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Rookwood. A Romance By W. HARRISON AINSWORTH

“Bless you, my lady,” said the ancient handmaiden, trembling, “you look very pale, and no wonder. I feel sick at heart, too. Oh! I shall be glad when they return from the church, and happier still when the morning dawns. I can’t sleep a wink—can’t close my eyes, but I think of him.”

“Of him?”

“Of Sir Piers, my lady; for though he’s dead, I don’t think he’s gone.”

“How?”

“Why, my lady, the corruptible part of him’s gone, sure enough. But the incorruptible, as Doctor Small calls it—the sperrit, my lady. It might be my fancy, your ladyship; but as I’m standing here, when I went back into the room just now for the lights, as I hope to live, I thought I saw Sir Piers in the room.”

“You are crazed, Agnes.”

“No, my lady, I’m not crazed; it was mere fancy, no doubt. Oh, it’s a blessed thing to live with an easy conscience—a thrice blessed thing to die with an easy one, and that’s what I never shall, I’m afeard. Poor Sir Piers! I’d mumble a prayer for him, if I durst.”

“Leave me,” said Lady Rookwood, impatiently.

And Agnes quitted the room.

“What if the dead can return?” thought Lady Rookwood.

“All men doubt it, yet all men believe it. I would not believe it, were there not a creeping horror that overmasters me, when I think of the state beyond the grave—that intermediate state, for such it must be, betwixt heaven or hell, when the body lieth mouldering in the ground, and the soul survives, to wander, unconfined, until the hour of doom. And doth the soul survive when disenthralled? Is it dependent on the body? Does it perish with the body? These are doubts I cannot resolve. But if I deemed there was no future state, this hand should at once liberate me from my own weaknesses—my fears—my life. There is but one path to acquire that knowledge, which once taken can never be retraced.

“I am content to live—while living, to be feared—it may be hated; when dead, to be contemned—yet still remembered. Ha! what sound was that? A stifled scream! Agnes!—without there! She is full of fears. I am not free from them myself, but I will shake them off. This will divert their channel,” continued she, drawing from her bosom the marriage certificate. “This will arouse the torpid current of my blood—’Piers Rookwood to Susan Bradley.’ And by whom was it solemnised? The name is Checkley—Richard Checkley. Ha! I bethink me—a Papist priest—a recusant—who was for some time an inmate of the hall. I have heard of this man—he was afterwards imprisoned, but escaped—he is either dead, or in a foreign land. No witnesses—’tis well! Methinks Sir Piers Rookwood did well to preserve this. It shall light his funeral pyre. Would he could now behold me, as I consume it!”

She held the paper in the direction of the candle; but, ere it could touch the flame, it dropped from her hand. As if her horrible wish had been granted, before her stood the figure of her husband! Lady Rookwood started not. No sign of trepidation or alarm, save the sudden stiffening of her form was betrayed. Her bosom ceased to palpitate—her respiration stopped—her eyes were fixed upon the apparition.

The figure appeared to regard her sternly. It was at some little distance, within the shade cast by the lofty bedstead. Still she could distinctly discern it. There was no ocular deception; it was attired in the costume Sir Piers was wont to wear—a hunting dress. All that her son had told her rushed to her recollection. The phantom advanced. Its countenance was pale, and wore a gloomy frown.

“What would you destroy?” demanded the apparition, in a hollow tone.

“The evidence of—”

“What?”

“Your marriage.”

“With yourself, accursed woman?”

“With Susan Bradley.”

“Blood and thunder!” shouted the figure, in an altered tone. “Married to her! then Luke is legitimate, and heir to this estate!” Whereupon the apparition rushed to the table, and laid a very substantial grasp upon the document. “A marriage certificate!” ejaculated the spectre; “here’s a piece of luck! It ain’t often in our lottery life we draw a prize like this. One way or the other, it must turn up a few cool thousands.”

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curiosity: