manner, opened his warrant and read:--

"These are to will and require you forthwith to receive into your charge the body of Ralph Ray, and him detain under secure imprisonment--"

"You've had the warrant a long while to no purpose, I believe," w.i.l.l.y broke in. "You may keep it still longer."

The constable took no further note of the interruption than to pause in his reading, and begin again in the same measured tones:--

"We do therefore command, publish, and declare that the said Ralph Ray, having hitherto withheld himself from judgment, shall within fourteen days next after personally deliver himself to the High Sheriff of Carlisle, under pain of being excepted from any pardon or indemnity both for his life and estate."

Then the constable calmly folded up his paper, and returned it to its place in his belt. w.i.l.l.y now stood as one transfixed.

"So you see, young man, it will be best for you all to go and fetch him."

"And what if I cannot?" asked w.i.l.l.y. "What then will happen?"

"Outlawry; and G.o.d send that that be all!"

"And what then?"

"The confiscation to the Crown of these goods and chattels."

"How so?" said Rotha, coming forward. "Mrs. Ray is still alive, and this is a brother."

"They must go elsewhere, young mistress."

"You don't mean that you can turn the poor dame into the road?" said Rotha eagerly.

The man shrugged his shoulders. His companions grinned, and shifted in their seats.

"You can't do it; you cannot do it," said w.i.l.l.y emphatically, stamping his foot on the floor.

"And why not?" The constable was unmoved. "Angus Ray is dead. Ralph Ray is his eldest son."

"It's against the law, I tell you," said w.i.l.l.y.

"You seem learned in the law, young farmer; enlighten us, pray."

"My mother, as relict of my father, has her dower, as well as her own goods and chattels, which came from her own father, and revert to her now on her husband's death."

"True; a learned doctor of the law, indeed!" said the constable, turning to his fellows.

"I have also my share," continued w.i.l.l.y, "of all except the freehold.

These apportionments the law cannot touch, however it may confiscate the property of my brother."

"Look you, young man," said the constable, facing about and lifting his voice; "every commissioner must feel that the law had the ill-luck to lose an acute exponent when you gave up your days and nights to feeding sheep; but there is one point which so learned a doctor ought not to have pa.s.sed over in silence. When you said the wife of the deceased had a right to her dower, and his younger son to his portion, you forgot that the wife and children of a traitor are in the same case with a traitor himself."