The Battle Of The Strong, Complete - Gilbert Parker
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The Chevalier sat, or rather dropped into his chair again.
"Then you are not the Comte de Tournay, monsieur," said he hopelessly.
"Then I shall not dine with you to-day," retorted Detricand gaily.
"You fit the tale," said de Mauprat dubiously, touching the letter with
his finger.
"Let me see," rejoined Detricand. "I've been a donkey farmer, a
shipmaster's assistant, a tobacco pedlar, a quarryman, a wood merchant,
an interpreter, a fisherman--that's very like the Comte de Tournay! On
Monday night I supped with a smuggler; on Tuesday I breakfasted on soupe
a la graisse with Manon Moignard the witch; on Wednesday I dined with
Dormy Jamais and an avocat disbarred for writing lewd songs for a
chocolate-house; on Thursday I went oyster-fishing with a native who has
three wives, and a butcher who has been banished four times for not
keeping holy the Sabbath Day; and I drank from eleven o'clock till
sunrise this morning with three Scotch sergeants of the line--which is
very like the Comte de Tournay, as you were saying, Chevalier! I am five
feet eleven, and the Comte de Tournay was five feet ten--which is no
lie," he added under his breath. "I have a scar, but it's over my left
shoulder and not over my right--which is also no lie," he added under his
breath. "De Tournay's hair was brown, and mine, you see, is almost a dead
black--fever did that," he added under his breath. "De Tournay escaped
the day after the Battle of Jersey from the prison hospital, I was left,
and here I've been ever since--Yves Savary dit Detricand at your service,
chevalier."
A pained expression crossed over the Chevalier's face. "I am most sorry;
I am most sorry," he said hesitatingly. "I had no wish to wound your
feelings."
"Ah, it is de Tournay to whom you must apologise," said Detricand
musingly, with a droll look.
"It is a pity," continued the Chevalier, "for somehow all at once I
recalled a resemblance. I saw de Tournay when he was fourteen--yes, I
think it was fourteen--and when I looked at you, monsieur, his face came
back to me. It would have made my cousin so happy if you had been the
Comte de Tournay and I had found you here." The old man's voice trembled
a little. "We are growing fewer every day, we Frenchmen of the ancient
families. And it would have made my cousin so happy, as I was saying,
monsieur."
Detricand's manner changed; he became serious. The devil-may-care,
irresponsible shamelessness of his face dropped away like a mask.
Something had touched him. His voice changed too.
"De Tournay was a much better fellow than I am, chevalier," said he--
"and that's no lie," he added under his breath. "De Tournay was a fiery,
ambitious, youngster with bad companions. De Tournay told me he repented
of coming with Rullecour, and he felt he had spoilt his life--that he
could never return to France again or to his people."
The old Chevalier shook his head sadly. "Is he dead?" he asked.
There was a slight pause, and then Detricand answered: "No, still
living."
"Where is he?"
"I promised de Tournay that I would never reveal that."
"Might I not write to him?" asked the old man. "Assuredly, Chevalier."
"Could you--will you--despatch a letter to him from me, monsieur?"
"Upon my honour, yes."
"I thank you--I thank you, monsieur; I will write it to-day."
"As you will, Chevalier. I will ask you for the letter to-night,"
rejoined Detricand. "It may take time to reach de Tournay; but he shall
receive it into his own hands."
De Mauprat trembled to his feet to put the question he knew the Chevalier
dreaded to ask:
"Do you think that monsieur le comte will return to France?"
"I think he will," answered Detricand slowly.
"It will make my cousin so happy--so happy," quavered the little
Chevalier. "Will you take snuff with me, monsieur?" He offered his silver
snuff-box to his vagrant countryman. This was a mark of favour he showed
to few.
Detricand bowed, accepted, and took a pinch. "I must be going," he said.
CHAPTER IX
At eight o'clock the next morning, Guida and her fellow-voyagers, bound
for the Ecrehos Rocks, had caught the first ebb of the tide, and with a
fair wind from the sou'-west had skirted the coast, ridden lightly over
the Banc des Violets, and shaped their course nor'-east. Guida kept the
helm all the way, as she had been promised by Ranulph. It was still more
than half tide when they approached the rocks, and with a fair wind there
should be ease in landing.
No more desolate spot might be imagined. To the left, as you faced
towards Jersey, was a long sand-bank. Between the rocks and the sand-bank
shot up a tall, lonely shaft of granite with an evil history. It had been
chosen as the last refuge of safety for the women and children of a
shipwrecked vessel, in the belief that high tide would not reach them.
But the wave rose up maliciously, foot by foot, till it drowned their
cries for ever in the storm. The sand-bank was called "Ecriviere," and
the rock was afterwards known as the "Pierre des Femmes."
Other rocks less prominent, but no less treacherous, flanked it--the Noir
Sabloniere and the Grande Galere. To the right of the main island were a
group of others, all reef and shingle, intersected by treacherous
channels; in calm lapped by water with the colours of a prism of crystal,
in storm by a leaden surf and flying foam. These were known as the
Colombiere, the Grosse Tete, Tas de Pois, and the Marmotiers; each with
its retinue of sunken reefs and needles of granitic gneiss lying low in
menace. Happy the sailor caught in a storm and making for the shelter the
little curves in the island afford, who escapes a twist of the current, a
sweep of the tide, and the impaling fingers of the submarine palisades.
Beyond these rocks lay Maitre Ile, all gneiss and shingle, a desert in
the sea. The holy men of the early Church, beholding it from the shore of
Normandy, had marked it for a refuge from the storms of war and the
follies of the world. So it came to pass, for the honour of God and the
Virgin Mary, the Abbe of Val Richer builded a priory there: and there now
lie in peace the bones of the monks of Val Richer beside the skeletons of
unfortunate gentlemen of the sea of later centuries--pirates from France,
buccaneers from England, and smugglers from Jersey, who kept their trysts
in the precincts of the ancient chapel.
The brisk air of early autumn made the blood tingle in Guida's cheeks.
Her eyes were big with light and enjoyment. Her hair was caught close by
a gay cap of her own knitting, but a little of it escaped, making a
pretty setting to her face.
The boat rode under all her courses, until, as Jean said, they had put
the last lace on her bonnet. Guida's hands were on the tiller firmly,
doing Jean's bidding promptly. In all they were five. Besides Guida and
Ranulph, Jean and Jean's wife, there was a young English clergyman of the
parish of St. Michael's, who had come from England to fill the place of
the rector for a few months. Word had been brought to him that a man was
dying on the Ecrehos. He had heard that the boat was going, he had found
Jean Touzel, and here he was with a biscuit in his hand and a black-jack
of French wine within easy reach. Not always in secret the Reverend
Lorenzo Dow loved the good things of this world.
The most notable characteristic of the young clergyman's appearance was
his outer guilelessness and the oddness of his face. His head was rather
big for his body; he had a large mouth which laughed easily, a noble
forehead, and big, short-sighted eyes. He knew French well, but could
speak almost no Jersey patois, so, in compliment to him, Jean Touzel,
Ranulph, and Guida spoke in English. This ability to speak English--his
own English--was the pride of Jean's life. He babbled it all the way, and
chiefly about a mythical Uncle Elias, who was the text for many a sermon.
"Times past," said he, as they neared Maitre Ile, "mon onc' 'Lias he
knows these Ecrehoses better as all the peoples of the world--respe d'la
compagnie. Mon onc' 'Lias he was a fine man. Once when there is a fight
between de Henglish and de hopping Johnnies," he pointed towards France,
"dere is seven French ship, dere is two Henglish ship--gentlemen-of-war
dey are call. Eh ben, one of de Henglish ships he is not a
gentleman-of-war, he is what you call go-on-your-own-hook--privator. But
it is all de same--tres-ba, all right! What you t'ink coum to pass? De
big Henglish ship she is hit ver' bad, she is all break-up. Efin, dat
leetle privator he stan' round on de fighting side of de gentleman-of-war
and take de fire by her loneliness. Say, then, wherever dere is troub'
mon onc' 'Lias he is there, he stan' outside de troub' an' look on--dat
is his hobby. You call it hombog? Oh, nannin-gia! Suppose two peoples
goes to fight, ah bah, somebody must pick up de pieces--dat is mon onc'
'Lias! He have his boat full of hoysters; so he sit dere all alone and
watch dat great fight, an' heat de hoyster an' drink de cider vine.
"Ah, bah! mon onc' 'Lias he is standin' hin de door dat day. Dat is what
we say on Jersey--when a man have some ver' great luck we say he stan'
hin de door. I t'ink it is from de Bible or from de helmanac--sacre moi,
I not know.... If I talk too much you give me dat black-jack."
They gave him the black-jack. After he had drunk and wiped his mouth on
his sleeve, he went on:
"O my good-ma'm'selle, a leetle more to de wind. Ah, dat is
right--trejous! . . . Dat fight it go like two bulls on a vergee--respe
d'la compagnie. Mon onc' 'Lias he have been to Hengland, he have sing
'God save our greshus King'; so he t'ink a leetle--Ef he go to de French,
likely dey will hang him. Mon onc' 'Lias, he is what you call
patreeteesm. He say, 'Hengland, she is mine--trejous.' Efin, he sail
straight for de Henglish ships. Dat is de greates' man, mon onc'
'Lias--respe d'la compagnie! he coum on de side which is not fighting. Ah
bah, he tell dem dat he go to save de gentleman-of-war. He see a
hofficier all bloodiness and he call hup: 'Es-tu gentiment?' he say.
'Gentiment,' say de hofficier; 'han' you?' 'Naicely, yank you!' mon onc'
'Lias he say. 'I will save you,' say mon onc' 'Lias--'I will save de ship
of God save our greshus King.' De hofficier wipe de tears out of his
face. 'De King will reward you, man alive,' he say. Mon onc' 'Lias he
touch his breast and speak out. 'Mon hofficier, my reward is
here--trejous. I will take you into de Ecrehoses.' 'Coum up and save de
King's ships,' says de hofficier. 'I will take no reward,' say mon onc'
'Lias, 'but, for a leetle pourboire, you will give me de privator--eh?'
'Milles sacres'--say de hofficier, 'mines saeres--de privator!' he say,
ver' surprise'. 'Man doux d'la vie--I am damned!' 'You are damned trulee,
if you do not get into de Ecrehoses,' say mon onc' 'Lias--'A bi'tot,
good-bye!' he say. De hofficier call down to him: 'Is dere nosing else
you will take?' 'Nannin, do not tempt me,' say mon onc' 'Lias. 'I am not
a gourman'. I will take de privator--dat is my hobby.' All de time de
cannons grand--dey brow-brou! boum-boum!--what you call discomfortable.
Time is de great t'ing, so de hofficier wipe de tears out of his face
again. 'Coum up,' he say; 'de privator is yours.'
"Away dey go. You see dat spot where we coum to land, Ma'm'selle
Landresse--where de shingle look white, de leetle green grass above? Dat
is where mon onc' 'Lias he bring in de King's ship and de privator.
Gatd'en'ale--it is a journee awful! He twist to de right, he shape to de
left trough de teeth of de rocks--all safe--vera happee--to dis nice
leetle bay of de Maitre Ile dey coum. De Frenchies dey grind dere teeth
and spit de fire. But de Henglish laugh at demdey are safe. 'Frien' of my
heart,' say de hofficier to mon onc' 'Lias, 'pilot of pilots,' he say,
'in de name of our greshus King I t'ank you--A bi'tot, good-bye!' he say.
'Tres-ba,' mon onc' 'Lias he say den, 'I will go to my privator.' 'You
will go to de shore,' say de hofficier. 'You will wait on de shore till
de captain and his men of de privator coum to you. When dey coum, de ship
is yours--de privator is for you.' Mon onc' 'Lias he is like a child--he
believe. He 'bout ship and go shore. Misery me, he sit on dat
rocking-stone you see tipping on de wind. But if he wait until de men of
de privator coum to him, he will wait till we see him sitting there now.
Gache-a-penn, you say patriote? Mon onc' 'Lias he has de patreeteesm, and
what happen? He save de ship of de greshus King God save--and dey eat up
his hoysters! He get nosing. Gad'rabotin--respe d'la compagnie--if dere
is a ship of de King coum to de Ecrehoses, and de hofficier say to
me"--he tapped his breast--"'Jean Touzel, tak de ships of de King trough
de rocks,'--ah bah, I would rememb' mon onc' 'Lias. I would say, 'A
bi'tot-good-bye.' . . . Slowlee--slowlee! We are at de place. Bear wif de
land, ma'm'selle! Steadee! As you go! V'la! hitch now, Maitre Ranulph."
The keel of the boat grated on the shingle.
The air of the morning, the sport of using the elements for one's
pleasure, had given Guida an elfish sprightliness of spirits. Twenty
times during Jean's recital she had laughed gaily, and never sat a laugh
better on any one's countenance than on hers. Her teeth were strong,
white, and regular; in themselves they gave off a sort of shining mirth.
At first the lugubrious wife of the happy Jean was inclined to resent
Guida's gaiety as unseemly, for Jean's story sounded to her as serious
statement of fact; which incapacity for humour probably accounted for
Jean's occasional lapses from domestic grace. If Jean had said that he
had met a periwinkle dancing a hornpipe with an oyster she would have
muttered heavily "Think of that!" The most she could say to any one was:
"I believe you, ma couzaine." Some time in her life her voice had dropped
into that great well she called her body, and it came up only now and
then like an echo. There never was anything quite so fat as she. She was
found weeping one day on the veille because she was no longer able to get
her shoulders out of the window to use the clothes-lines stretching to
her neighbour's over the way. If she sat down in your presence, it was
impossible to do aught but speculate as to whether she could get up
alone. Yet she went abroad on the water a great deal with Jean. At first
the neighbours gave out sinister suspicions as to Jean's intentions, for
sea-going with your own wife was uncommon among the sailors of the coast.
But at last these dark suggestions settled down into a belief that Jean
took her chiefly for ballast; and thereafter she was familiarly called
"Femme de Ballast."
Talking was no virtue in her eyes. What was going on in her mind no one
ever knew. She was more phlegmatic than an Indian; but the tails of the
sheep on the Town Hill did not better show the quarter of the wind than
the changing colour of Aimable's face indicated Jean's coming or going.
For Mattresse Aimable had one eternal secret, an unwavering passion for
Jean Touzel. If he patted her on the back on a day when the fishing was
extra fine, her heart pumped so hard she had to sit down; if, passing her
lonely bed of a morning, he shook her great toe to wake her, she blushed,
and turned her face to the wall in placid happiness. She was so credulous
and matter-of-fact that if Jean had told her she must die on the spot,
she would have said "Think of that!" or "Je te crais," and died. If in
the vague dusk of her brain the thought glimmered that she was ballast
for Jean on sea and anchor on land, she still was content. For twenty
years the massive, straight-limbed Jean had stood to her for all things
since the heavens and the earth were created. Once, when she had burnt
her hand in cooking supper for him, his arm made a trial of her girth,
and he kissed her. The kiss was nearer her ear than her lips, but to her
mind it was the most solemn proof of her connubial happiness and of
Jean's devotion. She was a Catholic, unlike Jean and most people of her
class in Jersey, and ever since that night he kissed her she had told an
extra bead on her rosary and said another prayer.
These were the reasons why at first she was inclined to resent Guida's
laughter. But when she saw that Maitre Ranulph and the curate and Jean
himself laughed, she settled down to a grave content until they landed.
They had scarce reached the deserted chapel where their dinner was to be
cooked by Maitresse Aimable, when Ranulph called them to note a vessel
bearing in their direction.
"She's not a coasting craft," said Jean.
"She doesn't look like a merchant vessel," said Ranulph, eyeing her
through his telescope. "Why, she's a warship!" he added.
Jean thought she was not, but Maitre Ranulph said "Pardi, I ought to
know, Jean. Ship-building is my trade, to say nothing of guns--I wasn't
two years in the artillery for nothing. See the low bowsprit and the high
poop. She's bearing this way. She'll be Narcissus!" he said slowly.
That was Philip d'Avranche's ship.
Guida's face lighted, her heart beat faster. Ranulph turned on his heel.
"Where are you going, Ro?" Guida said, taking a step after him.
"On the other side, to my men and the wreck," he said, pointing.
Guida glanced once more towards the man-o'-war: and then, with mischief
in her eye, turned towards Jean. "Suppose," she said to him archly,
"suppose the ship should want to come in, of course you'd remember your
onc' 'Lias, and say, 'A bi'tot, good-bye!"'
An evasive "Ah bah!" was the only reply Jean vouchsafed.
Ranulph joined his men at the wreck, and the Reverend Lorenzo Dow went
about the Lord's business in the little lean-to of sail-cloth and ship's
lumber which had been set up near to the toil of the carpenters. When the
curate entered the but the sick man was in a doze. He turned his head
from side to side restlessly and mumbled to himself. The curate, sitting
on the ground beside the man, took from his pocket a book, and began
writing in a strange, cramped hand. This book was his journal. When a
youth he had been a stutterer, and had taken refuge from talk in writing,
and the habit stayed even as his affliction grew less. The important
events of the day or the week, the weather, the wind, the tides, were
recorded, together with sundry meditations of the Reverend Lorenzo Dow.
The pages were not large, and brevity was Mr. Dow's journalistic virtue.
Beyond the diligent keeping of this record, he had no habits, certainly
no precision, no remembrance, no system: the business of his life ended
there. He had quietly vacated two curacies because there had been bitter
complaints that the records of certain baptisms, marriages, and burials
might only be found in the chequered journal of his life, sandwiched
between fantastic reflections and remarks upon the rubric. The records
had been exact enough, but the system was not canonical, and it rested
too largely upon the personal ubiquity of the itinerary priest, and the
safety of his journal--and of his life.
Guida, after the instincts of her nature, had at once sought the highest
point on the rocky islet, and there she drank in the joy of sight and
sound and feeling. She could see--so perfect was the day--the line
marking the Minquiers far on the southern horizon, the dark and perfect
green of the Jersey slopes, and the white flags of foam which beat
against the Dirouilles and the far-off Paternosters, dissolving as they
flew, their place taken by others, succeeding and succeeding, as a
soldier steps into a gap in the line of battle. Something in these rocks,
something in the Paternosters--perhaps their distance, perhaps their
remoteness from all other rocks--fascinated her. As she looked at them,
she suddenly felt a chill, a premonition, a half-spiritual, half-material
telegraphy of the inanimate to the animate: not from off cold stone to
sentient life; but from that atmosphere about the inanimate thing, where
the life of man has spent itself and been dissolved, leaving--who can
tell what? Something which speaks but yet has no sound.
The feeling which possessed Guida as she looked at the Paternosters was
almost like blank fear. Yet physical fear she had never felt, not since
that day when the battle raged in the Vier Marchi, and Philip d'Avranche
had saved her from the destroying scimitar of the Turk. Now that scene
all came back to her in a flash, as it were; and she saw again the dark
snarling face of the Mussulman, the blue-and-white silk of his turban,
the black and white of his waistcoat, the red of the long robe, and the
glint of his uplifted sword. Then in contrast, the warmth, brightness,
and bravery on the face of the lad in blue and gold who struck aside the
descending blade and caught her up in his arms; and she had nestled
there--in those arms of Philip d'Avranche. She remembered how he had
kissed her, and how she had kissed him--he a lad and she a little
child--as he left her with her mother in the watchmaker's shop in the
Vier Marchi that day. . . . And she had never seen him again until
yesterday.
She looked from the rocks to the approaching frigate. Was it the
Narcissus coming--coming to this very island? She recalled Philip--how
gallant he was yesterday, how cool, with what an air of command! How
light he had made of the riot! Ranulph's strength and courage she
accepted as a matter of course, and was glad that he was brave, generous,
and good; but the glamour of distance and mystery were around d'Avranche.
Remembrance, like a comet, went circling through the firmament of eleven
years, from the Vier Marchi to the Place du Vier Prison.
She watched the ship slowly bearing with the land. The Jack was flying
from the mizzen. They were now taking in her topsails. She was so near
that Guida could see the anchor a-cockbell, and the poop lanthorns. She
could count the guns like long black horns shooting out from a rhinoceros
hide: she could discern the figurehead lion snarling into the spritsail.
Presently the ship came up to the wind and lay to. Then she signalled for
a pilot, and Guida ran towards the ruined chapel, calling for Jean
Touzel.
In spite of Jean's late protests as to piloting a "gentleman-of-war,"
this was one of the joyful moments of his life. He could not loosen his
rowboat quick enough; he was away almost before you could have spoken his
name. Excited as Guida was, she could not resist calling after him:
"'God save our greshus King! A bi'tot--goodbye!'"
ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
A sort of chuckle not entirely pleasant
Sacrifice to the god of the pin-hole
What fools there are in the world
THE BATTLE OF THE STRONG
[A ROMANCE OF TWO KINGDOMS]
By Gilbert Parker
Volume 2.
CHAPTER X
As Ranulph had surmised, the ship was the Narcissus, and its first
lieutenant was Philip d'Avranche. The night before, orders had reached
the vessel from the Admiralty that soundings were to be taken at the
Ecrehos. The captain had at once made inquiries for a pilot, and Jean
Touzel was commended to him. A messenger sent to Jean found that he had
already gone to the Ecrehos. The captain had then set sail, and now,
under Jean's skilful pilotage, the Narcissus twisted and crept through
the teeth of the rocks at the entrance, and slowly into the cove, reefs
on either side gaping and girding at her, her keel all but scraping the
serrated granite beneath. She anchored, and boats put off to take
soundings and explore the shores. Philip was rowed in by Jean Touzel.
Stepping out upon the beach of Mattre 'Ile, Philip slowly made his way
over the shingle to the ruined chapel, in no good humour with himself or
with the world, for exploring these barren rocks seemed a useless whim of
the Admiralty, and he could not conceive of any incident rising from the
monotony of duty to lighten the darkness of this very brilliant day. His
was not the nature to enjoy the stony detail of his profession.
Excitement and adventure were as the breath of life to him, and since he
had played his little part at the Jersey battle in a bandbox eleven years
before, he had touched hands with accidents of flood and field in many
countries.
He had been wrecked on the island of Trinidad in a tornado, losing his
captain and his ship; had seen active service in America and in India;
won distinction off the coast of Arabia in an engagement with Spanish
cruisers; and was now waiting for his papers as commander of a ship of
his own, and fretted because the road of fame and promotion was so
toilsome. Rumours of war with France had set his blood dancing a little,
but for him most things were robbed of half their pleasure because they
did not come at once.
This was a moody day with him, for he had looked to spend it differently.
As he walked up the shingle his thoughts were hanging about a cottage in
the Place du Vier Prison. He had hoped to loiter in a doorway there, and
to empty his sailor's heart in well-practised admiration before the altar
of village beauty. The sight of Guida's face the day before had given a
poignant pulse to his emotions, unlike the broken rhythm of past comedies
of sentiment and melodramas of passion. According to all logic of custom,
the acuteness of yesterday's impression should have been followed up by
today's attack; yet here he was, like another Robinson Crusoe, "kicking
up the shingle of a cursed Patmos"--so he grumbled aloud. Patmos was not
so wild a shot after all, for no sooner had he spoken the word than,
looking up, he saw in the doorway of the ruined chapel the gracious
figure of a girl: and a book of revelations was opened and begun.