PART FIRST -- THE QUARRY AND THE
BEACH ROMANCE
CHAPTER ONE
To yesterday and to to-day I say
my polite "vaya usted con Dios." What are these days to me? But
that far-off day of my romance, when from between the blue and
white bales in Don Ramon's darkened storeroom, at Kingston, I
saw the door open before the figure of an old man with the tired,
long, white face, that day I am not likely to forget. I remember
the chilly smell of the typical West Indian store, the
indescribable smell of damp gloom, of locos, of pimento, of olive
oil, of new sugar, of new rum; the glassy double sheen of Ramon's
great spectacles, the piercing eyes in the mahogany face, while
the tap, tap, tap of a cane on the flags went on behind the inner
door; the click of the latch; the stream of light. The door,
petulantly thrust inwards, struck against some barrels. I remember
the rattling of the bolts on that door, and the tall figure that
appeared there, snuffbox in hand. In that land of white clothes,
that precise, ancient, Castilian in black was something to
remember. The black cane that had made the tap, tap, tap dangled
by a silken cord from the hand whose delicate blue-veined,
wrinkled wrist ran back into a foam of lawn ruffles. The other hand
paused in the act of conveying a pinch of snuff to the nostrils of
the hooked nose that had, on the skin stretched tight over the
bridge, the polish of old ivory; the elbow pressing the black
cocked-hat against the side; the legs, one bent, the other bowing a
little back--this was the attitude of Seraphina's father.
Having imperiously thrust the
door of the inner room open, he remained immovable, with no
intention of entering, and called in a harsh, aged voice: "Señor
Ramon! Señor Ramon!" and then twice: "Sera-phina--Seraphina!"
turning his head back.
Then for the first time I saw
Seraphina, looking over her father's shoulder. I remember her face
on that day; her eyes were gray--the gray of black, not of blue.
For a moment they looked me straight in the face, reflectively,
unconcerned, and then travelled to the spectacles of old
Ramon.
This glance--remember I was young
on that day--had been enough to set me wondering what they were
thinking of me; what they could have seen of me.
"But there he is--your Señor
Ramon," she said to her father, as if she were chiding him for
a petulance in calling; "your sight is not very good, my poor
little father--there he is, your Ramon."
The warm reflection of the light
behind her, gilding the curve of her face from ear to chin, lost
itself in the shadows of black lace falling from dark hair that was
not quite black. She spoke as if the words clung to her lips; as if
she had to put them forth delicately for fear of damaging the frail
things. She raised her long hand to a white flower that clung above
her ear like the pen of a clerk, and disappeared.
Ramon hurried with a stiffness of
immense respect towards the ancient grandee. The door swung
to.
I remained alone. The blue bales
and the white, and the great red oil jars loomed in the dim light
filtering through the jalousies out of the blinding sunlight of
Jamaica. A moment after, the door opened once more and a young man
came out to me; tall, slim, with very bright, very large black eyes
aglow in an absolute pallor of face. That was Carlos Riego.
Well, that is my yesterday of
romance, for the many things that have passed between those times
and now have become dim or have gone out of my mind. And my day
before yesterday was the day on which I, at twenty-two, stood
looking at myself in the tall glass, the day on which I left my
home in Kent and went, as chance willed it, out to sea with
Carlos Riego.
That day my cousin Rooksby had
become engaged to my sister Veronica, and I had a fit of jealous
misery. I was rawboned, with fair hair, I had a good skin,
tanned by the weather, good teeth, and brown eyes. I had not had a
very happy life, and I had lived shut in on myself, thinking of the
wide world beyond my reach, that seemed to hold out infinite
possibilities of romance, of adventure, of love, perhaps, and
stores of gold. In the family my mother counted; my father did not.
She was the daughter of a Scottish earl who had ruined himself
again and again. He had been an inventor, a projector, and my
mother had been a poor beauty, brought up on the farm we still
lived on--the last rag of land that had remained to her father.
Then she had married a good man in his way; a good enough catch;
moderately well off, very amiable, easily influenced, a
dilettante, and a bit of a dreamer, too. He had taken her into the
swim of the Regency, and his purse had not held out. So my mother,
asserting herself, had insisted upon a return to our farm, which
had been her dowry. The alternative would have been a shabby,
ignominious life at Calais, in the shadow of Brummel and
such.
My father used to sit all day by
the fire, inscribing "ideas" every now and then in a pocket-book. I
think he was writing an epic poem, and I think he was happy in an
ineffectual way. He had thin red hair, untidy for want of a valet,
a shining,
delicate, hooked nose,
narrow-lidded blue eyes, and a face with the colour and texture of
a white-heart cherry. He used to spend his days in a hooded chair.
My mother managed everything, leading an out-of-door life which
gave her face the colour of a wrinkled pippin. It was the face of a
Roman mother, tight-lipped, brown-eyed, and fierce. You may
understand the kind of woman she was from the hands she employed on
the farm. They were smugglers and night-malefactors to a man--and
she liked that. The decent, slow-witted, gently devious type of
rustic could not live under her. The neighbours round declared that
the Lady Mary Kemp's farm was a hotbed of disorder. I expect it
was, too; three of our men were hung up at Canterbury on one
day--for horse-stealing and arson.
Anyhow, that
was my mother. As for me, I was
under her, and, since I had my aspirations, I had a rather bitter
childhood. And I had others to contrast myself with. First
there was Rooksby: a pleasant, well-spoken, amiable young squire of
the immediate neighbourhood; young Sir Ralph, a man popular with
all sorts, and in love with my sister Veronica from early days.
Veronica was very beautiful, and very gentle, and very kind; tall,
slim, with sloping white shoulders and long white arms, hair the
colour of amber, and startled blue eyes--a good mate for Rooksby.
Rooksby had foreign relations, too. The uncle from whom he
inherited the Priory had married a Riego, a Castilian, during the
Peninsular war. He had been a prisoner at the time--he had died
in Spain, I think. When Ralph made the grand tour, he had made the
acquaintance of his Spanish relations; he used to talk about
them, the Riegos, and Veronica used to talk of what he said of
them until they came to stand for Romance, the romance of the outer
world, to me. One day, a little before Ralph and Veronica became
engaged, these Spaniards descended out of the blue. It was Romance
suddenly dangled right before my eyes. It was Romance; you have no
idea what it meant to me to talk to Carlos Riego.
Rooksby was kind enough. He had
me over to the Priory, where I made the acquaintance of the two
maiden ladies, his second cousins, who kept house for him. Yes,
Ralph was kind; but I rather hated him for it, and was a little
glad when he, too, had to suffer some of the pangs of
jealousy--jealousy of Carlos Riego.
Carlos was dark, and of a grace
to set Ralph as much in the shade as Ralph himself set me;
and Carlos had seen a deal more of the world than Ralph. He
had a foreign sense of humour that made him forever ready to
sacrifice his personal dignity. It made Veronica laugh, and even
drew a grim smile from my mother; but it gave Ralph bad moments.
How he came into these parts was a little of a mystery. When
Ralph was displeased with this Spanish connection he used to swear
that Carlos had cut a throat or taken a purse. At other times he
used to say that it was a political matter. In fine, Carlos had the
hospitality of the Priory, and the title of Count when he chose to
use it. He brought with him a short, pursy, bearded
companion, half friend, half servant, who said he had served in
Napoleon's Spanish contingent, and had a way of striking his breast
with a
wooden hand (his arm had suffered
in a cavalry charge), and exclaiming, "I, Tomas Castro! . . ." He
was an Andalusian.
For myself, the first shock of
his strangeness over-come, I adored Carlos, and Veronica liked him,
and laughed at him, till one day he said good-by and rode off along
the London road, followed by his Tomas Castro. I had an intense
longing to go with him out into the great world that brooded all
round our foothills.
You are to remember that I knew
nothing whatever of that great world. I had never been further away
from our farm than just to Canterbury school, to Hythe market, to
Romney market. Our farm nestled down under the steep, brown
downs, just beside the Roman road to Canterbury; Stone Street--the
Street--we called it. Ralph's land was just on the other side of
the Street, and the shepherds on the downs used to see of nights a
dead-and-gone Rooksby, Sir Peter that was, ride upon it past the
quarry with his head under his arm. I don't think I believed in
him, but I believed in the smugglers who shared the highway with
that horrible ghost. It is impossible for any one nowadays-to
conceive the effect these smugglers had upon life thereabouts and
then. They were the power to which everything else deferred. They
used to overrun the country in great bands, and brooked no
interference with their business. Not long before they had defeated
regular troops in a pitched battle on the Marsh, and on the very
day I went away I remember we couldn't do our carting because the
smugglers had given us notice they would need our horses in the
evening. They were a power in the land where there was violence
enough without them, God knows! Our position on that Street put us
in the midst of it all. At dusk we shut our doors, pulled down our
blinds, sat round the fire, and knew pretty well what was going on
outside. There would be long whistles in the dark, and when we
found men lurking in our barns we feigned not to see them--it was
safer so. The smugglers--the Free Traders, they called
themselves--were as well organized for helping malefactors out of
the country as for running goods in; so it came about that we used
to have comers and forgers, murderers and French spies--all sorts
of malefactors--hiding in our straw throughout the day, wait-for
the whistle to blow from the Street at dusk. I, born with my
century, was familiar with these things; but my mother forbade my
meddling with them. I expect she knew enough herself--all the
resident gentry did. But Ralph--though he was to some extent of
the new school, and used to boast that, if applied to, he
"would grant a warrant against any Free Trader"-- never did, as a
matter of fact, or not for many years.
Carlos, then, Rooksby's Spanish
kinsman, had come and gone, and I envied him his going, with his
air of mystery, to some far-off lawless adventures--perhaps over
there in Spain, where there were war and rebellion. Shortly
afterwards Rooksby proposed for the hand of Veronica and was
accepted--by my mother.
Veronica went about looking
happy. That upset me, too. It seemed unjust that
she should go out into the great
world--to Bath, to Brighton, should see the Prince Regent and the
great fights on Hounslow Heath--whilst I was to remain forever a
farmer's boy. That afternoon I was upstairs, looking at the
reflection of myself in the tall glass, wondering miserably why I
seemed to be such an oaf.
The voice of Rooksby hailed me
suddenly from downstairs. "Hey, John--John Kemp; come down, I
say!"
I started away from the glass as
if I had been taken in an act of folly. Rooksby was flicking his
leg with his switch in the doorway, at the bottom of the narrow
flight of stairs.
He wanted to talk to me, he said,
and I followed him out through the yard on to the soft road that
climbs the hill to westward. The evening was falling slowly and
mournfully; it was dark already in the folds of the sombre
downs.
We passed the corner of the
orchard. "I know what you've got to tell me," I said. "You're going
to marry Veronica. Well, you've no need of my blessing. Some people
have all the luck. Here am I . . . look at me!"
Ralph walked with his head bent
down.
"Confound it," I said, "I shall
run away to sea! I tell you, I'm rotting, rotting! There! I say,
Ralph, give me Carlos' direction
" I caught hold of his
arm. "I'll go
after him. He'd show me a little
life. He said he would."
Ralph remained lost in a kind of
gloomy abstraction, while I went on worrying him for Carlos'
address.
"Carlos is the only soul I know
outside five miles from here. Besides, he's friends in the Indies.
That's where I want to go, and he could give me a cast. You
remember what Tomas Castro said.
"
Rooksby came to a sudden halt,
and began furiously to switch his corded legs.
"Curse Carlos, and his Castro,
too. They'll have me in jail betwixt them. They're both in my red
barn, if you want their direction.
"
He hurried on suddenly up the
hill, leaving me gazing upwards at him. When I caught him up he was
swearing--as one did in those days--and stamping his foot in the
middle of the road.
"I tell you," he said violently,
"it's the most accursed business! That Castro, with
his Cuba, is nothing but a
blasted buccaneer... and Carlos is no better. They go to Liverpool
for a passage to Jamaica, and see what comes of it!"
It seems that on Liverpool docks,
in the owl-light, they fell in with an elderly hunks just returned
from West Indies, who asks the time at the door of a shipping
agent. Castro pulls out a watch, and the old fellow jumps on it,
vows it's his own, taken from him years before by some picaroons on
his outward voyage. Out from the agent's comes another, and swears
that Castro is one of the self- same crew. He himself purported
to be the master of the very ship. Afterwards--in the solitary dusk
among the ropes and bales--there had evidently been some play with
knives, and it ended with a flight to London, and then down to
Rooksby's red barn, with the runners in full cry after them.
"Think of it," Rooksby said, "and
me a justice, and... oh, it drives me wild, this hole-and-corner
work! There's a filthy muddle with the Free Traders--a whistle to
blow after dark at the quarry. To-night of all nights, and me a
justice... and as good as a married man!"
I looked at him wonderingly in
the dusk; his high coat collar almost hid his face, and his hat was
pressed down over his eyes. The thing seemed incredible to me. Here
was an adventure, and I was shocked to see that Rooksby was in a
pitiable state about it.
"But, Ralph," I said, "I would
help Carlos."
"Oh, you," he said fretfully.
"You want to run your head into a noose; that's what it comes to.
Why, I may have to flee the country. There's the red-breasts poking
their noses into every cottage on the Ashford road." He strode on
again. A wisp of mist came stealing down the hill. "I can't give my
cousin up. He could be smuggled out, right enough. But then I
should have to get across salt water, too, for at least a year. Why
"
He seemed ready to tear his hair,
and then I put in my say. He needed a little persuasion, though, in
spite of Veronica.
I should have to meet Carlos
Riego and Castro in a little fir-wood above the quarry, in half
an hour's time. All I had to do was to whistle three bars of
"Lillibulero," as a signal. A connection had been already arranged
with the Free Traders on the road beside the quarry, and they were
coming down that night, as we knew well enough, both of us. They
were coming in force from Canterbury way down to the Marsh. It had
cost Ralph a pretty penny; but, once in the hands of the smugglers,
his cousin and Castro would be safe enough from the runners; it
would have needed a troop of horse to take them. The difficulty was
that of late
the smugglers themselves had
become demoralized. There were ugly rumours of it; and there was a
danger that Castro and Carlos, if not looked after, might end their
days in some marsh-dyke. It was desirable that someone well known
in our parts should see them to the seashore. A boat, there, was to
take them out into the bay, where an outward-bound West Indiaman
would pick them up. But for Ralph's fear for his neck, which had
increased in value since its devotion to Veronica, he would have
squired his cousin. As it was, he fluttered round the idea of
letting me take his place. Finally he settled it; and I embarked
on a long adventure.
CHAPTER TWO
Between moonrise and sunset I was
stumbling through the bracken of the little copse that was like a
tuft of hair on the brow of the great white quarry. It was quite
dark, in among the trees. I made the circuit of the copse,
whistling softly my three bars of "Lillibulero." Then I plunged
into it. The bracken underfoot rustled and rustled. I came to a
halt. A little bar of light lay on the horizon in front of me,
almost colourless. It was crossed again and again by the small
fir-trunks that were little more than wands. A woodpigeon rose with
a sudden crash of sound, flapping away against the branches. My
pulse was dancing with delight--my heart, too. It was like a game
of hide-and-seek, and yet it was life at last.
Everything grew silent again and
I began to think I had missed my time. Down below in the plain, a
great way off, a dog was barking continuously. I moved forward a
few paces and whistled. The glow of adventure began to die away.
There was nothing at all--a little mystery of light on the
tree-trunks.
I moved forward again, getting
back towards the road. Against the glimmer of dead light I thought
I caught the outlines of a man's hat down among the tossing lines
of the bracken. I whispered loudly:
"Carlos! Carlos!"
There was a moment of hoarse
whispering; a sudden gruff sound. A shaft of blazing yellow light
darted from the level of the ground into my dazed eyes. A man
sprang at me and thrust something cold and knobby into my
neckcloth. The light continued to blaze into my eyes; it moved
upwards and shone on a red waistcoat dashed with gilt buttons. I
was being arrested.... "In the King's name
" It was a
most sudden catastrophe. A hand
was clutching my windpipe.
"Don't you so much as squeak, Mr.
Castro," a voice whispered in my ear. The lanthorn light suddenly
died out, and I heard whispers.
"Get him out on to the road....
I'll tackle the other . . . Darbies.
Mind his
knife."
I was like a confounded rabbit in
their hands. One of them had his fist on my collar and jerked me
out upon the hard road. We rolled down the embankment, but he was
on the top. It seemed an abominable episode, a piece of bad faith
on the part of fate. I ought to have been exempt from these
sordid haps, but the man's hot leathery hand on my throat was
like a foretaste of the other collar. And
I was horribly
afraid--horribly--of the sort of mysterious potency of the laws
that these men represented, and I could think of nothing to
do.
We stood in a little slanting
cutting in the shadow. A watery light before the moon's rising
slanted downwards from the hilltop along the opposite bank. We
stood in utter silence.
"If you stir a hair," my captor
said coolly, "I'll squeeze the blood out of your throat, like a
rotten orange."
He had the calmness of one
dealing with an everyday incident; yet the incident was--it should
have been--tremendous. We stood waiting silently for an eternity,
as one waits for a hare to break covert before the beaters. From
down the long hill came a small sound of horses' hoofs--a sound
like the beating of the heart, intermittent--a muffled thud on
turf, and a faint clink of iron. It seemed to die away unheard
by the runner beside me. Presently there was a crackling of the
short pine branches, a rustle, and a hoarse whisper said from
above:
"Other's cleared, Thorns. Got
that one safe?" "All serene."
The man from above dropped down
into the road, a clumsy, cloaked figure. He turned his lanthorn
upon me, in a painful yellow glare.
"What! 'Tis the young 'un," he
grunted, after a moment. "Read the warrant, Thorns."
My captor began to fumble in his
pocket, pulled out a paper, and bent down into the light. Suddenly
he paused and looked up at me.
"This ain't
Mr. Lilly white, I
don't believe this ain't a Jack Spaniard."
The clinks of bits and
stirrup-irons came down in a waft again.
"That be hanged for a tale,
Thorns," the man with the lanthorn said sharply. "If this here
ain't Riego--or the other--I'll
"
I began to come out of my stupor.
"My name's John Kemp," I said.
The other grunted. "Hurry up,
Thorns."
"But, Mr. Lillywhite," Thorns
reasoned, "he don't speak like a Dago. Split me if he do! And we
ain't in a friendly country either, you know that. We can't afford
to rile the gentry!"
I plucked up courage.
"You'll get your heads broke," I
said, "if you wait much longer. Hark to that!"
The approaching horses had turned
off the turf on to the hard road; the steps of first one and then
another sounded out down the silent hill. I knew it was the Free
Traders from that; for except between banks they kept to the soft
roadsides as if it were an article of faith. The noise of hoofs
became that of an army.
The runners began to consult. The
shadow called Thorns was for bolting across country; but Lilly
white was not built for speed. Besides he did not know the lie of
the land, and believed the Free Traders were mere bogeys.
"They'll never touch us,"
Lillywhite grumbled. "We've a warrant... King's name
"
He was flashing his lanthorn
aimlessly up the hill.
"Besides," he began again, "we've
got this gallus bird. If he's not a Spaniard, he knows all about
them. I heard him. Kemp he may be, but he spoke Spanish up there...
and we've got something for our trouble. He'll swing, I'll lay you
a "
From far above us came a shout,
then a confused noise of voices. The moon began to get up; above
the cutting the clouds had a fringe of sudden silver. A horseman,
cloaked and muffled to the ears, trotted warily towards us.
"What's up?" he hailed from a
matter of ten yards. "What are you showing that glim for? Anything
wrong below?"
The runners kept silence; we
heard the click of a pistol lock.
"In the King's name," Lillywhite
shouted, "get off that nag and lend a hand! We've a
prisoner."
The horseman gave an incredulous
whistle, and then began to shout, his voice winding mournfully
uphill, "Hallo! Hallo--o--o." An echo stole back, "Hallo! Hallo--
o--o"; then a number of voices. The horse stood, drooping its head,
and the man turned in his saddle. "Runners," he shouted, "Bow
Street runners! Come along, come along, boys! We'll roast 'em.
Runners!
Runners!"
The sound of heavy horses at a
jolting trot came to our ears. "We're in for it," Lillywhite
grunted. "D
n this county of
Kent."
Thorns never loosed his hold of
my collar. At the steep of the hill the men and horses came into
sight against the white sky, a confused crowd of ominous
things.
"Turn that lanthorn off'n me,"
the horseman said. "Don't you see you frighten my horse? Now, boys,
get round them.
"
The great horses formed an
irregular half-circle round us; men descended clumsily, like sacks
of corn. The lanthorn was seized and flashed upon us; there was a
confused hubbub. I caught my own name.
"Yes, I'm Kemp.
John Kemp," I called. "I'm
true blue."
"Blue be hanged!" a voice shouted
back. "What be you a-doing with runners?"
The riot went on--forty or fifty
voices. The runners were seized; several hands caught at me. It was
impossible to make myself heard; a fist struck me on the
cheek.
"Gibbet 'em," somebody shrieked;
"they hung my nephew! Gibbet 'em all the three. Young Kemp's
mother's a bad 'un. An informer he is. Up with 'em!"
I was pulled down on my knees,
then thrust forward, and then left to myself while they rushed to
bonnet Lillywhite. I stumbled against a great, quiet farm
horse.
A continuous scuffling went on;
an imperious voice cried: "Hold your tongues, you fools! Hold your
tongues!.
" Someone else called:
"Hear to Jack Rangsley.
Hear to him!"
There was a silence. I saw a hand
light a torch at the lanthorn, and the crowd of faces, the muddle
of limbs, the horses' heads, and the quiet trees above, flickered
into sight.
"Don't let them hang me, Jack
Rangsley," I sobbed. "You know I'm no spy. Don't let 'em hang me,
Jack."
He rode his horse up to me, and
caught me by the collar.
"Hold your tongue," he said
roughly. He began to make a set speech,
anathematizing runners. He moved
to tie our feet, and hang us by our finger- nails over the quarry
edge.
A hubbub of assent and dissent
went up; then the crowd became unanimous. Rangsley slipped from his
horse.
"Blindfold 'em, lads," he cried,
and turned me sharply round.
"Don't struggle," he whispered in
my ear; his silk handkerchief came cool across my eyelids. I felt
hands fumbling with a knot at the back of my head. "You're all
right," he said again. The hubbub of voices ceased suddenly. "Now,
lads, bring 'em along."
A voice I knew said their
watchword, "Snuff and enough," loudly, and then, "What's
agate?"
Someone else answered, "It's
Rooksby, it's Sir Ralph."
The voice interrupted sharply,
"No names, now. I don't want hanging." The hand left my arm; there
was a pause in the motion of the procession. I caught a moment's
sound of whispering. Then a new voice cried, "Strip the runners to
the shirt. Strip 'em. That's it." I heard some groans and a cry,
"You won't murder us." Then a nasal drawl, "We will sure--ly."
Someone else, Rangsley, I think, called, "Bring 'em along--this way
now."
After a period of turmoil we
seemed to come out of the crowd upon a very rough, descending path;
Rangsley had called out, "Now, then, the rest of you be off; we've
got enough here"; and the hoofs of heavy horses sounded again. Then
we came to a halt, and Rangsley called sharply ïrom close to
me:
"Now, you runners--and you, John
Kemp--here you be on the brink of eternity, above the old quarry.
There's a sheer drop of a hundred feet. We'll tie your legs and
hang you by your fingers. If you hang long enough, you'll have time
to say your prayers. Look alive, lads!"
The voice of one of the runners
began to shout, "You'll swing for this--you
"
As for me I was in a dream.
"Jack," I said, "Jack, you won't
"
"Oh, that's all right," the voice
said in a whisper. "Mum, now! It's all right."
It withdrew itself a little from
my ear and called, "'Now then, ready with them. When I say three.
"
I heard groans and curses, and
began to shout for help. My voice came back in an echo,
despairingly. Suddenly I was dragged backward, and the bandage
pulled from my eyes,
"Come along," Rangsley said,
leading me gently enough to the road, which was five steps behind.
"It's all a joke," he snarled. "A pretty bad one for those
catchpolls. Hear 'em groan. The drop's not two feet."
We made a few paces down the
road; the pitiful voices of the runners crying for help came
plainly to my ears.
"You--they--aren't murdering
them?" I asked.
"No, no," he answered. "Can't
afford to. Wish we could; but they'd make it too hot for us."
We began to descend the hill.
From the quarry a voice shrieked: "Help--help--for the love of
God--I can't.
"
There was a grunt and the sound
of a fall; then a precisely similar sequence of sounds.
"That'll teach 'em," Rangsley
said ferociously. "Come along--they've only rolled down a bank.
They weren't over the quarry. It's all right. I swear it is."
And, as a matter of fact, that
was the smugglers' ferocious idea of humour. They would hang any
undesirable man, like these runners, whom it would make too great a
stir to murder outright, over the edge of a low bank, and swear to
him that he was clawing the brink of Shakespeare's Cliff or any
other hundred-foot drop. The wretched creatures suffered all the
tortures of death before they let go, and, as a rule, they never
returned to our parts.
CHAPTER THREE
The spirit of the age has
changed; everything has changed so utterly that one can hardly
believe in the existence of one's earlier self. But I can still
remember how, at that moment, I made the acquaintance of my
heart--a thing that bounded and leapt within my chest, a little
sickeningly. The other details I forget.
Jack Rangsley was a tall,
big-boned, thin man, with something sinister in the lines of his
horseman's cloak, and something reckless in the way he set his
spurred heel on the ground. He was the son of an old Marsh squire.
Old Rangsley had been head of the last of the Owlers--the
aristocracy of export smugglers--and Jack had sunk a little in
becoming the head of the Old Bourne Tap importers.
But he was hard enough,
tyrannical enough, and had nerve enough to keep Free- trading alive
in our parts until long after it had become an anachronism. He
ended his days on the gallows, of course, but that was long
afterwards.
"I'd give a dollar to know what's
going on in those runners' heads," Rangsley said, pointing back
with his crop. He laughed gayly. The great white face of the quarry
rose up pale in the moonlight; the dusky red fires of the limekilns
glowed at the base, sending up a blood-red dust of sullen smoke.
"I'll swear they think they've dropped straight into hell.
"You'll have to cut the country,
John," he added suddenly, "they'll have got your name uncommon pat.
I did my best for you." He had had me tied up like that before the
runners' eyes in order to take their suspicions off me. He had made
a pretence to murder me with the same idea. But he didn't believe
they were taken in. "There'll be warrants out before morning, if
they ain't too shaken. But what were you doing in the business?
The two Spaniards were lying in the fern looking on when you come
blundering your clumsy nose in. If it hadn't been for Rooksby you
might have
Hullo, there!" he broke
off.
An answer came from the black
shadow of a clump of roadside elms. I made out the forms of three
or four horses standing with their heads together.
"Come along," Rangsley said; "up
with you. We'll talk as we go."
Someone helped me into a saddle;
my legs trembled in the stirrups as if I had ridden a thousand
miles on end already. I imagine I must have fallen into a stupor;
for I have only a vague impression of somebody's exculpating
himself to me. As a matter of fact, Ralph, after having egged me
on, in the intention of staying at home, had had qualms of
conscience, and had come to the quarry. It
was he who had cried the
watchword, "Snuff and enough," and who had held the whispered
consultation. Carlos and Castro had waited in their hiding-place,
having been spectators of the arrival of the runners and of my
capture. I gathered this long afterwards. At that moment I was
conscious only of the motion of the horse beneath me, of intense
weariness, and of the voice of Ralph, who was lamenting his own
cowardice.
"If it had come at any other
time!" he kept on repeating. "But now, with Veronica to think of!
You take me, Johnny, don't
you?"
My companions rode silently.
After we had passed the houses of a little village a heavy mist
fell upon us, white, damp, and clogging. Ralph reined his horse
beside mine.
"I'm sorry," he began again, "I'm
miserably sorry I got you into this scrape. I swear I wouldn't have
had it happen, not for a thousand pounds--not for ten."
"It doesn't matter," I said
cheerfully.
"Ah, but," Rooksby said, "you'll
have to leave the country for a time. Until I can arrange. I will.
You can trust me."
"Oh, he'll have to leave the
country, for sure," Rangsley said jovially, "if he wants to live it
down. There's five-and-forty warrants out against me--but they
dursent serve 'em. But he's not me."
"It's a miserable business,"
Ralph said. He had an air of the profoundest dejection. In
the misty light he looked like a man mortally wounded, riding from
a battle-field.
"Let him come with us," the
musical voice of Carlos came through the mist in front of us. "He
shall see the world a little."
"For God's sake hold your
tongue!" Ralph answered him. "There's mischief enough. He shall go
to France."
"Oh, let the young blade rip
about the world for a year or two, squire," Rangsley's voice said
from behind us.
In the end Ralph let me go with
Carlos--actually across the sea, and to the West Indies. I begged
and implored him; it seemed that now there was a chance for me to
find my world of romance. And Ralph, who, though one of the most
law- respecting of men, was not for the moment one of the most
valorous, was wild to
wash his hands of the whole
business. He did his best for me; he borrowed a goodly number of
guineas from Rangsley, who travelled with a bag of them at his
saddle-bow, ready to pay his men their seven shillings a head for
the run.
Ralph remembered, too--or I
remembered for him--that he had estates and an agent in Jamaica,
and he turned into the big inn at the junction of the London road
to write a letter to his agent bidding him house me and employ me
as an improver. For fear of compromising him we waited in the
shadow of trees a furlong or two down the road. He came at a trot,
gave me the letter, drew me aside, and began upbraiding himself
again. The others rode onwards.
"Oh, it's all right," I said.
"It's fine--it's fine. I'd have given fifty guineas for this chance
this morning--and, Ralph, I say, you may tell Veronica why I'm
going, but keep a shut mouth to my mother. Let her think I've run
away--eh? Don't spoil your chance."
He was in such a state of
repentance and flutter that he could not let me take a decent
farewell. The sound of the others' horses had long died away down
the hill when he began to tell me what he ought to have done.
"I knew it at once after I'd let
you go. I ought to have kept you out of it. You came near being
murdered. And to think of it--you, her brother--to be
"
"Oh, it's all right," I said
gayly, "it's all right. You've to stand by Veronica. I've no one to
my back. Good-night, good-by."
I pulled my horse's head round
and galloped down the hill. The main body had halted before setting
out over the shingle to the shore. Rangsley was waiting to conduct
us into the town, where we should find a man to take us three
fugitives out to the expected ship. We rode clattering aggressively
through the silence of the long, narrow main street. Every now and
then Carlos Riego coughed lamentably, but Tomas Castro rode in
gloomy silence. There was a light here and there in a window, but
not a soul stirring abroad. On the blind of an inn the shadow of
a bearded man held the shadow of a rummer to its mouth.
"That'll be my uncle," Rangsley
said. "He'll be the man to do your errand." He called to one of the
men behind. "Here, Joe Pilcher, do you go into the White Hart and
drag my Uncle Tom out. Bring 'un up to me--to the nest."
Three doors further on we came to
a halt, and got down from our horses.
Rangsley knocked on a
shutter-panel, two hard knocks with the crop and three with the
naked fist. Then a lock clicked, heavy bars rumbled, and a chain
rattled.
Rangsley pushed me through the
doorway. A side door opened, and I saw into a lighted room filled
with wreaths of smoke. A paunchy man in a bob wig, with a blue coat
and Windsor buttons, holding a churchwarden pipe in his right hand
and a pewter quart in his left, came towards us.
"Hullo, captain," he said,
"you'll be too late with the lights, won't you?" He had a
deprecatory air.
"Your watch is fast, Mr. Mayor,"
Rangsley answered surlily; "the tide won't serve for half an hour
yet."
"Cht, cht," the other wheezed.
"No offence. We respect you. But still, when one has a stake, one
likes to know."
"My stake's all I have, and my
neck," Rangsley said impatiently; "what's yours? A matter of fifty
pun ten?... Why don't you make them bring they lanthorns?"
A couple of dark lanthorns were
passed to Rangsley, who half-uncovered one, and lit the way up
steep wooden stairs. We climbed up to a tiny cock-loft, of which
the side towards the sea was all glazed.
"Now you sit there, on the
floor," Rangsley commanded; "can't leave you below; the runners
will be coming to the mayor for new warrants to-morrow, and he'd
not like to have spent the night in your company."
He threw a casement open. The
moon was hidden from us by clouds, but, a long way off, over the
distant sea, there was an irregular patch of silver light, against
which the chimneys of the opposite houses were silhouetted. The
church clock began muffledly to chime the quarters behind us; then
the hour struck--ten strokes.
Rangsley set one of his lanthorns
on the window and twisted the top. He sent beams of yellow light
shooting out to seawards. His hands quivered, and he was mumbling
to himself under the influence of ungovernable excitement. His
stakes were very large, and all depended on the flicker of those
lanthorns out towards the men on the luggers that were hidden in
the black expanse of the sea. Then he waited, and against the light
of the window I could see him mopping his forehead with the sleeve
of his coat; my heart began to beat softly and insistently--out of
sympathy.
Suddenly, from the deep shadow of
the cloud above the sea, a yellow light flashed silently cut--very
small, very distant, very short-lived. Rangsley heaved a deep sigh
and slapped me heavily on the shoulder.
"All serene, my buck," he said;
"now let's see after you. I've half an hour. What's the
ship?"
I was at a loss, but Carlos said
out of the darkness, "The ship the Thames. My friend Señor Ortiz,
of the Minories, said you would know."
"Oh, I know, I know," Rangsley
said softly; and, indeed, he did know all that was to be known
about smuggling out of the southern counties of people who could no
longer inhabit them. The trade was a survival of the days of
Jacobite plots. "And it's a hanging job, too. But it's no affair of
mine." He stopped and reflected for an instant.
I could feel Carlos' eyes upon
us, looking out of the thick darkness. A slight rustling came from
the corner that hid Castro.
"She passes down channel
to-night, then?" Rangsley said. "With this wind you'll want to be
well out in the Bay at a quarter after eleven."
An abnormal scuffling,
intermingled with snatches of jovial remonstrance, made itself
heard from the bottom of the ladder. A voice called up through the
hatch, "Here's your uncle, Squahre Jack," and a husky murmur
corroborated.
"Be you drunk again, you old
sinner?" Rangsley asked. "Listen to me
Here's
three men to be set aboard the
Thames at a quarter after eleven." A grunt came in reply.
Rangsley repeated slowly. The
grunt answered again.
"Here's three men to be set
aboard the Thames at a quarter after eleven.
"
Rangsley said again.
"Here's... a-cop.
three men to be set aboard
Thames at quarter after eleven," a
voice hiccoughed back to
us.
"Well, see you do it," Rangsley
said. "He's as drunk as a king," he commented to us; "but when
you've said a thing three times, he remembers--hark to him."
The drunken voice from below kept
up a constant babble of, "Three men to be set aboard Thames...
three men to be set
"
"He'll not stop saying that till
he has you safe aboard," Rangsley said. He showed a glimmer of
light down the ladder--Carlos and Castro descended. I caught sight
below me of the silver head and the deep red ears of the drunken
uncle of Rangsley. He had been one of the most redoubtable of the
family, a man of immense strength and cunning, but a confirmed
habit of consuming a pint and a half of gin a night had made him
disinclined for the more arduous tasks of the trade. He limited his
energies to working the underground passage, to the success of
which his fox-like cunning, and intimate knowledge of the passing
shipping, were indispensable. I was preparing to follow the others
down the ladder when Rangsley touched my arm.
"I don't like your company," he
said close behind my ear. "I know who they are. There were bills
out for them this morning. I'd blow them, and take the reward, but
for you and Squahre Rooksby. They're handy with their knives, too,
I fancy. You mind me, and look to yourself with them. There's
something unnatural."
His words had a certain effect
upon me, and his manner perhaps more. A thing that was "unnatural"
to Jack Rangsley--the man of darkness, who lived forever as if in
the shadow of the gallows--was a thing to be avoided. He was for me
nearly as romantic a figure as Carlos himself, but for his
forbidding darkness, and he was a person of immense power. The
silent flittings of lights that I had just seen, the answering
signals from the luggers far out to sea, the enforced sleep of the
towns and countryside whilst his plans were working out at night,
had impressed me with a sense of awe. And his words sank into my
spirit, and made me afraid for my future.
We followed the others downwards
into a ground-floor room that was fitted up as a barber's shop. A
rushlight was burning on a table. Rangsley took hold of a piece of
wainscotting, part of the frame of a panel; he pulled it towards
him, and, at the same moment, a glazed show-case full of razors and
brushes swung noiselessly forward with an effect of the
supernatural. A small opening, just big enough to take a man's
body, revealed itself. We passed through it and up a sort of
tunnel. The door at the other end, which was formed of panels, had
a manger and straw crib attached to it on the outside, and let us
into a horse's stall. We found ourselves in the stable of the
inn.
"We don't use this passage for
ourselves," Rangsley said. "Only the most looked up to need to--the
justices and such like. But gallus birds like you and your company,
it's best for us not to be seen in company with. Follow my uncle
now. Good-night."
We went into the yard, under the
pillars of the town hall, across the silent street,
through a narrow passage, and
down to the sea. Old Rangsley reeled ahead of us swiftly,
muttering, "Three men to be set aboard the Thames... quarter past
eleven. Three men to be set aboard..." and in a few minutes we
stood upon the shingle beside the idle sea, that was nearly at the
full.
CHAPTER FOUR
It was, I suppose, what I
demanded of Fate--to be gently wafted into the position of a hero
of romance, without rough hands at my throat. It is what we all
ask, I suppose; and we get it sometimes in ten-minute snatches. I
didn't know where I was going. It was enough for me to sail in and
out of the patches of shadow that fell from the moon right above
our heads.
We embarked, and, as we drew
further out, the land turned to a shadow, spotted here and there
with little lights. Behind us a cock crowed. The shingle crashed at
intervals beneath the feet of a large body of men. I remembered the
smugglers; but it was as if I had remembered them only to forget
them forever. Old Rangsley, who steered with the sheet in his hand,
kept up an unintelligible babble. Carlos and Castro talked under
their breaths. Along the gunwale there was a constant ripple and
gurgle. Suddenly old Rangsley began to sing; his voice was hoarse
and drunken.
"When Harol' war in va--a--ded,
An' fallin', lost his
crownd,
An' Normun Willium
wa--a--ded."
The water murmured without a
pause, as if it had a million tiny facts to communicate in very
little time. And then old Rangsley hove to, to wait for the ship,
and sat half asleep, lurching over the tiller. He was a very,
unreliable scoundrel. The boat leaked like a sieve. The wind
freshened, and we three began to ask ourselves how it was going to
end. There were no lights upon the sea.
At last, well out, a blue gleam
caught our eyes; but by this time old Rangsley was helpless, and it
fell to me to manage the boat. Carlos was of no use--he knew it,
and, without saying a word, busied himself in bailing the water
out. But Castro, I was surprised to notice, knew more than I did
about a boat, and, maimed as he was, made himself useful.
"To me it looks as if we should
drown," Carlos said at one point, very quietly. "I am sorry for
you, Juan."
"And for yourself, too," I
answered, feeling very hopeless, and with a dogged grimness.
"Just now, my young cousin, I
feel as if I should not mind dying under the water," he remarked
with a sigh, but without ceasing to bail for a moment.
"Ah, you are sorry to be leaving
home, and your friends, and Spain, and your fine adventures," I
answered.
The blue flare showed a very
little nearer. There was nothing to be done but talk and
wait.
"No; England," he answered in a
tone full of meaning--"things in England--people there. One person
at least."
To me his words and his smile
seemed to imply a bitter irony; but they were said very
earnestly.
Castro had hauled the helpless
form of old Rangsley forward. I caught him muttering
savagely:
"I could kill that old
man!"
He did not want to be drowned;
neither assuredly did I. But it was not fear so much as a feeling
of dreariness and disappointment that had come over me, the sudden
feeling that I was going not to adventure, but to death; that here
was not romance, but an end--a disenchanted surprise that it should
soon be all over.
We kept a grim silence. Further
out in the bay, we were caught in a heavy squall. Sitting by the
tiller, I got as much out of her as I knew how. We would go as far
as we could before the run was over. Carlos bailed unceasingly,
and without a word of complaint, sticking to his self-appointed
task as if in very truth he were careless of life. A feeling
came over me that this, indeed, was the elevated and the romantic.
Perhaps he was tired of his life; perhaps he really regretted what
he left behind him in England, or somewhere else--some association,
some woman. But he, at least, if we went down together, would go
gallantly, and without complaint, at the end of a life with
associations, movements, having lived and regretted. I should
disappear in-gloriously on the very threshold.
Castro, standing up unsteadily,
growled, "We may do it yet! See, señor!"
The blue gleam was much
larger--it flared smokily up towards the sky. I made out ghastly
parallelograms of a ship's sails high above us, and at last many
faces peering unseeingly over the rail in our direction. We all
shouted together.
I may say that it was thanks to
me that we reached the ship. Our boat went down under us whilst I
was tying a rope under Carlos' arms. He was standing up with the
baler still in his hand. On board, the women passengers were
screaming, and as I clung desperately to the rope that was thrown
me, it struck me oddly that I
had never before heard so many
women's voices at the same time. Afterwards, when I stood on the
deck, they began laughing at old Rangsley, who held forth in a
thunderous voice, punctuated by hiccoughs:
"They carried I aboard--a
cop--theer lugger and sinks I in the cold, co--old sea."
It mortified me excessively that
I should be tacked to his tail and exhibited to a number of people,
and I had a sudden conviction of my small importance. I had
expected something altogether different--an audience
sympathetically interested in my desire for a passage to the West
Indies; instead of which people laughed while I spoke in panting
jerks, and the water dripped out of my clothes. After I had made it
clear that I wanted to go with Carlos, and could pay for my
passage, I was handed down into the steerage, where a tallow candle
burnt in a thick, blue atmosphere. I was stripped and filled with
some fiery liquid, and fell asleep. Old Rangsley was sent ashore
with the pilot.
It was a new and strange life to
me, opening there suddenly enough. The Thames was one of the usual
West Indiamen; but to me even the very ropes and spars, the sea,
and the unbroken dome of the sky, had a rich strangeness. Time
passed lazily and gliding. I made more fully the acquaintance of my
companions, but seemed to know them no better. I lived with Carlos
in the cabin--Castro in the half-deck; but we were all three pretty
constantly together, and they being the only Spaniards on board, we
were more or less isolated from the other passengers.
Looking at my companions at
times, I had vague misgivings. It was as if these two had
fascinated me to the verge of some danger. Sometimes Castro,
looking up, uttered vague ejaculations. Carlos pushed his hat back
and sighed. They had preoccupations, cares, interests in which they
let me have no part.
Castro struck me as absolutely
ruffianly. His head was knotted in a red, white- spotted
handkerchief; his grizzled beard was tangled; he wore a black and
rusty cloak, ragged at the edges, and his feet were often bare; at
his side would lie his wooden right hand. As a rule, the place of
his forearm was taken by a long, thin, steel blade, that he was
forever sharpening.
Carlos talked with me, telling me
about his former life and his adventures. The other passengers he
discountenanced by a certain coldness of manner that made me
ashamed of talking to them. I respected him so; he was so
wonderful to me then. Castro I detested; but I accepted their
relationship without in the least understanding how Carlos, with
his fine grain, his high soul--I gave him credit for a high
soul--could put up with the squalid ferocity with which I credited
Castro. It seemed to hang in the air round the grotesque
ragged-ness of the saturnine
brown man.
Carlos had made Spain too hot to
hold him in those tortuous intrigues of the Army of the Faith and
Bourbon troops and Italian legions. From what I could understand,
he must have played fast and loose in an insolent manner. And there
was some woman offended. There was a gayness and gallantry in that
part of it.
He had known the very spirit of
romance, and now he was sailing gallantly out to take up his
inheritance from an uncle who was a great noble, owning the greater
part of one of the Intendencias of Cuba.
"He is a very old man, I hear,"
Carlos said--"a little doting, and having need of me."
There were all the elements of
romance about Carlos' story--except the actual discomforts of the
ship in which we were sailing. He himself had never been in Cuba or
seen his uncle; but he had, as I have indicated, ruined himself in
one way or another in Spain, and it had come as a God-send to him
when his uncle had sent Tomas Castro to bring him to Cuba, to the
town of Rio Medio.
"The town belongs to my uncle.
He is very rich; a Grand d'Espagne . . . everything; but he is
now very old, and has left Havana to die in his palace in his own
town. He has an only daughter, a Dona Seraphina, and I suppose that
if I find favour in his eyes I shall marry her, and inherit my
uncle's great riches; I am the only one that is left of the family
to inherit." He waved his hand and smiled a little. "Vaya; a little
of that great wealth would be welcome. If I had had a few pence
more there would have been none of this worry, and I should not
have been on this dirty ship in these rags." He looked down
good-humouredly at his clothes.
"But," I said, "how do you come
to be in a scrape at all?" He laughed a little proudly.
"In a scrape?" he said. "I... I
am in none. It is Tomas Castro there." He laughed affectionately.
"He is as faithful as he is ugly," he said; "but I fear he has been
a villain, too
What do I know? Over
there in my uncle's town, there are some
villains--you know what I mean,
one must not speak too loudly on this ship. There is a man
called O'Brien, who mismanages my uncle's affairs. What do I
know? The good Tomas has been in some villainy that is no affair of
mine. He is a good friend and a faithful dependent of my family's.
He certainly had that man's watch--the man we met by evil chance at
Liverpool, a man who came from Jamaica. He had bought it--of a bad
man, perhaps, I do not ask. It was Castro your police wished
to take. But I, bon Dieu, do you think I would take watches?"
I certainly did not think he had
taken a watch; but I did not relinquish the idea that he, in a
glamorous, romantic way, had been a pirate. Rooksby had certainly
hinted as much in his irritation.
He lost none of his romantic
charm in my eyes. The fact that he was sailing in uncomfortable
circumstances detracted little; nor did his clothes, which, at the
worst, were better than any I had ever had. And he wore them with
an air and a grace. He had probably been in worse circumstances
when campaigning with the Army of the Faith in Spain. And there was
certainly the uncle with the romantic title and the great
inheritance, and the cousin--the Miss Seraphina, whom he would
probably marry. I imagined him an aristocratic scapegrace, a
corsair--it was the Byronic period then--sailing out to marry a
sort of shimmering princess with hair like Veronica's, bright
golden, and a face like that of a certain keeper's daughter.
Carlos, however, knew nothing about his cousin; he cared little
more, as far as I could tell. "What can she be to me since I have
seen your...?" he said once, and then stopped, looking at me with
a certain tender irony. He insisted, though, that his aged uncle
was in need of him. As for Castro--he and his rags came out of a
life of sturt and strife, and I hoped he might die by
treachery. He had undoubtedly been sent by the uncle across the
seas to find Carlos and bring him out of Europe; there
was-something romantic in that mission. He was now a dependent of
the Riego family, but there were unfathomable depths in that tubby
little man's past. That he had gone to Russia at the tail of the
Grande Armée, one could not help believing. He had been most likely
in the grand army of sutlers and camp-followers. He could talk
convincingly of the cold, and of the snows and his escape. And from
his allusions one could get glimpses of what he had been before and
afterwards--apparently everything that was questionable in a
secularly disturbed Europe; no doubt somewhat of a bandit; a
guerrillero in the sixes and sevens; with the Army of the Faith
near the French border, later on.
There had been room and to spare
for that sort of pike, in the muddy waters, during the first years
of the century. But the waters were clearing, and now the good
Castro had been dodging the gallows in the Antilles or in
Mexico. In his heroic moods he would swear that his arm had been
cut off at Somo Sierra; swear it with a great deal of
asseveration, making one see the Polish lancers charging the
gunners, being cut down, and his own sword arm falling
suddenly.
Carlos, however, used to declare
with affectionate cynicism that the arm had been broken by the
cudgel of a Polish peasant while Castro was trying to filch a
pig from a stable
"I cut his throat out,
though," Castro would grumble darkly; "so,
like that, and it matters very
little--it is even an improvement. See, I put on my blade. See, I
transfix you that fly there
See how astonished he
was. He did
never expect that." He had
actually impaled a crawling cockroach. He spent his days cooking
extraordinary messes, crouching for hours over a little
charcoal
brazier that he lit
surreptitiously in the back of his bunk, making substitutes for
eternal gaspachos.
All these things, if they
deepened the romance of Carlos' career, enhanced, also, the
mystery. I asked him one day, "But why do you go to Jamaica at all
if you are bound for Cuba?"
He looked at me, smiling a little
mournfully.
"Ah, Juan mio," he said, "Spain
is not like your England, unchanging and stable. The party who
reign to-day do not love me, and they are masters in Cuba as in
Spain. But in his province my uncle rules alone. There I shall be
safe." He was condescending to roll some cigarettes for Tomas,
whose wooden hand incommoded him, and he tossed a fragment of
tobacco to the wind with a laugh. "In Jamaica there is a merchant,
a Señor Ramon; I have letters to him, and he shall find me a
conveyance to Rio Medio, my uncle's town. He is an quliado."
He laughed again. "It is not easy
to enter that place, Juanino."
There was certainly some mystery
about that town of his uncle's. One night I overheard him say to
Castro:
"Tell me, O my Tomas, would it be
safe to take this caballero, my cousin, to Rio Medio?"
Castro paused, and then murmured
gruffly:
"Señor, unless that Irishman is
consulted beforehand, or the English lord would undertake to join
with the picaroons, it is very assuredly not safe."
Carlos made a little exclamation
of mild astonishment. "Pero? Is it so bad as that in my uncle's
own town?" Tomas muttered something that I did not catch, and
then:
"If the English caballero
committed indiscretions, or quarrelled--and all these people
quarrel, why, God knows--that Irish devil could hang many persons,
even myself, or take vengeance on your worship."
Carlos was silent as if in a
reverie. At last he said:
"But if affairs are like this, it
would be well to have one more with us. The
caballero, my cousin, is very
strong and of great courage."
Castro grunted, "Oh, of a
courage! But as the proverb says, 'If you set an Englishman by a
hornets' nest they shall not remain long within.":
After that I avoided any allusion
to Cuba, because the thing, think as I would about it, would
not grow clear. It was plain that something illegal was going on
there, or how could "that Irish devil," whoever he was, have power
to hang Tomas and be revenged on Carlos? It did not affect my love
for Carlos, though, in the weariness of this mystery, the passage
seemed to drag a little. And it was obvious enough that Carlos was
unwilling or unable to tell anything about what pre-, occupied
him.
I had noticed an intimacy spring
up between the ship's second mate and Tomas, who was, it seemed to
me, forever engaged in long confabulations in the man's cabin, and,
as much to make talk as for any other reason, I asked Carlos if he
had noticed his dependent's familiarity. It was noticeable because
Castro held aloof from every other soul on board. Carlos answered
me with one of his nervous and angry smiles.
"Ah, Juan mine, do not ask too
many questions! I wish you could come with me all the way, but I
cannot tell you all I know. I do not even myself know all. It
seems that the man is going to leave the ship in Jamaica, and has
letters for that Señor Ramon, the merchant, even as I have. Vaya;
more I cannot tell you."
This struck me as curious, and a
little of the whole mystery seemed from that time to attach to the
second mate, who before had been no more to me than a long, sallow
Nova Scotian, with a disagreeable intonation and rather offensive
manners. I began to watch him, desultorily, and was rather startled
by something more than a suspicion that he himself was watching me.
On one occasion in particular I seemed to observe this. The second
mate was lankily stalking the deck, his hands in his pockets.
As he paused in his walk to spit into the sea beside me,
Carlos said:
"And you, my Juan, what will you
do in this Jamaica?"
The sense that we were
approaching land was already all over the ship. The second mate
leered at me enigmatically, and moved slowly away. I said that I
was going to the Horton Estates, Rooksby's, to learn planting under
a Mr. Macdonald, the agent. Carlos shrugged his shoulders. I
suppose I had spoken with some animation.
"Ah," he said, with his air of
great wisdom and varied experience, of
disillusionment, "it will be much
the same as it has been at your home--after the first days. Hard
work and a great sameness." He began to cough violently.
I said bitterly enough, "Yes. It
will be always the same with me. I shall never see life. You've
seen all that there is to see, so I suppose you do not mind
settling down with an old uncle in a palace."
He answered suddenly, with a
certain darkness of manner, "That is as God wills. Who knows?
Perhaps life, even in my uncle's palace, will not be so
safe."
The second mate was bearing down
on us again.
I said jocularly, "Why, when I
get very tired of life at Horton Pen, I shall come to see you in
your uncle's town."
Carlos had another of his fits of
coughing.
"After all, we are kinsmen. I
dare say you would give me a bed," I went on. The second mate was
quite close to us then.
Carlos looked at me with an
expression of affection that a little shamed my lightness of
tone:
"I love you much more than a
kinsman, Juan," he said. "I wish you could come with me. I try to
arrange it. Later, perhaps, I may be dead. I am very ill."
He was undoubtedly ill.
Campaigning in Spain, exposure in England in a rainy time, and then
the ducking when we came on board, had done him no good. He looked
moodily at the sea.
"I wish you could come. I will
try
"
The mate had paused, and was
listening quite unaffectedly, behind Carlos' back. A moment after
Carlos half turned and regarded him with a haughty stare.
He whistled and walked
away.
Carlos muttered something that I
did not catch about "spies of that pestilent Irishman." Then:
"I will not selfishly take you
into any more dangers," he said. "But life on a sugar
plantation is not fit for
you."
I felt glad and flattered that a
personage so romantic should deem me a fit companion for himself.
He went forward as if with some purpose.
Some days afterwards the second
mate sent for me to his cabin. He had been on the sick list, and he
was lying in his bunk, stripped to the waist, one arm and one leg
touching the floor. He raised himself slowly when I came in, and
spat. He had in a pronounced degree the Nova Scotian peculiarities
and accent, and after he had shaved, his face shone like polished
leather.
"Hallo!" he said. "See heeyur,
young Kemp, does your neck just itch to be stretched?"
I looked at him with mouth and
eyes agape.
He spat again, and waved a claw
towards the forward bulkhead.
"They'll do it for yeh," he said.
"You're such a green goose, it makes me sick a bit. You hevn't
reckoned out the chances, not quite. It's a kind of dead reckoning
yeh hevn't had call to make. Eh?"
"What do you mean?" I asked,
bewildered.
He looked at me, grinning, half
naked, with amused contempt, for quite a long time, and at last
offered sardonically to open my eyes for me.
I said nothing.
"Do you know what will happen to
you," he asked, "ef yeh don't get quit of that Carlos of
yours?"
I was surprised into muttering
that I didn't know. "I can tell yeh," he continued. "Yeh will get
hanged."
By that time I was too amazed to
get angry. I simply suspected the Blue Nose of being drunk. But he
glared at me so soberly that next moment I felt frightened.