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House by the Church-Yard, The
Chapter 40. Of A Messenger From Chapelizod Vault...
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
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       _ CHAPTER XL. OF A MESSENGER FROM CHAPELIZOD VAULT WHO WAITED IN THE TYLED HOUSE FOR MR. MERVYN
       Mervyn was just about this time walking up the steep Ballyfermot Road. It was then a lonely track, with great bushes and hedgerows overhanging it; and as other emotions subsided, something of the chill and excitement of solitude stole over him. The moon was wading through flecked masses of cloud. The breath of night rustled lightly through the bushes, and seemed to follow her steps with a strange sort of sigh and a titter. He stopped and looked back under the branches of an old thorn, and traced against the dark horizon the still darker outline of the ivied church tower of Chapelizod, and thought of the dead that lay there, and of all that those sealed lips might tell, and old tales of strange meetings on moors and desolate places with departed spirits, flitted across his brain; and the melancholy rush of the night air swept close about his ears, and he turned and walked more briskly toward his own gloomy quarters, passing the churchyard of Ballyfermot on his right. There were plenty of head-stones among the docks and nettles: some short and some tall, some straight and some slanting back, and some with a shoulder up, and a lonely old ash-tree still and dewy in the midst, glimmering cold among the moveless shadows; and then at last he sighted the heavy masses of old elm, and the pale, peeping front of the 'Tyled House,' through the close and dismal avenue of elm, he reached the front of the mansion. There was no glimmer of light from the lower windows, not even the noiseless flitting of a bat over the dark little court-yard. His key let him in. He knew that his servants were in bed. There was something cynical in his ree-raw independence. It was unlike what he had been used to, and its savagery suited with his bitter and unsociable mood of late.
       But his step sounding through the hall, and the stories about the place of which he was conscious. He battled with his disturbed foolish sensations, however, and though he knew there was a candle burning in his bed-room, he turned aside at the foot of the great stair, and stumbled and groped his way into the old wainscoted back-parlour, that looked out, through its great bow window, upon the haunted orchard, and sat down in its dismal solitude.
       He ruminated upon his own hard fate--the meanness of man-kind--the burning wrongs, as he felt confident, of other times, Fortune's inexorable persecution of his family, and the stygian gulf that deepened between him and the object of his love; and his soul darkened with a fierce despair, and with unshaped but evil thoughts that invited the tempter.
       The darkness and associations of the place were unwholesome, and he was about to leave it for the companionship of his candle, but that, on a sudden, he thought he heard a sound nearer than the breeze among the old orchard trees.
       This was the measured breathing of some one in the room. He held his own breath while he listened--'One of the dogs,' he thought, and he called them quietly; but no dog came. 'The wind, then, in the chimney;' and he got up resolutely, designing to open the half-closed shutter. He fancied as he did so that he heard the respiration near him, and passed close to some one in the dark.
       With an unpleasant expectation he threw back the shutters, and unquestionably he did see, very unmistakably, a dark figure in a chair; so dark, indeed, that he could not discern more of it than the rude but undoubted outline of a human shape; and he stood for some seconds, holding the open shutter in his hand, and looking at it with more of the reality of fear than he had, perhaps, ever experienced before. Pale Hecate now, in the conspiracy, as it seemed, withdrew on a sudden the pall from before her face, and threw her beams full upon the figure. A slim, tall shape, in dark clothing, and, as it seemed, a countenance he had never beheld before--black hair, pale features, with a sinister-smiling character, and a very blue chin, and closed eyes.
       Fixed with a strange horror, and almost expecting to see it undergo some frightful metamorphosis, Mervyn stood gazing on the cadaverous intruder.
       'Hollo! who's that?' cried Mervyn sternly.
       The figure opened his eyes, with a wild stare, as if he had not opened them for a hundred years before, and rose up with an uncertain motion, returning Mervyn's gaze, as if he did not know where he was.
       'Who are you?' repeated Mervyn.
       The phantom seemed to recover himself slowly, and only said: 'Mr. Mervyn?'
       'Who are you, Sir?' cried Mervyn, again.
       'Zekiel Irons,' he answered.
       'Irons? what _are_ you, and what business have you here, Sir?' demanded Mervyn.
       'The Clerk of Chapelizod,' he continued, quietly and remarkably sternly, but a little thickly, like a man who had been drinking.
       Mervyn now grew angry.
       'The Clerk of Chapelizod--here--sleeping in my parlour! What the devil, Sir, do you mean?'
       'Sleep--Sir--sleep! There's them that sleeps with their eyes open. Sir--you know who they may be; there's some sleeps sound enough, like me and you; and some that's sleep-walkers,' answered Irons; and his enigmatical talk somehow subdued Mervyn, for he said more quietly--
       'Well, what of all this, Sirrah?'
       'A message,' answered Irons. The man's manner, though quiet, was dogged, and somewhat savage.
       'Give it me, then,' said Mervyn, expecting a note, and extending his hand.
       'I've nothing for your hand, Sir, 'tis for your ear,' said he.
       'From whom, then, and what?' said Mervyn, growing impatient again.
       'I ask your pardon, Mr. Mervyn; I have a good deal to do, back and forward, sometimes early, sometimes late, in the church--Chapelizod Church--all alone, Sir; and I often think of you, when I walk over the south-side vault.'
       'What's your message, I say, Sir, and who sends it,' insisted Mervyn.
       'Your father,' answered Irons.
       Mervyn looked with a black and wild sort of enquiry on the clerk--was he insane or what?--and seemed to swallow down a sort of horror, before his anger rose again.
       'You're mistaken--my father's dead,' he said, in a fierce but agitated undertone.
       'He's dead, Sir--yes,' said his saturnine visitor, with the same faint smile and cynical quietude.
       'Speak out, Sirrah; whom do you come from?'
       'The late Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Dunoran.' He spoke, as I have said, a little thickly, like a man who had drunk his modicum of liquor.
       'You've been drinking, and you dare to mix my--my father's name with your drunken dreams and babble--you wretched sot!'
       A cloud passed over the moon just then, and Irons darkened, as if about to vanish, like an offended apparition. But it was only for a minute, and he emerged in the returning light, and spoke--
       'A naggin of whiskey, at the Salmon House, to raise my heart before I came here. I'm not drunk--that's sure.' He answered, quite unmoved, like one speaking to himself.
       'And--why--what can you mean by speaking of him?' repeated Mervyn, unaccountably agitated.
       'I speak _for_ him, Sir, by your leave. Suppose he greets you with a message--and you don't care to hear it?'
       'You're mad,' said Mervyn, with an icy stare, to whom the whole colloquy began to shape itself into a dream.
       'Belike _you're_ mad, Sir,' answered Irons, in a grim, ugly tone, but with face unmoved. ''Twas not a light matter brought me here--a message--there--well!--your right honourable father, that lies in lead and oak, without a name on his coffin-lid, would have you to know that what he said was--as it should be--and I can prove it--'
       'What?--he said _what?_--what is it?--what can you prove? Speak out, Sirrah!' and his eyes shone white in the moonlight, and his hand was advanced towards Irons's throat, and he looked half beside himself, and trembling all over.
       'Put down your hand or you hear no more from me,' said Irons, also a little transformed.
       Mervyn silently lowered his hand clenched by his side, and, with compressed lips, nodded an impatient sign to him.
       'Yes, Sir, he'd have you to understand he never did it, and I can prove it--_but I won't!_'
       That moment, something glittered in Mervyn's hand, and he strode towards Irons, overturning a chair with a crash.
       'I have you--come on and you're a dead man,' said the clerk, in a hoarse voice, drawing into the deep darkness toward the door, with the dull gleam of a pistol-barrel just discernible in his extended hand.
       'Stay--don't go,' cried Mervyn, in a piercing voice; 'I conjure--I implore--whatever you are, come back--see, I'm unarmed,' (and he flung his sword back toward the window).
       'You young gentlemen are always for drawing upon poor bodies--how would it have gone if I had not looked to myself, Sir, and come furnished?' said Irons, in his own level tone.
       'I don't know--I don't _care_--I don't care if I were dead. Yes, yes, 'tis true, I almost wish he had shot me.'
       'Mind, Sir, you're on honour,' said the clerk, in his old tone, as he glided slowly back, his right hand in his coat pocket, and his eye with a quiet suspicion fixed upon Mervyn, and watching his movements.
       'I don't know what or who you are, but if ever you knew what human feeling is--I say, if you are anything at all capable of compassion, you will kill me at a blow rather than trifle any longer with the terrible hope that has been my torture--I believe my insanity, all my life.'
       'Well, Sir,' said Irons, mildly, and with that serene suspicion of a smile on his face, 'if you wish to talk to me you must take me different; for, to say truth, I was nearer killing you that time than you were aware, and all the time I mean you no harm! and yet, if I thought you were going to say to anybody living, Zekiel Irons, the clerk, was here on Tuesday night, I believe I'd shoot you now.'
       'You wish your visit secret? well, you have my honour, no one living shall hear of it,' said Mervyn. 'Go on.'
       'I've little to say, your honour; but, first, do you think your servants heard the noise just now?'
       'The old woman's deaf, and her daughter dare not stir after night-fall. You need fear no interruption.'
       'Ay, I know; the house is haunted, they say, but dead men tell no tales. 'Tis the living I fear, I thought it would be darker--the clouds broke up strangely; 'tis as much as my life's worth to me to be seen near this Tyled House; and never you speak to me nor seem to know me when you chance to meet me, do you mind, Sir? I'm bad enough myself, but there's some that's worse.'
       'Tis agreed, there shall be no recognition,' answered Mervyn.
       'There's them watching me that can see in the clouds, or the running waters, what you're thinking of a mile away, that can move as soft as ghosts, and can gripe as hard as hell, when need is. So be patient for a bit--I gave you the message--I tell you 'tis true; and as to my proving it at present, I can, you see, and I can't; but the hour is coming, only be patient, and swear, Sir, upon your soul and honour, that you won't let me come to perdition by reason of speaking the truth.'
       'On my soul and honour, I mean it,' answered Mervyn. 'Go on.'
       'Nor ever tell, high or low, rich or poor, man, woman, or child, that I came here; because--no matter.'
       'That I promise, too; for Heaven's sake go on.'
       'If you please, Sir, no, not a word more till the time comes,' answered Irons; 'I'll go as I came.' And he shoved up the window-sash and got out lightly upon the grass, and glided away among the gigantic old fruit-trees, and was lost before a minute.
       Perhaps he came intending more. He had seemed for a while to have made up his mind, Mervyn thought, to a full disclosure, and then he hesitated, and, on second thoughts, drew back. Barren and tantalising, however, as was this strange conference, it was yet worth worlds, as indicating the quarter from which information might ultimately be hoped for. _
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A Prologue--Being A Dish Of Village Chat
Chapter 1. The Rector's Night-Walk To His Church
Chapter 2. The Nameless Coffin
Chapter 3. Mr. Mervyn In His Inn
Chapter 4. The Fair-Green Of Palmerstown
Chapter 5. How The Royal Irish Artillery Entertained...
Chapter 6. In Which The Minstrelsy Proceeds
Chapter 7. Showing How Two Gentlemen May Misunderstand...
Chapter 8. Relating How Doctor Toole...
Chapter 9. How A Squire Was Found For The Knight...
Chapter 10. The Dead Secret...
Chapter 11. Some Talk About The Haunted House...
Chapter 12. Some Odd Facts About The Tiled House...
Chapter 13. In Which The Rector Visits The Tiled House...
Chapter 14. Relating How Puddock Purged O'flaherty's Head...
Chapter 15. Aesculapius To The Rescue
Chapter 16. The Ordeal By Battle
Chapter 17. Lieutenant Puddock Receives An Invitation...
Chapter 18. Relating How The Gentlemen Sat Over Their Claret...
Chapter 19. In Which The Gentlemen Follow The Ladies
Chapter 20. In Which Mr. Dangerfield Visits The Church Of Chapelizod...
Chapter 21. Relating Among Other Things...
Chapter 22. Telling How Mr. Mervyn Fared At Belmont...
Chapter 23. Which Concerns The Grand Dinner At The King's House...
Chapter 24. In Which Two Young Persons Understand One Another...
Chapter 25. In Which The Sun Sets...
Chapter 26. Relating How The Band Of The Royal Irish Artillery Played...
Chapter 27. Concerning The Troubles...
Chapter 28. In Which Mr. Irons Recounts Some Old Recollections...
Chapter 29. Showing How Poor Mrs. Macnamara Was Troubled And Haunted Too, And Opening A Budget Of Gossip
Chapter 30. Concerning A Certain Woman In Black
Chapter 31. Being A Short History Of The Great Battle Of Belmont...
Chapter 32. Narrating How Lieutenant Puddock...
Chapter 33. In Which Captain Devereux's Fiddle Plays...
Chapter 34. In Which Lilias Hears A Stave...
Chapter 35. In Which Aunt Becky And Doctor Toole...
Chapter 36. Narrating How Miss Lilias Visited Belmont...
Chapter 37. Showing How Some Of The Feuds In Chapelizod...
Chapter 38. Dreams And Troubles, And A Dark Look-Out
Chapter 39. Telling How Lilias Walsingham...
Chapter 40. Of A Messenger From Chapelizod Vault...
Chapter 41. In Which The Rector Comes Home...
Chapter 42. In Which Dr. Sturk Tries This Way...
Chapter 43. Showing How Charles Nutter's Blow Descended...
Chapter 44. Relating How, In The Watches Of The Night...
Chapter 45. Concerning A Little Rehearsal...
Chapter 46. The Closet Scene...
Chapter 47. In Which Pale Hecate Visits The Mills...
Chapter 48. Swans On The Water
Chapter 49. Swans In The Water
Chapter 50. Treating Of Some Confusion, In Consequence...
Chapter 51. How Charles Nutter's Tea, Pipe, And Tobacco-Box...
Chapter 52. Concerning A Rouleau Of Guineas And The Crack Of A Pistol
Chapter 53. Relating After What Fashion Dr. Sturk Came Home
Chapter 54. In Which Miss Magnolia Macnamara...
Chapter 55. In Which Dr. Toole, In Full Costume...
Chapter 56. Doctor Walsingham...
Chapter 57. In Which Dr. Toole And Mr. Lowe Make A Visit...
Chapter 58. In Which One Of Little Bopeep's Sheep Comes...
Chapter 59. Telling How A Coach Drew Up At The Elms...
Chapter 60. Being A Chapter Of Hoops, Feathers...
Chapter 61. In Which The Ghosts Of A By-Gone Sin Keep Tryst
Chapter 62. Of A Solemn Resolution...
Chapter 63. In Which A Liberty Is Taken...
Chapter 64. Being A Night Scene...
Chapter 65. Relating Some Awful News...
Chapter 66. Of A Certain Tempest...
Chapter 67. In Which A Certain Troubled Spirit Walks
Chapter 68. How An Evening Passes At The Elms...
Chapter 69. Concerning A Second Hurricane...
Chapter 70. In Which An Unexpected Visitor Is Seen...
Chapter 71. In Which Mr. Irons's Narrative Reaches Merton Moor
Chapter 72. In Which The Apparition Of Mr. Irons...
Chapter 73. Concerning A Certain Gentleman...
Chapter 74. In Which Doctor Toole, In His Boots...
Chapter 75. How A Gentleman Paid A Visit...
Chapter 76. Relating How The Castle Was Taken...
Chapter 77. In Which Irish Melody Prevails
Chapter 78. In Which, While The Harmony Continues...
Chapter 79. Showing How Little Lily's Life Began To Change...
Chapter 80. In Which Two Acquaintances...
Chapter 81. In Which Mr. Dangerfield Receives A Visitor...
Chapter 82. In Which Mr. Paul Dangerfield Pays His Respects...
Chapter 83. In Which The Knight Of The Silver Spectacles...
Chapter 84. In Which Christiana Goes Over; And Dan Loftus Comes Home
Chapter 85. In Which Captain Devereux Hears The News...
Chapter 86. In Which Mr. Paul Dangerfield Mounts The Stairs Of The House...
Chapter 87. In Which Two Comrades Are Tete-A-Tete...
Chapter 88. In Which Mr. Moore The Barber Arrives...
Chapter 89. In Which A Certain Songster Treats The Company...
Chapter 90. Mr. Paul Dangerfield Has Something On His Mind...
Chapter 91. Concerning Certain Documents...
Chapter 92. The Wher-Wolf
Chapter 93. In Which Doctor Toole And Dirty Davy Confer In The Blue-Room
Chapter 94. What Doctor Sturk Brought To Mind...
Chapter 95. In Which Doctor Pell Declines A Fee...
Chapter 96. About The Rightful Mrs. Nutter Of The Mills...
Chapter 97. In Which Obediah Arrives
Chapter 98. In Which Charles Archer Puts Himself Upon The Country
Chapter 99. The Story Ends