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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIV </h2>
<h3> THE DOVECOTE </h3>
<p>With the tiller in his hand, the brave lieutenant meditated sadly. There
was plenty of time for thought before quick action would be needed,
although the Dovecote was so near that no boat could come out of it
unseen. For the pinnace was fetching a circuit, so as to escape the eyes
of any sentinel, if such there should be at the mouth of the cavern, and
to come upon the inlet suddenly. And the two other revenue boats were in
her wake.</p>
<p>The wind was slowly veering toward the east, as the Grimsby man had
predicted, with no sign of any storm as yet, but rather a prospect of
winterly weather, and a breeze to bring the woodcocks in. The gentle rise
and fall of waves, or rather, perhaps, of the tidal flow, was checkered
and veined with a ripple of the slanting breeze, and twinkled in the
moonbeams. For the moon was brightly mounting toward her zenith, and
casting bastions of rugged cliff in gloomy largeness on the mirror of the
sea. Hugging these as closely as their peril would allow, Carroway ordered
silence, and with the sense of coming danger thought:</p>
<p>“Probably I shall kill this man. He will scarcely be taken alive, I fear.
He is as brave as myself, or braver; and in his place I would never yield.
If he were a Frenchman, it would be all right. But I hate to kill a
gallant Englishman. And such a pretty girl, and a good girl too, loves him
with all her heart, I know. And that good old couple who depend upon him,
and who have had such shocking luck themselves! He has been a bitter
plague to me, and often I have longed to strike him down. But to-night—I
can not tell why it is—I wish there were some way out of it. God
knows that I would give up the money, and give up my thief-catching
business too, if the honor of the service let me. But duty drives me; do
it I must. And after all, what is life to a man who is young, and has no
children? Better over, better done with, before the troubles and the
disappointment come, the weariness, and the loss of power, and the sense
of growing old, and seeing the little ones hungry. Life is such a fleeting
vapor—I smell some man sucking peppermint! The smell of it goes on
the wind for a mile. Oh! Cadman again, as usual. Peppermint in the Royal
Coast-Guard! Away with it, you ancient beldame!”</p>
<p>Muttering something about his bad tooth, the man flung his lozenge away;
and his eyes flashed fire in the moonlight, while the rest grinned a low
grin at him. And Adam Andrews, sitting next him, saw him lay hands upon
his musketoon.</p>
<p>“Are your firelocks all primed, my lads?” the commander asked, quite as if
he had seen him, although he had not been noticing; and the foremost to
answer “Ay, ay, sir,” was Cadman.</p>
<p>“Then be sure that you fire not, except at my command. We will take them
without shedding blood, if it may be. But happen what will, we must have
Lyth.”</p>
<p>With these words, Carroway drew his sword, and laid it on the bench beside
him; and the rest (who would rather use steel than powder) felt that their
hangers were ready. Few of them wished to strike at all; for vexed as they
were with the smugglers for having outwitted them so often, as yet there
was no bad blood between them, such as must be quenched with death. And
some of them had friends, and even relatives, among the large body of
free-traders, and counted it too likely that they might be here.</p>
<p>Meanwhile in the cave there was rare work going on, speedily, cleverly,
and with a merry noise. There was only one boat, with a crew of six men,
besides Robin Lyth the captain; but the six men made noise enough for
twelve, and the echoes made it into twice enough for any twenty-four. The
crew were trusty, hardy fellows, who liked their joke, and could work with
it; and Robin Lyth knew them too well to attempt any high authority of
gagging. The main of their cargo was landed and gone inland, as snugly as
need be; and having kept beautifully sober over that, they were taking the
liberty of beginning to say, or rather sip, the grace of the fine
indulgence due to them.</p>
<p>Pleasant times make pleasant scenes, and everything now was fair and large
in this happy cave of freedom. Lights of bright resin were burning, with
strong flare and fume, upon shelves of rock; dark water softly went
lapping round the sides, having dropped all rude habits at the entrance;
and a pulse of quiet rise and fall opened, and spread to the discovery of
light, tremulous fronds and fans of kelp. The cavern, expanding and
mounting from the long narrow gut of its inlet, shone with staves of snowy
crag wherever the scour of the tide ran round; bulged and scooped, or
peaked and fissured, and sometimes beautifully sculptured by the pliant
tools of water. Above the tide-reach darker hues prevailed, and more
jagged outline, tufted here and there with yellow, where the lichen
freckles spread. And the vault was framed of mountain fabric, massed with
ponderous gray slabs.</p>
<p>All below was limpid water, or at any rate not very muddy, but as bright
as need be for the time of year, and a sea which is not tropical. No one
may hope to see the bottom through ten feet of water on the Yorkshire
coast, toward the end of the month of November; but still it tries to look
clear upon occasion; and here in the caves it settles down, after even a
week free from churning. And perhaps the fog outside had helped it to look
clearer inside; for the larger world has a share of the spirit of
contrariety intensified in man.</p>
<p>Be that as it may, the water was too clear for any hope of sinking tubs
deeper than Preventive eyes could go; and the very honest fellows who were
laboring here had not brought any tubs to sink. All such coarse gear was
shipped off inland, as they vigorously expressed it; and what they were
concerned with now was the cream and the jewel of their enterprise.</p>
<p>The sea reserved exclusive right of way around the rocky sides, without
even a niche for human foot, so far as a stranger could perceive. At the
furthermost end of the cave, however, the craggy basin had a lip of flinty
pebbles and shelly sand. This was no more than a very narrow shelf, just
enough for a bather to plunge from; but it ran across the broad end of the
cavern, and from its southern corner went a deep dry fissure mounting out
of sight into the body of the cliff. And here the smugglers were merrily
at work.</p>
<p>The nose of their boat was run high upon the shingle; two men on board of
her were passing out the bales, while the other four received them, and
staggered with them up the cranny. Captain Lyth himself was in the
stern-sheets, sitting calmly, but ordering everything, and jotting down
the numbers. Now and then the gentle wash was lifting the brown timbers,
and swelling with a sleepy gush of hushing murmurs out of sight. And now
and then the heavy vault was echoing with some sailor's song.</p>
<p>There was only one more bale to land, and that the most precious of the
whole, being all pure lace most closely packed in a water-proof inclosure.
Robin Lyth himself was ready to indulge in a careless song. For this, as
he had promised Mary, was to be his last illegal act. Henceforth, instead
of defrauding the revenue, he would most loyally cheat the public, as
every reputable tradesman must. How could any man serve his time more
notably, toward shop-keeping, and pave fairer way into the corporation of
a grandly corrupt old English town, than by long graduation of free trade?
And Robin was yet too young and careless to know that he could not endure
dull work. “How pleasant, how comfortable, how secure,” he was saying to
himself, “it will be! I shall hardly be able to believe that I ever lived
in hardship.”</p>
<p>But the great laws of human nature were not to be balked so. Robin Lyth,
the prince of smugglers, and the type of hardihood, was never to wear a
grocer's apron, was never to be “licensed to sell tea, coffee, tobacco,
pepper, and snuff.” For while he indulged in this vain dream, and was
lifting his last most precious bale, a surge of neither wind nor tide, but
of hostile invasion, washed the rocks, and broke beneath his feet.</p>
<p>In a moment all his wits returned, all his plenitude of resource, and
unequalled vigor and coolness. With his left hand—for he was as
ambidexter as a brave writer of this age requires—he caught up a
handspike, and hurled it so truly along the line of torches that only two
were left to blink; with his right he flung the last bale upon the shelf;
then leaped out after it, and hurried it away. Then he sprang into the
boat again, and held an oar in either hand.</p>
<p>“In the name of the king, surrender,” shouted Carroway, standing, tall and
grim, in the bow of the pinnace, which he had skillfully driven through
the entrance, leaving the other boats outside. “We are three to one, we
have muskets, and a cannon. In the name of the king, surrender.”</p>
<p>“In the name of the devil, splash!” cried Robin, suiting the action to the
word, striking the water with both broad blades, while his men snatched
oars and did the same. A whirl of flashing water filled the cave, as if
with a tempest, soaked poor Carroway, and drenched his sword, and deluged
the priming of the hostile guns. All was uproar, turmoil, and confusion
thrice confounded; no man could tell where he was, and the grappling boats
reeled to and fro.</p>
<p>“Club your muskets, and at 'em!” cried the lieutenant, mad with rage, as
the gunwale of his boat swung over. “Their blood be upon their own heads;
draw your hangers, and at 'em!”</p>
<p>He never spoke another word, but furiously leaping at the smuggler chief,
fell back into his own boat, and died, without a syllable, without a
groan. The roar of a gun and the smoke of powder mingled with the watery
hubbub, and hushed in a moment all the oaths of conflict.</p>
<p>The revenue men drew back and sheathed their cutlasses, and laid down
their guns; some looked with terror at one another, and some at their dead
commander. His body lay across the heel of the mast, which had been
unstepped at his order; and a heavy drip of blood was weltering into a
ring upon the floor.</p>
<p>For several moments no one spoke, nor moved, nor listened carefully; but
the fall of the poor lieutenant's death-drops, like the ticking of a
clock, went on. Until an old tar, who had seen a sight of battles, crooked
his legs across a thwart, and propped up the limp head upon his doubled
knee.</p>
<p>“Dead as a door-nail,” he muttered, after laying his ear to the lips, and
one hand on the too impetuous heart, “Who takes command? This is a hanging
job, I'm thinking.”</p>
<p>There was nobody to take command, not even a petty officer. The command
fell to the readiest mind, as it must in such catastrophes. “Jem, you do
it,” whispered two or three; and being so elected, he was clear.</p>
<p>“Lay her broadside on to the mouth of the cave. Not a man stirs out
without killing me,” old Jem shouted; and to hear a plain voice was sudden
relief to most of them. In the wavering dimness they laid the pinnace
across the narrow entrance, while the smugglers huddled all together in
their boat. “Burn two blue-lights,” cried old Jem; and it was done.</p>
<p>“I'm not going to speechify to any cursed murderers,” the old sailor said,
with a sense of authority which made him use mild language; “but take heed
of one thing, I'll blow you all to pieces with this here four-pounder,
without you strikes peremptory.”</p>
<p>The brilliance of the blue-lights filled the cavern, throwing out
everybody's attitude and features, especially those of the dead
lieutenant. “A fine job you have made of it this time!” said Jem.</p>
<p>They were beaten, they surrendered, they could scarcely even speak to
assert their own innocence of such a wicked job. They submitted to be
bound, and cast down into their boat, imploring only that it might be
there—that they might not be taken to the other boat and laid near
the corpse of Carroway.</p>
<p>“Let the white-livered cowards have their way,” the old sailor said,
contemptuously. “Put their captain on the top of them. Now which is Robin
Lyth?”</p>
<p>The lights were burned out, and the cave was dark again, except when a
slant of moonlight came through a fissure upon the southern side. The
smugglers muttered something, but they were not heeded.</p>
<p>“Never mind, make her fast, fetch her out, you lubbers. We shall see him
well enough when we get outside.”</p>
<p>But in spite of all their certainty, they failed of this. They had only
six prisoners, and not one of them was Lyth.</p>
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