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<h1> THE GREEN FLAG </h1>
<h2> By Arthur Conan Doyle </h2>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> THE GREEN FLAG </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> CAPTAIN SHARKEY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE CROXLEY MASTER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE LORD OF CHATEAU NOIR </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE STRIPED CHEST </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> A SHADOW BEFORE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE KING OF THE FOXES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE THREE CORRESPONDENTS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> THE NEW CATACOMB </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE DEBUT OF BIMBASHI JOYCE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> A FOREIGN OFFICE ROMANCE </SPAN></p>
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<h2> THE GREEN FLAG </h2>
<p>When Jack Conolly, of the Irish Shotgun Brigade, the Rory of the Hills
Inner Circle, and the extreme left wing of the Land League, was
incontinently shot by Sergeant Murdoch of the constabulary, in a little
moonlight frolic near Kanturk, his twin-brother Dennis joined the British
Army. The countryside had become too hot for him; and, as the seventy-five
shillings were wanting which might have carried him to America, he took
the only way handy of getting himself out of the way. Seldom has Her
Majesty had a less promising recruit, for his hot Celtic blood seethed
with hatred against Britain and all things British. The sergeant, however,
smiling complacently over his 6 ft. of brawn and his 44 in. chest, whisked
him off with a dozen other of the boys to the depot at Fermoy, whence in a
few weeks they were sent on, with the spade-work kinks taken out of their
backs, to the first battalion of the Royal Mallows, at the top of the
roster for foreign service.</p>
<p>The Royal Mallows, at about that date, were as strange a lot of men as
ever were paid by a great empire to fight its battles. It was the darkest
hour of the land struggle, when the one side came out with crow-bar and
battering-ram by day, and the other with mask and with shot-gun by night.
Men driven from their homes and potato-patches found their way even into
the service of the Government, to which it seemed to them that they owed
their troubles, and now and then they did wild things before they came.
There were recruits in the Irish regiments who would forget to answer to
their own names, so short had been their acquaintance with them. Of these
the Royal Mallows had their full share; and, while they still retained
their fame as being one of the smartest corps in the army, no one knew
better than their officers that they were dry-rotted with treason and with
bitter hatred of the flag under which they served.</p>
<p>And the centre of all the disaffection was C Company, in which Dennis
Conolly found himself enrolled. They were Celts, Catholics, and men of the
tenant class to a man; and their whole experience of the British
Government had been an inexorable landlord, and a constabulary who seemed
to them to be always on the side of the rent-collector. Dennis was not the
only moonlighter in the ranks, nor was he alone in having an intolerable
family blood-feud to harden his heart. Savagery had begotten savagery in
that veiled civil war. A landlord with an iron mortgage weighing down upon
him had small bowels for his tenantry. He did but take what the law
allowed, and yet, with men like Jim Holan, or Patrick McQuire, or Peter
Flynn, who had seen the roofs torn from their cottages and their folk
huddled among their pitiable furniture upon the roadside, it was ill to
argue about abstract law. What matter that in that long and bitter
struggle there was many another outrage on the part of the tenant, and
many another grievance on the side of the landowner! A stricken man can
only feel his own wound, and the rank and file of the C Company of the
Royal Mallows were sore and savage to the soul. There were low whisperings
in barrack-rooms and canteens, stealthy meetings in public-house parlours,
bandying of passwords from mouth to mouth, and many other signs which made
their officers right glad when the order came which sent them to foreign,
and better still, to active service.</p>
<p>For Irish regiments have before now been disaffected, and have at a
distance looked upon the foe as though he might, in truth, be the friend;
but when they have been put face on to him, and when their officers have
dashed to the front with a wave and halloo, those rebel hearts have
softened and their gallant Celtic blood has boiled with the mad Joy of the
fight, until the slower Britons have marvelled that they ever could have
doubted the loyalty of their Irish comrades. So it would be again,
according to the officers, and so it would not be if Dennis Conolly and a
few others could have their way.</p>
<p>It was a March morning upon the eastern fringe of the Nubian desert. The
sun had not yet risen, but a tinge of pink flushed up as far as the
cloudless zenith, and the long strip of sea lay like a rosy ribbon across
the horizon. From the coast inland stretched dreary sand-plains, dotted
over with thick clumps at mimosa scrub and mottled patches of thorny bush.
No tree broke the monotony of that vast desert. The dull, dusty hue of the
thickets, and the yellow glare of the sand, were the only colours, save at
one point, where, from a distance, it seemed that a land-slip of
snow-white stones had shot itself across a low foot-hill. But as the
traveller approached he saw, with a thrill, that these were no stones, but
the bleaching bones of a slaughtered army. With its dull tints, its
gnarled, viprous bushes, its arid, barren soil, and this death streak
trailed across it, it was indeed a nightmare country.</p>
<p>Some eight or ten miles inland the rolling plain curved upwards with a
steeper slope until it ran into a line of red basaltic rock which
zigzagged from north to south, heaping itself up at one point into a
fantastic knoll. On the summit of this there stood upon that March morning
three Arab chieftains—the Sheik Kadra of the Hadendowas, Moussa Wad
Aburhegel, who led the Berber dervishes, and Hamid Wad Hussein, who had
come northward with his fighting men from the land of the Baggaras. They
had all three just risen from their praying-carpets, and were peering out,
with fierce, high-nosed faces thrust forwards, at the stretch of country
revealed by the spreading dawn.</p>
<p>The red rim of the sun was pushing itself now above the distant sea, and
the whole coast-line stood out brilliantly yellow against the rich deep
blue beyond. At one spot lay a huddle of white-walled houses, a mere
splotch in the distance; while four tiny cock-boats, which lay beyond,
marked the position of three of Her Majesty's 10,000-ton troopers and the
admiral's flagship. But it was not upon the distant town, nor upon the
great vessels, nor yet upon the sinister white litter which gleamed in the
plain beneath them, that the Arab chieftains gazed. Two miles from where
they stood, amid the sand-hills and the mimosa scrub, a great
parallelogram had been marked by piled-up bushes. From the inside of this
dozens of tiny blue smoke-reeks curled up into the still morning air;
while there rose from it a confused deep murmur, the voices of men and the
gruntings of camels blended into the same insect buzz.</p>
<p>"The unbelievers have cooked their morning food," said the Baggara chief,
shading his eyes with his tawny, sinewy hand. "Truly their sleep has been
scanty; for Hamid and a hundred of his men have fired upon them since the
rising of the moon."</p>
<p>"So it was with these others," answered the Sheik Kadra, pointing with his
sheathed sword towards the old battle-field. "They also had a day of
little water and a night of little rest, and the heart was gone out of
them ere ever the sons of the Prophet had looked them in the eyes. This
blade drank deep that day, and will again before the sun has travelled
from the sea to the hill."</p>
<p>"And yet these are other men," remarked the Berber dervish. "Well, I know
that Allah has placed them in the clutch of our fingers, yet it may be
that they with the big hats will stand firmer than the cursed men of
Egypt."</p>
<p>"Pray Allah that it may be so," cried the fierce Baggara, with a flash of
his black eyes. "It was not to chase women that I brought 700 men from the
river to the coast. See, my brother, already they are forming their
array."</p>
<p>A fanfare of bugle-calls burst from the distant camp. At the same time the
bank of bushes at one side had been thrown or trampled down, and the
little army within began to move slowly out on to the plain. Once clear of
the camp they halted, and the slant rays of the sun struck flashes from
bayonet and from gun-barrel as the ranks closed up until the big pith
helmets joined into a single long white ribbon. Two streaks of scarlet
glowed on either side of the square, but elsewhere the fringe of
fighting-men was of the dull yellow khaki tint which hardly shows against
the desert sand. Inside their array was a dense mass of camels and mules
bearing stores and ambulance needs. Outside a twinkling clump of cavalry
was drawn up on each flank, and in front a thin, scattered line of mounted
infantry was already slowly advancing over the bush-strewn plain, halting
on every eminence, and peering warily round as men might who have to pick
their steps among the bones of those who have preceded them.</p>
<p>The three chieftains still lingered upon the knoll, looking down with
hungry eyes and compressed lips at the dark steel-tipped patch. "They are
slower to start than the men of Egypt," the Sheik of the Hadendowas
growled in his beard.</p>
<p>"Slower also to go back, perchance, my brother," murmured the dervish.</p>
<p>"And yet they are not many—3,000 at the most."</p>
<p>"And we 10,000, with the Prophet's grip upon our spear-hafts and his words
upon our banner. See to their chieftain, how he rides upon the right and
looks up at us with the glass that sees from afar! It may be that he sees
this also." The Arab shook his sword at the small clump of horsemen who
had spurred out from the square.</p>
<p>"Lo! he beckons," cried the dervish; "and see those others at the corner,
how they bend and heave. Ha! by the Prophet, I had thought it." As he
spoke, a little woolly puff of smoke spurted up at the corner of the
square, and a 7 lb. shell burst with a hard metallic smack just over their
heads. The splinters knocked chips from the red rocks around them.</p>
<p>"Bismillah!" cried the Hadendowa; "if the gun can carry thus far, then
ours can answer to it. Ride to the left, Moussa, and tell Ben Ali to cut
the skin from the Egyptians if they cannot hit yonder mark. And you,
Hamid, to the right, and see that 3,000 men lie close in the wady that we
have chosen. Let the others beat the drum and show the banner of the
Prophet, for by the black stone their spears will have drunk deep ere they
look upon the stars again."</p>
<p>A long, straggling, boulder-strewn plateau lay on the summit of the red
hills, sloping very precipitously to the plain, save at one point, where a
winding gully curved downwards, its mouth choked with sand-mounds and
olive-hued scrub. Along the edge of this position lay the Arab host—a
motley crew of shock-headed desert clansmen, fierce predatory slave
dealers of the interior, and wild dervishes from the Upper Nile, all blent
together by their common fearlessness and fanaticism. Two races were
there, as wide as the poles apart—the thin-lipped, straight-haired
Arab and the thick-lipped, curly negro—yet the faith of Islam had
bound them closer than a blood tie. Squatting among the rocks, or lying
thickly in the shadow, they peered out at the slow-moving square beneath
them, while women with water-skins and bags of dhoora fluttered from group
to group, calling out to each other those fighting texts from the Koran
which in the hour of battle are maddening as wine to the true believer. A
score of banners waved over the ragged, valiant crew, and among them, upon
desert horses and white Bishareen camels, were the Emirs and Sheiks who
were to lead them against the infidels.</p>
<p>As the Sheik Kadra sprang into his saddle and drew his sword there was a
wild whoop and a clatter of waving spears, while the one-ended war-drums
burst into a dull crash like a wave upon shingle. For a moment 10,000 men
were up on the rocks with brandished arms and leaping figures; the next
they were under cover again, waiting sternly and silently for their
chieftain's orders. The square was less than half a mile from the ridge
now, and shell after shell from the 7 lb. guns were pitching over it. A
deep roar on the right, and then a second one showed that the Egyptian
Krupps were in action. Sheik Kadra's hawk eyes saw that the shells burst
far beyond the mark, and he spurred his horse along to where a knot of
mounted chiefs were gathered round the two guns, which were served by
their captured crews.</p>
<p>"How is this, Ben Ali?" he cried. "It was not thus that the dogs fired
when it was their own brothers in faith at whom they aimed!"</p>
<p>A chieftain reined his horse back, and thrust a blood-smeared sword into
its sheath. Beside him two Egyptian artillerymen with their throats cut
were sobbing out their lives upon the ground. "Who lays the gun this
time?" asked the fierce chief, glaring at the frightened gunners." Here,
thou black-browed child of Shaitan, aim, and aim for thy life."</p>
<p>It may have been chance, or it may have been skill, but the third and
fourth shells burst over the square. Sheik Kadra smiled grimly and
galloped back to the left, where his spearmen were streaming down into the
gully. As he joined them a deep growling rose from the plain beneath, like
the snarling of a sullen wild beast, and a little knot of tribesmen fell
into a struggling heap, caught in the blast of lead from a Gardner. Their
comrades pressed on over them, and sprang down into the ravine. From all
along the crest burst the hard, sharp crackle of Remington fire.</p>
<p>The square had slowly advanced, rippling over the low sandhills, and
halting every few minutes to re-arrange its formation. Now, having made
sure that there was no force of the enemy in the scrub, it changed its
direction, and began to take a line parallel to the Arab position. It was
too steep to assail from the front, and if they moved far enough to the
right the general hoped that he might turn it. On the top of those ruddy
hills lay a baronetcy for him, and a few extra hundreds in his pension,
and he meant having them both that day. The Remington fire was annoying,
and so were those two Krupp guns; already there were more cacolets full
than he cared to see. But on the whole he thought it better to hold his
fire until he had more to aim at than a few hundred of fuzzy heads peeping
over a razor-back ridge. He was a bulky, red-faced man, a fine
whist-player, and a soldier who knew his work. His men believed in him,
and he had good reason to believe in them, for he had excellent stuff
under him that day. Being an ardent champion of the short-service system,
he took particular care to work with veteran first battalions, and his
little force was the compressed essence of an army corps.</p>
<p>The left front of the square was formed by four companies of the Royal
Wessex, and the right by four of the Royal Mallows. On either side the
other halves of the same regiments marched in quarter column of companies.
Behind them, on the right was a battalion of Guards, and on the left one
of Marines, while the rear was closed in by a Rifle battalion. Two Royal
Artillery 7 lb. screw-guns kept pace with the square, and a dozen
white-bloused sailors, under their blue-coated, tight-waisted officers,
trailed their Gardner in front, turning every now and then to spit up at
the draggled banners which waved over the cragged ridge. Hussars and
Lancers scouted in the scrub at each side, and within moved the clump of
camels, with humorous eyes and supercilious lips, their comic faces a
contrast to the blood-stained men who already lay huddled in the cacolets
on either side.</p>
<p>The square was now moving slowly on a line parallel with the rocks,
stopping every few minutes to pick up wounded, and to allow the screw-guns
and Gardner to make themselves felt. The men looked serious, for that
spring on to the rocks of the Arab army had given them a vague glimpse of
the number and ferocity of their foes; but their faces were set like
stone, for they knew to a man that they must win or they must die—and
die, too, in a particularly unlovely fashion. But most serious of all was
the general, for he had seen that which brought a flush to his cheeks and
a frown to his brow.</p>
<p>"I say, Stephen," said he to his galloper, "those Mallows seem a trifle
jumpy. The right flank company bulged a bit when the niggers showed on the
hill."</p>
<p>"Youngest troops in the square, sir," murmured the aide, looking at them
critically through his eye-glass.</p>
<p>"Tell Colonel Flanagan to see to it, Stephen," said the general; and the
galloper sped upon his way. The colonel, a fine old Celtic warrior, was
over at C Company in an instant.</p>
<p>"How are the men, Captain Foley?"</p>
<p>"Never better, sir," answered the senior captain, in the spirit that makes
a Madras officer look murder if you suggest recruiting his regiment from
the Punjab.</p>
<p>"Stiffen them up!" cried the colonel. As he rode away a colour-sergeant
seemed to trip, and fell forward into a mimosa bush. He made no effort to
rise, but lay in a heap among the thorns.</p>
<p>"Sergeant O'Rooke's gone, sorr," cried a voice. "Never mind, lads," said
Captain Foley. "He's died like a soldier, fighting for his Queen."</p>
<p>"Down with the Queen!" shouted a hoarse voice from the ranks.</p>
<p>But the roar of the Gardner and the typewriter-like clicking of the hopper
burst in at the tail of the words. Captain Foley heard them, and
Subalterns Grice and Murphy heard them; but there are times when a deaf
ear is a gift from the gods.</p>
<p>"Steady, Mallows!" cried the captain, in a pause of the grunting
machine-gun. "We have the honour of Ireland to guard this day."</p>
<p>"And well we know how to guard it, captin!" cried the same ominous voice;
and there was a buzz from the length of the company.</p>
<p>The captain and the two subs. came together behind the marching line.</p>
<p>"They seem a bit out of hand," murmured the captain.</p>
<p>"Bedad," said the Galway boy, "they mean to scoot like redshanks."</p>
<p>"They nearly broke when the blacks showed on the hill," said Grice.</p>
<p>"The first man that turns, my sword is through him," cried Foley, loud
enough to be heard by five files on either side of him. Then, in a lower
voice, "It's a bitter drop to swallow, but it's my duty to report what you
think to the chief, and have a company of Jollies put behind us." He
turned away with the safety of the square upon his mind, and before he had
reached his goal the square had ceased to exist.</p>
<p>In their march in front of what looked like a face of cliff, they had come
opposite to the mouth of the gully, in which, screened by scrub and
boulders, 3,000 chosen dervishes, under Hamid Wad Hussein, of the
Baggaras, were crouching. Tat, tat, tat, went the rifles of three mounted
infantrymen in front of the left shoulder of the square, and an instant
later they wore spurring it for their lives, crouching over the manes of
their horses, and pelting over the sandhills with thirty or forty
galloping chieftains at their heels. Rocks and scrub and mimosa swarmed
suddenly into life. Rushing black figures came and went in the gaps of the
bushes. A howl that drowned the shouts of the officers, a long quavering
yell, burst from the ambuscade. Two rolling volleys from the Royal Wessex,
one crash from the screw-gun firing shrapnel, and then before a second
cartridge could be rammed in, a living, glistening black wave, tipped with
steel, had rolled over the gun, the Royal Wessex had been dashed back
among the camels, and 1,000 fanatics were hewing and hacking in the heart
of what had been the square.</p>
<p>The camels and mules in the centre, jammed more and more together as their
leaders flinched from the rush of the tribesmen, shut out the view of the
other three faces, who could only tell that the Arabs had got in by the
yells upon Allah, which rose ever nearer and nearer amid the clouds of
sand-dust, the struggling animals, and the dense mass of swaying, cursing
men. Some of the Wessex fired back at the Arabs who had passed them, as
excited Tommies will, and it is whispered among doctors that it was not
always a Remington bullet which was cut from a wound that day. Some
rallied in little knots, stabbing furiously with their bayonets at the
rushing spearmen. Others turned at bay with their backs against the
camels, and others round the general and his staff, who, revolver in hand,
had flung themselves into the heart of it. But the whole square was
sidling slowly away from the gorge, pushed back by the pressure at the
shattered corner.</p>
<p>The officers and men at the other faces were glancing nervously to the
rear, uncertain what was going on, and unable to take help to their
comrades without breaking the formation.</p>
<p>"By Jove, they've got through the Wessex!" cried Grice of the Mallows.</p>
<p>"The divils have hurrooshed us, Ted," said his brother subaltern, cocking
his revolver.</p>
<p>The ranks were breaking, and crowding towards Private Conolly, all talking
together as the officers peered back through the veil of dust. The sailors
had run their Gardner out, and she was squirting death out of her five
barrels into the flank of the rushing stream of savages. "Oh, this bloody
gun!" shouted a voice. "She's jammed again." The fierce metallic grunting
had ceased, and her crew were straining and hauling at the breech.</p>
<p>"This damned vertical feed!" cried an officer.</p>
<p>"The spanner, Wilson!—the spanner! Stand to your cutlasses, boys, or
they're into us." His voice rose into a shriek as he ended, for a
shovel-headed spear had been buried in his chest. A second wave of
dervishes lapped over the hillocks, and burst upon the machine-gun and the
right front of the line. The sailors were overborne in an instant, but the
Mallows, with their fighting blood aflame, met the yell of the Moslem with
an even wilder, fiercer cry, and dropped two hundred of them with a single
point-blank volley. The howling, leaping crew swerved away to the right,
and dashed on into the gap which had already been made for them.</p>
<p>But C Company had drawn no trigger to stop that fiery rush. The men leaned
moodily upon their Martinis. Some had even thrown them upon the ground.
Conolly was talking fiercely to those about him. Captain Foley, thrusting
his way through the press, rushed up to him with a revolver in his hand.</p>
<p>"This is your doing, you villain!" he cried.</p>
<p>"If you raise your pistol, Captin, your brains will be over your coat,"
said a low voice at his side.</p>
<p>He saw that several rifles were turned on him. The two subs. had pressed
forward, and were by his side. "What is it, then?" he cried, looking round
from one fierce mutinous face to another. "Are you Irishmen? Are you
soldiers? What are you here for but to fight for your country?"</p>
<p>"England is no country of ours," cried several.</p>
<p>"You are not fighting for England. You are fighting for Ireland, and for
the Empire of which it as part."</p>
<p>"A black curse on the Impire!" shouted Private McQuire, throwing down his
rifle. "'Twas the Impire that backed the man that druv me onto the
roadside. May me hand stiffen before I draw trigger for it.</p>
<p>"What's the Impire to us, Captain Foley, and what's the Widdy to us
ayther?" cried a voice.</p>
<p>"Let the constabulary foight for her."</p>
<p>"Ay, be God, they'd be better imployed than pullin' a poor man's thatch
about his ears."</p>
<p>"Or shootin' his brother, as they did mine."</p>
<p>"It was the Impire laid my groanin' mother by the wayside. Her son will
rot before he upholds it, and ye can put that in the charge-sheet in the
next coort-martial."</p>
<p>In vain the three officers begged, menaced, persuaded. The square was
still moving, ever moving, with the same bloody fight raging in its
entrails. Even while they had been speaking they had been shuffling
backwards, and the useless Gardner, with her slaughtered crew, was already
a good hundred yards from them. And the pace was accelerating. The mass of
men, tormented and writhing, was trying, by a common instinct, to reach
some clearer ground where they could re-form. Three faces were still
intact, but the fourth had been caved in, and badly mauled, without its
comrades being able to help it. The Guards had met a fresh rush of the
Hadendowas, and had blown back the tribesmen with a volley, and the
cavalry had ridden over another stream of them, as they welled out of the
gully. A litter of hamstrung horses, and haggled men behind them, showed
that a spearman on his face among the bushes can show some sport to the
man who charges him. But, in spite of all, the square was still reeling
swiftly backwards, trying to shake itself clear of this torment which
clung to its heart. Would it break or would it re-form? The lives of five
regiments and the honour of the flag hung upon the answer.</p>
<p>Some, at least, were breaking. The C Company of the Mallows had lost all
military order, and was pushing back in spite of the haggard officers, who
cursed, and shoved, and prayed in the vain attempt to hold them. The
captain and the subs. were elbowed and jostled, while the men crowded
towards Private Conolly for their orders. The confusion had not spread,
for the other companies, in the dust and smoke and turmoil, had lost touch
with their mutinous comrades. Captain Foley saw that even now there might
be time to avert a disaster. "Think what you are doing, man," he yelled,
rushing towards the ringleader. "There are a thousand Irish in the square,
and they are dead men if we break."</p>
<p>The words alone might have had little effect on the old moonlighter. It is
possible that, in his scheming brain, he had already planned how he was to
club his Irish together and lead them to the sea. But at that moment the
Arabs broke through the screen of camels which had fended them off. There
was a Struggle, a screaming, a mule rolled over, a wounded man sprang up
in a cacolet with a spear through him, and then through the narrow gap
surged a stream of naked savages, mad with battle, drunk with slaughter,
spotted and splashed with blood—blood dripping from their spears,
their arms, their faces. Their yells, their bounds, their crouching,
darting figures, the horrid energy of their spear-thrusts, made them look
like a blast of fiends from the pit. And were these the Allies of Ireland?
Were these the men who were to strike for her against her enemies?
Conolly's soul rose up in loathing at the thought.</p>
<p>He was a man of firm purpose, and yet at the first sight of those howling
fiends that purpose faltered, and at the second it was blown to the winds.
He saw a huge coal-black negro seize a shrieking camel-driver and saw at
his throat with a knife. He saw a shock-headed tribesman plunge his great
spear through the back of their own little bugler from Mill-street. He saw
a dozen deeds of blood—the murder of the wounded, the hacking of the
unarmed—and caught, too, in a glance, the good wholesome faces of
the faced-about rear rank of the Marines. The Mallows, too, had faced
about, and in an instant Conolly had thrown himself into the heart of C
Company, striving with the officers to form the men up with their
comrades.</p>
<p>But the mischief had gone too far. The rank and file had no heart in their
work. They had broken before, and this last rush of murderous savages was
a hard thing for broken men to stand against. They flinched from the
furious faces and dripping forearms. Why should they throw away their
lives for a flag for which they cared nothing? Why should their leader
urge them to break, and now shriek to them to re-form? They would not
re-form. They wanted to get to the sea and to safety. He flung himself
among them with outstretched arms, with words of reason, with shouts, with
gaspings. It was useless; the tide was beyond his control. They were
shredding out into the desert with their faces set for the coast.</p>
<p>"Bhoys, will ye stand for this?" screamed a voice. It was so ringing, so
strenuous, that the breaking Mallows glanced backwards. They were held by
what they saw. Private Conolly had planted his rifle-stock downwards in a
mimosa bush. From the fixed bayonet there fluttered a little green flag
with the crownless harp. God knows for what black mutiny, for what signal
of revolt, that flag had been treasured up within the corporal's tunic!
Now its green wisp stood amid the rush, while three proud regimental
colours were reeling slowly backwards.</p>
<p>"What for the flag?" yelled the private.</p>
<p>"My heart's blood for it! and mine! and mine!" cried a score of voices.
"God bless it! The flag, boys—the flag!"</p>
<p>C Company were rallying upon it. The stragglers clutched at each other,
and pointed. "Here, McQuire, Flynn, O'Hara," ran the shoutings. "Close on
the flag! Back to the flag!" The three standards reeled backwards, and the
seething square strove for a clearer space where they could form their
shattered ranks; but C Company, grim and powder-stained, choked with
enemies and falling fast, still closed in on the little rebel ensign that
flapped from the mimosa bush.</p>
<p>It was a good half-hour before the square, having disentangled itself from
its difficulties and dressed its ranks, began to slowly move forwards over
the ground, across which in its labour and anguish it had been driven. The
long trail of Wessex men and Arabs showed but too clearly the path they
had come.</p>
<p>"How many got into us, Stephen?" asked the general, tapping his snuff-box.</p>
<p>"I should put them down at a thousand or twelve hundred, sir."</p>
<p>"I did not see any get out again. What the devil were the Wessex thinking
about? The Guards stood well, though; so did the Mallows."</p>
<p>"Colonel Flanagan reports that his front flank company was cut off, sir."</p>
<p>"Why, that's the company that was out of hand when we advanced!"</p>
<p>"Colonel Flanagan reports, sir, that the company took the whole brunt of
the attack, and gave the square time to re-form."</p>
<p>"Tell the Hussars to ride forward, Stephen," said the general, "and try if
they can see anything of them. There's no firing, and I fear that the
Mallows will want to do some recruiting. Let the square take ground by the
right, and then advance!"</p>
<p>But the Sheik Kadra of the Hadendowas saw from his knoll that the men with
the big hats had rallied, and that they were coming back in the quiet
business fashion of men whose work was before them. He took counsel with
Moussa the Dervish and Hussein the Baggara, and a woestruck man was he
when he learned that the third of his men were safe in the Moslem
Paradise. So, having still some signs of victory to show, he gave the
word, and the desert warriors flitted off unseen and unheard, even as they
had come.</p>
<p>A red rock plateau, a few hundred spears and Remingtons, and a plain which
for the second time was strewn with slaughtered men, was all that his
day's fighting gave to the English general.</p>
<p>It was a squadron of Hussars which came first to the spot where the rebel
flag had waved. A dense litter of Arab dead marked the place. Within, the
flag waved no longer, but the rifle stood in the mimosa bush, and round
it, with their wounds in front, lay the Fenian private and the silent
ranks of the Irishry. Sentiment is not an English failing, but the Hussar
captain raised his hilt in a salute as he rode past the blood-soaked ring.</p>
<p>The British general sent home dispatches to his Government, and so did the
chief of the Hadendowas, though the style and manner differed somewhat in
each.</p>
<p>The Sheik Kadra of the Hadendowa people to Mohammed Ahmed, the chosen of
Allah, homage and greeting, (began the latter). Know by this that on the
fourth day of this moon we gave battle to the Kaffirs who call themselves
Inglees, having with us the Chief Hussein with ten thousand of the
faithful. By the blessing of Allah we have broken them, and chased them
for a mile, though indeed these infidels are different from the dogs of
Egypt, and have slain very many of our men. Yet we hope to smite them
again ere the new moon be come, to which end I trust that thou wilt send
us a thousand Dervishes from Omdurman. In token of our victory I send you
by this messenger a flag which we have taken. By the colour it might well
seem to have belonged to those of the true faith, but the Kaffirs gave
their blood freely to save it, and so we think that, though small, it is
very dear to them.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CAPTAIN SHARKEY. </h2>
<p>I<br/></p>
<h3> HOW THE GOVERNOR OF SAINT KITT'S CAME HOME. </h3>
<p>When the great wars of the Spanish Succession had been brought to an end
by the Treaty of Utrecht, the vast number of privateers which had been
fitted out by the contending parties found their occupation gone. Some
took to the more peaceful but less lucrative ways of ordinary commerce,
others were absorbed into the fishing fleets, and a few of the more
reckless hoisted the Jolly Rodger at the mizzen, and the bloody flag at
the main, declaring a private war upon their own account against the whole
human race.</p>
<p>With mixed crews, recruited from every nation, they scoured the seas,
disappearing occasionally to careen in some lonely inlet, or putting in
for a debauch at some outlying port, where they dazzled the inhabitants by
their lavishness, and horrified them by their brutalities.</p>
<p>On the Coromandel Coast, at Madagascar, in the African waters, and above
all in the West Indian and American seas, the pirates were a constant
menace. With an insolent luxury they would regulate their depredations by
the comfort of the seasons, harrying New England in the summer, and
dropping south again to the tropical islands in the winter.</p>
<p>They were the more to be dreaded because they had none of that discipline
and restraint which made their predecessors, the Buccaneers, both
formidable and respectable. These Ishmaels of the sea rendered an account
to no man, and treated their prisoners according to the drunken whim of
the moment. Flashes of grotesque generosity alternated with longer
stretches of inconceivable ferocity, and the skipper who fell into their
hands might find himself dismissed with his cargo, after serving as boon
companion in some hideous debauch, or might sit at his cabin table with
his own nose and his lips served up with pepper and salt in front of him.
It took a stout seaman in those days to ply his calling in the Caribbean
Gulf.</p>
<p>Such a man was Captain John Scarrow, of the ship <i>Morning Star</i>, and
yet he breathed a long sigh of relief when he heard the splash of the
falling anchor and swung at his moorings within a hundred yards of the
guns of the citadel of Basseterre. St. Kitt's was his final port of call,
and early next morning his bowsprit would be pointed for Old England. He
had had enough of those robber-haunted seas. Ever since he had left
Maracaibo upon the Main, with his full lading of sugar and red pepper, he
had winced at every topsail which glimmered over the violet edge of the
tropical sea. He had coasted up the Windward Islands, touching here and
there, and assailed continually by stories of villainy and outrage.</p>
<p>Captain Sharkey, of the twenty-gun pirate barque, <i>Happy Delivery</i>,
had passed down the coast, and had littered it with gutted vessels and
with murdered men. Dreadful anecdotes were current of his grim
pleasantries and of his inflexible ferocity. From the Bahamas to the Main
his coal-black barque, with the ambiguous name, had been freighted with
death and many things which are worse than death. So nervous was Captain
Scarrow, with his new full-rigged ship, and her full and valuable lading,
that he struck out to the west as far as Bird's Island to be out of the
usual track of commerce. And yet even in those solitary waters he had been
unable to shake off sinister traces of Captain Sharkey.</p>
<p>One morning they had raised a single skiff adrift upon the face of the
ocean. Its only occupant was a delirious seaman, who yelled hoarsely as
they hoisted him aboard, and showed a dried-up tongue like a black and
wrinkled fungus at the back of his mouth. Water and nursing soon
transformed him into the strongest and smartest sailor on the ship. He was
from Marblehead, in New England, it seemed, and was the sole survivor of a
schooner which had been scuttled by the dreadful Sharkey.</p>
<p>For a week Hiram Evanson, for that was his name, had been adrift beneath a
tropical sun. Sharkey had ordered the mangled remains of his late captain
to be thrown into the boat, "as provisions for the voyage," but the seaman
had at once committed it to the deep, lest the temptation should be more
than he could bear. He had lived upon his own huge frame until, at the
last moment, the <i>Morning Star</i> had found him in that madness which
is the precursor of such a death. It was no bad find for Captain Scarrow,
for, with a short-handed crew, such a seaman as this big New Englander was
a prize worth having. He vowed that he was the only man whom Captain
Sharkey had ever placed under an obligation.</p>
<p>Now that they lay under the guns of Basseterre, all danger from the pirate
was at an end, and yet the thought of him lay heavily upon the seaman's
mind as he watched the agent's boat shooting out from the Custom-house
quay.</p>
<p>"I'll lay you a wager, Morgan," said he to the first mate, "that the agent
will speak of Sharkey in the first hundred words that pass his lips."</p>
<p>"Well, captain, I'll have you a silver dollar, and chance it," said the
rough old Bristol man beside him.</p>
<p>The negro rowers shot the boat alongside, and the linen-clad steersman
sprang up the ladder. "Welcome, Captain Scarrow!" he cried. "Have you
heard about Sharkey?"</p>
<p>The captain grinned at the mate.</p>
<p>"What devilry has he been up to now?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Devilry! You've not heard, then? Why, we've got him safe under lock and
key at Basseterre. He was tried last Wednesday, and he is to be hanged
to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>Captain and mate gave a shout of joy, which an instant later was taken up
by the crew. Discipline was forgotten as they scrambled up through the
break of the poop to hear the news. The New Englander was in the front of
them with a radiant face turned up to Heaven, for he came of the Puritan
stock.</p>
<p>"Sharkey to be hanged!" he cried. "You don't know, Master Agent, if they
lack a hangman, do you?"</p>
<p>"Stand back!" cried the mate, whose outraged sense of discipline was even
stronger than his interest at the news. "I'll pay that dollar, Captain
Scarrow, with the lightest heart that ever I paid a wager yet. How came
the villain to be taken?"</p>
<p>"Why, as to that, he became more than his own comrades could abide, and
they took such a horror of him that they would not have him on the ship.
So they marooned him upon the Little Mangles to the south of the
Mysteriosa Bank, and there he was found by a Portobello trader, who
brought him in. There was talk of sending him to Jamaica to be tried, but
our good little Governor, Sir Charles Ewan, would not hear of it. 'He's my
meat,' said he, 'and I claim the cooking of it.' If you can stay till
to-morrow morning at ten, you'll see the joint swinging."</p>
<p>"I wish I could," said the captain, wistfully, "but I am sadly behind time
now. I should start with the evening tide."</p>
<p>"That you can't do," said the agent with decision. "The Governor is going
back with you."</p>
<p>"The Governor!"</p>
<p>"Yes. He's had a dispatch from Government to return without delay. The
fly-boat that brought it has gone on to Virginia. So Sir Charles has been
waiting for you, as I told him you were due before the rains."</p>
<p>"Well, well!" cried the captain in some perplexity, "I'm a plain seaman,
and I don't know much of governors and baronets and their ways. I don't
remember that I ever so much as spoke to one. But if it's in King George's
service, and he asks a cast in the <i>Morning Star</i> as far as London,
I'll do what I can for him. There's my own cabin he can have and welcome.
As to the cooking, it's lobscouse and salmagundy six days in the week; but
he can bring his own cook aboard with him if he thinks our galley too
rough for his taste."</p>
<p>"You need not trouble your mind, Captain Scarrow," said the agent. "Sir
Charles is in weak health just now, only clear of a quartan ague, and it
is likely he will keep his cabin most of the voyage. Dr. Larousse said
that he would have sunk had the hanging of Sharkey not put fresh life into
him. He has a great spirit in him, though, and you must not blame him if
he is somewhat short in his speech."</p>
<p>"He may say what he likes, and do what he likes, so long as he does not
come athwart my hawse when I am working the ship," said the captain. "He
is Governor of St. Kitt's, but I am Governor of the <i>Morning Star</i>,
and, by his leave, I must weigh with the first tide, for I owe a duty to
my employer, just as he does to King George."</p>
<p>"He can scarce be ready to-night, for he has many things to set in order
before he leaves."</p>
<p>"The early morning tide, then."</p>
<p>"Very good. I shall send his things aboard to-night; and he will follow
them to-morrow early if I can prevail upon him to leave St. Kitt's without
seeing Sharkey do the rogue's hornpipe. His own orders were instant, so it
may be that he will come at once. It is likely that Dr. Larousse may
attend him upon the journey."</p>
<p>Left to themselves, the captain and mate made the best preparations which
they could for their illustrious passenger. The largest cabin was turned
out and adorned in his honour, and orders were given by which barrels of
fruit and some cases of wine should be brought off to vary the plain food
of an ocean-going trader. In the evening the Governor's baggage began to
arrive—great iron-bound ant-proof trunks, and official tin
packing-cases, with other strange-shaped packages, which suggested the
cocked hat or the sword within. And then there came a note, with a
heraldic device upon the big red seal, to say that Sir Charles Ewan made
his compliments to Captain Scarrow, and that he hoped to be with him in
the morning as early as his duties and his infirmities would permit.</p>
<p>He was as good as his word, for the first grey of dawn had hardly begun to
deepen into pink when he was brought alongside, and climbed with some
difficulty up the ladder. The captain had heard that the Governor was an
eccentric, but he was hardly prepared for the curious figure who came
limping feebly down his quarter-deck, his steps supported by a thick
bamboo cane. He wore a Ramillies wig, all twisted into little tails like a
poodle's coat, and cut so low across the brow that the large green glasses
which covered his eyes looked as if they were hung from it. A fierce beak
of a nose, very long and very thin, cut the air in front of him. His ague
had caused him to swathe his throat and chin with a broad linen cravat,
and he wore a loose damask powdering-gown secured by a cord round the
waist. As he advanced he carried his masterful nose high in the air, but
his head turned slowly from side to side in the helpless manner of the
purblind, and he called in a high, querulous voice for the captain.</p>
<p>"You have my things?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, Sir Charles."</p>
<p>"Have you wine aboard?"</p>
<p>"I have ordered five cases, sir."</p>
<p>"And tobacco?"</p>
<p>"There is a keg of Trinidad."</p>
<p>"You play a hand at picquet?"</p>
<p>"Passably well, sir."</p>
<p>"Then anchor up, and to sea!"</p>
<p>There was a fresh westerly wind, so by the time the sun was fairly through
the morning haze, the ship was hull down from the islands. The decrepit
Governor still limpid the deck, with one guiding hand upon the quarter
rail.</p>
<p>"You are on Government service now, captain," said he. "They are counting
the days till I come to Westminster, I promise you. Have you all that she
will carry?"</p>
<p>"Every inch, Sir Charles."</p>
<p>"Keep her so if you blow the sails out of her. I fear, Captain Scarrow,
that you will find a blind and broken man a poor companion for your
voyage."</p>
<p>"I am honoured in enjoying your Excellency's society," said the captain.
"But I am sorry that your eyes should be so afflicted."</p>
<p>"Yes, indeed. It is the cursed glare of the sun on the white streets of
Basseterre which has gone far to burn them out."</p>
<p>"I had heard also that you had been plagued by a quartan ague."</p>
<p>"Yes; I have had a pyrexy, which has reduced me much."</p>
<p>"We had set aside a cabin for your surgeon."</p>
<p>"Ah, the rascal! There was no budging him, for he has a snug business
amongst the merchants. But hark!" He raised his ring-covered band in the
air. From far astern there came the low, deep thunder of cannon.</p>
<p>"It is from the island!" cried the captain in astonishment. "Can it be a
signal for us to put back?"</p>
<p>The Governor laughed. "You have heard that Sharkey, the pirate, is to be
hanged this morning. I ordered the batteries to salute when the rascal was
kicking his last, so that I might know of it out at sea. There's an end of
Sharkey!"</p>
<p>"There's an end of Sharkey!" cried the captain; and the crew took up the
cry as they gathered in little knots upon the deck and stared back at the
low, purple line of the vanishing land.</p>
<p>It was a cheering omen for their start across the Western Ocean, and the
invalid Governor found himself a popular man on board, for it was
generally understood that but for his insistence upon an immediate trial
and sentence, the villain might have played upon some more venal judge and
so escaped. At dinner that day Sir Charles gave many anecdotes of the
deceased pirate; and so affable was he, and so skilful in adapting his
conversation to men of lower degree, that captain, mate, and Governor
smoked their long pipes, and drank their claret as three good comrades
should.</p>
<p>"And what figure did Sharkey cut in the dock?" asked the captain.</p>
<p>"He is a man of some presence," said the Governor.</p>
<p>"I had always understood that he was an ugly, sneering devil," remarked
the mate.</p>
<p>"Well, I dare say he could look ugly upon occasions," said the Governor.</p>
<p>"I have heard a New Bedford whaleman say that he could not forget his
eyes," said Captain Scarrow. "They were of the lightest filmy blue, with
red-rimmed lids. Was that not so, Sir Charles?"</p>
<p>"Alas, my own eyes will not permit me to know much of those of others! But
I remember now that the adjutant-general said that he had such an eye as
you describe, and added that the jury was so foolish as to be visibly
discomposed when it was turned upon them. It is well for them that he is
dead, for he was a man who would never forget an injury, and if he had
laid hands upon any one of them he would have stuffed him with straw and
hung him for a figure-head."</p>
<p>The idea seemed to amuse the Governor, for he broke suddenly into a high,
neighing laugh, and the two seamen laughed also, but not so heartily, for
they remembered that Sharkey was not the last pirate who sailed the
western seas, and that as grotesque a fate might come to be their own.
Another bottle was broached to drink to a pleasant voyage, and the
Governor would drink just one other on the top of it, so that the seamen
were glad at last to stagger off—the one to his watch, and the other
to his bunk. But when, after his four hours' spell, the mate came down
again, he was amazed to see the Governor, in his Ramillies wig, his
glasses, and his powdering-gown, still seated sedately at the lonely table
with his reeking pipe and six black bottles by his side.</p>
<p>"I have drunk with the Governor of St. Kitt's when he was sick," said he,
"and God forbid that I should ever try to keep pace with him when he is
well."</p>
<p>The voyage of the <i>Morning Star</i> was a successful one, and in about
three weeks she was at the mouth of the British Channel. From the first
day the infirm Governor had begun to recover his strength, and before they
were halfway across the Atlantic, he was, save only for his eyes, as well
as any man upon the ship. Those who uphold the nourishing qualities of
wine might point to him in triumph, for never a night passed that he did
not repeat the performance of his first one. And yet be would be out upon
deck in the early morning as fresh and brisk as the best of them, peering
about with his weak eyes, and asking questions about the sails and the
rigging, for he was anxious to learn the ways of the sea. And he made up
for the deficiency of his eyes by obtaining leave from the captain that
the New England seaman—he who had been cast away in the boat—should
lead him about, and, above all, that he should sit beside him when he
played cards and count the number of the pips, for unaided he could not
tell the king from the knave.</p>
<p>It was natural that this Evanson should do the Governor willing service,
since the one was the victim of the vile Sharkey and the other was his
avenger. One could see that it was a pleasure to the big American to lend
his arm to the invalid, and at night he would stand with all respect
behind his chair in the cabin and lay his great stub-nailed forefinger
upon the card which he should play. Between them there was little in the
pockets either of Captain Scarrow or of Morgan, the first mate, by the
time they sighted the Lizard.</p>
<p>And it was not long before they found that all they had heard of the high
temper of Sir Charles Ewan fell short of the mark. At a sign of opposition
or a word of argument his chin would shoot out from his cravat, his
masterful nose would be cocked at a higher and more insolent angle, and
his bamboo cane would whistle up over his shoulders. He cracked it once
over the head of the carpenter when the man had accidentally jostled him
upon the deck. Once, too, when there was some grumbling and talk of a
mutiny over the state of the provisions, he was of opinion that they
should not wait for the dogs to rise, but that they should march forward
and set upon them until they had trounced the devilment out of them. "Give
me a knife and a bucket!" he cried with an oath, and could hardly be
withheld from setting forth alone to deal with the spokesman of the
seamen.</p>
<p>Captain Scarrow had to remind him that though he might be only answerable
to himself at St. Kitt's, killing became murder upon the high seas. In
politics he was, as became his official position, a stout prop of the
House of Hanover, and he swore in his cups that he had never met a
Jacobite without pistolling him where he stood. Yet for all his vapouring
and his violence he was so good a companion, with such a stream of strange
anecdote and reminiscence, that Scarrow and Morgan had never known a
voyage pass so pleasantly.</p>
<p>And then at length came the last day, when, after passing the island, they
had struck land again at the high white cliffs at Beachy Head. As evening
fell the ship lay rolling in an oily calm, a league off from Winchelsea,
with the long, dark snout of Dungeness jutting out in front of her. Next
morning they would pick up their pilot at the Foreland, and Sir Charles
might meet the King's ministers at Westminster before the evening. The
boatswain had the watch, and the three friends were met for a last turn of
cards in the cabin, the faithful American still serving as eyes to the
Governor. There was a good stake upon the table, for the sailors had tried
on this last night to win their losses back from their passenger. Suddenly
he threw his cards down, and swept all the money into the pocket of his
long-flapped silken waistcoat.</p>
<p>"The game's mine!" said he.</p>
<p>"Heh, Sir Charles, not so fast!" cried Captain Scarrow; "you have not
played out the hand, and we are not the losers."</p>
<p>"Sink you for a liar!" said the Governor. "I tell you I <i>have</i> played
out the hand, and that you <i>are</i> a loser." He whipped off his wig and
his glasses as he spoke, and there was a high, bald forehead, and a pair
of shifty blue eyes with the red rims of a bull terrier.</p>
<p>"Good God!" cried the mate. "It's Sharkey!"</p>
<p>The two sailors sprang from their seats, but the big American castaway had
put his huge back against the cabin door, and he held a pistol in each of
his hands. The passenger had also laid a pistol upon the scattered cards
in front of him, and he burst into his high, neighing laugh. "Captain
Sharkey is the name, gentlemen," said he, "and this is Roaring Ned
Galloway, the quartermaster of the <i>Happy Delivery</i>. We made it hot,
and so they marooned us: me on a dry Tortuga cay, and him in an oarless
boat. You dogs—you poor, fond, water-hearted dogs— we hold you
at the end of our pistols!"</p>
<p>"You may shoot, or you may not!" cried Scarrow, striking his hand upon the
breast of his frieze jacket. "If it's my last breath, Sharkey, I tell you
that you are a bloody rogue and miscreant, with a halter and hell-fire in
store for you!"</p>
<p>"There's a man of spirit, and one of my own kidney, and he's going to make
a very pretty death of it!" cried Sharkey. "There's no one aft save the
man at the wheel, so you may keep your breath, for you'll need it soon. Is
the dinghy astern, Ned?"</p>
<p>"Ay, ay, captain!"</p>
<p>"And the other boats scuttled?"</p>
<p>"I bored them all in three places."</p>
<p>"Then we shall have to leave you, Captain Scarrow. You look as if you
hadn't quite got your bearings yet. Is there anything you'd like to ask
me?"</p>
<p>"I believe you're the devil himself!" cried the captain. "Where is the
Governor of St. Kitt's?"</p>
<p>"When last I saw him his Excellency was in bed with his throat cut. When I
broke prison I learnt from my friends—for Captain Sharkey has those
who love him in every port—that the Governor was starting for Europe
under a master who had never seen him. I climbed his verandah, and I paid
him the little debt that I owed him. Then I came aboard you with such of
his things as I had need of, and a pair of glasses to hide these tell-tale
eyes of mine, and I have ruffled it as a governor should. Now, Ned, you
can get to work upon them."</p>
<p>"Help! help! Watch ahoy!" yelled the mate; but the butt of the pirate's
pistol crashed down on his head, and he dropped like a pithed ox. Scarrow
rushed for the door, but the sentinel clapped his hand over his mouth, and
threw his other arm round his waist.</p>
<p>"No use, Master Scarrow," said Sharkey. "Let us see you go down on your
knees and beg for your life."</p>
<p>"I'll see you—" cried Scarrow, shaking his mouth clear.</p>
<p>"Twist his arm round, Ned. Now will you?"</p>
<p>"No; not if you twist it off."</p>
<p>"Put an inch of your knife into him."</p>
<p>"You may put six inches, and then I won't."</p>
<p>"Sink me, but I like his spirit!" cried Sharkey. "Put your knife in your
pocket, Ned. You've saved your skin, Scarrow, and it's a pity so stout a
man should not take to the only trade where a pretty fellow can pick up a
living. You must be born for no common death, Scarrow, since you have lain
at my mercy and lived to tell the story. Tie him up, Ned."</p>
<p>"To the stove, captain?"</p>
<p>"Tut, tut! there's a fire in the stove. None of your rover tricks, Ned
Galloway, unless they are called for, or I'll let you know which of us two
is captain and which is quartermaster. Make him fast to the table."</p>
<p>"Nay, I thought you meant to roast him!" said the quartermaster. "You
surely do not mean to let him go?"</p>
<p>"If you and I were marooned on a Bahama cay, Ned Galloway, it is still for
me to command and for you to obey. Sink you for a villain, do you dare to
question my orders?"</p>
<p>"Nay, nay, Captain Sharkey, not so hot, sir!" said the quartermaster, and,
lifting Scarrow like a child, he laid him on the table. With the quick
dexterity of a seaman, he tied his spread-eagled hands and feet with a
rope which was passed underneath, and gagged him securely with the long
cravat which used to adorn the chin of the Governor of St. Kitt's.</p>
<p>"Now, Captain Scarrow, we must take our leave of you," said the pirate.
"If I had half a dozen of my brisk boys at my heels I should have had your
cargo and your ship, but Roaring Ned could not find a foremast hand with
the spirit of a mouse. I see there are some small craft about, and we
shall get one of them. When Captain Sharkey has a boat he can get a smack,
when he has a smack he can get a brig, when he has a brig he can get a
barque, and when he has a barque he'll soon have a full-rigged ship of his
own—so make haste into London town, or I may be coming back, after
all, for the <i>Morning Star</i>."</p>
<p>Captain Scarrow heard the key turn in the lock as they left the cabin.
Then, as he strained at his bonds, he heard their footsteps pass up the
companion and along the quarter-deck to where the dinghy hung in the
stern. Then, still struggling and writhing, he heard the creak of the
falls and the splash of the boat in the water. In a mad fury he tore and
dragged at his ropes, until at last, with flayed wrists and ankles, he
rolled from the table, sprang over the dead mate, kicked his way through
the closed door, and rushed hatless on to the deck.</p>
<p>"Ahoy! Peterson, Armitage, Wilson!" he screamed. "Cutlasses and pistols!
Clear away the long-boat! Clear away the gig! Sharkey, the pirate, is in
yonder dinghy. Whistle up the larboard watch, bo'sun, and tumble into the
boats, all hands."</p>
<p>Down splashed the long-boat and down splashed the gig, but in an instant
the coxswains and crews were swarming up the falls on to the deck once
more.</p>
<p>"The boats are scuttled!" they cried. "They are leaking like a sieve."</p>
<p>The captain gave a bitter curse. He had been beaten and outwitted at every
point. Above was a cloudless, starlit sky, with neither wind nor the
promise of it. The sails flapped idly in the moonlight. Far away lay a
fishing-smack, with the men clustering over their net. Close to them was
the little dinghy, dipping and lifting over the shining swell.</p>
<p>"They are dead men!" cried the captain. "A shout all together, boys, to
warn them of their danger." But it was too late. At that very moment the
dinghy shot into the shadow of the fishing-boat. There were two rapid
pistol-shots, a scream, and then another pistol-shot, followed by silence.
The clustering fishermen had disappeared. And then, suddenly, as the first
puffs of a land-breeze came out from the Sussex shore, the boom swung out,
the mainsail filled, and the little craft crept out with her nose to the
Atlantic.</p>
<p>II<br/></p>
<h3> THE DEALINGS OF CAPTAIN SHARKEY WITH STEPHEN CRADDOCK </h3>
<p>Careening was a very necessary operation for the old pirate. On his
superior speed he depended both for overhauling the trader and escaping
the man-of-war. But it was impossible to retain his sailing qualities
unless he periodically—once a year, at the least—cleared his
vessel's bottom from the long, trailing plants and crusting barnacles
which gather so rapidly in the tropical seas. For this purpose he
lightened his vessel, thrust her into some narrow inlet where she would be
left high and dry at low water, fastened blocks and tackles to her masts
to pull her over on to her bilge, and then scraped her thoroughly from
rudder-post to cut-water.</p>
<p>During the weeks which were thus occupied the ship was, of course,
defenceless; but, on the other hand, she was unapproachable by anything
heavier than an empty hull, and the place for careening was chosen with an
eye to secrecy, so that there was no great danger. So secure did the
captains feel, that it was not uncommon for them, at such times, to leave
their ships under a sufficient guard, and to start off in the long-boat,
either upon a sporting expedition or, more frequently, upon a visit to
some outlying town, where they burned the heads of the women by their
swaggering gallantry, or broached pipes of wine in the market square, with
a threat to pistol all who would not drink with them.</p>
<p>Sometimes they would even appear in cities of the size of Charleston, and
walk the streets with their clattering side-arms—an open scandal to
the whole law-abiding colony. Such visits were not always paid with
impunity. It was one of them, for example, which provoked Lieutenant
Maynard to hack off Blackbeard's head, and to spear it upon the end of his
bowsprit. But, as a rule, the pirate ruffled and bullied and drabbed
without let or hindrance, until it was time for him to go back to his ship
once more.</p>
<p>There was one pirate, however, who never crossed even the skirts of
civilisation, and that was the sinister Sharkey, of the barque <i>Happy
Delivery</i>. It may have been from his morose and solitary temper, or, as
is more probable, that he knew that his name upon the coast was such that
outraged humanity would, against all odds, have thrown themselves upon
him, but never once did he show his face in a settlement.</p>
<p>When his ship was laid up he would leave her under the charge of Ned
Galloway—her New England quartermaster—and would take long
voyages in his boat, sometimes, it was said, for the purpose of burying
his share of the plunder, and sometimes to shoot the wild oxen of
Hispaniola, which, when dressed and barbecued, provided provisions for his
next voyage. In the latter case the barque would come round to some
pre-arranged spot to pick him up, and take on board what he had shot.</p>
<p>There had always been a hope in the islands that Sharkey might be taken on
one of these occasions; and at last there came news to Kingston which
seemed to justify an attempt upon him. It was brought by an elderly
logwood-cutter who had fallen into the pirate's hands, and in some freak
of drunken benevolence had been allowed to get away with nothing worse
than a slit nose and a drubbing. His account was recent and definite. The
<i>Happy Delivery</i> was careening at Torbec on the south-west of
Hispaniola. Sharkey, with four men, was buccaneering on the outlying
island of La Vache. The blood of a hundred murdered crews was calling out
for vengeance, and now at last it seemed as if it might not call in vain.</p>
<p>Sir Edward Compton, the high-nosed, red-faced Governor, sitting in solemn
conclave with the commandant and the head of the council, was sorely
puzzled in his mind as to how he should use this chance. There was no
man-of-war nearer than Jamestown, and she was a clumsy old fly-boat, which
could neither overhaul the pirate on the seas, nor reach her in a shallow
inlet. There were forts and artillerymen both at Kingston and Port Royal,
but no soldiers available for an expedition.</p>
<p>A private venture might be fitted out—and there were many who had a
blood-feud with Sharkey—but what could a private venture do? The
pirates were numerous and desperate. As to taking Sharkey and his four
companions, that, of course, would be easy if they could get at them; but
how were they to get at them on a large well-wooded island like La Vache,
full of wild hills and impenetrable jungles? A reward was offered to
whoever could find a solution, and that brought a man to the front who had
a singular plan, and was himself prepared to carry it out.</p>
<p>Stephen Craddock had been that most formidable person, the Puritan gone
wrong. Sprung from a decent Salem family, his ill-doing seemed to be a
recoil from the austerity of their religion, and he brought to vice all
the physical strength and energy with which the virtues of his ancestors
had endowed him. He was ingenious, fearless, and exceedingly tenacious of
purpose, so that when he was still young, his name became notorious upon
the American coast. He was the same Craddock who was tried for his life in
Virginia for the slaying of the Seminole Chief, and, though he escaped, it
was well known that he had corrupted the witnesses and bribed the judge.</p>
<p>Afterwards, as a slaver, and even, as it was hinted, as a pirate, he had
left an evil name behind him in the Bight of Benin. Finally he had
returned to Jamaica with a considerable fortune, and had settled down to a
life of sombre dissipation. This was the man, gaunt, austere, and
dangerous, who now waited upon the Governor with a plan for the
extirpation of Sharkey. Sir Edward received him with little enthusiasm,
for in spite of some rumours of conversion and reformation, he had always
regarded him as an infected sheep who might taint the whole of his little
flock. Craddock saw the Governor's mistrust under his thin veil of formal
and restrained courtesy.</p>
<p>"You've no call to fear me, sir," said he; "I'm a changed man from what
you've known. I've seen the light again of late, after losing sight of it
for many a black year. It was through the ministration of the Rev. John
Simons, of our own people. Sir, if your spirit should be in need of
quickening, you would find a very sweet savour in his discourse."</p>
<p>The Governor cocked his episcopalian nose at him.</p>
<p>"You came here to speak of Sharkey, Master Craddock," said he.</p>
<p>"The man Sharkey is a vessel of wrath," said Craddock. "His wicked horn
has been exalted over long, and it is borne in upon me that if I can cut
him off and utterly destroy him, it will be a goodly deed, and one which
may atone for many backslidings in the past. A plan has been given to me
whereby I may encompass his destruction."</p>
<p>The Governor was keenly interested, for there was a grim and practical air
about the man's freckled face which showed that he was in earnest. After
all, he was a seaman and a fighter, and, if it were true that he was eager
to atone for his past, no better man could be chosen for the business.</p>
<p>"This will be a dangerous task, Master Craddock," said he.</p>
<p>"If I meet my death at it, it may be that it will cleanse the memory of an
ill-spent life. I have much to atone for."</p>
<p>The Governor did not see his way to contradict him.</p>
<p>"What was your plan?" he asked.</p>
<p>"You have heard that Sharkey's barque, the <i>Happy Delivery</i>, came
from this very port of Kingston?"</p>
<p>"It belonged to Mr. Codrington, and it was taken by Sharkey, who scuttled
his own sloop and moved into her because she was faster," said Sir Edward.</p>
<p>"Yes; but it may be that you have lever heard that Mr. Codrington has a
sister ship, the <i>White Rose</i>, which lies even now in the harbour,
and which is so like the pirate, that, if it were not for a white paint
line, none could tell them apart."</p>
<p>"Ah! and what of that?" asked the Governor keenly, with the air of one who
is just on the edge of an idea.</p>
<p>"By the help of it this man shall be delivered into our hands."</p>
<p>"And how?"</p>
<p>"I will paint out the streak upon the <i>White Rose</i>, and make it in
all things like the <i>Happy Delivery</i>. Then I will set sail for the
Island of La Vache, where this man is slaying the wild oxen. When he sees
me he will surely mistake me for his own vessel which he is awaiting, and
he will come on board to his own undoing."</p>
<p>It was a simple plan, and yet it seemed to the Governor that it might be
effective. Without hesitation he gave Craddock permission to carry it out,
and to take any steps he liked in order to further the object which he had
in view. Sir Edward was not very sanguine, for many attempts had been made
upon Sharkey, and their results had shown that he was as cunning as he was
ruthless. But this gaunt Puritan with the evil record was cunning aid
ruthless also. The contest of wits between two such men as Sharkey and
Craddock appealed to the Governor's acute sense of sport, and though he
was inwardly convinced that the chances were against him, he backed his
man with the same loyalty which he would have shown to his horse or his
cock.</p>
<p>Haste was, above all things, necessary, for upon any day the careening
might be finished, and the pirates out at sea once more. But there was not
very much to do, and there were many willing hands to do it, so the second
day saw the <i>White Rose</i> beating out for the open sea. There were
many seamen in the port who knew the lines and rig of the pirate barque,
and not one of them could see the slightest difference in this
counterfeit. Her white side line had been painted out, her masts and yards
were smoked, to give them the dingy appearance of the weather-beaten
rover, and a large diamond-shaped patch was let into her foretopsail. Her
crew were volunteers, many of them being men who had sailed with Stephen
Craddock before—the mate, Joshua Hird, an old slaver, had been his
accomplice in many voyages, and came now at the bidding of his chief.</p>
<p>The avenging barque sped across the Caribbean Sea, and, at the sight of
that patched topsail, the little craft which they met flew left and right
like frightened trout in a pool. On the fourth evening Point Abacou bore
five miles to the north and east of them. On the fifth they were at anchor
in the Bay of Tortoises at the Island of La Vache, where Sharkey and his
four men had been hunting. It was a well-wooded place, with the palms and
underwood growing down to the thin crescent of silver sand which skirted
the shore. They had hoisted the black flag and the red pennant, but no
answer came from the shore. Craddock strained his eyes, hoping every
instant to see a boat shoot out to them with Sharkey seated in the sheets.
But the night passed away, and a day and yet another night, without any
sign of the men whom they were endeavouring to trap. It looked as if they
were already gone.</p>
<p>On the second morning Craddock went ashore in search of some proof whether
Sharkey and his men were still upon the island. What he found reassured
him greatly. Close to the shore was a boucan of green wood, such as was
used for preserving the meat, and a great store of barbecued strips of
ox-flesh was hung upon lines all round it. The pirate ship had not taken
off her provisions, and therefore the hunters were still upon the island.</p>
<p>Why had they not shown themselves? Was it that they had detected that this
was not their own ship? Or was it that they were hunting in the interior
of the island, and were not on the look-out for a ship yet? Craddock was
still hesitating between the two alternatives, when a Carib Indian came
down with information. The pirates were in the island, he said, and their
camp was a day's march from the Sea. They had stolen his wife, and the
marks of their stripes were still pink upon his brown back. Their enemies
were his friends, and he would lead them to where they lay.</p>
<p>Craddock could not have asked for anything better; so early next morning,
with a small party armed to the teeth, he set off, under the guidance of
the Carib. All day they struggled through brushwood and clambered over
rocks, pushing their way further and further into the desolate heart of
the island. Here and there they found traces of the hunters, the bones of
a slain ox, or the marks of feet in a morass, and once, towards evening,
it seemed to some of them that they heard the distant rattle of guns.</p>
<p>That night they spent under the trees, and pushed on again with the
earliest light. About noon they came to the huts of bark, which, the Carib
told them, were the camp of the hunters, but they were silent and
deserted. No doubt their occupants were away at the hunt and would return
in the evening, so Craddock and his men lay in ambush in the brushwood
around them. But no one came, and another night was spent in the forest.
Nothing more could be done, and it seemed to Craddock that after the two
days' absence it was time that he returned to his ship once more.</p>
<p>The return journey was less difficult, as they had already blazed a path
for themselves. Before evening they found themselves once more at the Bay
of Palms, and saw their ship riding at anchor where they had left her.
Their boat and oars had been hauled up among the bushes, so they launched
it and pulled out to the barque.</p>
<p>"No luck, then!" cried Joshua Hird, the mate, looking down with a pale
face from the poop.</p>
<p>"His camp was empty, but he may come down to us yet," said Craddock, with
his hand on the ladder.</p>
<p>Somebody upon deck began to laugh. "I think," said the mate, "that these
men had better stay in the boat."</p>
<p>"Why so?"</p>
<p>"If you will come aboard, sir, you will understand it." He spoke in a
curious, hesitating fashion.</p>
<p>The blood flushed to Craddock's gaunt face. "How is this, Master Hird?" he
cried, springing up the side. "What mean you by giving orders to my boat's
crew?"</p>
<p>But as he passed over the bulwarks, with one foot upon the deck and one
knee upon the rail, a tow-bearded man, whom he had never before observed
aboard his vessel, grabbed suddenly at his pistol. Craddock clutched at
the fellow's wrist, but at the same instant his mate snatched the cutlass
from his side.</p>
<p>"What roguery is this?" shouted Craddock, looking furiously around him.
But the crew stood in knots about the deck, laughing and whispering
amongst themselves without showing any desire to go to his assistance.
Even in that hurried glance Craddock noticed that they were dressed in the
most singular manner, with long riding-coats, full-skirted velvet gowns
and coloured ribands at their knees, more like men of fashion than seamen.</p>
<p>As he looked at their grotesque figures he struck his brow with his
clenched fist to be sure that he was awake. The deck seemed to be much
dirtier than when he had left it, and there were strange, sun-blackened
faces turned upon him from every side. Not one of them did he know save
only Joshua Hird. Had the ship been captured in his absence? Were these
Sharkey's men who were around him? At the thought he broke furiously away
and tried to climb over to his boat, but a dozen hands were on him in an
instant, and he was pushed aft through the open door of his own cabin.</p>
<p>And it was all different to the cabin which he had left. The floor was
different, the ceiling was different, the furniture was different. His had
been plain and austere. This was sumptuous and yet dirty, hung with rare
velvet curtains splashed with wine-stains, and panelled with costly woods
which were pocked with pistol-marks.</p>
<p>On the table was a great chart of the Caribbean Sea, and beside it, with
compasses in his hand, sat a clean-shaven, pale-faced man with a fur cap
and a claret-coloured coat of damask. Craddock turned white under his
freckles as he looked upon the long, thin high-nostrilled nose and the
red-rimmed eyes which were turned upon him with the fixed, humorous gaze
of the master player who has left his opponent without a move. "Sharkey!"
cried Craddock.</p>
<p>Sharkey's thin lips opened, and he broke into his high, sniggering laugh.</p>
<p>"You fool!" he cried, and, leaning over, he stabbed Craddock's shoulder
again and again with his compasses. "You poor, dull-witted fool, would you
match yourself against me?"</p>
<p>It was not the pain of the wounds, but it was the contempt in Sharkey's
voice which turned Craddock into a savage madman. He flew at the pirate,
roaring with rage, striking, kicking, writhing, foaming. It took six men
to drag him down on to the floor amidst the splintered remains of the
table—and not one of the six who did not bear the prisoner's mark
upon him. But Sharkey still surveyed him with the same contemptuous eye.
From outside there came the crash of breaking wood and the clamour of
startled voices.</p>
<p>"What is that?" asked Sharkey.</p>
<p>"They have stove the boat with cold shot, and the men are in the water."</p>
<p>"Let them stay there," said the pirate. "Now, Craddock, you know where you
are. You are aboard my ship, the <i>Happy Delivery</i>, and you lie at my
mercy. I knew you for a stout seaman, you rogue, before you took to this
long-shore canting. Your hands then were no cleaner than my own. Will you
sign articles, as your mate has done, and join us, or shall I heave you
over to follow your ship's company?"</p>
<p>"Where is my ship?" asked Craddock.</p>
<p>"Scuttled in the bay."</p>
<p>"And the hands?"</p>
<p>"In the bay, too."</p>
<p>"Then I'm for the bay, also."</p>
<p>"Hock him and heave him over," said Sharkey.</p>
<p>Many rough hands had dragged Craddock out upon deck, and Galloway, the
quartermaster, had already drawn his hanger to cripple him, when Sharkey
came hurrying from his cabin with an eager face. "We can do better with
the hound!" he cried. "Sink me if it is not a rare plan. Throw him into
the sail-room with the irons on, and do you come here, quarter-master,
that I may tell you what I have in my mind."</p>
<p>So Craddock, bruised and wounded in soul and body, was thrown into the
dark sail-room, so fettered that he could not stir hand or foot, but his
Northern blood was running strong in his veins, and his grim spirit
aspired only to make such an ending as might go some way towards atoning
for the evil of his life. All night he lay in the curve of the bilge
listening to the rush of the water and the straining of the timbers which
told him that the ship was at sea and driving fast. In the early morning
someone came crawling to him in the darkness over the heap of sails.</p>
<p>"Here's rum and biscuits," said the voice of his late mate. "It's at the
risk of my life, Master Craddock, that I bring them to you."</p>
<p>"It was you who trapped me and caught me as in a snare!" cried Craddock.
"How shall you answer for what you have done?"</p>
<p>"What I did I did with the point of a knife betwixt my blade-bones."</p>
<p>"God forgive you for a coward, Joshua Hird. How came you into their
hands?"</p>
<p>"Why, Master Craddock, the pirate ship came back from its careening upon
the very day that you left us. They laid us aboard, and, short-handed as
we were, with the best of the men ashore with you, we could offer but a
poor defence. Some were cut down, and they were the happiest. The others
were killed afterwards. As to me, I saved my life by signing on with
them."</p>
<p>"And they scuttled my ship?"</p>
<p>"They scuttled her, and then Sharkey and his men, who had been watching us
from the brushwood, came off to the ship. His mainyard had been cracked
and fished last voyage, so he had suspicions of us, seeing that ours was
whole. Then he thought of laying the same trap for you which you had set
for him."</p>
<p>Craddock groaned. "How came I not to see that fished mainyard?" he
muttered. "But whither are we bound?"</p>
<p>"We are running north and west."</p>
<p>"North and west! Then we are heading back towards Jamaica."</p>
<p>"With an eight-knot wind."</p>
<p>"Have you heard what they mean to do with me?"</p>
<p>"I have not heard. If you would but sign the articles—"</p>
<p>"Enough, Joshua Hird! I have risked my soul too often."</p>
<p>"As you wish. I have done what I could. Farewell!"</p>
<p>All that night and the next day the <i>Happy Delivery</i> ran before the
easterly trades, and Stephen Craddock lay in the dark of the sail-room
working patiently at his wrist-irons. One he had slipped off at the cost
of a row of broken and bleeding knuckles, but, do what he would, he could
not free the other, and his ankles were securely fastened. From hour to
hour he heard the swish of the water, and knew that the barque must be
driving with all set in front of the trade wind. In that case they must be
nearly back again to Jamaica by now. What plan could Sharkey have in his
head, and what use did he hope to make of him? Craddock set his teeth, and
vowed that if he had once been a villain from choice he would, at least,
never be one by compulsion.</p>
<p>On the second morning Craddock became aware that sail had been reduced in
the vessel, and that she was tacking slowly, with a light breeze on her
beam. The varying slope of the sail room and the sounds from the deck told
his practised senses exactly what she was doing. The short reaches showed
him that she was manoeuvring near shore, and making for some definite
point. If so, she must have reached Jamaica. But what could she be doing
there?</p>
<p>And then suddenly there was a burst of hearty cheering from the deck, and
then the crash of a gun above his head, and then the answering booming of
guns from far over the water. Craddock sat up and strained his ears. Was
the ship in action? Only the one gun had been fired, and though many had
answered, there were none of the crashings which told of a shot coming
home. Then, if it was not an action, it must be a salute. But who would
salute Sharkey, the pirate? It could only be another pirate ship which
would do so. So Craddock lay back again with a groan, and continued to
work at the manacle which still held his right wrist. But suddenly there
came the shuffling of steps outside, and he had hardly time to wrap the
loose links round his free hand, when the door was unbolted and two
pirates came in.</p>
<p>"Got your hammer, carpenter?" asked one, whom Craddock recognised as the
big quartermaster.</p>
<p>"Knock off his leg shackles, then. Better leave the bracelets—he's
safer with them on."</p>
<p>With hammer and chisel the carpenter loosened the irons.</p>
<p>"What are you going to do with me?" asked Craddock.</p>
<p>"Come on deck and you'll see."</p>
<p>The sailor seized him by the arm and dragged him roughly to the foot of
the companion. Above him was a square of blue sky cut across by the mizzen
gaff, with the colours flying at the peak. But it was the sight of those
colours which struck the breath from Stephen Craddock's lips. For there
were two of them, and the British ensign was flying above the Jolly Rodger—the
honest flag above that of the rogue.</p>
<p>For an instant Craddock stopped in amazement, but a brutal push from the
pirates behind drove him up the companion ladder. As he stepped out upon
deck, his eyes turned up to the main, and there again were the British
colours flying above the red pennant, and all the shrouds and rigging were
garlanded with streamers.</p>
<p>Had the ship been taken, then? But that was impossible, for there were the
pirates clustering in swarms along the port bulwarks, and waving their
hats joyously in the air. Most prominent of all was the renegade mate,
standing on the foc'sle head, and gesticulating wildly. Craddock looked
over the side to see what they were cheering at, and then in a flash he
saw how critical was the moment.</p>
<p>On the port bow, and about a mile off, lay the white houses and forts of
Port Royal, with flags breaking out everywhere over their roofs. Right
ahead was the opening of the palisades leading to the town of Kingston.
Not more than a quarter of a mile off was a small sloop working out
against the very slight wind. The British ensign was at her peak, and her
rigging was all decorated. On her deck could be seen a dense crowd of
people cheering and waving their hats, and the gleam of scarlet told that
there were officers of the garrison among them.</p>
<p>In an instant, with the quick perception of a man of action, Craddock saw
through it all. Sharkey, with that diabolical cunning and audacity which
were among his main characteristics, was simulating the part which
Craddock would himself have played had he come back victorious. It was in
<i>his</i> honour that the salutes were firing and the flags flying. It
was to welcome <i>him</i> that this ship with the Governor, the
commandant, and the chiefs of the island were approaching. In another ten
minutes they would all be under the guns of the <i>Happy Delivery</i>, and
Sharkey would have won the greatest stake that ever a pirate played for
yet.</p>
<p>"Bring him forward," cried the pirate captain, as Craddock appeared
between the carpenter and the quartermaster. "Keep the ports closed, but
clear away the port guns, and stand by for a broadside. Another two cable
lengths and we have them."</p>
<p>"They are edging away," said the boatswain. "I think they smell us."</p>
<p>"That's soon set right," said Sharkey, turning his filmy eyes upon
Craddock. "Stand there, you—right there, where they can recognise
you, with your hand on the guy, and wave your hat to them. Quick, or your
brains will be over your coat. Put an inch of your knife into him, Ned.
Now, will you wave your hat? Try him again, then. Hey, shoot him! Stop
him!"</p>
<p>But it was too late. Relying upon the manacles, the quartermaster had
taken his hands for a moment off Craddock's arm. In that instant he had
flung off the carpenter, and, amid a spatter of pistol bullets, had sprung
the bulwarks and was swimming for his life. He had been hit and hit again,
but it takes many pistols to kill a resolute and powerful man who has his
mind set upon doing something before he dies. He was a strong swimmer,
and, in spite of the red trail which he left in the water behind him, he
was rapidly increasing his distance from the pirate. "Give me a musket!"
cried Sharkey, with a savage oath.</p>
<p>He was a famous shot, and his iron nerves never failed him in an
emergency. The dark head appearing on the crest of a roller, and then
swooping down on the other side, was already half-way to the sloop.
Sharkey dwelt long upon his aim before he fired. With the crack of the gun
the swimmer reared himself up in the water, waved his hands in a gesture
of warning, and roared out in a voice which rang over the bay. Then, as
the sloop swung round her head-sails, and the pirate fired an impotent
broadside, Stephen Craddock, smiling grimly in his death agony, sank
slowly down to that golden couch which glimmered far beneath him.</p>
<p>III<br/></p>
<h3> HOW COPLEY BANKS SLEW CAPTAIN SHARKEY </h3>
<p>The Buccaneers were something higher than a mere band of marauders. They
were a floating republic, with laws, usages, and discipline of their own.
In their endless and remorseless quarrel with the Spaniards they had some
semblance of right upon their side. Their bloody harryings of the cities
of the Main were not more barbarous than the inroads of Spain upon the
Netherlands—or upon the Caribs in these same American lands.</p>
<p>The chief of the Buccaneers, were he English or French, a Morgan or a
Granmont, was still a responsible person, whose country might countenance
him, or even praise him, so long as he refrained from any deed which might
shock the leathery seventeenth-century conscience too outrageously. Some
of them were touched with religion, and it is still remembered how Sawkins
threw the dice overboard upon the Sabbath, and Daniel pistolled a man
before the altar for irreverence.</p>
<p>But there came a day when the fleets of the Buccaneers no longer mustered
at the Tortugas, and the solitary and outlawed pirate took their place.
Yet even with him the tradition of restraint and of discipline still
lingered; and among the early pirates, the Avorys, the Englands, and the
Robertses, there remained some respect for human sentiment. They were more
dangerous to the merchant than to the seaman. But they in turn were
replaced by more savage and desperate men, who frankly recognised that
they would get no quarter in their war with the human race, and who swore
that they would give as little as they got. Of their histories we know
little that is trustworthy. They wrote no memoirs and left no trace, save
an occasional blackened and blood-stained derelict adrift upon the face of
the Atlantic. Their deeds could only be surmised from the long roll of
ships who never made their port.</p>
<p>Searching the records of history, it is only here and there in an
old-world trial that the veil that shrouds them seems for an instant to be
lifted, and we catch a glimpse of some amazing and grotesque brutality
behind. Such was the breed of Ned Low, of Gow the Scotchman, and of the
infamous Sharkey, whose coal-black barque, the <i>Happy Delivery</i>, was
known from the Newfoundland Banks to the mouths of the Orinoco as the dark
forerunner of misery and of death.</p>
<p>There were many men, both among the islands and on the Main, who had a
blood feud with Sharkey, but not one who had suffered more bitterly than
Copley Banks, of Kingston. Banks had been one of the leading sugar
merchants of the West Indies. He was a man of position, a member of the
Council, the husband of a Percival, and the cousin of the Governor of
Virginia. His two sons had been sent to London to be educated, and their
mother had gone over to bring them back. On their return voyage the ship,
the <i>Duchess of Cornwall</i>, fell into the hands of Sharkey, and the
whole family met with an infamous death.</p>
<p>Copley Banks said little when he heard the news, but he sank into a morose
and enduring melancholy. He neglected his business, avoided his friends,
and spent much of his time in the low taverns of the fishermen and seamen.
There, amidst riot and devilry, he sat silently puffing at his pipe, with
a set face and a smouldering eye. It was generally supposed that his
misfortunes had shaken his wits, and his old friends looked at him
askance, for the company which he kept was enough to bar him from honest
men.</p>
<p>From time to time there came rumours of Sharkey over the sea. Sometimes it
was from some schooner which had seen a great flame upon the horizon, and
approaching to offer help to the burning ship, had fled away at the sight
of the sleek, black barque, lurking like a wolf near a mangled sheep.
Sometimes it was a frightened trader, which had come tearing in with her
canvas curved like a lady's bodice, because she had seen a patched
foretopsail rising slowly above the violet water-line. Sometimes it was
from a coaster, which had found a waterless Bahama cay littered with
sun-dried bodies. Once there came a man who had been mate of a Guineaman,
and who had escaped from the pirate's hands. He could not speak—for
reasons which Sharkey could best supply—but he could write, and he
did write, to the very great interest of Copley Banks. For hours they sat
together over the map, and the dumb man pointed here and there to outlying
reefs and tortuous inlets, while his companion sat smoking in silence,
with his unvarying face and his fiery eyes.</p>
<p>One morning, some two years after his misfortunes, Mr. Copley Banks strode
into his own office with his old air of energy and alertness. The manager
stared at him in surprise, for it was months since he had shown any
interest in business.</p>
<p>"Good morning, Mr. Banks!" said he.</p>
<p>"Good morning, Freeman. I see that <i>Ruffling Harry</i> is in the Bay."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; she clears for the Windward Islands on Wednesday."</p>
<p>"I have other plans for her, Freeman. I have determined upon a slaving
venture to Whydah."</p>
<p>"But her cargo is ready, sir."</p>
<p>"Then it must come out again, Freeman. My mind is made up, and the <i>Ruffling
Harry</i> must go slaving to Whydah."</p>
<p>All argument and persuasion were vain, so the manager had dolefully to
clear the ship once more. And then Copley Banks began to make preparations
for his African voyage. It appeared that he relied upon force rather than
barter for the filling of his hold, for he carried none of those showy
trinkets which savages love, but the brig was fitted with eight
nine-pounder guns, and racks full of muskets and cutlasses. The
after-sailroom next the cabin was transformed into a powder magazine, and
she carried as many round shot as a well-found privateer. Water and
provisions were shipped for a long voyage.</p>
<p>But the preparation of his ship's company was most surprising. It made
Freeman, the manager, realise that there was truth in the rumour that his
master had taken leave of his senses. For, under one pretext or another,
he began to dismiss the old and tried hands, who had served the firm for
years, and in their place he embarked the scum of the port—men whose
reputations were so vile that the lowest crimp would have been ashamed to
furnish them. There was Birthmark Sweetlocks, who was known to have been
present at the killing of the logwood-cutters, so that his hideous scarlet
disfigurement was put down by the fanciful as being a red afterglow from
that great crime. He was first mate, and under him was Israel Martin, a
little sun-wilted fellow who had served with Howell Davies at the taking
of Cape Coast Castle.</p>
<p>The crew were chosen from amongst those whom Banks had met and known in
their own infamous haunts, and his own table-steward was a haggard-faced
man, who gobbled at you when he tried to talk. His beard had been shaved,
and it was impossible to recognise him as the same man whom Sharkey had
placed under the knife, and who had escaped to tell his experiences to
Copley Banks. These doings were not unnoticed, nor yet uncommented upon in
the town of Kingston. The Commandant of the troops—Major Harvey of
the Artillery—made serious representations to the Governor.</p>
<p>"She is not a trader, but a small warship," said he.</p>
<p>"I think it would be as well to arrest Copley Banks and to seize the
vessel."</p>
<p>"What do you suspect?" asked the Governor, who was a slow-witted man,
broken down with fevers and port wine.</p>
<p>"I suspect," said the soldier, "that it is Stede Bonnet over again."</p>
<p>Now, Stede Bonnet was a planter of high reputation and religious character
who, from some sudden and overpowering freshet of wildness in his blood,
had given up everything in order to start off pirating in the Caribbean
Sea. The example was a recent one, and it had caused the utmost
consternation in the islands. Governors had before now been accused of
being in league with pirates, and of receiving commissions upon their
plunder, so that any want of vigilance was open to a sinister
construction.</p>
<p>"Well, Major Harvey," said he, "I am vastly sorry to do anything which may
offend my friend Copley Banks, for many a time have my knees been under
his mahogany, but in face of what you say there is no choice for me but to
order you to board the vessel and to satisfy yourself as to her character
and destination."</p>
<p>So at one in the morning Major Harvey, with a launchful of his soldiers,
paid a surprise visit to the <i>Ruffling Harry</i>, with the result that
they picked up nothing more solid than a hempen cable floating at the
moorings. It had been slipped by the brig, whose owner had scented danger.
She had already passed the Palisades, and was beating out against the
north-east trades on a course for the Windward Passage.</p>
<p>When upon the next morning the brig had left Morant Point a mere haze upon
the Southern horizon, the men were called aft, and Copley Banks revealed
his plans to them. He had chosen them, he said, as brisk boys and lads of
spirit, who would rather run some risk upon the sea than starve for a
living upon the shore. King's ships were few and weak, and they could
master any trader who might come their way. Others had done well at the
business, and with a handy, well-found vessel, there was no reason why
they should not turn their tarry jackets into velvet coats. If they were
prepared to sail under the black flag, he was ready to command them; but
if any wished to withdraw, they might have the gig and row back to
Jamaica.</p>
<p>Four men out of six-and-forty asked for their discharge, went over the
ship's side into the boat, and rowed away amidst the jeers and howlings of
the crew. The rest assembled aft, and drew up the articles of their
association. A square of black tarpaulin had the white skull painted upon
it, and was hoisted amidst cheering at the main.</p>
<p>Officers were elected, and the limits of their authority fixed. Copley
Banks was chosen captain, but, as there are no mates upon a pirate craft,
Birthmark Sweetlocks became quartermaster, and Israel Martin the
boatswain. There was no difficulty in knowing what was the custom of the
brotherhood, for half the men at least had served upon pirates before.
Food should be the same for all, and no man should interfere with another
man's drink! The captain should have a cabin, but all hands should be
welcome to enter it when they chose.</p>
<p>All should share and share alike, save only the captain, quartermaster,
boatswain, carpenter, and master-gunner, who had from a quarter to a whole
share extra. He who saw a prize first should have the best weapon taken
out of her. He who boarded her first should have the richest suit of
clothes aboard of her. Every man might treat his own prisoner, be it man
or woman, after his own fashion. If a man flinched from his gun, the
quartermaster should pistol him. These were some of the rules which the
crew of the <i>Ruffling Harry</i> subscribed by putting forty-two crosses
at the foot of the paper upon which they had been drawn.</p>
<p>So a new rover was afloat upon the seas, and her name before a year was
over became as well known as that of the <i>Happy Delivery</i>. From the
Bahamas to the Leewards, and from the Leewards to the Windwards, Copley
Banks became the rival of Sharkey and the terror of traders. For a long
time the barque and the brig never met, which was the more singular as the
<i>Ruffling Harry</i> was for ever looking in at Sharkey's resorts; but at
last one day, when she was passing down the inlet of Coxon's Hole, at the
east end of Cuba, with the intention of careening, there was the <i>Happy
Delivery</i>, with her blocks and tackle-falls already rigged for the same
purpose. Copley Banks fired a shotted salute and hoisted the green
trumpeter ensign, as the custom was among gentlemen of the sea. Then he
dropped his boat and went aboard.</p>
<p>Captain Sharkey was not a man of a genial mood, nor had he any kindly
sympathy for those who were of the same trade as himself. Copley Banks
found him seated astride upon one of the after guns, with his New England
quartermaster, Ned Galloway, and a crowd of roaring ruffians standing
about him. Yet none of them roared with quite such assurance when
Sharkey's pale face and filmy blue eyes were tuned upon him. He was in his
shirt-sleeves, with his cambric frills breaking through his open red satin
long-flapped vest. The scorching sun seemed to have no power upon his
fleshless frame, for he wore a low fur cap, as though it had been winter.
A many-coloured band of silk passed across his body and supported a short,
murderous sword, while his broad, brass-buckled belt was stuffed with
pistols.</p>
<p>"Sink you for a poacher!" he cried, as Copley Banks passed over the
bulwarks. "I will drub you within an inch of your life, and that inch
also! What mean you by fishing in my waters?"</p>
<p>Copley Banks looked at him, and his eyes were like those of a traveller
who sees his home at last. "I am glad that we are of one mind," said he,
"for I am myself of opinion that the seas are not large enough for the two
of us. But if you will take your sword and pistols and come upon a
sand-bank with me, then the world will be rid of a damned villain,
whichever way it goes."</p>
<p>"Now, this is talking!" said Sharkey, jumping off the gun and holding out
his hand. "I have not met many who could look John Sharkey in the eyes and
speak with a full breath. May the devil seize me if I do not choose you as
a consort! But if you play me false, then I will come aboard of you and
gut you upon your own poop."</p>
<p>"And I pledge you the same!" said Copley Banks, and so the two pirates
became sworn comrades to each other.</p>
<p>That summer they went north as far as the Newfoundland Banks, and harried
the New York traders and the whale ships from New England. It was Copley
Banks who captured the Liverpool ship, <i>House of Hanover</i>, but it was
Sharkey who fastened her master to the windlass and pelted him to death
with empty claret-bottles.</p>
<p>Together they engaged the King's ship <i>Royal Fortune</i>, which had been
sent in search of them, and beat her off after a night action of five
hours, the drunken, raving crews fighting naked in the light of the
battle-lanterns, with a bucket of rum and a pannikin laid by the tackles
of every gun. They ran to Topsail Inlet in North Carolina to refit, and
then in the spring they were at the Grand Caicos, ready for a long cruise
down the West Indies.</p>
<p>By this time Sharkey and Copley Banks had become very excellent friends,
for Sharkey loved a whole-hearted villain, and he loved a man of metal,
and it seemed to him that the two met in the captain of the <i>Ruffling
Harry</i>. It was long before he gave his confidence to him, for cold
suspicion lay deep in his character. Never once would he trust himself
outside his own ship and away from his own men. But Copley Banks came
often on board the <i>Happy Delivery</i>, and joined Sharkey in many of
his morose debauches, so that at last any lingering misgivings of the
latter were set at rest. He knew nothing of the evil that he had done to
his new boon companion, for of his many victims how could he remember the
woman and the two boys whom he had slain with such levity so long ago!
When, therefore, he received a challenge to himself and to his
quartermaster for a carouse upon the last evening of their stay at the
Caicos Bank he saw no reason to refuse.</p>
<p>A well-found passenger ship had been rifled the week before, so their fare
was of the best, and after supper five of them drank deeply together.
There were the two captains, Birthmark Sweetlocks, Ned Galloway, and
Israel Martin, the old buccaneers-man. To wait upon them was the dumb
steward, whose head Sharkey split with a glass, because he had been too
slow in the filling of it. The quarter-master has slipped Sharkey's
pistols away from him, for it was an old joke with him to fire them
cross-handed under the table and see who was the luckiest man. It was a
pleasantry which had cost his boatswain his leg, so now, when the table
was cleared, they would coax Sharkey's weapons away from him on the excuse
of the heat, and lay them out of his reach.</p>
<p>The captain's cabin of the <i>Ruffling Harry</i> was in a deck-house upon
the poop, and a stern-chaser gun was mounted at the back of it. Round shot
were racked round the wall, and three great hogsheads of powder made a
stand for dishes and for bottles. In this grim room the five pirates sang
and roared and drank, while the silent steward still filled up their
glasses, and passed the box and the candle round for their tobacco-pipes.
Hour after hour the talk became fouler, the voices hoarser, the curses and
shoutings more incoherent, until three of the five had closed their
blood-shot eyes, and dropped their swimming heads upon the table.</p>
<p>Copley Banks and Sharkey were left face to face, the one because he had
drunk the least, the other because no amount of liquor would ever shake
his iron nerve or warm his sluggish blood. Behind him stood the watchful
steward, for ever filling up his waning glass. From without came the low
lapping of the tide, and from over the water a sailor's chanty from the
barque. In the windless tropical night the words came clearly to their
ears:—</p>
<p>A trader sailed from Stepney Town,<br/>
Wake her up! Shake her up! Try her with the mainsail!<br/>
A trader sailed from Stepney Town<br/>
With a keg full of gold and a velvet gown.<br/>
Ho, the bully Rover Jack,<br/>
Waiting with his yard aback<br/>
Out upon the Lowland Sea.<br/></p>
<p>The two boon companions sat listening in silence. Then Copley Banks
glanced at the steward, and the man took a coil of rope from the shot-rack
behind him.</p>
<p>"Captain Sharkey," said Copley Banks, "do you remember the <i>Duchess of
Cornwall</i>, hailing from London, which you took and sank three years ago
off the Statira Shoal?"</p>
<p>"Curse me if I can bear their names in mind," said Sharkey. "We did as
many as ten ships a week about that time."</p>
<p>"There were a mother and two sons among the passengers. Maybe that will
bring it back to your mind."</p>
<p>Captain Sharkey leant back in thought, with his huge thin beak of a nose
jutting upwards. Then he burst suddenly into a high treble, neighing
laugh. He remembered it, he said, and he added details to prove it. "But
burn me if it had not slipped from my mind!" he cried. "How came you to
think of it?"</p>
<p>"It was of interest to me," said Copley Banks, "for the woman was my wife,
and the lads were my only sons."</p>
<p>Sharkey stared across at his companion, and saw that the smouldering fire
which lurked always in his eyes had burned up into a lurid flame. He read
their menace, and he clapped his hands to his empty belt. Then he turned
to seize a weapon, but the bight of a rope was cast round him, and in an
instant his arms were bound to his side. He fought like a wild cat, and
screamed for help. "Ned!" he yelled. "Ned! Wake up! Here's damned
villainy! Help, Ned!—help!"</p>
<p>But the three men were far too deeply sunk in their swinish sleep for any
voice to wake them. Round and round went the rope, until Sharkey was
swathed like a mummy from ankle to neck. They propped him stiff and
helpless against a powder barrel, and they gagged him with a handkerchief,
but his filmy, red-rimmed eyes still looked curses at them. The dumb man
chattered in his exultation, and Sharkey winced for the first time when he
saw the empty mouth before him. He understood that vengeance, slow and
patient, had dogged him long, and clutched him at last.</p>
<p>The two captors had their plans all arranged, and they were somewhat
elaborate. First of all they stove the heads of two of the great powder
barrels, and they heaped the contents out upon the table and floor. They
piled it round and under the three drunken men, until each sprawled in a
heap of it. Then they carried Sharkey to the gun and they triced him
sitting over the port-hole, with his body about a foot from the muzzle.
Wriggle as he would he could not move an inch either to the right or left,
and the dumb man trussed him up with a sailor's cunning, so that there was
no chance that he should work free.</p>
<p>"Now, you bloody devil," said Copley Banks, softly, "you must listen to
what I have to say to you, for they are the last words that you will hear.
You are my man now, and I have bought you at a price, for I have given all
that a man can give here below, and I have given my soul as well.</p>
<p>"To reach you I have had to sink to your level. For two years I strove
against it, hoping that some other way might come, but I learnt that there
was no other. I've robbed and I have murdered—worse still, I have
laughed and lived with you—and all for the one end. And now my time
has come, and you will die as I would have you die, seeing the shadow
creeping upon you and the devil waiting for you in the shadow."</p>
<p>Sharkey could hear the hoarse voices of his rovers singing their chanty
over the water.</p>
<p>Where is the trader of Stepney Town?<br/>
Wake her up! Shake her up! Every stick a-bending!<br/>
Where is the trader of Stepney Town?<br/>
His gold's on the capstan, his blood's on his gown,<br/>
All for bully Rover Jack,<br/>
Reaching on the weather tack<br/>
Right across the Lowland Sea.<br/></p>
<p>The words came clear to his ear, and just outside he could hear two men
pacing backwards and forwards upon the deck. And yet he was helpless,
staring down the mouth of the nine-pounder, unable to move an inch or to
utter so much as a groan. Again there came the burst of voices from the
deck of the barque.</p>
<p>So it's up and it's over to Stornoway Bay,<br/>
Pack it on! Crack it on! Try her with stunsails!<br/>
It's off on a bowline to Stornoway Bay,<br/>
Where the liquor is good and the lasses are gay,<br/>
Waiting for their bully Jack,<br/>
Watching for him sailing back,<br/>
Right across the Lowland Sea.<br/></p>
<p>To the dying pirate the jovial words and rollicking tune made his own fate
seem the harsher, but there was no softening in those venomous blue eyes.
Copley Banks had brushed away the priming of the gun, and had sprinkled
fresh powder over the touch-hole. Then he had taken up the candle and cut
it to the length of about an inch. This he placed upon the loose powder at
the breach of the gun. Thin he scattered powder thickly over the floor
beneath, so that when the candle fell at the recoil it must explode the
huge pile in which the three drunkards were wallowing.</p>
<p>"You've made others look death in the face, Sharkey," said he; "now it has
come to be your own turn. You and these swine here shall go together!" He
lit the candle-end as he spoke, and blew out the other lights upon the
table. Then he passed out with the dumb man, and locked the cabin door
upon the outer side. But before he closed it he took an exultant look
backwards, and received one last curse from those unconquerable eyes. In
the single dim circle of light that ivory-white face, with the gleam of
moisture upon the high, bald forehead, was the last that was ever seen of
Sharkey.</p>
<p>There was a skiff alongside, and in it Copley Banks and the dumb steward
made their way to the beach, and looked back upon the brig riding in the
moon-light just outside the shadow of the palm trees. They waited and
waited watching that dim light which shone through the stem port. And then
at last there came the dull thud of a gun, and an instant later the
shattering crash of an explosion. The long, sleek, black barque, the sweep
of white sand, and the fringe of nodding feathery palm trees sprang into
dazzling light and back into darkness again. Voices screamed and called
upon the bay.</p>
<p>Then Copley Banks, his heart singing within him, touched his companion
upon the shoulder, and they plunged together into the lonely jungle of the
Caicos.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CROXLEY MASTER </h2>
<p>Mr. Robert Montgomery was seated at his desk, his head upon his hands, in
a state of the blackest despondency. Before him was the open ledger with
the long columns of Dr. Oldacre's prescriptions. At his elbow lay the
wooden tray with the labels in various partitions, the cork box, the lumps
of twisted sealing-wax, while in front a rank of bottles waited to be
filled. But his spirits were too low for work. He sat in silence with his
fine shoulders bowed and his head upon his hands.</p>
<p>Outside, through the grimy surgery window over a foreground of blackened
brick and slate, a line of enormous chimneys like Cyclopean pillars upheld
the lowering, dun-coloured cloud-bank. For six days in the week they
spouted smoke, but to-day the furnace fires were banked, for it was
Sunday. Sordid and polluting gloom hung over a district blighted and
blasted by the greed of man. There was nothing in the surroundings to
cheer a desponding soul, but it was more than his dismal environment which
weighed upon the medical assistant. His trouble was deeper and more
personal. The winter session was approaching. He should be back again at
the University completing the last year which would give him his medical
degree; but, alas! he had not the money with which to pay his class fees,
nor could he imagine how he could procure it. Sixty pounds were wanted to
make his career, and it might have been as many thousand for any chance
there seemed to be of his obtaining it. He was roused from his black
meditation by the entrance of Dr. Oldacre himself, a large, clean-shaven,
respectable man, with a prim manner and an austere face. He had prospered
exceedingly by the support of the local Church interest, and the rule of
his life was never by word or action to run a risk of offending the
sentiment which had made him. His standard of respectability and of
dignity was exceedingly high, and he expected the same from his
assistants. His appearance and words were always vaguely benevolent. A
sudden impulse came over the despondent student. He would test the reality
of this philanthropy.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, Dr. Oldacre," said he, rising from his chair; "I have
a great favour to ask of you."</p>
<p>The doctor's appearance was not encouraging. His mouth suddenly tightened,
and his eyes fell.</p>
<p>"Yes, Mr. Montgomery?"</p>
<p>"You are aware, sir, that I need only one more session to complete my
course."</p>
<p>"So you have told me."</p>
<p>"It is very important to me, sir."</p>
<p>"Naturally."</p>
<p>"The fees, Dr. Oldacre, would amount to about sixty pounds."</p>
<p>"I am afraid that my duties call me elsewhere, Mr. Montgomery."</p>
<p>"One moment, sir! I had hoped, sir, that perhaps, if I signed a paper
promising you interest upon your money, you would advance this sum to me.
I will pay you back, sir, I really will. Or, if you like, I will work it
off after I am qualified."</p>
<p>The doctor's lips had thinned into a narrow line. His eyes were raised
again, and sparkled indignantly.</p>
<p>"Your request is unreasonable, Mr. Montgomery. I am surprised that you
should have made it. Consider, sir, how many thousands of medical students
there are in this country. No doubt there are many of them who have a
difficulty in finding their fees. Am I to provide for them all? Or why
should I make an exception in your favour? I am grieved and disappointed,
Mr. Montgomery, that you should have put me into the painful position of
having to refuse you." He turned upon his heel, and walked with offended
dignity out of the surgery.</p>
<p>The student smiled bitterly, and turned to his work of making up the
morning prescriptions. It was poor and unworthy work—work which any
weakling might have done as well, and this was a man of exceptional nerve
and sinew. But, such as it was, it brought him his board and One pound a
week—enough to help him during the summer months and let him save a
few pounds towards his winter keep. But those class fees! Where were they
to come from? He could not save them out of his scanty wage. Dr. Oldacre
would not advance them. He saw no way of earning them. His brains were
fairly good, but brains of that quality were a drug in the market. He only
excelled in his strength, and where was he to find a customer for that?
But the ways of Fate are strange, and his customer was at hand.</p>
<p>"Look y'ere!" said a voice at the door. Montgomery looked up, for the
voice was a loud and rasping one. A young man stood at the entrance—
a stocky, bull-necked young miner, in tweed Sunday clothes and an
aggressive neck-tie. He was a sinister-looking figure, with dark, insolent
eyes, and the jaw and throat of a bulldog.</p>
<p>"Look y'ere!" said he again. "Why hast thou not sent t' medicine oop as
thy master ordered?"</p>
<p>Montgomery had become accustomed to the brutal frankness of the northern
worker. At first it had enraged him, but after a time he had grown callous
to it, and accepted it as it was meant. But this was something different.
It was insolence—brutal, overbearing insolence, with physical menace
behind it.</p>
<p>"What name?" he asked coldly.</p>
<p>"Barton. Happen I may give thee cause to mind that name, yoong man. Mak'
oop t' wife's medicine this very moment, look ye, or it will be the worse
for thee."</p>
<p>Montgomery smiled. A pleasant sense of relief thrilled softly through him.
What blessed safety-valve was this through which his jangled nerves might
find some outlet. The provocation was so gross, the insult so unprovoked,
that he could have none of those qualms which take the edge off a man's
mettle. He finished sealing the bottle upon which he was occupied, and he
addressed it and placed it carefully in the rack. "Look here!" said he,
turning round to the miner, "your medicine will be made up in its turn and
sent down to you. I don't allow folk in the surgery. Wait outside in the
waiting-room if you wish to wait at all."</p>
<p>"Yoong man," said the miner, "thou's got to mak' t' wife's medicine here,
and now, and quick, while I wait and watch thee, or else happen thou might
need some medicine thysel' before all is over."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't advise you to fasten a quarrel upon me." Montgomery was
speaking in the hard, staccato voice of a man who is holding himself in
with difficulty. "You'll save trouble if you'll go quietly. If you don't
you'll be hurt. Ah, you would? Take it, then!"</p>
<p>The blows were almost simultaneous—a savage swing which whistled
past Montgomery's ear, and a straight drive which took the workman on the
chin. Luck was with the assistant. That single whizzing uppercut, and the
way in which it was delivered, warned him that he had a formidable man to
deal with. But if he had underrated his antagonist, his antagonist had
also underrated him, and had laid himself open to a fatal blow.</p>
<p>The miner's head had come with a crash against the corner of the surgery
shelves, and he had dropped heavily on to the ground. There he lay with
his bandy legs drawn up and his hands thrown abroad, the blood trickling
over the surgery tiles.</p>
<p>"Had enough?" asked the assistant, breathing fiercely through his nose.</p>
<p>But no answer came. The man was insensible. And then the danger of his
position came upon Montgomery, and he turned as white as his antagonist. A
Sunday, the immaculate Dr. Oldacre with his pious connection, a savage
brawl with a patient; he would irretrievably lose his situation if the
facts came out. It was not much of a situation, but he could not get
another without a reference, and Oldacre might refuse him one. Without
money for his classes, and without a situation—what was to become of
him? It was absolute ruin.</p>
<p>But perhaps he could escape exposure after all. He seized his insensible
adversary, dragged him out into the centre of he room, loosened his
collar, and squeezed the surgery sponge over his face. He sat up at last
with a gasp and a scowl. "Domn thee, thou's spoilt my neck-tie," said he,
mopping up the water from his breast.</p>
<p>"I'm sorry I hit you so hard," said Montgomery, apologetically.</p>
<p>"Thou hit me hard! I could stan' such fly-flappin' all day. 'Twas this
here press that cracked my pate for me, and thou art a looky man to be
able to boast as thou hast outed me. And now I'd be obliged to thee if
thou wilt give me t' wife's medicine."</p>
<p>Montgomery gladly made it up and handed it to the miner.</p>
<p>"You are weak still," said he. "Won't you stay awhile and rest?"</p>
<p>"T' wife wants her medicine," said the man, and lurched out at the door.</p>
<p>The assistant, looking after him, saw him rolling, with an uncertain step,
down the street, until a friend met him, and they walked on arm in arm.
The man seemed in his rough Northern fashion to bear no grudge, and so
Montgomery's fears left him. There was no reason why the doctor should
know anything about it. He wiped the blood from the floor, put the surgery
in order, and went on with his interrupted task, hoping that he had come
scathless out of a very dangerous business.</p>
<p>Yet all day he was aware of a sense of vague uneasiness, which sharpened
into dismay when, late in the afternoon, he was informed that three
gentlemen had called and were waiting for him in the surgery. A coroner's
inquest, a descent of detectives, an invasion of angry relatives—all
sorts of possibilities rose to scare him. With tense nerves and a rigid
face he went to meet his visitors.</p>
<p>They were a very singular trio. Each was known to him by sight; but what
on earth the three could be doing together, and, above all, what they
could expect from <i>him</i>, was a most inexplicable problem. The first
was Sorley Wilson, the son of the owner of the Nonpareil Coalpit. He was a
young blood of twenty, heir to a fortune, a keen sportsman, and down for
the Easter Vacation from Magdalene College. He sat now upon the edge of
the surgery table, looking in thoughtful silence at Montgomery and
twisting the ends of his small, black, waxed moustache. The second was
Purvis, the publican, owner of the chief beer-shop, and well known as the
local bookmaker. He was a coarse, clean-shaven man, whose fiery face made
a singular contrast with his ivory-white bald head. He had shrewd,
light-blue eyes with foxy lashes, and he also leaned forward in silence
from his chair, a fat, red hand upon either knee, and stared critically at
the young assistant. So did the third visitor, Fawcett, the horse-breaker,
who leaned back, his long, thin legs, with their boxcloth riding-gaiters,
thrust out in front of him, tapping his protruding teeth with his
riding-whip, with anxious thought in every line of his rugged, bony face.
Publican, exquisite, and horse-breaker were all three equally silent,
equally earnest, and equally critical. Montgomery seated in the midst of
them, looked from one to the other.</p>
<p>"Well, gentlemen?" he observed, but no answer came.</p>
<p>The position was embarrassing.</p>
<p>"No," said the horse-breaker, at last. "No. It's off. It's nowt."</p>
<p>"Stand oop, lad; let's see thee standin'." It was the publican who spoke.
Montgomery obeyed. He would learn all about it, no doubt, if he were
patient. He stood up and turned slowly round, as if in front of his
tailor.</p>
<p>"It's off! It's off!" cried the horse-breaker. "Why, mon, the Master would
break him over his knee."</p>
<p>"Oh, that be hanged for a yarn!" said the young Cantab. "You can drop out
if you like, Fawcett, but I'll see this thing through, if I have to do it
alone. I don't hedge a penny. I like the cut of him a great deal better
than I liked Ted Barton."</p>
<p>"Look at Barton's shoulders, Mr. Wilson."</p>
<p>"Lumpiness isn't always strength. Give me nerve and fire and breed. That's
what wins."</p>
<p>"Ay, sir, you have it theer—you have it theer!" said the fat,
red-faced publican, in a thick suety voice. "It's the same wi' poops. Get
'em clean-bred an' fine, an' they'll yark the thick 'uns—yark 'em
out o' their skins."</p>
<p>"He's ten good pund on the light side," growled the horse-breaker.</p>
<p>"He's a welter weight, anyhow."</p>
<p>"A hundred and thirty."</p>
<p>"A hundred and fifty, if he's an ounce."</p>
<p>"Well, the Master doesn't scale much more than that."</p>
<p>"A hundred and seventy-five."</p>
<p>"That was when he was hog-fat and living high. Work the grease out of him
and I lay there's no great difference between them. Have you been weighed
lately, Mr. Montgomery?"</p>
<p>It was the first direct question which had been asked him. He had stood in
the midst of them like a horse at a fair, and he was just beginning to
wonder whether he was more angry or amused.</p>
<p>"I am just eleven stone," said he.</p>
<p>"I said that he was a welter weight."</p>
<p>"But suppose you was trained?" said the publican. "Wot then?"</p>
<p>"I am always in training."</p>
<p>"In a manner of speakin', no doubt, he <i>is</i> always in trainin',"
remarked the horse-breaker. "But trainin' for everyday work ain't the same
as trainin' with a trainer; and I dare bet, with all respec' to your
opinion, Mr. Wilson, that there's half a stone of tallow on him at this
minute."</p>
<p>The young Cantab put his fingers on the assistant's upper arm, then with
his other hand on his wrist, he bent the forearm sharply, and felt the
biceps, as round and hard as a cricket-ball, spring up under his fingers.</p>
<p>"Feel that!" said he.</p>
<p>The publican and horse-breaker felt it with an air of reverence. "Good
lad! He'll do yet!" cried Purvis.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," said Montgomery, "I think that you will acknowledge that I
have boon very patient with you. I have listened to all that you have to
say about my personal appearance, and now I must really beg that you will
have the goodness to tell me what is the matter."</p>
<p>They all sat down in their serious, business-like way.</p>
<p>"That's easy done, Mr. Montgomery," said the fat-voiced publican. "But
before sayin' anything we had to wait and see whether, in a way of
speakin', there was any need for us to say anything at all. Mr. Wilson
thinks there is. Mr. Fawcett, who has the same right to his opinion, bein'
also a backer and one o' the committee, thinks the other way."</p>
<p>"I thought him too light built, and I think so now," said the
horse-breaker, still tapping his prominent teeth with the metal head of
his riding-whip. "But happen he may pull through, and he's a fine-made,
buirdly young chap, so if you mean to back him, Mr. Wilson—</p>
<p>"Which I do."</p>
<p>"And you, Purvis?"</p>
<p>"I ain't one to go back, Fawcett."</p>
<p>"Well, I'll stan' to my share of the purse."</p>
<p>"And well I knew you would," said Purvis, "for it would be somethin' new
to find Isaac Fawcett as a spoil-sport. Well, then, we will make up the
hundred for the stake among us, and the fight stands—always
supposin' the young man is willin'."</p>
<p>"Excuse all this rot, Mr. Montgomery," said the University man, in a
genial voice. "We've begun at the wrong end, I know, but we'll soon
straighten it out, and I hope that you will see your way to falling in
with our views. In the first place, you remember the man whom you knocked
out this morning? He is Barton—the famous Ted Barton."</p>
<p>"I'm sure, sir, you may well be proud to have outed him in one round,"
said the publican. "Why, it took Morris, the ten-stone-six champion, a
deal more trouble than that before he put Barton to sleep. You've done a
fine performance, sir, and happen you'll do a finer, if you give yourself
the chance."</p>
<p>"I never heard of Ted Barton, beyond seeing the name on a medicine label,"
said the assistant.</p>
<p>"Well, you may take it from me that he's a slaughterer," said the
horse-breaker. "You've taught him a lesson that he needed, for it was
always a word and a blow with him, and the word alone was worth five
shillin' in a public court. He won't be so ready now to shake his nief in
the face of everyone he meets. However, that's neither here nor there."</p>
<p>Montgomery looked at them in bewilderment.</p>
<p>"For goodness' sake, gentlemen, tell me what it is you want me to do!" he
cried.</p>
<p>"We want you to fight Silas Craggs, better known as the Master of
Croxley."</p>
<p>"But why?"</p>
<p>"Because Ted Barton was to have fought him next Saturday. He was the
champion of the Wilson coal-pits, and the other was the Master of the
iron-folk down at the Croxley smelters. We'd matched our man for a purse
of a hundred against the Master. But you've queered our man, and he can't
face such a battle with a two-inch cut at the back of his head. There's
only one thing to be done, sir, and that is for you to take his place. If
you can lick Ted Barton you may lick the Master of Croxley, but if you
don't we're done, for there's no one else who is in the same street with
him in this district. It's twenty rounds, two-ounce gloves, Queensberry
rules, and a decision on points if you fight to the finish."</p>
<p>For a moment the absurdity of the thing drove every other thought out of
Montgomery's head. But then there came a sudden revulsion. A hundred
pounds!—all he wanted to complete his education was lying there
ready to his hand, if only that hand were strong enough to pick it up. He
had thought bitterly that morning that there was no market for his
strength, but here was one where his muscle might earn more in an hour
than his brains in a year. But a chill of doubt came over him. "How can I
fight for the coal-pits?" said he. "I am not connected with them."</p>
<p>"Eh, lad, but thou art!" cried old Purvis. "We've got it down in writin',
and it's clear enough 'Anyone connected with the coal-pits.' Doctor
Oldacre is the coal-pit club doctor; thou art his assistant. What more can
they want?"</p>
<p>"Yes, that's right enough," said the Cantab. "It would be a very sporting
thing of you, Mr. Montgomery, if you would come to our help when we are in
such a hole. Of course, you might not like to take the hundred pounds; but
I have no doubt that, in the case of your winning, we could arrange that
it should take the form of a watch or piece of plate, or any other shape
which might suggest itself to you. You see, you are responsible for our
having lost our champion, so we really feel that we have a claim upon
you."</p>
<p>"Give me a moment, gentlemen. It is very unexpected. I am afraid the
doctor would never consent to my going—in fact, I am sure that he
would not."</p>
<p>"But he need never know—not before the fight, at any rate. We are
not bound to give the name of our man. So long as he is within the weight
limits on the day of the fight, that is all that concerns anyone."</p>
<p>The adventure and the profit would either of them have attracted
Montgomery. The two combined were irresistible. "Gentlemen," said he,
"I'll do it!"</p>
<p>The three sprang from their seats. The publican had seized his right hand,
the horse-dealer his left, and the Cantab slapped him on the back.</p>
<p>"Good lad! good lad!" croaked the publican. "Eh, mon, but if thou yark
him, thou'll rise in one day from being just a common doctor to the
best-known mon 'twixt here and Bradford. Thou art a witherin' tyke, thou
art, and no mistake; and if thou beat the Master of Croxley, thou'll find
all the beer thou want for the rest of thy life waiting for thee at the
'Four Sacks.'"</p>
<p>"It is the most sporting thing I ever heard of in my life," said young
Wilson. "By George, sir, if you pull it off, you've got the constituency
in your pocket, if you care to stand. You know the out-house in my
garden?"</p>
<p>"Next the road?"</p>
<p>"Exactly. I turned it into a gymnasium for Ted Barton. You'll find all you
want there: clubs, punching ball, bars, dumb-bells, everything. Then
you'll want a sparring partner. Ogilvy has been acting for Barton, but we
don't think that he is class enough. Barton bears you no grudge. He's a
good-hearted fellow, though cross-grained with strangers. He looked upon
you as a stranger this morning, but he says he knows you now. He is quite
ready to spar with you for practice, and he will come any hour you will
name."</p>
<p>"Thank you; I will let you know the hour," said Montgomery; and so the
committee departed jubilant upon their way.</p>
<p>The medical assistant sat for a time in the surgery turning it over a
little in his mind. He had been trained originally at the University by
the man who had been middle-weight champion in his day. It was true that
his teacher was long past his prime, slow upon his feet, and stiff in his
joints, but even so he was still a tough antagonist; but Montgomery had
found at last that he could more than hold his own with him. He had won
the University medal, and his teacher, who had trained so many students,
was emphatic in his opinion that he had never had one who was in the same
class with him. He had been exhorted to go in for the Amateur
Championships, but he had no particular ambition in that direction. Once
he had put on the gloves with Hammer Tunstall in a booth at a fair and had
fought three rattling rounds, in which he had the worst of it, but had
made the prize fighter stretch himself to the uttermost. There was his
whole record, and was it enough to encourage him to stand up to the Master
of Croxley? He had never heard of the Master before, but then he had lost
touch of the ring during the last few years of hard work. After all, what
did it matter? If he won, there was the money, which meant so much to him.
If he lost, it would only mean a thrashing. He could take punishment
without flinching, of that he was certain. If there were only one chance
in a hundred of pulling it off, then it was worth his while to attempt it.</p>
<p>Dr. Oldacre, new come from church, with an ostentatious Prayer-book in his
kid-gloved hand, broke in upon his meditation.</p>
<p>"You don't go to service, I observe, Mr. Montgomery" said he, coldly.</p>
<p>"No, sir; I have had some business to detain me."</p>
<p>"It is very near to my heart that my household should set a good example.
There are so few educated people in this district that a great
responsibility devolves upon us. If we do not live up to the highest, how
can we expect these poor workers to do so? It is a dreadful thing to
reflect that the parish takes a great deal more interest in an approaching
glove fight than in their religious duties."</p>
<p>"A glove fight, sir?" said Montgomery, guiltily.</p>
<p>"I believe that to be the correct term. One of my patients tells me that
it is the talk of the district. A local ruffian, a patient of ours, by the
way, matched against a pugilist over at Croxley. I cannot understand why
the law does not step in and stop so degrading an exhibition. It is really
a prize fight."</p>
<p>"A glove fight, you said."</p>
<p>"I am informed that a 2oz. glove is an evasion by which they dodge the
law, and make it difficult for the police to interfere. They contend for a
sum of money. It seems dreadful and almost incredible—does it not?—to
think that such scenes can be enacted within a few miles of our peaceful
home. But you will realise, Mr. Montgomery, that while there are such
influences for us to counteract, it is very necessary that we should live
up to our highest."</p>
<p>The doctor's sermon would have had more effect if the assistant had not
once or twice had occasion to test his highest, and come upon it at
unexpectedly humble elevations. It is always so particularly easy to
"compound for sins we're most inclined to by damning those we have no mind
to." In any case, Montgomery felt that of all the men concerned in such a
fight—promoters, backers, spectators—it is the actual fighter
who holds the strongest and most honourable position. His conscience gave
him no concern upon the subject. Endurance and courage are virtues, not
vices, and brutality is, at least, better than effeminacy.</p>
<p>There was a little tobacco-shop at the corner of the street, where
Montgomery got his bird's-eye and also his local information, for the
shopman was a garrulous soul, who knew everything about the affairs of the
district. The assistant strolled down there after tea and asked, in a
casual way, whether the tobacconist had ever heard of the Master of
Croxley.</p>
<p>"Heard of him! Heard of him!" the little man could hardly articulate in
his astonishment. "Why, sir, he's the first mon o' the district, an' his
name's as well known in the West Riding as the winner o' t' Derby. But
Lor,' sir,"—here he stopped and rummaged among a heap of papers.
"They are makin' a fuss about him on account o' his fight wi' Ted Barton,
and so the <i>Croxley Herald</i> has his life an' record, an' here it is,
an' thou canst read it for thysel'"</p>
<p>The sheet of the paper which he held up was a lake of print around an
islet of illustration. The latter was a coarse wood-cut of a pugilist's
head and neck set in a cross-barred jersey. It was a sinister but powerful
face, the face of a debauched hero, clean-shaven, strongly eye-browed,
keen-eyed, with huge, aggressive jaw, and an animal dewlap beneath it. The
long, obstinate cheeks ran flush up to the narrow, sinister eyes. The
mighty neck came down square from the ears and curved outwards into
shoulders, which had lost nothing at the hands of the local artist. Above
was written "Silas Craggs," and beneath, "The Master of Croxley."</p>
<p>"Thou'll find all about him there, sir," said the tobacconist. "He's a
witherin' tyke, he is, and we're proud to have him in the county. If he
hadn't broke his leg he'd have been champion of England."</p>
<p>"Broke his leg, has he?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and it set badly. They ca' him owd K, behind his back, for that is
how his two legs look. But his arms—well, if they was both stropped
to a bench, as the sayin' is, I wonder where the champion of England would
be then."</p>
<p>"I'll take this with me," said Montgomery; and putting the paper into his
pocket he returned home.</p>
<p>It was not a cheering record which he read there. The whole history of the
Croxley Master was given in full, his many victories, his few defeats.</p>
<p>Born in 1857 (said the provincial biographer), Silas Craggs, better<br/>
known in sporting circles as the Master of Croxley, is now in his<br/>
fortieth year.<br/></p>
<p>"Hang it, I'm only twenty-three!" said Montgomery to himself, and read on
more cheerfully.</p>
<p>Having in his youth shown a surprising aptitude for the game, he<br/>
fought his way up among his comrades, until he became the<br/>
recognised champion of the district and won the proud title which<br/>
he still holds. Ambitious of a more than local fame, he secured a<br/>
patron, and fought his first fight against Jack Barton, of<br/>
Birmingham, in May 1880, at the old Loiterers' Club. Craggs,<br/>
who fought at ten stone-two at the time, had the better of fifteen<br/>
rattling rounds, and gained an award on points against the Midlander.<br/>
Having disposed of James Dunn, of Rotherhithe, Cameron, of Glasgow,<br/>
and a youth named Fernie, he was thought so highly of by the fancy<br/>
that he was matched against Ernest Willox, at that time<br/>
middle-weight champion of the North of England, and defeated him in a<br/>
hard-fought battle, knocking him out in the tenth round after a<br/>
punishing contest. At this period it looked as if the very highest<br/>
honours of the ring were within the reach of the young Yorkshireman,<br/>
but he was laid upon the shelf by a most unfortunate accident. The<br/>
kick of a horse broke his thigh, and for a year he was compelled to<br/>
rest himself. When he returned to his work the fracture had set<br/>
badly, and his activity was much impaired. It was owing to this<br/>
that he was defeated in seven rounds by Willox, the man whom he had<br/>
previously beaten, and afterwards by James Shaw, of London, though<br/>
the latter acknowledged that he had found the toughest customer of<br/>
his career. Undismayed by his reverses, the Master adapted the<br/>
style of his fighting to his physical disabilities and resumed his<br/>
career of victory—defeating Norton (the black), Hobby Wilson, and<br/>
Levi Cohen, the latter a heavy-weight. Conceding two stone, he<br/>
fought a draw with the famous Billy McQuire, and afterwards, for<br/>
a purse of fifty pounds, he defeated Sam Hare at the Pelican Club,<br/>
London. In 1891 a decision was given against him upon a foul when<br/>
fighting a winning fight against Jim Taylor, the Australian middle<br/>
weight, and so mortified was he by the decision, that he withdrew<br/>
from the ring. Since then he has hardly fought at all save to<br/>
accommodate any local aspirant who may wish to learn the difference<br/>
between a bar-room scramble and a scientific contest. The latest<br/>
of these ambitious souls comes from the Wilson coal-pits, which have<br/>
undertaken to put up a stake of 100 pounds and back their local<br/>
champion. There are various rumours afloat as to who their<br/>
representative is to be, the name of Ted Barton being freely<br/>
mentioned; but the betting, which is seven to one on the Master<br/>
against any untried man, is a fair reflection of the feeling of<br/>
the community.<br/></p>
<p>Montgomery read it over twice, and it left him with a very serious face.
No light matter this which he had undertaken; no battle with a
rough-and-tumble fighter who presumed upon a local reputation. The man's
record showed that he was first-class—or nearly so. There were a few
points in his favour, and he must make the most of them. There was age—twenty-three
against forty. There was an old ring proverb that "Youth will be served,"
but the annals of the ring offer a great number of exceptions. A hard
veteran full of cool valour and ring-craft, could give ten or fifteen
years and a beating to most striplings. He could not rely too much upon
his advantage in age. But then there was the lameness; that must surely
count for a great deal. And, lastly, there was the chance that the Master
might underrate his opponent, that he might be remiss in his training, and
refuse to abandon his usual way of life, if he thought that he had an easy
task before him. In a man of his age and habits this seemed very possible.
Montgomery prayed that it might be so. Meanwhile, if his opponent were the
best man who ever jumped the ropes into a ring, his own duty was clear. He
must prepare himself carefully, throw away no chance, and do the very best
that he could. But he knew enough to appreciate the difference which
exists in boxing, as in every sport, between the amateur and the
professional. The coolness, the power of hitting, above all the capability
of taking punishment, count for so much. Those specially developed,
gutta-percha-like abdominal muscles of the hardened pugilist will take
without flinching a blow which would leave another man writhing on the
ground. Such things are not to be acquired in a week, but all that could
be done in a week should be done.</p>
<p>The medical assistant had a good basis to start from. He was 5ft. 11 ins.—tall
enough for anything on two legs, as the old ring men used to say—lithe
and spare, with the activity of a panther, and a strength which had hardly
yet ever found its limitations. His muscular development was finely hard,
but his power came rather from that higher nerve-energy which counts for
nothing upon a measuring tape. He had the well-curved nose and the widely
opened eye which never yet were seen upon the face of a craven, and behind
everything he had the driving force, which came from the knowledge that
his whole career was at stake upon the contest. The three backers rubbed
their hands when they saw him at work punching the ball in the gymnasium
next morning; and Fawcett, the horse-breaker, who had written to Leeds to
hedge his bets, sent a wire to cancel the letter, and to lay another fifty
at the market price of seven to one.</p>
<p>Montgomery's chief difficulty was to find time for his training without
any interference from the doctor. His work took him a large part of the
day, but as the visiting was done on foot, and considerable distances had
to be traversed, it was a training in itself. For the rest, he punched the
swinging ball and worked with the dumb-bells for an hour every morning and
evening, and boxed twice a day with Ted Barton in the gymnasium, gaining
as much profit as could be got from a rushing, two-handed slogger. Barton
was full of admiration for his cleverness and quickness, but doubtful
about his strength. Hard hitting was the feature of his own style, and he
exacted it from others.</p>
<p>"Lord, sir, that's a turble poor poonch for an eleven-stone man!" he would
cry. "Thou wilt have to hit harder than that afore t' Master will know
that thou art theer. All, thot's better, mon, thot's fine!" he would add,
as his opponent lifted him across the room on the end of a right counter.
"Thot's how I likes to feel 'em. Happen thou'lt pull through yet." He
chuckled with joy when Montgomery knocked him into a corner. "Eh, mon,
thou art coming along grand. Thou hast fair yarked me off my legs. Do it
again, lad, do it again!"</p>
<p>The only part of Montgomery's training which came within the doctor's
observation was his diet, and that puzzled him considerably.</p>
<p>"You will excuse my remarking, Mr. Montgomery, that you are becoming
rather particular in your tastes. Such fads are not to be encouraged in
one's youth. Why do you eat toast with every meal?"</p>
<p>"I find that it suits me better than bread, sir."</p>
<p>"It entails unnecessary work upon the cook. I observe, also, that you have
turned against potatoes."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; I think that I am better without them."</p>
<p>"And you no longer drink your beer?"</p>
<p>"No, sir."</p>
<p>"These causeless whims and fancies are very much to be deprecated, Mr.
Montgomery. Consider how many there are to whom these very potatoes and
this very beer would be most acceptable."</p>
<p>"No doubt, sir, but at present I prefer to do without them."</p>
<p>They were sitting alone at lunch, and the assistant thought that it would
be a good opportunity of asking leave for the day of the fight.</p>
<p>"I should be glad if you could let me have leave for Saturday, Dr.
Oldacre."</p>
<p>"It is very inconvenient upon so busy a day."</p>
<p>"I should do a double day's work on Friday so as to leave everything in
order. I should hope to be back in the evening."</p>
<p>"I am afraid I cannot spare you, Mr. Montgomery."</p>
<p>This was a facer. If he could not get leave he would go without it.</p>
<p>"You will remember, Dr. Oldacre, that when I came to you it was understood
that I should have a clear day every month. I have never claimed one. But
now there are reasons why I wish to have a holiday upon Saturday."</p>
<p>Dr. Oldacre gave in with a very bad grace. "Of course, if you insist upon
your formal rights, there is no more to be said, Mr. Montgomery, though I
feel that it shows a certain indifference to my comfort and the welfare of
the practice. Do you still insist?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Very good. Have your way."</p>
<p>The doctor was boiling over with anger, but Montgomery was a valuable
assistant—steady, capable, and hardworking—and he could not
afford to lose him. Even if he had been prompted to advance those class
fees, for which his assistant had appealed, it would have been against his
interests to do so, for he did not wish him to qualify, and he desired him
to remain in his subordinate position, in which he worked so hard for so
small a wage. There was something in the cool insistence of the young man,
a quiet resolution in his voice as he claimed his Saturday, which aroused
his curiosity.</p>
<p>"I have no desire to interfere unduly with your affairs, Mr. Montgomery,
but were you thinking of having a day in Leeds upon Saturday?"</p>
<p>"No, sir.</p>
<p>"In the country?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"You are very wise. You will find a quiet day among the wild flowers a
very valuable restorative. Have you thought of any particular direction?"</p>
<p>"I am going over Croxley way."</p>
<p>"Well, there is no prettier country when once you are past the iron-works.
What could be more delightful than to lie upon the Fells, basking in the
sunshine, with perhaps some instructive and elevating book as your
companion? I should recommend a visit to the ruins of St. Bridget's
Church, a very interesting relic of the early Norman era. By the way,
there is one objection which I see to your going to Croxley on Saturday.
It is upon that date, as I am informed, that that ruffianly glove fight
takes place. You may find yourself molested by the blackguards whom it
will attract."</p>
<p>"I will take my chance of that, sir," said the assistant.</p>
<p>On the Friday night, which was the last night before the fight,
Montgomery's three backers assembled in the gymnasium and inspected their
man as he went through some light exercises to keep his muscles supple. He
was certainly in splendid condition, his skin shining with health, and his
eyes with energy and confidence. The three walked round him and exulted.</p>
<p>"He's simply ripping!" said the undergraduate.</p>
<p>"By gad, you've come out of it splendidly. You're as hard as a pebble, and
fit to fight for your life."</p>
<p>"Happen he's a trifle on the fine side," said the publican. "Runs a bit
light at the loins, to my way of thinking'."</p>
<p>"What weight to-day?"</p>
<p>"Ten stone eleven," the assistant answered.</p>
<p>"That's only three pund off in a week's trainin'," said the horse-breaker.
"He said right when he said that he was in condition. Well, it's fine
stuff all there is of it, but I'm none so sure as there is enough." He
kept poking his finger into Montgomery as if he were one of his horses. "I
hear that the Master will scale a hundred and sixty odd at the ring-side."</p>
<p>"But there's some of that which he'd like well to pull off and leave
behind wi' his shirt," said Purvis. "I hear they've had a rare job to get
him to drop his beer, and if it had not been for that great red-headed
wench of his they'd never ha' done it. She fair scratted the face off a
potman that had brought him a gallon from t' 'Chequers.' They say the
hussy is his sparrin' partner, as well as his sweetheart, and that his
poor wife is just breakin' her heart over it. Hullo, young 'un, what do
you want?"</p>
<p>The door of the gymnasium had opened and a lad, about sixteen, grimy and
black with soot and iron, stepped into the yellow glare of the oil lamp.
Ted Barton seized him by the collar.</p>
<p>"See here, thou yoong whelp, this is private, and we want noan o' thy
spyin'!"</p>
<p>"But I maun speak to Mr. Wilson."</p>
<p>The young Cantab stepped forward.</p>
<p>"Well, my lad, what is it?"</p>
<p>"It's aboot t' fight, Mr. Wilson, sir. I wanted to tell your mon somethin'
aboot t' Maister."</p>
<p>"We've no time to listen to gossip, my boy. We know all about the Master."</p>
<p>"But thou doan't, sir. Nobody knows but me and mother, and we thought as
we'd like thy mon to know, sir, for we want him to fair bray him."</p>
<p>"Oh, you want the Master fair brayed, do you? So do we. Well, what have
you to say?"</p>
<p>"Is this your mon, sir?"</p>
<p>"Well, suppose it is?"</p>
<p>"Then it's him I want to tell aboot it. T' Maister is blind o' the left
eye."</p>
<p>"Nonsense!"</p>
<p>"It's true, sir. Not stone blind, but rarely fogged. He keeps it secret,
but mother knows, and so do I. If thou slip him on the left side he can't
cop thee. Thou'll find it right as I tell thee. And mark him when he sinks
his right. 'Tis his best blow, his right upper-cut. T' Maister's finisher,
they ca' it at t' works. It's a turble blow when it do come home."</p>
<p>"Thank you, my boy. This is information worth having about his sight,"
said Wilson. "How came you to know so much? Who are you?"</p>
<p>"I'm his son, sir."</p>
<p>Wilson whistled.</p>
<p>"And who sent you to us?"</p>
<p>"My mother. I maun get back to her again."</p>
<p>"Take this half-crown."</p>
<p>"No, sir, I don't seek money in comin' here. I do it—"</p>
<p>"For love?" suggested the publican.</p>
<p>"For hate!" said the boy, and darted off into the darkness.</p>
<p>"Seems to me t' red-headed wench may do him more harm than good, after
all," remarked the publican. "And now, Mr. Montgomery, sir, you've done
enough for this evenin', an' a nine-hours' sleep is the best trainin'
before a battle. Happen this time to-morrow night you'll be safe back
again with your 100 pound in your pocket."</p>
<p>II<br/></p>
<p>Work was struck at one o'clock at the coal-pits and the iron-works, and
the fight was arranged for three. From the Croxley Furnaces, from Wilson's
Coal-pits, from the Heartsease Mine, from the Dodd Mills, from the
Leverworth Smelters the workmen came trooping, each with his fox-terrier
or his lurcher at his heels. Warped with labour and twisted by toil, bent
double by week-long work in the cramped coal galleries or half-blinded
with years spent in front of white-hot fluid metal, these men still gilded
their harsh and hopeless lives by their devotion to sport. It was their
one relief, the only thing which could distract their minds from sordid
surroundings, and give them an interest beyond the blackened circle which
enclosed them. Literature, art, science, all these things were beyond
their horizon; but the race, the football match, the cricket, the fight,
these were things which they could understand, which they could speculate
upon in advance and comment upon afterwards. Sometimes brutal, sometimes
grotesque, the love of sport is still one of the great agencies which make
for the happiness of our people. It lies very deeply in the springs of our
nature, and when it has been educated out, a higher, more refined nature
may be left, but it will not be of that robust British type which has left
its mark so deeply on the world. Every one of these raddled workers,
slouching with his dog at his heels to see something of the fight, was a
true unit of his race.</p>
<p>It was a squally May day, with bright sunbursts and driving showers.
Montgomery worked all morning in the surgery getting his medicine made up.</p>
<p>"The weather seems so very unsettled, Mr. Montgomery," remarked the
doctor, "that I am inclined to think that you had better postpone your
little country excursion until a later date."</p>
<p>"I am afraid that I must go to-day, sir."</p>
<p>"I have just had an intimation that Mrs. Potter, at the other side of
Angleton, wishes to see me. It is probable that I shall be there all day.
It will be extremely inconvenient to leave the house empty so long."</p>
<p>"I am very sorry, sir, but I must go," said the assistant, doggedly.</p>
<p>The doctor saw that it would be useless to argue, and departed in the
worst of bad tempers upon mission. Montgomery felt easier now that he was
gone. He went up to his room, and packed his running-shoes, his
fighting-drawers, and his cricket sash into a hand-bag. When he came down,
Mr. Wilson was waiting for him in the surgery. "I hear the doctor has
gone."</p>
<p>"Yes; he is likely to be away all day."</p>
<p>"I don't see that it matters much. It's bound to come to his ears by
to-night."</p>
<p>"Yes; it's serious with me, Mr. Wilson. If I win, it's all right. I don't
mind telling you that the hundred pounds will make all the difference to
me. But if I lose, I shall lose my situation, for, as you say, I can't
keep it secret."</p>
<p>"Never mind. We'll see you through among us. I only wonder the doctor has
not heard, for it's all over the country that you are to fight the Croxley
Champion. We've had Armitage up about it already. He's the Master's
backer, you know. He wasn't sure that you were eligible. The Master said
he wanted you whether you were eligible or not. Armitage has money on, and
would have made trouble if he could. But I showed him that you came within
the conditions of the challenge, and he agreed that it was all right. They
think they have a soft thing on."</p>
<p>"Well, I can only do my best," said Montgomery.</p>
<p>They lunched together; a silent and rather nervous repast, for
Montgomery's mind was full of what was before him, and Wilson had himself
more money at stake than he cared to lose.</p>
<p>Wilson's carriage and pair were at the door, the horses with blue and
white rosettes at their ears, which were the colours of the Wilson
Coal-pits, well known, on many a football field. At the avenue gate a
crowd of some hundred pit-men and their wives gave a cheer as the carriage
passed. To the assistant it all seemed dream-like and extraordinary—the
strangest experience of his life, but with a thrill of human action and
interest in it which made it passionately absorbing. He lay back in the
open carriage and saw the fluttering handkerchiefs from the doors and
windows of the miners' cottages. Wilson had pinned a blue and white
rosette upon his coat, and everybody knew him as their champion. "Good
luck, sir! good luck to thee!" they shouted from the roadside. He felt
that it was like some unromantic knight riding down to sordid lists, but
there was something of chivalry in it all the same. He fought for others
as well as for himself. He might fail from want of skill or strength, but
deep in his sombre soul he vowed that it should never be for want of
heart.</p>
<p>Mr. Fawcett was just mounting into his high-wheeled, spidery dogcart, with
his little bit of blood between the shafts. He waved his whip and fell in
behind the carriage. They overtook Purvis, the tomato-faced publican, upon
the road, with his wife in her Sunday bonnet. They also dropped into the
procession, and then, as they traversed the seven miles of the high road
to Croxley, their two-horsed, rosetted carriage became gradually the
nucleus of a comet with a loosely radiating tail. From every side-road
came the miners' carts, the humble, ramshackle traps, black and bulging,
with their loads of noisy, foul-tongued, open-hearted partisans. They
trailed for a long quarter of a mile behind them—cracking, whipping,
shouting, galloping, swearing. Horsemen and runners were mixed with the
vehicles. And then suddenly a squad of the Sheffield Yeomanry, who were
having their annual training in those parts, clattered and jingled out of
a field, and rode as an escort to the carriage. Through the dust-clouds
round him Montgomery saw the gleaming brass helmets, the bright coats, and
the tossing heads of the chargers, the delighted brown faces of the
troopers. It was more dream-like than ever.</p>
<p>And then, as they approached the monstrous, uncouth line of bottle-shaped
buildings which marked the smelting-works of Croxley, their long, writhing
snake of dust was headed off by another but longer one which wound across
their path. The main road into which their own opened was filled by the
rushing current of traps. The Wilson contingent halted until the others
should get past. The iron-men cheered and groaned, according to their
humour, as they whirled past their antagonist. Rough chaff flew back and
forwards like iron nuts and splinters of coal. "Brought him up, then!"
"Got t' hearse for to fetch him back?" "Where's t' owd K-legs?" "Mon, mon,
have thy photograph took—'twill mind thee of what thou used to
look!" "He fight?—he's nowt but a half-baked doctor!" "Happen he'll
doctor thy Croxley Champion afore he's through wi't."</p>
<p>So they flashed at each other as the one side waited and the other passed.
Then there came a rolling murmur swelling into a shout, and a great brake
with four horses came clattering along, all streaming with salmon-pink
ribbons. The driver wore a white hat with pink rosette, and beside him, on
the high seat, were a man and a woman-she with her arm round his waist.
Montgomery had one glimpse of them as they flashed past; he with a furry
cap drawn low over his brow, a great frieze coat and a pink comforter
round his throat; she brazen, red-headed, bright-coloured, laughing
excitedly. The Master, for it was he, turned as he passed, gazed hard at
Montgomery, and gave him a menacing, gap-toothed grin. It was a hard,
wicked face, blue-jowled and craggy, with long, obstinate cheeks and
inexorable eyes. The brake behind was full of patrons of the sport-flushed
iron-foremen, heads of departments, managers. One was drinking from a
metal flask, and raised it to Montgomery as he passed; and then the crowd
thinned, and the Wilson cortege with their dragoons swept in at the rear
of the others.</p>
<p>The road led away from Croxley, between curving green hills, gashed and
polluted by the searchers for coal and iron. The whole country had been
gutted, and vast piles of refuse and mountains of slag suggested the
mighty chambers which the labour of man had burrowed beneath. On the left
the road curved up to where a huge building, roofless and dismantled,
stood crumbling and forlorn, with the light shining through the windowless
squares.</p>
<p>"That's the old Arrowsmith's factory. That's where the fight is to be,"
said Wilson. "How are you feeling now?"</p>
<p>"Thank you, I was never better in my life," Montgomery answered.</p>
<p>"By Gad, I like your nerve!" said Wilson, who was himself flushed and
uneasy. "You'll give us a fight for our money, come what may. That place
on the right is the office, and that has been set aside as the dressing
and weighing room."</p>
<p>The carriage drove up to it amidst the shouts of the folk upon the
hillside. Lines of empty carriages and traps curved down upon the winding
road, and a black crowd surged round the door of the ruined factory. The
seats, as a huge placard announced, were five shillings, three shillings,
and a shilling, with half-price for dogs. The takings, deducting expenses,
were to go to the winner, and it was already evident that a larger stake
than a hundred pounds was in question. A babel of voices rose from the
door, The workers wished to bring their dogs in free. The men scuffled.
The dogs barked. The crowd was a whirling, eddying pool surging with a
roar up to the narrow cleft which was its only outlet.</p>
<p>The brake, with its salmon-coloured streamers and four reeking horses,
stood empty before the door of the office; Wilson, Purvis, Fawcett and
Montgomery passed in.</p>
<p>There was a large, bare room inside with square, clean patches upon the
grimy walls, where pictures and almanacs had once hung. Worn linoleum
covered the floor, but there was no furniture save some benches and a deal
table with an ewer and a basin upon it. Two of the corners were curtained
off. In the middle of the room was a weighing-chair. A hugely fat man,
with a salmon tie and a blue waistcoat with birds'-eye spots, came
bustling up to them. It was Armitage, the butcher and grazier, well known
for miles round as a warm man, and the most liberal patron of sport in the
Riding. "Well, well," he grunted, in a thick, fussy, wheezy voice, "you
have come, then. Got your man? Got your man?</p>
<p>"Here he is, fit and well. Mr. Montgomery, let me present you to Mr.
Armitage."</p>
<p>"Glad to meet you, sir. Happy to make your acquaintance. I make bold to
say, sir, that we of Croxley admire your courage, Mr. Montgomery, and that
our only hope is a fair fight and no favour, and the best man win. That's
our sentiments at Croxley."</p>
<p>"And it is my sentiment, also," said the assistant.</p>
<p>"Well, you can't say fairer than that, Mr. Montgomery. You've taken a
large contrac' in hand, but a large contrac' may be carried through, sir,
as anyone that knows my dealings could testify. The Master is ready to
weigh in!"</p>
<p>"So am I."</p>
<p>"You must weigh in the buff." Montgomery looked askance at the tall,
red-headed woman who was standing gazing out of the window.</p>
<p>"That's all right," said Wilson. "Get behind the curtain and put on your
fighting kit."</p>
<p>He did so, and came out the picture of an athlete, in white, loose
drawers, canvas shoes, and the sash of a well-known cricket club round his
waist. He was trained to a hair, his skin gleaming like silk, and every
muscle rippling down his broad shoulders and along his beautiful arms as
he moved them. They bunched into ivory knobs, or slid into long, sinuous
curves, as he raised or lowered his hands.</p>
<p>"What thinkest thou o' that?" asked Ted Barton, his second, of the woman
in the window.</p>
<p>She glanced contemptuously at the young athlete. "It's but a poor kindness
thou dost him to put a thread-paper yoong gentleman like yon against a mon
as is a mon. Why, my Jock would throttle him wi' one bond lashed behind
him."</p>
<p>"Happen he may—happen not," said Barton. "I have but twa pund in the
world, but it's on him, every penny, and no hedgin'. But here's t'
Maister, and rarely fine he do look."</p>
<p>The prize-fighter had come out from his curtain, a squat, formidable
figure, monstrous in chest and arms, limping slightly on his distorted
leg. His skin bad none of the freshness and clearness of Montgomery's, but
was dusky and mottled, with one huge mole amid the mat of tangled black
hair which thatched his mighty breast. His weight bore no relation to his
strength, for those huge shoulders and great arms, with brown,
sledge-hammer fists, would have fitted the heaviest man that ever threw
his cap into a ring. But his loins and legs were slight in proportion.
Montgomery, on the other hand, was as symmetrical as a Greek statue. It
would be an encounter between a man who was specially fitted for one
sport, and one who was equally capable of any. The two looked curiously at
each other: a bull-dog, and a high-bred clean-limbed terrier, each full of
spirit.</p>
<p>"How do you do?"</p>
<p>"How do?" The Master grinned again, and his three jagged front teeth
gleamed for an instant. The rest had been beaten out of him in twenty
years of battle. He spat upon the floor. "We have a rare fine day for't."</p>
<p>"Capital," said Montgomery.</p>
<p>"That's the good feelin' I like," wheezed the fat butcher. "Good lads,
both of them!—prime lads!—hard meat an' good bone. There's no
ill-feelin'."</p>
<p>"If he downs me, Gawd bless him!" said the Master,</p>
<p>"An' if we down him, Gawd help him!" interrupted the woman.</p>
<p>"Haud thy tongue, wench!" said the Master, impatiently. "Who art thou to
put in thy word? Happen I might draw my hand across thy face."</p>
<p>The woman did not take the threat amiss. "Wilt have enough for thy hand to
do, Jock," said she. "Get quit o' this gradely man afore thou turn on me."</p>
<p>The lovers' quarrel was interrupted by the entrance of a newcomer, a
gentleman with a fur-collared overcoat and a very shiny top-hat— a
top-hat of a degree of glossiness which is seldom seen five miles from
Hyde Park. This hat he wore at the extreme back of his head, so that the
lower surface of the brim made a kind of frame for his high, bald
forehead, his, keen eyes, his rugged and yet kindly face. He bustled in
with the quiet air of possession with which the ring master enters the
circus.</p>
<p>"It's Mr. Stapleton, the referee from London," said Wilson.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Mr. Stapleton? I was introduced to you at the big fight at
the Corinthian Club in Piccadilly."</p>
<p>"Ah! I dare say," said the other, shaking hands. "Fact is, I'm introduced
to so many that I can't undertake to carry their names. Wilson, is it?
Well, Mr. Wilson, glad to see you. Couldn't get a fly at the station, and
that's why I'm late."</p>
<p>"I'm sure, sir," said Armitage, "we should be proud that anyone so well
known in the boxing world should come down to our little exhibition."</p>
<p>"Not at all. Not at all. Anything in the interests of boxin'. All ready?
Men weighed?"</p>
<p>"Weighing now, sir."</p>
<p>"Ah! Just as well that I should see it done. Seen you before, Craggs. Saw
you fight your second battle against Willox. You had beaten him once, but
he came back on you. What does the indicator say—163lbs.— two
off for the kit—161lbs. Now, my lad, you jump. My goodness, what
colours are you wearing?"</p>
<p>"The Anonymi Cricket Club."</p>
<p>"What right have you to wear them? I belong to the club myself."</p>
<p>"So do I."</p>
<p>"You an amateur?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"And you are fighting for a money prize?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I suppose you know what you are doing? You realise that you're a
professional pug from this onwards, and that if ever you fight again—"</p>
<p>"I'll never fight again."</p>
<p>"Happen you won't," said the woman, and the Master turned a terrible eye
upon her.</p>
<p>"Well, I suppose you know your own business best. Up you jump. One hundred
and fifty-one, minus two, 149—12lbs. difference, but youth and
condition on the other scale. Well, the sooner we get to work the better,
for I wish to catch the seven o'clock express at Hellifield. Twenty
three-minute rounds, with one-minute intervals, and Queensberry rules.
Those are the conditions, are they not?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Very good, then—we may go across."</p>
<p>The two combatants had overcoats thrown over their shoulders, and the
whole party, backers, fighters, seconds, and the referee filed out of the
room. A police inspector was waiting for them in the road. He had a
note-book in his hand—that terrible weapon which awes even the
London cabman.</p>
<p>"I must take your names, gentlemen, in case it should be necessary to
proceed for breach of peace."</p>
<p>"You don't mean to stop the fight?" cried Armitage, in a passion of
indignation. "I'm Mr. Armitage, of Croxley, and this is Mr. Wilson, and
we'll be responsible that all is fair and as it should be."</p>
<p>"I'll take the names in case it should be necessary to proceed," said the
inspector, impassively.</p>
<p>"But you know me well."</p>
<p>"If you was a dook or even a judge it would be all' the same," said the
inspector. "It's the law, and there's an end. I'll not take upon myself to
stop the fight, seeing that gloves are to be used, but I'll take the names
of all concerned. Silas Craggs, Robert Montgomery, Edward Barton, James
Stapleton, of London. Who seconds Silas Craggs?"</p>
<p>"I do," said the woman. "Yes, you can stare, but it's my job, and no one
else's. Anastasia's the name—four a's."</p>
<p>"Craggs?"</p>
<p>"Johnson—Anastasia Johnson. If you jug him you can jug me."</p>
<p>"Who talked of juggin', ye fool?" growled the Master. "Coom on, Mr.
Armitage, for I'm fair sick o' this loiterin'."</p>
<p>The inspector fell in with the procession, and proceeded, as they walked
up the hill, to bargain in his official capacity for a front seat, where
he could safeguard the interests of the law, and in his private capacity
to lay out thirty shillings at seven to one with Mr. Armitage. Through the
door they passed, down a narrow lane walled with a dense bank of humanity,
up a wooden ladder to a platform, over a rope which was slung waist-high
from four corner-stakes, and then Montgomery realised that he was in that
ring in which his immediate destiny was to be worked out. On the stake at
one corner there hung a blue-and-white streamer. Barton led him across,
the overcoat dangling loosely from his shoulders, and he sat down on a
wooden stool. Barton and another man, both wearing white sweaters, stood
beside him. The so-called ring was a square, twenty feet each way. At the
opposite angle was the sinister figure of the Master, with his red-headed
woman and a rough-faced friend to look after him. At each corner were
metal basins, pitchers of water, and sponges.</p>
<p>During the hubbub and uproar of the entrance Montgomery was too bewildered
to take things in. But now there was a few minutes' delay, for the referee
had lingered behind, and so he looked quietly about him. It was a sight to
haunt him for a lifetime. Wooden seats had been built in, sloping upwards
to the tops of the walls. Above, instead of a ceiling, a great flight of
crows passed slowly across a square of grey cloud. Right up to the topmost
benches the folk were banked—broadcloth in front, corduroys and
fustian behind; faces turned everywhere upon him. The grey reek of the
pipes filled the building, and the air was pungent with the acrid smell of
cheap, strong tobacco. Everywhere among the human faces were to be seen
the heads of the dogs. They growled and yapped from the back benches. In
that dense mass of humanity, one could hardly pick out individuals, but
Montgomery's eyes caught the brazen gleam of the helmets held upon the
knees of the ten yeomen of his escort. At the very edge of the platform
sat the reporters, five of them—three locals and two all the way
from London. But where was the all-important referee? There was no sign of
him, unless he were in the centre of that angry swirl of men near the
door.</p>
<p>Mr. Stapleton had stopped to examine the gloves which wore to be used, and
entered the building after the combatants. He had started to come down
that narrow lane with the human walls which led to the ring. But already
it had gone abroad that the Wilson champion was a gentleman, and that
another gentleman had been appointed as referee. A wave of suspicion
passed through the Croxley folk. They would have one of their own people
for a referee. They would not have a stranger. His path was stopped as he
made for the ring. Excited men flung themselves in front of him; they
waved their fists in his face and cursed him. A woman howled vile names in
his ear. Somebody struck at him with an umbrella. "Go thou back to Lunnon.
We want noan o' thee. Go thou back!" they yelled.</p>
<p>Stapleton, with his shiny hat cocked backwards, and his large, bulging
forehead swelling from under it, looked round him from beneath his bushy
brows. He was in the centre of a savage and dangerous mob. Then he drew
his watch from his pocket and held it dial upwards in his palm.</p>
<p>"In three minutes," said he, "I will declare the fight off."</p>
<p>They raged round him. His cool face and that aggressive top-hat irritated
them. Grimy hands were raised. But it was difficult, somehow, to strike a
man who was so absolutely indifferent.</p>
<p>"In two minutes I declare the fight off."</p>
<p>They exploded into blasphemy. The breath of angry men smoked into his
placid face. A gnarled, grimy fist vibrated at the end of his nose. "We
tell thee we want noan o' thee. Get thou back where thou com'st from."</p>
<p>"In one minute I declare the fight off."</p>
<p>Then the calm persistence of the man conquered the swaying, mutable,
passionate crowd.</p>
<p>"Let him through, mon. Happen there'll be no fight after a'."</p>
<p>"Let him through."</p>
<p>"Bill, thou loomp, let him pass. Dost want the fight declared off?"</p>
<p>"Make room for the referee!—room for the Lunnon referee!"</p>
<p>And half pushed, half carried, he was swept up to the ring. There were two
chairs by the side of it, one for him and one for the timekeeper. He sat
down, his hands on his knees, his hat at a more wonderful angle than ever,
impassive but solemn, with the aspect of one who appreciates his
responsibilities.</p>
<p>Mr. Armitage, the portly butcher, made his way into the ring and held up
two fat hands, sparkling with rings, as a signal for silence.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen!" he yelled. And then in a crescendo shriek, "Gentlemen!"</p>
<p>"And ladies!" cried somebody, for, indeed, there was a fair sprinkling of
women among the crowd. "Speak up, owd man!" shouted another. "What price
pork chops?" cried somebody at the back. Everybody laughed, and the dogs
began to bark. Armitage waved his hands amidst the uproar as if he were
conducting an orchestra. At last the babel thinned into silence.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," he yelled, "the match is between Silas Craggs, whom we call
the Master of Croxley, and Robert Montgomery, of the Wilson Coal-pits. The
match was to be under eleven-eight. When they were weighed just now,
Craggs weighed eleven-seven, and Montgomery ten-nine. The conditions of
the contest are—the best of twenty three-minute rounds with
two-ounce gloves. Should the fight run to its full length, it will, of
course, be decided upon points. Mr. Stapleton, the well-known London
referee, has kindly consented to see fair play. I wish to say that Mr.
Wilson and I, the chief backers of the two men, have every confidence in
Mr. Stapleton, and that we beg that you will accept his rulings without
dispute."</p>
<p>He then turned from one combatant to the other, with a wave of his hand.</p>
<p>III<br/></p>
<p>"Montgomery—Craggs!" said he.</p>
<p>A great hush fell over the huge assembly. Even the dogs stopped yapping;
one might have thought that the monstrous room was empty. The two men had
stood up, the small white gloves over their hands They advanced from their
corners and shook hands, Montgomery gravely, Craggs with a smile. Then
they fell into position. The crowd gave a long sigh—the intake of a
thousand excited breaths. The referee tilted his chair on to its back
legs, and looked moodily critical from the one to the other.</p>
<p>It was strength against activity—that was evident from the first.
The Master stood stolidly upon his K leg. It gave him a tremendous
pedestal; one could hardly imagine his being knocked down. And he could
pivot round upon it with extraordinary quickness; but his advance or
retreat was ungainly. His frame, however, was so much larger and broader
than that of the student, and his brown, massive face looked so resolute
and menacing that the hearts of the Wilson party sank within them. There
was one heart, however, which had not done so. It was that of Robert
Montgomery.</p>
<p>Any nervousness which he may have had completely passed away now that he
had his work before him. Here was something definite—this
hard-faced, deformed Hercules to beat, with a career as the price of
beating him. He glowed with the joy of action; it thrilled through his
nerves. He faced his man with little in-and-out steps, breaking to the
left, breaking to the right, feeling his way, while Craggs, with a dull,
malignant eye, pivoted slowly upon his weak leg, his left arm half
extended, his right sunk low across the mark. Montgomery led with his
left, and then led again, getting lightly home each time. He tried again,
but the Master had his counter ready, and Montgomery reeled back from a
harder blow than he had given. Anastasia, the woman, gave a shrill cry of
encouragement, and her man let fly his right. Montgomery ducked under it,
and in an instant the two were in each other's arms.</p>
<p>"Break away! Break away!" said the referee.</p>
<p>The Master struck upwards on the break, and shook Montgomery with the
blow. Then it was "time." It had been a spirited opening round. The people
buzzed into comment and applause. Montgomery was quite fresh, but the
hairy chest of the Master was rising and falling. The man passed a sponge
over his head while Anastasia flapped the towel before him. "Good lass!
good lass!" cried the crowd, and cheered her.</p>
<p>The men were up again, the Master grimly watchful, Montgomery as alert as
a kitten. The Master tried a sudden rush, squattering along with his
awkward gait, but coming faster than one would think. The student slipped
aside and avoided him. The Master stopped, grinned, and shook his head.
Then he motioned with his hand as an invitation to Montgomery to come to
him. The student did so and led with his left, but got a swinging right
counter in the ribs in exchange. The heavy blow staggered him, and the
Master came scrambling in to complete his advantage; but Montgomery, with
his greater activity, kept out of danger until the call of "time." A tame
round, and the advantage with the Master.</p>
<p>"T' Maister's too strong for him," said a smelter to his neighbour.</p>
<p>"Ay; but t'other's a likely lad. Happen we'll see some sport yet. He can
joomp rarely."</p>
<p>"But t' Maister can stop and hit rarely. Happen he'll mak' him joomp when
he gets his nief upon him."</p>
<p>They were up again, the water glistening upon their faces. Montgomery led
instantly, and got his right home with a sounding smack upon the master's
forehead. There was a shout from the colliers, and "Silence! Order!" from
the referee. Montgomery avoided the counter, and scored with his left.
Fresh applause, and the referee upon his feet in indignation..</p>
<p>"No comments, gentlemen, if <i>you</i> please, during the rounds."</p>
<p>"Just bide a bit!" growled the Master.</p>
<p>"Don't talk—fight!" said the referee, angrily.</p>
<p>Montgomery rubbed in the point by a flush hit upon the mouth, and the
Master shambled back to his corner like an angry bear, having had all the
worst of the round.</p>
<p>"Where's thot seven to one?" shouted Purvis, the publican. "I'll take six
to one!"</p>
<p>There were no answers.</p>
<p>"Five to one!"</p>
<p>There were givers at that. Purvis booked them in a tattered notebook.</p>
<p>Montgomery began to feel happy. He lay back with his legs outstretched,
his back against the corner-post, and one gloved hand upon each rope. What
a delicious minute it was between each round. If he could only keep out of
harm's way, he must surely wear this man out before the end of twenty
rounds. He was so slow that all his strength went for nothing.</p>
<p>"You're fightin' a winnin' fight—a winnin' fight," Ted Barton
whispered in his ear. "Go canny; tak' no chances; you have him proper."</p>
<p>But the Master was crafty. He had fought so many battles with his maimed
limb that he knew how to make the best of it. Warily and slowly he
manoeuvred round Montgomery, stepping forward and yet again forward until
he had imperceptibly backed him into his corner. The student suddenly saw
a flash of triumph upon the grim face, and a gleam in the dull, malignant
eyes. The Master was upon him. He sprang aside and was on the ropes. The
Master smashed in one of his terrible upper-cuts, and Montgomery half
broke it with his guard. The student sprang the other way and was against
the other converging rope. He was trapped in the angle. The Master sent in
another with a hoggish grunt which spoke of the energy behind it.
Montgomery ducked, but got a jab from the left upon the mark. He closed
with his man.</p>
<p>"Break away! Break away!" cried the referee. Montgomery disengaged, and
got a swinging blow on the ear as he did so. It had been a damaging round
for him, and the Croxley people were shouting their delight. "Gentlemen, I
will <i>not</i> have this noise!" Stapleton roared. "I have been
accustomed to preside at a well-conducted club, and not at a bear-garden."
This little man, with the tilted hat and the bulging forehead, dominated
the whole assembly. He was like a head-master among his boys. He glared
round him, and nobody cared to meet his eye. Anastasia had kissed the
Master when he resumed his seat.</p>
<p>"Good lass. Do't again!" cried the laughing crowd, and the angry Master
shook his glove at her, as she flapped her towel in front of him.
Montgomery was weary and a little sore, but not depressed. He had learned
something. He would not again be tempted into danger.</p>
<p>For three rounds the honours were fairly equal. The student's hitting was
the quicker, the Master's the harder. Profiting by his lesson, Montgomery
kept himself in the open, and refused to be herded into a corner.
Sometimes the Master succeeded in rushing him to the side-ropes, but the
younger man slipped away, or closed and then disengaged. The monotonous
"Break away! Break away!" of the referee broke in upon the quick, low
patter of rubber-soled shoes, the dull thud of the blows, and the sharp,
hissing breath of two tired men.</p>
<p>The ninth round found both of them in fairly good condition. Montgomery's
head was still singing from the blow that he had in the corner, and one of
his thumbs pained him acutely and seemed to be dislocated. The Master
showed no sign of a touch, but his breathing was the more laboured, and a
long line of ticks upon the referee's paper showed that the student had a
good show of points. But one of this iron-man's blows was worth three of
his, and he knew that without the gloves he could not have stood for three
rounds against him. All the amateur work that he had done was the merest
tapping and flapping when compared to those frightful blows, from arms
toughened by the shovel and the crowbar.</p>
<p>It was the tenth round, and the fight was half over. The betting now was
only three to one, for the Wilson champion had held his own much better
than had been expected. But those who knew the ring-craft as well as the
staying power of the old prize-fighter knew that the odds were still a
long way in his favour.</p>
<p>"Have a care of him!" whispered Barton, as he sent his man up to the
scratch. "Have a care! He'll play thee a trick, if he can."</p>
<p>But Montgomery saw, or imagined he saw, that his antagonist was tiring. He
looked jaded and listless, and his hands drooped a little from their
position. His own youth and condition were beginning to tell. He sprang in
and brought off a fine left-handed lead. The Master's return lacked his
usual fire. Again Montgomery led, and again he got home. Then he tried his
right upon the mark, and the Master guarded it downwards.</p>
<p>"Too low! Too low! A foul! A foul!" yelled a thousand voices.</p>
<p>The referee rolled his sardonic eyes slowly round. "Seems to me this
buildin' is chock-full of referees," said he. The people laughed and
applauded, but their favour was as immaterial to him as their anger. "No
applause, please! This is not a theatre!" he yelled.</p>
<p>Montgomery was very pleased with himself. His adversary was evidently in a
bad way. He was piling on his points and establishing a lead. He might as
well make hay while the sun shone. The Master was looking all abroad.
Montgomery popped one upon his blue jowl and got away without a return.
And then the Master suddenly dropped both his hands and began rubbing his
thigh. Ah! that was it, was it? He had muscular cramp.</p>
<p>"Go in! Go in!" cried Teddy Barton.</p>
<p>Montgomery sprang wildly forward, and the next instant was lying half
senseless, with his neck nearly broken, in the middle of the ring.</p>
<p>The whole round had been a long conspiracy to tempt him within reach of
one of those terrible right-hand upper-cuts for which the Master was
famous. For this the listless, weary bearing, for this the cramp in the
thigh. When Montgomery had sprung in so hotly he had exposed himself to
such a blow as neither flesh nor blood could stand. Whizzing up from below
with a rigid arm, which put the Master's eleven stone into its force, it
struck him under the jaw; he whirled half round, and fell a helpless and
half-paralysed mass. A vague groan and murmur, inarticulate, too excited
for words, rose from the great audience. With open mouths and staring eyes
they gazed at the twitching and quivering figure.</p>
<p>"Stand back! Stand right back!" shrieked the referee, for the Master was
standing over his man ready to give him the <i>coup-de-grace</i> as he
rose.</p>
<p>"Stand back, Craggs, this instant!" Stapleton repeated.</p>
<p>The Master sank his hands sulkily and walked backwards to the rope with
his ferocious eyes fixed upon his fallen antagonist. The timekeeper called
the seconds. If ten of them passed before Montgomery rose to his feet, the
fight was ended. Ted Barton wrung his hands and danced about in an agony
in his corner.</p>
<p>As if in a dream—a terrible nightmare—the student could hear
the voice of the timekeeper—three—four—five—he got
up on his hand—six— seven—he was on his knee, sick,
swimming, faint, but resolute to rise. Eight—he was up, and the
Master was on him like a tiger, lashing savagely at him with both hands.
Folk held their breath as they watched those terrible blows, and
anticipated the pitiful end—so much more pitiful where a game but
helpless man refuses to accept defeat.</p>
<p>Strangely automatic is the human brain. Without volition, without effort,
there shot into the memory of this bewildered, staggering, half-stupefied
man the one thing which could have saved him—that blind eye of which
the Master's son had spoken. It was the same as the other to look at, but
Montgomery remembered that he had said that it was the left. He reeled to
the left side, half felled by a drive which lit upon his shoulder. The
Master pivoted round upon his leg and was at him in an instant.</p>
<p>"Yark him, lad! Yark him!" screamed the woman.</p>
<p>"Hold your tongue!" said the referee.</p>
<p>Montgomery slipped to the left again and yet again, but the Master was too
quick and clever for him. He struck round and got him full on the face as
he tried once more to break away. Montgomery's knees weakened under him,
and he fell with a groan on the floor. This time he knew that he was done.
With bitter agony he realised, as he groped blindly with his hands, that
he could not possibly raise himself. Far away and muffled he heard, amid
the murmurs of the multitude, the fateful voice of the timekeeper counting
off the seconds.</p>
<p>"One—two—three—four—five—six—"</p>
<p>"Time!" said the referee.</p>
<p>Then the pent-up passion of the great assembly broke loose. Croxley gave a
deep groan of disappointment. The Wilsons were on their feet, yelling with
delight. There was still a chance for them. In four more seconds their man
would have been solemnly counted out. But now he had a minute in which to
recover. The referee looked round with relaxed features and laughing eyes.
He loved this rough game, this school for humble heroes, and it was
pleasant to him to intervene as a <i>Deus ex machina</i> at so dramatic a
moment. His chair and his hat were both tilted at an extreme angle; he and
the timekeeper smiled at each other. Ted Barton and the other second had
rushed out and thrust an arm each under Montgomery's knee, the other
behind his loins, and so carried him back to his stool. His head lolled
upon his shoulder, but a douche of cold water sent a shiver through him,
and he started and looked round him.</p>
<p>"He's a' right!" cried the people round. "He's a rare brave lad. Good lad!
Good lad!" Barton poured some brandy into his mouth. The mists cleared a
little, and he realised where he was and what he had to do. But he was
still very weak, and he hardly dared to hope that he could survive another
round.</p>
<p>"Seconds out of the ring!" cried the referee. "Time!"</p>
<p>The Croxley Master sprang eagerly off his stool.</p>
<p>"Keep clear of him! Go easy for a bit," said Barton, and Montgomery walked
out to meet his man once more.</p>
<p>He had had two lessons—the one when the Master got him into his
corner, the other when he had been lured into mixing it up with so
powerful an antagonist. Now he would be wary. Another blow would finish
him; he could afford to run no risks. The Master was determined to follow
up his advantage, and rushed at him, slogging furiously right and left.
But Montgomery was too young and active to be caught. He was strong upon
his legs once more, and his wits had all come back to him. It was a
gallant sight—the line-of-battleship trying to pour its overwhelming
broadside into the frigate, and the frigate manoeuvring always so as to
avoid it. The Master tried all his ring-craft. He coaxed the student up by
pretended inactivity; he rushed at him with furious rushes towards the
ropes. For three rounds he exhausted every wile in trying to get at him.
Montgomery during all this time was conscious that his strength was minute
by minute coming back to him. The spinal jar from an upper-cut is
overwhelming, but evanescent. He was losing all sense of it beyond a great
stiffness of the neck. For the first round after his downfall he had been
content to be entirely on the defensive, only too happy if he could stall
off the furious attacks of the Master. In the second he occasionally
ventured upon a light counter. In the third he was smacking back merrily
where he saw an opening. His people yelled their approval of him at the
end of every round. Even the iron-workers cheered him with that fine
unselfishness which true sport engenders. To most of them, unspiritual and
unimaginative, the sight of this clean-limbed young Apollo, rising above
disaster and holding on while consciousness was in him to his appointed
task, was the greatest thing their experience had ever known.</p>
<p>But the Master's naturally morose temper became more and more murderous at
this postponement of his hopes. Three rounds ago the battle had been in
his hands; now it was all to do over again. Round by round his man was
recovering his strength. By the fifteenth he was strong again in wind and
limb. But the vigilant Anastasia saw something which encouraged her.</p>
<p>"That bash in t' ribs is telling on him, Jock," she whispered. "Why else
should he be gulping t' brandy? Go in, lad, and thou hast him yet."</p>
<p>Montgomery had suddenly taken the flask from Barton's hand, and had a deep
pull at the contents. Then, with his face a little flushed, and with a
curious look of purpose, which made the referee stare hard at him, in his
eyes, he rose for the sixteenth round.</p>
<p>"Game as a pairtridge!" cried the publican, as he looked at the hard-set
face.</p>
<p>"Mix it oop, lad! Mix it oop!" cried the iron-men to their Master. And
then a hum of exultation ran through their ranks as they realised that
their tougher, harder, stronger man held the vantage, after all. Neither
of the men showed much sign of punishment. Small gloves crush and numb,
but they do not cut. One of the Master's eyes was even more flush with his
cheek than Nature had made it. Montgomery had two or three livid marks
upon his body, and his face was haggard, save for that pink spot which the
brandy had brought into either cheek. He rocked a little as he stood
opposite his man, and his hands drooped as if he felt the gloves to be an
unutterable weight. It was evident that he was spent and desperately
weary. If he received one other blow it must surely be fatal to him. If he
brought one home, what power could there be behind it, and what chance was
there of its harming the colossus in front of him? It was the crisis of
the fight. This round must decide it. "Mix it oop, lad! Mix it oop!" the
iron-men whooped. Even the savage eyes of the referee were unable to
restrain the excited crowd.</p>
<p>Now, at last, the chance had come for Montgomery. He had learned a lesson
from his more experienced rival. Why should he not play his own game upon
him? He was spent, but not nearly so spent as he pretended. That brandy
was to call up his reserves, to let him have strength to take full
advantage of the opening when it came. It was thrilling and tingling
through his veins at the very moment when he was lurching and rocking like
a beaten man. He acted his part admirably. The Master felt that there was
an easy task before him, and rushed in with ungainly activity to finish it
once for all. He slap-banged away left and right, boring Montgomery up
against the ropes, swinging in his ferocious blows with those animal
grunts which told of the vicious energy behind them.</p>
<p>But Montgomery was too cool to fall a victim to any of those murderous
upper-cuts. He kept out of harm's way with a rigid guard, an active foot,
and a head which was swift to duck. And yet he contrived to present the
same appearance of a man who is hopelessly done. The Master, weary from
his own shower of blows, and fearing nothing from so weak a man, dropped
his hand for an instant, and at that instant Montgomery's right came home.</p>
<p>It was a magnificent blow, straight, clean, crisp, with the force of the
loins and the back behind it. And it landed where he had meant it to—
upon the exact point of that blue-grained chin. Flesh and blood could not
stand such a blow in such a place. Neither valour nor hardihood can save
the man to whom it comes. The Master fell backwards, flat, prostrate,
striking the ground with so simultaneous a clap that it was like a shutter
falling from a wall. A yell, which no referee could control, broke from
the crowded benches as the giant went down. He lay upon his back, his
knees a little drawn up, his huge chest panting. He twitched and shook,
but could not move. His feet pawed convulsively once or twice. It was no
use. He was done. "Eight—nine—ten!" said the time-keeper, and
the roar of a thousand voices, with a deafening clap like the broad-side
of a ship, told that the Master of Croxley was the Master no more.</p>
<p>Montgomery stood half dazed, looking down at the huge, prostrate figure.
He could hardly realise that it was indeed all over. He saw the referee
motion towards him with his hand. He heard his name bellowed in triumph
from every side. And then he was aware of someone rushing towards him; he
caught a glimpse of a flushed face and an aureole of flying red hair, a
gloveless fist struck him between the eyes, and he was on his back in the
ring beside his antagonist, while a dozen of his supporters were
endeavouring to secure the frantic Anastasia. He heard the angry shouting
of the referee, the screaming of the furious woman, and the cries of the
mob. Then something seemed to break like an over-stretched banjo string,
and he sank into the deep, deep, mist-girt abyss of unconsciousness.</p>
<p>The dressing was like a thing in a dream, and so was a vision of the
Master with the grin of a bulldog upon his face, and his three teeth
amiably protruded. He shook Montgomery heartily by the hand.</p>
<p>"I would have been rare pleased to shake thee by the throttle, lad, a
short while syne," said he. "But I bear no ill-feeling again' thee. It was
a rare poonch that brought me down—I have not had a better since my
second fight wi' Billy Edwards in '89. Happen thou might think o' goin'
further wi' this business. If thou dost, and want a trainer, there's not
much inside t' ropes as I don't know. Or happen thou might like to try it
wi' me old style and bare knuckles. Thou hast but to write to t' ironworks
to find me."</p>
<p>But Montgomery disclaimed any such ambition. A canvas bag with his share—190
sovereigns—was handed to him, of which he gave ten to the Master,
who also received some share of the gate-money. Then, with young Wilson
escorting him on one side, Purvis on the other, and Fawcett carrying his
bag behind, he went in triumph to his carriage, and drove amid a long
roar, which lined the highway like a hedge for the seven miles, back to
his starting-point.</p>
<p>"It's the greatest thing I ever saw in my life. By George, it's ripping!"
cried Wilson, who had been left in a kind of ecstasy by the events of the
day. "There's a chap over Barnsley way who fancies himself a bit. Let us
spring you on him, and let him see what he can make of you. We'll put up a
purse—won't we, Purvis? You shall never want a backer."</p>
<p>"At his weight," said the publican, "I'm behind him, I am, for twenty
rounds, and no age, country, or colour barred."</p>
<p>"So am I," cried Fawcett; "middle-weight champion of the world, that's
what he is—here, in the same carriage with us."</p>
<p>But Montgomery was not to be beguiled.</p>
<p>"No; I have my own work to do now."</p>
<p>"And what may that be?"</p>
<p>"I'll use this money to get my medical degree."</p>
<p>"Well, we've plenty of doctors, but you're the only man in the Riding that
could smack the Croxley Master off his legs. However, I suppose you know
your own business best. When you're a doctor, you'd best come down into
these parts, and you'll always find a job waiting for you at the Wilson
Coal-pits."</p>
<p>Montgomery had returned by devious ways to the surgery. The horses were
smoking at the door, and the doctor was just back from his long journey.
Several patients had called in his absence, and he was in the worst of
tempers.</p>
<p>"I suppose I should be glad that you have come back at all, Mr.
Montgomery!" he snarled. "When next you elect to take a holiday, I trust
it will not be at so busy a time."</p>
<p>"I am sorry, sir, that you should have been inconvenienced."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, I have been exceedingly inconvenienced." Here, for the first
time, he looked hard at the assistant. "Good Heavens, Mr. Montgomery, what
have you been doing with your left eye?"</p>
<p>It was where Anastasia had lodged her protest. Montgomery laughed.</p>
<p>"It is nothing, sir," said he.</p>
<p>"And you have a livid mark under your jaw. It is, indeed, terrible that my
representative should be going about in so disreputable a condition. How
did you receive these injuries?"</p>
<p>"Well, sir, as you know, there was a little glove-fight to-day over at
Croxley."</p>
<p>"And you got mixed up with that brutal crowd?"</p>
<p>"I <i>was</i> rather mixed up with them."</p>
<p>"And who assaulted you?"</p>
<p>"One of the fighters."</p>
<p>"Which of them?"</p>
<p>"The Master of Croxley."</p>
<p>"Good Heavens! Perhaps you interfered with him?"</p>
<p>"Well, to tell the truth, I did a little."</p>
<p>"Mr. Montgomery, in such a practice as mine, intimately associated as it
is with the highest and most progressive elements of our small community,
it is impossible—"</p>
<p>But just then the tentative bray of a cornet-player searching for his
key-note jarred upon their ears, and an instant later the Wilson Colliery
brass band was in full cry with, "See the Conquering Hero Comes," outside
the surgery window. There was a banner waving, and a shouting crowd of
miners.</p>
<p>"What is it? What does it mean?" cried the angry doctor.</p>
<p>"It means, sir, that I have, in the only way which was open to me, earned
the money which is necessary for my education. It is my duty, Dr. Oldacre,
to warn you that I am about to return to the University, and that you
should lose no time in appointing my successor."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE LORD OF CHATEAU NOIR </h2>
<p>It was in the days when the German armies had broken their way across
France, and when the shattered forces of the young Republic had been swept
away to the north of the Aisne and to the south of the Loire. Three broad
streams of armed men had rolled slowly but irresistibly from the Rhine,
now meandering to the north, now to the south, dividing, coalescing, but
all uniting to form one great lake round Paris. And from this lake there
welled out smaller streams—one to the north, one southward, to
Orleans, and a third westward to Normandy. Many a German trooper saw the
sea for the first time when he rode his horse girth-deep into the waves at
Dieppe.</p>
<p>Black and bitter were the thoughts of Frenchmen when they saw this weal of
dishonour slashed across the fair face of their country. They had fought
and they had been overborne. That swarming cavalry, those countless
footmen, the masterful guns—they had tried and tried to make head
against them. In battalions their invaders were not to be beaten, but man
to man, or ten to ten, they were their equals. A brave Frenchman might
still make a single German rue the day that he had left his own bank of
the Rhine. Thus, unchronicled amid the battles and the sieges, there broke
out another war, a war of individuals, with foul murder upon the one side
and brutal reprisal on the other.</p>
<p>Colonel von Gramm, of the 24th Posen Infantry, had suffered severely
during this new development. He commanded in the little Norman town of Les
Andelys, and his outposts stretched amid the hamlets and farmhouses of the
district round. No French force was within fifty miles of him, and yet
morning after morning he had to listen to a black report of sentries found
dead at their posts, or of foraging parties which had never returned. Then
the colonel would go forth in his wrath, and farmsteadings would blaze and
villages tremble; but next morning there was still that same dismal tale
to be told. Do what he might, he could not shake off his invisible
enemies. And yet it should not have been so hard, for, from certain signs
in common, in the plan and in the deed, it was certain that all these
outrages came from a single source.</p>
<p>Colonel von Gramm had tried violence, and it had failed. Gold might be
more successful. He published it abroad over the countryside that 500frs.
would be paid for information. There was no response. Then 800frs. The
peasants were incorruptible. Then, goaded on by a murdered corporal, he
rose to a thousand, and so bought the soul of Francois Rejane, farm
labourer, whose Norman avarice was a stronger passion than his French
hatred.</p>
<p>"You say that you know who did these crimes?" asked the Prussian colonel,
eyeing with loathing the blue-bloused, rat-faced creature before him.</p>
<p>"Yes, colonel."</p>
<p>"And it was—?"</p>
<p>"Those thousand francs, colonel—"</p>
<p>"Not a sou until your story has been tested. Come! Who is it who has
murdered my men?"</p>
<p>"It is Count Eustace of Chateau Noir."</p>
<p>"You lie!" cried the colonel, angrily. "A gentleman and a nobleman could
not have done such crimes."</p>
<p>The peasant shrugged his shoulders. "It is evident to me that you do not
know the count. It is this way, colonel. What I tell you is the truth, and
I am not afraid that you should test it. The Count of Chateau Noir is a
hard man, even at the best time he was a hard man. But of late he has been
terrible. It was his son's death, you know. His son was under Douay, and
he was taken, and then in escaping from Germany he met his death. It was
the count's only child, and indeed we all think that it has driven him
mad. With his peasants he follows the German armies. I do not know how
many he has killed, but it is he who cut the cross upon the foreheads, for
it is the badge of his house."</p>
<p>It was true. The murdered sentries had each had a saltire cross slashed
across their brows, as by a hunting-knife. The colonel bent his stiff back
and ran his forefinger over the map which lay upon the table.</p>
<p>"The Chateau Noir is not more than four leagues," he said.</p>
<p>"Three and a kilometre, colonel."</p>
<p>"You know the place?"</p>
<p>"I used to work there."</p>
<p>Colonel von Gramm rang the bell.</p>
<p>"Give this man food and detain him," said he to the sergeant.</p>
<p>"Why detain me, colonel? I can tell you no more."</p>
<p>"We shall need you as guide."</p>
<p>"As guide? But the count? If I were to fall into his hands? Ah, colonel—"</p>
<p>The Prussian commander waved him away. "Send Captain Baumgarten to me at
once," said he.</p>
<p>The officer who answered the summons was a man of middle-age, heavy-jawed,
blue-eyed, with a curving yellow moustache, and a brick-red face which
turned to an ivory white where his helmet had sheltered it. He was bald,
with a shining, tightly stretched scalp, at the back of which, as in a
mirror, it was a favourite mess-joke of the subalterns to trim their
moustaches. As a soldier he was slow, but reliable and brave. The colonel
could trust him where a more dashing officer might be in danger.</p>
<p>"You will proceed to Chateau Noir to-night, captain," said he. "A guide
has been provided. You will arrest the count and bring him back. If there
is an attempt at rescue, shoot him at once."</p>
<p>"How many men shall I take, colonel?"</p>
<p>"Well, we are surrounded by spies, and our only chance is to pounce upon
him before he knows that we are on the way. A large force will attract
attention. On the other hand, you must not risk being cut off."</p>
<p>"I might march north, colonel, as if to join General Goeben. Then I could
turn down this road which I see upon your map, and get to Chateau Noir
before they could hear of us. In that case, with twenty men—"</p>
<p>"Very good, captain. I hope to see you with your prisoner to-morrow
morning."</p>
<p>It was a cold December night when Captain Baumgarten marched out of Les
Andelys with his twenty Poseners, and took the main road to the north
west. Two miles out he turned suddenly down a narrow, deeply rutted track,
and made swiftly for his man. A thin, cold rain was falling, swishing
among the tall poplar trees and rustling in the fields on either side. The
captain walked first with Moser, a veteran sergeant, beside him. The
sergeant's wrist was fastened to that of the French peasant, and it had
been whispered in his ear that in case of an ambush the first bullet fired
would be through his head. Behind them the twenty infantrymen plodded
along through the darkness with their faces sunk to the rain, and their
boots squeaking in the soft, wet clay. They knew where they were going,
and why, and the thought upheld them, for they were bitter at the loss of
their comrades. It was a cavalry job, they knew, but the cavalry were all
on with the advance, and, besides, it was more fitting that the regiment
should avenge its own dead men.</p>
<p>It was nearly eight when they left Les Andelys. At half-past eleven their
guide stopped at a place where two high pillars, crowned with some
heraldic stonework, flanked a huge iron gate. The wall in which it had
been the opening had crumbled away, but the great gate still towered above
the brambles and weeds which had overgrown its base. The Prussians made
their way round it and advanced stealthily, under the shadow of a tunnel
of oak branches, up the long avenue, which was still cumbered by the
leaves of last autumn. At the top they halted and reconnoitred.</p>
<p>The black chateau lay in front of them. The moon had shone out between two
rain-clouds, and threw the old house into silver and shadow. It was shaped
like an L, with a low arched door in front, and lines of small windows
like the open ports of a man-of-war. Above was a dark roof, breaking at
the corners into little round overhanging turrets, the whole lying silent
in the moonshine, with a drift of ragged clouds blackening the heavens
behind it. A single light gleamed in one of the lower windows.</p>
<p>The captain whispered his orders to his men. Some were to creep to the
front door, some to the back. Some were to watch the east, and some the
west. He and the sergeant stole on tiptoe to the lighted window.</p>
<p>It was a small room into which they looked, very meanly furnished. An
elderly man, in the dress of a menial, was reading a tattered paper by the
light of a guttering candle. He leaned back in his wooden chair with his
feet upon a box, while a bottle of white wine stood with a half-filled
tumbler upon a stool beside him. The sergeant thrust his needle-gun
through the glass, and the man sprang to his feet with a shriek.</p>
<p>"Silence, for your life! The house is surrounded, and you cannot escape.
Come round and open the door, or we will show you no mercy when we come
in."</p>
<p>"For God's sake, don't shoot! I will open it! I will open it!" He rushed
from the room with his paper still crumpled up in his hand. An instant
later, with a groaning of old locks and a rasping of bars, the low door
swung open, and the Prussians poured into the stone-flagged passage.</p>
<p>"Where is Count Eustace de Chateau Noir?"</p>
<p>"My master! He is out, sir."</p>
<p>"Out at this time of night? Your life for a lie!"</p>
<p>"It is true, sir. He is out!"</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"I do not know."</p>
<p>"Doing what?"</p>
<p>"I cannot tell. No, it is no use your cocking your pistol, sir. You may
kill me, but you cannot make me tell you that which I do not know."</p>
<p>"Is he often out at this hour?"</p>
<p>"Frequently."</p>
<p>"And when does he come home?"</p>
<p>"Before daybreak."</p>
<p>Captain Baumgarten rasped out a German oath. He had had his journey for
nothing, then. The man's answers were only too likely to be true. It was
what he might have expected. But at least he would search the house and
make sure. Leaving a picket at the front door and another at the back, the
sergeant and he drove the trembling butler in front of them— his
shaking candle sending strange, flickering shadows over the old tapestries
and the low, oak-raftered ceilings. They searched the whole house, from
the huge stone-flagged kitchen below to the dining-hall on the second
floor, with its gallery for musicians, and its panelling black with age,
but nowhere was there a living creature. Up above, in an attic, they found
Marie, the elderly wife of the butler; but the owner kept no other
servants, and of his own presence there was no trace.</p>
<p>It was long, however, before Captain Baumgarten had satisfied himself upon
the point. It was a difficult house to search. Thin stairs, which only one
man could ascend at a time, connected lines of tortuous corridors. The
walls were so thick that each room was cut off from its neighbour. Huge
fireplaces yawned in each, while the windows were 6ft. deep in the wall.
Captain Baumgarten stamped with his feet, tore down curtains, and struck
with the pommel of his sword. If there were secret hiding-places, he was
not fortunate enough to find them.</p>
<p>"I have an idea," said he, at last, speaking in German to the sergeant.
"You will place a guard over this fellow, and make sure that he
communicates with no one."</p>
<p>"Yes, captain."</p>
<p>"And you will place four men in ambush at the front and at the back. It is
likely enough that about daybreak our bird may return to the nest."</p>
<p>"And the others, captain?"</p>
<p>"Let them have their suppers in the kitchen. The fellow will serve you
with meat and wine. It is a wild night, and we shall be better here than
on the country road."</p>
<p>"And yourself, captain?"</p>
<p>"I will take my supper up here in the dining-hall. The logs are laid and
we can light the fire. You will call me if there is any alarm. What can
you give me for supper—you?"</p>
<p>"Alas, monsieur, there was a time when I might have answered, 'What you
wish!' but now it is all that we can do to find a bottle of new claret and
a cold pullet."</p>
<p>"That will do very well. Let a guard go about with him, sergeant, and let
him feel the end of a bayonet if he plays us any tricks."</p>
<p>Captain Baumgarten was an old campaigner. In the Eastern provinces, and
before that in Bohemia, he had learned the art of quartering himself upon
the enemy. While the butler brought his supper he occupied himself in
making his preparations for a comfortable night. He lit the candelabrum of
ten candles upon the centre table. The fire was already burning up,
crackling merrily, and sending spurts of blue, pungent smoke into the
room. The captain walked to the window and looked out. The moon had gone
in again, and it was raining heavily. He could hear the deep sough of the
wind, and see the dark loom of the trees, all swaying in the one
direction. It was a sight which gave a zest to his comfortable quarters,
and to the cold fowl and the bottle of wine which the butler had brought
up for him. He was tired and hungry after his long tramp, so he threw his
sword, his helmet, and his revolver-belt down upon a chair, and fell to
eagerly upon his supper. Then, with his glass of wine before him and his
cigar between his lips, he tilted his chair back and looked about him.</p>
<p>He sat within a small circle of brilliant light which gleamed upon his
silver shoulder-straps, and threw out his terra-cotta face, his heavy
eyebrows, and his yellow moustache. But outside that circle things were
vague and shadowy in the old dining-hall. Two sides were oak-panelled and
two were hung with faded tapestry, across which huntsmen and dogs and
stags were still dimly streaming. Above the fireplace were rows of
heraldic shields with the blazonings of the family and of its alliances,
the fatal saltire cross breaking out on each of them.</p>
<p>Four paintings of old seigneurs of Chateau Noir faced the fireplace, all
men with hawk noses and bold, high features, so like each other that only
the dress could distinguish the Crusader from the Cavalier of the Fronde.
Captain Baumgarten, heavy with his repast, lay back in his chair looking
up at them through the clouds of his tobacco smoke, and pondering over the
strange chance which had sent him, a man from the Baltic coast, to eat his
supper in the ancestral hall of these proud Norman chieftains. But the
fire was hot, and the captain's eyes were heavy. His chin sank slowly upon
his chest, and the ten candles gleamed upon the broad, white scalp.</p>
<p>Suddenly a slight noise brought him to his feet. For an instant it seemed
to his dazed senses that one of the pictures opposite had walked from its
frame. There, beside the table, and almost within arm's length of him, was
standing a huge man, silent, motionless, with no sign of life save his
fierce-glinting eyes. He was black-haired, olive-skinned, with a pointed
tuft of black beard, and a great, fierce nose, towards which all his
features seemed to run. His cheeks were wrinkled like a last year's apple,
but his sweep of shoulder, and bony, corded hands, told of a strength
which was unsapped by age. His arms were folded across his arching chest,
and his mouth was set in a fixed smile.</p>
<p>"Pray do not trouble yourself to look for your weapons," he said, as the
Prussian cast a swift glance at the empty chair in which they had been
laid. "You have been, if you will allow me to say so, a little indiscreet
to make yourself so much at home in a house every wall of which is
honeycombed with secret passages. You will be amused to hear that forty
men were watching you at your supper. Ah! what then?"</p>
<p>Captain Baumgarten had taken a step forward with clenched fists. The
Frenchman held up tho revolver which he grasped in his right hand, while
with the left he hurled the German back into his chair.</p>
<p>"Pray keep your seat," said he. "You have no cause to trouble about your
men. They have already been provided for. It is astonishing with these
stone floors how little one can hear what goes on beneath. You have been
relieved of your command, and have now only to think of yourself. May I
ask what your name is?"</p>
<p>"I am Captain Baumgarten of, the 24th Posen Regiment."</p>
<p>"Your French is excellent, though you incline, like most of your
countrymen, to turn the 'p' into a 'b.' I have been amused to hear them
cry '<i>Avez bitie sur moi!</i>' You know, doubtless, who it is who
addresses you."</p>
<p>"The Count of Chateau Noir."</p>
<p>"Precisely. It would have been a misfortune if you had visited my chateau
and I had been unable to have a word with you. I have had to do with many
German soldiers, but never with an officer before. I have much to talk to
you about."</p>
<p>Captain Baumgarten sat still in his chair. Brave as he was, there was
something in this man's manner which made his skin creep with
apprehension. His eyes glanced to right and to left, but his weapons were
gone, and in a struggle he saw that he was but a child to this gigantic
adversary. The count had picked up the claret bottle and held it to the
light.</p>
<p>"Tut! tut!" said he. "And was this the best that Pierre could do for you?
I am ashamed to look you in the face, Captain Baumgarten. We must improve
upon this."</p>
<p>He blew a call upon a whistle which hung from his shooting-jacket. The old
manservant was in the room in an instant.</p>
<p>"Chambertin from bin 15!" he cried, and a minute later a grey bottle,
streaked with cobwebs, was carried in as a nurse bears an infant. The
count filled two glasses to the brim.</p>
<p>"Drink!" said he. "It is the very best in my cellars, and not to be
matched between Rouen and Paris. Drink, sir, and be happy! There are cold
joints below. There are two lobsters, fresh from Honfleur. Will you not
venture upon a second and more savoury supper?"</p>
<p>The German officer shook his head. He drained the glass, however, and his
host filled it once more, pressing him to give an order for this or that
dainty.</p>
<p>"There is nothing in my house which is not at your disposal. You have but
to say the word. Well, then, you will allow me to tell you a story while
you drink your wine. I have so longed to tell it to some German officer.
It is about my son, my only child, Eustace, who was taken and died in
escaping. It is a curious little story, and I think that I can promise you
that you will never forget it.</p>
<p>"You must know, then, that my boy was in the artillery—a fine young
fellow, Captain Baumgarten, and the pride of his mother. She died within a
week of the news of his death reaching us. It was brought by a brother
officer who was at his side throughout, and who escaped while my lad died.
I want to tell you all that he told me.</p>
<p>"Eustace was taken at Weissenburg on the 4th of August. The prisoners were
broken up into parties, and sent back into Germany by different routes.
Eustace was taken upon the 5th to a village called Lauterburg, where he
met with kindness from the German officer in command. This good colonel
had the hungry lad to supper, offered him the best he had, opened a bottle
of good wine, as I have tried to do for you, and gave him a cigar from his
own case. Might I entreat you to take one from mine?"</p>
<p>The German again shook his head. His horror of his companion had increased
as he sat watching the lips that smiled and the eyes that glared.</p>
<p>"The colonel, as I say, was good to my boy. But, unluckily, the prisoners
were moved next day across the Rhine into Ettlingen. They were not equally
fortunate there. The officer who guarded them was a ruffian and a villain,
Captain Baumgarten. He took a pleasure in humiliating and ill-treating the
brave men who had fallen into his power. That night upon my son answering
fiercely back to some taunt of his, he struck him in the eye, like this!"</p>
<p>The crash of the blow rang through the hall. The German's face fell
forward, his hand up, and blood oozing through his fingers. The count
settled down in his chair once more.</p>
<p>"My boy was disfigured by the blow, and this villain made his appearance
the object of his jeers. By the way, you look a little comical yourself at
the present moment, captain, and your colonel would certainly say that you
had been getting into mischief. To continue, however, my boy's youth and
his destitution—for his pockets were empty—moved the pity of a
kind-hearted major, and he advanced him ten Napoleons from his own pocket
without security of any kind. Into your hands, Captain Baumgarten, I
return these ten gold pieces, since I cannot learn the name of the lender.
I am grateful from my heart for this kindness shown to my boy.</p>
<p>"The vile tyrant who commanded the escort accompanied the prisoners to
Durlack, and from there to Carlsruhe. He heaped every outrage upon my lad,
because the spirit of the Chateau Noirs would not stoop to turn away his
wrath by a feigned submission. Ay, this cowardly villain, whose heart's
blood shall yet clot upon this hand, dared to strike my son with his open
hand, to kick him, to tear hairs from his moustache— to use him thus—and
thus—and thus!"</p>
<p>The German writhed and struggled. He was helpless in the hands of this
huge giant whose blows were raining upon him. When at last, blinded and
half-senseless, he staggered to his feet, it was only to be hurled back
again into the great oaken chair. He sobbed in his impotent anger and
shame.</p>
<p>"My boy was frequently moved to tears by the humiliation of his position,"
continued the count. "You will understand me when I say that it is a
bitter thing to be helpless in the hands of an insolent and remorseless
enemy. On arriving at Carlsruhe, however, his face, which had been wounded
by the brutality of his guard, was bound up by a young Bavarian subaltern
who was touched by his appearance. I regret to see that your eye is
bleeding so. Will you permit me to bind it with my silk handkerchief?"</p>
<p>He leaned forward, but the German dashed his hand aside.</p>
<p>"I am in your power, you monster!" he cried; "I can endure your
brutalities, but not your hypocrisy."</p>
<p>The count shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>"I am taking things in their order, just as they occurred," said he. "I
was under vow to tell it to the first German officer with whom I could
talk <i>tete-a-tete</i>. Let me see, I had got as far as the young
Bavarian at Carlsruhe. I regret extremely that you will not permit me to
use such slight skill in surgery as I possess. At Carlsruhe, my lad was
shut up in the old caserne, where he remained for a fortnight. The worst
pang of his captivity was that some unmannerly curs in the garrison would
taunt him with his position as he sat by his window in the evening. That
reminds me, captain, that you are not quite situated upon a bed of roses
yourself, are you now? You came to trap a wolf, my man, and now the beast
has you down with his fangs in your throat. A family man, too, I should
judge, by that well-filled tunic. Well, a widow the more will make little
matter, and they do not usually remain widows long. Get back into the
chair, you dog!</p>
<p>"Well, to continue my story—at the end of a fortnight my son and his
friend escaped. I need not trouble you with the dangers which they ran, or
with the privations which they endured. Suffice it that to disguise
themselves they had to take the clothes of two peasants, whom they waylaid
in a wood. Hiding by day and travelling by night, they had got as far into
France as Remilly, and were within a mile—a single mile, captain—of
crossing the German lines when a patrol of Uhlans came right upon them.
Ah! it was hard, was it not, when they had come so far and were so near to
safety?" The count blew a double call upon his whistle, and three
hard-faced peasants entered the room.</p>
<p>"These must represent my Uhlans," said he. "Well, then, the captain in
command, finding that these men were French soldiers in civilian dress
within the German lines, proceeded to hang them without trial or ceremony.
I think, Jean, that the centre beam is the strongest."</p>
<p>The unfortunate soldier was dragged from his chair to where a noosed rope
had been flung over one of the huge oaken rafters which spanned the room.
The cord was slipped over his head, and he felt its harsh grip round his
throat. The three peasants seized the other end, and looked to the count
for his orders. The officer, pale, but firm, folded his arms and stared
defiantly at the man who tortured him.</p>
<p>"You are now face to face with death, and I perceive from your lips that
you are praying. My son was also face to face with death, and he prayed,
also. It happened that a general officer came up, and he heard the lad
praying for his mother, and it moved him so—he being himself a
father—that he ordered his Uhlans away, and he remained with his
aide-de-camp only, beside the condemned men. And when he heard all the lad
had to tell—that he was the only child of an old family, and that
his mother was in failing health—he threw off the rope as I throw
off this, and he kissed him on either cheek, as I kiss you, and he bade
him go, as I bid you go, and may every kind wish of that noble general,
though it could not stave off the fever which slew my son, descend now
upon your head."</p>
<p>And so it was that Captain Baumgarten, disfigured, blinded, and bleeding,
staggered out into the wind and the rain of that wild December dawn.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE STRIPED CHEST </h2>
<p>"What do you make of her, Allardyce?" I asked.</p>
<p>My second mate was standing beside me upon the poop, with his short, thick
legs astretch, for the gale had left a considerable swell behind it, and
our two quarter-boats nearly touched the water with every roll. He
steadied his glass against the mizzen-shrouds, and he looked long and hard
at this disconsolate stranger every time she came reeling up on to the
crest of a roller and hung balanced for a few seconds before swooping down
upon the other side. She lay so low in the water that I could only catch
an occasional glimpse of a pea-green line of bulwark. She was a brig, but
her mainmast had been snapped short off some 10ft. above the deck, and no
effort seemed to have been made to cut away the wreckage, which floated,
sails and yards, like the broken wing of a wounded gull upon the water
beside her. The foremast was still standing, but the foretopsail was
flying loose, and the headsails were streaming out in long, white pennons
in front of her. Never have I seen a vessel which appeared to have gone
through rougher handling. But we could not be surprised at that, for there
had been times during the last three days when it was a question whether
our own barque would ever see land again. For thirty-six hours we had kept
her nose to it, and if the <i>Mary Sinclair</i> had not been as good a
seaboat as ever left the Clyde, we could not have gone through. And yet
here we were at the end of it with the loss only of our gig and of part of
the starboard bulwark. It did not astonish us, however, when the smother
had cleared away, to find that others had been less lucky, and that this
mutilated brig staggering about upon a blue sea and under a cloudless sky,
had been left, like a blinded man after a lightning flash, to tell of the
terror which is past. Allardyce, who was a slow and methodical Scotchman,
stared long and hard at the little craft, while our seamen lined the
bulwark or clustered upon the fore shrouds to have a view of the stranger.
In latitude 20 degrees and longitude 10 degrees, which were about our
bearings, one becomes a little curious as to whom one meets, for one has
left the main lines of Atlantic commerce to the north. For ten days we had
been sailing over a solitary sea.</p>
<p>"She's derelict, I'm thinking," said the second mate.</p>
<p>I had come to the same conclusion, for I could see no signs of life upon
her deck, and there was no answer to the friendly wavings from our seamen.
The crew had probably deserted her under the impression that she was about
to founder.</p>
<p>"She can't last long," continued Allardyce, in his measured way. "She may
put her nose down and her tail up any minute. The water's lipping up to
the edge of her rail."</p>
<p>"What's her flag?" I asked.</p>
<p>"I'm trying to make out. It's got all twisted and tangled with the
halyards. Yes, I've got it now, clear enough. It's the Brazilian flag, but
it's wrong side up."</p>
<p>She had hoisted a signal of distress, then, before her people had
abandoned her. Perhaps they had only just gone. I took the mate's glass
and looked round over the tumultuous face of the deep blue Atlantic, still
veined and starred with white lines and spoutings of foam. But nowhere
could I see anything human beyond ourselves.</p>
<p>"There may be living men aboard," said I.</p>
<p>"There may be salvage," muttered the second mate.</p>
<p>"Then we will run down upon her lee side, and lie to." We were not more
than a hundred yards from her when we swung our foreyard aback, and there
we were, the barque and the brig, ducking and bowing like two clowns in a
dance.</p>
<p>"Drop one of the quarter-boats," said I. "Take four men, Mr. Allardyce,
and see what you can learn of her."</p>
<p>But just at that moment my first officer, Mr. Armstrong, came on deck, for
seven bells had struck, and it was but a few minutes off his watch. It
would interest me to go myself to this abandoned vessel and to see what
there might be aboard of her. So, with a word to Armstrong, I swung myself
over the side, slipped down the falls, and took my place in the sheets of
the boat.</p>
<p>It was but a little distance, but it took some time to traverse, and so
heavy was the roll that often when we were in the trough of the sea, we
could not see either the barque which we had left or the brig which we
were approaching. The sinking sun did not penetrate down there, and it was
cold and dark in the hollows of the waves, but each passing billow heaved
us up into the warmth and the sunshine once more. At each of these
moments, as we hung upon a white-capped ridge between the two dark
valleys, I caught a glimpse of the long, pea-green line, and the nodding
foremast of the brig, and I steered so as to come round by her stern, so
that we might determine which was the best way of boarding her. As we
passed her we saw the name <i>Nossa Sehnora da Vittoria</i> painted across
her dripping counter.</p>
<p>"The weather side, sir," said the second mate. "Stand by with the
boat-hook, carpenter!" An instant later we had jumped over the bulwarks,
which were hardly higher than our boat, and found ourselves upon the deck
of the abandoned vessel. Our first thought was to provide for our own
safety in case—as seemed very probable—the vessel should
settle down beneath our feet. With this object two of our men held on to
the painter of the boat, and fended her off from the vessel's side, so
that she might be ready in case we had to make a hurried retreat. The
carpenter was sent to find out how much water there was, and whether it
was still gaming, while the other seaman, Allardyce and myself, made a
rapid inspection of the vessel and her cargo.</p>
<p>The deck was littered with wreckage and with hen-coops, in which the dead
birds were washing about. The boats were gone, with the exception of one,
the bottom of which had been stove, and it was certain that the crew had
abandoned the vessel. The cabin was in a deck-house, one side of which had
been beaten in by a heavy sea. Allardyce and I entered it, and found the
captain's table as he had left it, his books and papers— all Spanish
or Portuguese—scattered over it, with piles of cigarette ash
everywhere. I looked about for the log, but could not find it.</p>
<p>"As likely as not he never kept one," said Allardyce. "Things are pretty
slack aboard a South American trader, and they don't do more than they can
help. If there was one it must have been taken away with him in the boat."</p>
<p>"I should like to take all these books and papers," said I. "Ask the
carpenter how much time we have."</p>
<p>His report was reassuring. The vessel was full of water, but some of the
cargo was buoyant, and there was no immediate danger of her sinking.
Probably she would never sink, but would drift about as one of those
terrible unmarked reefs which have sent so many stout vessels to the
bottom.</p>
<p>"In that case there is no danger in your going below, Mr. Allardyce," said
I. "See what you can make of her and find out how much of her cargo may be
saved. I'll look through these papers while you are gone."</p>
<p>The bills of lading, and some notes and letters which lay upon the desk,
sufficed to inform me that the Brazilian brig <i>Nossa Sehnora da Vittoria</i>
had cleared from Bahia a month before. The name of the captain was
Texeira, but there was no record as to the number of the crew. She was
bound for London, and a glance at the bills of lading was sufficient to
show me that we were not likely to profit much in the way of salvage. Her
cargo consisted of nuts, ginger, and wood, the latter in the shape of
great logs of valuable tropical growths. It was these, no doubt, which had
prevented the ill-fated vessel from going to the bottom, but they were of
such a size as to make it impossible for us to extract them. Besides
these, there were a few fancy goods, such as a number of ornamental birds
for millinery purposes, and a hundred cases of preserved fruits. And then,
as I turned over the papers, I came upon a short note in English, which
arrested my attention.</p>
<p>It is requested (said the note) that the various old Spanish<br/>
and Indian curiosities, which came out of the Santarem<br/>
collection, and which are consigned to Prontfoot & Neuman<br/>
of Oxford Street, London, should be put in some place where<br/>
there may be no danger of these very valuable and unique articles<br/>
being injured or tampered with. This applies most particularly<br/>
to the treasure-chest of Don Ramirez di Leyra, which must on<br/>
no account be placed where anyone can get at it.<br/></p>
<p>The treasure-chest of Don Ramirez! Unique and valuable articles! Here was
a chance of salvage after all. I had risen to my feet with the paper in my
hand when my Scotch mate appeared in the doorway.</p>
<p>"I'm thinking all isn't quite as it should be aboard of this ship, sir,"
said he. He was a hard-faced man, and yet I could see that he had been
startled.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?"</p>
<p>"Murder's the matter, sir. There's a man here with his brains beaten out."</p>
<p>"Killed in the storm?" said I.</p>
<p>"May be so, sir, but I'll be surprised if you think so after you have seen
him."</p>
<p>"Where is he, then?"</p>
<p>"This way, sir; here in the maindeck house."</p>
<p>There appeared to have been no accommodation below in the brig, for there
was the after-house for the captain, another by the main hatchway, with
the cook's galley attached to it, and a third in the forecastle for the
men. It was to this middle one that the mate led me. As you entered, the
galley, with its litter of tumbled pots and dishes, was upon the right,
and upon the left was a small room with two bunks for the officers. Then
beyond there was a place about 12ft. square, which was littered with flags
and spare canvas. All round the walls were a number of packets done up in
coarse cloth and carefully lashed to the woodwork. At the other end was a
great box, striped red and white, though the red was so faded and the
white so dirty that it was only where the light fell directly upon it that
one could see the colouring. The box was, by subsequent measurement, 4ft.
3ins. in length, 3ft. 2ins. in height, and 3ft. across—considerably
larger than a seaman's chest. But it was not to the box that my eyes or my
thoughts were turned as I entered the store-room. On the floor, lying
across the litter of bunting, there was stretched a small, dark man with a
short, curling beard. He lay as far as it was possible from the box, with
his feet towards it and his head away. A crimson patch was printed upon
the white canvas on which his head was resting, and little red ribbons
wreathed themselves round his swarthy neck and trailed away on to the
floor, but there was no sign of a wound that I could see, and his face was
as placid as that of a sleeping child. It was only when I stooped that I
could perceive his injury, and then I turned away with an exclamation of
horror. He had been pole-axed; apparently by some person standing behind
him. A frightful blow had smashed in the top of his head and penetrated
deeply into his brains. His face might well be placid, for death must have
been absolutely instantaneous, and the position of the wound showed that
he could never have seen the person who had inflicted it.</p>
<p>"Is that foul play or accident, Captain Barclay?" asked my second mate,
demurely.</p>
<p>"You are quite right, Mr. Allardyce. The man has been murdered—struck
down from above by a sharp and heavy weapon. But who was he, and why did
they murder him?"</p>
<p>"He was a common seaman, sir," said the mate. "You can see that if you
look at his fingers." He turned out his pockets as he spoke and brought to
light a pack of cards, some tarred string, and a bundle of Brazilian
tobacco.</p>
<p>"Hello, look at this!" said he.</p>
<p>It was a large, open knife with a stiff spring blade which he had picked
up from the floor. The steel was shining and bright, so that we could not
associate it with the crime, and yet the dead man had apparently held it
in his hand when he was struck down, for it still lay within his grasp.</p>
<p>"It looks to me, sir, as if he knew he was in danger and kept his knife
handy," said the mate. "However, we can't help the poor beggar now. I
can't make out these things that are lashed to the wall. They seem to be
idols and weapons and curios of all sorts done up in old sacking."</p>
<p>"That's right," said I. "They are the only things of value that we are
likely to get from the cargo. Hail the barque and tell them to send the
other quarter-boat to help us to get the stuff aboard."</p>
<p>While he was away I examined this curious plunder which had come into our
possession. The curiosities were so wrapped up that I could only form a
general idea as to their nature, but the striped box stood in a good light
where I could thoroughly examine it. On the lid, which was clamped and
cornered with metal-work, there was engraved a complex coat of arms, and
beneath it was a line of Spanish which I was able to decipher as meaning,
"The treasure-chest of Don Ramirez di Leyra, Knight of the Order of Saint
James, Governor and Captain-General of Terra Firma and of the Province of
Veraquas." In one corner was the date, 1606, and on the other a large
white label, upon which was written in English, "You are earnestly
requested, upon no account, to open this box." The same warning was
repeated underneath in Spanish. As to the lock, it was a very complex and
heavy one of engraved steel, with a Latin motto, which was above a
seaman's comprehension. By the time I had finished this examination of the
peculiar box, the other quarter-boat with Mr. Armstrong, the first
officer, had come alongside, and we began to carry out and place in her
the various curiosities which appeared to be the only objects worth moving
from the derelict ship. When she was full I sent her back to the barque,
and then Allardyce and I, with the carpenter and one seaman, shifted the
striped box, which was the only thing left, to our boat, and lowered it
over, balancing it upon the two middle thwarts, for it was so heavy that
it would have given the boat a dangerous tilt had we placed it at either
end. As to the dead man, we left him where we had found him. The mate had
a theory that, at the moment of the desertion of the ship, this fellow had
started plundering, and that the captain, in an attempt to preserve
discipline, had struck him down with a hatchet or some other heavy weapon.
It seemed more probable than any other explanation, and yet it did not
entirely satisfy me either. But the ocean is full of mysteries, and we
were content to leave the fate of the dead seaman of the Brazilian brig to
be added to that long list which every sailor can recall.</p>
<p>The heavy box was slung up by ropes on to the deck of the <i>Mary Sinclair</i>,
and was carried by four seamen into the cabin, where, between the table
and the after-lockers, there was just space for it to stand. There it
remained during supper, and after that meal the mates remained with me,
and discussed over a glass of grog the event of the day. Mr. Armstrong was
a long, thin, vulture-like man, an excellent seaman, but famous for his
nearness and cupidity. Our treasure-trove had excited him greatly, and
already he had begun with glistening eyes to reckon up how much it might
be worth to each of us when the shares of the salvage came to be divided.</p>
<p>"If the paper said that they were unique, Mr. Barclay, then they may be
worth anything that you like to name. You wouldn't believe the sums that
the rich collectors give. A thousand pounds is nothing to them. We'll have
something to show for our voyage, or I am mistaken."</p>
<p>"I don't think that," said I. "As far as I can see, they are not very
different from any other South American curios."</p>
<p>"Well, sir, I've traded there for fourteen voyages, and I have never seen
anything like that chest before. That's worth a pile of money, just as it
stands. But it's so heavy that surely there must be something valuable
inside it. Don't you think that we ought to open it and see?"</p>
<p>"If you break it open you will spoil it, as likely as not," said the
second mate.</p>
<p>Armstrong squatted down in front of it, with his head on one side, and his
long, thin nose within a few inches of the lock.</p>
<p>"The wood is oak," said he, "and it has shrunk a little with age. If I had
a chisel or a strong-bladed knife I could force the lock back without
doing any damage at all."</p>
<p>The mention of a strong-bladed knife made me think of the dead seaman upon
the brig.</p>
<p>"I wonder if he could have been on the job when someone came to interfere
with him," said I.</p>
<p>"I don't know about that, sir, but I am perfectly certain that I could
open the box. There's a screwdriver here in the locker. Just hold the
lamp, Allardyce, and I'll have it done in a brace of shakes."</p>
<p>"Wait a bit," said I, for already, with eyes which gleamed with curiosity
and with avarice, he was stooping over the lid. "I don't see that there is
any hurry over this matter. You've read that card which warns us not to
open it. It may mean anything or it may mean nothing, but somehow I feel
inclined to obey it. After all, whatever is in it will keep, and if it is
valuable it will be worth as much if it is opened in the owner's offices
as in the cabin of the <i>Mary Sinclair</i>."</p>
<p>The first officer seemed bitterly disappointed at my decision.</p>
<p>"Surely, sir, you are not superstitious about it," said he, with a slight
sneer upon his thin lips. "If it gets out of our own hands, and we don't
see for ourselves what is inside it, we may be done out of our rights;
besides—"</p>
<p>"That's enough, Mr. Armstrong," said I, abruptly. "You may have every
confidence that you will get your rights, but I will not have that box
opened to-night."</p>
<p>"Why, the label itself shows that the box has been examined by Europeans,"
Allardyce added. "Because a box is a treasure-box is no reason that it has
treasures inside it now. A good many folk have had a peep into it since
the days of the old Governor of Terra Firma."</p>
<p>Armstrong threw the screwdriver down upon the table and shrugged his
shoulders.</p>
<p>"Just as you like," said he; but for the rest of the evening, although we
spoke upon many subjects, I noticed that his eyes were continually coming
round, with the same expression of curiosity and greed, to the old striped
box.</p>
<p>And now I come to that portion of my story which fills me even now with a
shuddering horror when I think of it. The main cabin had the rooms of the
officers round it, but mine was the farthest away from it at the end of
the little passage which led to the companion. No regular watch was kept
by me, except in cases of emergency, and the three mates divided the
watches among them. Armstrong had the middle watch, which ends at four in
the morning, and he was relieved by Allardyce. For my part I have always
been one of the soundest of sleepers, and it is rare for anything less
than a hand upon my shoulder to arouse me.</p>
<p>And yet I was aroused that night, or rather in the early grey of the
morning. It was just half-past four by my chronometer when something
caused me to sit up in my berth wide awake and with every nerve tingling.
It was a sound of some sort, a crash with a human cry at the end of it,
which still jarred on my ears. I sat listening, but all was now silent.
And yet it could not have been imagination, that hideous cry, for the echo
of it still rang in my head, and it seemed to have come from some place
quite close to me. I sprang from my bunk, and, pulling on some clothes, I
made my way into the cabin. At first I saw nothing unusual there. In the
cold, grey light I made out the red-clothed table, the six rotating
chairs, the walnut lockers, the swinging barometer, and there, at the end,
the big striped chest. I was turning away, with the intention of going
upon deck and asking the second mate if he had heard anything, when my
eyes fell suddenly upon something which projected from under the table. It
was the leg of a man—a leg with a long sea-boot upon it. I stooped,
and there was a figure sprawling upon his face, his arms thrown forward
and his body twisted. One glance told me that it was Armstrong, the first
officer, and a second that he was a dead man. For a few moments I stood
gasping. Then I rushed on to the deck, called Allardyce to my assistance,
and came back with him into the cabin.</p>
<p>Together we pulled the unfortunate fellow from under the table, and as we
looked at his dripping head we exchanged glances, and I do not know which
was the paler of the two.</p>
<p>"The same as the Spanish sailor," said I.</p>
<p>"The very same. God preserve us! It's that infernal chest! Look at
Armstrong's hand!"</p>
<p>He held up the mate's right hand, and there was the screwdriver which he
had wished to use the night before.</p>
<p>"He's been at the chest, sir. He knew that I was on deck and you were
asleep. He knelt down in front of it, and he pushed the lock back with
that tool. Then something happened to him, and he cried out so that you
heard him."</p>
<p>"Allardyce," I whispered, "what <i>could</i> have happened to him?"</p>
<p>The second mate put his hand upon my sleeve and drew me into his cabin.</p>
<p>"We can talk here, sir, and we don't know who may be listening to us in
there. What do you suppose is in that box, Captain Barclay?"</p>
<p>"I give you my word, Allardyce, that I have no idea."</p>
<p>"Well, I can only find one theory which will fit all the facts. Look at
the size of the box. Look at all the carving and metal-work which may
conceal any number of holes. Look at the weight of it; it took four men to
carry it. On top of that, remember that two men have tried to open it, and
both have come to their end through it. Now, sir, what can it mean except
one thing?"</p>
<p>"You mean there is a man in it?"</p>
<p>"Of course there is a man in it. You know how it is in these South
American States, sir. A man may be president one week and hunted like a
dog the next—they are for ever flying for their lives. My idea is
that there is some fellow in hiding there, who is armed and desperate, and
who will fight to the death before he is taken."</p>
<p>"But his food and drink?"</p>
<p>"It's a roomy chest, sir, and he may have some provisions stowed away. As
to his drink, he had a friend among the crew upon the brig who saw that he
had what he needed."</p>
<p>"You think, then, that the label asking people not to open the box was
simply written in his interest?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, that is my idea. Have you any other way of explaining the
facts?"</p>
<p>I had to confess that I had not.</p>
<p>"The question is what we are to do?" I asked.</p>
<p>"The man's a dangerous ruffian, who sticks at nothing. I'm thinking it
wouldn't be a bad thing to put a rope round the chest and tow it alongside
for half an hour; then we could open it at our ease. Or if we just tied
the box up and kept him from getting any water maybe that would do as
well. Or the carpenter could put a coat of varnish over it and stop all
the blow-holes."</p>
<p>"Come, Allardyce," said I, angrily. "You don't seriously mean to say that
a whole ship's company are going to be terrorised by a single man in a
box. If he's there, I'll engage to fetch him out!" I went to my room and
came back with my revolver in my hand. "Now, Allardyce," said I, "do you
open the lock, and I'll stand on guard."</p>
<p>"For God's sake, think what you are doing, sir!" cried the mate. "Two men
have lost their lives over it, and the blood of one not yet dry upon the
carpet."</p>
<p>"The more reason why we should revenge him."</p>
<p>"Well, sir, at least let me call the carpenter. Three are better than two,
and he is a good stout man."</p>
<p>He went off in search of him, and I was left alone with the striped chest
in the cabin. I don't think that I'm a nervous man, but I kept the table
between me and this solid old relic of the Spanish Main. In the growing
light of morning the red and white striping was beginning to appear, and
the curious scrolls and wreaths of metal and carving which showed the
loving pains which cunning craftsmen had expended upon it. Presently the
carpenter and the mate came back together, the former with a hammer in his
hand.</p>
<p>"It's a bad business, this, sir," said he, shaking his head, as he looked
at the body of the mate. "And you think there's someone hiding in the
box?"</p>
<p>"There's no doubt about it," said Allardyce, picking up the screwdriver
and setting his jaw like a man who needs to brace his courage. "I'll drive
the lock back if you will both stand by. If he rises let him have it on
the head with your hammer, carpenter. Shoot at once, sir, if he raises his
hand. Now!"</p>
<p>He had knelt down in front of the striped chest, and passed the blade of
the tool under the lid. With a sharp snick the lock flew back. "Stand by!"
yelled the mate, and with a heave he threw open the massive top of the
box. As it swung up we all three sprang back, I with my pistol levelled,
and the carpenter with the hammer above his head. Then, as nothing
happened, we each took a step forward and peeped in. The box was empty.</p>
<p>Not quite empty either, for in one corner was lying an old yellow
candle-stick, elaborately engraved, which appeared to be as old as the box
itself. Its rich yellow tone and artistic shape suggested that it was an
object of value. For the rest there was nothing more weighty or valuable
than dust in the old striped treasure-chest.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm blessed!" cried Allardyce, staring blankly into it. "Where does
the weight come in, then?"</p>
<p>"Look at the thickness of the sides, and look at the lid. Why, it's five
inches through. And see that great metal spring across it."</p>
<p>"That's for holding the lid up," said the mate. "You see, it won't lean
back. What's that German printing on the inside?"</p>
<p>"It means that it was made by Johann Rothstein of Augsburg, in 1606."</p>
<p>"And a solid bit of work, too. But it doesn't throw much light on what has
passed, does it, Captain Barclay? That candlestick looks like gold. We
shall have something for our trouble after all."</p>
<p>He leant forward to grasp it, and from that moment I have never doubted as
to the reality of inspiration, for on the instant I caught him by the
collar and pulled him straight again. It may have been some story of the
Middle Ages which had come back to my mind, or it may have been that my
eye had caught some red which was not that of rust upon the upper part of
the lock, but to him and to me it will always seem an inspiration, so
prompt and sudden was my action.</p>
<p>"There's devilry here," said I. "Give me the crooked stick from the
corner."</p>
<p>It was an ordinary walking-cane with a hooked top. I passed it over the
candlestick and gave it a pull. With a flash a row of polished steel fangs
shot out from below the upper lip, and the great striped chest snapped at
us like a wild animal. Clang came the huge lid into its place, and the
glasses on the swinging rack sang and tinkled with the shock. The mate sat
down on the edge of the table and shivered like a frightened horse.</p>
<p>"You've saved my life, Captain Barclay!" said he.</p>
<p>So this was the secret of the striped treasure-chest of old Don Ramirez di
Leyra, and this was how he preserved his ill-gotten gains from the Terra
Firma and the Province of Veraquas. Be the thief ever so cunning he could
not tell that golden candlestick from the other articles of value, and the
instant that he laid hand upon it the terrible spring was unloosed and the
murderous steel pikes were driven into his brain, while the shock of the
blow sent the victim backward and enabled the chest to automatically close
itself. How many, I wondered, had fallen victims to the ingenuity of the
mechanic of Ausgburg? And as I thought of the possible history of that
grim striped chest my resolution was very quickly taken.</p>
<p>"Carpenter, bring three men, and carry this on deck."</p>
<p>"Going to throw it overboard, sir?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Mr. Allardyce. I'm not superstitious as a rule, but there are some
things which are more than a sailor can be called upon to stand."</p>
<p>"No wonder that brig made heavy weather, Captain Barclay, with such a
thing on board. The glass is dropping fast, sir, and we are only just in
time."</p>
<p>So we did not even wait for the three sailors, but we carried it out, the
mate, the carpenter, and I, and we pushed it with our own hands over the
bulwarks. There was a white spout of water, and it was gone. There it
lies, the striped chest, a thousand fathoms deep, and if, as they say, the
sea will some day be dry land, I grieve for the man who finds that old box
and tries to penetrate into its secret.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A SHADOW BEFORE </h2>
<p>The 15th of July, 1870, found John Worlington Dodds a ruined gamester of
the Stock Exchange. Upon the 17th he was a very opulent man. And yet he
had effected the change without leaving the penurious little Irish townlet
of Dunsloe, which could have been bought outright for a quarter of the sum
which he had earned during the single day that he was within its walls.
There is a romance of finance yet to be written, a story of huge forces
which are for ever waxing and waning, of bold operations, of breathless
suspense, of agonised failure, of deep combinations which are baffled by
others still more subtle. The mighty debts of each great European Power
stand like so many columns of mercury, for ever rising and falling to
indicate the pressure upon each. He who can see far enough into the future
to tell how that ever-varying column will stand to-morrow is the man who
has fortune within his grasp.</p>
<p>John Worlington Dodds had many of the gifts which lead a speculator to
success. He was quick in observing, just in estimating, prompt and
fearless in acting. But in finance there is always the element of luck,
which, however one may eliminate it, still remains, like the blank at
roulette, a constantly present handicap upon the operator. And so it was
that Worlington Dodds had come to grief. On the best advices he had
dabbled in the funds of a South American Republic in the days before South
American Republics had been found out. The Republic defaulted, and Dodds
lost his money. He had bulled the shares of a Scotch railway, and a four
months' strike had hit him hard. He had helped to underwrite a coffee
company in the hope that the public would come along upon the feed and
gradually nibble away some of his holding, but the political sky had been
clouded and the public had refused to invest. Everything which he had
touched had gone wrong, and now, on the eve of his marriage, young,
clear-headed, and energetic, he was actually a bankrupt had his creditors
chosen to make him one. But the Stock Exchange is an indulgent body. What
is the case of one to-day may be that of another to-morrow, and everyone
is interested in seeing that the stricken man is given time to rise again.
So the burden of Worlington Dodds was lightened for him; many shoulders
helped to bear it, and he was able to go for a little summer tour into
Ireland, for the doctors had ordered him rest and change of air to restore
his shaken nervous system. Thus it was that upon the 15th of July, 1870,
he found himself at his breakfast in the fly-blown coffee-room of the
"George Hotel" in the market square of Dunsloe. It is a dull and
depressing coffee-room, and one which is usually empty, but on this
particular day it was as crowded and noisy as that of any London hotel.
Every table was occupied, and a thick smell of fried bacon and of fish
hung in the air. Heavily booted men clattered in and out, spurs jingled,
riding-crops were stacked in corners, and there was a general atmosphere
of horse. The conversation, too, was of nothing else. From every side
Worlington Dodds heard of yearlings, of windgalls, of roarers, of spavins,
of cribsuckers, of a hundred other terms which were as unintelligible to
him as his own Stock Exchange jargon would have been to the company. He
asked the waiter for the reason of it all, and the waiter was an
astonished man that there should be any man in this world who did not know
it.</p>
<p>"Shure it's the Dunsloe horse fair, your honour—the greatest
horse-fair in all Oireland. It lasts for a wake, and the folk come from
far an' near—from England an' Scotland an' iverywhere. If you look
out of the winder, your honour, you'll see the horses, and it's asy your
honour's conscience must be, or you wouldn't slape so sound that the
creatures didn't rouse you with their clatter."</p>
<p>Dodds had a recollection that he had heard a confused murmur, which had
interwoven itself with his dreams—a sort of steady rhythmic beating
and clanking—and now, when he looked through the window, he saw the
cause of it. The square was packed with horses from end to end—greys,
bays, browns, blacks, chestnuts—young ones and old, fine ones and
coarse, horses of every conceivable sort and size. It seemed a huge
function for so small a town, and he remarked as much to the waiter.</p>
<p>"Well, you see, your honour, the horses don't live in the town, an' they
don't vex their heads how small it is. But it's in the very centre of the
horse-bradin' districts of Oireland, so where should they come to be sould
if it wasn't to Dunsloe?" The waiter had a telegram in his hand, and he
turned the address to Worlington Dodds. "Shure I niver heard such a name,
sorr. Maybe you could tell me who owns it?"</p>
<p>Dodds looked at the envelope. Strellenhaus was the name. "No, I don't
know," said he. "I never heard it before. It's a foreign name. Perhaps if
you were—"</p>
<p>But at that moment a little round-faced, ruddy-cheeked gentleman, who was
breakfasting at the next table, leaned forward and interrupted him.</p>
<p>"Did you say a foreign name, sir?" said he.</p>
<p>"Strellenhaus is the name."</p>
<p>"I am Mr. Strellenhaus—Mr. Julius Strellenhaus, of Liverpool. I was
expecting a telegram. Thank you very much."</p>
<p>He sat so near that Dodds, without any wish to play the spy, could not
help to some extent overlooking him as he opened the envelope. The message
was a very long one. Quite a wad of melon-tinted paper came out from the
tawny envelope. Mr. Strellenhaus arranged the sheets methodically upon the
table-cloth in front of him, so that no eye but his own could see them.
Then he took out a note-book, and, with an anxious face, he began to make
entries in it, glancing first at the telegram and then at the book, and
writing apparently one letter or figure at a time. Dodds was interested,
for he knew exactly what the man was doing. He was working out a cipher.
Dodds had often done it himself. And then suddenly the little man turned
very pale, as if the full purport of the message had been a shock to him.
Dodds had done that also, and his sympathies were all with his neighbours.
Then the stranger rose, and, leaving his breakfast untasted, he walked out
of the room.</p>
<p>"I'm thinkin' that the gintleman has had bad news, sorr," said the
confidential waiter.</p>
<p>"Looks like it," Dodds answered; and at that moment his thoughts were
suddenly drawn off into another direction.</p>
<p>The boots had entered the room with a telegram in his hand. "Where's Mr.
Mancune?" said he to the waiter.</p>
<p>"Well, there are some quare names about. What was it you said?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Mancune," said the boots, glancing round him. "Ah, there he is!" and
he handed the telegram to a gentleman who was sitting reading the paper in
a corner.</p>
<p>Dodds's eyes had already fallen upon this man, and he had wondered vaguely
what he was doing in such company. He was a tall, white-haired,
eagle-nosed gentleman, with a waxed moustache and a carefully pointed
beard—an aristocratic type which seemed out of its element among the
rough, hearty, noisy dealers who surrounded him. This, then, was Mr.
Mancune, for whom the second telegram was intended.</p>
<p>As he opened it, tearing it open with a feverish haste, Dodds could
perceive that it was as bulky as the first one. He observed also, from the
delay in reading it, that it was also in some sort of cipher. The
gentleman did not write down any translation of it, but he sat for some
time with his nervous, thin fingers twitching amongst the hairs of his
white beard, and his shaggy brows bent in the deepest and most absorbed
attention whilst he mastered the meaning of it. Then he sprang suddenly to
his feet, his eyes flashed, his cheeks flushed, and in his excitement he
crumpled the message up in his hand. With an effort he mastered his
emotion, put the paper into his pocket, and walked out of the room.</p>
<p>This was enough to excite a less astute and imaginative man than
Worlington Dodds. Was there any connection between these two messages, or
was it merely a coincidence? Two men with strange names receive two
telegrams within a few minutes of each other, each of considerable length,
each in cipher, and each causing keen emotion to the man who received it.
One turned pale. The other sprang excitedly to his feet. It might be a
coincidence, but it was a very curious one. If it was not a coincidence,
then what could it mean? Were they confederates who pretended to work
apart, but who each received identical orders from some person at a
distance? That was possible, and yet there were difficulties in the way.
He puzzled and puzzled, but could find no satisfactory solution to the
problem. All breakfast he was turning it over in his mind.</p>
<p>When breakfast was over he sauntered out into the market square, where the
horse sale was already in progress. The yearlings were being sold first—tall,
long-legged, skittish, wild-eyed creatures, who had run free upon the
upland pastures, with ragged hair and towsie manes, but hardy, inured to
all weathers, and with the makings of splendid hunters and steeplechasers
when corn and time had brought them to maturity. They were largely of
thoroughbred blood, and were being bought by English dealers, who would
invest a few pounds now on what they might sell for fifty guineas in a
year, if all went well. It was legitimate speculation, for the horse is a
delicate creature, he is afflicted with many ailments, the least accident
may destroy his value, he is a certain expense and an uncertain profit,
and for one who comes safely to maturity several may bring no return at
all. So the English horse-dealers took their risks as they bought up the
shaggy Irish yearlings. One man with a ruddy face and a yellow overcoat
took them by the dozen, with as much <i>sang froid</i> as if they had been
oranges, entering each bargain in a bloated note-book. He bought forty or
fifty during the time that Dodds was watching him.</p>
<p>"Who is that?" he asked his neighbour, whose spurs and gaiters showed that
he was likely to know.</p>
<p>The man stared in astonishment at the stranger's ignorance. "Why, that's
Jim Holloway, the great Jim Holloway," said he; then, seeing by the blank
look upon Dodds's face that even this information had not helped him much,
he went into details. "Sure he's the head of Holloway & Morland, of
London," said he. "He's the buying partner, and he buys cheap; and the
other stays at home and sells, and he sells dear. He owns more horses than
any man in the world, and asks the best money for them. I dare say you'll
find that half of what are sold at the Dunsloe fair this day will go to
him, and he's got such a purse that there's not a man who can bid against
him."</p>
<p>Worlington Dodds watched the doings of the great dealer with interest. He
had passed on now to the two-year-olds and three-year-olds, full-grown
horses, but still a little loose in the limb and weak in the bone. The
London buyer was choosing his animals carefully, but having chosen them,
the vigour of his competition drove all other bidders out of it. With a
careless nod he would run the figure up five pounds at a time, until he
was left in possession of the field. At the same time he was a shrewd
observer, and when, as happened more than once, he believed that someone
was bidding against him simply in order to run him up, the head would
cease suddenly to nod, the note-book would be closed with a snap, and the
intruder would be left with a purchase which he did not desire upon his
hands. All Dodds's business instincts were aroused by the tactics of this
great operator, and he stood in the crowd watching with the utmost
interest all that occurred.</p>
<p>It is not to buy young horses, however, that the great dealers come to
Ireland, and the real business of the fair commenced when the four and
five-year-olds were reached; the full-grown, perfect horses, at their
prime, and ready for any work or any fatigue. Seventy magnificent
creatures had been brought down by a single breeder, a comfortable-
looking, keen-eyed, ruddy-cheeked gentleman who stood beside the sales-man
and whispered cautions and precepts into his ear.</p>
<p>"That's Flynn of Kildare," said Dodds's informant. "Jack Flynn has brought
down that string of horses, and the other large string over yonder belongs
to Tom Flynn, his brother. The two of them together are the two first
breeders in Ireland." A crowd had gathered in front of the horses. By
common consent a place had been made for Mr. Holloway, and Dodds could
catch a glimpse of his florid face and yellow covert-coat in the front
rank. He had opened his note-book, and was tapping his teeth reflectively
with his pencil as he eyed the horses.</p>
<p>"You'll see a fight now between the first seller and the first buyer in
the country," said Dodds's acquaintance. "They are a beautiful string,
anyhow. I shouldn't be surprised if he didn't average five-and-thirty
pound apiece for the lot as they stand."</p>
<p>The salesman had mounted upon a chair, and his keen, clean-shaven face
overlooked the crowd. Mr. Jack Flynn's grey whiskers were at his elbow,
and Mr. Holloway immediately in front.</p>
<p>"You've seen these horses, gentlemen," said the salesman, with a backward
sweep of his hand towards the line of tossing heads and streaming manes.
"When you know that they are bred by Mr. Jack Flynn, at his place in
Kildare, you will have a guarantee of their quality. They are the best
that Ireland can produce, and in this class of horse the best that Ireland
can produce are the best in the world, as every riding man knows well.
Hunters or carriage horses, all warranted sound, and bred from the best
stock. There are seventy in Mr. Jack Flynn's string, and he bids me say
that if any wholesale dealer would make one bid for the whole lot, to save
time, he would have the preference over any purchaser."</p>
<p>There was a pause and a whisper from the crowd in front, with some
expressions of discontent. By a single sweep all the small dealers had
been put out of it. It was only a long purse which could buy on such a
scale as that. The salesman looked round him inquiringly.</p>
<p>"Come, Mr. Holloway," said he, at last. "You didn't come over here for the
sake of the scenery. You may travel the country and not see such another
string of horses. Give us a starting bid."</p>
<p>The great dealer was still rattling his pencil upon his front teeth.
"Well," said he, at last, "they <i>are</i> a fine lot of horses, and I
won't deny it. They do you credit, Mr. Flynn, I am sure. All the same I
didn't mean to fill a ship at a single bid in this fashion. I like to pick
and choose my horses."</p>
<p>"In that case Mr. Flynn is quite prepared to sell them in smaller lots,"
said the salesman. "It was rather for the convenience of a wholesale
customer that he was prepared to put them all up together. But if no
gentleman wishes to bid—"</p>
<p>"Wait a minute," said a voice. "They are very fine horses, these, and I
will give you a bid to start you. I will give you twenty pounds each for
the string of seventy."</p>
<p>There was a rustle as the crowd all swayed their heads to catch a glimpse
of the speaker. The salesman leaned forward. "May I ask your name, sir?"</p>
<p>"Strellenhaus—Mr. Strellenhaus of Liverpool."</p>
<p>"It's a new firm," said Dodds's neighbour. "I thought I knew them all, but
I never heard of him before."</p>
<p>The salesman's head had disappeared, for he was whispering with the
breeder. Now he suddenly straightened himself again. "Thank you for giving
us a lead, sir," said he. "Now, gentlemen, you have heard the offer of Mr.
Strellenhaus of Liverpool. It will give us a base to start from. Mr.
Strellenhaus has offered twenty pounds a head."</p>
<p>"Guineas," said Holloway.</p>
<p>"Bravo, Mr. Holloway! I knew that you would take a hand. You are not the
man to let such a string of horses pass away from you. The bid is twenty
guineas a head."</p>
<p>"Twenty-five pounds," said Mr. Strellenhaus.</p>
<p>"Twenty-six."</p>
<p>"Thirty."</p>
<p>It was London against Liverpool, and it was the head of the trade against
an outsider. Still, the one man had increased his bids by fives and the
other only by ones. Those fives meant determination and also wealth.
Holloway had ruled the market so long that the crowd was delighted at
finding someone who would stand up to him.</p>
<p>"The bid now stands at thirty pounds a head," said the salesman. "The word
lies with you, Mr. Holloway."</p>
<p>The London dealer was glancing keenly at his unknown opponent, and he was
asking himself whether this was a genuine rival, or whether it was a
device of some sort—an agent of Flynn's perhaps—for running up
the price. Little Mr. Strellenhaus, the same apple-faced gentleman whom
Dodds had noticed in the coffee-room, stood looking at the horses with the
sharp, quick glances of a man who knows what he is looking for.</p>
<p>"Thirty-one," said Holloway, with the air of a man who has gone to his
extreme limit.</p>
<p>"Thirty-two," said Strellenhaus, promptly.</p>
<p>Holloway grew angry at this persistent opposition. His red face flushed
redder still.</p>
<p>"Thirty-three!" he shouted.</p>
<p>"Thirty-four," said Strellenhaus.</p>
<p>Holloway became thoughtful, and entered a few figures in his note-book.
There were seventy horses. He knew that Flynn's stock was always of the
highest quality. With the hunting season coming on he might rely upon
selling them at an average of from forty-five to fifty. Some of them might
carry a heavy weight, and would run to three figures. On the other hand,
there was the feed and keep of them for three months, the danger of the
voyage, the chance of influenza or some of those other complaints which
run through an entire stable as measles go through a nursery. Deducting
all this, it was a question whether at the present price any profit would
be left upon the transaction. Every pound that he bid meant seventy out of
his pocket. And yet he could not submit to be beaten by this stranger
without a struggle. As a business matter it was important to him to be
recognised as the head of his profession. He would make one more effort,
if he sacrificed his profit by doing so.</p>
<p>"At the end of your rope, Mr. Holloway?" asked the salesman, with the
suspicion of a sneer.</p>
<p>"Thirty-five," cried Holloway gruffly.</p>
<p>"Thirty-six," said Strellenhaus.</p>
<p>"Then I wish you joy of your bargain," said Holloway. "I don't buy at that
price, but I should be glad to sell you some."</p>
<p>Mr. Strellenhaus took no notice of the irony. He was still looking
critically at the horses. The salesman glanced round him in a perfunctory
way.</p>
<p>"Thirty-six pounds bid," said he. "Mr. Jack Flynn's lot is going to Mr.
Strellenhaus of Liverpool, at thirty-six pounds a head. Going—going—"</p>
<p>"Forty!" cried a high, thin, clear voice.</p>
<p>A buzz rose from the crowd, and they were all on tiptoe again, trying to
catch a glimpse of this reckless buyer. Being a tall man, Dodds could see
over the others, and there, at the side of Holloway, he saw the masterful
nose and aristocratic beard of the second stranger in the coffee-room. A
sudden personal interest added itself to the scene. He felt that he was on
the verge of something—something dimly seen— which he could
himself turn to account. The two men with strange names, the telegrams,
the horses—what was underlying it all? The salesman was all
animation again, and Mr. Jack Flynn was sitting up with his white whiskers
bristling and his eyes twinkling. It was the best deal which he had ever
made in his fifty years of experience.</p>
<p>"What name, sir?" asked the salesman.</p>
<p>"Mr. Mancune."</p>
<p>"Address?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Mancune of Glasgow."</p>
<p>"Thank you for your bid, sir. Forty pounds a head has been bid by Mr.
Mancune of Glasgow. Any advance upon forty?"</p>
<p>"Forty-one," said Strellenhaus.</p>
<p>"Forty-five," said Mancune.</p>
<p>The tactics had changed, and it was the turn of Strellenhaus now to
advance by ones, while his rival sprang up by fives. But the former was as
dogged as ever.</p>
<p>"Forty-six," said he.</p>
<p>"Fifty!" cried Mancune.</p>
<p>It was unheard of. The most that the horses could possibly average at a
retail price was as much as these men were willing to pay wholesale.</p>
<p>"Two lunatics from Bedlam," whispered the angry Holloway. "If I was Flynn
I would see the colour of their money before I went any further."</p>
<p>The same thought had occurred to the salesman. "As a mere matter of
business, gentlemen," said he, "it is usual in such cases to put down a
small deposit as a guarantee of <i>bona fides</i>. You will understand how
I am placed, and that I have not had the pleasure of doing business with
either of you before."</p>
<p>"How much?" asked Strellenhaus, briefly.</p>
<p>"Should we say five hundred?"</p>
<p>"Here is a note for a thousand pounds."</p>
<p>"And here is another," said Mancune.</p>
<p>"Nothing could be more handsome, gentlemen," said the salesman. "It's a
treat to see such a spirited competition. The last bid was fifty pounds a
head from Mancune. The word lies with you, Mr. Strellenhaus."</p>
<p>Mr. Jack Flynn whispered something to the salesman. "Quite so! Mr. Flynn
suggests, gentlemen, that as you are both large buyers, it would, perhaps,
be a convenience to you if he was to add the string of Mr. Tom Flynn,
which consists of seventy animals of precisely the same quality, making
one hundred and forty in all. Have you any objection, Mr. Mancune?"</p>
<p>"No, sir."</p>
<p>"And you, Mr. Strellenhaus?"</p>
<p>"I should prefer it."</p>
<p>"Very handsome! Very handsome indeed!" murmured the salesman. "Then I
understand, Mr. Mancune, that your offer of fifty pounds a head extends to
the whole of these horses?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>A long breath went up from the crowd. Seven thousand pounds at one deal.
It was a record for Dunsloe.</p>
<p>"Any advance, Mr. Strellenhaus?"</p>
<p>"Fifty-one."</p>
<p>"Fifty-five."</p>
<p>"Fifty-six."</p>
<p>"Sixty."</p>
<p>They could hardly believe their ears. Holloway stood with his mouth open,
staring blankly in front of him. The salesman tried hard to look as if
such bidding and such prices were nothing unusual. Jack Flynn of Kildare
smiled benignly and rubbed his hands together. The crowd listened in dead
silence.</p>
<p>"Sixty-one," said Strellenhaus. From the beginning he had stood without a
trace of emotion upon his round face, like a little automatic figure which
bid by clockwork. His rival was of a more excitable nature. His eyes were
shining, and he was for ever twitching at his beard.</p>
<p>"Sixty-five," he cried.</p>
<p>"Sixty-six."</p>
<p>"Seventy."</p>
<p>But the clockwork had run down. No answering bid came from Mr.
Strellenhaus.</p>
<p>"Seventy bid, sir."</p>
<p>Mr. Strellenhaus shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>"I am buying for another, and I have reached his limit," said he. "If you
will permit me to send for instructions—"</p>
<p>"I am afraid, sir, that the sale must proceed."</p>
<p>"Then the horses belong to this gentleman." For the first time he turned
towards his rival, and their glances crossed like sword-blades. "It is
possible that I may see the horses again."</p>
<p>"I hope so," said Mr. Mancune; and his white, waxed moustache gave a
feline upward bristle.</p>
<p>So, with a bow, they separated. Mr. Strellenhaus walked, down to the
telegraph-office, where his message was delayed because Mr. Worlington
Dodds was already at the end of the wires, for, after dim guesses and
vague conjecture, he had suddenly caught a clear view of this coming event
which had cast so curious a shadow before it in this little Irish town.
Political rumours, names, appearances, telegrams, seasoned horses at any
price, there could only be one meaning to it. He held a secret, and he
meant to use it.</p>
<p>Mr. Warner, who was the partner of Mr. Worlington Dodds, and who was
suffering from the same eclipse, had gone down to the Stock Exchange, but
had found little consolation there, for the European system was in a
ferment, and rumours of peace and of war were succeeding each other with
such rapidity and assurance that it was impossible to know which to trust.
It was obvious that a fortune lay either way, for every rumour set the
funds fluctuating; but without special information it was impossible to
act, and no one dared to plunge heavily upon the strength of newspaper
surmise and the gossip of the street. Warner knew that an hour's work
might resuscitate the fallen fortunes of himself and his partner, and yet
he could not afford to make a mistake. He returned to his office in the
afternoon, half inclined to back the chances of peace, for of all war
scares not one in ten comes to pass. As he entered the office a telegram
lay upon the table. It was from Dunsloe, a place of which he had never
heard, and was signed by his absent partner. The message was in cipher,
but he soon translated it, for it was short and crisp.</p>
<p>"I am a bear of everything German and French. Sell, sell, sell, keep on
selling."</p>
<p>For a moment Warner hesitated. What could Worlington Dodds know at Dunsloe
which was not known in Throgmorton Street? But he remembered the quickness
and decision of his partner. He would not have sent such a message without
very good grounds. If he was to act at all he must act at once, so,
hardening his heart, he went down to the house, and, dealing upon that
curious system by which a man can sell what he has not got, and what he
could not pay for if he had it, he disposed of heavy parcels of French and
German securities. He had caught the market in one of its little spasms of
hope, and there was no lack of buying until his own persistent selling
caused others to follow his lead, and so brought about a reaction. When
Warner returned to his offices it took him some hours to work out his
accounts, and he emerged into the streets in the evening with the absolute
certainty that the next settling-day would leave him either hopelessly
bankrupt or exceedingly prosperous.</p>
<p>It all depended upon Worlington Dodds's information. What could he
possibly have found out at Dunsloe?</p>
<p>And then suddenly he saw a newspaper boy fasten a poster upon a lamp-post,
and a little crowd had gathered round it in an instant One of them waved
his hat in the air; another shouted to a friend across the street. Warner
hurried up and caught a glimpse of the poster between two craning heads—</p>
<p>"FRANCE DECLARES WAR ON GERMANY."<br/></p>
<p>"By Jove!" cried Warner. "Old Dodds was right, after all."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE KING OF THE FOXES </h2>
<p>It was after a hunting dinner, and there were as many scarlet coats as
black ones round the table. The conversation over the cigars had turned,
therefore, in the direction of horses and horsemen, with reminiscences of
phenomenal runs where foxes had led the pack from end to end of a county,
and been overtaken at last by two or three limping hounds and a huntsman
on foot, while every rider in the field had been pounded. As the port
circulated the runs became longer and more apocryphal, until we had the
whips inquiring their way and failing to understand the dialect of the
people who answered them. The foxes, too, became mere eccentric, and we
had foxes up pollard willows, foxes which were dragged by the tail out of
horses' mangers, and foxes which had raced through an open front door and
gone to ground in a lady's bonnet-box. The master had told one or two tall
reminiscences, and when he cleared his throat for another we were all
curious, for he was a bit of an artist in his way, and produced his
effects in a <i>crescendo</i> fashion. His face wore the earnest,
practical, severely accurate expression which heralded some of his finest
efforts.</p>
<p>"It was before I was master," said he. "Sir Charles Adair had the hounds
at that time, and then afterwards they passed to old Lathom, and then to
me. It may possibly have been just after Lathom took them over, but my
strong impression is that it was in Adair's time. That would be early in
the seventies—about seventy-two, I should say.</p>
<p>"The man I mean has moved to another part of the country, but I daresay
that some of you can remember him. Danbury was the name—Walter
Danbury, or Wat Danbury, as the people used to call him. He was the son of
old Joe Danbury, of High Ascombe, and when his father died he came into a
very good thing, for his only brother was drowned when the <i>Magna Charta</i>
foundered, so he inherited the whole estate. It was but a few hundred
acres, but it was good arable land, and those were the great days of
farming. Besides, it was freehold, and a yeoman farmer without a mortgage
was a warmish man before the great fall in wheat came. Foreign wheat and
barbed wire—those are the two curses of this country, for the one
spoils the farmer's work and the other spoils his play.</p>
<p>"This young Wat Danbury was a very fine fellow, a keen rider, and a
thorough sportsman, but his head was a little turned at having come, when
so young, into a comfortable fortune, and he went the pace for a year or
two. The lad had no vice in him, but there was a hard-drinking set in the
neighbourhood at that time, and Danbury got drawn in among them; and,
being an amiable fellow who liked to do what his friends were doing, he
very soon took to drinking a great deal more than was good for him. As a
rule, a man who takes his exercise may drink as much as he likes in the
evening, and do himself no very great harm, if he will leave it alone
during the day. Danbury had too many friends for that, however, and it
really looked as if the poor chap was going to the bad, when a very
curious thing happened which pulled him up with such a sudden jerk that he
never put his hand upon the neck of a whisky bottle again.</p>
<p>"He had a peculiarity which I have noticed in a good many other men, that
though he was always playing tricks with his own health, he was none the
less very anxious about it, and was extremely fidgety if ever he had any
trivial symptom. Being a tough, open-air fellow, who was always as hard as
a nail, it was seldom that there was anything amiss with him; but at last
the drink began to tell, and he woke one morning with his hands shaking
and all his nerves tingling like over-stretched fiddle-strings. He had
been dining at some very wet house the night before, and the wine had,
perhaps, been more plentiful than choice; at any rate, there he was, with
a tongue like a bath towel and a head that ticked like an eight-day clock.
He was very alarmed at his own condition, and he sent for Doctor
Middleton, of Ascombe, the father of the man who practises there now.</p>
<p>"Middleton had been a great friend of old Danbury's, and he was very sorry
to see his son going to the devil; so he improved the occasion by taking
his case very seriously, and lecturing him upon the danger of his ways. He
shook his head and talked about the possibility of <i>delirium tremens</i>,
or even of mania, if he continued to lead such a life. Wat Danbury was
horribly frightened.</p>
<p>"'Do you think I am going to get anything of the sort?' he wailed.</p>
<p>"'Well, really, I don't know,' said the doctor gravely. 'I cannot
undertake to say that you are out of danger. Your system is very much out
of order. At any time during the day you might have those grave symptoms
of which I warn you.'</p>
<p>"'You think I shall be safe by evening?'</p>
<p>"'If you drink nothing during the day, and have no nervous symptoms before
evening, I think you may consider yourself safe," the doctor answered. A
little fright would, he thought, do his patient good, so he made the most
of the matter.</p>
<p>"'What symptoms may I expect?' asked Danebury.</p>
<p>"'It generally takes the form of optical delusions.'</p>
<p>"'I see specks floating all about.'</p>
<p>"'That is mere biliousness,' said the doctor soothingly, for he saw that
the lad was highly strung, and he did not wish to overdo it. 'I daresay
that you will have no symptoms of the kind, but when they do come they
usually take the shape of insects, or reptiles, or curious animals.'</p>
<p>"'And if I see anything of the kind?'</p>
<p>"'If you do, you will at once send for me;' and so, with a promise of
medicine, the doctor departed.</p>
<p>"Young Wat Danbury rose and dressed and moped about the room feeling very
miserable and unstrung, with a vision of the County Asylum for ever in his
mind. He had the doctor's word for it that if he could get through to
evening in safety he would be all right; but it is not very exhilarating
to be waiting for symptoms, and to keep on glancing at your bootjack to
see whether it is still a bootjack or whether it has begun to develop
antennae and legs. At last he could stand it no longer, and an
overpowering longing for the fresh air and the green grass came over him.
Why should he stay indoors when the Ascombe Hunt was meeting within half a
mile of him? If he was going to have these delusions which the doctor
talked of, he would not have them the sooner nor the worse because he was
on horseback in the open. He was sure, too, it would ease his aching head.
And so it came about that in ten minutes he was in his hunting-kit, and in
ten more he was riding out of his stable-yard with his roan mare 'Matilda'
between his knees. He was a little unsteady in his saddle just at first,
but the farther he went the better he felt, until by the time he reached
the meet his head was almost clear, and there was nothing troubling him
except those haunting words of the doctor's about the possibility of
delusions any time before nightfall.</p>
<p>"But soon he forgot that also, for as he came up the hounds were thrown
off, and they drew the Gravel Hanger, and afterwards the Hickory Copse. It
was just the morning for a scent—no wind to blow it away, no water
to wash it out, and just damp enough to make it cling. There was a field
of forty, all keen men and good riders, so when they came to the Black
Hanger they knew that there would be some sport, for that's a cover which
never draws blank. The woods were thicker in those days than now, and the
foxes were thicker also, and that great dark oak-grove was swarming with
them. The only difficulty was to make them break, for it is, as you know,
a very close country, and you must coax them out into the open before you
can hope for a run.</p>
<p>"When they came to the Black Hanger the field took their positions along
the cover-side wherever they thought that they were most likely to get a
good start. Some went in with the hounds, some clustered at the ends of
the drives, and some kept outside in the hope of the fox breaking in that
direction. Young Wat Danbury knew the country like the palm of his hand,
so he made for a place where several drives intersected, and there he
waited. He had a feeling that the faster and the farther he galloped the
better he should be, and so he was chafing to be off. His mare, too, was
in the height of fettle and one of the fastest goers in the county. Wat
was a splendid lightweight rider—under ten stone with his saddle—and
the mare was a powerful creature, all quarters and shoulders, fit to carry
a lifeguardsman; and so it was no wonder that there was hardly a man in
the field who could hope to stay with him. There he waited and listened to
the shouting of the huntsman and the whips, catching a glimpse now and
then in the darkness of the wood of a whisking tail, or the gleam of a
white-and-tan side amongst the underwood. It was a well-trained pack, and
there was not so much as a whine to tell you that forty hounds were
working all round you.</p>
<p>"And then suddenly there came one long-drawn yell from one of them, and it
was taken up by another, and another, until within a few seconds the whole
pack was giving tongue together and running on a hot scent. Danbury saw
them stream across one of the drives and disappear upon the other side,
and an instant later the three red coats of the hunt servants flashed
after them upon the same line. He might have made a shorter cut down one
of the other drives, but he was afraid of heading the fox, so he followed
the lead of the huntsman. Right through the wood they went in a bee-line,
galloping with their faces brushed by their horses' manes as they stooped
under the branches.</p>
<p>"It's ugly going, as you know, with the roots all wriggling about in the
darkness, but you can take a risk when you catch an occasional glimpse of
the pack running with a breast-high scent; so in and out they dodged until
the wood began to thin at the edges, and they found themselves in the long
bottom where the river runs. It is clear going there upon grassland, and
the hounds were running very strong about two hundred yards ahead, keeping
parallel with the stream. The field, who had come round the wood instead
of going through, were coming hard over the fields upon the left; but
Danbury, with the hunt servants, had a clear lead, and they never lost it.</p>
<p>"Two of the field got on terms with them—Parson Geddes on a big
seventeen-hand bay which he used to ride in those days, and Squire Foley,
who rode as a feather-weight, and made his hunters out of cast
thoroughbreds from the Newmarket sales; but the others never had a look-in
from start to finish, for there was no check and no pulling, and it was
clear cross-country racing from start to finish. If you had drawn a line
right across the map with a pencil you couldn't go straighter than that
fox ran, heading for the South Downs and the sea, and the hounds ran as
surely as if they were running to view, and yet from the beginning no one
ever saw the fox, and there was never a hallo forrard to tell them that he
had been spied. This, however, is not so surprising, for if you've been
over that line of country you will know that there are not very many
people about.</p>
<p>"There were six of them then in the front row—Parson Geddes, Squire
Foley, the huntsman, two whips, and Wat Danbury, who had forgotten all
about his head and the doctor by this time, and had not a thought for
anything but the run. All six were galloping just as hard as they could
lay hoofs to the ground. One of the whips dropped back, however, as some
of the hounds were tailing off, and that brought them down to five. Then
Foley's thoroughbred strained herself, as these slim-legged,
dainty-fetlocked thoroughbreds will do when the going is rough, and he had
to take a back seat. But the other four were still going strong, and they
did four or five miles down the river flat at a rasping pace. It had been
a wet winter, and the waters had been out a little time before, so there
was a deal of sliding and splashing; but by the time they came to the
bridge the whole field was out of sight, and these four had the hunt to
themselves.</p>
<p>"The fox had crossed the bridge—for foxes do not care to swim a
chilly river any more than humans do—and from that point he had
streaked away southward as hard as he could tear. It is broken country,
rolling heaths, down one slope and up another, and it's hard to say
whether the up or the down is the more trying for the horses. This sort of
switchback work is all right for a cobby, short-backed, short-legged
little horse, but it is killing work for a big, long-striding hunter such
as one wants in the Midlands. Anyhow, it was too much for Parson Geddes'
seventeen-hand bay, and though he tried the Irish trick—for he was a
rare keen sportsman—of running up the hills by his horse's head, it
was all to no use, and he had to give it up. So then there were only the
huntsman, the whip, and Wat Danbury—all going strong.</p>
<p>"But the country got worse and worse and the hills were steeper and more
thickly covered in heather and bracken. The horses were over their hocks
all the time, and the place was pitted with rabbit-holes; but the hounds
were still streaming along, and the riders could not afford to pick their
steps. As they raced down one slope, the hounds were always flowing up the
opposite one, until it looked like that game where the one figure in
falling makes the other one rise.</p>
<p>"But never a glimpse did they get of the fox, although they knew very well
that he must be only a very short way ahead for the scent to be so strong.
And then Wat Danbury heard a crash and a thud at his elbow, and looking
round he saw a pair of white cords and top-boots kicking out of a tussock
of brambles. The whip's horse had stumbled, and the whip was out of the
running. Danbury and the huntsman eased down for an instant; and then,
seeing the man staggering to his feet all right, they turned and settled
into their saddles once more.</p>
<p>"Joe Clarke, the huntsman, was a famous old rider, known for five counties
round; but he reckoned upon his second horse, and the second horses had
all been left many miles behind. However, the one he was riding was good
enough for anything with such a horseman upon his back, and he was going
as well as when he started. As to Wat Danbury, he was going better. With
every stride his own feelings improved, and the mind of the rider had its
influence upon the mind of the horse. The stout little roan was gathering
its muscular limbs under it, and stretching to the gallop as if it were
steel and whale-bone instead of flesh and blood. Wat had never come to the
end of its powers yet, and to-day he had such a chance of testing them as
he had never had before.</p>
<p>"There was a pasture country beyond the heather slopes, and for several
miles the two riders were either losing ground as they fumbled with their
crop-handles at the bars of gates, or gaining it again as they galloped
over the fields. Those were the days before this accursed wire came into
the country, and you could generally break a hedge where you could not fly
it, so they did not trouble the gates more than they could help. Then they
were down in a hard lane, where they had to slacken their pace, and
through a farm where a man came shouting excitedly after them; but they
had no time to stop and listen to him, for the hounds were on some
ploughland, only two fields ahead. It was sloping upwards, that
ploughland, and the horses were over their fetlocks in the red, soft soil.</p>
<p>"When they reached the top they were blowing badly, but a grand valley
sloped before them, leading up to the open country of the South Downs.
Between, there lay a belt of pine-woods, into which the hounds were
streaming, running now in a long, straggling line, and shedding one here
and one there as they ran. You could see the white-and-tan dots here and
there where the limpers were tailing away. But half the pack were still
going well, though the pace and distance had both been tremendous—two
clear hours now without a check.</p>
<p>"There was a drive through the pine-wood—one of those green,
slightly rutted drives where a horse can get the last yard out of itself,
for the ground is hard enough to give him clean going and yet springy
enough to help him. Wat Danbury got alongside of the huntsman and they
galloped together with their stirrup-irons touching, and the hounds within
a hundred yards of them.</p>
<p>"'We have it all to ourselves,' said he.</p>
<p>"'Yes, sir, we've shook on the lot of 'em this time,' said old Joe Clarke.
'If we get this fox it's worth while 'aving 'im skinned an' stuffed, for
'e's a curiosity 'e is.'</p>
<p>"'It's the fastest run I ever had in my life!' cried Danbury.</p>
<p>"'And the fastest that ever I 'ad, an' that means more,' said the old
huntsman. 'But what licks me is that we've never 'ad a look at the beast.
'E must leave an amazin' scent be'ind 'im when these 'ounds can follow 'im
like this, and yet none of us have seen 'im when we've 'ad a clear 'alf
mile view in front of us.'</p>
<p>"'I expect we'll have a view of him presently,' said Danbury; and in his
mind he added, 'at least, I shall,' for the huntsman's horse was gasping
as it ran, and the white foam was pouring down it like the side of a
washing-tub.</p>
<p>"They had followed the hounds on to one of the side tracks which led out
of the main drive, and that divided into a smaller track still, where the
branches switched across their faces as they went, and there was barely
room for one horse at a time. Wat Danbury took the lead, and he heard the
huntsman's horse clumping along heavily behind him, while his own mare was
going with less spring than when she had started. She answered to a touch
of his crop or spur, however, and he felt that there was something still
left to draw upon. And then he looked up, and there was a heavy wooden
stile at the end of the narrow track, with a lane of stiff young saplings
leading down to it, which was far too thick to break through. The hounds
were running clear upon the grassland on the other side, and you were
bound either to get over that stile or lose sight of them, for the pace
was too hot to let you go round.</p>
<p>"Well, Wat Danbury was not the lad to flinch, and at it he went full
split, like a man who means what he is doing. She rose gallantly to it,
rapped it hard with her front hoof, shook him on to her withers, recovered
herself, and was over. Wat had hardly got back into his saddle when there
was a clatter behind him like the fall of a woodstack, and there was the
top bar in splinters, the horse on its belly, and the huntsman on hands
and knees half a dozen yards in front of him. Wat pulled up for an
instant, for the fall was a smasher; but he saw old Joe spring to his feet
and get to his horse's bridle. The horse staggered up, but the moment it
put one foot in front of the other, Wat saw that it was hopelessly lame—a
slipped shoulder and a six weeks' job. There was nothing he could do, and
Joe was shouting to him not to lose the hounds, so off he went again, the
one solitary survivor of the whole hunt. When a man finds himself there,
he can retire from fox-hunting, for he has tasted the highest which it has
to offer. I remember once when I was out with the Royal Surrey—but
I'll tell you that story afterwards.</p>
<p>"The pack, or what was left of them, had got a bit ahead during this time;
but he had a clear view of them on the downland, and the mare seemed full
of pride at being the only one left, for she was stepping out rarely and
tossing her head as she went. They were two miles over the green shoulder
of a hill, a rattle down a stony, deep-rutted country lane, where the mare
stumbled and nearly came down, a jump over a 5ft. brook, a cut through a
hazel copse, another dose of heavy ploughland, a couple of gates to open,
and then the green, unbroken Downs beyond.</p>
<p>"'Well,' said Wat Danbury to himself, 'I'll see this fox run into or I
shall see it drowned, for it's all clear going now between this and the
chalk cliffs which line the sea.' But he was wrong in that, as he speedily
discovered. In all the little hollows of the downs at that part there are
plantations of fir-woods, some of which have grown to a good size. You do
not see them until you come upon the edge of the valleys in which they
lie. Danbury was galloping hard over the short, springy turf when he came
over the lip of one of these depressions, and there was the dark clump of
wood lying in front of and beneath him. There were only a dozen hounds
still running, and they were just disappearing among the trees. The
sunlight was shining straight upon the long olive-green slopes which
curved down towards this wood, and Danbury, who had the eyes of a hawk,
swept them over this great expanse; but there was nothing moving upon it.
A few sheep were grazing far up on the right, but there was no other sight
of any living creature. He was certain then that he was very near to the
end, for either the fox must have gone to ground in the wood or the
hounds' noses must be at his very brush. The mare seemed to know also what
that great empty sweep of countryside meant, for she quickened her stride,
and a few minutes afterwards Danbury was galloping into the fir-wood.</p>
<p>"He had come from bright sunshine, but the wood was very closely planted,
and so dim that he could hardly see to right or to left out of the narrow
path down which he was riding. You know what a solemn, churchyardy sort of
place a fir-wood is. I suppose it is the absence of any undergrowth, and
the fact that the trees never move at all. At any rate a kind of chill
suddenly struck Wat Danbury, and it flashed through his mind that there
had been some very singular points about this run— its length and
its straightness, and the fact that from the first find no one had ever
caught a glimpse of the creature. Some silly talk which had been going
round the country about the king of the foxes—a sort of demon fox,
so fast that it could outrun any pack, and so fierce that they could do
nothing with it if they overtook it—suddenly came back into his
mind, and it did not seem so laughable now in the dim fir-wood as it had
done when the story had been told over the wine and cigars. The
nervousness which had been on him in the morning, and which he had hoped
that he had shaken off, swept over him again in an overpowering wave. He
had been so proud of being alone, and yet he would have given 10 pounds
now to have had Joe Clarke's homely face beside him. And then, just at
that moment, there broke out from the thickest part of the wood the most
frantic hullabaloo that ever he had heard in his life. The hounds had run
into their fox.</p>
<p>"Well, you know, or you ought to know, what your duty is in such a case.
You have to be whip, huntsman, and everything else if you are the first
man up. You get in among the hounds, lash them off, and keep the brush and
pads from being destroyed. Of course, Wat Danbury knew all about that, and
he tried to force his mare through the trees to the place where all this
hideous screaming and howling came from, but the wood was so thick that it
was impossible to ride it. He sprang off, therefore, left the mare
standing, and broke his way through as best he could with his hunting-lash
ready over his shoulder.</p>
<p>"But as he ran forward he felt his flesh go cold and creepy all over. He
had heard hounds run into foxes many times before, but he had never heard
such sounds as these. They were not the cries of triumph, but of fear.
Every now and then came a shrill yelp of mortal agony. Holding his breath,
he ran on until he broke through the interlacing branches, and found
himself in a little, clearing with the hounds all crowding round a patch
of tangled bramble at the further end.</p>
<p>"When he first caught sight of them the hounds were standing in a
half-circle round this bramble patch, with their backs bristling and their
jaws gaping. In front of the brambles lay one of them with his throat torn
out, all crimson and white-and-tan. Wat came running out into the
clearing, and at the sight of him the hounds took heart again, and one of
them sprang with a growl into the bushes. At the same instant, a creature
the size of a donkey jumped on to its feet, a huge grey head, with
monstrous glistening fangs and tapering fox jaws, shot out from among the
branches, and the hound was thrown several feet into the air, and fell
howling among the cover. Then there was a clashing snap, like a rat-trap
closing, and the howls sharpened into a scream and then were still.</p>
<p>"Danbury had been on the look-out for symptoms all day, and now he had
found them. He looked once more at the thicket, saw a pair of savage red
eyes fixed upon him, and fairly took to his heels. It might only be a
passing delusion, or it might be the permanent mania of which the doctor
had spoken, but anyhow, the thing to do was to get back to bed and to
quiet, and to hope for the best.</p>
<p>"He forgot the hounds, the hunt, and everything else in his desperate
fears for his own reason. He sprang upon his mare, galloped her madly over
the downs, and only stopped when he found himself at a country station.
There he left his mare at the inn, and made back for home as quickly as
steam would take him. It was evening before he got there, shivering with
apprehension, and seeing those red eyes and savage teeth at every turn. He
went straight to bed and sent for Dr. Middleton.</p>
<p>"'I've got 'em, doctor,' said he. 'It came about exactly as you said—
strange creatures, optical delusions, and everything. All I ask you now is
to save my reason.' The doctor listened to his story, and was shocked as
he heard it.</p>
<p>"'It appears to be a very clear case,' said he. 'This must be a lesson to
you for life.'</p>
<p>"'Never a drop again if I only come safely through this,' cried Wat
Danbury.</p>
<p>"'Well, my dear boy, if you will stick to that it may prove a blessing in
disguise. But the difficulty in this case is to know where fact ends and
fancy begins. You see, it is not as if there was only one delusion. There
have been several. The dead dogs, for example, must have been one as well
as the creature in the bush.'</p>
<p>"'I saw it all as clearly as I see you.'</p>
<p>"'One of the characteristics of this form of delirium is that what you see
is even clearer than reality. I was wondering whether the whole run was
not a delusion also.'</p>
<p>"Wat Danbury pointed to his hunting boots still lying upon the floor,
necked with the splashings of two counties.</p>
<p>"'Hum! that looks very real, certainly. No doubt, in your weak state, you
over-exerted yourself and so brought this attack upon yourself. Well,
whatever the cause, our treatment is clear. You will take the soothing
mixture which I will send to you, and we shall put two leeches upon your
temples to-night to relieve any congestion of the brain.'</p>
<p>"So Wat Danbury spent the night in tossing about and reflecting what a
sensitive thing this machinery of ours is, and how very foolish it is to
play tricks with what is so easily put out of gear and so difficult to
mend. And so he repeated and repeated his oath that this first lesson
should be his last, and that from that time forward he would be a sober,
hard-working yeoman as his father had been before him. So he lay, tossing
and still repentant, when his door flew open in the morning and in rushed
the doctor with a newspaper crumpled up in his hand.</p>
<p>"'My dear boy,' he cried, 'I owe you a thousand apologies. You're the most
ill-used lad and I the greatest numskull in the county. Listen to this!'
And he sat down upon the side of the bed, flattened out his paper upon his
knee, and began to read.</p>
<p>"The paragraph was headed, 'Disaster to the Ascombe Hounds,' and it went
on to say that four of the hounds, shockingly torn and mangled, had been
found in Winton Fir Wood upon the South Downs. The run had been so severe
that half the pack were lamed; but the four found in the wood were
actually dead, although the cause of their extraordinary injuries was
still unknown.</p>
<p>"'So, you see,' said the doctor, looking up, 'that I was wrong when I put
the dead hounds among the delusions.'</p>
<p>"'But the cause?' cried Wat.</p>
<p>"'Well, I think we may guess the cause from an item which has been
inserted just as the paper went to press:—</p>
<p>"Late last night, Mr. Brown, of Smither's Farm, to the<br/>
east of Hastings, perceived what he imagined to be an enormous<br/>
dog worrying one of his sheep. He shot the creature, which<br/>
proves to be a grey Siberian wolf of the variety known as<br/>
<i>Lupus Giganticus</i>. It is supposed to have escaped from some<br/>
travelling menagerie.<br/></p>
<p>"That's the story, gentlemen, and Wat Danbury stuck to his good
resolutions, for the fright which he had cured him of all wish to run such
a risk again; and he never touches anything stronger than lime-juice—at
least, he hadn't before he left this part of the country, five years ago
next Lady Day."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE THREE CORRESPONDENTS </h2>
<p>There was only the one little feathery clump of dom palms in all that
great wilderness of black rocks and orange sand. It stood high on the
bank, and below it the brown Nile swirled swiftly towards the Ambigole
Cataract, fitting a little frill of foam round each of the boulders which
studded its surface. Above, out of a naked blue sky, the sun was beating
down upon the sand, and up again from the sand under the brims of the
pith-hats of the horsemen with the scorching glare of a blast-furnace. It
had risen so high that the shadows of the horses were no larger than
themselves.</p>
<p>"Whew!" cried Mortimer, mopping his forehead, "you'd pay five shillings
for this at the hummums."</p>
<p>"Precisely," said Scott. "But you are not asked to ride twenty miles in a
Turkish bath with a field-glass and a revolver, and a water-bottle and a
whole Christmas-treeful of things dangling from you. The hot-house at Kew
is excellent as a conservatory, but not adapted for exhibitions upon the
horizontal bar. I vote for a camp in the palm-grove and a halt until
evening."</p>
<p>Mortimer rose on his stirrups and looked hard to the southward. Everywhere
were the same black burned rocks and deep orange sand. At one spot only an
intermittent line appeared to have been cut through the rugged spurs which
ran down to the river. It was the bed of the old railway, long destroyed
by the Arabs, but now in process of reconstruction by the advancing
Egyptians. There was no other sign of man's handiwork in all that desolate
scene.</p>
<p>"It's palm trees or nothing," said Scott.</p>
<p>"Well, I suppose we must; and yet I grudge every hour until we catch the
force up. What <i>would</i> our editors say if we were late for the
action?"</p>
<p>"My dear chap, an old bird like you doesn't need to be told that no sane
modern general would ever attack until the Press is up."</p>
<p>"You don't mean that?" said young Anerley. "I thought we were looked upon
as an unmitigated nuisance."</p>
<p>"'Newspaper correspondents and travelling gentlemen, and all that tribe of
useless drones'—being an extract from Lord Wolseley's 'Soldier's
Pocket-Book,'" cried Scott. "We know all about <i>that</i>, Anerley;" and
he winked behind his blue spectacles. "If there was going to be a battle
we should very soon have an escort of cavalry to hurry us up. I've been in
fifteen, and I never saw one where they had not arranged for a reporter's
table."</p>
<p>"That's very well; but the enemy may be less considerate," said Mortimer.</p>
<p>"They are not strong enough to force a battle."</p>
<p>"A skirmish, then?"</p>
<p>"Much more likely to be a raid upon the rear. In that case we are just
where we should be."</p>
<p>"So we are! What a score over Reuter's man up with the advance! Well,
we'll outspan and have our tiffin under the palms."</p>
<p>There were three of them, and they stood for three great London dailies.
Reuter's was thirty miles ahead; two evening pennies upon camels were
twenty miles behind. And among them they represented the eyes and ears of
the public—the great silent millions and millions who had paid for
everything, and who waited so patiently to know the result of their
outlay.</p>
<p>They were remarkable men these body-servants of the Press; two of them
already veterans in camps, the other setting out upon his first campaign,
and full of deference for his famous comrades.</p>
<p>This first one, who had just dismounted from his bay polo-pony, was
Mortimer, of the <i>Intelligence</i>—tall, straight, and hawk-faced,
with khaki tunic and riding-breeches, drab putties, a scarlet cummerbund,
and a skin tanned to the red of a Scotch fir by sun and wind, and mottled
by the mosquito and the sand-fly. The other—small, quick, mercurial,
with blue-black, curling beard and hair, a fly-switch for ever flicking in
his left hand—was Scott, of the <i>Courier</i>, who had come through
more dangers and brought off more brilliant <i>coups</i> than any man in
the profession, save the eminent Chandler, now no longer in a condition to
take the field. They were a singular contrast, Mortimer and Scott, and it
was in their differences that the secret of their close friendship lay.
Each dovetailed into the other. The strength of each was in the other's
weakness. Together they formed a perfect unit. Mortimer was Saxon—slow,
conscientious, and deliberate; Scott was Celtic—quick,
happy-go-lucky, and brilliant. Mortimer was the more solid, Scott the more
attractive. Mortimer was the deeper thinker, Scott the brighter talker. By
a curious coincidence, though each had seen much of warfare, their
campaigns had never coincided. Together they covered all recent military
history. Scott had done Plevna, the Shipka, the Zulus, Egypt, Suakim;
Mortimer had seen the Boer War, the Chilian, the Bulgaria and Servian, the
Gordon relief, the Indian frontier, Brazilian rebellion, and Madagascar.
This intimate personal knowledge gave a peculiar flavour to their talk.
There was none of the second-hand surmise and conjecture which form so
much of our conversation; it was all concrete and final. The speaker had
been there, had seen it, and there was an end of it.</p>
<p>In spite of their friendship there was the keenest professional rivalry
between the two men. Either would have sacrificed himself to help his
companion, but either would also have sacrificed his companion to help his
paper. Never did a jockey yearn for a winning mount as keenly as each of
them longed to have a full column in a morning edition whilst every other
daily was blank. They were perfectly frank about the matter. Each
professed himself ready to steal a march on his neighbour, and each
recognised that the other's duty to his employer was far higher than any
personal consideration.</p>
<p>The third man was Anerley, of the <i>Gazette</i>—young,
inexperienced, and rather simple-looking. He had a droop of the lip, which
some of his more intimate friends regarded as a libel upon his character,
and his eyes were so slow and so sleepy that they suggested an
affectation. A leaning towards soldiering had sent him twice to autumn
manoeuvres, and a touch of colour in his descriptions had induced the
proprietors of the <i>Gazette</i> to give him a trial as a war-special.
There was a pleasing diffidence about his bearing which recommended him to
his experienced companions, and if they had a smile sometimes at his
guileless ways, it was soothing to them to have a comrade from whom
nothing was to be feared. From the day that they left the telegraph-wire
behind them at Sarras, the man who was mounted upon a 15-guinea 13-4
Syrian was delivered over into the hands of the owners of the two fastest
polo-ponies that ever shot down the Ghezireh ground. The three had
dismounted and led their beasts under the welcome shade. In the brassy,
yellow glare every branch above threw so black and solid a shadow that the
men involuntarily raised their feet to step over them.</p>
<p>"The palm makes an excellent hat-rack," said Scott, slinging his revolver
and his water-bottle over the little upward-pointing pegs which bristle
from the trunk. "As a shade tree, however, it isn't an unqualified
success. Curious that in the universal adaptation of means to ends
something a little less flimsy could not have been devised for the
tropics."</p>
<p>"Like the banyan in India."</p>
<p>"Or the fine hardwood trees in Ashantee, where a whole regiment could
picnic under the shade."</p>
<p>"The teak tree isn't bad in Burmah, either. By Jove, the baccy has all
come loose in the saddle-bag! That long-cut mixture smokes rather hot for
this climate. How about the baggles, Anerley?"</p>
<p>"They'll be here in five minutes."</p>
<p>Down the winding path which curved among the rocks the little train of
baggage-camels was daintily picking its way. They came mincing and
undulating along, turning their heads slowly from side to side with the
air of a self-conscious woman. In front rode the three Berberee
body-servants upon donkeys, and behind walked the Arab camel-boys. They
had been travelling for nine long hours, ever since the first rising of
the moon, at the weary camel-drag of two and a half miles an hour, but now
they brightened, both beasts and men, at the sight of the grove and the
riderless horses. In a few minutes the loads were unstrapped, the animals
tethered, a fire lighted, fresh water carried up from the river, and each
camel-boy provided with his own little heap of tibbin laid in the centre
of the table-cloth, without which no well-bred Arabian will condescend to
feed. The dazzling light without, the subdued half-tones within, the green
palm-fronds outlined against the deep blue sky, the flitting,
silent-footed Arab servants, the crackling of sticks, the reek of a
lighting fire, the placid supercilious heads of the camels, they all come
back in their dreams to those who have known them.</p>
<p>Scott was breaking eggs into a pan and rolling out a love-song in his
rich, deep voice. Anerley, with his head and arms buried in a deal
packing-case, was working his way through strata of tinned soups, bully
beef, potted chicken, and sardines to reach the jams which lay beneath.
The conscientious Mortimer, with his notebook upon his knee, was jotting
down what the railway engineer had told him at the line-end the day
before. Suddenly he raised his eyes and saw the man himself on his
chestnut pony, dipping and rising over the broken ground.</p>
<p>"Hullo! Here's Merryweather!"</p>
<p>"A pretty lather his pony is in! He's had her at that hand-gallop for
hours, by the look of her. Hullo, Merryweather, hullo!"</p>
<p>The engineer, a small, compact man with a pointed red beard, had made as
though he would ride past their camp without word or halt. Now he swerved,
and easing his pony down to a canter, he headed her to-wards them.</p>
<p>"For God's sake, a drink!" he croaked. "My tongue is stuck to the roof of
my mouth."</p>
<p>Mortimer ran with the water-bottle, Scott with the whisky-flask, and
Anerley with the tin pannikin. The engineer drank until his breath failed
him.</p>
<p>"Well, I must be off," said he, striking the drops from his red moustache.</p>
<p>"Any news?"</p>
<p>"A hitch in the railway construction. I must see the general. It's the
devil not having a telegraph."</p>
<p>"Anything we can report?" Out came three notebooks.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you after I've seen the general."</p>
<p>"Any dervishes?"</p>
<p>"The usual shaves. Hud-up, Jinny! Good-bye!"</p>
<p>With a soft thudding upon the sand, and a clatter among the stones the
weary pony was off upon her journey once more.</p>
<p>"Nothing serious, I suppose?" said Mortimer, staring after him.</p>
<p>"Deuced serious," cried Scott. "The ham and eggs are burned! No—it's
all right—saved, and done to a turn! Pull the box up, Anerley. Come
on, Mortimer, stow that notebook! The fork is mightier than the pen just
at present. What's the matter with you, Anerley?"</p>
<p>"I was wondering whether what we have just seen was worth a telegram."</p>
<p>"Well, it's for the proprietors to say if it's worth it. Sordid money
considerations are not for us. We must wire about something just to
justify our khaki coats and our putties."</p>
<p>"But what is there to say?"</p>
<p>Mortimer's long, austere face broke into a smile over the youngster's
innocence. "It's not quite usual in our profession to give each other
tips," said he. "However, as my telegram is written, I've no objection to
your reading it. You may be sure that I would not show it to you if it
were of the slightest importance."</p>
<p>Anerley took up the slip of paper and read:—</p>
<p>Merryweather obstacles stop journey confer general stop nature<br/>
difficulties later stop rumours dervishes.<br/></p>
<p>"This is very condensed," said Anerley, with wrinkled brows.</p>
<p>"Condensed!" cried Scott. "Why, it's sinfully garrulous. If my old man got
a wire like that his language would crack the lamp-shades. I'd cut out
half this; for example, I'd have out 'journey,' and 'nature,' and
'rumours.' But my old man would make a ten-line paragraph of it for all
that."</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"Well, I'll do it myself just to show you. Lend me that stylo." He
scribbled for a minute in his notebook. "It works out somewhat on these
lines":—</p>
<p>Mr. Charles H. Merryweather, the eminent railway engineer,<br/>
who is at present engaged in superintending the construction<br/>
of the line from Sarras to the front, has met with considerable<br/>
obstacles to the rapid completion of his important task—<br/></p>
<p>"Of course the old man knows who Merryweather is, and what he is about, so
the word 'obstacles' would suggest all that to him."</p>
<p>He has to-day been compelled to make a journey of forty<br/>
miles to the front, in order to confer with the general upon<br/>
the steps which are necessary in order to facilitate the work.<br/>
Further particulars of the exact nature of the difficulties<br/>
met with will be made public at a later date. All is quiet<br/>
upon the line of communications, though the usual persistent<br/>
rumours of the presence of dervishes in the Eastern desert<br/>
continue to circulate.—<i>Our own correspondent</i>.<br/></p>
<p>"How's that?" cried Scott, triumphantly, and his white teeth gleamed
suddenly through his black beard. "That's the sort of flapdoodle for the
dear old public."</p>
<p>"Will it interest them?"</p>
<p>"Oh, everything interests them. They want to know all about it; and they
like to think that there is a man who is getting a hundred a month simply
in order to tell it to them."</p>
<p>"It's very kind of you to teach me all this."</p>
<p>"Well, it is a little unconventional, for, after all, we are here to score
over each other if we can. There are no more eggs, and you must take it
out in jam. Of course, as Mortimer says, such a telegram as this is of no
importance one way or another, except to prove to the office that we <i>are</i>
in the Soudan, and not at Monte Carlo. But when it comes to serious work
it must be every man for himself."</p>
<p>"Is that quite necessary?"</p>
<p>"Why, of course it is."</p>
<p>"I should have thought if three men were to combine and to share their
news, they would do better than if they were each to act for himself, and
they would have a much pleasanter time of it."</p>
<p>The two older men sat with their bread-and-jam in their hands, and an
expression of genuine disgust upon their faces.</p>
<p>"We are not here to have a pleasant time," said Mortimer, with a flash
through his glasses. "We are here to do our best for our papers. How can
they score over each other if we do not do the same? If we all combine we
might as well amalgamate with Reuter at once."</p>
<p>"Why, it would take away the whole glory of the profession!" cried Scott.
"At present the smartest man gets his stuff first on the wires. What
inducement is there to be smart if we all share and share alike?"</p>
<p>"And at present the man with the best equipment has the best chance,"
remarked Mortimer, glancing across at the shot-silk polo ponies and the
cheap little Syrian grey. "That is the fair reward of foresight and
enterprise. Every man for himself, and let the best man win."</p>
<p>"That's the way to find who the best man is. Look at Chandler. He would
never have got his chance if he had not played always off his own bat.
You've heard how he pretended to break his leg, sent his
fellow-correspondent off for the doctor, and so got a fair start for the
telegraph-office."</p>
<p>"Do you mean to say that was legitimate?"</p>
<p>"Everything is legitimate. It's your wits against my wits."</p>
<p>"I should call it dishonourable."</p>
<p>"You may call it what you like. Chandler's paper got the battle and the
other's didn't. It made Chandler's name."</p>
<p>"Or take Westlake," said Mortimer, cramming the tobacco into his pipe.
"Hi, Abdul, you may have the dishes! Westlake brought his stuff down by
pretending to be the Government courier, and using the relays of
Government horses. Westlake's paper sold half a million."</p>
<p>"Is that legitimate also?" asked Anerley, thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"Why not?"</p>
<p>"Well, it looks a little like horse-stealing and lying."</p>
<p>"Well, <i>I</i> think I should do a little horse-stealing and lying if I
could have a column to myself in a London daily. What do you say, Scott?"</p>
<p>"Anything short of manslaughter."</p>
<p>"And I'm not sure that I'd trust you there."</p>
<p>"Well, I don't think I should be guilty of newspaper-man-slaughter. That I
regard as a distinct breach of professional etiquette. But if any outsider
comes between a highly charged correspondent and an electric wire, he does
it at his peril. My dear Anerley, I tell you frankly that if you are going
to handicap yourself with scruple you may just as well be in Fleet Street
as in the Soudan. Our life is irregular. Our work has never been
systematised. No doubt it will be some day, but the time is not yet. Do
what you can and how you can, and be first on the wires; that's my advice
to you; and also, that when next you come upon a campaign you bring with
you the best horse that money can buy. Mortimer may beat me or I may beat
Mortimer, but at least we know that between us we have the fastest ponies
in the country. We have neglected no chance."</p>
<p>"I am not so certain of that," said Mortimer, slowly. "You are aware, of
course, that though a horse beats a camel on twenty miles, a camel beats a
horse on thirty."</p>
<p>"What, one of those camels?" cried Anerley in astonishment. The two
seniors burst out laughing.</p>
<p>"No, no, the real high-bred trotter—the kind of beast the dervishes
ride when they make their lightning raids."</p>
<p>"Faster than a galloping horse?" "Well, it tires a horse down. It goes the
same gait all the way, and it wants neither halt nor drink, and it takes
rough ground much better than a horse. They used to have long distance
races at Haifa, and the camel always won at thirty."</p>
<p>"Still, we need not reproach ourselves, Scott, for we are not very likely
to have to carry a thirty-mile message, they will have the field telegraph
next week."</p>
<p>"Quite so. But at the present moment—"</p>
<p>"I know, my dear chap; but there is no motion of urgency before the house.
Load baggles at five o'clock; so you have Just three hours clear. Any sign
of the evening pennies?"</p>
<p>Mortimer swept the northern horizon with his binoculars. "Not in sight
yet."</p>
<p>"They are quite capable of travelling during the heat of the day. Just the
sort of thing evening pennies <i>would</i> do. Take care of your match,
Anerley. These palm groves go up like a powder magazine if you set them
alight. Bye-bye." The two men crawled under their mosquito-nets and sank
instantly into the easy sleep of those whose lives are spent in the open.</p>
<p>Young Anerley stood with his back against a palm tree and his briar
between his lips, thinking over the advice which he had received. After
all, they were the heads of the profession, these men, and it was not for
him, the newcomer, to reform their methods. If they served their papers in
this fashion, then he must do the same. They had at least been frank and
generous in teaching him the rules of the game. If it was good enough for
them it was good enough for him.</p>
<p>It was a broiling afternoon, and those thin frills of foam round the
black, glistening necks of the Nile boulders looked delightfully cool and
alluring. But it would not be safe to bathe for some hours to come. The
air shimmered and vibrated over the baking stretch of sand and rock. There
was not a breath of wind, and the droning and piping of the insects
inclined one for sleep. Somewhere above a hoopoe was calling. Anerley
knocked out his ashes, and was turning towards his couch, when his eye
caught something moving in the desert to the south. It was a horseman
riding towards them as swiftly as the broken ground would permit. A
messenger from the army, thought Anerley; and then, as he watched, the sun
suddenly struck the man on the side of the head, and his chin flamed into
gold. There could not be two horsemen with beards of such a colour. It was
Merryweather, the engineer, and he was returning. What on earth was he
returning for? He had been so keen to see the general, and yet he was
coming back with his mission unaccomplished. Was it that his pony was
hopelessly foundered? It seemed to be moving well. Anerley picked up
Mortimer's binoculars, and a foam-bespattered horse and a weary
koorbash-cracking man came cantering up the centre of the field. But there
was nothing in his appearance to explain the mystery of his return. Then
as he watched them they dipped into a hollow and disappeared. He could see
that it was one of those narrow khors which led to the river, and he
waited, glass in hand, for their immediate reappearance. But minute passed
after minute and there was no sign of them. That narrow gully appeared to
have swallowed them up. And then with a curious gulp and start he saw a
little grey cloud wreathe itself slowly from among the rocks and drift in
a long, hazy shred over the desert. In an instant he had torn Scott and
Mortimer from their slumbers.</p>
<p>"Get up, you chaps!" he cried. "I believe Merryweather has been shot by
dervishes."</p>
<p>"And Reuter not here!" cried the two veterans, exultantly clutching at
their notebooks. "Merryweather shot! Where? When? How?"</p>
<p>In a few words Anerley explained what he had seen.</p>
<p>"You heard nothing?"</p>
<p>"Nothing."</p>
<p>"Well, a shot loses itself very easily among rocks. By George, look at the
buzzards!"</p>
<p>Two large brown birds were soaring in the deep blue heaven. As Scott spoke
they circled down and dropped into the little khor.</p>
<p>"That's good enough," said Mortimer, with his nose between the leaves of
his book. "'Merryweather headed dervishes stop return stop shot mutilated
stop raid communications.' How's that?"</p>
<p>"You think he was headed off?"</p>
<p>"Why else should he return?"</p>
<p>"In that case, if they were out in front of him and others cut him off,
there must be several small raiding parties."</p>
<p>"I should judge so."</p>
<p>"How about the 'mutilated'?"</p>
<p>"I've fought against Arabs before."</p>
<p>"Where are you off to?"</p>
<p>"Sarras."</p>
<p>"I think I'll race you in," said Scott.</p>
<p>Anerley stared in astonishment at the absolutely impersonal way in which
these men regarded the situation. In their zeal for news it had apparently
never struck them that they, their camp, and their servants were all in
the lion's mouth. But even as they talked there came the harsh,
importunate rat-tat-tat of an irregular volley from among the rocks, and
the high, keening whistle of bullets over their heads. A palm spray
fluttered down amongst them. At the same instant the six frightened
servants came running wildly in for protection.</p>
<p>It was the cool-headed Mortimer who organised the defence, for Scott's
Celtic soul was so aflame at all this "copy" in hand and more to come that
he was too exuberantly boisterous for a commander. The other, with his
spectacles and his stern face, soon had the servants in hand. "<i>Tali
henna! Egri!</i> What the deuce are you frightened about? Put the camels
between the palm trunks. That's right. Now get the knee-tethers on them.
<i>Quies</i>! Did you never hear bullets before? Now put the donkeys here.
Not much—you don't get my polo-pony to make a zareba with. Picket
the ponies between the grove and the river out of danger's way. These
fellows seem to fire even higher than they did in '85."</p>
<p>"That's got home, anyhow," said Scott, as they heard a soft, splashing
thud like a stone in a mud-bank.</p>
<p>"Who's hit, then?"</p>
<p>"The brown camel that's chewing the cud." As he spoke the creature, its
jaw still working, laid its long neck along the ground and closed its
large dark eyes.</p>
<p>"That shot cost me 15 pounds," said Mortimer, ruefully. "How many of them
do you make?"</p>
<p>"Four, I think."</p>
<p>"Only four Bezingers, at any rate; there may be some spearmen."</p>
<p>"I think not; it is a little raiding-party of rifle-men. By the way,
Anerley, you've never been under fire before, have you?"</p>
<p>"Never," said the young pressman, who was conscious of a curious feeling
of nervous elation.</p>
<p>"Love and poverty and war, they are all experiences necessary to make a
complete life. Pass over those cartridges. This is a very mild baptism
that you are undergoing, for behind these camels you are as safe as if you
were sitting in the back room of the Authors' Club."</p>
<p>"As safe, but hardly as comfortable," said Scott. "A long glass of hock
and seltzer would be exceedingly acceptable. But oh, Mortimer, what a
chance! Think of the general's feelings when he hears that the first
action of the war has been fought by the Press column. Think of Reuter,
who has been stewing at the front for a week! Think of the evening pennies
just too late for the fun. By George, that slug brushed a mosquito off
me!"</p>
<p>"And one of the donkeys is hit."</p>
<p>"This is sinful. It will end in our having to carry our own kits to
Khartoum."</p>
<p>"Never mind, my boy, it all goes to make copy. I can see the headlines—'Raid
on Communications'; 'Murder of British Engineer': 'Press Column Attacked.'
Won't it be ripping?"</p>
<p>"I wonder what the next line will be," said Anerley.</p>
<p>"'Our Special Wounded'!" cried Scott, rolling over on to his back. "No
harm done," he added, gathering himself up again; "only a chip off my
knee. This is getting sultry. I confess that the idea of that back room at
the Authors' Club begins to grow upon me."</p>
<p>"I have some diachylon."</p>
<p>"Afterwards will do. We're having a 'appy day with Fuzzy on the rush. I
wish he <i>would</i> rush."</p>
<p>"They're coming nearer."</p>
<p>"This is an excellent revolver of mine if it didn't throw so devilish
high. I always aim at a man's toes if I want to stimulate his digestion. O
Lord, there's our kettle gone!" With a boom like a dinner-gong a Remington
bullet had passed through the kettle, and a cloud of steam hissed up from
the fire. A wild shout came from the rocks above.</p>
<p>"The idiots think that they have blown us up. They'll rush us now, as sure
as fate; then it will be our turn to lead. Got your revolver, Anerley?"</p>
<p>"I have this double-barrelled fowling-piece."</p>
<p>"Sensible man! It's the best weapon in the world at this sort of
rough-and-tumble work. What cartridges?"</p>
<p>"Swan-shot."</p>
<p>"That will do all right. I carry this big bore double-barrelled pistol
loaded with slugs. You might as well try to stop one of these fellows with
a pea-shooter as with a service revolver."</p>
<p>"There are ways and means," said Scott. "The Geneva Convention does not
hold south of the first cataract. It's easy to make a bullet mushroom by a
little manipulation of the tip of it. When I was in the broken square at
Tamai—"</p>
<p>"Wait a bit," cried Mortimer, adjusting his glasses. "I think they are
coming now."</p>
<p>"The time," said Scott, snapping up his watch, "being exactly seventeen
minutes past four."</p>
<p>Anerley had been lying behind a camel staring with an interest which
bordered upon fascination at the rocks opposite. Here was a little woolly
puff of smoke, and there was another one, but never once had they caught a
glimpse of the attackers. To him there was something weird and awesome in
these unseen, persistent men who, minute by minute, were drawing closer to
them. He had heard them cry out when the kettle was broken, and once,
immediately afterwards, an enormously strong voice had roared something
which had set Scott shrugging his shoulders.</p>
<p>"They've got to take us first," said he, and Anerley thought his nerve
might be better if he did not ask for a translation.</p>
<p>The firing had begun at a distance of some 100 yards, which put it out of
the question for them, with their lighter weapons, to make any reply to
it. Had their antagonists continued to keep that range the defenders must
either have made a hopeless sally or tried to shelter themselves behind
their zareba as best they might on the chance that the sound might bring
up help. But, luckily for them, the African has never taken kindly to the
rifle, and his primitive instinct to close with his enemy is always too
strong for his sense of strategy. They were drawing in, therefore, and
now, for the first time, Anerley caught sight of a face looking at them
from over a rock. It was a huge, virile, strong-jawed head of a pure negro
type, with silver trinkets gleaming in the ears. The man raised a great
arm from behind the rock, and shook his Remington at them.</p>
<p>"Shall I fire?" asked Anerley.</p>
<p>"No, no; it is too far. Your shot would scatter all over the place."</p>
<p>"It's a picturesque ruffian," said Scott. "Couldn't you kodak him,
Mortimer? There's another!" A fine-featured brown Arab, with a black,
pointed beard, was peeping from behind another boulder. He wore the green
turban which proclaimed him hadji, and his face showed the keen, nervous
exultation of the religious fanatic.</p>
<p>"They seem a piebald crowd," said Scott.</p>
<p>"That last is one of the real fighting Baggara," remarked Mortimer. "He's
a dangerous man."</p>
<p>"He looks pretty vicious. There's another negro!"</p>
<p>"Two more! Dingas, by the look of them. Just the same chaps we get our own
black battalions from. As long as they get a fight they don't mind who
it's for; but if the idiots had only sense enough to understand, they
would know that the Arab is their hereditary enemy, and we their
hereditary friends. Look at the silly juggins, gnashing his teeth at the
very men who put down the slave trade!"</p>
<p>"Couldn't you explain?"</p>
<p>"I'll explain with this pistol when he comes a little nearer. Now sit
tight, Anerley. They're off!"</p>
<p>They were indeed. It was the brown man with the green turban who headed
the rush. Close at his heels was the negro with the silver ear-rings—
a giant of a man, and the other two were only a little behind. As they
sprang over the rocks one after the other, it took Anerley back to the
school sports when he held the tape for the hurdle-race. It was
magnificent, the wild spirit and abandon of it, the flutter of the
chequered galabeeahs, the gleam of steel, the wave of black arms, the
frenzied faces, the quick pitter-patter of the rushing feet. The
law-abiding Briton is so imbued with the idea of the sanctity of human
life that it was hard for the young pressman to realise that these men had
every intention of killing him, and that he was at perfect liberty to do
as much for them. He lay staring as if this were a show and he a
spectator.</p>
<p>"Now, Anerley, now! Take the Arab!" cried somebody.</p>
<p>He put up the gun and saw the brown fierce face at the other end of the
barrel. He tugged at the trigger, but the face grew larger and fiercer
with every stride. Again and again he tugged. A revolver-shot rang out at
his elbow, then another one, and he saw a red spot spring out on the
Arab's brown breast. But he was still coming on.</p>
<p>"Shoot, you ass, shoot!" screamed Scott.</p>
<p>Again he strained unavailingly at the trigger. There were two more
pistol-shots, and the big negro had fallen and risen and fallen again.</p>
<p>"Cock it, you fool!" shouted a furious voice; and at the same instant,
with a rush and flutter, the Arab bounded over the prostrate camel and
came down with his bare feet upon Anerley's chest. In a dream he seemed to
be struggling frantically with someone upon the ground, then he was
conscious of a tremendous explosion in his very face, and so ended for him
the first action of the war.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, old chap. You'll be all right. Give yourself time." It was
Mortimer's voice, and he became dimly conscious of a long, spectacled
face, and of a heavy hand upon his shoulder.</p>
<p>"Sorry to leave you. We'll be lucky now if we are in time for the morning
editions." Scott was tightening his girth as he spoke.</p>
<p>"We'll put in our wire that you have been hurt, so your people will know
why they don't hear from you. If Reuter or the evening pennies come up,
don't give the thing away. Abbas will look after you, and we'll be back
to-morrow afternoon. Bye-bye!"</p>
<p>Anerley heard it all, though he did not feel energy enough to answer.
Then, as he watched two sleek, brown ponies with their yellow-clad riders
dwindling among the rocks, his memory cleared suddenly, and he realised
that the first great journalistic chance of his life was slipping away
from him. It was a small fight, but it was the first of the war, and the
great public at home were all athirst for news. They would have it in the
<i>Courier</i>; they would have it in the <i>Intelligence</i>, and not a
word in the <i>Gazette</i>. The thought brought him to his feet, though he
had to throw his arm round the stem of the palm tree to steady his
swimming head. There was a big black man lying where he had fallen, his
huge chest pocked with bullet-marks, every wound rosetted with its circle
of flies. The Arab was stretched out within a few yards of him, with two
hands clasped over the dreadful thing which had been his head. Across him
was lying Anerley's fowling-piece, one barrel discharged, the other at
half cock.</p>
<p>"Scott effendi shoot him your gun," said a voice. It was Abbas, his
English-speaking body-servant.</p>
<p>Anerley groaned at the disgrace of it. He had lost his head so completely
that he had forgotten to cock his gun; and yet he knew that it was not
fear but interest which had so absorbed him. He put his hand up to his
head and felt that a wet handkerchief was bound round his forehead.</p>
<p>"Where are the two other dervishes?"</p>
<p>"They ran away. One got shot in arm."</p>
<p>"What's happened to me?"</p>
<p>"Effendi got cut on head. Effendi catch bad man by arms, and Scott effendi
shot him. Face burn very bad."</p>
<p>Anerley became conscious suddenly that there was a pringling about his
skin and an overpowering smell of burned hair under his nostrils. He put
his hand to his moustache. It was gone. His eyebrows too? He could not
find them. His head, no doubt, was very near to the dervish's when they
were rolling upon the ground together, and this was the effect of the
explosion of his own gun. Well, he would have time to grow some more hair
before he saw Fleet Street again. But the cut, perhaps, was a more serious
matter. Was it enough to prevent him getting to the telegraph-office at
Sarras? The only way was to try and see. But there was only that poor
little Syrian grey of his. There it stood in the evening sunshine, with a
sunk head and a bent knee, as if its morning's work was still heavy upon
it. What hope was there of being able to do thirty-five miles of heavy
going upon that? It would be a strain upon the splendid ponies of his
companions—and they were the swiftest and most enduring in the
country. The most enduring? There was one creature more enduring, and that
was a real trotting camel. If he had had one he might have got to the
wires first after all, for Mortimer had said that over thirty miles they
have the better of any horse. Yes, if he had only had a real trotting
camel! And then like a flash came Mortimer's words, "It is the kind of
beast that the dervishes ride when they make their lightning raids."</p>
<p>The beasts the dervishes ride! What had these dead dervishes ridden? In an
instant he was clambering up the rocks, with Abbas protesting at his
heels. Had the two fugitives carried away all the camels, or had they been
content to save themselves? The brass gleam from a litter of empty
Remington cases caught his eye, and showed where the enemy had been
crouching. And then he could have shouted for joy, for there, in the
hollow, some little distance off, rose the high, graceful white neck and
the elegant head of such a camel as he had never set eyes upon before—a
swanlike, beautiful creature, as far from the rough, clumsy baggles as the
cart-horse is from the racer.</p>
<p>The beast was kneeling under the shelter of the rocks with its waterskin
and bag of doora slung over its shoulders, and its forelegs tethered Arab
fashion with a rope around the knees. Anerley threw his leg over the front
pommel while Abbas slipped off the cord. Forward flew Anerley towards the
creature's neck, then violently backwards, clawing madly at anything which
might save him, and then, with a jerk which nearly snapped his loins, he
was thrown forward again. But the camel was on its legs now, and the young
pressman was safely seated upon one of the fliers of the desert. It was as
gentle as it was swift, and it stood oscillating its long neck and gazing
round with its large brown eyes, whilst Anerley coiled his legs round the
peg and grasped the curved camel-stick which Abbas had handed up to him.
There were two bridle-cords, one from the nostril and one from the neck,
but he remembered that Scott had said that it was the servant's and not
the house-bell which had to be pulled, so he kept his grasp upon the
lower. Then he touched the long, vibrating neck with his stick, and in an
instant Abbas' farewell seemed to come from far behind him, and the black
rocks and yellow sand were dancing past on either side.</p>
<p>It was his first experience of a trotting camel, and at first the motion,
although irregular and abrupt, was not unpleasant. Having no stirrup or
fixed point of any kind, he could not rise to it, but he gripped as
tightly as be could with his knee, and he tried to sway backwards and
forwards as he had seen the Arabs do. It was a large, very concave
Makloofa saddle, and he was conscious that he was bouncing about on it
with as little power of adhesion as a billiard-ball upon a tea-tray. He
gripped the two sides with his hands to hold himself steady. The creature
had got into its long, swinging, stealthy trot, its sponge-like feet
making no sound upon the hard sand. Anerley leaned back with his two hands
gripping hard behind him, and he whooped the creature on. The sun had
already sunk behind the line of black volcanic peaks, which look like huge
slag-heaps at the mouth of a mine. The western sky had taken that lovely
light green and pale pink tint which makes evening beautiful upon the
Nile, and the old brown river itself, swirling down amongst the black
rocks, caught some shimmer of the colours above. The glare, the heat, and
the piping of the insects had all ceased together. In spite of his aching
head, Anerley could have cried out for pure physical joy as the swift
creature beneath him flew along with him through that cool, invigorating
air, with the virile north wind soothing his pringling face.</p>
<p>He had looked at his watch, and now he made a swift calculation of times
and distances. It was past six when he had left the camp. Over broken
ground it was impossible that he could hope to do more than seven miles an
hour—less on bad parts, more on the smooth. His recollection of the
track was that there were few smooth and many bad. He would be lucky,
then, if he reached Sarras anywhere from twelve to one. Then the messages
took a good two hours to go through, for they had to be transcribed at
Cairo. At the best he could only hope to have told his story in Fleet
Street at two or three in the morning. It was possible that he might
manage it, but the chances seemed enormously against him. About three the
morning edition would be made up, and his chance gone for ever. The one
thing clear was that only the first man at the wires would have any chance
at all, and Anerley meant to be first if hard riding could do it. So he
tapped away at the bird-like neck, and the creature's long, loose limbs
went faster and faster at every tap. Where the rocky spurs ran down to the
river, horses would have to go round, while camels might get across, so
that Anerley felt that he was always gaining upon his companions.</p>
<p>But there was a price to be paid for the feeling. He had heard of men who
had burst when on camel journeys, and he knew that the Arabs swathe their
bodies tightly in broad cloth bandages when they prepare for a long march.
It had seemed unnecessary and ridiculous when he first began to speed over
the level track, but now, when he got on the rocky paths, he understood
what it meant. Never for an instant was he at the same angle. Backwards,
forwards he swung, with a tingling jar at the end of each sway, until he
ached from his neck to his knees. It caught him across the shoulders, it
caught him down the spine, it gripped him over the loins, it marked the
lower line of his ribs with one heavy, dull throb. He clutched here and
there with his hand to try and ease the strain upon his muscles. He drew
up his knees, altered his seat, and set his teeth with a grim
determination to go through with it should it kill him. His head was
splitting, his flayed face smarting, and every joint in his body aching as
if it were dislocated. But he forgot all that when, with the rising of the
moon, he heard the clinking of horses' hoofs down upon the track by the
river, and knew that, unseen by them, he had already got well abreast of
his companions. But he was hardly halfway, and the time already eleven.</p>
<p>All day the needles had been ticking away without intermission in the
little corrugated iron hut which served as a telegraph station at Sarras.
With its bare walls and its packing-case seats, it was none the less for
the moment one of the vital spots upon the earth's surface, and the crisp,
importunate ticking might have come from the world-old clock of Destiny.
Many august people had been at the other end of those wires, and had
communed with the moist-faced military clerk. A French Premier had
demanded a pledge, and an English marquis had passed on the request to the
General in command, with a question as to how it would affect the
situation. Cipher telegrams had nearly driven the clerk out of his wits,
for of all crazy occupations the taking of a cipher message, when you are
without the key to the cipher, is the worst. Much high diplomacy had been
going on all day in the innermost chambers of European chancellories, and
the results of it had been whispered into this little corrugated-iron hut.
About two in the morning an enormous despatch had come at last to an end,
and the weary operator had opened the door, and was lighting his pipe in
the cool, fresh air, when he saw a camel plump down in the dust, and a
man, who seemed to be in the last stage of drunkenness, come rolling
towards him.</p>
<p>"What's the time?" he cried, in a voice which appeared to be the only
sober thing about him.</p>
<p>It was on the clerk's lips to say that it was time that the questioner was
in his bed, but it is not safe upon a campaign to be ironical at the
expense of khaki-clad men. He contented himself, therefore, with the bald
statement that it was after two. But no retort that he could have devised
could have had a more crushing effect. The voice turned drunken also, and
the man caught at the door-post to uphold him.</p>
<p>"Two o'clock! I'm done after all!" said he. His head was tied up in a
bloody handkerchief, his face was crimson, and he stood with his legs
crooked as if the pith had all gone out of his back. The clerk began to
realise that something out of the ordinary was in the wind.</p>
<p>"How long does it take to get a wire to London?"</p>
<p>"About two hours."</p>
<p>"And it's two now. I could not get it there before four."</p>
<p>"Before three."</p>
<p>"Four."</p>
<p>"No, three."</p>
<p>"But you said two hours."</p>
<p>"Yes, but there's more than an hour's difference in longitude."</p>
<p>"By Heaven, I'll do it yet!" cried Anerley, and staggering to a
packing-case, he began the dictation of his famous despatch.</p>
<p>And so it came about that the <i>Gazette</i> had a long column, with
headlines like an epitaph, when the sheets of the <i>Intelligence</i> and
the <i>Courier</i> were as blank as the faces of their editors. And so,
too, it happened that when two weary men, upon two foundered horses,
arrived about four in the morning at the Sarras post-office, they looked
at each other in silence and departed noiselessly, with the conviction
that there are some situations with which the English language is not
capable of dealing.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE NEW CATACOMB </h2>
<p>"Look here, Burger," said Kennedy, "I do wish that you would confide in
me."</p>
<p>The two famous students of Roman remains sat together in Kennedy's
comfortable room overlooking the Corso. The night was cold, and they had
both pulled up their chairs to the unsatisfactory Italian stove which
threw out a zone of stuffiness rather than of warmth.</p>
<p>Outside under the bright winter stars lay the modern Rome, the long,
double chain of the electric lamps, the brilliantly lighted <i>cafes</i>,
the rushing carriages, and the dense throng upon the footpaths. But
inside, in the sumptuous chamber of the rich young English archaeologist,
there was only old Rome to be seen. Cracked and time-worn friezes hung
upon the walls, grey old busts of senators and soldiers with their
fighting heads and their hard, cruel faces peered out from the corners. On
the centre table, amidst a litter of inscriptions, fragments, and
ornaments, there stood the famous reconstruction by Kennedy of the Baths
of Caracalla, which excited such interest and admiration when it was
exhibited in Berlin.</p>
<p>Amphorae hung from the ceiling, and a litter of curiosities strewed the
rich red Turkey carpet. And of them all there was not one which was not of
the most unimpeachable authenticity, and of the utmost rarity and value;
for Kennedy, though little more than thirty, had a European reputation in
this particular branch of research, and was, moreover, provided with that
long purse which either proves to be a fatal handicap to the student's
energies, or, if his mind is still true to its purpose, gives him an
enormous advantage in the race for fame. Kennedy had often been seduced by
whim and pleasure from his studies, but his mind was an incisive one,
capable of long and concentrated efforts which ended in sharp reactions of
sensuous languor. His handsome face, with its high, white forehead, its
aggressive nose, and its somewhat loose and sensuous mouth, was a fair
index of the compromise between strength and weakness in his nature.</p>
<p>Of a very different type was his companion, Julius Burger. He came of a
curious blend, a German father and an Italian mother, with the robust
qualities of the North mingling strangely with the softer graces of the
South. Blue Teutonic eyes lightened his sun-browned face, and above them
rose a square, massive forehead, with a fringe of close yellow curls lying
round it. His strong, firm jaw was clean-shaven, and his companion had
frequently remarked how much it suggested those old Roman busts which
peered out from the shadows in the corners of his chamber. Under its bluff
German strength there lay always a suggestion of Italian subtlety, but the
smile was so honest, and the eyes so frank, that one understood that this
was only an indication of his ancestry, with no actual bearing upon his
character.</p>
<p>In age and in reputation he was on the same level as his English
companion, but his life and his work had both been far more arduous.
Twelve years before he had come as a poor student to Rome, and had lived
ever since upon some small endowment for research which had been awarded
to him by the University of Bonn.</p>
<p>Painfully, slowly, and doggedly, with extraordinary tenacity and
singlemindedness, he had climbed from rung to rung of the ladder of fame,
until now he was a member of the Berlin Academy, and there was every
reason to believe that he would shortly be promoted to the Chair of the
greatest of German Universities. But the singleness of purpose which had
brought him to the same high level as the rich and brilliant Englishman,
had caused him in everything outside their work to stand infinitely below
him. He had never found a pause in his studies in which to cultivate the
social graces. It was only when he spoke of his own subject that his face
was filled with life and soul. At other times he was silent and
embarrassed, too conscious of his own limitations in larger subjects, and
impatient of that small talk which is the conventional refuge of those who
have no thoughts to express.</p>
<p>And yet for some years there had been an acquaintanceship which appeared
to be slowly ripening into a friendship between these two very different
rivals. The base and origin of this lay in the fact that in their own
studies each was the only one of the younger men who had knowledge and
enthusiasm enough to properly appreciate the other. Their common interests
and pursuits had brought them together, and each had been attracted by the
other's knowledge. And then gradually something had been added to this.
Kennedy had been amused by the frankness and simplicity of his rival,
while Burger in turn had been fascinated by the brilliancy and vivacity
which had made Kennedy such a favourite in Roman society. I say "had,"
because just at the moment the young Englishman was somewhat under a
cloud.</p>
<p>A love affair, the details of which had never quite come out, had
indicated a heartlessness and callousness upon his part which shocked many
of his friends. But in the bachelor circles of students and artists in
which he preferred to move there is no very rigid code of honour in such
matters, and though a head might be shaken or a pair of shoulders shrugged
over the flight of two and the return of one, the general sentiment was
probably one of curiosity and perhaps of envy rather than of reprobation.</p>
<p>"Look here, Burger," said Kennedy, looking hard at the placid face of his
companion, "I do wish that you would confide in me."</p>
<p>As he spoke he waved his hand in the direction of a rug which lay upon the
floor.</p>
<p>On the rug stood a long, shallow fruit-basket of the light wicker-work
which is used in the Campagna, and this was heaped with a litter of
objects, inscribed tiles, broken inscriptions, cracked mosaics, torn
papyri, rusty metal ornaments, which to the uninitiated might have seemed
to have come straight from a dustman's bin, but which a specialist would
have speedily recognized as unique of their kind.</p>
<p>The pile of odds and ends in the flat wicker-work basket supplied exactly
one of those missing links of social development which are of such
interest to the student. It was the German who had brought them in, and
the Englishman's eyes were hungry as he looked at them.</p>
<p>"I won't interfere with your treasure-trove, but I should very much like
to hear about it," he continued, while Burger very deliberately lit a
cigar. "It is evidently a discovery of the first importance. These
inscriptions will make a sensation throughout Europe."</p>
<p>"For every one here there are a million there!" said the German. "There
are so many that a dozen savants might spend a lifetime over them, and
build up a reputation as solid as the Castle of St. Angelo."</p>
<p>Kennedy was thinking with his fine forehead wrinkled and his fingers
playing with his long, fair moustache.</p>
<p>"You have given yourself away, Burger!" said he at last. "Your words can
only apply to one thing. You have discovered a new catacomb."</p>
<p>"I had no doubt that you had already come to that conclusion from an
examination of these objects."</p>
<p>"Well, they certainly appeared to indicate it, but your last remarks make
it certain. There is no place except a catacomb which could contain so
vast a store of relics as you describe."</p>
<p>"Quite so. There is no mystery about that. I <i>have</i> discovered a new
catacomb."</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"Ah, that is my secret, my dear Kennedy! Suffice it that it is so situated
that there is not one chance in a million of anyone else coming upon it.
Its date is different from that of any known catacomb, and it has been
reserved for the burial of the highest Christians, so that the remains and
the relics are quite different from anything which has ever been seen
before. If I was not aware of your knowledge and of your energy, my
friend, I would not hesitate, under the pledge of secrecy, to tell you
everything about it. But as it is I think that I must certainly prepare my
own report of the matter before I expose myself to such formidable
competition."</p>
<p>Kennedy loved his subject with a love which was almost a mania—a
love which held him true to it, amidst all the distractions which come to
a wealthy and dissipated young man. He had ambition, but his ambition was
secondary to his mere abstract joy and interest in everything which
concerned the old life and history of the city. He yearned to see this new
underworld which his companion had discovered.</p>
<p>"Look here, Burger," said he, earnestly, "I assure you that you can trust
me most implicitly in the matter. Nothing would induce me to put pen to
paper about anything which I see until I have your express permission. I
quite understand your feeling, and I think it is most natural, but you
have really nothing whatever to fear from me. On the other hand, if you
don't tell me I shall make a systematic search, and I shall most certainly
discover it. In that case, of course, I should make what use I liked of
it, since I should be under no obligation to you."</p>
<p>Burger smiled thoughtfully over his cigar.</p>
<p>"I have noticed, friend Kennedy," said he, "that when I want information
over any point you are not always so ready to supply it."</p>
<p>"When did you ever ask me anything that I did not tell you? You remember,
for example, my giving you the material for your paper about the temple of
the Vestals."</p>
<p>"Ah, well, that was not a matter of much importance. If I were to question
you upon some intimate thing, would you give me an answer, I wonder! This
new catacomb is a very intimate thing to me, and I should certainly expect
some sign of confidence in return."</p>
<p>"What you are driving at I cannot imagine," said the Englishman, "but if
you mean that you will answer my question about the catacomb if I answer
any question which you may put to me, I can assure you that I will
certainly do so."</p>
<p>"Well, then," said Burger, leaning luxuriously back in his settee, and
puffing a blue tree of cigar-smoke into the air, "tell me all about your
relations with Miss Mary Saunderson."</p>
<p>Kennedy sprang up in his chair and glared angrily at his impassive
companion.</p>
<p>"What the devil do you mean?" he cried. "What sort of a question is this?
You may mean it as a joke, but you never made a worse one."</p>
<p>"No, I don't mean it as a joke," said Burger, simply. "I am really rather
interested in the details of the matter. I don't know much about the world
and women and social life and that sort of thing, and such an incident has
the fascination of the unknown for me. I know you, and I knew her by sight—I
had even spoken to her once or twice. I should very much like to hear from
your own lips exactly what it was which occurred between you."</p>
<p>"I won't tell you a word."</p>
<p>"That's all right. It was only my whim to see if you would give up a
secret as easily as you expected me to give up my secret of the new
catacomb. You wouldn't, and I didn't expect you to. But why should you
expect otherwise of me? There's St. John's clock striking ten. It is quite
time that I was going home."</p>
<p>"No, wait a bit, Burger," said Kennedy; "this is really a ridiculous
caprice of yours to wish to know about an old love affair which has burned
out months ago. You know we look upon a man who kisses and tells as the
greatest coward and villain possible."</p>
<p>"Certainly," said the German, gathering up his basket of curiosities,
"when he tells anything about a girl which is previously unknown, he must
be so. But in this case, as you must be aware, it was a public matter
which was the common talk of Rome, so that you are not really doing Miss
Mary Saunderson any injury by discussing her case with me. But still, I
respect your scruples; and so good night!"</p>
<p>"Wait a bit, Burger," said Kennedy, laying his hand upon the other's arm;
"I am very keen upon this catacomb business, and I can't let it drop quite
so easily. Would you mind asking me something else in return—something
not quite so eccentric this time?"</p>
<p>"No, no; you have refused, and there is an end of it," said Burger, with
his basket on his arm. "No doubt you are quite right not to answer, and no
doubt I am quite right also—and so again, my dear Kennedy, good
night!"</p>
<p>The Englishman watched Burger cross the room, and he had his hand on the
handle of the door before his host sprang up with the air of a man who is
making the best of that which cannot be helped. "Hold on, old fellow,"
said he. "I think you are behaving in a most ridiculous fashion, but
still, if this is your condition, I suppose that I must submit to it. I
hate saying anything about a girl, but, as you say, it is all over Rome,
and I don't suppose I can tell you anything which you do not know already.
What was it you wanted to know?"</p>
<p>The German came back to the stove, and, laying down his basket, he sank
into his chair once more. "May I have another cigar?" said he. "Thank you
very much! I never smoke when I work, but I enjoy a chat much more when I
am under the influence of tobacco. Now, as regards this young lady, with
whom you had this little adventure. What in the world has become of her?"</p>
<p>"She is at home with her own people."</p>
<p>"Oh, really—in England?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"What part of England—London?"</p>
<p>"No, Twickenham."</p>
<p>"You must excuse my curiosity, my dear Kennedy, and you must put it down
to my ignorance of the world. No doubt it is quite a simple thing to
persuade a young lady to go off with you for three weeks or so, and then
to hand her over to her own family at—what did you call the place?"</p>
<p>"Twickenham."</p>
<p>"Quite so—at Twickenham. But it is something so entirely outside my
own experience that I cannot even imagine how you set about it. For
example, if you had loved this girl your love could hardly disappear in
three weeks, so I presume that you could not have loved her at all. But if
you did not love her why should you make this great scandal which has
damaged you and ruined her?"</p>
<p>Kennedy looked moodily into the red eye of the stove. "That's a logical
way of looking at it, certainly," said he. "Love is a big word, and it
represents a good many different shades of feeling. I liked her, and—
well, you say you've seen her—you know how charming she can look.
But still I am willing to admit, looking back, that I could never have
really loved her."</p>
<p>"Then, my dear Kennedy, why did you do it?"</p>
<p>"The adventure of the thing had a great deal to do with it."</p>
<p>"What! You are so fond of adventures!"</p>
<p>"Where would the variety of life be without them? It was for an adventure
that I first began to pay my attentions to her. I've chased a good deal of
game in my time, but there's no chase like that of a pretty woman. There
was the piquant difficulty of it also, for, as she was the companion of
Lady Emily Rood it was almost impossible to see her alone. On the top of
all the other obstacles which attracted me, I learned from her own lips
very early in the proceedings that she was engaged."</p>
<p>"Mein Gott! To whom?"</p>
<p>"She mentioned no names."</p>
<p>"I do not think that anyone knows that. So that made the adventure more
alluring, did it?"</p>
<p>"Well, it did certainly give a spice to it. Don't you think so?"</p>
<p>"I tell you that I am very ignorant about these things."</p>
<p>"My dear fellow, you can remember that the apple you stole from your
neighbour's tree was always sweeter than that which fell from your own.
And then I found that she cared for me."</p>
<p>"What—at once?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, it took about three months of sapping and mining. But at last I
won her over. She understood that my judicial separation from my wife made
it impossible for me to do the right thing by her—but she came all
the same, and we had a delightful time, as long as it lasted."</p>
<p>"But how about the other man?"</p>
<p>Kennedy shrugged his shoulders. "I suppose it is the survival of the
fittest," said he. "If he had been the better man she would not have
deserted him. Let's drop the subject, for I have had enough of it!"</p>
<p>"Only one other thing. How did you get rid of her in three weeks?"</p>
<p>"Well, we had both cooled down a bit, you understand. She absolutely
refused, under any circumstances, to come back to face the people she had
known in Rome. Now, of course, Rome is necessary to me, and I was already
pining to be back at my work—so there was one obvious cause of
separation. Then, again, her old father turned up at the hotel in London,
and there was a scene, and the whole thing became so unpleasant that
really—though I missed her dreadfully at first—I was very glad
to slip out of it. Now, I rely upon you not to repeat anything of what I
have said."</p>
<p>"My dear Kennedy, I should not dream of repeating it. But all that you say
interests me very much, for it gives me an insight into your way of
looking at things, which is entirely different from mine, for I have seen
so little of life. And now you want to know about my new catacomb. There's
no use my trying to describe it, for you would never find it by that.
There is only one thing, and that is for me to take you there."</p>
<p>"That would be splendid."</p>
<p>"When would you like to come?"</p>
<p>"The sooner the better. I am all impatience to see it."</p>
<p>"Well, it is a beautiful night—though a trifle cold. Suppose we
start in an hour. We must be very careful to keep the matter to ourselves.
If anyone saw us hunting in couples they would suspect that there was
something going on."</p>
<p>"We can't be too cautious," said Kennedy. "Is it far?"</p>
<p>"Some miles."</p>
<p>"Not too far to walk?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, we could walk there easily."</p>
<p>"We had better do so, then. A cabman's suspicions would be aroused if he
dropped us both at some lonely spot in the dead of the night."</p>
<p>"Quite so. I think it would be best for us to meet at the Gate of the
Appian Way at midnight. I must go back to my lodgings for the matches and
candles and things."</p>
<p>"All right, Burger! I think it is very kind of you to let me into this
secret, and I promise you that I will write nothing about it until you
have published your report. Good-bye for the present! You will find me at
the Gate at twelve."</p>
<p>The cold, clear air was filled with the musical chimes from that city of
clocks as Burger, wrapped in an Italian overcoat, with a lantern hanging
from his hand, walked up to the rendezvous. Kennedy stepped out of the
shadow to meet him.</p>
<p>"You are ardent in work as well as in love!" said the German, laughing.</p>
<p>"Yes; I have been waiting here for nearly half an hour."</p>
<p>"I hope you left no clue as to where we were going."</p>
<p>"Not such a fool! By Jove, I am chilled to the bone! Come on, Burger, let
us warm ourselves by a spurt of hard walking."</p>
<p>Their footsteps sounded loud and crisp upon the rough stone paving of the
disappointing road which is all that is left of the most famous highway of
the world. A peasant or two going home from the wine-shop, and a few carts
of country produce coming up to Rome, were the only things which they met.
They swung along, with the huge tombs looming up through the darkness upon
each side of them, until they had come as far as the Catacombs of St.
Calixtus, and saw against a rising moon the great circular bastion of
Cecilia Metella in front of them. Then Burger stopped with his hand to his
side. "Your legs are longer than mine, and you are more accustomed to
walking," said he, laughing. "I think that the place where we turn off is
somewhere here. Yes, this is it, round the corner of the trattoria. Now,
it is a very narrow path, so perhaps I had better go in front, and you can
follow." He had lit his lantern, and by its light they were enabled to
follow a narrow and devious track which wound across the marshes of the
Campagna. The great Aqueduct of old Rome lay like a monstrous caterpillar
across the moonlit landscape, and their road led them under one of its
huge arches, and past the circle of crumbling bricks which marks the old
arena. At last Burger stopped at a solitary wooden cowhouse, and he drew a
key from his pocket.</p>
<p>"Surely your catacomb is not inside a house!" cried Kennedy.</p>
<p>"The entrance to it is. That is just the safeguard which we have against
anyone else discovering it."</p>
<p>"Does the proprietor know of it?"</p>
<p>"Not he. He had found one or two objects which made me almost certain that
his house was built on the entrance to such a place. So I rented it from
him, and did my excavations for myself. Come in, and shut the door behind
you."</p>
<p>It was a long, empty building, with the mangers of the cows along one
wall. Burger put his lantern down on the ground, and shaded its light in
all directions save one by draping his overcoat round it. "It might excite
remark if anyone saw a light in this lonely place," said he. "Just help me
to move this boarding." The flooring was loose in the corner, and plank by
plank the two savants raised it and leaned it against the wall. Below
there was a square aperture and a stair of old stone steps which led away
down into the bowels of the earth.</p>
<p>"Be careful!" cried Burger, as Kennedy, in his impatience, hurried down
them. "It is a perfect rabbits'-warren below, and if you were once to lose
your way there, the chances would be a hundred to one against your ever
coming out again. Wait until I bring the light."</p>
<p>"How do you find your own way if it is so complicated?"</p>
<p>"I had some very narrow escapes at first, but I have gradually learned to
go about. There is a certain system to it, but it is one which a lost man,
if he were in the dark, could not possibly find out. Even now I always
spin out a ball of string behind me when I am going far into the catacomb.
You can see for yourself that it is difficult, but every one of these
passages divides and subdivides a dozen times before you go a hundred
yards." They had descended some twenty feet from the level of the byre,
and they were standing now in a square chamber cut out of the soft tufa.
The lantern cast a flickering light, bright below and dim above, over the
cracked brown walls. In every direction were the black openings of
passages which radiated from this common centre.</p>
<p>"I want you to follow me closely, my friend," said Burger. "Do not loiter
to look at anything upon the way, for the place to which I will take you
contains all that you can see, and more. It will save time for us to go
there direct." He led the way down one of the corridors, and the
Englishman followed closely at his heels. Every now and then the passage
bifurcated, but Burger was evidently following some secret marks of his
own, for he neither stopped nor hesitated. Everywhere along the walls,
packed like the berths upon an emigrant ship, lay the Christians of old
Rome. The yellow light flickered over the shrivelled features of the
mummies, and gleamed upon rounded skulls and long, white arm-bones crossed
over fleshless chests. And everywhere as he passed Kennedy looked with
wistful eyes upon inscriptions, funeral vessels, pictures, vestments,
utensils, all lying as pious hands had placed them so many centuries ago.
It was apparent to him, even in those hurried, passing glances, that this
was the earliest and finest of the catacombs, containing such a storehouse
of Roman remains as had never before come at one time under the
observation of the student. "What would happen if the light went out?" he
asked, as they hurried on.</p>
<p>"I have a spare candle and a box of matches in my pocket. By the way,
Kennedy, have you any matches?"</p>
<p>"No; you had better give me some."</p>
<p>"Oh, that is all right. There is no chance of our separating."</p>
<p>"How far are we going? It seems to me that we have walked at least a
quarter of a mile."</p>
<p>"More than that, I think. There is really no limit to the tombs—at
least, I have never been able to find any. This is a very difficult place,
so I think that I will use our ball of string." He fastened one end of it
to a projecting stone and he carried the coil in the breast of his coat,
paying it out as he advanced. Kennedy saw that it was no unnecessary
precaution, for the passages had become more complexed and tortuous than
ever, with a perfect network of intersecting corridors. But these all
ended in one large circular hall with a square pedestal of tufa topped
with a slab of marble at one end of it. "By Jove!" cried Kennedy in an
ecstasy, as Burger swung his lantern over the marble. "It is a Christian
altar—probably the first one in existence. Here is the little
consecration cross cut upon the corner of it. No doubt this circular space
was used as a church."</p>
<p>"Precisely," said Burger. "If I had more time I should like to show you
all the bodies which are buried in these niches upon the walls, for they
are the early popes and bishops of the Church, with their mitres, their
croziers, and full canonicals. Go over to that one and look at it!"
Kennedy went across, and stared at the ghastly head which lay loosely on
the shredded and mouldering mitre.</p>
<p>"This is most interesting," said he, and his voice seemed to boom against
the concave vault. "As far as my experience goes, it is unique. Bring the
lantern over, Burger, for I want to see them all." But the German had
strolled away, and was standing in the middle of a yellow circle of light
at the other side of the hall.</p>
<p>"Do you know how many wrong turnings there are between this and the
stairs?" he asked. "There are over two thousand. No doubt it was one of
the means of protection which the Christians adopted. The odds are two
thousand to one against a man getting out, even if he had a light; but if
he were in the dark it would, of course, be far more difficult."</p>
<p>"So I should think."</p>
<p>"And the darkness is something dreadful. I tried it once for an
experiment. Let us try it again!" He stooped to the lantern, and in an
instant it was as if an invisible hand was squeezed tightly over each of
Kennedy's eyes. Never had he known what such darkness was. It seemed to
press upon him and to smother him. It was a solid obstacle against which
the body shrank from advancing. He put his hands out to push it back from
him. "That will do, Burger," said he, "let's have the light again."</p>
<p>But his companion began to laugh, and in that circular room the sound
seemed to come from every side at once. "You seem uneasy, friend Kennedy,"
said he.</p>
<p>"Go on, man, light the candle!" said Kennedy, impatiently.</p>
<p>"It's very strange, Kennedy, but I could not in the least tell by the
sound in which direction you stand. Could you tell where I am?"</p>
<p>"No; you seem to be on every side of me."</p>
<p>"If it were not for this string which I hold in my hand I should not have
a notion which way to go."</p>
<p>"I dare say not. Strike a light, man, and have an end of this nonsense."</p>
<p>"Well, Kennedy, there are two things which I understand that you are very
fond of. The one is adventure, and the other is an obstacle to surmount.
The adventure must be the finding of your way out of this catacomb. The
obstacle will be the darkness and the two thousand wrong turns which make
the way a little difficult to find. But you need not hurry, for you have
plenty of time, and when you halt for a rest now and then, I should like
you just to think of Miss Mary Saunderson, and whether you treated her
quite fairly."</p>
<p>"You devil, what do you mean?" roared Kennedy. He was running about in
little circles and clasping at the solid blackness with both hands.</p>
<p>"Good-bye," said the mocking voice, and it was already at some distance.
"I really do not think, Kennedy, even by your own showing that you did the
right thing by that girl. There was only one little thing which you
appeared not to know, and I can supply it. Miss Saunderson was engaged to
a poor, ungainly devil of a student, and his name was Julius Burger."
There was a rustle somewhere—the vague sound of a foot striking a
stone—and then there fell silence upon that old Christian church—a
stagnant heavy silence which closed round Kennedy and shut him in like
water round a drowning man.</p>
<p>Some two months afterwards the following paragraph made the round of the
European Press:—</p>
<p>One of the most interesting discoveries of recent years is<br/>
that of the new catacomb in Rome, which lies some distance to the<br/>
east of the well-known vaults of St. Calixtus. The finding of this<br/>
important burial-place, which is exceedingly rich in most<br/>
interesting early Christian remains, is due to the energy and<br/>
sagacity of Dr. Julius Burger, the young German specialist, who is<br/>
rapidly taking the first place as an authority upon ancient Rome.<br/>
Although the first to publish his discovery, it appears that a less<br/>
fortunate adventurer had anticipated Dr. Burger. Some months ago<br/>
Mr. Kennedy, the well-known English student, disappeared suddenly<br/>
from his rooms in the "Corso", and it was conjectured that his<br/>
association with a recent scandal had driven him to leave Rome. It<br/>
appears now that he had in reality fallen a victim to that fervid<br/>
love of archaeology which had raised him to a distinguished place<br/>
among living scholars. His body was discovered in the heart of the<br/>
new catacomb, and it was evident from the condition of his feet and<br/>
boots that he had tramped for days through the tortuous corridors<br/>
which make these subterranean tombs so dangerous to explorers. The<br/>
deceased gentleman had, with inexplicable rashness, made his way<br/>
into this labyrinth without, as far as can be discovered, taking<br/>
with him either candles or matches, so that his sad fate was the<br/>
natural result of his own temerity. What makes the matter more<br/>
painful is that Dr. Julius Burger was an intimate friend of the<br/>
deceased. His joy at the extraordinary find which he has been so<br/>
fortunate as to make has been greatly marred by the terrible fate<br/>
of his comrade and fellow-worker.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE DEBUT OF BIMBASHI JOYCE </h2>
<p>It was in the days when the tide of Mahdism, which had swept in such a
flood from the great Lakes and Darfur to the confines of Egypt, had at
last come to its full, and even begun, as some hoped, to show signs of a
turn. At its outset it had been terrible. It had engulfed Hicks's army,
swept over Gordon and Khartoum, rolled behind the British forces as they
retired down the river, and finally cast up a spray of raiding parties as
far north as Assouan. Then it found other channels to east and west, to
Central Africa and to Abyssinia, and retired a little on the side of
Egypt. For ten years there ensued a lull, during which the frontier
garrisons looked out upon those distant blue hills of Dongola. Behind the
violet mists which draped them lay a land of blood and horror. From time
to time some adventurer went south towards those haze-girt mountains,
tempted by stories of gum and ivory, but none ever returned. Once a
mutilated Egyptian and once a Greek woman, mad with thirst and fear, made
their way to the lines. They were the only exports of that country of
darkness. Sometimes the sunset would turn those distant mists into a bank
of crimson, and the dark mountains would rise from that sinister reek like
islands in a sea of blood. It seemed a grim symbol in the southern heaven
when seen from the fort-capped hills by Wady Halfa. Ten years of lust in
Khartoum, ten years of silent work in Cairo, and then all was ready, and
it was time for civilisation to take a trip south once more, travelling as
her wont is in an armoured train. Everything was ready, down to the last
pack-saddle of the last camel, and yet no one suspected it, for an
unconstitutional Government has its advantage. A great administrator had
argued, and managed, and cajoled; a great soldier had organised and
planned, and made piastres do the work of pounds. And then one night these
two master spirits met and clasped hands, and the soldier vanished away
upon some business of his own. And just at that very time, Bimbashi Hilary
Joyce, seconded from the Royal Mallow Fusiliers, and temporarily attached
to the Ninth Soudanese, made his first appearance in Cairo.</p>
<p>Napoleon had said, and Hilary Joyce had noted, that great reputations are
only to be made in the East. Here he was in the East with four tin cases
of baggage, a Wilkinson sword, a Bond's slug-throwing pistol, and a copy
of "Green's Introduction to the Study of Arabic." With such a start, and
the blood of youth running hot in his veins, everything seemed easy. He
was a little frightened of the general; he had heard stories of his
sternness to young officers, but with tact and suavity he hoped for the
best. So, leaving his effects at "Shepherd's Hotel," he reported himself
at headquarters. It was not the general, but the head of the Intelligence
Department who received him, the chief being still absent upon that
business which had called him. Hilary Joyce found himself in the presence
of a short, thick-set officer, with a gentle voice and a placid expression
which covered a remarkably acute and energetic spirit. With that quiet
smile and guileless manner he had undercut and outwitted the most cunning
of Orientals. He stood, a cigarette between his fingers, looking at the
newcomer. "I heard that you had come. Sorry the chief isn't here to see
you. Gone up to the frontier, you know."</p>
<p>"My regiment is at Wady Halfa. I suppose, sir, that I should report myself
there at once?"</p>
<p>"No; I was to give you your orders." He led the way to a map upon the
wall, and pointed with the end of his cigarette. "You see this place. It's
the Oasis of Kurkur—a little quiet, I am afraid, but excellent air.
You are to get out there as quick as possible. You'll find a company of
the Ninth, and half a squadron of cavalry. You will be in command."</p>
<p>Hilary Joyce looked at the name, printed at the intersection of two black
lines without another dot upon the map for several inches around it. "A
village, sir?"</p>
<p>"No, a well. Not very good water, I'm afraid, but you soon get accustomed
to natron. It's an important post, as being at the junction of two caravan
routes. All routes are closed now, of course, but still you never know who
<i>might</i> come along them."</p>
<p>"We are there, I presume, to prevent raiding?"</p>
<p>"Well, between you and me, there's really nothing to raid. You are there
to intercept messengers. They must call at the wells. Of course you have
only just come out, but you probably understand already enough about the
conditions of this country to know that there is a great deal of
disaffection about, and that the Khalifa is likely to try and keep in
touch with his adherents. Then, again, Senoussi lives up that way"—he
waved his cigarette to the westward—"the Khalifa might send a
message to him along that route. Anyhow, your duty is to arrest everyone
coming along, and get some account of him before you let him go. You don't
talk Arabic, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"I am learning, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, well, you'll have time enough for study there. And you'll have a
native officer, Ali something or other, who speaks English, and can
interpret for you. Well, good-bye—I'll tell the chief that you
reported yourself. Get on to your post now as quickly as you can."</p>
<p>Railway to Baliani, the post-boat to Assouan, and then two days on a camel
in the Libyan desert, with an Ababdeh guide, and three baggage-camels to
tie one down to their own exasperating pace. However, even two and a half
miles an hour mount up in time, and at last, on the third evening, from
the blackened slag-heap of a hill which is called the Jebel Kurkur, Hilary
Joyce looked down upon a distant clump of palms, and thought that this
cool patch of green in the midst of the merciless blacks and yellows was
the fairest colour effect that he had ever seen. An hour later he had
ridden into the little camp, the guard had turned out to salute him, his
native subordinate had greeted him in excellent English, and he had fairly
entered into his own. It was not an exhilarating place for a lengthy
residence. There was one large, bowl-shaped, grassy depression sloping
down to the three pits of brown and brackish water. There was the grove of
palm trees also, beautiful to look upon, but exasperating in view of the
fact that Nature has provided her least shady trees on the very spot where
shade is needed most. A single wide-spread acacia did something to restore
the balance. Here Hilary Joyce slumbered in the heat, and in the cool he
inspected his square-shouldered, spindle-shanked Soudanese, with their
cheery black faces and their funny little pork-pie forage caps. Joyce was
a martinet at drill, and the blacks loved being drilled, so the Bimbashi
was soon popular among them. But one day was exactly like another. The
weather, the view, the employment, the food—everything was the same.
At the end of three weeks he felt that he had been there for interminable
years. And then at last there came something to break the monotony.</p>
<p>One evening, as the sun was sinking, Hilary Joyce rode slowly down the old
caravan road. It had a fascination for him, this narrow track, winding
among the boulders and curving up the nullahs, for he remembered how in
the map it had gone on and on, stretching away into the unknown heart of
Africa. The countless pads of innumerable camels through many centuries
had beaten it smooth, so that now, unused and deserted, it still wound
away, the strangest of roads, a foot broad, and perhaps two thousand miles
in length. Joyce wondered as he rode how long it was since any traveller
had journeyed up it from the south, and then he raised his eyes, and there
was a man coming along the path. For an instant Joyce thought that it
might be one of his own men, but a second glance assured him that this
could not be so. The stranger was dressed in the flowing robes of an Arab,
and not in the close-fitting khaki of a soldier. He was very tall, and a
high turban made him seem gigantic. He strode swiftly along, with head
erect, and the bearing of a man who knows no fear.</p>
<p>Who could he be, this formidable giant coming out of the unknown? The
precursor possibly of a horde of savage spearmen. And where could he have
walked from? The nearest well was a long hundred miles down the track. At
any rate the frontier post of Kurkur could not afford to receive casual
visitors. Hilary Joyce whisked round his horse, galloped into camp, and
gave the alarm. Then, with twenty horsemen at his back, he rode out again
to reconnoitre. The man was still coming on in spite of these hostile
preparations. For an instant he hesitated when first he saw the cavalry,
but escape was out of the question, and he advanced with the air of one
who makes the best of a bad job. He made no resistance, and said nothing
when the hands of two troopers clutched at his shoulders, but walked
quietly between their horses into camp. Shortly afterwards the patrol came
in again. There were no signs of any dervishes. The man was alone. A
splendid trotting camel had been found lying dead a little way down the
track. The mystery of the stranger's arrival was explained. But why, and
whence, and whither?—these were questions for which a zealous
officer must find an answer.</p>
<p>Hilary Joyce was disappointed that there were no dervishes. It would have
been a great start for him in the Egyptian army had he fought a little
action on his own account. But even as it was, he had a rare chance of
impressing the authorities. He would love to show his capacity to the head
of the Intelligence, and even more to that grim Chief who never forgot
what was smart, or forgave what was slack. The prisoner's dress and
bearing showed that he was of importance. Mean men do not ride pure-bred
trotting camels. Joyce sponged his head with cold water, drank a cup of
strong coffee, put on an imposing official tarboosh instead of his
sun-helmet, and formed himself into a court of inquiry and judgment under
the acacia tree. He would have liked his people to have seen him now, with
his two black orderlies in waiting, and his Egyptian native officer at his
side. He sat behind a camp-table, and the prisoner, strongly guarded, was
led up to him. The man was a handsome fellow, with bold grey eyes and a
long black beard.</p>
<p>"Why!" cried Joyce, "the rascal is making faces at me." A curious
contraction had passed over the man's features, but so swiftly that it
might have been a nervous twitch. He was now a model of Oriental gravity.
"Ask him who he is, and what he wants?" The native officer did so, but the
stranger made no reply, save that the same sharp spasm passed once more
over his face. "Well, I'm blessed!" cried Hilary Joyce. "Of all the
impudent scoundrels! He keeps on winking at me. Who are you, you rascal?
Give an account of yourself! D'ye hear?" But the tall Arab was as
impervious to English as to Arabic. The Egyptian tried again and again.
The prisoner looked at Joyce with his inscrutable eyes, and occasionally
twitched his face at him, but never opened his mouth. The Bimbashi
scratched his head in bewilderment.</p>
<p>"Look here, Mahomet Ali, we've got to get some sense out of this fellow.
You say there are no papers on him?"</p>
<p>"No, sir; we found no papers."</p>
<p>"No clue of any kind?"</p>
<p>"He has come far, sir. A trotting camel does not die easily. He has come
from Dongola, at least."</p>
<p>"Well, we must get him to talk."</p>
<p>"It is possible that he is deaf and dumb."</p>
<p>"Not he. I never saw a man look more all there in my life."</p>
<p>"You might send him across to Assouan."</p>
<p>"And give someone else the credit? No, thank you. This is my bird. But how
are we going to get him to find his tongue?"</p>
<p>The Egyptian's dark eyes skirted the encampment and rested on the cook's
fire. "Perhaps," said he, "if the Bimbashi thought fit—" He looked
at the prisoner and then at the burning wood.</p>
<p>"No, no; it wouldn't do. No, by Jove, that's going too far."</p>
<p>"A very little might do it."</p>
<p>"No, no. It's all very well here, but it would sound just awful if ever it
got as far as Fleet Street. But, I say," he whispered, "we might frighten
him a bit. There's no harm in that."</p>
<p>"No, sir."</p>
<p>"Tell them to undo the man's galabeeah. Order them to put a horseshoe in
the fire and make it red-hot." The prisoner watched the proceedings with
an air which had more of amusement than of uneasiness. He never winced as
the black sergeant approached with the glowing shoe held upon two
bayonets.</p>
<p>"Will you speak now?" asked the Bimbashi, savagely. The prisoner smiled
gently and stroked his beard.</p>
<p>"Oh, chuck the infernal thing away!" cried Joyce, jumping up in a passion.
"There's no use trying to bluff the fellow. He knows we won't do it. But I
<i>can</i> and I <i>will</i> flog him, and you can tell him from me that
if he hasn't found his tongue by to-morrow morning I'll take the skin off
his back as sure as my name's Joyce. Have you said all that?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, you can sleep upon it, you beauty, and a good night's rest may it
give you!" He adjourned the Court, and the prisoner, as imperturbable as
ever, was led away by the guard to his supper of rice and water. Hilary
Joyce was a kind-hearted man, and his own sleep was considerably disturbed
by the prospect of the punishment which he must inflict next day. He had
hopes that the mere sight of the koorbash and the thongs might prevail
over his prisoner's obstinacy. And then, again, he thought how shocking it
would be if the man proved to be really dumb after all. The possibility
shook him so that he had almost determined by daybreak that he would send
the stranger on unhurt to Assouan. And yet what a tame conclusion it would
be to the incident! He lay upon his angareeb still debating it when the
question suddenly and effectively settled itself. Ali Mahomet rushed into
his tent.</p>
<p>"Sir," he cried, "the prisoner is gone!"</p>
<p>"Gone!"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, and your own best riding camel as well. There is a slit cut in
the tent, and he got away unseen in the early morning."</p>
<p>The Bimbashi acted with all energy. Cavalry rode along every track; scouts
examined the soft sand of the wadys for signs of the fugitive, but no
trace was discovered. The man had utterly disappeared. With a heavy heart,
Hilary Joyce wrote an official report of the matter and forwarded it to
Assouan. Five days later there came a curt order from the chief that he
should report himself there. He feared the worst from the stern soldier,
who spared others as little as he spared himself. And his worst
forebodings were realised. Travel-stained and weary, he reported himself
one night at the general's quarters. Behind a table piled with papers and
strewn with maps the famous soldier and his Chief of Intelligence were
deep in plans and figures. Their greeting was a cold one.</p>
<p>"I understand, Captain Joyce," said the general, "that you have allowed a
very important prisoner to slip through your fingers."</p>
<p>"I am sorry, sir."</p>
<p>"No doubt. But that will not mend matters. Did you ascertain anything
about him before you lost him?"</p>
<p>"No, sir."</p>
<p>"How was that?"</p>
<p>"I could get nothing out of him, sir."</p>
<p>"Did you try?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; I did what I could."</p>
<p>"What did you do?"</p>
<p>"Well, sir, I threatened to use physical force."</p>
<p>"What did he say?"</p>
<p>"He said nothing."</p>
<p>"What was he like?"</p>
<p>"A tall man, sir. Rather a desperate character, I should think."</p>
<p>"Any way by which we could identify him?"</p>
<p>"A long black beard, sir. Grey eyes. And a nervous way of twitching his
face."</p>
<p>"Well, Captain Joyce," said the general, in his stern, inflexible voice,
"I cannot congratulate you upon your first exploit in the Egyptian army.
You are aware that every English officer in this force is a picked man. I
have the whole British army from which to draw. It is necessary,
therefore, that I should insist upon the very highest efficiency. It would
be unfair upon the others to pass over any obvious want of zeal or
intelligence. You are seconded from the Royal Mallows, I understand?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"I have no doubt that your colonel will be glad to see you fulfilling your
regimental duties again." Hilary Joyce's heart was too heavy for words. He
was silent. "I will let you know my final decision to-morrow morning."
Joyce saluted and turned upon his heel."</p>
<p>"You can sleep upon that, you beauty, and a good night's rest may it give
you!"</p>
<p>Joyce turned in bewilderment. Where had those words been used before? Who
was it who had used them? The general was standing erect. Both he and the
Chief of the Intelligence were laughing. Joyce stared at the tall figure,
the erect bearing, the inscrutable grey eyes.</p>
<p>"Good Lord!" he gasped.</p>
<p>"Well, well, Captain Joyce, we are quits!" said the general, holding out
his hand. "You gave me a bad ten minutes with that infernal red-hot
horseshoe of yours. I've done as much for you. I don't think we can spare
you for the Royal Mallows just yet awhile."</p>
<p>"But, sir; but—!"</p>
<p>"The fewer questions the better, perhaps. But of course it must seem
rather amazing. I had a little private business with the Kabbabish. It
must be done in person. I did it, and came to your post in my return. I
kept on winking at you as a sign that I wanted a word with you alone."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes. I begin to understand."</p>
<p>"I couldn't give it away before all those blacks, or where should I have
been the next time I used my false beard and Arab dress? You put me in a
very awkward position. But at last I had a word alone with your Egyptian
officer, who managed my escape all right."</p>
<p>"He! Mahomet Ali!"</p>
<p>"I ordered him to say nothing. I had a score to settle with you. But we
dine at eight, Captain Joyce. We live plainly here, but I think I can do
you a little better than you did me at Kurkur."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> A FOREIGN OFFICE ROMANCE </h2>
<p>There are many folk who knew Alphonse Lacour in his old age. From about
the time of the Revolution of '48 until he died in the second year of the
Crimean War he was always to be found in the same corner of the Cafe de
Provence, at the end of the Rue St. Honore, coming down about nine in the
evening, and going when he could find no one to talk with. It took some
self-restraint to listen to the old diplomatist, for his stories were
beyond all belief, and yet he was quick at detecting the shadow of a smile
or the slightest little raising of the eyebrows. Then his huge, rounded
back would straighten itself, his bull-dog chin would project, and his r's
would burr like a kettledrum. When he got as far as, "Ah, monsieur
r-r-r-rit!" or "Vous ne me cr-r-r-royez pas donc!" it was quite time to
remember that you had a ticket for the opera.</p>
<p>There was his story of Talleyrand and the five oyster-shells, and there
was his utterly absurd account of Napoleon's second visit to Ajaccio. Then
there was that most circumstantial romance (which he never ventured upon
until his second bottle had been uncorked) of the Emperor's escape from
St. Helena—how he lived for a whole year in Philadelphia, while
Count Herbert de Bertrand, who was his living image, personated him at
Longwood. But of all his stories there was none which was more notorious
than that of the Koran and the Foreign Office messenger. And yet when
Monsieur Otto's memoirs were written it was found that there really was
some foundation for old Lacour's incredible statement.</p>
<p>"You must know, monsieur," he would say, "that I left Egypt after Kleber's
assassination. I would gladly have stayed on, for I was engaged in a
translation of the Koran, and between ourselves I had thoughts at the time
of embracing Mahometanism, for I was deeply struck by the wisdom of their
views about marriage. They had made an incredible mistake, however, upon
the subject of wine, and this was what the Mufti who attempted to convert
me could never get over. Then when old Kleber died and Menou came to the
top, I felt that it was time for me to go. It is not for me to speak of my
own capacities, monsieur, but you will readily understand that the man
does not care to be ridden by the mule. I carried my Koran and my papers
to London, where Monsieur Otto had been sent by the First Consul to
arrange a treaty of peace; for both nations were very weary of the war,
which had already lasted ten years. Here I was most useful to Monsieur
Otto on account of my knowledge of the English tongue, and also, if I may
say so, on account of my natural capacity. They were happy days during
which I lived in the square of Bloomsbury. The climate of monsieur's
country is, it must be confessed, detestable. But then what would you
have? Flowers grow best in the rain. One has but to point to monsieur's
fellow country-women to prove it.</p>
<p>"Well, Monsieur Otto, our Ambassador, was kept terribly busy over that
treaty, and all of his staff were worked to death. We had not Pitt to deal
with, which was, perhaps, as well for us. He was a terrible man that Pitt,
and wherever half a dozen enemies of France were plotting together, there
was his sharp-pointed nose right in the middle of them. The nation,
however, had been thoughtful enough to put him out of office, and we had
to do with Monsieur Addington. But Milord Hawkesbury was the Foreign
Minister, and it was with him that we were obliged to do our bargaining.</p>
<p>"You can understand that it was no child's play. After ten years of war
each nation had got hold of a great deal which had belonged to the other,
or to the other's allies. What was to be given back, and what was to be
kept? Is this island worth that peninsula? If we do this at Venice, will
you do that at Sierra Leone? If we give up Egypt to the Sultan, will you
restore the Cape of Good Hope, which you have taken from our allies the
Dutch? So we wrangled and wrestled, and I have seen Monsieur Otto come
back to the Embassy so exhausted that his secretary and I had to help him
from his carriage to his sofa. But at last things adjusted themselves, and
the night came round when the treaty was to be finally signed. Now, you
must know that the one great card which we held, and which we played,
played, played at every point of the game, was that we had Egypt. The
English were very nervous about our being there. It gave us a foot at each
end of the Mediterranean, you see. And they were not sure that that
wonderful little Napoleon of ours might not make it the base of an advance
against India. So whenever Lord Hawkesbury proposed to retain anything, we
had only to reply, 'In <i>that</i> case, of course, we cannot consent to
evacuate Egypt,' and in this way we quickly brought him to reason. It was
by the help of Egypt that we gained terms which were remarkably
favourable, and especially that we caused the English to consent to give
up the Cape of Good Hope. We did not wish your people, monsieur, to have
any foothold in South Africa, for history has taught us that the British
foothold of one half-century is the British Empire of the next. It is not
your army or your navy against which we have to guard, but it is your
terrible younger son and your man in search of a career. When we French
have a possession across the seas, we like to sit in Paris and to
felicitate ourselves upon it. With you it is different. You take your
wives and your children, and you run away to see what kind of place this
may be, and after that we might as well try to take that old Square of
Bloomsbury away from you.</p>
<p>"Well, it was upon the first of October that the treaty was finally to be
signed. In the morning I was congratulating Monsieur Otto upon the happy
conclusion of his labours. He was a little pale shrimp of a man, very
quick and nervous, and he was so delighted now at his own success that he
could not sit still, but ran about the room chattering and laughing, while
I sat on a cushion in the corner, as I had learned to do in the East.
Suddenly, in came a messenger with a letter which had been forwarded from
Paris. Monsieur Otto cast his eye upon it, and then, without a word, his
knees gave way, and he fell senseless upon the floor. I ran to him, as did
the courier, and between us we carried him to the sofa. He might have been
dead from his appearance, but I could still feel his heart thrilling
beneath my palm. 'What is this, then?' I asked.</p>
<p>"'I do not know,' answered the messenger. 'Monsieur Talleyrand told me to
hurry as never man hurried before, and to put this letter into the hands
of Monsieur Otto. I was in Paris at midday yesterday.'</p>
<p>"I know that I am to blame, but I could not help glancing at the letter,
picking it out of the senseless hand of Monsieur Otto. My God! the
thunderbolt that it was! I did not faint, but I sat down beside my chief
and I burst into tears. It was but a few words, but they told us that
Egypt had been evacuated by our troops a month before. All our treaty was
undone then, and the one consideration which had induced our enemies to
give us good terms had vanished. In twelve hours it would not have
mattered. But now the treaty was not yet signed. We should have to give up
the Cape. We should have to let England have Malta. Now that Egypt was
gone we had nothing left to offer in exchange.</p>
<p>"But we are not so easily beaten, we Frenchmen. You English misjudge us
when you think that because we show emotions which you conceal, that we
are therefore of a weak and womanly nature. You cannot read your histories
and believe that. Monsieur Otto recovered his senses presently, and we
took counsel what we should do.</p>
<p>"'It is useless to go on, Alphonse,' said he. 'This Englishman will laugh
at me when I ask him to sign.'</p>
<p>"'Courage!' I cried; and then a sudden thought coming into my head—'How
do we know that the English will have news of this? Perhaps they may sign
the treaty before they know of it.'</p>
<p>"Monsieur Otto sprang from the sofa and flung himself into my arms.</p>
<p>"'Alphonse,' he cried, 'you have saved me! Why should they know about it?
Our news has come from Toulon to Paris, and thence straight to London.
Theirs will come by sea through the Straits of Gibraltar. At this moment
it is unlikely that anyone in Paris knows of it, save only Talleyrand and
the First Consul. If we keep our secret, we may still get our treaty
signed.'</p>
<p>"Ah! monsieur, you can imagine the horrible uncertainty in which we spent
the day. Never, never shall I forget those slow hours during which we sat
together, starting at every distant shout, lest it should be the first
sign of the rejoicing which this news would cause in London. Monsieur Otto
passed from youth to age in a day. As for me, I find it easier to go out
and meet danger than to wait for it. I set forth, therefore, towards
evening. I wandered here, and wandered there. I was in the fencing-rooms
of Monsieur Angelo, and in the salon-de-boxe of Monsieur Jackson, and in
the club of Brooks, and in the lobby of the Chamber of Deputies, but
nowhere did I hear any news. Still, it was possible that Milord Hawkesbury
had received it himself just as we had. He lived in Harley Street, and
there it was that the treaty was to be finally signed that night at eight.
I entreated Monsieur Otto to drink two glasses of Burgundy before he went,
for I feared lest his haggard face and trembling, hands should rouse
suspicion in the English minister.</p>
<p>"Well, we went round together in one of the Embassy's carriages about
half-past seven. Monsieur Otto went in alone; but presently, on excuse of
getting his portfolio, he came out again, with his cheeks flushed with
joy, to tell me that all was well.</p>
<p>"'He knows nothing,' he whispered. 'Ah, if the next half-hour were over!'</p>
<p>"'Give me a sign when it is settled,' said I.</p>
<p>"'For what reason?'</p>
<p>"'Because until then no messenger shall interrupt you. I give you my
promise—I, Alphonse Lacour.'</p>
<p>"He clasped my hand in both of his.</p>
<p>"'I shall make an excuse to move one of the candles on to the table in the
window,' said he, and hurried into the house, whilst I was left waiting
beside the carriage.</p>
<p>"Well, if we could but secure ourselves from interruption for a single
half-hour the day would be our own. I had hardly begun to form my plans
when I saw the lights of a carriage coming swiftly from the direction of
Oxford Street. Ah! if it should be the messenger! What could I do? I was
prepared to kill him—yes, even to kill him—rather than at this
last moment allow our work to be undone. Thousands die to make a glorious
war. Why should not one die to make a glorious peace? What though they
hurried me to the scaffold? I should have sacrificed myself for my
country. I had a little curved Turkish knife strapped to my waist. My hand
was on the hilt of it when the carriage which had alarmed me so rattled
safely past me.</p>
<p>"But another might come. I must be prepared. Above all, I must not
compromise the Embassy. I ordered our carriage to move on, and I engaged
what you call a hackney coach. Then I spoke to the driver, and gave him a
guinea. He understood that it was a special service.</p>
<p>"'You shall have another guinea if you do what you are told,' said I.</p>
<p>"'All right, master,' said he, turning his slow eyes upon me without a
trace of excitement or curiosity.</p>
<p>"' If I enter your coach with another gentleman, you will drive up and
down Harley Street, and take no orders from anyone but me. When I get out,
you will carry the other gentleman to Watier's Club, in Bruton Street.'</p>
<p>"'All right, master,' said he again.</p>
<p>"So I stood outside Milord Hawkesbury's house, and you can think how often
my eyes went up to that window in the hope of seeing the candle twinkle in
it. Five minutes passed, and another five. Oh, how slowly they crept
along! It was a true October night, raw and cold, with a white fog
crawling over the wet, shining cobblestones, and blurring the dim
oil-lamps. I could not see fifty paces in either direction, but my ears
were straining, straining, to catch the rattle of hoofs or the rumble of
wheels. It is not a cheering place, monsieur, that street of Harley, even
upon a sunny day. The houses are solid and very respectable over yonder,
but there is nothing of the feminine about them. It is a city to be
inhabited by males. But on that raw night, amid the damp and the fog, with
the anxiety gnawing at my heart, it seemed the saddest, weariest spot in
the whole wide world. I paced up and down slapping my hands to keep them
warm, and still straining my ears. And then suddenly out of the dull hum
of the traffic down in Oxford Street I heard a sound detach itself, and
grow louder and louder, and clearer and clearer with every instant, until
two yellow lights came flashing through the fog, and a light cabriolet
whirled up to the door of the Foreign Minister. It had not stopped before
a young fellow sprang out of it and hurried to the steps, while the driver
turned his horse and rattled off into the fog once more.</p>
<p>"Ah, it is in the moment of action that I am best, monsieur. You, who only
see me when I am drinking my wine in the Cafe de Provence, cannot conceive
the heights to which I rise. At that moment, when I knew that the fruits
of a ten years' war were at stake, I was magnificent. It was the last
French campaign and I the general and army in one.</p>
<p>"'Sir," said I, touching him upon the arm, 'are you the messenger for Lord
Hawkesbury?'</p>
<p>"'Yes,' said he.</p>
<p>"'I have been waiting for you half an hour,' said I. 'You are to follow me
at once. He is with the French Ambassador.'</p>
<p>"I spoke with such assurance that he never hesitated for an instant. When
he entered the hackney coach and I followed him in, my heart gave such a
thrill of joy that I could hardly keep from shouting aloud. He was a poor
little creature, this Foreign Office messenger, not much bigger than
Monsieur Otto, and I—monsieur can see my hands now, and imagine what
they were like when I was seven-and-twenty years of age.</p>
<p>"Well, now that I had him in my coach, the question was what I should do
with him. I did not wish to hurt him if I could help it.</p>
<p>"'This is a pressing business,' said he. 'I have a despatch which I must
deliver instantly.'</p>
<p>"Our coach had rattled down Harley Street now, in accordance with my
instruction, it turned and began to go up again.</p>
<p>"'Hullo!' he cried. 'What's this?'</p>
<p>"'What then? 'I asked.</p>
<p>"'We are driving back. Where is Lord Hawkesbury?'</p>
<p>"'We shall see him presently.'</p>
<p>"'Let me out!' he shouted. 'There's some trickery in this. Coachman, stop
the coach! Let me out, I say!'</p>
<p>"I dashed him back into his seat as he tried to turn the handle of the
door. He roared for help. I clapped my palm across his mouth. He made his
teeth meet through the side of it. I seized his own cravat and bound it
over his lips. He still mumbled and gurgled, but the noise was covered by
the rattle of our wheels. We were passing the minister's house, and there
was no candle in the window.</p>
<p>"The messenger sat quiet for a little, and I could see the glint of his
eyes as he stared at me through the gloom. He was partly stunned, I think,
by the force with which I had hurled him into his seat. And also he was
pondering, perhaps, what he should do next. Presently he got his mouth
partly free from the cravat.</p>
<p>"'You shall have my watch and my purse if you will let me go,' said he.</p>
<p>"'Sir,' said I, 'I am as honourable a man as you are yourself.'</p>
<p>"'Who are you, then?'</p>
<p>"'My name is of no importance.'</p>
<p>"'What do you want with me?'</p>
<p>"It is a bet.'</p>
<p>"'A bet? What d'you mean? Do you understand that I am on the Government
service, and that you will see the inside of a gaol for this?'</p>
<p>"'That is the bet. That is the sport, said I.'</p>
<p>"'You may find it poor sport before you finish,' he cried. 'What is this
insane bet of yours then?'</p>
<p>"'I have bet,' I answered, 'that I will recite a chapter of the Koran to
the first gentleman whom I should meet in the street.'</p>
<p>"I do not know what made me think of it, save that my translation was
always running in my head. He clutched at the door-handle, and again I had
to hurl him back into his seat.</p>
<p>"'How long will it take?' he gasped.</p>
<p>"'It depends on the chapter,' I answered.</p>
<p>"'A short one, then, and let me go!'</p>
<p>"'But is it fair?' I argued. 'When I say a chapter, I do not mean the
shortest chapter, but rather one which should be of average length.'</p>
<p>"'Help! help! help!' he squealed, and I was compelled again to adjust his
cravat.</p>
<p>"'A little patience,' said I, 'and it will soon be over. I should like to
recite the chapter which would be of most interest to yourself. You will
confess that I am trying to make things as pleasant as I can for you?"</p>
<p>He slipped his mouth free again.</p>
<p>"'Quick, then, quick!' he groaned.</p>
<p>"'The Chapter of the Camel?' I suggested.</p>
<p>"'Yes, yes.'</p>
<p>"'Or that of the Fleet Stallion?'</p>
<p>"'Yes, yes. Only proceed!'</p>
<p>"We had passed the window and there was no candle. I settled down to
recite the Chapter of the Stallion to him. Perhaps you do not know your
Koran very well, monsieur? Well, I knew it by heart then, as I know it by
heart now. The style is a little exasperating for anyone who is in a
hurry. But, then, what would you have? The people in the East are never in
a hurry, and it was written for them. I repeated it all with the dignity
and solemnity which a sacred book demands, and the young Englishman he
wriggled and groaned.</p>
<p>"'When the horses, standing on three feet and placing the tip of their
fourth foot upon the ground, were mustered in front of him in the evening,
he said, I have loved the love of earthly good above the remembrance of
things on high, and have spent the time in viewing these horses. Bring the
horses back to me. And when they were brought back he began to cut off
their legs and—'</p>
<p>"It was at this moment that the young Englishman sprang at me. My God! how
little can I remember of the next few minutes! He was a boxer, this shred
of a man. He had been trained to strike. I tried to catch him by the
hands. Pac, pac, he came upon my nose and upon my eye. I put down my head
and thrust at him with it. Pac, he came from below. But ah! I was too much
for him. I hurled myself upon him, and he had no place where he could
escape from my weight. He fell flat upon the cushions and I seated myself
upon him with such conviction that the wind flew from him as from a burst
bellows.</p>
<p>"Then I searched to see what there was with which I could tie him. I drew
the strings from my shoes, and with one I secured his wrists, and with
another his ankles. Then I tied the cravat round his mouth again, so that
he could only lie and glare at me. When I had done all this, and had
stopped the bleeding of my own nose, I looked out of the coach and ah,
monsieur, the very first thing which caught my eyes was that candle—that
dear little candle—glimmering in the window of the minister. Alone,
with these two hands, I had retrieved the capitulation of an army and the
loss of a province. Yes, monsieur, what Abercrombie and 5,000 men had done
upon the beach at Aboukir was undone by me, single-handed, in a hackney
coach in Harley Street.</p>
<p>"Well, I had no time to lose, for at any moment Monsieur Otto might be
down. I shouted to my driver, gave him his second guinea, and allowed him
to proceed to Watier's. For myself, I sprang into our Embassy's carriage,
and a moment later the door of the minister opened. He had himself
escorted Monsieur Otto downstairs, and now so deep was he in talk that he
walked out bareheaded as far as the carriage. As he stood there by the
open door, there came the rattle of wheels, and a man rushed down the
pavement.</p>
<p>"'A despatch of great importance for Milord Hawkesbury!' he cried.</p>
<p>"I could see that it was not my messenger, but a second one. Milord
Hawkesbury caught the paper from his hand, and read it by the light of the
carriage lamp. His face, monsieur, was as white as this plate, before he
had finished.</p>
<p>"'Monsieur Otto,' he cried, 'we have signed this treaty upon a false
understanding. Egypt is in our hands.'</p>
<p>"'What!' cried Monsieur Otto. 'Impossible!'</p>
<p>"'It is certain. It fell to Abercrombie last month.'</p>
<p>"'In that case,' said Monsieur Otto, 'it is very fortunate that the treaty
is signed.'</p>
<p>"'Very fortunate for you, sir,' cried Milord Hawkesbury, as he turned back
to the house.</p>
<p>"Next day, monsieur, what they call the Bow Street runners were after me,
but they could not run across salt water, and Alphonse Lacour was
receiving the congratulations of Monsieur Talleyrand and the First Consul
before ever his pursuers had got as far as Dover."</p>
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