‘Left shoulder. I think we’d better take the risk and make Hand Cross.’
‘Yes, but first I will bind up your shoulder. Are you bleeding very much?’
‘Like a pig,’ said Ludovic.
She slid to the ground, stiff and somewhat bruised, and said imperatively: ‘Get down! If you bleed like a pig you will die, and I do not at all want you to die.’
He laughed, but dismounted, and found himself steadied by two small capable hands. He reeled and sank on his knees, saying: ‘Damme, I must be worse hit than I knew! You’d best take the horse and leave me.’
‘I shall not leave you,’ replied Eustacie, busily ripping the flounce off her petticoat. ‘I shall take you to Hand Cross.’
Receiving no answer, she looked closely at him and found to her dismay that he had fainted. For a moment she was at a loss to know what to do, but when she touched him and brought her hand away wet with blood, she decided that the most urgent need was to bind up his wound, and promptly set about the task of extricating him from his coat. It was by no means easy, but she accomplished it at last, and managed as well as she could for the lack of light to twist the strips of her petticoat round his shoulder. He regained consciousness while she was straining her bandage as tight as possible, and lay for a moment blinking at her.
‘What in – oh, I remember!’ he said faintly. ‘Give me some brandy. Flask in my coat.’
She tied a firm knot, found the brandy, and raising his head, held the flask to his lips. He recovered sufficiently to struggle up and to put on his coat again. ‘You know, you’d be wasted on Tristram,’ he told her. ‘Help me into the saddle, and we’ll make Hand Cross yet.’
‘Yes, but this time it is I who will take the reins,’ said Eustacie.
‘Just as you say, my dear,’ he replied meekly.
‘And you will put your arms round me and not fall off.’
‘Don’t worry, I shan’t fall off.’
Eustacie, finding a conveniently fallen tree-trunk, led her weary horse to it, and by using it as a mounting-block contrived to get into the saddle. She then rode back to Ludovic, and adjured him to mount behind her. He managed to do this, but the effort very nearly brought on another swooning fit. He had recourse to the brandy again, which cleared his head sufficiently to enable him to say: ‘Follow this track; it’ll bring us out on to the pike-road, north of Hand Cross. If you can wake old Nye at the Red Lion he’ll take me in.’
‘What shall I do if I see an Exciseman?’ inquired Eustacie.
‘Say your prayers,’ he replied irrepressibly.
No Exciseman, however, was encountered on the track that led through the Forest, and by the time they came out on to the turnpike road, a mile from Hand Cross, Eustacie was far too anxious about her cousin to have much thought to spare for a questing Excise-officer. Ludovic seemed to stay in the saddle more by instinct than by any conscious effort. Eustacie dared not urge Rufus even to a trot. She had drawn Ludovic’s sound arm round her waist, and held it there, clasping his slack hand. It seemed an interminable way to Hand Cross, but at last the lonely inn came into sight, a dark huddle against the sky. It was by now long after midnight, and no light shone behind the shuttered windows. Eustacie pulled Rufus up before the door and let go of Ludovic’s hand. It fell nervelessly to his side; she realized that he must have swooned again; he was certainly sagging against her very heavily; she hoped he would not fall out of the saddle when she dismounted. She slid down, and was relieved to find that he only fell forward across Rufus’s neck. The next moment she had grasped the bell-pull and sent an agitated peal ringing through the silent inn.
It was answered so speedily that Eustacie, who had heard rumours that Joseph Nye, of the Red Lion, knew more about the free-traders than he would admit, instantly suspected that he had been waiting up for the very convoy she had met. He opened the door in person, fully dressed, and holding a lantern, and looking a great deal startled. When he saw Eustacie he stared as though he could not believe his eyes, and gasped: ‘Miss! Why, miss!’
Eustacie grasped his arm urgently. ‘Please help me at once! I have brought my cousin Ludovic, and he said you would take him in, but he is wounded, and I think dying!’ With which, because she had been through a great deal of excitement and was quite worn out by it, she burst into tears.
Four
The landlord took an involuntary step backward. ‘Miss, have you gone mad?’
‘No!’ sobbed Eustacie.
He looked incredulously out into the moonlight, but when he saw the sagging figure on Rufus’s back he gave an exclamation of horror, thrust his lantern into Eustacie’s hand, and strode out. He was a big man, with mighty muscles, and he lifted Ludovic down from the saddle with surprising ease, and carried him into the inn, and lowered him on to a wooden settle by the fireplace. ‘My God, what’s come to him? What’s he doing here?’ he demanded under his breath.
‘An Exciseman shot him. Oh, do you think he will die?’
‘Die! No! But if he’s found here – !’ He broke off. ‘I must get that horse stabled and out of sight. Stay you here, miss, and don’t touch him! Lordy, lordy, this is a pretty kettle of fish!’ He took a taper from the high mantelpiece, kindled it at the lantern’s flame, and gave it to Eustacie. ‘Do you light them candles, miss, and keep as quiet as you can! I’ve people putting up in the house.’ He took up the lantern as he spoke and went out of the inn, softly closing the door behind him.
A branch of half-burned candles was standing on the table. Eustacie lit them, and turned to look fearfully down at her cousin.
He was lying with one arm hanging over the edge of the settle, and his face alarmingly pale. Not knowing what to do for him, she sank down on her knees beside him and lifted his dangling hand, and held it between her own. For the first time she was able to see him clearly; she thought that had she met him in daylight she must have known him for a Lavenham, for here was Sylvester’s hawk-nose and humorous mouth, softened indeed by youth but unmistakable. He was lean and long-limbed, taller than Sylvester had been, but with the same slender hands and arched feet, and the same cleft in his wilful chin.
He seemed to Eustacie scarcely to breathe; she laid his arm across his chest and loosened the handkerchief about his neck. ‘Oh please, Cousin Ludovic, don’t die!’ she begged.
She heard a slight movement on the stairs behind her, and, turning her head, beheld a tall woman in a dressing-gown standing on the top step with a candle in her hand, looking down at her. She sprang up and stood as though defending the unconscious Ludovic, staring up at the new-comer in a challenging way.
The lady with the candle said with a twinkle in her grey eyes: ‘Don’t be alarmed! I’m no ghost, I assure you. You woke me with your ring at the bell, and because I’m of a prying disposition, I got up to see what in the world was going forward.’ She came down the stairs as she spoke, and saw Ludovic. Her eyebrows went up, but she said placidly: ‘I see I’ve thrust myself into an adventure. Is he badly hurt?’