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<h2> CHAPTER XIII </h2>
<h3> GRUMBLING AND GROWLING </h3>
<p>While these successful runs went on, and great authorities smiled at
seeing the little authorities set at naught, and men of the revenue smote
their breasts for not being born good smugglers, and the general public
was well pleased, and congratulated them cordially upon their
accomplishment of naught, one man there was whose noble spirit chafed and
knew no comfort. He strode up and down at Coast-guard Point, and communed
with himself, while Robin held sweet converse in the lane.</p>
<p>“Why was I born?” the sad Carroway cried; “why was I thoroughly educated
and trained in both services of the king, expected to rise, and beginning
to rise, till a vile bit of splinter stopped me, and then sent down to
this hole of a place to starve, and be laughed at, and baffled by a boy?
Another lucky run, and the revenue bamboozled, and the whole of us sent
upon a wild-goose chase! Every gapper-mouth zany grinning at me, and
scoundrels swearing that I get my share! And the only time I have had my
dinner with my knees crook'd, for at least a fortnight, was at Anerley
Farm on Sunday. I am not sure that even they wouldn't turn against me; I
am certain that pretty girl would. I've a great mind to throw it up—a
great mind to throw it up. It is hardly the work for a gentleman born, and
the grandson of a rear-admiral. Tinkers' and tailors' sons get the luck
now; and a man of good blood is put on the back shelf, behind the
blacking-bottles. A man who has battled for his country—”</p>
<p>“Charles, are you coming to your dinner, once more?”</p>
<p>“No, I am not. There's no dinner worth coming to. You and the children may
eat the rat pie. A man who has battled for his country, and bled till all
his veins were empty, and it took two men to hold him up, and yet waved
his Sword at the head of them—it is the downright contradiction of
the world in everything for him to poke about with pots and tubs, like a
pig in a brewery, grain-hunting.”</p>
<p>“Once more, Charles, there is next to nothing left. The children are
eating for their very lives. If you stay out there another minute, you
must take the consequence.”</p>
<p>“Alas, that I should have so much stomach, and so little to put into it!
My dear, put a little bit under a basin, if any of them has no appetite. I
wanted just to think a little.”</p>
<p>“Charles, they have all got tremendous appetites. It is the way the wind
is. You may think by-and-by, but if you want to eat, you must do it now,
or never.”</p>
<p>“'Never' never suits me in that matter,” the brave lieutenant answered.
“Matilda, put Geraldine to warm the pewter plate for me. Geraldine
darling, you can do it with your mouth full.”</p>
<p>The commander of the coast-guard turned abruptly from his long indignant
stride, and entered the cottage provided for him, and which he had peopled
so speedily.</p>
<p>Small as it was, it looked beautifully clean and neat, and everybody used
to wonder how Mrs. Carroway kept it so. But in spite of all her troubles
and many complaints, she was very proud of this little house, with its
healthful position and beautiful outlook over the bay of Bridlington. It
stood in a niche of the low soft cliff, where now the sea-parade extends
from the northern pier of Bridlington Quay; and when the roadstead between
that and the point was filled with a fleet of every kind of craft, or,
better still, when they all made sail at once—as happened when a
trusty breeze arose—the view was lively, and very pleasant, and full
of moving interest. Often one of his Majesty's cutters, Swordfish,
Kestrel, or Albatross, would swoop in with all sail set, and hover, while
the skipper came ashore to see the “Ancient Carroway,” as this vigilant
officer was called; and sometimes even a sloop of war, armed brigantine,
or light corvette, prowling for recruits, or cruising for their training,
would run in under the Head, and overhaul every wind-bound ship with a
very high hand.</p>
<p>“Ancient Carroway”—as old friends called him, and even young people
who had never seen him—was famous upon this coast now for nearly
three degrees of latitude. He had dwelled here long, and in highly good
content, hospitably treated by his neighbors, and himself more hospitable
than his wife could wish, until two troubles in his life arose, and from
year to year grew worse and worse. One of these troubles was the growth of
mouths in number and size, that required to be filled; and the other
trouble was the rampant growth of smuggling, and the glory of that upstart
Robin Lyth. Now let it be lawful to take that subject first.</p>
<p>Fair Robin, though not at all anxious for fame, but modestly willing to
decline it, had not been successful—though he worked so much by
night—in preserving sweet obscurity. His character was public, and
set on high by fortune, to be gazed at from wholly different points of
view. From their narrow and lime-eyed outlook the coast-guard beheld in
him the latest incarnation of Old Nick; yet they hated him only in an
abstract manner, and as men feel toward that evil one. Magistrates also,
and the large protective powers, were arrayed against him, yet happy to
abstain from laying hands, when their hands were their own, upon him. And
many of the farmers, who should have been his warmest friends and best
customers, were now so attached to their king and country, by bellicose
warmth and army contracts, that instead of a guinea for a four-gallon
anker, they would offer three crowns, or the exciseman. And not only
conscience, but short cash, after three bad harvests, constrained them.</p>
<p>Yet the staple of public opinion was sound, as it must be where women
predominate. The best of women could not see why they should not have
anything they wanted for less than it cost the maker. To gaze at a sister
woman better dressed at half the money was simply to abjure every lofty
principle. And to go to church with a counterfeit on, when the genuine
lace was in the next pew on a body of inferior standing, was a downright
outrage to the congregation, the rector, and all religion. A cold-blooded
creature, with no pin-money, might reconcile it with her principles, if
any she had, to stand up like a dowdy and allow a poor man to risk his
life by shot and storm and starvation, and then to deny him a word or a
look, because of his coming with the genuine thing at a quarter the price
fat tradesmen asked, who never stirred out of their shops when it rained,
for a thing that was a story and an imposition. Charity, duty, and common
honesty to their good husbands in these bad times compelled them to make
the very best of bargains; of which they got really more and more, as
those brave mariners themselves bore witness, because of the depression in
the free trade now and the glorious victories of England. Were they bound
to pay three times the genuine value, and then look a figure, and be
laughed at?</p>
<p>And as for Captain Carroway, let him scold, and threaten, and stride
about, and be jealous, because his wife dare not buy true things, poor
creature—although there were two stories also about that, and the
quantities of things that he got for nothing, whenever he was clever
enough to catch them, which scarcely ever happened, thank goodness! Let
Captain Carroway attend to his own business; unless he was much belied, he
had a wife who would keep him to it. Who was Captain Carroway to come down
here, without even being born in Yorkshire, and lay down the law, as if he
owned the manor?</p>
<p>Lieutenant Carroway had heard such questions, but disdained to answer
them. He knew who he was, and what his grandfather had been, and he never
cared a—short word—what sort of stuff long tongues might prate
of him. Barbarous broad-drawlers, murderers of his Majesty's English,
could they even pronounce the name of an officer highly distinguished for
many years in both of the royal services? That was his description, and
the Yorkshire yokels might go and read it—if read they could—in
the pages of authority.</p>
<p>Like the celebrated calf that sucked two cows, Carroway had drawn royal
pay, though in very small drains, upon either element, beginning with a
skeleton regiment, and then, when he became too hot for it, diving off
into a frigate as a recommended volunteer. Here he was more at home,
though he never ceased longing to be a general; and having the credit of
fighting well ashore, he was looked at with interest when he fought a
fight at sea. He fought it uncommonly well, and it was good, and so many
men fell that he picked up his commission, and got into a fifty-two-gun
ship. After several years of service, without promotion—for his
grandfather's name was worn out now, and the wars were not properly
constant—there came a very lively succession of fights, and Carroway
got into all of them, or at least into all the best of them. And he ought
to have gone up much faster than he did, and he must have done so but for
his long lean jaws, the which are the worst things that any man can have.
Not only because of their own consumption and slow length of leverage, but
mainly on account of the sadness they impart, and the timid recollection
of a hungry wolf, to the man who might have lifted up a fatter individual.</p>
<p>But in Rodney's great encounter with the Spanish fleet, Carroway showed
such a dauntless spirit, and received such a wound, that it was impossible
not to pay him some attention. His name was near the bottom of a very long
list, but it made a mark on some one's memory, depositing a chance of
coming up some day, when he should be reported hit again. And so good was
his luck that he soon was hit again, and a very bad hit it was; but still
he got over it without promotion, because that enterprise was one in which
nearly all our men ran away, and therefore required to be well pushed up
for the sake of the national honor. When such things happen, the few who
stay behind must be left behind in the Gazette as well. That wound,
therefore, seemed at first to go against him, but he bandaged it, and
plastered it, and hoped for better luck. And his third wound truly was a
blessed one, a slight one, and taken in the proper course of things,
without a slur upon any of his comrades. This set him up again with
advancement and appointment, and enabled him to marry and have children
seven.</p>
<p>The lieutenant was now about fifty years of age, gallant and lively as
ever, and resolute to attend to his duty and himself as well. His duty was
now along shore, in command of the Coast-guard of the East District; for
the loss of a good deal of one heel made it hard for him to step about as
he should do when afloat. The place suited him, and he was fond of it,
although he grumbled sometimes about his grandfather, and went on as if
his office was beneath him. He abused all his men, and all the good ones
liked him, and respected him for his clear English. And he enjoyed this
free exercise of language out-of-doors, because inside his threshold he
was on his P's and Q's. To call him “ugly Carroway,” as coarse people did,
because of a scar across his long bold nose, was petty and unjust, and
directly contradicted by his own and his wife's opinion. For nobody could
have brighter eyes, or a kindlier smile, and more open aspect in the
forepart of the week, while his Sunday shave retained its influence, so
far as its limited area went, for he kept a long beard always. By
Wednesday he certainly began to look grim, and on Saturday ferocious,
pending the advent of the Bridlington barber, who shaved all the Quay
every Sunday. But his mind was none the worse, and his daughters liked him
better when he rasped their young cheeks with his beard, and paid a penny.
For to his children he was a loving and tender-hearted father, puzzled at
their number, and sometimes perplexed at having to feed and clothe them,
yet happy to give them his last and go without, and even ready to welcome
more, if Heaven should be pleased to send them.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Carroway, most fidgety of women, and born of a well-shorn family,
was unhappy from the middle to the end of the week that she could not
scrub her husband's beard off. The lady's sense of human crime, and of
everything hateful in creation, expressed itself mainly in the word
“dirt.” Her rancor against that nobly tranquil and most natural of
elements inured itself into a downright passion. From babyhood she had
been notorious for kicking her little legs out at the least speck of dust
upon a tiny red shoe. Her father—a clergyman—heard so much of
this, and had so many children of a different stamp, that when he came to
christen her, at six months of age (which used to be considered quite an
early time of life), he put upon her the name of “Lauta,” to which she
thoroughly acted up; but people having ignorance of foreign tongues said
that he always meant “Matilda.”</p>
<p>Such was her nature, and it grew upon her; so that when a young and
gallant officer, tall and fresh, and as clean as a frigate, was captured
by her neat bright eyes, very clean run, and sharp cut-water, she began to
like to look at him. Before very long, his spruce trim ducks, careful
scrape of Brunswick-leather boots, clean pocket-handkerchiefs, and fine
specklessness, were making and keeping a well-swept path to the thoroughly
dusted store-room of her heart. How little she dreamed, in those virgin
days, that the future could ever contain a week when her Charles would
decline to shave more than once, and then have it done for him on a
Sunday!</p>
<p>She hesitated, for she had her thoughts—doubts she disdained to call
them—but still he forgot once to draw his boots sideways, after
having purged the toe and heel, across the bristle of her father's mat.
With the quick eye of love he perceived her frown, and the very next day
he conquered her. His scheme was unworthy, as it substituted corporate for
personal purity; still it succeeded, as unworthy schemes will do. On the
birthday of his sacred Majesty, Charles took Matilda to see his ship, the
48-gun frigate Immaculate, commanded by a well-known martinet. Her spirit
fell within her, like the Queen of Sheba's, as she gazed, but trembled to
set down foot upon the trim order and the dazzling choring. She might have
survived the strict purity of all things, the deck lines whiter than
Parian marble, the bulwarks brighter than the cheek-piece of a grate, the
breeches of the guns like goodly gold, and not a whisker of a rope's end
curling the wrong way, if only she could have espied a swab, or a bucket,
or a flake of holy-stone, or any indicament of labor done. “Artis est
celare artem;” this art was unfathomable.</p>
<p>Matilda was fain to assure herself that the main part of this might be
superficial, like a dish-cover polished with the spots on, and she lost
her handkerchief on purpose to come back and try a little test-work of her
own. This was a piece of unstopped knotting in the panel of a hatchway, a
resinous hole that must catch and keep any speck of dust meandering on the
wayward will of wind. Her cambric came out as white as it went in!</p>
<p>She surrendered at discretion, and became the prize of Carroway.</p>
<p>Now people at Bridlington Quay declared that the lieutenant, though he
might have carried off a prize, was certainly not the prize-master; and
they even went so far as to say that “he could scarcely call his soul his
own.” The matter was no concern of theirs, neither were their conclusions
true. In little things the gallant officer, for the sake of discipline and
peace, submitted to due authority; and being so much from home, he left
all household matters to a firm control. In return for this, he was always
thought of first, and the best of everything was kept for him, and Mrs.
Carroway quoted him to others as a wonder, though she may not have done so
to himself. And so, upon the whole, they got on very well together.</p>
<p>Now on this day, when the lieutenant had exhausted a grumble of unusual
intensity, and the fair Geraldine (his eldest child) had obeyed him to the
letter, by keeping her mouth full while she warmed a plate for him, it was
not long before his usual luck befell the bold Carroway. Rap, rap, came a
knock at the side door of his cottage—a knock only too familiar; and
he heard the gruff voice of Cadman—“Can I see his honor
immediately?”</p>
<p>“No, you can not,” replied Mrs. Carroway. “One would think you were all in
a league to starve him. No sooner does he get half a mouthful—”</p>
<p>“Geraldine, put it on the hob, my dear, and a basin over it. Matilda, my
love, you know my maxim—'Duty first, dinner afterward.' Cadman, I
will come with you.”</p>
<p>The revenue officer took up his hat (which had less time now than his
dinner to get cold) and followed Cadman to the usual place for holding
privy councils. This was under the heel of the pier (which was then about
half as long as now) at a spot where the outer wall combed over, to break
the crest of the surges in the height of a heavy eastern gale. At neap
tides, and in moderate weather, this place was dry, with a fine salt
smell; and with nothing in front of it but the sea, and nothing behind it
but solid stone wall, any one would think that here must be commune
sacred, secret, and secluded from eavesdroppers. And yet it was not so, by
reason of a very simple reason.</p>
<p>Upon the roadway of the pier, and over against a mooring-post, where the
parapet and the pier itself made a needful turn toward the south, there
was an equally needful thing, a gully-hole with an iron trap to carry off
the rain that fell, or the spray that broke upon the fabric; and the
outlet of this gully was in the face of the masonry outside. Carroway, not
being gifted with a crooked mind, had never dreamed that this little gut
might conduct the pulses of the air, like the Tyrant's Ear, and that the
trap at the end might be a trap for him. Yet so it was; and by gently
raising the movable iron frame at the top, a well-disposed person might
hear every word that was spoken in the snug recess below. Cadman was well
aware of this little fact, but left his commander to find it out.</p>
<p>The officer, always thinly clad (both through the state of his wardrobe
and his dread of effeminate comfort), settled his bony shoulders against
the rough stonework, and his heels upon a groyne, and gave his subordinate
a nod, which meant, “Make no fuss, but out with it.” Cadman, a short
square fellow with crafty eyes, began to do so.</p>
<p>“Captain, I have hit it off at last. Hackerbody put me wrong last time,
through the wench he hath a hankering after. This time I got it, and no
mistake, as right as if the villain lay asleep 'twixt you and me, and told
us all about it with his tongue out; and a good thing for men of large
families like me.”</p>
<p>“All that I have heard such a number of times,” his commander answered,
crustily, “that I whistle, as we used to do in a dead calm, Cadman. An old
salt like you knows how little comes of that.”</p>
<p>“There I don't quite agree with your honor. I have known a hurricane come
from whistling. But this time there is no woman about it, and the penny
have come down straightforrard. New moon Tuesday next, and Monday we slips
first into that snug little cave. He hath a' had his last good run.”</p>
<p>“How much is coming this time, Cadman? I am sick and tired of those three
caves. It is all old woman's talk of caves, while they are running south,
upon the open beach.”</p>
<p>“Captain, it is a big venture—the biggest of all the summer, I do
believe. Two thousand pounds, if there is a penny, in it. The schooner,
and the lugger, and the ketch, all to once, of purpose to send us
scattering. But your honor knows what we be after most. No woman in it
this time, Sir. The murder has been of the women, all along. When there is
no woman, I can see my way. We have got the right pig by the ear this
time.”</p>
<p>“John Cadman, your manner of speech is rude. You forget that your
commanding officer has a wife and family, three-quarters of which are
female. You will give me your information without any rude observations as
to sex, of which you, as a married man, should be ashamed. A man and his
wife are one flesh, Cadman, and therefore you are a woman yourself, and
must labor not to disgrace yourself. Now don't look amazed, but consider
these things. If you had not been in a flurry, like a woman, you would not
have spoiled my dinner so. I will meet you at the outlook at six o'clock.
I have business on hand of importance.”</p>
<p>With these words Carroway hastened home, leaving Cadman to mutter his
wrath, and then to growl it, when his officer was out of ear-shot.</p>
<p>“Never a day, nor an hour a'most, without he insulteth of me. A woman,
indeed! Well, his wife may be a man, but what call hath he to speak of
mine so? John Cadman a woman, and one flesh with his wife! Pretty news
that would be for my missus!”</p>
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