THE 'Green Pig' stood in the solitude of the North Road. Its simple front,
its neatly balanced windows, curtained with white, gave it an air of
comfort and tranquillity. The smoke which curled from its hospitable
chimney spoke of warmth and good fare.
To pass it was to spurn the last chance of a bottle for many a weary mile,
and the prudent traveller would always rest an hour by its ample fireside,
or gossip with its fantastic hostess. Now, the hostess of the little inn
was Ellen Roach, friend and accomplice of Sixteen-String Jack, once the
most famous woman in England, and still after a weary stretch at Botany
Bay the strangest of companions, the most buxom of spinsters. Her beauty
was elusive even in her triumphant youth, and middle-age had neither
softened her traits nor refined her expression. Her auburn hair, once the
glory of Covent Garden, was fading to a withered grey; she was never tall
enough to endure an encroaching stoutness with equanimity; her dumpy
figure made you marvel at her past success; and hardship had furrowed her
candid brow into wrinkles. But when she opened her lips she became
instantly animated. With a glass before her on the table, she would
prattle frankly and engagingly of the past. Strange cities had she seen;
she had faced the dangers of an adventurous life with calmness and good
temper. And yet Botany Bay, with its attendant horrors, was already fading
from her memory. In imagination she was still with her incomparable hero,
and it was her solace, after fifteen years, to sing the praise and echo
the perfections of Sixteen-String Jack.
'How well I remember,' she would murmur, as though unconscious of her
audience, 'the unhappy day when Jack Rann was first arrested.
It was May, and he came back travel-stained and weary in the brilliant
dawn. He had stopped a one-horse shay near the nine-mile stone on the
Hounslow Road—every word of his confession is burnt into my brain—and
had taken a watch and a handful of guineas. I was glad enough of the
money, for there was no penny in the house, and presently I sent the
maid-servant to make the best bargain she could with the watch. But the
silly jade, by the saddest of mishaps, took the trinket straight to the
very man who made it, and he, suspecting a theft, had us both arrested.
Even then Jack might have been safe, had not the devil prompted me to
speak the truth. Dismayed by the magistrate, I owned, wretched woman that
I was, that I had received the watch from Rann, and in two hours Jack also
was under lock and key. Yet, when we were sent for trial I made what
amends I could. I declared on oath that I had never seen Sixteen-String
Jack in my life; his name came to my lips by accident; and, hector as they
would, the lawyers could not frighten me to an acknowledgment. Meanwhile
Jack's own behaviour was grand. I was the proudest woman in England as I
stood by his side in the dock. When you compared him with Sir John
Fielding, you did not doubt for an instant which was the finer gentleman.
And what a dandy was my Jack! Though he came there to answer for his life,
he was all ribbons and furbelows. His irons were tied up with the
daintiest blue bows, and in the breast of his coat he carried a bundle of
flowers as large as a birch-broom. His neck quivered in the noose, yet he
was never cowed to civility. 'I know no more of the matter than you do,'
he cried indignantly, 'nor half so much neither,' and if the magistrate
had not been an ill-mannered oaf, he would not have dared to disbelieve my
true-hearted Jack. That time we escaped with whole skins; and off we went,
after dinner, to Vauxhall, where Jack was more noticed than the fiercest
of the bloods, and where he filled the heart of George Barrington with
envy. Nor was he idle, despite his recent escape: he brought away two
watches and three purses from the Garden, so that our necessities were
amply supplied. Ah, I should have been happy in those days if only Jack
had been faithful. But he had a roving eye and a joyous temperament; and
though he loved me better than any of the baggages to whom he paid court,
he would not visit me so often as he should. Why, once he was hustled off
to Bow Street because the watch caught him climbing in at Doll Frampton's
window. And she, the shameless minx, got him off by declaring in open
court that she would be proud to receive him whenever he would deign to
ring at her bell. That is the penalty of loving a great man: you must
needs share his affection with a set of unworthy wenches. Yet Jack was
always kind to me, and I was the chosen companion of his pranks.
'Never can I forget the splendid figure he cut that day at Bagnigge Wells.
We had driven down in our coach, and all the world marvelled at our
magnificence. Jack was brave in a scarlet coat, a tambour waistcoat, and
white silk stockings. From the knees of his breeches streamed the strings
(eight at each), whence he got his name, and as he plucked off his
lace-hat the dinner-table rose at him. That was a moment worth living for,
and when, after his first bottle, Jack rattled the glasses, and declared
himself a highwayman, the whole company shuddered. "But, my friends,"
quoth he, "to-day I am making holiday, so that you have naught to fear."
When the wine 's in, the wit 's out, and Jack could never stay his hand
from the bottle. The more he drank, the more he bragged, until, thoroughly
fuddled, he lost a ring from his finger, and charged the miscreants in the
room with stealing it. "However," hiccupped he, "'tis a mere nothing,
worth a paltry hundred pounds—less than a lazy evening's work. So
I'll let the trifling theft pass." But the cowards were not content with
Jack's generosity, and seizing upon him, they thrust him neck and crop
through the window. They were seventeen to one, the craven-hearted loons;
and I could but leave the marks of my nails on the cheek of the foremost,
and follow my hero into the yard, where we took coach, and drove sulkily
back to Covent Garden.
'And yet he was not always in a mad humour; in fact, Sixteen-String Jack,
for all his gaiety, was a proud, melancholy man. The shadow of the tree
was always upon him, and he would make me miserable by talking of his
certain doom. "I have a hundred pounds in my pocket," he would say; "I
shall spend that, and then I shan't last long." And though I never thought
him serious, his prophecy came true enough. Only a few months before the
end we had visited Tyburn together. With his usual carelessness, he passed
the line of constables who were on guard.
"It is very proper," said he, in his jauntiest tone, "that I should be a
spectator on this melancholy occasion." And though none of the dullards
took his jest, they instantly made way for him. For my Jack was always a
gentleman, though he was bred to the stable, and his bitterest enemy could
not have denied that he was handsome. His open countenance was as honest
as the day, and the brown curls over his forehead were more elegant than
the smartest wig. Wherever he went the world did him honour, and many a
time my vanity was sorely wounded. I was a pretty girl, mind you, though
my travels have not improved my beauty; and I had many admirers before
ever I picked up Jack Rann at a masquerade. Why, there was a Templar, with
two thousand a year, who gave me a carriage and servants while I still
lived at the dressmaker's in Oxford Street, and I was not out of my teens
when the old Jew in St. Mary Axe took me into keeping. But when Jack was
by, I had no chance of admiration. All the eyes were glued upon him, and
his poor doxy had to be content with a furtive look thrown over a
stranger's shoulder. At Barnet races, the year before they sent me across
the sea, we were followed by a crowd the livelong day; and truly Jack, in
his blue satin waistcoat laced with silver, might have been a peer. At any
rate, he had not his equal on the course, and it is small wonder that
never for a moment were we left to ourselves.
'But happiness does not last for ever; only too often we were gravelled
for lack of money, and Jack, finding his purse empty, could do naught else
than hire a hackney and take to the road again, while I used to lie awake
listening to the watchman's raucous voice, and praying God to send back my
warrior rich and scatheless. So times grew more and more difficult. Jack
would stay a whole night upon the heath, and come home with an empty
pocket or a beggarly half crown. And there was nothing, after a shabby
coat that he hated half so much as a sheriff's officer. "Learn a lesson in
politeness," he said to one of the wretches who dragged him off to the
Marshalsea. "When Sir John Fielding's people come after me they use me
genteelly; they only hold up a finger, beckon me, and I follow as quietly
as a lamb. But you bluster and insult, as though you had never dealings
with gentlemen." Poor Jack, he was of a proud stomach, and could not abide
interference; yet they would never let him go free. And he would have been
so happy had he been allowed his own way. To pull out a rusty pistol now
and again, and to take a purse from a traveller—surely these were
innocent pleasures, and he never meant to hurt a fellow-creature. But for
all his kindness of heart, for all his love of splendour and fine clothes,
they took him at last.
'And this time, too, it was a watch which was our ruin. How often did I
warn him: "Jack," I would say, "take all the money you can. Guineas tell
no tale. But leave the watches in their owners' fobs." Alas! he did not
heed my words, and the last man he ever stopped on the road was that
pompous rascal, Dr. Bell, then chaplain to the Princess Amelia. "Give me
your money," screamed Jack, "and take no notice or I'll blow your brains
out." And the doctor gave him all that he had, the mean-spirited
devil-dodger, and it was no more than eighteenpence. Now what should a man
of courage do with eighteenpence? So poor Jack was forced to seize the
parson's watch and trinkets as well, and thus it was that a second time we
faced the Blind Beak.
When Jack brought home the watch, I was seized with a shuddering
presentiment, and I would have given the world to throw it out of the
window. But I could not bear to see him pinched with hunger, and he had
already tossed the doctor's eighteenpence to a beggar woman. So I trudged
off to the pawnbroker's, to get what price I could, and I bethought me
that none would know me for what I was so far away as Oxford Street. But
the monster behind the counter had a quick suspicion, though I swear I
looked as innocent as a babe; he discovered the owner of the watch, and
infamously followed me to my house.
'The next day we were both arrested, and once more we stood in the hot,
stifling Court of the Old Bailey. Jack was radiant as ever, the one spot
of colour and gaiety in that close, sodden atmosphere. When we were taken
from Bow Street a thousand people formed our guard of honour, and for a
month we were the twin wonders of London. The lightest word, the fleetest
smile of the renowned highwayman, threw the world into a fit of
excitement, and a glimpse of Rann was worth a king's ransom. I could look
upon him all day for nothing! And I knew what a fever of fear throbbed
behind his mask of happy contempt. Yet bravely he played the part unto the
very end. If the toasts of London were determined to gaze at him, he
assured them they should have a proper salve for their eyes. So he dressed
himself as a light-hearted sportsman. His coat and waistcoat were of
pea-green cloth; his buckskin breeches were spotlessly new, and all
tricked out with the famous strings; his hat was bound round with silver
cords; and even the ushers of the Court were touched to courtesy. He would
whisper to me, as we stood in the dock, "Cheer up, my girl. I have ordered
the best supper that Covent Garden can provide, and we will make merry
to-night when this foolish old judge has done his duty." The supper was
never eaten. Through the weary afternoon we waited for acquittal. The
autumn sun sank in hopeless gloom. The wretched lamps twinkled through the
jaded air of the court-house. In an hour I lived a thousand years of
misery, and when the sentence was read, the words carried no sense to my
withered brain. It was only in my cell I realised that I had seen Jack
Rann for the last time; that his pea-green coat would prove a final and
ineffaceable memory.
'Alas! I, who had never been married, was already a hempen widow; but I
was too hopelessly heartbroken for my lover's fate to think of my own
paltry hardship. I never saw him again. They told me that he suffered at
Tyburn like a man, and that he counted upon a rescue to the very end. They
told me (still bitterer news to hear) that two days before his death he
entertained seven women at supper, and was in the wildest humour. This
almost broke my heart; it was an infidelity committed on the other side of
the grave. But, poor Jack, he was a good lad, and loved me more than them
all, though he never could be faithful to me.' And thus, bidding the
drawer bring fresh glasses, Ellen Roach would end her story. Though she
had told it a hundred times, at the last words a tear always sparkled in
her eye. She lived without friend and without lover, faithful to the
memory of Sixteen-String Jack, who for her was the only reality in the
world of shades. Her middle-age was as distant as her youth. The
dressmaker's in Oxford Street was as vague a dream as the inhospitable
shore of Botany Bay. So she waited on to a weary eld, proud of the 'Green
Pig's' well-ordered comfort, prouder still that for two years she shared
the glory of Jack Rann, and that she did not desert her hero, even in his
punishment.
