“I suppose I shall have the rough side of Mother Mim’s tongue when I do find her,” he went on. “I’ve neglected her shamefully, without a doubt. But such ties as the one between her and me become tiresome in the long run. She ought to have died off long ago, but she’s as tough as leather. Poor devils in this part of the country, that haven’t a penny to bless themselves with, think nothing of living till they’re a hundred. Is it a superfluity of ozone, or a want of brains, that keeps them alive so long?”
He rode steadily forward till he had nearly crossed one angle of the moor. At length, but not without some difficulty, he found the place he had come in search of. It was a rudely-built hut—cottage it could hardly be called—composed of mud, and turf, and great boulders all unhewn. Its roof of coarsest thatch was frayed and worn with the wind and rain of many winters. Its solitary door of old planks, roughly nailed together, opened full on to the moor.
At the back was a patch of garden-ground, which was supposed to grow potatoes in the season, but which had never yet been known to grow any that were fit to eat. Mr. St. George looked round with a sneer as he dismounted.
“And it was in this wretched den that I spent the first eight years of my existence!” he muttered. “And the woman whom this place calls its mistress was the first being whom I learned to love! And, faith, I’m rather doubtful whether I’ve ever loved anybody half so well since.”
Putting his horse’s bridle over a convenient hook, and dispensing with the ceremony of knocking, Kester St. George lifted the latch, pushed open the door, stooped his head, and went in. Inside the hut everything was in semi-darkness, and Kester stood for a minute with the door in his hand, striving to make out the objects before him.
“Come in and shut the door: I expected you,” said a hollow voice from one corner of the room; and the one room, such as it was, comprised the whole hut.
“Is that you, Mother Mim?” asked Kester.
“Ay—who else should it be?” answered the voice. “But come in and shut the door. That cold wind gives me the shivers.”
Kester did as he was told, and then made his way to a wretched pallet at the other end of the hut. Of furniture there was hardly any, and the aspect of the whole place was miserable in the extreme. Over the ashes of a wood fire crouched a girl of sixteen, ragged and unkempt, who stared at him with black, glittering eyes as he passed her. Next moment he was standing by the side of a ragged pallet, on which lay the figure of a woman who looked ill almost unto death.
“Why, mother, whatever has been the matter with you?” asked Kester. “A little bit out of sorts, eh? But you’ll soon be all right again now.”