Roger Ingleton, Minor | Page 4

Talbot Baines Reed
took
refuge finally in his pipe. As for the tutor, he had his hands full,
steering his team between the lane-side ditches, and thinking of the
wrecked life that lay waiting at the journey's end.
It was nearly ten o'clock before the dim lights of Maxfield Manor
showed ahead. The snow on the home-drive was undisturbed by the
wheels of any other vehicle. The mother and son had not returned, at
any rate, yet.
As the two men entered, the hall was full of scared domestics, talking
in undertones, and feeding on the occasional bulletin which the
privileged Raffles was permitted to carry from the sick-room to the
outer world.
At the sight of the doctor and Mr Armstrong, they sneaked off
grudgingly to their own territories, leaving Raffles to escort the
gentlemen to the scene of the tragedy.
Old Roger Ingleton lay on the sofa, with eyes half-closed, upturned to
the ceiling; alive still, but no more. Cups and wine-glasses on the table
near told of the housekeeper's fruitless experiments at restoration, and
the inflamed countenance of that ministering angel herself spoke
ominously of the four hours during which the sufferer's comfort had
been under her charge.
The tutor, after satisfying himself that his mission had not been too late,
retired to the fireplace, where he leaned dismally, and watched through
his eye-glass the doctor's examination.
After a few minutes, the latter walked across to him.
"Did you say Mrs Ingleton and the boy will not be back till the
morning?"
"Probably not."
"If so, they will be too late; he will not last the night."

"I will fetch them," said Mr Armstrong quietly.
"Good fellow! you are having a night of it. I shall remain here; so you
can take whichever of my horses you like. The mare will go best."
"Thanks!" said the tutor, pulling himself together for this new task.
Before he quitted the room, he stepped up to the couch and bent for a
moment over the helpless form of his employer. There was no
recognition in the glazed eyes, and the hand, which he just touched
with his own, was nerveless and dead already.
With a silent nod to the doctor Mr Armstrong left the room, and was
presently once more ploughing on horseback through the deep snow.
It was well this man was a man of iron and master of himself, or he
might have flagged under this new effort, with the distressing prospect
awaiting him at his journey's end.
As it was, he urged doggedly forward, forgetful of the existence of such
an individual as Frank Armstrong, and dwelling only on the dying man
behind and the mourners ahead.
The clock was chiming one in Castleridge Church when at length he
reined up his spent horse at the stable entrance to the Grange. Here for
a weary quarter of an hour he rang, called, and whistled before the
glimmer of a lantern gave promise of an answer.
To the stable-boy's not altogether polite inquiry, Mr Armstrong replied,
"Mr Ingleton of Maxfield is ill. Call Robbins, and tell him to put the
horses in immediately, to take his mistress and Mr Roger home; and get
some one in the house to call them. Don't delay an instant."
This peremptory speech fairly aroused the sleepy stable-boy, and in a
few minutes Mr Armstrong was standing in the hall of the Grange
talking to a footman.
"Take me up to his room," said he, pushing the bewildered servant

before him up the staircase.
The man, not at all sure that he was not in the grip of an armed burglar,
ascended the stair in a maze, not daring to look behind him.
At the end of a corridor he stopped.
"Is that the room? Give me the lamp! Go and tell your master to get up.
Say a messenger has come with bad news from Maxfield; and look
here--put some wraps in the carriage, and have some coffee or wine
ready in the hall in ten minutes."
The fellow, greatly reassured by this short parley, went off to fulfil his
instructions, while the tutor, with what was very like a sigh, opened the
door and entered his pupil's bedroom.
Roger Ingleton, minor, lay sound asleep, with his arms behind his head
and a smile on his resolute lips. As the light of the lamp fell on his face,
it looked very pale, with its frame of black curly hair and the deep
fringe of its long eyelashes; but the finely-chiselled nostrils and firm
mouth redeemed it from all suspicion of weakness. Even as he slept
you might judge this lad of nineteen had a will of his own hidden up in
the delicate framework of his body, and resembled his father at least in
this, that his
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 112
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.