North groaned.
“Why, doctor! Took more bad?”
The old man glanced at the hand he had laid upon the doctor’s shoulder, and wiped it, for it was wet with blood; and the sight of the hideous smear seemed to raise a terrible thought in his brain.
“Why, doctor,” he said, in a low whisper; “you haven’t – you haven’t hurt him much?”
North seized the old man’s arm, and sat gazing wildly at him for a few moments without speaking. He was battling with the mental confusion that troubled him and kept him in a state of hesitancy, in which his mind drifted like a derelict at sea.
He mastered it at last, and began to see clearly that, from what the old sexton knew, he must continue to make him his confidant. There could be no half measures. For his own safety he must tell him all; though even now there was Leo, who knew of the encounter.
No; she dare not speak, suspect what she might. For her reputation’s sake, she must hold her tongue.
Meanwhile, the old man glanced at his hand again, and, with a look of disgust, went through the action of wiping it.
“Why, doctor – doctor!” he whispered; “don’t say you’ve – !”
“I couldn’t help it, Moredock,” said North excitedly. “It was in the struggle: it was a fight for life. We were both mad with rage, and I – I struck him.”
“Ay, ay, doctor; but you needn’t ha’ hit him so hard. Look at the blood! Deary, deary; and all this trouble about a gel.”
“I don’t know how it happened,” panted North, clinging tightly to the old man’s arm. “I must have given him a terrible blow.”
“But it’s a hanging matter, doctor – a hanging matter!” whispered the sexton. “Don’t hold me, man; I didn’t do it! I won’t be dragged into it! I didn’t know you’d go and do that!”
“I didn’t mean to, Moredock. It was in my rage.”
“But it’s murder, doctor; it’s murder, and they’ll try you for your life!”
“It must not be known. We must – ”
“Nay, nay: it isn’t we,” protested the old man. “It was you did it. I was skeered about you both getting wild, and I thought I’d be out of it, and came home.”
“But you must help me, Moredock! You shall help me, man!”
“I can’t help you, doctor: it’s murder!” protested the sexton, trying to escape from the fierce grasp which held him.
“It was not murder! It was fair fight!” cried North fiercely. “And, look here, man, you cannot help yourself. You must help me to hide this terrible night’s work.”
The old man ceased struggling: for the doctor’s words impressed him, and he felt how thoroughly they two were linked together.
“But it’s like cutting short a man’s days,” he half whimpered.
“Silence! Do what I say, and no one need know what has occurred.”
“But – ”
“Silence, I say!” cried North, firmly now. “Get your hat; we must go to the church at once.”
Moredock stood half bent, and with his head turned to his companion.
“Where – where is he, doctor?”
“In the Candlish vault. I carried him there!”
“Hah!”
The sexton drew a long breath. “You must come on and remove all traces of the struggle in the vestry, and then – ”
“In the morslem, eh, doctor?” said the old man thoughtfully, and growing resigned to the difficulties of his position. “Well, we can put him where no one’s likely to find him there. Hey, doctor, but it’s been a bad thing for me to ha’ met you!”
“Your lanthorn and matches – quick!” said North. “There is no time to lose!”
“But if – if – doctor?”
“If what?”
“If it is found out, you’ll say a word for me. You’ve made me do all this. I do want to live my fifteen or twenty years more in peace.”
“Trust me as you’ve trusted me before,” said North, who was now speaking calmly enough, and had grasped the situation. “I tell you it was an accident – a horrible accident. It was in fair fight; and I have come off none too well.”
“I’ll stand by you, doctor,” said the old man; “and we’ll hide it safe. But there’s Dally,” he muttered to himself – “Dally. She’ll know there’s something wrong, for she won’t believe. Not that he has gone away out o’ fear o’ doctor? Ay, she’ll have to think that. My poor little lass – my poor little lass!”
Volume Two – Chapter Sixteen.
The Doctor is Relieved
The old clock wheezed, and rattled, and spun round, and its weights ran down as the doctor and old Moredock entered the belfry door. Then, as the portal was closed, the dark place seemed to be filled with sound as the chimes rang out the four quarters, and then the deep-toned strokes of hammer upon bell proclaimed that it was nearing day.
“Only three o’clock,” thought North, “and it seems as many days as hours.”
They passed into the church as soon as the old man had lit his lanthorn and covered it with the skirt of his coat, which he held so that the light fell only upon the matting, and here and there upon a brass or some half-worn letters cut in the stones.
The chancel door stuck and refused to open till the old man had held down his lanthorn to see what held it.
“What’s here?” he whispered, as something glittered. “Young miss’s bracelet,” he added, as he dragged out the shining gewgaw, which Leo had dropped in her flight, and which had fallen close to the bottom of the door, and acted as a wedge. “Take hold, doctor.”
“Pah!” ejaculated North, drawing back. “Throw it away.”
“Ay, I’ll throw it away,” muttered the old man, stuffing the heavy gold circle into his pocket: “I’ll throw it away. Hey, but lookye here.”
He held up the lanthorn, and revealed the state of the vestry – the chair overturned, the table driven into a corner, and the gown and surplice torn from the pegs on which they had hung, trampled and twisted, while in one place the tiles close to the wainscot were stained with blood, a few drops of which had splashed the panelled oak.
“Shut that window, man – quick! Hide your light.”
Moredock obeyed, screening his lanthorn, and then climbing on to the oak chest and drawing in and fastening the hasp.
“Shall I – ” he began, as he got down.