A Terrible Night
Some hours later, I woke up. A terrible cry had woken me. The
moon was bright. Its light was shining through my window. I
listened. Then I heard somebody shouting.
'Help! Help! Rochester, help me!'
The voice came from the top corridor.
'Help! Help!'
I got out of bed and I put on a dress and some shoes. I opened
my door. All the guests were in the corridor outside the bedrooms.
They were all asking questions.
'What happened?' they asked. 'Is there a fire? Who is hurt?
Where is Mr. Rochester?'
'I am here!' Mr. Rochester said. He was walking down the
stairs from the top corridor.
'What is wrong, Mr. Rochester?' Miss Ingram asked. 'What has
happened?'
'Nothing is wrong,
1
Mr. Rochester replied. 'One of the servants
has had a bad dream. Go back to bed!'
I went back to my room. But something was wrong. I did not
get into my bed. I waited. Soon, somebody knocked on my door. I
opened the door. Mr. Rochester was standing in the corridor.
'Jane, follow me. Do not make a sound,' Mr. Rochester said.
We went up to the top corridor. Mr. Rochester
unlocked a door and we went inside a room.
Mr. Mason was sitting on a chair in the room. His face was
pale. And his shirt was covered with blood! Then I heard a terrible
laugh. The sound came from the next room.
'Grace Poole is a madwoman,' I thought. 'Why does Mr.
Rochester have a mad servant?'
Mr. Rochester spoke quietly to Mr. Mason.
'I am going to bring a doctor, Richard,' he said.
Then he spoke to me. 'Stay here, Jane. Wash Mr. Mason's arm.
But do not speak to him.'
Mr. Rochester left the room. I washed Mr. Mason's arm. We
waited for Mr. Rochester and the doctor. Mr. Mason did not speak
to me and I did not speak to him.
After two hours, Mr. Rochester returned. The doctor was with
him. The doctor looked at Mr. Mason's arm.
'She bit me,' Mr. Mason said. 'I came up here. I wanted to see
her. I wanted to help her. But she bit me!'
'Be quiet now, Richard,' Mr. Rochester said quickly.
The doctor put a bandage on Mr. Mason's arm. Mr. Rochester
put Mr. Mason's coat round the injured man's shoulders. Then he
spoke to me again.
'Run downstairs, Jane. Unlock the small door at the side of the
house,' he said. 'We will follow you.'
I went quickly downstairs and I opened the door. Outside the
door, a servant was waiting with a carriage. Mr. Mason and the
doctor came out of the house. They got into the carriage. Then Mr.
Rochester came out of the house too. Mr. Mason spoke to him
through the window of the carriage.
'Help her. Be kind to her, Rochester,' he said.
'Yes, I will, Mason,' Mr. Rochester said.
The servant drove the carriage away.
'Will you walk in the garden with me, Jane?' Mr. Rochester
asked. 'I do not want to sleep now.'
'Yes, I will, sir,' I said.
Soon, it was morning. The birds were beginning to sing. The
flowers had a sweet smell.
'It has been a strange night, Jane,' Mr. Rochester said. 'Were
you frightened?'
'I am frightened of Grace Poole,' I said. 'She will hurt you, one
day.'
'I am stronger than she is. She will not hurt me,' Mr. Rochester
said. He looked at me for a few moments. 'Are you my friend,
Jane?' he asked me.
'Yes, sir. I will be your friend forever!' 1 replied.
'Thank you, my dear,' Mr. Rochester said. 'I have made
mistakes. Now, I want to be happy. That is not wrong, is it, Jane?'
He stopped speaking for a minute. Then he said, 'Go into the
house. I'll talk to you tomorrow.'
But the next day, I had a letter from Gateshead Hall, my Aunt
Reed's house. The letter was from my Cousin
Eliza.
I started the journey to my Aunt Reed's house immediately. I
arrived there the next day. My Aunt Reed was very, very ill. She
could not move. And she did not speak to me. I wanted to return to
Thornfield Hall. I wanted to see Mr. Rochester. But Eliza wanted
me to stay at Gateshead Hall.
After three weeks, my aunt spoke to me at last. She spoke very
slowly.
'Are you Jane Eyre?' she asked.
'Yes, Aunt Reed. I am Jane Eyre,' I replied.
'There is a letter for you,' Aunt Reed said. 'It is in my desk. Call
Eliza, please. She will get the letter.'
Eliza came into the room. She opened the desk and she gave
me a letter.
'Read the letter, Jane,' my aunt said. The letter had come from
Madeira. But it was three years old.
'I answered that letter,' Aunt Reed said. 'I hated you, Jane. I did
not want you to have your uncle's money. I wrote to John Eyre. I
wrote, "Jane Eyre is dead. She died at Lowood School." I am
sorry, Jane, I was wrong.'
Mr.s Reed died that night. I left Gateshead Hall a few days
later. I took my uncle's letter with me.
Mr. Rochester met me at Thornfield Hall.
'Welcome back to my house,' he said. 'This is your home, Jane.'
'Thank you, sir,' I said. 'I am very happy here.'
Mr. Rochester's guests had left. No other visitors came to
Thornfield Hall. Every day, Mr. Rochester and I talked together.
And every day, I loved him more.
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