Amos Huntingdon

Theodore P. Wilson
Amos Huntingdon
By Reverend T.P. Wilson
CHAPTER ONE.
BRAVELY DONE.
"Help! help! holloa there! Master Walter--Mr
Amos--Jim--Harry--quick-- bring us a light!--lend a hand here!" Such
were the words which suddenly broke the stillness of a dark October
night, and roused up the household of Mr Walter Huntingdon, a
country gentleman living on his own estate in Derbyshire. The voice
was the coachman's, and came apparently from somewhere near the
drive-gate, which was about a couple of hundred yards from the front
door of the house. The evening had been dark and stormy; and it was in
a lull of the tempest that the ominous sounds of distress reached the
ears of the inmates of Flixworth Manor.
In a few moments all was bustle and excitement--lights flashing; feet
hurrying; voices shouting; and then a rush for the scene of danger and
trouble.
Outside the grounds in which the Manor-house stood were extensive
grass lands on either side of the public road. In the field nearest to the
drive-gate, and on the left as you entered it, was a deep and precipitous
chalk-pit, now disused. This pit was some little distance from the road
itself, and was not noticeable by persons unacquainted with the locality.
It had been there no one knew how long, and was a favourite resort of
adventurous children, a footpath to the village passing not far from its
edge. Towards this chalk-pit the startled party of rescue from the house
hurried with one consent, several of them carrying lanterns or
extemporised torches.
Ten o'clock was striking in the distant church-tower as they gathered

round the spot from which the cries for help had proceeded. A terrible
sight was dimly revealed to them in the uncertain glare cast upon it by
the lights which they carried. Hanging over the edge of the chalk-pit
was the squire's carriage. One horse had broken away from the traces,
but the other was struggling violently, and seemed likely, in its
plungings, to force the carriage still further over the precipitous side of
the pit. The coachman, who had managed to spring unharmed from the
box, was doing his best to restrain the violence of the terrified animal,
but with only partial success; while the situation of Mr Huntingdon
himself and of his maiden sister, who were inside the carriage, was
perilous and distressing in the extreme.
The accident had been caused by a strange and savage dog suddenly
springing at the horses' heads as the carriage was nearing the outer gate.
The night was very dark, and the horses, which were young and full of
spirit, being startled by the unexpected attack of the dog, which
belonged to some passing traveller, sprang violently out of the road,
and, easily crashing through the wooden fence, which happened to be
unusually weak just at that part, carried the carriage along with them to
the very edge of the chalk-pit, spite of all the efforts of the coachman to
hold them in; so that when the people of the Manor-house came to the
rescue, they found the carriage and its occupants in a most critical
position.
Not a moment was to be lost. Jim, the stable-boy, was quickly by the
side of the coachman, who was almost exhausted with his efforts to
curb the terrified horse, the animal becoming still more excited by the
flare of the lights and the rush of the newcomers.
"Cut the traces, man! cut the traces!" cried Harry the butler, as he
gained the spot.
"Do nothing of the sort," said a voice close by him. "Don't you see that
there may be nothing to hold the carriage up, if you cut the traces? it
may fall sheer over into the chalk-pit.--Steady, Beauty! steady, poor
Beauty!" These last words came from a young man who evidently had
authority over the servants, and spoke calmly but firmly, at the same
time patting and soothing the terror-stricken animal, which, though still

trembling in every limb, had ceased its frantic plungings.
"William," continued the same speaker, addressing the coachman,
"keep her still, if you can, till we have got my father and aunt out."
Just at that moment a boy of about seventeen years of age sprang on to
the front wheel, which was a little tilted on one side, and with a violent
wrench opened the carriage-door. "Father, dear father," he cried, "are
you there? are you hurt?"
For a moment no reply was made; then in a stifled voice came the
words, "Save your aunt, my dear boy, save your aunt!"
Miss Huntingdon, who was nearest the door, and had contrived to cling
to a stout strap at the side of it, was now dragged with difficulty, by the
joint efforts of her nephew and the butler, out on to the firm ground.
Walter,
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