[The House by the Church-Yard by J. Sheridan Le Fanu]@TWC D-Link book
The House by the Church-Yard

CHAPTER LXXXIX
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He sat in his corner by the fire, silent and dismal; and no one cared what was passing in the brain behind that black and scowling mask.

He paid sternly and furiously, like a villain who has lost at play; and without a 'good-night,' or any other leave taking, glided ominously from the room; and the gentlemen who carried on the discourse and convivialities of the Salmon House, followed him with a gibe or two, and felt the pleasanter for the removal of that ungracious presence.
A few minutes later, Mr.Lowe stood on the hall-door step, and calling to his man, gave him a little note and some silver, and a message--very impressively repeated--and the groom touched his hat, and buttoned up his coat about his neck, the wind being from the east, and he started, at something very near a gallop, for Dublin.
There was a man at the door of the Salmon House, who, with a taciturn and saturnine excitement, watched the unusual bustle going on at the door-steps of Doctor Sturk's dwelling.

This individual had been drinking there for a while; and having paid his shot, stood with his back to the wall, and his hands in his pockets, profoundly agitated, and with a chaos of violent and unshaped thoughts rising and rolling in his darkened brain.
After Lowe went into the house again, seeing the maid still upon the steps, talking with Mr.Moore, the barber, who was making his lingering adieux there, this person drew near, and just as the tonsor made his final farewell, and strode down the street towards his own dwelling, he presented himself in time to arrest the retreat of the damsel.
'By your leave, Mistress Katty,' said he, laying his hand on the iron rail of the door-steps.
'Oh, good jewel! an' is that yourself, Mr.Irons?
And where in the world wor you this month an' more ?' 'Business--nothin'-- in Mullingar--an' how's the docthor to-night ?' The clerk spoke a little thickly, as he commonly did on leaving the Salmon House.
'He's elegant, my dear--beyant the beyants--why, he's sittin' up, dhrinking chicken-broth, and talking law-business with Mr.Lowe.' 'He's talkin'!' 'Ay is he, and Mr.Lowe just this minute writ down all about the way he come by the breakin' of his skull in the park, and we'll have great doings on the head of it; for the master swore to it, and Doctor Toole----' 'An'who done it ?' demanded Irons, ascending a step, and grasping the iron rail.
'I couldn't hear--nor no one, only themselves.' 'An' who's that rode down the Dublin road this minute ?' 'That's Mr.Lowe's man; 'tis what he's sent him to Dublin wid a note.' 'I see,' said Irons, with a great oath, which seemed to the maid wholly uncalled for; and he came up another step, and held the iron rail and shook it, like a man grasping a battle-axe, and stared straight at her, with a look so strange, and a visage so black, that she was half-frightened.
'A what's the matther wid you, Misther Irons ?' she demanded.
But he stared on in silence, scowling through her face at vacancy, and swaying slightly as he griped the metal banister.
'I _will_,' he muttered, with another most unclerklike oath, and he took Katty by the hand, and shook it slowly in his own cold, damp grasp as he asked, with the same intense and forbidding look, 'Is Mr.Lowe in the house still ?' 'He is, himself and Doctor Toole, in the back parlour.' 'Whisper him, Katty, this minute, there's a man has a thing to tell him.' 'What about ?' enquired Katty.
'About a great malefactor.' Katty paused, with her mouth open, expecting more.
'Tell him now; at once, woman; you don't know what delay may cost.' He spoke impetuously, and with a bitter sort of emphasis, like a man in a hurry to commit himself to a course, distrusting his own resolution.
She was frightened at his sudden fierceness, and drew back into the hall and he with her, and he shut the door with a clang behind him, and then looked before him, stunned and wild, like a man called up from his bed into danger.
'Thank God.

I'm in for it,' muttered he, with a shudder and a sardonic grin, and he looked for a moment something like that fine image of the Wandering Jew, given us by Gustave Doree, the talisman of his curse dissolved, and he smiling cynically in the terrible light of the judgment day.
The woman knocked at the parlour door, and Lowe opened it.
'Who's here ?' he asked, looking at Irons, whose face he remembered, though he forgot to whom it belonged.
'I'm Zekiel Irons, the parish-clerk, please your worship, and all I want is ten minutes alone with your honour.' 'For what purpose ?' demanded the magistrate, eyeing him sharply.
'To tell you all about a damned murder.' 'Hey--why--who did it ?' 'Charles Archer,' he answered; and screwed up his mouth with a convulsive grimace, glaring bloodlessly at the justice.
'Ha! Charles Archer! I think we know something already about that.' 'I don't think you do, though; and by your leave, you'll promise, if I bring it home to him, you'll see me safe through it.

'Tis what I'm the only witness living that knows all about it.' 'Well, what is it about ?' 'The murder of Mr.Beauclerc, that my Lord Dunoran was tried and found guilty for.' 'Why, all very good; but that did not happen in Ireland.' 'No.


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