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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Maid of the Silver Sea, by John Oxenham
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: A Maid of the Silver Sea
+
+Author: John Oxenham
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2005 [eBook #14832]
+Last Updated: August 21, 2023
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Steven Gibbs and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA ***
+
+
+
+
+A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA
+
+by
+
+JOHN OXENHAM
+
+With Frontispiece in Colour by Harold Copping
+
+Hodder and Stoughton Warwick Square, London, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ MY FRIEND
+ EDWARD BAKER
+ OF LA CHAUMIERE, SARK
+
+ ON WHOSE MOST HOSPITABLE AND SUPREMELY
+ COMFORTABLE VERANDAH, LOOKING OUT
+ TO THE FAIR COAST OF FRANCE, THIS
+ STORY WAS PARTLY WRITTEN, I
+ INSCRIBE THE SAME IN REMEMBRANCE
+ OF MANY
+ DELIGHTFUL DAYS
+ TOGETHER
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN’T DARE
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+ HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART
+
+ CHAPTER X
+ HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+ HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART’S DESIRE
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+ HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+ HOW TWO FELL OUT
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ HOW ONE FELL OVER
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ HOW PETER’S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+ HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ HOW HE HELD THE ROCK
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ HOW JULIE’S SCHEMES FELL FLAT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L’ETAT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+ HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+ HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT
+
+
+A girl and a boy lay in a cubby-hole in the north side of the cliff
+overlooking Port Gorey, and watched the goings-on down below.
+
+The sun was tending towards Guernsey and the gulf was filled witn golden
+light. A small brig, unkempt and dirty, was nosing towards the rough
+wooden landing-stage clamped to the opposite rocks, as though doubtful
+of the advisability of attempting its closer acquaintance.
+
+“Mon Gyu, Bern, how I wish they were all at the bottom of the sea!” said
+the girl vehemently.
+
+“Whe--e--e--w!” whistled the boy, and then with a twinkle in his
+eye,--“Who’s got a new parasol now?”
+
+“Everybody!--but it’s not that. It’s the bustle--and the dirt--and the
+noise--and oh--everything! You can’t remember what it was like before
+these wretched mines came--no dust, no noise, no bustle, no dirty men,
+no silly women, no nothing as it is now. Just Sark as it used to be. And
+now--! Mon Gyu, yes I wish the sea would break in through their nasty
+tunnels and wash them all away--pumps and engines and
+houses--everything!”
+
+And up on the hillside at the head of the gulf the great pumping-engine
+clacked monotonously “Never! Never! Never!”
+
+“You’ve got it bad to-day, Nan,” said the boy.
+
+“I’ve always got it bad. It makes me sick. It has changed everything and
+everybody--everybody except mother and you,” she added quickly.
+“Get--get--get! Why we hardly used to know what money was, and now no
+one thinks of anything but getting all they can. It is sickening.”
+
+“S--s--s--s--t!” signalled the boy suddenly, at the sound of steps and
+voices on the cliff outside and close at hand.
+
+“Tom,” muttered the boy.
+
+“And Peter Mauger,” murmured the girl, and they both shrank lower into
+their hiding-place.
+
+It was a tiny natural chamber in the sharp slope of the hill. Ages ago
+the massive granite boulders of the headland, loosened and undercut by
+the ceaseless assaults of wind and weather and the deadly quiet fingers
+of the frost, had come rolling down the slope till they settled afresh
+on new foundations, forming holes and crannies and little angular
+chambers where the splintered shoulders met. In time, the soil silted
+down and covered their asperities, and--like a good colonist--carrying
+in itself the means of increase, it presently brought forth and
+blossomed, and the erstwhile shattered rocks were royally robed in
+russet and purple, and green and gold.
+
+Among these fantastic little chambers Nance had played as a child, and
+had found refuge in them from the persecutions of her big half-brother,
+Tom Hamon. Tom was six when she was born--fourteen accordingly when she
+was at the teasable age of eight, and unusually tempting as a victim by
+reason of her passionate resentment of his unwelcome attentions.
+
+She hated Tom, and Tom had always resented her and her mother’s
+intrusion into the family, and Bernel’s, when he came, four years after
+Nance.
+
+What his father wanted to marry again for, Tom never could make out. His
+lack of training and limited powers of expression did not indeed permit
+him any distinct reasoning on the matter, but the feeling was there--a
+dull resentment which found its only vent and satisfaction in stolid
+rudeness to his stepmother and the persecution of Nance and Bernel
+whenever occasion offered.
+
+The household was not therefore on too happy a footing.
+
+It consisted, at the time when our story opens, of--Old Mrs.
+Hamon--Grannie--half of whose life had been lived in the nineteenth
+century and half in the eighteenth. She had seen all the wild doings of
+the privateering and free-trading days, and recalled as a comparatively
+recent event the raiding of the Island by the men of Herm, though that
+happened forty years before.
+
+She was for the most part a very reserved and silent old lady, but her
+tongue could bite like a whip when the need arose.
+
+She occupied her own dower-rooms in the house, and rarely went outside
+them. All day long she sat in her great arm-chair by the window in her
+sitting-room, with the door wide open, so that she could see all that
+went on in the house and outside it; and in the sombre depths of her
+great black silk sun-bonnet--long since turned by age and weather to
+dusky green--her watchful eyes had in them something of the inscrutable
+and menacing.
+
+Her wants were very few, and as her income from her one-third of the
+farm had far exceeded her expenses for more than twenty years, she was
+reputed as rich in material matters as she undoubtedly was in
+common-sense and worldly wisdom. Even young Tom was sulkily silent
+before her on the rare occasions when they came into contact.
+
+Next in the family came the nominal head of it, “Old Tom” Hamon, to
+distinguish him from young Tom, his son; a rough, not ill-natured man,
+until the money-getting fever seized him, since which time his
+home-folks had found in him changes that did not make for their comfort.
+
+The discovery of silver in Sark, the opening of the mines, and the
+coming of the English miners--with all the very problematical benefits
+of a vastly increased currency of money, and the sudden introduction of
+new ideas and standards of life and living into a community which had
+hitherto been contented with the order of things known to its
+forefathers--these things had told upon many, but on none more than old
+Tom Hamon.
+
+Suspicious at first of the meaning and doings of these strangers, he
+very soon found them advantageous. He got excellent prices for his farm
+produce, and when his horses and carts were not otherwise engaged he
+could always turn them to account hauling for the mines.
+
+As the silver-fever grew in him he became closer in his dealings both
+abroad and at home. With every pound he could scrimp and save he bought
+shares in the mines and believed in them absolutely. And he went on
+scrimping and saving and buying shares so as to have as large a stake in
+the silver future as possible.
+
+He got no return as yet from his investment, indeed. But that would
+come all right in time, and the more shares he could get hold of the
+larger the ultimate return would be. And so he stinted himself and his
+family, and mortgaged his future, in hopes of wealth which he would not
+have known how to enjoy if he had succeeded in getting it.
+
+So possessed was he with the desire for gain that when young Tom came
+home from sea he left the farming to him, and took to the mining
+himself, and worked harder than he had ever worked in his life before.
+
+He was a sturdy, middle-sized man, with a grizzled bullet head and
+rounded beard, of a dogged and pertinacious disposition, but capable,
+when stirred out of his usual phlegm, of fiery outbursts which overbore
+all argument and opposition. His wife died when his boy Tom was three,
+and after two years of lonely discomfort he married Nancy Poidestre of
+Petit Dixcart, whose people looked upon it as something of a
+_mésalliance_ that she should marry out of her own country into Little
+Sark.
+
+Nancy was eminently good-looking and a notable housewife, and she went
+into Tom Hamon’s house of La Closerie with every hope and intention of
+making him happy.
+
+But, from the very first, little Tom set his face against her.
+
+It would be hard to say why. Nancy racked her brain for reasons, and
+could find none, and was miserable over it.
+
+His father thrashed him for his rudeness and insolence, which only made
+matters worse.
+
+His own mother had given way to him in everything, and spoiled him
+completely. After her death his father out of pity for his forlorn
+estate, had equally given way to him, and only realised, too late, when
+he tried to bring him to with a round turn, how thoroughly out of hand
+he had got.
+
+When little Tom found, as one consequence of the new mother’s arrival,
+that his father thrashed instead of humouring him, he put it all down to
+the new-comer’s account, and set himself to her discomfiture in every
+way his barbarous little wits could devise.
+
+He never forgot one awful week he passed in his grandmother’s care--a
+week that terminated in the arrival of still another new-comer, who, in
+course of time, developed into little Nance. It is not impossible that
+the remembrance of that black week tended to colour his after-treatment
+of his little half-sister. In spite of her winsomeness he hated her
+always, and did his very best to make life a burden to her.
+
+When, on that memorable occasion, he was hastily flung by his father
+into his grandmother’s room, as the result of some wickedness which had
+sorely upset his stepmother, and the door was, most unusually, closed
+behind him, his first natural impulse was to escape as quickly as
+possible.
+
+But he became aware of something unusual and discomforting in the
+atmosphere, and when his grandmother said sternly, “Sit down!” and he
+turned on her to offer his own opinion on the matter, he found the keen
+dark eyes gazing out at him from under the shadowy penthouse of the
+great black sun-bonnet, with so intent and compelling a stare that his
+mouth closed without saying a word. He climbed up on to a chair and
+twisted his feet round the legs by way of anchorage.
+
+Then he sat up and stared back at Grannie, and as an exhibition of
+nonchalance and high spirit, put out his tongue at her.
+
+Grannie only looked at him.
+
+And, bit by bit, the tongue withdrew, and only the gaping mouth was
+left, and above it a pair of frightened green eyes, transmitting to the
+perverse little soul within new impressions and vague terrors.
+
+Before long his left arm went up over his face to shut out the sight of
+Grannie’s dreadful staring eyes, and when, after a sufficient interval,
+he ventured a peep at her and found her eyes still fixed on him, he
+howled, “Take it off! Take it off!” and slipped his anchors and slid to
+the floor, hunching his back at this tormentor who could beat him on his
+own ground.
+
+For that week he gave no trouble to any one. But after it he never went
+near Grannie’s room, and for years he never spoke to her. When he passed
+her open door, or in front of her window, he hunched his shoulder
+protectively and averted his eyes.
+
+Resenting control in any shape or form, Tom naturally objected to
+school.
+
+His stepmother would have had him go--for his own sake as well as hers.
+But his father took a not unusual Sark view of the matter.
+
+“What’s the odds?” said he. “He’ll have the farm. Book-learning will be
+no use to him,” and in spite of Nancy’s protests--which Tom regarded as
+simply the natural outcrop of her ill-will towards him--the boy grew up
+untaught and uncontrolled, and knowing none but the worst of all
+masters--himself.
+
+On occasion, when the tale of provocation reached its limit, his father
+thrashed him, until there came a day when Tom upset the usual course of
+proceedings by snatching the stick out of his father’s hands, and would
+have belaboured him in turn if he had not been promptly knocked down.
+
+After that his father judged it best for all concerned that he should
+flight his troublesome wings outside for a while. So he sent him off in
+a trading-ship, in the somewhat forlorn hope that a knowledge of the
+world would knock some of the devil out of him--a hope which, like many
+another, fell short of accomplishment.
+
+The world knocks a good deal out of a man, but it also knocks a good
+deal in. Tom came back from his voyaging knowing a good many things that
+he had not known when he started--a little English among others--and
+most of the others things which had been more profitably left unlearnt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF
+
+
+And little Nance?
+
+The most persistent memories of Nance’s childhood were her fear and
+hatred of Tom, and her passionate love for her mother,--and Bernel when
+he came.
+
+“My own,” she called these two, and regarded even her father as somewhat
+outside that special pale; esteemed Grannie as an Olympian, benevolently
+inclined, but dwelling on a remote and loftier plane; and feared and
+detested Tom as an open enemy.
+
+And she had reasons.
+
+She was a high-strung child, too strong and healthy to be actually
+nervous, but with every faculty always at its fullest--not only in
+active working order but always actively at work--an admirable subject
+therefore for the malevolence of an enemy whose constant proximity
+offered him endless opportunity.
+
+Much of his boyish persecution never reached the ears of the higher
+powers. Nance very soon came to accept Tom’s rough treatment as natural
+from a big fellow of fourteen to a small girl of eight, and she bore it
+stoically and hated him the harder.
+
+Her mother taught her carefully to say her prayers, which included
+petitions for the welfare of Grannie and father and brother Tom, and for
+a time, with the perfunctoriness of childhood, which attaches more
+weight to the act than to the meaning of it, she allowed that to pass
+with a stickle and a slur. But very soon brother Tom was ruthlessly
+dropped out of the ritual, and neither threats nor persuasion could
+induce her to re-establish him.
+
+Later on, and in private, she added to her acknowledged petitions an
+appendix, unmistakably brief and to the point--“And, O God, please kill
+brother Tom!”--and lived in hope.
+
+She was an unusually pretty child, though her prettiness developed
+afterwards--as childish prettiness does not always--into something finer
+and more lasting.
+
+She had, as a child, large dark blue eyes, which wore as a rule a look
+of watchful anxiety--put there by brother Tom. To the end of her life
+she carried the mark of a cut over her right eyebrow, which came within
+an ace of losing her the sight of that eye. It was brother Tom did that.
+
+She had an abundance of flowing brown hair, by which Tom delighted to
+lift her clear off the ground, under threat of additional boxed ears if
+she opened her mouth. The wide, firm little mouth always remained
+closed, but the blue eyes burned fiercely, and the outraged little
+heart, thumping furiously at its impotence, did its best to salve its
+wounds with ceaseless repetition of its own private addition to the
+prescribed form of morning and evening prayer.
+
+Once, even Tom’s dull wit caught something of meaning in the blaze of
+the blue eyes.
+
+“What are you saying, you little devil?” he growled, and released her so
+suddenly that she fell on her knees in the mud.
+
+And she put her hands together, as she was in the habit of doing, and
+prayed, “O God, please kill brother Tom!”
+
+“Little devil!” said brother Tom, with a startled red face, and made a
+dash at her; but she had foreseen that and was gone like a flash.
+
+One might have expected her childish comeliness to exercise something of
+a mollifying effect on his brutality. On the contrary, it seemed but to
+increase it. She was so sweet; he was so coarse. She was so small and
+fragile; he was so big and strong. Her prettiness might work on others.
+He would let her see and feel that he was not the kind to be fooled by
+such things.
+
+He had the elemental heartlessness of the savage, which recognises no
+sufferings but its own, and refuses to be affected even by them.
+
+When Nance’s kitten, presented to her by their neighbour, Mrs. Helier
+Baker, solved much speculation as to its sex by becoming a mother, Tom
+gladly undertook the task of drowning the superfluous offspring. He got
+so much amusement out of it that, for weeks, Nance’s horrified inner
+vision saw little blind heads, half-drowned and mewing piteously,
+striving with feeble pink claws to climb out of the death-tub and being
+ruthlessly set swimming again till they sank.
+
+She hurled herself at Tom as he gloated over his enjoyment, and would
+have asked nothing better than to treat him as he was treating the
+kittens--righteous retribution in her case, not enjoyment!--but he was
+too strong for her. He simply kicked out behind, and before she could
+get up had thrust one of his half-drowned victims into the neck of her
+frock, and the clammy-dead feel of it and its pitiful screaming set her
+shuddering for months whenever she thought of it.
+
+But now and again her tormentor overpassed the bounds and got his
+reward--to Nance’s immediate satisfaction but subsequent increased
+tribulation. For whenever he got a thrashing on her account he never
+failed to pay her out in the smaller change of persecution which never
+came to light.
+
+On a pitch-dark, starless night, the high-hedged--and in places
+deep-sunk--lanes of Little Sark are as black as the inside of an ebony
+ruler.
+
+When the moon bathes sea and land in a flood of shimmering silver, or on
+a clear night of stars--and the stars in Sark, you must know, shine
+infinitely larger and closer and brighter than in most other places--the
+darkness below is lifted somewhat by reason of the majestic width and
+height of the glittering dome above. But when moon and stars alike are
+wanting, then the darkness of a Sark lane is a thing to be felt, and--if
+you should happen to be a little girl of eight, with a large imagination
+and sharp ears that have picked up fearsome stories of witches and
+ghosts and evil spirits--to be mortally feared.
+
+Tom had a wholesome dread of such things himself. But the fear of
+fourteen, in a great strong body and no heavenly spark of imagination,
+is not to be compared with the fear of eight and a mind that could
+quiver like a harp even at its own imaginings. And, to compass his ends,
+he would blunt his already dull feelings and turn the darkness to his
+account.
+
+When he knew Nance was out on such a night--on some errand, or in at a
+neighbour’s--to crouch in the hedge and leap silently out upon her was
+huge delight; and it was well worth braving the grim possibilities of
+the hedges in order to extort from her the anger in the bleat of terror
+which, as a rule, was all that her paralysed heart permitted, as she
+turned and fled.
+
+Almost more amusing--as considerably extending the enjoyment--was it to
+follow her quietly on such occasions, yet not so quietly but that she
+was perfectly aware of footsteps behind, which stopped when she stopped
+and went on again when she went on, and so kept her nerves on the quiver
+the whole time.
+
+Creeping fearfully along in the blackness, with eyes and ears on the
+strain, and both little shoulders humped against the expected apparition
+of Tom--or worse, she would become aware of the footsteps behind her.
+
+Then she would stop suddenly to make sure, and stand listening
+painfully, and hear nothing but the low hoarse growl of the sea that
+rarely ceases, day or night, among the rocks of Little Sark.
+
+Then she would take a tentative step or two and stop again, and then
+dash on. And always there behind her were the footsteps that followed in
+the dark.
+
+Then she would fumble with her foot for a stone and stoop hastily--for
+you are at a disadvantage with ghosts and with Toms when you stoop--and
+pick it up and hurl it promiscuously in the direction of the footsteps,
+and quaver, in a voice that belied its message, “Go away, Tom Hamon! I
+can see you,”--which was a little white fib born of the black urgency of
+the situation;--“and I’m not the least bit afraid,”--which was most
+decidedly another.
+
+And so the journey would progress fitfully and in spasms, and leave
+nightmare recollections for the disturbance of one’s sleep.
+
+But there were variations in the procedure at times.
+
+As when, on one occasion, Nance’s undiscriminating projectile elicited
+from the darkness a plaintive “Moo!” which came, she knew, from her
+favourite calf Jeanetton, who had broken her tether in the field and
+sought companionship in the road, and had followed her doubtfully,
+stopping whenever she stopped, and so received the punishment intended
+for another.
+
+Nance kissed the bruise on Jeanetton’s ample forehead next day very many
+times, and explained the whole matter to her at considerable length, and
+Jeanetton accepted it all very placidly and bore no ill-will.
+
+Another time, when Nance had taken a very specially compounded cake over
+to her old friend, Mrs. Baker, as a present from her mother, and had
+been kept much longer than she wished--for the old lady’s enjoyment of
+her pretty ways and entertaining prattle--she set out for home in fear
+and trembling.
+
+It was one of the pitch-black nights, and she went along on tiptoes,
+hugging the empty plate to her breast, and glancing fearfully over first
+one shoulder, then the other, then over both and back and front all at
+once.
+
+She was almost home, and very grateful for it, when the dreaded black
+figure leaped silently out at her from its crouching place, and she tore
+down the lane to the house, Tom’s hoarse guffaws chasing her mockingly.
+
+The open door cleft a solid yellow wedge in the darkness. She was almost
+into it, when her foot caught, and she flung head foremost into the
+light with a scream, and lay there with the blood pouring down her face
+from the broken plate.
+
+A finger’s-breadth lower and she would have gone through life one-eyed,
+which would have been a grievous loss to humanity at large, for sweeter
+windows to a large sweet soul never shone than those out of which
+little Nance Hamon’s looked.
+
+Most houses may be judged by their windows, but these material windows
+are not always true gauge of what is within. They may be decked to
+deceive, but the clear windows of the soul admit of no disguise. That
+little life tenant is always looking out and showing himself in his true
+colours--whether he knows it or not.
+
+Nance’s terrified scream took old Tom out at a bound. He had heard the
+quick rush of her feet and Tom’s mocking laughter in the distance. He
+carried Nance in to her mother, snatched up a stick, and went after the
+culprit who had promptly disappeared.
+
+It was two days before Tom sneaked in again and took his thrashing
+dourly. Little Nance had shut her lips tight when her father questioned
+her, and refused to say a word. But he was satisfied as to where the
+blame lay and administered justice with a heavy hand.
+
+Bernel--as soon as he grew to persecutable age--provided Tom with
+another victim. But time was on the victims’ side, and when Nance got to
+be twelve--Bernel being then eight and Tom eighteen--their combined
+energies and furies of revolt against his oppressions put matters more
+on a level.
+
+Many a pitched battle they had, and sometimes almost won. But, win or
+lose, the fact that they had no longer to suffer without lifting a hand
+was great gain to them, and the very fact that they had to go about
+together for mutual protection knitted still stronger the ties that
+bound them one to the other.
+
+But, though little Nance’s earlier years suffered much from the black
+shadow of brother Tom, they were very far from being years of darkness.
+
+She was of an unusually bright and enquiring disposition, always
+wanting to see and know and understand, interested in everything about
+her, and never satisfied till she had got to the bottom of things, or at
+all events as far down as it was possible for a small girl to get.
+
+Her lively chatter and ceaseless questions left her mother and Grannie
+small chance of stagnation. But, if she asked many questions--and some
+of them posers--it was not simply for the sake of asking, but because
+she truly wanted to know; and even Grannie, who was not naturally
+talkative, never resented her pertinent enquiries, but gave freely of
+her accumulated wisdom and enjoyed herself in the giving.
+
+When she got beyond their depth at times, or outside their limits, she
+would boldly carry her queries--and strange ones they were at times--to
+old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar up in Sark, making nothing of the journey
+and the Coupée in order to solve some, to her, important problem. And he
+not only never refused her but delighted to open to her the stores of a
+well-stocked mind and of the kindest and gentlest of hearts.
+
+Often and often the people of Vauroque and Plaisance would see them
+pass, hand in hand and full of talk, when the Vicar had wished to see
+with his own eyes one or other of Nance’s wonderful discoveries, in the
+shape of cave or rock-pool, or deposit of sparkling crystal
+fingers--amethyst and topaz--or what not.
+
+For she was ever lighting on odd and beautiful bits of Nature’s
+craftsmanship. Books were hardly to be had in those days, and in place
+of them she climbed fearlessly about the rough cliff-sides and tumbled
+headlands, and looked close at Nature with eyes that missed nothing and
+craved everything.
+
+To the neighbours the headlands were places where rabbits were to be
+shot for dinner, the lower rocks places where ormers and limpets and
+vraie might be found. But to little Nance the rabbits were playfellows
+whose sudden deaths she lamented and resented; the cliff-sides were
+glorious gardens thick with sweet-scented yellow gorse and honeysuckle
+and wild roses, carpeted with primroses and bluebells; and, in their
+season, rich and juicy with blackberries beyond the possibilities of
+picking.
+
+She was on closest visiting terms with innumerable broods of
+newly-hatched birdlings--knew them, indeed, while they were still but
+eggs--delighted in them when they were as yet but skin and
+mouth--rejoiced in their featherings and flyings. Even baby cuckoos were
+a joy to her, though, on their foster-mothers’ accounts she resented the
+thriftlessness of their parents, and grew tired each year of their
+monotonous call which ceased not day or night. But of the larks never,
+for their songs seemed to her of heaven, while the cuckoos were of
+earth. The gulls, too, were somewhat difficult from the friendly point
+of view, but she lay for hours overlooking their domestic arrangements
+and envying the wonders of their matchless flight.
+
+And down below the cliffs what marvels she discovered!--marvels which in
+many cases the Vicar was fain to content himself with at second hand,
+since closer acquaintance seemed to him to involve undoubted risk to
+limb if not to life. Little Nance, indeed, hopped down the seamed cliffs
+like a rock pipit, with never a thought of the dangers of the passage,
+and he would stand and watch her with his heart in his mouth, and only
+shake his grey head at her encouraging assertions that it was truly
+truly as easy as easy. For he felt certain that even if he got down he
+would never get up again. And so, when the triumphant shout from below
+told him she was safely landed, he would wave a grateful hand and get
+back from the edge and seat himself securely on a rock, till the rosy
+face came laughing up between him and the shimmering sea, with trophy of
+weed or shell or crystal quartz, and he would tell her all he knew about
+them, and she would try to tell him of all he had missed by not coming
+down.
+
+There were wonderful great basins down there, all lined with pink and
+green corallines, and full of the loveliest weeds and anemones and other
+sea-flowers, and the rivulets that flowed from them to the sea were
+lined pink and green, too. And this that she had brought him was the
+flaming sea-weed, though truly it did not look it now, but in the water
+it was, she assured him, of the loveliest, and there were great bunches
+there so that the dark holes under the rocks were all alight with it.
+
+She coaxed him doubtfully to the descent of the rounded headland facing
+L’Etat, picking out an easy circuitous way for him, and so got him
+safely down to her own special pool, hollowed out of the solid granite
+by centuries of patient grinding on the part of the great boulders
+within.
+
+It was there, peering down at the fishes below, that she expressed a
+wish to imitate them; and he agreeing, she ran up to the farm for a bit
+of rope and was back before he had half comprehended all the beauties of
+the pool. And he had no sooner explained the necessary movements to her
+and she had tried them, than she cast off the rope, shouting, “I can
+swim! I can swim!” and to his amazement swam across the pool and back--a
+good fifty feet each way--chirping with delight in this new-found
+faculty and the tonic kiss of the finest water in the world. But after
+all it was not so very amazing, for she was absolutely without fear, and
+in that water it is difficult to sink.
+
+They were often down there together after that, for close alongside were
+wonderful channels and basins whorled out of the rock in the most
+fantastic ways, and to sit and watch the tide rush up them was a
+never-failing entertainment.
+
+And not far away was a blow-hole of the most extraordinary which shot
+its spray a hundred feet into the air, and if you didn’t mind getting
+wet you could sit quite alongside it, so close that you could put your
+hand into it as it came rocketing out of the hole, and then, if the sun
+was right, you sat in the midst of rainbows--a thing Nance had always
+longed to do since she clapped her baby hands at her first one. But the
+Vicar never did that.
+
+And once, in quest of the how and the why, Nance swam into the
+blow-hole’s cave at a very low tide, and its size and the dome of its
+roof, compared with the narrowness of its entrance, amazed her, but she
+did not stay long for it gave her the creeps.
+
+These were some of the ways by which little Nance grew to a larger
+estate than most of her fellows, and all these things helped to make her
+what she came to be.
+
+When she grew old enough to assist in the farm, new realms of delight
+opened to her. Chickens, calves, lambs, piglets--she foster-mothered
+them all and knew no weariness in all such duties which were rather
+pleasures.
+
+It was a wounded rabbit, limping into cover under a tangle of gorse and
+blackberry bushes, that discovered to her the entrance to the series of
+little chambers and passages that led right through the headland to the
+side looking into Port Gorey. Which most satisfactory hiding-place she
+and Bernel turned to good account on many an occasion when brother Tom’s
+oppression passed endurance.
+
+It had taken time, and much screwing up of childish courage, to explore
+the whole of that extraordinary little burrow, and it was not the work
+of a day.
+
+When Nance crept along the little run made by many generations of
+rabbits, she found that it led finally into a dark crack in the rock,
+and, squeezing through that, she was in a small dark chamber which smelt
+strongly of her friends.
+
+As soon as her eyes recovered from the sudden change from blazing
+sunlight to almost pitch darkness, she perceived a small black opening
+at the far end, and looking through it she saw a lightening of the
+darkness still farther in which tempted her on.
+
+It was a tough scramble even for her, and the closeness of the rocks and
+the loneliness weighed upon her somewhat. But there was that glimmer of
+light ahead and she must know what it was, and so she climbed and
+wriggled over and under the huge splintered rocks till she came to the
+light, like a tiny slit of a window far above her head, and still there
+were passages leading on.
+
+Next day, with Bernel and a tiny crasset lamp for company, she explored
+the burrow to its utmost limits and adopted it at once as their refuge
+and stronghold. And thereafter they spent much time there, especially in
+the end chamber where a tiny slit gave on to Port Gorey, and they could
+lie and watch all that went on down below.
+
+There they solemnly concocted plans for brother Tom’s discomfiture, and
+thither they retreated after defeat or victory, while he hunted high
+and low for them and never could make out where they had got to.
+
+Then Tom went off to sea, and life, for those at home, became a joy
+without a flaw--except the thought that he would sometime come
+back--unless he got drowned.
+
+When he returned he was past the boyish bullying and teasing stage, and
+his stunts and twists developed themselves along other lines. Moreover,
+sailor-fashion, he wore a knife in a sheath at the back of his belt.
+
+He found Nance a tall slim girl of sixteen, her childish prettiness just
+beginning to fashion itself into the strength and comeliness of form and
+feature which distinguished her later on.
+
+He swore, with strange oaths, that she was the prettiest bit of goods
+he’d set eyes on since he left home, and he’d seen a many. And he
+wondered to himself if this could really be the Nance he used to hate
+and persecute.
+
+But Nance detested him and all his ways as of old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME
+
+
+Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger seated themselves on a rock within a few feet
+of the narrow slit out of which Nance and Bernel had been looking.
+
+“Ouaie,” said Tom, taking up his parable--“wanted me to join him in
+getting a loan on farm, he did.”
+
+“Aw, now!”
+
+“Ouaie--a loan on farm, and me to join him, ’cause he couldn’ do it
+without. ‘And why?’ I asked him.”
+
+“Ah!”
+
+“An’ he told me he was goin’ to make a fortune out them silver mines.”
+
+“Aw!”
+
+“Ouaie! He’d put in every pound he had and every shilling he earned. An’
+the more he could put in the more he would get out.”
+
+“Aw!”
+
+“‘But,’ I said, ‘suppos’n it all goes into them big holes and never
+comes out--’”
+
+“Aw!”
+
+“But he’s just crazy ’bout them mines. Says there’s silver an’ lead, and
+guyabble-knows-what-all in ’em, and when they get it out he’ll be a rich
+man.”
+
+“Aw!” said Peter, nodding his head portentously, as one who had gauged
+the futility of earthly riches.
+
+He was a young man of large possessions but very few words. When he did
+allow his thoughts out they came slowly and in jerks, with lapses at
+times which the hearer had to fill in as best he could.
+
+His father had been an enterprising free-trader, and had made money
+before the family farm came to him on the death of his father. He had
+married another farm and the heiress attached to it, and Peter was the
+result. An only son, both parents dead, two farms and a good round sum
+in the Guernsey Bank, such were Peter’s circumstances.
+
+And himself--good-tempered; lazy, since he had no need to work; not
+naturally gifted mentally, and the little he had, barely stirred by the
+short course of schooling which had been deemed sufficient for so
+worldly-well-endowed a boy; tall, loose-limbed, easy going and easily
+led, Peter was the object of much speculation among marriageably
+inclined maiden hearts, and had set his own where it was not wanted.
+
+“Ouaie,” continued Tom, “an’ if I’d join him in the loan the money’d all
+come to me when he’d done with it.”
+
+“Aw!... Money isn’t everything.... Can’t get all you want sometimes
+when you’ve got all money you want.”
+
+“G’zammin, Peter! You’re as crazy ’bout that lass as th’ old un is ’bout
+his mines. Why don’t ye ask her and ha’ done with it?”
+
+“Aw--yes. Well.... You see.... I’m makin’ up to her gradual like, and in
+time----”
+
+And Bernel in the hole dug his elbow facetiously into Nance’s side.
+
+“Mon Gyu! To think of a slip of a thing like our Nance making a great
+big fellow like you as fool-soft as a bit of tallow!” and Tom stared at
+him in amazement. “Why, I’ve licked her scores of times, and I used to
+lift her up by the hair of her head.”
+
+“I’d ha’ knocked your head right off, Tom Hamon, if I’d been there.
+Right off--yes, an’ bumped it on the ground.”
+
+“No, you wouldn’t. ’Cause, in the first place, you couldn’t, and in the
+second place you wouldn’t have looked at her then. She was no more to
+look at than a bit of a rabbit, slipping about, scared-like, with her
+big eyes all round her.”
+
+“Great rough bull of a chap you was, Tom. Ought to had more lickings
+when you was young.”
+
+“Aw!” said Tom.
+
+“Join him?” asked Peter after a pause.
+
+“No, I won’t, an’ he’s no right to ask it, an’ he knows it. Them dirty
+mines may pay an’ they may not, but the farm’s a safe thing an’ I’ll
+stick to it.”
+
+“Maybe new capt’n’ll make things go better. That’s him, I’m thinking,
+just got ashore from brig without breaking his legs,” nodding towards
+the wooden landing-stage on the other side of the gulf. For landing at
+Port Gorey was at times a matter requiring both nerve and muscle.
+
+A man, however, had just leaped ashore from the brig, and was now
+standing looking somewhat anxiously after the landing of his baggage,
+which consisted of a wooden chest and an old carpet-bag.
+
+When at last it stood safely on the platform, he cast a comprehensive
+look at his surroundings and then turned to the group of men who had
+come down to watch the boat come in, and four pairs of eyes on the
+opposite side of the gulf watched him curiously, with little thought of
+the tremendous part he was to play in all their lives.
+
+“Where’s he stop?” asked Peter.
+
+“Our house.”
+
+“Nay!”
+
+“Ouaie, I tell you. He’s to stop at our house.”
+
+“Why doesn’t he go to Barracks?”
+
+“Old Captain’s there and they might not agree. Oh ouaie, he’ll have his
+hands full, I’m thinking. And if he’s not careful it’s a crack on the
+head and a drop over the Coupée he’ll be getting.”
+
+“Ah!” said Peter Mauger.
+
+“Come you along and see what kind of chap he is.”
+
+“Aw well, I don’t mind,” and they strolled away to inspect the new Mine
+Captain, who was to brace up the slackened ropes and bring the
+enterprise to a successful issue.
+
+“Did you know he was going to stop with us, Nance?” asked Bernel, as
+they groped their way out after due interval.
+
+“I heard father tell mother this morning.”
+
+“Where’s he to sleep?”
+
+“He’s to have my room and I’m coming up into the loft. I shall take the
+dark end, and I’ve put up a curtain across.”
+
+“Shoo! We’ll hear enough about the mines now,” and they crept out behind
+a gorse bush, and went off across the common towards the clump of
+wind-whipped trees inside which the houses of Little Sark clustered for
+companionship and shelter from the south-west gales.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+
+Old Tom Hamon gave the new arrival warm greeting, and pointed out such
+matters as might interest him as they climbed the steep road which led
+up to the plateau and the houses.
+
+“Assay Office, Mr. Gard.... Captain’s Office.... Forge.... Sark’s Hope
+shaft.... Le Pelley shaft--ninety fathoms below sea-level.... Pump
+shaft ... and yon to east’ard is Prince’s shaft.... We go round here
+behind engine-house.... Yon’s my house ’mong the trees.”
+
+“That’s a fine animal,” said Gard, stopping suddenly to look at a great
+white horse, which stood nibbling the gorse on the edge of the cliff
+right in the eye of the sun, as it drooped towards Guernsey in a
+holocaust of purple and amber and crimson clouds. The glow of the
+threatening sky threw the great white figure into unusual prominence.
+
+“Yours, Mr. Hamon?” asked Gard--and the white horse flung up its head
+and pealed out a trumpet-like neigh as though resenting the imputation.
+
+“No,” said old Tom, staring at the white horse under his shading hand.
+“Seigneur’s. What’s he doing down here? He’s generally kept up at
+Eperquerie, and that’s the best place for him. He’s an awkward beast at
+times. I must send and tell Mr. Le Pelley where he is.”
+
+The little cluster of white, thatched houses stood close together for
+company, but discreetly turned their faces away from one another so that
+no man overlooked or interfered with his neighbour.
+
+Gard found himself in a large room which occupied the whole middle
+portion of the house and served as kitchen and common room for the
+family.
+
+The floor was of trodden earth--hard and dry as cement, with a strip of
+boarding round the sides and in front of the fire-place. Heavy oaken
+beams ran across the roof from which depended a great hanging rack
+littered with all kinds of household odds and ends. Along the beams of
+the roof on hooks hung two long guns. One end of the room was occupied
+by a huge fire-place, in one corner of which stood a new iron cooking
+range, and alongside it a heap of white ashes and some smouldering
+sticks of gorse under a big black iron pot filled the room with the
+fragrance of wood smoke. In the opposite side of the fire-place was an
+iron door closing the great baking oven, and above it ran a wide
+mantel-shelf on which stood china dogs and glass rolling-pins and a
+couple of lamps.
+
+A well-scrubbed white wooden table was set ready for supper. On a very
+ancient-looking black oak stand--cupboard below and shelves above--was
+ranged a vast assortment of crockery ware, and on the walls hung
+potbellied metal jugs and cans which shone like silver.
+
+Two doors led to the other rooms of the house, one of them wide open.
+
+One corner of the room was occupied by a great wooden bin eight feet
+square, filled with dried bracken. On the wide flat side, which looked
+like a form, a woman and a girl were sitting when the two men entered.
+
+Hamon introduced them briefly as his wife and daughter, and, comely
+women as Gard had been accustomed to in his own country of Cornwall,
+there was something about these two, and especially about the younger of
+the two, which made him of a sudden more than satisfied with the
+somewhat doubtful venture to which he had bound himself--set a sudden
+homely warmth in his heart, and made him feel the richer for being
+there--made him, in fact, glad that he had come.
+
+And yet there was nothing in their reception of him that justified the
+feeling.
+
+They nodded, indeed, in answer to his bow, but neither their faces nor
+their manner showed any special joy at his coming.
+
+But that made no difference to him. They were there, and the mere sight
+of the girl’s fine mobile face and large dark blue eyes was a thing to
+be grateful for.
+
+“You’ll be wanting your supper,” said Hamon.
+
+“At your own time, please,” said the young man, looking towards Mrs.
+Hamon. “I am really not very hungry”--though truth to tell he well might
+have been, for the food on the brig had left much to be desired even to
+one who had been a sailorman himself.
+
+“It is our usual time,” said Mrs. Hamon, “and it is all ready. Will you
+please to sit there.”
+
+At the sound of the chairs a boy of fourteen came quietly in and slipped
+into his seat.
+
+His sister had gone off with a portion on a plate through the open door.
+
+Gard was surprised to find himself hoping it was not her custom to take
+her meals in private, and was relieved when she came back presently
+without the plate and sat down by her brother.
+
+“Ah, you, Bernel, as soon as you’ve done your supper run over and tell
+Mr. Le Pelley that his white stallion is on our common, and he’d better
+send for him.”
+
+“I’ll ride him home,” said the boy exultingly.
+
+“No you won’t, Bern,” said his sister quickly. “He’s not safe. You know
+what an awkward beast he is at times, and you could never get him across
+the Coupée.”
+
+“Pooh! I’d ride him across any day.”
+
+“Promise me you won’t,” she said, with a hand on his arm.
+
+“Oh, well, if you say so,” he grumbled. “I could manage him all right
+though.”
+
+Just then the doorway darkened and two young men entered, and threw
+their caps on the green bed, and sat down with an awkward nod of
+greeting to the company in general.
+
+“My son Tom,” said Mr. Hamon, and Tom jerked another awkward nod towards
+the stranger. “And Peter Mauger”--Peter repeated the performance, more
+shyly and awkwardly even than Tom, from a variety of reasons.
+
+Tom was at home, and he had not even been invited--except by Tom. And
+strangers always made him shy. And then there was Nance, with her great
+eyes fixed on him, he knew, though he had not dared to look straight at
+her.
+
+And then the stranger had an air about him--it was hard to say of what,
+but it made Peter Mauger and Tom conscious of personal uncouthness, and
+of a desire to get up and go out and wash their hands and have a shave.
+
+Gard, they knew, was the new captain of the mine, chosen by the
+managers of the company for his experience with men, and he looked as if
+he had been accustomed to order them about.
+
+His eyes were dark and keen, his face full of energy. Being clean-shaven
+his age was doubtful. He might be twenty-five or forty. Nance, in her
+first quick comprehensive glance, had wondered which.
+
+He stood close upon six feet and was broad-chested and
+square-shouldered. A good figure of a man, clean and upstanding, and
+with no nonsense about him. A capable-looking man in every respect, and
+if his manner was quiet and retiring, there was that about him which
+suggested the possibility of explosion if occasion arose.
+
+Not that the Hamon family as a whole, or any member of it, would have
+put the matter quite in that way to itself, or herself. But that,
+vaguely, was the impression produced upon them--an impression of
+uprightness, intelligence, and reserved strength--and the more strongly,
+perhaps, because of late these characteristics had been somewhat
+overshadowed in the Island by the greed of gain and love of display
+engendered by the opening of the mines.
+
+To old Tom Hamon his coming was wholly welcome. It foreshadowed a strong
+and more energetic development of the mines and the speedier realization
+of his most earnest desires.
+
+To Mrs. Hamon it meant some extra household work, which she would gladly
+undertake since it was her husband’s wish to have the stranger live with
+them, though in his absorption by the mines she had no sympathy
+whatever.
+
+Nance looked upon him merely as a part of the mines, and therefore to
+be detested along with the noisy engine-house, the pumps, the damp and
+dirty miners, and all the rest of it--the coming of which had so
+completely spoiled her much-loved Sark.
+
+Tom disliked him because he made him feel small and boorish, and of a
+commoner make. And feelings such as that inevitably try to disprove
+themselves by noisy self-assertion.
+
+Accordingly Tom--after various jocular remarks in patois to Peter, who
+would have laughed at them had he dared, but, knowing Nance’s feelings
+towards her brother was not sure how she would take it--loudly and
+provocatively to Gard--
+
+“Expect to make them mines pay, monsieur?”
+
+“Well, I hope so. But it’s too soon to express an opinion till I’ve seen
+them.”
+
+“They put a lot of money in, and they get a lot of dirt out, but one
+does not hear much of any silver.”
+
+“Sometimes the deepest mines prove the best in the end.”
+
+“And as long as there’s anybody to pay for it I suppose you go on
+digging.”
+
+“If I thought the mines had petered out--”
+
+“Eh?” said Peter, and then coughed to hide his confusion when they all
+looked at him.
+
+“I should of course advise the owners to stop work and sink no more
+money.”
+
+“It’ll be a bad day for Sark when that happens,” said old Tom. “But it’s
+not going to happen. The silver’s there all right. It only wants getting
+out.”
+
+“If it’s there we’ll certainly get it out,” said Gard, and although he
+said it quietly enough, old Tom felt much better about things in
+general.
+
+“You’re the man for us,” he said heartily. “We’ll all be rich before we
+die yet.”
+
+“Depends when we die,” growled Tom--in which observation--obvious as it
+was--there was undoubtedly much truth. And then, his little suggestion
+of provocation having broken like ripples on Gard’s imperturbability, he
+turned on Peter and tried to stir him up.
+
+“You don’t get on any too fast with your making up to la garche, mon
+gars,” he said in the patois again.
+
+“Aw--Tom!” remonstrated Peter, very red in the face at this ruthless
+laying bare of his approaches.
+
+“Get ahead, man! Put your arm round her neck and give her a kiss. That’s
+the way to fetch ’em.”
+
+At which Nance jumped up with fiery face and sparks in her eyes and left
+the room, and Gard, who understood no word of what had passed, yet
+understood without possibility of doubt that Tom’s speech had been
+mortally offensive to his sister, and set him down in his own mind as of
+low esteem and boorish disposition.
+
+As for Peter, to whom such advice was as useless as the act would have
+been impossible at that stage of the proceedings, he was almost as much
+upset as Nance herself. He got up with a shamefaced--
+
+“Aw, Tom, boy, that was not good of you,” and made for his hat, while
+Tom sat with a broad grin at the result of his delicate diplomacy, and
+Gard’s great regret was that it was not possible for him to take the
+hulking fellow by the neck and bundle him out of doors.
+
+Old Tom made some sharp remark to his son, who replied in kind; Mrs.
+Hamon sat quietly aloof, as she always did when Tom and his father got
+to words, and Bernel made play with his supper, as though such matters
+were of too common occurrence to call for any special attention on his
+part.
+
+Then Nance’s face framed in a black sun-bonnet gleamed in at the outer
+door.
+
+“Come along, Bern, and we’ll go and tell the Seigneur where his white
+horse is,” and she disappeared, and Bernel, having polished off
+everything within reach, got up and followed her.
+
+“Will you please to take a look at the mines to-night?” asked old Tom of
+his guest, anxious to interest him in the work as speedily as possible.
+
+“We might take a bit of a walk, and you can tell me all you will about
+things. But I don’t take hold till the first of the month, and I don’t
+want to interfere until I have a right to. I suppose my baggage will be
+coming up?”
+
+“Ach, yes! Tom, you take the cart and bring Mr. Gard’s things up. They
+are lying on the quay down there. Then we will go along, if you please!”
+
+Old Tom marched him through the wonderful amber twilight to the summit
+of the bluff behind the engine-house--whence Gard could just make out
+his box and carpet-bag still lying on the quay below. And all the way
+the old man was volubly explaining the many changes necessary, in his
+opinion, to bring the business to a paying basis. All which information
+Gard accepted for testing purposes, but gathered from the total the fact
+that through ill health on the part of the departing captain, the ropes
+all round had got slack and that the tightening of them would be a
+matter of no little delicacy and difficulty.
+
+Sark men, Mr. Hamon explained, were very free and independent, and hated
+to be driven. They did piecework--so much per fathom, and were
+constitutionally, he admitted, a bit more particular as to the so much
+than as to the fathom. While the Cornish and Welsh men, receiving weekly
+wages, had also grown slack and did far less work than they did at first
+and than they might, could, and should do.
+
+“But,” said old Tom frankly, scratching his head, “I don’t know’s I’d
+like the job myself. Your men are quiet enough to look at, but they can
+boil over when they’re put to it. And our men--well, they’re Sark, and
+there’s more’n a bit of the devil in them.”
+
+“I must get things round bit by bit,” said Gard quietly. “It never pays
+to make a fuss and bustle men. Softly does it.”
+
+“I’m thinking you can do it if any man can.”
+
+“I’ll have a good try any way.”
+
+“Whereabouts does the Seigneur live?” he asked presently, and
+inconsequently as it seemed, but following out a train of thought of his
+own which needed no guessing at.
+
+“The Seigneur? Over there in Sark--across the Coupée.”
+
+“What’s the Coupée?”
+
+“The Coupée?--Mon Gyu!”--at such colossal ignorance--“Why, ...the
+Coupée’s the Coupée.... Come along, then. Maybe you can get a look at it
+before it’s too dark.”
+
+They had got quite out of sound of the clanking engine, and were
+travelling a well-made road, when their attention was drawn to a lively
+struggle proceeding on the common between the road and the cliff.
+
+Tom, setting out after the troubled Peter, had caught sight of the
+Seigneur’s white horse and had forthwith decided to take him home.
+Peter, agreeing that it was a piece of neighbourliness which the
+Seigneur would appreciate, had turned back to give his assistance.
+
+By some cajolery they had managed to slip a halter with a special length
+of rope over the wary white head, and there for the moment matters hung.
+For the white horse, with his forelegs firmly planted, dragged at one
+end of the rope and the two men at the other, and the issue remained in
+doubt.
+
+The doubt, however, was suddenly solved by the white horse deciding on
+more active measures. He swung his great head to one side, dragged the
+men off their feet and started off at a gallop, they hanging on as best
+they could.
+
+Old Tom and Gard set off after them to see the end of the matter, and
+suddenly, as the roadway dipped between high banks and became a hollow
+way, the white beast gave a shrill squeal, flung up his heels, jerked
+himself free, and vanished like a streak of light into the darkness of
+the lofty bank in front.
+
+“Mon Gyu!” cried old Tom, and sped up the bank to see the end.
+
+But the white horse knew his way and had no fear. They were just in time
+to hear the rattle of his hoofs, as he disappeared with a final shrill
+defiance into the outer darkness on the further side of a mighty gulf,
+while a stone dislodged by his flying feet went clattering down into
+invisible depths.
+
+“He’s done it,” panted old Tom, while Gard gazed with something like awe
+at the narrow pathway, wavering across from side to side of the great
+abyss, out of which rose the growl of the sea.
+
+“What’s this?” he asked.
+
+“Coupée. It’s a wonder he managed it. The path slipped in the winter
+and it’s narrow in places.”
+
+“And do people cross it in the dark?” asked Gard, thinking of the girl
+and boy who had gone to see the Seigneur.
+
+“Och yes! It is not bad when you’re used to it. Come and see!” and he
+led the way back across the common to the road.
+
+Gard walked cautiously behind him as he went across the crumbling white
+pathway with the carelessness of custom, and, sailor as he had been, he
+was not sorry when the other side was reached, and he could stand in the
+security of the cutting and look back, and down into the gulf where the
+white waves foamed and growled among the boulders three hundred feet
+below.
+
+“I’ve seen a many as did not care to cross that, first time they saw
+it,” said old Tom with a chuckle.
+
+“Well, I’m not surprised at that. It’s apt to make one’s head spin.”
+
+“I brought captain of brig up here and he wouldn’t put a foot on it. Not
+for five hundred pounds, he said.”
+
+“It would have taken more than five hundred pounds to piece him together
+if he’d tumbled down there.”
+
+“That’s so.”
+
+A young moon, and a clear sky still rarely light and lofty in the amber
+after-glow, gave them a safe passage back.
+
+When they reached the house among the trees, Gard bethought him of his
+belongings.
+
+“And my things from the quay?” he suggested.
+
+“G’zammin! That boy has forgotten all about them, I’ll be bound. I’ll
+take the cart down myself.”
+
+“I’ll go with you.”
+
+When they got back with the box and bag, which no one had touched since
+they were dropped on to the platform four hours before, they found that
+Nance and Bernel had got home and gone off to bed, having taken
+advantage of being across in Sark to call on some of their friends
+there.
+
+Gard wondered how they would have fared if they had happened to be on
+the Coupée when the white horse went thundering across.
+
+He dreamed that night that he was cautiously treading an endless white
+path that swung up and down in the darkness like a piece of ribbon in a
+breeze. And a great white horse came plunging at him out of the
+darkness, and just as he gave himself up for lost, a sweet firm face in
+a black sun-bonnet appeared suddenly in front of him, and the white
+horse squealed and leaped over them and disappeared, while the stones he
+had displaced went rattling down into the depths below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING
+
+
+As soon as the old captain’s time was up, Gard took up his work in the
+mines with energetic hopefulness.
+
+His hopefulness was unbounded. His energy he tempered with all the tact
+and discretion his knowledge of men, and his experience in handling
+them, had taught him.
+
+His father had been lost at sea the year after his son was born. His
+mother, a good and God-fearing woman, had strained every nerve to give
+her boy an education. She died when Stephen was fourteen. He took to his
+father’s calling and had followed it with a certain success for ten
+years, by which time he had attained the position of first mate.
+
+Then the owner of the Botallack Mine, in Cornwall, having come across
+him in the way of business, and been struck by his intelligence and
+aptitude, induced him by a lucrative appointment to try his luck on
+land.
+
+The managers of the Sark Mines, seeking a special man for somewhat
+special circumstances, had applied to Botallack for assistance, and
+Stephen Gard came to Sark as the representative of many hopes which, so
+far, had been somewhat lacking in results.
+
+But, as old Tom Hamon had predicted, he very soon found that he had laid
+his hand to no easy plough.
+
+The Sark men were characteristically difficult, and made the difficulty
+greater by not understanding him--or declining to understand, which came
+to the same thing--when he laid down his ideas and endeavoured to bring
+them to his ways.
+
+Some, without doubt, had no English, and their patois was quite beyond
+him. Others could understand him an they would, but deliberately chose
+not to--partly from a conservative objection to any change whatever, and
+partly from an idea that he had been imported for the purpose of driving
+them, and driving is the last thing a Sark man will submit to.
+
+Old Tom Hamon, and a few others who had a financial interest in the
+mines, assisted him all they could, in hopes of thereby assisting
+themselves, but they were few.
+
+As for the Cornishmen and Welshmen, the success or failure of the Sark
+Mines mattered little to them. There was always mining going on
+somewhere and competent men were always in demand. They were paid so
+much a week, small output or large, and without a doubt the small output
+entailed less labour than the large. They naturally regarded with no
+great favour the man whose present aim in life it was to ensure the
+largest output possible.
+
+And so Gard found himself confronted by many difficulties, and,
+moreover, and greatly to the troubling of his mind, found himself looked
+upon as a dictator and an interloper by the men whom he had hoped to
+benefit.
+
+Concerning the mines themselves he was not called upon for an opinion.
+The managers had satisfied themselves as to the presence of silver. If
+his opinion had been asked it would have confirmed them. But all he had
+to do was to follow the veins and win the ore in paying quantities, and
+he found himself handicapped on every hand by the obstinacy of his men.
+
+Outside business matters he was very well satisfied with his
+surroundings.
+
+In such spare time as he had, he wandered over the Island with eager,
+open eyes, marvelling at its wonders and enjoying its natural beauties
+with rare delight.
+
+The great granite cliffs, with their deep indentations and stimulating
+caves and crannies; the shimmering blue and green sea, with its long
+slow heave which rushed in foam and tumult up the rock-pools and
+gullies; the softer beauties of rounded down and flower-and fern-clad
+slopes honeycombed with rabbit holes; the little sea-gardens teeming
+with novel life; in all these he found his resource and a certain
+consolation for his loneliness.
+
+And in the Hamon household he found much to interest him and not a
+little ground for speculation.
+
+Old Mrs. Hamon--Grannie--had promptly ordered him in for inspection,
+and, after prolonged and careful observation from the interior of the
+black sun-bonnet, had been understood to approve him, since she said
+nothing to the contrary.
+
+It took him some time to arrive at the correct relationship between
+young Tom and Nance and Bernel, for it seemed quite incredible that
+fruit so diverse should spring from one parent stem.
+
+For Tom was all that was rough and boorish--rude to Mrs. Hamon, coarse,
+and at times overbearing to Nance and Bernel, to such an extent, indeed,
+that more than once Gard had difficulty in remembering that he himself
+was only a visitor on sufferance and not entitled to interfere in such
+intimate family matters.
+
+Tom was not slow to perceive this, and in consequence set himself
+deliberately to provoke it by behaviour even more outrageous than usual.
+Time and again Gard would have rejoiced to take him outside and express
+his feelings to their fullest satisfaction.
+
+With Mrs. Hamon and Bernel he was on the most friendly footing, his
+undisguised sentiments in the matter of Tom commending him to them
+decisively.
+
+But with Nance he made no headway whatever.
+
+It was an absolutely new sensation to him, and a satisfaction the
+meaning of which he had not yet fully gauged, to be living under the
+same roof with a girl such as this. He found himself listening for her
+voice outside and the sound of her feet, and learned almost at once to
+distinguish between the clatter of her wooden pattens and any one else’s
+when she was busy in the yard or barns.
+
+Even though she held him at coolest arm’s length, and repelled any
+slightest attempt at abridgment of the distance, he still rejoiced in
+the sight of her and found the world good because of her presence in it.
+
+He did not understand her feeling about him in the least. He did not
+know that she had had to give up her room for him--that she detested the
+mines and everything tainted by them, and himself as head and forefront
+of the offence--that she regarded him as an outsider and a foreigner and
+therefore quite out of place in Sark. He only knew that he saw very
+little of her and would have liked to see a great deal more.
+
+The very reserve of her treatment of himself--one might even say her
+passive endurance of him--served but to stimulate within him the wish to
+overcome it. The attraction of indifference is a distinct force in life.
+
+There was something so trim and neat and altogether captivating to him
+in the slim energetic figure, in its short blue skirts and print jacket,
+as it whisked to and fro, inside and out, on its multifarious duties,
+and still more in the sweet, serious face, glimmering coyly in the
+shadow of the great sun-bonnet and always moulded to a fine, but, as it
+seemed to him, a somewhat unnatural gravity in his company.
+
+And yet he was quite sure she could be very much otherwise when she
+would. For he had heard her singing over her work, and laughing merrily
+with Bernel; and her face, sweet as it was in its repression, seemed to
+him more fitted for smiles and laughter and joyousness.
+
+He saw, of course, that brother Tom was a constant source of annoyance
+to them all, but especially to her, and his blood boiled impotently on
+her account.
+
+He carried with him--as a delightful memory of her, though not without
+its cloud--the pretty picture she made when he came upon her one day in
+the orchard, milking--for, strictly as the Sabbath may be observed, cows
+must still be milked on a Sunday, not being endowed manna-like, with the
+gift of miraculous double production on a Saturday.
+
+Her head was pressed into her favourite beast’s side, and she was
+crooning soothingly to it as the white jets ping-panged into the
+frothing pail, and he stood for a moment watching her unseen.
+
+Then the cow slowly turned her head towards him, considered him gravely
+for a moment, decided he was unnecessary and whisked her tail
+impatiently. Nance’s lullaby stopped, she looked round with a reproving
+frown, and he went silently on his way.
+
+It was another Sunday afternoon that, as he lay in the bracken on the
+slope of a headland, he saw two slim figures racing down a bare slope on
+the opposite side of a wide blue gulf, with joyous chatter, and
+recognized Nance and Bernel.
+
+They disappeared and he felt lonely. Then they came picking their way
+round a black spur below, and stood for a minute or two looking down at
+something beneath them. Which something he presently discovered must be
+a pool of size among the rocks, for after a brief retiral, Nance behind
+a boulder and Bernel into a black hollow, they came out again, she
+lightly clad in fluttering white and Bernel in nothing at all, and with
+a shout of delight dived out of sight into the pool below.
+
+He could hear their shouts and laughter echoed back by the huge
+overhanging rocks. He saw them climb out again and sit sunning
+themselves on the grey ledge like a pair of sea-birds, and Nance’s
+exiguous white garment no longer fluttered in the breeze.
+
+Then in they went again, and again, and again, till, tiring of the
+limits of the pool--huge as he afterwards found it to be--they crept
+over the barnacled rocks to the sea, and flung themselves fearlessly in,
+and came ploughing through it towards his headland. And he shrank still
+lower among the bracken, for though he had watched the distant little
+figure in white with a slight sense of sacrilege, and absolutely no
+sense of impropriety but only of enjoyment, he would not for all he was
+worth have had her know that he had watched at all, since he could
+imagine how she would resent it.
+
+Nevertheless, these unconscious revelations of her real self were to him
+as jewels of price, and he treasured the memory of them accordingly.
+
+He watched them swim back and disappear among the rocks, and presently
+go merrily up the bare slope again; and he lay long in the bracken,
+scarce daring to move, and when he did, he crept away warily, as one
+guilty of a trespass.
+
+And glad he was that he had done so, for he had proof of her feeling
+that same night at supper.
+
+Peter Mauger came sheepishly in again with Tom, and Tom, when he had
+satisfied the edge of his hunger, must wax facetious in his brotherly
+way.
+
+“Peter and me was sitting among the rocks over against big pool
+s’afternoon and we saw things”--with a grin.
+
+“Aw, Tom!” deprecated Peter in red confusion.
+
+“An’ Peter, he said he never seen anything so pretty in all his life
+as--”
+
+“Aw now, Tom, you’re a liar! I never said anything about it.”
+
+“You thought it, or your face was liar too, my boy. Like a dog after a
+rabbit it was.”
+
+“It was just like you both to lie watching,” flamed Nance. “If you’d
+both go and jump into the sea every day you’d be a great deal nicer than
+you are; and if you’d stop there it would be a great deal nicer for us.”
+
+“Aw--Nance!” from Peter, and a great guffaw from Tom, while Gard devoted
+himself guiltily to his plate.
+
+“You looked nice before you went in,” chuckled Tom, who never knew when
+to stop, “but you looked a sight nicer when you came out and sat on
+rocks with it all stuck to you--”
+
+“You’re a--a--a disgusting thing, Tom Hamon, and you’re just as bad,
+Peter Mauger!” and she looked as if she would have flown at them, but,
+instead, jumped up and flung out of the room.
+
+Gard’s innate honesty would not permit him to take up the cudgels this
+time. Inwardly he felt himself involved in her condemnation, though none
+but himself knew it.
+
+But he had taken at times to glowering at Tom, when his rudeness passed
+bounds, in a way which made that young man at once uncomfortable and
+angry, and at times provoked him to clownish attempts at reprisal.
+
+Mrs. Hamon bore with the black sheep quietly, since nothing else was
+possible to her, though her annoyance and distress were visible enough.
+
+Old Tom was completely obsessed with his visions of wealth ever just
+beyond the point of his pick. He toiled long hours in the damp
+darknesses below seas, with the sounds of crashing waves and rolling
+boulders close above him, and at times threateningly audible through the
+stratum of rocks between; and when he did appear at meals he was too
+weary to trouble about anything beyond the immediate satisfaction of his
+needs. Besides, young Tom had long since proved his strength equal to
+his father’s, and remonstrance or rebuke would have produced no effect.
+
+As to Bernel, he was only a boy as yet, but he was Nance’s boy and all
+she would have wished him.
+
+In time he would grow up and be a match for Tom, and meanwhile she would
+see to it that he grew up as different from Tom in every respect as it
+was possible for a boy to be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES
+
+
+Stephen Gard’s experience of women had been small.
+
+His mother had been everything to him till she died, when he was
+fourteen, and he went to sea.
+
+When she was gone, that which she had put into him remained, and kept
+him clear of many of the snares to which the life of the young sailorman
+is peculiarly liable.
+
+When he attained a position of responsibility he had had no time for
+anything else. And so, of his own experience, he knew little of women
+and their ways.
+
+Less, indeed, than Nance knew of men and their ways. And that was not
+very much and tended chiefly to scorn and dissatisfaction, seeing that
+her knowledge was gleaned almost entirely from her experiences of Tom
+and Peter Mauger. Her father was, of course, her father, and on somewhat
+of a different plane from other men.
+
+And so, if Nance was a wonder and a revelation to Gard, Gard was no less
+of, at all events, a novelty in the way of mankind to Nance.
+
+His quiet bearing and good manners, after a life-long course of Tom, had
+a distinct attraction for her.
+
+That he could burst into flame if occasion required, she was convinced.
+For, more than once, out of the corner of her eye and round the edge of
+her sun-bonnet, she had caught his thunderous looks of disgust at some
+of Tom’s carryings-on.
+
+She would, perhaps, have been ashamed to confess it but, somewhere down
+in her heart, she rather hoped, sooner or later, to see his lightning as
+well. It would be worth seeing, and she was inclined to think it would
+be good for Tom--and the rest of the family.
+
+For Gard looked as if he could give a good account of himself in case of
+need. His well-built, tight-knit figure gave one the impression that he
+was even stronger than he looked.
+
+If only he had been a Sark man and had nothing to do with those horrid
+mines! But all her greatest dislikes met in him, and she could not bring
+herself to the point of relaxing one iota in these matters of which he
+was unfortunately and unconsciously guilty.
+
+The state of affairs at the mines improved not one whit as the months
+dragged on. There was a smouldering core of discontent which might break
+into flame at any moment--or into disastrous explosion if the necessary
+element were added.
+
+Old Tom did his best, and stood loyally by the new captain and the
+interests of the mine and himself. But he was in a minority and could so
+far do no more than oppose vehement talk to vehement talk, and that, as
+a rule, is much like pouring oil on roaring flames.
+
+Not many of those who were shareholders in the mine were also workers in
+it, and the workers met constantly at the house of a neighbour, who had
+turned his kitchen to an undomestic but profitable purpose by supplying
+drink to the miners at what seemed to the English and Welshmen
+ridiculously low prices.
+
+In that kitchen the new captain and his new methods were vehemently
+discussed and handled roughly enough--in words. And hot words and the
+thoughts they excite, and wild thoughts and the words they find vent in,
+are at times the breeders of deeds that were better left undone.
+
+To all financially interested in the mines the need for strictest
+economy and fullest efficiency was patent enough. It was still a case of
+faith and hope--a case of continual putting in of work and money, and,
+so far, of getting little out--except the dross which intervened between
+them and their highest hopes.
+
+There was silver there without a doubt, and the many thin veins they
+came across lured them on with constant hope of mighty pockets and
+deposits of which these were but the flying indications.
+
+And all putting in and getting nothing out results in stressful times,
+in business ventures as in the case of individuals. The great shafts
+sank deeper and deeper, the galleries branched out far under the sea,
+and there was a constant call for more and more money, lest that already
+sunk should be lost.
+
+Mr. Hamon, disappointed in his view of raising money on the farm by
+Tom’s obstinacy, in the bitterness of his spirit and the urgent
+necessities of the mines, conceived a new idea which, if he was able to
+carry it out, would serve the double purpose of satisfying his own needs
+at the recalcitrant Tom’s expense.
+
+“I must have more money for the mines,” he said to his wife one day in
+private. “I’m thinking of selling the farm.”
+
+“Selling the farm?” gasped Mrs. Hamon, doubtful of her own hearing. For
+selling the farm is the very last resource of the utterly unfortunate.
+“Aye, selling the farm. Why not? It’ll all come back twenty times over
+when we strike the pockets, and then we can live where we will, or we
+can go across to Guernsey, or to England if you like.”
+
+But Mrs. Hamon was silent and full of thought. She had no desire for
+wealth, and still less to live in Guernsey or in England, or anywhere in
+the world but Sark.
+
+He had been a good husband to her on the whole, until this silver craze
+absorbed him. She had never found it necessary to counter his wishes
+before. But this idea of selling the farm cut to the very roots of her
+life.
+
+For Nance’s sake and Bernel’s she must oppose it with all that was in
+her. If the farm were sold the money would all go into those gaping
+black mouths and bottomless pits at Port Gorey. The home would be broken
+up--an end of all things. It must not be.
+
+“I should think many times before selling the farm if I were you,” she
+said quietly, and left it there for the moment.
+
+But old Tom, having made up his mind, and the necessities of the case
+pressing, lost no time over the matter.
+
+“I’ve been speaking to John Guille about that business,” he said, next
+day, in a confidently casual way.
+
+“About--?”
+
+“About the farm. He’ll give me six hundred pounds for it and take the
+stock at what it’s worth, and he’s willing we should stop on as tenants
+at fifty pounds a year rent.”
+
+His wife was ominously silent. He glanced at her doubtfully.
+
+“I shall stop on as tenant for the present and Tom can go on working
+it. When we reach the silver, and the money begins to come back, we can
+decide what to do afterwards.”
+
+Still his wife said nothing, but her face was white and set. It was hard
+for her to put herself in opposition to him, but here she found it
+necessary. He was going too far.
+
+It was only when the silence had grown ominous and painful, that she
+said, slowly and with difficulty--
+
+“I’m sorry to look like going against you, Tom, but I can’t see it right
+you should sell the farm.”
+
+“It’ll make no difference to you and the young ones. I’ll see to that.”
+
+“It’s not right and you mustn’t do it.”
+
+“Mustn’t do it!--And it’s as good as done!”
+
+“It can’t be done until your mother and I consent, and we can’t see it’s
+a right thing to do.”
+
+“Can’t you see that you’re only saving the farm for Tom?” he argued
+wrathfully, bottling his anger as well as he could. “It’s nothing to you
+and the young ones in any case.”
+
+“I know, but all the same it’s not right. If it was to buy another farm
+it would be different, for you could leave it as you choose. But to
+throw away the money on those mines--”
+
+This was a lapse from diplomacy and old Tom resented it.
+
+“Throw the money away!” he shouted, casting all restraint to the winds.
+“Who’s going to throw the money away? It’s like you women. You never can
+see beyond the ends of your noses. I’ll tell you what I’ll do--I’ll pay
+you out your dower right in hard cash. Will that satisfy you?”
+
+If he died she would have a life interest in one-third of the farm, but
+could not, of course, will it to Nance or Bernel. If he sold the farm
+and paid her her lawful third in cash, she could do what she chose with
+it. It was therefore distinctly to her own interest to fall in with his
+plan.
+
+But, dearly as she would have liked to make some provision, however
+small, for Nance and Bernel, her whole Sark soul was up in arms against
+the idea of selling the farm.
+
+It would feel like a break-up of life. Nothing, she was sure, would ever
+be the same again.
+
+“It’s not right,” she said simply.
+
+“You’re a fool--” and then the look on her quiet face--such a look as
+she might have worn if he had struck her--penetrated the storm-cloud of
+his anger. He remembered her years of wifely patience and faithful
+service, “--a foolish woman. A Sark wife should know which side of her
+bread the butter is on. Can’t you see--”
+
+“I know all that, Tom, but I hope you’ll give up this notion of selling
+the farm. Your mother feels just as I do about it. We’ve talked it
+over--”
+
+“I’ll talk to her,” and he went in at once to the old lady’s room.
+
+But Grannie gave him no time for argument.
+
+“It’s you’s the fool, Tom,” she said decisively, as he crossed the
+threshold. “There’s not enough silver in Sark to make a plate for your
+coffin.”
+
+“I brought out more’n enough to make your plate and mine, myself
+to-day,” he said triumphantly.
+
+“Ah, bah! You’d have done better for yourself and for Sark if you’d let
+it lie.”
+
+“I’d have done better still if I’d got twice as much.”
+
+“If the good God set silver inside Sark, it was because He thought it
+was the best place for it, and it’s not for the likes of you to be
+trying to get it out.”
+
+“What’s it there for if it’s not to be got out?”
+
+“You mark me, Tom Hamon, no good will come of all this upsetting and
+digging out the insides of the Island--nenni-gia!”
+
+“Pergui, mother, where do you think all the silver and gold in the world
+came from?”
+
+“It didn’t come out of our Sark rocks any way, mon gars.”
+
+“Good thing for us if it had, ma fé! But, see you here, mother, if I
+sell the farm it’s not you and Nance that need trouble. If I pay out
+your dowers in hard cash you’re both of you better off than you are now,
+and I’m better off too. It’s only Tom could complain, and--”
+
+“It’s hard on the lad.”
+
+“Bidemme, it’s no more than he deserves for his goings-on! Maybe it’ll
+do him good to have to work for his living.”
+
+“And you would do that to get your bit more money to throw into those
+big holes?”
+
+“Never you mind me. I’ll take care of myself, and we’ll see who’s wisest
+in the end. Now, will you agree to it?”
+
+“I’ll talk it over with Nancy again,” and the big black sun-bonnet
+nodded with sapient significance. “Send her to me.”
+
+“It’s from you I got my good sense,” said old Tom approvingly, and went
+off in search of his wife, while the clever old lady pondered deep
+schemes.
+
+“Here’s the way of it, Nancy,” she said, when Mrs. Hamon came in. “He’s
+crazy on these silver mines, and he’s willing to pay out our dowers,
+yours and mine, so that he may throw the rest into the big holes at Port
+Gorey. Ch’est b’en! Your money and mine take more than half of what he
+gets. If you’ll put yours to mine I’ll make up the difference from what
+I’ve saved, and we’ll retraite the farm, and it shall go to Nance and
+Bernel when the time comes.”
+
+“I can’t help thinking it’s rather hard on Tom,” suggested Mrs. Hamon,
+with less vigour than before.
+
+The idea appealed strongly to her maternal feelings and she had suffered
+much from Tom; still her instinct for right was there and was not to be
+stifled with a word.
+
+“If you feel so when the time comes we could divide it among them, and
+till then Tom would have to behave himself,” said the wily old lady,
+with a chuckle.
+
+That again appealed strongly to Mrs. Hamon.
+
+“Yes, I think I would agree to that,” she said, after thinking it all
+over.
+
+All things considered, Grannie’s scheme was an excellent one and worthy
+of her.
+
+By a curious anomaly of Sark law, though a man may not mortgage his
+property without the consent of his next-in-succession, he can sell it
+outright and do what he chooses with the proceeds. His wife has a dower
+right of one-third of both real and personal estate, into which she
+enters upon his death. The right, however, is there while he still
+lives, and must be taken into consideration in any sale of the property.
+
+All property is sold subject to the “retraite”; in plain English, no
+sale is completed for six weeks, and within that time every member of
+the seller’s family, in due order of succession, even to the collateral
+branches, has the right to take over, or withdraw, the property at the
+same price as has been agreed upon, paying in addition to the Seigneur
+the trézième or thirteenth part of the price, as by law provided.
+
+If Grannie’s scheme were carried out, therefore, she and Mrs. Hamon
+would become owners of the farm. Tom would be there on sufferance and
+might be kept within bounds or kicked out. Old Tom would have something
+more to throw into the holes at Port Gorey. And Nance and Bernel could
+be adequately provided for. An excellent scheme, therefore, for all
+concerned--except young Tom, who would have to behave himself better
+than he was in the habit of doing or suffer the consequences.
+
+“Yes,” said Nancy. “I don’t see that I’d be doing right by Nance and
+Bernel not to agree to that. And if Tom behaves himself,” at which
+Grannie grunted doubtfully, “he can have his share when the time comes.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM
+
+
+So far the discussion as to the sale of the farm had been confined to
+the elders.
+
+Young Tom had viewed John Guille’s visits to the place with the lowering
+suspicion of a bull at a stranger’s invasion of his field. He wondered
+what was going on and surmised that it was nothing to his advantage.
+
+Words had been rare between him and his father since his refusal to lend
+himself to a loan on the farm, but his suspicion got the better of his
+obstinacy at last.
+
+“What’s John Guille want coming about here so much?” he demanded
+bluntly.
+
+“I suppose he can come if he wants to. He’s going to buy the farm.”
+
+“Going--to--buy--the--farm!... You--going--to--sell--the--farm--away--
+from--me?” roared young Tom, like the bull wounded to the quick.
+
+“Ouaie, pardi! And why not? You had the chance of saving it and you
+wouldn’t.”
+
+“If you do it, I’ll--”
+
+“Ouaie! You’ll--”
+
+“I’ll--Go’zammin, I’ll--I’ll--”
+
+“Unless you’re a fool, mon gars, you’ll be careful what you say or do.
+It’ll all come back from the mines and you’ll have your share if you
+behave yourself.”
+
+“---- you and your mines!” was Tom’s valedictory, and he flung away in
+mortal anger; anger, too, which, from a Sark point of view, was by no
+means unjustified. Selling the estate away from the rightful heir was
+disinheritance, a blow below the belt which most testators reserve until
+they are safe from reach of bodily harm.
+
+Tom left the house and cut all connection with his family. He drifted
+away like a threatening cloud, and the sun shone out, and Stephen Gard,
+with the rest, found greater comfort in his room than they had ever
+found in his company.
+
+So gracious, indeed, did the atmosphere of the house become, purged of
+Tom, that Gard, to his great joy, found even Nance not impossible of
+approach.
+
+He had always treated her with extremest deference and courtesy,
+respecting, as far as he was able, her evident wish for nothing but the
+most distant intercourse.
+
+But he was such a very great change from Tom!
+
+She caught his dark eyes fixed on her at times with a look that reminded
+her of Helier Baker’s black spaniel’s, who was a very close friend of
+hers. They had neither dog nor cat at present at La Closerie, both
+having been scrimped by the silver mines, when old Tom’s first bad
+attack of economy came on.
+
+Then, at table, Gard was always quietly on the look-out to anticipate
+her wants. That was a refreshing novelty. Even Bernel, her special
+crony, thought only of his own requirements when food stood before him.
+
+Now and again Gard began to venture on a question direct to her,
+generally concerning some bit of the coast he had been scrambling about,
+and she found it rather pleasant to be able to give information about
+things he did not know to this undoubtedly clever mine captain.
+
+So, little by little, he grew into her barest toleration but apparently
+nothing more, and was puzzled at her aloofness and reserve, not
+understanding at all her bitter feeling against the mines and everything
+connected with them.
+
+The first time he went to church with her and Bernel was a great
+white-stone day to him.
+
+He had gone by himself once every Sunday, and done his best to follow
+the service in French, which he was endeavouring to pick up as best he
+could. And, if he could only now and again come across a word he
+understood, still the being in church and worshipping with others--even
+though it was in an unknown tongue--the sound of the chants and hymns
+and responses, and the mild austerity and reverent intonation of the
+good old Vicar, all induced a Sabbath feeling in him, and made a welcome
+change from the rougher routine of the week, which he would have missed
+most sorely.
+
+On that special afternoon, he had been lying on the green wall of the
+old French fort, enjoying that most wonderful view over the shimmering
+blue sea, with Herm and Jethou resting on it like great green velvet
+cushions, and Guernsey gleaming softly in the distance, and Brecqhou and
+the Gouliot Head, and all the black outlying rocks fringed with creamy
+foam, till it should be time to go along to church.
+
+When he heard voices in the road below and saw Nance and Bernel, he
+jumped up on the spur of the moment, and pushed through the gorse and
+bracken, and stood waiting for them.
+
+“Will you let me join you?” he asked, as they came up, fallen shyly
+silent.
+
+“We don’t mind,” said Bernel, and they went along together.
+
+“This always strikes me afresh, each time I see it, as one of the most
+extraordinary places I’ve come across,” said Gard, as they dipped down
+towards the Coupée.
+
+“Wait till we’re coming home,” said Bernel hopefully.
+
+“Why?”
+
+“You see those clouds over there? That’s wind--sou’-west--you’ll see
+what it’s like after church.”
+
+“Your gales are as extraordinary as all the rest--and your tides and
+currents and sea-mists. I suppose one must be born here to understand
+them. We have a fine coast in Cornwall, but I think you beat us.”
+
+“Of course. This is Sark.”
+
+“And does no one ever tumble over the Coupée in the dark?”
+
+“N--o, not often, any way. Nance once saw a man blown over.”
+
+“That was a bad thing to see,” said Gard, turning towards her. “How was
+it?”
+
+“I was coming from school--”
+
+“All alone?”
+
+“Yes, all alone. The others had gone on; I’d been kept in, and it was
+nearly dark. It was blowing hard, and when I got to the first rock here
+I thought it was going to blow me over. So I went down on my hands and
+knees and was just going to crawl, when old Hirzel Mollet came down the
+other side with a great sheaf of wheat on his back. He was taking it to
+the Seigneur for his tithes. And then in a moment he gave a shout and I
+saw he was gone.”
+
+“That was terrible. What did you do?”
+
+“I screamed and crawled back across the narrow bit to the cutting, and
+ran screaming up to the cottages at Plaisance, and Thomas Carré and his
+men came running down. But they could do nothing. They went round in a
+boat from the Creux, but he was dead.”
+
+“And how did you get home?”
+
+“Thomas Carré took me across and I ran on alone, but it was months
+before I could forget poor old Hirzel Mollet.”
+
+“I should think so, indeed. That was a terrible thing to see.”
+
+The opening of the mines, and the influx of the Welsh and Cornishmen and
+their wives and children, with their new and up-to-date ideas of living
+and dressing, had wrought a great and not altogether wholesome change
+upon the original inhabitants.
+
+All the week they were hard at work in their fields or their boats, but
+on Sunday the lonely lanes leading to Little Sark were thronged with
+sightseers, curious to inspect the mines and the latest odd fashions
+among the miners’ wives and daughters.
+
+Odd, and extremely useless little parasols, were then the vogue in
+England. The miners’ women-folk flaunted these before the dazzled eyes
+of the Sark girls, and Sark forthwith burst into flower of many-coloured
+parasols.
+
+The mine ladies dressed in printed cottons of strange and wonderful
+patterns. The Sark girls must do the same.
+
+“Tiens!” ejaculated Nance more than once, as they walked. “Here is Judi
+Le Masurier with a new pink parasol!--and a straw bonnet with green
+strings!--and every day you’ll see her about the fields without so much
+as a sun-bonnet on! And Rachel Guille has got a new print dress all red
+roses and lilac! Mon Gyu, what are we coming to!”
+
+She had many such comments and still more unspoken ones. But Stephen
+Gard, glancing, whenever he could do so unperceived, at the trim but
+plainly-dressed little sun-bonneted figure by his side, vowed in his
+heart that the whole of these others rolled into one were not to be
+compared with her, and that he would give all the silver in the mines of
+Sark to win her appreciation and regard.
+
+As they turned the corner at Vauroque, they came suddenly on a number of
+men lounging on the low wall, and among them Tom Hamon, pipe in mouth
+and hands in pockets.
+
+As they passed he made some jocular remark in the patois which provoked
+a guffaw from the rest, and reddened Nance’s face, and caused Bernel to
+glance up at Gard and jerk round angrily towards Tom.
+
+“What did he say?” asked Gard, stopping.
+
+But Nance hurried on and he could not but follow.
+
+“What was it?” he asked again, as he caught up with her.
+
+“If you please, do not mind him. It was just one of his rudenesses.”
+
+“They want knocking out of him.”
+
+“He is very rude,” said Nance, and they passed the Vicarage and turned
+up the stony lane to the church.
+
+Gard was surprised by the speedy verification of Bernel’s weather
+forecast. Before the service was over the wind was howling round the
+building with the sounds of unleashed furies, and when they got out it
+was almost dark.
+
+They bent to the gale and pressed on, Gard with a discomforting
+remembrance that the Coupée lay ahead.
+
+As they passed Vauroque there seemed a still larger crowd of loafers at
+the corner, and again Tom’s voice called rudely after them.
+
+Gard turned promptly and strode back to where he was sitting on the
+wall, dangling his feet in devil-may-care fashion. Tom jumped down to
+meet him.
+
+“Say that again in English, will you?” said Gard angrily.
+
+“Go to--!” said Tom.
+
+Then Gard’s left fist caught him on the hinge of the right jaw, and he
+reeled back among the others who had jumped down to back him up.
+
+“Well--? Want any more?” asked Gard stormily.
+
+“You wait,” growled Tom, nursing his jaw, “I’ll talk to you one of these
+days.”
+
+“Whenever you like, you cur. What you need is a sound thrashing and a
+kick over the Coupée.”
+
+To his surprise none of the others joined in. But he did not know them.
+
+They might guffaw at Tom’s unseemly pleasantries, but they held him in
+no high esteem--either for himself or for his position, since word of
+the sale of La Closerie had got about.
+
+Then they were a hardy crew and held personal courage and prowess in
+high respect. And in this matter there could be no possible doubt as to
+where the credit lay.
+
+“Goin’ to fight him, Tom?” drawled one, in the patois.
+
+“---- him!” growled Tom, but made no move that way.
+
+And Gard turned and went over to Nance and Bernel, who were sheltering
+from the storm in lee of one of the cottages.
+
+If he could have seen it, there was a warmer feeling in her heart for
+him than had ever been there before--a novel feeling, too, of respect
+and confidence such as she had never entertained towards any other man
+in all her life.
+
+For that quick blow had been struck on her behalf, she knew; and it was
+vastly strange, and somehow good, to feel that a great strong man was
+ready to stand up for her and, if necessary, to fight for her.
+
+She pressed silently on against the gale, with an odd little glow in her
+heart, and a feeling as though something new had suddenly come into her
+life.
+
+The gale caught them at the Coupée, and the crossing seemed to Gard not
+without its risks.
+
+Bernel bent and ran on through the darkness without a thought of danger.
+
+Gard hesitated one moment and Nance stretched a hand to him, and he took
+it and went steadily across.
+
+And, oh, the thrill of that first living touch of her! The feel of the
+warm nervous little hand sent a tingling glow through him such as he had
+never in his life experienced before. Verily, a white-stone day this, in
+spite of winds and darkness!
+
+The gale howled like ten thousand demons, and the noise of the waves in
+Grande Grève came up to them in a ceaseless savage roar. Gard confessed
+to himself that, alone, he would never have dared to face that perilous
+storm-swept bridge. But the small hand of a girl made all the difference
+and he stepped alongside her without a tremor.
+
+“B’en, Monsieur Gard, was I right?” shouted Bernel in his ear, as they
+stepped within the shelter of the cutting on the farther side.
+
+“You were right. It’s a terrible place in a gale.”
+
+“You wait,” shouted Bernel. “We’re not home yet.”
+
+“No more Coupées, any way,” and they bent again into the storm.
+
+They had not gone more than a hundred yards when, through some freakish
+funnelling of the tumbled headlands, the gale gripped them like a giant
+playing with pigmies, caught them up, flung them bodily across the road
+and held Gard and Bernel pinned and panting against the green bank,
+while Nance disappeared over it into the shrieking darkness.
+
+“Good heavens!” gasped Gard, fearful lest she should have been blown
+over the cliffs, and wriggled himself up under the ceaseless thrashing
+of the gale and was whirled off the top into the field beyond.
+
+There the pressure was less, and, getting on to his hands and knees to
+crawl in search of Nance, he found her close beside him crouching in the
+lee of the grassy dyke.
+
+He crept into shelter beside her, and presently, in the lull after a
+fiercer blast than usual, she set off, bent almost double, and in a
+moment they were in comparative quiet. Nance crawled through a gap into
+the road and they found Bernel waiting for them.
+
+“Knew you’d come through there. That’s what that gap’s made for,” he
+shouted.
+
+“I’ve been in many a storm but I never felt wind like that before,” said
+Gard, as soon as his breath came back.
+
+“If you’d stopped with me you’d have been all right,” said Bernel.
+“There was no need for you to go after Nance. We’ve been through that
+lots of times, haven’t we, Nance?”
+
+“Lots.”
+
+“I shall know next time,” said Gard, and to Nance it was a fresh
+experience to think of some one going out of his way to be of possible
+service to her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN’T DARE
+
+
+Before the six weeks allowed by Sark law for the retraiting of the
+property had expired, Grannie and Mrs. Hamon put in their claims, and it
+became generally known that they would become the new owners of La
+Closerie, in place of John Guille.
+
+When the rumour at length reached Tom’s ears, he, not unnaturally
+perhaps, set down the whole matter as a plot to oust him from his
+heritage and put Nance and Bernel in his place.
+
+So his anger grew, and he was powerless. And the impotence of an angry
+man may lead him into gruesome paths. Smouldering fires burst out at
+times into devastating flames, and maddened bulls put down their heads
+and charge regardless of consequences.
+
+When Tom Hamon asked Peter Mauger to lend him his gun to go
+rabbit-shooting one night, Peter, if he had been a thoughtful man, would
+have declined.
+
+But Peter was above all things easy-going, and anything but thoughtful
+of such matters as surged gloomily in Tom’s angry head, and he lent him
+his gun as a matter of course.
+
+And Tom went off across the Coupée into Little Sark, nursing his black
+devil and thinking vaguely and gloomily of the things he would like to
+do. For to rob a man of his rights in this fashion was past a man’s
+bearing, and if he was to be ruined for the sake of that solemn-faced
+slip of a Nance and that young limb of a Bernel, he might as well take
+payment for it all, and cut their crowing, and give them something to
+remember him by.
+
+He had no very definite intentions. His mind was a chaos of whirling
+black furies. He would like to pay somebody out for the wrongs under
+which he was suffering--who, or how, was of little moment. He had been
+wounded, he wanted to hit back.
+
+He turned off the Coupée to the left and struck down through the gorse
+and bracken towards the Pot, and then crept along the cliffs and across
+the fields towards La Closerie--still for three days his, in the
+reversion; after that, gone from him irrevocably--a galling shame and
+not to be borne by any man that called himself a man.
+
+Should he lie in the hedge and shoot down the old man as he came in from
+those cursed mines which had started all the trouble? Or should he walk
+right into the house and shoot and fell whatever he came across? If he
+must suffer it would at all events be some satisfaction to think that he
+had made them suffer too.
+
+From where he stood he could look right in through the open door, and
+could hear their voices--Nance and Bernel and Mrs. Hamon--the
+interlopers, the schemers, the stealers of his rights.
+
+The shaft of light was eclipsed suddenly as Nance came out and tripped
+across the yard on some household duty.
+
+He remembered how he used to terrify her by springing out of the
+darkness at her. She had helped to bring all this trouble about.
+
+Why should he not--? Why should he not--?
+
+And while his gun still shook in his hands to the wild throbbing of his
+pulses, Nance passed out of his sight into the barn.
+
+The deed a man may do on the spur of the moment, when his brain is on
+fire, is not so readily done when it has to be thought about.
+
+Then Mrs. Hamon came to the door, and called to Nance to bring with her
+a piece or two of wood for the fire.
+
+Here was his chance! Here was the head and front of the offence, past,
+present, and future! If she had never come into the family there would
+have been no Nance, no Bernel, no selling of the farm, maybe. A movement
+of the arms, the crooking of a finger, and things would be even between
+them.
+
+But--it would still be he who would have to pay--as always!
+
+All through he had been the sufferer, and if he did this thing he must
+suffer still more--always he who must pay.
+
+The man who hesitates is lost, or saved. When the contemplator of evil
+deeds begins also to contemplate consequences, reason is beginning to
+resume her sway.
+
+Then he heard heavy footsteps and voices. His father and Stephen Gard.
+
+Another chance! Gard he hated. There was a bruise on his right jaw
+still. And the old man!--he had cut him out of his inheritance by going
+crazy over those cursed mines.
+
+“I’m sorry you have gone so far,” Gard was saying as they passed. “If
+you had consulted me I should have advised against it. Mining is always
+more or less of a speculation. I would never, if I could help it, let
+any man put more into a mine than he can afford to lose.”
+
+“If you know a thing’s a good thing you want all you can get out of
+it,” said old Tom stoutly.
+
+“Yes, if--” and they passed into the house, while Tom in the hedge was
+considering which of them he would soonest see dead.
+
+Now they were all inside together. A full charge of small shot might do
+considerable and satisfactory damage.
+
+But thought of the certain consequences to himself welled coldly up in
+him again, and he slunk noiselessly away, cursing himself for leaving
+undone the work he had come out to do.
+
+On the common above the Pot, a terrified white scut rose almost under
+his feet and sped along in front of him. He blew it into rags, and was
+so ashamed of his prowess that he kicked the remnants into the gorse and
+went home empty-handed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART
+
+
+One of the first things Stephen Gard had seen to, when he got matters
+into his own hands, was the safeguarding of the mines from ever-possible
+irruption of the sea. The great steam pumps kept the workings reasonably
+clear of drainage water, but no earthly power could drain the sea if it
+once got in.
+
+The central shafts had sunk far below sea-level. The lateral galleries
+had, in some cases, run out seawards and were now extending far under
+the sea itself.
+
+From the whirling coils of the tides and races round the coast, he
+judged that the sea-bed was as seamed and broken and full of faults as
+the visible cliffs ashore.
+
+In bad weather, the men in those submarine galleries and the
+outbranching tunnels could hear the crash of the waves above their
+heads, and the rolling and grinding of the mighty boulders with which
+they disported.
+
+If, by chance, the sea should break through, the peril to life and
+property would be great.
+
+He therefore caused to be constructed and fitted inside each tunnel, at
+the point where it branched from its main gallery, a stout iron door,
+roughly hinged at the top and falling, in case of need, into the flange
+of a thick wooden frame. The framework was fitted to the opening on the
+seaward side, in a groove cut deep into the rock round each side and
+top and bottom. The heavy iron door, when open, lay up against the roof
+of the tunnel and was supported by two wooden legs. If the sea should
+break through, the first rush of the water would sweep away the
+supporting legs, the iron door would fall with a crash into the flange
+of the wooden frame, and the greater the pressure the tighter it would
+fit.
+
+So the weight of the sea would seal the iron door against the wooden
+casement, which would swell and press always tighter against the rock,
+and that boring would be closed for ever. And if any man should be
+inside the tunnel when the sea broke through, there he must stop,
+drowned like a rat in its hole, unless by a miracle he could make his
+way along the tunnel before the trap-door fell.
+
+Gard never ceased to enjoin the utmost caution on the men who undertook
+these outermost experimental borings.
+
+His strict injunctions were to cease work at the first sign of water in
+these undersea tunnels, make for the gallery, close the trap, and await
+events.
+
+Believing absolutely in the existence of one or more great central
+deposits whence all these thin veins of silver had come, and hoping to
+strike them at every blow of his pick, old Tom Hamon was the keenest
+explorer and opener of new leads in the mine.
+
+“The silver’s there all right,” he said, time and again, “it only wants
+finding,” and he pushed ahead, here and there, wherever he thought the
+chances most favourable.
+
+He took his rightful pay along with the rest for the work he did, but it
+was not for wages he wrought. Ever just beyond the point of his
+energetic pick lay fortune, and he was after it with all his heart and
+soul and bodily powers.
+
+For months he had been following up a vein which ran out under the sea,
+and grew richer and richer as he laid it bare. He believed it would lead
+him to the mother vein, and that to the heart of all the Sark silver.
+And so he toiled, early and late, and knew no weariness.
+
+His tunnel, in places not more than three and four feet high and between
+two and three feet wide, extended now several hundred feet under the
+sea, and was fitted at the gallery end with the usual raised iron door.
+
+It was hot work in there, in the dim-lighted darkness, in spite of the
+fact that the sea was close above his head. Fortunately, here and there,
+he had come upon curious little chambers like empty bubbles in one-time
+molten rock, ten feet across and as much in height, some of them, and
+curiously whorled and wrought, and these allowed him breathing spaces
+and welcome relief from the crampings of the passage.
+
+When he had broken into such a chamber it needed, at times, no little
+labour to rediscover his vein on the opposite side. But he always found
+it in time, and broke through the farther wall with unusual difficulty,
+and went on.
+
+The men generally worked in pairs, but old Tom would have no one with
+him. He did all the work, picking and hauling the refuse single-handed.
+The work should be his alone, his alone the glory of the great and
+ultimate discovery.
+
+The rocks above him sweated and dripped at times, but that was only to
+be expected and gave him no anxiety. Alone with his eager hopes he
+chipped and picked, and felt no loneliness because of the flame of hope
+that burned within him. Above him he could hear the long roll and growl
+of the wave-tormented boulders--now a dull, heavy fall like the blow of
+a gigantic mallet, and again a long-drawn crash like shingle grinding
+down a hillside. But these things he had heard before and had grown
+accustomed to.
+
+And so it was fated that, one day, after patiently picking round a great
+piece of rock till it was loosened from its ages-old bed, he felt it
+tremble under his hand, and leaning his weight against it, it
+disappeared into space beyond.
+
+That had happened before when he struck one of the chambers, and he felt
+no uneasiness. If there had been water beyond, it would have given him
+notice by oozing round the rock as he loosened it. The brief rush of
+foul gas, which always followed the opening of one of these hollows, he
+avoided by lying flat on the ground until he felt the air about him
+sweeter again.
+
+Then, enlarging the aperture with his pick, he scrambled through into
+this chamber now first opened since time began.
+
+It was like many he had seen before, but considerably larger. Holding
+his light at arm’s length, above his head, a million little eyes
+twinkled back at him as the rays shot to and fro on the pointed facets
+of the rock crystals which hung from the roof and started out of the
+walls and ground.
+
+The gleaming fingers seemed all pointed straight at him. Was it in
+mockery or in acknowledgment of his prowess?
+
+For, in among the pointing fingers, it seemed to him that the
+silver-bearing veins ran thick as the setting of an ancient jewel,
+twisted and curling and winding in and out so that his eyes were dazzled
+with the wonder of it all.
+
+“A man! A man at last! Since time began we have awaited him, and this
+is he at last!” so those myriad eyes and pointing fingers seemed to cry
+to him.
+
+And up above, the roar and growl of the sea sounded closer than ever
+before.
+
+But he had found his treasure and he heeded nought beside. Here, of a
+surety, he said to himself, was the silver heart from which the
+scattered veins had been projected. He had found what he had sought with
+such labours and persistency. What else mattered?
+
+And then, without a moment’s warning--the end.
+
+No signal crackings, no thin jets or streams from the green immensity
+beyond.
+
+Just one universal collapse, one chaotic climacteric, begun and ended in
+the same instant, as the crust of the chamber, no longer supported by
+the in-pent air, dissolved under the irresistible pressure of the sea.
+
+Where the sparkling chamber had been was a whirling vortex of bubbling
+green water, in which tumbled grotesquely the body of a man.
+
+The water boiled furiously along the tunnel and foamed into the gallery.
+The wooden supports of the iron door gave way; the door sank slowly into
+its appointed place.
+
+Old Tom Hamon was dead and buried.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
+
+
+The news spread quickly.
+
+Tom Hamon heard it as he sat brooding over his wrongs and cursing the
+chicken-heartedness and fear of consequences which had robbed him of his
+revenge.
+
+He started up with an incredulous curse and tore across the Coupée to
+the mines to make sure.
+
+But there was no doubt about it. Old Tom was dead: the six weeks were
+still two days short of their fulfilment; the property was his; his day
+had come.
+
+He walked straight to La Closerie, and stalked grimly into the kitchen,
+where, as it happened, they were sitting over a doleful and long-delayed
+meal.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had been too overwhelmed by the unexpected blow to consider
+all its bearings. Grannie, looking beyond, had foreseen consequences and
+trouble with Tom, and had sent for Stephen Gard and given him some
+elementary instruction relative to the laws of succession in Sark.
+
+Tom stalked in upon them with malevolent triumph. They had tried their
+best to oust him from his inheritance and the act of God had spoiled
+them. He felt almost virtuous.
+
+But his natural truculence, and his not altogether unnatural exultation
+at the frustration of these plans for his own upsetting, overcame all
+else. Of regret for their personal loss and his own he had none.
+
+“Oh--ho! Mighty fine, aren’t we, feasting on the best,” he began. “Let
+me tell you all this is mine now, spite of all your dirty tricks, and
+you can get out, all of you, and the sooner the better. Eating my best
+butter, too! Ma fé, fat is good enough for the likes of you,” and he
+stretched a long arm and lifted the dish of golden butter from the
+board--butter, too, which Nance and her mother had made themselves after
+also milking the cows.
+
+“Put that down!” said Gard, in a voice like the taps of a hammer.
+
+“You get out--bravache! Bretteur! I’m master here.”
+
+“In six weeks--if you live that long. Until things are properly divided
+you’ll keep out of this, if you’re well advised.”
+
+“I will, will I? We’ll see about that, Mister Bully. I know what you’re
+up to, trying to fool our Nance with your foreign ways, and I won’t have
+it. She’s not for the likes of you or any other man that’s got a wife
+and children over in England--”
+
+This was the suddenly-thought-of burden of a discussion over the cups
+one night at the canteen, soon after Gard’s arrival, when the
+possibility of his being a married man had been mooted and had remained
+in Tom’s turgid brain as a fact.
+
+“By the Lord!” cried Gard, starting up in black fury, “if you can’t
+behave yourself I’ll break every bone in your body.”
+
+And Nance’s face, which had unconsciously stiffened at Tom’s words,
+glowed again at Gard’s revelation of the natural man in him, and her
+eyes shone with various emotions--doubts, hopes, fears, and a keen
+interest in what would follow.
+
+The first thing that followed was the dish of butter, which hurtled past
+Gard’s head and crashed into the face of the clock, and then fell with a
+flop to the earthen floor.
+
+The next was Tom’s lowered head and cumbrous body, as he charged like a
+bull into Gard and both rolled to the ground, the table escaping
+catastrophe by a hair’s-breadth.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had sprung up with clasped hands and piteous face. Nance and
+Bernel had sprung up also, with distress in their faces but still more
+of interest. They had come to a certain reliance on Gard’s powers, and
+how many and many a time had they longed to be able to give Tom a
+well-deserved thrashing!
+
+Through the open door of her room came Grannie’s hard little voice, “Now
+then! Now then! What are you about there?” but no one had time to tell
+her.
+
+Gard was up in a moment, panting hard, for Tom’s bull-head had caught
+him in the wind.
+
+“If you want ... to fight ... come outside!” he jerked.
+
+“---- you!” shouted Tom, as he struggled to his knees and then to his
+feet. “I’ll smash you!” and he lowered his head and made another blind
+rush.
+
+But this time Gard was ready for him, and a stout buffet on the ear as
+he passed sent him crashing in a heap into the bowels of the clock,
+which had witnessed no such doings since Tom’s great-grandfather brought
+it home and stood it in its place, and it testified to its amazement at
+them by standing with hands uplifted at ten minutes to two until it was
+repaired many months afterwards.
+
+Tom got up rather dazedly, and Gard took him by the shoulders and ran
+him outside before he had time to pull himself together.
+
+“Now,” said Gard, shaking him as a bull-dog might a calf. “See here!
+You’re not wanted here at present, and if you make any more trouble
+you’ll suffer for it,” and he gave him a final whirl away from the house
+and went in and closed the door.
+
+Tom stood gazing at it in dull fury, thought of smashing the window,
+picked up a stone, remembered just in time that it would be his window,
+so flung the stone and a curse against the door and departed.
+
+“I’m sorry,” said Gard, looking deprecatingly at Nance. “I’m afraid I
+lost my temper.”
+
+“It was all his fault,” said Nance. “Did he hurt you?”
+
+“Only my feelings. He had no right to say such things or do what he
+did.”
+
+“It’s always good to see him licked,” said Bernel with gusto. “Nance and
+I used to try, but he was too big for us.”
+
+Mrs. Hamon had gone in with a white face to explain things to Grannie.
+
+She came back presently and said briefly to Gard, “She wants you,” and
+he went in to the old lady.
+
+“You did well, Stephen Gard,” she chirped. “Stand by them, for they’ll
+need it. He’s a bad lot is Tom, and he’ll make things uncomfortable when
+he comes here to live. When Nancy takes her third of what’s left of the
+house, that’ll be only two rooms, so you’ll have to look out for
+another, and maybe you’ll not find it easy to get one in Little Sark. If
+you take my advice you’ll try Charles Guille at Clos Bourel, or Thomas
+Carré at the Plaisance Cottages by the Coupée, they’re kindly folk
+both. I’ve told Nancy to get Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux to help her
+portion the lots, and it’ll be no easy job, for Tom will choose the best
+and get all he can.”
+
+They were agreeably surprised to hear no more of Tom, but learned before
+long that, on the strength of his unexpected good fortune, he had gone
+over to Guernsey to pass, in ways that most appealed to him, the six
+weeks allowed by the law for the settlement of his father’s affairs.
+
+Within that six weeks Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux had, on Mrs. Hamon’s
+behalf, to allot all old Tom’s estate, house, fields, cattle,
+implements, furniture, into three as equal portions as he could contrive
+with his most careful balancing of pros and cons. For, with Solomon-like
+wisdom, Sark law entails upon the widow the apportionment of the three
+lots into which everything is divided, but allows the heir first choice
+of any two of them, the remaining lot becoming the widow’s dower.
+
+No light undertaking, therefore, the apportionment of those lots, or the
+widow may be left with only bedrooms to live in, and an ill proportion
+of grazing ground for her cattle and herself to live upon. For, be sure
+that when it comes to the picking of these lots, even the best of sons
+will pick the plums, and when such an one as Tom Hamon is in question it
+is as well to mingle the plums and the sloes with an exactitude of
+proportionment that will allow of no advantage either way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART’S DESIRE
+
+
+Gard’s isolation was brought home to him when he endeavoured to find
+another lodging in Little Sark.
+
+Accommodation was, of course, limited. Many of the miners had to tramp
+in each day from Sark. There was still, in spite of all his tact and
+efforts, somewhat of a feeling against him as a new-comer, an innovator,
+a tightener of loose cords, and no one offered to change quarters to
+oblige him. And so, in the end, he took Grannie’s advice and found a
+room in one of the thatch-roofed cottages which offered their
+white-washed shoulders to the road just where it rose out of the further
+side of the Coupée into Sark.
+
+They were quiet, farmer-fisher folk who lived there, having nothing to
+do with the mines and little beyond a general interest in them.
+
+When not at work, he was thrown much upon himself, and if in his rambles
+he chanced upon Bernel Hamon it was a treat, and if, as happened all too
+seldom, upon Nance as well, an enjoyment beyond words.
+
+But Nance was a busy maid, with hens and chickens, and cows and calves,
+and pigs and piglets claiming her constant attention, and it was only
+now and again that she could so arrange her duties as to allow of a
+flight with Bernel--a flight which always took the way to the sea and
+developed presently into a bathing revel wherein she flung cares and
+clothes to the winds, or into a fishing excursion, in which pleasure and
+profit and somewhat of pain were evenly mixed.
+
+For, though she loved the sea and ate fresh-caught fish with as much
+gusto as any, she hated seeing them caught--almost as much as she hated
+having her fowls or piglets slaughtered for eating purposes, and never
+would touch them--a delicacy of feeling at which Bernel openly scoffed
+but could not laugh her out of.
+
+She had sentiments also regarding the rabbits Bernel shot on the cliffs,
+but being wild, and she herself having had no hand in their upbringing
+and not having known them intimately, she accepted them as natural
+provision, though not without compunctions at times concerning possible
+families of orphans left totally unprovided for.
+
+When she did permit herself a few hours off duty she did it with a
+whole-hearted enjoyment--approaching the naïve abandon of
+childhood--which, to Gard’s sober restraint, when he was graciously
+permitted to witness it, was wholly charming.
+
+By degrees, and especially after her father’s tragic death, Nance’s
+feelings towards the stranger had perceptibly changed.
+
+He might be an alien, an Englishman; but he was at all events a
+Cornishman, and she had heard say that the men of Cornwall and of the
+Islands and of the Bretagne had much in common, just as their rugged
+coasts had. And England, after all, was allied to the Islands, belonged
+to them in fact, and was indeed quite as essential a part of the Queen’s
+dominions as the Islands themselves, and to harbour unfriendly feeling
+towards your own relations--unless indeed, as in the case of Tom, they
+had given you ample cause--would be surely the mark of a small and
+narrow mind.
+
+And he might be a miner; and mines, and most miners, were naturally
+hateful to her. But he had been a sailor, and was miner only by accident
+as it were, and she knew that he loved the sea. Allowance, she supposed,
+must be made for men getting twists in their brains--like her father. He
+had gone crazy over these mines though he had been sensible enough in
+other matters.
+
+What her careful, surreptitious observation of him, from the depths and
+round the wings of her sun-bonnet, told her was that he was an upright
+man, and true, and bold, with a spirit which he kept well in hand but
+which could blaze like lightning on occasion, and a strength which he
+could turn to excellent purpose when the need arose.
+
+And--and--she admitted it shyly to herself and not without wonder, and
+found herself dwelling upon it as she sang softly to the ping-pang of
+the milk into the pail, or the swoosh of it in the churn--he thought of
+her, Nance Hamon--perhaps he even admired her a little--any way he was
+certainly interested in her, and in his shy reserved way he showed a
+desire for her company which she no longer found pleasure in defeating
+as she had done at first.
+
+Undoubtedly an odd feeling, this, of being cared for by an outside
+man--- but withal tending to increase of self-esteem and therefore not
+unpleasing.
+
+Peter Mauger, indeed--but then she had never looked upon Peter as
+anything but Peter, and the shadow of Tom had always obscured him to
+her. Stephen Gard was a man, and a different kind of a man from Peter
+altogether.
+
+She remembered, with a slight reddening still of the warm brown cheeks
+whenever she thought of it--how, on the previous Sunday afternoon, she
+and Bernel had gone running over the downs through the waist-high
+bracken towards Brenière, the tide in their favourite pool below the
+rocks being too high for bathing. And on the slope above the Cromlech
+they had come suddenly on Gard, lying there looking out over the sea
+towards L’Etat.
+
+He had jumped up at sight of them and stood hesitating a moment.
+
+“Going for a bathe?” he asked, knowing the usual course of their
+proceedings.
+
+“Yes, we were,” said Bernel. “You going?” with a glance at the towel
+Gard had brought out on the chance of a dip.
+
+“I’d thought of it, but your tides and currents here are so
+troublesome--”
+
+“Oh, we know all about ’em. They’re all right when you know.”
+
+“I suppose so, but--” with a look at Nance, “I’ll clear out.”
+
+“You’re not coming?”
+
+“Your sister wouldn’t like it.”
+
+“Nance?” with a look of surprise. “She won’t mind. Will you, Nance?”
+
+Then it was her turn to hesitate, for bathing with Bernel was one thing,
+and with Mr. Gard quite another.
+
+“You’ll show me another time, Bernel,” said Gard, picking up his towel.
+“I wouldn’t like to spoil your fun now.”
+
+“But you wouldn’t. Would he, Nance?”
+
+“I don’t mind--if you’ll give me the cave.”
+
+“All the caves you want,” said Bernel, scornful at such unusual
+stickling on the part of his chum.
+
+“Quite sure you don’t mind?” asked Gard, doubtful still.
+
+“If I have the cave. It’s generally the one who gets there first, and
+Bern goes quicker than I do.”
+
+“Of course. You’re only a girl,” laughed Bernel, as he raced on down the
+slope.
+
+And Nance laughed too at his brotherly depreciation, and Gard, who had
+never regarded her as only a girl, and whose thoughts of her were very
+absorbing and uplifting, happening to catch her eye, laughed also, and
+so they went down towards the sea in pleasant enough humour and the
+nearest approach to good-fellowship they had yet attained.
+
+Nance disappeared round a corner, and the next he saw of her she was
+swimming boldly out towards Brenière point, and in a moment he and
+Bernel were after her.
+
+“Don’t go past the point,” jerked Bernel.
+
+“She’s gone.”
+
+“She’s a fish and knows her way,” and just then they ploughed into what
+at first looked to Gard like a perfectly smooth spot amid the troubled
+waters, and then he was lifted from below and flung awry and out of his
+stroke, and tossed and tumbled till he felt as helpless as a dead fish.
+Then a fresh coil of the bubbling tide whirled him to one side and he
+was out again in the safety of the dancing waves.
+
+“You see?” cried Bernel. “That’s what it’s like,” and shot into it
+headlong.
+
+And Gard, treading water quietly at a safe distance, saw how, every
+here and there, great crowns of water came surging up from below, with
+such lunging force that they rose in some cases almost a foot above the
+neighbouring level of the sea, and he wondered how any swimmer could
+make way through them. And yet Nance had cleft them like a seal, and he
+could hardly make out her brown head bobbing among the distant waves.
+
+“Is it safe for her?” he cried after Bernel, but the boy’s only reply
+was a scornful wave of the arm as he pressed on to join her.
+
+Gard had an ample swim, and was dressed and sitting on a rock, when they
+came leisurely in, and it seemed to him that never in his life had he
+seen anything half so pretty as those shining coils of chestnut hair
+with the sea-drops sparkling in them, and the bright energetic face
+below, browned with sun and wind, rosy-brown now with her long swim, and
+beaded like her hair with pearly drops.
+
+As she swept along below, she gave just one quick up-glance, and then,
+with completest ignorance of his presence, turned her head to Bernel and
+chattered away to him with most determined nonchalance.
+
+She and Bernel used the long effective side-stroke almost entirely, and
+the little arm that flashed in and out so tirelessly was as white as the
+garment that fluttered in wavy convolutions about the lithe little body
+below.
+
+Gard, as he watched her, felt like a discoverer of hidden treasure,
+overwhelmed and intoxicated with the wonder of unexpected riches. He had
+come to this wild little land of Sark after silver, and he said to
+himself that he had found a pearl beyond price.
+
+In a minute or two they were scrambling up the slope and flung
+themselves down beside him for a rest, feeling the strain of unusual
+exertion now that the brace and tonic of the water was off them.
+
+“You are bold swimmers,” said Gard.
+
+“She’s a fish in the water,” said Bernel, “and she made me swim almost
+as soon as I could walk.”
+
+“You see,” said Nance, in her decisive little way, “many of our Sark men
+won’t learn to swim. They think it’s mistrusting God. But that seems to
+me foolish. Every man who goes down to the sea ought to be able to
+swim--besides, it’s terribly nice.”
+
+“Yes, surely, Sark men ought to be able to swim, and they have certainly
+no lack of opportunity. But it’s a dangerous coast for those who don’t
+know it. Look at that now,” and he nodded to the foaming race in front
+of them, between Brenière and a gaunt rocky peak which rose like a
+mountain-top out of the lonely sea. “Why, it must be running five or six
+miles an hour.”
+
+From where they sat the sea seemed perfectly calm, a level plain of
+deepest blue, with pale green streaks under the rocks and dark purple
+patches further out, its surface just furrowed with tiny wind-ripples,
+and underneath, a long slow heave like the breathings of the spirit of
+the deep. But, smooth as the blue plain seemed, wave met rock with roar
+and turmoil, and between that outlying peak and the shore the waters
+tore and foamed with wild white crests--tumbling green ridges that were
+never two seconds the same. While all along the great black base of the
+peak the white waves rushed like mighty rockets, flinging long white
+arms up its ragged sides and crashing together at the end in dazzling
+bursts of foam.
+
+“Wonderful!” said Gard. “I’ve lain here for hours watching it.”
+
+“I’ve swum it,” said Nance quietly.
+
+“So’ve I,” said Bernel.
+
+“Never! You two? I wonder you came back alive!”
+
+“On the slack it’s not so bad, and at half ebb.”
+
+“And what is there to see when you get there?”
+
+“Oh, just rocks, and puffins and gulls. You can hardly walk without
+stepping on them. Do you remember how we sat and watched the baby gulls
+coming out, Nance?”
+
+“Yes,” nodded Nance. “And you nearly got your fingers bitten off by a
+puffin when you felt in its hole.”
+
+“Ma dé, yes! They do bite.”
+
+“What do you call the rock?” asked Gard, nodding across at it.
+
+“L’Etat,” said Nance. “Mr. Cachemaille once told me that it had most
+likely at one time been joined on to Little Sark by a Coupée, just the
+same as Little Sark is joined to Sark. That’s the Coupée, that shelf
+under water where the tide runs so fast. Some day, he said, perhaps our
+Coupée will go and we’ll be an island just as L’Etat is.”
+
+“It won’t be this week,” said Bernel philosophically.
+
+“It looks like the top of a high mountain just sticking up out of the
+water,” said Gard, fascinated by the ceaseless rush of those monstrous
+waves in an otherwise calm sea.
+
+“I suppose that is what it is,” said Nance. “It’s far worse at the other
+end. You can’t see it from here. No matter how smooth the sea is it
+seems to tumble down over some cliff under water and then come shooting
+up again, and it throws itself at the rocks and sends the spray up into
+the sky.”
+
+“I’d like to go and see it,” said Gard. “But I don’t think I would like
+to swim. Could one get a boat?”
+
+“We have a boat with Nick Mollet in the bay below here,” said Bernel.
+“But he’s generally out fishing and you’re always busy.”
+
+“I’ll take a holiday some day and you shall take me over.”
+
+Time came when they went, but it was hardly a holiday undertaking.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT
+
+
+It was a few days after this that Gard had another proof of Nance’s and
+Bernel’s fearlessness and prowess in the waters they had conquered into
+friendliness.
+
+Bernel was a great fisherman. He could wheedle out rock-fish by the
+dozen while envious miners sat about him tugging hopefully at empty
+lines.
+
+He had gone down one afternoon to the overhanging wooden slip at Port
+Gorey, and had excellent sport, until a sudden shift of the wind to the
+south-west began piling the waters into the gulf on an incoming tide.
+Then he drew in his lines and sat dangling his legs for a few minutes,
+before gathering up his catch and going home.
+
+Nance saw him from the other headland and came tripping round to see how
+he had fared.
+
+“Bern,” she cried, as she came up. “Tell that man he’s not safe down
+there. The waves are bad there sometimes.”
+
+“Hi, you!” cried Bernel, to a miner who had been watching his success
+and had then climbed down seaward over the furrowed black ledges, hoping
+to do better there. “Come back! It’s not safe there.”
+
+But the fisherman, intent on his sport, either did not, or would not,
+hear him.
+
+“Oh, well, if you won’t,” said Bernel.
+
+And then, without warning, a wave greater than any that had gone before
+it, hurled itself up the rocks and came roaring over the black ledges
+into the bay, and the man was gone.
+
+Nance and Bernel had straightened up instantly at the sound of its
+coming.
+
+Their eyes swept the rocks, and caught a glimpse of the dark body
+tumbling with the cascade of foam into Port Gorey.
+
+“Oh, Bern!” cried Nance, with up-clasped hands.
+
+But Bernel, loosing his belt and kicking off his breeches with a glance
+at the derelict, launched himself clear of the pier with a shout. And
+Nance, seeing the bulk of the man, and careless of everything but Bernel
+who seemed so very small compared with him, threw off her sun-bonnet and
+linen jacket, loosed a button, and was gone like a white flash after the
+two of them.
+
+Gard was in the assay office not far away. He heard the shout and ran
+out just in time to see Nance go, and running to the slip he saw their
+clothes lying and the meaning of it all.
+
+Bern had hold of the miner by the collar of his coat, and was doing his
+best with one hand to tow him to the shingle at the head of the gulf,
+the almost drowned one splashing wildly and doing his utmost to get hold
+of and drown his rescuer. Every now and again Bernel found it necessary
+to let go in order to keep out of his way.
+
+Nance swam steadily up and the sinking one made a frantic clutch at her.
+
+“Lie quiet or you shall drown,” she cried. “Do you hear? Lie quiet and
+you are safe! See!” and she held his right hand while Bernel took his
+left and the man found himself no longer sinking, and they struck out
+for the shingle.
+
+Others of the miners had run down with ropes, but ropes were useless in
+that deep gulf. Nance and Bernel were doing the only thing possible, and
+Gard saw that they were all right now that the man had ceased to
+struggle.
+
+He picked up Bernel’s things, and Nance’s, with a curious feeling of
+delight and a touch of shyness, her sun-bonnet, her little linen jacket,
+her woollen skirt, her neat little wooden sabots, and ran swiftly with
+them to the shaft at the head of the gulf.
+
+They would make for the adit, he thought, and so gain the shaft and come
+up by the ladders, if, indeed, John Thomas was in any state to climb
+ladders.
+
+“Bring some brandy,” he shouted to one of the men, and ran on. Nance was
+more to him than all the miners in Sark, and it was not brandy she would
+be wanting, he knew, but her clothes.
+
+And, since a man needs both his hands to go down almost perpendicular
+ladders, he left at the top all that she would not instantly need and
+took only the little jacket and the woollen skirt. These he rolled into
+a bundle as he ran, and gripped in his teeth as he began the descent,
+and rejoiced all the way down in this close intimacy with her clothing.
+Indeed, on one of the stages, when he stopped for a moment’s breathing,
+he kissed the little garments devoutly, and then laughed shamefacedly at
+himself for his foolishness, and glanced round quickly lest any should
+have witnessed it.
+
+So down, down, till he came to the level, and crept along the adit to
+the shore.
+
+They had dragged John Thomas up on to the shingle, and he lay there
+half-dead and fuller of water than was his custom.
+
+Nance looked up quickly at the sound of Gard’s feet, and the paled-brown
+of her face flushed red at sight of him, and then a grateful gleam
+lighted it as he dropped her things into her hand and bent over John
+Thomas, who was showing signs of life in a dazed and water-logged
+fashion.
+
+“You did splendidly, you two,” he said to Bernel. “It’s a grand thing to
+save a man’s life, even if it’s only John Thomas,” for John Thomas had
+found this land of free spirits too much for him, and had become a
+soaker and an indifferent workman.
+
+“He’ll be all right after a bit,” he added. “I told them to send down
+some brandy,” at which John Thomas groaned heavily to show his
+extremity. “As soon as it comes, Bernel, you help Nance up the ladders.
+Then run home both of you. Your things are at the top, Bernel. And here
+comes the brandy. Now, up you go! Do you think you can manage the
+ladders?” he asked Nance.
+
+“I’ll manage them,” and they crept away into the darkness of the adit,
+and Nance thought she had never been in such a hideous place in her
+life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY
+
+
+They had been most gratefully and graciously free from Tom since his
+father’s death, but he reappeared a day or two before the end of the six
+weeks, and brought with him a wife from Guernsey--not even a Guernsey
+woman, however, but a Frenchwoman from the Cotentin--black-haired,
+black-eyed, good-looking, after the type that would please such an one
+as Tom Hamon--somewhat over-bold of face and manner for the rest of the
+family.
+
+Philip Tanquerel had had to bring all his sagacity to bear on his
+difficult task of apportioning the lots, and Tom, who knew every inch of
+the ground and all its capacities, grinned viciously now and again at
+the acumen displayed in the divisions.
+
+The allotment of the house-room had presented difficulties.
+
+The great kitchen at La Closerie occupied the whole centre third of the
+ground floor, the remaining thirds of the space on each side being taken
+up with the rarely-used best room and three bedrooms, all pretty much of
+a size, and all opening into the kitchen. Up above, under the sloping
+thatch was the great solie or loft, entered from the outside through the
+door-window in the gable by means of a short wooden ladder.
+
+Grannie’s dower rights, when Tom’s grandfather died, had obtained for
+her the two rooms constituting one-third of the house on the south side
+of the kitchen, and certain rights of use of the kitchen itself. As she
+needed only one room, she had bartered off the other and her kitchen
+rights to her son and his wife in exchange for food and attendance, and
+the arrangement had worked excellently.
+
+But, on her first glimpse of young Tom’s quick-eyed, bold-faced
+Frenchwoman, she had vowed she would have none of her; and in the end,
+as the result of some chaffering, it was arranged that Tom and his wife
+should have the kitchen and all the rooms north of it, while Mrs. Hamon
+and Nance and Bernel had the room next Grannie’s for a kitchen, and the
+great loft for bedrooms, all the necessary and duly specified
+alterations to be made at Tom’s expense, and Mr. Tanquerel to see them
+carried out at once. Grannie’s other room was to become their
+sitting-room also and they were to provide for her as hitherto. By
+boarding up the doors leading to the kitchen, and making a new entrance
+to their own rooms, the families were therefore entirely separated, to
+every one’s complete satisfaction.
+
+The division of the furniture and kitchen utensils gave Mrs. Hamon all
+she needed. Tom, of course, took as _droit d’ainesse_, before the
+division, the family clock--which still bore signs of strife, and had
+refused to go since that night when Gard’s buffet had sent him headlong
+into it; and the farm-ladders and the pilotins--the stone props on which
+the haystacks were built; and in addition to his own full share, as
+between himself and Nance and Bernel, he exacted from them to the
+uttermost farthing the extra seventh part of the value of all they
+received--an Island right, but honoured more in the breach than in the
+observance, and one which, in its exercise, tended to label the
+exerciser as unduly mean and grasping.
+
+Beyond that, everything was so fairly well balanced that Tom found
+himself unable to secure all he had hoped, and so deemed himself
+ill-used, and did not hesitate to express himself in his usual forcible
+manner.
+
+To obtain some of the things he specially wanted, Tanquerel had so
+arranged the lots that he must sacrifice others, and these little
+matters rankled in his mind and obscured his purview.
+
+There was a good deal of unhappy wrangling, but in the end Mrs. Hamon
+and Nance found themselves with a large cornfield, one for pasture, and
+one for mixed crops, potatoes, beans and so on, besides rights of
+grazing and gorse-cutting on a certain stretch of cliff common.
+
+They had also a pony and two cows, and two pigs and a couple of dozen
+hens and a cock--quite enough to keep Nance busy; and to them also fell
+an adequate share of the byres and barns, and the free use of the well.
+
+Tom, however, still looked upon them as interlopers, and grudged them
+every stick and stone, and hoof and claw. If they had never come into
+the family all would have been his. Whatever they had they had snatched
+out of his mouth.
+
+If it had not been for Philip Tanquerel the alterations agreed on would
+never have been completed. He got down the carpenter and mason from
+Sark, stood over them, day by day, till the work was done, and then
+referred them to Tom for payment--and a pleasant and lively time they
+had in getting it.
+
+The conditions resulting from all this were just such as have prevailed
+in hundreds of similar cases, such as are almost inevitable from the
+minute divisions and sub-divisions of small properties. When ill-feeling
+has prevailed beforehand it is by no means likely to be lessened by the
+unavoidable friction of such a distribution.
+
+The open ill-feeling was, however, all on Tom’s side. The others had
+suffered him at closer quarters the greater part of their lives. It was
+to them a mighty relief to be boarded off from him, and to feel free at
+last from his unwelcome incursions.
+
+He never spoke to any of them, and when they passed one another on their
+various farm duties a black look and a muttered curse was his only
+greeting.
+
+By means of what fairy tales concerning himself, or his position, or
+Sark, he had induced the lively-eyed Julie to marry him, we may not
+know. But Mrs. Tom very soon let it be known that she considered herself
+woefully misled, and quite thrown away upon such a place as Sark, and
+still more so upon this _ultima thule_ of Little Sark, which she volubly
+asserted was the very last place le bon Dieu had made, and the condition
+in which it was left did Him little credit.
+
+She, at all events, showed no disinclination to chat with her
+neighbours. Very much the contrary. None of them could pass within range
+of her eyes and tongue without a greeting and an invitation to talk.
+
+“Tiens donc, Nancie, ma petite!” she would cry, at sight of Nance. “What
+a hurry you are in. It is hurry and scurry and bustle from morning till
+night with you over there. The hens? Let them wait, ma garche, ’twill
+strengthen their legs to scratch a bit, and ’twill enlighten your mind
+to hear about Guernsey and Granville. Oh the beautiful country! Mon
+Dieu, if only I were back there!”
+
+They all--except, perhaps, Grannie--felt for her--lonely in a strange
+land--and were inclined to do what they could to make her more
+contented. But she desired them chiefly as listeners, and the things she
+had to tell were little to their taste, and less to her credit from
+their point of view, though she herself evidently looked upon them as
+every-day matters, and calculated to inspire these simple island-folk
+with the respect due to a woman of the greater world outside.
+
+Grannie’s views of her grand-daughter-in-law had never altered from the
+first moment she set eyes on her.
+
+When Mrs. Tom came in to hear herself talk, one afternoon when Tom was
+away fishing, the old lady simply sat and stared at her from the depths
+of her big black sun-bonnet, and never opened her lips or gave any sign
+of interest or hearing.
+
+“Is she deaf?” asked Mrs. Tom after a while.
+
+“Dear me, no. Grannie hears everything,” said Mrs. Hamon, with a smile
+at thought of all the old lady would have to say presently.
+
+“Nom d’un nom, then why doesn’t she speak? Is it dumb she is?”
+
+“Neither deaf nor dumb--nor yet a fool,” rapped Grannie, so sharply that
+the visitor jumped.
+
+And during the remainder of her visit, no matter to whom she was talking
+or what she was saying, Julie’s snapping black eyes would inevitably
+keep working round to the depths of the big black sun-bonnet, and at
+times her discourse lost point and trailed to a ragged end.
+
+“It’s my belief that old woman next door is a witch,” she said to her
+husband later on.
+
+“She’s an old devil,” he said bluntly. “She’ll put the evil eye on you
+if you don’t take care.”
+
+“She ought to be burnt,” said Mrs. Tom.
+
+“All the same,” said Tom musingly, “she’s got money, so you’d best be as
+civil to her as she’ll let you.”
+
+“Mon Dieu! My flesh creeps still at the way she looked at me. She has
+the evil eye without a doubt.”
+
+And Grannie?--“Mai grand doux! What does a woman like that want here?”
+said she. “A wide mouth and wanton eyes. La Closerie has never had these
+before--a Frenchwoman too!”--with withering contempt. For, odd as it may
+seem, among this people originally French, and still speaking a patois
+based, like their laws and customs, on the old Norman, there is no term
+of opprobrium more profound than “Frenchman.”
+
+Madame Julie flatly refused to subject herself to further peril from
+Grannie’s keen but harmless gaze, and contented herself with such
+opportunities of enlarging Nance’s outlook on life as casual chats about
+the farm-yard afforded, and found time heavy on her hands.
+
+Ennui, before long, gave place to grumbling, and that to recrimination;
+and from what the others could not help hearing, through the boarded-up
+doors and the floor of the loft, Tom and his wife had a cat-and-dog time
+of it.
+
+Gard had moved over to Plaisance with great regret. But nothing else was
+possible under the altered circumstances at La Closerie, so he made the
+best of it.
+
+It was some consolation to learn that they also missed him.
+
+“Everything’s different,” grumbled Bernel, one day when they met. “Tom
+and his wife quarrel so that we can hear them through the walls. And
+Grannie sits by the hour without opening her mouth. And mother and Nance
+are as quiet as if they were going to be sick. And I’m getting
+green-mouldy. Seems as if we’d got to the end of things, and nothing was
+ever going to happen again. I think I’ll go to Guernsey.”
+
+“Do you think they’d like--I mean, would they mind if I came in for a
+chat now and then? It’s pretty lonely up at Plaisance too.”
+
+“Oh, they’ll mind and so will I. When’ll you come?”
+
+“I’ll look in to-night as I come from the mines--if you’re sure--”
+
+“You come and try, and if you don’t like it you needn’t come
+again”--with a twinkle of the eye.
+
+Nance did not strike him as looking as though she were going to be sick,
+when he went in that night, nor did her mother.
+
+Grannie indeed had little to say, but then she was never over-talkative,
+and when Gard more than once looked at her, and wondered if she had
+fallen asleep, he always found the keen old eyes wide open, and eyeing
+him watchfully as ever out of the depths of the big black sun-bonnet.
+
+Mrs. Hamon asked about his new quarters, and his quiet shake of the head
+and simple--“They’re kindly folk, but it’s somehow very different”--told
+its own tale.
+
+“They’re a bit short-handed, you see,” he added, “and so they’re all
+kept busy, and at times, I’m afraid, they wish me further.”
+
+“And you go all that way back for your dinner each day?” asked Mrs.
+Hamon thoughtfully.
+
+“Well, I have tried taking it with me, but it’s not very satisfactory.”
+
+“What would you say to coming here for it, as you used to? I think we
+could manage it, Nance. What do you say?”
+
+“We could manage it all right,” said Nance, “if--” and then, in spite of
+herself, she could not keep that telltale mouth of hers in order, and
+the attempt to repress a smile only emphasized the dimples at the
+corners. For Gard’s face was as eager as a dog’s at sight of a rat.
+
+“It will save me such a lot of time,” he explained--at which Nance
+dimpled again as she went out to feed her chickens, and left them to
+complete the new arrangement.
+
+And if it had cost Gard every penny of his salary he would still have
+rejoiced at it, and considered his bargain a good one. As it was, it
+cost him no more than the trouble of rearranging his terms with the good
+folks at Plaisance, and it gave a new zest and enjoyment to life since
+it ensured a meeting with Nance at least once each day.
+
+And not with Nance only!
+
+Madame Julie, very weary of herself, and Tom, and her surroundings, and
+Sark, and life in general as understood in Sark, very soon became
+conscious of the regular visits next door of the best-looking young man
+she had yet seen in the Island, and was filled with curiosity concerning
+him.
+
+“He’s after that slip of a Nance,” she said to herself. “And he has his
+own share of good looks, has that young man.”--And then came the
+inevitable, “Mon Dieu, but I wish Tom had been made like that!”
+
+To get a better view of him--and perhaps not without a vague idea of
+ulterior interest and amusement for herself--anything to add a dash of
+colour to the prevailing greyness of her surroundings--she was leaning
+on the gate next day when he came striding up to his dinner, and gave
+him, “Bon jour, m’sieur!” with much heartiness and the full benefit of
+her black eyes and white teeth.
+
+“’Jour, madame!” and he whipped off his hat and passed on into the
+house.
+
+“That was Madame Tom, I suppose, who was leaning over the gate, as I
+came in,” he said, as they ate.
+
+“I expect so,” said Mrs. Hamon. “She generally seems to have time on her
+hands.”
+
+“When Tom’s not there,” snapped Grannie. “Got her hands full enough when
+he is.”
+
+“I should imagine Tom would not be too easy to get on with at times.
+Maybe he’ll settle down now he’s married.”
+
+“Doesn’t sound like settling down sometimes,” chirped the old lady
+again.
+
+“Oh? I’m sorry to hear that. She doesn’t look bad-tempered.”
+
+“Tom’s got more’n enough for the two of them.”
+
+“I’m afraid she finds it a change from what she’s been accustomed to,”
+said Mrs. Hamon quietly. “She came in once or twice, but her talk is of
+things that don’t interest us, and ours is of things that don’t interest
+her, so we can’t get as friendly as we would like to be.”
+
+“And Tom?”
+
+“Tom considers us all robbers, as he always has done. He gives us his
+blackest face whenever he sees any of us.”
+
+“That’s unpleasant, seeing you’re such close neighbours.”
+
+“Yes, it’s unpleasant, but we can’t help it. It’s just Tom. How is your
+work getting on?”
+
+“Not as I would wish,” said Gard, with a gloomy wag of the head. “Your
+Sark men are difficult--very difficult, and the others who ought to know
+better, and who do know better”--with more than a touch of warmth--“go
+on as though I was a slave-driver.”
+
+“Sark men are hard to drive,” said Mrs. Hamon sympathetically.
+
+“They know perfectly well that I want only what is just and right to the
+shareholders. They expect their pay to the last penny, but when I insist
+on a proper return for it they look at me as if they’d like to knock me
+on the head. It’s disheartening work. I’ve been tempted at times to
+throw it all up and go back to England”--at which Nance’s heart gave so
+unusual a little kick that she had difficulty in frowning it into
+quietude, and just then Bernel came in with his gun and a couple of
+rabbits.
+
+“Who’s going to England?” he asked. “I’ll go too.”
+
+“No you won’t,” said Nance sharply. “We want you here.”
+
+“It’s as dull as Beauregard pond and as dirty, since the m--aw--um!”
+with a deprecatory glance at Gard.
+
+“You’d find most busy places just as dirty,” said Gard.
+
+“Then I’ll go to sea. That’s clean at all events.”
+
+“Let’s hope things will brighten a bit. You wouldn’t find the fo’c’sle
+of a trader as comfortable as La Closerie, my boy,”--and they fell to on
+their dinner and left the matter there.
+
+“Dites-donc, Nannon, ma petite,” said Mrs. Tom to Nance, a day or two
+later, “who is the joli gars who comes each day to see you?”
+
+“Mr. Gard from the mines comes up here to get his dinner, if that’s what
+you mean.”
+
+“Oh--ho! He comes for his dinner, does he? And is that all he comes for,
+little Miss Modesty?”
+
+“That’s all,” said Nance solemnly.
+
+“Oh yes, without a doubt, that’s all. I think I’ll ask him next time I
+see him. Why doesn’t he go home for his dinner like other people?”
+
+“He’s living at Plaisance now and it’s far to go. He used to live here,
+you know.”
+
+“Ma foi, no, I didn’t know. He used to live here? And why did he go to
+Plaisance then?”
+
+“We hadn’t room for him, you see.”
+
+“But, Mon Dieu, we have room and to spare! There are those two bedrooms
+empty. Why shouldn’t he--”
+
+But Nance shook her head at that.
+
+“Why then?” demanded Mrs. Tom, with visions of some one besides Tom to
+talk to of an evening--a good-looking, sensible one too. “Why?”
+
+“He and Tom don’t get on well together--”
+
+“Pardi, I’m not surprised at that. It would need an angel out of heaven
+to get on with him sometimes. What induced me ever to marry such a
+grumbler I don’t know. I wonder if Monsieur What-is-it?--Gard--would
+come back if I could arrange it?”
+
+But Nance shook her head again.
+
+“Ah--ha, ma garche, and you would sooner he did not--is it not so?”
+
+“I’m quite sure he and Tom would never get on together, and I don’t
+think Mr. Gard would come.”
+
+“It’s worth trying, however. He would be some one to talk to of an
+evening any way.”
+
+And so, when Tom came in that evening, she tackled him on the subject.
+
+“Say then, mon beau,”--and as she said it she could not but contrast his
+slouching bulk with the straight, well-knit figure of the other--“why
+should we not take in a lodger as all the rest do? Our two rooms there
+are empty and--”
+
+“Who’s the lodger?”
+
+“There is one comes up every day to dinner next door, and would stop
+there altogether if they had the room. Tiens, what’s this his name is?
+He’s from the mines--”
+
+“You mean Gard--the manager,” scowled Tom.
+
+“That’s it--Monsieur Gard. Why shouldn’t he--”
+
+“Because I’d break his head if I got the chance, and he knows it. Comes
+up there to dinner, does he? How long’s he been doing that?”
+
+“For a week now. Couldn’t you get over your bad feeling? It would be
+money in our pockets.”
+
+“No, I couldn’t, and he wouldn’t come if you asked him.”
+
+“Will you let me try?”
+
+“I tell you he won’t come.”
+
+“In that case there’s no harm in trying. If I can persuade him, will you
+promise to be civil to him, and not try to break his head?”
+
+“He won’t come, I tell you.”
+
+“And I say he may.”
+
+“And you’ll nag and nag till you get your own way, I suppose.”
+
+“Of course. What’s the use of a woman’s tongue if she can’t get her own
+way with it? Will you promise to behave properly if he comes?”
+
+“I’ll behave if he behaves,” he growled sulkily. “But we’ll neither of
+us get the chance. He won’t come.”
+
+“Eh bien, we’ll see!”
+
+And when Gard came up to dinner next day, she was leaning over the gate
+waiting for him, very tastefully dressed according to her lights, and
+with an engaging smile on her face.
+
+“Dites donc, Monsieur Gard,” she said pleasantly. “Our little Nannon was
+telling me you regretted having to live so far away. Why should you not
+come back and occupy your old room? It is lying empty there, and I would
+do my very best to make you comfortable, and you would be close to your
+friends all the time then, instead of having to go across that frightful
+Coupée.”
+
+“It is very kind of you, madame,” and he stared back at her in much
+surprise, and found himself wondering what on earth had made her marry
+such a man as Tom Hamon. For she was undeniably good-looking and had all
+a Frenchwoman’s knack of making the very best of all she had--abundant
+black hair, very neatly twisted up at the back of her head; white teeth
+and full red lips; straight, well-developed figure very neatly dressed;
+and large black eyes which looked capable of so many things, that they
+found it difficult to settle for any length of time to any one
+expression.
+
+“It is very kind of you, madame,” said Gard, “but--” and he stood
+looking at her and hesitating how to put it.
+
+“You mean about Tom,” she laughed. “But that is all past. I have spoken
+to him, and he promises to behave himself quite properly if you will
+come. Voilà!”
+
+Just for a moment the possibilities of the suggestion caught his mind.
+He would be near Nance all the time. He would be saved much tiresome
+walking to and fro. Especially he would be saved that passage of the
+Coupée, which at night, even with a lantern, was not a thing one easily
+got accustomed to, and on stormy nights was enough to make one’s hair
+fly. Then this woman was very different from his present landlady, and
+would probably, he thought, have different notions of comfort.
+
+The quick black eyes caught something of what was in him: and he, as
+suddenly, caught something of what lurked, consciously or unconsciously,
+in them, and a little tremor of repugnance shook his heart and braced
+him back to reason.
+
+He shook his head. “It would not do, madame. He and I would never get on
+together, no matter how hard we tried. I thank you for the offer all the
+same,” and he made as though to pass her.
+
+“I wish you would come,” she said, and laid a pleading hand on his arm.
+“I’m sure he would try to behave. I can generally manage him except when
+he’s been drinking. Then I’m afraid of him, and wish some one else was
+at hand. But that’s only when he’s been out all night at the fishing,
+and it’s soon over and done with. Do come, monsieur!”--It was almost a
+whisper now, and she leaned towards him--the rich dark face--the great
+solicitous eyes.
+
+But she had mistaken her man. Perhaps she had not met many like him.
+
+He shook off her hand almost brusquely.
+
+“It is impossible, madame. I could not,” and he pushed past just as
+Nance came to the door.
+
+She had seen him coming, heard their voices outside, and wondered what
+was keeping him.
+
+She turned back into the house when she saw Julie, wondering still more.
+For Gard’s face was disturbed, and had in it something of the look she
+had seen more than once when he had faced Tom in his tantrums.
+
+And, glancing past him, she had seen what he had not--Julie’s face when
+he turned his back on her.
+
+“Mon Gyu!” gasped Nance to herself, and went in wondering.
+
+“She and Tom wanted me to take my old room again, and I refused,” was
+all he said.
+
+“Tom wanted you to go there?” said Mrs. Hamon in amazement.
+
+“So she said.”
+
+Grannie’s disparaging sniff was charged with libel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Well?” asked Tom of his wife, when he came in later on with Peter
+Mauger, who had come over for supper. “Got your lodger?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“That’s what I told you,” with a provocative laugh.
+
+“Oh, he’d have come quick enough.”
+
+“Would, would he? Then why didn’t he?”
+
+“I wouldn’t trust myself alone in the house with that man.”
+
+“Ah!” said Tom, staring at her. “Always thought he was a bad lot myself,
+didn’t I, Peter?”
+
+Peter nodded.
+
+“It’s a wonder to me that Mrs. Hamon lets him run after that girl of
+hers as she does,” said Julie.
+
+“If I catch him up to any of his tricks I’ll break his head for him.”
+
+“Maybe it would be a good thing for little Nance if you did.”
+
+“Knew he was a toad as soon as I set eyes on him, so did Peter. Didn’t
+you, Peter?”
+
+Peter nodded.
+
+“What d’he say to you?” demanded Tom.
+
+“Didn’t say much. Asked if you were much away at the fishing and that.
+But the way he looked at me!--I’ve got the shivers down my back yet,”
+and a virtuous little shudder shook her and made a visible impression on
+Peter.
+
+“Peter and me’ll maybe have a word with him one of these days, won’t we,
+Peter?”
+
+“Maybe,” said Peter.
+
+“We don’t want toads like Gard running off with any of our Sark girls,
+do we, Peter?”
+
+“No,” said Peter.
+
+“Mr. Gard had better look out for himself or take himself off before
+somebody does it for him. There’s plenty wouldn’t mind giving him a
+crack on the head and slipping him over the Coupée some dark night.”
+
+As to such extreme measures Peter offered no opinion. He looked vaguely
+round the big kitchen as though in search of something that used to be
+there, and said--
+
+“How about supper?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY
+
+
+One dark night Gard sauntered down the cutting towards the Coupée,
+enjoying a last pipe before turning in.
+
+This had become something of a habit with him. The people of Plaisance,
+hard at work all day in the fields, went early to bed and left him to
+follow when he pleased. And to stand securely in that deep cleft, just
+where the protecting walls broke off short and left the narrow path to
+waver on into the darkness, was always fascinating to him.
+
+When the moon flooded the gulf on the left with shimmering silver, and
+the waves broke along the black rocks below in crisp white foam like
+silver frost, he would stand by the hour there and never tire of it.
+
+The moon cast such a mystic glamour over those great voids of darkness
+and over the headlands, melting softly away, fold behind fold, on the
+right, while Little Sark became a mystery land into which the white path
+rambled enticingly and invited one to follow.
+
+And to him, as his eyes followed it till it disappeared over the crown
+of the ridge, it was more than a mystery land--a land of promise, rich
+in La Closerie and Nance.
+
+Always within him, as he watched, was the feeling that if the sweet
+slim figure should come tripping down the moonlit path towards him, he
+would be in no way astonished. When he stood there, watching, it seemed
+to him that it would be entirely fitting for her to come so, in the calm
+soft light that was as pure and sweet as herself.
+
+And at times his eye would light on the grim black pile of L’Etat, lying
+out there in the silvery shimmer like some great monumental cairn, a
+rough and rugged heap of loneliness and mystery--the grimmer and
+lonelier by reason of the twinkling brightness of its setting. And then
+his thoughts would play about the lonely pile, and come back with a
+sense of homely relief to the fairy path which Nance’s little feet had
+trod, in light and dark, and storm and shine, since ever she could walk.
+
+He pictured her as a tiny girl running fearlessly across the grim
+pathway to school, dancing in the sunshine, bending to the storm, and
+all alone when she had been kept in--he wondered with a smile what she
+had been kept in for.
+
+He thought of her, as he had seen her, walking to church, her usually
+blithe spirit tuned to sedateness by the very fact, and, to him,
+delightfully stiffened by the further fact that she, almost alone among
+her friends and school-fellows, wore Island costume, while all the rest
+flaunted it in all the colours of the rainbow. And he laughed happily to
+himself, for very joy, at thought of the sweet elusive face in the
+shadow of the great sun-bonnet. There was not a face in all Sark to
+compare with it, nor, for him, in all the world.
+
+But this night, as be stood there pulling slowly at his pipe and
+thinking of Nance, was one of the black nights.
+
+Later on there would be a remnant of a moon, but as yet the sky above
+was an ebon vault without a star, and the gulfs at his feet were pits of
+darkness out of which rose the voices of the sea in solemn rhythmic
+cadence.
+
+Down in Grande Grève, on his right, the waves rolled in almost without a
+sound, as though they feared to disturb the darkness. From the
+intervening moments he could tell how slowly they crept to their curve.
+Their fall was a soft sibilation, a long-drawn sigh. The ever-restless
+sea for once seemed falling to sleep.
+
+And then, as he listened into the darkness, a tiny elfish glimmer
+flickered in the void below, flickered and was gone, and he rubbed his
+eyes for playing him tricks. But the next wave broke slowly round the
+wide curve of the bay in a crescent of lambent flame, and a flood of
+soft, blue-green fire ran swelling up the beach and then with a sigh
+drew slowly back, and all was dark again. Again and again--each wave was
+a miracle of mystic beauty, and he stood there entranced long after his
+pipe had gone dead.
+
+And as he stood gazing down at the wonder of it, his ear caught the
+sound of quick light footsteps coming towards him across the Coupée, and
+he marvelled at the intrepidity of this late traveller. If he had had to
+go across there that night, he would have gone step by step, with
+caution and a lantern; whereas here was no hesitation, but haste and
+assurance.
+
+It was only when she had passed the last bastion, and was almost upon
+him, that he made out that it was a girl.
+
+His heart gave a jump. She had been so much in his thought. Yet, even
+so, it was almost at a venture that he said--
+
+“Nance?”
+
+And yet, again, he had learned to recognize her footsteps at the farm,
+and where the heart is given the senses are subtly acute, and she had
+slackened her pace somewhat as she drew near.
+
+“Yes; I am going to the doctor.”
+
+“Why--who--?”
+
+“Grannie is ill--in pain. He will give me something to ease her.” He had
+turned and was walking by her side.
+
+“I am sorry. You will let me go with you?”
+
+“There is no need at all--”
+
+“No need, I know; but all the same it would be a pleasure to me to see
+you safely there and back.”
+
+She hurried on without speaking. If there had been any light, and he had
+dared to peep inside the black sun-bonnet, he might perhaps have found
+the hint of a smile overlaying her anxiety on Grannie’s account.
+
+By the ampler feel of things, and the easing of the slope, he knew they
+were out of the cutting, and presently they were passing Plaisance.
+
+“If you would sooner I did not walk with you, I will fall behind; but I
+couldn’t stop here and think of you going on alone,” he said.
+
+“That would be foolishness,” she said gently. “But there is really no
+need. I have no fears of ghosts or anything like that.”
+
+“There might be other kinds of spirits about,” he said quietly. “And
+when men drink as some of my fellows do, they are no respecters of
+persons. But this is surely very sudden. Your grandmother seemed all
+right at dinner-time.”
+
+“She had bad pains in the afternoon, and they have been getting worse.
+She did not want to have the doctor, but the things she took did her no
+good, and mother said I had better go and ask him for something more.”
+
+“And where is Bernel?”
+
+“He went to the fishing with Billy Mollet, and he was not back.”
+
+“And suppose the doctor is not in?”
+
+“They will know where he is, and I will go after him.”
+
+“Did you see those wonderful waves of fire as you came across the
+Coupée?”
+
+“I have seen them often. When there is more sea on, and it breaks on the
+rocks, it is finer still. It is something in the water, Mr. Cachemaille
+told me.”
+
+“I heard your footsteps down there on the Coupée, but I couldn’t see a
+sign of you till you were almost against me.”
+
+“I saw from the other side that some one was there, but I could not see
+who.”
+
+“You have most wonderful eyes in Sark.”
+
+“It is never quite dark to me on the darkest night. I suppose it is with
+being used to it.”
+
+“You’ll have to help me across the Coupée.”
+
+“And how will you get back?”
+
+“The moon will be up, and then I can see all right. I don’t need much
+light, but I’ve not been brought up to see through solid black.”
+
+The doctor was fortunately in, and knew by ample experience what would
+ease Grannie’s pains. So presently they were hurrying back along the
+dark road.
+
+As they turned the corner by Vauroque an open doer cast a great shaft
+of light across the darkness, and there, just as on a previous occasion,
+on the wall lounged half-a-dozen men, and among them was Tom Hamon, who
+had come up to have a drink with his friend Peter.
+
+At sight of him, Nance bent her head and tried to shrink into herself as
+she hurried past.
+
+But Tom had seen her, and the sight of her alone with Gard at that time
+of night roused the virtuous indignation, and other more potent spirits,
+within him.
+
+He sprang down into the road, shouting what sounded like a spate of
+curses in the patois.
+
+Gard stopped and turned, with a keen recollection of the same thing
+having happened before. He remembered too how that occasion ended.
+
+But Nance laid an entreating hand on his arm.
+
+“Please--don’t!”
+
+Her voice sounded a little strange to him. If he had been able to see
+her face now he would have found it pallid, in spite of its usual
+healthy brown bloom.
+
+She stood entreatingly till he turned and went on with her.
+
+“He is evidently aching for another thrashing,” he said grimly, as he
+stalked beside her.
+
+And presently they were in the cutting, and the unnerving vastness of
+the gulfs opened out on either side. Gard felt like a blindfolded man
+stumbling along a plank.
+
+He involuntarily put out a groping hand and took hold of her cloak. A
+little hand slipped out of the cloak and took his in charge, and so they
+went through the darkness of the narrow way.
+
+He breathed more freely when the further slope was reached, and only
+then became aware that the hand that held his was all of a tremble. The
+next moment he perceived that she was sobbing quietly.
+
+“Nance!” he cried. “What is it? You are crying. Is it anything I--”
+
+“No, no, no!” sobbed the wounded soul convulsively.
+
+“What then? Tell me!”
+
+“I cannot. I cannot.”
+
+“Nance--dear!” and he sought her hand again and stood holding it firmly.
+“It is like stabs in my heart to hear you sobbing. I would give my life
+to save you from trouble. Do you believe me, dear?”
+
+“Yes, yes--”
+
+“And you can trust me, dear, can you not? You distrusted me at first, I
+know, but--”
+
+“Oh, I do trust you, and I know you are good. And it is that that makes
+it so wicked of him to say such things about us--”
+
+In her excitement she had let slip more than she intended. She stopped
+abruptly.
+
+“Tom?”
+
+She did not speak, but the wound welled open in another sob.
+
+“Don’t trouble about him, dear! I don’t know what he said, but if it was
+meant to make you doubt me, it was not true. You are more to me than
+anything in the world, Nance, and I have never loved any other
+woman--except my mother. Do you believe me?”
+
+“Yes--oh, yes! I cannot help believing you. Oh, I wish sometimes that
+Tom was dead. When I was very little I used to pray each night to God to
+kill him.”
+
+“I’ll teach him to leave you alone.”
+
+“I must go now. Grannie is waiting for her medicine.”
+
+He took the little hand under his arm and pressed it close to his side,
+and they pushed on down the dark lanes till they came in sight of the
+lights of La Closerie.
+
+Then he bent into the sun-bonnet and sealed his capture of the virginal
+fortress by a passionate kiss on the tremulous little lips. And she,
+with the frankness of a child, reached up and kissed him warmly back.
+
+“Good-night, dear, and God bless you!” he said fervently.
+
+“Can you find your way in the dark?”
+
+“There is the moon. I shall be all right.”
+
+She bent her head and ran on towards the lights. He watched her go in at
+the door, and turned and went back along the lane, and his heart was
+high with the joy that was in him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HOW TWO FELL OUT
+
+
+It was but a thin strip of a moon that had risen above the evening
+mists--a mere sickle of red gold--but such as it was it sufficed to lift
+the pall of darkness from the earth and set the black sky back into its
+proper place.
+
+To Gard the night had suddenly become spacious and ample, and the
+peaceful slip of a moon, which grew paler and brighter every minute, was
+full of promise.
+
+He was so full of Nance that he had almost forgotten Tom and his
+scurrilous insolences.
+
+He crossed the Coupée without any difficulty, enjoyed over again the
+recollection of that last crossing, and stood in the cutting on the Sark
+side for a moment to marvel at the change an hour had made in his
+outlook on things in general.
+
+Tom? Why, he could almost forgive Tom, for it was he who had helped to
+bring matters to a head--unconsciously, indeed, and probably quite
+against his wish. Still, he had been the instrument--the drop of acid in
+the solution which had crystallized their love into set form and made it
+visible, and fixed it for life.
+
+Truly, he was half inclined to consider himself under obligation to
+Tom--if only his boorishness could be kept in check for the future. For,
+of a certainty, he was not going to allow Nance to be made miserable by
+his loutish insolences.
+
+He had climbed the cutting and was on the level, when he heard heavy
+footsteps coming towards him, and the next moment he was face to face
+with the object of his thoughts.
+
+Possibly Tom had expected to meet him and had been preparing for the
+fray, for he opened at once with a volley of patois which to Gard was so
+much blank cartridge.
+
+“Oh--ho, le velas--corrupteur! Amuseur! Séducteur! Ou quais noutre
+fille? Quais qu’on avait fait d’elle d’on?”
+
+“Quite finished?” asked Gard quietly, as the other came to a stop for
+want of breath. “Say it all over again in English, and I’ll know what
+you’re talking about.”
+
+“English be----!” he broke out afresh, in a turgid mixture of tongues.
+“Séducteur, amuseur! Where’s our Nance? Gaderabotin, what have you done
+with the girl? I know you, corrupteur! Running after men’s wives--and
+our Nance, too! See then--you touch la garche and I’ll--”
+
+“See here! We’ve had enough of this,” said Gard, gripping him by the
+shoulders and shaking him. “If you weren’t drunk I’d thrash you within
+an inch of your life, you brute. Come back when you’re sober, and I’ll
+give you a lesson in manners.”
+
+Tom had been struggling to get his arms up. At last he wrenched himself
+free and came on like a bull. One of his flailing fists caught Gard
+across the face, flattening his nose and filling one eye with stars; the
+other hand, trying to grip his opponent, ripped open his coat, tearing
+away both button and cloth.
+
+“You lout!” cried Gard, his blood up and dripping also from his nose.
+“If you must have it, you shall;” and he squared up to him to administer
+righteous punishment.
+
+And then the futility of it came upon him. The man was three-parts
+drunk, in no condition for a fight, scarce able to attempt even to
+defend himself.
+
+No punishment of Tom drunk would have the slightest moral effect on Tom
+sober. He would remember nothing about it in the morning, except that he
+had been knocked about.
+
+When he received his next lesson in deportment it was Gard’s earnest
+desire and hope that it might prove a lasting and final one.
+
+So he decided to postpone it, and contented himself with warding and
+dodging his furious lunges and rushes, and gave him no blow in return.
+Until, at last, after one or two heavy falls of his own occasioning, Tom
+gave it up, spluttered a final commination on his opponent, and turned
+to go home.
+
+He went blunderingly down into the hollow way, and Gard stood watching
+him in doubt.
+
+It seemed hardly possible he could cross the Coupée in that state, and
+he felt a sort of moral responsibility towards him. Much as he detested
+him, he had no wish to see him go reeling over into Coupée bay.
+
+So he set off after him to see him safely across, and Tom, hearing him
+coming, groped in the crumbling side wall till he found a rock of size,
+and sent it hurling up the path with another curse.
+
+Then he blundered on, and Gard followed. And Tom stopped again by one of
+the pinnacles and sought another rock, and flung it, and it dropped
+slowly from point to point till it landed on the shingle three hundred
+feet below.
+
+He stood there in the dim light, cursing volubly in patois and shaking
+his fist at Gard; but at last, to Gard’s great relief, he humped his
+back and stumbled away up the cutting on the further side.
+
+And Gard, very sick of it all, and with an aching head and a very tender
+nose, but withal with a warm glow at the heart which no aches or pains
+could damp down, turned and went home to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+HOW ONE FELL OVER
+
+
+Gard’s first waking thoughts next morning were of Nance entirely.
+
+He would see her at dinner-time. How would he find her? Last night the
+disturbance of her feelings had shaken her out of herself somewhat, and
+shown her to him in new and delightful lights.
+
+If, this morning, she should be to some extent withdrawn again into her
+natural modest shell, he would not be surprised; and he made up his
+mind, then and there, to be in no wise disappointed. Last night was a
+fact, a delightful fact, on which to build the rosy future.
+
+It was a long time to wait till dinner-time to see her. What if he went
+round that way, before going to work, just to inquire if Tom got home
+all right.
+
+And then the feeling of discomfort in his eye and nose, as though the
+one had shrunk to the size of a pin-point and the other had grown to the
+bulk of a turnip--brought back the whole matter, and on further
+consideration he decided not to go to the farm till the proper time. If
+he came across Tom, the fray would inevitably be resumed at once, and
+his right eye, at the moment, showed a decided disinclination to open to
+its usual extent, or to perform any of the functions properly demanded
+of a right eye contemplating battle.
+
+He must get up at once and bathe it and bring it to reason.
+
+Raw beef, he believed, was the correct treatment under the
+circumstances. But raw beef was almost as obtainable as raw moon, and
+even raw mutton he did not know where he could procure, nor whether it
+would answer the purpose.
+
+So he bathed his bruises with much water, and reduced their excesses to
+some extent, but not enough to escape the eye of his hostess when he
+appeared at breakfast.
+
+“Bin fighting?” she queried dispassionately.
+
+“A one-sided fight. Tom Hamon was drunk last night and hit me in the
+face, but he was not in a condition to fight or I’d have taught him
+better manners.”
+
+“He’s a rough piece,” with a disparaging shake of the head. “It’d take a
+lot to knock him into shape. Try this,” and she delved among her stores,
+and found him an ointment of her own compounding which took some of the
+soreness out of his bruises.
+
+But black eyes and swollen noses are impertinently obtrusive and
+disdainful of disguise, and the captain’s battle-flags provoked no
+little jocosity among his men that morning.
+
+“Run up against su’then, cap’n?” asked John Hamon the engineer, who was
+one of the few who sided with him.
+
+“Yes, against a drunken fist in the dark. When it’s sober I’m going to
+give it a lesson in manners.”
+
+“Drunken fisses is hard to teach. You’ll have your hands full, cap’n.”
+
+It seemed an unusually long morning, but dinner-time came at last and he
+hastened across to the farm, eager for the first sight of the sweet shy
+face hiding in the big sun-bonnet.
+
+Quite contrary to his expectations Nance came hurrying to meet him. She
+had evidently been on the watch for him. Still more to his surprise, her
+face, instead of that look of shy reserve which he had been prepared
+for, was full of anxious questioning. The large dark eyes were full of
+something he had never seen in them before.
+
+“Why--Nance--dear! What is the matter?” he asked quickly.
+
+“Did you meet Tom again last night? Oh,” at nearer sight of his bruised
+face, “you did, you did!”
+
+“Yes, dear, I did. Or rather he met me--as you see.”
+
+“Did you fight with him?” she panted.
+
+“He was too drunk to fight. He ran at me and gave me this, and my first
+inclination was to give him a sound thrashing. Then I saw it would be no
+good, in the condition he was in, so I just kept him at arm’s length
+till he tired of it. He went off at last, and I was so afraid he might
+tumble off the Coupée that I followed him, and he hurled rocks at me
+whenever he came to a stand. But he got across all right, and I went
+back and went to bed. Now, what’s all the trouble about?”
+
+“He never came home,” she jerked, with a catch in her voice which
+thought only of Tom had never put there.
+
+“Never came home?”
+
+“And they’re all out looking for him.”
+
+“I wonder if he went back to Peter Mauger’s.... If he tried to cross
+that Coupée again--in the condition he was in--”
+
+“He didn’t go back to Peter’s. Julie went there first of all to ask.”
+
+“Good Lord, what can have become of him?”
+
+The answer came unexpectedly round the corner of the house--Julie
+Hamon, in a state of utmost dishevelment and agitation, which turned
+instantly to venomous fury at the sight of Gard and Nance.
+
+Her black hair seemed all a-bristle. Her black eyes flamed. Her dark
+face worked like a quicksand. Her skirts were wet to the waist. Her
+jacket was open at the top, as though she had wrenched at it in a fit of
+choking. Her strong bare throat throbbed convulsively. Her hands, half
+closed at her side, looked as though they wanted something to claw.
+
+“Did you do it?” she cried hoarsely, stalking up to Gard.
+
+“Do what?”
+
+“Kill him.”
+
+“Tom?... You don’t mean to say--”
+
+“You ought to know. He’s there in the school-house, broken to a jelly
+and his head staved in. And they say it’s you he fought with last night.
+The marks of it are on your face”--her voice rose to a
+scream--“Murderer! Murderer! Murderer!”
+
+“You wicked--thing!” cried Nance, pale to the lips.
+
+“You--you--you!” foamed Julie. “You’re as bad as he is. Because my man
+tried to save you from that--murderer--”
+
+“Oh, you--wicked!--You’re crazy,” cried Nance, rushing at her as though
+to make an end of her.
+
+And Julie, mad with the strain of the night’s anxieties and their abrupt
+and terrible ending, uncurled her claws and struck at her with a
+snarl--tore off her sun-bonnet, and would have ripped up her face, if
+Gard had not flung his arms round her from the back and dragged her
+screaming and kicking towards her own door.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had come running out at sound of the fray. Gard whirled the
+mad woman into her own house and Mrs. Hamon followed her and closed the
+door.
+
+Gard turned to look for Nance.
+
+She was nervously trying to tie on her sun-bonnet by one string.
+
+“Nance, dear,” he said, “you don’t believe I had anything to do with
+this?”
+
+“Oh no, no! I’m sure you hadn’t. But--”
+
+“But?” he asked, looking down into the pale face and bright anxious
+eyes.
+
+“Oh, they may say you did it. They will think it. They are sure to think
+it, and they are so--”
+
+“Don’t trouble about it, dear. I know no more about it than you do, and
+they cannot get beyond that. Promise me you won’t let it trouble you.”
+
+“Oh, I will try. But--”
+
+“Have no fears on my account, Nance. I will go at once and tell them all
+I know about it.”
+
+He pressed her hands reassuringly, and she went into the house with
+downcast head and a face full of forebodings, and he set off at once for
+Sark.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME
+
+
+Mrs. Tom had had a troubled night. Anxiety at her husband’s continued
+absence had in due time given way to anger, and anger in its turn to
+anxiety again.
+
+In a state of mind compounded of these wearing emotions, she had set out
+in the early morning to find out what had become of him; if he was
+sleeping off a drunken debauch at Peter Mauger’s, to give them both a
+vigorous piece of her mind; if he was not there, to find out where he
+was; in any case to vent on some one the pent-up feelings of the night.
+
+Vigorous hammering on Peter Mauger’s door produced first his old
+housekeeper, and presently himself, heavy-eyed, dull-witted, and in
+flagrant dishabille, since Mrs. Guille had but a moment ago shaken him
+out of the sleep of those who drink not wisely over-night, with the
+information that a crazy woman wanted him at the door.
+
+“Where’s Tom?” demanded Julie, ready to empty the vials of her wrath on
+the delinquent as soon as he was produced.
+
+But Peter’s manner at once dissipated that expectation.
+
+“Tom?” he said vaguely, and gazed at her with a bovine stupidity that
+jarred her strained nerves like a blow.
+
+“Yes, Tom--my husband, fool! Where is he?” she asked sharply.
+
+“Where is he?” scratching his tousled head to quicken his wits. “I d’n
+know.”
+
+“You don’t know? What did you do with him last night, you drunken
+fool?”--by this time the neighbours had come out to learn the news.
+
+Peter gaped at her in astonishment, his muddled wits and aching head
+beginning dimly to realize that something was wrong.
+
+“Tom left here ... last night ... t’go home,” he nodded emphatically.
+
+“Well, he never got home,” snapped Julie. “And you’d best get your
+clothes on and help me find him. You were both as drunk as pigs, I
+suppose. If he’s lying dead in a ditch it’s you that’ll have the blame.”
+
+“Aw now, Julie!”
+
+“Don’t Julie me, you fool! Get dressed and do something.”
+
+“I’ll come. You wait,” and he went inside, and put his head into a basin
+of water, and threw on his clothes, and came out presently looking
+anxious and disturbed now that his sluggish brain had begun to work.
+
+“Where you been looking?” he asked.
+
+“Nowhere. I expected to find him here.”
+
+“We had a glass or two and then he started off home. He could walk all
+right.... Did you.... You didn’t see anything wrong ... anything ... at
+the Coupée?” he asked, with a quick anxious look at her.
+
+“No, I didn’t. What do you mean? Oh, mon Dieu!” and she started down the
+road at a run, with Peter lumbering after her and the neighbours in a
+buzzing tail behind.
+
+The cold douche had cooled Peter’s hot head, the running quickened his
+blood and his thoughts, a sudden grim fear braced his brain to quite
+unusual activity.
+
+As he ran he recalled the events of the night before; their meeting with
+Gard and Nance; Tom’s scurrilous insults.
+
+If Tom and Gard had met again--Gard would be sure to see Nance home. Had
+he met Tom on his way back? And if so--if so--and ill had come to
+Tom--why, Gard might get the blame. And--and--in short, though by
+zig-zag jerks as he ran--if Gard were out of the way for good and all,
+Nance’s thoughts might turn to one nearer home. He would be sorry if ill
+had come to Tom, of course. But if Gard could be got rid of he would be
+most uncommonly glad.
+
+And as he panted after Julie, head down with the burden of much
+thinking, just before he reached the sunk way to the Coupée, his eye
+lighted on something in the road that caused him to stop and bend--a
+button with a scrap of blue cloth attached. He picked it up hastily and
+put it in his pocket. On a white stone just by it there were some
+red-brown spots. He pushed it with his foot to the side of the road and
+was down into the cutting before the heavy-footed neighbours came up.
+
+Julie was ranging up and down the narrow pathway, searching the depths
+with a face like a hawk, hanging on to the rough sides of the pinnacles,
+and bending over in a way that elicited warning cries from the others as
+they came streaming down.
+
+But keenest search of the western slope revealed nothing amid its tangle
+of gorse and blackberry bushes, and the eastern cliff fell so sheer, and
+had so many projecting lumps and underfalls, that it was impossible to
+see close in to the foot.
+
+And then one, nimbler witted than the rest, climbed out along the common
+above the northern cliff, whereby, when he had come to the great slope,
+he took the Coupée cliff in flank, and could spy along its base.
+
+And suddenly he stopped, and stiffened like a pointer sighting his bird,
+peered intently for a moment, and gave tongue.
+
+The chase was ended. That they had sought, and feared to find, was
+found.
+
+They came hurrying up, and clustered like cormorants on the slope, Julie
+among them, her face grim and livid in its black setting, her eyes
+blazing fiercely.
+
+The finder pointed it out. They all saw it--a huddled black heap close
+in under the cliff.
+
+Elevated by his discovery, the finder maintained his reputation by doing
+the only thing that could be done. He left them talking and sped away
+across the downs, across the fields, towards Creux harbour.
+
+He might, if he had known it, have found a boat nearer at hand, Rouge
+Terrier way or in Brenière Bay. But he was a Sark man, and a farmer at
+that, and knew little and cared less, of the habits of Little Sark.
+
+And the rest, falling to his idea, streamed after him, for that which
+lay under the cliff could only be gotten out by boat.
+
+So to the Creux, panting the news as he went. And there, willing hands
+dragged a boat rasping down the shingle, and lusty arms, four men rowing
+and one astern sculling and steering at the same time, sent her bounding
+over the water as though it were life she sought, not death. For, though
+no man among them had any smallest hope of finding life in that which
+lay under the cliff, yet must they strain every muscle, till the
+labouring boat seemed to share their anxiety to get there and learn the
+worst.
+
+So, out past the Lâches, with the tide boiling round the point; past
+Derrible, with its yawning black mouths; past Dixcart with its patch of
+sand; under the grim bastions of the Cagnon; the clean grey cliffs and
+green downs above, all smiling in the morning sun; the clear green water
+creaming among the black boulders, hissing among their girdles of tawny
+sea-weeds, cascading merrily down their rifted sides; round the
+Convanche corner, so deftly close that the beauty of the water cave is
+bared to them, if they had eye or thought for anything but that which
+lies under the cliff in Coupée Bay. And not a word said all the way--not
+one word. Jokes and laughter go with the boat as a rule, and
+high-pitched nasal patois talk; but here--not a word.
+
+The prow runs grating up the shingle, the heavy feet grind through it
+all in a line, for none of them has any desire to be first. Together
+they bend over that which had been Tom Hamon, and their faces are grim
+and hard as the rocks about them. Not that they are indifferent, but
+that any show of feeling would be looked upon as a sign of weakness.
+
+Under such circumstances men at times give vent to jocularities which
+sound coarse and shocking. But they are not meant so--simply the protest
+of the rough spirit at being thought capable of such unmanly weakness as
+feeling.
+
+But these men were elementally silent. One look had shown them there was
+nothing to be done but that which they had come to do--to carry what
+they had found back to the waiting crowd at the Creux.
+
+They had none of them cared much for this man. He was not a man to make
+close friends. But death had given him a new dignity among them, and the
+rough hands lifted him, and bore him to the boat as tenderly as though a
+jar or a stumble might add to his pains.
+
+And so, but with slower strokes now, as though that slight additional
+burden, that single passenger, weighed them to the water’s edge, they
+crawl slowly back the way they came, logged, not with water, but with
+the presence of death.
+
+The narrow beach between the tawny headlands is black with people. Up
+above, on the edge of the cliff, another crowd peers curiously down.
+
+The Sénéchal is there at the water’s edge, Philip Guille of La Ville,
+and the Greffier, William Robert, who is also the schoolmaster, and
+Thomas Le Masurier the Prévôt, and Elie Guille the Constable, and Dr.
+Stradling from Dixcart, and the dark-faced, fierce-eyed woman who cannot
+keep still, but ranges to and fro in the lip of the tide, and whom they
+all know now as the wife--the Frenchwoman, though some of them have
+never seen her before.
+
+A buzz runs round as the boat comes slowly past the point of the Lâches.
+The woman stops her caged-beast walk and stands gazing fiercely at it,
+as if she would tear its secret out of it before it touched the shore.
+
+The watchers on the cliff have the advantage. Something like a thrill
+runs through them, something between a sigh and a groan breaks from
+them.
+
+The woman wades out to meet the boat. She sees and screams, and chokes.
+The wives on the beach groan in sympathy.
+
+The body is lifted carefully out and laid on the cool grey stones, and
+the woman stands looking at it as a tiger may look at her slaughtered
+mate.
+
+“Stand back! Stand back!” cries the Sénéchal to the thronging crowd; and
+to the Constable, “Keep them back, you, Elie Guille!” to which Elie
+Guille growls, “Par madé, but that’s not easy, see you!”
+
+The Doctor straightens up from his brief examination, and says a word to
+the Sénéchal, and to the men about him.
+
+A rough stretcher is made out of a couple of oars and a sail, and the
+sombre procession passes through the gloomy old tunnel into the Creux
+Road, and wends its way up to the school-house for proper inquiry to be
+made as to how Tom Hamon came by his death.
+
+And close behind the stretcher walks the dark-faced woman, with her eyes
+like coals of fire, and her dress dragged open as though to stop her
+from choking.
+
+“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!” she says in perpetual
+iteration, through her clenched teeth. But to look at her face and eyes
+you might think it was rather the devil she was calling on.
+
+For, ungracious as their lives had been in many respects, yet this
+violent breaking of the yoke has left the survivor sore and wounded, and
+furious to vent her rage on whom at present she knows not.
+
+She is not allowed inside the school-house--hastily cleared of its usual
+occupants, who dodge about among the crowd outside, enjoying the
+unlooked-for holiday with gusto in spite of its gruesome origin--and so
+she prowls about outside, and the neighbours talk and she hears this,
+that, and the other, and presently, with bitter, black face and rage in
+her heart, she goes off home to find out Stephen Gard if she can, and
+accuse him to his face of the murder of her husband.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HOW PETER’S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT
+
+
+Peter Mauger had kept himself carefully beyond the range of Julie’s wild
+black eyes. In the state she was in there was no knowing what she might
+do or say. And the words even of a mad woman sometimes stick like burrs.
+He began to breathe more freely when she whirled away home.
+
+The Sénéchal and Constable came out of the school-house at last with
+very grave faces.
+
+“The Doctor says his head was staved in with the blows of some round
+blunt thing like a mallet,” said the Sénéchal to the gaping crowd, “and
+we must hold a proper inquiry. Any of you who saw Tom Hamon last night
+will be here at two o’clock to tell us all you know. Tell any others who
+know anything about it that they must be here too,” and he went back
+into the school-house, and the buzzing crowd dispersed, with plenty to
+buzz about now in truth.
+
+Peter Mauger went thoughtfully home. He had had no breakfast, and was
+feeling the need of it, and he had something in his mind that he wanted
+to think out.
+
+And as he ate he thought, slowly and ruminatingly, and with many pauses,
+when his jaws stopped working to give his mind freer play, but still
+very much to the purpose, and as soon as he had done he set out to put
+his project into execution.
+
+Just beyond the Coupée he met Gard hurrying towards Sark, and the state
+of Gard’s nose and eye, and his torn coat, caught his eye at once.
+
+“What’s this about Tom Hamon?” asked Gard hastily.
+
+“He’s dead.”
+
+“His wife has just told me so. But how did it happen?”
+
+“They’re going to find out at school-house at two o’clock. Any that saw
+him last night are to be there. You’d better be there.”
+
+“I’m going now.”
+
+“All right,” said Peter, and went on his way into Little Sark.
+
+His way took him to La Closerie. But he was not anxious to meet Mrs.
+Tom, so he hung about behind the hedges till Nance happened to come out
+of the house, and then he whistled softly and beckoned to her to come to
+him.
+
+Her face was very pale and troubled, and he saw she had been crying.
+
+“I want to speak to you,” he said.
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“Come round here. It’s important.”
+
+“What is it?” she asked wearily again, when she had joined him behind
+the green dyke.
+
+“It’s this, Nance. You--you know I want you. I’ve always wanted you--”
+
+“Oh--don’t!” she cried, with protesting hand. “This is no time. Peter
+Mauger, for--”
+
+“Wait a bit! Here’s how it is. Doctor says Tom was killed by some one
+beating his head in with a hammer or something of the kind. Now who beat
+his head in? Who would be most likely to beat his head in? Not me, for
+we were mates. Some one that hated him. Some one that he was always
+quarrelling with--” Her face had grown so white that there was no colour
+even in the trembling lips. She stared at him with terrified eyes.
+
+“You know who I mean,” he said. “If it wasn’t him that did it I don’t
+know who it was.”
+
+“It wasn’t,” she jerked vehemently.
+
+“You’d wish so, of course. But--Look here!--I’m pretty sure they met
+again last night after--”
+
+“Yes, they met, and Tom tried to fight him--”
+
+“Ah--then!”
+
+“And he’s gone up at once, as soon as he heard that Tom was found, to
+tell them all about it.”
+
+“Aw!”--decidedly crestfallen at the wind being taken out of his sails in
+this fashion. “I--I thought--maybe I could help him--”
+
+“Oh you did, did you?”--plucking up heart at sight of his discomfiture.
+“And how were you going to help him?”
+
+“If he’s gone to make a clean breast of it it’s all up, of course. If
+he’d kept it to himself--”
+
+“He might have run away, you mean?”
+
+“Safest for him, maybe. Up above Coupée there’s a stone with blood on
+it. And I picked up this beside it,” and he hauled out the button and
+the bit of blue cloth he had found. “I thought, maybe if he knew about
+these he might think it safest to go.”
+
+“Then every one would have the right to say he’d done it, and he didn’t.
+He knew no more about it than you did.”
+
+“I didn’t know anything about it.”
+
+“Well, neither did he, and he’s not the kind to run away.”
+
+“Aw, well--I done my best. You’ll remember that, Nance. You know what
+the Sark men are. He’d be safest away. You tell him I say so,” and he
+pouched his discounted piece of evidence and turned and went, leaving
+Nance with a heavy heart.
+
+For, as Peter said, she knew what the Sark men were--a law unto
+themselves, and slow to move out of the deep-cut grooves of the past,
+but, once stirred to boiling point, capable of going to any lengths
+without consideration of consequences.
+
+And therein lay Gard’s peril.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT
+
+
+Every soul in the Island that could by any means get there, was in or
+outside the school-house, mostly outside, long before the clock struck
+two. Never in their lives had they hurried thither like that before.
+
+A barricade of forms had been made across the room. Within it, at the
+school-master’s table, sat the Sénéchal, Philip Guille, and the Doctor,
+and old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar, ageing rapidly since the tragic
+death of his good friend, the late Seigneur; beside them stood the
+Prévôt and the Greffier, behind them lay the body of Tom Hamon covered
+with a sheet.
+
+It was a perfect day, with a cloudless blue sky and blazing sun, and all
+the windows were opened wide. Those inside dripped with perspiration,
+but felt cold chills below their blue guernseys each time they looked at
+that stark figure with the upturned feet beneath the cold white sheet.
+
+Outside the barricade stood Elie Guille, the Constable, and his
+understudy Abraham Baker, the Vingténier, to keep order and call the
+witnesses.
+
+The Seigneur, Mr. Le Pelley, was away or he would undoubtedly have been
+there too. In his absence the Sénéchal conducted the proceedings.
+
+In the front row of school-desks, scored with the deep-cut initials of
+generations of Sark boys, sat the dead man’s widow, tense and quivering,
+her eyes consuming fires in deep black wells, her face livid, her hands
+clenched still as though waiting for something to rend.
+
+More than one of the men who sat beside her at the desk found, with a
+grim smile, his own name looking up at him out of the maltreated board.
+And one nudged his neighbour and pointed to the name of Tom Hamon, cut
+deeper than any of the others and with the N upside down.
+
+Very briefly the Sénéchal stated that they were there to find out, if
+they could, how Tom Hamon came by his death, and added very gravely, in
+a deep silence, that after a most careful examination of the body the
+Doctor was of opinion that death had been caused, not by the fall from
+the Coupée, which accounted for the dreadful bruises, but by violent
+blows on the head with a hammer or some sueh thing prior to the fall.
+They wanted to find out all about it.
+
+The Doctor stood up and confirmed what the Sénéchal had said, went
+somewhat more into detail to substantiate his opinion, and ended by
+saying, “The head, as it happens, is less bruised than any other part of
+the body, except on the crown, and that is practically beaten in, and
+not, I am prepared to swear, by a fall. These wounds were the immediate
+cause of death, and they were made before he fell down the rocks.
+Besides, he went down feet first. The abrasions on the legs and thighs
+prove that beyond a doubt. Then again, the base of the skull is not
+fractured, as it most certainly would have been if he had fallen on his
+head. Death was undoubtedly the result of those wounds in the head. It
+is impossible for me to say for certain with what kind of weapon they
+were made, but it was probably something round and blunt.”
+
+“Now,” said the Sénéchal, when the Doctor had finished, and the hum and
+the growl which followed had died down again, “will any of you who know
+anything about this matter come forward and tell us all you know?”
+
+Stephen Gard stood up at once and all eyes settled on him. Then Peter
+Mauger was pushed along from the back, with friendly thumps and growling
+injunctions to speak up. But the looks bestowed on Gard were of quite a
+different quality from those given to Peter, and the men at the table
+could not but notice it.
+
+“We will take Peter Mauger first. Let him be sworn,” said the Sénéchal,
+and Gard sat down.
+
+The Greffier swore Peter in the old Island fashion--“Vous jurez par la
+foi que vous devez à Dieu que vous direz la vérité, et rien que la
+vérité, et tous ce que vous connaissez dans cette cause, et que Dieu
+vous soit en aide! (You swear by the faith which you owe to God that you
+will tell the truth, and only the truth, and all that you know
+concerning this case, and so help you God!)”
+
+Peter put up his right hand and swore so to do.
+
+“Now tell us all you know,” said the Sénéchal.
+
+And Peter ramblingly told how he and Tom had been drinking together the
+night before, and how Tom had started off home and he had gone to bed.
+
+“Were you both drunk?”
+
+“Well--”
+
+“Very well, you were. Did you think it right to let your friend go off
+in that condition when he had to cross the Coupée?”
+
+“I’ve seen him worse, many times, and no harm come to him.”
+
+“Well, get on!”
+
+He told how Mrs. Tom woke him up in the morning, and how they had all
+gone in search of the missing man.
+
+“Was it you that found him?”
+
+“No, it was Charles Guille of Clos Bourel. But I found something too.”
+
+“What was it?”
+
+“This”--and from under his coat he drew out carefully the white stone
+with its red-brown spots, and from his pocket the button and the scrap
+of blue cloth. And those at the back stood up, with much noise, to see.
+
+The men at the table looked at these scraps of possible evidence with
+interest, as they were placed before them.
+
+“Where did you find these things?”
+
+“Between Plaisance and the Coupée.”
+
+“What do you make of them?”
+
+“Seemed to me those red spots might be blood. The other’s a button torn
+off some one’s coat.”
+
+“Have you any idea whose blood and whose coat?”
+
+“The blood I don’t know. The button, I believe, is off Mr. Gard’s
+coat,”--at which another growl and hum went round.
+
+“And you know nothing more about the matter?”
+
+“That’s all I know.”
+
+“Very well. Sit down. Mr. Gard!” and Gard pushed his way among
+unyielding legs and shoulders, and stood before the grave-faced men at
+the table.
+
+They all knew him and had all come to esteem what they knew of him. They
+knew also of his difficulties with his men, and that there was a certain
+feeling against him in some quarters. Not one of them thought it likely
+he had done this dreadful thing. But--there was no knowing to what
+lengths even a decent man might go in anger. All their brows pinched a
+little at sight of his torn coat and missing button.
+
+He was duly sworn, and the Sénéchal bade him tell all he knew of the
+matter.
+
+“That button is mine,” he said quietly, holding out the lapel of his
+coat for all to see. “If there is blood on that stone it is mine
+also”--at which a growling laugh of derision went round the spectators.
+
+Gard flushed at this unmistakable sign of hostility. The Sénéchal
+threatened to turn them all out if anything of the kind happened again,
+and Gard proceeded to recount in minutest detail the happenings of the
+previous night--so far as they concerned himself and Tom Hamon.
+
+“What were you doing down at the Coupée at that time of night?” asked
+the Sénéchal.
+
+“I had been having a smoke and was just about to turn in when I met Miss
+Hamon hurrying to the Doctor’s for some medicine. I asked her permission
+to accompany her, and then took her home to Little Sark. It was when I
+was coming back that I met Tom Hamon.”
+
+“Yes, little Nance came to me about half-past ten,” said the Doctor, “I
+remember I asked her if she was not afraid to go all that way home
+alone, and she said she had a friend with her.”
+
+“Was there any specially bad feeling between you and Tom Hamon?”
+
+“There had always been bad feeling, but any one who knows anything about
+it knows that it was not of my making.”
+
+“Will you explain it to us?”
+
+“If you say I must. One does not like to say ill things of the dead.”
+
+“We want to get to the bottom of this matter, Mr. Gard. Tell us all you
+know that will help us.”
+
+“Very well, sir, but I am sorry to have to go into that. It all began
+through Tom’s bad treatment of his stepmother and step-sister and
+brother when I lived at La Closerie. I took sides with them and tried to
+bring him to better manners. We rarely met without his flinging some
+insult after me. They were generally in the patois, but I knew them to
+be insults by his manner and by the way they were greeted by those who
+did understand.”
+
+“Had you met last night before you met near the Coupée?”
+
+“We passed Tom by La Vauroque as we came from the Doctor’s. He shouted
+something after us, but I did not understand it.”
+
+“You don’t know what it was that he said?” an unfortunate question on
+the part of the Sénéchal, and quite unintentionally so on his part. It
+necessitated the introduction of matters Gard would fain have kept out
+of the enquiry.
+
+“Well,” he said, with visible reluctance, “I learned afterwards, and by
+accident, something of what he said or meant.”
+
+“How was that, and what was it?”
+
+“Is it necessary to go into that? Won’t it do if I say it was a very
+gross insult?”
+
+The three at the table conferred for a moment. Then the Sénéchal said
+very kindly, “I perceive we are getting on to somewhat delicate ground,
+Mr. Gard, but, for your own sake. I would suggest that no occasion
+should be given to any to say that you are hiding anything from the
+court.”
+
+“Very well, sir, I have nothing whatever to hide, and I have still less
+to be ashamed of. I found Miss Hamon was weeping bitterly at what her
+brother had said, and I tried to get her to tell me what it was, but she
+would not. I said I knew it was something against me, but I hoped by
+this time she had learned to know and trust me. I told her her sobs cut
+me to the heart and that I would give my life to save her from trouble.
+In a word, I told her I loved her, and in the excitement of the moment
+she dropped a word or two that gave me an inkling of what Tom had said.
+It was casting dirt at both her and myself. Then, as I came home, I met
+Tom as I have told you.”
+
+The Sénéchal considered the matter for a moment. He did not for one
+moment believe that Gard had had any hand in the killing of Tom Hamon.
+But he could not but perceive the hostile feeling that was abroad, and
+his desire was, if possible, to allay it.
+
+“It is, I should think,” he said gravely, “past any man’s believing
+that, after asking Tom’s sister to marry you, you should go straight
+away and kill Tom, even in the hottest of hot blood, though men at such
+times do not always know what they are doing. But you, from what I have
+seen and heard of you, are not such a man. I am going to ask you one
+question in the hope that your answer may have the effect of setting you
+right with all who hear it. Before God--had you any hand in the death of
+this man?--have you any further knowledge of the matter whatever?”
+
+“Before God,” said Gard solemnly, his uplifted right hand as steady as
+a rock, “I had no hand in his death. I know nothing more whatever about
+the matter.”
+
+“I believe you,” said the Sénéchal.
+
+“And I,” said the Doctor.
+
+“And I,” said the Vicar gravely, and with much emotion.
+
+But from the spectators there rose a dissentient murmur which caused the
+Vicar to survey his unruly flock with mild amazement and
+disapproval--much as the shepherd might if his sheep had suddenly shed
+their fleeces and become wolves.
+
+And Julie Hamon sprang to her feet with blazing eyes, pointed a shaking
+hand at Gard, and screamed:
+
+“Murderer! Murderer! Murderer!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD
+
+
+Stephen Gard walked slowly down the road towards Plaisance in the lowest
+of spirits.
+
+This strange people amongst whom he had fallen, possessed, in
+pre-eminent degree, what in these later times is known as the defects of
+its qualities.
+
+Black sheep there were, of course, as there are in every community, who
+seemed all defects and possessed of no redeeming qualities whatever.
+But, taken as a whole, the men of Sark were simple, honest according to
+their lights, brave and hardy, very tenacious of their own ideas and
+their island rights, somewhat stubborn and easier to lead than to drive,
+and withal red-blooded, as the result of their ancestry, and given to a
+large despite of foreigners, in which category were included all
+unfortunates born outside the rugged walls of Sark.
+
+He had done his best among them, both for their own interests and those
+of the mines, but no striving would ever make him other than a
+foreigner; and in the depression of spirit consequent on the trying
+experiences of the day, he gloomily pondered the idea of giving up his
+post and finding a more congenial atmosphere elsewhere.
+
+Still, he was a Cornishman, and dour to beat. And, if he had incurred
+unreasonable dislike, he had also lighted on the virgin lode of Nance’s
+love and trust, and that, he said to himself with a glow of gratitude,
+outweighed all else.
+
+He had left the school-house at once when he had given his evidence, and
+had heard no more of what had taken place there. The bystanders had let
+him pass without any open opposition, but their faces had been hard and
+unsympathetic, and he recognized that life among them would be anything
+but a sunny road for some time to come.
+
+If the people at Plaisance had told him to clear out and find another
+lodging he would not have been in the least surprised. But they had no
+such thought. In common with all who really got to know him, they had
+come to esteem and like him, and they had no reason to believe that he
+had had anything to do with Tom Hamon’s death.
+
+He had pondered these matters wearily till bed-time, and he turned in at
+last sick of himself, and Sark, and things generally. But his brain
+would not sleep, and the longer he lay and the more he tossed and
+turned, the wearier he grew.
+
+Sleep seemed so impossible that he was half inclined to get up and dress
+and go out. The cool night air and the freshness of the dawn would be
+better than this sleepless unresting. Suddenly there came a sharp little
+tap on his window.
+
+A bird, he thought, or a bat.
+
+The tap came again--sharp and imperative.
+
+He got up quietly and went to the window. The night was still dark. As
+he peered into it a hand came up again and tapped once more and he
+opened the window.
+
+“Mr. Gard!”--in a sharp whisper.
+
+“Nance! What is it, dear? Anything wrong?”
+
+“I want you--quick.”
+
+“One minute!” and he hastily threw on his things and joined her outside.
+
+“What is it, Nance?” he asked anxiously, wondering what new complication
+had arisen.
+
+“I’ll tell you as we go. Come!” and they were speeding noiselessly down
+the road to the Coupée.
+
+There she took his hand, as once before, to lead him safely across, and
+her hand, he perceived, was trembling violently.
+
+They were half way along the narrow path when the hollow way in front
+leading up into Little Sark resounded suddenly with the tramp of heavy
+feet.
+
+“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!” panted Nance, and he could feel her turn and look
+round like a hunted animal.
+
+“Quick!” she whispered. “Behind here! and oh, grip tight!” and she knelt
+and crawled on hands and knees round the base of the nearest pinnacle.
+
+In those days the pinnacles which buttress the Coupée were considerably
+higher and bulkier than they are now, and along their rugged flanks the
+adventurous or sorely-pressed might find precarious footing. But it was
+a nerve-racking experience even in the day-time when the eye could guide
+the foot. Now, in the ebon-black night, it was past thinking of.
+
+Dazed by the suddenness and strangeness of the whole matter, and without
+an inkling of what it all meant, Gard clung like a fly to the bare rock
+and tried his hardest not to think of the sheer three hundred feet that
+lay between him and the black beach below.
+
+In grim and menacing silence, save for the crunch of their heavy feet on
+the crumbling pathway, the men went past, a dozen or more, as it seemed
+to Gard. When the sound of them had died in the hollow on the Sark
+side, Nance whispered, “Quick now! quick!”
+
+They crawled back into the roadway, and she took his hand in hers again
+which shook more than ever, and they sped away into Little Sark.
+
+“Now tell me, Nance. What is it all about?” he panted, as she nipped
+through an opening in a green bank and led the way towards the eastern
+cliffs over by the Pot.
+
+“Oh--it’s you they want,” she gasped, and he stopped instantly and
+stood, as though he would turn and go back.
+
+“It is no use,” she jerked emphatically, between breaths, and dragged
+impatiently at his arm. “You don’t know our Sark men.... They do things
+first and are sorry after.... Bernel heard them planning it all.... The
+men from Sark were to meet these ones, and then--”
+
+“But,” he said angrily, “running away looks like--”
+
+“No, no! Not here.... And it is only for a time. The truth will come
+out, but it would be too late if they had got you.”
+
+“What would they have done with me?”
+
+“Oh--terrible things. They are madmen when they are angry.”
+
+He had yielded to her will, and they were speeding swiftly along the
+downs. The path was quite invisible to him. He tripped and stumbled at
+times on tangled roots of gorse and bracken, but she kept on swiftly and
+unerringly, as though the night were light about her.
+
+“Where are you taking me?” he asked, as they crept past the miners’
+cottages on the cliff above Rouge Terrier.
+
+“To Brenière.... To L’Etat.... Bernel went on to find a boat.”
+
+And presently they were out on the bald cliff-head, and slipping and
+sliding down it till they came to the ledge, below which Brenière
+spreads out on the water like a giant’s hand.
+
+Between her panting breaths Nance whistled a low soft note like the pipe
+of a sea-bird. A like sound came softly up from below, and slipping and
+stumbling again, they were on the beach among mighty boulders girt with
+dripping sea-weed.
+
+Another low pipe out of the darkness, and they had found the boat and
+tumbled into it, wet and bruised, and breathless.
+
+“Dieu merci!” said Bernel, and pulled lustily out to sea.
+
+The swirl of the tide caught them as they cleared Brenière Point, and
+Gard crawled forward to take an oar. Nance did the same, and so set
+Bernel free to scull and steer, the arrangement which dire experience
+has taught the Sark men as best adapted to their rock-strewn waters and
+racing currents.
+
+Gard’s mind was in a tumult of revolt, but he sensibly drove his
+feelings through his muscles to the blade of his oar, and said nothing.
+Nance and Bernel were not likely to have gone to these lengths without
+what seemed to them sufficient reason.
+
+And he remembered Nance’s trembling arm on the Coupée, and her agonies
+of fear on his account, and so came by degrees to a certain acceptance
+of their view of matters, and therewith a feeling of gratitude for their
+labours and risks on his behalf. For he did not doubt that, should the
+self-appointed administrators of justice learn who had baulked them of
+their prey, they would wreak upon them some of the vengeance they had
+intended for himself.
+
+He saw that it was no light matter these two had undertaken, and as he
+thought it over, and told the black welter under his oar what he thought
+of these wild and hot-headed Sark men, his gratitude grew.
+
+The thin orange sickle of a moon rose at last, high by reason of the
+mists banked thick along the horizon, and afforded them a welcome
+glimmer of light--barely a glimmer indeed, rather a mere thinning of the
+clinging darkness, but enough for Bernel’s tutored eye.
+
+He took them in a cautious circuit outside the Quette d’Amont, the
+eastern sentinel of L’Etat, and so, with shipped oars, by means of his
+single scull astern, brought them deftly to the riven black ledges round
+the corner on the south side.
+
+It is a precarious landing at best, and the after scramble up the
+crumbling slope calls for caution even in the light of day. In that
+misleading darkness, clinging with his hands and climbing on the sides
+of his feet, and starting at startled feathered things that squawked and
+fluttered from under his groping hands and feet, Gard found it no easy
+matter to follow Nance, though she carried a great bundle and waited for
+him every now and again. When he looked down next day upon the way they
+had come he marvelled that they had ever reached the top in safety.
+
+“Wait here!” she said at last, when they had attained a somewhat level
+place, and before he had breath for a word she was away down again.
+
+She was back presently with another bundle, and he started when she
+thrust into his hands a long gun, and bade him pick up the first bundle
+and follow her. The feel of the gun brought home to him, as nothing else
+could have done, her and Bernel’s views of possible contingencies.
+
+He followed her stumblingly along the rough crown of the ridge, till she
+dipped down a rather smoother slope and came to a stand before what
+seemed to him a heap of huge stones.
+
+“There is shelter in here,” she said. “And these things are for your
+comfort. We will bring you more to eat in a day or two--”
+
+“Nance, dear,” he said, dropping the gun and the bundle, and laying his
+hand on her slim shoulder. “I have become a sore burden to you--”
+
+“Oh no, no!” she said hastily. “You would have done as much for me, and
+it is because--”
+
+“For you, dear? I would give my life for you, Nance, and here it is you
+who are doing everything, and running all these risks for me.”
+
+“It is because I know they are in the wrong. It may be only a day or
+two, and they will thank me when they find out their mistake.”
+
+“Well, I thank you and Bernel with my whole heart. Please God I may some
+time be able to repay you!”
+
+“If you are safe, that is all we want. Now I must go. We must get back
+before they miss us.”
+
+“God keep you, dear!” and he bent and kissed her, and as before she
+kissed him back with the frankness of a child.
+
+He was about to follow her when she turned to go, but she said
+imperatively, “Stop here, or you may lose yourself in the dark. And in
+the day-time do not walk on the ridge or they may see you--”
+
+“And the gun? What is that for?”
+
+“If they should come here after you, you will keep them off with it,”
+she said, with a spurt of the true Island spirit. “It is your life they
+seek, and they are in the wrong. But no one ever comes here, and you
+will not need it. Now, good-bye! And God have you in His keeping!”
+
+“And you, dearest--and all yours!”--and she was gone like a flitting
+shadow.
+
+And while he still stood peering into the darkness into which she had
+merged, she suddenly materialized again and was by his side.
+
+“I forgot. Bernel told me to tell you it throws a little high. But I
+hope you won’t need it. And there is fresh water among the rocks at the
+south end there.”
+
+He caught her to him again, and kissed her ardently, and then she was
+gone.
+
+He strained his ears, fearful of hearing her slip or fall in the
+darkness, but she went without displacing a stone, and he was alone with
+the sickly moon, and the sombre sky, and the voices of the rising tide
+along the grim black ledges of his sanctuary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY
+
+
+It all seemed monstrous strange to him, now that he had time to think of
+the actual fact apart from the difficulties of its accomplishment.
+
+An hour ago he was lying in his bed at Plaisance, in low enough spirits,
+indeed, at the outlook before him, but his gloomiest thought had never
+plumbed depths such as this.
+
+He wondered briefly if so extreme a step had been really necessary.
+
+And then he heard again the purposeful tramp of those heavy feet on the
+Coupée, and fathomed again the menace of them.
+
+And he felt Nance’s guiding hand trembling violently in his once more,
+and he said to himself that she and Bernel knew better than he how the
+land lay, and that he could not have done other than he had done.
+
+Then he became aware that the dew was drenching him, and so he bent and
+groped in the dark for the shelter Nance had spoken of.
+
+The strip of moon had paled as it rose, the huge white stones glimmered
+faintly in it, and a darker patch below showed him where the entrance
+must be. He crept into the darker patch on his hands and knees, bumping
+his head violently, but once inside found room to sit upright. Snaking
+out again, he laid hold of the two bundles and the gun, and dragged them
+into shelter.
+
+What the bundles contained he could not tell in the dark, but one felt
+like a thick woollen cloak, and the other like a blanket, and among
+their contents he felt a loaf of bread, and a bottle and a powder-flask.
+So he rolled himself up in the blanket and the cloak, and lay wondering
+at the strange case in which he found himself, and so at last fell
+asleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He woke into a dapple of light and shade which filled his wandering wits
+with wonder, till, with a start, he came to himself and remembered.
+
+The place he was in was something like a stone bee-hive, about eight
+feet across from side to side, with a rounded sloping roof rising at its
+highest some four feet from the ground, and the great blocks of which it
+was built fitted so ill in places that the sun shot the darkness through
+and through with innumerable little white arrows of light. The dark
+opening of the night was now a glowing invitation to the day. He shook
+off his wraps and crawled out into the open.
+
+And what an open!
+
+He drew deep breaths of delight at the magnificence of his outlook--its
+vastness, its spaciousness, its wholesome amplitude and loneliness. He
+felt like a new man born solitary into a new world.
+
+The sky, without a cloud, was like a mighty hollowed sapphire, in which
+blazed the clear white sun; and the vast plain of the sea, sweeping away
+into infinity, was a still deeper blue, with here and there long swathes
+of green, and here and there swift-speeding ruffles purple-black.
+
+A brisk easterly breeze set all the face of it a-ripple, and where the
+dancing wavelets caught the sun it glanced and gleamed like sheets of
+molten silver.
+
+“A silver sea! A silver sea!” he cried aloud, and into his mind there
+flashed an incongruous comparison of the bountifulness of Nature’s
+silver with the pitiful grains they hacked out of her rocks with such
+toil and hardship.
+
+Away to the south across the silver sea the Jersey cliffs shone clear in
+the sunshine, and on the dimpling plain between, the black Paternosters
+looked so like the sails of boats heading for Sark that he remembered
+suddenly that he was in hiding, and dropped to cover alongside the great
+stones of his shelter.
+
+But careful observation of the square black objects showed him that they
+did not move, and anyway they were much too far away to see him. So he
+took courage again, and, full of curiosity concerning his hiding-place,
+he crept up the southern slope till he reached the ridge of the roof, so
+to speak, and lay there looking over, entranced with the beauty of the
+scene before him.
+
+The whole east coast of Sark right up to the Burons, off the Creux, lay
+basking in the morning light. Dixcart and Derrible held no secrets from
+him; he looked straight up their shining beaches. Their bold headlands
+were like giant-fists reaching out along the water towards him.
+Brenière, the nearest point to his rock, was another mighty grasping
+hand, but between it and him swept a furious race of tossing,
+white-capped waves, with here and there black fangs of rock which stuck
+up through the green waters as though hungering for prey.
+
+He could just see the upper part of the miners’ cottages on the cliff
+above Rouge Terrier, but, beyond these and the ruined mill on Hog’s
+Back, not another sign of man and his toilsome, troublesome little
+works. But for these, Sark, in its utter loneliness, might have been a
+new-found island, and he its first discoverer.
+
+Ranging on, his eye rested on the shattered fragments of Little Sark,
+scattered broadcast over the sea about its most southerly point--bare
+black pinnacles, ragged ledges, islets, rocklets, reefs, and fangs,
+every one of which seemed to stir the placid sea to wildest wrath.
+Elsewhere it danced and dimpled in the sunshine, with only the long slow
+heave in it to tell of the sleeping giant below, but round each rock,
+and up the sides of his own huge pyramid, it swept in great green
+combers shot with bubbling white, and went tumbling back upon itself in
+rings of boiling foam.
+
+Beyond, he saw the rounded back of Jethou, and just behind it the long
+line of houses in Guernsey.
+
+He lay long enjoying it all, with the warm sun on his back, and the
+brisk wind toning his blood, but no view, however wonderful, will
+satisfy a man’s stomach. He had fed the day before mostly on most
+unsatisfying emotions, and now he began to feel the need of something
+more solid. So he crept back along the slope to find out what there was
+for breakfast.
+
+His stores lay about the floor of his resting-place, just as he had
+turned them out in the night; a couple of long loaves, a good-sized
+piece of raw bacon, and another of boiled pork which he thought he
+recognized, some butter in a cloth, a bottle which looked as if it might
+contain spirits, the powder-flask, and a small linen bag containing
+bullets, snail-shot, and percussion caps. These, with Bernel’s gun and
+the blanket, and the old woollen cloak, which he recognized as Mr.
+Hamon’s roquelaure, and his pipe, and the tobacco he happened to have
+in his pouch, constituted, for the time being, his worldly possessions.
+
+He spread his cloak and blanket in the sun to dry and air, and, doubtful
+whether his rock would supply any further provision or when more might
+reach him from Sark, he proceeded to make a somewhat restricted meal of
+bread and cold pork.
+
+The raw bacon suggested something of a problem. To cook it he must have
+a fire. To have a fire he must have fuel; his tinder-box he always
+carried, of course, for the new matches had not yet penetrated to Sark.
+Moreover, to light a fire might be dangerous as liable to attract
+attention, unless he could do it under cover where no stray gleams could
+get out.
+
+He pondered these matters as he ate, spinning out his exiguous meal to
+its uttermost crumb to make it as satisfying as possible.
+
+He saw his way at once to perfecting his cover. All about him where he
+sat, the grey rock pushed through a thin friable soil like the bones of
+an ill-buried skeleton. And everywhere in the scanty soil grew thick
+little rounded cushions, half grass, half moss, varying in size from an
+apple to a foot-stool, which came out whole at a pluck or a kick. After
+breakfast he would plug up every hole in his shelter, and pile
+half-a-dozen sizeable pieces outside with which to close the front door.
+Then, if he could find anything in the shape of fuel, he saw his way to
+a dinner of fried bacon, but it would have to be after dark when the
+smoke would be invisible.
+
+But first he must find out about his water supply.
+
+Down at the south end, Nance had said. That must be over there, on that
+almost-detached stack of rocks, where the waves seemed to break loudest.
+
+So, after another crawl up to the ridge to make certain that no boats
+were about--for he had frequently seen them fishing in the neighbourhood
+of L’Etat--he crept down the flank of his pyramid almost to sea-level to
+get across to the outer pile.
+
+He had to pick his way with caution across a valley of black rocks,
+rifted and chasmed by the fury of the waves. He could imagine--or
+thought he could, but came far short of it--how the great green rollers
+would thunder through that black gully in the winter storms.
+
+There were great wells lined all round with rich brown sea-weeds, and
+narrow chasms in whose hidden depths the waters swooked and gurgled like
+unseen monsters, and whose broken edges, on which he had to step, were
+like the rough teeth of gigantic saws set up on end alongside one
+another.
+
+He crawled across these rough serrations and scaled the rifted black
+wall in front, and came at once on a number of shallow pools of
+rain-water lying in the hollows of a mighty slab.
+
+But the moment his head rose above the level of the steep black wall his
+ears were filled with a deafening roaring and rushing, supplemented by
+most tremendous dull thuddings which shook the stack like the blows of a
+mighty flail.
+
+From behind a further wall there rose a boiling mist, through which
+lashed up white jets of spray which slanted over the rocks beyond in a
+continuous torrent.
+
+He crawled to the further wall and looked over into a deep black gully,
+some fifteen feet wide and perhaps thirty feet deep, into which, out of
+a perfectly calm sea, most monstrous waves came roaring and leaping,
+till the whole chasm was foaming and spuming like an over-boiling
+milk-pan. In the middle of the chasm, for the further torment of the
+waters, was jammed a huge black rock, against which the incoming green
+avalanche dashed itself to fragments and went rocketing into the air.
+The solid granite at the further end was cleft from summit to base by a
+tiny rift a foot wide through which the boiling spume poured out to the
+sea beyond.
+
+But the marvel was where those gigantic waves came from. Save for the
+dancing wind-ripples and its long, slow internal pulsations, the sea was
+as smooth as a pond to within twenty yards of the rocks. Then it
+suddenly seemed to draw itself together, to draw itself down into itself
+indeed, like a tiger compressing its springs for a leap, and then, with
+a rush and a roar, it launched itself at the rocks with the weight of
+the ocean behind it, and hurtled blindly into the chasm where the black
+rock lay.
+
+It was a most wonderful sight, and Gard sat long watching it, then and
+later, fascinated always and puzzled by that extraordinary
+self-compression and sudden upleap of the waters out of an otherwise
+placid sea.
+
+It was but one more odd expression of Nature’s fantastic humour, and the
+nearest he could come to an explanation of it was that, in the sea bed
+just there, was some great fault, some huge chasm into which the waters
+fell and then came leaping out to further torment on the rocks.
+
+It was as he was returning to his own quarters by a somewhat different
+route across the valley of rocks, that he lighted on another find which
+contented him greatly.
+
+In one of the saw-toothed chasms he saw a piece of wood sticking up, and
+climbed along to get it as first contribution to his fire. And when he
+got to it, down below in the gully, he found jammed the whole side of a
+boat, flung up there by some high spring tide and trapped before it
+could escape. Excellent wood for his firing, well tarred and fairly dry.
+He hauled and pulled till he had it all safely up, and then he carried
+it, load after load, to his house, and laid it out in the sun to dry
+still more.
+
+He worked hard all day, keeping a wary outlook for any stray fishermen.
+
+First he culled a great heap of the thin wiry grass which seemed the
+chief product of his rock, and spread it also to dry for a couch. There
+was no bracken for bedding, no gorse for firing. The grass would supply
+the place of the one, the broken boat the other.
+
+Then he made good all the holes in his walls and roof, except one in the
+latter for the escape of the smoke, and built a solid wall of the tufted
+cushions round the seaward side of his doorway, as a screen against his
+light being seen, and as a protection from the south-west wind if it
+should blow up strong in the night.
+
+He found it very strange to be toiling on these elemental matters, with
+never a soul to speak to. He felt like a castaway on a desert island,
+with the additional oddness of knowing himself to be within reach of his
+kind, yet debarred from any communication with them on pain, possibly,
+of death.
+
+At times he felt like a condemned criminal, yet knew that he had done no
+wrong, and that it was only the mistaken justice of a simple people
+that wanted blood for blood, and was not over-heedful as to whose blood
+so long as its own sense of justice was satisfied.
+
+But, he kept saying to himself, things might have been worse with him,
+very much worse, but for Nance and Bernel. And before long, any day, the
+matter might be cleared up and himself reinstated in the opinion of the
+Sark men.
+
+Even that would leave much to be desired, but possibly, he thought, if
+they found they had sorely misjudged him in this matter, they might
+realize that they had done so in other matters also, and that he had
+only been striving to do his duty as he saw it.
+
+And then, wherever else his thoughts led him, there was always Nance,
+and the thought of Nance always set his heart aglow and braced him to
+patient endurance and hope.
+
+He retraced, again and again, all the ways they had travelled together
+in these later days, recalled her every word and look, felt again the
+trembling of her hand--for him--on the Coupée, heard again the tremors
+of her voice as she urged him to safety. And those sweet ingenuous
+kisses she had given him! Yes, indeed, he had much to be grateful for,
+if some things to cavil at, in fortune’s dealings.
+
+But, behind all his fair white thought of Nance, was always the black
+background of the whole circumstances of the case, and the grim fact of
+Tom Hamon’s death, and he pondered this last with knitted brows from
+every point of view, and strove in vain for a gleam of light on the
+darkness.
+
+Could the Doctor be mistaken, and was Tom’s death the simple result of
+his fall over the Coupée? The Doctor’s pronouncement, however, seemed
+to leave no loophole of hope there.
+
+If not, then who had killed Tom, and why?
+
+He could think of no one. He could imagine no reason for it.
+
+Tom had been a bully at home, but outside he was on jovial terms with
+his fellows--except only himself. He had to acknowledge to himself the
+seeming justice of the popular feeling. If any man in Sark might, with
+some show of reason, have been suspected of the killing of Tom Hamon, it
+was himself.
+
+Once, by reason of overmuch groping in the dark, an awful doubt came
+upon him--was it possible that, in some horrible wandering of the mind,
+of which he remembered nothing, he had actually done this thing? Done it
+unconsciously, in some over-boiling of hot blood into the brain, which
+in its explosion had blotted out every memory of what had passed?
+
+It was a hideous idea, born of over-strain and overmuch groping after
+non-existent threads in a blind alley.
+
+He tried to get outside himself, and follow Stephen Gard that night and
+see if that terrible thing could have been possible to him.
+
+But he followed himself from point to point, and from moment to moment,
+and accounted for himself to himself without any lapse whatever; unless,
+indeed, his brain had played him false and he had gone out of the house
+again after going into it, and followed Tom and struck him down.
+
+With what? The Doctor said with some blunt instrument like a hammer.
+Where could he have obtained it? What had he done with it?
+
+The idea, while it lasted, was horrible. But he shook it off at last
+and called himself a fool for his pains. He had never harboured thought
+of murder in his life. He had detested Tom, but he had never gone the
+length of wishing him dead. The whole idea was absurd.
+
+All these things he thought over as, his first essential labours
+completed, he lay under the screen of the ridge and watched the sun
+dropping towards Guernsey in a miracle of eventide glories.
+
+Below him, the long slow seas rocketted along the ragged black base of
+his rock with mighty roarings and tumultuous bursts of foam, and on the
+ledges the gulls and cormorants squabbled and shrieked, and took long
+circling flights without fluttering a wing, to show what gulls could do,
+or skimmed darkly just above the waves and into them, to show that
+cormorants were never satisfied. And now and again wild flights of
+red-billed puffins swept up from the water and settled out of his sight
+at the eastern end of the rock, and he promised himself to look them up
+some other day if opportunity offered.
+
+From the constant tumult of the seas about his rock, except just at low
+water, he saw little fear of being taken by surprise, even if his
+presence there became known. Twice only in the twenty-four hours did it
+seem possible for any one to effect a landing there, and at those times
+he promised himself to be on the alert.
+
+He lay there till the sun had gone, and the pale green and amber, and
+the crimson and gold of his going had slowly passed from sea and sky,
+and left them grey and cold; till a single light shone out on Sark,
+which he knew must be in one of the miners’ cottages, and many lights
+twinkled in Guernsey; till beneath him he could no longer see the sea,
+but only the white foam fury as it boiled along the rocks. Then he crept
+away to his burrow, rejoicing in the thought of the companionship of a
+fire and hot food.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE
+
+
+It took Gard some time to get his fire started, and when it did blaze
+up, with fine spurts of gas from the tar, and vivid blue and green and
+red flames from the salted wood, the little stone bee-hive glowed like
+an oven and presently grew as hot as one. The smoke escaped but slowly
+through the single hole in the roof, and at last he could stand it no
+longer, and crept out into the night until his fire should have burned
+down to a core of red ashes over which he could grill his dinner.
+
+And what a night! He had seen the stars from many parts of the earth and
+sea, but never, it seemed to him, had he seen such stars as these, so
+close, so large, so wonderfully clean and bright. And, indeed, glory of
+the heavens so supreme as that is possible only far away from man, and
+all the works and habitations of man, and all his feeble efforts at the
+mitigation of the darkness. Nay, for fullest perception, it may be that
+it is necessary for a man to be not only alone in the profundity of
+Nature’s night, but to be lifted somewhat out of himself and his natural
+darkness by extremity of joy, or still more of need.
+
+The milky way was as white as though a mighty brush dipped in glittering
+star-dust had been drawn across the velvet dome. The larger stars, many
+of which were old acquaintances and known to him by name, seemed to
+swing so clear and close that they took on quite a new aspect of
+friendliness and cheer. The smaller--I write as he thought--a mighty
+host, an innumerable company quite beyond his ken, still spoke to him in
+a language that he had never forgotten.
+
+Long ago, when he was quite a little boy, he had come upon a great globe
+of the heavens, a much-prized curiosity of his old schoolmaster. Upon it
+appeared all the principal stars linked up into their constellations,
+the shadowy linking lines forming the figures of the Imaginary Ones
+associated with them in the minds of the ancients. There, on the
+varnished round of the globe, ranged the Great and Little Bears, and the
+Dogs, and the Archer, and the Flying Horse, the Lion, and the Crab, and
+the Whale, and the Twins, and Perseus and Andromeda, and Cassiopeia. And
+up there, on the dark inner side of the mighty dome, he seemed to see
+them all again, and time swung back with him for a moment, and he was a
+boy once more.
+
+And, gazing up at them all, their steady shine and many-coloured
+twinklings led him to wonder as to the how and the why of them. From the
+stars to their Maker was but a natural step, and so he came, simply and
+naturally, to thought of the greatness of Him who swung these
+innumerable worlds in their courses, and, from that, to His goodness and
+justice.
+
+Memories of his mother came surging back upon him, and of all her
+goodness and all she had taught him. She had had a mighty, simple trust
+in the goodness of God, and had passed it on to her boy, though his
+rough contact with the world had overworn it all to some extent.
+
+Still, it was all there, and now it all came back to him through the
+hopeful twinkling eyes of those innumerable stars.
+
+“Have courage and hope!” they sang; and though all his little world,
+save those two or three who knew him best, was against him, he stood
+there with his face turned up to the stars, and believed in his heart
+that all would yet be well.
+
+And when at last he turned back to things of earth, he found the stars
+still twinkling in the sea, as though they would not let him go even
+though he gave up looking at them. They gleamed and glanced in the
+smooth-rolling waves till the deep seemed sown with phosphorescence, as
+on that night in Grand Grève; the night Nance came upon him so suddenly
+in the dark and he went on with her to get Grannie’s medicine.
+
+Was it possible that that blessed night, that terrible night, was barely
+forty-eight hours old? So much had happened since then, such incredible
+things! It seemed weeks ago. It seemed like a dream; horrid, fantastic,
+wonderfully sweet.
+
+Within that tiny span of hours he had come to the knowledge of Nance’s
+love for him. Oh those sweet, frank kisses! If he had died last night;
+if the hot heads in their madness had killed him to balance Tom Hamon’s
+account--still he would have lived: for Nance had kissed him.
+
+And within the half of that short span he had been judged a murderer,
+had had to flee for his life, and would, without a doubt, have lost it
+but for Nance.
+
+She had undertaken a mighty risk for him--for him! And she had shown him
+that she loved him, for she had kissed him with her heart in her lips.
+
+And, grateful as he was for all the rest, it was still the recollection
+of those sweet kisses that he thought of most.
+
+So “Hope! Hope!” sang the stars, and his heart was high because his
+conscience was clean and Nance had kissed him.
+
+When at last he crawled into his burrow, his fire was only white ashes,
+and he would not trouble to relight it.
+
+He broke off a piece of bread, and ate it slowly, and thought of Nance,
+and promised himself the larger breakfast. Then he rolled himself in his
+cloak, and slept more soundly than an alderman after a civic feast.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM
+
+
+Next morning, when he crawled out of his burrow, Gard found everything
+swathed in dense white mist. Upon which he promptly lit his fire, and in
+due course enjoyed a more satisfying meal than he had eaten since he
+landed on the rock.
+
+Then he decided to take advantage of the screening mist to explore such
+parts of his prison-house as were not available to him at other times.
+So he walked along the ridge, secure from observation since he could not
+himself see down to the water from it, though the rushings and roarings
+along the black ledges below never ceased.
+
+Every nook and ledge of the out-cropping rock on the south side of the
+ridge was occupied by lady gulls in all stages of their maternal duties.
+From the surprise they expressed at his intrusion, and the way they
+stuck to their nests, they were evidently quite unused to man and his
+ways, and it was all he could do to avoid stepping on them and their
+squawking families as he picked his way along.
+
+He clambered down the eastern slope nearest Sark, and found the ground
+there covered with a fairly deep soil, and green growths that were
+strange to him. The soil was perforated with holes which at first he
+ascribed to rabbits, but when he inserted his hand into one he got such
+a nip from an unusually strong beak that he changed his mind to puffins,
+and, standing quite still for a time, he presently saw the members of
+the colony come creeping out behind their great red bills and scurry off
+across the water in search of breakfast.
+
+Then the great semi-detached pinnacle below attracted him, and he
+scrambled down amid the complaints of a great colony of gulls and
+cormorants but found the tide still too full for him to cross the
+intervening chasm. Those wonderful great green waves out of a smooth sea
+came roaring along the sides of the island and met full tilt in the
+chasm below him, as they leaped exultant from their conflict with the
+rocks. They hurled themselves against one another in wildest fury, and
+the foam of their meeting boiled white along the ledges, and dappled all
+the sea.
+
+As he crawled through the lank wet grass and soft spongy soil, he found
+himself suddenly confronted with a great barrier of fallen rocks; as
+though, at some period of its existence, the north end of the island had
+tapered to a gigantic peak which, in the fulness of its time, had come
+down with a crash, and now lay like a titanic wall from summit to
+sea-board. Huge and forbidding, of all shapes and sizes, the mighty
+fragments barred his course like a menace, and he attacked them warily,
+drawing himself with infinite caution from one to another; over this
+one, under this, deftly between these two, lest an unwary weighting
+should start them on the movement that might grind him to powder.
+
+The fog increased their forbidding aspect tenfold. He could not see a
+foot before him, and could only worm his way among them, testing each
+before he trusted it, and finding at times monsters become but mediocre
+when his hand was on them. More than once he had to rest his hands on
+cautiously-tried ledges and swing his legs forward and grope with his
+feet for foothold, and whether the space below was trifling, or whether
+it ran to incredible depth, he could not tell.
+
+It was a mighty relief to him to come out at last on the other side of
+the wall, and to find himself on the great north slope which faced Sark,
+and so was closed to him in clear weather.
+
+The long thin grass grew rankly here, and was beaded with moisture, but
+he pushed along with an eerie feeling at the wildness of it all.
+
+The mist clung close about him, but had suddenly become luminous. He
+felt as though he were packed loosely all round with cotton wool on
+which a strong light was shining. It gave him a feeling of
+light-headedness. Everything was light about him, and yet he could not
+see more than a couple of feet before his face. The waves roared
+hoarsely below him, and once he had unknowingly got so low down that a
+monstrous white arm, reaching suddenly up out of the depths, seemed
+about to lay hold on him and drag him back with it into the turmoil.
+
+He was panting and full of mist when at last he climbed the second great
+rock barrier and rounded the corner towards the south.
+
+And as he sat resting there, the whiff of a westerly breeze tore a long
+lane in the white shroud, and for a moment he saw, as through a
+telescope, the houses of Guernsey gleaming in bright sunshine. Then it
+closed again, and presently began to drift past him in strange whorls
+and spirals, like hurrying ghosts wrapped hastily in filmy garments,
+which loosed at times and trailed slowly over the rocks and caught and
+clung to their sharp projections. Then the sun completed the rout, and
+the mist-ghosts swept away towards France, harried by the west wind like
+a flock of sheep before the shepherd’s dog.
+
+In the afternoon the heat grew so intense that he was driven to the
+wells in the valley of rocks for a bathe, for there was no shelter
+available, and his bee-hive was like an oven.
+
+None of the pools was large enough for a swim, and it was more than a
+man’s life was worth to venture among the boiling surges of the outer
+rocks. But he could at all events get under water, if it was only to sit
+there and cool off.
+
+So he stripped, and was just about slipping into a deep still bath,
+emerald green, with a fringe of amber weeds all round its almost
+perpendicular sides, when, glancing down to make sure of an ultimate
+footing, his eye lighted with a shock of surprise on a pair of huge eyes
+looking straight up at him out of the water. They were violet in colour,
+protuberant, and malevolent beyond words.
+
+He sat down suddenly on the baking black rock, with a cold shiver
+running down his back in spite of the scorch of the sun. The utter cold
+malignity of those great violet eyes, and the thought of what would have
+happened if he had stepped into that pool, made him momentarily sick.
+
+He had seen small devil-fish in the pools in Sark, but never one
+approaching this in size. He crept away at last, leaving it in
+possession, and found a pool clear of boulders or caving hollows, and
+sat in it with no great enjoyment, wondering if the great unwholesome
+beast in the other would be likely to climb the cliff and come upon him
+in the night. He thought it unlikely, but still the idea clung to him
+and caused him no little discomfort. He blocked his door that night with
+great green cushions, though he felt doubtful if they would be effective
+against the wiles and strength of a devil-fish, if half that he had
+heard of them was true.
+
+In the middle of the night--for he went to bed early, having nothing
+else to do, except to watch the stars--he woke with a cold start,
+feeling certain that hideous creature had crawled up the slope and was
+feeling all round his house for an entrance.
+
+Certainly _something_ was moving about outside, and feeling over the
+stones in an uncertain, searching kind of a way. And when you have been
+wakened up from a nightmare in which staring devil-eyes played a
+prominent part, _something_ may be anything, and as like as not the
+owner of the eyes.
+
+But even devil-fishes in their most advanced stages have not yet
+attained the power of human speech. If they speak to one another what a
+horrible sound it must be!
+
+It was with a sigh of relief, and a sudden unstringing of the bow, that
+he heard outside--
+
+“Mr. Gard!” and with a lusty kick, which expressed some of his feeling,
+he sent his doorway flying and crawled out after it.
+
+The myriad winking stars lifted the roof of the world and the darkness
+somewhat, sufficient at all events for him to make out that it was not
+Nance.
+
+“You, Bernel?” he queried, as the only possible alternative.
+
+“Yes, Mr. Gard. I’ve brought you some more things to eat.”
+
+“Good lad! I’m a great trouble to you. Where is Nance? In the boat?”
+
+“No, she couldn’t come. That Julie’s watching her like a cat. It was she
+and Peter stirred up the men against you. All day yesterday the whole
+Island was out looking for you, dead or alive, and very much puzzled as
+to what had become of you. And Julie’s got a suspicion that we know.
+They searched the house for you in spite of mother and Grannie, but they
+won’t forget Grannie in a hurry, and I don’t think they’ll come back,”
+and he laughed at the recollection of it.
+
+“What did Grannie do?”
+
+“She just looked at them from under that big black sun-bonnet, and
+muttered things no one heard. But her eyes were like points of burning
+sticks, and they all crept out one after another, afraid of they didn’t
+know what. But Julie’s been on the watch all day, and would hardly let
+us out of her sight. But she couldn’t watch us both when we were not
+together. So Nance got a bundle of things ready for you, and then went
+out with another bundle and Julie followed her, and I slipped off here.”
+
+“Bernel, I don’t know how to thank you all! What should I have done
+without you?”
+
+“You’d have been dead, most likely. It’s not that they cared much for
+Tom, you know, but they don’t like the idea of a Sark man being killed
+by a foreigner and no one paying for it.”
+
+“But I’m not a foreigner--”
+
+“Yes you are, to them. Of course you’re not a Frenchman, but all the
+same you’re not a Sark man. Good thing for you you’d lived with us and
+we’d got to know you and like you.”
+
+“Yes, that was a good thing indeed. I’m only sorry to have brought you
+trouble and to be such a trouble to you.”
+
+“If we thought you’d done it of course we wouldn’t trouble. But we know
+you couldn’t have.”
+
+“Nothing fresh has turned up?”
+
+“Nothing yet. But Nance says it will, sure. Truth must out, she says.”
+
+“It’s a weary while of coming out sometimes, Bernel. And I can’t spend
+the rest of my life here, you know.”
+
+“She said you were to keep your heart up. You never know what may
+happen.”
+
+“Tell her I can stand it because of all her goodness to me. If I hadn’t
+her to think of I might go mad in time.”
+
+“I’ve brought you a rabbit I snared. Nance cooked it.”
+
+“That was good of her. Can you eat puffins’ eggs?”
+
+“They want a bit of getting used to,” laughed the boy. “But they’re
+better cooked than raw.”
+
+“I can cook them. I found part of an old boat, and I’ve plugged up all
+the holes in the shelter, and I only light a fire at night. Could I fish
+here?”
+
+“Too big a sea close in. I’ve got some in the boat. I put out a line as
+I came across. I’ll leave you some.”
+
+“And have you a bottle--or a bailing-tin? Anything I could bring home
+some water from the pools in? I have to go over there every time I need
+a drink, and in the dark it’s not possible.”
+
+“You can have the bailer. It’s a new one and sound.”
+
+“Now tell me, Bernel, if they find out I’m here what will they do?”
+
+“They might come across and try and take you, unless they cool down; and
+that won’t be so long as that Julie and Peter talk as they do. She makes
+him do everything she tells him. He’s a sheep.”
+
+“And if they come across, what do you and Nance expect me to do?”
+
+“You’ve got my gun,” said the boy simply.
+
+“Yes, I’ve got your gun. But do you expect me to kill some of them?”
+
+“They’d kill you,” said Bernel, conclusively. On second thoughts,
+however, he added, “But you needn’t kill them. Wing one or two, and the
+rest will let you be. With a gun I could keep all Sark from landing on
+L’Etat.”
+
+“Suppose they come in the night? How many landing-places are there?”
+
+“There’s another at the end nighest Guernsey, but it’s not easy. And
+it’s only low tide and half-ebb that lets you ashore here at all.”
+
+“How about your boat?”
+
+“She’s riding to a line. Tide’s running up that way, but I’d better be
+off.”
+
+They stumbled through the darkness and the sleeping gulls, which woke in
+fright, and volubly accused one another of nightmares and riotous
+behaviour--and Bernel hauled in his boat, and handed Gard the tin dipper
+and three good-sized bream.
+
+“If you can’t eat them all at once, split them open and dry them in the
+sun,” he said. “They’ll keep for a week that way.”
+
+“Tell Nance I think of her every hour of the day, and I pray God the
+truth may come out soon.”
+
+“I’ll tell her. It’ll come out. She says so,” and he pulled out into the
+darkness and was gone.
+
+And the Solitary went back to his shelter, secure in the knowledge that
+the tide was on the rise, and half-ebb would not be till well on into
+next day. And he thought of Nance, and of Bernel, and of all the whole
+matter again; white thoughts and black thoughts, but chiefly white
+because of Nance, and Nance was a fact, while the black thoughts were
+shadows confusing as the mist.
+
+He could only devoutly hope and pray that a clean wind might come and
+put the shadows to flight and let the sun of truth shine through.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS
+
+
+Living thus face to face with Nature, and drawn through lack of other
+occupation into unusually intimate association with her, Gard found his
+lonely rock a centre of strange and novel experience.
+
+Situated as he was, even small things forced themselves largely upon his
+observation and wrought themselves into his memory. He found it good to
+lose himself for a time in these visible and tangible actualities,
+rather than in useless efforts after an understanding of the mystery of
+which he was the victim and centre.
+
+He had given over much time to pondering the subject of Tom Hamon’s
+death, but had come no nearer any reasonable solution of it. That
+hideous doubt as to himself in the matter recurred at times, but he
+always hastened to dissipate it by some other interest more practical
+and palpable, lest it should bring him to ultimate belief in its
+possibility, and so to madness.
+
+And so he spent hours watching that wonderful roaring cauldron on the
+south stack where his water pools were. Other hours in study of the
+social and domestic economies of gulls and cormorants. He saw families
+of awkward little fawn-coloured squawkers force their way out of their
+shells under his very eves, while indignant mothers told him what they
+thought of him from a safe distance.
+
+He bathed regularly in the heat of the day, but always after careful
+inspection of his chosen pool, and one day fled in haste up the black
+rocks at sight of the tip of a long, quivering, flesh-coloured tentacle
+coming curling round a rock in the close neighbourhood of the pool in
+which he was basking.
+
+That monster under the rock gave him many a bad dream. It seemed to him
+the incarnation of evil, and those horrible, bulging, merciless eyes
+stuck like burrs in his memory.
+
+One day, when he had been watching the cauldron, and filling his tin
+dipper at the freshwater pools, as he came to descend the black wall
+leading to the valley of rocks, he witnessed a little tragedy.
+
+Down below, on the edge of the pool where the octopus dwelt, a silly
+young cormorant was standing gazing into the water, so fascinated with
+something it saw there that it forgot even to jerk its head in search of
+understanding.
+
+Gard stood and watched. He saw a tiny pale worm-like thing come creeping
+up the black rock on which the cormorant squatted. The cormorant saw it
+too, and he was hungry, as all cormorants always are, even after a full
+meal. So presently he made a jab at it with his curved beak, and in a
+moment the pale worm had twisted itself tightly round his silly neck,
+and dragged him screaming and fluttering under the water.
+
+Another day, when he was coming down by the break in the cliff, where
+some great winter wave had bitten out such a slice that the top had come
+tumbling down, he saw the monster sunning itself on the flat rock by the
+side of its pool, like a huge nightmare spider.
+
+The moment he appeared its great eyes settled on his as though it had
+been waiting only for him. And when he stopped, with a feeling of
+shuddering discomfort at its hugeness--for its body seemed considerably
+over a foot in width, while its arms lounging over the rocks were each
+at least six feet long, and looked horribly muscular--he could have
+sworn that one of the great devil-eyes winked familiarly at him, as
+though the beast would say, “Come on, come on! Nice day for a bathe!
+Just waiting for you!”
+
+He could see the loathsome body move as it breathed, swinging
+comfortably in the support of its arms.
+
+In a fury of repulsion he stooped to pick up a rock, but when he hurled
+it the last tentacle was just sliding into the pool, and it seemed to
+him that it waved an ironical farewell before it disappeared.
+
+More than once fishing-boats hovered about his rock, but kept a safe
+distance from the boiling underfalls, and he always lay in hiding till
+they had gone.
+
+But he saw more gracious and beautiful things than these.
+
+As he lay one morning, looking over the ridge at the Sark headlands
+shining in the sun--with a strong west wind driving the waves so briskly
+that, Sark-like, they tossed their white crests into the air in angry
+expostulation long before they met the rocks, and went roaring up them
+in dazzling spouts of foam--his eye lighted on a gleam of unusual colour
+on the racing green plain. It came again and again, and presently, as
+the merry dance waxed wilder still, every white-cap as it tossed into
+the air became a tiny rainbow, and the whole green plain was alive with
+magical flutterings, of colours so dazzling that it seemed bestrewn with
+dancing diamonds. A sight so wonderful that he found himself holding in
+his! breath lest a puff should drive it all away.
+
+That same evening, too, was a glory of colour such as he had never
+dreamed of. The setting sun was ruby; red, and the cloud-bank into which
+he sank was all rimmed with red fire that seemed to corruscate in its
+burning brilliancy.
+
+To Gard indeed, in the somewhat peculiar state of mind induced by his
+sudden cutting-off from his kind and flinging back upon himself, it
+seemed as though the blood-red sun had fallen into a vast consuming fire
+behind that dark, fire-rimmed cloud, and that that was the end of it,
+and it would never rise again.
+
+The sky, right away into the farthest east, was flaming red with a hint
+of underlying smoke below the glow. The sea was a weltering bath of
+blood, and the cliffs of Sark, save for the gleam of white foam at their
+feet, shone as red as though they had just been bodily dipped in it.
+
+His lonely rock, when he looked round at it in wonder, was all
+unfamiliarly red. There was a red fantastic glow in the very air, and he
+himself was as red as though he had in very fact killed Tom Hamon, and
+drenched himself with his blood.
+
+So startling and unnatural was it all, that he found himself wondering
+fearfully if these outside things were really all blood-red, or whether
+something had gone wrong with his brain and eyes, and only caused them
+to look so to him alone, or whether it was indeed the end of all things
+shaping itself slowly under his very eyes. And in that thought and fear
+he was not by any means alone.
+
+But the wonderful red, which in its universality and intensity had
+become overpowering and fearsome, faded at last, and he hailed its going
+with a sigh of relief. His eyes and his brain were all right, he had not
+killed Tom Hamon, and this was not the earth’s last sunset.
+
+And again that night, as he sat on the ridge on sentinel duty till the
+rising tide should lock the doors of his castle, the sea all round him
+shone with phosphorescence; every breaking wave along the black plain
+was a lambent gleam of lightning, and where they tore up the sides of
+his rock they were like flames out of a fiery sea, so that he sat there
+looking down upon a weltering band of nickering green and blue fires,
+which clung to the black ledges and dripped slowly back into the
+seething gleam below.
+
+It was all very strange and very awesome, and he wondered what it might
+portend in the way of further marvels.
+
+And he had not long to wait.
+
+Far away in the Atlantic a cyclone had been raging, and carrying havoc
+in its skirts. Now it was whirling towards Europe, and the puffins crept
+deep into their holes, and the gulls circled with disconsolate cries,
+and the cormorants crouched gloomily in lee of their snuggest ledges,
+and all nature seemed waiting for the blow.
+
+Gard was awakened in the morning by the gale tearing at the massive
+stones of his shelter as though it would carry them bodily into the sea.
+
+And when he crawled out, flat like a worm, the wind caught him even so,
+and he had to grimp to earth and anchor himself by projecting pieces of
+rock.
+
+Such seas as these he had never imagined round Sark; forgetting that
+behind Guernsey lay thousands of miles of waters tortured past
+endurance and racing now to escape the fury of the storm.
+
+A white lash of spray came over him as he lay, and soaked him to the
+skin, and, turning his face to the storm, he saw through the chinks of
+his eyes a great wavering white curtain between him and the sky line.
+The south-west portion of his island, where his freshwater pools were,
+and the valley of rocks, were all awash, the mighty waves roaring clean
+over the south stack, and rushing up into the black sky in rockets of
+flying spray. The tide had still some time to run, and he feared what it
+might be like at its fullest. It seemed to him by no means impossible
+that it might sweep the whole rock bare.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM
+
+
+It was a fortunate thing for Gard that the storm--the great storm from
+which, for many a year afterwards, local events in Sark dated--came when
+it did; two days after Bernel’s visit and the replenishment of his
+larder. For if he had been caught bare he must have starved.
+
+Eight whole days it lasted, with only two slight abatements which, while
+they raised his hopes only to dash them, still served him mightily.
+
+During the first days he spent much of his time crouched in the lee of
+his bee-hive, watching the terrific play of the waves on his own rock
+and on the Sark headlands.
+
+He wondered if any other man had seen such a storm under such
+conditions. For he was practically at sea on a rock; in the midst of the
+turmoil, yet absolutely unaffected by it.
+
+On shipboard, thought of one’s ship and possible consequences had always
+interfered with fullest enjoyment of Nature’s paroxysms. It was
+impossible to detach one’s thoughts completely and view matters entirely
+from the outside. But here--he was sure his rock had suffered many an
+equal torment--there was nothing to come between him and the elemental
+frenzy. Nothing but--as the days of it ran on--a growing solicitude as
+to what he was going to live on if it continued much longer.
+
+Never was Sark rabbit so completely demolished as was that one that
+Nance had cooked and sent him. Before he had done with it he cracked the
+very bones he had thrown away, for the sake of what was in them, and
+finally chewed the softer parts of the bones themselves to cheat himself
+into the belief that he was eating.
+
+That was after he had devoured every crumb of his bread, and finished
+his three fishes to the extreme points of their tails.
+
+He was, I said, in the very midst of the turmoil yet unaffected by it.
+But that was not so in some respects.
+
+Bodily, as we have seen, the storm bore hardly upon him, since
+rabbit-bones and fish-tails can hardly be looked upon as a nutritious or
+inviting dietary.
+
+But mentally and spiritually the mighty elemental upheaval was wholly
+crushing and uplifting.
+
+As he cowered, with humming head, under the fierce unremitting rush of
+the gale, and felt the great stones of his shelter tremble in it, and
+watched the huge green hills of water, with their roaring white crests,
+go sweeping past to crash in thunder on the cliffs of Sark, he felt
+smaller than he had ever felt before--and that, as a rule, and if it
+come not of self-abnegation through a man’s own sin or folly, is
+entirely to his good; possibly in the other case also.
+
+To feel infinitely small and helpless in the hands of an Infinitely
+Great is a spiritual education to any man, and it was so to this man.
+
+He felt himself, in that universal chaos, no more than a speck of
+helpless dust amid the whirling wheels of Nature’s inexplicable
+machinery, and clung the tighter to the simple fundamental facts of
+which his heart was sure--behind and above all this was God, who held
+all these things in His hand. And over there in Sark was Nance, the very
+thought of whom was like a coal of fire in his heart, which all the
+gales that ever blew, and all the soddened soaking of ceaseless rain
+from above and ceaseless spray from below, could not even dim.
+
+For long-continued and relentless buffeting such as this tells upon any
+man, no matter what his strength of mind or body to begin with; and a
+perpetually soaked body is apt in time to sodden the soul, unless it
+have something superhuman to cling to, as this man had in his simple
+trust in God and the girl he loved.
+
+In all those stressful days, so far as he could see, the tides--which in
+those parts rise and fall some forty feet, as you may see by the scoured
+bases of the towering cliffs--seemed always at the full, the westerly
+gale driving in the waters remorselessly and piling them up against the
+land without cessation, and as though bent on its destruction.
+
+Great gouts of clotted foam flew over his head in clouds, and plastered
+his rock with shivering sponges. The sheets of spray from his south-west
+rocks lashed him incessantly. His shelter was as wet inside as out, as
+he was himself.
+
+He felt empty and hungry at times, but never thirsty; his skin absorbed
+moisture enough and to spare. But, chilled and clammed and starving, on
+the fifth day when he had crawled into his wet burrow for such small
+relief as it might offer from the ceaseless flailing without, he
+broached his bottle of cognac and drank a little, and found himself the
+better of it.
+
+On the evening of the third day his hopes had risen with a slight
+slackening of the turmoil. He was not sure if the gale had really
+abated, or if it was only that he was growing accustomed to it. But
+under that belief, and the compulsion of a growling stomach, he crawled
+precariously round to the eastern end of the rock where the puffins had
+their holes, lying flat when the great gusts snatched at him as though
+they were bent on hurling him into the water, and gliding on again in
+the intervals. And there, with a piece of his firewood he managed to
+extort half-a-dozen eggs from fiercely expostulating parents. The end of
+his stick was bitten to fragments, but he got his eggs, and was amazed
+at the size of them compared with that of their producers.
+
+The sight of the great wall of tumbled rocks on his right, and the
+sudden remembrance of his previous passage over it, set him wondering if
+it might not be possible to find better shelter in some of those
+fissures across which he had had to swing himself by the hands on the
+previous occasion. For this was the leeward side of the island, and the
+huge bulk of it rose like a protecting shoulder between him and the
+gale, whereas his bee-hive, on the exposed flank of the rock, got the
+full force of it. So he scooped a hole in the friable black soil and
+deposited his eggs in it and crawled along to the wall.
+
+The tumbled fragments looked much less fearsome than they had done in
+the fog. He found no difficulty in clambering among them now, when he
+could see clearly what he was about, and he wormed his way in and out,
+and up and down, but could not light on any of those tricky spaces which
+had seemed to him so dangerous before.
+
+And then, as he crawled under one huge slab, a black void lay before
+him, of no great width but evidently deep. It took many minutes’
+peering into the depths to accustom his eyes to the dimness.
+
+Then it seemed to him that the rough out jutting fragments below would
+afford a holding, and he swung his feet cautiously down and felt round
+for foothold.
+
+Carefully testing everything he touched, he let himself down, inch by
+inch, assured that if he could go down he could certainly get up again.
+
+At first the gale still whistled through the crevices among the
+boulders, but presently he found himself in a silence that was so mighty
+a change from the ceaseless roar to which he was becoming accustomed,
+that he felt as though stricken with deafness. Up above him the light
+filtered down, tempered by the slab under which he had come, and enabled
+him still to find precarious hand and foot hold.
+
+But presently his downward progress was barred by a rough flooring of
+splintered fragments, and he stood panting and looked about him.
+
+His well was about twenty feet deep, he reckoned, and there were gaping
+slits here and there which might lead in towards the rock or out towards
+the sea. He had turned and twisted so much in his descent that it took
+him some time to decide in which direction the sea might lie and in
+which the rock. And, having settled that, he wriggled through a crevice
+and wormed slowly on.
+
+He was almost in the dark now, and could only feel his way. But he was
+used to groping in narrow places, and a spirit of investigation urged
+him on.
+
+Half an hour’s strenuous and cautious worming, and a thin trickle of
+light glimmered ahead. He turned and worked his way back at once.
+
+There was no slit opposite the one he had tried, but presently,
+half-way up the well, he made out an opening like the mouth of a small
+adit. His back had been to it as he came down, and so he had missed it.
+
+He climbed up and in, and felt convinced in his own mind that this was
+no simple work of nature. Nature had no doubt begun, but man had
+certainly finished it. For the floor level was comparatively free from
+harshness, and the outjutting projections of the sides and roof had been
+tempered, and progress was not difficult.
+
+It was very narrow, however, and very low, and quite dark. He could only
+drag himself along on his stomach like a worm. But he pushed on with all
+the ardour of a discoverer.
+
+Was it silver? Was it smugglers? Or what? Wholly accidental formation he
+was sure it was not, though he thought it likely that man’s handiwork
+had only turned Nature’s to account.
+
+The fissure had probably been there from the beginning of time, or it
+might be the result of numberless years of the slow wearing away of a
+softer vein of rock, but some man at some time had lighted on it, and
+followed it up, and with much labour had smoothed its natural asperities
+and used it for his own purposes. And he was keen to learn what those
+purposes were.
+
+To any ordinary man, accustomed to the ordinary amplitudes of life, and
+freedom to stretch his arms and legs and raise his head and fill his
+lungs with fresh air, a passage such as this would have been impossible.
+Here and there, indeed, the walls widened somewhat through some fault in
+the rook, bur for the most part his elbows grazed the sides each time he
+moved them.
+
+Even he, used as he was to such conditions, began at last to feel them
+oppressive. The whole mighty bulk of L’Etat seemed above and about him,
+malignantly intent on crushing him out of existence.
+
+He knew that was only fancy. He had experienced it many times before.
+But the nightmare feeling was there, and it needed all his will at times
+to keep him from a panic attempt at retreat, when the insensate
+rock-walls seemed absolutely settling down on him, and breathing was
+none too easy.
+
+But going back meant literally going backwards, crawling out toes
+foremost; for his elbows scraped the walls and his head the roof, and
+turning was out of the question. The men who had made and used that
+narrow way had undoubtedly gone with a purpose, and not for pleasure.
+And he was bound to learn what that purpose was.
+
+So he set his teeth, and wormed himself slowly along, with pinched face
+and tight-shut mouth, and nostrils opened wide to take in all the air
+they could and let out as little as possible. And, even at that, he had
+to lie still at times, pressed flat against the floor, to let some
+fresher air trickle in above him.
+
+But at last he came to what he sought, though no whit of it could he see
+when he got there. By the sudden cessation of the pressure on his sides
+and head, he was aware of entrance into a larger space, and, with
+forethought quickened by the exigences of his passage, he lay for a
+moment to pant more freely and to think.
+
+His body was in the passage. He knew where the passage led out to. What
+lay ahead he could not tell.
+
+If it was a chamber, as he expected, there might quite possibly be other
+passages leading out of it. And so it would be well to make sure of
+recognizing this one again before he loosed his hold on it. So he
+pulled off one boot, and feeling carefully round the opening, placed it
+just inside as a landmark.
+
+Then he groped on along the right-hand wall to learn the size of the
+chamber, and was immediately thankful that his own passage was safely
+marked, for he came on another opening, and another, and another, and
+labelled them carefully in his mind, “One, two, three.”
+
+It was truly eerie work, groping there in that dense darkness and utter
+silence, and trying to the nerves even of one who had never known
+himself guilty of such things. But, being there, he was determined to
+learn all he could.
+
+He clung to his right-hand wall as to a life-rope. If he once got mazed
+in a place like that he might never taste daylight and upper air again.
+
+Of the size of the chamber he could so far form no opinion. He would
+have given much for a light. His flint and steel were indeed in his
+pocket, but he was sodden through and through, and had no means whatever
+of catching a spark if he struck one.
+
+Then, as he groped cautiously along past the third opening, his progress
+was stayed, and not by rock.
+
+He was on his knees, his hands feeling blindly, but with infinite
+enquiry, along the rough rock wall, when he stumbled suddenly over
+something that lay along the ground. Dropping his hands to save himself
+from falling, they lighted on that which lay below, and he started back
+with an exclamation and a shudder. For what he had felt was like the
+hair and face of a man.
+
+He crouched back against the wall, his heart thumping like a ship’s
+pump, and the blood belling in his ears, and sat so for very many
+minutes; sat on, until, in that silent blackness, he could hear the
+dull, far-away thud of the waves on the outer walls of the island.
+
+Then, by degrees, he pulled himself together. If it was indeed a man, he
+was undoubtedly dead, and therefore harmless; and having learned this
+much he would know more.
+
+So presently he groped forward, felt again the round head and soft hair,
+and below it and beyond it a heap of what felt like small oblong
+packages done up in wrappings of cloth and tied round with cord.
+
+He picked one up and handled it inquisitively, with a shrewd idea of
+what might be, or might have been, inside. The cord was very loose, as
+though the contents had shrunk since it was tied. As he fumbled with it
+in the dark, it came open and left him no possible room for doubt as to
+what those contents were. He sneezed till the top of his head seemed
+like to lift, and the tears ran down his cheeks in an unceasing stream.
+What had once been tobacco had powdered into snuff, and his rough
+handling of the package had scattered it broadcast.
+
+He turned at last, and lay with his head in his arms against the wall
+until the air should have time to clear, and meanwhile the sneezing had
+quickened his wits.
+
+Here was possible tinder, and by means of those dried-up wrappings he
+might procure a light. If it lasted but five minutes it might enable him
+to solve the problem on which he had stumbled.
+
+He groped again for the opened package, and found it on the dead man’s
+face. The wrapper was of tarred cloth, almost perished with age, dry and
+friable. Shaking out the rest of the snuff at arm’s length, he picked
+the stuff to pieces and shredded it into tinder. Then he felt about for
+half-a-dozen more packages, carefully slipped their cords and emptied
+out their contents, and getting out his flint and steel, flaked sparks
+into the tinder till it caught and flared, and the interior of the
+cavern leaped at him out of its darkness.
+
+He rolled up one of the empty wrappers like a torch, and lit it, and
+looked about him.
+
+His first hasty glance fell on the dead man, and he got another shock
+from the fact that his feet were lashed together with stout rope, and
+probably his hands also, for they were behind his back, and he lay face
+upward. His coat and short-clothes and buckled shoes spoke of long
+by-gone days, and the skin of his face was brown and shrivelled, so that
+the bones beneath showed grim and gaunt.
+
+Beyond him was a great heap of the same small packages of tobacco, and
+alongside them a pile of small kegs. Gard lit another of his torches,
+and stepped gingerly over to them. He sounded one or two, but found them
+empty. Time had shrunk their stout timbers and tapped their contents.
+
+Then he held up his flickering light and looked quickly round this
+prison-house which had turned into a tomb, and shivered, as a dim idea
+of what it all meant came over him.
+
+It was a large, low, natural rock chamber, and all round the walls were
+black slits which might mean it passages leading on into the bowels of
+the island. To investigate them all would mean the work of many days.
+
+The dead man, the perished packages, the empty kegs--there was nothing
+else, except his own boot lying in the mouth of the largest of the black
+slits, as though anxious on its own account to be gone.
+
+The still air was already becoming heavy with the pungent smoke of his
+torches. He stepped cautiously across to the body again, and picked a
+couple of buttons from the coat. They came off in his hand, and when he
+touched the buckles on the shoes they did the same. Then he turned and
+made for his waiting shoe just as his last torch went out.
+
+The smell of the fresh salt air, when he wriggled out into the well, was
+almost as good as a feast to him. He climbed hastily to the surface,
+and, as he crept out from under the topmost slab, took careful note of
+its position, and then scored with a piece of rock each stone which led
+up to it. For, if ever he should need an inner sanctuary, here was one
+to his hand, and evidently quite unknown to the present generation of
+Sark men.
+
+He recovered his eggs, and crept round the shoulder of the rock. The
+gale pounced on him like a tiger on its half-escaped prey. It beat him
+flat, worried him, did its best to tear him off and fling him into the
+sea. But--Heavens!--how sweet it was after the musty quiet of the
+death-chamber below!
+
+Inch by inch, he worked his way back in the teeth of it, and crawled
+spent into his bee-hive. Then, ravenous with his exertions, he broke one
+of his eggs into his tin dipper, and forthwith emptied it outside, and
+the gale swept away the awful smell of it.
+
+The next was as bad, and his hopes sank to nothing.
+
+The third, however, was all right. He mixed it with some cognac and
+whipped it up with a stick, and the growlers inside fought over it
+contentedly.
+
+He was almost afraid to try another. However, he could get more
+to-morrow. So he broke the fourth, and found it also good, so whipped it
+up with more cognac, and felt happier than he had done since he nibbled
+his rabbit-bones.
+
+As he lay that night, and the gale howled about him more furiously than
+ever, his thoughts ran constantly on the dead man lying in the silent
+darkness down below.
+
+It was very quiet down there, and dry; but this roaring turmoil, with
+its thunderous crashings and hurtling spray, was infinitely more to his
+taste, wet though he was to the bone, and almost deafened with the
+ceaseless uproar. For this, terrible though it was in its majestic fury,
+was life, and that black stillness below was death.
+
+To the tune of the tumult without, he worked out the dead man’s story in
+his mind.
+
+It was long ago in the old smuggling days. Some bold free-trader of Sark
+or Guernsey had lighted on that cave and used it as a storehouse. Some
+too energetic revenue officer had disappeared one day and never been
+heard of again. He had been surprised--by the free-traders--perhaps in
+the very act of surprising them--brought over to L’Etat in a boat, been
+dragged through the tunnel, or made to crawl through, perhaps, with
+vicious knife-digs in the rear, and had been left bound in the darkness
+till he should be otherwise disposed of. His captors had been captured
+in turn, or maybe killed, and he had lain there alone and in the dark,
+waiting, waiting for them to return, shouting now and again into the
+muffling darkness, struggling with his bonds, growing weaker and weaker,
+faint with hunger, mad with thirst, until at last he died.
+
+It was horrible to think of, and desperate as his own state was, he
+thanked God heartily that he was not as that other.
+
+Morning brought no slackening of the gale. It seemed to him, if
+anything, to be waxing still more furious.
+
+He had only two eggs left, and they might both be bad ones, but he would
+not have ventured round the headland that day for all the eggs in
+existence.
+
+He broke one presently, in answer to a clamour inside him that would
+brook no denial, and found it good, and lived on it that day, and mused
+between times on the strange fact that a man could feel so mightily
+grateful for the difference between a bad egg and a good one.
+
+His sixth egg turned out a good one also, and the next day there came
+another hopeful lull, which permitted him to harry the puffins once
+more, and gave him a dozen chances against contingencies.
+
+On the eighth day the storm blew itself out, and he looked hopefully
+across at the lonely and weather-beaten cliffs of Sark for the relief
+which he was certain they had been aching to send him.
+
+The waves, however, still ran high, and, though he did not know it till
+later, there was not a boat left afloat round the whole Island. The
+forethoughtful and weather-wise had run them round to the Creux and
+carried them through the tunnel into the roadway behind. All the rest
+had been smashed and sunk and swallowed by the storm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+HOW HE HELD THE ROCK
+
+
+The sun blazed hot next day, and he spread himself out in it to warm,
+and all his soaked things in it to dry, and blessed it for its wholesome
+vigour.
+
+Nance or Bernel would be sure to come as soon as the tide served at
+night, and he would net be sorry for a change of diet; meanwhile, he
+could get along all right with the unwilling assistance of the puffins.
+
+The birds had all crept out of their hiding-places, and were wheeling
+and diving and making up for lost time and busily discussing late events
+at the tops of their voices whenever their bills were not otherwise
+occupied. Where they had all hidden themselves during the storm, he
+could not imagine, but there seemed to be as many of them as ever, and
+they were all quite happy and quarrelsome, except the cormorants, who
+were so ravenous that they could not spare a moment from their diving
+and gobbling, even to quarrel with their neighbours.
+
+He levied on the puffins again, and, after a meal, prowled curiously
+about his rock to see what damage the storm had done, but to his
+surprise found almost none.
+
+It seemed incredible that all should be the same after the deadly
+onslaught of the gale. But it was only in the valley of rocks that he
+found any consequences.
+
+There the huge boulders had been hurled about like marbles: some had
+been tossed overboard, and some, in their fantastic up-piling, spoke
+eloquently of all they had suffered.
+
+But one grim--though to him wholly gracious--deed the storm had wrought
+there. For, out of the pool where the devil-fish dwelt, its monstrous
+limbs streamed up and lay over the sloping rocks, and he dared not
+venture near. But, in the afternoon when he came again to look at it,
+and found it still in the same attitude, something about it struck him
+as odd and unusual.
+
+The great tentacles had never moved, so far as he could see, and there
+was surely something wrong with a devil-fish that did not move.
+
+He hurled a stone, picked out of the landslip at the corner, and hit a
+tentacle full and fair with a dull thud like leather. But the beast
+never moved.
+
+He was suspicious of the wily one, however. The devil, he knew, was
+sometimes busiest when he made least show of business. And it was not
+till next morning, when he found the monster still as before, that he
+ventured down to the pool and looked into it, and saw what had happened.
+
+The waves had hurled a huge boulder into it--and there you may see it to
+this day--and it had fallen on the devil-fish and ground him flat, and
+purged the rock of a horror.
+
+Gard examined the hideous tentacles with the curiosity of intensest
+repulsion; yet could not but stand amazed at the wonderful delicacy and
+finish displayed in the tiny powerful suckers with which each limb was
+furnished on the under side, and the flexible muscularity of the
+monstrous limbs themselves, thick as his biceps where they came out of
+the pool, and tapering to a worm-like point, capable, it seemed to him,
+of picking up a pin.
+
+He was mightily glad the beast was dead, however. It had been a blot on
+Nature’s handiwork, and the very thought of it a horror.
+
+The strenuous interlude of the storm, which, to the lonely one exposed
+to its fullest fury, had seemed interminable--every shivering day the
+length of many, and the black howling nights longer still--had had the
+effect of relaxing somewhat his own oversight over himself and his
+precautions against being seen.
+
+L’Etat in a furious sou’-wester is a sight worth seeing. Possibly some
+telescope had been brought to bear on the foam-swept rock when he,
+secure in the general bouleversement and cramped with hunger, had turned
+the forbidden corner with no thought in his mind but eggs.
+
+Possibly again, it was sheer carelessness on his part, born once more of
+the security of the storm and the recent non-necessity for concealment.
+
+However it came about, what happened was that, as he stood in the valley
+of rocks examining his dead monster, he became suddenly aware that a
+fishing-boat had crept round the open end of the valley, and that it
+seemed to him much closer in than he had ever seen one before.
+
+He dropped prone among the boulders at once, but whether he had been
+seen he could not tell--could only vituperate his own carelessness, and
+hope that nothing worse might come of it.
+
+He lay there a very long time, and when at last he ventured to crawl to
+the rocks at the seaward opening, the boat was away on the usual
+fishing-grounds busy with its own concerns, and he persuaded himself
+that its somewhat unusual course had been accidental. The incident,
+however, braced him to his former caution, and he went no more abroad
+without first carefully inspecting the surrounding waters from the
+ridge.
+
+They would be certain to come that night, he felt sure, either Nance or
+Bernel, perhaps both. Yes, he thought most likely they would both come.
+They would, without doubt, be wondering how he had fared during the
+storm, and would be making provision for him.
+
+Perhaps Nance was cooking for him at that very moment, and thinking of
+him as he was of her.
+
+In the certain expectation of their coming, he decided he would not go
+to sleep at all that night, but would crawl down to the landing-place to
+welcome them.
+
+He wondered if that mad woman Julie had given up watching them, and, if
+not, if they would be able to circumvent her again. In any case, he
+hoped that if only one of them came it might be Nance. He fairly ached
+for the sight and sound of her--and the feel of her little hand, and a
+warm frank kiss from the lips that knew no guile.
+
+The sufferings of the storm became as nothing to him in this large hope
+and expectation of her coming.
+
+The intervening hours dragged slowly. It would be half-ebb soon after
+dark, he thought; and he crept up to the ridge and gazed anxiously over
+at the Race between him and Brenière, to see if it showed any unusual
+symptoms after the storm.
+
+It ran furiously enough, but, he said to himself, it would slacken on
+the ebb, and they were so familiar with it that it would take more than
+that to stop them coming.
+
+Before dark the great seas were rolling past, a little quicker than
+usual, he thought, but in long, smooth undulations, which slipped,
+unbroken and soundless, even along the black ledges of his rock. And
+when the stars came out--brighter than ever with the burnishing of the
+gale--the long black backs of the waves, and the darker hollows between,
+were sown so thick with trailing gleams that he could not be certain
+whether it was only star-shine or phosphorescence.
+
+It was all very peaceful and beautiful, however, and very welcome to
+eyes that had not looked upon sun, moon, or star for eight whole nights
+and days, and whose ears had grown hardened to the ceaseless clamour of
+the gale. Nature, indeed, seemed preternaturally quiet, as though
+exhausted with her previous violence or desirous of wiping out the
+remembrance of it; just as small humanity after an outbreak endeavours
+at times to purge the memory of its offence by display of unusual
+amiability and sweetness.
+
+Eager to welcome his confidently expected visitors, Gard crept along the
+ridge as soon as it was dark, and posted himself on the point which, in
+the daylight, commanded the passage from Brenière.
+
+And he sat there so long--so long after his hopes and wishes had flown
+over to Sark and hurried Bernel and Nance into a boat and landed them on
+L’Etat--that the night seemed running out, and he began to fear they
+were not coming, after all.
+
+In the troubled darkness of the Race, he caught gleams at times which
+might be oar-blades or might be only the upfling from the perils below.
+The tide was ebbing, and soon the black fangs with which it was strewn
+would be showing.
+
+At times he convinced himself that the brief gleams moved; but when, to
+ease his eyes of the intolerable strain, he looked up at the stars, it
+seemed to him that they moved also, and so he could not be sure.
+
+But surely there was a gleam that seemed to move and come fitfully
+towards him--or was it only star-shine dancing on the waves of the Race
+which always ran against the tide?
+
+He stood to watch, then lost the gleam, and crouched again disappointed.
+
+The boat must come round Quette d’Amont, the great pile of rock that lay
+off the eastern corner, and the first glimpse he could hope to get of it
+in the darkness would be there.
+
+Then, suddenly, in that curious way in which one sometimes sees more out
+of the tail of one’s eye than out of the front of it, he got an
+impression--and with it a start--of something moving noiselessly among
+the tumbled rocks below on his left.
+
+It was a dark night, but the glory of the stars lifted it out of the
+ebony-ruler category. It was a wide, thin, lofty darkness, but still
+black enough along the sides of his rock, and down there it seemed to
+him that something moved, something dim and shadowy and silent.
+
+He thought of the dead man in his chamber down below. Could he be in the
+habit of walking of a night? He thought of ghosts, of which, if popular
+belief was anything to go by, Sark was full; and there was nothing to
+hinder them coming across to L’Etat for their Sabbat. And he thought of
+monster devil-fish climbing, loathsome and soundless, about the dark
+rocks.
+
+He longed for a pair of Sark eyes, and shrank down into a hollow under
+the ridge to watch this thing, with something of a creepy chill between
+his shoulder-blades.
+
+There was certainly something lighter than the surrounding darkness down
+below, and it moved. It turned the corner and flitted along the slope,
+slowly but surely, in the direction of his shelter. Its mode of
+progression, from the little he could make out in the darkness, was just
+such as he would have looked for in a huge octopus hauling itself along
+by its tentacles over the out-cropping rock-bones.
+
+He could not rest there. He must see. He crawled along the ridge as
+quietly as he could manage it, and would have felt happier, whatever it
+was, spirit or monster, if he had had his gun. Now and again it stopped,
+and when it stopped he lay flat to the ground and held his breath, lest
+it should discover him. When it went on, he went on.
+
+When he came to the end of the ridge he saw that the nebulous something
+had apparently stopped just where his house must be.
+
+And then, every sense on the strain, he heard his own name called
+softly, and he laughed to himself for very joy of it, and lay still to
+hear it again, and laughed once more to think that in her simplicity she
+still thought of him as “Mr. Gard.” He would teach her to call him
+“Steen,” as his mother used to do.
+
+Then he got up quickly and cried, as softly as herself, but with joy and
+laughter in his voice--
+
+“Why, Nance! My dear, I was not sure whether you were a ghost or a
+devil-fish;” and he sprang down towards her.
+
+And then, to his amazement, he saw that she was clad only in the
+clinging white garment in which he had seen her swim.
+
+Her next words confounded him.
+
+“Is Bernel here?”
+
+“Bernel, Nance? No, dear, he is not here. Why--”
+
+“Did he not get here last night?” she jerked sharply.
+
+“No. No one. I was hoping--”
+
+But she had sunk down against the great stones of the shelter, with her
+hands before her face.
+
+“Mon Gyu, mon Gyu! Then he is dead! Oh, my poor one! My dear one!”
+
+“Nance! Nance! What is it all, dearest? Did Bernel try to come across
+last night--”
+
+“Yes, yes! He would come. He said you must be starving. We were all
+anxious about you--”
+
+“And he tried to swim across?”
+
+“Yes, yes! And he is drowned! Oh, my poor, poor boy!”
+
+She was shaking with the sudden chill of dreadful loss. He stooped, and
+felt inside the shelter with a long arm for the old woollen cloak and
+wrapped her carefully in it. He raked out the blanket and made her sit
+with it tucked about her feet. And she was passive in his hands, with
+thought as yet for nothing but her loss.
+
+She was shaken with broken sobs, and in the face of grief such as this
+he could find no words. What could he say? All the words in the world
+could not bring back the dead.
+
+And it was through him this great sorrow had come upon her. He seemed
+fated to bring misfortune on their house.
+
+He wondered if she would hate him for it, though she must know he had
+had no more to do with the matter than with Tom’s death.
+
+He put a protecting arm round the old cloak, tentatively, and in some
+fear lest she might resent it, but knew no other way to convey to her
+what was in his heart.
+
+But she did not resent it, and nothing was further from her mind than
+imputing any share in this loss to him.
+
+Some women’s hearts are so wonderfully constituted that the greater the
+demands upon them the more they are prepared to give. At times they give
+and give beyond the bounds of reason, and yet amazingly retain their
+faith and hope in the recipients of their gifts.
+
+But that has nothing to do with our story. Except this--that these
+various demands on Nance’s fortitude, incurred by her love for Stephen
+Gard, far from weakening her love only made it the stronger. As that
+love came more and more between her and her old surroundings, and
+exacted from her sacrifice after sacrifice, the more she clung to it,
+and looked to it, and let the past go. The partial ostracism brought
+upon her by Gard’s outspoken declaration of their mutual feeling--even
+this final offering of her dearly-loved brother--these only bound her
+heart to him the tighter.
+
+“Nance dear!” he said at last, when she had got control of herself
+again. “Is it not possible to hope? He was so good a swimmer. Maybe he
+found the Race too strong and was carried away by it. He may have been
+picked up, and will come back as soon as he is able.”
+
+“No,” she said, with gloomy decision. “He is dead. I feared for him, for
+I had been to look at the Race just before sundown, and it looked
+terribly strong. But he would go--”
+
+“Why didn’t he get a boat?”
+
+“Ah, mon Gyu!” and she started up wildly. “I was forgetting. I was
+thinking only of myself and Bernel. There isn’t a boat left alive
+outside the Creux, and he couldn’t get one there without them knowing.
+But”--in quick excitement now, to make up for lost time--“they have seen
+you here, and they may come to-night--Achochre that I am! They may be
+here! Come quickly! Your gun!” and she was all on the quiver to be gone.
+
+Gard stooped and pulled out the gun from its hiding-place inside the
+shelter.
+
+“Is it loaded?” she asked sharply.
+
+“Yes. I cleaned it to-day.”
+
+“Take your charges with you, and do you hasten back to the place we
+landed the first night. You know?”
+
+“I know. And you?”
+
+“I will go to the other landing-place. But they are not likely to come
+there.”
+
+“And if they do?”
+
+“I will manage them,” and she slipped into the darkness with the big
+cloak about her.
+
+Gard crept along the slope, and found a roost above the landing-place.
+
+His brain was in a whirl. Bernel had tried to cross to him and was
+drowned. Nance had swum across. Brave girl! Wonderful girl! For
+him!--and for news of Bernel. It was terrible to think of Bernel, dead
+on his account--terrible! It would not be surprising if Nance hated him.
+Yet, what had he done?--what could he do? He had done nothing. He could
+do nothing; and his teeth ground savagely at the craziness of these wild
+Sark men who had brought it all about, and at his own utter impotence.
+
+But Nance did not hate him. And she had swum that dreadful Race to warn
+him. Brave girl! Wonderful girl!
+
+And then--surely the grinding of an oar, as it wrought upon the gunwale
+against an ill-fitted thole-pin--out there by the Quette d’Amont!
+
+His eyes and ears strained into the darkness till they felt like
+cracking.
+
+And the muffled growl of voices!
+
+His heart thumped so, they might have heard it.
+
+He must wait till he was sure they meant to come in. But they must not
+come too close.
+
+It was an ill landing in the dark, and there were various opinions on
+it. But there was no doubt as to their intentions. They were coming in.
+
+“Sheer off there!” cried Gard.
+
+Dead silence below. They had come in some doubt, but their doubts were
+solved now, and there was no longer need for curbed tongues, though,
+indeed, his hollow voice made some of them wonder if it was not a spirit
+that spoke to them.
+
+“It’s him!” “The man himself!” “We have him!” “In now and get him!”--was
+the burden of their growls, as they hung on their oars.
+
+“See here, men!” said Gard, invisible even to Sark eyes, against the
+solid darkness of the slope. “There has been trouble and loss enough
+over this matter already, and none of it my making. Do you hear? I say
+again--none of it my making. If you attempt to come ashore there will be
+more trouble, and this time it will be of my making. Keep back!”--as an
+impulsive one gave a tug at his oar. “If you force me to fire, your
+blood be on your own heads. I give you fair warning.”
+
+Growls from the boat carried up to him an impression of mixed doubt and
+discomfort--ultimate disbelief in his possession of arms, an energetic
+oath or two, and another creak of the oar.
+
+“Very well! Here’s to show you I am armed.” The report of his gun made
+Nance jump, at the other side of the island, and set all the birds on
+L’Etat--except the puffins, deep in their holes--circling and screaming.
+
+The small shot tore up the water within a couple of yards of the boat,
+which backed off hastily--much to his satisfaction, for he had feared
+they might rush him before he had time to reload.
+
+He had dropped flat after firing and recharged his gun as he lay. He was
+sure they must have come armed, and feared a volley as soon as his own
+discharge indicated his whereabouts.
+
+As a matter of fact, they had come divided as to the truth of the report
+that there was a man on L’Etat--even then as to him being the man they
+sought. In any case, they had expected to take him unawares, and never
+dreamt of his being armed and on the watch for them.
+
+Thanks to Nance, he had turned the tables on them. It was they who were
+taken unawares.
+
+But if he spoke again, he said to himself, they would be ready for him,
+and their answers would probably take the rude form of bullets. So he
+lay still and waited.
+
+There was a growling disputation in the boat. Then one spoke--
+
+“See then, you, Gard! We will haff you yet, now we know where you are.
+If it takes effery man and effery boat in Sark, we will haff you, now we
+know where you are. You do not kill a Sark man like that and go free.
+Noh--pardie!”
+
+“I have killed no man--” A gun rang out in the boat, and the shot
+spatted on the rocks not a yard from him.
+
+Coming in, they knew, meant certain death for one among them, and, keen
+as they were to lay hands on him, no man had any wish to be that one.
+
+The oars creaked away into the darkness, and he climbed to the ridge to
+make sure they made no attempt on the other side.
+
+But discretion had prevailed. One man could not hold L’Etat from
+invasion at half-a-dozen points at once. They could bide their time, and
+take him by force of numbers.
+
+He heard them go creaking off towards the Creux, and turned and went
+back along the ridge to find Nance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
+
+
+Nance was standing by the shelter, and even in the darkness he could
+tell that she was shaking, in spite of her previous vigorous incitement
+to defence.
+
+“You--you didn’t kill any of them?” she asked anxiously.
+
+“No, dear. I warned them off and fired into the water to show them I was
+armed.”
+
+“I was afraid. But, there were two shots.”
+
+“One of them fired back the next time I spoke, but I was expecting it.”
+
+“They are wicked, wicked men, and cruel.”
+
+“They are mistaken, that’s all. But it comes to much the same thing, and
+I don’t see,” he said despondently, “how we are ever to prove it to
+them.”
+
+“They will come again.”
+
+“Yes, they are to come back with every man and every boat in the Island.
+I shall have my hands full. Are there more than these two places where
+they can land?”
+
+“Not good places, and these only when the sea is right. But angry
+men--and ready to shoot you--oh, it is wicked--”
+
+“We must hope the sea will keep them off, and that something may turn up
+to throw some light on the other matter,” he said, trying to comfort
+her, though, in truth, the outlook was not hopeful, and he feared
+himself that his time might be short.
+
+“I will stop here and help you,” she said, with sudden vehemence. “They
+shall not have you. They shall not! They are wicked, crazy men,” and the
+little cloaked figure shook again with the spirit that was in it.
+
+“Dear!” he said, putting his arm round her, and drawing her close. “You
+must not stop. They must not know you have been here. I do not know what
+the end will be. We are in God’s hands, and we have done no wrong. But
+if ... if the worst comes, you will remember all your life, dear, that
+to one man you were as an angel from heaven. Nance! Nance! Oh, my dear,
+how can I tell you all you are to me!”--and as he pressed her to him,
+the bare white arms stole out of the cloak and clasped him tightly round
+the neck.
+
+“But how are you going to get back, little one? You cannot possibly swim
+that Race again?” he asked presently, holding her still in his arms and
+looking down at her anxiously.
+
+“Yes, I can swim,” she said valiantly. “I knew it would be worse than
+usual, and I brought these”--and she slipped from his arms and groped on
+the ground, and presently held up what felt to him in the darkness like
+a pair of inflated bladders with a broad band between them. “And here is
+a little bread and meat, all I could carry tied on to my head. We feared
+you would be starving.”
+
+“You should not have burdened yourself, dear. It might have drowned you.
+And I have eggs--puffins’--”
+
+“Ach!”
+
+“They are better than nothing, and I beat them up with cognac. But are
+you safe in the Race, Nance dear, even with those things?”
+
+“You cannot sink. If Bernel had only taken them! But he laughed at them,
+and now--”
+
+He kissed her sobs away, but was full of anxiety at thought of her in
+the rushing darkness of the Race.
+
+“I will go with you,” he said eagerly, “and you will lend me your
+bladders to get back with.”
+
+“You would never get back to L’Etat in the dark”--and he knew that that
+was true. “We of Sark can see, but you others--”
+
+“I shall be in misery till I know you are all right,” he said anxiously.
+
+“I will run home. My things are in the gorse above Brenière. And I will
+get a lantern and come down by Brenière and wave it to you.”
+
+“Will you do that? It will be like a signal from heaven,” he said
+eagerly, “a signal from heaven waved by an angel from heaven.”
+
+“And to-morrow I will go to the Vicar, and the Sénéchal, and the
+Seigneur, if he has come home, and I will make them stop these wicked
+men from coming here again.”
+
+“Can they?”
+
+“They shall. They must. They are the law and it is not right.”
+
+“It is worth trying, at any rate,” he said cheerfully, as they reached
+the eastern corner and struck down across his puffin-warren to the point
+immediately opposite Brenière. But he had not much hope that the Vicar
+and the Sénéchal and the Seigneur all combined would avail him, for the
+men of Sark are a law unto themselves.
+
+“But I’ve found another hiding-place, Nance, where they could never find
+me.”
+
+“Here?--on L’Etat?”
+
+“Yes--inside. I’ll show you some time, perhaps, if--”
+
+“Is this where you came ashore?” he asked, as she came to a stand on a
+rough black shelf up which the waves hissed white and venomous.
+
+“We--we always landed here when we swam across,” she said, with a little
+break in her voice, as it came home to her again that Bernel would swim
+the Race no more.
+
+“Nance dear, don’t give up hope. He may come back yet.”
+
+“I have only you left, and they want to kill you,” she said sadly.
+
+“I wish I could come with you,” as the dark waters swirled below them.
+“It feels terrible to let you go into that all alone.”
+
+“It is nothing. The tide is dead slack, and I have these”--swinging the
+bladders in her hand--“if I get tired. Oh, if Bern had only taken
+them--”
+
+“I will kneel on the ridge and pray for your safety till I see your
+light. Dear, God keep you, and bless you for all your goodness and
+courage!”
+
+He strained her to him again, as if he could not let her go to that
+colder embrace that awaited her below.
+
+“I could kiss the very rocks you have stood on,” he said passionately.
+
+She kissed him back and dropped the cloak, waited a second till a wave
+had swirled by, then launched into the slack of it, and was gone.
+
+He stood long, peering and listening into the darkness, but heard only
+the welter of the water under the black ledges below, and its scornful
+hiss as it seethed through the fringing sea-weeds.
+
+Then at last he turned and climbed, slowly and heavily, up to the ridge;
+for now he felt the strain of these last full hours, coming on top of
+the longer strain of the storm; and this, and the lack of proper
+feeding, made him feel weak and empty and weary. He knelt down there in
+the darkness, with his face towards the Race where Nance was battling
+with the hungry black waters, and he prayed for her safety as he had
+never prayed for anything in his life before.
+
+“_God keep her! God keep her! God keep her--and bring her safe to land!
+O God, keep her, keep her, keep her, and bring her safe to land!_”
+
+It was a monotonous little prayer, but all his heart was in it, and that
+is all that makes a prayer avail. And when at last, from sheer
+weariness, he sank down on to his heels in science, gazing earnestly out
+into the blackness of the night, his heart prayed on though his lips no
+longer moved.
+
+Could anything have happened to her? Could the black waters have
+swallowed her?
+
+Anything might have happened to her. The waters might have swallowed
+her, as they had Bernel.
+
+The thoughts would surge up behind his prayer, but he prayed them
+down--again and again--and clung to his prayer and his hope.
+
+It seemed hours since they parted, since his last glimpse of her as the
+black waters swallowed the slim white figure, and seemed to laugh
+scornfully at its smallness and weakness.
+
+“_Oh, Nance! Nance! God keep you! God keep you! God keep you! Dear one,
+God keep you! God keep you! God keep you, and bring you safe to land_!”
+
+He was numb with kneeling. If one had come behind him and cut off his
+feet above the ankles, he would have felt no pain. He felt no bodily
+sensation whatever. His body was there on the rock, but his heart was
+out upon the black waters alongside Nance, struggling with her through
+the belching coils, nerving her through the treacherous swirls. And his
+soul--all that was most really and truly him--was agonizing in prayer
+for her before the God to whom he had prayed at his mother’s knee, and
+whom she had taught him to look to as a friend and helper in all times
+of need.
+
+He did not even stop--as he well might have done--to think that the
+friend sought only in time of need might have reasonable ground for
+complaint of neglect at other times.
+
+He thought of nothing but that Nance was out there battling with the
+black waters--that he could not lift a finger to help her--that all he
+could do was to pray for her safety with all his heart and soul.
+
+Then, after an age of this numb agony of waiting, a tiny bead of light
+flickered on the outer darkness, as though Hope with a golden pin-point
+had pricked the black curtain of despair, and let a gleam of her glory
+peep through. It swung to and fro, and he fell forward with his face in
+his ice-cold hands and sobbed, “Thank God! Thank God! She is safe! She
+is safe!”
+
+When he tried to get up, his legs gave way under him, and he had to sit
+and wait till they recovered. And when at last he got under way along
+the ridge, he stumbled like a drunken man.
+
+He tangled his feet in the blanket and fell in a heap. He wondered
+dimly where the cloak was--remembered Nance had worn it till she took to
+the sea--and stumbled off through the dark again to find it. Nance had
+worn it. To him it was sacred.
+
+When he got back with it, he wrapped it round him and crept into his
+shelter and slept like a dog.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END
+
+
+He woke next morning with a start. The sun was high, by the shadow of
+his doorway; and by that same token the tide would be at half-ebb, if
+not lower, and the gates of his fortress at his enemy’s mercy.
+
+He picked up his gun, listened anxiously for sound of him, and then
+crept cautiously out, with a quick glance along each slope.
+
+Nothing!--nothing but the cheerful sun and the cloudless sky, and the
+empty blue plain of the sea, and the birds circling and diving and
+squabbling as usual--and Nance’s little parcel lying where she had
+dropped it. He had had other things to think about last night.
+
+The composure of the birds reassured him somewhat. Still, they might
+have landed on the other side of the rock and be lying in wait for him.
+
+He picked up Nance’s parcel with a feeling of reverence. It might have
+cost her her life, in spite of her bladders. Then he climbed cautiously
+to the ridge and peered over.
+
+Sark lay basking in the sunshine, peaceful and placid, as if no son of
+hers had ever had an ill thought of his neighbour, much less sought his
+blood.
+
+Not a boat was in sight, and the birds on the north slope seemed as
+undisturbed as their fellows on the south.
+
+The invasion in force needed time perhaps to prepare and would be all
+the more conclusive when completed.
+
+Meanwhile, he would eat and watch at the same time, for he felt as empty
+as a drum, and an empty man is not in the pinkest of condition for a
+fight.
+
+Never in his life had he tasted bread so sweet!--and the strips of
+boiled bacon in between came surely from a most unusual pig--a porker of
+sorts, without a doubt, and of most extraordinary attainment in the nice
+balancing of lean and fat, and the induing of both with vital juices of
+the utmost strength and sweetness. Truly, a most celestial pig!--and he
+was very hungry.
+
+Had he been a pagan he would most likely have offered a portion of his
+slim rations as thank-offering to his gods, for they had come to him at
+risk of a girl’s life. As it was, he ate them very thoughtfully to the
+very last crumb, and was grateful.
+
+They had been wrapped in a piece of white linen, and then tied tightly
+in oiled cloth, and were hardly damped with sea-water. The piece of
+linen and the oiled cloth and the bits of cord he folded up carefully
+and put inside his coat.
+
+They spoke of Nance. If they had drowned her she would have gone with
+them tied on to her head. He took them out again, and kissed them, and
+put them back.
+
+Thank God, she had got through safely! Thank God! Thank God!
+
+He shivered in the blaze of the sun as his eyes rested on the waves of
+the Race, bristling up against the run of the tide as usual, and he
+thought of what it might have meant to him this morning.
+
+It had swallowed Bernel. In spite of his hopeful words to Nance, he
+feared the brave lad was gone. And it might have swallowed Nance. And if
+it had--it might as well have him, too. For it was only thought of Nance
+that made life bearable to him.
+
+The sun wheeled his silvery dance along the waters; the day wore
+on;--and still no sign of the invaders. Sark looked as utterly deserted
+as it must have done in the lone days after the monks left it, when, for
+two hundred years, it was given over to the birds, till de Carteret and
+his merry men came across from Jersey and woke it up to life again.
+
+And then, of a sudden, his heart kicked within him as if it would climb
+into his throat and choke him; for, round the distant point of the
+Lâches, a boat had stolen out, and, as he watched it anxiously, there
+came another, and another, and another. They were coming!
+
+Four boat-loads! That ought to be enough to make full sure of him. He
+wondered why they had not come sooner, for the tide was on the rise, and
+the landing-places did not look tempting.
+
+His gun was under his hand, and his powder-flask and his little bag of
+shot. He had no more preparations to make, and he had no wish to fight.
+
+No wish? The thought of it was hateful to him, and yet it was not in
+human nature to give in without a struggle.
+
+But it should be all their doing. All he wanted was to be left in peace.
+Every man has the right to defend his own life.
+
+But then, again--there could be only one end to it, he knew. So why
+fight?
+
+They were coming to make an end of him. What good was it to make an end
+of any of them?
+
+Even if he should succeed in keeping them off this time, the end would
+come all the same, only it would be longer of coming. Why prolong it?
+
+The boats came bounding on like hounds at sight of the quarry. They were
+well filled, four or five men in each boat, besides the oarsmen. Enough,
+surely, to make an end of one lone man.
+
+Would they attempt to land in different places and rush him, he
+wondered. Or would they content themselves with lying off and attempting
+to shoot him down from a distance? The last would be the safest all
+round, both for them and for him--for, landing, they would, for the
+moment, be more or less at his mercy; and, snapping at him from a
+distance, he would have certain chances of cover in his favour.
+
+The top of the ridge was flattened in places, there were even
+depressions here and there, very slight, but quite enough to shelter any
+one lying prone in them from bombardment from sea-level. He chose the
+deepest he could find, and crawled into it, and lay, with his chin in
+his hands, watching the oncoming boats.
+
+If he could have managed it, he would have slipped down to the rock wall
+and crept into his burrow, but it was on that side the boats were
+coming, and the sharp eyes on board would inevitably see him, and so get
+on the track of his hiding-place.
+
+If the chance offered--if they left that end of the rock unspied upon
+for three minutes--he would try it.
+
+They parted at the Quette d’Amont, two going along the south side and
+two along the north. He could hear their voices, their rough jests and
+brief laughter, as they crept past.
+
+It was an odd sensation, this, of lying there like a hunted hare,
+knowing that it was him they were after.
+
+He pressed still closer to the rock, and did not dare to raise his head
+for a look. The voices and the sound of the oars died away, came again,
+died again, as the boats slowly circled the rock, every keen eye on
+board, he knew, searching every nook and cranny for sign of him.
+
+Then a shot rang out, over there towards the south-west, and another,
+and another. Tired of inaction, they were peppering his bee-hive to stir
+him up in case he was fast asleep inside.
+
+The other boats rowed swiftly round to the firing, and he could imagine
+them clustered there in a bunch, watching hopefully for him to come out;
+and his blood boiled and chilled again at thought of what might have
+been if he had been caught napping.
+
+And then, seizing his chance, he crawled to the opposite side of his
+hollow, peeped over, and saw the way clear. If only they would go on
+peppering the bee-hive for another minute or two, he would have time to
+slip down the Sark side of his rock and get to the great wall, and so
+down into his new hiding-place.
+
+If they tried to land, he could perhaps kill or wound two, three,
+half-a-dozen, at risk of his own life. But the end would be the same.
+With a dozen good shots coolly potting at him, he must go down in time,
+and he had no desire either to kill or to be killed.
+
+He wormed himself over the edge of his hollow and hurried along to the
+tumbled rocks, carrying his gun and powder-flask--not that he wanted
+them, but wanted still less to leave them behind. He scrambled over,
+found his marked rocks, and slipped safely under the overhanging slab.
+There he could peep out without danger of being seen; and he was barely
+under cover when the first boat came slowly round again, every bearded
+face intent on the rock, every eye searching for sign of him.
+
+The other boats passed, and as each one came it seemed to him that every
+eye on board looked straight up into his own, and he involuntarily
+shrank down into the shadow of the slab. They could not possibly see
+him, he was certain; and yet a thrill ran through him each time their
+searching glances crossed his own.
+
+The rough jests and laughter of the boats had given way now to angry
+growls at his invisibility. He could hear them cursing him as they
+passed, and even casting doubts on the veracity of his visitors of the
+previous night. And these latter upheld their statements with such
+torrents of red-hot patois that, if they had come to grips and fought
+the matter out, he would not have been in the least surprised.
+
+Then there came a long interval, when no boats came round. They had
+probably taken their courage in their hands and landed, and were
+searching the island. He dropped noiselessly into his well and clambered
+up into the tunnel, and lay there with only his head out.
+
+And, sure enough, before long he heard the sound of big sea-boots
+climbing heavily over the rock wall, and the voices of their owners as
+they passed.
+
+What would they do next, he wondered. Would they imagine him flown, as
+the result of their last night’s visit? Or would they believe him still
+on the island and bound to come out of his hiding-place sooner or later?
+Would they give it up and go home? Or would they leave a guard to trap
+him when hunger and thirst brought him out?
+
+He lay patiently in the mouth of his tunnel till long after the last
+glimmer of light had faded from under the big slabs that covered in his
+well. More than once he heard voices, and once they came so close that
+he was sure they had come upon his tracks, and he crept some distance
+down his tunnel to be out of sight. But the alarm proved a false one,
+and the time passed very slowly.
+
+As he lay, he thought of the dead man with the bound hands and feet in
+the silent chamber behind him, bound by the forebears of these men, who,
+in turn, were seeking him, and would treat him as ruthlessly if they
+found him.
+
+He took the lesson to heart, and braced himself to patient endurance,
+though, indeed, he began to ask himself gloomily what was the use of it
+all. In the end, their venomous persistence must make an end of him. One
+man could not fight for ever against a whole community.
+
+And at that he chided himself. Not a whole community! For was not Nance
+on his side--hoping and praying and working for him with all her might
+and main? And her mother, and Grannie, and the Vicar, and the Doctor,
+and the Sénéchal? He was sure they all knew him far too well to doubt
+him. And all these and the Truth must surely prevail.
+
+But the long strain had been sore on him, and in spite of his anxieties
+he fell asleep in his hole, and dreamed that the dead man came crawling
+down the tunnel, and dragged him back into the chamber, and tied his
+hands and feet, and went away, and left him to die there all alone. And
+so strong was the impression upon him that, when he woke, he lay
+wondering who had loosed his bonds, and could not make out how he had
+got back into the mouth of the tunnel.
+
+It was still quite dark. He was stiff with lying in that cramped place.
+He was strongly tempted to climb out and see how matters lay. For he
+might be able to find out in the dark, whereas daylight would make him
+prisoner again.
+
+He wanted eggs, too. Nance’s provision had served him well all day, but
+if he had to spend another day there something more would be welcome.
+
+But then it struck him that if he went up in the dark he might never be
+able to find his way back again. The cleft under the slab was difficult
+to hit upon even in daylight. There were scores of just similar ragged
+black holes among the tumbled rocks of the great wall.
+
+As he lay pondering it all, the grim idea came into his head of dragging
+the dead man through the tunnel, and hoisting him up outside, and
+leaving him propped up among the boulders where they would be sure to
+find him.
+
+He knew how arrantly superstitious they were, most of them. They had
+been brought up on ghosts and witches and evil spirits, and, fearless as
+they might be of things mortal and natural, all that bordered on the
+unknown and uncanny held for them unimaginable terrors. The dead man
+might serve a useful purpose after all; and the grim idea grew.
+
+He could decide nothing, however, till he learned if he had the rock to
+himself; and he determined to take the risk of finding this out.
+
+He cautiously climbed the well, and by the look of the stars he judged
+it still very early morning. A brooding grey darkness covered the sea;
+the sky was dark even in the east.
+
+He slipped off his coat and left it hanging out of the cleft as a
+landmark, and lowered himself silently from rock to rock, till he stood
+among the rank grasses below.
+
+Food first--so, after patient listening for smallest sound or sign of a
+watch, he crept down to the slope where the puffins’ nests were, and,
+wrapping his hand in Nance’s napkin, managed to get out a dozen eggs
+from as many different holes, in spite of the fierce objections of their
+legitimate owners.
+
+He tied these up carefully in the blood-spotted cloth, and carried them
+up to his cleft. Then he stole away like a shadow, to find out, if he
+could, if there was any one else on the rock besides himself and the
+dead man.
+
+There had been hot disputes on that head in the boats. Those who were
+there for the first time had even gone the length of casting strongest
+possible doubts as to whether those who were there the night before had
+seen or heard anything whatever, and did not hesitate to state their
+belief that they were all on a fool’s errand. The others replied in
+kind, and when the further question was mooted as to keeping watch all
+night, the scoffers told the others to keep watch if they chose; for
+themselves, they were going home to their beds.
+
+“Frightened of ghosts, I s’pose,” growled one.
+
+“No more than yourself, John Drillot. But we’ve wasted a day on this
+same fooling, and the man’s not here; and for me, I doubt if he’s ever
+been here.”
+
+“And what of the things we found in the shelter?” said Drillot. “Think
+they came there of themselves?”
+
+“I don’t care how they came there. It’s not old cloaks and blankets we
+came after. Maybe he has been here. I don’t know. But he’s not here now,
+and I’ve had enough of it.”
+
+“B’en! I’m not afraid to stop all night--if anyone’ll stop with me”--and
+if no one had offered he would have been just as well pleased. “Don’t
+know as I’d care to stop all alone.”
+
+“Frightened of ghosts, maybe,” scoffed the other.
+
+“You stop with me, Tom Guille, and we’ll see which is frightenedest of
+ghosts, you or me.”
+
+But Tom Guille believed in ghosts as devoutly as any old woman in Sark,
+and he was bound for home, no matter what the rest chose to do.
+
+“There’s not a foot of the rock we haven’t searched,” said he, “and the
+man’s not here; so what’s the use of waiting all night?”
+
+“Because if he’s in hiding it’s at night he’ll come out.”
+
+“Come out of where?”
+
+“Wherever he’s got to.”
+
+“That’s Guernsey, most likely. His friends have arranged to lift him off
+here first chance that came; and it came before we did, and you’ll not
+see him in these parts again, I warrant you.”
+
+“I’ll wait with you, John, if you’re set on it, though I doubt Tom’s
+right, and the man’s gone,” said Peter Vaudin of La Ville. And John
+Drillot found himself bound to the adventure.
+
+“Do we keep the boat?” asked Vaudin.
+
+“No ... for then one of us must sit in her all night, or she will bump
+herself to pieces. You will come back for us in the morning, Philip.”
+
+“I’ll come,” said Philip Guille, and presently they stood watching the
+boats pulling lustily homewards, and devoutly wishing they were in them.
+
+Every foot of the rock, as they knew it, had already been carefully
+raked over. The possible hiding-places were few. But no one knows better
+than a Sark man what rocks can do in the way of slits and tunnels and
+caves, and it was just this possibility that had set John Drillot to his
+unwonted, and none too welcome, task. The murderer--as he deemed
+Gard--might have found some place unknown to any of them, and might be
+lying quietly waiting for them to go. If that was so, he must come out
+sooner or later, and the chances were that he would steal out in the
+night.
+
+So the two watchers prowled desultorily about the rock, poking again
+into every place that suggested possible concealment for anything larger
+than a puffin. There might be openings in the rifted basement rocks
+which only the full ebb would discover, and these might lead up into
+chambers where a man could lie high and dry till the tide allowed him
+out again. And so they hung precariously over the waves and poked and
+peered, and found nothing.
+
+They had clambered over the great wall more than once before Vaudin
+said: “G’zamin, John, I wonder if there’s any holes here big enough to
+take a man?”
+
+“He’d have to be a little one, and this Gard’s not that,” and they
+stood looking at the wall. “’Sides, them rocks lie on the rock itself,
+and there’s no depth to them.”
+
+But Vaudin was not sure that there might not be room for a man to lie
+flat under some of the big slabs, and began to poke about among them.
+
+“Some one’s been up here,” he said, pointing to one of Gard’s own
+scorings.
+
+“Bin up there four times myself,” said Drillot, “an’ so have all the
+rest. There’s no room to hide a man there, Peter. If he’s hid anywhere,
+he’ll come out in the night. Maybe Philip Guille’s right, and he’s safe
+in Guernsey by this. Come along to that shelter and let’s have a drink.”
+
+They had their bottle out of the boat, and they had also come upon
+Gard’s bottle of cognac, of which quite half remained. It was a finer
+cordial than their own, so they sat drinking them turn about, and
+watching the sun set, and chatting spasmodically, till it grew too dark
+to do more than sit still with safety.
+
+They were by no means drunk, but the spirits had made them heavy, and
+when John Drillot solemnly suggested that they should keep watch about,
+Peter Vaudin as solemnly agreed, and offered to take first duty.
+
+So John curled his length inside the bee-hive, and made himself
+comfortable with Gard’s cloak and blanket, and was presently snoring
+like a whole pig-sty. And that had a soporific effect on Peter. He had
+only stopped behind to oblige John, and personally had little
+expectation of anything coming of it. Moreover, the night air was
+chilly. If he could get that cloak from John now! He crawled in to try,
+but big John was rolled up like a caterpillar. It was warmer inside
+there than out, anyway. And he could keep watch there just as well as
+outside; so he propped himself up alongside John, and braced his mind to
+sentry duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE
+
+
+Having lodged his eggs in a ledge under the big slab, Gard stole away to
+learn, if he could, if he had the rock all to himself.
+
+He wanted water, and he wanted his bottle of cognac and the tin dipper;
+for puffins’ eggs, while not unpalatable beaten up with cognac, are of a
+flavour calculated to exercise the strongest stomach when eaten raw.
+
+He feared the men would have made away with all his small possessions,
+but he could only try. So he stole like a shadow round the crown of the
+ridge and along towards the shelter, standing at times motionless for
+whole minutes till the rush of the waves below should pass and give him
+chance of hearing.
+
+But on L’Etat the sound of many waters never ceases night or day, and
+the night wind hummed among the stones of the shelter, and, as it
+happened, John Drillot had just lurched over in avoidance of a lump of
+rock which was intruding on his comfort, and in so doing had lodged his
+heavy boot in Peter Vaudin’s ribs, and so their sonorous duet was
+stilled, and neither of them was very sound asleep, when Gard, after
+listening anxiously and hearing nothing, dropped on his hands and knees
+and felt cautiously inside.
+
+Peter felt the blind hand groping in the dark, and was wide awake in an
+instant. He hurled himself at the intruder, as well as a man could who
+had been lying back against the wall half asleep a moment before; and
+Gard turned and sped away along the side of the ridge, with Peter at his
+heels and John Drillot thundering ponderously in the rear.
+
+“What is’t, Peter boy?” shouted John.
+
+“It’s him. This way!” yelled Peter, out of the dimness in front, as he
+stumbled and staggered along the ragged inadequacies of the ridge.
+
+If Gard had had time for consideration, he would have led them a chase
+elsewhere first, but, in the sudden upsetting of lighting on what he had
+persuaded himself was not there, he lost his head and made straight for
+cover.
+
+Peter Vaudin was at the base of the rock wall as he wriggled silently
+under the big slab, and it was only by a violent jerk that he got his
+foot clear of Peter’s grip. And Peter, strung to the occasion, kept his
+hand on the spot where the foot had disappeared, and waited a moment for
+John Drillot to come up before he followed it.
+
+“Gone in here,” he jerked, as he climbed cautiously up.
+
+“Can’t have gone far, then,” panted John. “Sure it was him?”
+
+“Had him by the foot, but he got loose. Here we are,” as he poked about,
+and came at last on the hole below the slab. “Come on, John ... can’t be
+far away.... Big hole”--as he kicked about down below--“no bottom, far
+as I can see.”
+
+“Best wait for daylight, to see where we’re getting.”
+
+“Oui gia! Man doux, it’s not me’s going down here till I know what’s
+below.”
+
+So they sat and kicked their heels and waited for the day, certain in
+their own minds that their quarry was run to earth and as good as
+caught.
+
+Gard had swept down both his coat and his cloth full of eggs in his
+sudden entrance. He stood at the bottom of the well to see if they would
+follow, while Peter’s long legs kicked about for foothold. He heard them
+decide to wait for daylight, and then he noiselessly picked up his coat
+and his soppy bundle of broken eggs, pushed them into the tunnel, and
+crawled in after them.
+
+He was trapped, indeed, but he doubted very much if any fisherman on
+Sark would venture down that tunnel. They were brawny men, used to leg
+and elbow room, and, as a rule, heartily detested anything in the shape
+of underground adventure. They might, of course, get over some miners to
+explore for them. Or they might content themselves with sitting down on
+top of his hole until he was starved out. In any case, his rope was
+nearly run; but yet he was not disposed to shorten it by so much as an
+inch.
+
+As he wormed his way along the tunnel, the recollection of those other
+openings off the dead man’s cave came back to him. He would try them. He
+pushed on with a spurt of hope.
+
+The tunnel was not nearly so long now that he knew where he was going;
+in fact, now that nothing but it stood between him and capture, it
+seemed woefully inadequate.
+
+When his head and elbows no longer grazed rock he dropped his coat and
+crawled into the chamber. He felt his way round to the dried packages,
+and cautiously emptied half-a-dozen and prepared them for his use.
+
+This set him sneezing so violently that it seemed impossible that the
+watchers outside should not hear him. It also gave him an idea.
+
+He struck a light and kindled one of his torches, and the dead man
+leaped out of the darkness at him as before. That gave him another idea.
+
+Propping up his light on the floor, he emptied package after package of
+the powdered tobacco into the tunnel, and wafted it down towards the
+entrance with his jacket. Then with his knife he cut the lashings from
+the dead man’s hands and feet, and carried him across--he was very
+light, for all his substance had long since withered out of him--and
+laid him in the tunnel as though he was making his way out.
+
+If he knew anything of Sark men and miners, he felt fairly secure for
+some time to come, so he sat himself down, as far as possible from the
+snuff, and made such a meal as was possible off puffins’ eggs, mixed
+good and bad and unredeemed by any palliating odour and flavour. They
+were not appetising, but they stayed his stomach for the time being.
+
+It was only then that he remembered that he had left his gun and
+powder-flask behind him. He had placed them on a ledge just inside the
+mouth of the tunnel, and in his haste had forgotten to pick them up. He
+had no intention of using them, however, and he would not go back for
+them.
+
+When his scanty meal was done, he cautiously emptied a number of the
+packages and rolled them into torches, and deliberated as to which of
+the black openings he should attempt first.
+
+That one opposite, out of which the dead man’s legs sprawled
+grotesquely, was the one by which he had entered. This one, then, near
+which he sat, must run on towards the centre of the island--if it ran on
+at all; and, since all were equally unknown and hopeful, he would try
+this first.
+
+His tarred paper torches, though they burned with a clear flame, gave
+forth a somewhat pungent odour, so he kicked one of the small barrels to
+pieces, and with three of the staves and a piece of string made a holder
+which would carry the torch upright, and also permit him to lay it on
+the ground or push it in front of him, if need be.
+
+The first tunnel ran in about thirty feet, and then the slant of the
+roof met the floor at so sharp an angle that further passage was
+impossible.
+
+The second, third, and fourth the same; and he began to fear they were
+all blind alleys leading nowhere.
+
+The openings near his own entrance tunnel he had left till the last,
+since they obviously led outwards.
+
+Two of them shut down in the same way as all the others, and it was only
+the dogged determination to leave no chance untried that drove him, with
+a fresh supply of torches, down the last one of all, the one alongside
+that out of which the dead man’s legs projected.
+
+It took a turn to the left within a dozen feet of the entrance, and,
+like the rest, it presently narrowed down through a slope in the roof;
+but just at its narrowest, when he feared he had come to the end, there
+came a dip in the flooring corresponding to the slope up above, and he
+found he could wriggle through. Once through, the passage widened and
+continued to widen, and the going became very rough and broken, with
+piles of ragged rock and deep black pitfalls in between.
+
+Then, of a sudden, he saw the walls and roof of his passage fall away,
+and his light flickered feebly in the darkness of a vast place, and he
+crouched on the rock up which he had climbed, and sat in wonder.
+
+Somewhere below him he could hear the slow rise and fall of water, dull
+and heavy and without any splash, like the dumb breathing of a captive
+monster.
+
+And every now and again there came, from somewhere beyond, a low dull
+thud, like the blow of a padded hammer, and a distant subdued rustle
+along the outside of the darkness. He knew it was not inside the place
+he was in, for he could hear the soft rise and fall of the water quite
+clearly, but these other sounds came to him from a distance, muted as
+though his ears had suddenly gone deaf.
+
+“Those dull blows,” he said to himself, “are the waves on the outside of
+L’Etat. That low rustling is the rush of them along the lower rocks. The
+water inside here probably comes in through some openings below
+tide-level. I am quite safe here, even if they get past the dead man’s
+cave--quite safe until I starve. Unless there are fish to be had”--and
+he felt a spark of hope. “And maybe there are devil-fish”--and he
+shivered and glanced below and about him fearfully.
+
+His homely torch did no more than faintly illumine the rock he sat on
+and those close at hand, and cast a gigantic uncouth shadow of himself
+on the rough wall behind. All beyond was solid darkness, blacker even
+than a black Sark night.
+
+He sat wondering vaguely if any before him had penetrated to that
+strange place. It was odd and uncanny to feel that his eyes were the
+very first to look upon it. And then, away in front, and apparently at a
+great distance above him, he became aware of a difference in the solid
+darkness. It seemed almost as though it had thinned. His eye had seemed
+able for a moment to carry beyond the narrow circle of the torch, but
+when he peered into the void to see what this might mean, it all seemed
+solid as before.
+
+As his straining eyes sought relief in something visible, their
+side-glance caught once more that same impression of movement in the
+darkness. And presently it came again and stronger--a strange greenish
+fluttering up in the roof--very faint, as though the roof were smoke on
+which a soft green light played for a moment and vanished.
+
+But by degrees the light grew, though at no time did it become more than
+a wan ghost of a light, and from its curious fluttering he judged that
+it came through water.
+
+Reasoning from the trend of the cavern, he came to the conclusion that
+somewhere on that further side there were openings into the deep water
+beyond, on which the sunlight played and struck at times into the cave,
+and he was keen to look more closely into it.
+
+He lowered his torch to the side of his rock, and its feeble flicker
+fell on a chaos of rocks below. He looked long and cautiously for supple
+yellow arms or tiny whip-like threads which might coil suddenly round
+his legs and drag him to hideous death.
+
+But he saw nothing of the kind. The rocks were dry and bare, not a
+limpet nor a sea-weed visible, and leaving his jacket for a landmark as
+before, he slowly let himself down from one huge boulder to another,
+till he found himself climbing another great pile in front.
+
+When at last his head rose above this ridge, he almost rolled over at
+the sight of two huge green eyes blinking lazily at him out of the
+darkness in front--two great openings far below sea-level, through which
+filtered dimly the wavering green light whose refractions fluttered in
+the roof.
+
+The vast trough below him heaved gently now and then, with a ponderous
+solemnity which filled him with awe. He felt himself an intruder. He
+felt like a fly creeping about a sleeping tiger. He hardly dared to
+breathe, lest the brooding spirit of the place should rise suddenly out
+of some dark corner and squash him on his rock as one does a crawling
+insect; and his anxious eyes swept to and fro for the smallest sign of
+danger.
+
+But, plucking up courage from immunity, and dreading to be caught in the
+dark in that weird place, he crawled over the boulders towards the side
+wall of the cavern to get as near to those openings as possible. From
+the very slight movement of the water, which was ever on the boil round
+the outside of L’Etat, he judged them deep down among the roots of the
+island, far below the turmoil of the surface, but he must see and make
+sure.
+
+With infinite toil and many a scrape and bruise, he got round at last,
+and could look right down into the dim green depths, and what he saw
+there filled him with sickening fear.
+
+The water was crystal clear, and in through the nearer opening, as he
+looked, a huge octopus propelled itself in leisurely fashion, its great
+tentacles streaming out behind, its hideous protruding eyes searching
+eagerly for prey.
+
+Just inside the opening it gathered itself together for a moment, and
+seemed to look so meaningly right up into his eyes that he found himself
+shrinking behind a rock lest it should see him. Then it clamped itself
+to the side of the opening and spread wide its arms for anything that
+might come its way.
+
+He watched it, fascinated. He saw fishes large and small unconsciously
+touch the quivering tentacles, which on the instant twisted round them
+and dragged them in to the rending beak below the hideous eyes. And then
+he saw another similar monster come floating in on similar quest, and in
+a moment they were locked in deadly fight--such a writhing and coiling
+and straining and twisting of monstrous fleshy limbs, which swelled and
+thrilled, and loosed and gripped, with venom past believing--such a
+clamping to this rock and that--such tremendous efforts at dislodgment.
+
+It was a nightmare. It sickened him. He turned and crawled feebly away,
+anxious only now to get out of this awful place without falling foul of
+any similar monsters among the rocks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR
+
+
+From the headland above Brenière, Nance had watched the boats go
+plunging across to L’Etat.
+
+Very early that morning she had sped across the Coupée and up the long
+roads to the Seigneurie, but the Seigneur was away in Guernsey still,
+busied on the vital matter of raising still more money for the mines in
+which he was a firm believer, mortgaging his Seigneurie for the purpose,
+assured in his own mind that all would be well in the end.
+
+Then to the Vicar and the Sénéchal, and these set off at once for the
+harbour, but found themselves powerless in the face of public opinion.
+Argument and remonstrance alike fell on deaf ears. The Vicar appealed to
+their sense of right; the Sénéchal forbade their going. But their minds
+were doggedly set on it, and they went.
+
+“I shall hold you to account,” stormed Philip Guille.
+
+“B’en, M. le Sénéchal, we’ll pay it all among us,” and away they went;
+and back to her look-out by Brenière went Nance, and the Vicar with her
+for comfort in this dark hour.
+
+They watched the boats circling the rock, round and round. They heard
+the firing, and Nance flung herself on the ground in an agony of
+weeping, sure that the end had come. For they could only be firing at
+Gard, and what could one man do against so many?
+
+“They have killed him,” she moaned.
+
+And the Vicar could only tighten his pale lips, and smooth her hair with
+his thin white hand, as she writhed on the ground at his side. For he
+could but think she was right. They were good shots, the Sark men, and
+it needs but one bullet to kill a man.
+
+If Nance had looked a moment longer she might have seen Gard slip down
+from the ridge to the wall, but the bombardment of the shelter, which
+gave him his chance, made an end of her hopes, and her face was hidden
+in the turf.
+
+The Vicar’s sight was not keen enough to see clearly what was passing.
+But when the men landed on the rock, and overran it in their search, he
+could not fail to see their figures on the ridge against the sky, and an
+exclamation of surprise roused Nance.
+
+“What is it?” she jerked.
+
+“They have landed over there. They seem to be searching the rock.”
+
+“Then--” and she sat up suddenly and gazed intently across at L’Etat,
+and then sprang to her feet, a new creature. “For, see you, Mr
+Cachemaille,” she cried, “if they had killed him they would not be
+searching for him, nenni-gia!”
+
+“That is true, child,” said the Vicar hopefully, and then, less
+hopefully, “but where shall a man hide on L’Etat?”
+
+“Ah now! I remember. Just as I was leaving him last night, he told me--”
+
+“As you were leaving him--last night?” and the old man gazed at her as
+though he doubted his ears or her right senses.
+
+“But yes,” she cried impatiently. “I swam across there last night to see
+if Bernel was there and to take him some food. But you are not to tell
+that to any one. And he told me--”
+
+“You swam across?--to L’Etat?”
+
+“Yes, yes! We have done it many times, and, besides, I had the
+bladders--”
+
+The Vicar shook his head helplessly. She forgot to explain so much that
+he did not understand. But he grasped at one thread.
+
+“And Bernel?”
+
+“Ah, my poor Bernel! He is drowned,” she said, with a heave of the
+breast, but with her eyes intent on L’Etat. “I wanted him to take the
+bladders, but he would not; and it was the first night after the storm,
+you see, and the waves were big still, and he never got to L’Etat, and
+he never came back; so, you see--”
+
+“Truly, you are being sorely tried, my child. But your brother was a
+better swimmer than most. May we not hope--”
+
+But she shook her head, intent on the doings on the rock, and full, for
+the moment, of the hope she could draw from Gard’s hint about a
+hiding-place of which she knew nothing. For if she and Bernel had never
+discovered it, how should these others? And obviously they were
+searching, for they prowled about the rock like ants, and poked here and
+there, and wandered on and came back. And if they still sought they had
+not yet found; and so there was a new spring of hope in her heart.
+
+“Yes, truly, they are searching,” she murmured, and forgot the Vicar
+and all else.
+
+He tried to induce her to go back home with him, but she would not move.
+For the moment all her hope in life was in peril on the rock, and she
+must see all that went on; and finally he had to leave her there, and
+she hardly knew that he had gone. She wanted only to be left alone, to
+nurse her new-born hope and watch in fear and trembling for any symptom
+of its overthrow.
+
+But she was not to be left in peace, for Madame Julie had heard the
+firing also, and had come round the headland by the miners’ cottages,
+exulting in the fact that her enemy was run to earth at last and was
+meeting righteous punishment.
+
+And as she prowled about there, chafing at the delay in the return of
+the boats, she came suddenly on Nance gazing out at L’Etat with a
+face--not, as Julie would have expected, downcast and woe-begone, but
+full of eager expectancy. And the sight of her, and in such case,
+stirred Julie to venom.
+
+“Ah then--there you are, mademoiselle, listening to the end of your
+fancy gentleman! And the right end, too, ma foi! A man that goes
+knocking his neighbours on the head--it’s right he should be shot like a
+rabbit--”
+
+Nance’s face quivered, but she did not even look round.
+
+“You’ll see them coming back presently, and they’ll bring his body back
+with them in the boat, all full of holes. And then I’ll feel that my
+Tom’s paid for--”
+
+“Do you hear?” she cried, planting herself in front of Nance, and
+jerking her hands up and down in her excitement and the exaspeiation of
+receiving no response. “Do you hear me--you? Or are you gone crazy for
+love of your murderer?”--and she made as though to lay wild hands on the
+girl.
+
+“You are wicked! You are evil! You are a devil!” said Nance through her
+little white teeth, and looked so as though she might fly at her that
+Julie drew off.
+
+“Aha--spitfire!--wildcat!--you would bite?”
+
+Nance, all ashake with disgust, stooped suddenly and picked up a lump of
+rock.
+
+“Go!” she said, in a voice of such concentrated fury that it was little
+more than a whisper. “Go!--before I do you ill;” and she looked so like
+it that Julie turned and fled, expecting the rock between her shoulders
+at every step.
+
+But the rock was on the ground, and Nance was intent again on L’Etat.
+
+She stood there watching, until she saw the boats put off, and then she
+turned and sped like a rabbit--across the waste lands--across the
+Coupée--over Clos Bourel fields into Dixcart--over Hog’s Back to the
+Creux.
+
+She ran through the tunnel just as the boats came up, and her eyes were
+wide with expectant fear, as they swept them hungrily.
+
+“What have you done then, out there, Philip Vaudin?” she cried, as his
+boat’s nose grated on the shingle.
+
+“Pardi, ma garche, we have done nothing.”
+
+“But the shooting?”
+
+“Some one shot at the shelter to see if he was inside, and the rest shot
+because they thought there must be something to shoot at.”
+
+“And you have not got him?” asked another disappointedly.
+
+“Never even seen him.”
+
+“Ah ba!”
+
+“Either he’s gone or he’s under cover, though, ma fé, I don’t know where
+he’d find it on L’Etat,” and Nance’s heart beat hopefully. “However,
+John Drillot and Peter Vaudin are stopping the night in case he is still
+there and ventures out of his hole,” and her heart sank again, and
+kicked rebelliously that a man should be hunted thus, like a rabbit.
+
+She spent a night of misery, wondering what was happening on L’Etat, and
+was at her post above Brenière as soon as it was light.
+
+She saw Philip Vaudin come round from the Creux in his boat and run
+across to the rock, and almost as soon as he had disappeared round
+Quette d’Amont, he came speeding back, alone, and not to the harbour,
+but straight to the fishermen’s rough landing-place inside Brenière.
+
+“What is it then, Philip?” she asked anxiously, as he hauled himself up
+the rocks on to the turf.
+
+“I’ve come for two miners,” he panted, for he had come quickly. “They’ve
+run him to earth in a hole, but they won’t either of them go in after
+him, and they want some one who will.”
+
+“Ah, then!”
+
+“Yes. He came out in the night, and they chased him, but he got into his
+hole, and they’re sitting on it ever since,” and he hurried away through
+the waste of gorse and bracken to the miners’ cottages.
+
+Volunteers were evidently not over plentiful. It was a considerable time
+before he came back with a Welshman, Evan Morgan, and a young
+Cornishman, John Trevna, and neither of them seemed over eager for the
+job.
+
+“For, see you,” had been Morgan’s view, “coing in a hole after a man
+what hass a gun iss not a nice pissness, no inteet!” and the Cornishman
+agreed with him.
+
+However, they put off, and Nance crouched in the bracken and watched all
+their doings.
+
+She had long since caught sight of John Drillot and Peter Vaudin sitting
+on the rock wall, and wondered what kind of a hiding-place Gard could
+possibly have found therein. A poor one, she feared, and that the end
+would be quick.
+
+The boat disappeared round the corner, and presently she saw the three
+men join the others at the wall, and they all clustered there and
+talked, and then one by one they disappeared into the wall itself, and
+she sat watching in fear and trembling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT
+
+
+“It iss better to sit here two, three days till he comse out than to go
+in and get yourself killt, yes inteet!” was the burden of Evan Morgan’s
+answer to all their arguments for a speedy assault. And “Iss, sure!” was
+Trevna’s curt, complete endorsement.
+
+But when, at John Drillot’s suggestion, they had squeezed under the slab
+to have a look at what lay below, and had peered down the slit that Gard
+tried first, and had then lighted on the tunnel, and had found the gun
+and powder-flask jammed in a crevice--that put a different face on the
+matter.
+
+And, after prolonged discussion as to the proper method of procedure,
+especially in the matter of precedence, it was at last arranged that
+Evan Morgan should go first with his miner’s lamp, and that John Trevna
+should follow close behind, carrying the gun.
+
+“And iss it understood that I shoot him if I see him?” asked Trevna, to
+make sure of his ground and make his conscience easy.
+
+“Pardi, yes, mon gars! Shoot straight, and the Island will thank you,”
+asserted John Drillot.
+
+“Ant for Heaven’s sake, John Trevna, see you ton’t shoot me behint by
+mistake,” urged Evan Morgan; and they disappeared slowly into the
+tunnel, while the other two stood waiting expectantly in the well.
+
+Accustomed as they were to narrow places, this long worm-hole of a
+tunnel, with the doubtful possibilities that lay beyond it, seemed as
+endless to the militant members of the expedition as it did to the
+waiters outside.
+
+Occasionally a hollow sound came booming down the tunnel, when one or
+other grunted out a word of objurgation on the narrowness of things, but
+for the most part they wormed along in silence, Morgan shifting forward
+his lamp, foot by foot, and straining his eyes into the darkness ahead,
+Trevna close behind with his gun at full cock and ready for instant
+action.
+
+“Gad’rabotin, but they take their time, those two!” said John Drillot,
+impatiently, outside.
+
+“It iss going right through to Wailee, I do think,” growled Evan Morgan
+inside.
+
+And it was just after that that there broke out in the depths of the
+tunnel a commotion so extraordinary that the listeners outside could
+make nothing at all of it, and could only lurch about in amazement and
+climb up and push their heads into the tunnel, and wonder what it all
+meant. Then, in the midst of the turmoil, there came the thunderous
+bellow of the gun, and after a time a trickle of thin blue smoke floated
+lazily out and hung about the well; and the men outside sniffed
+appreciatively, and said, “Ch’est b’en!” and waited hopefully.
+
+Evan Morgan, shifting forward his light, got an impression of something
+in the narrow way in front, and suddenly he was taken with the biggest
+fit of sneezing he had ever had in his life. He banged down the lamp
+and threw up his head till it cracked against the roof, then banged his
+chin against the floor, and finally propped himself, like a sick dog, on
+his two front paws, and sneezed and sneezed and sneezed for dear life.
+
+Then John Trevna began. He had the sense to lay down his gun, or Morgan
+might have got the charge in his back. And so they sneezed in concert,
+until their heads were clearer than they had been for many a day. And
+the sound of it all to those outside was like the sound of mortal
+combat.
+
+Then Morgan, wiping his streaming eyes on the sleeve of his coat, in a
+state of extreme exhaustion, caught sight of that which lay just beyond
+him, and he saw that it was a man crawling down the tunnel to meet him.
+
+“Shoot, John, shoot! He iss here,” he yelled, and laid himself flat to
+give Trevna his chance.
+
+And Trevna, between two sneezes, picked up his gun, though he could see
+nothing to shoot at, and ran the barrel forward above Morgan’s head and
+fired, and the roar of it in that confined space came near to deafening
+them both.
+
+The smoke hung thick and choked them, as they gasped it in in gulps
+while they sneezed, and the light had gone out with the concussion.
+
+They lay for a time exhausted. Then the atmosphere cleared somewhat, and
+they lay in the thick darkness straining their ears for any sound, but
+heard nothing.
+
+“What did you see, Evan Morgan?” whispered Trevna at last.
+
+“It wass a man.”
+
+“Then I have killed him, for he does not move. Can you light the lamp?”
+
+“I can not--in here. I am coing out. I haf hat enough of this.”
+
+“We must take him out, too.”
+
+“You can tek him, then, John Trevna. I haf hat enough of him and this
+hole.”
+
+“Don’t be a fool, Evan Morgan. If it wass a man, and he got that load in
+him as close as that, he iss deader than Tom Hamon.”
+
+“Well, you can go an’ see. I am coing out,” and he began to wriggle
+backwards, and Trevna was fain to go too.
+
+But presently they came to one of the somewhat wider places where the
+wall had fallen away, and Trevna squeezed himself tightly into this.
+
+“You go on, then, Evan Morgan,” he said, “if you can get past, and I
+will go back and bring him out.”
+
+“You are a fool, John Trevna, to meddle with him any more. Iff the man
+iss dead, he iss just as well left there.”
+
+“If he iss dead he cannot harm me, and I would like to see the man I
+have killed.”
+
+“Ugh!” grunted Morgan, and crawled on, legs first.
+
+Trevna wormed along up the tunnel, groping cautiously in front of him at
+each forward lurch, and at last his hands fell on what he sought, and at
+the same moment he began sneezing again.
+
+It would be no easy job dragging a dead man all down that tunnel, he
+thought. But when, after cautious feeling here and there, he got a grip
+of the man’s coat collar, to his surprise it came away in his hand, but
+at the same time it seemed to him that the body was extraordinarily
+light.
+
+He tried again with a fresh grip on the coat, but it tore like paper,
+and, after thinking it over, he unstrapped his leather belt and got it
+round the man below the armpits, and so was able to haul him slowly
+along.
+
+When Evan Morgan’s wriggling legs came slowly out of the tunnel, John
+Drillot and Peter Vaudin were almost dancing with excitement, and their
+first surprise was the sight of him when, by rights, John Trevna should
+have been the one to come out first.
+
+“Well then? What have you done? And where is John Trevna?” cried John
+Drillot.
+
+“Ach! He iss a fool. He hass shot the man and now he will pring him out
+when he woult pe much petter buried where he iss.”
+
+“He’s quite right. What was all the noise about?”
+
+“That wass the shooting.”
+
+“Before that. You all seemed to be howling at once.”
+
+“That wass the sneezing. It iss full of sneezing down there,” and his
+red eyes still showed the effect of it.
+
+It was a long time before they heard the laboured sounds of Trevna’s
+coming. But at last his legs wriggled out, then his body, then with a
+lurch he hauled up to the mouth of the tunnel that which he had brought
+with him. And at sight of it they all started back against the sides of
+the well, with various cries but equal amazement.
+
+“O mon Gyu!” cried Peter Vaudin.
+
+“Thousand devils!” cried John Drillot.
+
+“Heavens an’ earth!” gasped Evan Morgan.
+
+John Trevna gazed open-mouthed, for he had little breath left in him.
+
+And from the black mouth of the tunnel the strange and terrible figure
+of the dead man looked quietly down at them and filled them with
+amazement.
+
+Trevna’s heavy charge had blown in the top of the skull. The shrunken
+yellow face wore the gaunt eager look of one who had died the slow death
+of starvation. It seemed to be trying to get at them to bite and rend
+them.
+
+Peter Vaudin was the first to climb the wall behind him, but the rest
+were close at his heels, and hustled him up through the crack under the
+slab.
+
+Peter struck down towards the landing-place the moment he had wriggled
+through.
+
+“Stop then, Peter,” called John Drillot, in a low insistent voice, lest
+that dreadful thing below should hear him.
+
+“Not me! I’ve had enough, John Drillot. That is not what we came for ...
+and I had hold of its leg last night,” and he shivered at the
+recollection, and the thought that it might have turned on him and
+gripped him with its grisly hands.
+
+“I don’t know what it is,” began John Drillot, “but--”
+
+“It’s the man I shot inside there,” said Trevna.
+
+“That man hass peen det a hundert years,” said Morgan.
+
+“All the same, he was running about last night,” said Peter, “and I had
+hold of his leg”--with another shiver.
+
+“He’s dead enough now, anyway,” said Drillot.
+
+“Eh b’en! leave him where he is, and let’s get away. I’ve heard say
+there were ghosts on L’Etat, and now I know it. No good comes of
+meddling with these things.”
+
+“But we ought to take him with us.”
+
+“Take him with us!” almost shrieked Peter. “And let him loose on Sark!
+Why then?”
+
+“Whatever he was last night, he’s dead enough now.... Will you help me
+to get him up, John Trevna?”
+
+“Iss, sure! He’s got my belt.”
+
+“Not in my boat, John Drillot,” cried Peter. “Not in my boat. I’ve had
+enough of him, pardi!” and he set off at speed for the boat.
+
+“Don’t be a fool, Peter. You, Evan Morgan, run down and stop him going.
+Come on, John Trevna,” and after peering cautiously down to make sure
+the dead man had not moved, they dropped into the well again.
+
+The shrivelled figure was very light, as Trevna had found. It was only
+their repugnance at handling it that made their task a heavy one. One
+above and one below, they managed at last to get it up above ground, and
+then John Trevna slipped his belt to its middle, and carried it with one
+hand down the slope to the boat.
+
+There they found Evan Morgan holding the approach to the landing-place
+against Peter, with a lump of rock, while Philip, in the boat below,
+stood shouting at them to know what was the matter.
+
+At sight of the others and their burden, however, he had no eyes for
+anything else.
+
+“What have you got there, John Drillot?”
+
+“A dead man.”
+
+“Aw, then! That’s not Gard.”
+
+“It’s the only man here, anyway. Pull close up, Philip--”
+
+“Not in my boat, John Drillot!” from Peter.
+
+“We must take this to the Sénéchal,” said John angrily. “If you don’t
+want to come you can wait here. If you don’t make less noise, I will
+knock you on the head myself,” and he jumped down into the boat, and
+took the dead man from Trevna, and laid him carefully in the bows. The
+others jumped in, and Peter, sooner than be knocked on the head or left
+behind, sulkily followed, and sat himself on the extreme edge of the
+stern as far away from the dead man as he could get.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL
+
+
+Nance had crouched all the morning, in the bracken above Brenière, on
+the knife-edge of expectancy. And behind her, at a safe distance,
+crouched Julie Hamon, watching Nance and L’Etat at the same time, as a
+cat in the shade watches a sparrow playing in the sunshine.
+
+“What will be the end? What will be the end?” sighed Nance. They had all
+gone down out of sight, across there, and it was terrible to sit here
+waiting, waiting, waiting for what she feared.
+
+If they had indeed run Gard to his hiding-place, as Philip Vaudin had
+said, there could be but one possible end to it; and she sat, sad-eyed
+and wistful, waiting for them to come up again.
+
+It seemed as if they would never come, and she never took her eyes off
+the rock wall on L’Etat.
+
+And then at last she sprang to her feet. One of them had come up again.
+She could not see which. Then the others appeared, and they seemed to
+stand talking. Then one went off round the slope and another ran after
+him, and the other two went back into the rock wall.
+
+What could they be at? She stood gazing intently.
+
+The two came up again, and--yes--they carried something, or one of them
+did, and they two went off round the corner also. And presently she saw
+the boat coming round, and saw by its head that it was for the Creux.
+She turned and sped across by the same way as yesterday, and Julie
+followed her at a safe distance. And it seemed to Nance, as she hurried
+through the familiar hedge-gaps and lanes and across the headlands, that
+the world had lost its brightness, and that life was desperately hard
+and trying.
+
+On Derrible Head there might be a chance of seeing. She ran up to the
+highest point by the old cannon, just as the boat was coming in under La
+Conchée.
+
+And--oh, mon Dieu! mon Dieu! yes--there, in the bows, lay the body of a
+man!--and the tears she had kept back all day broke out now in a fury of
+weeping. She could hardly see, but she ran on, falling at times and
+bruising herself, staggering to her feet again, stumbling blindly
+through a mist of tears.
+
+The boat was drawn up by the time she got there, and a curious crowd
+surrounded it. She pushed through. She must see.
+
+And then the weight fell off her heart, and it was all she could do to
+keep from screaming. For this poor thing, whatever it was, was not
+Stephen Gard and never had been.
+
+She wanted to sing and dance and scream her joy aloud. They had not
+found him.
+
+“What is this, John Drillot?” asked Julie, alongside her, black with
+anger, as she pointed to the body.
+
+“Ma fé--a ghost, they say. John Trevna shot him, but he had been dead a
+long time before that, though he was alive last night, for Peter had
+hold of his leg as he ran.”
+
+“And where is the other--the one you went for?”
+
+“He’s not on L’Etat, anyway, ma fille,” and they lifted the body on to a
+piece of sailcloth, and carried it off through the tunnel for the
+Sénéchal to look into.
+
+So Stephen Gard’s hiding-place had proved effective, and they had not
+found him. But, of a certainty, he must be starving, and so away home
+sped Nance, to prepare a parcel of food to take across to him. And
+Julie, her black brows pinched together and her face set in a frown of
+venomous intention, never once let her out of her sight.
+
+It was after midnight when Nance stole across the fields, carrying her
+little parcel and her swimming-bladders, and made her way to Brenière
+point.
+
+It was a still night, with a sky full of stars, and her heart was high
+for the moment, though when her thoughts ran on, in spite of her, it
+fell again. For things could not go on this way for ever, and she saw no
+way out.
+
+She dropped her outer things by a bush, and let herself quietly down the
+rocks and into the water, and the black-faced woman who presently stood
+by that bush snarled curses after her and was filled with unholy
+exultation. For Nance could have only one reason for going across there,
+and on the morrow the men should hear of it, and she would give them no
+rest till Gard was made an end of.
+
+What that thing was that they had brought home, she did not know, but
+they were fools to be satisfied with that when the man they had gone
+after was undoubtedly still on the rock.
+
+So she sat down by Nance’s gown and cloak, and revolved schemes for her
+discomfiture and the undoing of Stephen Gard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN
+
+
+Nance found the passage of the Race more trying then ever before. The
+strain of these latter days had been very great, and the thought of
+Bernel tended to unnerve her.
+
+On the other hand, the knowledge that Gard had outwitted the whole
+strength of the Island cheered and braced her, and she struggled
+valiantly through the broken waters till at last she hung panting on the
+black ledge where she was in the habit of landing.
+
+She scrambled up among the boulders and made straight for the great
+wall. She had decided in her own mind that he would probably be
+somewhere in there, possibly afraid to come out, as he would not know if
+the Sark men were still on the rock.
+
+As nearly as she could, she climbed to the place she had seen the men go
+in, and then she cried softly, “Steve! Mr. Gard!” and went on calling,
+as she moved up and down along the base of the wall.
+
+And at last her heart jumped wildly as she heard her name faintly from
+inside the wall, and presently Gard himself came crawling from under the
+big slab and jumped down to her side.
+
+“Nance! You are a good angel to me,” and he flung his arms round her and
+kissed her again and again.
+
+“But oh, my dear, I would not have you risk your life for me like
+this.”
+
+“It is nothing. I am all right,” said Nance, forgetting the weariness
+and dangers of the passage in her joy at finding him alive and well. “I
+have brought you food,” and she pushed her little parcel into his hands.
+
+“I hardly dare to eat it when I think what it has cost you.”
+
+“That would be foolish, and you must be starving.”
+
+“Truly, I am hungry--”
+
+“Eat, then!” and she seized the package and began to tear it open. “It
+will make me still more glad to see you eat.”
+
+“Well, then--” and Nance was gladder than ever that she had come.
+
+“Have they all gone back?” he asked anxiously, as he munched.
+
+“They came back this morning, bringing a strange dead man.”
+
+“I know. I put him there--”
+
+“Who is he?”
+
+“I found him in a cave inside the rock. He had been left there very many
+years ago with his hands and feet tied. I think he must have been a
+Customs officer of long ago.”
+
+Nance shivered, and he felt it.
+
+“You are cold, Nance dear, and I am thinking only of myself;” and he
+took off his jacket and put it over her slim wet shoulders, in spite of
+herself.
+
+“If they have all gone back we could go to the shelter. They may have
+left some of the things there;” and they went along and found the cloak
+and blanket, and he wrapped them about her.
+
+“I found a still larger cave out of the other one, and I was in there
+when they came after me. I had put the dead man in the tunnel, and when
+I came back he was gone; but I did not dare to come out, for I was
+afraid they might be on the watch still.”
+
+“The dead man frightened them. I do not think they will come back. They
+are afraid of ghosts.”
+
+“I hoped he would scare them. But what is to be the end of it all, Nance
+dear? Things cannot go on this way. Would it be possible to get me a
+boat and let me get over to Guernsey?”
+
+“If you will wait a little time, that is what we must do, if the truth
+does not come out.”
+
+“And meanwhile you may be drowned in trying to keep me from starving.”
+
+“I shall not be drowned and you shall not starve,” she said resolutely.
+
+“I would sooner live on puffins’ eggs than have you swim across that
+place. My heart goes right down into my feet when I think of it.”
+
+“There is no need. I am all right.”
+
+“The Sénéchal and the Seigneur could not stop them?”
+
+“Mr. Le Pelley is in Guernsey still. The Sénéchal they would not listen
+to. But the truth will come out if only you will wait.”
+
+“If I get away, will you come to me, Nance? And all my life I will give
+to making you happy.”
+
+“Yes, I will come. But it will be sore leaving Sark. To a Sark-born
+there is no other place in the world like Sark.”
+
+“All my life I will give to making up for it.”
+
+“We will see. Now I must go, or it will be daylight before I get back.”
+
+“I shall be in misery till I know you are safe.”
+
+“It will be nearly light. I will wave to you from Brenière;” and they
+went slowly round to the ledges, and parted with kisses; and in the grey
+morning light he could, for a time, follow the little white figure as it
+slipped bravely through the bristling black waves of the Race.
+
+But presently he could see her no more, and could but wait, full of
+anxiety and many prayers, for the signal that should tell of her safety.
+
+But it did not come, and he grew desperate and full of fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HOW JULIE’S SCHEMES FELL FLAT
+
+
+Nance found the return journey still more trying to her strength, but
+she struggled through, and was devoutly thankful when the slack water
+under Brenière was reached.
+
+She waded ashore almost too weary to stand, and had to cling to the
+rough rocks till she recovered her breath. Then, slowly and heavily, she
+dragged herself up the lower ledges to the little plateau where her
+clothes were.
+
+Julie had sat revolving grim schemes in that black head of hers.
+
+She hated the girl. She hated Gard. She hated Sark and every one in it.
+Why had she ever come into these outer wilds? She would have done with
+it all and get away back to the life that was more to her taste.
+
+But first--yes, mon Dieu, she would leave them something to remember her
+by.
+
+She had not a doubt that Gard was still on L’Etat. Nothing else would
+take this girl across there. The shameless hussy!--to go swimming across
+to see her man with nothing but a white shift on!
+
+She could wound Gard through Nance. She could wound Nance through Gard.
+
+She could wait for the girl as she came up the side of the Head, and
+push her down again or crush her with a lump of rock.
+
+But that might mean reprisals on the part of the Islanders. She had had
+experience of the way in which they resented any ill done to one of
+their number by an outsider. She had no wish to join Gard on his rock.
+
+It would be better to hold the girl up to the scorn and contempt of the
+neighbours; that would punish her. And by setting the men on Gard’s
+track again, that would punish him and her too.
+
+And so she restrained the natural violence of her temper, which would
+have run to rocks and bodily injury, and waited in the bracken till
+Nance came stumbling along in the half-light. Then up she sprang, with
+an unexpectedness that for the moment took Nance’s breath and set her
+heart pounding with dreadful certainties of ghosts.
+
+“So this is how you go to visit your fancy monsieur on the rock, is it,
+little Nance? And with nothing on but that! Oh shame! What will the
+neighbours say when they hear how you swim across to him, and you will
+not dare deny it?”
+
+But Nance, relieved in her mind on the score of ghosts, and regaining
+her composure with her breath, simply turned her back on her and
+proceeded as if she were not there.
+
+“And he is there still!” screamed Julie, dancing round with rage to keep
+face to face with her. “I was sure of it, though those fools could not
+find him. I’ll see that he’s found or starved out, b’en sûr! Yes, if I
+have to go myself and see to it. As for you--shameless one!--it’s the
+last time you’ll swim across there, yes indeed!”--and she raved on and
+on, as only an angry woman with a grievance can.
+
+Nance slipped her dress over her head and, under cover of it, dropped
+off her wet undergarment, coolly wrung it out, put on her cloak and
+walked away, Julie raging alongside with wild words that tumbled over
+one another in their haste.
+
+Nance walked to the highest point behind Brenière, and waved her white
+garment a dozen times to let Gard know she was safe, and then turned and
+set off home through the waist-high bracken and the great cushions of
+gorse. And close alongside her went Julie, raging and raving the worse
+for her silence; for there is nothing so galling to an angry soul as to
+find its most venomous shafts fall harmless from the triple mail of
+quiet self-possession.
+
+So they came through the other cottages to La Closerie, but the
+neighbours were all asleep, and those who woke at the sound of her
+violence, turned over and said, “It’s only that mad Frenchwoman in one
+of her tantrums. Why, in Heaven’s name, can’t she go to sleep, like
+other folks?”
+
+Nance went into her own house and quietly closed the door. Julie
+hammered on it with her fists, as she would dearly have liked to hammer
+on Nance’s face, and then cursed herself off into her own place,
+slamming the door with such violence as to waken all the fowls and set
+all the pigs grunting in their sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH
+
+
+Gard’s eyes, straining into the dimness of the coming dawn through what
+seemed to him a most terrible long time, so packed was it with anxious
+fears, caught at last the white flicker of Nance’s signal, and he
+dropped down just where he stood, among the rough stones of the ridge,
+with a grateful sigh.
+
+The strain was telling on him. He felt physically weak and worn. Nance’s
+devoted love and courage made his heart beat high, indeed, but his fears
+on her account strung his laxed cords to breaking point, and then left
+them looser than before.
+
+He must get away somehow, if only to prevent this constant and terrible
+risking of her life on his behalf.
+
+He hardly dared to hope that his strategy with the dead man would be of
+any permanent benefit to him, though there was no knowing. Examination
+of the body would show that it had been dead for very many years, but
+his knowledge of the Island superstitions made him doubt if any Sark man
+would willingly spend a night on L’Etat for a very long time to come.
+
+On the other hand, if the result of their discussions confirmed them in
+the belief that he was still there, and if, as he constantly feared,
+they should learn of Nance’s comings, and visit upon her the venom they
+harboured for him, they might so invest the rock that escape would be
+impossible.
+
+Meagre living, starvation even, he would suffer rather than live more
+amply at risk of Nance’s life, but if the hope of ultimate escape was
+taken from him then he might as well give in at once and have done with
+it.
+
+So he lay there, in the broken rocks of the ridge, and looked grimly on
+life. And the sun rose in a red ball over France, and cleft a shining
+track across the grey face of the waters, and drew up the mists and
+thinned away the clouds, till the great plain of the sea and the great
+dome above were all deep flawless blue, and he saw a thin white curl of
+smoke rise from the miners’ cottages on Sark.
+
+He lay there listless, nerveless, careless of life almost, an Ishmael
+with every man’s hand against him--worse off than Ishmael, he thought,
+since Ishmael had a desert in which to wander, and he was tied to this
+bare rock.
+
+But there was Nance! There was always Nance. And at thought of her, his
+bruised soul found somewhat of comfort and courage once more.
+
+He felt her quivering in his arms again as he pressed her close. He felt
+again the willing surrender of her sweet wet face. And the thought of it
+thrilled his cold blood and set it coursing through his veins like new
+life. Yes, truly, while there was Nance there was hope.
+
+Perhaps the Sénéchal and the Vicar would prevail upon them. Perhaps they
+would give it up and leave him alone, and then Nance would find him a
+boat and they would get across to Guernsey. Perhaps, as she kept
+insisting, something would happen to discover the truth.
+
+So he lay, while the sun mounted high and baked him on the bare stones,
+but he did not find it hot.
+
+And then, of a sudden, he stiffened and lay watching anxiously. For
+there, from out the Creux had come a boat--and another, and another, and
+another--four boat-loads of them again!
+
+So they were coming, after all, and his hopes died sudden death.
+
+Well--let them come and take him and have their will. He was not the
+first who had paid the price for what he had not done, and human nature
+must fall to pieces if hung too long on tenterhooks.
+
+He watched them listlessly. He could crawl into his innermost cavern, of
+course, and could hold it against them all till the end of time, which
+in this case would be but a trifling span, for a man must eat to live.
+But what was the use? As well die quick as slow, since there could be
+but one end to it. And then, to his very great surprise, the boats crept
+slowly out of sight round the corner of Coupée Bay, and he lay
+wondering.
+
+What could be the meaning of that? Why had they put in there? Why
+couldn’t they come on and finish the matter?
+
+The sea was all deserted again. If he had not just happened to catch
+sight of them stealing across there, he would have felt sure they were
+not coming to-day.
+
+Perhaps they were going to wait there till night, though why on earth
+they should wait there instead of at the Creux, was past his
+comprehension.
+
+And then, after a time, to his amazement, he saw them all go crawling
+back the way they had come. One, two, three, four--yes, they were all
+there, and they crept slowly round Lâches point and disappeared, and
+left him gaping.
+
+It was past believing. It was altogether beyond him. He lay, with his
+eyes glued to the point round which they had gone, stupid with the
+wonder of it.
+
+They had actually given it up--for to-day, at least, and gone back! He
+cudgelled his brains for the meaning of it all, till they grew dull and
+weary with futile thinking.
+
+Perhaps Nance and the Vicar and the Sénéchal had prevailed after all!
+Perhaps something had turned up at last to prove to the Sark men their
+misjudgment! Perhaps--well, any way, it was good to be left alone.
+
+He lay there, laxed with the over-strain of all this upsetting, but
+rejoicing placidly in this one more day of life.
+
+He felt like one granted a day’s respite as he stands on the scaffold
+with the rope round his neck.
+
+Never had the sun shone so brightly. Never had the silver sea danced so
+merrily. It might be the last he would see of them.
+
+And the sun wheeled on towards Guernsey, and made his deliberate
+preparations for a setting beyond the ordinary; for the sun, you must
+know, takes a very special pride in showing the great cliffs of Sark
+what he can do in the way of transformation scenes and most transcendent
+colouring.
+
+And Stephen Gard lay there under the ridge on L’Etat, with the wonder
+and beauty of it all in his face and in his heart, and said to himself
+that it was probably the last sunset he would ever see, and he was glad
+to have seen it at its best.
+
+He had a vague idea that heaven would be something like that--tenderly
+soft and beautiful, and glowing with radiances of unearthly splendour,
+which whispered to weary hearts of the peace and joy that lay beyond,
+and gently called them home to rest.
+
+His theology was, without doubt, of the most elemental and objective,
+and would not have carried him any great lengths in these days; but, for
+the time being, at all events, it lifted its possessor to a plane of
+thought above his usual, and tended to quietness and peace of mind.
+
+The sky right away into the east was glowing softly with the wonders of
+the sunset, and there the delicate tones changed almost momentarily. As
+his eye followed the tender grace of their transformations, with a
+delight which he could neither have expressed nor explained, it once
+more lighted suddenly upon that which he had been looking for so
+anxiously all day long, and brought him to earth like a broken bird.
+
+Once more a boat had come round the point of Les Lâches, and this time
+it was speeding towards him as fast as a sail that was as flat almost as
+a board, and looked to him no more than a thin white cone, could bring
+it.
+
+So they were coming, after all, and this wonderful sunset might be his
+last indeed;--and all the tender beauty of the fleecy clouds thinned and
+paled, and the glory faded as though it had all been but a glorious
+bubble, and that sharp point of white, speeding across the darkening
+sea, had pricked it.
+
+But why on earth were they coming now? They had missed the ebb, and it
+was hours yet to next half-ebb, and they could not hope to land. The
+white waves were boiling all along the ledges, and the sea for twenty
+feet out was a surging dapple of foam laced with seething white bubbles.
+It would be more than any man’s life was worth to try and get ashore on
+L’Etat for many an hour yet.
+
+And there was only one boat! What had become of all the others--of the
+threatened invasion in force? He sat and watched it in gloomy wonder.
+
+The boat came racing on. As she cleared Brenière her white sail turned
+to red gold, and the sea below grew purple. There was something white in
+her bows. He got up heavily, doggedly, forced to it against his will,
+and walked along the ridge to the eastern point which commanded the
+landing-place on that side.
+
+There was, without doubt, something white in the bows of the boat, and
+as he stood gazing at it, it took, to his dazed imagination, the strange
+form of Nance waving joyful hands to him.
+
+He drew his hands across his eyes. The storm had been sore on them.
+
+The bristling waves of the Race burst in sheets of spray under the
+glancing bows, but the white spray and the white figure and the pointed
+white sail were all ablaze in the last rays of the sun, and they all
+swam before him as if his head was going round.
+
+She came round Quette d’Amont with a fine sweep, like one bound on
+business of which she had no reason to be ashamed, and dropped her sail
+and lay in the shelter of the rock.
+
+And the white figure in the bows was truly Nance, and she was standing
+and waving and calling to him. And the grey-headed man aft was surely
+Philip Guille, the Sénéchal, and the faces of the rest were all
+friendly.
+
+He stumbled hastily down to the lower ledges, but the rush and the roar
+there drowned their voices.
+
+What were they trying to tell him? What could they want of him?
+
+The Sénéchal was standing, hands to mouth, waiting his chance. The
+restless waters below drew back for a moment to gather for a leap, and
+the big voice came booming across the tumult--
+
+“Jump! We’ll pick you up! All is well!”
+
+And Gard, without a moment’s hesitation, sprang out into the marbled
+foam, and struck out for the boat.
+
+They were all friendly hands that gripped him and hauled him over the
+side, and patted him on the back to get the water out of him--all
+friendly faces that were turned to him; and the dearest face of all,
+lighted with a heavenly gladness, was to him as the face of an angel.
+
+“Tell me!” he gasped, still all astream, wits and clothes alike. And it
+was the Sénéchal who told him.
+
+“Peter Mauger was killed last night, at the same place as Tom Hamon, and
+in the same way. So these hot-blooded thickheads are convinced at last
+that it wasn’t your work.”
+
+“Peter Mauger!” he said, gazing vaguely at them all. “But who--”
+
+“We haven’t found out yet. But even the thickest of the thickheads can’t
+put it down to you”--and the thickheads present grinned in friendly
+fashion, and they ran up the sail with a will, and turned her nose, and
+went racing back to the Creux quicker than they had come.
+
+And Gard sat still with his hand in Nance’s two, feeling very weak and
+shaky, and looked vaguely back at L’Etat as it faded and dwindled into a
+dim black triangle of rock.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L’ETAT
+
+
+This is what had happened.
+
+Since Tom Hamon’s death, his friend Peter and his widow Julie had, as we
+know, found themselves drawn together by a common detestation of Stephen
+Gard and a common desire for his extinction.
+
+For Peter considered he had been supplanted in Nance’s regards, though
+Nance had never regarded him as anything but a nuisance and a boor. And
+Julie considered herself scorned and slighted, though Gard had never
+considered her save as Tom Hamon’s wife.
+
+It was they who had stirred up the Sark men against Gard, and they
+missed no opportunity of keeping their ill brew on the boil.
+
+Their offensive alliance brought them much together. Peter was often at
+La Closerie. He was like wax in the hands of the fiery Frenchwoman, and
+she moulded him to her will. The neighbours might have begun to talk,
+but that it was obvious to all that the only bond between them at
+present was their ill-will towards Gard, and in that feeling many shared
+and found nothing strange in Tom’s wife and Tom’s chief friend joining
+hands to make some one pay for his death.
+
+In time, if it had gone on, the neighbours would doubtless have had
+plenty to say on the subject, for old wives’ tongues rattled fast of a
+winter’s evening, when they all gathered in this house or that, and sat
+on the sides of the green bed with their feet in the dry fern inside,
+and the oil crasset hanging down in the midst, and plied their needles
+and their tongues and wits all at once, and wrought scandalously good
+guernseys and stockings in spite of it all.
+
+But these were summer evenings yet, and the _veilles_ had not begun, and
+reputations were out at grass till the time came round for their
+inspection and judgment.
+
+And so, when Peter Mauger never reached home the night before this day
+of which we are telling, his old housekeeper, whatever she thought about
+it at the time, only said afterwards that she supposed he had stopped
+somewhere and would turn up all right in the morning, though she
+admitted that he was not in the habit of staying out of a night. Anyway,
+she was an old woman and all alone, and she was not going out to look
+for him at that time of night.
+
+The morning surprised her by his continued absence. Never in his life,
+so far as she knew, had he behaved like this before. Vituperation of him
+gave place to anxiety about him.
+
+She questioned the neighbours. All they knew was that he had been seen
+going down to Little Sark soon after sunset.
+
+“That black Frenchwoman of Tom Hamon’s twists him round her finger,”
+said one.
+
+“You tie him up, Mrs. Guille,” chuckled another, “or sure as beans
+she’ll steal him from you and leave you in the cold.”
+
+And then, who should they see coming striding along the road but Madame
+Julie herself, and evidently in a hurry;--in a state of red-hot
+excitement, too, as she drew near. And they waited, hands on hips, to
+hear what she was up to now.
+
+“Where’s Peter?” she demanded, a long way in advance. “Tell him I want
+him. That man Gard is still on L’Etat, though those fools who went
+across for him couldn’t find him. Cré nom! What are you all staring at,
+then?”
+
+“Where’s our Peter?” demanded Mrs. Guille shrilly, with the strident
+note of fear in her voice, as she becked and bobbed towards the
+Frenchwoman like an aged cormorant.
+
+“Peter? I’m asking you. I want him. Where is he?”
+
+“He went to Little Sark last night, and he’s never come home.”
+
+“Never come home? Why, what’s taken him? If he’d been with me last night
+he’d have seen something! That Nance Hamon swam across to the rock with
+nothing on but her shift to take food to Gard, and I caught her at
+it--the shameless hussy!”
+
+“Maybe Peter’s heard of it an’ gone across with ’em again,” suggested
+one. “He was terrible hot against Gard.”
+
+“And reason he had to be hot against him,” cried Julie. “Who’ll find out
+for me where he’s got to, and when they’re going out after Gard? I would
+go too and see the end of him.”
+
+A couple of burly husbands came rolling round the corner towards their
+breakfasts and caught her words.
+
+“Doubt you’ll have to go alone, mistress,” said one, phlegmatically.
+“There’s ghosts on L’Etat, they do say, though sure the one John
+Drillot brought across was dead enough.”
+
+“If he’s there,” said the other, plumbing Julie’s feelings, “he’s safe
+as a pig in a pen.”
+
+“Where’s our Peter?” demanded Mrs. Guille.
+
+“Peter? I d’n know. What’s come of him?” and they stared blankly at her.
+
+“He went to Little Sark last night to see her”--with a beck of distaste
+towards Julie--“and he’s never come home.”
+
+The men looked from the speaker to Julie, as though the next word
+necessarily lay with her.
+
+“I never set eyes on him. I was out after that girl. I came here to tell
+him about Gard. Has he been to the harbour?”
+
+“No, he hasn’t. We are from there now.”
+
+“He’s maybe with some of them arranging about going to L’Etat,” said
+Julie. “I’ll go and find out;” and she set off along the road past the
+windmill.
+
+The morning passed in fruitless enquiries. She asked this one and that,
+every one she could think of, if they had seen Peter, and was met
+everywhere with meaning grins and point-blank denials. Apparently no one
+had set eyes on Peter, and every one seemed to imply that she ought io
+know more about him than any one else.
+
+It was past mid-day before she was back at Vauroque, but Mrs. Guilie was
+still standing in the doorway of Peter’s empty house as if she had been
+looking out for news of him ever since.
+
+“Eh b’en? Have you found him?” she cried.
+
+“Not a finger of him!” snapped Julie savagely, tired out with her
+fruitless labours.
+
+“Then he’s come to some ill, bà sú. And if he has--ma fé, it’s
+you!--it’s you!” The old lady’s scream of denunciation choked itself
+with its own excess, and the neighbours came running out to learn the
+news.
+
+Stolid minds travel in grooves, and old Mrs. Guille’s had been groping
+along possibilities of all kinds, clinging at the same time to the hope
+that Peter would still turn up all right.
+
+Now that her hope was shattered her mind dropped naturally into a grim
+groove, along which it had taken a tentative trip during the morning and
+had recoiled from with a shudder.
+
+The last time Mrs. Tom Hamon had come seeking a man who was missing,
+that man had been found under the Coupée, and so old Mrs. Guille set oft
+for the Coupée as fast as her old legs and her want of breath and
+general agitation would let her.
+
+“Nom de Dieu! What--?” began Julie, with twisted black brows, and then
+drifted on with the rest in Mrs. Guille’s wake--all except one or two
+housewives whose men were due for dinner, and knew they must be fed
+whatever had come to Peter Mauger.
+
+“Gaderabotin!” said one of these as he came up, and stood scratching his
+head and gazing down the road after them. “What’s taken them all?”
+
+“Think because they found Tom Hamon there, they’ll find Peter too,”
+guffawed another, and they rolled on into their homes, chuckling at the
+simplicity of women and children.
+
+Arrived at the Coupée, the little mob of sensation-seekers peered
+fearfully about. One small boy, cleverer or more groovy-minded than the
+rest, struck off along the headland to the left. It was from there
+Charles Guille had seen Tom Hamon. Perhaps from there he would see
+something, too.
+
+And no sooner was he there, where he could see to the foot of the cliffs
+in Coupée Bay, than he commenced to dance and wave his arms like a mad
+thing, because the words he wanted to shout choked him tight so that he
+could hardly breathe.
+
+They streamed out along the cliff and huddled there, struck chill with
+fright in spite of the blazing sun.
+
+For there, under the cliff, in the same spot as they found Tom Hamon,
+lay another dark, huddled figure, and they knew it must be Peter.
+
+The finding of Tom had filled them with anger against Gard. The finding
+of Peter filled them with fear.
+
+Gard had sufficed as explanation and scapegoat for Tom’s death, and as
+vent for their feelings. But what of Peter’s?
+
+It had not been Gard, then? And if not Gard, who?
+
+For, whoever it was, he was still at large, and any of them might be the
+next.
+
+There were new terrors in the eyes that gazed so wildly on the narrow
+white path and the towering pinnacles of the Coupée. They had been
+familiar with it all, all their lives, but suddenly it had become
+strange to them.
+
+If grisly Death, all bones and scythe, had come stalking along it before
+their eyes at that moment, they would have shrieked, no doubt, and
+fallen flat, but he would have no more than answered to their feelings
+and fulfilled their expectations.
+
+As it was, when the Seigneur’s big white stallion stuck his head over
+the green dyke behind them, and gave a shrill neigh at the unexpected
+sight of so many people in a field which was usually occupied only by
+Charles Guille’s two mild-eyed cows and their calves, the women screamed
+and the children lied.
+
+“Man doux! but I thought it was the devil himself,” said old Mrs.
+Guille. “Oui-gia!” and shook an angry fist at him.
+
+But the discoverer of the body was already away along the road to
+Vauroque, covering the ground like a little incarnation of ill-news.
+
+The exertion of running cleared away the choking, if it took his breath.
+He shouted as he drew near the houses.
+
+“Ah, bah!” growled one of the diners inside. “What’s to do now, then?”
+
+“He’s there ... Peter ... under Coupée ... Where Tom Hamon....” panted
+the news-bearer as he tore past to his own home. And the rest of
+Vauroque emptied itself into the road and stood looking along it, as the
+stragglers came up, white-faced and wild-eyed.
+
+“He’s there,” confirmed one woman, twisting up her loosened hair. “And
+just same place where Tom Hamon lay.”
+
+“’Tweren’t Gard killed _him_, then,” said one of the diners, chewing
+over that thought with his last mouthful.
+
+“Nor Tom neither, then, maybe,” said another.
+
+“We’ve bin on wrong tack, then;” and they went off round the corner at a
+speed their build would hardly have credited them with.
+
+One to the Sénéchal and one to the Doctor, and then to the Creux, both
+telling the news as they went. So that when the officials came hurrying
+through the tunnel the greater part of the Island was waiting for them
+on the shingle, except those who preferred the wider view from the
+cliff above.
+
+Some of the men had been for pulling across at once, but they were
+overborne.
+
+“Doctor said he’d like to have seen him afore he was moved last time,”
+said old John de Carteret weightily, and would not let a boat go out
+till the Doctor and the Sénéchal came.
+
+It was all waiting for them the moment they arrived, however, and they
+stepped in and swung away round Les Lâches, and three other boats
+followed them so closely that it looked almost like a gruesome race who
+should get there first.
+
+There was little talking in any of the boats, but there was some solid
+hard thinking, in a mazed kind of way.
+
+Until they knew more of the facts, indeed, they scarce knew what to
+think yet. But more than one of them remembered disturbedly how they had
+gone in force two days before to fetch Gard off his lonely rock, or to
+make an end of him there; and here they were going in force on a very
+different errand--an errand which, they could not help seeing, would
+bring him off his rock in a very different way, if this present matter
+was what it looked as if it might be.
+
+And the Doctor was not long in giving them the facts, when they had run
+up on to the shingle, and then crunched through it to the place where
+Peter’s body lay under the steep black cliff--in the exact spot where
+Tom Hamon’s had lain just eighteen days before.
+
+But that it was undoubtedly Peter’s face and body, those who had come
+after Tom the last time might have thought they were going through their
+previous experience over again. It was all so like.
+
+They all stood round in a dark, silent group while the Doctor carefully
+examined the body, and the Sénéchal looked on with stern and troubled
+face.
+
+“It is most extraordinary,” said the Doctor, straightening up from his
+task at last, and his face, too, was knitted with perplexity, but had
+something else in it besides. “This man has been done to death in
+exactly the same way as Hamon”--a rustle of surprise shook the group of
+silent onlookers. “The head has been beaten in just as Hamon’s was--with
+some blunt rounded tool, I should say. These other wounds and contusions
+are the results of his fall down the cliff. He has been dead at least
+eight hours. Lift him carefully, men. We can do nothing more
+here--unless by chance the one who did it flung his weapon after him,
+and we could find it.”
+
+They scattered, and searched the whole dark bay minutely, but found
+nothing. Then with rough gentleness they bore the body to the boat and
+laid it under the thwarts.
+
+“Men!” said the Sénéchal weightily, as they were just about to climb
+back into their boats. “This matter brings another matter home to all
+our hearts. You have been persecuting another man under the belief that
+he killed Tom Hamon. From what some of us knew of Mr. Gard, we were
+certain he could have had no hand in it. This, I take it, proves it?” He
+looked at the Doctor.
+
+“Undoubtedly!” nodded the Doctor. “The man who killed this one killed
+the other, and that man could not be Stephen Gard, for he is on L’Etat.”
+
+“It’s God’s mercy that you haven’t Mr. Gard’s blood on your heads. Some
+of you, I know, have done your best that way. Suppose you had killed
+him that other night--what would you have felt as you stood here to-day?
+Take that thought home with you, and may God keep you from like
+misjudgment in the future!”
+
+And they had not a word to say for themselves, but crawled silently
+aboard, and in silence pulled back to Creux Harbour.
+
+Once only old John de Carteret spoke to the Sénéchal, soon after they
+had started.
+
+“One of them”--nodding over at the boats behind--“could go to the rock
+and bring him off,” he suggested.
+
+“I thought of that, but there’s one I want to go with me. She’ll be down
+at the Creux, I expect, and we’ll go as soon as we’ve disposed of this.”
+
+There was a very different feeling visible in the silent crowd that
+awaited them at the harbour this time from that manifested on the last
+occasion, Then, it was a sympathetic anger that united them all in a
+common feeling against the perpetrator of the deed. Now--even before the
+whisper had run round that Peter Mauger had been done to death in the
+same way as Tom Hamon--fear was among them, and doubt. Fear of they knew
+not exactly what, and doubt of they knew not whom.
+
+But here were two men done to death in their midst, and the man on whom
+all their suspicions had settled in the first case could not possibly
+have had anything to do with the second, and so had most likely had
+nothing to do with either--in which case the man who had was still at
+large among them, and no man’s life was safe, much less any woman’s or
+child’s.
+
+Their thoughts did not run, perhaps, quite so clearly as that, but that
+was the result of it all, and their faces showed it. Furthermore, every
+man and woman there began at once to cast about in his and her mind for
+the possible murderer, and men looked at the neighbours whom they had
+known all their lives, with lurking suspicions in their eyes and the
+consideration of strange possibilities in their minds.
+
+Tom Hamon’s death had bound them closer together; Peter Mauger’s set
+them all apart. The strange dead man up in the school-house added to
+their discomfort.
+
+It was not until the hastily-constructed litter with its gruesome burden
+had been sent off to the Boys’ School, in charge of the constables and
+the Doctor, that the Sénéchal caught sight of Nance’s eager white face
+and anxious eyes, in the crowd that lingered still in answer to another
+whisper that had flown round.
+
+If they were at once pig-headed and hot-blooded and suspicious, they
+were also warm-hearted and willing to atone for a mistake--once they
+were sure of it.
+
+No crowd followed Peter on his last journey but one, though the whole
+Island had swarmed after Tom Hamon.
+
+They wanted to see the man who would have been killed for killing Tom,
+though he didn’t do it, but for--circumstances, and his own pluck and
+endurance.
+
+And when the Sénéchal beckoned to one of the circumstances, and put his
+hand on her slim shoulder, and said--
+
+“We are going for him. I thought you would like to come too,” her face
+went rosy with gratitude, and the brave little hands clasped up on to
+her breast, as she murmured--
+
+“Oh, M. le Sénéchal!” and choked at anything more.
+
+Those nearest gave her rough words of encouragement.
+
+“Cheer up, Nance! You’ll soon have him back!”
+
+“That’s a brave garche! Don’t cry about it now!”
+
+“We’ll make it up to him, lass. We’ll all come and dance at the
+wedding”--and so on.
+
+But the Sénéchal patted her on the shoulder and asked--
+
+“And where is your brother? He should come, too. I hear you have both
+been in this matter.”
+
+“Ah, monsieur!” she said, with brimming eyes and a pathetic little lift
+and fall of the hand, which expressed far more than she could put into
+words. “We fear ... we fear he is drowned. He swam out to the rock
+taking food, and ... and ... we have not seen him since;” and her hand
+was over her face and the tears streaming through.
+
+“Mon Dieu! Another!” said the Sénéchal, aghast. “When, child? When was
+this?”
+
+“The night after the storm, monsieur.”
+
+“Perhaps he is there, on the rock.”
+
+“No, monsieur. I was over there myself last night. He never got there,
+and we fear he must be drowned.”
+
+“You were over there, child? Why, how did you get across?”
+
+“I swam, monsieur;” and he stared at her in amazement.
+
+“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! You make up for some of the others,” he said
+bluntly. “Come then, and we will make sure of this one, anyhow;” and he
+led the way to John de Carteret’s boat, and all the people gave them a
+cheer as they pulled out of the harbour to catch the breeze off the
+Lâches.
+
+Then the crowd waited for their return, and talked by snatches of all
+these strange happenings, and discussed and discounted the chances of
+Bernel’s being still alive.
+
+“For, see you, the Race! And that was the first night after the storm,
+and it would be running like the deuce, bidemme!” “It’s best not to know
+how to swim if it leads you to do things like that, oui-gia!” “When a
+man’s time comes, he cuts his cleft in the water, whether he can swim or
+not, crais b’en!” “And that slip of a Nance had been over there last
+night--par madé, some folks have the courage!” “All the same, it was
+madness--”
+
+But behind all the broken chatter, in every mind was the grim question,
+“Who is it, then, that is doing these things amongst us?” And there was
+a feeling of mighty discomfort abroad.
+
+All the same, they cheered vigorously as the boat came speeding back,
+and they saw Gard sitting between Nance and the Sénéchal, and crowded
+round as it ran up the shingle, and would have lifted him out and
+carried him shoulder-high through the tunnel and up the road, if he
+would have had it.
+
+They saw how his imprisonment on the rock--“Ma fé, think of it!--all
+through that storm, too!”--had told upon him. His cheeks were hollow,
+and his eyes sunken, and he looked very weary--“and, man doux, no
+wonder, after eighteen days on L’Etat!”--though their friendly shouts
+had put a touch of colour in his face and a spark in his eyes for the
+moment.
+
+“Now, away home, all of you!” ordered the Sénéchal. “We’ve all had
+enough to think about for one day. To-morrow we will see what is to be
+done.”
+
+“Too much!” croaked one old crone, who had something of a reputation
+among her neighbours. “What I want to know is--who killed Peter Mauger?”
+
+And that was the question that occupied most minds in Sark that night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL
+
+
+The Doctor insisted on taking care of Gard. He took him into his own
+house at Dixcart, and began at once a course of treatment based on
+common-sense and the then most scientific attainment, and calculated to
+repair the waste of the Rock and build him up anew in the shortest time
+compatible with an efficient and permanent cure.
+
+Even when Gard felt quite himself again and would have returned to his
+work, the genial autocrat would not hear of it.
+
+“Just you stop here, my boy,” he ordered. “An experience such as you
+have had needs some getting over. You can stand a good rest and some
+fattening up, and those ---- mines must wait.”
+
+Meanwhile, the Island was in a smoulder of suspicion and superstition.
+
+No one had yet ventured openly to point the finger at any reasonably
+possible doer of deeds so dark. Behind carefully closed doors of a
+night, indeed, here and there a whisper suggested that the Frenchwoman
+might be at the bottom of it all. But the mistake that had already been
+made, and the consequences that came so terribly near to completing it
+beyond repair, made them all cautious of open speech or action.
+
+Gard’s story explained the mystery of the dead stranger and relieved the
+public mind to that extent.
+
+The Sénéchal was disposed to agree with his views on the matter.
+
+“I never heard of those caves on L’Etat,” he said musingly, as they sat
+over their pipes one night; “and I’m sure no one else knew of them. But
+there was much free-trading round here in the old times, and I’ve no
+doubt many a Customs man disappeared and was never heard of again, just
+like this one. All the Islands felt very sore about the new regulations,
+and our people stick at nothing when their blood is up.”
+
+“They do not,” said Gard feelingly.
+
+“I’d like to get into that inner cave,” said the Doctor longingly.
+
+“You couldn’t,” said Gard, looking at his size and girth. “It’s a mighty
+tight squeeze under the slab, and that tunnel would beat you. Unless
+you’ve been brought up to that kind of thing, you couldn’t stand it. It
+would give you nightmares for the rest of your life.”
+
+“That’s a rare lass, that little Nance,” said the Sénéchal. “There’s
+some good in Sark after all, Mr. Gard.”
+
+“She was an angel to me,” said Gard with feeling. “If it had not been
+for her, I could never have held out. Not for what she brought me, but
+the fact that she came. But it was terrible to me to think of her coming
+through that Race. I begged her not to, but she would have her way.
+Three times she risked her life for me--”
+
+“Three times!” said the Sénéchal. “Ma fé, but she’s a garche to be proud
+of!”
+
+“Ay, and to be more than proud of,” said Gard. “She has given me my
+life, and I will give it all to making her happy.”
+
+“I wouldn’t swim across to L’Etat for any woman in the world,” said the
+Doctor. “Because, in the first place, I couldn’t. She must have nerves
+of steel, to say nothing of muscles. In the dark, too! And you wouldn’t
+think it to look at her.”
+
+“It needed more than nerves or muscles,” said Gard quietly.
+
+Not a man among the Islanders--much less a woman--would go anywhere near
+the Coupée after dark. Even Nance confessed to a preference for daylight
+passages. And Gard, when he went down into Little Sark for a walk, as
+part of his cure, could not repress a cold shiver whenever he passed the
+fatal spot where two men had gone over to their deaths.
+
+All the old wives’ tales were dug up and passed along, growing as they
+went. Little eyes and mouths grew permanently rounded with horrors, and
+the ground was thoroughly well spaded and planted with sturdy shoots
+warranted to yield a noisome harvest of superstition for generations to
+come.
+
+The occupants of Clos Bourel and Plaisance carefully locked their doors
+of a night now.
+
+Old Mrs. Carré at Plaisance vowed she had heard the White Horses go
+past, on the nights before Tom Hamon and Peter were found. And every one
+knew that when the ghostly horses were heard, some one was going to die.
+But as she had said nothing about it before, her contribution to the
+general uneasiness was received with respect before her face but with
+open doubt behind her back.
+
+Old Nikki Never-mind-his-name--lest his descendants, if he had any,
+take umbrage at the matter--swore that he had not only seen the ghostly
+steed pass Vauroque in the dead of night, but that it bore a rider whose
+head was carried carefully in his right hand. Unfortunately, the
+headless one passed so quickly that Nikki said he could not distinguish
+his features--having looked for them first in the wrong place--and so he
+could not say for certain who the next to die would be; but from the
+knowing wag of his head the neighbours were of opinion that he knew more
+than he chose to tell, and he gained quite a reputation thereby.
+
+But, even here again, doubts were cast upon the matter by some,
+especially those who were acquainted with the old gentleman’s
+proclivities towards raw spirits of the material kind that paid the
+lightest of duties in Guernsey.
+
+All these and very many similar matters were discussed by the
+Doctor--who disturbed their minds with horrific accounts of homicidal
+mania taking possession of apparently innocent souls--and the Sénéchal
+and the Vicar and Stephen Gard, as they sat over their pipes of an
+evening in the Doctor’s house. But chiefly the great and troublesome
+question of “Who?”
+
+They were all of one mind that the matter must be looked into. The
+feeling that a danger was loose in the Island, and might at any moment
+fall upon any man, woman, or child, was past endurance. The suspicion
+that It might be any one of those they met every day was insufferable.
+
+The only difficulty was to decide how to look into it--what to do, and
+how.
+
+Each day they feared to hear of some new outrage. But until the
+perpetrator was discovered they could do nothing towards his
+suppression. And, on the other hand, it looked as though they could do
+nothing towards his discovery until he perpetrated some new outrage.
+
+It was Gard who suggested they should watch the Coupée every night,
+armed, and unknown to any but themselves.
+
+And, after much discussion, following out his idea, he and the Sénéchal
+and the Doctor, who could bowl over a rabbit as well as any of them, lay
+in the heather, on the common above the cutting on the Little Sark side,
+for many nights, guns in hand, and eyes and ears on the strain, but saw
+and heard nothing.
+
+One night, indeed, when there was a high wind, the Doctor’s marrow
+crawled in his backbone at the sound of groanings and moanings and most
+dolorous cries for help, coming up out of black Coupée Bay, where they
+had picked up Tom Hamon’s and Peter Mauger’s dead bodies.
+
+He sweated cold terrors, for he was on the east headland right above the
+bay, till the Sénéchal crawled over to him and whispered--
+
+“Hear ’em?”
+
+“Y-y-yes. What the d-d-deuce and all--”
+
+“Knew you’d wonder what it was--”
+
+“W-w-wonder?” chittered the Doctor.
+
+“It’s only the wind in the cave at the corner below here--”
+
+“Ah! Thought it must be something of that kind,” said the Doctor through
+his teeth, clenched hard to keep them in order. “Don’t wonder folks
+fight shy of the Coupée. Sounded uncommonly like spirits. Might give
+some folks the jumps.”
+
+On another dark and windy night it was the Sénéchal’s turn to get
+something of a fright.
+
+As he lay in the heather, gun in hand, and well wrapped up in his big
+cloak, with all his faculties concentrated on the wavering pathway
+below, it seemed to him that he heard slow heavy footsteps approaching.
+
+His nerves were strung tight. He craned his head to look down into the
+cutting, when suddenly there came a wild snuffle at the back of his
+neck, and as he jumped up with a startled yelp, one part anger and nine
+parts fright, a horse that had grazed down upon him in the darkness,
+leaped back with a snort and a squeal and disappeared into the night.
+
+“Ga’rabotin! but I thought it was the devil himself,” said the Sénéchal,
+as the others came hurrying up. “Why the deuce can’t people tie up their
+horses as they do their cows? I’ll bring it up at the next Chef
+Plaids”--which consideration restored his shaken equanimity somewhat,
+and made him feel himself again.
+
+Nothing more came of all their watching, and over a jorum of something
+hot one night, after they had returned to the Doctor’s house, it was
+himself who said--
+
+“After all, it stands to reason. Some evil-possessed soul seeks victims,
+and has fixed on the Coupée as the place best fitted for his work. No
+one now goes near the Coupée at night--ergo, no victims; ergo,
+no--er--no manifestations.”
+
+“H’m! Very clever!” said the Sénéchal, through his pipe. “Where does
+that leave us, then?”
+
+“We must have a decoy, of course.”
+
+“H’m! You’ll not get any Sark man to act as decoy to the devil. Besides,
+they would talk, and that would upset the whole thing.”
+
+“What about one of your men, Gard?”
+
+“It’s a dangerous game for any man to play, Doctor.... I don’t quite see
+how one could ask it of them,”--and after a pause of concentrated
+thought and many slow smoke-puffs--“What would you say to me?” and all
+their eyes settled on him--the Doctor’s professionally.
+
+“Surely you have suffered enough in this matter, Mr. Gard,” suggested
+the Vicar.
+
+“I would give a good deal, and do a good deal, to get to the bottom of
+it all. Things will never settle down properly till this matter is
+disposed of.”
+
+That, of course, was obvious to them all, but all had the same feeling
+that he had already suffered enough in the matter.
+
+But consideration of the Doctor’s suggestion in all its aspects only
+served to convince them that, if any such scheme was to be carried out,
+it could only be done among themselves, and its dangers were obvious.
+
+It was not a matter to be lightly undertaken by any man. For whoever
+undertook the rôle of decoy, undoubtedly took his life in his hands; and
+they spent many evenings over it.
+
+The Vicar was absolutely against the idea, but had no alternative to
+suggest.
+
+“It is simply playing with death,” said he, “and no man has a right to
+do that.”
+
+“It means a good deal for the Island if we can clear it up,” said the
+Sénéchal.
+
+But, by degrees, they got to discussion of how it might be done, and
+from that to the actual doing was only a heroic step.
+
+The decoy’s head must be well padded, of course, for the heads of both
+victims had been the points of attack.
+
+He must be well armed also, and being forewarned and more, he ought to
+be able to give a certain account of himself.
+
+And then the Doctor and the Sénéchal would be close at hand and on the
+keen look-out for emergencies.
+
+The Doctor undertook to pad his head with something in the nature of a
+turban under his hat, which, he vowed, would resist the impact of iron
+blows better than metal itself.
+
+“Leave my ears loose, anyway,” said Gard. “I’d like at all events to be
+able to hear it coming.”
+
+The Sénéchal had a weapon, part pistol and the rest blunderbuss, which
+had belonged to his father, who had always referred to it affectionately
+as his “dunderbush.” It had seen strange doings in its time, but had
+been so long retired from the active list, that he undertook to load and
+fire it himself before he said any more about it.
+
+And he did it next day, with a full charge, in his meadow, with the
+assistance of a gate-post and a long cord, and reported it at night as
+in excellent order, and calculated to blow into smithereens anything
+blowable that stood up before it within the short limit of its range.
+
+At this stage in its proceedings the Vicar reluctantly retired from the
+Committee of Public Safety. He acknowledged the sore need of ending the
+suspicious and superstitious fears which were beginning to affect the
+life of the community in various ways. But he could not see his way to
+any participation in means so dangerous to the life of one of their
+number as those suggested.
+
+He did his best to dissuade Gard from it. He even reminded him of the
+duty he owed to Nance. She had undoubtedly saved his life, and she had a
+premier claim upon his consideration--and so on.
+
+To all of which Gard fully assented.
+
+“But,” he said gravely, “we are at a deadlock in this other matter, and
+it is just barely possible that this plan may clear it all up. I can’t
+say I’m very sanguine that it will. On the other hand, I really don’t
+see that any great harm can come to me. The others probably suffered
+because they were taken unawares. I shall go in the hope of meeting it,
+and shall be ready for it. Unless, Vicar, you really think it is the
+devil or something of that sort?”
+
+“I don’t know what to think,” said the Vicar solemnly. “I cannot bring
+myself to believe any of our Sark men would do such dreadful things. I
+look at each man I meet and say to myself, ‘Now, can it be possible it
+is you?--or you?--or you?’--and it does not seem possible; and yet--”
+
+“And yet some one did it, Vicar,” said the Doctor, brusquely, “and
+that’s just the trouble. Until we find out _who_ did it, any man may
+have done it, and we all look at everybody else, just as you do, and say
+to ourselves, ‘Is it you?--or you?--or you?’ Though I’m bound to say
+I’ve not got the length yet of doubting either you or the Sénéchal, or
+Gard, and I don’t think it’s myself. It might quite conceivably be any
+one of us, however, prowling about in our sleep and utterly unconscious
+afterwards of evil-doing.”
+
+“A most awful possibility,” said the Vicar. “God grant it may turn out
+differently from that.”
+
+“You never know what this inexplicable machine may do,” said the Doctor,
+tapping his head. “However, we’ll hope for the best, and I think the
+Sénéchal and I ought to be able to see Gard through without any very
+disastrous results. If we succeed, he will deserve better of this Island
+than any man I know--and a sight more than this Island deserves of him.
+I quite understand,” he said, as Gard looked quickly up. “And it does
+you credit, my boy; but there are not very many men would do it.”
+
+“Well, I’m afraid I must leave you to it,” said the Vicar, and did so.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS
+
+
+When it began to be noised abroad that Gard was going to and fro across
+the Coupée, even by night, as if nothing had ever happened there, the
+Sark men shrugged their shoulders and said, “Pardie!--sooner him than
+me--oui-gia!”
+
+It was obviously necessary, however, that this should be known. Even the
+cormorant does not fish where fish are never found.
+
+But when he went to and fro by night, he went mailed--according to the
+Doctor’s ideas--and armed--according to the Sénéchal’s; and each night
+the Doctor and the Sénéchal went quietly down, some time in advance, and
+lay hidden on the headlands with their guns, and never took their eyes
+off him and all his surroundings, while he was in sight.
+
+And Gard, in nearing the Little Sark cutting, always kept carefully to
+the right-hand side of the path, though it was somewhat crumbly there
+and had fallen away down the slope towards Grande Grève. For he had gone
+cautiously over the ground beforehand, and decided that if there was any
+possibility of being knocked overboard unawares, he would prefer to go
+over the much gentler slope on the right, where one might even at a
+pinch find lodgment among the rubble and bushes, than over the sheer
+fall into Coupée Bay, where you could drop a stone almost to the shingle
+below.
+
+Nance knew nothing whatever of the matter, or she would undoubtedly and
+most reasonably have had something to say about it. But knowledge of it
+could only upset her, and so perhaps himself, and he had carefully kept
+it from her. Little Sark, moreover, was more isolated than ever by
+reason of the Coupée mystery, and word of his goings and comings--save
+such as had La Closerie for their object in the day-time--never reached
+her.
+
+They were in grievous sorrow down there over Bernel. Gard still preached
+hope, but each day’s delay in its realisation seemed to them to make it
+the more unlikely, and their hearts were very sore.
+
+Julie had gone about her work for days after Gard’s return like a bereft
+tigress. Then one morning she locked the door of her house, put the key
+in her pocket, and took the cutter for Guernsey; and none regretted her
+going.
+
+And, as it turned out, though that had not been her intention at the
+time, it was the last Sark was to see of her. Rumours reached them later
+of her marriage to a fellow-countryman, with whom she had gone to
+France. The one thing they knew for certain was that she never came back
+to La Closerie, and after due interval, and consequent on other matters,
+they broke open the door and resumed possession of the house.
+
+Night after night Gard slowly crossed the Coupée, lingered in its
+shadows, went on into Little Sark, and came lingering back.
+
+And night after night the Doctor and the Sénéchal lay in the heather of
+the headlands, guns in hand, waiting for something that never came, and
+then going stiffly home to one or other of their houses, to lubricate
+their joints and console their disappointment with hot punch and much
+tobacco.
+
+“I’m afraid it’s no go,” was the Doctor’s grudging verdict at last, on
+the fourteenth blank night.
+
+“Let’s keep on,” said Gard. “Things generally happen just when you don’t
+expect them.”
+
+“That’s so,” grunted the Sénéchal. And they decided to keep on.
+
+Fortunately, the nights were warm and mostly fine. When neither moon nor
+stars afforded him light enough for a safe crossing, he took a lantern,
+so that no one who desired to knock him on the head need miss the chance
+for lack of seeing him.
+
+And when, after their lonely waiting, the watchers in the heather saw
+the lantern come joggling down the steep cutting from Sark, they braced
+themselves for eventualities, and hefted their guns, and pricked up
+their ears and made ready.
+
+And when it had wavered slowly along the path between the great pits of
+darkness on either hand, and had gone joggling on into Little Sark, they
+sank back into their formes with each his own particular exclamation,
+and lay waiting till the light came back.
+
+Times of tension and endurance which told upon them all, but bore most
+heavily on Gard, since the onslaught, when it came, must fall upon him,
+and the absolute ignorance as to how and when and whence it might come,
+kept every nerve within him strung like a fiddle-string.
+
+It was the eeriest experience he had ever had, that nightly trip across
+the Coupée;--bad enough when moon or stars afforded him vague and
+distorted glimpses of his ghostly surroundings:--ten times worse when
+the flicker of his lantern barely kept him to the path, and the broken
+gleams ran over the rugged edges and tumbled into the black gulfs at the
+sides;--when every starting shadow might be a murderer leaping out upon
+him, every foot of the walling darkness the murderer’s cover, and every
+step he took a step towards death.
+
+A trip, I assure you, that not many men would have been capable of. For
+it did not by any means end with the Coupée. When he got to bed of a
+night, and fell asleep at last, he was still crossing the Coupée with
+his joggling lantern all night long, and suffered things in dreams
+compared with which even his actual experiences were but holiday jaunts.
+
+And at times these grisly imaginings came back upon him as he actually
+walked the narrow path next night, and it was all he could do to keep
+his head and not fling the lantern into the depths of the pit and follow
+it.
+
+They were all getting exceedingly weary of the whole business; indeed,
+it was getting on all their nerves in a way which threatened
+consequences, when, mercifully, the end came--suddenly, not at all as
+they had looked for it, quite outside all their expectation.
+
+It was one of the shrouded nights. The Doctor and the Sénéchal, flat in
+the heather, saw the lantern issue from the Sark cutting and come
+joggling towards them. They heard a snort of surprise behind them, but
+gave it no special heed. The Sénéchal grinned briefly at remembrance of
+his fright when the beast snuffled down his neck that other night.
+
+Then, this is what happened.
+
+Gard--his lantern in his left hand, and the Sénéchal’s father’s
+“dunderbush” in his right--his eyes pinching spooks out of every inch of
+the black wall about him, and every string at its tightest--had reached
+the crumbly bit of path near the Little Sark side, when, like a clap of
+thunder out of a blue sky, the black silence of the cutting vomited
+uproar--the wild clang and beat of what sounded, in that hollow space,
+like the trampling of a thousand dancing hoofs--shrill neighings and
+whinnyings and screamings, all blended into an indescribable and
+blood-curdling clamour that gashed the night like an outrage.
+
+And then, before even he had time to wonder, the great white stallion
+was upon him--dancing on its hind legs on that narrow path like an
+acrobat, towering above him to twice his own height, striking savagely
+down at him with its great front feet, screaming like a fiend.
+
+He had no time to think. His left arm and the lantern went up with the
+natural instinct of defence. Just one glimpse he got--and never forgot
+it--of vicious white eyes and teeth, flapping red nostrils, wild-flying
+hair, and huge pawing feet descending on him, with the dirty white hair
+splaying out all round them as they came down. Then his right hand went
+up also, and he fired full into all these things. The lantern and the
+blunderbuss went spinning into the gulf, the great feet beat him to the
+ground, and rose and jabbed down at him with all the vicious might that
+lay behind them--the savage white muzzle shrilling its blood-curdling
+screams of triumph all the while--and all this in the space of a second.
+“Good God!” cried the Doctor, craning over the eastern bank of the
+cutting, but fearful of firing into the turmoil lest he should hit Gard,
+so dropped himself bodily over on to the path.
+
+Then the Sénéchal’s Sark eyes saw the great white head, with its flying
+veil of hair, as it towered up for another vicious jab at the fallen
+man, and he emptied both barrels of his gun into it.
+
+A wild scream that shrilled along the night and woke Plaisance and Clos
+Bourel and Vauroque, and the great white devil reared to his fullest
+with wildly beating forefeet, toppled over backwards, and disappeared
+with one hideous thud and a final crash on the shingle of Coupée Bay.
+
+It was worse than they had ever dreamed--as bad almost as some of Gard’s
+own nightmares.
+
+“Good God! Good God! Good God!” babbled the Doctor, as he groped in the
+dark for what might be left of their unfortunate decoy.
+
+“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!” gasped the Sénéchal, with catching
+breath and shaking legs, as he ran round to join him in the search.
+
+But there was no sign of Gard.
+
+“Run, man!--Plaisance--a light!” jerked the Sénéchal.
+
+“I can’t see,” groaned the Doctor.
+
+“I’ll go!” and he set off at the best pace his years and his shaking
+legs could compass.
+
+Plaisance was standing at its doors, trembling still at that fearsome
+cry, and wondering if it was, perchance, the last trump.
+
+At sight of the panting figure coming up from the Coupée, it scuttled
+and banged the doors tight. “Open! Open, you fools!” cried the
+Sénéchal, and flung himself against the first door, while those inside,
+under the sure belief that they were keeping out the devil, heaped
+themselves against it to prevent him.
+
+“Dolts! Idiots! Fools!” he cried. “It’s me--the Sénéchal. I want your
+help!” and at that a man peeped out from the next door to make sure this
+was not just another wile of the devil.
+
+“A lantern! Quick!” ordered the Sénéchal. “And a blanket and a rope--and
+get ready a bed for a wounded man. Come you with me and help!”
+
+“Mais, mon Gyu----!” began the man.
+
+“We’ve killed the devil, and the Doctor’s down there with him----”
+
+“But we don’t want him here, M. le Sénéchal,” quavered a woman’s voice,
+in terror.
+
+“Fools! It’s Mr. Gard that is hurt. The devil’s down in Coupée Bay, and
+we’ve killed him for you.”
+
+“Ah then, Gyu marchi! Here’s a blanket--and the lantern--rope’s in barn.
+You get a bed ready,” to the woman, and they went off towards the
+Coupée.
+
+And mighty glad the Doctor was to see them coming. He had begun to fear
+the Sénéchal had lost his head and made a bolt for home.
+
+He had been sitting under the bank of the cutting as the surest way of
+keeping out of one or other of the black gulfs. But the interval had
+given him time to recover himself, and he jumped up at once, all ready
+for business, and hailed them.
+
+“Down this side, I think,” he said, and they swung the lantern over the
+Grande Grève slope below the bit of crumbly pathway.
+
+“Le velas!” said Thomas Carré, and handed the lantern to the Sénéchal,
+and let himself heavily over the side, and groped his way down to the
+motionless form among the bramble bushes.
+
+“Pardie, he is dead, I do think!” as he bent over it.
+
+“Let’s see!” said the Doctor’s quick voice at his elbow. “Hand down the
+light;” and the Sénéchal waited above in grievous anxiety.
+
+“Not dead,” said the Doctor at last. “Stunned and badly knocked about.
+He’ll come round. Now, how are we to get him up?”
+
+“Here’s a blanket--and a rope.”
+
+“Good! The blanket!... So!... Now--gently, my man!... Got it, Sénéchal?
+Right! Ease him down on to the path. That’s right! Give me a hand, will
+you? My legs aren’t as limber as they used to be. Now we’ll get him on
+to a bed and see what the damage is;” and they set off slowly for
+Plaisance.
+
+“My God, Sénéchal! That passed belief! To think of our never thinking of
+that infernal brute!” said the Doctor, as they stumbled slowly along in
+the joggling light.
+
+“He was possessed of the devil, without a doubt. That last scream of his
+when he got my two bullets--”
+
+“’T woke us,” said Carré. “And we wondered what was up. What was it,
+then, monsieur?”
+
+“That devil of a white stallion of Le Pelley’s. It was him killed Tom
+Hamon and Peter Mauger, and he tried to kill Mr. Gard. We’ve been on
+this job for weeks past, while you were all sleeping in your beds.”
+
+“Mon Gyu! and we none of us knew anything about it till we heard yon
+scream! And he’s dead----”
+
+“He’s dead--unless he’s the devil,” said the Sénéchal sententiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES
+
+
+Vast was the wonder of the Sark folk when they heard next day of that
+night’s doings, and learned who the murderer of the Coupée was, and how
+and by whom he had been laid by the heels.
+
+The whole Island breathed freely once more, and was outspokenly grateful
+to the courage and pertinacity which had lifted from it the cloud and
+the reproach.
+
+Some of them even had the grace to be not a little ashamed of their
+previous doings, but ascribed the greater part of the blame to Tom’s
+widow and Peter Mauger.
+
+But it was days before Stephen Gard took any interest in the matter,
+past or present, or in anything whatsoever.
+
+The Doctor’s pad undoubtedly saved his life, but no amount of padding
+could avert entirely the fiendish malignity of those merciless iron
+flails.
+
+He lay unconscious for eight-and-forty hours; and the Doctor--though he
+never breathed a word of it, and prophesied complete recovery with the
+utmost cheerfulness and apparent sincerity--had his own grim fears as to
+what the effect of the whole hideous event might be on one who had
+already suffered such undue strain of mind and body.
+
+Fortunately, his fears proved groundless. On the third day, Gard
+quietly opened his eyes on Nance, who had barely left his bedside since
+the Sénéchal went down to La Closerie himself and brought her back with
+him to Plaisance.
+
+“I’ve been asleep,” he said drowsily. “Anything wrong, Nance dear?” and
+he tried to sit up, but found his head heavy with cold water bandages,
+and a pain about his neck and left shoulder, and his left arm in
+splints, and all the rest of him one great aching bruise.
+
+“Why--” he murmured, in vast surprise.
+
+“You’re to lie quite still,” said Nance dictatorially, with lifted
+finger. “And you’re not to talk or think till the Doctor comes.”
+
+“Give me a kiss, then!”--good prima facie evidence, this, that his brain
+had suffered no permanent injury.
+
+“Well, he didn’t say anything about that,” and she bent over him and
+kissed him with a brimming flood of gratitude in her blue eyes, and he
+lay quiet for a time.
+
+“Is it dead?” he asked suddenly, with a reminiscent shudder which set
+all his bruises aching.
+
+“The white horse? Yes, Dieu merci, it’s dead! But you’re not to talk or
+think.”
+
+“Give me another kiss, then!”--from which it was apparent that he knew
+very well what kind of medicine was best adapted to his ailments.
+
+The Doctor came down to see him the very first thing every morning, and
+now he came quietly in, just as Nance had been administering her latest
+dose.
+
+“Ah--ha, nurse! What are you doing to my patient!”
+
+“I’m only keeping him quiet, sir, as you told me to,” said Nance, with a
+rosy face.
+
+“It’s the doctor you ought to pay, not the patient. Well, my boy, how
+are we this morning? Head aching yet?”
+
+“It does feel a bit queer. Tell me all about last night, Doctor!”
+
+“Ah--ha, yes--last night! Well, you caught the murderer with a
+vengeance, my boy--or he caught you,”--and then, seeing the puzzlement
+in the tired eyes, he briefly explained the whole matter.
+
+“And do you mean it was that awful beast killed the others?”
+
+“Without a doubt--and would have killed you in exactly the same way, and
+exactly the same place, but for my pads and the Sénéchal’s bullets.
+Queer thing--they found the brute lying all in a heap in Coupée Bay on
+the very spot where Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger were found.”
+
+“Ay-y-y-y-y!” breathed Gard, with a long sigh of relief and a shiver. “I
+shall never forget him.”
+
+“Oh yes, you will--in time. Think of little Nance here. She’s a sight
+better worth thinking of. And now, Miss Nancy, how much good news can
+you stand all at once, if you try your very hardest?” he asked, with a
+sparkle in his eyes that somehow seemed to set hers sparkling too.
+
+“Oh madé, Doctor!” and the little hands clasped up on her breast, as was
+her way when greatly moved. “Not----?”
+
+She dared not hope for so much--the wish of her heart--just an inch or
+so behind the desire for Gard’s recovery.
+
+“The cutter this morning brought over one we had feared was lost----”
+
+“Not--not Bernel?”
+
+“Yes, my child, Bernel, by God’s good mercy! He was picked up by a
+Granville trawler, and lay there ill for some days, and could only get
+back by Jersey and Guernsey. He was to come along with the Sénéchal in a
+quarter of an hour--”
+
+But Nance had fallen on her knees and buried her face in the
+bed-clothes, lest any but God should see it in the rapture of its
+breaking.
+
+“Dieu merci! Dieu merci! Dieu merci!” she was crying, though none of
+them heard it.
+
+And “Thank God!” said Stephen Gard with fervour--for Bernel, and for
+himself, but most of all for Nance.
+
+
+ NOTE.--The names used in this book are necessarily the names
+ still current in Sark. None of the characters presented,
+ however, are in any way connected with any persons now living
+ in the Island.
+
+
+
+
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+ A Maid of the Silver Sea | Project Gutenberg
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Maid of the Silver Sea, by John Oxenham</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A Maid of the Silver Sea</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John Oxenham</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 29, 2005 [eBook #14832]<br>
+[Most recently updated: August 21, 2023]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Steven Gibbs
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+ (https://www.pgdp.net)</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA ***</div>
+
+<hr class="full">
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+ <h1>A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA</h1>
+
+ <h3>BY</h3>
+
+ <h2>JOHN OXENHAM</h2>
+
+ <h5>WITH FRONTISPIECE IN COLOUR BY HAROLD COPPING</h5>
+
+ <h6>Hodder and Stoughton Warwick Square, London, E.C.</h6>
+
+ <h5>1910</h5>
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" class="w50" alt="Nance Hamon" title="Nance Hamon"><br>
+ <p class="center"><b>Nance Hamon</b></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h5>TO<br>
+ MY FRIEND<br>
+ EDWARD BAKER<br>
+ OF LA CHAUMIERE, SARK<br>
+ <br>
+ ON WHOSE MOST HOSPITABLE AND SUPREMELY<br>
+ COMFORTABLE VERANDAH, LOOKING OUT<br>
+ TO THE FAIR COAST OF FRANCE, THIS<br>
+ STORY WAS PARTLY WRITTEN, I<br>
+ INSCRIBE THE SAME IN REMEMBRANCE<br>
+ OF MANY<br>
+ DELIGHTFUL DAYS<br>
+ TOGETHER</h5>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+ <div class="center">
+ <table class="autotable">
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST<br>VEILING</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN'T DARE</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT<br>GOING DOWN IT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE<br>AN ENEMY</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS<br>OF THE NARROW WAY</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW TWO FELL OUT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>CHAPTER XVI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW ONE FELL OVER</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>CHAPTER XVII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>CHAPTER XVIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW PETER'S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>CHAPTER XIX</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX"><b>CHAPTER XX</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI"><b>CHAPTER XXI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII"><b>CHAPTER XXII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII"><b>CHAPTER XXIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV"><b>CHAPTER XXIV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV"><b>CHAPTER XXV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI"><b>CHAPTER XXVI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW HE HELD THE ROCK</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII"><b>CHAPTER XXVII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM<br>HEAVEN</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII"><b>CHAPTER XXVIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX"><b>CHAPTER XXIX</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX"><b>CHAPTER XXX</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI"><b>CHAPTER XXXI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII"><b>CHAPTER XXXII</b></a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII"><b>CHAPTER XXXIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV"><b>CHAPTER XXXIV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW JULIE'S SCHEMES FELL FLAT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV"><b>CHAPTER XXXV</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI"><b>CHAPTER XXXVI</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L'ETAT</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII"><b>CHAPTER XXXVII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII"><b>CHAPTER XXXVIII</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr vt"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX"><b>CHAPTER XXXIX</b></a> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"> HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES</td></tr>
+ </table></div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT</h3>
+
+ <p>A girl and a boy lay in a cubby-hole in the north side of the
+ cliff overlooking Port Gorey, and watched the goings-on down
+ below.</p>
+
+ <p>The sun was tending towards Guernsey and the gulf was filled
+ witn golden light. A small brig, unkempt and dirty, was nosing
+ towards the rough wooden landing-stage clamped to the opposite
+ rocks, as though doubtful of the advisability of attempting its
+ closer acquaintance.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Gyu, Bern, how I wish they were all at the bottom of the
+ sea!" said the girl vehemently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whe&mdash;e&mdash;e&mdash;w!" whistled the boy, and then with
+ a twinkle in his eye,&mdash;"Who's got a new parasol now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Everybody!&mdash;but it's not that. It's the bustle&mdash;and
+ the dirt&mdash;and the noise&mdash;and oh&mdash;everything! You
+ can't remember what it was like before these wretched mines
+ came&mdash;no dust, no noise, no bustle, no dirty men, no silly
+ women, no nothing as it is now. Just Sark as it used to be. And
+ now&mdash;! Mon Gyu, yes I wish the sea would break in through
+ their nasty tunnels and wash them all away&mdash;pumps and
+ engines and houses&mdash;everything!"</p>
+
+ <p>And up on the hillside at the head of the gulf the great
+ pumping-engine clacked monotonously "Never! Never! Never!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You've got it bad to-day, Nan," said the boy.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've always got it bad. It makes me sick. It has changed
+ everything and everybody&mdash;everybody except mother and you,"
+ she added quickly. "Get&mdash;get&mdash;get! Why we hardly used
+ to know what money was, and now no one thinks of anything but
+ getting all they can. It is sickening."</p>
+
+ <p>"S&mdash;s&mdash;s&mdash;s&mdash;t!" signalled the boy
+ suddenly, at the sound of steps and voices on the cliff outside
+ and close at hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom," muttered the boy.</p>
+
+ <p>"And Peter Mauger," murmured the girl, and they both shrank
+ lower into their hiding-place.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a tiny natural chamber in the sharp slope of the hill.
+ Ages ago the massive granite boulders of the headland, loosened
+ and undercut by the ceaseless assaults of wind and weather and
+ the deadly quiet fingers of the frost, had come rolling down the
+ slope till they settled afresh on new foundations, forming holes
+ and crannies and little angular chambers where the splintered
+ shoulders met. In time, the soil silted down and covered their
+ asperities, and&mdash;like a good colonist&mdash;carrying in
+ itself the means of increase, it presently brought forth and
+ blossomed, and the erstwhile shattered rocks were royally robed
+ in russet and purple, and green and gold.</p>
+
+ <p>Among these fantastic little chambers Nance had played as a
+ child, and had found refuge in them from the persecutions of her
+ big half-brother, Tom Hamon. Tom was six when she was
+ born&mdash;fourteen accordingly when she was at the teasable age
+ of eight, and unusually tempting as a victim by reason of her
+ passionate resentment of his unwelcome attentions.</p>
+
+ <p>She hated Tom, and Tom had always resented her and her
+ mother's intrusion into the family, and Bernel's, when he came,
+ four years after Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>What his father wanted to marry again for, Tom never could
+ make out. His lack of training and limited powers of expression
+ did not indeed permit him any distinct reasoning on the matter,
+ but the feeling was there&mdash;a dull resentment which found its
+ only vent and satisfaction in stolid rudeness to his stepmother
+ and the persecution of Nance and Bernel whenever occasion
+ offered.</p>
+
+ <p>The household was not therefore on too happy a footing.</p>
+
+ <p>It consisted, at the time when our story opens, of&mdash;Old
+ Mrs. Hamon&mdash;Grannie&mdash;half of whose life had been lived
+ in the nineteenth century and half in the eighteenth. She had
+ seen all the wild doings of the privateering and free-trading
+ days, and recalled as a comparatively recent event the raiding of
+ the Island by the men of Herm, though that happened forty years
+ before.</p>
+
+ <p>She was for the most part a very reserved and silent old lady,
+ but her tongue could bite like a whip when the need arose.</p>
+
+ <p>She occupied her own dower-rooms in the house, and rarely went
+ outside them. All day long she sat in her great arm-chair by the
+ window in her sitting-room, with the door wide open, so that she
+ could see all that went on in the house and outside it; and in
+ the sombre depths of her great black silk sun-bonnet&mdash;long
+ since turned by age and weather to dusky green&mdash;her watchful
+ eyes had in them something of the inscrutable and menacing.</p>
+
+ <p>Her wants were very few, and as her income from her one-third
+ of the farm had far exceeded her expenses for more than twenty
+ years, she was reputed as rich in material matters as she
+ undoubtedly was in common-sense and worldly wisdom. Even young
+ Tom was sulkily silent before her on the rare occasions when they
+ came into contact.</p>
+
+ <p>Next in the family came the nominal head of it, "Old Tom"
+ Hamon, to distinguish him from young Tom, his son; a rough, not
+ ill-natured man, until the money-getting fever seized him, since
+ which time his home-folks had found in him changes that did not
+ make for their comfort.</p>
+
+ <p>The discovery of silver in Sark, the opening of the mines, and
+ the coming of the English miners&mdash;with all the very
+ problematical benefits of a vastly increased currency of money,
+ and the sudden introduction of new ideas and standards of life
+ and living into a community which had hitherto been contented
+ with the order of things known to its forefathers&mdash;these
+ things had told upon many, but on none more than old Tom
+ Hamon.</p>
+
+ <p>Suspicious at first of the meaning and doings of these
+ strangers, he very soon found them advantageous. He got excellent
+ prices for his farm produce, and when his horses and carts were
+ not otherwise engaged he could always turn them to account
+ hauling for the mines.</p>
+
+ <p>As the silver-fever grew in him he became closer in his
+ dealings both abroad and at home. With every pound he could
+ scrimp and save he bought shares in the mines and believed in
+ them absolutely. And he went on scrimping and saving and buying
+ shares so as to have as large a stake in the silver future as
+ possible.</p>
+
+ <p>He got no return as yet from his investment, indeed. But that
+ would come all right in time, and the more shares he could get
+ hold of the larger the ultimate return would be. And so he
+ stinted himself and his family, and mortgaged his future, in
+ hopes of wealth which he would not have known how to enjoy if he
+ had succeeded in getting it.</p>
+
+ <p>So possessed was he with the desire for gain that when young
+ Tom came home from sea he left the farming to him, and took to
+ the mining himself, and worked harder than he had ever worked in
+ his life before.</p>
+
+ <p>He was a sturdy, middle-sized man, with a grizzled bullet head
+ and rounded beard, of a dogged and pertinacious disposition, but
+ capable, when stirred out of his usual phlegm, of fiery outbursts
+ which overbore all argument and opposition. His wife died when
+ his boy Tom was three, and after two years of lonely discomfort
+ he married Nancy Poidestre of Petit Dixcart, whose people looked
+ upon it as something of a <i>m&eacute;salliance</i> that she should
+ marry out of her own country into Little Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Nancy was eminently good-looking and a notable housewife, and
+ she went into Tom Hamon's house of La Closerie with every hope
+ and intention of making him happy.</p>
+
+ <p>But, from the very first, little Tom set his face against
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>It would be hard to say why. Nancy racked her brain for
+ reasons, and could find none, and was miserable over it.</p>
+
+ <p>His father thrashed him for his rudeness and insolence, which
+ only made matters worse.</p>
+
+ <p>His own mother had given way to him in everything, and spoiled
+ him completely. After her death his father out of pity for his
+ forlorn estate, had equally given way to him, and only realised,
+ too late, when he tried to bring him to with a round turn, how
+ thoroughly out of hand he had got.</p>
+
+ <p>When little Tom found, as one consequence of the new mother's
+ arrival, that his father thrashed instead of humouring him, he
+ put it all down to the new-comer's account, and set himself to
+ her discomfiture in every way his barbarous little wits could
+ devise.</p>
+
+ <p>He never forgot one awful week he passed in his grandmother's
+ care&mdash;a week that terminated in the arrival of still another
+ new-comer, who, in course of time, developed into little Nance.
+ It is not impossible that the remembrance of that black week
+ tended to colour his after-treatment of his little half-sister.
+ In spite of her winsomeness he hated her always, and did his very
+ best to make life a burden to her.</p>
+
+ <p>When, on that memorable occasion, he was hastily flung by his
+ father into his grandmother's room, as the result of some
+ wickedness which had sorely upset his stepmother, and the door
+ was, most unusually, closed behind him, his first natural impulse
+ was to escape as quickly as possible.</p>
+
+ <p>But he became aware of something unusual and discomforting in
+ the atmosphere, and when his grandmother said sternly, "Sit
+ down!" and he turned on her to offer his own opinion on the
+ matter, he found the keen dark eyes gazing out at him from under
+ the shadowy penthouse of the great black sun-bonnet, with so
+ intent and compelling a stare that his mouth closed without
+ saying a word. He climbed up on to a chair and twisted his feet
+ round the legs by way of anchorage.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he sat up and stared back at Grannie, and as an
+ exhibition of nonchalance and high spirit, put out his tongue at
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>Grannie only looked at him.</p>
+
+ <p>And, bit by bit, the tongue withdrew, and only the gaping
+ mouth was left, and above it a pair of frightened green eyes,
+ transmitting to the perverse little soul within new impressions
+ and vague terrors.</p>
+
+ <p>Before long his left arm went up over his face to shut out the
+ sight of Grannie's dreadful staring eyes, and when, after a
+ sufficient interval, he ventured a peep at her and found her eyes
+ still fixed on him, he howled, "Take it off! Take it off!" and
+ slipped his anchors and slid to the floor, hunching his back at
+ this tormentor who could beat him on his own ground.</p>
+
+ <p>For that week he gave no trouble to any one. But after it he
+ never went near Grannie's room, and for years he never spoke to
+ her. When he passed her open door, or in front of her window, he
+ hunched his shoulder protectively and averted his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>Resenting control in any shape or form, Tom naturally objected
+ to school.</p>
+
+ <p>His stepmother would have had him go&mdash;for his own sake as
+ well as hers. But his father took a not unusual Sark view of the
+ matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the odds?" said he. "He'll have the farm.
+ Book-learning will be no use to him," and in spite of Nancy's
+ protests&mdash;which Tom regarded as simply the natural outcrop
+ of her ill-will towards him&mdash;the boy grew up untaught and
+ uncontrolled, and knowing none but the worst of all
+ masters&mdash;himself.</p>
+
+ <p>On occasion, when the tale of provocation reached its limit,
+ his father thrashed him, until there came a day when Tom upset
+ the usual course of proceedings by snatching the stick out of his
+ father's hands, and would have belaboured him in turn if he had
+ not been promptly knocked down.</p>
+
+ <p>After that his father judged it best for all concerned that he
+ should flight his troublesome wings outside for a while. So he
+ sent him off in a trading-ship, in the somewhat forlorn hope that
+ a knowledge of the world would knock some of the devil out of
+ him&mdash;a hope which, like many another, fell short of
+ accomplishment.</p>
+
+ <p>The world knocks a good deal out of a man, but it also knocks
+ a good deal in. Tom came back from his voyaging knowing a good
+ many things that he had not known when he started&mdash;a little
+ English among others&mdash;and most of the others things which
+ had been more profitably left unlearnt.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF</h3>
+
+ <p>And little Nance?</p>
+
+ <p>The most persistent memories of Nance's childhood were her
+ fear and hatred of Tom, and her passionate love for her
+ mother,&mdash;and Bernel when he came.</p>
+
+ <p>"My own," she called these two, and regarded even her father
+ as somewhat outside that special pale; esteemed Grannie as an
+ Olympian, benevolently inclined, but dwelling on a remote and
+ loftier plane; and feared and detested Tom as an open enemy.</p>
+
+ <p>And she had reasons.</p>
+
+ <p>She was a high-strung child, too strong and healthy to be
+ actually nervous, but with every faculty always at its
+ fullest&mdash;not only in active working order but always
+ actively at work&mdash;an admirable subject therefore for the
+ malevolence of an enemy whose constant proximity offered him
+ endless opportunity.</p>
+
+ <p>Much of his boyish persecution never reached the ears of the
+ higher powers. Nance very soon came to accept Tom's rough
+ treatment as natural from a big fellow of fourteen to a small
+ girl of eight, and she bore it stoically and hated him the
+ harder.</p>
+
+ <p>Her mother taught her carefully to say her prayers, which
+ included petitions for the welfare of Grannie and father and
+ brother Tom, and for a time, with the perfunctoriness of
+ childhood, which attaches more weight to the act than to the
+ meaning of it, she allowed that to pass with a stickle and a
+ slur. But very soon brother Tom was ruthlessly dropped out of the
+ ritual, and neither threats nor persuasion could induce her to
+ re-establish him.</p>
+
+ <p>Later on, and in private, she added to her acknowledged
+ petitions an appendix, unmistakably brief and to the
+ point&mdash;"And, O God, please kill brother Tom!"&mdash;and
+ lived in hope.</p>
+
+ <p>She was an unusually pretty child, though her prettiness
+ developed afterwards&mdash;as childish prettiness does not
+ always&mdash;into something finer and more lasting.</p>
+
+ <p>She had, as a child, large dark blue eyes, which wore as a
+ rule a look of watchful anxiety&mdash;put there by brother Tom.
+ To the end of her life she carried the mark of a cut over her
+ right eyebrow, which came within an ace of losing her the sight
+ of that eye. It was brother Tom did that.</p>
+
+ <p>She had an abundance of flowing brown hair, by which Tom
+ delighted to lift her clear off the ground, under threat of
+ additional boxed ears if she opened her mouth. The wide, firm
+ little mouth always remained closed, but the blue eyes burned
+ fiercely, and the outraged little heart, thumping furiously at
+ its impotence, did its best to salve its wounds with ceaseless
+ repetition of its own private addition to the prescribed form of
+ morning and evening prayer.</p>
+
+ <p>Once, even Tom's dull wit caught something of meaning in the
+ blaze of the blue eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"What are you saying, you little devil?" he growled, and
+ released her so suddenly that she fell on her knees in the
+ mud.</p>
+
+ <p>And she put her hands together, as she was in the habit of
+ doing, and prayed, "O God, please kill brother Tom!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Little devil!" said brother Tom, with a startled red face,
+ and made a dash at her; but she had foreseen that and was gone
+ like a flash.</p>
+
+ <p>One might have expected her childish comeliness to exercise
+ something of a mollifying effect on his brutality. On the
+ contrary, it seemed but to increase it. She was so sweet; he was
+ so coarse. She was so small and fragile; he was so big and
+ strong. Her prettiness might work on others. He would let her see
+ and feel that he was not the kind to be fooled by such
+ things.</p>
+
+ <p>He had the elemental heartlessness of the savage, which
+ recognises no sufferings but its own, and refuses to be affected
+ even by them.</p>
+
+ <p>When Nance's kitten, presented to her by their neighbour, Mrs.
+ Helier Baker, solved much speculation as to its sex by becoming a
+ mother, Tom gladly undertook the task of drowning the superfluous
+ offspring. He got so much amusement out of it that, for weeks,
+ Nance's horrified inner vision saw little blind heads,
+ half-drowned and mewing piteously, striving with feeble pink
+ claws to climb out of the death-tub and being ruthlessly set
+ swimming again till they sank.</p>
+
+ <p>She hurled herself at Tom as he gloated over his enjoyment,
+ and would have asked nothing better than to treat him as he was
+ treating the kittens&mdash;righteous retribution in her case, not
+ enjoyment!&mdash;but he was too strong for her. He simply kicked
+ out behind, and before she could get up had thrust one of his
+ half-drowned victims into the neck of her frock, and the
+ clammy-dead feel of it and its pitiful screaming set her
+ shuddering for months whenever she thought of it.</p>
+
+ <p>But now and again her tormentor overpassed the bounds and got
+ his reward&mdash;to Nance's immediate satisfaction but subsequent
+ increased tribulation. For whenever he got a thrashing on her
+ account he never failed to pay her out in the smaller change of
+ persecution which never came to light.</p>
+
+ <p>On a pitch-dark, starless night, the high-hedged&mdash;and in
+ places deep-sunk&mdash;lanes of Little Sark are as black as the
+ inside of an ebony ruler.</p>
+
+ <p>When the moon bathes sea and land in a flood of shimmering
+ silver, or on a clear night of stars&mdash;and the stars in Sark,
+ you must know, shine infinitely larger and closer and brighter
+ than in most other places&mdash;the darkness below is lifted
+ somewhat by reason of the majestic width and height of the
+ glittering dome above. But when moon and stars alike are wanting,
+ then the darkness of a Sark lane is a thing to be felt,
+ and&mdash;if you should happen to be a little girl of eight, with
+ a large imagination and sharp ears that have picked up fearsome
+ stories of witches and ghosts and evil spirits&mdash;to be
+ mortally feared.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom had a wholesome dread of such things himself. But the fear
+ of fourteen, in a great strong body and no heavenly spark of
+ imagination, is not to be compared with the fear of eight and a
+ mind that could quiver like a harp even at its own imaginings.
+ And, to compass his ends, he would blunt his already dull
+ feelings and turn the darkness to his account.</p>
+
+ <p>When he knew Nance was out on such a night&mdash;on some
+ errand, or in at a neighbour's&mdash;to crouch in the hedge and
+ leap silently out upon her was huge delight; and it was well
+ worth braving the grim possibilities of the hedges in order to
+ extort from her the anger in the bleat of terror which, as a
+ rule, was all that her paralysed heart permitted, as she turned
+ and fled.</p>
+
+ <p>Almost more amusing&mdash;as considerably extending the
+ enjoyment&mdash;was it to follow her quietly on such occasions,
+ yet not so quietly but that she was perfectly aware of footsteps
+ behind, which stopped when she stopped and went on again when she
+ went on, and so kept her nerves on the quiver the whole time.</p>
+
+ <p>Creeping fearfully along in the blackness, with eyes and ears
+ on the strain, and both little shoulders humped against the
+ expected apparition of Tom&mdash;or worse, she would become aware
+ of the footsteps behind her.</p>
+
+ <p>Then she would stop suddenly to make sure, and stand listening
+ painfully, and hear nothing but the low hoarse growl of the sea
+ that rarely ceases, day or night, among the rocks of Little
+ Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Then she would take a tentative step or two and stop again,
+ and then dash on. And always there behind her were the footsteps
+ that followed in the dark.</p>
+
+ <p>Then she would fumble with her foot for a stone and stoop
+ hastily&mdash;for you are at a disadvantage with ghosts and with
+ Toms when you stoop&mdash;and pick it up and hurl it
+ promiscuously in the direction of the footsteps, and quaver, in a
+ voice that belied its message, "Go away, Tom Hamon! I can see
+ you,"&mdash;which was a little white fib born of the black
+ urgency of the situation;&mdash;"and I'm not the least bit
+ afraid,"&mdash;which was most decidedly another.</p>
+
+ <p>And so the journey would progress fitfully and in spasms, and
+ leave nightmare recollections for the disturbance of one's
+ sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>But there were variations in the procedure at times.</p>
+
+ <p>As when, on one occasion, Nance's undiscriminating projectile
+ elicited from the darkness a plaintive "Moo!" which came, she
+ knew, from her favourite calf Jeanetton, who had broken her
+ tether in the field and sought companionship in the road, and had
+ followed her doubtfully, stopping whenever she stopped, and so
+ received the punishment intended for another.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance kissed the bruise on Jeanetton's ample forehead next day
+ very many times, and explained the whole matter to her at
+ considerable length, and Jeanetton accepted it all very placidly
+ and bore no ill-will.</p>
+
+ <p>Another time, when Nance had taken a very specially compounded
+ cake over to her old friend, Mrs. Baker, as a present from her
+ mother, and had been kept much longer than she wished&mdash;for
+ the old lady's enjoyment of her pretty ways and entertaining
+ prattle&mdash;she set out for home in fear and trembling.</p>
+
+ <p>It was one of the pitch-black nights, and she went along on
+ tiptoes, hugging the empty plate to her breast, and glancing
+ fearfully over first one shoulder, then the other, then over both
+ and back and front all at once.</p>
+
+ <p>She was almost home, and very grateful for it, when the
+ dreaded black figure leaped silently out at her from its
+ crouching place, and she tore down the lane to the house, Tom's
+ hoarse guffaws chasing her mockingly.</p>
+
+ <p>The open door cleft a solid yellow wedge in the darkness. She
+ was almost into it, when her foot caught, and she flung head
+ foremost into the light with a scream, and lay there with the
+ blood pouring down her face from the broken plate.</p>
+
+ <p>A finger's-breadth lower and she would have gone through life
+ one-eyed, which would have been a grievous loss to humanity at
+ large, for sweeter windows to a large sweet soul never shone than
+ those out of which little Nance Hamon's looked.</p>
+
+ <p>Most houses may be judged by their windows, but these material
+ windows are not always true gauge of what is within. They may be
+ decked to deceive, but the clear windows of the soul admit of no
+ disguise. That little life tenant is always looking out and
+ showing himself in his true colours&mdash;whether he knows it or
+ not.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance's terrified scream took old Tom out at a bound. He had
+ heard the quick rush of her feet and Tom's mocking laughter in
+ the distance. He carried Nance in to her mother, snatched up a
+ stick, and went after the culprit who had promptly
+ disappeared.</p>
+
+ <p>It was two days before Tom sneaked in again and took his
+ thrashing dourly. Little Nance had shut her lips tight when her
+ father questioned her, and refused to say a word. But he was
+ satisfied as to where the blame lay and administered justice with
+ a heavy hand.</p>
+
+ <p>Bernel&mdash;as soon as he grew to persecutable
+ age&mdash;provided Tom with another victim. But time was on the
+ victims' side, and when Nance got to be twelve&mdash;Bernel being
+ then eight and Tom eighteen&mdash;their combined energies and
+ furies of revolt against his oppressions put matters more on a
+ level.</p>
+
+ <p>Many a pitched battle they had, and sometimes almost won. But,
+ win or lose, the fact that they had no longer to suffer without
+ lifting a hand was great gain to them, and the very fact that
+ they had to go about together for mutual protection knitted still
+ stronger the ties that bound them one to the other.</p>
+
+ <p>But, though little Nance's earlier years suffered much from
+ the black shadow of brother Tom, they were very far from being
+ years of darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>She was of an unusually bright and enquiring disposition,
+ always wanting to see and know and understand, interested in
+ everything about her, and never satisfied till she had got to the
+ bottom of things, or at all events as far down as it was possible
+ for a small girl to get.</p>
+
+ <p>Her lively chatter and ceaseless questions left her mother and
+ Grannie small chance of stagnation. But, if she asked many
+ questions&mdash;and some of them posers&mdash;it was not simply
+ for the sake of asking, but because she truly wanted to know; and
+ even Grannie, who was not naturally talkative, never resented her
+ pertinent enquiries, but gave freely of her accumulated wisdom
+ and enjoyed herself in the giving.</p>
+
+ <p>When she got beyond their depth at times, or outside their
+ limits, she would boldly carry her queries&mdash;and strange ones
+ they were at times&mdash;to old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar up in
+ Sark, making nothing of the journey and the Coup&eacute;e in
+ order to solve some, to her, important problem. And he not only
+ never refused her but delighted to open to her the stores of a
+ well-stocked mind and of the kindest and gentlest of hearts.</p>
+
+ <p>Often and often the people of Vauroque and Plaisance would see
+ them pass, hand in hand and full of talk, when the Vicar had
+ wished to see with his own eyes one or other of Nance's wonderful
+ discoveries, in the shape of cave or rock-pool, or deposit of
+ sparkling crystal fingers&mdash;amethyst and topaz&mdash;or what
+ not.</p>
+
+ <p>For she was ever lighting on odd and beautiful bits of
+ Nature's craftsmanship. Books were hardly to be had in those
+ days, and in place of them she climbed fearlessly about the rough
+ cliff-sides and tumbled headlands, and looked close at Nature
+ with eyes that missed nothing and craved everything.</p>
+
+ <p>To the neighbours the headlands were places where rabbits were
+ to be shot for dinner, the lower rocks places where ormers and
+ limpets and vraie might be found. But to little Nance the rabbits
+ were playfellows whose sudden deaths she lamented and resented;
+ the cliff-sides were glorious gardens thick with sweet-scented
+ yellow gorse and honeysuckle and wild roses, carpeted with
+ primroses and bluebells; and, in their season, rich and juicy
+ with blackberries beyond the possibilities of picking.</p>
+
+ <p>She was on closest visiting terms with innumerable broods of
+ newly-hatched birdlings&mdash;knew them, indeed, while they were
+ still but eggs&mdash;delighted in them when they were as yet but
+ skin and mouth&mdash;rejoiced in their featherings and flyings.
+ Even baby cuckoos were a joy to her, though, on their
+ foster-mothers' accounts she resented the thriftlessness of their
+ parents, and grew tired each year of their monotonous call which
+ ceased not day or night. But of the larks never, for their songs
+ seemed to her of heaven, while the cuckoos were of earth. The
+ gulls, too, were somewhat difficult from the friendly point of
+ view, but she lay for hours overlooking their domestic
+ arrangements and envying the wonders of their matchless
+ flight.</p>
+
+ <p>And down below the cliffs what marvels she
+ discovered!&mdash;marvels which in many cases the Vicar was fain
+ to content himself with at second hand, since closer acquaintance
+ seemed to him to involve undoubted risk to limb if not to life.
+ Little Nance, indeed, hopped down the seamed cliffs like a rock
+ pipit, with never a thought of the dangers of the passage, and he
+ would stand and watch her with his heart in his mouth, and only
+ shake his grey head at her encouraging assertions that it was
+ truly truly as easy as easy. For he felt certain that even if he
+ got down he would never get up again. And so, when the triumphant
+ shout from below told him she was safely landed, he would wave a
+ grateful hand and get back from the edge and seat himself
+ securely on a rock, till the rosy face came laughing up between
+ him and the shimmering sea, with trophy of weed or shell or
+ crystal quartz, and he would tell her all he knew about them, and
+ she would try to tell him of all he had missed by not coming
+ down.</p>
+
+ <p>There were wonderful great basins down there, all lined with
+ pink and green corallines, and full of the loveliest weeds and
+ anemones and other sea-flowers, and the rivulets that flowed from
+ them to the sea were lined pink and green, too. And this that she
+ had brought him was the flaming sea-weed, though truly it did not
+ look it now, but in the water it was, she assured him, of the
+ loveliest, and there were great bunches there so that the dark
+ holes under the rocks were all alight with it.</p>
+
+ <p>She coaxed him doubtfully to the descent of the rounded
+ headland facing L'Etat, picking out an easy circuitous way for
+ him, and so got him safely down to her own special pool, hollowed
+ out of the solid granite by centuries of patient grinding on the
+ part of the great boulders within.</p>
+
+ <p>It was there, peering down at the fishes below, that she
+ expressed a wish to imitate them; and he agreeing, she ran up to
+ the farm for a bit of rope and was back before he had half
+ comprehended all the beauties of the pool. And he had no sooner
+ explained the necessary movements to her and she had tried them,
+ than she cast off the rope, shouting, "I can swim! I can swim!"
+ and to his amazement swam across the pool and back&mdash;a good
+ fifty feet each way&mdash;chirping with delight in this new-found
+ faculty and the tonic kiss of the finest water in the world. But
+ after all it was not so very amazing, for she was absolutely
+ without fear, and in that water it is difficult to sink.</p>
+
+ <p>They were often down there together after that, for close
+ alongside were wonderful channels and basins whorled out of the
+ rock in the most fantastic ways, and to sit and watch the tide
+ rush up them was a never-failing entertainment.</p>
+
+ <p>And not far away was a blow-hole of the most extraordinary
+ which shot its spray a hundred feet into the air, and if you
+ didn't mind getting wet you could sit quite alongside it, so
+ close that you could put your hand into it as it came rocketing
+ out of the hole, and then, if the sun was right, you sat in the
+ midst of rainbows&mdash;a thing Nance had always longed to do
+ since she clapped her baby hands at her first one. But the Vicar
+ never did that.</p>
+
+ <p>And once, in quest of the how and the why, Nance swam into the
+ blow-hole's cave at a very low tide, and its size and the dome of
+ its roof, compared with the narrowness of its entrance, amazed
+ her, but she did not stay long for it gave her the creeps.</p>
+
+ <p>These were some of the ways by which little Nance grew to a
+ larger estate than most of her fellows, and all these things
+ helped to make her what she came to be.</p>
+
+ <p>When she grew old enough to assist in the farm, new realms of
+ delight opened to her. Chickens, calves, lambs, piglets&mdash;she
+ foster-mothered them all and knew no weariness in all such duties
+ which were rather pleasures.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a wounded rabbit, limping into cover under a tangle of
+ gorse and blackberry bushes, that discovered to her the entrance
+ to the series of little chambers and passages that led right
+ through the headland to the side looking into Port Gorey. Which
+ most satisfactory hiding-place she and Bernel turned to good
+ account on many an occasion when brother Tom's oppression passed
+ endurance.</p>
+
+ <p>It had taken time, and much screwing up of childish courage,
+ to explore the whole of that extraordinary little burrow, and it
+ was not the work of a day.</p>
+
+ <p>When Nance crept along the little run made by many generations
+ of rabbits, she found that it led finally into a dark crack in
+ the rock, and, squeezing through that, she was in a small dark
+ chamber which smelt strongly of her friends.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as her eyes recovered from the sudden change from
+ blazing sunlight to almost pitch darkness, she perceived a small
+ black opening at the far end, and looking through it she saw a
+ lightening of the darkness still farther in which tempted her
+ on.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a tough scramble even for her, and the closeness of the
+ rocks and the loneliness weighed upon her somewhat. But there was
+ that glimmer of light ahead and she must know what it was, and so
+ she climbed and wriggled over and under the huge splintered rocks
+ till she came to the light, like a tiny slit of a window far
+ above her head, and still there were passages leading on.</p>
+
+ <p>Next day, with Bernel and a tiny crasset lamp for company, she
+ explored the burrow to its utmost limits and adopted it at once
+ as their refuge and stronghold. And thereafter they spent much
+ time there, especially in the end chamber where a tiny slit gave
+ on to Port Gorey, and they could lie and watch all that went on
+ down below.</p>
+
+ <p>There they solemnly concocted plans for brother Tom's
+ discomfiture, and thither they retreated after defeat or victory,
+ while he hunted high and low for them and never could make out
+ where they had got to.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Tom went off to sea, and life, for those at home, became
+ a joy without a flaw&mdash;except the thought that he would
+ sometime come back&mdash;unless he got drowned.</p>
+
+ <p>When he returned he was past the boyish bullying and teasing
+ stage, and his stunts and twists developed themselves along other
+ lines. Moreover, sailor-fashion, he wore a knife in a sheath at
+ the back of his belt.</p>
+
+ <p>He found Nance a tall slim girl of sixteen, her childish
+ prettiness just beginning to fashion itself into the strength and
+ comeliness of form and feature which distinguished her later
+ on.</p>
+
+ <p>He swore, with strange oaths, that she was the prettiest bit
+ of goods he'd set eyes on since he left home, and he'd seen a
+ many. And he wondered to himself if this could really be the
+ Nance he used to hate and persecute.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance detested him and all his ways as of old.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME</h3>
+
+ <p>Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger seated themselves on a rock within
+ a few feet of the narrow slit out of which Nance and Bernel had
+ been looking.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie," said Tom, taking up his parable&mdash;"wanted me to
+ join him in getting a loan on farm, he did."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, now!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie&mdash;a loan on farm, and me to join him, 'cause he
+ couldn' do it without. 'And why?' I asked him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!"</p>
+
+ <p>"An' he told me he was goin' to make a fortune out them silver
+ mines."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie! He'd put in every pound he had and every shilling he
+ earned. An' the more he could put in the more he would get
+ out."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!"</p>
+
+ <p>"'But,' I said, 'suppos'n it all goes into them big holes and
+ never comes out&mdash;'"</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But he's just crazy 'bout them mines. Says there's silver an'
+ lead, and guyabble-knows-what-all in 'em, and when they get it
+ out he'll be a rich man."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!" said Peter, nodding his head portentously, as one who
+ had gauged the futility of earthly riches.</p>
+
+ <p>He was a young man of large possessions but very few words.
+ When he did allow his thoughts out they came slowly and in jerks,
+ with lapses at times which the hearer had to fill in as best he
+ could.</p>
+
+ <p>His father had been an enterprising free-trader, and had made
+ money before the family farm came to him on the death of his
+ father. He had married another farm and the heiress attached to
+ it, and Peter was the result. An only son, both parents dead, two
+ farms and a good round sum in the Guernsey Bank, such were
+ Peter's circumstances.</p>
+
+ <p>And himself&mdash;good-tempered; lazy, since he had no need to
+ work; not naturally gifted mentally, and the little he had,
+ barely stirred by the short course of schooling which had been
+ deemed sufficient for so worldly-well-endowed a boy; tall,
+ loose-limbed, easy going and easily led, Peter was the object of
+ much speculation among marriageably inclined maiden hearts, and
+ had set his own where it was not wanted.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie," continued Tom, "an' if I'd join him in the loan the
+ money'd all come to me when he'd done with it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!... Money isn't everything.... Can't get all you want
+ sometimes when you've got all money you want."</p>
+
+ <p>"G'zammin, Peter! You're as crazy 'bout that lass as th' old
+ un is 'bout his mines. Why don't ye ask her and ha' done with
+ it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw&mdash;yes. Well.... You see.... I'm makin' up to her
+ gradual like, and in time&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>And Bernel in the hole dug his elbow facetiously into Nance's
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Gyu! To think of a slip of a thing like our Nance making
+ a great big fellow like you as fool-soft as a bit of tallow!" and
+ Tom stared at him in amazement. "Why, I've licked her scores of
+ times, and I used to lift her up by the hair of her head."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd ha' knocked your head right off, Tom Hamon, if I'd been
+ there. Right off&mdash;yes, an' bumped it on the ground."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, you wouldn't. 'Cause, in the first place, you couldn't,
+ and in the second place you wouldn't have looked at her then. She
+ was no more to look at than a bit of a rabbit, slipping about,
+ scared-like, with her big eyes all round her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Great rough bull of a chap you was, Tom. Ought to had more
+ lickings when you was young."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!" said Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"Join him?" asked Peter after a pause.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I won't, an' he's no right to ask it, an' he knows it.
+ Them dirty mines may pay an' they may not, but the farm's a safe
+ thing an' I'll stick to it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe new capt'n'll make things go better. That's him, I'm
+ thinking, just got ashore from brig without breaking his legs,"
+ nodding towards the wooden landing-stage on the other side of the
+ gulf. For landing at Port Gorey was at times a matter requiring
+ both nerve and muscle.</p>
+
+ <p>A man, however, had just leaped ashore from the brig, and was
+ now standing looking somewhat anxiously after the landing of his
+ baggage, which consisted of a wooden chest and an old
+ carpet-bag.</p>
+
+ <p>When at last it stood safely on the platform, he cast a
+ comprehensive look at his surroundings and then turned to the
+ group of men who had come down to watch the boat come in, and
+ four pairs of eyes on the opposite side of the gulf watched him
+ curiously, with little thought of the tremendous part he was to
+ play in all their lives.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's he stop?" asked Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Our house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nay!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie, I tell you. He's to stop at our house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why doesn't he go to Barracks?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Old Captain's there and they might not agree. Oh ouaie, he'll
+ have his hands full, I'm thinking. And if he's not careful it's a
+ crack on the head and a drop over the Coup&eacute;e he'll be
+ getting."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" said Peter Mauger.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come you along and see what kind of chap he is."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw well, I don't mind," and they strolled away to inspect the
+ new Mine Captain, who was to brace up the slackened ropes and
+ bring the enterprise to a successful issue.</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you know he was going to stop with us, Nance?" asked
+ Bernel, as they groped their way out after due interval.</p>
+
+ <p>"I heard father tell mother this morning."</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's he to sleep?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's to have my room and I'm coming up into the loft. I shall
+ take the dark end, and I've put up a curtain across."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shoo! We'll hear enough about the mines now," and they crept
+ out behind a gorse bush, and went off across the common towards
+ the clump of wind-whipped trees inside which the houses of Little
+ Sark clustered for companionship and shelter from the south-west
+ gales.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES</h3>
+
+ <p>Old Tom Hamon gave the new arrival warm greeting, and pointed
+ out such matters as might interest him as they climbed the steep
+ road which led up to the plateau and the houses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Assay Office, Mr. Gard.... Captain's Office.... Forge....
+ Sark's Hope shaft.... Le Pelley shaft&mdash;ninety fathoms below
+ sea-level.... Pump shaft ... and yon to east'ard is Prince's
+ shaft.... We go round here behind engine-house.... Yon's my house
+ 'mong the trees."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a fine animal," said Gard, stopping suddenly to look
+ at a great white horse, which stood nibbling the gorse on the
+ edge of the cliff right in the eye of the sun, as it drooped
+ towards Guernsey in a holocaust of purple and amber and crimson
+ clouds. The glow of the threatening sky threw the great white
+ figure into unusual prominence.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yours, Mr. Hamon?" asked Gard&mdash;and the white horse flung
+ up its head and pealed out a trumpet-like neigh as though
+ resenting the imputation.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," said old Tom, staring at the white horse under his
+ shading hand. "Seigneur's. What's he doing down here? He's
+ generally kept up at Eperquerie, and that's the best place for
+ him. He's an awkward beast at times. I must send and tell Mr. Le
+ Pelley where he is."</p>
+
+ <p>The little cluster of white, thatched houses stood close
+ together for company, but discreetly turned their faces away from
+ one another so that no man overlooked or interfered with his
+ neighbour.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard found himself in a large room which occupied the whole
+ middle portion of the house and served as kitchen and common room
+ for the family.</p>
+
+ <p>The floor was of trodden earth&mdash;hard and dry as cement,
+ with a strip of boarding round the sides and in front of the
+ fire-place. Heavy oaken beams ran across the roof from which
+ depended a great hanging rack littered with all kinds of
+ household odds and ends. Along the beams of the roof on hooks
+ hung two long guns. One end of the room was occupied by a huge
+ fire-place, in one corner of which stood a new iron cooking
+ range, and alongside it a heap of white ashes and some
+ smouldering sticks of gorse under a big black iron pot filled the
+ room with the fragrance of wood smoke. In the opposite side of
+ the fire-place was an iron door closing the great baking oven,
+ and above it ran a wide mantel-shelf on which stood china dogs
+ and glass rolling-pins and a couple of lamps.</p>
+
+ <p>A well-scrubbed white wooden table was set ready for supper.
+ On a very ancient-looking black oak stand&mdash;cupboard below
+ and shelves above&mdash;was ranged a vast assortment of crockery
+ ware, and on the walls hung potbellied metal jugs and cans which
+ shone like silver.</p>
+
+ <p>Two doors led to the other rooms of the house, one of them
+ wide open.</p>
+
+ <p>One corner of the room was occupied by a great wooden bin
+ eight feet square, filled with dried bracken. On the wide flat
+ side, which looked like a form, a woman and a girl were sitting
+ when the two men entered.</p>
+
+ <p>Hamon introduced them briefly as his wife and daughter, and,
+ comely women as Gard had been accustomed to in his own country of
+ Cornwall, there was something about these two, and especially
+ about the younger of the two, which made him of a sudden more
+ than satisfied with the somewhat doubtful venture to which he had
+ bound himself&mdash;set a sudden homely warmth in his heart, and
+ made him feel the richer for being there&mdash;made him, in fact,
+ glad that he had come.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet there was nothing in their reception of him that
+ justified the feeling.</p>
+
+ <p>They nodded, indeed, in answer to his bow, but neither their
+ faces nor their manner showed any special joy at his coming.</p>
+
+ <p>But that made no difference to him. They were there, and the
+ mere sight of the girl's fine mobile face and large dark blue
+ eyes was a thing to be grateful for.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll be wanting your supper," said Hamon.</p>
+
+ <p>"At your own time, please," said the young man, looking
+ towards Mrs. Hamon. "I am really not very hungry"&mdash;though
+ truth to tell he well might have been, for the food on the brig
+ had left much to be desired even to one who had been a sailorman
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is our usual time," said Mrs. Hamon, "and it is all ready.
+ Will you please to sit there."</p>
+
+ <p>At the sound of the chairs a boy of fourteen came quietly in
+ and slipped into his seat.</p>
+
+ <p>His sister had gone off with a portion on a plate through the
+ open door.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard was surprised to find himself hoping it was not her
+ custom to take her meals in private, and was relieved when she
+ came back presently without the plate and sat down by her
+ brother.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, you, Bernel, as soon as you've done your supper run over
+ and tell Mr. Le Pelley that his white stallion is on our common,
+ and he'd better send for him."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll ride him home," said the boy exultingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"No you won't, Bern," said his sister quickly. "He's not safe.
+ You know what an awkward beast he is at times, and you could
+ never get him across the Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>"Pooh! I'd ride him across any day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Promise me you won't," she said, with a hand on his arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well, if you say so," he grumbled. "I could manage him
+ all right though."</p>
+
+ <p>Just then the doorway darkened and two young men entered, and
+ threw their caps on the green bed, and sat down with an awkward
+ nod of greeting to the company in general.</p>
+
+ <p>"My son Tom," said Mr. Hamon, and Tom jerked another awkward
+ nod towards the stranger. "And Peter Mauger"&mdash;Peter repeated
+ the performance, more shyly and awkwardly even than Tom, from a
+ variety of reasons.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom was at home, and he had not even been invited&mdash;except
+ by Tom. And strangers always made him shy. And then there was
+ Nance, with her great eyes fixed on him, he knew, though he had
+ not dared to look straight at her.</p>
+
+ <p>And then the stranger had an air about him&mdash;it was hard
+ to say of what, but it made Peter Mauger and Tom conscious of
+ personal uncouthness, and of a desire to get up and go out and
+ wash their hands and have a shave.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard, they knew, was the new captain of the mine, chosen by
+ the managers of the company for his experience with men, and he
+ looked as if he had been accustomed to order them about.</p>
+
+ <p>His eyes were dark and keen, his face full of energy. Being
+ clean-shaven his age was doubtful. He might be twenty-five or
+ forty. Nance, in her first quick comprehensive glance, had
+ wondered which.</p>
+
+ <p>He stood close upon six feet and was broad-chested and
+ square-shouldered. A good figure of a man, clean and upstanding,
+ and with no nonsense about him. A capable-looking man in every
+ respect, and if his manner was quiet and retiring, there was that
+ about him which suggested the possibility of explosion if
+ occasion arose.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that the Hamon family as a whole, or any member of it,
+ would have put the matter quite in that way to itself, or
+ herself. But that, vaguely, was the impression produced upon
+ them&mdash;an impression of uprightness, intelligence, and
+ reserved strength&mdash;and the more strongly, perhaps, because
+ of late these characteristics had been somewhat overshadowed in
+ the Island by the greed of gain and love of display engendered by
+ the opening of the mines.</p>
+
+ <p>To old Tom Hamon his coming was wholly welcome. It
+ foreshadowed a strong and more energetic development of the mines
+ and the speedier realization of his most earnest desires.</p>
+
+ <p>To Mrs. Hamon it meant some extra household work, which she
+ would gladly undertake since it was her husband's wish to have
+ the stranger live with them, though in his absorption by the
+ mines she had no sympathy whatever.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance looked upon him merely as a part of the mines, and
+ therefore to be detested along with the noisy engine-house, the
+ pumps, the damp and dirty miners, and all the rest of
+ it&mdash;the coming of which had so completely spoiled her
+ much-loved Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom disliked him because he made him feel small and boorish,
+ and of a commoner make. And feelings such as that inevitably try
+ to disprove themselves by noisy self-assertion.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly Tom&mdash;after various jocular remarks in patois
+ to Peter, who would have laughed at them had he dared, but,
+ knowing Nance's feelings towards her brother was not sure how she
+ would take it&mdash;loudly and provocatively to Gard&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Expect to make them mines pay, monsieur?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I hope so. But it's too soon to express an opinion till
+ I've seen them."</p>
+
+ <p>"They put a lot of money in, and they get a lot of dirt out,
+ but one does not hear much of any silver."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sometimes the deepest mines prove the best in the end."</p>
+
+ <p>"And as long as there's anybody to pay for it I suppose you go
+ on digging."</p>
+
+ <p>"If I thought the mines had petered out&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" said Peter, and then coughed to hide his confusion when
+ they all looked at him.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should of course advise the owners to stop work and sink no
+ more money."</p>
+
+ <p>"It'll be a bad day for Sark when that happens," said old Tom.
+ "But it's not going to happen. The silver's there all right. It
+ only wants getting out."</p>
+
+ <p>"If it's there we'll certainly get it out," said Gard, and
+ although he said it quietly enough, old Tom felt much better
+ about things in general.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're the man for us," he said heartily. "We'll all be rich
+ before we die yet."</p>
+
+ <p>"Depends when we die," growled Tom&mdash;in which
+ observation&mdash;obvious as it was&mdash;there was undoubtedly
+ much truth. And then, his little suggestion of provocation having
+ broken like ripples on Gard's imperturbability, he turned on
+ Peter and tried to stir him up.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't get on any too fast with your making up to la
+ garche, mon gars," he said in the patois again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw&mdash;Tom!" remonstrated Peter, very red in the face at
+ this ruthless laying bare of his approaches.</p>
+
+ <p>"Get ahead, man! Put your arm round her neck and give her a
+ kiss. That's the way to fetch 'em."</p>
+
+ <p>At which Nance jumped up with fiery face and sparks in her
+ eyes and left the room, and Gard, who understood no word of what
+ had passed, yet understood without possibility of doubt that
+ Tom's speech had been mortally offensive to his sister, and set
+ him down in his own mind as of low esteem and boorish
+ disposition.</p>
+
+ <p>As for Peter, to whom such advice was as useless as the act
+ would have been impossible at that stage of the proceedings, he
+ was almost as much upset as Nance herself. He got up with a
+ shamefaced&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, Tom, boy, that was not good of you," and made for his
+ hat, while Tom sat with a broad grin at the result of his
+ delicate diplomacy, and Gard's great regret was that it was not
+ possible for him to take the hulking fellow by the neck and
+ bundle him out of doors.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom made some sharp remark to his son, who replied in
+ kind; Mrs. Hamon sat quietly aloof, as she always did when Tom
+ and his father got to words, and Bernel made play with his
+ supper, as though such matters were of too common occurrence to
+ call for any special attention on his part.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Nance's face framed in a black sun-bonnet gleamed in at
+ the outer door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come along, Bern, and we'll go and tell the Seigneur where
+ his white horse is," and she disappeared, and Bernel, having
+ polished off everything within reach, got up and followed
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you please to take a look at the mines to-night?" asked
+ old Tom of his guest, anxious to interest him in the work as
+ speedily as possible.</p>
+
+ <p>"We might take a bit of a walk, and you can tell me all you
+ will about things. But I don't take hold till the first of the
+ month, and I don't want to interfere until I have a right to. I
+ suppose my baggage will be coming up?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach, yes! Tom, you take the cart and bring Mr. Gard's things
+ up. They are lying on the quay down there. Then we will go along,
+ if you please!"</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom marched him through the wonderful amber twilight to
+ the summit of the bluff behind the engine-house&mdash;whence Gard
+ could just make out his box and carpet-bag still lying on the
+ quay below. And all the way the old man was volubly explaining
+ the many changes necessary, in his opinion, to bring the business
+ to a paying basis. All which information Gard accepted for
+ testing purposes, but gathered from the total the fact that
+ through ill health on the part of the departing captain, the
+ ropes all round had got slack and that the tightening of them
+ would be a matter of no little delicacy and difficulty.</p>
+
+ <p>Sark men, Mr. Hamon explained, were very free and independent,
+ and hated to be driven. They did piecework&mdash;so much per
+ fathom, and were constitutionally, he admitted, a bit more
+ particular as to the so much than as to the fathom. While the
+ Cornish and Welsh men, receiving weekly wages, had also grown
+ slack and did far less work than they did at first and than they
+ might, could, and should do.</p>
+
+ <p>"But," said old Tom frankly, scratching his head, "I don't
+ know's I'd like the job myself. Your men are quiet enough to look
+ at, but they can boil over when they're put to it. And our
+ men&mdash;well, they're Sark, and there's more'n a bit of the
+ devil in them."</p>
+
+ <p>"I must get things round bit by bit," said Gard quietly. "It
+ never pays to make a fuss and bustle men. Softly does it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm thinking you can do it if any man can."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll have a good try any way."</p>
+
+ <p>"Whereabouts does the Seigneur live?" he asked presently, and
+ inconsequently as it seemed, but following out a train of thought
+ of his own which needed no guessing at.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Seigneur? Over there in Sark&mdash;across the
+ Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the Coup&eacute;e?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The Coup&eacute;e?&mdash;Mon Gyu!"&mdash;at such colossal
+ ignorance&mdash;"Why, ...the Coup&eacute;e's the
+ Coup&eacute;e.... Come along, then. Maybe you can get a look at
+ it before it's too dark."</p>
+
+ <p>They had got quite out of sound of the clanking engine, and
+ were travelling a well-made road, when their attention was drawn
+ to a lively struggle proceeding on the common between the road
+ and the cliff.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom, setting out after the troubled Peter, had caught sight of
+ the Seigneur's white horse and had forthwith decided to take him
+ home. Peter, agreeing that it was a piece of neighbourliness
+ which the Seigneur would appreciate, had turned back to give his
+ assistance.</p>
+
+ <p>By some cajolery they had managed to slip a halter with a
+ special length of rope over the wary white head, and there for
+ the moment matters hung. For the white horse, with his forelegs
+ firmly planted, dragged at one end of the rope and the two men at
+ the other, and the issue remained in doubt.</p>
+
+ <p>The doubt, however, was suddenly solved by the white horse
+ deciding on more active measures. He swung his great head to one
+ side, dragged the men off their feet and started off at a gallop,
+ they hanging on as best they could.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom and Gard set off after them to see the end of the
+ matter, and suddenly, as the roadway dipped between high banks
+ and became a hollow way, the white beast gave a shrill squeal,
+ flung up his heels, jerked himself free, and vanished like a
+ streak of light into the darkness of the lofty bank in front.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Gyu!" cried old Tom, and sped up the bank to see the
+ end.</p>
+
+ <p>But the white horse knew his way and had no fear. They were
+ just in time to hear the rattle of his hoofs, as he disappeared
+ with a final shrill defiance into the outer darkness on the
+ further side of a mighty gulf, while a stone dislodged by his
+ flying feet went clattering down into invisible depths.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's done it," panted old Tom, while Gard gazed with
+ something like awe at the narrow pathway, wavering across from
+ side to side of the great abyss, out of which rose the growl of
+ the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's this?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Coup&eacute;e. It's a wonder he managed it. The path slipped
+ in the winter and it's narrow in places."</p>
+
+ <p>"And do people cross it in the dark?" asked Gard, thinking of
+ the girl and boy who had gone to see the Seigneur.</p>
+
+ <p>"Och yes! It is not bad when you're used to it. Come and see!"
+ and he led the way back across the common to the road.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard walked cautiously behind him as he went across the
+ crumbling white pathway with the carelessness of custom, and,
+ sailor as he had been, he was not sorry when the other side was
+ reached, and he could stand in the security of the cutting and
+ look back, and down into the gulf where the white waves foamed
+ and growled among the boulders three hundred feet below.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've seen a many as did not care to cross that, first time
+ they saw it," said old Tom with a chuckle.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I'm not surprised at that. It's apt to make one's head
+ spin."</p>
+
+ <p>"I brought captain of brig up here and he wouldn't put a foot
+ on it. Not for five hundred pounds, he said."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would have taken more than five hundred pounds to piece
+ him together if he'd tumbled down there."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's so."</p>
+
+ <p>A young moon, and a clear sky still rarely light and lofty in
+ the amber after-glow, gave them a safe passage back.</p>
+
+ <p>When they reached the house among the trees, Gard bethought
+ him of his belongings.</p>
+
+ <p>"And my things from the quay?" he suggested.</p>
+
+ <p>"G'zammin! That boy has forgotten all about them, I'll be
+ bound. I'll take the cart down myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go with you."</p>
+
+ <p>When they got back with the box and bag, which no one had
+ touched since they were dropped on to the platform four hours
+ before, they found that Nance and Bernel had got home and gone
+ off to bed, having taken advantage of being across in Sark to
+ call on some of their friends there.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard wondered how they would have fared if they had happened
+ to be on the Coup&eacute;e when the white horse went thundering
+ across.</p>
+
+ <p>He dreamed that night that he was cautiously treading an
+ endless white path that swung up and down in the darkness like a
+ piece of ribbon in a breeze. And a great white horse came
+ plunging at him out of the darkness, and just as he gave himself
+ up for lost, a sweet firm face in a black sun-bonnet appeared
+ suddenly in front of him, and the white horse squealed and leaped
+ over them and disappeared, while the stones he had displaced went
+ rattling down into the depths below.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING</h3>
+
+ <p>As soon as the old captain's time was up, Gard took up his
+ work in the mines with energetic hopefulness.</p>
+
+ <p>His hopefulness was unbounded. His energy he tempered with all
+ the tact and discretion his knowledge of men, and his experience
+ in handling them, had taught him.</p>
+
+ <p>His father had been lost at sea the year after his son was
+ born. His mother, a good and God-fearing woman, had strained
+ every nerve to give her boy an education. She died when Stephen
+ was fourteen. He took to his father's calling and had followed it
+ with a certain success for ten years, by which time he had
+ attained the position of first mate.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the owner of the Botallack Mine, in Cornwall, having come
+ across him in the way of business, and been struck by his
+ intelligence and aptitude, induced him by a lucrative appointment
+ to try his luck on land.</p>
+
+ <p>The managers of the Sark Mines, seeking a special man for
+ somewhat special circumstances, had applied to Botallack for
+ assistance, and Stephen Gard came to Sark as the representative
+ of many hopes which, so far, had been somewhat lacking in
+ results.</p>
+
+ <p>But, as old Tom Hamon had predicted, he very soon found that
+ he had laid his hand to no easy plough.</p>
+
+ <p>The Sark men were characteristically difficult, and made the
+ difficulty greater by not understanding him&mdash;or declining to
+ understand, which came to the same thing&mdash;when he laid down
+ his ideas and endeavoured to bring them to his ways.</p>
+
+ <p>Some, without doubt, had no English, and their patois was
+ quite beyond him. Others could understand him an they would, but
+ deliberately chose not to&mdash;partly from a conservative
+ objection to any change whatever, and partly from an idea that he
+ had been imported for the purpose of driving them, and driving is
+ the last thing a Sark man will submit to.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom Hamon, and a few others who had a financial interest
+ in the mines, assisted him all they could, in hopes of thereby
+ assisting themselves, but they were few.</p>
+
+ <p>As for the Cornishmen and Welshmen, the success or failure of
+ the Sark Mines mattered little to them. There was always mining
+ going on somewhere and competent men were always in demand. They
+ were paid so much a week, small output or large, and without a
+ doubt the small output entailed less labour than the large. They
+ naturally regarded with no great favour the man whose present aim
+ in life it was to ensure the largest output possible.</p>
+
+ <p>And so Gard found himself confronted by many difficulties,
+ and, moreover, and greatly to the troubling of his mind, found
+ himself looked upon as a dictator and an interloper by the men
+ whom he had hoped to benefit.</p>
+
+ <p>Concerning the mines themselves he was not called upon for an
+ opinion. The managers had satisfied themselves as to the presence
+ of silver. If his opinion had been asked it would have confirmed
+ them. But all he had to do was to follow the veins and win the
+ ore in paying quantities, and he found himself handicapped on
+ every hand by the obstinacy of his men.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside business matters he was very well satisfied with his
+ surroundings.</p>
+
+ <p>In such spare time as he had, he wandered over the Island with
+ eager, open eyes, marvelling at its wonders and enjoying its
+ natural beauties with rare delight.</p>
+
+ <p>The great granite cliffs, with their deep indentations and
+ stimulating caves and crannies; the shimmering blue and green
+ sea, with its long slow heave which rushed in foam and tumult up
+ the rock-pools and gullies; the softer beauties of rounded down
+ and flower-and fern-clad slopes honeycombed with rabbit holes;
+ the little sea-gardens teeming with novel life; in all these he
+ found his resource and a certain consolation for his
+ loneliness.</p>
+
+ <p>And in the Hamon household he found much to interest him and
+ not a little ground for speculation.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Mrs. Hamon&mdash;Grannie&mdash;had promptly ordered him in
+ for inspection, and, after prolonged and careful observation from
+ the interior of the black sun-bonnet, had been understood to
+ approve him, since she said nothing to the contrary.</p>
+
+ <p>It took him some time to arrive at the correct relationship
+ between young Tom and Nance and Bernel, for it seemed quite
+ incredible that fruit so diverse should spring from one parent
+ stem.</p>
+
+ <p>For Tom was all that was rough and boorish&mdash;rude to Mrs.
+ Hamon, coarse, and at times overbearing to Nance and Bernel, to
+ such an extent, indeed, that more than once Gard had difficulty
+ in remembering that he himself was only a visitor on sufferance
+ and not entitled to interfere in such intimate family
+ matters.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom was not slow to perceive this, and in consequence set
+ himself deliberately to provoke it by behaviour even more
+ outrageous than usual. Time and again Gard would have rejoiced to
+ take him outside and express his feelings to their fullest
+ satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>With Mrs. Hamon and Bernel he was on the most friendly
+ footing, his undisguised sentiments in the matter of Tom
+ commending him to them decisively.</p>
+
+ <p>But with Nance he made no headway whatever.</p>
+
+ <p>It was an absolutely new sensation to him, and a satisfaction
+ the meaning of which he had not yet fully gauged, to be living
+ under the same roof with a girl such as this. He found himself
+ listening for her voice outside and the sound of her feet, and
+ learned almost at once to distinguish between the clatter of her
+ wooden pattens and any one else's when she was busy in the yard
+ or barns.</p>
+
+ <p>Even though she held him at coolest arm's length, and repelled
+ any slightest attempt at abridgment of the distance, he still
+ rejoiced in the sight of her and found the world good because of
+ her presence in it.</p>
+
+ <p>He did not understand her feeling about him in the least. He
+ did not know that she had had to give up her room for
+ him&mdash;that she detested the mines and everything tainted by
+ them, and himself as head and forefront of the offence&mdash;that
+ she regarded him as an outsider and a foreigner and therefore
+ quite out of place in Sark. He only knew that he saw very little
+ of her and would have liked to see a great deal more.</p>
+
+ <p>The very reserve of her treatment of himself&mdash;one might
+ even say her passive endurance of him&mdash;served but to
+ stimulate within him the wish to overcome it. The attraction of
+ indifference is a distinct force in life.</p>
+
+ <p>There was something so trim and neat and altogether
+ captivating to him in the slim energetic figure, in its short
+ blue skirts and print jacket, as it whisked to and fro, inside
+ and out, on its multifarious duties, and still more in the sweet,
+ serious face, glimmering coyly in the shadow of the great
+ sun-bonnet and always moulded to a fine, but, as it seemed to
+ him, a somewhat unnatural gravity in his company.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet he was quite sure she could be very much otherwise
+ when she would. For he had heard her singing over her work, and
+ laughing merrily with Bernel; and her face, sweet as it was in
+ its repression, seemed to him more fitted for smiles and laughter
+ and joyousness.</p>
+
+ <p>He saw, of course, that brother Tom was a constant source of
+ annoyance to them all, but especially to her, and his blood
+ boiled impotently on her account.</p>
+
+ <p>He carried with him&mdash;as a delightful memory of her,
+ though not without its cloud&mdash;the pretty picture she made
+ when he came upon her one day in the orchard, milking&mdash;for,
+ strictly as the Sabbath may be observed, cows must still be
+ milked on a Sunday, not being endowed manna-like, with the gift
+ of miraculous double production on a Saturday.</p>
+
+ <p>Her head was pressed into her favourite beast's side, and she
+ was crooning soothingly to it as the white jets ping-panged into
+ the frothing pail, and he stood for a moment watching her
+ unseen.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the cow slowly turned her head towards him, considered
+ him gravely for a moment, decided he was unnecessary and whisked
+ her tail impatiently. Nance's lullaby stopped, she looked round
+ with a reproving frown, and he went silently on his way.</p>
+
+ <p>It was another Sunday afternoon that, as he lay in the bracken
+ on the slope of a headland, he saw two slim figures racing down a
+ bare slope on the opposite side of a wide blue gulf, with joyous
+ chatter, and recognized Nance and Bernel.</p>
+
+ <p>They disappeared and he felt lonely. Then they came picking
+ their way round a black spur below, and stood for a minute or two
+ looking down at something beneath them. Which something he
+ presently discovered must be a pool of size among the rocks, for
+ after a brief retiral, Nance behind a boulder and Bernel into a
+ black hollow, they came out again, she lightly clad in fluttering
+ white and Bernel in nothing at all, and with a shout of delight
+ dived out of sight into the pool below.</p>
+
+ <p>He could hear their shouts and laughter echoed back by the
+ huge overhanging rocks. He saw them climb out again and sit
+ sunning themselves on the grey ledge like a pair of sea-birds,
+ and Nance's exiguous white garment no longer fluttered in the
+ breeze.</p>
+
+ <p>Then in they went again, and again, and again, till, tiring of
+ the limits of the pool&mdash;huge as he afterwards found it to
+ be&mdash;they crept over the barnacled rocks to the sea, and
+ flung themselves fearlessly in, and came ploughing through it
+ towards his headland. And he shrank still lower among the
+ bracken, for though he had watched the distant little figure in
+ white with a slight sense of sacrilege, and absolutely no sense
+ of impropriety but only of enjoyment, he would not for all he was
+ worth have had her know that he had watched at all, since he
+ could imagine how she would resent it.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, these unconscious revelations of her real self
+ were to him as jewels of price, and he treasured the memory of
+ them accordingly.</p>
+
+ <p>He watched them swim back and disappear among the rocks, and
+ presently go merrily up the bare slope again; and he lay long in
+ the bracken, scarce daring to move, and when he did, he crept
+ away warily, as one guilty of a trespass.</p>
+
+ <p>And glad he was that he had done so, for he had proof of her
+ feeling that same night at supper.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter Mauger came sheepishly in again with Tom, and Tom, when
+ he had satisfied the edge of his hunger, must wax facetious in
+ his brotherly way.</p>
+
+ <p>"Peter and me was sitting among the rocks over against big
+ pool s'afternoon and we saw things"&mdash;with a grin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, Tom!" deprecated Peter in red confusion.</p>
+
+ <p>"An' Peter, he said he never seen anything so pretty in all
+ his life as&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw now, Tom, you're a liar! I never said anything about
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"You thought it, or your face was liar too, my boy. Like a dog
+ after a rabbit it was."</p>
+
+ <p>"It was just like you both to lie watching," flamed Nance. "If
+ you'd both go and jump into the sea every day you'd be a great
+ deal nicer than you are; and if you'd stop there it would be a
+ great deal nicer for us."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw&mdash;Nance!" from Peter, and a great guffaw from Tom,
+ while Gard devoted himself guiltily to his plate.</p>
+
+ <p>"You looked nice before you went in," chuckled Tom, who never
+ knew when to stop, "but you looked a sight nicer when you came
+ out and sat on rocks with it all stuck to you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You're a&mdash;a&mdash;a disgusting thing, Tom Hamon, and
+ you're just as bad, Peter Mauger!" and she looked as if she would
+ have flown at them, but, instead, jumped up and flung out of the
+ room.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard's innate honesty would not permit him to take up the
+ cudgels this time. Inwardly he felt himself involved in her
+ condemnation, though none but himself knew it.</p>
+
+ <p>But he had taken at times to glowering at Tom, when his
+ rudeness passed bounds, in a way which made that young man at
+ once uncomfortable and angry, and at times provoked him to
+ clownish attempts at reprisal.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hamon bore with the black sheep quietly, since nothing
+ else was possible to her, though her annoyance and distress were
+ visible enough.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom was completely obsessed with his visions of wealth
+ ever just beyond the point of his pick. He toiled long hours in
+ the damp darknesses below seas, with the sounds of crashing waves
+ and rolling boulders close above him, and at times threateningly
+ audible through the stratum of rocks between; and when he did
+ appear at meals he was too weary to trouble about anything beyond
+ the immediate satisfaction of his needs. Besides, young Tom had
+ long since proved his strength equal to his father's, and
+ remonstrance or rebuke would have produced no effect.</p>
+
+ <p>As to Bernel, he was only a boy as yet, but he was Nance's boy
+ and all she would have wished him.</p>
+
+ <p>In time he would grow up and be a match for Tom, and meanwhile
+ she would see to it that he grew up as different from Tom in
+ every respect as it was possible for a boy to be.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES</h3>
+
+ <p>Stephen Gard's experience of women had been small.</p>
+
+ <p>His mother had been everything to him till she died, when he
+ was fourteen, and he went to sea.</p>
+
+ <p>When she was gone, that which she had put into him remained,
+ and kept him clear of many of the snares to which the life of the
+ young sailorman is peculiarly liable.</p>
+
+ <p>When he attained a position of responsibility he had had no
+ time for anything else. And so, of his own experience, he knew
+ little of women and their ways.</p>
+
+ <p>Less, indeed, than Nance knew of men and their ways. And that
+ was not very much and tended chiefly to scorn and
+ dissatisfaction, seeing that her knowledge was gleaned almost
+ entirely from her experiences of Tom and Peter Mauger. Her father
+ was, of course, her father, and on somewhat of a different plane
+ from other men.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, if Nance was a wonder and a revelation to Gard, Gard
+ was no less of, at all events, a novelty in the way of mankind to
+ Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>His quiet bearing and good manners, after a life-long course
+ of Tom, had a distinct attraction for her.</p>
+
+ <p>That he could burst into flame if occasion required, she was
+ convinced. For, more than once, out of the corner of her eye and
+ round the edge of her sun-bonnet, she had caught his thunderous
+ looks of disgust at some of Tom's carryings-on.</p>
+
+ <p>She would, perhaps, have been ashamed to confess it but,
+ somewhere down in her heart, she rather hoped, sooner or later,
+ to see his lightning as well. It would be worth seeing, and she
+ was inclined to think it would be good for Tom&mdash;and the rest
+ of the family.</p>
+
+ <p>For Gard looked as if he could give a good account of himself
+ in case of need. His well-built, tight-knit figure gave one the
+ impression that he was even stronger than he looked.</p>
+
+ <p>If only he had been a Sark man and had nothing to do with
+ those horrid mines! But all her greatest dislikes met in him, and
+ she could not bring herself to the point of relaxing one iota in
+ these matters of which he was unfortunately and unconsciously
+ guilty.</p>
+
+ <p>The state of affairs at the mines improved not one whit as the
+ months dragged on. There was a smouldering core of discontent
+ which might break into flame at any moment&mdash;or into
+ disastrous explosion if the necessary element were added.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom did his best, and stood loyally by the new captain and
+ the interests of the mine and himself. But he was in a minority
+ and could so far do no more than oppose vehement talk to vehement
+ talk, and that, as a rule, is much like pouring oil on roaring
+ flames.</p>
+
+ <p>Not many of those who were shareholders in the mine were also
+ workers in it, and the workers met constantly at the house of a
+ neighbour, who had turned his kitchen to an undomestic but
+ profitable purpose by supplying drink to the miners at what
+ seemed to the English and Welshmen ridiculously low prices.</p>
+
+ <p>In that kitchen the new captain and his new methods were
+ vehemently discussed and handled roughly enough&mdash;in words.
+ And hot words and the thoughts they excite, and wild thoughts and
+ the words they find vent in, are at times the breeders of deeds
+ that were better left undone.</p>
+
+ <p>To all financially interested in the mines the need for
+ strictest economy and fullest efficiency was patent enough. It
+ was still a case of faith and hope&mdash;a case of continual
+ putting in of work and money, and, so far, of getting little
+ out&mdash;except the dross which intervened between them and
+ their highest hopes.</p>
+
+ <p>There was silver there without a doubt, and the many thin
+ veins they came across lured them on with constant hope of mighty
+ pockets and deposits of which these were but the flying
+ indications.</p>
+
+ <p>And all putting in and getting nothing out results in
+ stressful times, in business ventures as in the case of
+ individuals. The great shafts sank deeper and deeper, the
+ galleries branched out far under the sea, and there was a
+ constant call for more and more money, lest that already sunk
+ should be lost.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Hamon, disappointed in his view of raising money on the
+ farm by Tom's obstinacy, in the bitterness of his spirit and the
+ urgent necessities of the mines, conceived a new idea which, if
+ he was able to carry it out, would serve the double purpose of
+ satisfying his own needs at the recalcitrant Tom's expense.</p>
+
+ <p>"I must have more money for the mines," he said to his wife
+ one day in private. "I'm thinking of selling the farm."</p>
+
+ <p>"Selling the farm?" gasped Mrs. Hamon, doubtful of her own
+ hearing. For selling the farm is the very last resource of the
+ utterly unfortunate. "Aye, selling the farm. Why not? It'll all
+ come back twenty times over when we strike the pockets, and then
+ we can live where we will, or we can go across to Guernsey, or to
+ England if you like."</p>
+
+ <p>But Mrs. Hamon was silent and full of thought. She had no
+ desire for wealth, and still less to live in Guernsey or in
+ England, or anywhere in the world but Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>He had been a good husband to her on the whole, until this
+ silver craze absorbed him. She had never found it necessary to
+ counter his wishes before. But this idea of selling the farm cut
+ to the very roots of her life.</p>
+
+ <p>For Nance's sake and Bernel's she must oppose it with all that
+ was in her. If the farm were sold the money would all go into
+ those gaping black mouths and bottomless pits at Port Gorey. The
+ home would be broken up&mdash;an end of all things. It must not
+ be.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should think many times before selling the farm if I were
+ you," she said quietly, and left it there for the moment.</p>
+
+ <p>But old Tom, having made up his mind, and the necessities of
+ the case pressing, lost no time over the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've been speaking to John Guille about that business," he
+ said, next day, in a confidently casual way.</p>
+
+ <p>"About&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"About the farm. He'll give me six hundred pounds for it and
+ take the stock at what it's worth, and he's willing we should
+ stop on as tenants at fifty pounds a year rent."</p>
+
+ <p>His wife was ominously silent. He glanced at her
+ doubtfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall stop on as tenant for the present and Tom can go on
+ working it. When we reach the silver, and the money begins to
+ come back, we can decide what to do afterwards."</p>
+
+ <p>Still his wife said nothing, but her face was white and set.
+ It was hard for her to put herself in opposition to him, but here
+ she found it necessary. He was going too far.</p>
+
+ <p>It was only when the silence had grown ominous and painful,
+ that she said, slowly and with difficulty&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry to look like going against you, Tom, but I can't
+ see it right you should sell the farm."</p>
+
+ <p>"It'll make no difference to you and the young ones. I'll see
+ to that."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's not right and you mustn't do it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mustn't do it!&mdash;And it's as good as done!"</p>
+
+ <p>"It can't be done until your mother and I consent, and we
+ can't see it's a right thing to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't you see that you're only saving the farm for Tom?" he
+ argued wrathfully, bottling his anger as well as he could. "It's
+ nothing to you and the young ones in any case."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know, but all the same it's not right. If it was to buy
+ another farm it would be different, for you could leave it as you
+ choose. But to throw away the money on those mines&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>This was a lapse from diplomacy and old Tom resented it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Throw the money away!" he shouted, casting all restraint to
+ the winds. "Who's going to throw the money away? It's like you
+ women. You never can see beyond the ends of your noses. I'll tell
+ you what I'll do&mdash;I'll pay you out your dower right in hard
+ cash. Will that satisfy you?"</p>
+
+ <p>If he died she would have a life interest in one-third of the
+ farm, but could not, of course, will it to Nance or Bernel. If he
+ sold the farm and paid her her lawful third in cash, she could do
+ what she chose with it. It was therefore distinctly to her own
+ interest to fall in with his plan.</p>
+
+ <p>But, dearly as she would have liked to make some provision,
+ however small, for Nance and Bernel, her whole Sark soul was up
+ in arms against the idea of selling the farm.</p>
+
+ <p>It would feel like a break-up of life. Nothing, she was sure,
+ would ever be the same again.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's not right," she said simply.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're a fool&mdash;" and then the look on her quiet
+ face&mdash;such a look as she might have worn if he had struck
+ her&mdash;penetrated the storm-cloud of his anger. He remembered
+ her years of wifely patience and faithful service, "&mdash;a
+ foolish woman. A Sark wife should know which side of her bread
+ the butter is on. Can't you see&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know all that, Tom, but I hope you'll give up this notion
+ of selling the farm. Your mother feels just as I do about it.
+ We've talked it over&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll talk to her," and he went in at once to the old lady's
+ room.</p>
+
+ <p>But Grannie gave him no time for argument.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's you's the fool, Tom," she said decisively, as he crossed
+ the threshold. "There's not enough silver in Sark to make a plate
+ for your coffin."</p>
+
+ <p>"I brought out more'n enough to make your plate and mine,
+ myself to-day," he said triumphantly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, bah! You'd have done better for yourself and for Sark if
+ you'd let it lie."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd have done better still if I'd got twice as much."</p>
+
+ <p>"If the good God set silver inside Sark, it was because He
+ thought it was the best place for it, and it's not for the likes
+ of you to be trying to get it out."</p>
+
+ <p>"What's it there for if it's not to be got out?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You mark me, Tom Hamon, no good will come of all this
+ upsetting and digging out the insides of the
+ Island&mdash;nenni-gia!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pergui, mother, where do you think all the silver and gold in
+ the world came from?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It didn't come out of our Sark rocks any way, mon gars."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good thing for us if it had, ma f&eacute;! But, see you here,
+ mother, if I sell the farm it's not you and Nance that need
+ trouble. If I pay out your dowers in hard cash you're both of you
+ better off than you are now, and I'm better off too. It's only
+ Tom could complain, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's hard on the lad."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bidemme, it's no more than he deserves for his goings-on!
+ Maybe it'll do him good to have to work for his living."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you would do that to get your bit more money to throw
+ into those big holes?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Never you mind me. I'll take care of myself, and we'll see
+ who's wisest in the end. Now, will you agree to it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll talk it over with Nancy again," and the big black
+ sun-bonnet nodded with sapient significance. "Send her to
+ me."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's from you I got my good sense," said old Tom approvingly,
+ and went off in search of his wife, while the clever old lady
+ pondered deep schemes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Here's the way of it, Nancy," she said, when Mrs. Hamon came
+ in. "He's crazy on these silver mines, and he's willing to pay
+ out our dowers, yours and mine, so that he may throw the rest
+ into the big holes at Port Gorey. Ch'est b'en! Your money and
+ mine take more than half of what he gets. If you'll put yours to
+ mine I'll make up the difference from what I've saved, and we'll
+ retraite the farm, and it shall go to Nance and Bernel when the
+ time comes."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can't help thinking it's rather hard on Tom," suggested
+ Mrs. Hamon, with less vigour than before.</p>
+
+ <p>The idea appealed strongly to her maternal feelings and she
+ had suffered much from Tom; still her instinct for right was
+ there and was not to be stifled with a word.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you feel so when the time comes we could divide it among
+ them, and till then Tom would have to behave himself," said the
+ wily old lady, with a chuckle.</p>
+
+ <p>That again appealed strongly to Mrs. Hamon.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I think I would agree to that," she said, after thinking
+ it all over.</p>
+
+ <p>All things considered, Grannie's scheme was an excellent one
+ and worthy of her.</p>
+
+ <p>By a curious anomaly of Sark law, though a man may not
+ mortgage his property without the consent of his
+ next-in-succession, he can sell it outright and do what he
+ chooses with the proceeds. His wife has a dower right of
+ one-third of both real and personal estate, into which she enters
+ upon his death. The right, however, is there while he still
+ lives, and must be taken into consideration in any sale of the
+ property.</p>
+
+ <p>All property is sold subject to the "retraite"; in plain
+ English, no sale is completed for six weeks, and within that time
+ every member of the seller's family, in due order of succession,
+ even to the collateral branches, has the right to take over, or
+ withdraw, the property at the same price as has been agreed upon,
+ paying in addition to the Seigneur the tr&eacute;zi&egrave;me or
+ thirteenth part of the price, as by law provided.</p>
+
+ <p>If Grannie's scheme were carried out, therefore, she and Mrs.
+ Hamon would become owners of the farm. Tom would be there on
+ sufferance and might be kept within bounds or kicked out. Old Tom
+ would have something more to throw into the holes at Port Gorey.
+ And Nance and Bernel could be adequately provided for. An
+ excellent scheme, therefore, for all concerned&mdash;except young
+ Tom, who would have to behave himself better than he was in the
+ habit of doing or suffer the consequences.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," said Nancy. "I don't see that I'd be doing right by
+ Nance and Bernel not to agree to that. And if Tom behaves
+ himself," at which Grannie grunted doubtfully, "he can have his
+ share when the time comes."</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM</h3>
+
+ <p>So far the discussion as to the sale of the farm had been
+ confined to the elders.</p>
+
+ <p>Young Tom had viewed John Guille's visits to the place with
+ the lowering suspicion of a bull at a stranger's invasion of his
+ field. He wondered what was going on and surmised that it was
+ nothing to his advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>Words had been rare between him and his father since his
+ refusal to lend himself to a loan on the farm, but his suspicion
+ got the better of his obstinacy at last.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's John Guille want coming about here so much?" he
+ demanded bluntly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I suppose he can come if he wants to. He's going to buy the
+ farm."</p>
+
+ <p>"Going&mdash;to&mdash;buy&mdash;the&mdash;farm!...
+ You&mdash;going&mdash;to&mdash;sell&mdash;the&mdash;farm&mdash;away&mdash;from&mdash;me?"
+ roared young Tom, like the bull wounded to the quick.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie, pardi! And why not? You had the chance of saving it
+ and you wouldn't."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you do it, I'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie! You'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll&mdash;Go'zammin, I'll&mdash;I'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Unless you're a fool, mon gars, you'll be careful what you
+ say or do. It'll all come back from the mines and you'll have
+ your share if you behave yourself."</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;&mdash; you and your mines!"
+ was Tom's valedictory, and he flung away in mortal anger; anger,
+ too, which, from a Sark point of view, was by no means
+ unjustified. Selling the estate away from the rightful heir was
+ disinheritance, a blow below the belt which most testators
+ reserve until they are safe from reach of bodily harm.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom left the house and cut all connection with his family. He
+ drifted away like a threatening cloud, and the sun shone out, and
+ Stephen Gard, with the rest, found greater comfort in his room
+ than they had ever found in his company.</p>
+
+ <p>So gracious, indeed, did the atmosphere of the house become,
+ purged of Tom, that Gard, to his great joy, found even Nance not
+ impossible of approach.</p>
+
+ <p>He had always treated her with extremest deference and
+ courtesy, respecting, as far as he was able, her evident wish for
+ nothing but the most distant intercourse.</p>
+
+ <p>But he was such a very great change from Tom!</p>
+
+ <p>She caught his dark eyes fixed on her at times with a look
+ that reminded her of Helier Baker's black spaniel's, who was a
+ very close friend of hers. They had neither dog nor cat at
+ present at La Closerie, both having been scrimped by the silver
+ mines, when old Tom's first bad attack of economy came on.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, at table, Gard was always quietly on the look-out to
+ anticipate her wants. That was a refreshing novelty. Even Bernel,
+ her special crony, thought only of his own requirements when food
+ stood before him.</p>
+
+ <p>Now and again Gard began to venture on a question direct to
+ her, generally concerning some bit of the coast he had been
+ scrambling about, and she found it rather pleasant to be able to
+ give information about things he did not know to this undoubtedly
+ clever mine captain.</p>
+
+ <p>So, little by little, he grew into her barest toleration but
+ apparently nothing more, and was puzzled at her aloofness and
+ reserve, not understanding at all her bitter feeling against the
+ mines and everything connected with them.</p>
+
+ <p>The first time he went to church with her and Bernel was a
+ great white-stone day to him.</p>
+
+ <p>He had gone by himself once every Sunday, and done his best to
+ follow the service in French, which he was endeavouring to pick
+ up as best he could. And, if he could only now and again come
+ across a word he understood, still the being in church and
+ worshipping with others&mdash;even though it was in an unknown
+ tongue&mdash;the sound of the chants and hymns and responses, and
+ the mild austerity and reverent intonation of the good old Vicar,
+ all induced a Sabbath feeling in him, and made a welcome change
+ from the rougher routine of the week, which he would have missed
+ most sorely.</p>
+
+ <p>On that special afternoon, he had been lying on the green wall
+ of the old French fort, enjoying that most wonderful view over
+ the shimmering blue sea, with Herm and Jethou resting on it like
+ great green velvet cushions, and Guernsey gleaming softly in the
+ distance, and Brecqhou and the Gouliot Head, and all the black
+ outlying rocks fringed with creamy foam, till it should be time
+ to go along to church.</p>
+
+ <p>When he heard voices in the road below and saw Nance and
+ Bernel, he jumped up on the spur of the moment, and pushed
+ through the gorse and bracken, and stood waiting for them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you let me join you?" he asked, as they came up, fallen
+ shyly silent.</p>
+
+ <p>"We don't mind," said Bernel, and they went along
+ together.</p>
+
+ <p>"This always strikes me afresh, each time I see it, as one of
+ the most extraordinary places I've come across," said Gard, as
+ they dipped down towards the Coup&eacute;e.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait till we're coming home," said Bernel hopefully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You see those clouds over there? That's
+ wind&mdash;sou'-west&mdash;you'll see what it's like after
+ church."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your gales are as extraordinary as all the rest&mdash;and
+ your tides and currents and sea-mists. I suppose one must be born
+ here to understand them. We have a fine coast in Cornwall, but I
+ think you beat us."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course. This is Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"And does no one ever tumble over the Coup&eacute;e in the
+ dark?"</p>
+
+ <p>"N&mdash;o, not often, any way. Nance once saw a man blown
+ over."</p>
+
+ <p>"That was a bad thing to see," said Gard, turning towards her.
+ "How was it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was coming from school&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"All alone?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, all alone. The others had gone on; I'd been kept in, and
+ it was nearly dark. It was blowing hard, and when I got to the
+ first rock here I thought it was going to blow me over. So I went
+ down on my hands and knees and was just going to crawl, when old
+ Hirzel Mollet came down the other side with a great sheaf of
+ wheat on his back. He was taking it to the Seigneur for his
+ tithes. And then in a moment he gave a shout and I saw he was
+ gone."</p>
+
+ <p>"That was terrible. What did you do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I screamed and crawled back across the narrow bit to the
+ cutting, and ran screaming up to the cottages at Plaisance, and
+ Thomas Carr&eacute; and his men came running down. But they could
+ do nothing. They went round in a boat from the Creux, but he was
+ dead."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how did you get home?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thomas Carr&eacute; took me across and I ran on alone, but it
+ was months before I could forget poor old Hirzel Mollet."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should think so, indeed. That was a terrible thing to
+ see."</p>
+
+ <p>The opening of the mines, and the influx of the Welsh and
+ Cornishmen and their wives and children, with their new and
+ up-to-date ideas of living and dressing, had wrought a great and
+ not altogether wholesome change upon the original
+ inhabitants.</p>
+
+ <p>All the week they were hard at work in their fields or their
+ boats, but on Sunday the lonely lanes leading to Little Sark were
+ thronged with sightseers, curious to inspect the mines and the
+ latest odd fashions among the miners' wives and daughters.</p>
+
+ <p>Odd, and extremely useless little parasols, were then the
+ vogue in England. The miners' women-folk flaunted these before
+ the dazzled eyes of the Sark girls, and Sark forthwith burst into
+ flower of many-coloured parasols.</p>
+
+ <p>The mine ladies dressed in printed cottons of strange and
+ wonderful patterns. The Sark girls must do the same.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tiens!" ejaculated Nance more than once, as they walked.
+ "Here is Judi Le Masurier with a new pink parasol!&mdash;and a
+ straw bonnet with green strings!&mdash;and every day you'll see
+ her about the fields without so much as a sun-bonnet on! And
+ Rachel Guille has got a new print dress all red roses and lilac!
+ Mon Gyu, what are we coming to!"</p>
+
+ <p>She had many such comments and still more unspoken ones. But
+ Stephen Gard, glancing, whenever he could do so unperceived, at
+ the trim but plainly-dressed little sun-bonneted figure by his
+ side, vowed in his heart that the whole of these others rolled
+ into one were not to be compared with her, and that he would give
+ all the silver in the mines of Sark to win her appreciation and
+ regard.</p>
+
+ <p>As they turned the corner at Vauroque, they came suddenly on a
+ number of men lounging on the low wall, and among them Tom Hamon,
+ pipe in mouth and hands in pockets.</p>
+
+ <p>As they passed he made some jocular remark in the patois which
+ provoked a guffaw from the rest, and reddened Nance's face, and
+ caused Bernel to glance up at Gard and jerk round angrily towards
+ Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"What did he say?" asked Gard, stopping.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance hurried on and he could not but follow.</p>
+
+ <p>"What was it?" he asked again, as he caught up with her.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you please, do not mind him. It was just one of his
+ rudenesses."</p>
+
+ <p>"They want knocking out of him."</p>
+
+ <p>"He is very rude," said Nance, and they passed the Vicarage
+ and turned up the stony lane to the church.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard was surprised by the speedy verification of Bernel's
+ weather forecast. Before the service was over the wind was
+ howling round the building with the sounds of unleashed furies,
+ and when they got out it was almost dark.</p>
+
+ <p>They bent to the gale and pressed on, Gard with a
+ discomforting remembrance that the Coup&eacute;e lay ahead.</p>
+
+ <p>As they passed Vauroque there seemed a still larger crowd of
+ loafers at the corner, and again Tom's voice called rudely after
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard turned promptly and strode back to where he was sitting
+ on the wall, dangling his feet in devil-may-care fashion. Tom
+ jumped down to meet him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say that again in English, will you?" said Gard angrily.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go to&mdash;!" said Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Gard's left fist caught him on the hinge of the right
+ jaw, and he reeled back among the others who had jumped down to
+ back him up.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well&mdash;? Want any more?" asked Gard stormily.</p>
+
+ <p>"You wait," growled Tom, nursing his jaw, "I'll talk to you
+ one of these days."</p>
+
+ <p>"Whenever you like, you cur. What you need is a sound
+ thrashing and a kick over the Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>To his surprise none of the others joined in. But he did not
+ know them.</p>
+
+ <p>They might guffaw at Tom's unseemly pleasantries, but they
+ held him in no high esteem&mdash;either for himself or for his
+ position, since word of the sale of La Closerie had got
+ about.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they were a hardy crew and held personal courage and
+ prowess in high respect. And in this matter there could be no
+ possible doubt as to where the credit lay.</p>
+
+ <p>"Goin' to fight him, Tom?" drawled one, in the patois.</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;him!" growled Tom, but made no move that way.</p>
+
+ <p>And Gard turned and went over to Nance and Bernel, who were
+ sheltering from the storm in lee of one of the cottages.</p>
+
+ <p>If he could have seen it, there was a warmer feeling in her
+ heart for him than had ever been there before&mdash;a novel
+ feeling, too, of respect and confidence such as she had never
+ entertained towards any other man in all her life.</p>
+
+ <p>For that quick blow had been struck on her behalf, she knew;
+ and it was vastly strange, and somehow good, to feel that a great
+ strong man was ready to stand up for her and, if necessary, to
+ fight for her.</p>
+
+ <p>She pressed silently on against the gale, with an odd little
+ glow in her heart, and a feeling as though something new had
+ suddenly come into her life.</p>
+
+ <p>The gale caught them at the Coup&eacute;e, and the crossing
+ seemed to Gard not without its risks.</p>
+
+ <p>Bernel bent and ran on through the darkness without a thought
+ of danger.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard hesitated one moment and Nance stretched a hand to him,
+ and he took it and went steadily across.</p>
+
+ <p>And, oh, the thrill of that first living touch of her! The
+ feel of the warm nervous little hand sent a tingling glow through
+ him such as he had never in his life experienced before. Verily,
+ a white-stone day this, in spite of winds and darkness!</p>
+
+ <p>The gale howled like ten thousand demons, and the noise of the
+ waves in Grande Gr&egrave;ve came up to them in a ceaseless
+ savage roar. Gard confessed to himself that, alone, he would
+ never have dared to face that perilous storm-swept bridge. But
+ the small hand of a girl made all the difference and he stepped
+ alongside her without a tremor.</p>
+
+ <p>"B'en, Monsieur Gard, was I right?" shouted Bernel in his ear,
+ as they stepped within the shelter of the cutting on the farther
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>"You were right. It's a terrible place in a gale."</p>
+
+ <p>"You wait," shouted Bernel. "We're not home yet."</p>
+
+ <p>"No more Coup&eacute;es, any way," and they bent again into
+ the storm.</p>
+
+ <p>They had not gone more than a hundred yards when, through some
+ freakish funnelling of the tumbled headlands, the gale gripped
+ them like a giant playing with pigmies, caught them up, flung
+ them bodily across the road and held Gard and Bernel pinned and
+ panting against the green bank, while Nance disappeared over it
+ into the shrieking darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good heavens!" gasped Gard, fearful lest she should have been
+ blown over the cliffs, and wriggled himself up under the
+ ceaseless thrashing of the gale and was whirled off the top into
+ the field beyond.</p>
+
+ <p>There the pressure was less, and, getting on to his hands and
+ knees to crawl in search of Nance, he found her close beside him
+ crouching in the lee of the grassy dyke.</p>
+
+ <p>He crept into shelter beside her, and presently, in the lull
+ after a fiercer blast than usual, she set off, bent almost
+ double, and in a moment they were in comparative quiet. Nance
+ crawled through a gap into the road and they found Bernel waiting
+ for them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Knew you'd come through there. That's what that gap's made
+ for," he shouted.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've been in many a storm but I never felt wind like that
+ before," said Gard, as soon as his breath came back.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you'd stopped with me you'd have been all right," said
+ Bernel. "There was no need for you to go after Nance. We've been
+ through that lots of times, haven't we, Nance?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Lots."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall know next time," said Gard, and to Nance it was a
+ fresh experience to think of some one going out of his way to be
+ of possible service to her.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ VIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN'T DARE</h3>
+
+ <p>Before the six weeks allowed by Sark law for the retraiting of
+ the property had expired, Grannie and Mrs. Hamon put in their
+ claims, and it became generally known that they would become the
+ new owners of La Closerie, in place of John Guille.</p>
+
+ <p>When the rumour at length reached Tom's ears, he, not
+ unnaturally perhaps, set down the whole matter as a plot to oust
+ him from his heritage and put Nance and Bernel in his place.</p>
+
+ <p>So his anger grew, and he was powerless. And the impotence of
+ an angry man may lead him into gruesome paths. Smouldering fires
+ burst out at times into devastating flames, and maddened bulls
+ put down their heads and charge regardless of consequences.</p>
+
+ <p>When Tom Hamon asked Peter Mauger to lend him his gun to go
+ rabbit-shooting one night, Peter, if he had been a thoughtful
+ man, would have declined.</p>
+
+ <p>But Peter was above all things easy-going, and anything but
+ thoughtful of such matters as surged gloomily in Tom's angry
+ head, and he lent him his gun as a matter of course.</p>
+
+ <p>And Tom went off across the Coup&eacute;e into Little Sark,
+ nursing his black devil and thinking vaguely and gloomily of the
+ things he would like to do. For to rob a man of his rights in
+ this fashion was past a man's bearing, and if he was to be ruined
+ for the sake of that solemn-faced slip of a Nance and that young
+ limb of a Bernel, he might as well take payment for it all, and
+ cut their crowing, and give them something to remember him
+ by.</p>
+
+ <p>He had no very definite intentions. His mind was a chaos of
+ whirling black furies. He would like to pay somebody out for the
+ wrongs under which he was suffering&mdash;who, or how, was of
+ little moment. He had been wounded, he wanted to hit back.</p>
+
+ <p>He turned off the Coup&eacute;e to the left and struck down
+ through the gorse and bracken towards the Pot, and then crept
+ along the cliffs and across the fields towards La
+ Closerie&mdash;still for three days his, in the reversion; after
+ that, gone from him irrevocably&mdash;a galling shame and not to
+ be borne by any man that called himself a man.</p>
+
+ <p>Should he lie in the hedge and shoot down the old man as he
+ came in from those cursed mines which had started all the
+ trouble? Or should he walk right into the house and shoot and
+ fell whatever he came across? If he must suffer it would at all
+ events be some satisfaction to think that he had made them suffer
+ too.</p>
+
+ <p>From where he stood he could look right in through the open
+ door, and could hear their voices&mdash;Nance and Bernel and Mrs.
+ Hamon&mdash;the interlopers, the schemers, the stealers of his
+ rights.</p>
+
+ <p>The shaft of light was eclipsed suddenly as Nance came out and
+ tripped across the yard on some household duty.</p>
+
+ <p>He remembered how he used to terrify her by springing out of
+ the darkness at her. She had helped to bring all this trouble
+ about.</p>
+
+ <p>Why should he not&mdash;? Why should he not&mdash;?</p>
+
+ <p>And while his gun still shook in his hands to the wild
+ throbbing of his pulses, Nance passed out of his sight into the
+ barn.</p>
+
+ <p>The deed a man may do on the spur of the moment, when his
+ brain is on fire, is not so readily done when it has to be
+ thought about.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Mrs. Hamon came to the door, and called to Nance to bring
+ with her a piece or two of wood for the fire.</p>
+
+ <p>Here was his chance! Here was the head and front of the
+ offence, past, present, and future! If she had never come into
+ the family there would have been no Nance, no Bernel, no selling
+ of the farm, maybe. A movement of the arms, the crooking of a
+ finger, and things would be even between them.</p>
+
+ <p>But&mdash;it would still be he who would have to pay&mdash;as
+ always!</p>
+
+ <p>All through he had been the sufferer, and if he did this thing
+ he must suffer still more&mdash;always he who must pay.</p>
+
+ <p>The man who hesitates is lost, or saved. When the contemplator
+ of evil deeds begins also to contemplate consequences, reason is
+ beginning to resume her sway.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he heard heavy footsteps and voices. His father and
+ Stephen Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>Another chance! Gard he hated. There was a bruise on his right
+ jaw still. And the old man!&mdash;he had cut him out of his
+ inheritance by going crazy over those cursed mines.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry you have gone so far," Gard was saying as they
+ passed. "If you had consulted me I should have advised against
+ it. Mining is always more or less of a speculation. I would
+ never, if I could help it, let any man put more into a mine than
+ he can afford to lose."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you know a thing's a good thing you want all you can get
+ out of it," said old Tom stoutly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, if&mdash;" and they passed into the house, while Tom in
+ the hedge was considering which of them he would soonest see
+ dead.</p>
+
+ <p>Now they were all inside together. A full charge of small shot
+ might do considerable and satisfactory damage.</p>
+
+ <p>But thought of the certain consequences to himself welled
+ coldly up in him again, and he slunk noiselessly away, cursing
+ himself for leaving undone the work he had come out to do.</p>
+
+ <p>On the common above the Pot, a terrified white scut rose
+ almost under his feet and sped along in front of him. He blew it
+ into rags, and was so ashamed of his prowess that he kicked the
+ remnants into the gorse and went home empty-handed.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART</h3>
+
+ <p>One of the first things Stephen Gard had seen to, when he got
+ matters into his own hands, was the safeguarding of the mines
+ from ever-possible irruption of the sea. The great steam pumps
+ kept the workings reasonably clear of drainage water, but no
+ earthly power could drain the sea if it once got in.</p>
+
+ <p>The central shafts had sunk far below sea-level. The lateral
+ galleries had, in some cases, run out seawards and were now
+ extending far under the sea itself.</p>
+
+ <p>From the whirling coils of the tides and races round the
+ coast, he judged that the sea-bed was as seamed and broken and
+ full of faults as the visible cliffs ashore.</p>
+
+ <p>In bad weather, the men in those submarine galleries and the
+ outbranching tunnels could hear the crash of the waves above
+ their heads, and the rolling and grinding of the mighty boulders
+ with which they disported.</p>
+
+ <p>If, by chance, the sea should break through, the peril to life
+ and property would be great.</p>
+
+ <p>He therefore caused to be constructed and fitted inside each
+ tunnel, at the point where it branched from its main gallery, a
+ stout iron door, roughly hinged at the top and falling, in case
+ of need, into the flange of a thick wooden frame. The framework
+ was fitted to the opening on the seaward side, in a groove cut
+ deep into the rock round each side and top and bottom. The heavy
+ iron door, when open, lay up against the roof of the tunnel and
+ was supported by two wooden legs. If the sea should break
+ through, the first rush of the water would sweep away the
+ supporting legs, the iron door would fall with a crash into the
+ flange of the wooden frame, and the greater the pressure the
+ tighter it would fit.</p>
+
+ <p>So the weight of the sea would seal the iron door against the
+ wooden casement, which would swell and press always tighter
+ against the rock, and that boring would be closed for ever. And
+ if any man should be inside the tunnel when the sea broke
+ through, there he must stop, drowned like a rat in its hole,
+ unless by a miracle he could make his way along the tunnel before
+ the trap-door fell.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard never ceased to enjoin the utmost caution on the men who
+ undertook these outermost experimental borings.</p>
+
+ <p>His strict injunctions were to cease work at the first sign of
+ water in these undersea tunnels, make for the gallery, close the
+ trap, and await events.</p>
+
+ <p>Believing absolutely in the existence of one or more great
+ central deposits whence all these thin veins of silver had come,
+ and hoping to strike them at every blow of his pick, old Tom
+ Hamon was the keenest explorer and opener of new leads in the
+ mine.</p>
+
+ <p>"The silver's there all right," he said, time and again, "it
+ only wants finding," and he pushed ahead, here and there,
+ wherever he thought the chances most favourable.</p>
+
+ <p>He took his rightful pay along with the rest for the work he
+ did, but it was not for wages he wrought. Ever just beyond the
+ point of his energetic pick lay fortune, and he was after it with
+ all his heart and soul and bodily powers.</p>
+
+ <p>For months he had been following up a vein which ran out under
+ the sea, and grew richer and richer as he laid it bare. He
+ believed it would lead him to the mother vein, and that to the
+ heart of all the Sark silver. And so he toiled, early and late,
+ and knew no weariness.</p>
+
+ <p>His tunnel, in places not more than three and four feet high
+ and between two and three feet wide, extended now several hundred
+ feet under the sea, and was fitted at the gallery end with the
+ usual raised iron door.</p>
+
+ <p>It was hot work in there, in the dim-lighted darkness, in
+ spite of the fact that the sea was close above his head.
+ Fortunately, here and there, he had come upon curious little
+ chambers like empty bubbles in one-time molten rock, ten feet
+ across and as much in height, some of them, and curiously whorled
+ and wrought, and these allowed him breathing spaces and welcome
+ relief from the crampings of the passage.</p>
+
+ <p>When he had broken into such a chamber it needed, at times, no
+ little labour to rediscover his vein on the opposite side. But he
+ always found it in time, and broke through the farther wall with
+ unusual difficulty, and went on.</p>
+
+ <p>The men generally worked in pairs, but old Tom would have no
+ one with him. He did all the work, picking and hauling the refuse
+ single-handed. The work should be his alone, his alone the glory
+ of the great and ultimate discovery.</p>
+
+ <p>The rocks above him sweated and dripped at times, but that was
+ only to be expected and gave him no anxiety. Alone with his eager
+ hopes he chipped and picked, and felt no loneliness because of
+ the flame of hope that burned within him. Above him he could hear
+ the long roll and growl of the wave-tormented boulders&mdash;now
+ a dull, heavy fall like the blow of a gigantic mallet, and again
+ a long-drawn crash like shingle grinding down a hillside. But
+ these things he had heard before and had grown accustomed to.</p>
+
+ <p>And so it was fated that, one day, after patiently picking
+ round a great piece of rock till it was loosened from its
+ ages-old bed, he felt it tremble under his hand, and leaning his
+ weight against it, it disappeared into space beyond.</p>
+
+ <p>That had happened before when he struck one of the chambers,
+ and he felt no uneasiness. If there had been water beyond, it
+ would have given him notice by oozing round the rock as he
+ loosened it. The brief rush of foul gas, which always followed
+ the opening of one of these hollows, he avoided by lying flat on
+ the ground until he felt the air about him sweeter again.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, enlarging the aperture with his pick, he scrambled
+ through into this chamber now first opened since time began.</p>
+
+ <p>It was like many he had seen before, but considerably larger.
+ Holding his light at arm's length, above his head, a million
+ little eyes twinkled back at him as the rays shot to and fro on
+ the pointed facets of the rock crystals which hung from the roof
+ and started out of the walls and ground.</p>
+
+ <p>The gleaming fingers seemed all pointed straight at him. Was
+ it in mockery or in acknowledgment of his prowess?</p>
+
+ <p>For, in among the pointing fingers, it seemed to him that the
+ silver-bearing veins ran thick as the setting of an ancient
+ jewel, twisted and curling and winding in and out so that his
+ eyes were dazzled with the wonder of it all.</p>
+
+ <p>"A man! A man at last! Since time began we have awaited him,
+ and this is he at last!" so those myriad eyes and pointing
+ fingers seemed to cry to him.</p>
+
+ <p>And up above, the roar and growl of the sea sounded closer
+ than ever before.</p>
+
+ <p>But he had found his treasure and he heeded nought beside.
+ Here, of a surety, he said to himself, was the silver heart from
+ which the scattered veins had been projected. He had found what
+ he had sought with such labours and persistency. What else
+ mattered?</p>
+
+ <p>And then, without a moment's warning&mdash;the end.</p>
+
+ <p>No signal crackings, no thin jets or streams from the green
+ immensity beyond.</p>
+
+ <p>Just one universal collapse, one chaotic climacteric, begun
+ and ended in the same instant, as the crust of the chamber, no
+ longer supported by the in-pent air, dissolved under the
+ irresistible pressure of the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>Where the sparkling chamber had been was a whirling vortex of
+ bubbling green water, in which tumbled grotesquely the body of a
+ man.</p>
+
+ <p>The water boiled furiously along the tunnel and foamed into
+ the gallery. The wooden supports of the iron door gave way; the
+ door sank slowly into its appointed place.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Tom Hamon was dead and buried.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH</h3>
+
+ <p>The news spread quickly.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom Hamon heard it as he sat brooding over his wrongs and
+ cursing the chicken-heartedness and fear of consequences which
+ had robbed him of his revenge.</p>
+
+ <p>He started up with an incredulous curse and tore across the
+ Coup&eacute;e to the mines to make sure.</p>
+
+ <p>But there was no doubt about it. Old Tom was dead: the six
+ weeks were still two days short of their fulfilment; the property
+ was his; his day had come.</p>
+
+ <p>He walked straight to La Closerie, and stalked grimly into the
+ kitchen, where, as it happened, they were sitting over a doleful
+ and long-delayed meal.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hamon had been too overwhelmed by the unexpected blow to
+ consider all its bearings. Grannie, looking beyond, had foreseen
+ consequences and trouble with Tom, and had sent for Stephen Gard
+ and given him some elementary instruction relative to the laws of
+ succession in Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom stalked in upon them with malevolent triumph. They had
+ tried their best to oust him from his inheritance and the act of
+ God had spoiled them. He felt almost virtuous.</p>
+
+ <p>But his natural truculence, and his not altogether unnatural
+ exultation at the frustration of these plans for his own
+ upsetting, overcame all else. Of regret for their personal loss
+ and his own he had none.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;ho! Mighty fine, aren't we, feasting on the best,"
+ he began. "Let me tell you all this is mine now, spite of all
+ your dirty tricks, and you can get out, all of you, and the
+ sooner the better. Eating my best butter, too! Ma f&eacute;, fat
+ is good enough for the likes of you," and he stretched a long arm
+ and lifted the dish of golden butter from the board&mdash;butter,
+ too, which Nance and her mother had made themselves after also
+ milking the cows.</p>
+
+ <p>"Put that down!" said Gard, in a voice like the taps of a
+ hammer.</p>
+
+ <p>"You get out&mdash;bravache! Bretteur! I'm master here."</p>
+
+ <p>"In six weeks&mdash;if you live that long. Until things are
+ properly divided you'll keep out of this, if you're well
+ advised."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will, will I? We'll see about that, Mister Bully. I know
+ what you're up to, trying to fool our Nance with your foreign
+ ways, and I won't have it. She's not for the likes of you or any
+ other man that's got a wife and children over in
+ England&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>This was the suddenly-thought-of burden of a discussion over
+ the cups one night at the canteen, soon after Gard's arrival,
+ when the possibility of his being a married man had been mooted
+ and had remained in Tom's turgid brain as a fact.</p>
+
+ <p>"By the Lord!" cried Gard, starting up in black fury, "if you
+ can't behave yourself I'll break every bone in your body."</p>
+
+ <p>And Nance's face, which had unconsciously stiffened at Tom's
+ words, glowed again at Gard's revelation of the natural man in
+ him, and her eyes shone with various emotions&mdash;doubts,
+ hopes, fears, and a keen interest in what would follow.</p>
+
+ <p>The first thing that followed was the dish of butter, which
+ hurtled past Gard's head and crashed into the face of the clock,
+ and then fell with a flop to the earthen floor.</p>
+
+ <p>The next was Tom's lowered head and cumbrous body, as he
+ charged like a bull into Gard and both rolled to the ground, the
+ table escaping catastrophe by a hair's-breadth.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hamon had sprung up with clasped hands and piteous face.
+ Nance and Bernel had sprung up also, with distress in their faces
+ but still more of interest. They had come to a certain reliance
+ on Gard's powers, and how many and many a time had they longed to
+ be able to give Tom a well-deserved thrashing!</p>
+
+ <p>Through the open door of her room came Grannie's hard little
+ voice, "Now then! Now then! What are you about there?" but no one
+ had time to tell her.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard was up in a moment, panting hard, for Tom's bull-head had
+ caught him in the wind.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you want ... to fight ... come outside!" he jerked.</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;&mdash; you!" shouted Tom, as he struggled to his
+ knees and then to his feet. "I'll smash you!" and he lowered his
+ head and made another blind rush.</p>
+
+ <p>But this time Gard was ready for him, and a stout buffet on
+ the ear as he passed sent him crashing in a heap into the bowels
+ of the clock, which had witnessed no such doings since Tom's
+ great-grandfather brought it home and stood it in its place, and
+ it testified to its amazement at them by standing with hands
+ uplifted at ten minutes to two until it was repaired many months
+ afterwards.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom got up rather dazedly, and Gard took him by the shoulders
+ and ran him outside before he had time to pull himself
+ together.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now," said Gard, shaking him as a bull-dog might a calf. "See
+ here! You're not wanted here at present, and if you make any more
+ trouble you'll suffer for it," and he gave him a final whirl away
+ from the house and went in and closed the door.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom stood gazing at it in dull fury, thought of smashing the
+ window, picked up a stone, remembered just in time that it would
+ be his window, so flung the stone and a curse against the door
+ and departed.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry," said Gard, looking deprecatingly at Nance. "I'm
+ afraid I lost my temper."</p>
+
+ <p>"It was all his fault," said Nance. "Did he hurt you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Only my feelings. He had no right to say such things or do
+ what he did."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's always good to see him licked," said Bernel with gusto.
+ "Nance and I used to try, but he was too big for us."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hamon had gone in with a white face to explain things to
+ Grannie.</p>
+
+ <p>She came back presently and said briefly to Gard, "She wants
+ you," and he went in to the old lady.</p>
+
+ <p>"You did well, Stephen Gard," she chirped. "Stand by them, for
+ they'll need it. He's a bad lot is Tom, and he'll make things
+ uncomfortable when he comes here to live. When Nancy takes her
+ third of what's left of the house, that'll be only two rooms, so
+ you'll have to look out for another, and maybe you'll not find it
+ easy to get one in Little Sark. If you take my advice you'll try
+ Charles Guille at Clos Bourel, or Thomas Carr&eacute; at the
+ Plaisance Cottages by the Coup&eacute;e, they're kindly folk
+ both. I've told Nancy to get Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux to
+ help her portion the lots, and it'll be no easy job, for Tom will
+ choose the best and get all he can."</p>
+
+ <p>They were agreeably surprised to hear no more of Tom, but
+ learned before long that, on the strength of his unexpected good
+ fortune, he had gone over to Guernsey to pass, in ways that most
+ appealed to him, the six weeks allowed by the law for the
+ settlement of his father's affairs.</p>
+
+ <p>Within that six weeks Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux had, on
+ Mrs. Hamon's behalf, to allot all old Tom's estate, house,
+ fields, cattle, implements, furniture, into three as equal
+ portions as he could contrive with his most careful balancing of
+ pros and cons. For, with Solomon-like wisdom, Sark law entails
+ upon the widow the apportionment of the three lots into which
+ everything is divided, but allows the heir first choice of any
+ two of them, the remaining lot becoming the widow's dower.</p>
+
+ <p>No light undertaking, therefore, the apportionment of those
+ lots, or the widow may be left with only bedrooms to live in, and
+ an ill proportion of grazing ground for her cattle and herself to
+ live upon. For, be sure that when it comes to the picking of
+ these lots, even the best of sons will pick the plums, and when
+ such an one as Tom Hamon is in question it is as well to mingle
+ the plums and the sloes with an exactitude of proportionment that
+ will allow of no advantage either way.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE</h3>
+
+ <p>Gard's isolation was brought home to him when he endeavoured
+ to find another lodging in Little Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Accommodation was, of course, limited. Many of the miners had
+ to tramp in each day from Sark. There was still, in spite of all
+ his tact and efforts, somewhat of a feeling against him as a
+ new-comer, an innovator, a tightener of loose cords, and no one
+ offered to change quarters to oblige him. And so, in the end, he
+ took Grannie's advice and found a room in one of the
+ thatch-roofed cottages which offered their white-washed shoulders
+ to the road just where it rose out of the further side of the
+ Coup&eacute;e into Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>They were quiet, farmer-fisher folk who lived there, having
+ nothing to do with the mines and little beyond a general interest
+ in them.</p>
+
+ <p>When not at work, he was thrown much upon himself, and if in
+ his rambles he chanced upon Bernel Hamon it was a treat, and if,
+ as happened all too seldom, upon Nance as well, an enjoyment
+ beyond words.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance was a busy maid, with hens and chickens, and cows
+ and calves, and pigs and piglets claiming her constant attention,
+ and it was only now and again that she could so arrange her
+ duties as to allow of a flight with Bernel&mdash;a flight which
+ always took the way to the sea and developed presently into a
+ bathing revel wherein she flung cares and clothes to the winds,
+ or into a fishing excursion, in which pleasure and profit and
+ somewhat of pain were evenly mixed.</p>
+
+ <p>For, though she loved the sea and ate fresh-caught fish with
+ as much gusto as any, she hated seeing them caught&mdash;almost
+ as much as she hated having her fowls or piglets slaughtered for
+ eating purposes, and never would touch them&mdash;a delicacy of
+ feeling at which Bernel openly scoffed but could not laugh her
+ out of.</p>
+
+ <p>She had sentiments also regarding the rabbits Bernel shot on
+ the cliffs, but being wild, and she herself having had no hand in
+ their upbringing and not having known them intimately, she
+ accepted them as natural provision, though not without
+ compunctions at times concerning possible families of orphans
+ left totally unprovided for.</p>
+
+ <p>When she did permit herself a few hours off duty she did it
+ with a whole-hearted enjoyment&mdash;approaching the na&iuml;ve
+ abandon of childhood&mdash;which, to Gard's sober restraint, when
+ he was graciously permitted to witness it, was wholly
+ charming.</p>
+
+ <p>By degrees, and especially after her father's tragic death,
+ Nance's feelings towards the stranger had perceptibly
+ changed.</p>
+
+ <p>He might be an alien, an Englishman; but he was at all events
+ a Cornishman, and she had heard say that the men of Cornwall and
+ of the Islands and of the Bretagne had much in common, just as
+ their rugged coasts had. And England, after all, was allied to
+ the Islands, belonged to them in fact, and was indeed quite as
+ essential a part of the Queen's dominions as the Islands
+ themselves, and to harbour unfriendly feeling towards your own
+ relations&mdash;unless indeed, as in the case of Tom, they had
+ given you ample cause&mdash;would be surely the mark of a small
+ and narrow mind.</p>
+
+ <p>And he might be a miner; and mines, and most miners, were
+ naturally hateful to her. But he had been a sailor, and was miner
+ only by accident as it were, and she knew that he loved the sea.
+ Allowance, she supposed, must be made for men getting twists in
+ their brains&mdash;like her father. He had gone crazy over these
+ mines though he had been sensible enough in other matters.</p>
+
+ <p>What her careful, surreptitious observation of him, from the
+ depths and round the wings of her sun-bonnet, told her was that
+ he was an upright man, and true, and bold, with a spirit which he
+ kept well in hand but which could blaze like lightning on
+ occasion, and a strength which he could turn to excellent purpose
+ when the need arose.</p>
+
+ <p>And&mdash;and&mdash;she admitted it shyly to herself and not
+ without wonder, and found herself dwelling upon it as she sang
+ softly to the ping-pang of the milk into the pail, or the swoosh
+ of it in the churn&mdash;he thought of her, Nance
+ Hamon&mdash;perhaps he even admired her a little&mdash;any way he
+ was certainly interested in her, and in his shy reserved way he
+ showed a desire for her company which she no longer found
+ pleasure in defeating as she had done at first.</p>
+
+ <p>Undoubtedly an odd feeling, this, of being cared for by an
+ outside man&mdash;- but withal tending to increase of self-esteem
+ and therefore not unpleasing.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter Mauger, indeed&mdash;but then she had never looked upon
+ Peter as anything but Peter, and the shadow of Tom had always
+ obscured him to her. Stephen Gard was a man, and a different kind
+ of a man from Peter altogether.</p>
+
+ <p>She remembered, with a slight reddening still of the warm
+ brown cheeks whenever she thought of it&mdash;how, on the
+ previous Sunday afternoon, she and Bernel had gone running over
+ the downs through the waist-high bracken towards Breni&egrave;re,
+ the tide in their favourite pool below the rocks being too high
+ for bathing. And on the slope above the Cromlech they had come
+ suddenly on Gard, lying there looking out over the sea towards
+ L'Etat.</p>
+
+ <p>He had jumped up at sight of them and stood hesitating a
+ moment.</p>
+
+ <p>"Going for a bathe?" he asked, knowing the usual course of
+ their proceedings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, we were," said Bernel. "You going?" with a glance at the
+ towel Gard had brought out on the chance of a dip.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd thought of it, but your tides and currents here are so
+ troublesome&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, we know all about 'em. They're all right when you
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"I suppose so, but&mdash;" with a look at Nance, "I'll clear
+ out."</p>
+
+ <p>"You're not coming?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Your sister wouldn't like it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance?" with a look of surprise. "She won't mind. Will you,
+ Nance?"</p>
+
+ <p>Then it was her turn to hesitate, for bathing with Bernel was
+ one thing, and with Mr. Gard quite another.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll show me another time, Bernel," said Gard, picking up
+ his towel. "I wouldn't like to spoil your fun now."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you wouldn't. Would he, Nance?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't mind&mdash;if you'll give me the cave."</p>
+
+ <p>"All the caves you want," said Bernel, scornful at such
+ unusual stickling on the part of his chum.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite sure you don't mind?" asked Gard, doubtful still.</p>
+
+ <p>"If I have the cave. It's generally the one who gets there
+ first, and Bern goes quicker than I do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course. You're only a girl," laughed Bernel, as he raced
+ on down the slope.</p>
+
+ <p>And Nance laughed too at his brotherly depreciation, and Gard,
+ who had never regarded her as only a girl, and whose thoughts of
+ her were very absorbing and uplifting, happening to catch her
+ eye, laughed also, and so they went down towards the sea in
+ pleasant enough humour and the nearest approach to
+ good-fellowship they had yet attained.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance disappeared round a corner, and the next he saw of her
+ she was swimming boldly out towards Breni&egrave;re point, and in
+ a moment he and Bernel were after her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't go past the point," jerked Bernel.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's gone."</p>
+
+ <p>"She's a fish and knows her way," and just then they ploughed
+ into what at first looked to Gard like a perfectly smooth spot
+ amid the troubled waters, and then he was lifted from below and
+ flung awry and out of his stroke, and tossed and tumbled till he
+ felt as helpless as a dead fish. Then a fresh coil of the
+ bubbling tide whirled him to one side and he was out again in the
+ safety of the dancing waves.</p>
+
+ <p>"You see?" cried Bernel. "That's what it's like," and shot
+ into it headlong.</p>
+
+ <p>And Gard, treading water quietly at a safe distance, saw how,
+ every here and there, great crowns of water came surging up from
+ below, with such lunging force that they rose in some cases
+ almost a foot above the neighbouring level of the sea, and he
+ wondered how any swimmer could make way through them. And yet
+ Nance had cleft them like a seal, and he could hardly make out
+ her brown head bobbing among the distant waves.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it safe for her?" he cried after Bernel, but the boy's
+ only reply was a scornful wave of the arm as he pressed on to
+ join her.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard had an ample swim, and was dressed and sitting on a rock,
+ when they came leisurely in, and it seemed to him that never in
+ his life had he seen anything half so pretty as those shining
+ coils of chestnut hair with the sea-drops sparkling in them, and
+ the bright energetic face below, browned with sun and wind,
+ rosy-brown now with her long swim, and beaded like her hair with
+ pearly drops.</p>
+
+ <p>As she swept along below, she gave just one quick up-glance,
+ and then, with completest ignorance of his presence, turned her
+ head to Bernel and chattered away to him with most determined
+ nonchalance.</p>
+
+ <p>She and Bernel used the long effective side-stroke almost
+ entirely, and the little arm that flashed in and out so
+ tirelessly was as white as the garment that fluttered in wavy
+ convolutions about the lithe little body below.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard, as he watched her, felt like a discoverer of hidden
+ treasure, overwhelmed and intoxicated with the wonder of
+ unexpected riches. He had come to this wild little land of Sark
+ after silver, and he said to himself that he had found a pearl
+ beyond price.</p>
+
+ <p>In a minute or two they were scrambling up the slope and flung
+ themselves down beside him for a rest, feeling the strain of
+ unusual exertion now that the brace and tonic of the water was
+ off them.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are bold swimmers," said Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's a fish in the water," said Bernel, "and she made me
+ swim almost as soon as I could walk."</p>
+
+ <p>"You see," said Nance, in her decisive little way, "many of
+ our Sark men won't learn to swim. They think it's mistrusting
+ God. But that seems to me foolish. Every man who goes down to the
+ sea ought to be able to swim&mdash;besides, it's terribly
+ nice."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, surely, Sark men ought to be able to swim, and they have
+ certainly no lack of opportunity. But it's a dangerous coast for
+ those who don't know it. Look at that now," and he nodded to the
+ foaming race in front of them, between Breni&egrave;re and a
+ gaunt rocky peak which rose like a mountain-top out of the lonely
+ sea. "Why, it must be running five or six miles an hour."</p>
+
+ <p>From where they sat the sea seemed perfectly calm, a level
+ plain of deepest blue, with pale green streaks under the rocks
+ and dark purple patches further out, its surface just furrowed
+ with tiny wind-ripples, and underneath, a long slow heave like
+ the breathings of the spirit of the deep. But, smooth as the blue
+ plain seemed, wave met rock with roar and turmoil, and between
+ that outlying peak and the shore the waters tore and foamed with
+ wild white crests&mdash;tumbling green ridges that were never two
+ seconds the same. While all along the great black base of the
+ peak the white waves rushed like mighty rockets, flinging long
+ white arms up its ragged sides and crashing together at the end
+ in dazzling bursts of foam.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wonderful!" said Gard. "I've lain here for hours watching
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I've swum it," said Nance quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>"So've I," said Bernel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never! You two? I wonder you came back alive!"</p>
+
+ <p>"On the slack it's not so bad, and at half ebb."</p>
+
+ <p>"And what is there to see when you get there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, just rocks, and puffins and gulls. You can hardly walk
+ without stepping on them. Do you remember how we sat and watched
+ the baby gulls coming out, Nance?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," nodded Nance. "And you nearly got your fingers bitten
+ off by a puffin when you felt in its hole."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ma d&eacute;, yes! They do bite."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you call the rock?" asked Gard, nodding across at
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"L'Etat," said Nance. "Mr. Cachemaille once told me that it
+ had most likely at one time been joined on to Little Sark by a
+ Coup&eacute;e, just the same as Little Sark is joined to Sark.
+ That's the Coup&eacute;e, that shelf under water where the tide
+ runs so fast. Some day, he said, perhaps our Coup&eacute;e will
+ go and we'll be an island just as L'Etat is."</p>
+
+ <p>"It won't be this week," said Bernel philosophically.</p>
+
+ <p>"It looks like the top of a high mountain just sticking up out
+ of the water," said Gard, fascinated by the ceaseless rush of
+ those monstrous waves in an otherwise calm sea.</p>
+
+ <p>"I suppose that is what it is," said Nance. "It's far worse at
+ the other end. You can't see it from here. No matter how smooth
+ the sea is it seems to tumble down over some cliff under water
+ and then come shooting up again, and it throws itself at the
+ rocks and sends the spray up into the sky."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd like to go and see it," said Gard. "But I don't think I
+ would like to swim. Could one get a boat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We have a boat with Nick Mollet in the bay below here," said
+ Bernel. "But he's generally out fishing and you're always
+ busy."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll take a holiday some day and you shall take me over."</p>
+
+ <p>Time came when they went, but it was hardly a holiday
+ undertaking.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT</h3>
+
+ <p>It was a few days after this that Gard had another proof of
+ Nance's and Bernel's fearlessness and prowess in the waters they
+ had conquered into friendliness.</p>
+
+ <p>Bernel was a great fisherman. He could wheedle out rock-fish
+ by the dozen while envious miners sat about him tugging hopefully
+ at empty lines.</p>
+
+ <p>He had gone down one afternoon to the overhanging wooden slip
+ at Port Gorey, and had excellent sport, until a sudden shift of
+ the wind to the south-west began piling the waters into the gulf
+ on an incoming tide. Then he drew in his lines and sat dangling
+ his legs for a few minutes, before gathering up his catch and
+ going home.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance saw him from the other headland and came tripping round
+ to see how he had fared.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bern," she cried, as she came up. "Tell that man he's not
+ safe down there. The waves are bad there sometimes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hi, you!" cried Bernel, to a miner who had been watching his
+ success and had then climbed down seaward over the furrowed black
+ ledges, hoping to do better there. "Come back! It's not safe
+ there."</p>
+
+ <p>But the fisherman, intent on his sport, either did not, or
+ would not, hear him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well, if you won't," said Bernel.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, without warning, a wave greater than any that had
+ gone before it, hurled itself up the rocks and came roaring over
+ the black ledges into the bay, and the man was gone.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance and Bernel had straightened up instantly at the sound of
+ its coming.</p>
+
+ <p>Their eyes swept the rocks, and caught a glimpse of the dark
+ body tumbling with the cascade of foam into Port Gorey.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Bern!" cried Nance, with up-clasped hands.</p>
+
+ <p>But Bernel, loosing his belt and kicking off his breeches with
+ a glance at the derelict, launched himself clear of the pier with
+ a shout. And Nance, seeing the bulk of the man, and careless of
+ everything but Bernel who seemed so very small compared with him,
+ threw off her sun-bonnet and linen jacket, loosed a button, and
+ was gone like a white flash after the two of them.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard was in the assay office not far away. He heard the shout
+ and ran out just in time to see Nance go, and running to the slip
+ he saw their clothes lying and the meaning of it all.</p>
+
+ <p>Bern had hold of the miner by the collar of his coat, and was
+ doing his best with one hand to tow him to the shingle at the
+ head of the gulf, the almost drowned one splashing wildly and
+ doing his utmost to get hold of and drown his rescuer. Every now
+ and again Bernel found it necessary to let go in order to keep
+ out of his way.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance swam steadily up and the sinking one made a frantic
+ clutch at her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Lie quiet or you shall drown," she cried. "Do you hear? Lie
+ quiet and you are safe! See!" and she held his right hand while
+ Bernel took his left and the man found himself no longer sinking,
+ and they struck out for the shingle.</p>
+
+ <p>Others of the miners had run down with ropes, but ropes were
+ useless in that deep gulf. Nance and Bernel were doing the only
+ thing possible, and Gard saw that they were all right now that
+ the man had ceased to struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>He picked up Bernel's things, and Nance's, with a curious
+ feeling of delight and a touch of shyness, her sun-bonnet, her
+ little linen jacket, her woollen skirt, her neat little wooden
+ sabots, and ran swiftly with them to the shaft at the head of the
+ gulf.</p>
+
+ <p>They would make for the adit, he thought, and so gain the
+ shaft and come up by the ladders, if, indeed, John Thomas was in
+ any state to climb ladders.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bring some brandy," he shouted to one of the men, and ran on.
+ Nance was more to him than all the miners in Sark, and it was not
+ brandy she would be wanting, he knew, but her clothes.</p>
+
+ <p>And, since a man needs both his hands to go down almost
+ perpendicular ladders, he left at the top all that she would not
+ instantly need and took only the little jacket and the woollen
+ skirt. These he rolled into a bundle as he ran, and gripped in
+ his teeth as he began the descent, and rejoiced all the way down
+ in this close intimacy with her clothing. Indeed, on one of the
+ stages, when he stopped for a moment's breathing, he kissed the
+ little garments devoutly, and then laughed shamefacedly at
+ himself for his foolishness, and glanced round quickly lest any
+ should have witnessed it.</p>
+
+ <p>So down, down, till he came to the level, and crept along the
+ adit to the shore.</p>
+
+ <p>They had dragged John Thomas up on to the shingle, and he lay
+ there half-dead and fuller of water than was his custom.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance looked up quickly at the sound of Gard's feet, and the
+ paled-brown of her face flushed red at sight of him, and then a
+ grateful gleam lighted it as he dropped her things into her hand
+ and bent over John Thomas, who was showing signs of life in a
+ dazed and water-logged fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>"You did splendidly, you two," he said to Bernel. "It's a
+ grand thing to save a man's life, even if it's only John Thomas,"
+ for John Thomas had found this land of free spirits too much for
+ him, and had become a soaker and an indifferent workman.</p>
+
+ <p>"He'll be all right after a bit," he added. "I told them to
+ send down some brandy," at which John Thomas groaned heavily to
+ show his extremity. "As soon as it comes, Bernel, you help Nance
+ up the ladders. Then run home both of you. Your things are at the
+ top, Bernel. And here comes the brandy. Now, up you go! Do you
+ think you can manage the ladders?" he asked Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll manage them," and they crept away into the darkness of
+ the adit, and Nance thought she had never been in such a hideous
+ place in her life.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY</h3>
+
+ <p>They had been most gratefully and graciously free from Tom
+ since his father's death, but he reappeared a day or two before
+ the end of the six weeks, and brought with him a wife from
+ Guernsey&mdash;not even a Guernsey woman, however, but a
+ Frenchwoman from the Cotentin&mdash;black-haired, black-eyed,
+ good-looking, after the type that would please such an one as Tom
+ Hamon&mdash;somewhat over-bold of face and manner for the rest of
+ the family.</p>
+
+ <p>Philip Tanquerel had had to bring all his sagacity to bear on
+ his difficult task of apportioning the lots, and Tom, who knew
+ every inch of the ground and all its capacities, grinned
+ viciously now and again at the acumen displayed in the
+ divisions.</p>
+
+ <p>The allotment of the house-room had presented
+ difficulties.</p>
+
+ <p>The great kitchen at La Closerie occupied the whole centre
+ third of the ground floor, the remaining thirds of the space on
+ each side being taken up with the rarely-used best room and three
+ bedrooms, all pretty much of a size, and all opening into the
+ kitchen. Up above, under the sloping thatch was the great solie
+ or loft, entered from the outside through the door-window in the
+ gable by means of a short wooden ladder.</p>
+
+ <p>Grannie's dower rights, when Tom's grandfather died, had
+ obtained for her the two rooms constituting one-third of the
+ house on the south side of the kitchen, and certain rights of use
+ of the kitchen itself. As she needed only one room, she had
+ bartered off the other and her kitchen rights to her son and his
+ wife in exchange for food and attendance, and the arrangement had
+ worked excellently.</p>
+
+ <p>But, on her first glimpse of young Tom's quick-eyed,
+ bold-faced Frenchwoman, she had vowed she would have none of her;
+ and in the end, as the result of some chaffering, it was arranged
+ that Tom and his wife should have the kitchen and all the rooms
+ north of it, while Mrs. Hamon and Nance and Bernel had the room
+ next Grannie's for a kitchen, and the great loft for bedrooms,
+ all the necessary and duly specified alterations to be made at
+ Tom's expense, and Mr. Tanquerel to see them carried out at once.
+ Grannie's other room was to become their sitting-room also and
+ they were to provide for her as hitherto. By boarding up the
+ doors leading to the kitchen, and making a new entrance to their
+ own rooms, the families were therefore entirely separated, to
+ every one's complete satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>The division of the furniture and kitchen utensils gave Mrs.
+ Hamon all she needed. Tom, of course, took as <i>droit d'ainesse</i>,
+ before the division, the family clock&mdash;which still bore
+ signs of strife, and had refused to go since that night when
+ Gard's buffet had sent him headlong into it; and the farm-ladders
+ and the pilotins&mdash;the stone props on which the haystacks
+ were built; and in addition to his own full share, as between
+ himself and Nance and Bernel, he exacted from them to the
+ uttermost farthing the extra seventh part of the value of all
+ they received&mdash;an Island right, but honoured more in the
+ breach than in the observance, and one which, in its exercise,
+ tended to label the exerciser as unduly mean and grasping.</p>
+
+ <p>Beyond that, everything was so fairly well balanced that Tom
+ found himself unable to secure all he had hoped, and so deemed
+ himself ill-used, and did not hesitate to express himself in his
+ usual forcible manner.</p>
+
+ <p>To obtain some of the things he specially wanted, Tanquerel
+ had so arranged the lots that he must sacrifice others, and these
+ little matters rankled in his mind and obscured his purview.</p>
+
+ <p>There was a good deal of unhappy wrangling, but in the end
+ Mrs. Hamon and Nance found themselves with a large cornfield, one
+ for pasture, and one for mixed crops, potatoes, beans and so on,
+ besides rights of grazing and gorse-cutting on a certain stretch
+ of cliff common.</p>
+
+ <p>They had also a pony and two cows, and two pigs and a couple
+ of dozen hens and a cock&mdash;quite enough to keep Nance busy;
+ and to them also fell an adequate share of the byres and barns,
+ and the free use of the well.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom, however, still looked upon them as interlopers, and
+ grudged them every stick and stone, and hoof and claw. If they
+ had never come into the family all would have been his. Whatever
+ they had they had snatched out of his mouth.</p>
+
+ <p>If it had not been for Philip Tanquerel the alterations agreed
+ on would never have been completed. He got down the carpenter and
+ mason from Sark, stood over them, day by day, till the work was
+ done, and then referred them to Tom for payment&mdash;and a
+ pleasant and lively time they had in getting it.</p>
+
+ <p>The conditions resulting from all this were just such as have
+ prevailed in hundreds of similar cases, such as are almost
+ inevitable from the minute divisions and sub-divisions of small
+ properties. When ill-feeling has prevailed beforehand it is by no
+ means likely to be lessened by the unavoidable friction of such a
+ distribution.</p>
+
+ <p>The open ill-feeling was, however, all on Tom's side. The
+ others had suffered him at closer quarters the greater part of
+ their lives. It was to them a mighty relief to be boarded off
+ from him, and to feel free at last from his unwelcome
+ incursions.</p>
+
+ <p>He never spoke to any of them, and when they passed one
+ another on their various farm duties a black look and a muttered
+ curse was his only greeting.</p>
+
+ <p>By means of what fairy tales concerning himself, or his
+ position, or Sark, he had induced the lively-eyed Julie to marry
+ him, we may not know. But Mrs. Tom very soon let it be known that
+ she considered herself woefully misled, and quite thrown away
+ upon such a place as Sark, and still more so upon this <i>ultima
+ thule</i> of Little Sark, which she volubly asserted was the very
+ last place le bon Dieu had made, and the condition in which it
+ was left did Him little credit.</p>
+
+ <p>She, at all events, showed no disinclination to chat with her
+ neighbours. Very much the contrary. None of them could pass
+ within range of her eyes and tongue without a greeting and an
+ invitation to talk.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tiens donc, Nancie, ma petite!" she would cry, at sight of
+ Nance. "What a hurry you are in. It is hurry and scurry and
+ bustle from morning till night with you over there. The hens? Let
+ them wait, ma garche, 'twill strengthen their legs to scratch a
+ bit, and 'twill enlighten your mind to hear about Guernsey and
+ Granville. Oh the beautiful country! Mon Dieu, if only I were
+ back there!"</p>
+
+ <p>They all&mdash;except, perhaps, Grannie&mdash;felt for
+ her&mdash;lonely in a strange land&mdash;and were inclined to do
+ what they could to make her more contented. But she desired them
+ chiefly as listeners, and the things she had to tell were little
+ to their taste, and less to her credit from their point of view,
+ though she herself evidently looked upon them as every-day
+ matters, and calculated to inspire these simple island-folk with
+ the respect due to a woman of the greater world outside.</p>
+
+ <p>Grannie's views of her grand-daughter-in-law had never altered
+ from the first moment she set eyes on her.</p>
+
+ <p>When Mrs. Tom came in to hear herself talk, one afternoon when
+ Tom was away fishing, the old lady simply sat and stared at her
+ from the depths of her big black sun-bonnet, and never opened her
+ lips or gave any sign of interest or hearing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is she deaf?" asked Mrs. Tom after a while.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear me, no. Grannie hears everything," said Mrs. Hamon, with
+ a smile at thought of all the old lady would have to say
+ presently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nom d'un nom, then why doesn't she speak? Is it dumb she
+ is?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Neither deaf nor dumb&mdash;nor yet a fool," rapped Grannie,
+ so sharply that the visitor jumped.</p>
+
+ <p>And during the remainder of her visit, no matter to whom she
+ was talking or what she was saying, Julie's snapping black eyes
+ would inevitably keep working round to the depths of the big
+ black sun-bonnet, and at times her discourse lost point and
+ trailed to a ragged end.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's my belief that old woman next door is a witch," she said
+ to her husband later on.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's an old devil," he said bluntly. "She'll put the evil
+ eye on you if you don't take care."</p>
+
+ <p>"She ought to be burnt," said Mrs. Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"All the same," said Tom musingly, "she's got money, so you'd
+ best be as civil to her as she'll let you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Dieu! My flesh creeps still at the way she looked at me.
+ She has the evil eye without a doubt."</p>
+
+ <p>And Grannie?&mdash;"Mai grand doux! What does a woman like
+ that want here?" said she. "A wide mouth and wanton eyes. La
+ Closerie has never had these before&mdash;a Frenchwoman
+ too!"&mdash;with withering contempt. For, odd as it may seem,
+ among this people originally French, and still speaking a patois
+ based, like their laws and customs, on the old Norman, there is
+ no term of opprobrium more profound than "Frenchman."</p>
+
+ <p>Madame Julie flatly refused to subject herself to further
+ peril from Grannie's keen but harmless gaze, and contented
+ herself with such opportunities of enlarging Nance's outlook on
+ life as casual chats about the farm-yard afforded, and found time
+ heavy on her hands.</p>
+
+ <p>Ennui, before long, gave place to grumbling, and that to
+ recrimination; and from what the others could not help hearing,
+ through the boarded-up doors and the floor of the loft, Tom and
+ his wife had a cat-and-dog time of it.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard had moved over to Plaisance with great regret. But
+ nothing else was possible under the altered circumstances at La
+ Closerie, so he made the best of it.</p>
+
+ <p>It was some consolation to learn that they also missed
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Everything's different," grumbled Bernel, one day when they
+ met. "Tom and his wife quarrel so that we can hear them through
+ the walls. And Grannie sits by the hour without opening her
+ mouth. And mother and Nance are as quiet as if they were going to
+ be sick. And I'm getting green-mouldy. Seems as if we'd got to
+ the end of things, and nothing was ever going to happen again. I
+ think I'll go to Guernsey."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you think they'd like&mdash;I mean, would they mind if I
+ came in for a chat now and then? It's pretty lonely up at
+ Plaisance too."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, they'll mind and so will I. When'll you come?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll look in to-night as I come from the mines&mdash;if
+ you're sure&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You come and try, and if you don't like it you needn't come
+ again"&mdash;with a twinkle of the eye.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance did not strike him as looking as though she were going
+ to be sick, when he went in that night, nor did her mother.</p>
+
+ <p>Grannie indeed had little to say, but then she was never
+ over-talkative, and when Gard more than once looked at her, and
+ wondered if she had fallen asleep, he always found the keen old
+ eyes wide open, and eyeing him watchfully as ever out of the
+ depths of the big black sun-bonnet.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hamon asked about his new quarters, and his quiet shake
+ of the head and simple&mdash;"They're kindly folk, but it's
+ somehow very different"&mdash;told its own tale.</p>
+
+ <p>"They're a bit short-handed, you see," he added, "and so
+ they're all kept busy, and at times, I'm afraid, they wish me
+ further."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you go all that way back for your dinner each day?" asked
+ Mrs. Hamon thoughtfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I have tried taking it with me, but it's not very
+ satisfactory."</p>
+
+ <p>"What would you say to coming here for it, as you used to? I
+ think we could manage it, Nance. What do you say?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We could manage it all right," said Nance, "if&mdash;" and
+ then, in spite of herself, she could not keep that telltale mouth
+ of hers in order, and the attempt to repress a smile only
+ emphasized the dimples at the corners. For Gard's face was as
+ eager as a dog's at sight of a rat.</p>
+
+ <p>"It will save me such a lot of time," he explained&mdash;at
+ which Nance dimpled again as she went out to feed her chickens,
+ and left them to complete the new arrangement.</p>
+
+ <p>And if it had cost Gard every penny of his salary he would
+ still have rejoiced at it, and considered his bargain a good one.
+ As it was, it cost him no more than the trouble of rearranging
+ his terms with the good folks at Plaisance, and it gave a new
+ zest and enjoyment to life since it ensured a meeting with Nance
+ at least once each day.</p>
+
+ <p>And not with Nance only!</p>
+
+ <p>Madame Julie, very weary of herself, and Tom, and her
+ surroundings, and Sark, and life in general as understood in
+ Sark, very soon became conscious of the regular visits next door
+ of the best-looking young man she had yet seen in the Island, and
+ was filled with curiosity concerning him.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's after that slip of a Nance," she said to herself. "And
+ he has his own share of good looks, has that young
+ man."&mdash;And then came the inevitable, "Mon Dieu, but I wish
+ Tom had been made like that!"</p>
+
+ <p>To get a better view of him&mdash;and perhaps not without a
+ vague idea of ulterior interest and amusement for
+ herself&mdash;anything to add a dash of colour to the prevailing
+ greyness of her surroundings&mdash;she was leaning on the gate
+ next day when he came striding up to his dinner, and gave him,
+ "Bon jour, m'sieur!" with much heartiness and the full benefit of
+ her black eyes and white teeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Jour, madame!" and he whipped off his hat and passed on into
+ the house.</p>
+
+ <p>"That was Madame Tom, I suppose, who was leaning over the
+ gate, as I came in," he said, as they ate.</p>
+
+ <p>"I expect so," said Mrs. Hamon. "She generally seems to have
+ time on her hands."</p>
+
+ <p>"When Tom's not there," snapped Grannie. "Got her hands full
+ enough when he is."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should imagine Tom would not be too easy to get on with at
+ times. Maybe he'll settle down now he's married."</p>
+
+ <p>"Doesn't sound like settling down sometimes," chirped the old
+ lady again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh? I'm sorry to hear that. She doesn't look
+ bad-tempered."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom's got more'n enough for the two of them."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid she finds it a change from what she's been
+ accustomed to," said Mrs. Hamon quietly. "She came in once or
+ twice, but her talk is of things that don't interest us, and ours
+ is of things that don't interest her, so we can't get as friendly
+ as we would like to be."</p>
+
+ <p>"And Tom?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom considers us all robbers, as he always has done. He gives
+ us his blackest face whenever he sees any of us."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's unpleasant, seeing you're such close neighbours."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, it's unpleasant, but we can't help it. It's just Tom.
+ How is your work getting on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not as I would wish," said Gard, with a gloomy wag of the
+ head. "Your Sark men are difficult&mdash;very difficult, and the
+ others who ought to know better, and who do know
+ better"&mdash;with more than a touch of warmth&mdash;"go on as
+ though I was a slave-driver."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sark men are hard to drive," said Mrs. Hamon
+ sympathetically.</p>
+
+ <p>"They know perfectly well that I want only what is just and
+ right to the shareholders. They expect their pay to the last
+ penny, but when I insist on a proper return for it they look at
+ me as if they'd like to knock me on the head. It's disheartening
+ work. I've been tempted at times to throw it all up and go back
+ to England"&mdash;at which Nance's heart gave so unusual a little
+ kick that she had difficulty in frowning it into quietude, and
+ just then Bernel came in with his gun and a couple of
+ rabbits.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's going to England?" he asked. "I'll go too."</p>
+
+ <p>"No you won't," said Nance sharply. "We want you here."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's as dull as Beauregard pond and as dirty, since the
+ m&mdash;aw&mdash;um!" with a deprecatory glance at Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd find most busy places just as dirty," said Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then I'll go to sea. That's clean at all events."</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's hope things will brighten a bit. You wouldn't find the
+ fo'c'sle of a trader as comfortable as La Closerie, my
+ boy,"&mdash;and they fell to on their dinner and left the matter
+ there.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dites-donc, Nannon, ma petite," said Mrs. Tom to Nance, a day
+ or two later, "who is the joli gars who comes each day to see
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Gard from the mines comes up here to get his dinner, if
+ that's what you mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;ho! He comes for his dinner, does he? And is that
+ all he comes for, little Miss Modesty?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all," said Nance solemnly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, without a doubt, that's all. I think I'll ask him
+ next time I see him. Why doesn't he go home for his dinner like
+ other people?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's living at Plaisance now and it's far to go. He used to
+ live here, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ma foi, no, I didn't know. He used to live here? And why did
+ he go to Plaisance then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We hadn't room for him, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"But, Mon Dieu, we have room and to spare! There are those two
+ bedrooms empty. Why shouldn't he&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance shook her head at that.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why then?" demanded Mrs. Tom, with visions of some one
+ besides Tom to talk to of an evening&mdash;a good-looking,
+ sensible one too. "Why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He and Tom don't get on well together&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pardi, I'm not surprised at that. It would need an angel out
+ of heaven to get on with him sometimes. What induced me ever to
+ marry such a grumbler I don't know. I wonder if Monsieur
+ What-is-it?&mdash;Gard&mdash;would come back if I could arrange
+ it?"</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance shook her head again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;ha, ma garche, and you would sooner he did
+ not&mdash;is it not so?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm quite sure he and Tom would never get on together, and I
+ don't think Mr. Gard would come."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's worth trying, however. He would be some one to talk to
+ of an evening any way."</p>
+
+ <p>And so, when Tom came in that evening, she tackled him on the
+ subject.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say then, mon beau,"&mdash;and as she said it she could not
+ but contrast his slouching bulk with the straight, well-knit
+ figure of the other&mdash;"why should we not take in a lodger as
+ all the rest do? Our two rooms there are empty and&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's the lodger?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There is one comes up every day to dinner next door, and
+ would stop there altogether if they had the room. Tiens, what's
+ this his name is? He's from the mines&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You mean Gard&mdash;the manager," scowled Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's it&mdash;Monsieur Gard. Why shouldn't he&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Because I'd break his head if I got the chance, and he knows
+ it. Comes up there to dinner, does he? How long's he been doing
+ that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"For a week now. Couldn't you get over your bad feeling? It
+ would be money in our pockets."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I couldn't, and he wouldn't come if you asked him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you let me try?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I tell you he won't come."</p>
+
+ <p>"In that case there's no harm in trying. If I can persuade
+ him, will you promise to be civil to him, and not try to break
+ his head?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He won't come, I tell you."</p>
+
+ <p>"And I say he may."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you'll nag and nag till you get your own way, I
+ suppose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course. What's the use of a woman's tongue if she can't
+ get her own way with it? Will you promise to behave properly if
+ he comes?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll behave if he behaves," he growled sulkily. "But we'll
+ neither of us get the chance. He won't come."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh bien, we'll see!"</p>
+
+ <p>And when Gard came up to dinner next day, she was leaning over
+ the gate waiting for him, very tastefully dressed according to
+ her lights, and with an engaging smile on her face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dites donc, Monsieur Gard," she said pleasantly. "Our little
+ Nannon was telling me you regretted having to live so far away.
+ Why should you not come back and occupy your old room? It is
+ lying empty there, and I would do my very best to make you
+ comfortable, and you would be close to your friends all the time
+ then, instead of having to go across that frightful
+ Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is very kind of you, madame," and he stared back at her in
+ much surprise, and found himself wondering what on earth had made
+ her marry such a man as Tom Hamon. For she was undeniably
+ good-looking and had all a Frenchwoman's knack of making the very
+ best of all she had&mdash;abundant black hair, very neatly
+ twisted up at the back of her head; white teeth and full red
+ lips; straight, well-developed figure very neatly dressed; and
+ large black eyes which looked capable of so many things, that
+ they found it difficult to settle for any length of time to any
+ one expression.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is very kind of you, madame," said Gard, "but&mdash;" and
+ he stood looking at her and hesitating how to put it.</p>
+
+ <p>"You mean about Tom," she laughed. "But that is all past. I
+ have spoken to him, and he promises to behave himself quite
+ properly if you will come. Voil&agrave;!"</p>
+
+ <p>Just for a moment the possibilities of the suggestion caught
+ his mind. He would be near Nance all the time. He would be saved
+ much tiresome walking to and fro. Especially he would be saved
+ that passage of the Coup&eacute;e, which at night, even with a
+ lantern, was not a thing one easily got accustomed to, and on
+ stormy nights was enough to make one's hair fly. Then this woman
+ was very different from his present landlady, and would probably,
+ he thought, have different notions of comfort.</p>
+
+ <p>The quick black eyes caught something of what was in him: and
+ he, as suddenly, caught something of what lurked, consciously or
+ unconsciously, in them, and a little tremor of repugnance shook
+ his heart and braced him back to reason.</p>
+
+ <p>He shook his head. "It would not do, madame. He and I would
+ never get on together, no matter how hard we tried. I thank you
+ for the offer all the same," and he made as though to pass
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish you would come," she said, and laid a pleading hand on
+ his arm. "I'm sure he would try to behave. I can generally manage
+ him except when he's been drinking. Then I'm afraid of him, and
+ wish some one else was at hand. But that's only when he's been
+ out all night at the fishing, and it's soon over and done with.
+ Do come, monsieur!"&mdash;It was almost a whisper now, and she
+ leaned towards him&mdash;the rich dark face&mdash;the great
+ solicitous eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>But she had mistaken her man. Perhaps she had not met many
+ like him.</p>
+
+ <p>He shook off her hand almost brusquely.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is impossible, madame. I could not," and he pushed past
+ just as Nance came to the door.</p>
+
+ <p>She had seen him coming, heard their voices outside, and
+ wondered what was keeping him.</p>
+
+ <p>She turned back into the house when she saw Julie, wondering
+ still more. For Gard's face was disturbed, and had in it
+ something of the look she had seen more than once when he had
+ faced Tom in his tantrums.</p>
+
+ <p>And, glancing past him, she had seen what he had
+ not&mdash;Julie's face when he turned his back on her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Gyu!" gasped Nance to herself, and went in wondering.</p>
+
+ <p>"She and Tom wanted me to take my old room again, and I
+ refused," was all he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom wanted you to go there?" said Mrs. Hamon in
+ amazement.</p>
+
+ <p>"So she said."</p>
+
+ <p>Grannie's disparaging sniff was charged with libel.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;'>
+
+ <p>"Well?" asked Tom of his wife, when he came in later on with
+ Peter Mauger, who had come over for supper. "Got your
+ lodger?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what I told you," with a provocative laugh.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, he'd have come quick enough."</p>
+
+ <p>"Would, would he? Then why didn't he?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I wouldn't trust myself alone in the house with that
+ man."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" said Tom, staring at her. "Always thought he was a bad
+ lot myself, didn't I, Peter?"</p>
+
+ <p>Peter nodded.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a wonder to me that Mrs. Hamon lets him run after that
+ girl of hers as she does," said Julie.</p>
+
+ <p>"If I catch him up to any of his tricks I'll break his head
+ for him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe it would be a good thing for little Nance if you
+ did."</p>
+
+ <p>"Knew he was a toad as soon as I set eyes on him, so did
+ Peter. Didn't you, Peter?"</p>
+
+ <p>Peter nodded.</p>
+
+ <p>"What d'he say to you?" demanded Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"Didn't say much. Asked if you were much away at the fishing
+ and that. But the way he looked at me!&mdash;I've got the shivers
+ down my back yet," and a virtuous little shudder shook her and
+ made a visible impression on Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Peter and me'll maybe have a word with him one of these days,
+ won't we, Peter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe," said Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>"We don't want toads like Gard running off with any of our
+ Sark girls, do we, Peter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," said Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Gard had better look out for himself or take himself off
+ before somebody does it for him. There's plenty wouldn't mind
+ giving him a crack on the head and slipping him over the
+ Coup&eacute;e some dark night."</p>
+
+ <p>As to such extreme measures Peter offered no opinion. He
+ looked vaguely round the big kitchen as though in search of
+ something that used to be there, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"How about supper?"</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY</h3>
+
+ <p>One dark night Gard sauntered down the cutting towards the
+ Coup&eacute;e, enjoying a last pipe before turning in.</p>
+
+ <p>This had become something of a habit with him. The people of
+ Plaisance, hard at work all day in the fields, went early to bed
+ and left him to follow when he pleased. And to stand securely in
+ that deep cleft, just where the protecting walls broke off short
+ and left the narrow path to waver on into the darkness, was
+ always fascinating to him.</p>
+
+ <p>When the moon flooded the gulf on the left with shimmering
+ silver, and the waves broke along the black rocks below in crisp
+ white foam like silver frost, he would stand by the hour there
+ and never tire of it.</p>
+
+ <p>The moon cast such a mystic glamour over those great voids of
+ darkness and over the headlands, melting softly away, fold behind
+ fold, on the right, while Little Sark became a mystery land into
+ which the white path rambled enticingly and invited one to
+ follow.</p>
+
+ <p>And to him, as his eyes followed it till it disappeared over
+ the crown of the ridge, it was more than a mystery land&mdash;a
+ land of promise, rich in La Closerie and Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>Always within him, as he watched, was the feeling that if the
+ sweet slim figure should come tripping down the moonlit path
+ towards him, he would be in no way astonished. When he stood
+ there, watching, it seemed to him that it would be entirely
+ fitting for her to come so, in the calm soft light that was as
+ pure and sweet as herself.</p>
+
+ <p>And at times his eye would light on the grim black pile of
+ L'Etat, lying out there in the silvery shimmer like some great
+ monumental cairn, a rough and rugged heap of loneliness and
+ mystery&mdash;the grimmer and lonelier by reason of the twinkling
+ brightness of its setting. And then his thoughts would play about
+ the lonely pile, and come back with a sense of homely relief to
+ the fairy path which Nance's little feet had trod, in light and
+ dark, and storm and shine, since ever she could walk.</p>
+
+ <p>He pictured her as a tiny girl running fearlessly across the
+ grim pathway to school, dancing in the sunshine, bending to the
+ storm, and all alone when she had been kept in&mdash;he wondered
+ with a smile what she had been kept in for.</p>
+
+ <p>He thought of her, as he had seen her, walking to church, her
+ usually blithe spirit tuned to sedateness by the very fact, and,
+ to him, delightfully stiffened by the further fact that she,
+ almost alone among her friends and school-fellows, wore Island
+ costume, while all the rest flaunted it in all the colours of the
+ rainbow. And he laughed happily to himself, for very joy, at
+ thought of the sweet elusive face in the shadow of the great
+ sun-bonnet. There was not a face in all Sark to compare with it,
+ nor, for him, in all the world.</p>
+
+ <p>But this night, as be stood there pulling slowly at his pipe
+ and thinking of Nance, was one of the black nights.</p>
+
+ <p>Later on there would be a remnant of a moon, but as yet the
+ sky above was an ebon vault without a star, and the gulfs at his
+ feet were pits of darkness out of which rose the voices of the
+ sea in solemn rhythmic cadence.</p>
+
+ <p>Down in Grande Gr&egrave;ve, on his right, the waves rolled in
+ almost without a sound, as though they feared to disturb the
+ darkness. From the intervening moments he could tell how slowly
+ they crept to their curve. Their fall was a soft sibilation, a
+ long-drawn sigh. The ever-restless sea for once seemed falling to
+ sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, as he listened into the darkness, a tiny elfish
+ glimmer flickered in the void below, flickered and was gone, and
+ he rubbed his eyes for playing him tricks. But the next wave
+ broke slowly round the wide curve of the bay in a crescent of
+ lambent flame, and a flood of soft, blue-green fire ran swelling
+ up the beach and then with a sigh drew slowly back, and all was
+ dark again. Again and again&mdash;each wave was a miracle of
+ mystic beauty, and he stood there entranced long after his pipe
+ had gone dead.</p>
+
+ <p>And as he stood gazing down at the wonder of it, his ear
+ caught the sound of quick light footsteps coming towards him
+ across the Coup&eacute;e, and he marvelled at the intrepidity of
+ this late traveller. If he had had to go across there that night,
+ he would have gone step by step, with caution and a lantern;
+ whereas here was no hesitation, but haste and assurance.</p>
+
+ <p>It was only when she had passed the last bastion, and was
+ almost upon him, that he made out that it was a girl.</p>
+
+ <p>His heart gave a jump. She had been so much in his thought.
+ Yet, even so, it was almost at a venture that he said&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance?"</p>
+
+ <p>And yet, again, he had learned to recognize her footsteps at
+ the farm, and where the heart is given the senses are subtly
+ acute, and she had slackened her pace somewhat as she drew
+ near.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes; I am going to the doctor."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;who&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Grannie is ill&mdash;in pain. He will give me something to
+ ease her." He had turned and was walking by her side.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am sorry. You will let me go with you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There is no need at all&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No need, I know; but all the same it would be a pleasure to
+ me to see you safely there and back."</p>
+
+ <p>She hurried on without speaking. If there had been any light,
+ and he had dared to peep inside the black sun-bonnet, he might
+ perhaps have found the hint of a smile overlaying her anxiety on
+ Grannie's account.</p>
+
+ <p>By the ampler feel of things, and the easing of the slope, he
+ knew they were out of the cutting, and presently they were
+ passing Plaisance.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you would sooner I did not walk with you, I will fall
+ behind; but I couldn't stop here and think of you going on
+ alone," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be foolishness," she said gently. "But there is
+ really no need. I have no fears of ghosts or anything like
+ that."</p>
+
+ <p>"There might be other kinds of spirits about," he said
+ quietly. "And when men drink as some of my fellows do, they are
+ no respecters of persons. But this is surely very sudden. Your
+ grandmother seemed all right at dinner-time."</p>
+
+ <p>"She had bad pains in the afternoon, and they have been
+ getting worse. She did not want to have the doctor, but the
+ things she took did her no good, and mother said I had better go
+ and ask him for something more."</p>
+
+ <p>"And where is Bernel?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He went to the fishing with Billy Mollet, and he was not
+ back."</p>
+
+ <p>"And suppose the doctor is not in?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They will know where he is, and I will go after him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you see those wonderful waves of fire as you came across
+ the Coup&eacute;e?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have seen them often. When there is more sea on, and it
+ breaks on the rocks, it is finer still. It is something in the
+ water, Mr. Cachemaille told me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I heard your footsteps down there on the Coup&eacute;e, but I
+ couldn't see a sign of you till you were almost against me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I saw from the other side that some one was there, but I
+ could not see who."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have most wonderful eyes in Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is never quite dark to me on the darkest night. I suppose
+ it is with being used to it."</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll have to help me across the Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how will you get back?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The moon will be up, and then I can see all right. I don't
+ need much light, but I've not been brought up to see through
+ solid black."</p>
+
+ <p>The doctor was fortunately in, and knew by ample experience
+ what would ease Grannie's pains. So presently they were hurrying
+ back along the dark road.</p>
+
+ <p>As they turned the corner by Vauroque an open doer cast a
+ great shaft of light across the darkness, and there, just as on a
+ previous occasion, on the wall lounged half-a-dozen men, and
+ among them was Tom Hamon, who had come up to have a drink with
+ his friend Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>At sight of him, Nance bent her head and tried to shrink into
+ herself as she hurried past.</p>
+
+ <p>But Tom had seen her, and the sight of her alone with Gard at
+ that time of night roused the virtuous indignation, and other
+ more potent spirits, within him.</p>
+
+ <p>He sprang down into the road, shouting what sounded like a
+ spate of curses in the patois.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard stopped and turned, with a keen recollection of the same
+ thing having happened before. He remembered too how that occasion
+ ended.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance laid an entreating hand on his arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Please&mdash;don't!"</p>
+
+ <p>Her voice sounded a little strange to him. If he had been able
+ to see her face now he would have found it pallid, in spite of
+ its usual healthy brown bloom.</p>
+
+ <p>She stood entreatingly till he turned and went on with
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"He is evidently aching for another thrashing," he said
+ grimly, as he stalked beside her.</p>
+
+ <p>And presently they were in the cutting, and the unnerving
+ vastness of the gulfs opened out on either side. Gard felt like a
+ blindfolded man stumbling along a plank.</p>
+
+ <p>He involuntarily put out a groping hand and took hold of her
+ cloak. A little hand slipped out of the cloak and took his in
+ charge, and so they went through the darkness of the narrow
+ way.</p>
+
+ <p>He breathed more freely when the further slope was reached,
+ and only then became aware that the hand that held his was all of
+ a tremble. The next moment he perceived that she was sobbing
+ quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance!" he cried. "What is it? You are crying. Is it anything
+ I&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no, no!" sobbed the wounded soul convulsively.</p>
+
+ <p>"What then? Tell me!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I cannot. I cannot."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance&mdash;dear!" and he sought her hand again and stood
+ holding it firmly. "It is like stabs in my heart to hear you
+ sobbing. I would give my life to save you from trouble. Do you
+ believe me, dear?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And you can trust me, dear, can you not? You distrusted me at
+ first, I know, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I do trust you, and I know you are good. And it is that
+ that makes it so wicked of him to say such things about
+ us&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>In her excitement she had let slip more than she intended. She
+ stopped abruptly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom?"</p>
+
+ <p>She did not speak, but the wound welled open in another
+ sob.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't trouble about him, dear! I don't know what he said, but
+ if it was meant to make you doubt me, it was not true. You are
+ more to me than anything in the world, Nance, and I have never
+ loved any other woman&mdash;except my mother. Do you believe
+ me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes&mdash;oh, yes! I cannot help believing you. Oh, I wish
+ sometimes that Tom was dead. When I was very little I used to
+ pray each night to God to kill him."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll teach him to leave you alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"I must go now. Grannie is waiting for her medicine."</p>
+
+ <p>He took the little hand under his arm and pressed it close to
+ his side, and they pushed on down the dark lanes till they came
+ in sight of the lights of La Closerie.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he bent into the sun-bonnet and sealed his capture of the
+ virginal fortress by a passionate kiss on the tremulous little
+ lips. And she, with the frankness of a child, reached up and
+ kissed him warmly back.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good-night, dear, and God bless you!" he said fervently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you find your way in the dark?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There is the moon. I shall be all right."</p>
+
+ <p>She bent her head and ran on towards the lights. He watched
+ her go in at the door, and turned and went back along the lane,
+ and his heart was high with the joy that was in him.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW TWO FELL OUT</h3>
+
+ <p>It was but a thin strip of a moon that had risen above the
+ evening mists&mdash;a mere sickle of red gold&mdash;but such as
+ it was it sufficed to lift the pall of darkness from the earth
+ and set the black sky back into its proper place.</p>
+
+ <p>To Gard the night had suddenly become spacious and ample, and
+ the peaceful slip of a moon, which grew paler and brighter every
+ minute, was full of promise.</p>
+
+ <p>He was so full of Nance that he had almost forgotten Tom and
+ his scurrilous insolences.</p>
+
+ <p>He crossed the Coup&eacute;e without any difficulty, enjoyed
+ over again the recollection of that last crossing, and stood in
+ the cutting on the Sark side for a moment to marvel at the change
+ an hour had made in his outlook on things in general.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom? Why, he could almost forgive Tom, for it was he who had
+ helped to bring matters to a head&mdash;unconsciously, indeed,
+ and probably quite against his wish. Still, he had been the
+ instrument&mdash;the drop of acid in the solution which had
+ crystallized their love into set form and made it visible, and
+ fixed it for life.</p>
+
+ <p>Truly, he was half inclined to consider himself under
+ obligation to Tom&mdash;if only his boorishness could be kept in
+ check for the future. For, of a certainty, he was not going to
+ allow Nance to be made miserable by his loutish insolences.</p>
+
+ <p>He had climbed the cutting and was on the level, when he heard
+ heavy footsteps coming towards him, and the next moment he was
+ face to face with the object of his thoughts.</p>
+
+ <p>Possibly Tom had expected to meet him and had been preparing
+ for the fray, for he opened at once with a volley of patois which
+ to Gard was so much blank cartridge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;ho, le velas&mdash;corrupteur! Amuseur!
+ S&eacute;ducteur! Ou quais noutre fille? Quais qu'on avait fait
+ d'elle d'on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite finished?" asked Gard quietly, as the other came to a
+ stop for want of breath. "Say it all over again in English, and
+ I'll know what you're talking about."</p>
+
+ <p>"English be&mdash;&mdash;!" he broke out afresh, in a turgid
+ mixture of tongues. "S&eacute;ducteur, amuseur! Where's our
+ Nance? Gaderabotin, what have you done with the girl? I know you,
+ corrupteur! Running after men's wives&mdash;and our Nance, too!
+ See then&mdash;you touch la garche and I'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"See here! We've had enough of this," said Gard, gripping him
+ by the shoulders and shaking him. "If you weren't drunk I'd
+ thrash you within an inch of your life, you brute. Come back when
+ you're sober, and I'll give you a lesson in manners."</p>
+
+ <p>Tom had been struggling to get his arms up. At last he
+ wrenched himself free and came on like a bull. One of his
+ flailing fists caught Gard across the face, flattening his nose
+ and filling one eye with stars; the other hand, trying to grip
+ his opponent, ripped open his coat, tearing away both button and
+ cloth.</p>
+
+ <p>"You lout!" cried Gard, his blood up and dripping also from
+ his nose. "If you must have it, you shall;" and he squared up to
+ him to administer righteous punishment.</p>
+
+ <p>And then the futility of it came upon him. The man was
+ three-parts drunk, in no condition for a fight, scarce able to
+ attempt even to defend himself.</p>
+
+ <p>No punishment of Tom drunk would have the slightest moral
+ effect on Tom sober. He would remember nothing about it in the
+ morning, except that he had been knocked about.</p>
+
+ <p>When he received his next lesson in deportment it was Gard's
+ earnest desire and hope that it might prove a lasting and final
+ one.</p>
+
+ <p>So he decided to postpone it, and contented himself with
+ warding and dodging his furious lunges and rushes, and gave him
+ no blow in return. Until, at last, after one or two heavy falls
+ of his own occasioning, Tom gave it up, spluttered a final
+ commination on his opponent, and turned to go home.</p>
+
+ <p>He went blunderingly down into the hollow way, and Gard stood
+ watching him in doubt.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed hardly possible he could cross the Coup&eacute;e in
+ that state, and he felt a sort of moral responsibility towards
+ him. Much as he detested him, he had no wish to see him go
+ reeling over into Coup&eacute;e bay.</p>
+
+ <p>So he set off after him to see him safely across, and Tom,
+ hearing him coming, groped in the crumbling side wall till he
+ found a rock of size, and sent it hurling up the path with
+ another curse.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he blundered on, and Gard followed. And Tom stopped again
+ by one of the pinnacles and sought another rock, and flung it,
+ and it dropped slowly from point to point till it landed on the
+ shingle three hundred feet below.</p>
+
+ <p>He stood there in the dim light, cursing volubly in patois and
+ shaking his fist at Gard; but at last, to Gard's great relief, he
+ humped his back and stumbled away up the cutting on the further
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>And Gard, very sick of it all, and with an aching head and a
+ very tender nose, but withal with a warm glow at the heart which
+ no aches or pains could damp down, turned and went home to
+ bed.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW ONE FELL OVER</h3>
+
+ <p>Gard's first waking thoughts next morning were of Nance
+ entirely.</p>
+
+ <p>He would see her at dinner-time. How would he find her? Last
+ night the disturbance of her feelings had shaken her out of
+ herself somewhat, and shown her to him in new and delightful
+ lights.</p>
+
+ <p>If, this morning, she should be to some extent withdrawn again
+ into her natural modest shell, he would not be surprised; and he
+ made up his mind, then and there, to be in no wise disappointed.
+ Last night was a fact, a delightful fact, on which to build the
+ rosy future.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a long time to wait till dinner-time to see her. What
+ if he went round that way, before going to work, just to inquire
+ if Tom got home all right.</p>
+
+ <p>And then the feeling of discomfort in his eye and nose, as
+ though the one had shrunk to the size of a pin-point and the
+ other had grown to the bulk of a turnip&mdash;brought back the
+ whole matter, and on further consideration he decided not to go
+ to the farm till the proper time. If he came across Tom, the fray
+ would inevitably be resumed at once, and his right eye, at the
+ moment, showed a decided disinclination to open to its usual
+ extent, or to perform any of the functions properly demanded of a
+ right eye contemplating battle.</p>
+
+ <p>He must get up at once and bathe it and bring it to
+ reason.</p>
+
+ <p>Raw beef, he believed, was the correct treatment under the
+ circumstances. But raw beef was almost as obtainable as raw moon,
+ and even raw mutton he did not know where he could procure, nor
+ whether it would answer the purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>So he bathed his bruises with much water, and reduced their
+ excesses to some extent, but not enough to escape the eye of his
+ hostess when he appeared at breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bin fighting?" she queried dispassionately.</p>
+
+ <p>"A one-sided fight. Tom Hamon was drunk last night and hit me
+ in the face, but he was not in a condition to fight or I'd have
+ taught him better manners."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's a rough piece," with a disparaging shake of the head.
+ "It'd take a lot to knock him into shape. Try this," and she
+ delved among her stores, and found him an ointment of her own
+ compounding which took some of the soreness out of his
+ bruises.</p>
+
+ <p>But black eyes and swollen noses are impertinently obtrusive
+ and disdainful of disguise, and the captain's battle-flags
+ provoked no little jocosity among his men that morning.</p>
+
+ <p>"Run up against su'then, cap'n?" asked John Hamon the
+ engineer, who was one of the few who sided with him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, against a drunken fist in the dark. When it's sober I'm
+ going to give it a lesson in manners."</p>
+
+ <p>"Drunken fisses is hard to teach. You'll have your hands full,
+ cap'n."</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed an unusually long morning, but dinner-time came at
+ last and he hastened across to the farm, eager for the first
+ sight of the sweet shy face hiding in the big sun-bonnet.</p>
+
+ <p>Quite contrary to his expectations Nance came hurrying to meet
+ him. She had evidently been on the watch for him. Still more to
+ his surprise, her face, instead of that look of shy reserve which
+ he had been prepared for, was full of anxious questioning. The
+ large dark eyes were full of something he had never seen in them
+ before.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;Nance&mdash;dear! What is the matter?" he asked
+ quickly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you meet Tom again last night? Oh," at nearer sight of
+ his bruised face, "you did, you did!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, dear, I did. Or rather he met me&mdash;as you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you fight with him?" she panted.</p>
+
+ <p>"He was too drunk to fight. He ran at me and gave me this, and
+ my first inclination was to give him a sound thrashing. Then I
+ saw it would be no good, in the condition he was in, so I just
+ kept him at arm's length till he tired of it. He went off at
+ last, and I was so afraid he might tumble off the Coup&eacute;e
+ that I followed him, and he hurled rocks at me whenever he came
+ to a stand. But he got across all right, and I went back and went
+ to bed. Now, what's all the trouble about?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He never came home," she jerked, with a catch in her voice
+ which thought only of Tom had never put there.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never came home?"</p>
+
+ <p>"And they're all out looking for him."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder if he went back to Peter Mauger's.... If he tried to
+ cross that Coup&eacute;e again&mdash;in the condition he was
+ in&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"He didn't go back to Peter's. Julie went there first of all
+ to ask."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good Lord, what can have become of him?"</p>
+
+ <p>The answer came unexpectedly round the corner of the
+ house&mdash;Julie Hamon, in a state of utmost dishevelment and
+ agitation, which turned instantly to venomous fury at the sight
+ of Gard and Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>Her black hair seemed all a-bristle. Her black eyes flamed.
+ Her dark face worked like a quicksand. Her skirts were wet to the
+ waist. Her jacket was open at the top, as though she had wrenched
+ at it in a fit of choking. Her strong bare throat throbbed
+ convulsively. Her hands, half closed at her side, looked as
+ though they wanted something to claw.</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you do it?" she cried hoarsely, stalking up to Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do what?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Kill him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom?... You don't mean to say&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You ought to know. He's there in the school-house, broken to
+ a jelly and his head staved in. And they say it's you he fought
+ with last night. The marks of it are on your face"&mdash;her
+ voice rose to a scream&mdash;"Murderer! Murderer! Murderer!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You wicked&mdash;thing!" cried Nance, pale to the lips.</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you&mdash;you!" foamed Julie. "You're as bad as he
+ is. Because my man tried to save you from
+ that&mdash;murderer&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, you&mdash;wicked!&mdash;You're crazy," cried Nance,
+ rushing at her as though to make an end of her.</p>
+
+ <p>And Julie, mad with the strain of the night's anxieties and
+ their abrupt and terrible ending, uncurled her claws and struck
+ at her with a snarl&mdash;tore off her sun-bonnet, and would have
+ ripped up her face, if Gard had not flung his arms round her from
+ the back and dragged her screaming and kicking towards her own
+ door.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hamon had come running out at sound of the fray. Gard
+ whirled the mad woman into her own house and Mrs. Hamon followed
+ her and closed the door.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard turned to look for Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>She was nervously trying to tie on her sun-bonnet by one
+ string.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance, dear," he said, "you don't believe I had anything to
+ do with this?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no, no! I'm sure you hadn't. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"But?" he asked, looking down into the pale face and bright
+ anxious eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, they may say you did it. They will think it. They are
+ sure to think it, and they are so&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't trouble about it, dear. I know no more about it than
+ you do, and they cannot get beyond that. Promise me you won't let
+ it trouble you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I will try. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Have no fears on my account, Nance. I will go at once and
+ tell them all I know about it."</p>
+
+ <p>He pressed her hands reassuringly, and she went into the house
+ with downcast head and a face full of forebodings, and he set off
+ at once for Sark.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XVII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME</h3>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Tom had had a troubled night. Anxiety at her husband's
+ continued absence had in due time given way to anger, and anger
+ in its turn to anxiety again.</p>
+
+ <p>In a state of mind compounded of these wearing emotions, she
+ had set out in the early morning to find out what had become of
+ him; if he was sleeping off a drunken debauch at Peter Mauger's,
+ to give them both a vigorous piece of her mind; if he was not
+ there, to find out where he was; in any case to vent on some one
+ the pent-up feelings of the night.</p>
+
+ <p>Vigorous hammering on Peter Mauger's door produced first his
+ old housekeeper, and presently himself, heavy-eyed, dull-witted,
+ and in flagrant dishabille, since Mrs. Guille had but a moment
+ ago shaken him out of the sleep of those who drink not wisely
+ over-night, with the information that a crazy woman wanted him at
+ the door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's Tom?" demanded Julie, ready to empty the vials of her
+ wrath on the delinquent as soon as he was produced.</p>
+
+ <p>But Peter's manner at once dissipated that expectation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom?" he said vaguely, and gazed at her with a bovine
+ stupidity that jarred her strained nerves like a blow.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, Tom&mdash;my husband, fool! Where is he?" she asked
+ sharply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where is he?" scratching his tousled head to quicken his
+ wits. "I d'n know."</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't know? What did you do with him last night, you
+ drunken fool?"&mdash;by this time the neighbours had come out to
+ learn the news.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter gaped at her in astonishment, his muddled wits and
+ aching head beginning dimly to realize that something was
+ wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tom left here ... last night ... t'go home," he nodded
+ emphatically.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, he never got home," snapped Julie. "And you'd best get
+ your clothes on and help me find him. You were both as drunk as
+ pigs, I suppose. If he's lying dead in a ditch it's you that'll
+ have the blame."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw now, Julie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't Julie me, you fool! Get dressed and do something."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll come. You wait," and he went inside, and put his head
+ into a basin of water, and threw on his clothes, and came out
+ presently looking anxious and disturbed now that his sluggish
+ brain had begun to work.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where you been looking?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nowhere. I expected to find him here."</p>
+
+ <p>"We had a glass or two and then he started off home. He could
+ walk all right.... Did you.... You didn't see anything wrong ...
+ anything ... at the Coup&eacute;e?" he asked, with a quick
+ anxious look at her.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I didn't. What do you mean? Oh, mon Dieu!" and she
+ started down the road at a run, with Peter lumbering after her
+ and the neighbours in a buzzing tail behind.</p>
+
+ <p>The cold douche had cooled Peter's hot head, the running
+ quickened his blood and his thoughts, a sudden grim fear braced
+ his brain to quite unusual activity.</p>
+
+ <p>As he ran he recalled the events of the night before; their
+ meeting with Gard and Nance; Tom's scurrilous insults.</p>
+
+ <p>If Tom and Gard had met again&mdash;Gard would be sure to see
+ Nance home. Had he met Tom on his way back? And if so&mdash;if
+ so&mdash;and ill had come to Tom&mdash;why, Gard might get the
+ blame. And&mdash;and&mdash;in short, though by zig-zag jerks as
+ he ran&mdash;if Gard were out of the way for good and all,
+ Nance's thoughts might turn to one nearer home. He would be sorry
+ if ill had come to Tom, of course. But if Gard could be got rid
+ of he would be most uncommonly glad.</p>
+
+ <p>And as he panted after Julie, head down with the burden of
+ much thinking, just before he reached the sunk way to the
+ Coup&eacute;e, his eye lighted on something in the road that
+ caused him to stop and bend&mdash;a button with a scrap of blue
+ cloth attached. He picked it up hastily and put it in his pocket.
+ On a white stone just by it there were some red-brown spots. He
+ pushed it with his foot to the side of the road and was down into
+ the cutting before the heavy-footed neighbours came up.</p>
+
+ <p>Julie was ranging up and down the narrow pathway, searching
+ the depths with a face like a hawk, hanging on to the rough sides
+ of the pinnacles, and bending over in a way that elicited warning
+ cries from the others as they came streaming down.</p>
+
+ <p>But keenest search of the western slope revealed nothing amid
+ its tangle of gorse and blackberry bushes, and the eastern cliff
+ fell so sheer, and had so many projecting lumps and underfalls,
+ that it was impossible to see close in to the foot.</p>
+
+ <p>And then one, nimbler witted than the rest, climbed out along
+ the common above the northern cliff, whereby, when he had come to
+ the great slope, he took the Coup&eacute;e cliff in flank, and
+ could spy along its base.</p>
+
+ <p>And suddenly he stopped, and stiffened like a pointer sighting
+ his bird, peered intently for a moment, and gave tongue.</p>
+
+ <p>The chase was ended. That they had sought, and feared to find,
+ was found.</p>
+
+ <p>They came hurrying up, and clustered like cormorants on the
+ slope, Julie among them, her face grim and livid in its black
+ setting, her eyes blazing fiercely.</p>
+
+ <p>The finder pointed it out. They all saw it&mdash;a huddled
+ black heap close in under the cliff.</p>
+
+ <p>Elevated by his discovery, the finder maintained his
+ reputation by doing the only thing that could be done. He left
+ them talking and sped away across the downs, across the fields,
+ towards Creux harbour.</p>
+
+ <p>He might, if he had known it, have found a boat nearer at
+ hand, Rouge Terrier way or in Breni&egrave;re Bay. But he was a
+ Sark man, and a farmer at that, and knew little and cared less,
+ of the habits of Little Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>And the rest, falling to his idea, streamed after him, for
+ that which lay under the cliff could only be gotten out by
+ boat.</p>
+
+ <p>So to the Creux, panting the news as he went. And there,
+ willing hands dragged a boat rasping down the shingle, and lusty
+ arms, four men rowing and one astern sculling and steering at the
+ same time, sent her bounding over the water as though it were
+ life she sought, not death. For, though no man among them had any
+ smallest hope of finding life in that which lay under the cliff,
+ yet must they strain every muscle, till the labouring boat seemed
+ to share their anxiety to get there and learn the worst.</p>
+
+ <p>So, out past the L&acirc;ches, with the tide boiling round the
+ point; past Derrible, with its yawning black mouths; past Dixcart
+ with its patch of sand; under the grim bastions of the Cagnon;
+ the clean grey cliffs and green downs above, all smiling in the
+ morning sun; the clear green water creaming among the black
+ boulders, hissing among their girdles of tawny sea-weeds,
+ cascading merrily down their rifted sides; round the Convanche
+ corner, so deftly close that the beauty of the water cave is
+ bared to them, if they had eye or thought for anything but that
+ which lies under the cliff in Coup&eacute;e Bay. And not a word
+ said all the way&mdash;not one word. Jokes and laughter go with
+ the boat as a rule, and high-pitched nasal patois talk; but
+ here&mdash;not a word.</p>
+
+ <p>The prow runs grating up the shingle, the heavy feet grind
+ through it all in a line, for none of them has any desire to be
+ first. Together they bend over that which had been Tom Hamon, and
+ their faces are grim and hard as the rocks about them. Not that
+ they are indifferent, but that any show of feeling would be
+ looked upon as a sign of weakness.</p>
+
+ <p>Under such circumstances men at times give vent to
+ jocularities which sound coarse and shocking. But they are not
+ meant so&mdash;simply the protest of the rough spirit at being
+ thought capable of such unmanly weakness as feeling.</p>
+
+ <p>But these men were elementally silent. One look had shown them
+ there was nothing to be done but that which they had come to
+ do&mdash;to carry what they had found back to the waiting crowd
+ at the Creux.</p>
+
+ <p>They had none of them cared much for this man. He was not a
+ man to make close friends. But death had given him a new dignity
+ among them, and the rough hands lifted him, and bore him to the
+ boat as tenderly as though a jar or a stumble might add to his
+ pains.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, but with slower strokes now, as though that slight
+ additional burden, that single passenger, weighed them to the
+ water's edge, they crawl slowly back the way they came, logged,
+ not with water, but with the presence of death.</p>
+
+ <p>The narrow beach between the tawny headlands is black with
+ people. Up above, on the edge of the cliff, another crowd peers
+ curiously down.</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal is there at the water's edge,
+ Philip Guille of La Ville, and the Greffier, William Robert, who
+ is also the schoolmaster, and Thomas Le Masurier the
+ Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t, and Elie Guille the Constable, and Dr.
+ Stradling from Dixcart, and the dark-faced, fierce-eyed woman who
+ cannot keep still, but ranges to and fro in the lip of the tide,
+ and whom they all know now as the wife&mdash;the Frenchwoman,
+ though some of them have never seen her before.</p>
+
+ <p>A buzz runs round as the boat comes slowly past the point of
+ the L&acirc;ches. The woman stops her caged-beast walk and stands
+ gazing fiercely at it, as if she would tear its secret out of it
+ before it touched the shore.</p>
+
+ <p>The watchers on the cliff have the advantage. Something like a
+ thrill runs through them, something between a sigh and a groan
+ breaks from them.</p>
+
+ <p>The woman wades out to meet the boat. She sees and screams,
+ and chokes. The wives on the beach groan in sympathy.</p>
+
+ <p>The body is lifted carefully out and laid on the cool grey
+ stones, and the woman stands looking at it as a tiger may look at
+ her slaughtered mate.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stand back! Stand back!" cries the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal to
+ the thronging crowd; and to the Constable, "Keep them back, you,
+ Elie Guille!" to which Elie Guille growls, "Par mad&eacute;, but
+ that's not easy, see you!"</p>
+
+ <p>The Doctor straightens up from his brief examination, and says
+ a word to the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and to the men about
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>A rough stretcher is made out of a couple of oars and a sail,
+ and the sombre procession passes through the gloomy old tunnel
+ into the Creux Road, and wends its way up to the school-house for
+ proper inquiry to be made as to how Tom Hamon came by his
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>And close behind the stretcher walks the dark-faced woman,
+ with her eyes like coals of fire, and her dress dragged open as
+ though to stop her from choking.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" she says in
+ perpetual iteration, through her clenched teeth. But to look at
+ her face and eyes you might think it was rather the devil she was
+ calling on.</p>
+
+ <p>For, ungracious as their lives had been in many respects, yet
+ this violent breaking of the yoke has left the survivor sore and
+ wounded, and furious to vent her rage on whom at present she
+ knows not.</p>
+
+ <p>She is not allowed inside the school-house&mdash;hastily
+ cleared of its usual occupants, who dodge about among the crowd
+ outside, enjoying the unlooked-for holiday with gusto in spite of
+ its gruesome origin&mdash;and so she prowls about outside, and
+ the neighbours talk and she hears this, that, and the other, and
+ presently, with bitter, black face and rage in her heart, she
+ goes off home to find out Stephen Gard if she can, and accuse him
+ to his face of the murder of her husband.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XVIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW PETER'S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT</h3>
+
+ <p>Peter Mauger had kept himself carefully beyond the range of
+ Julie's wild black eyes. In the state she was in there was no
+ knowing what she might do or say. And the words even of a mad
+ woman sometimes stick like burrs. He began to breathe more freely
+ when she whirled away home.</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and Constable came out of the
+ school-house at last with very grave faces.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Doctor says his head was staved in with the blows of some
+ round blunt thing like a mallet," said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal
+ to the gaping crowd, "and we must hold a proper inquiry. Any of
+ you who saw Tom Hamon last night will be here at two o'clock to
+ tell us all you know. Tell any others who know anything about it
+ that they must be here too," and he went back into the
+ school-house, and the buzzing crowd dispersed, with plenty to
+ buzz about now in truth.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter Mauger went thoughtfully home. He had had no breakfast,
+ and was feeling the need of it, and he had something in his mind
+ that he wanted to think out.</p>
+
+ <p>And as he ate he thought, slowly and ruminatingly, and with
+ many pauses, when his jaws stopped working to give his mind freer
+ play, but still very much to the purpose, and as soon as he had
+ done he set out to put his project into execution.</p>
+
+ <p>Just beyond the Coup&eacute;e he met Gard hurrying towards
+ Sark, and the state of Gard's nose and eye, and his torn coat,
+ caught his eye at once.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's this about Tom Hamon?" asked Gard hastily.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's dead."</p>
+
+ <p>"His wife has just told me so. But how did it happen?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They're going to find out at school-house at two o'clock. Any
+ that saw him last night are to be there. You'd better be
+ there."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm going now."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right," said Peter, and went on his way into Little
+ Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>His way took him to La Closerie. But he was not anxious to
+ meet Mrs. Tom, so he hung about behind the hedges till Nance
+ happened to come out of the house, and then he whistled softly
+ and beckoned to her to come to him.</p>
+
+ <p>Her face was very pale and troubled, and he saw she had been
+ crying.</p>
+
+ <p>"I want to speak to you," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Come round here. It's important."</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it?" she asked wearily again, when she had joined him
+ behind the green dyke.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's this, Nance. You&mdash;you know I want you. I've always
+ wanted you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;don't!" she cried, with protesting hand. "This is no
+ time. Peter Mauger, for&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait a bit! Here's how it is. Doctor says Tom was killed by
+ some one beating his head in with a hammer or something of the
+ kind. Now who beat his head in? Who would be most likely to beat
+ his head in? Not me, for we were mates. Some one that hated him.
+ Some one that he was always quarrelling with&mdash;" Her face had
+ grown so white that there was no colour even in the trembling
+ lips. She stared at him with terrified eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"You know who I mean," he said. "If it wasn't him that did it
+ I don't know who it was."</p>
+
+ <p>"It wasn't," she jerked vehemently.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd wish so, of course. But&mdash;Look here!&mdash;I'm
+ pretty sure they met again last night after&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, they met, and Tom tried to fight him&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;then!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And he's gone up at once, as soon as he heard that Tom was
+ found, to tell them all about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!"&mdash;decidedly crestfallen at the wind being taken out
+ of his sails in this fashion. "I&mdash;I thought&mdash;maybe I
+ could help him&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh you did, did you?"&mdash;plucking up heart at sight of his
+ discomfiture. "And how were you going to help him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If he's gone to make a clean breast of it it's all up, of
+ course. If he'd kept it to himself&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"He might have run away, you mean?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Safest for him, maybe. Up above Coup&eacute;e there's a stone
+ with blood on it. And I picked up this beside it," and he hauled
+ out the button and the bit of blue cloth he had found. "I
+ thought, maybe if he knew about these he might think it safest to
+ go."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then every one would have the right to say he'd done it, and
+ he didn't. He knew no more about it than you did."</p>
+
+ <p>"I didn't know anything about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, neither did he, and he's not the kind to run away."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, well&mdash;I done my best. You'll remember that, Nance.
+ You know what the Sark men are. He'd be safest away. You tell him
+ I say so," and he pouched his discounted piece of evidence and
+ turned and went, leaving Nance with a heavy heart.</p>
+
+ <p>For, as Peter said, she knew what the Sark men were&mdash;a
+ law unto themselves, and slow to move out of the deep-cut grooves
+ of the past, but, once stirred to boiling point, capable of going
+ to any lengths without consideration of consequences.</p>
+
+ <p>And therein lay Gard's peril.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT</h3>
+
+ <p>Every soul in the Island that could by any means get there,
+ was in or outside the school-house, mostly outside, long before
+ the clock struck two. Never in their lives had they hurried
+ thither like that before.</p>
+
+ <p>A barricade of forms had been made across the room. Within it,
+ at the school-master's table, sat the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal,
+ Philip Guille, and the Doctor, and old Mr. Cachemaille, the
+ Vicar, ageing rapidly since the tragic death of his good friend,
+ the late Seigneur; beside them stood the Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t and
+ the Greffier, behind them lay the body of Tom Hamon covered with
+ a sheet.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a perfect day, with a cloudless blue sky and blazing
+ sun, and all the windows were opened wide. Those inside dripped
+ with perspiration, but felt cold chills below their blue
+ guernseys each time they looked at that stark figure with the
+ upturned feet beneath the cold white sheet.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside the barricade stood Elie Guille, the Constable, and
+ his understudy Abraham Baker, the Vingt&eacute;nier, to keep
+ order and call the witnesses.</p>
+
+ <p>The Seigneur, Mr. Le Pelley, was away or he would undoubtedly
+ have been there too. In his absence the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal
+ conducted the proceedings.</p>
+
+ <p>In the front row of school-desks, scored with the deep-cut
+ initials of generations of Sark boys, sat the dead man's widow,
+ tense and quivering, her eyes consuming fires in deep black
+ wells, her face livid, her hands clenched still as though waiting
+ for something to rend.</p>
+
+ <p>More than one of the men who sat beside her at the desk found,
+ with a grim smile, his own name looking up at him out of the
+ maltreated board. And one nudged his neighbour and pointed to the
+ name of Tom Hamon, cut deeper than any of the others and with the
+ N upside down.</p>
+
+ <p>Very briefly the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal stated that they were
+ there to find out, if they could, how Tom Hamon came by his
+ death, and added very gravely, in a deep silence, that after a
+ most careful examination of the body the Doctor was of opinion
+ that death had been caused, not by the fall from the
+ Coup&eacute;e, which accounted for the dreadful bruises, but by
+ violent blows on the head with a hammer or some sueh thing prior
+ to the fall. They wanted to find out all about it.</p>
+
+ <p>The Doctor stood up and confirmed what the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal had said, went somewhat more into detail
+ to substantiate his opinion, and ended by saying, "The head, as
+ it happens, is less bruised than any other part of the body,
+ except on the crown, and that is practically beaten in, and not,
+ I am prepared to swear, by a fall. These wounds were the
+ immediate cause of death, and they were made before he fell down
+ the rocks. Besides, he went down feet first. The abrasions on the
+ legs and thighs prove that beyond a doubt. Then again, the base
+ of the skull is not fractured, as it most certainly would have
+ been if he had fallen on his head. Death was undoubtedly the
+ result of those wounds in the head. It is impossible for me to
+ say for certain with what kind of weapon they were made, but it
+ was probably something round and blunt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now," said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, when the Doctor had
+ finished, and the hum and the growl which followed had died down
+ again, "will any of you who know anything about this matter come
+ forward and tell us all you know?"</p>
+
+ <p>Stephen Gard stood up at once and all eyes settled on him.
+ Then Peter Mauger was pushed along from the back, with friendly
+ thumps and growling injunctions to speak up. But the looks
+ bestowed on Gard were of quite a different quality from those
+ given to Peter, and the men at the table could not but notice
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"We will take Peter Mauger first. Let him be sworn," said the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and Gard sat down.</p>
+
+ <p>The Greffier swore Peter in the old Island fashion&mdash;"Vous
+ jurez par la foi que vous devez &agrave; Dieu que vous direz la
+ v&eacute;rit&eacute;, et rien que la v&eacute;rit&eacute;, et
+ tous ce que vous connaissez dans cette cause, et que Dieu vous
+ soit en aide! (You swear by the faith which you owe to God that
+ you will tell the truth, and only the truth, and all that you
+ know concerning this case, and so help you God!)"</p>
+
+ <p>Peter put up his right hand and swore so to do.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now tell us all you know," said the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal.</p>
+
+ <p>And Peter ramblingly told how he and Tom had been drinking
+ together the night before, and how Tom had started off home and
+ he had gone to bed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Were you both drunk?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, you were. Did you think it right to let your
+ friend go off in that condition when he had to cross the
+ Coup&eacute;e?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've seen him worse, many times, and no harm come to
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, get on!"</p>
+
+ <p>He told how Mrs. Tom woke him up in the morning, and how they
+ had all gone in search of the missing man.</p>
+
+ <p>"Was it you that found him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, it was Charles Guille of Clos Bourel. But I found
+ something too."</p>
+
+ <p>"What was it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"This"&mdash;and from under his coat he drew out carefully the
+ white stone with its red-brown spots, and from his pocket the
+ button and the scrap of blue cloth. And those at the back stood
+ up, with much noise, to see.</p>
+
+ <p>The men at the table looked at these scraps of possible
+ evidence with interest, as they were placed before them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where did you find these things?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Between Plaisance and the Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you make of them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Seemed to me those red spots might be blood. The other's a
+ button torn off some one's coat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you any idea whose blood and whose coat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The blood I don't know. The button, I believe, is off Mr.
+ Gard's coat,"&mdash;at which another growl and hum went
+ round.</p>
+
+ <p>"And you know nothing more about the matter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all I know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well. Sit down. Mr. Gard!" and Gard pushed his way among
+ unyielding legs and shoulders, and stood before the grave-faced
+ men at the table.</p>
+
+ <p>They all knew him and had all come to esteem what they knew of
+ him. They knew also of his difficulties with his men, and that
+ there was a certain feeling against him in some quarters. Not one
+ of them thought it likely he had done this dreadful thing.
+ But&mdash;there was no knowing to what lengths even a decent man
+ might go in anger. All their brows pinched a little at sight of
+ his torn coat and missing button.</p>
+
+ <p>He was duly sworn, and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal bade him
+ tell all he knew of the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"That button is mine," he said quietly, holding out the lapel
+ of his coat for all to see. "If there is blood on that stone it
+ is mine also"&mdash;at which a growling laugh of derision went
+ round the spectators.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard flushed at this unmistakable sign of hostility. The
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal threatened to turn them all out if
+ anything of the kind happened again, and Gard proceeded to
+ recount in minutest detail the happenings of the previous
+ night&mdash;so far as they concerned himself and Tom Hamon.</p>
+
+ <p>"What were you doing down at the Coup&eacute;e at that time of
+ night?" asked the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal.</p>
+
+ <p>"I had been having a smoke and was just about to turn in when
+ I met Miss Hamon hurrying to the Doctor's for some medicine. I
+ asked her permission to accompany her, and then took her home to
+ Little Sark. It was when I was coming back that I met Tom
+ Hamon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, little Nance came to me about half-past ten," said the
+ Doctor, "I remember I asked her if she was not afraid to go all
+ that way home alone, and she said she had a friend with her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Was there any specially bad feeling between you and Tom
+ Hamon?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There had always been bad feeling, but any one who knows
+ anything about it knows that it was not of my making."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you explain it to us?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If you say I must. One does not like to say ill things of the
+ dead."</p>
+
+ <p>"We want to get to the bottom of this matter, Mr. Gard. Tell
+ us all you know that will help us."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, sir, but I am sorry to have to go into that. It
+ all began through Tom's bad treatment of his stepmother and
+ step-sister and brother when I lived at La Closerie. I took sides
+ with them and tried to bring him to better manners. We rarely met
+ without his flinging some insult after me. They were generally in
+ the patois, but I knew them to be insults by his manner and by
+ the way they were greeted by those who did understand."</p>
+
+ <p>"Had you met last night before you met near the
+ Coup&eacute;e?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We passed Tom by La Vauroque as we came from the Doctor's. He
+ shouted something after us, but I did not understand it."</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't know what it was that he said?" an unfortunate
+ question on the part of the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and quite
+ unintentionally so on his part. It necessitated the introduction
+ of matters Gard would fain have kept out of the enquiry.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," he said, with visible reluctance, "I learned
+ afterwards, and by accident, something of what he said or
+ meant."</p>
+
+ <p>"How was that, and what was it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it necessary to go into that? Won't it do if I say it was
+ a very gross insult?"</p>
+
+ <p>The three at the table conferred for a moment. Then the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal said very kindly, "I perceive we are
+ getting on to somewhat delicate ground, Mr. Gard, but, for your
+ own sake. I would suggest that no occasion should be given to any
+ to say that you are hiding anything from the court."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, sir, I have nothing whatever to hide, and I have
+ still less to be ashamed of. I found Miss Hamon was weeping
+ bitterly at what her brother had said, and I tried to get her to
+ tell me what it was, but she would not. I said I knew it was
+ something against me, but I hoped by this time she had learned to
+ know and trust me. I told her her sobs cut me to the heart and
+ that I would give my life to save her from trouble. In a word, I
+ told her I loved her, and in the excitement of the moment she
+ dropped a word or two that gave me an inkling of what Tom had
+ said. It was casting dirt at both her and myself. Then, as I came
+ home, I met Tom as I have told you."</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal considered the matter for a moment.
+ He did not for one moment believe that Gard had had any hand in
+ the killing of Tom Hamon. But he could not but perceive the
+ hostile feeling that was abroad, and his desire was, if possible,
+ to allay it.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is, I should think," he said gravely, "past any man's
+ believing that, after asking Tom's sister to marry you, you
+ should go straight away and kill Tom, even in the hottest of hot
+ blood, though men at such times do not always know what they are
+ doing. But you, from what I have seen and heard of you, are not
+ such a man. I am going to ask you one question in the hope that
+ your answer may have the effect of setting you right with all who
+ hear it. Before God&mdash;had you any hand in the death of this
+ man?&mdash;have you any further knowledge of the matter
+ whatever?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Before God," said Gard solemnly, his uplifted right hand as
+ steady as a rock, "I had no hand in his death. I know nothing
+ more whatever about the matter."</p>
+
+ <p>"I believe you," said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I," said the Doctor.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I," said the Vicar gravely, and with much emotion.</p>
+
+ <p>But from the spectators there rose a dissentient murmur which
+ caused the Vicar to survey his unruly flock with mild amazement
+ and disapproval&mdash;much as the shepherd might if his sheep had
+ suddenly shed their fleeces and become wolves.</p>
+
+ <p>And Julie Hamon sprang to her feet with blazing eyes, pointed
+ a shaking hand at Gard, and screamed:</p>
+
+ <p>"Murderer! Murderer! Murderer!"</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD</h3>
+
+ <p>Stephen Gard walked slowly down the road towards Plaisance in
+ the lowest of spirits.</p>
+
+ <p>This strange people amongst whom he had fallen, possessed, in
+ pre-eminent degree, what in these later times is known as the
+ defects of its qualities.</p>
+
+ <p>Black sheep there were, of course, as there are in every
+ community, who seemed all defects and possessed of no redeeming
+ qualities whatever. But, taken as a whole, the men of Sark were
+ simple, honest according to their lights, brave and hardy, very
+ tenacious of their own ideas and their island rights, somewhat
+ stubborn and easier to lead than to drive, and withal
+ red-blooded, as the result of their ancestry, and given to a
+ large despite of foreigners, in which category were included all
+ unfortunates born outside the rugged walls of Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>He had done his best among them, both for their own interests
+ and those of the mines, but no striving would ever make him other
+ than a foreigner; and in the depression of spirit consequent on
+ the trying experiences of the day, he gloomily pondered the idea
+ of giving up his post and finding a more congenial atmosphere
+ elsewhere.</p>
+
+ <p>Still, he was a Cornishman, and dour to beat. And, if he had
+ incurred unreasonable dislike, he had also lighted on the virgin
+ lode of Nance's love and trust, and that, he said to himself with
+ a glow of gratitude, outweighed all else.</p>
+
+ <p>He had left the school-house at once when he had given his
+ evidence, and had heard no more of what had taken place there.
+ The bystanders had let him pass without any open opposition, but
+ their faces had been hard and unsympathetic, and he recognized
+ that life among them would be anything but a sunny road for some
+ time to come.</p>
+
+ <p>If the people at Plaisance had told him to clear out and find
+ another lodging he would not have been in the least surprised.
+ But they had no such thought. In common with all who really got
+ to know him, they had come to esteem and like him, and they had
+ no reason to believe that he had had anything to do with Tom
+ Hamon's death.</p>
+
+ <p>He had pondered these matters wearily till bed-time, and he
+ turned in at last sick of himself, and Sark, and things
+ generally. But his brain would not sleep, and the longer he lay
+ and the more he tossed and turned, the wearier he grew.</p>
+
+ <p>Sleep seemed so impossible that he was half inclined to get up
+ and dress and go out. The cool night air and the freshness of the
+ dawn would be better than this sleepless unresting. Suddenly
+ there came a sharp little tap on his window.</p>
+
+ <p>A bird, he thought, or a bat.</p>
+
+ <p>The tap came again&mdash;sharp and imperative.</p>
+
+ <p>He got up quietly and went to the window. The night was still
+ dark. As he peered into it a hand came up again and tapped once
+ more and he opened the window.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Gard!"&mdash;in a sharp whisper.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance! What is it, dear? Anything wrong?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I want you&mdash;quick."</p>
+
+ <p>"One minute!" and he hastily threw on his things and joined
+ her outside.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it, Nance?" he asked anxiously, wondering what new
+ complication had arisen.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll tell you as we go. Come!" and they were speeding
+ noiselessly down the road to the Coup&eacute;e.</p>
+
+ <p>There she took his hand, as once before, to lead him safely
+ across, and her hand, he perceived, was trembling violently.</p>
+
+ <p>They were half way along the narrow path when the hollow way
+ in front leading up into Little Sark resounded suddenly with the
+ tramp of heavy feet.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" panted Nance, and he could feel her turn
+ and look round like a hunted animal.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quick!" she whispered. "Behind here! and oh, grip tight!" and
+ she knelt and crawled on hands and knees round the base of the
+ nearest pinnacle.</p>
+
+ <p>In those days the pinnacles which buttress the Coup&eacute;e
+ were considerably higher and bulkier than they are now, and along
+ their rugged flanks the adventurous or sorely-pressed might find
+ precarious footing. But it was a nerve-racking experience even in
+ the day-time when the eye could guide the foot. Now, in the
+ ebon-black night, it was past thinking of.</p>
+
+ <p>Dazed by the suddenness and strangeness of the whole matter,
+ and without an inkling of what it all meant, Gard clung like a
+ fly to the bare rock and tried his hardest not to think of the
+ sheer three hundred feet that lay between him and the black beach
+ below.</p>
+
+ <p>In grim and menacing silence, save for the crunch of their
+ heavy feet on the crumbling pathway, the men went past, a dozen
+ or more, as it seemed to Gard. When the sound of them had died in
+ the hollow on the Sark side, Nance whispered, "Quick now!
+ quick!"</p>
+
+ <p>They crawled back into the roadway, and she took his hand in
+ hers again which shook more than ever, and they sped away into
+ Little Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now tell me, Nance. What is it all about?" he panted, as she
+ nipped through an opening in a green bank and led the way towards
+ the eastern cliffs over by the Pot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;it's you they want," she gasped, and he stopped
+ instantly and stood, as though he would turn and go back.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is no use," she jerked emphatically, between breaths, and
+ dragged impatiently at his arm. "You don't know our Sark men....
+ They do things first and are sorry after.... Bernel heard them
+ planning it all.... The men from Sark were to meet these ones,
+ and then&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"But," he said angrily, "running away looks like&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no! Not here.... And it is only for a time. The truth
+ will come out, but it would be too late if they had got you."</p>
+
+ <p>"What would they have done with me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;terrible things. They are madmen when they are
+ angry."</p>
+
+ <p>He had yielded to her will, and they were speeding swiftly
+ along the downs. The path was quite invisible to him. He tripped
+ and stumbled at times on tangled roots of gorse and bracken, but
+ she kept on swiftly and unerringly, as though the night were
+ light about her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where are you taking me?" he asked, as they crept past the
+ miners' cottages on the cliff above Rouge Terrier.</p>
+
+ <p>"To Breni&egrave;re.... To L'Etat.... Bernel went on to find a
+ boat."</p>
+
+ <p>And presently they were out on the bald cliff-head, and
+ slipping and sliding down it till they came to the ledge, below
+ which Breni&egrave;re spreads out on the water like a giant's
+ hand.</p>
+
+ <p>Between her panting breaths Nance whistled a low soft note
+ like the pipe of a sea-bird. A like sound came softly up from
+ below, and slipping and stumbling again, they were on the beach
+ among mighty boulders girt with dripping sea-weed.</p>
+
+ <p>Another low pipe out of the darkness, and they had found the
+ boat and tumbled into it, wet and bruised, and breathless.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dieu merci!" said Bernel, and pulled lustily out to sea.</p>
+
+ <p>The swirl of the tide caught them as they cleared
+ Breni&egrave;re Point, and Gard crawled forward to take an oar.
+ Nance did the same, and so set Bernel free to scull and steer,
+ the arrangement which dire experience has taught the Sark men as
+ best adapted to their rock-strewn waters and racing currents.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard's mind was in a tumult of revolt, but he sensibly drove
+ his feelings through his muscles to the blade of his oar, and
+ said nothing. Nance and Bernel were not likely to have gone to
+ these lengths without what seemed to them sufficient reason.</p>
+
+ <p>And he remembered Nance's trembling arm on the Coup&eacute;e,
+ and her agonies of fear on his account, and so came by degrees to
+ a certain acceptance of their view of matters, and therewith a
+ feeling of gratitude for their labours and risks on his behalf.
+ For he did not doubt that, should the self-appointed
+ administrators of justice learn who had baulked them of their
+ prey, they would wreak upon them some of the vengeance they had
+ intended for himself.</p>
+
+ <p>He saw that it was no light matter these two had undertaken,
+ and as he thought it over, and told the black welter under his
+ oar what he thought of these wild and hot-headed Sark men, his
+ gratitude grew.</p>
+
+ <p>The thin orange sickle of a moon rose at last, high by reason
+ of the mists banked thick along the horizon, and afforded them a
+ welcome glimmer of light&mdash;barely a glimmer indeed, rather a
+ mere thinning of the clinging darkness, but enough for Bernel's
+ tutored eye.</p>
+
+ <p>He took them in a cautious circuit outside the Quette d'Amont,
+ the eastern sentinel of L'Etat, and so, with shipped oars, by
+ means of his single scull astern, brought them deftly to the
+ riven black ledges round the corner on the south side.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a precarious landing at best, and the after scramble up
+ the crumbling slope calls for caution even in the light of day.
+ In that misleading darkness, clinging with his hands and climbing
+ on the sides of his feet, and starting at startled feathered
+ things that squawked and fluttered from under his groping hands
+ and feet, Gard found it no easy matter to follow Nance, though
+ she carried a great bundle and waited for him every now and
+ again. When he looked down next day upon the way they had come he
+ marvelled that they had ever reached the top in safety.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait here!" she said at last, when they had attained a
+ somewhat level place, and before he had breath for a word she was
+ away down again.</p>
+
+ <p>She was back presently with another bundle, and he started
+ when she thrust into his hands a long gun, and bade him pick up
+ the first bundle and follow her. The feel of the gun brought home
+ to him, as nothing else could have done, her and Bernel's views
+ of possible contingencies.</p>
+
+ <p>He followed her stumblingly along the rough crown of the
+ ridge, till she dipped down a rather smoother slope and came to a
+ stand before what seemed to him a heap of huge stones.</p>
+
+ <p>"There is shelter in here," she said. "And these things are
+ for your comfort. We will bring you more to eat in a day or
+ two&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance, dear," he said, dropping the gun and the bundle, and
+ laying his hand on her slim shoulder. "I have become a sore
+ burden to you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no, no!" she said hastily. "You would have done as much
+ for me, and it is because&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"For you, dear? I would give my life for you, Nance, and here
+ it is you who are doing everything, and running all these risks
+ for me."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is because I know they are in the wrong. It may be only a
+ day or two, and they will thank me when they find out their
+ mistake."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I thank you and Bernel with my whole heart. Please God
+ I may some time be able to repay you!"</p>
+
+ <p>"If you are safe, that is all we want. Now I must go. We must
+ get back before they miss us."</p>
+
+ <p>"God keep you, dear!" and he bent and kissed her, and as
+ before she kissed him back with the frankness of a child.</p>
+
+ <p>He was about to follow her when she turned to go, but she said
+ imperatively, "Stop here, or you may lose yourself in the dark.
+ And in the day-time do not walk on the ridge or they may see
+ you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And the gun? What is that for?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If they should come here after you, you will keep them off
+ with it," she said, with a spurt of the true Island spirit. "It
+ is your life they seek, and they are in the wrong. But no one
+ ever comes here, and you will not need it. Now, good-bye! And God
+ have you in His keeping!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And you, dearest&mdash;and all yours!"&mdash;and she was gone
+ like a flitting shadow.</p>
+
+ <p>And while he still stood peering into the darkness into which
+ she had merged, she suddenly materialized again and was by his
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>"I forgot. Bernel told me to tell you it throws a little high.
+ But I hope you won't need it. And there is fresh water among the
+ rocks at the south end there."</p>
+
+ <p>He caught her to him again, and kissed her ardently, and then
+ she was gone.</p>
+
+ <p>He strained his ears, fearful of hearing her slip or fall in
+ the darkness, but she went without displacing a stone, and he was
+ alone with the sickly moon, and the sombre sky, and the voices of
+ the rising tide along the grim black ledges of his sanctuary.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY</h3>
+
+ <p>It all seemed monstrous strange to him, now that he had time
+ to think of the actual fact apart from the difficulties of its
+ accomplishment.</p>
+
+ <p>An hour ago he was lying in his bed at Plaisance, in low
+ enough spirits, indeed, at the outlook before him, but his
+ gloomiest thought had never plumbed depths such as this.</p>
+
+ <p>He wondered briefly if so extreme a step had been really
+ necessary.</p>
+
+ <p>And then he heard again the purposeful tramp of those heavy
+ feet on the Coup&eacute;e, and fathomed again the menace of
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>And he felt Nance's guiding hand trembling violently in his
+ once more, and he said to himself that she and Bernel knew better
+ than he how the land lay, and that he could not have done other
+ than he had done.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he became aware that the dew was drenching him, and so he
+ bent and groped in the dark for the shelter Nance had spoken
+ of.</p>
+
+ <p>The strip of moon had paled as it rose, the huge white stones
+ glimmered faintly in it, and a darker patch below showed him
+ where the entrance must be. He crept into the darker patch on his
+ hands and knees, bumping his head violently, but once inside
+ found room to sit upright. Snaking out again, he laid hold of the
+ two bundles and the gun, and dragged them into shelter.</p>
+
+ <p>What the bundles contained he could not tell in the dark, but
+ one felt like a thick woollen cloak, and the other like a
+ blanket, and among their contents he felt a loaf of bread, and a
+ bottle and a powder-flask. So he rolled himself up in the blanket
+ and the cloak, and lay wondering at the strange case in which he
+ found himself, and so at last fell asleep.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;'>
+
+ <p>He woke into a dapple of light and shade which filled his
+ wandering wits with wonder, till, with a start, he came to
+ himself and remembered.</p>
+
+ <p>The place he was in was something like a stone bee-hive, about
+ eight feet across from side to side, with a rounded sloping roof
+ rising at its highest some four feet from the ground, and the
+ great blocks of which it was built fitted so ill in places that
+ the sun shot the darkness through and through with innumerable
+ little white arrows of light. The dark opening of the night was
+ now a glowing invitation to the day. He shook off his wraps and
+ crawled out into the open.</p>
+
+ <p>And what an open!</p>
+
+ <p>He drew deep breaths of delight at the magnificence of his
+ outlook&mdash;its vastness, its spaciousness, its wholesome
+ amplitude and loneliness. He felt like a new man born solitary
+ into a new world.</p>
+
+ <p>The sky, without a cloud, was like a mighty hollowed sapphire,
+ in which blazed the clear white sun; and the vast plain of the
+ sea, sweeping away into infinity, was a still deeper blue, with
+ here and there long swathes of green, and here and there
+ swift-speeding ruffles purple-black.</p>
+
+ <p>A brisk easterly breeze set all the face of it a-ripple, and
+ where the dancing wavelets caught the sun it glanced and gleamed
+ like sheets of molten silver.</p>
+
+ <p>"A silver sea! A silver sea!" he cried aloud, and into his
+ mind there flashed an incongruous comparison of the bountifulness
+ of Nature's silver with the pitiful grains they hacked out of her
+ rocks with such toil and hardship.</p>
+
+ <p>Away to the south across the silver sea the Jersey cliffs
+ shone clear in the sunshine, and on the dimpling plain between,
+ the black Paternosters looked so like the sails of boats heading
+ for Sark that he remembered suddenly that he was in hiding, and
+ dropped to cover alongside the great stones of his shelter.</p>
+
+ <p>But careful observation of the square black objects showed him
+ that they did not move, and anyway they were much too far away to
+ see him. So he took courage again, and, full of curiosity
+ concerning his hiding-place, he crept up the southern slope till
+ he reached the ridge of the roof, so to speak, and lay there
+ looking over, entranced with the beauty of the scene before
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>The whole east coast of Sark right up to the Burons, off the
+ Creux, lay basking in the morning light. Dixcart and Derrible
+ held no secrets from him; he looked straight up their shining
+ beaches. Their bold headlands were like giant-fists reaching out
+ along the water towards him. Breni&egrave;re, the nearest point
+ to his rock, was another mighty grasping hand, but between it and
+ him swept a furious race of tossing, white-capped waves, with
+ here and there black fangs of rock which stuck up through the
+ green waters as though hungering for prey.</p>
+
+ <p>He could just see the upper part of the miners' cottages on
+ the cliff above Rouge Terrier, but, beyond these and the ruined
+ mill on Hog's Back, not another sign of man and his toilsome,
+ troublesome little works. But for these, Sark, in its utter
+ loneliness, might have been a new-found island, and he its first
+ discoverer.</p>
+
+ <p>Ranging on, his eye rested on the shattered fragments of
+ Little Sark, scattered broadcast over the sea about its most
+ southerly point&mdash;bare black pinnacles, ragged ledges,
+ islets, rocklets, reefs, and fangs, every one of which seemed to
+ stir the placid sea to wildest wrath. Elsewhere it danced and
+ dimpled in the sunshine, with only the long slow heave in it to
+ tell of the sleeping giant below, but round each rock, and up the
+ sides of his own huge pyramid, it swept in great green combers
+ shot with bubbling white, and went tumbling back upon itself in
+ rings of boiling foam.</p>
+
+ <p>Beyond, he saw the rounded back of Jethou, and just behind it
+ the long line of houses in Guernsey.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay long enjoying it all, with the warm sun on his back,
+ and the brisk wind toning his blood, but no view, however
+ wonderful, will satisfy a man's stomach. He had fed the day
+ before mostly on most unsatisfying emotions, and now he began to
+ feel the need of something more solid. So he crept back along the
+ slope to find out what there was for breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>His stores lay about the floor of his resting-place, just as
+ he had turned them out in the night; a couple of long loaves, a
+ good-sized piece of raw bacon, and another of boiled pork which
+ he thought he recognized, some butter in a cloth, a bottle which
+ looked as if it might contain spirits, the powder-flask, and a
+ small linen bag containing bullets, snail-shot, and percussion
+ caps. These, with Bernel's gun and the blanket, and the old
+ woollen cloak, which he recognized as Mr. Hamon's roquelaure, and
+ his pipe, and the tobacco he happened to have in his pouch,
+ constituted, for the time being, his worldly possessions.</p>
+
+ <p>He spread his cloak and blanket in the sun to dry and air,
+ and, doubtful whether his rock would supply any further provision
+ or when more might reach him from Sark, he proceeded to make a
+ somewhat restricted meal of bread and cold pork.</p>
+
+ <p>The raw bacon suggested something of a problem. To cook it he
+ must have a fire. To have a fire he must have fuel; his
+ tinder-box he always carried, of course, for the new matches had
+ not yet penetrated to Sark. Moreover, to light a fire might be
+ dangerous as liable to attract attention, unless he could do it
+ under cover where no stray gleams could get out.</p>
+
+ <p>He pondered these matters as he ate, spinning out his exiguous
+ meal to its uttermost crumb to make it as satisfying as
+ possible.</p>
+
+ <p>He saw his way at once to perfecting his cover. All about him
+ where he sat, the grey rock pushed through a thin friable soil
+ like the bones of an ill-buried skeleton. And everywhere in the
+ scanty soil grew thick little rounded cushions, half grass, half
+ moss, varying in size from an apple to a foot-stool, which came
+ out whole at a pluck or a kick. After breakfast he would plug up
+ every hole in his shelter, and pile half-a-dozen sizeable pieces
+ outside with which to close the front door. Then, if he could
+ find anything in the shape of fuel, he saw his way to a dinner of
+ fried bacon, but it would have to be after dark when the smoke
+ would be invisible.</p>
+
+ <p>But first he must find out about his water supply.</p>
+
+ <p>Down at the south end, Nance had said. That must be over
+ there, on that almost-detached stack of rocks, where the waves
+ seemed to break loudest.</p>
+
+ <p>So, after another crawl up to the ridge to make certain that
+ no boats were about&mdash;for he had frequently seen them fishing
+ in the neighbourhood of L'Etat&mdash;he crept down the flank of
+ his pyramid almost to sea-level to get across to the outer
+ pile.</p>
+
+ <p>He had to pick his way with caution across a valley of black
+ rocks, rifted and chasmed by the fury of the waves. He could
+ imagine&mdash;or thought he could, but came far short of
+ it&mdash;how the great green rollers would thunder through that
+ black gully in the winter storms.</p>
+
+ <p>There were great wells lined all round with rich brown
+ sea-weeds, and narrow chasms in whose hidden depths the waters
+ swooked and gurgled like unseen monsters, and whose broken edges,
+ on which he had to step, were like the rough teeth of gigantic
+ saws set up on end alongside one another.</p>
+
+ <p>He crawled across these rough serrations and scaled the rifted
+ black wall in front, and came at once on a number of shallow
+ pools of rain-water lying in the hollows of a mighty slab.</p>
+
+ <p>But the moment his head rose above the level of the steep
+ black wall his ears were filled with a deafening roaring and
+ rushing, supplemented by most tremendous dull thuddings which
+ shook the stack like the blows of a mighty flail.</p>
+
+ <p>From behind a further wall there rose a boiling mist, through
+ which lashed up white jets of spray which slanted over the rocks
+ beyond in a continuous torrent.</p>
+
+ <p>He crawled to the further wall and looked over into a deep
+ black gully, some fifteen feet wide and perhaps thirty feet deep,
+ into which, out of a perfectly calm sea, most monstrous waves
+ came roaring and leaping, till the whole chasm was foaming and
+ spuming like an over-boiling milk-pan. In the middle of the
+ chasm, for the further torment of the waters, was jammed a huge
+ black rock, against which the incoming green avalanche dashed
+ itself to fragments and went rocketing into the air. The solid
+ granite at the further end was cleft from summit to base by a
+ tiny rift a foot wide through which the boiling spume poured out
+ to the sea beyond.</p>
+
+ <p>But the marvel was where those gigantic waves came from. Save
+ for the dancing wind-ripples and its long, slow internal
+ pulsations, the sea was as smooth as a pond to within twenty
+ yards of the rocks. Then it suddenly seemed to draw itself
+ together, to draw itself down into itself indeed, like a tiger
+ compressing its springs for a leap, and then, with a rush and a
+ roar, it launched itself at the rocks with the weight of the
+ ocean behind it, and hurtled blindly into the chasm where the
+ black rock lay.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a most wonderful sight, and Gard sat long watching it,
+ then and later, fascinated always and puzzled by that
+ extraordinary self-compression and sudden upleap of the waters
+ out of an otherwise placid sea.</p>
+
+ <p>It was but one more odd expression of Nature's fantastic
+ humour, and the nearest he could come to an explanation of it was
+ that, in the sea bed just there, was some great fault, some huge
+ chasm into which the waters fell and then came leaping out to
+ further torment on the rocks.</p>
+
+ <p>It was as he was returning to his own quarters by a somewhat
+ different route across the valley of rocks, that he lighted on
+ another find which contented him greatly.</p>
+
+ <p>In one of the saw-toothed chasms he saw a piece of wood
+ sticking up, and climbed along to get it as first contribution to
+ his fire. And when he got to it, down below in the gully, he
+ found jammed the whole side of a boat, flung up there by some
+ high spring tide and trapped before it could escape. Excellent
+ wood for his firing, well tarred and fairly dry. He hauled and
+ pulled till he had it all safely up, and then he carried it, load
+ after load, to his house, and laid it out in the sun to dry still
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>He worked hard all day, keeping a wary outlook for any stray
+ fishermen.</p>
+
+ <p>First he culled a great heap of the thin wiry grass which
+ seemed the chief product of his rock, and spread it also to dry
+ for a couch. There was no bracken for bedding, no gorse for
+ firing. The grass would supply the place of the one, the broken
+ boat the other.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he made good all the holes in his walls and roof, except
+ one in the latter for the escape of the smoke, and built a solid
+ wall of the tufted cushions round the seaward side of his
+ doorway, as a screen against his light being seen, and as a
+ protection from the south-west wind if it should blow up strong
+ in the night.</p>
+
+ <p>He found it very strange to be toiling on these elemental
+ matters, with never a soul to speak to. He felt like a castaway
+ on a desert island, with the additional oddness of knowing
+ himself to be within reach of his kind, yet debarred from any
+ communication with them on pain, possibly, of death.</p>
+
+ <p>At times he felt like a condemned criminal, yet knew that he
+ had done no wrong, and that it was only the mistaken justice of a
+ simple people that wanted blood for blood, and was not
+ over-heedful as to whose blood so long as its own sense of
+ justice was satisfied.</p>
+
+ <p>But, he kept saying to himself, things might have been worse
+ with him, very much worse, but for Nance and Bernel. And before
+ long, any day, the matter might be cleared up and himself
+ reinstated in the opinion of the Sark men.</p>
+
+ <p>Even that would leave much to be desired, but possibly, he
+ thought, if they found they had sorely misjudged him in this
+ matter, they might realize that they had done so in other matters
+ also, and that he had only been striving to do his duty as he saw
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, wherever else his thoughts led him, there was always
+ Nance, and the thought of Nance always set his heart aglow and
+ braced him to patient endurance and hope.</p>
+
+ <p>He retraced, again and again, all the ways they had travelled
+ together in these later days, recalled her every word and look,
+ felt again the trembling of her hand&mdash;for him&mdash;on the
+ Coup&eacute;e, heard again the tremors of her voice as she urged
+ him to safety. And those sweet ingenuous kisses she had given
+ him! Yes, indeed, he had much to be grateful for, if some things
+ to cavil at, in fortune's dealings.</p>
+
+ <p>But, behind all his fair white thought of Nance, was always
+ the black background of the whole circumstances of the case, and
+ the grim fact of Tom Hamon's death, and he pondered this last
+ with knitted brows from every point of view, and strove in vain
+ for a gleam of light on the darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>Could the Doctor be mistaken, and was Tom's death the simple
+ result of his fall over the Coup&eacute;e? The Doctor's
+ pronouncement, however, seemed to leave no loophole of hope
+ there.</p>
+
+ <p>If not, then who had killed Tom, and why?</p>
+
+ <p>He could think of no one. He could imagine no reason for
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom had been a bully at home, but outside he was on jovial
+ terms with his fellows&mdash;except only himself. He had to
+ acknowledge to himself the seeming justice of the popular
+ feeling. If any man in Sark might, with some show of reason, have
+ been suspected of the killing of Tom Hamon, it was himself.</p>
+
+ <p>Once, by reason of overmuch groping in the dark, an awful
+ doubt came upon him&mdash;was it possible that, in some horrible
+ wandering of the mind, of which he remembered nothing, he had
+ actually done this thing? Done it unconsciously, in some
+ over-boiling of hot blood into the brain, which in its explosion
+ had blotted out every memory of what had passed?</p>
+
+ <p>It was a hideous idea, born of over-strain and overmuch
+ groping after non-existent threads in a blind alley.</p>
+
+ <p>He tried to get outside himself, and follow Stephen Gard that
+ night and see if that terrible thing could have been possible to
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>But he followed himself from point to point, and from moment
+ to moment, and accounted for himself to himself without any lapse
+ whatever; unless, indeed, his brain had played him false and he
+ had gone out of the house again after going into it, and followed
+ Tom and struck him down.</p>
+
+ <p>With what? The Doctor said with some blunt instrument like a
+ hammer. Where could he have obtained it? What had he done with
+ it?</p>
+
+ <p>The idea, while it lasted, was horrible. But he shook it off
+ at last and called himself a fool for his pains. He had never
+ harboured thought of murder in his life. He had detested Tom, but
+ he had never gone the length of wishing him dead. The whole idea
+ was absurd.</p>
+
+ <p>All these things he thought over as, his first essential
+ labours completed, he lay under the screen of the ridge and
+ watched the sun dropping towards Guernsey in a miracle of
+ eventide glories.</p>
+
+ <p>Below him, the long slow seas rocketted along the ragged black
+ base of his rock with mighty roarings and tumultuous bursts of
+ foam, and on the ledges the gulls and cormorants squabbled and
+ shrieked, and took long circling flights without fluttering a
+ wing, to show what gulls could do, or skimmed darkly just above
+ the waves and into them, to show that cormorants were never
+ satisfied. And now and again wild flights of red-billed puffins
+ swept up from the water and settled out of his sight at the
+ eastern end of the rock, and he promised himself to look them up
+ some other day if opportunity offered.</p>
+
+ <p>From the constant tumult of the seas about his rock, except
+ just at low water, he saw little fear of being taken by surprise,
+ even if his presence there became known. Twice only in the
+ twenty-four hours did it seem possible for any one to effect a
+ landing there, and at those times he promised himself to be on
+ the alert.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay there till the sun had gone, and the pale green and
+ amber, and the crimson and gold of his going had slowly passed
+ from sea and sky, and left them grey and cold; till a single
+ light shone out on Sark, which he knew must be in one of the
+ miners' cottages, and many lights twinkled in Guernsey; till
+ beneath him he could no longer see the sea, but only the white
+ foam fury as it boiled along the rocks. Then he crept away to his
+ burrow, rejoicing in the thought of the companionship of a fire
+ and hot food.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE</h3>
+
+ <p>It took Gard some time to get his fire started, and when it
+ did blaze up, with fine spurts of gas from the tar, and vivid
+ blue and green and red flames from the salted wood, the little
+ stone bee-hive glowed like an oven and presently grew as hot as
+ one. The smoke escaped but slowly through the single hole in the
+ roof, and at last he could stand it no longer, and crept out into
+ the night until his fire should have burned down to a core of red
+ ashes over which he could grill his dinner.</p>
+
+ <p>And what a night! He had seen the stars from many parts of the
+ earth and sea, but never, it seemed to him, had he seen such
+ stars as these, so close, so large, so wonderfully clean and
+ bright. And, indeed, glory of the heavens so supreme as that is
+ possible only far away from man, and all the works and
+ habitations of man, and all his feeble efforts at the mitigation
+ of the darkness. Nay, for fullest perception, it may be that it
+ is necessary for a man to be not only alone in the profundity of
+ Nature's night, but to be lifted somewhat out of himself and his
+ natural darkness by extremity of joy, or still more of need.</p>
+
+ <p>The milky way was as white as though a mighty brush dipped in
+ glittering star-dust had been drawn across the velvet dome. The
+ larger stars, many of which were old acquaintances and known to
+ him by name, seemed to swing so clear and close that they took on
+ quite a new aspect of friendliness and cheer. The smaller&mdash;I
+ write as he thought&mdash;a mighty host, an innumerable company
+ quite beyond his ken, still spoke to him in a language that he
+ had never forgotten.</p>
+
+ <p>Long ago, when he was quite a little boy, he had come upon a
+ great globe of the heavens, a much-prized curiosity of his old
+ schoolmaster. Upon it appeared all the principal stars linked up
+ into their constellations, the shadowy linking lines forming the
+ figures of the Imaginary Ones associated with them in the minds
+ of the ancients. There, on the varnished round of the globe,
+ ranged the Great and Little Bears, and the Dogs, and the Archer,
+ and the Flying Horse, the Lion, and the Crab, and the Whale, and
+ the Twins, and Perseus and Andromeda, and Cassiopeia. And up
+ there, on the dark inner side of the mighty dome, he seemed to
+ see them all again, and time swung back with him for a moment,
+ and he was a boy once more.</p>
+
+ <p>And, gazing up at them all, their steady shine and
+ many-coloured twinklings led him to wonder as to the how and the
+ why of them. From the stars to their Maker was but a natural
+ step, and so he came, simply and naturally, to thought of the
+ greatness of Him who swung these innumerable worlds in their
+ courses, and, from that, to His goodness and justice.</p>
+
+ <p>Memories of his mother came surging back upon him, and of all
+ her goodness and all she had taught him. She had had a mighty,
+ simple trust in the goodness of God, and had passed it on to her
+ boy, though his rough contact with the world had overworn it all
+ to some extent.</p>
+
+ <p>Still, it was all there, and now it all came back to him
+ through the hopeful twinkling eyes of those innumerable
+ stars.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have courage and hope!" they sang; and though all his little
+ world, save those two or three who knew him best, was against
+ him, he stood there with his face turned up to the stars, and
+ believed in his heart that all would yet be well.</p>
+
+ <p>And when at last he turned back to things of earth, he found
+ the stars still twinkling in the sea, as though they would not
+ let him go even though he gave up looking at them. They gleamed
+ and glanced in the smooth-rolling waves till the deep seemed sown
+ with phosphorescence, as on that night in Grand Gr&egrave;ve; the
+ night Nance came upon him so suddenly in the dark and he went on
+ with her to get Grannie's medicine.</p>
+
+ <p>Was it possible that that blessed night, that terrible night,
+ was barely forty-eight hours old? So much had happened since
+ then, such incredible things! It seemed weeks ago. It seemed like
+ a dream; horrid, fantastic, wonderfully sweet.</p>
+
+ <p>Within that tiny span of hours he had come to the knowledge of
+ Nance's love for him. Oh those sweet, frank kisses! If he had
+ died last night; if the hot heads in their madness had killed him
+ to balance Tom Hamon's account&mdash;still he would have lived:
+ for Nance had kissed him.</p>
+
+ <p>And within the half of that short span he had been judged a
+ murderer, had had to flee for his life, and would, without a
+ doubt, have lost it but for Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>She had undertaken a mighty risk for him&mdash;for him! And
+ she had shown him that she loved him, for she had kissed him with
+ her heart in her lips.</p>
+
+ <p>And, grateful as he was for all the rest, it was still the
+ recollection of those sweet kisses that he thought of most.</p>
+
+ <p>So "Hope! Hope!" sang the stars, and his heart was high
+ because his conscience was clean and Nance had kissed him.</p>
+
+ <p>When at last he crawled into his burrow, his fire was only
+ white ashes, and he would not trouble to relight it.</p>
+
+ <p>He broke off a piece of bread, and ate it slowly, and thought
+ of Nance, and promised himself the larger breakfast. Then he
+ rolled himself in his cloak, and slept more soundly than an
+ alderman after a civic feast.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM</h3>
+
+ <p>Next morning, when he crawled out of his burrow, Gard found
+ everything swathed in dense white mist. Upon which he promptly
+ lit his fire, and in due course enjoyed a more satisfying meal
+ than he had eaten since he landed on the rock.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he decided to take advantage of the screening mist to
+ explore such parts of his prison-house as were not available to
+ him at other times. So he walked along the ridge, secure from
+ observation since he could not himself see down to the water from
+ it, though the rushings and roarings along the black ledges below
+ never ceased.</p>
+
+ <p>Every nook and ledge of the out-cropping rock on the south
+ side of the ridge was occupied by lady gulls in all stages of
+ their maternal duties. From the surprise they expressed at his
+ intrusion, and the way they stuck to their nests, they were
+ evidently quite unused to man and his ways, and it was all he
+ could do to avoid stepping on them and their squawking families
+ as he picked his way along.</p>
+
+ <p>He clambered down the eastern slope nearest Sark, and found
+ the ground there covered with a fairly deep soil, and green
+ growths that were strange to him. The soil was perforated with
+ holes which at first he ascribed to rabbits, but when he inserted
+ his hand into one he got such a nip from an unusually strong beak
+ that he changed his mind to puffins, and, standing quite still
+ for a time, he presently saw the members of the colony come
+ creeping out behind their great red bills and scurry off across
+ the water in search of breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the great semi-detached pinnacle below attracted him, and
+ he scrambled down amid the complaints of a great colony of gulls
+ and cormorants but found the tide still too full for him to cross
+ the intervening chasm. Those wonderful great green waves out of a
+ smooth sea came roaring along the sides of the island and met
+ full tilt in the chasm below him, as they leaped exultant from
+ their conflict with the rocks. They hurled themselves against one
+ another in wildest fury, and the foam of their meeting boiled
+ white along the ledges, and dappled all the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>As he crawled through the lank wet grass and soft spongy soil,
+ he found himself suddenly confronted with a great barrier of
+ fallen rocks; as though, at some period of its existence, the
+ north end of the island had tapered to a gigantic peak which, in
+ the fulness of its time, had come down with a crash, and now lay
+ like a titanic wall from summit to sea-board. Huge and
+ forbidding, of all shapes and sizes, the mighty fragments barred
+ his course like a menace, and he attacked them warily, drawing
+ himself with infinite caution from one to another; over this one,
+ under this, deftly between these two, lest an unwary weighting
+ should start them on the movement that might grind him to
+ powder.</p>
+
+ <p>The fog increased their forbidding aspect tenfold. He could
+ not see a foot before him, and could only worm his way among
+ them, testing each before he trusted it, and finding at times
+ monsters become but mediocre when his hand was on them. More than
+ once he had to rest his hands on cautiously-tried ledges and
+ swing his legs forward and grope with his feet for foothold, and
+ whether the space below was trifling, or whether it ran to
+ incredible depth, he could not tell.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a mighty relief to him to come out at last on the other
+ side of the wall, and to find himself on the great north slope
+ which faced Sark, and so was closed to him in clear weather.</p>
+
+ <p>The long thin grass grew rankly here, and was beaded with
+ moisture, but he pushed along with an eerie feeling at the
+ wildness of it all.</p>
+
+ <p>The mist clung close about him, but had suddenly become
+ luminous. He felt as though he were packed loosely all round with
+ cotton wool on which a strong light was shining. It gave him a
+ feeling of light-headedness. Everything was light about him, and
+ yet he could not see more than a couple of feet before his face.
+ The waves roared hoarsely below him, and once he had unknowingly
+ got so low down that a monstrous white arm, reaching suddenly up
+ out of the depths, seemed about to lay hold on him and drag him
+ back with it into the turmoil.</p>
+
+ <p>He was panting and full of mist when at last he climbed the
+ second great rock barrier and rounded the corner towards the
+ south.</p>
+
+ <p>And as he sat resting there, the whiff of a westerly breeze
+ tore a long lane in the white shroud, and for a moment he saw, as
+ through a telescope, the houses of Guernsey gleaming in bright
+ sunshine. Then it closed again, and presently began to drift past
+ him in strange whorls and spirals, like hurrying ghosts wrapped
+ hastily in filmy garments, which loosed at times and trailed
+ slowly over the rocks and caught and clung to their sharp
+ projections. Then the sun completed the rout, and the mist-ghosts
+ swept away towards France, harried by the west wind like a flock
+ of sheep before the shepherd's dog.</p>
+
+ <p>In the afternoon the heat grew so intense that he was driven
+ to the wells in the valley of rocks for a bathe, for there was no
+ shelter available, and his bee-hive was like an oven.</p>
+
+ <p>None of the pools was large enough for a swim, and it was more
+ than a man's life was worth to venture among the boiling surges
+ of the outer rocks. But he could at all events get under water,
+ if it was only to sit there and cool off.</p>
+
+ <p>So he stripped, and was just about slipping into a deep still
+ bath, emerald green, with a fringe of amber weeds all round its
+ almost perpendicular sides, when, glancing down to make sure of
+ an ultimate footing, his eye lighted with a shock of surprise on
+ a pair of huge eyes looking straight up at him out of the water.
+ They were violet in colour, protuberant, and malevolent beyond
+ words.</p>
+
+ <p>He sat down suddenly on the baking black rock, with a cold
+ shiver running down his back in spite of the scorch of the sun.
+ The utter cold malignity of those great violet eyes, and the
+ thought of what would have happened if he had stepped into that
+ pool, made him momentarily sick.</p>
+
+ <p>He had seen small devil-fish in the pools in Sark, but never
+ one approaching this in size. He crept away at last, leaving it
+ in possession, and found a pool clear of boulders or caving
+ hollows, and sat in it with no great enjoyment, wondering if the
+ great unwholesome beast in the other would be likely to climb the
+ cliff and come upon him in the night. He thought it unlikely, but
+ still the idea clung to him and caused him no little discomfort.
+ He blocked his door that night with great green cushions, though
+ he felt doubtful if they would be effective against the wiles and
+ strength of a devil-fish, if half that he had heard of them was
+ true.</p>
+
+ <p>In the middle of the night&mdash;for he went to bed early,
+ having nothing else to do, except to watch the stars&mdash;he
+ woke with a cold start, feeling certain that hideous creature had
+ crawled up the slope and was feeling all round his house for an
+ entrance.</p>
+
+ <p>Certainly <i>something</i> was moving about outside, and feeling
+ over the stones in an uncertain, searching kind of a way. And
+ when you have been wakened up from a nightmare in which staring
+ devil-eyes played a prominent part, <i>something</i> may be anything,
+ and as like as not the owner of the eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>But even devil-fishes in their most advanced stages have not
+ yet attained the power of human speech. If they speak to one
+ another what a horrible sound it must be!</p>
+
+ <p>It was with a sigh of relief, and a sudden unstringing of the
+ bow, that he heard outside&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Gard!" and with a lusty kick, which expressed some of his
+ feeling, he sent his doorway flying and crawled out after it.</p>
+
+ <p>The myriad winking stars lifted the roof of the world and the
+ darkness somewhat, sufficient at all events for him to make out
+ that it was not Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>"You, Bernel?" he queried, as the only possible
+ alternative.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, Mr. Gard. I've brought you some more things to eat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good lad! I'm a great trouble to you. Where is Nance? In the
+ boat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, she couldn't come. That Julie's watching her like a cat.
+ It was she and Peter stirred up the men against you. All day
+ yesterday the whole Island was out looking for you, dead or
+ alive, and very much puzzled as to what had become of you. And
+ Julie's got a suspicion that we know. They searched the house for
+ you in spite of mother and Grannie, but they won't forget Grannie
+ in a hurry, and I don't think they'll come back," and he laughed
+ at the recollection of it.</p>
+
+ <p>"What did Grannie do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She just looked at them from under that big black sun-bonnet,
+ and muttered things no one heard. But her eyes were like points
+ of burning sticks, and they all crept out one after another,
+ afraid of they didn't know what. But Julie's been on the watch
+ all day, and would hardly let us out of her sight. But she
+ couldn't watch us both when we were not together. So Nance got a
+ bundle of things ready for you, and then went out with another
+ bundle and Julie followed her, and I slipped off here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bernel, I don't know how to thank you all! What should I have
+ done without you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd have been dead, most likely. It's not that they cared
+ much for Tom, you know, but they don't like the idea of a Sark
+ man being killed by a foreigner and no one paying for it."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I'm not a foreigner&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes you are, to them. Of course you're not a Frenchman, but
+ all the same you're not a Sark man. Good thing for you you'd
+ lived with us and we'd got to know you and like you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, that was a good thing indeed. I'm only sorry to have
+ brought you trouble and to be such a trouble to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"If we thought you'd done it of course we wouldn't trouble.
+ But we know you couldn't have."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing fresh has turned up?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing yet. But Nance says it will, sure. Truth must out,
+ she says."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a weary while of coming out sometimes, Bernel. And I
+ can't spend the rest of my life here, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"She said you were to keep your heart up. You never know what
+ may happen."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell her I can stand it because of all her goodness to me. If
+ I hadn't her to think of I might go mad in time."</p>
+
+ <p>"I've brought you a rabbit I snared. Nance cooked it."</p>
+
+ <p>"That was good of her. Can you eat puffins' eggs?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They want a bit of getting used to," laughed the boy. "But
+ they're better cooked than raw."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can cook them. I found part of an old boat, and I've
+ plugged up all the holes in the shelter, and I only light a fire
+ at night. Could I fish here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Too big a sea close in. I've got some in the boat. I put out
+ a line as I came across. I'll leave you some."</p>
+
+ <p>"And have you a bottle&mdash;or a bailing-tin? Anything I
+ could bring home some water from the pools in? I have to go over
+ there every time I need a drink, and in the dark it's not
+ possible."</p>
+
+ <p>"You can have the bailer. It's a new one and sound."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now tell me, Bernel, if they find out I'm here what will they
+ do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They might come across and try and take you, unless they cool
+ down; and that won't be so long as that Julie and Peter talk as
+ they do. She makes him do everything she tells him. He's a
+ sheep."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if they come across, what do you and Nance expect me to
+ do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You've got my gun," said the boy simply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I've got your gun. But do you expect me to kill some of
+ them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They'd kill you," said Bernel, conclusively. On second
+ thoughts, however, he added, "But you needn't kill them. Wing one
+ or two, and the rest will let you be. With a gun I could keep all
+ Sark from landing on L'Etat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Suppose they come in the night? How many landing-places are
+ there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There's another at the end nighest Guernsey, but it's not
+ easy. And it's only low tide and half-ebb that lets you ashore
+ here at all."</p>
+
+ <p>"How about your boat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She's riding to a line. Tide's running up that way, but I'd
+ better be off."</p>
+
+ <p>They stumbled through the darkness and the sleeping gulls,
+ which woke in fright, and volubly accused one another of
+ nightmares and riotous behaviour&mdash;and Bernel hauled in his
+ boat, and handed Gard the tin dipper and three good-sized
+ bream.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you can't eat them all at once, split them open and dry
+ them in the sun," he said. "They'll keep for a week that
+ way."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell Nance I think of her every hour of the day, and I pray
+ God the truth may come out soon."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll tell her. It'll come out. She says so," and he pulled
+ out into the darkness and was gone.</p>
+
+ <p>And the Solitary went back to his shelter, secure in the
+ knowledge that the tide was on the rise, and half-ebb would not
+ be till well on into next day. And he thought of Nance, and of
+ Bernel, and of all the whole matter again; white thoughts and
+ black thoughts, but chiefly white because of Nance, and Nance was
+ a fact, while the black thoughts were shadows confusing as the
+ mist.</p>
+
+ <p>He could only devoutly hope and pray that a clean wind might
+ come and put the shadows to flight and let the sun of truth shine
+ through.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXIV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS</h3>
+
+ <p>Living thus face to face with Nature, and drawn through lack
+ of other occupation into unusually intimate association with her,
+ Gard found his lonely rock a centre of strange and novel
+ experience.</p>
+
+ <p>Situated as he was, even small things forced themselves
+ largely upon his observation and wrought themselves into his
+ memory. He found it good to lose himself for a time in these
+ visible and tangible actualities, rather than in useless efforts
+ after an understanding of the mystery of which he was the victim
+ and centre.</p>
+
+ <p>He had given over much time to pondering the subject of Tom
+ Hamon's death, but had come no nearer any reasonable solution of
+ it. That hideous doubt as to himself in the matter recurred at
+ times, but he always hastened to dissipate it by some other
+ interest more practical and palpable, lest it should bring him to
+ ultimate belief in its possibility, and so to madness.</p>
+
+ <p>And so he spent hours watching that wonderful roaring cauldron
+ on the south stack where his water pools were. Other hours in
+ study of the social and domestic economies of gulls and
+ cormorants. He saw families of awkward little fawn-coloured
+ squawkers force their way out of their shells under his very
+ eves, while indignant mothers told him what they thought of him
+ from a safe distance.</p>
+
+ <p>He bathed regularly in the heat of the day, but always after
+ careful inspection of his chosen pool, and one day fled in haste
+ up the black rocks at sight of the tip of a long, quivering,
+ flesh-coloured tentacle coming curling round a rock in the close
+ neighbourhood of the pool in which he was basking.</p>
+
+ <p>That monster under the rock gave him many a bad dream. It
+ seemed to him the incarnation of evil, and those horrible,
+ bulging, merciless eyes stuck like burrs in his memory.</p>
+
+ <p>One day, when he had been watching the cauldron, and filling
+ his tin dipper at the freshwater pools, as he came to descend the
+ black wall leading to the valley of rocks, he witnessed a little
+ tragedy.</p>
+
+ <p>Down below, on the edge of the pool where the octopus dwelt, a
+ silly young cormorant was standing gazing into the water, so
+ fascinated with something it saw there that it forgot even to
+ jerk its head in search of understanding.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard stood and watched. He saw a tiny pale worm-like thing
+ come creeping up the black rock on which the cormorant squatted.
+ The cormorant saw it too, and he was hungry, as all cormorants
+ always are, even after a full meal. So presently he made a jab at
+ it with his curved beak, and in a moment the pale worm had
+ twisted itself tightly round his silly neck, and dragged him
+ screaming and fluttering under the water.</p>
+
+ <p>Another day, when he was coming down by the break in the
+ cliff, where some great winter wave had bitten out such a slice
+ that the top had come tumbling down, he saw the monster sunning
+ itself on the flat rock by the side of its pool, like a huge
+ nightmare spider.</p>
+
+ <p>The moment he appeared its great eyes settled on his as though
+ it had been waiting only for him. And when he stopped, with a
+ feeling of shuddering discomfort at its hugeness&mdash;for its
+ body seemed considerably over a foot in width, while its arms
+ lounging over the rocks were each at least six feet long, and
+ looked horribly muscular&mdash;he could have sworn that one of
+ the great devil-eyes winked familiarly at him, as though the
+ beast would say, "Come on, come on! Nice day for a bathe! Just
+ waiting for you!"</p>
+
+ <p>He could see the loathsome body move as it breathed, swinging
+ comfortably in the support of its arms.</p>
+
+ <p>In a fury of repulsion he stooped to pick up a rock, but when
+ he hurled it the last tentacle was just sliding into the pool,
+ and it seemed to him that it waved an ironical farewell before it
+ disappeared.</p>
+
+ <p>More than once fishing-boats hovered about his rock, but kept
+ a safe distance from the boiling underfalls, and he always lay in
+ hiding till they had gone.</p>
+
+ <p>But he saw more gracious and beautiful things than these.</p>
+
+ <p>As he lay one morning, looking over the ridge at the Sark
+ headlands shining in the sun&mdash;with a strong west wind
+ driving the waves so briskly that, Sark-like, they tossed their
+ white crests into the air in angry expostulation long before they
+ met the rocks, and went roaring up them in dazzling spouts of
+ foam&mdash;his eye lighted on a gleam of unusual colour on the
+ racing green plain. It came again and again, and presently, as
+ the merry dance waxed wilder still, every white-cap as it tossed
+ into the air became a tiny rainbow, and the whole green plain was
+ alive with magical flutterings, of colours so dazzling that it
+ seemed bestrewn with dancing diamonds. A sight so wonderful that
+ he found himself holding in his! breath lest a puff should drive
+ it all away.</p>
+
+ <p>That same evening, too, was a glory of colour such as he had
+ never dreamed of. The setting sun was ruby; red, and the
+ cloud-bank into which he sank was all rimmed with red fire that
+ seemed to corruscate in its burning brilliancy.</p>
+
+ <p>To Gard indeed, in the somewhat peculiar state of mind induced
+ by his sudden cutting-off from his kind and flinging back upon
+ himself, it seemed as though the blood-red sun had fallen into a
+ vast consuming fire behind that dark, fire-rimmed cloud, and that
+ that was the end of it, and it would never rise again.</p>
+
+ <p>The sky, right away into the farthest east, was flaming red
+ with a hint of underlying smoke below the glow. The sea was a
+ weltering bath of blood, and the cliffs of Sark, save for the
+ gleam of white foam at their feet, shone as red as though they
+ had just been bodily dipped in it.</p>
+
+ <p>His lonely rock, when he looked round at it in wonder, was all
+ unfamiliarly red. There was a red fantastic glow in the very air,
+ and he himself was as red as though he had in very fact killed
+ Tom Hamon, and drenched himself with his blood.</p>
+
+ <p>So startling and unnatural was it all, that he found himself
+ wondering fearfully if these outside things were really all
+ blood-red, or whether something had gone wrong with his brain and
+ eyes, and only caused them to look so to him alone, or whether it
+ was indeed the end of all things shaping itself slowly under his
+ very eyes. And in that thought and fear he was not by any means
+ alone.</p>
+
+ <p>But the wonderful red, which in its universality and intensity
+ had become overpowering and fearsome, faded at last, and he
+ hailed its going with a sigh of relief. His eyes and his brain
+ were all right, he had not killed Tom Hamon, and this was not the
+ earth's last sunset.</p>
+
+ <p>And again that night, as he sat on the ridge on sentinel duty
+ till the rising tide should lock the doors of his castle, the sea
+ all round him shone with phosphorescence; every breaking wave
+ along the black plain was a lambent gleam of lightning, and where
+ they tore up the sides of his rock they were like flames out of a
+ fiery sea, so that he sat there looking down upon a weltering
+ band of nickering green and blue fires, which clung to the black
+ ledges and dripped slowly back into the seething gleam below.</p>
+
+ <p>It was all very strange and very awesome, and he wondered what
+ it might portend in the way of further marvels.</p>
+
+ <p>And he had not long to wait.</p>
+
+ <p>Far away in the Atlantic a cyclone had been raging, and
+ carrying havoc in its skirts. Now it was whirling towards Europe,
+ and the puffins crept deep into their holes, and the gulls
+ circled with disconsolate cries, and the cormorants crouched
+ gloomily in lee of their snuggest ledges, and all nature seemed
+ waiting for the blow.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard was awakened in the morning by the gale tearing at the
+ massive stones of his shelter as though it would carry them
+ bodily into the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>And when he crawled out, flat like a worm, the wind caught him
+ even so, and he had to grimp to earth and anchor himself by
+ projecting pieces of rock.</p>
+
+ <p>Such seas as these he had never imagined round Sark;
+ forgetting that behind Guernsey lay thousands of miles of waters
+ tortured past endurance and racing now to escape the fury of the
+ storm.</p>
+
+ <p>A white lash of spray came over him as he lay, and soaked him
+ to the skin, and, turning his face to the storm, he saw through
+ the chinks of his eyes a great wavering white curtain between him
+ and the sky line. The south-west portion of his island, where his
+ freshwater pools were, and the valley of rocks, were all awash,
+ the mighty waves roaring clean over the south stack, and rushing
+ up into the black sky in rockets of flying spray. The tide had
+ still some time to run, and he feared what it might be like at
+ its fullest. It seemed to him by no means impossible that it
+ might sweep the whole rock bare.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM</h3>
+
+ <p>It was a fortunate thing for Gard that the storm&mdash;the
+ great storm from which, for many a year afterwards, local events
+ in Sark dated&mdash;came when it did; two days after Bernel's
+ visit and the replenishment of his larder. For if he had been
+ caught bare he must have starved.</p>
+
+ <p>Eight whole days it lasted, with only two slight abatements
+ which, while they raised his hopes only to dash them, still
+ served him mightily.</p>
+
+ <p>During the first days he spent much of his time crouched in
+ the lee of his bee-hive, watching the terrific play of the waves
+ on his own rock and on the Sark headlands.</p>
+
+ <p>He wondered if any other man had seen such a storm under such
+ conditions. For he was practically at sea on a rock; in the midst
+ of the turmoil, yet absolutely unaffected by it.</p>
+
+ <p>On shipboard, thought of one's ship and possible consequences
+ had always interfered with fullest enjoyment of Nature's
+ paroxysms. It was impossible to detach one's thoughts completely
+ and view matters entirely from the outside. But here&mdash;he was
+ sure his rock had suffered many an equal torment&mdash;there was
+ nothing to come between him and the elemental frenzy. Nothing
+ but&mdash;as the days of it ran on&mdash;a growing solicitude as
+ to what he was going to live on if it continued much longer.</p>
+
+ <p>Never was Sark rabbit so completely demolished as was that one
+ that Nance had cooked and sent him. Before he had done with it he
+ cracked the very bones he had thrown away, for the sake of what
+ was in them, and finally chewed the softer parts of the bones
+ themselves to cheat himself into the belief that he was
+ eating.</p>
+
+ <p>That was after he had devoured every crumb of his bread, and
+ finished his three fishes to the extreme points of their
+ tails.</p>
+
+ <p>He was, I said, in the very midst of the turmoil yet
+ unaffected by it. But that was not so in some respects.</p>
+
+ <p>Bodily, as we have seen, the storm bore hardly upon him, since
+ rabbit-bones and fish-tails can hardly be looked upon as a
+ nutritious or inviting dietary.</p>
+
+ <p>But mentally and spiritually the mighty elemental upheaval was
+ wholly crushing and uplifting.</p>
+
+ <p>As he cowered, with humming head, under the fierce unremitting
+ rush of the gale, and felt the great stones of his shelter
+ tremble in it, and watched the huge green hills of water, with
+ their roaring white crests, go sweeping past to crash in thunder
+ on the cliffs of Sark, he felt smaller than he had ever felt
+ before&mdash;and that, as a rule, and if it come not of
+ self-abnegation through a man's own sin or folly, is entirely to
+ his good; possibly in the other case also.</p>
+
+ <p>To feel infinitely small and helpless in the hands of an
+ Infinitely Great is a spiritual education to any man, and it was
+ so to this man.</p>
+
+ <p>He felt himself, in that universal chaos, no more than a speck
+ of helpless dust amid the whirling wheels of Nature's
+ inexplicable machinery, and clung the tighter to the simple
+ fundamental facts of which his heart was sure&mdash;behind and
+ above all this was God, who held all these things in His hand.
+ And over there in Sark was Nance, the very thought of whom was
+ like a coal of fire in his heart, which all the gales that ever
+ blew, and all the soddened soaking of ceaseless rain from above
+ and ceaseless spray from below, could not even dim.</p>
+
+ <p>For long-continued and relentless buffeting such as this tells
+ upon any man, no matter what his strength of mind or body to
+ begin with; and a perpetually soaked body is apt in time to
+ sodden the soul, unless it have something superhuman to cling to,
+ as this man had in his simple trust in God and the girl he
+ loved.</p>
+
+ <p>In all those stressful days, so far as he could see, the
+ tides&mdash;which in those parts rise and fall some forty feet,
+ as you may see by the scoured bases of the towering
+ cliffs&mdash;seemed always at the full, the westerly gale driving
+ in the waters remorselessly and piling them up against the land
+ without cessation, and as though bent on its destruction.</p>
+
+ <p>Great gouts of clotted foam flew over his head in clouds, and
+ plastered his rock with shivering sponges. The sheets of spray
+ from his south-west rocks lashed him incessantly. His shelter was
+ as wet inside as out, as he was himself.</p>
+
+ <p>He felt empty and hungry at times, but never thirsty; his skin
+ absorbed moisture enough and to spare. But, chilled and clammed
+ and starving, on the fifth day when he had crawled into his wet
+ burrow for such small relief as it might offer from the ceaseless
+ flailing without, he broached his bottle of cognac and drank a
+ little, and found himself the better of it.</p>
+
+ <p>On the evening of the third day his hopes had risen with a
+ slight slackening of the turmoil. He was not sure if the gale had
+ really abated, or if it was only that he was growing accustomed
+ to it. But under that belief, and the compulsion of a growling
+ stomach, he crawled precariously round to the eastern end of the
+ rock where the puffins had their holes, lying flat when the great
+ gusts snatched at him as though they were bent on hurling him
+ into the water, and gliding on again in the intervals. And there,
+ with a piece of his firewood he managed to extort half-a-dozen
+ eggs from fiercely expostulating parents. The end of his stick
+ was bitten to fragments, but he got his eggs, and was amazed at
+ the size of them compared with that of their producers.</p>
+
+ <p>The sight of the great wall of tumbled rocks on his right, and
+ the sudden remembrance of his previous passage over it, set him
+ wondering if it might not be possible to find better shelter in
+ some of those fissures across which he had had to swing himself
+ by the hands on the previous occasion. For this was the leeward
+ side of the island, and the huge bulk of it rose like a
+ protecting shoulder between him and the gale, whereas his
+ bee-hive, on the exposed flank of the rock, got the full force of
+ it. So he scooped a hole in the friable black soil and deposited
+ his eggs in it and crawled along to the wall.</p>
+
+ <p>The tumbled fragments looked much less fearsome than they had
+ done in the fog. He found no difficulty in clambering among them
+ now, when he could see clearly what he was about, and he wormed
+ his way in and out, and up and down, but could not light on any
+ of those tricky spaces which had seemed to him so dangerous
+ before.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, as he crawled under one huge slab, a black void lay
+ before him, of no great width but evidently deep. It took many
+ minutes' peering into the depths to accustom his eyes to the
+ dimness.</p>
+
+ <p>Then it seemed to him that the rough out jutting fragments
+ below would afford a holding, and he swung his feet cautiously
+ down and felt round for foothold.</p>
+
+ <p>Carefully testing everything he touched, he let himself down,
+ inch by inch, assured that if he could go down he could certainly
+ get up again.</p>
+
+ <p>At first the gale still whistled through the crevices among
+ the boulders, but presently he found himself in a silence that
+ was so mighty a change from the ceaseless roar to which he was
+ becoming accustomed, that he felt as though stricken with
+ deafness. Up above him the light filtered down, tempered by the
+ slab under which he had come, and enabled him still to find
+ precarious hand and foot hold.</p>
+
+ <p>But presently his downward progress was barred by a rough
+ flooring of splintered fragments, and he stood panting and looked
+ about him.</p>
+
+ <p>His well was about twenty feet deep, he reckoned, and there
+ were gaping slits here and there which might lead in towards the
+ rock or out towards the sea. He had turned and twisted so much in
+ his descent that it took him some time to decide in which
+ direction the sea might lie and in which the rock. And, having
+ settled that, he wriggled through a crevice and wormed slowly
+ on.</p>
+
+ <p>He was almost in the dark now, and could only feel his way.
+ But he was used to groping in narrow places, and a spirit of
+ investigation urged him on.</p>
+
+ <p>Half an hour's strenuous and cautious worming, and a thin
+ trickle of light glimmered ahead. He turned and worked his way
+ back at once.</p>
+
+ <p>There was no slit opposite the one he had tried, but
+ presently, half-way up the well, he made out an opening like the
+ mouth of a small adit. His back had been to it as he came down,
+ and so he had missed it.</p>
+
+ <p>He climbed up and in, and felt convinced in his own mind that
+ this was no simple work of nature. Nature had no doubt begun, but
+ man had certainly finished it. For the floor level was
+ comparatively free from harshness, and the outjutting projections
+ of the sides and roof had been tempered, and progress was not
+ difficult.</p>
+
+ <p>It was very narrow, however, and very low, and quite dark. He
+ could only drag himself along on his stomach like a worm. But he
+ pushed on with all the ardour of a discoverer.</p>
+
+ <p>Was it silver? Was it smugglers? Or what? Wholly accidental
+ formation he was sure it was not, though he thought it likely
+ that man's handiwork had only turned Nature's to account.</p>
+
+ <p>The fissure had probably been there from the beginning of
+ time, or it might be the result of numberless years of the slow
+ wearing away of a softer vein of rock, but some man at some time
+ had lighted on it, and followed it up, and with much labour had
+ smoothed its natural asperities and used it for his own purposes.
+ And he was keen to learn what those purposes were.</p>
+
+ <p>To any ordinary man, accustomed to the ordinary amplitudes of
+ life, and freedom to stretch his arms and legs and raise his head
+ and fill his lungs with fresh air, a passage such as this would
+ have been impossible. Here and there, indeed, the walls widened
+ somewhat through some fault in the rook, bur for the most part
+ his elbows grazed the sides each time he moved them.</p>
+
+ <p>Even he, used as he was to such conditions, began at last to
+ feel them oppressive. The whole mighty bulk of L'Etat seemed
+ above and about him, malignantly intent on crushing him out of
+ existence.</p>
+
+ <p>He knew that was only fancy. He had experienced it many times
+ before. But the nightmare feeling was there, and it needed all
+ his will at times to keep him from a panic attempt at retreat,
+ when the insensate rock-walls seemed absolutely settling down on
+ him, and breathing was none too easy.</p>
+
+ <p>But going back meant literally going backwards, crawling out
+ toes foremost; for his elbows scraped the walls and his head the
+ roof, and turning was out of the question. The men who had made
+ and used that narrow way had undoubtedly gone with a purpose, and
+ not for pleasure. And he was bound to learn what that purpose
+ was.</p>
+
+ <p>So he set his teeth, and wormed himself slowly along, with
+ pinched face and tight-shut mouth, and nostrils opened wide to
+ take in all the air they could and let out as little as possible.
+ And, even at that, he had to lie still at times, pressed flat
+ against the floor, to let some fresher air trickle in above
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>But at last he came to what he sought, though no whit of it
+ could he see when he got there. By the sudden cessation of the
+ pressure on his sides and head, he was aware of entrance into a
+ larger space, and, with forethought quickened by the exigences of
+ his passage, he lay for a moment to pant more freely and to
+ think.</p>
+
+ <p>His body was in the passage. He knew where the passage led out
+ to. What lay ahead he could not tell.</p>
+
+ <p>If it was a chamber, as he expected, there might quite
+ possibly be other passages leading out of it. And so it would be
+ well to make sure of recognizing this one again before he loosed
+ his hold on it. So he pulled off one boot, and feeling carefully
+ round the opening, placed it just inside as a landmark.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he groped on along the right-hand wall to learn the size
+ of the chamber, and was immediately thankful that his own passage
+ was safely marked, for he came on another opening, and another,
+ and another, and labelled them carefully in his mind, "One, two,
+ three."</p>
+
+ <p>It was truly eerie work, groping there in that dense darkness
+ and utter silence, and trying to the nerves even of one who had
+ never known himself guilty of such things. But, being there, he
+ was determined to learn all he could.</p>
+
+ <p>He clung to his right-hand wall as to a life-rope. If he once
+ got mazed in a place like that he might never taste daylight and
+ upper air again.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the size of the chamber he could so far form no opinion. He
+ would have given much for a light. His flint and steel were
+ indeed in his pocket, but he was sodden through and through, and
+ had no means whatever of catching a spark if he struck one.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, as he groped cautiously along past the third opening,
+ his progress was stayed, and not by rock.</p>
+
+ <p>He was on his knees, his hands feeling blindly, but with
+ infinite enquiry, along the rough rock wall, when he stumbled
+ suddenly over something that lay along the ground. Dropping his
+ hands to save himself from falling, they lighted on that which
+ lay below, and he started back with an exclamation and a shudder.
+ For what he had felt was like the hair and face of a man.</p>
+
+ <p>He crouched back against the wall, his heart thumping like a
+ ship's pump, and the blood belling in his ears, and sat so for
+ very many minutes; sat on, until, in that silent blackness, he
+ could hear the dull, far-away thud of the waves on the outer
+ walls of the island.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, by degrees, he pulled himself together. If it was indeed
+ a man, he was undoubtedly dead, and therefore harmless; and
+ having learned this much he would know more.</p>
+
+ <p>So presently he groped forward, felt again the round head and
+ soft hair, and below it and beyond it a heap of what felt like
+ small oblong packages done up in wrappings of cloth and tied
+ round with cord.</p>
+
+ <p>He picked one up and handled it inquisitively, with a shrewd
+ idea of what might be, or might have been, inside. The cord was
+ very loose, as though the contents had shrunk since it was tied.
+ As he fumbled with it in the dark, it came open and left him no
+ possible room for doubt as to what those contents were. He
+ sneezed till the top of his head seemed like to lift, and the
+ tears ran down his cheeks in an unceasing stream. What had once
+ been tobacco had powdered into snuff, and his rough handling of
+ the package had scattered it broadcast.</p>
+
+ <p>He turned at last, and lay with his head in his arms against
+ the wall until the air should have time to clear, and meanwhile
+ the sneezing had quickened his wits.</p>
+
+ <p>Here was possible tinder, and by means of those dried-up
+ wrappings he might procure a light. If it lasted but five minutes
+ it might enable him to solve the problem on which he had
+ stumbled.</p>
+
+ <p>He groped again for the opened package, and found it on the
+ dead man's face. The wrapper was of tarred cloth, almost perished
+ with age, dry and friable. Shaking out the rest of the snuff at
+ arm's length, he picked the stuff to pieces and shredded it into
+ tinder. Then he felt about for half-a-dozen more packages,
+ carefully slipped their cords and emptied out their contents, and
+ getting out his flint and steel, flaked sparks into the tinder
+ till it caught and flared, and the interior of the cavern leaped
+ at him out of its darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>He rolled up one of the empty wrappers like a torch, and lit
+ it, and looked about him.</p>
+
+ <p>His first hasty glance fell on the dead man, and he got
+ another shock from the fact that his feet were lashed together
+ with stout rope, and probably his hands also, for they were
+ behind his back, and he lay face upward. His coat and
+ short-clothes and buckled shoes spoke of long by-gone days, and
+ the skin of his face was brown and shrivelled, so that the bones
+ beneath showed grim and gaunt.</p>
+
+ <p>Beyond him was a great heap of the same small packages of
+ tobacco, and alongside them a pile of small kegs. Gard lit
+ another of his torches, and stepped gingerly over to them. He
+ sounded one or two, but found them empty. Time had shrunk their
+ stout timbers and tapped their contents.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he held up his flickering light and looked quickly round
+ this prison-house which had turned into a tomb, and shivered, as
+ a dim idea of what it all meant came over him.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a large, low, natural rock chamber, and all round the
+ walls were black slits which might mean it passages leading on
+ into the bowels of the island. To investigate them all would mean
+ the work of many days.</p>
+
+ <p>The dead man, the perished packages, the empty
+ kegs&mdash;there was nothing else, except his own boot lying in
+ the mouth of the largest of the black slits, as though anxious on
+ its own account to be gone.</p>
+
+ <p>The still air was already becoming heavy with the pungent
+ smoke of his torches. He stepped cautiously across to the body
+ again, and picked a couple of buttons from the coat. They came
+ off in his hand, and when he touched the buckles on the shoes
+ they did the same. Then he turned and made for his waiting shoe
+ just as his last torch went out.</p>
+
+ <p>The smell of the fresh salt air, when he wriggled out into the
+ well, was almost as good as a feast to him. He climbed hastily to
+ the surface, and, as he crept out from under the topmost slab,
+ took careful note of its position, and then scored with a piece
+ of rock each stone which led up to it. For, if ever he should
+ need an inner sanctuary, here was one to his hand, and evidently
+ quite unknown to the present generation of Sark men.</p>
+
+ <p>He recovered his eggs, and crept round the shoulder of the
+ rock. The gale pounced on him like a tiger on its half-escaped
+ prey. It beat him flat, worried him, did its best to tear him off
+ and fling him into the sea. But&mdash;Heavens!&mdash;how sweet it
+ was after the musty quiet of the death-chamber below!</p>
+
+ <p>Inch by inch, he worked his way back in the teeth of it, and
+ crawled spent into his bee-hive. Then, ravenous with his
+ exertions, he broke one of his eggs into his tin dipper, and
+ forthwith emptied it outside, and the gale swept away the awful
+ smell of it.</p>
+
+ <p>The next was as bad, and his hopes sank to nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>The third, however, was all right. He mixed it with some
+ cognac and whipped it up with a stick, and the growlers inside
+ fought over it contentedly.</p>
+
+ <p>He was almost afraid to try another. However, he could get
+ more to-morrow. So he broke the fourth, and found it also good,
+ so whipped it up with more cognac, and felt happier than he had
+ done since he nibbled his rabbit-bones.</p>
+
+ <p>As he lay that night, and the gale howled about him more
+ furiously than ever, his thoughts ran constantly on the dead man
+ lying in the silent darkness down below.</p>
+
+ <p>It was very quiet down there, and dry; but this roaring
+ turmoil, with its thunderous crashings and hurtling spray, was
+ infinitely more to his taste, wet though he was to the bone, and
+ almost deafened with the ceaseless uproar. For this, terrible
+ though it was in its majestic fury, was life, and that black
+ stillness below was death.</p>
+
+ <p>To the tune of the tumult without, he worked out the dead
+ man's story in his mind.</p>
+
+ <p>It was long ago in the old smuggling days. Some bold
+ free-trader of Sark or Guernsey had lighted on that cave and used
+ it as a storehouse. Some too energetic revenue officer had
+ disappeared one day and never been heard of again. He had been
+ surprised&mdash;by the free-traders&mdash;perhaps in the very act
+ of surprising them&mdash;brought over to L'Etat in a boat, been
+ dragged through the tunnel, or made to crawl through, perhaps,
+ with vicious knife-digs in the rear, and had been left bound in
+ the darkness till he should be otherwise disposed of. His captors
+ had been captured in turn, or maybe killed, and he had lain there
+ alone and in the dark, waiting, waiting for them to return,
+ shouting now and again into the muffling darkness, struggling
+ with his bonds, growing weaker and weaker, faint with hunger, mad
+ with thirst, until at last he died.</p>
+
+ <p>It was horrible to think of, and desperate as his own state
+ was, he thanked God heartily that he was not as that other.</p>
+
+ <p>Morning brought no slackening of the gale. It seemed to him,
+ if anything, to be waxing still more furious.</p>
+
+ <p>He had only two eggs left, and they might both be bad ones,
+ but he would not have ventured round the headland that day for
+ all the eggs in existence.</p>
+
+ <p>He broke one presently, in answer to a clamour inside him that
+ would brook no denial, and found it good, and lived on it that
+ day, and mused between times on the strange fact that a man could
+ feel so mightily grateful for the difference between a bad egg
+ and a good one.</p>
+
+ <p>His sixth egg turned out a good one also, and the next day
+ there came another hopeful lull, which permitted him to harry the
+ puffins once more, and gave him a dozen chances against
+ contingencies.</p>
+
+ <p>On the eighth day the storm blew itself out, and he looked
+ hopefully across at the lonely and weather-beaten cliffs of Sark
+ for the relief which he was certain they had been aching to send
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>The waves, however, still ran high, and, though he did not
+ know it till later, there was not a boat left afloat round the
+ whole Island. The forethoughtful and weather-wise had run them
+ round to the Creux and carried them through the tunnel into the
+ roadway behind. All the rest had been smashed and sunk and
+ swallowed by the storm.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXVI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW HE HELD THE ROCK</h3>
+
+ <p>The sun blazed hot next day, and he spread himself out in it
+ to warm, and all his soaked things in it to dry, and blessed it
+ for its wholesome vigour.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance or Bernel would be sure to come as soon as the tide
+ served at night, and he would net be sorry for a change of diet;
+ meanwhile, he could get along all right with the unwilling
+ assistance of the puffins.</p>
+
+ <p>The birds had all crept out of their hiding-places, and were
+ wheeling and diving and making up for lost time and busily
+ discussing late events at the tops of their voices whenever their
+ bills were not otherwise occupied. Where they had all hidden
+ themselves during the storm, he could not imagine, but there
+ seemed to be as many of them as ever, and they were all quite
+ happy and quarrelsome, except the cormorants, who were so
+ ravenous that they could not spare a moment from their diving and
+ gobbling, even to quarrel with their neighbours.</p>
+
+ <p>He levied on the puffins again, and, after a meal, prowled
+ curiously about his rock to see what damage the storm had done,
+ but to his surprise found almost none.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed incredible that all should be the same after the
+ deadly onslaught of the gale. But it was only in the valley of
+ rocks that he found any consequences.</p>
+
+ <p>There the huge boulders had been hurled about like marbles:
+ some had been tossed overboard, and some, in their fantastic
+ up-piling, spoke eloquently of all they had suffered.</p>
+
+ <p>But one grim&mdash;though to him wholly gracious&mdash;deed
+ the storm had wrought there. For, out of the pool where the
+ devil-fish dwelt, its monstrous limbs streamed up and lay over
+ the sloping rocks, and he dared not venture near. But, in the
+ afternoon when he came again to look at it, and found it still in
+ the same attitude, something about it struck him as odd and
+ unusual.</p>
+
+ <p>The great tentacles had never moved, so far as he could see,
+ and there was surely something wrong with a devil-fish that did
+ not move.</p>
+
+ <p>He hurled a stone, picked out of the landslip at the corner,
+ and hit a tentacle full and fair with a dull thud like leather.
+ But the beast never moved.</p>
+
+ <p>He was suspicious of the wily one, however. The devil, he
+ knew, was sometimes busiest when he made least show of business.
+ And it was not till next morning, when he found the monster still
+ as before, that he ventured down to the pool and looked into it,
+ and saw what had happened.</p>
+
+ <p>The waves had hurled a huge boulder into it&mdash;and there
+ you may see it to this day&mdash;and it had fallen on the
+ devil-fish and ground him flat, and purged the rock of a
+ horror.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard examined the hideous tentacles with the curiosity of
+ intensest repulsion; yet could not but stand amazed at the
+ wonderful delicacy and finish displayed in the tiny powerful
+ suckers with which each limb was furnished on the under side, and
+ the flexible muscularity of the monstrous limbs themselves, thick
+ as his biceps where they came out of the pool, and tapering to a
+ worm-like point, capable, it seemed to him, of picking up a
+ pin.</p>
+
+ <p>He was mightily glad the beast was dead, however. It had been
+ a blot on Nature's handiwork, and the very thought of it a
+ horror.</p>
+
+ <p>The strenuous interlude of the storm, which, to the lonely one
+ exposed to its fullest fury, had seemed interminable&mdash;every
+ shivering day the length of many, and the black howling nights
+ longer still&mdash;had had the effect of relaxing somewhat his
+ own oversight over himself and his precautions against being
+ seen.</p>
+
+ <p>L'Etat in a furious sou'-wester is a sight worth seeing.
+ Possibly some telescope had been brought to bear on the
+ foam-swept rock when he, secure in the general bouleversement and
+ cramped with hunger, had turned the forbidden corner with no
+ thought in his mind but eggs.</p>
+
+ <p>Possibly again, it was sheer carelessness on his part, born
+ once more of the security of the storm and the recent
+ non-necessity for concealment.</p>
+
+ <p>However it came about, what happened was that, as he stood in
+ the valley of rocks examining his dead monster, he became
+ suddenly aware that a fishing-boat had crept round the open end
+ of the valley, and that it seemed to him much closer in than he
+ had ever seen one before.</p>
+
+ <p>He dropped prone among the boulders at once, but whether he
+ had been seen he could not tell&mdash;could only vituperate his
+ own carelessness, and hope that nothing worse might come of
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay there a very long time, and when at last he ventured to
+ crawl to the rocks at the seaward opening, the boat was away on
+ the usual fishing-grounds busy with its own concerns, and he
+ persuaded himself that its somewhat unusual course had been
+ accidental. The incident, however, braced him to his former
+ caution, and he went no more abroad without first carefully
+ inspecting the surrounding waters from the ridge.</p>
+
+ <p>They would be certain to come that night, he felt sure, either
+ Nance or Bernel, perhaps both. Yes, he thought most likely they
+ would both come. They would, without doubt, be wondering how he
+ had fared during the storm, and would be making provision for
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps Nance was cooking for him at that very moment, and
+ thinking of him as he was of her.</p>
+
+ <p>In the certain expectation of their coming, he decided he
+ would not go to sleep at all that night, but would crawl down to
+ the landing-place to welcome them.</p>
+
+ <p>He wondered if that mad woman Julie had given up watching
+ them, and, if not, if they would be able to circumvent her again.
+ In any case, he hoped that if only one of them came it might be
+ Nance. He fairly ached for the sight and sound of her&mdash;and
+ the feel of her little hand, and a warm frank kiss from the lips
+ that knew no guile.</p>
+
+ <p>The sufferings of the storm became as nothing to him in this
+ large hope and expectation of her coming.</p>
+
+ <p>The intervening hours dragged slowly. It would be half-ebb
+ soon after dark, he thought; and he crept up to the ridge and
+ gazed anxiously over at the Race between him and Breni&egrave;re,
+ to see if it showed any unusual symptoms after the storm.</p>
+
+ <p>It ran furiously enough, but, he said to himself, it would
+ slacken on the ebb, and they were so familiar with it that it
+ would take more than that to stop them coming.</p>
+
+ <p>Before dark the great seas were rolling past, a little quicker
+ than usual, he thought, but in long, smooth undulations, which
+ slipped, unbroken and soundless, even along the black ledges of
+ his rock. And when the stars came out&mdash;brighter than ever
+ with the burnishing of the gale&mdash;the long black backs of the
+ waves, and the darker hollows between, were sown so thick with
+ trailing gleams that he could not be certain whether it was only
+ star-shine or phosphorescence.</p>
+
+ <p>It was all very peaceful and beautiful, however, and very
+ welcome to eyes that had not looked upon sun, moon, or star for
+ eight whole nights and days, and whose ears had grown hardened to
+ the ceaseless clamour of the gale. Nature, indeed, seemed
+ preternaturally quiet, as though exhausted with her previous
+ violence or desirous of wiping out the remembrance of it; just as
+ small humanity after an outbreak endeavours at times to purge the
+ memory of its offence by display of unusual amiability and
+ sweetness.</p>
+
+ <p>Eager to welcome his confidently expected visitors, Gard crept
+ along the ridge as soon as it was dark, and posted himself on the
+ point which, in the daylight, commanded the passage from
+ Breni&egrave;re.</p>
+
+ <p>And he sat there so long&mdash;so long after his hopes and
+ wishes had flown over to Sark and hurried Bernel and Nance into a
+ boat and landed them on L'Etat&mdash;that the night seemed
+ running out, and he began to fear they were not coming, after
+ all.</p>
+
+ <p>In the troubled darkness of the Race, he caught gleams at
+ times which might be oar-blades or might be only the upfling from
+ the perils below. The tide was ebbing, and soon the black fangs
+ with which it was strewn would be showing.</p>
+
+ <p>At times he convinced himself that the brief gleams moved; but
+ when, to ease his eyes of the intolerable strain, he looked up at
+ the stars, it seemed to him that they moved also, and so he could
+ not be sure.</p>
+
+ <p>But surely there was a gleam that seemed to move and come
+ fitfully towards him&mdash;or was it only star-shine dancing on
+ the waves of the Race which always ran against the tide?</p>
+
+ <p>He stood to watch, then lost the gleam, and crouched again
+ disappointed.</p>
+
+ <p>The boat must come round Quette d'Amont, the great pile of
+ rock that lay off the eastern corner, and the first glimpse he
+ could hope to get of it in the darkness would be there.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, suddenly, in that curious way in which one sometimes
+ sees more out of the tail of one's eye than out of the front of
+ it, he got an impression&mdash;and with it a start&mdash;of
+ something moving noiselessly among the tumbled rocks below on his
+ left.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a dark night, but the glory of the stars lifted it out
+ of the ebony-ruler category. It was a wide, thin, lofty darkness,
+ but still black enough along the sides of his rock, and down
+ there it seemed to him that something moved, something dim and
+ shadowy and silent.</p>
+
+ <p>He thought of the dead man in his chamber down below. Could he
+ be in the habit of walking of a night? He thought of ghosts, of
+ which, if popular belief was anything to go by, Sark was full;
+ and there was nothing to hinder them coming across to L'Etat for
+ their Sabbat. And he thought of monster devil-fish climbing,
+ loathsome and soundless, about the dark rocks.</p>
+
+ <p>He longed for a pair of Sark eyes, and shrank down into a
+ hollow under the ridge to watch this thing, with something of a
+ creepy chill between his shoulder-blades.</p>
+
+ <p>There was certainly something lighter than the surrounding
+ darkness down below, and it moved. It turned the corner and
+ flitted along the slope, slowly but surely, in the direction of
+ his shelter. Its mode of progression, from the little he could
+ make out in the darkness, was just such as he would have looked
+ for in a huge octopus hauling itself along by its tentacles over
+ the out-cropping rock-bones.</p>
+
+ <p>He could not rest there. He must see. He crawled along the
+ ridge as quietly as he could manage it, and would have felt
+ happier, whatever it was, spirit or monster, if he had had his
+ gun. Now and again it stopped, and when it stopped he lay flat to
+ the ground and held his breath, lest it should discover him. When
+ it went on, he went on.</p>
+
+ <p>When he came to the end of the ridge he saw that the nebulous
+ something had apparently stopped just where his house must
+ be.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, every sense on the strain, he heard his own name
+ called softly, and he laughed to himself for very joy of it, and
+ lay still to hear it again, and laughed once more to think that
+ in her simplicity she still thought of him as "Mr. Gard." He
+ would teach her to call him "Steen," as his mother used to
+ do.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he got up quickly and cried, as softly as herself, but
+ with joy and laughter in his voice&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, Nance! My dear, I was not sure whether you were a ghost
+ or a devil-fish;" and he sprang down towards her.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, to his amazement, he saw that she was clad only in
+ the clinging white garment in which he had seen her swim.</p>
+
+ <p>Her next words confounded him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is Bernel here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bernel, Nance? No, dear, he is not here. Why&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Did he not get here last night?" she jerked sharply.</p>
+
+ <p>"No. No one. I was hoping&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But she had sunk down against the great stones of the shelter,
+ with her hands before her face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Gyu, mon Gyu! Then he is dead! Oh, my poor one! My dear
+ one!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance! Nance! What is it all, dearest? Did Bernel try to come
+ across last night&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes! He would come. He said you must be starving. We
+ were all anxious about you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And he tried to swim across?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes! And he is drowned! Oh, my poor, poor boy!"</p>
+
+ <p>She was shaking with the sudden chill of dreadful loss. He
+ stooped, and felt inside the shelter with a long arm for the old
+ woollen cloak and wrapped her carefully in it. He raked out the
+ blanket and made her sit with it tucked about her feet. And she
+ was passive in his hands, with thought as yet for nothing but her
+ loss.</p>
+
+ <p>She was shaken with broken sobs, and in the face of grief such
+ as this he could find no words. What could he say? All the words
+ in the world could not bring back the dead.</p>
+
+ <p>And it was through him this great sorrow had come upon her. He
+ seemed fated to bring misfortune on their house.</p>
+
+ <p>He wondered if she would hate him for it, though she must know
+ he had had no more to do with the matter than with Tom's
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>He put a protecting arm round the old cloak, tentatively, and
+ in some fear lest she might resent it, but knew no other way to
+ convey to her what was in his heart.</p>
+
+ <p>But she did not resent it, and nothing was further from her
+ mind than imputing any share in this loss to him.</p>
+
+ <p>Some women's hearts are so wonderfully constituted that the
+ greater the demands upon them the more they are prepared to give.
+ At times they give and give beyond the bounds of reason, and yet
+ amazingly retain their faith and hope in the recipients of their
+ gifts.</p>
+
+ <p>But that has nothing to do with our story. Except
+ this&mdash;that these various demands on Nance's fortitude,
+ incurred by her love for Stephen Gard, far from weakening her
+ love only made it the stronger. As that love came more and more
+ between her and her old surroundings, and exacted from her
+ sacrifice after sacrifice, the more she clung to it, and looked
+ to it, and let the past go. The partial ostracism brought upon
+ her by Gard's outspoken declaration of their mutual
+ feeling&mdash;even this final offering of her dearly-loved
+ brother&mdash;these only bound her heart to him the tighter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance dear!" he said at last, when she had got control of
+ herself again. "Is it not possible to hope? He was so good a
+ swimmer. Maybe he found the Race too strong and was carried away
+ by it. He may have been picked up, and will come back as soon as
+ he is able."</p>
+
+ <p>"No," she said, with gloomy decision. "He is dead. I feared
+ for him, for I had been to look at the Race just before sundown,
+ and it looked terribly strong. But he would go&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why didn't he get a boat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, mon Gyu!" and she started up wildly. "I was forgetting. I
+ was thinking only of myself and Bernel. There isn't a boat left
+ alive outside the Creux, and he couldn't get one there without
+ them knowing. But"&mdash;in quick excitement now, to make up for
+ lost time&mdash;"they have seen you here, and they may come
+ to-night&mdash;Achochre that I am! They may be here! Come
+ quickly! Your gun!" and she was all on the quiver to be gone.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard stooped and pulled out the gun from its hiding-place
+ inside the shelter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it loaded?" she asked sharply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. I cleaned it to-day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Take your charges with you, and do you hasten back to the
+ place we landed the first night. You know?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know. And you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will go to the other landing-place. But they are not likely
+ to come there."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if they do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will manage them," and she slipped into the darkness with
+ the big cloak about her.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard crept along the slope, and found a roost above the
+ landing-place.</p>
+
+ <p>His brain was in a whirl. Bernel had tried to cross to him and
+ was drowned. Nance had swum across. Brave girl! Wonderful girl!
+ For him!&mdash;and for news of Bernel. It was terrible to think
+ of Bernel, dead on his account&mdash;terrible! It would not be
+ surprising if Nance hated him. Yet, what had he done?&mdash;what
+ could he do? He had done nothing. He could do nothing; and his
+ teeth ground savagely at the craziness of these wild Sark men who
+ had brought it all about, and at his own utter impotence.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance did not hate him. And she had swum that dreadful
+ Race to warn him. Brave girl! Wonderful girl!</p>
+
+ <p>And then&mdash;surely the grinding of an oar, as it wrought
+ upon the gunwale against an ill-fitted thole-pin&mdash;out there
+ by the Quette d'Amont!</p>
+
+ <p>His eyes and ears strained into the darkness till they felt
+ like cracking.</p>
+
+ <p>And the muffled growl of voices!</p>
+
+ <p>His heart thumped so, they might have heard it.</p>
+
+ <p>He must wait till he was sure they meant to come in. But they
+ must not come too close.</p>
+
+ <p>It was an ill landing in the dark, and there were various
+ opinions on it. But there was no doubt as to their intentions.
+ They were coming in.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sheer off there!" cried Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>Dead silence below. They had come in some doubt, but their
+ doubts were solved now, and there was no longer need for curbed
+ tongues, though, indeed, his hollow voice made some of them
+ wonder if it was not a spirit that spoke to them.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's him!" "The man himself!" "We have him!" "In now and get
+ him!"&mdash;was the burden of their growls, as they hung on their
+ oars.</p>
+
+ <p>"See here, men!" said Gard, invisible even to Sark eyes,
+ against the solid darkness of the slope. "There has been trouble
+ and loss enough over this matter already, and none of it my
+ making. Do you hear? I say again&mdash;none of it my making. If
+ you attempt to come ashore there will be more trouble, and this
+ time it will be of my making. Keep back!"&mdash;as an impulsive
+ one gave a tug at his oar. "If you force me to fire, your blood
+ be on your own heads. I give you fair warning."</p>
+
+ <p>Growls from the boat carried up to him an impression of mixed
+ doubt and discomfort&mdash;ultimate disbelief in his possession
+ of arms, an energetic oath or two, and another creak of the
+ oar.</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well! Here's to show you I am armed." The report of his
+ gun made Nance jump, at the other side of the island, and set all
+ the birds on L'Etat&mdash;except the puffins, deep in their
+ holes&mdash;circling and screaming.</p>
+
+ <p>The small shot tore up the water within a couple of yards of
+ the boat, which backed off hastily&mdash;much to his
+ satisfaction, for he had feared they might rush him before he had
+ time to reload.</p>
+
+ <p>He had dropped flat after firing and recharged his gun as he
+ lay. He was sure they must have come armed, and feared a volley
+ as soon as his own discharge indicated his whereabouts.</p>
+
+ <p>As a matter of fact, they had come divided as to the truth of
+ the report that there was a man on L'Etat&mdash;even then as to
+ him being the man they sought. In any case, they had expected to
+ take him unawares, and never dreamt of his being armed and on the
+ watch for them.</p>
+
+ <p>Thanks to Nance, he had turned the tables on them. It was they
+ who were taken unawares.</p>
+
+ <p>But if he spoke again, he said to himself, they would be ready
+ for him, and their answers would probably take the rude form of
+ bullets. So he lay still and waited.</p>
+
+ <p>There was a growling disputation in the boat. Then one
+ spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"See then, you, Gard! We will haff you yet, now we know where
+ you are. If it takes effery man and effery boat in Sark, we will
+ haff you, now we know where you are. You do not kill a Sark man
+ like that and go free. Noh&mdash;pardie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have killed no man&mdash;" A gun rang out in the boat, and
+ the shot spatted on the rocks not a yard from him.</p>
+
+ <p>Coming in, they knew, meant certain death for one among them,
+ and, keen as they were to lay hands on him, no man had any wish
+ to be that one.</p>
+
+ <p>The oars creaked away into the darkness, and he climbed to the
+ ridge to make sure they made no attempt on the other side.</p>
+
+ <p>But discretion had prevailed. One man could not hold L'Etat
+ from invasion at half-a-dozen points at once. They could bide
+ their time, and take him by force of numbers.</p>
+
+ <p>He heard them go creaking off towards the Creux, and turned
+ and went back along the ridge to find Nance.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXVII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN</h3>
+
+ <p>Nance was standing by the shelter, and even in the darkness he
+ could tell that she was shaking, in spite of her previous
+ vigorous incitement to defence.</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you didn't kill any of them?" she asked
+ anxiously.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, dear. I warned them off and fired into the water to show
+ them I was armed."</p>
+
+ <p>"I was afraid. But, there were two shots."</p>
+
+ <p>"One of them fired back the next time I spoke, but I was
+ expecting it."</p>
+
+ <p>"They are wicked, wicked men, and cruel."</p>
+
+ <p>"They are mistaken, that's all. But it comes to much the same
+ thing, and I don't see," he said despondently, "how we are ever
+ to prove it to them."</p>
+
+ <p>"They will come again."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, they are to come back with every man and every boat in
+ the Island. I shall have my hands full. Are there more than these
+ two places where they can land?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not good places, and these only when the sea is right. But
+ angry men&mdash;and ready to shoot you&mdash;oh, it is
+ wicked&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"We must hope the sea will keep them off, and that something
+ may turn up to throw some light on the other matter," he said,
+ trying to comfort her, though, in truth, the outlook was not
+ hopeful, and he feared himself that his time might be short.</p>
+
+ <p>"I will stop here and help you," she said, with sudden
+ vehemence. "They shall not have you. They shall not! They are
+ wicked, crazy men," and the little cloaked figure shook again
+ with the spirit that was in it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear!" he said, putting his arm round her, and drawing her
+ close. "You must not stop. They must not know you have been here.
+ I do not know what the end will be. We are in God's hands, and we
+ have done no wrong. But if ... if the worst comes, you will
+ remember all your life, dear, that to one man you were as an
+ angel from heaven. Nance! Nance! Oh, my dear, how can I tell you
+ all you are to me!"&mdash;and as he pressed her to him, the bare
+ white arms stole out of the cloak and clasped him tightly round
+ the neck.</p>
+
+ <p>"But how are you going to get back, little one? You cannot
+ possibly swim that Race again?" he asked presently, holding her
+ still in his arms and looking down at her anxiously.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I can swim," she said valiantly. "I knew it would be
+ worse than usual, and I brought these"&mdash;and she slipped from
+ his arms and groped on the ground, and presently held up what
+ felt to him in the darkness like a pair of inflated bladders with
+ a broad band between them. "And here is a little bread and meat,
+ all I could carry tied on to my head. We feared you would be
+ starving."</p>
+
+ <p>"You should not have burdened yourself, dear. It might have
+ drowned you. And I have eggs&mdash;puffins'&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach!"</p>
+
+ <p>"They are better than nothing, and I beat them up with cognac.
+ But are you safe in the Race, Nance dear, even with those
+ things?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You cannot sink. If Bernel had only taken them! But he
+ laughed at them, and now&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>He kissed her sobs away, but was full of anxiety at thought of
+ her in the rushing darkness of the Race.</p>
+
+ <p>"I will go with you," he said eagerly, "and you will lend me
+ your bladders to get back with."</p>
+
+ <p>"You would never get back to L'Etat in the dark"&mdash;and he
+ knew that that was true. "We of Sark can see, but you
+ others&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall be in misery till I know you are all right," he said
+ anxiously.</p>
+
+ <p>"I will run home. My things are in the gorse above
+ Breni&egrave;re. And I will get a lantern and come down by
+ Breni&egrave;re and wave it to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you do that? It will be like a signal from heaven," he
+ said eagerly, "a signal from heaven waved by an angel from
+ heaven."</p>
+
+ <p>"And to-morrow I will go to the Vicar, and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and the Seigneur, if he has come home,
+ and I will make them stop these wicked men from coming here
+ again."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can they?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They shall. They must. They are the law and it is not
+ right."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is worth trying, at any rate," he said cheerfully, as they
+ reached the eastern corner and struck down across his
+ puffin-warren to the point immediately opposite Breni&egrave;re.
+ But he had not much hope that the Vicar and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and the Seigneur all combined would avail
+ him, for the men of Sark are a law unto themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>"But I've found another hiding-place, Nance, where they could
+ never find me."</p>
+
+ <p>"Here?&mdash;on L'Etat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes&mdash;inside. I'll show you some time, perhaps,
+ if&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Is this where you came ashore?" he asked, as she came to a
+ stand on a rough black shelf up which the waves hissed white and
+ venomous.</p>
+
+ <p>"We&mdash;we always landed here when we swam across," she
+ said, with a little break in her voice, as it came home to her
+ again that Bernel would swim the Race no more.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance dear, don't give up hope. He may come back yet."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have only you left, and they want to kill you," she said
+ sadly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish I could come with you," as the dark waters swirled
+ below them. "It feels terrible to let you go into that all
+ alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is nothing. The tide is dead slack, and I have
+ these"&mdash;swinging the bladders in her hand&mdash;"if I get
+ tired. Oh, if Bern had only taken them&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will kneel on the ridge and pray for your safety till I see
+ your light. Dear, God keep you, and bless you for all your
+ goodness and courage!"</p>
+
+ <p>He strained her to him again, as if he could not let her go to
+ that colder embrace that awaited her below.</p>
+
+ <p>"I could kiss the very rocks you have stood on," he said
+ passionately.</p>
+
+ <p>She kissed him back and dropped the cloak, waited a second
+ till a wave had swirled by, then launched into the slack of it,
+ and was gone.</p>
+
+ <p>He stood long, peering and listening into the darkness, but
+ heard only the welter of the water under the black ledges below,
+ and its scornful hiss as it seethed through the fringing
+ sea-weeds.</p>
+
+ <p>Then at last he turned and climbed, slowly and heavily, up to
+ the ridge; for now he felt the strain of these last full hours,
+ coming on top of the longer strain of the storm; and this, and
+ the lack of proper feeding, made him feel weak and empty and
+ weary. He knelt down there in the darkness, with his face towards
+ the Race where Nance was battling with the hungry black waters,
+ and he prayed for her safety as he had never prayed for anything
+ in his life before.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>God keep her! God keep her! God keep her&mdash;and bring her
+ safe to land! O God, keep her, keep her, keep her, and bring her
+ safe to land!</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>It was a monotonous little prayer, but all his heart was in
+ it, and that is all that makes a prayer avail. And when at last,
+ from sheer weariness, he sank down on to his heels in science,
+ gazing earnestly out into the blackness of the night, his heart
+ prayed on though his lips no longer moved.</p>
+
+ <p>Could anything have happened to her? Could the black waters
+ have swallowed her?</p>
+
+ <p>Anything might have happened to her. The waters might have
+ swallowed her, as they had Bernel.</p>
+
+ <p>The thoughts would surge up behind his prayer, but he prayed
+ them down&mdash;again and again&mdash;and clung to his prayer and
+ his hope.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed hours since they parted, since his last glimpse of
+ her as the black waters swallowed the slim white figure, and
+ seemed to laugh scornfully at its smallness and weakness.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Oh, Nance! Nance! God keep you! God keep you! God keep you!
+ Dear one, God keep you! God keep you! God keep you, and bring you
+ safe to land</i>!"</p>
+
+ <p>He was numb with kneeling. If one had come behind him and cut
+ off his feet above the ankles, he would have felt no pain. He
+ felt no bodily sensation whatever. His body was there on the
+ rock, but his heart was out upon the black waters alongside
+ Nance, struggling with her through the belching coils, nerving
+ her through the treacherous swirls. And his soul&mdash;all that
+ was most really and truly him&mdash;was agonizing in prayer for
+ her before the God to whom he had prayed at his mother's knee,
+ and whom she had taught him to look to as a friend and helper in
+ all times of need.</p>
+
+ <p>He did not even stop&mdash;as he well might have done&mdash;to
+ think that the friend sought only in time of need might have
+ reasonable ground for complaint of neglect at other times.</p>
+
+ <p>He thought of nothing but that Nance was out there battling
+ with the black waters&mdash;that he could not lift a finger to
+ help her&mdash;that all he could do was to pray for her safety
+ with all his heart and soul.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, after an age of this numb agony of waiting, a tiny bead
+ of light flickered on the outer darkness, as though Hope with a
+ golden pin-point had pricked the black curtain of despair, and
+ let a gleam of her glory peep through. It swung to and fro, and
+ he fell forward with his face in his ice-cold hands and sobbed,
+ "Thank God! Thank God! She is safe! She is safe!"</p>
+
+ <p>When he tried to get up, his legs gave way under him, and he
+ had to sit and wait till they recovered. And when at last he got
+ under way along the ridge, he stumbled like a drunken man.</p>
+
+ <p>He tangled his feet in the blanket and fell in a heap. He
+ wondered dimly where the cloak was&mdash;remembered Nance had
+ worn it till she took to the sea&mdash;and stumbled off through
+ the dark again to find it. Nance had worn it. To him it was
+ sacred.</p>
+
+ <p>When he got back with it, he wrapped it round him and crept
+ into his shelter and slept like a dog.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXVIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END</h3>
+
+ <p>He woke next morning with a start. The sun was high, by the
+ shadow of his doorway; and by that same token the tide would be
+ at half-ebb, if not lower, and the gates of his fortress at his
+ enemy's mercy.</p>
+
+ <p>He picked up his gun, listened anxiously for sound of him, and
+ then crept cautiously out, with a quick glance along each
+ slope.</p>
+
+ <p>Nothing!&mdash;nothing but the cheerful sun and the cloudless
+ sky, and the empty blue plain of the sea, and the birds circling
+ and diving and squabbling as usual&mdash;and Nance's little
+ parcel lying where she had dropped it. He had had other things to
+ think about last night.</p>
+
+ <p>The composure of the birds reassured him somewhat. Still, they
+ might have landed on the other side of the rock and be lying in
+ wait for him.</p>
+
+ <p>He picked up Nance's parcel with a feeling of reverence. It
+ might have cost her her life, in spite of her bladders. Then he
+ climbed cautiously to the ridge and peered over.</p>
+
+ <p>Sark lay basking in the sunshine, peaceful and placid, as if
+ no son of hers had ever had an ill thought of his neighbour, much
+ less sought his blood.</p>
+
+ <p>Not a boat was in sight, and the birds on the north slope
+ seemed as undisturbed as their fellows on the south.</p>
+
+ <p>The invasion in force needed time perhaps to prepare and would
+ be all the more conclusive when completed.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, he would eat and watch at the same time, for he
+ felt as empty as a drum, and an empty man is not in the pinkest
+ of condition for a fight.</p>
+
+ <p>Never in his life had he tasted bread so sweet!&mdash;and the
+ strips of boiled bacon in between came surely from a most unusual
+ pig&mdash;a porker of sorts, without a doubt, and of most
+ extraordinary attainment in the nice balancing of lean and fat,
+ and the induing of both with vital juices of the utmost strength
+ and sweetness. Truly, a most celestial pig!&mdash;and he was very
+ hungry.</p>
+
+ <p>Had he been a pagan he would most likely have offered a
+ portion of his slim rations as thank-offering to his gods, for
+ they had come to him at risk of a girl's life. As it was, he ate
+ them very thoughtfully to the very last crumb, and was
+ grateful.</p>
+
+ <p>They had been wrapped in a piece of white linen, and then tied
+ tightly in oiled cloth, and were hardly damped with sea-water.
+ The piece of linen and the oiled cloth and the bits of cord he
+ folded up carefully and put inside his coat.</p>
+
+ <p>They spoke of Nance. If they had drowned her she would have
+ gone with them tied on to her head. He took them out again, and
+ kissed them, and put them back.</p>
+
+ <p>Thank God, she had got through safely! Thank God! Thank
+ God!</p>
+
+ <p>He shivered in the blaze of the sun as his eyes rested on the
+ waves of the Race, bristling up against the run of the tide as
+ usual, and he thought of what it might have meant to him this
+ morning.</p>
+
+ <p>It had swallowed Bernel. In spite of his hopeful words to
+ Nance, he feared the brave lad was gone. And it might have
+ swallowed Nance. And if it had&mdash;it might as well have him,
+ too. For it was only thought of Nance that made life bearable to
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>The sun wheeled his silvery dance along the waters; the day
+ wore on;&mdash;and still no sign of the invaders. Sark looked as
+ utterly deserted as it must have done in the lone days after the
+ monks left it, when, for two hundred years, it was given over to
+ the birds, till de Carteret and his merry men came across from
+ Jersey and woke it up to life again.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, of a sudden, his heart kicked within him as if it
+ would climb into his throat and choke him; for, round the distant
+ point of the L&acirc;ches, a boat had stolen out, and, as he
+ watched it anxiously, there came another, and another, and
+ another. They were coming!</p>
+
+ <p>Four boat-loads! That ought to be enough to make full sure of
+ him. He wondered why they had not come sooner, for the tide was
+ on the rise, and the landing-places did not look tempting.</p>
+
+ <p>His gun was under his hand, and his powder-flask and his
+ little bag of shot. He had no more preparations to make, and he
+ had no wish to fight.</p>
+
+ <p>No wish? The thought of it was hateful to him, and yet it was
+ not in human nature to give in without a struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>But it should be all their doing. All he wanted was to be left
+ in peace. Every man has the right to defend his own life.</p>
+
+ <p>But then, again&mdash;there could be only one end to it, he
+ knew. So why fight?</p>
+
+ <p>They were coming to make an end of him. What good was it to
+ make an end of any of them?</p>
+
+ <p>Even if he should succeed in keeping them off this time, the
+ end would come all the same, only it would be longer of coming.
+ Why prolong it?</p>
+
+ <p>The boats came bounding on like hounds at sight of the quarry.
+ They were well filled, four or five men in each boat, besides the
+ oarsmen. Enough, surely, to make an end of one lone man.</p>
+
+ <p>Would they attempt to land in different places and rush him,
+ he wondered. Or would they content themselves with lying off and
+ attempting to shoot him down from a distance? The last would be
+ the safest all round, both for them and for him&mdash;for,
+ landing, they would, for the moment, be more or less at his
+ mercy; and, snapping at him from a distance, he would have
+ certain chances of cover in his favour.</p>
+
+ <p>The top of the ridge was flattened in places, there were even
+ depressions here and there, very slight, but quite enough to
+ shelter any one lying prone in them from bombardment from
+ sea-level. He chose the deepest he could find, and crawled into
+ it, and lay, with his chin in his hands, watching the oncoming
+ boats.</p>
+
+ <p>If he could have managed it, he would have slipped down to the
+ rock wall and crept into his burrow, but it was on that side the
+ boats were coming, and the sharp eyes on board would inevitably
+ see him, and so get on the track of his hiding-place.</p>
+
+ <p>If the chance offered&mdash;if they left that end of the rock
+ unspied upon for three minutes&mdash;he would try it.</p>
+
+ <p>They parted at the Quette d'Amont, two going along the south
+ side and two along the north. He could hear their voices, their
+ rough jests and brief laughter, as they crept past.</p>
+
+ <p>It was an odd sensation, this, of lying there like a hunted
+ hare, knowing that it was him they were after.</p>
+
+ <p>He pressed still closer to the rock, and did not dare to raise
+ his head for a look. The voices and the sound of the oars died
+ away, came again, died again, as the boats slowly circled the
+ rock, every keen eye on board, he knew, searching every nook and
+ cranny for sign of him.</p>
+
+ <p>Then a shot rang out, over there towards the south-west, and
+ another, and another. Tired of inaction, they were peppering his
+ bee-hive to stir him up in case he was fast asleep inside.</p>
+
+ <p>The other boats rowed swiftly round to the firing, and he
+ could imagine them clustered there in a bunch, watching hopefully
+ for him to come out; and his blood boiled and chilled again at
+ thought of what might have been if he had been caught
+ napping.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, seizing his chance, he crawled to the opposite side
+ of his hollow, peeped over, and saw the way clear. If only they
+ would go on peppering the bee-hive for another minute or two, he
+ would have time to slip down the Sark side of his rock and get to
+ the great wall, and so down into his new hiding-place.</p>
+
+ <p>If they tried to land, he could perhaps kill or wound two,
+ three, half-a-dozen, at risk of his own life. But the end would
+ be the same. With a dozen good shots coolly potting at him, he
+ must go down in time, and he had no desire either to kill or to
+ be killed.</p>
+
+ <p>He wormed himself over the edge of his hollow and hurried
+ along to the tumbled rocks, carrying his gun and
+ powder-flask&mdash;not that he wanted them, but wanted still less
+ to leave them behind. He scrambled over, found his marked rocks,
+ and slipped safely under the overhanging slab. There he could
+ peep out without danger of being seen; and he was barely under
+ cover when the first boat came slowly round again, every bearded
+ face intent on the rock, every eye searching for sign of him.</p>
+
+ <p>The other boats passed, and as each one came it seemed to him
+ that every eye on board looked straight up into his own, and he
+ involuntarily shrank down into the shadow of the slab. They could
+ not possibly see him, he was certain; and yet a thrill ran
+ through him each time their searching glances crossed his
+ own.</p>
+
+ <p>The rough jests and laughter of the boats had given way now to
+ angry growls at his invisibility. He could hear them cursing him
+ as they passed, and even casting doubts on the veracity of his
+ visitors of the previous night. And these latter upheld their
+ statements with such torrents of red-hot patois that, if they had
+ come to grips and fought the matter out, he would not have been
+ in the least surprised.</p>
+
+ <p>Then there came a long interval, when no boats came round.
+ They had probably taken their courage in their hands and landed,
+ and were searching the island. He dropped noiselessly into his
+ well and clambered up into the tunnel, and lay there with only
+ his head out.</p>
+
+ <p>And, sure enough, before long he heard the sound of big
+ sea-boots climbing heavily over the rock wall, and the voices of
+ their owners as they passed.</p>
+
+ <p>What would they do next, he wondered. Would they imagine him
+ flown, as the result of their last night's visit? Or would they
+ believe him still on the island and bound to come out of his
+ hiding-place sooner or later? Would they give it up and go home?
+ Or would they leave a guard to trap him when hunger and thirst
+ brought him out?</p>
+
+ <p>He lay patiently in the mouth of his tunnel till long after
+ the last glimmer of light had faded from under the big slabs that
+ covered in his well. More than once he heard voices, and once
+ they came so close that he was sure they had come upon his
+ tracks, and he crept some distance down his tunnel to be out of
+ sight. But the alarm proved a false one, and the time passed very
+ slowly.</p>
+
+ <p>As he lay, he thought of the dead man with the bound hands and
+ feet in the silent chamber behind him, bound by the forebears of
+ these men, who, in turn, were seeking him, and would treat him as
+ ruthlessly if they found him.</p>
+
+ <p>He took the lesson to heart, and braced himself to patient
+ endurance, though, indeed, he began to ask himself gloomily what
+ was the use of it all. In the end, their venomous persistence
+ must make an end of him. One man could not fight for ever against
+ a whole community.</p>
+
+ <p>And at that he chided himself. Not a whole community! For was
+ not Nance on his side&mdash;hoping and praying and working for
+ him with all her might and main? And her mother, and Grannie, and
+ the Vicar, and the Doctor, and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal? He was
+ sure they all knew him far too well to doubt him. And all these
+ and the Truth must surely prevail.</p>
+
+ <p>But the long strain had been sore on him, and in spite of his
+ anxieties he fell asleep in his hole, and dreamed that the dead
+ man came crawling down the tunnel, and dragged him back into the
+ chamber, and tied his hands and feet, and went away, and left him
+ to die there all alone. And so strong was the impression upon him
+ that, when he woke, he lay wondering who had loosed his bonds,
+ and could not make out how he had got back into the mouth of the
+ tunnel.</p>
+
+ <p>It was still quite dark. He was stiff with lying in that
+ cramped place. He was strongly tempted to climb out and see how
+ matters lay. For he might be able to find out in the dark,
+ whereas daylight would make him prisoner again.</p>
+
+ <p>He wanted eggs, too. Nance's provision had served him well all
+ day, but if he had to spend another day there something more
+ would be welcome.</p>
+
+ <p>But then it struck him that if he went up in the dark he might
+ never be able to find his way back again. The cleft under the
+ slab was difficult to hit upon even in daylight. There were
+ scores of just similar ragged black holes among the tumbled rocks
+ of the great wall.</p>
+
+ <p>As he lay pondering it all, the grim idea came into his head
+ of dragging the dead man through the tunnel, and hoisting him up
+ outside, and leaving him propped up among the boulders where they
+ would be sure to find him.</p>
+
+ <p>He knew how arrantly superstitious they were, most of them.
+ They had been brought up on ghosts and witches and evil spirits,
+ and, fearless as they might be of things mortal and natural, all
+ that bordered on the unknown and uncanny held for them
+ unimaginable terrors. The dead man might serve a useful purpose
+ after all; and the grim idea grew.</p>
+
+ <p>He could decide nothing, however, till he learned if he had
+ the rock to himself; and he determined to take the risk of
+ finding this out.</p>
+
+ <p>He cautiously climbed the well, and by the look of the stars
+ he judged it still very early morning. A brooding grey darkness
+ covered the sea; the sky was dark even in the east.</p>
+
+ <p>He slipped off his coat and left it hanging out of the cleft
+ as a landmark, and lowered himself silently from rock to rock,
+ till he stood among the rank grasses below.</p>
+
+ <p>Food first&mdash;so, after patient listening for smallest
+ sound or sign of a watch, he crept down to the slope where the
+ puffins' nests were, and, wrapping his hand in Nance's napkin,
+ managed to get out a dozen eggs from as many different holes, in
+ spite of the fierce objections of their legitimate owners.</p>
+
+ <p>He tied these up carefully in the blood-spotted cloth, and
+ carried them up to his cleft. Then he stole away like a shadow,
+ to find out, if he could, if there was any one else on the rock
+ besides himself and the dead man.</p>
+
+ <p>There had been hot disputes on that head in the boats. Those
+ who were there for the first time had even gone the length of
+ casting strongest possible doubts as to whether those who were
+ there the night before had seen or heard anything whatever, and
+ did not hesitate to state their belief that they were all on a
+ fool's errand. The others replied in kind, and when the further
+ question was mooted as to keeping watch all night, the scoffers
+ told the others to keep watch if they chose; for themselves, they
+ were going home to their beds.</p>
+
+ <p>"Frightened of ghosts, I s'pose," growled one.</p>
+
+ <p>"No more than yourself, John Drillot. But we've wasted a day
+ on this same fooling, and the man's not here; and for me, I doubt
+ if he's ever been here."</p>
+
+ <p>"And what of the things we found in the shelter?" said
+ Drillot. "Think they came there of themselves?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't care how they came there. It's not old cloaks and
+ blankets we came after. Maybe he has been here. I don't know. But
+ he's not here now, and I've had enough of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"B'en! I'm not afraid to stop all night&mdash;if anyone'll
+ stop with me"&mdash;and if no one had offered he would have been
+ just as well pleased. "Don't know as I'd care to stop all
+ alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"Frightened of ghosts, maybe," scoffed the other.</p>
+
+ <p>"You stop with me, Tom Guille, and we'll see which is
+ frightenedest of ghosts, you or me."</p>
+
+ <p>But Tom Guille believed in ghosts as devoutly as any old woman
+ in Sark, and he was bound for home, no matter what the rest chose
+ to do.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's not a foot of the rock we haven't searched," said he,
+ "and the man's not here; so what's the use of waiting all
+ night?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Because if he's in hiding it's at night he'll come out."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come out of where?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wherever he's got to."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's Guernsey, most likely. His friends have arranged to
+ lift him off here first chance that came; and it came before we
+ did, and you'll not see him in these parts again, I warrant
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll wait with you, John, if you're set on it, though I doubt
+ Tom's right, and the man's gone," said Peter Vaudin of La Ville.
+ And John Drillot found himself bound to the adventure.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do we keep the boat?" asked Vaudin.</p>
+
+ <p>"No ... for then one of us must sit in her all night, or she
+ will bump herself to pieces. You will come back for us in the
+ morning, Philip."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll come," said Philip Guille, and presently they stood
+ watching the boats pulling lustily homewards, and devoutly
+ wishing they were in them.</p>
+
+ <p>Every foot of the rock, as they knew it, had already been
+ carefully raked over. The possible hiding-places were few. But no
+ one knows better than a Sark man what rocks can do in the way of
+ slits and tunnels and caves, and it was just this possibility
+ that had set John Drillot to his unwonted, and none too welcome,
+ task. The murderer&mdash;as he deemed Gard&mdash;might have found
+ some place unknown to any of them, and might be lying quietly
+ waiting for them to go. If that was so, he must come out sooner
+ or later, and the chances were that he would steal out in the
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>So the two watchers prowled desultorily about the rock, poking
+ again into every place that suggested possible concealment for
+ anything larger than a puffin. There might be openings in the
+ rifted basement rocks which only the full ebb would discover, and
+ these might lead up into chambers where a man could lie high and
+ dry till the tide allowed him out again. And so they hung
+ precariously over the waves and poked and peered, and found
+ nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>They had clambered over the great wall more than once before
+ Vaudin said: "G'zamin, John, I wonder if there's any holes here
+ big enough to take a man?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He'd have to be a little one, and this Gard's not that," and
+ they stood looking at the wall. "'Sides, them rocks lie on the
+ rock itself, and there's no depth to them."</p>
+
+ <p>But Vaudin was not sure that there might not be room for a man
+ to lie flat under some of the big slabs, and began to poke about
+ among them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Some one's been up here," he said, pointing to one of Gard's
+ own scorings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bin up there four times myself," said Drillot, "an' so have
+ all the rest. There's no room to hide a man there, Peter. If he's
+ hid anywhere, he'll come out in the night. Maybe Philip Guille's
+ right, and he's safe in Guernsey by this. Come along to that
+ shelter and let's have a drink."</p>
+
+ <p>They had their bottle out of the boat, and they had also come
+ upon Gard's bottle of cognac, of which quite half remained. It
+ was a finer cordial than their own, so they sat drinking them
+ turn about, and watching the sun set, and chatting spasmodically,
+ till it grew too dark to do more than sit still with safety.</p>
+
+ <p>They were by no means drunk, but the spirits had made them
+ heavy, and when John Drillot solemnly suggested that they should
+ keep watch about, Peter Vaudin as solemnly agreed, and offered to
+ take first duty.</p>
+
+ <p>So John curled his length inside the bee-hive, and made
+ himself comfortable with Gard's cloak and blanket, and was
+ presently snoring like a whole pig-sty. And that had a soporific
+ effect on Peter. He had only stopped behind to oblige John, and
+ personally had little expectation of anything coming of it.
+ Moreover, the night air was chilly. If he could get that cloak
+ from John now! He crawled in to try, but big John was rolled up
+ like a caterpillar. It was warmer inside there than out, anyway.
+ And he could keep watch there just as well as outside; so he
+ propped himself up alongside John, and braced his mind to sentry
+ duty.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXIX</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE</h3>
+
+ <p>Having lodged his eggs in a ledge under the big slab, Gard
+ stole away to learn, if he could, if he had the rock all to
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>He wanted water, and he wanted his bottle of cognac and the
+ tin dipper; for puffins' eggs, while not unpalatable beaten up
+ with cognac, are of a flavour calculated to exercise the
+ strongest stomach when eaten raw.</p>
+
+ <p>He feared the men would have made away with all his small
+ possessions, but he could only try. So he stole like a shadow
+ round the crown of the ridge and along towards the shelter,
+ standing at times motionless for whole minutes till the rush of
+ the waves below should pass and give him chance of hearing.</p>
+
+ <p>But on L'Etat the sound of many waters never ceases night or
+ day, and the night wind hummed among the stones of the shelter,
+ and, as it happened, John Drillot had just lurched over in
+ avoidance of a lump of rock which was intruding on his comfort,
+ and in so doing had lodged his heavy boot in Peter Vaudin's ribs,
+ and so their sonorous duet was stilled, and neither of them was
+ very sound asleep, when Gard, after listening anxiously and
+ hearing nothing, dropped on his hands and knees and felt
+ cautiously inside.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter felt the blind hand groping in the dark, and was wide
+ awake in an instant. He hurled himself at the intruder, as well
+ as a man could who had been lying back against the wall half
+ asleep a moment before; and Gard turned and sped away along the
+ side of the ridge, with Peter at his heels and John Drillot
+ thundering ponderously in the rear.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is't, Peter boy?" shouted John.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's him. This way!" yelled Peter, out of the dimness in
+ front, as he stumbled and staggered along the ragged inadequacies
+ of the ridge.</p>
+
+ <p>If Gard had had time for consideration, he would have led them
+ a chase elsewhere first, but, in the sudden upsetting of lighting
+ on what he had persuaded himself was not there, he lost his head
+ and made straight for cover.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter Vaudin was at the base of the rock wall as he wriggled
+ silently under the big slab, and it was only by a violent jerk
+ that he got his foot clear of Peter's grip. And Peter, strung to
+ the occasion, kept his hand on the spot where the foot had
+ disappeared, and waited a moment for John Drillot to come up
+ before he followed it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gone in here," he jerked, as he climbed cautiously up.</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't have gone far, then," panted John. "Sure it was
+ him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Had him by the foot, but he got loose. Here we are," as he
+ poked about, and came at last on the hole below the slab. "Come
+ on, John ... can't be far away.... Big hole"&mdash;as he kicked
+ about down below&mdash;"no bottom, far as I can see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Best wait for daylight, to see where we're getting."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oui gia! Man doux, it's not me's going down here till I know
+ what's below."</p>
+
+ <p>So they sat and kicked their heels and waited for the day,
+ certain in their own minds that their quarry was run to earth and
+ as good as caught.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard had swept down both his coat and his cloth full of eggs
+ in his sudden entrance. He stood at the bottom of the well to see
+ if they would follow, while Peter's long legs kicked about for
+ foothold. He heard them decide to wait for daylight, and then he
+ noiselessly picked up his coat and his soppy bundle of broken
+ eggs, pushed them into the tunnel, and crawled in after them.</p>
+
+ <p>He was trapped, indeed, but he doubted very much if any
+ fisherman on Sark would venture down that tunnel. They were
+ brawny men, used to leg and elbow room, and, as a rule, heartily
+ detested anything in the shape of underground adventure. They
+ might, of course, get over some miners to explore for them. Or
+ they might content themselves with sitting down on top of his
+ hole until he was starved out. In any case, his rope was nearly
+ run; but yet he was not disposed to shorten it by so much as an
+ inch.</p>
+
+ <p>As he wormed his way along the tunnel, the recollection of
+ those other openings off the dead man's cave came back to him. He
+ would try them. He pushed on with a spurt of hope.</p>
+
+ <p>The tunnel was not nearly so long now that he knew where he
+ was going; in fact, now that nothing but it stood between him and
+ capture, it seemed woefully inadequate.</p>
+
+ <p>When his head and elbows no longer grazed rock he dropped his
+ coat and crawled into the chamber. He felt his way round to the
+ dried packages, and cautiously emptied half-a-dozen and prepared
+ them for his use.</p>
+
+ <p>This set him sneezing so violently that it seemed impossible
+ that the watchers outside should not hear him. It also gave him
+ an idea.</p>
+
+ <p>He struck a light and kindled one of his torches, and the dead
+ man leaped out of the darkness at him as before. That gave him
+ another idea.</p>
+
+ <p>Propping up his light on the floor, he emptied package after
+ package of the powdered tobacco into the tunnel, and wafted it
+ down towards the entrance with his jacket. Then with his knife he
+ cut the lashings from the dead man's hands and feet, and carried
+ him across&mdash;he was very light, for all his substance had
+ long since withered out of him&mdash;and laid him in the tunnel
+ as though he was making his way out.</p>
+
+ <p>If he knew anything of Sark men and miners, he felt fairly
+ secure for some time to come, so he sat himself down, as far as
+ possible from the snuff, and made such a meal as was possible off
+ puffins' eggs, mixed good and bad and unredeemed by any
+ palliating odour and flavour. They were not appetising, but they
+ stayed his stomach for the time being.</p>
+
+ <p>It was only then that he remembered that he had left his gun
+ and powder-flask behind him. He had placed them on a ledge just
+ inside the mouth of the tunnel, and in his haste had forgotten to
+ pick them up. He had no intention of using them, however, and he
+ would not go back for them.</p>
+
+ <p>When his scanty meal was done, he cautiously emptied a number
+ of the packages and rolled them into torches, and deliberated as
+ to which of the black openings he should attempt first.</p>
+
+ <p>That one opposite, out of which the dead man's legs sprawled
+ grotesquely, was the one by which he had entered. This one, then,
+ near which he sat, must run on towards the centre of the
+ island&mdash;if it ran on at all; and, since all were equally
+ unknown and hopeful, he would try this first.</p>
+
+ <p>His tarred paper torches, though they burned with a clear
+ flame, gave forth a somewhat pungent odour, so he kicked one of
+ the small barrels to pieces, and with three of the staves and a
+ piece of string made a holder which would carry the torch
+ upright, and also permit him to lay it on the ground or push it
+ in front of him, if need be.</p>
+
+ <p>The first tunnel ran in about thirty feet, and then the slant
+ of the roof met the floor at so sharp an angle that further
+ passage was impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>The second, third, and fourth the same; and he began to fear
+ they were all blind alleys leading nowhere.</p>
+
+ <p>The openings near his own entrance tunnel he had left till the
+ last, since they obviously led outwards.</p>
+
+ <p>Two of them shut down in the same way as all the others, and
+ it was only the dogged determination to leave no chance untried
+ that drove him, with a fresh supply of torches, down the last one
+ of all, the one alongside that out of which the dead man's legs
+ projected.</p>
+
+ <p>It took a turn to the left within a dozen feet of the
+ entrance, and, like the rest, it presently narrowed down through
+ a slope in the roof; but just at its narrowest, when he feared he
+ had come to the end, there came a dip in the flooring
+ corresponding to the slope up above, and he found he could
+ wriggle through. Once through, the passage widened and continued
+ to widen, and the going became very rough and broken, with piles
+ of ragged rock and deep black pitfalls in between.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, of a sudden, he saw the walls and roof of his passage
+ fall away, and his light flickered feebly in the darkness of a
+ vast place, and he crouched on the rock up which he had climbed,
+ and sat in wonder.</p>
+
+ <p>Somewhere below him he could hear the slow rise and fall of
+ water, dull and heavy and without any splash, like the dumb
+ breathing of a captive monster.</p>
+
+ <p>And every now and again there came, from somewhere beyond, a
+ low dull thud, like the blow of a padded hammer, and a distant
+ subdued rustle along the outside of the darkness. He knew it was
+ not inside the place he was in, for he could hear the soft rise
+ and fall of the water quite clearly, but these other sounds came
+ to him from a distance, muted as though his ears had suddenly
+ gone deaf.</p>
+
+ <p>"Those dull blows," he said to himself, "are the waves on the
+ outside of L'Etat. That low rustling is the rush of them along
+ the lower rocks. The water inside here probably comes in through
+ some openings below tide-level. I am quite safe here, even if
+ they get past the dead man's cave&mdash;quite safe until I
+ starve. Unless there are fish to be had"&mdash;and he felt a
+ spark of hope. "And maybe there are devil-fish"&mdash;and he
+ shivered and glanced below and about him fearfully.</p>
+
+ <p>His homely torch did no more than faintly illumine the rock he
+ sat on and those close at hand, and cast a gigantic uncouth
+ shadow of himself on the rough wall behind. All beyond was solid
+ darkness, blacker even than a black Sark night.</p>
+
+ <p>He sat wondering vaguely if any before him had penetrated to
+ that strange place. It was odd and uncanny to feel that his eyes
+ were the very first to look upon it. And then, away in front, and
+ apparently at a great distance above him, he became aware of a
+ difference in the solid darkness. It seemed almost as though it
+ had thinned. His eye had seemed able for a moment to carry beyond
+ the narrow circle of the torch, but when he peered into the void
+ to see what this might mean, it all seemed solid as before.</p>
+
+ <p>As his straining eyes sought relief in something visible,
+ their side-glance caught once more that same impression of
+ movement in the darkness. And presently it came again and
+ stronger&mdash;a strange greenish fluttering up in the
+ roof&mdash;very faint, as though the roof were smoke on which a
+ soft green light played for a moment and vanished.</p>
+
+ <p>But by degrees the light grew, though at no time did it become
+ more than a wan ghost of a light, and from its curious fluttering
+ he judged that it came through water.</p>
+
+ <p>Reasoning from the trend of the cavern, he came to the
+ conclusion that somewhere on that further side there were
+ openings into the deep water beyond, on which the sunlight played
+ and struck at times into the cave, and he was keen to look more
+ closely into it.</p>
+
+ <p>He lowered his torch to the side of his rock, and its feeble
+ flicker fell on a chaos of rocks below. He looked long and
+ cautiously for supple yellow arms or tiny whip-like threads which
+ might coil suddenly round his legs and drag him to hideous
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>But he saw nothing of the kind. The rocks were dry and bare,
+ not a limpet nor a sea-weed visible, and leaving his jacket for a
+ landmark as before, he slowly let himself down from one huge
+ boulder to another, till he found himself climbing another great
+ pile in front.</p>
+
+ <p>When at last his head rose above this ridge, he almost rolled
+ over at the sight of two huge green eyes blinking lazily at him
+ out of the darkness in front&mdash;two great openings far below
+ sea-level, through which filtered dimly the wavering green light
+ whose refractions fluttered in the roof.</p>
+
+ <p>The vast trough below him heaved gently now and then, with a
+ ponderous solemnity which filled him with awe. He felt himself an
+ intruder. He felt like a fly creeping about a sleeping tiger. He
+ hardly dared to breathe, lest the brooding spirit of the place
+ should rise suddenly out of some dark corner and squash him on
+ his rock as one does a crawling insect; and his anxious eyes
+ swept to and fro for the smallest sign of danger.</p>
+
+ <p>But, plucking up courage from immunity, and dreading to be
+ caught in the dark in that weird place, he crawled over the
+ boulders towards the side wall of the cavern to get as near to
+ those openings as possible. From the very slight movement of the
+ water, which was ever on the boil round the outside of L'Etat, he
+ judged them deep down among the roots of the island, far below
+ the turmoil of the surface, but he must see and make sure.</p>
+
+ <p>With infinite toil and many a scrape and bruise, he got round
+ at last, and could look right down into the dim green depths, and
+ what he saw there filled him with sickening fear.</p>
+
+ <p>The water was crystal clear, and in through the nearer
+ opening, as he looked, a huge octopus propelled itself in
+ leisurely fashion, its great tentacles streaming out behind, its
+ hideous protruding eyes searching eagerly for prey.</p>
+
+ <p>Just inside the opening it gathered itself together for a
+ moment, and seemed to look so meaningly right up into his eyes
+ that he found himself shrinking behind a rock lest it should see
+ him. Then it clamped itself to the side of the opening and spread
+ wide its arms for anything that might come its way.</p>
+
+ <p>He watched it, fascinated. He saw fishes large and small
+ unconsciously touch the quivering tentacles, which on the instant
+ twisted round them and dragged them in to the rending beak below
+ the hideous eyes. And then he saw another similar monster come
+ floating in on similar quest, and in a moment they were locked in
+ deadly fight&mdash;such a writhing and coiling and straining and
+ twisting of monstrous fleshy limbs, which swelled and thrilled,
+ and loosed and gripped, with venom past believing&mdash;such a
+ clamping to this rock and that&mdash;such tremendous efforts at
+ dislodgment.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a nightmare. It sickened him. He turned and crawled
+ feebly away, anxious only now to get out of this awful place
+ without falling foul of any similar monsters among the rocks.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR</h3>
+
+ <p>From the headland above Breni&egrave;re, Nance had watched the
+ boats go plunging across to L'Etat.</p>
+
+ <p>Very early that morning she had sped across the Coup&eacute;e
+ and up the long roads to the Seigneurie, but the Seigneur was
+ away in Guernsey still, busied on the vital matter of raising
+ still more money for the mines in which he was a firm believer,
+ mortgaging his Seigneurie for the purpose, assured in his own
+ mind that all would be well in the end.</p>
+
+ <p>Then to the Vicar and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and these
+ set off at once for the harbour, but found themselves powerless
+ in the face of public opinion. Argument and remonstrance alike
+ fell on deaf ears. The Vicar appealed to their sense of right;
+ the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal forbade their going. But their minds
+ were doggedly set on it, and they went.</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall hold you to account," stormed Philip Guille.</p>
+
+ <p>"B'en, M. le S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, we'll pay it all among
+ us," and away they went; and back to her look-out by
+ Breni&egrave;re went Nance, and the Vicar with her for comfort in
+ this dark hour.</p>
+
+ <p>They watched the boats circling the rock, round and round.
+ They heard the firing, and Nance flung herself on the ground in
+ an agony of weeping, sure that the end had come. For they could
+ only be firing at Gard, and what could one man do against so
+ many?</p>
+
+ <p>"They have killed him," she moaned.</p>
+
+ <p>And the Vicar could only tighten his pale lips, and smooth her
+ hair with his thin white hand, as she writhed on the ground at
+ his side. For he could but think she was right. They were good
+ shots, the Sark men, and it needs but one bullet to kill a
+ man.</p>
+
+ <p>If Nance had looked a moment longer she might have seen Gard
+ slip down from the ridge to the wall, but the bombardment of the
+ shelter, which gave him his chance, made an end of her hopes, and
+ her face was hidden in the turf.</p>
+
+ <p>The Vicar's sight was not keen enough to see clearly what was
+ passing. But when the men landed on the rock, and overran it in
+ their search, he could not fail to see their figures on the ridge
+ against the sky, and an exclamation of surprise roused Nance.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it?" she jerked.</p>
+
+ <p>"They have landed over there. They seem to be searching the
+ rock."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then&mdash;" and she sat up suddenly and gazed intently
+ across at L'Etat, and then sprang to her feet, a new creature.
+ "For, see you, Mr Cachemaille," she cried, "if they had killed
+ him they would not be searching for him, nenni-gia!"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is true, child," said the Vicar hopefully, and then,
+ less hopefully, "but where shall a man hide on L'Etat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah now! I remember. Just as I was leaving him last night, he
+ told me&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"As you were leaving him&mdash;last night?" and the old man
+ gazed at her as though he doubted his ears or her right
+ senses.</p>
+
+ <p>"But yes," she cried impatiently. "I swam across there last
+ night to see if Bernel was there and to take him some food. But
+ you are not to tell that to any one. And he told me&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You swam across?&mdash;to L'Etat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes! We have done it many times, and, besides, I had the
+ bladders&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>The Vicar shook his head helplessly. She forgot to explain so
+ much that he did not understand. But he grasped at one
+ thread.</p>
+
+ <p>"And Bernel?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, my poor Bernel! He is drowned," she said, with a heave of
+ the breast, but with her eyes intent on L'Etat. "I wanted him to
+ take the bladders, but he would not; and it was the first night
+ after the storm, you see, and the waves were big still, and he
+ never got to L'Etat, and he never came back; so, you
+ see&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly, you are being sorely tried, my child. But your brother
+ was a better swimmer than most. May we not hope&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But she shook her head, intent on the doings on the rock, and
+ full, for the moment, of the hope she could draw from Gard's hint
+ about a hiding-place of which she knew nothing. For if she and
+ Bernel had never discovered it, how should these others? And
+ obviously they were searching, for they prowled about the rock
+ like ants, and poked here and there, and wandered on and came
+ back. And if they still sought they had not yet found; and so
+ there was a new spring of hope in her heart.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, truly, they are searching," she murmured, and forgot the
+ Vicar and all else.</p>
+
+ <p>He tried to induce her to go back home with him, but she would
+ not move. For the moment all her hope in life was in peril on the
+ rock, and she must see all that went on; and finally he had to
+ leave her there, and she hardly knew that he had gone. She wanted
+ only to be left alone, to nurse her new-born hope and watch in
+ fear and trembling for any symptom of its overthrow.</p>
+
+ <p>But she was not to be left in peace, for Madame Julie had
+ heard the firing also, and had come round the headland by the
+ miners' cottages, exulting in the fact that her enemy was run to
+ earth at last and was meeting righteous punishment.</p>
+
+ <p>And as she prowled about there, chafing at the delay in the
+ return of the boats, she came suddenly on Nance gazing out at
+ L'Etat with a face&mdash;not, as Julie would have expected,
+ downcast and woe-begone, but full of eager expectancy. And the
+ sight of her, and in such case, stirred Julie to venom.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah then&mdash;there you are, mademoiselle, listening to the
+ end of your fancy gentleman! And the right end, too, ma foi! A
+ man that goes knocking his neighbours on the head&mdash;it's
+ right he should be shot like a rabbit&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Nance's face quivered, but she did not even look round.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll see them coming back presently, and they'll bring his
+ body back with them in the boat, all full of holes. And then I'll
+ feel that my Tom's paid for&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you hear?" she cried, planting herself in front of Nance,
+ and jerking her hands up and down in her excitement and the
+ exaspeiation of receiving no response. "Do you hear me&mdash;you?
+ Or are you gone crazy for love of your murderer?"&mdash;and she
+ made as though to lay wild hands on the girl.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are wicked! You are evil! You are a devil!" said Nance
+ through her little white teeth, and looked so as though she might
+ fly at her that Julie drew off.</p>
+
+ <p>"Aha&mdash;spitfire!&mdash;wildcat!&mdash;you would bite?"</p>
+
+ <p>Nance, all ashake with disgust, stooped suddenly and picked up
+ a lump of rock.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go!" she said, in a voice of such concentrated fury that it
+ was little more than a whisper. "Go!&mdash;before I do you ill;"
+ and she looked so like it that Julie turned and fled, expecting
+ the rock between her shoulders at every step.</p>
+
+ <p>But the rock was on the ground, and Nance was intent again on
+ L'Etat.</p>
+
+ <p>She stood there watching, until she saw the boats put off, and
+ then she turned and sped like a rabbit&mdash;across the waste
+ lands&mdash;across the Coup&eacute;e&mdash;over Clos Bourel
+ fields into Dixcart&mdash;over Hog's Back to the Creux.</p>
+
+ <p>She ran through the tunnel just as the boats came up, and her
+ eyes were wide with expectant fear, as they swept them
+ hungrily.</p>
+
+ <p>"What have you done then, out there, Philip Vaudin?" she
+ cried, as his boat's nose grated on the shingle.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pardi, ma garche, we have done nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"But the shooting?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Some one shot at the shelter to see if he was inside, and the
+ rest shot because they thought there must be something to shoot
+ at."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you have not got him?" asked another disappointedly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never even seen him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah ba!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Either he's gone or he's under cover, though, ma f&eacute;, I
+ don't know where he'd find it on L'Etat," and Nance's heart beat
+ hopefully. "However, John Drillot and Peter Vaudin are stopping
+ the night in case he is still there and ventures out of his
+ hole," and her heart sank again, and kicked rebelliously that a
+ man should be hunted thus, like a rabbit.</p>
+
+ <p>She spent a night of misery, wondering what was happening on
+ L'Etat, and was at her post above Breni&egrave;re as soon as it
+ was light.</p>
+
+ <p>She saw Philip Vaudin come round from the Creux in his boat
+ and run across to the rock, and almost as soon as he had
+ disappeared round Quette d'Amont, he came speeding back, alone,
+ and not to the harbour, but straight to the fishermen's rough
+ landing-place inside Breni&egrave;re.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it then, Philip?" she asked anxiously, as he hauled
+ himself up the rocks on to the turf.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've come for two miners," he panted, for he had come
+ quickly. "They've run him to earth in a hole, but they won't
+ either of them go in after him, and they want some one who
+ will."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, then!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. He came out in the night, and they chased him, but he
+ got into his hole, and they're sitting on it ever since," and he
+ hurried away through the waste of gorse and bracken to the
+ miners' cottages.</p>
+
+ <p>Volunteers were evidently not over plentiful. It was a
+ considerable time before he came back with a Welshman, Evan
+ Morgan, and a young Cornishman, John Trevna, and neither of them
+ seemed over eager for the job.</p>
+
+ <p>"For, see you," had been Morgan's view, "coing in a hole after
+ a man what hass a gun iss not a nice pissness, no inteet!" and
+ the Cornishman agreed with him.</p>
+
+ <p>However, they put off, and Nance crouched in the bracken and
+ watched all their doings.</p>
+
+ <p>She had long since caught sight of John Drillot and Peter
+ Vaudin sitting on the rock wall, and wondered what kind of a
+ hiding-place Gard could possibly have found therein. A poor one,
+ she feared, and that the end would be quick.</p>
+
+ <p>The boat disappeared round the corner, and presently she saw
+ the three men join the others at the wall, and they all clustered
+ there and talked, and then one by one they disappeared into the
+ wall itself, and she sat watching in fear and trembling.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT</h3>
+
+ <p>"It iss better to sit here two, three days till he comse out
+ than to go in and get yourself killt, yes inteet!" was the burden
+ of Evan Morgan's answer to all their arguments for a speedy
+ assault. And "Iss, sure!" was Trevna's curt, complete
+ endorsement.</p>
+
+ <p>But when, at John Drillot's suggestion, they had squeezed
+ under the slab to have a look at what lay below, and had peered
+ down the slit that Gard tried first, and had then lighted on the
+ tunnel, and had found the gun and powder-flask jammed in a
+ crevice&mdash;that put a different face on the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>And, after prolonged discussion as to the proper method of
+ procedure, especially in the matter of precedence, it was at last
+ arranged that Evan Morgan should go first with his miner's lamp,
+ and that John Trevna should follow close behind, carrying the
+ gun.</p>
+
+ <p>"And iss it understood that I shoot him if I see him?" asked
+ Trevna, to make sure of his ground and make his conscience
+ easy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pardi, yes, mon gars! Shoot straight, and the Island will
+ thank you," asserted John Drillot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ant for Heaven's sake, John Trevna, see you ton't shoot me
+ behint by mistake," urged Evan Morgan; and they disappeared
+ slowly into the tunnel, while the other two stood waiting
+ expectantly in the well.</p>
+
+ <p>Accustomed as they were to narrow places, this long worm-hole
+ of a tunnel, with the doubtful possibilities that lay beyond it,
+ seemed as endless to the militant members of the expedition as it
+ did to the waiters outside.</p>
+
+ <p>Occasionally a hollow sound came booming down the tunnel, when
+ one or other grunted out a word of objurgation on the narrowness
+ of things, but for the most part they wormed along in silence,
+ Morgan shifting forward his lamp, foot by foot, and straining his
+ eyes into the darkness ahead, Trevna close behind with his gun at
+ full cock and ready for instant action.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gad'rabotin, but they take their time, those two!" said John
+ Drillot, impatiently, outside.</p>
+
+ <p>"It iss going right through to Wailee, I do think," growled
+ Evan Morgan inside.</p>
+
+ <p>And it was just after that that there broke out in the depths
+ of the tunnel a commotion so extraordinary that the listeners
+ outside could make nothing at all of it, and could only lurch
+ about in amazement and climb up and push their heads into the
+ tunnel, and wonder what it all meant. Then, in the midst of the
+ turmoil, there came the thunderous bellow of the gun, and after a
+ time a trickle of thin blue smoke floated lazily out and hung
+ about the well; and the men outside sniffed appreciatively, and
+ said, "Ch'est b'en!" and waited hopefully.</p>
+
+ <p>Evan Morgan, shifting forward his light, got an impression of
+ something in the narrow way in front, and suddenly he was taken
+ with the biggest fit of sneezing he had ever had in his life. He
+ banged down the lamp and threw up his head till it cracked
+ against the roof, then banged his chin against the floor, and
+ finally propped himself, like a sick dog, on his two front paws,
+ and sneezed and sneezed and sneezed for dear life.</p>
+
+ <p>Then John Trevna began. He had the sense to lay down his gun,
+ or Morgan might have got the charge in his back. And so they
+ sneezed in concert, until their heads were clearer than they had
+ been for many a day. And the sound of it all to those outside was
+ like the sound of mortal combat.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Morgan, wiping his streaming eyes on the sleeve of his
+ coat, in a state of extreme exhaustion, caught sight of that
+ which lay just beyond him, and he saw that it was a man crawling
+ down the tunnel to meet him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shoot, John, shoot! He iss here," he yelled, and laid himself
+ flat to give Trevna his chance.</p>
+
+ <p>And Trevna, between two sneezes, picked up his gun, though he
+ could see nothing to shoot at, and ran the barrel forward above
+ Morgan's head and fired, and the roar of it in that confined
+ space came near to deafening them both.</p>
+
+ <p>The smoke hung thick and choked them, as they gasped it in in
+ gulps while they sneezed, and the light had gone out with the
+ concussion.</p>
+
+ <p>They lay for a time exhausted. Then the atmosphere cleared
+ somewhat, and they lay in the thick darkness straining their ears
+ for any sound, but heard nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>"What did you see, Evan Morgan?" whispered Trevna at last.</p>
+
+ <p>"It wass a man."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then I have killed him, for he does not move. Can you light
+ the lamp?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I can not&mdash;in here. I am coing out. I haf hat enough of
+ this."</p>
+
+ <p>"We must take him out, too."</p>
+
+ <p>"You can tek him, then, John Trevna. I haf hat enough of him
+ and this hole."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be a fool, Evan Morgan. If it wass a man, and he got
+ that load in him as close as that, he iss deader than Tom
+ Hamon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, you can go an' see. I am coing out," and he began to
+ wriggle backwards, and Trevna was fain to go too.</p>
+
+ <p>But presently they came to one of the somewhat wider places
+ where the wall had fallen away, and Trevna squeezed himself
+ tightly into this.</p>
+
+ <p>"You go on, then, Evan Morgan," he said, "if you can get past,
+ and I will go back and bring him out."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are a fool, John Trevna, to meddle with him any more. Iff
+ the man iss dead, he iss just as well left there."</p>
+
+ <p>"If he iss dead he cannot harm me, and I would like to see the
+ man I have killed."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ugh!" grunted Morgan, and crawled on, legs first.</p>
+
+ <p>Trevna wormed along up the tunnel, groping cautiously in front
+ of him at each forward lurch, and at last his hands fell on what
+ he sought, and at the same moment he began sneezing again.</p>
+
+ <p>It would be no easy job dragging a dead man all down that
+ tunnel, he thought. But when, after cautious feeling here and
+ there, he got a grip of the man's coat collar, to his surprise it
+ came away in his hand, but at the same time it seemed to him that
+ the body was extraordinarily light.</p>
+
+ <p>He tried again with a fresh grip on the coat, but it tore like
+ paper, and, after thinking it over, he unstrapped his leather
+ belt and got it round the man below the armpits, and so was able
+ to haul him slowly along.</p>
+
+ <p>When Evan Morgan's wriggling legs came slowly out of the
+ tunnel, John Drillot and Peter Vaudin were almost dancing with
+ excitement, and their first surprise was the sight of him when,
+ by rights, John Trevna should have been the one to come out
+ first.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well then? What have you done? And where is John Trevna?"
+ cried John Drillot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach! He iss a fool. He hass shot the man and now he will
+ pring him out when he woult pe much petter buried where he
+ iss."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's quite right. What was all the noise about?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That wass the shooting."</p>
+
+ <p>"Before that. You all seemed to be howling at once."</p>
+
+ <p>"That wass the sneezing. It iss full of sneezing down there,"
+ and his red eyes still showed the effect of it.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a long time before they heard the laboured sounds of
+ Trevna's coming. But at last his legs wriggled out, then his
+ body, then with a lurch he hauled up to the mouth of the tunnel
+ that which he had brought with him. And at sight of it they all
+ started back against the sides of the well, with various cries
+ but equal amazement.</p>
+
+ <p>"O mon Gyu!" cried Peter Vaudin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thousand devils!" cried John Drillot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Heavens an' earth!" gasped Evan Morgan.</p>
+
+ <p>John Trevna gazed open-mouthed, for he had little breath left
+ in him.</p>
+
+ <p>And from the black mouth of the tunnel the strange and
+ terrible figure of the dead man looked quietly down at them and
+ filled them with amazement.</p>
+
+ <p>Trevna's heavy charge had blown in the top of the skull. The
+ shrunken yellow face wore the gaunt eager look of one who had
+ died the slow death of starvation. It seemed to be trying to get
+ at them to bite and rend them.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter Vaudin was the first to climb the wall behind him, but
+ the rest were close at his heels, and hustled him up through the
+ crack under the slab.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter struck down towards the landing-place the moment he had
+ wriggled through.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop then, Peter," called John Drillot, in a low insistent
+ voice, lest that dreadful thing below should hear him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not me! I've had enough, John Drillot. That is not what we
+ came for ... and I had hold of its leg last night," and he
+ shivered at the recollection, and the thought that it might have
+ turned on him and gripped him with its grisly hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know what it is," began John Drillot,
+ "but&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's the man I shot inside there," said Trevna.</p>
+
+ <p>"That man hass peen det a hundert years," said Morgan.</p>
+
+ <p>"All the same, he was running about last night," said Peter,
+ "and I had hold of his leg"&mdash;with another shiver.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's dead enough now, anyway," said Drillot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh b'en! leave him where he is, and let's get away. I've
+ heard say there were ghosts on L'Etat, and now I know it. No good
+ comes of meddling with these things."</p>
+
+ <p>"But we ought to take him with us."</p>
+
+ <p>"Take him with us!" almost shrieked Peter. "And let him loose
+ on Sark! Why then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Whatever he was last night, he's dead enough now.... Will you
+ help me to get him up, John Trevna?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Iss, sure! He's got my belt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not in my boat, John Drillot," cried Peter. "Not in my boat.
+ I've had enough of him, pardi!" and he set off at speed for the
+ boat.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be a fool, Peter. You, Evan Morgan, run down and stop
+ him going. Come on, John Trevna," and after peering cautiously
+ down to make sure the dead man had not moved, they dropped into
+ the well again.</p>
+
+ <p>The shrivelled figure was very light, as Trevna had found. It
+ was only their repugnance at handling it that made their task a
+ heavy one. One above and one below, they managed at last to get
+ it up above ground, and then John Trevna slipped his belt to its
+ middle, and carried it with one hand down the slope to the
+ boat.</p>
+
+ <p>There they found Evan Morgan holding the approach to the
+ landing-place against Peter, with a lump of rock, while Philip,
+ in the boat below, stood shouting at them to know what was the
+ matter.</p>
+
+ <p>At sight of the others and their burden, however, he had no
+ eyes for anything else.</p>
+
+ <p>"What have you got there, John Drillot?"</p>
+
+ <p>"A dead man."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, then! That's not Gard."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's the only man here, anyway. Pull close up,
+ Philip&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not in my boat, John Drillot!" from Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>"We must take this to the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal," said John
+ angrily. "If you don't want to come you can wait here. If you
+ don't make less noise, I will knock you on the head myself," and
+ he jumped down into the boat, and took the dead man from Trevna,
+ and laid him carefully in the bows. The others jumped in, and
+ Peter, sooner than be knocked on the head or left behind, sulkily
+ followed, and sat himself on the extreme edge of the stern as far
+ away from the dead man as he could get.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL</h3>
+
+ <p>Nance had crouched all the morning, in the bracken above
+ Breni&egrave;re, on the knife-edge of expectancy. And behind her,
+ at a safe distance, crouched Julie Hamon, watching Nance and
+ L'Etat at the same time, as a cat in the shade watches a sparrow
+ playing in the sunshine.</p>
+
+ <p>"What will be the end? What will be the end?" sighed Nance.
+ They had all gone down out of sight, across there, and it was
+ terrible to sit here waiting, waiting, waiting for what she
+ feared.</p>
+
+ <p>If they had indeed run Gard to his hiding-place, as Philip
+ Vaudin had said, there could be but one possible end to it; and
+ she sat, sad-eyed and wistful, waiting for them to come up
+ again.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed as if they would never come, and she never took her
+ eyes off the rock wall on L'Etat.</p>
+
+ <p>And then at last she sprang to her feet. One of them had come
+ up again. She could not see which. Then the others appeared, and
+ they seemed to stand talking. Then one went off round the slope
+ and another ran after him, and the other two went back into the
+ rock wall.</p>
+
+ <p>What could they be at? She stood gazing intently.</p>
+
+ <p>The two came up again, and&mdash;yes&mdash;they carried
+ something, or one of them did, and they two went off round the
+ corner also. And presently she saw the boat coming round, and saw
+ by its head that it was for the Creux. She turned and sped across
+ by the same way as yesterday, and Julie followed her at a safe
+ distance. And it seemed to Nance, as she hurried through the
+ familiar hedge-gaps and lanes and across the headlands, that the
+ world had lost its brightness, and that life was desperately hard
+ and trying.</p>
+
+ <p>On Derrible Head there might be a chance of seeing. She ran up
+ to the highest point by the old cannon, just as the boat was
+ coming in under La Conch&eacute;e.</p>
+
+ <p>And&mdash;oh, mon Dieu! mon Dieu! yes&mdash;there, in the
+ bows, lay the body of a man!&mdash;and the tears she had kept
+ back all day broke out now in a fury of weeping. She could hardly
+ see, but she ran on, falling at times and bruising herself,
+ staggering to her feet again, stumbling blindly through a mist of
+ tears.</p>
+
+ <p>The boat was drawn up by the time she got there, and a curious
+ crowd surrounded it. She pushed through. She must see.</p>
+
+ <p>And then the weight fell off her heart, and it was all she
+ could do to keep from screaming. For this poor thing, whatever it
+ was, was not Stephen Gard and never had been.</p>
+
+ <p>She wanted to sing and dance and scream her joy aloud. They
+ had not found him.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is this, John Drillot?" asked Julie, alongside her,
+ black with anger, as she pointed to the body.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ma f&eacute;&mdash;a ghost, they say. John Trevna shot him,
+ but he had been dead a long time before that, though he was alive
+ last night, for Peter had hold of his leg as he ran."</p>
+
+ <p>"And where is the other&mdash;the one you went for?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's not on L'Etat, anyway, ma fille," and they lifted the
+ body on to a piece of sailcloth, and carried it off through the
+ tunnel for the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal to look into.</p>
+
+ <p>So Stephen Gard's hiding-place had proved effective, and they
+ had not found him. But, of a certainty, he must be starving, and
+ so away home sped Nance, to prepare a parcel of food to take
+ across to him. And Julie, her black brows pinched together and
+ her face set in a frown of venomous intention, never once let her
+ out of her sight.</p>
+
+ <p>It was after midnight when Nance stole across the fields,
+ carrying her little parcel and her swimming-bladders, and made
+ her way to Breni&egrave;re point.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a still night, with a sky full of stars, and her heart
+ was high for the moment, though when her thoughts ran on, in
+ spite of her, it fell again. For things could not go on this way
+ for ever, and she saw no way out.</p>
+
+ <p>She dropped her outer things by a bush, and let herself
+ quietly down the rocks and into the water, and the black-faced
+ woman who presently stood by that bush snarled curses after her
+ and was filled with unholy exultation. For Nance could have only
+ one reason for going across there, and on the morrow the men
+ should hear of it, and she would give them no rest till Gard was
+ made an end of.</p>
+
+ <p>What that thing was that they had brought home, she did not
+ know, but they were fools to be satisfied with that when the man
+ they had gone after was undoubtedly still on the rock.</p>
+
+ <p>So she sat down by Nance's gown and cloak, and revolved
+ schemes for her discomfiture and the undoing of Stephen Gard.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN</h3>
+
+ <p>Nance found the passage of the Race more trying then ever
+ before. The strain of these latter days had been very great, and
+ the thought of Bernel tended to unnerve her.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, the knowledge that Gard had outwitted the
+ whole strength of the Island cheered and braced her, and she
+ struggled valiantly through the broken waters till at last she
+ hung panting on the black ledge where she was in the habit of
+ landing.</p>
+
+ <p>She scrambled up among the boulders and made straight for the
+ great wall. She had decided in her own mind that he would
+ probably be somewhere in there, possibly afraid to come out, as
+ he would not know if the Sark men were still on the rock.</p>
+
+ <p>As nearly as she could, she climbed to the place she had seen
+ the men go in, and then she cried softly, "Steve! Mr. Gard!" and
+ went on calling, as she moved up and down along the base of the
+ wall.</p>
+
+ <p>And at last her heart jumped wildly as she heard her name
+ faintly from inside the wall, and presently Gard himself came
+ crawling from under the big slab and jumped down to her side.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nance! You are a good angel to me," and he flung his arms
+ round her and kissed her again and again.</p>
+
+ <p>"But oh, my dear, I would not have you risk your life for me
+ like this."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is nothing. I am all right," said Nance, forgetting the
+ weariness and dangers of the passage in her joy at finding him
+ alive and well. "I have brought you food," and she pushed her
+ little parcel into his hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hardly dare to eat it when I think what it has cost
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be foolish, and you must be starving."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly, I am hungry&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eat, then!" and she seized the package and began to tear it
+ open. "It will make me still more glad to see you eat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, then&mdash;" and Nance was gladder than ever that she
+ had come.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have they all gone back?" he asked anxiously, as he
+ munched.</p>
+
+ <p>"They came back this morning, bringing a strange dead
+ man."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know. I put him there&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Who is he?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I found him in a cave inside the rock. He had been left there
+ very many years ago with his hands and feet tied. I think he must
+ have been a Customs officer of long ago."</p>
+
+ <p>Nance shivered, and he felt it.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are cold, Nance dear, and I am thinking only of myself;"
+ and he took off his jacket and put it over her slim wet
+ shoulders, in spite of herself.</p>
+
+ <p>"If they have all gone back we could go to the shelter. They
+ may have left some of the things there;" and they went along and
+ found the cloak and blanket, and he wrapped them about her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I found a still larger cave out of the other one, and I was
+ in there when they came after me. I had put the dead man in the
+ tunnel, and when I came back he was gone; but I did not dare to
+ come out, for I was afraid they might be on the watch still."</p>
+
+ <p>"The dead man frightened them. I do not think they will come
+ back. They are afraid of ghosts."</p>
+
+ <p>"I hoped he would scare them. But what is to be the end of it
+ all, Nance dear? Things cannot go on this way. Would it be
+ possible to get me a boat and let me get over to Guernsey?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If you will wait a little time, that is what we must do, if
+ the truth does not come out."</p>
+
+ <p>"And meanwhile you may be drowned in trying to keep me from
+ starving."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall not be drowned and you shall not starve," she said
+ resolutely.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would sooner live on puffins' eggs than have you swim
+ across that place. My heart goes right down into my feet when I
+ think of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"There is no need. I am all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and the Seigneur could not stop
+ them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Le Pelley is in Guernsey still. The
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal they would not listen to. But the truth
+ will come out if only you will wait."</p>
+
+ <p>"If I get away, will you come to me, Nance? And all my life I
+ will give to making you happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I will come. But it will be sore leaving Sark. To a
+ Sark-born there is no other place in the world like Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"All my life I will give to making up for it."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will see. Now I must go, or it will be daylight before I
+ get back."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall be in misery till I know you are safe."</p>
+
+ <p>"It will be nearly light. I will wave to you from
+ Breni&egrave;re;" and they went slowly round to the ledges, and
+ parted with kisses; and in the grey morning light he could, for a
+ time, follow the little white figure as it slipped bravely
+ through the bristling black waves of the Race.</p>
+
+ <p>But presently he could see her no more, and could but wait,
+ full of anxiety and many prayers, for the signal that should tell
+ of her safety.</p>
+
+ <p>But it did not come, and he grew desperate and full of
+ fears.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXIV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW JULIE'S SCHEMES FELL FLAT</h3>
+
+ <p>Nance found the return journey still more trying to her
+ strength, but she struggled through, and was devoutly thankful
+ when the slack water under Breni&egrave;re was reached.</p>
+
+ <p>She waded ashore almost too weary to stand, and had to cling
+ to the rough rocks till she recovered her breath. Then, slowly
+ and heavily, she dragged herself up the lower ledges to the
+ little plateau where her clothes were.</p>
+
+ <p>Julie had sat revolving grim schemes in that black head of
+ hers.</p>
+
+ <p>She hated the girl. She hated Gard. She hated Sark and every
+ one in it. Why had she ever come into these outer wilds? She
+ would have done with it all and get away back to the life that
+ was more to her taste.</p>
+
+ <p>But first&mdash;yes, mon Dieu, she would leave them something
+ to remember her by.</p>
+
+ <p>She had not a doubt that Gard was still on L'Etat. Nothing
+ else would take this girl across there. The shameless
+ hussy!&mdash;to go swimming across to see her man with nothing
+ but a white shift on!</p>
+
+ <p>She could wound Gard through Nance. She could wound Nance
+ through Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>She could wait for the girl as she came up the side of the
+ Head, and push her down again or crush her with a lump of
+ rock.</p>
+
+ <p>But that might mean reprisals on the part of the Islanders.
+ She had had experience of the way in which they resented any ill
+ done to one of their number by an outsider. She had no wish to
+ join Gard on his rock.</p>
+
+ <p>It would be better to hold the girl up to the scorn and
+ contempt of the neighbours; that would punish her. And by setting
+ the men on Gard's track again, that would punish him and her
+ too.</p>
+
+ <p>And so she restrained the natural violence of her temper,
+ which would have run to rocks and bodily injury, and waited in
+ the bracken till Nance came stumbling along in the half-light.
+ Then up she sprang, with an unexpectedness that for the moment
+ took Nance's breath and set her heart pounding with dreadful
+ certainties of ghosts.</p>
+
+ <p>"So this is how you go to visit your fancy monsieur on the
+ rock, is it, little Nance? And with nothing on but that! Oh
+ shame! What will the neighbours say when they hear how you swim
+ across to him, and you will not dare deny it?"</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance, relieved in her mind on the score of ghosts, and
+ regaining her composure with her breath, simply turned her back
+ on her and proceeded as if she were not there.</p>
+
+ <p>"And he is there still!" screamed Julie, dancing round with
+ rage to keep face to face with her. "I was sure of it, though
+ those fools could not find him. I'll see that he's found or
+ starved out, b'en s&ucirc;r! Yes, if I have to go myself and see
+ to it. As for you&mdash;shameless one!&mdash;it's the last time
+ you'll swim across there, yes indeed!"&mdash;and she raved on and
+ on, as only an angry woman with a grievance can.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance slipped her dress over her head and, under cover of it,
+ dropped off her wet undergarment, coolly wrung it out, put on her
+ cloak and walked away, Julie raging alongside with wild words
+ that tumbled over one another in their haste.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance walked to the highest point behind Breni&egrave;re, and
+ waved her white garment a dozen times to let Gard know she was
+ safe, and then turned and set off home through the waist-high
+ bracken and the great cushions of gorse. And close alongside her
+ went Julie, raging and raving the worse for her silence; for
+ there is nothing so galling to an angry soul as to find its most
+ venomous shafts fall harmless from the triple mail of quiet
+ self-possession.</p>
+
+ <p>So they came through the other cottages to La Closerie, but
+ the neighbours were all asleep, and those who woke at the sound
+ of her violence, turned over and said, "It's only that mad
+ Frenchwoman in one of her tantrums. Why, in Heaven's name, can't
+ she go to sleep, like other folks?"</p>
+
+ <p>Nance went into her own house and quietly closed the door.
+ Julie hammered on it with her fists, as she would dearly have
+ liked to hammer on Nance's face, and then cursed herself off into
+ her own place, slamming the door with such violence as to waken
+ all the fowls and set all the pigs grunting in their sleep.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXV</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH</h3>
+
+ <p>Gard's eyes, straining into the dimness of the coming dawn
+ through what seemed to him a most terrible long time, so packed
+ was it with anxious fears, caught at last the white flicker of
+ Nance's signal, and he dropped down just where he stood, among
+ the rough stones of the ridge, with a grateful sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>The strain was telling on him. He felt physically weak and
+ worn. Nance's devoted love and courage made his heart beat high,
+ indeed, but his fears on her account strung his laxed cords to
+ breaking point, and then left them looser than before.</p>
+
+ <p>He must get away somehow, if only to prevent this constant and
+ terrible risking of her life on his behalf.</p>
+
+ <p>He hardly dared to hope that his strategy with the dead man
+ would be of any permanent benefit to him, though there was no
+ knowing. Examination of the body would show that it had been dead
+ for very many years, but his knowledge of the Island
+ superstitions made him doubt if any Sark man would willingly
+ spend a night on L'Etat for a very long time to come.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, if the result of their discussions
+ confirmed them in the belief that he was still there, and if, as
+ he constantly feared, they should learn of Nance's comings, and
+ visit upon her the venom they harboured for him, they might so
+ invest the rock that escape would be impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>Meagre living, starvation even, he would suffer rather than
+ live more amply at risk of Nance's life, but if the hope of
+ ultimate escape was taken from him then he might as well give in
+ at once and have done with it.</p>
+
+ <p>So he lay there, in the broken rocks of the ridge, and looked
+ grimly on life. And the sun rose in a red ball over France, and
+ cleft a shining track across the grey face of the waters, and
+ drew up the mists and thinned away the clouds, till the great
+ plain of the sea and the great dome above were all deep flawless
+ blue, and he saw a thin white curl of smoke rise from the miners'
+ cottages on Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay there listless, nerveless, careless of life almost, an
+ Ishmael with every man's hand against him&mdash;worse off than
+ Ishmael, he thought, since Ishmael had a desert in which to
+ wander, and he was tied to this bare rock.</p>
+
+ <p>But there was Nance! There was always Nance. And at thought of
+ her, his bruised soul found somewhat of comfort and courage once
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>He felt her quivering in his arms again as he pressed her
+ close. He felt again the willing surrender of her sweet wet face.
+ And the thought of it thrilled his cold blood and set it coursing
+ through his veins like new life. Yes, truly, while there was
+ Nance there was hope.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and the Vicar would prevail
+ upon them. Perhaps they would give it up and leave him alone, and
+ then Nance would find him a boat and they would get across to
+ Guernsey. Perhaps, as she kept insisting, something would happen
+ to discover the truth.</p>
+
+ <p>So he lay, while the sun mounted high and baked him on the
+ bare stones, but he did not find it hot.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, of a sudden, he stiffened and lay watching
+ anxiously. For there, from out the Creux had come a
+ boat&mdash;and another, and another, and another&mdash;four
+ boat-loads of them again!</p>
+
+ <p>So they were coming, after all, and his hopes died sudden
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>Well&mdash;let them come and take him and have their will. He
+ was not the first who had paid the price for what he had not
+ done, and human nature must fall to pieces if hung too long on
+ tenterhooks.</p>
+
+ <p>He watched them listlessly. He could crawl into his innermost
+ cavern, of course, and could hold it against them all till the
+ end of time, which in this case would be but a trifling span, for
+ a man must eat to live. But what was the use? As well die quick
+ as slow, since there could be but one end to it. And then, to his
+ very great surprise, the boats crept slowly out of sight round
+ the corner of Coup&eacute;e Bay, and he lay wondering.</p>
+
+ <p>What could be the meaning of that? Why had they put in there?
+ Why couldn't they come on and finish the matter?</p>
+
+ <p>The sea was all deserted again. If he had not just happened to
+ catch sight of them stealing across there, he would have felt
+ sure they were not coming to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps they were going to wait there till night, though why
+ on earth they should wait there instead of at the Creux, was past
+ his comprehension.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, after a time, to his amazement, he saw them all go
+ crawling back the way they had come. One, two, three,
+ four&mdash;yes, they were all there, and they crept slowly round
+ L&acirc;ches point and disappeared, and left him gaping.</p>
+
+ <p>It was past believing. It was altogether beyond him. He lay,
+ with his eyes glued to the point round which they had gone,
+ stupid with the wonder of it.</p>
+
+ <p>They had actually given it up&mdash;for to-day, at least, and
+ gone back! He cudgelled his brains for the meaning of it all,
+ till they grew dull and weary with futile thinking.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps Nance and the Vicar and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal had
+ prevailed after all! Perhaps something had turned up at last to
+ prove to the Sark men their misjudgment! Perhaps&mdash;well, any
+ way, it was good to be left alone.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay there, laxed with the over-strain of all this
+ upsetting, but rejoicing placidly in this one more day of
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>He felt like one granted a day's respite as he stands on the
+ scaffold with the rope round his neck.</p>
+
+ <p>Never had the sun shone so brightly. Never had the silver sea
+ danced so merrily. It might be the last he would see of them.</p>
+
+ <p>And the sun wheeled on towards Guernsey, and made his
+ deliberate preparations for a setting beyond the ordinary; for
+ the sun, you must know, takes a very special pride in showing the
+ great cliffs of Sark what he can do in the way of transformation
+ scenes and most transcendent colouring.</p>
+
+ <p>And Stephen Gard lay there under the ridge on L'Etat, with the
+ wonder and beauty of it all in his face and in his heart, and
+ said to himself that it was probably the last sunset he would
+ ever see, and he was glad to have seen it at its best.</p>
+
+ <p>He had a vague idea that heaven would be something like
+ that&mdash;tenderly soft and beautiful, and glowing with
+ radiances of unearthly splendour, which whispered to weary hearts
+ of the peace and joy that lay beyond, and gently called them home
+ to rest.</p>
+
+ <p>His theology was, without doubt, of the most elemental and
+ objective, and would not have carried him any great lengths in
+ these days; but, for the time being, at all events, it lifted its
+ possessor to a plane of thought above his usual, and tended to
+ quietness and peace of mind.</p>
+
+ <p>The sky right away into the east was glowing softly with the
+ wonders of the sunset, and there the delicate tones changed
+ almost momentarily. As his eye followed the tender grace of their
+ transformations, with a delight which he could neither have
+ expressed nor explained, it once more lighted suddenly upon that
+ which he had been looking for so anxiously all day long, and
+ brought him to earth like a broken bird.</p>
+
+ <p>Once more a boat had come round the point of Les L&acirc;ches,
+ and this time it was speeding towards him as fast as a sail that
+ was as flat almost as a board, and looked to him no more than a
+ thin white cone, could bring it.</p>
+
+ <p>So they were coming, after all, and this wonderful sunset
+ might be his last indeed;&mdash;and all the tender beauty of the
+ fleecy clouds thinned and paled, and the glory faded as though it
+ had all been but a glorious bubble, and that sharp point of
+ white, speeding across the darkening sea, had pricked it.</p>
+
+ <p>But why on earth were they coming now? They had missed the
+ ebb, and it was hours yet to next half-ebb, and they could not
+ hope to land. The white waves were boiling all along the ledges,
+ and the sea for twenty feet out was a surging dapple of foam
+ laced with seething white bubbles. It would be more than any
+ man's life was worth to try and get ashore on L'Etat for many an
+ hour yet.</p>
+
+ <p>And there was only one boat! What had become of all the
+ others&mdash;of the threatened invasion in force? He sat and
+ watched it in gloomy wonder.</p>
+
+ <p>The boat came racing on. As she cleared Breni&egrave;re her
+ white sail turned to red gold, and the sea below grew purple.
+ There was something white in her bows. He got up heavily,
+ doggedly, forced to it against his will, and walked along the
+ ridge to the eastern point which commanded the landing-place on
+ that side.</p>
+
+ <p>There was, without doubt, something white in the bows of the
+ boat, and as he stood gazing at it, it took, to his dazed
+ imagination, the strange form of Nance waving joyful hands to
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>He drew his hands across his eyes. The storm had been sore on
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>The bristling waves of the Race burst in sheets of spray under
+ the glancing bows, but the white spray and the white figure and
+ the pointed white sail were all ablaze in the last rays of the
+ sun, and they all swam before him as if his head was going
+ round.</p>
+
+ <p>She came round Quette d'Amont with a fine sweep, like one
+ bound on business of which she had no reason to be ashamed, and
+ dropped her sail and lay in the shelter of the rock.</p>
+
+ <p>And the white figure in the bows was truly Nance, and she was
+ standing and waving and calling to him. And the grey-headed man
+ aft was surely Philip Guille, the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and the
+ faces of the rest were all friendly.</p>
+
+ <p>He stumbled hastily down to the lower ledges, but the rush and
+ the roar there drowned their voices.</p>
+
+ <p>What were they trying to tell him? What could they want of
+ him?</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal was standing, hands to mouth,
+ waiting his chance. The restless waters below drew back for a
+ moment to gather for a leap, and the big voice came booming
+ across the tumult&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Jump! We'll pick you up! All is well!"</p>
+
+ <p>And Gard, without a moment's hesitation, sprang out into the
+ marbled foam, and struck out for the boat.</p>
+
+ <p>They were all friendly hands that gripped him and hauled him
+ over the side, and patted him on the back to get the water out of
+ him&mdash;all friendly faces that were turned to him; and the
+ dearest face of all, lighted with a heavenly gladness, was to him
+ as the face of an angel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell me!" he gasped, still all astream, wits and clothes
+ alike. And it was the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal who told him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Peter Mauger was killed last night, at the same place as Tom
+ Hamon, and in the same way. So these hot-blooded thickheads are
+ convinced at last that it wasn't your work."</p>
+
+ <p>"Peter Mauger!" he said, gazing vaguely at them all. "But
+ who&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"We haven't found out yet. But even the thickest of the
+ thickheads can't put it down to you"&mdash;and the thickheads
+ present grinned in friendly fashion, and they ran up the sail
+ with a will, and turned her nose, and went racing back to the
+ Creux quicker than they had come.</p>
+
+ <p>And Gard sat still with his hand in Nance's two, feeling very
+ weak and shaky, and looked vaguely back at L'Etat as it faded and
+ dwindled into a dim black triangle of rock.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXVI</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L'ETAT</h3>
+
+ <p>This is what had happened.</p>
+
+ <p>Since Tom Hamon's death, his friend Peter and his widow Julie
+ had, as we know, found themselves drawn together by a common
+ detestation of Stephen Gard and a common desire for his
+ extinction.</p>
+
+ <p>For Peter considered he had been supplanted in Nance's
+ regards, though Nance had never regarded him as anything but a
+ nuisance and a boor. And Julie considered herself scorned and
+ slighted, though Gard had never considered her save as Tom
+ Hamon's wife.</p>
+
+ <p>It was they who had stirred up the Sark men against Gard, and
+ they missed no opportunity of keeping their ill brew on the
+ boil.</p>
+
+ <p>Their offensive alliance brought them much together. Peter was
+ often at La Closerie. He was like wax in the hands of the fiery
+ Frenchwoman, and she moulded him to her will. The neighbours
+ might have begun to talk, but that it was obvious to all that the
+ only bond between them at present was their ill-will towards
+ Gard, and in that feeling many shared and found nothing strange
+ in Tom's wife and Tom's chief friend joining hands to make some
+ one pay for his death.</p>
+
+ <p>In time, if it had gone on, the neighbours would doubtless
+ have had plenty to say on the subject, for old wives' tongues
+ rattled fast of a winter's evening, when they all gathered in
+ this house or that, and sat on the sides of the green bed with
+ their feet in the dry fern inside, and the oil crasset hanging
+ down in the midst, and plied their needles and their tongues and
+ wits all at once, and wrought scandalously good guernseys and
+ stockings in spite of it all.</p>
+
+ <p>But these were summer evenings yet, and the <i>veilles</i> had not
+ begun, and reputations were out at grass till the time came round
+ for their inspection and judgment.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, when Peter Mauger never reached home the night before
+ this day of which we are telling, his old housekeeper, whatever
+ she thought about it at the time, only said afterwards that she
+ supposed he had stopped somewhere and would turn up all right in
+ the morning, though she admitted that he was not in the habit of
+ staying out of a night. Anyway, she was an old woman and all
+ alone, and she was not going out to look for him at that time of
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>The morning surprised her by his continued absence. Never in
+ his life, so far as she knew, had he behaved like this before.
+ Vituperation of him gave place to anxiety about him.</p>
+
+ <p>She questioned the neighbours. All they knew was that he had
+ been seen going down to Little Sark soon after sunset.</p>
+
+ <p>"That black Frenchwoman of Tom Hamon's twists him round her
+ finger," said one.</p>
+
+ <p>"You tie him up, Mrs. Guille," chuckled another, "or sure as
+ beans she'll steal him from you and leave you in the cold."</p>
+
+ <p>And then, who should they see coming striding along the road
+ but Madame Julie herself, and evidently in a hurry;&mdash;in a
+ state of red-hot excitement, too, as she drew near. And they
+ waited, hands on hips, to hear what she was up to now.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's Peter?" she demanded, a long way in advance. "Tell
+ him I want him. That man Gard is still on L'Etat, though those
+ fools who went across for him couldn't find him. Cr&eacute; nom!
+ What are you all staring at, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's our Peter?" demanded Mrs. Guille shrilly, with the
+ strident note of fear in her voice, as she becked and bobbed
+ towards the Frenchwoman like an aged cormorant.</p>
+
+ <p>"Peter? I'm asking you. I want him. Where is he?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He went to Little Sark last night, and he's never come
+ home."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never come home? Why, what's taken him? If he'd been with me
+ last night he'd have seen something! That Nance Hamon swam across
+ to the rock with nothing on but her shift to take food to Gard,
+ and I caught her at it&mdash;the shameless hussy!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe Peter's heard of it an' gone across with 'em again,"
+ suggested one. "He was terrible hot against Gard."</p>
+
+ <p>"And reason he had to be hot against him," cried Julie.
+ "Who'll find out for me where he's got to, and when they're going
+ out after Gard? I would go too and see the end of him."</p>
+
+ <p>A couple of burly husbands came rolling round the corner
+ towards their breakfasts and caught her words.</p>
+
+ <p>"Doubt you'll have to go alone, mistress," said one,
+ phlegmatically. "There's ghosts on L'Etat, they do say, though
+ sure the one John Drillot brought across was dead enough."</p>
+
+ <p>"If he's there," said the other, plumbing Julie's feelings,
+ "he's safe as a pig in a pen."</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's our Peter?" demanded Mrs. Guille.</p>
+
+ <p>"Peter? I d'n know. What's come of him?" and they stared
+ blankly at her.</p>
+
+ <p>"He went to Little Sark last night to see her"&mdash;with a
+ beck of distaste towards Julie&mdash;"and he's never come
+ home."</p>
+
+ <p>The men looked from the speaker to Julie, as though the next
+ word necessarily lay with her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I never set eyes on him. I was out after that girl. I came
+ here to tell him about Gard. Has he been to the harbour?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, he hasn't. We are from there now."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's maybe with some of them arranging about going to
+ L'Etat," said Julie. "I'll go and find out;" and she set off
+ along the road past the windmill.</p>
+
+ <p>The morning passed in fruitless enquiries. She asked this one
+ and that, every one she could think of, if they had seen Peter,
+ and was met everywhere with meaning grins and point-blank
+ denials. Apparently no one had set eyes on Peter, and every one
+ seemed to imply that she ought io know more about him than any
+ one else.</p>
+
+ <p>It was past mid-day before she was back at Vauroque, but Mrs.
+ Guilie was still standing in the doorway of Peter's empty house
+ as if she had been looking out for news of him ever since.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh b'en? Have you found him?" she cried.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a finger of him!" snapped Julie savagely, tired out with
+ her fruitless labours.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then he's come to some ill, b&agrave; s&uacute;. And if he
+ has&mdash;ma f&eacute;, it's you!&mdash;it's you!" The old lady's
+ scream of denunciation choked itself with its own excess, and the
+ neighbours came running out to learn the news.</p>
+
+ <p>Stolid minds travel in grooves, and old Mrs. Guille's had been
+ groping along possibilities of all kinds, clinging at the same
+ time to the hope that Peter would still turn up all right.</p>
+
+ <p>Now that her hope was shattered her mind dropped naturally
+ into a grim groove, along which it had taken a tentative trip
+ during the morning and had recoiled from with a shudder.</p>
+
+ <p>The last time Mrs. Tom Hamon had come seeking a man who was
+ missing, that man had been found under the Coup&eacute;e, and so
+ old Mrs. Guille set oft for the Coup&eacute;e as fast as her old
+ legs and her want of breath and general agitation would let
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nom de Dieu! What&mdash;?" began Julie, with twisted black
+ brows, and then drifted on with the rest in Mrs. Guille's
+ wake&mdash;all except one or two housewives whose men were due
+ for dinner, and knew they must be fed whatever had come to Peter
+ Mauger.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gaderabotin!" said one of these as he came up, and stood
+ scratching his head and gazing down the road after them. "What's
+ taken them all?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Think because they found Tom Hamon there, they'll find Peter
+ too," guffawed another, and they rolled on into their homes,
+ chuckling at the simplicity of women and children.</p>
+
+ <p>Arrived at the Coup&eacute;e, the little mob of
+ sensation-seekers peered fearfully about. One small boy, cleverer
+ or more groovy-minded than the rest, struck off along the
+ headland to the left. It was from there Charles Guille had seen
+ Tom Hamon. Perhaps from there he would see something, too.</p>
+
+ <p>And no sooner was he there, where he could see to the foot of
+ the cliffs in Coup&eacute;e Bay, than he commenced to dance and
+ wave his arms like a mad thing, because the words he wanted to
+ shout choked him tight so that he could hardly breathe.</p>
+
+ <p>They streamed out along the cliff and huddled there, struck
+ chill with fright in spite of the blazing sun.</p>
+
+ <p>For there, under the cliff, in the same spot as they found Tom
+ Hamon, lay another dark, huddled figure, and they knew it must be
+ Peter.</p>
+
+ <p>The finding of Tom had filled them with anger against Gard.
+ The finding of Peter filled them with fear.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard had sufficed as explanation and scapegoat for Tom's
+ death, and as vent for their feelings. But what of Peter's?</p>
+
+ <p>It had not been Gard, then? And if not Gard, who?</p>
+
+ <p>For, whoever it was, he was still at large, and any of them
+ might be the next.</p>
+
+ <p>There were new terrors in the eyes that gazed so wildly on the
+ narrow white path and the towering pinnacles of the
+ Coup&eacute;e. They had been familiar with it all, all their
+ lives, but suddenly it had become strange to them.</p>
+
+ <p>If grisly Death, all bones and scythe, had come stalking along
+ it before their eyes at that moment, they would have shrieked, no
+ doubt, and fallen flat, but he would have no more than answered
+ to their feelings and fulfilled their expectations.</p>
+
+ <p>As it was, when the Seigneur's big white stallion stuck his
+ head over the green dyke behind them, and gave a shrill neigh at
+ the unexpected sight of so many people in a field which was
+ usually occupied only by Charles Guille's two mild-eyed cows and
+ their calves, the women screamed and the children lied.</p>
+
+ <p>"Man doux! but I thought it was the devil himself," said old
+ Mrs. Guille. "Oui-gia!" and shook an angry fist at him.</p>
+
+ <p>But the discoverer of the body was already away along the road
+ to Vauroque, covering the ground like a little incarnation of
+ ill-news.</p>
+
+ <p>The exertion of running cleared away the choking, if it took
+ his breath. He shouted as he drew near the houses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, bah!" growled one of the diners inside. "What's to do
+ now, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's there ... Peter ... under Coup&eacute;e ... Where Tom
+ Hamon...." panted the news-bearer as he tore past to his own
+ home. And the rest of Vauroque emptied itself into the road and
+ stood looking along it, as the stragglers came up, white-faced
+ and wild-eyed.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's there," confirmed one woman, twisting up her loosened
+ hair. "And just same place where Tom Hamon lay."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Tweren't Gard killed <i>him</i>, then," said one of the diners,
+ chewing over that thought with his last mouthful.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor Tom neither, then, maybe," said another.</p>
+
+ <p>"We've bin on wrong tack, then;" and they went off round the
+ corner at a speed their build would hardly have credited them
+ with.</p>
+
+ <p>One to the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and one to the Doctor, and
+ then to the Creux, both telling the news as they went. So that
+ when the officials came hurrying through the tunnel the greater
+ part of the Island was waiting for them on the shingle, except
+ those who preferred the wider view from the cliff above.</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the men had been for pulling across at once, but they
+ were overborne.</p>
+
+ <p>"Doctor said he'd like to have seen him afore he was moved
+ last time," said old John de Carteret weightily, and would not
+ let a boat go out till the Doctor and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal
+ came.</p>
+
+ <p>It was all waiting for them the moment they arrived, however,
+ and they stepped in and swung away round Les L&acirc;ches, and
+ three other boats followed them so closely that it looked almost
+ like a gruesome race who should get there first.</p>
+
+ <p>There was little talking in any of the boats, but there was
+ some solid hard thinking, in a mazed kind of way.</p>
+
+ <p>Until they knew more of the facts, indeed, they scarce knew
+ what to think yet. But more than one of them remembered
+ disturbedly how they had gone in force two days before to fetch
+ Gard off his lonely rock, or to make an end of him there; and
+ here they were going in force on a very different errand&mdash;an
+ errand which, they could not help seeing, would bring him off his
+ rock in a very different way, if this present matter was what it
+ looked as if it might be.</p>
+
+ <p>And the Doctor was not long in giving them the facts, when
+ they had run up on to the shingle, and then crunched through it
+ to the place where Peter's body lay under the steep black
+ cliff&mdash;in the exact spot where Tom Hamon's had lain just
+ eighteen days before.</p>
+
+ <p>But that it was undoubtedly Peter's face and body, those who
+ had come after Tom the last time might have thought they were
+ going through their previous experience over again. It was all so
+ like.</p>
+
+ <p>They all stood round in a dark, silent group while the Doctor
+ carefully examined the body, and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal
+ looked on with stern and troubled face.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is most extraordinary," said the Doctor, straightening up
+ from his task at last, and his face, too, was knitted with
+ perplexity, but had something else in it besides. "This man has
+ been done to death in exactly the same way as Hamon"&mdash;a
+ rustle of surprise shook the group of silent onlookers. "The head
+ has been beaten in just as Hamon's was&mdash;with some blunt
+ rounded tool, I should say. These other wounds and contusions are
+ the results of his fall down the cliff. He has been dead at least
+ eight hours. Lift him carefully, men. We can do nothing more
+ here&mdash;unless by chance the one who did it flung his weapon
+ after him, and we could find it."</p>
+
+ <p>They scattered, and searched the whole dark bay minutely, but
+ found nothing. Then with rough gentleness they bore the body to
+ the boat and laid it under the thwarts.</p>
+
+ <p>"Men!" said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal weightily, as they were
+ just about to climb back into their boats. "This matter brings
+ another matter home to all our hearts. You have been persecuting
+ another man under the belief that he killed Tom Hamon. From what
+ some of us knew of Mr. Gard, we were certain he could have had no
+ hand in it. This, I take it, proves it?" He looked at the
+ Doctor.</p>
+
+ <p>"Undoubtedly!" nodded the Doctor. "The man who killed this one
+ killed the other, and that man could not be Stephen Gard, for he
+ is on L'Etat."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's God's mercy that you haven't Mr. Gard's blood on your
+ heads. Some of you, I know, have done your best that way. Suppose
+ you had killed him that other night&mdash;what would you have
+ felt as you stood here to-day? Take that thought home with you,
+ and may God keep you from like misjudgment in the future!"</p>
+
+ <p>And they had not a word to say for themselves, but crawled
+ silently aboard, and in silence pulled back to Creux Harbour.</p>
+
+ <p>Once only old John de Carteret spoke to the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, soon after they had started.</p>
+
+ <p>"One of them"&mdash;nodding over at the boats
+ behind&mdash;"could go to the rock and bring him off," he
+ suggested.</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought of that, but there's one I want to go with me.
+ She'll be down at the Creux, I expect, and we'll go as soon as
+ we've disposed of this."</p>
+
+ <p>There was a very different feeling visible in the silent crowd
+ that awaited them at the harbour this time from that manifested
+ on the last occasion, Then, it was a sympathetic anger that
+ united them all in a common feeling against the perpetrator of
+ the deed. Now&mdash;even before the whisper had run round that
+ Peter Mauger had been done to death in the same way as Tom
+ Hamon&mdash;fear was among them, and doubt. Fear of they knew not
+ exactly what, and doubt of they knew not whom.</p>
+
+ <p>But here were two men done to death in their midst, and the
+ man on whom all their suspicions had settled in the first case
+ could not possibly have had anything to do with the second, and
+ so had most likely had nothing to do with either&mdash;in which
+ case the man who had was still at large among them, and no man's
+ life was safe, much less any woman's or child's.</p>
+
+ <p>Their thoughts did not run, perhaps, quite so clearly as that,
+ but that was the result of it all, and their faces showed it.
+ Furthermore, every man and woman there began at once to cast
+ about in his and her mind for the possible murderer, and men
+ looked at the neighbours whom they had known all their lives,
+ with lurking suspicions in their eyes and the consideration of
+ strange possibilities in their minds.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom Hamon's death had bound them closer together; Peter
+ Mauger's set them all apart. The strange dead man up in the
+ school-house added to their discomfort.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not until the hastily-constructed litter with its
+ gruesome burden had been sent off to the Boys' School, in charge
+ of the constables and the Doctor, that the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal
+ caught sight of Nance's eager white face and anxious eyes, in the
+ crowd that lingered still in answer to another whisper that had
+ flown round.</p>
+
+ <p>If they were at once pig-headed and hot-blooded and
+ suspicious, they were also warm-hearted and willing to atone for
+ a mistake&mdash;once they were sure of it.</p>
+
+ <p>No crowd followed Peter on his last journey but one, though
+ the whole Island had swarmed after Tom Hamon.</p>
+
+ <p>They wanted to see the man who would have been killed for
+ killing Tom, though he didn't do it, but for&mdash;circumstances,
+ and his own pluck and endurance.</p>
+
+ <p>And when the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal beckoned to one of the
+ circumstances, and put his hand on her slim shoulder, and
+ said&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"We are going for him. I thought you would like to come too,"
+ her face went rosy with gratitude, and the brave little hands
+ clasped up on to her breast, as she murmured&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, M. le S&eacute;n&eacute;chal!" and choked at anything
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>Those nearest gave her rough words of encouragement.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cheer up, Nance! You'll soon have him back!"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a brave garche! Don't cry about it now!"</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll make it up to him, lass. We'll all come and dance at
+ the wedding"&mdash;and so on.</p>
+
+ <p>But the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal patted her on the shoulder and
+ asked&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"And where is your brother? He should come, too. I hear you
+ have both been in this matter."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, monsieur!" she said, with brimming eyes and a pathetic
+ little lift and fall of the hand, which expressed far more than
+ she could put into words. "We fear ... we fear he is drowned. He
+ swam out to the rock taking food, and ... and ... we have not
+ seen him since;" and her hand was over her face and the tears
+ streaming through.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Dieu! Another!" said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, aghast.
+ "When, child? When was this?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The night after the storm, monsieur."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps he is there, on the rock."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, monsieur. I was over there myself last night. He never
+ got there, and we fear he must be drowned."</p>
+
+ <p>"You were over there, child? Why, how did you get across?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I swam, monsieur;" and he stared at her in amazement.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! You make up for some of the others," he
+ said bluntly. "Come then, and we will make sure of this one,
+ anyhow;" and he led the way to John de Carteret's boat, and all
+ the people gave them a cheer as they pulled out of the harbour to
+ catch the breeze off the L&acirc;ches.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the crowd waited for their return, and talked by snatches
+ of all these strange happenings, and discussed and discounted the
+ chances of Bernel's being still alive.</p>
+
+ <p>"For, see you, the Race! And that was the first night after
+ the storm, and it would be running like the deuce, bidemme!"
+ "It's best not to know how to swim if it leads you to do things
+ like that, oui-gia!" "When a man's time comes, he cuts his cleft
+ in the water, whether he can swim or not, crais b'en!" "And that
+ slip of a Nance had been over there last night&mdash;par
+ mad&eacute;, some folks have the courage!" "All the same, it was
+ madness&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But behind all the broken chatter, in every mind was the grim
+ question, "Who is it, then, that is doing these things amongst
+ us?" And there was a feeling of mighty discomfort abroad.</p>
+
+ <p>All the same, they cheered vigorously as the boat came
+ speeding back, and they saw Gard sitting between Nance and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and crowded round as it ran up the
+ shingle, and would have lifted him out and carried him
+ shoulder-high through the tunnel and up the road, if he would
+ have had it.</p>
+
+ <p>They saw how his imprisonment on the rock&mdash;"Ma f&eacute;,
+ think of it!&mdash;all through that storm, too!"&mdash;had told
+ upon him. His cheeks were hollow, and his eyes sunken, and he
+ looked very weary&mdash;"and, man doux, no wonder, after eighteen
+ days on L'Etat!"&mdash;though their friendly shouts had put a
+ touch of colour in his face and a spark in his eyes for the
+ moment.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, away home, all of you!" ordered the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal. "We've all had enough to think about for
+ one day. To-morrow we will see what is to be done."</p>
+
+ <p>"Too much!" croaked one old crone, who had something of a
+ reputation among her neighbours. "What I want to know
+ is&mdash;who killed Peter Mauger?"</p>
+
+ <p>And that was the question that occupied most minds in Sark
+ that night.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXVII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL</h3>
+
+ <p>The Doctor insisted on taking care of Gard. He took him into
+ his own house at Dixcart, and began at once a course of treatment
+ based on common-sense and the then most scientific attainment,
+ and calculated to repair the waste of the Rock and build him up
+ anew in the shortest time compatible with an efficient and
+ permanent cure.</p>
+
+ <p>Even when Gard felt quite himself again and would have
+ returned to his work, the genial autocrat would not hear of
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just you stop here, my boy," he ordered. "An experience such
+ as you have had needs some getting over. You can stand a good
+ rest and some fattening up, and those &mdash;&mdash; mines must
+ wait."</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, the Island was in a smoulder of suspicion and
+ superstition.</p>
+
+ <p>No one had yet ventured openly to point the finger at any
+ reasonably possible doer of deeds so dark. Behind carefully
+ closed doors of a night, indeed, here and there a whisper
+ suggested that the Frenchwoman might be at the bottom of it all.
+ But the mistake that had already been made, and the consequences
+ that came so terribly near to completing it beyond repair, made
+ them all cautious of open speech or action.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard's story explained the mystery of the dead stranger and
+ relieved the public mind to that extent.</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal was disposed to agree with his
+ views on the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"I never heard of those caves on L'Etat," he said musingly, as
+ they sat over their pipes one night; "and I'm sure no one else
+ knew of them. But there was much free-trading round here in the
+ old times, and I've no doubt many a Customs man disappeared and
+ was never heard of again, just like this one. All the Islands
+ felt very sore about the new regulations, and our people stick at
+ nothing when their blood is up."</p>
+
+ <p>"They do not," said Gard feelingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd like to get into that inner cave," said the Doctor
+ longingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"You couldn't," said Gard, looking at his size and girth.
+ "It's a mighty tight squeeze under the slab, and that tunnel
+ would beat you. Unless you've been brought up to that kind of
+ thing, you couldn't stand it. It would give you nightmares for
+ the rest of your life."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a rare lass, that little Nance," said the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal. "There's some good in Sark after all, Mr.
+ Gard."</p>
+
+ <p>"She was an angel to me," said Gard with feeling. "If it had
+ not been for her, I could never have held out. Not for what she
+ brought me, but the fact that she came. But it was terrible to me
+ to think of her coming through that Race. I begged her not to,
+ but she would have her way. Three times she risked her life for
+ me&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Three times!" said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal. "Ma f&eacute;,
+ but she's a garche to be proud of!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, and to be more than proud of," said Gard. "She has given
+ me my life, and I will give it all to making her happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wouldn't swim across to L'Etat for any woman in the world,"
+ said the Doctor. "Because, in the first place, I couldn't. She
+ must have nerves of steel, to say nothing of muscles. In the
+ dark, too! And you wouldn't think it to look at her."</p>
+
+ <p>"It needed more than nerves or muscles," said Gard
+ quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>Not a man among the Islanders&mdash;much less a
+ woman&mdash;would go anywhere near the Coup&eacute;e after dark.
+ Even Nance confessed to a preference for daylight passages. And
+ Gard, when he went down into Little Sark for a walk, as part of
+ his cure, could not repress a cold shiver whenever he passed the
+ fatal spot where two men had gone over to their deaths.</p>
+
+ <p>All the old wives' tales were dug up and passed along, growing
+ as they went. Little eyes and mouths grew permanently rounded
+ with horrors, and the ground was thoroughly well spaded and
+ planted with sturdy shoots warranted to yield a noisome harvest
+ of superstition for generations to come.</p>
+
+ <p>The occupants of Clos Bourel and Plaisance carefully locked
+ their doors of a night now.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Mrs. Carr&eacute; at Plaisance vowed she had heard the
+ White Horses go past, on the nights before Tom Hamon and Peter
+ were found. And every one knew that when the ghostly horses were
+ heard, some one was going to die. But as she had said nothing
+ about it before, her contribution to the general uneasiness was
+ received with respect before her face but with open doubt behind
+ her back.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Nikki Never-mind-his-name&mdash;lest his descendants, if
+ he had any, take umbrage at the matter&mdash;swore that he had
+ not only seen the ghostly steed pass Vauroque in the dead of
+ night, but that it bore a rider whose head was carried carefully
+ in his right hand. Unfortunately, the headless one passed so
+ quickly that Nikki said he could not distinguish his
+ features&mdash;having looked for them first in the wrong
+ place&mdash;and so he could not say for certain who the next to
+ die would be; but from the knowing wag of his head the neighbours
+ were of opinion that he knew more than he chose to tell, and he
+ gained quite a reputation thereby.</p>
+
+ <p>But, even here again, doubts were cast upon the matter by
+ some, especially those who were acquainted with the old
+ gentleman's proclivities towards raw spirits of the material kind
+ that paid the lightest of duties in Guernsey.</p>
+
+ <p>All these and very many similar matters were discussed by the
+ Doctor&mdash;who disturbed their minds with horrific accounts of
+ homicidal mania taking possession of apparently innocent
+ souls&mdash;and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and the Vicar and
+ Stephen Gard, as they sat over their pipes of an evening in the
+ Doctor's house. But chiefly the great and troublesome question of
+ "Who?"</p>
+
+ <p>They were all of one mind that the matter must be looked into.
+ The feeling that a danger was loose in the Island, and might at
+ any moment fall upon any man, woman, or child, was past
+ endurance. The suspicion that It might be any one of those they
+ met every day was insufferable.</p>
+
+ <p>The only difficulty was to decide how to look into
+ it&mdash;what to do, and how.</p>
+
+ <p>Each day they feared to hear of some new outrage. But until
+ the perpetrator was discovered they could do nothing towards his
+ suppression. And, on the other hand, it looked as though they
+ could do nothing towards his discovery until he perpetrated some
+ new outrage.</p>
+
+ <p>It was Gard who suggested they should watch the Coup&eacute;e
+ every night, armed, and unknown to any but themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>And, after much discussion, following out his idea, he and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and the Doctor, who could bowl over a
+ rabbit as well as any of them, lay in the heather, on the common
+ above the cutting on the Little Sark side, for many nights, guns
+ in hand, and eyes and ears on the strain, but saw and heard
+ nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>One night, indeed, when there was a high wind, the Doctor's
+ marrow crawled in his backbone at the sound of groanings and
+ moanings and most dolorous cries for help, coming up out of black
+ Coup&eacute;e Bay, where they had picked up Tom Hamon's and Peter
+ Mauger's dead bodies.</p>
+
+ <p>He sweated cold terrors, for he was on the east headland right
+ above the bay, till the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal crawled over to
+ him and whispered&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Hear 'em?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Y-y-yes. What the d-d-deuce and all&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Knew you'd wonder what it was&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"W-w-wonder?" chittered the Doctor.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's only the wind in the cave at the corner below
+ here&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! Thought it must be something of that kind," said the
+ Doctor through his teeth, clenched hard to keep them in order.
+ "Don't wonder folks fight shy of the Coup&eacute;e. Sounded
+ uncommonly like spirits. Might give some folks the jumps."</p>
+
+ <p>On another dark and windy night it was the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal's turn to get something of a fright.</p>
+
+ <p>As he lay in the heather, gun in hand, and well wrapped up in
+ his big cloak, with all his faculties concentrated on the
+ wavering pathway below, it seemed to him that he heard slow heavy
+ footsteps approaching.</p>
+
+ <p>His nerves were strung tight. He craned his head to look down
+ into the cutting, when suddenly there came a wild snuffle at the
+ back of his neck, and as he jumped up with a startled yelp, one
+ part anger and nine parts fright, a horse that had grazed down
+ upon him in the darkness, leaped back with a snort and a squeal
+ and disappeared into the night.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ga'rabotin! but I thought it was the devil himself," said the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, as the others came hurrying up. "Why the
+ deuce can't people tie up their horses as they do their cows?
+ I'll bring it up at the next Chef Plaids"&mdash;which
+ consideration restored his shaken equanimity somewhat, and made
+ him feel himself again.</p>
+
+ <p>Nothing more came of all their watching, and over a jorum of
+ something hot one night, after they had returned to the Doctor's
+ house, it was himself who said&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"After all, it stands to reason. Some evil-possessed soul
+ seeks victims, and has fixed on the Coup&eacute;e as the place
+ best fitted for his work. No one now goes near the Coup&eacute;e
+ at night&mdash;ergo, no victims; ergo, no&mdash;er&mdash;no
+ manifestations."</p>
+
+ <p>"H'm! Very clever!" said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, through
+ his pipe. "Where does that leave us, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We must have a decoy, of course."</p>
+
+ <p>"H'm! You'll not get any Sark man to act as decoy to the
+ devil. Besides, they would talk, and that would upset the whole
+ thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"What about one of your men, Gard?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a dangerous game for any man to play, Doctor.... I don't
+ quite see how one could ask it of them,"&mdash;and after a pause
+ of concentrated thought and many slow smoke-puffs&mdash;"What
+ would you say to me?" and all their eyes settled on him&mdash;the
+ Doctor's professionally.</p>
+
+ <p>"Surely you have suffered enough in this matter, Mr. Gard,"
+ suggested the Vicar.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would give a good deal, and do a good deal, to get to the
+ bottom of it all. Things will never settle down properly till
+ this matter is disposed of."</p>
+
+ <p>That, of course, was obvious to them all, but all had the same
+ feeling that he had already suffered enough in the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>But consideration of the Doctor's suggestion in all its
+ aspects only served to convince them that, if any such scheme was
+ to be carried out, it could only be done among themselves, and
+ its dangers were obvious.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not a matter to be lightly undertaken by any man. For
+ whoever undertook the r&ocirc;le of decoy, undoubtedly took his
+ life in his hands; and they spent many evenings over it.</p>
+
+ <p>The Vicar was absolutely against the idea, but had no
+ alternative to suggest.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is simply playing with death," said he, "and no man has a
+ right to do that."</p>
+
+ <p>"It means a good deal for the Island if we can clear it up,"
+ said the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal.</p>
+
+ <p>But, by degrees, they got to discussion of how it might be
+ done, and from that to the actual doing was only a heroic
+ step.</p>
+
+ <p>The decoy's head must be well padded, of course, for the heads
+ of both victims had been the points of attack.</p>
+
+ <p>He must be well armed also, and being forewarned and more, he
+ ought to be able to give a certain account of himself.</p>
+
+ <p>And then the Doctor and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal would be
+ close at hand and on the keen look-out for emergencies.</p>
+
+ <p>The Doctor undertook to pad his head with something in the
+ nature of a turban under his hat, which, he vowed, would resist
+ the impact of iron blows better than metal itself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave my ears loose, anyway," said Gard. "I'd like at all
+ events to be able to hear it coming."</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal had a weapon, part pistol and the
+ rest blunderbuss, which had belonged to his father, who had
+ always referred to it affectionately as his "dunderbush." It had
+ seen strange doings in its time, but had been so long retired
+ from the active list, that he undertook to load and fire it
+ himself before he said any more about it.</p>
+
+ <p>And he did it next day, with a full charge, in his meadow,
+ with the assistance of a gate-post and a long cord, and reported
+ it at night as in excellent order, and calculated to blow into
+ smithereens anything blowable that stood up before it within the
+ short limit of its range.</p>
+
+ <p>At this stage in its proceedings the Vicar reluctantly retired
+ from the Committee of Public Safety. He acknowledged the sore
+ need of ending the suspicious and superstitious fears which were
+ beginning to affect the life of the community in various ways.
+ But he could not see his way to any participation in means so
+ dangerous to the life of one of their number as those
+ suggested.</p>
+
+ <p>He did his best to dissuade Gard from it. He even reminded him
+ of the duty he owed to Nance. She had undoubtedly saved his life,
+ and she had a premier claim upon his consideration&mdash;and so
+ on.</p>
+
+ <p>To all of which Gard fully assented.</p>
+
+ <p>"But," he said gravely, "we are at a deadlock in this other
+ matter, and it is just barely possible that this plan may clear
+ it all up. I can't say I'm very sanguine that it will. On the
+ other hand, I really don't see that any great harm can come to
+ me. The others probably suffered because they were taken
+ unawares. I shall go in the hope of meeting it, and shall be
+ ready for it. Unless, Vicar, you really think it is the devil or
+ something of that sort?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know what to think," said the Vicar solemnly. "I
+ cannot bring myself to believe any of our Sark men would do such
+ dreadful things. I look at each man I meet and say to myself,
+ 'Now, can it be possible it is you?&mdash;or you?&mdash;or
+ you?'&mdash;and it does not seem possible; and yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And yet some one did it, Vicar," said the Doctor, brusquely,
+ "and that's just the trouble. Until we find out <i>who</i> did it, any
+ man may have done it, and we all look at everybody else, just as
+ you do, and say to ourselves, 'Is it you?&mdash;or you?&mdash;or
+ you?' Though I'm bound to say I've not got the length yet of
+ doubting either you or the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, or Gard, and I
+ don't think it's myself. It might quite conceivably be any one of
+ us, however, prowling about in our sleep and utterly unconscious
+ afterwards of evil-doing."</p>
+
+ <p>"A most awful possibility," said the Vicar. "God grant it may
+ turn out differently from that."</p>
+
+ <p>"You never know what this inexplicable machine may do," said
+ the Doctor, tapping his head. "However, we'll hope for the best,
+ and I think the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and I ought to be able to
+ see Gard through without any very disastrous results. If we
+ succeed, he will deserve better of this Island than any man I
+ know&mdash;and a sight more than this Island deserves of him. I
+ quite understand," he said, as Gard looked quickly up. "And it
+ does you credit, my boy; but there are not very many men would do
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I'm afraid I must leave you to it," said the Vicar, and
+ did so.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXVIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS</h3>
+
+ <p>When it began to be noised abroad that Gard was going to and
+ fro across the Coup&eacute;e, even by night, as if nothing had
+ ever happened there, the Sark men shrugged their shoulders and
+ said, "Pardie!&mdash;sooner him than me&mdash;oui-gia!"</p>
+
+ <p>It was obviously necessary, however, that this should be
+ known. Even the cormorant does not fish where fish are never
+ found.</p>
+
+ <p>But when he went to and fro by night, he went
+ mailed&mdash;according to the Doctor's ideas&mdash;and
+ armed&mdash;according to the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal's; and each
+ night the Doctor and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal went quietly
+ down, some time in advance, and lay hidden on the headlands with
+ their guns, and never took their eyes off him and all his
+ surroundings, while he was in sight.</p>
+
+ <p>And Gard, in nearing the Little Sark cutting, always kept
+ carefully to the right-hand side of the path, though it was
+ somewhat crumbly there and had fallen away down the slope towards
+ Grande Gr&egrave;ve. For he had gone cautiously over the ground
+ beforehand, and decided that if there was any possibility of
+ being knocked overboard unawares, he would prefer to go over the
+ much gentler slope on the right, where one might even at a pinch
+ find lodgment among the rubble and bushes, than over the sheer
+ fall into Coup&eacute;e Bay, where you could drop a stone almost
+ to the shingle below.</p>
+
+ <p>Nance knew nothing whatever of the matter, or she would
+ undoubtedly and most reasonably have had something to say about
+ it. But knowledge of it could only upset her, and so perhaps
+ himself, and he had carefully kept it from her. Little Sark,
+ moreover, was more isolated than ever by reason of the
+ Coup&eacute;e mystery, and word of his goings and
+ comings&mdash;save such as had La Closerie for their object in
+ the day-time&mdash;never reached her.</p>
+
+ <p>They were in grievous sorrow down there over Bernel. Gard
+ still preached hope, but each day's delay in its realisation
+ seemed to them to make it the more unlikely, and their hearts
+ were very sore.</p>
+
+ <p>Julie had gone about her work for days after Gard's return
+ like a bereft tigress. Then one morning she locked the door of
+ her house, put the key in her pocket, and took the cutter for
+ Guernsey; and none regretted her going.</p>
+
+ <p>And, as it turned out, though that had not been her intention
+ at the time, it was the last Sark was to see of her. Rumours
+ reached them later of her marriage to a fellow-countryman, with
+ whom she had gone to France. The one thing they knew for certain
+ was that she never came back to La Closerie, and after due
+ interval, and consequent on other matters, they broke open the
+ door and resumed possession of the house.</p>
+
+ <p>Night after night Gard slowly crossed the Coup&eacute;e,
+ lingered in its shadows, went on into Little Sark, and came
+ lingering back.</p>
+
+ <p>And night after night the Doctor and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal lay in the heather of the headlands, guns
+ in hand, waiting for something that never came, and then going
+ stiffly home to one or other of their houses, to lubricate their
+ joints and console their disappointment with hot punch and much
+ tobacco.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid it's no go," was the Doctor's grudging verdict at
+ last, on the fourteenth blank night.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's keep on," said Gard. "Things generally happen just when
+ you don't expect them."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's so," grunted the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal. And they
+ decided to keep on.</p>
+
+ <p>Fortunately, the nights were warm and mostly fine. When
+ neither moon nor stars afforded him light enough for a safe
+ crossing, he took a lantern, so that no one who desired to knock
+ him on the head need miss the chance for lack of seeing him.</p>
+
+ <p>And when, after their lonely waiting, the watchers in the
+ heather saw the lantern come joggling down the steep cutting from
+ Sark, they braced themselves for eventualities, and hefted their
+ guns, and pricked up their ears and made ready.</p>
+
+ <p>And when it had wavered slowly along the path between the
+ great pits of darkness on either hand, and had gone joggling on
+ into Little Sark, they sank back into their formes with each his
+ own particular exclamation, and lay waiting till the light came
+ back.</p>
+
+ <p>Times of tension and endurance which told upon them all, but
+ bore most heavily on Gard, since the onslaught, when it came,
+ must fall upon him, and the absolute ignorance as to how and when
+ and whence it might come, kept every nerve within him strung like
+ a fiddle-string.</p>
+
+ <p>It was the eeriest experience he had ever had, that nightly
+ trip across the Coup&eacute;e;&mdash;bad enough when moon or
+ stars afforded him vague and distorted glimpses of his ghostly
+ surroundings:&mdash;ten times worse when the flicker of his
+ lantern barely kept him to the path, and the broken gleams ran
+ over the rugged edges and tumbled into the black gulfs at the
+ sides;&mdash;when every starting shadow might be a murderer
+ leaping out upon him, every foot of the walling darkness the
+ murderer's cover, and every step he took a step towards
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>A trip, I assure you, that not many men would have been
+ capable of. For it did not by any means end with the
+ Coup&eacute;e. When he got to bed of a night, and fell asleep at
+ last, he was still crossing the Coup&eacute;e with his joggling
+ lantern all night long, and suffered things in dreams compared
+ with which even his actual experiences were but holiday
+ jaunts.</p>
+
+ <p>And at times these grisly imaginings came back upon him as he
+ actually walked the narrow path next night, and it was all he
+ could do to keep his head and not fling the lantern into the
+ depths of the pit and follow it.</p>
+
+ <p>They were all getting exceedingly weary of the whole business;
+ indeed, it was getting on all their nerves in a way which
+ threatened consequences, when, mercifully, the end
+ came&mdash;suddenly, not at all as they had looked for it, quite
+ outside all their expectation.</p>
+
+ <p>It was one of the shrouded nights. The Doctor and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, flat in the heather, saw the lantern
+ issue from the Sark cutting and come joggling towards them. They
+ heard a snort of surprise behind them, but gave it no special
+ heed. The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal grinned briefly at remembrance
+ of his fright when the beast snuffled down his neck that other
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, this is what happened.</p>
+
+ <p>Gard&mdash;his lantern in his left hand, and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal's father's "dunderbush" in his
+ right&mdash;his eyes pinching spooks out of every inch of the
+ black wall about him, and every string at its tightest&mdash;had
+ reached the crumbly bit of path near the Little Sark side, when,
+ like a clap of thunder out of a blue sky, the black silence of
+ the cutting vomited uproar&mdash;the wild clang and beat of what
+ sounded, in that hollow space, like the trampling of a thousand
+ dancing hoofs&mdash;shrill neighings and whinnyings and
+ screamings, all blended into an indescribable and blood-curdling
+ clamour that gashed the night like an outrage.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, before even he had time to wonder, the great white
+ stallion was upon him&mdash;dancing on its hind legs on that
+ narrow path like an acrobat, towering above him to twice his own
+ height, striking savagely down at him with its great front feet,
+ screaming like a fiend.</p>
+
+ <p>He had no time to think. His left arm and the lantern went up
+ with the natural instinct of defence. Just one glimpse he
+ got&mdash;and never forgot it&mdash;of vicious white eyes and
+ teeth, flapping red nostrils, wild-flying hair, and huge pawing
+ feet descending on him, with the dirty white hair splaying out
+ all round them as they came down. Then his right hand went up
+ also, and he fired full into all these things. The lantern and
+ the blunderbuss went spinning into the gulf, the great feet beat
+ him to the ground, and rose and jabbed down at him with all the
+ vicious might that lay behind them&mdash;the savage white muzzle
+ shrilling its blood-curdling screams of triumph all the
+ while&mdash;and all this in the space of a second. "Good God!"
+ cried the Doctor, craning over the eastern bank of the cutting,
+ but fearful of firing into the turmoil lest he should hit Gard,
+ so dropped himself bodily over on to the path.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal's Sark eyes saw the great
+ white head, with its flying veil of hair, as it towered up for
+ another vicious jab at the fallen man, and he emptied both
+ barrels of his gun into it.</p>
+
+ <p>A wild scream that shrilled along the night and woke Plaisance
+ and Clos Bourel and Vauroque, and the great white devil reared to
+ his fullest with wildly beating forefeet, toppled over backwards,
+ and disappeared with one hideous thud and a final crash on the
+ shingle of Coup&eacute;e Bay.</p>
+
+ <p>It was worse than they had ever dreamed&mdash;as bad almost as
+ some of Gard's own nightmares.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good God! Good God! Good God!" babbled the Doctor, as he
+ groped in the dark for what might be left of their unfortunate
+ decoy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" gasped the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, with catching breath and shaking legs, as
+ he ran round to join him in the search.</p>
+
+ <p>But there was no sign of Gard.</p>
+
+ <p>"Run, man!&mdash;Plaisance&mdash;a light!" jerked the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can't see," groaned the Doctor.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go!" and he set off at the best pace his years and his
+ shaking legs could compass.</p>
+
+ <p>Plaisance was standing at its doors, trembling still at that
+ fearsome cry, and wondering if it was, perchance, the last
+ trump.</p>
+
+ <p>At sight of the panting figure coming up from the
+ Coup&eacute;e, it scuttled and banged the doors tight. "Open!
+ Open, you fools!" cried the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and flung
+ himself against the first door, while those inside, under the
+ sure belief that they were keeping out the devil, heaped
+ themselves against it to prevent him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dolts! Idiots! Fools!" he cried. "It's me&mdash;the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal. I want your help!" and at that a man
+ peeped out from the next door to make sure this was not just
+ another wile of the devil.</p>
+
+ <p>"A lantern! Quick!" ordered the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal. "And a
+ blanket and a rope&mdash;and get ready a bed for a wounded man.
+ Come you with me and help!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mais, mon Gyu&mdash;&mdash;!" began the man.</p>
+
+ <p>"We've killed the devil, and the Doctor's down there with
+ him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"But we don't want him here, M. le S&eacute;n&eacute;chal,"
+ quavered a woman's voice, in terror.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fools! It's Mr. Gard that is hurt. The devil's down in
+ Coup&eacute;e Bay, and we've killed him for you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah then, Gyu marchi! Here's a blanket&mdash;and the
+ lantern&mdash;rope's in barn. You get a bed ready," to the woman,
+ and they went off towards the Coup&eacute;e.</p>
+
+ <p>And mighty glad the Doctor was to see them coming. He had
+ begun to fear the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal had lost his head and
+ made a bolt for home.</p>
+
+ <p>He had been sitting under the bank of the cutting as the
+ surest way of keeping out of one or other of the black gulfs. But
+ the interval had given him time to recover himself, and he jumped
+ up at once, all ready for business, and hailed them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Down this side, I think," he said, and they swung the lantern
+ over the Grande Gr&egrave;ve slope below the bit of crumbly
+ pathway.</p>
+
+ <p>"Le velas!" said Thomas Carr&eacute;, and handed the lantern
+ to the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal, and let himself heavily over the
+ side, and groped his way down to the motionless form among the
+ bramble bushes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pardie, he is dead, I do think!" as he bent over it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's see!" said the Doctor's quick voice at his elbow. "Hand
+ down the light;" and the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal waited above in
+ grievous anxiety.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not dead," said the Doctor at last. "Stunned and badly
+ knocked about. He'll come round. Now, how are we to get him
+ up?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Here's a blanket&mdash;and a rope."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good! The blanket!... So!... Now&mdash;gently, my man!... Got
+ it, S&eacute;n&eacute;chal? Right! Ease him down on to the path.
+ That's right! Give me a hand, will you? My legs aren't as limber
+ as they used to be. Now we'll get him on to a bed and see what
+ the damage is;" and they set off slowly for Plaisance.</p>
+
+ <p>"My God, S&eacute;n&eacute;chal! That passed belief! To think
+ of our never thinking of that infernal brute!" said the Doctor,
+ as they stumbled slowly along in the joggling light.</p>
+
+ <p>"He was possessed of the devil, without a doubt. That last
+ scream of his when he got my two bullets&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"'T woke us," said Carr&eacute;. "And we wondered what was up.
+ What was it, then, monsieur?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That devil of a white stallion of Le Pelley's. It was him
+ killed Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger, and he tried to kill Mr. Gard.
+ We've been on this job for weeks past, while you were all
+ sleeping in your beds."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mon Gyu! and we none of us knew anything about it till we
+ heard yon scream! And he's dead&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's dead&mdash;unless he's the devil," said the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal sententiously.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX"></a>CHAPTER
+ XXXIX</h2>
+
+ <h3>HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES</h3>
+
+ <p>Vast was the wonder of the Sark folk when they heard next day
+ of that night's doings, and learned who the murderer of the
+ Coup&eacute;e was, and how and by whom he had been laid by the
+ heels.</p>
+
+ <p>The whole Island breathed freely once more, and was
+ outspokenly grateful to the courage and pertinacity which had
+ lifted from it the cloud and the reproach.</p>
+
+ <p>Some of them even had the grace to be not a little ashamed of
+ their previous doings, but ascribed the greater part of the blame
+ to Tom's widow and Peter Mauger.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was days before Stephen Gard took any interest in the
+ matter, past or present, or in anything whatsoever.</p>
+
+ <p>The Doctor's pad undoubtedly saved his life, but no amount of
+ padding could avert entirely the fiendish malignity of those
+ merciless iron flails.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay unconscious for eight-and-forty hours; and the
+ Doctor&mdash;though he never breathed a word of it, and
+ prophesied complete recovery with the utmost cheerfulness and
+ apparent sincerity&mdash;had his own grim fears as to what the
+ effect of the whole hideous event might be on one who had already
+ suffered such undue strain of mind and body.</p>
+
+ <p>Fortunately, his fears proved groundless. On the third day,
+ Gard quietly opened his eyes on Nance, who had barely left his
+ bedside since the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal went down to La Closerie
+ himself and brought her back with him to Plaisance.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've been asleep," he said drowsily. "Anything wrong, Nance
+ dear?" and he tried to sit up, but found his head heavy with cold
+ water bandages, and a pain about his neck and left shoulder, and
+ his left arm in splints, and all the rest of him one great aching
+ bruise.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;" he murmured, in vast surprise.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're to lie quite still," said Nance dictatorially, with
+ lifted finger. "And you're not to talk or think till the Doctor
+ comes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Give me a kiss, then!"&mdash;good prima facie evidence, this,
+ that his brain had suffered no permanent injury.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, he didn't say anything about that," and she bent over
+ him and kissed him with a brimming flood of gratitude in her blue
+ eyes, and he lay quiet for a time.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it dead?" he asked suddenly, with a reminiscent shudder
+ which set all his bruises aching.</p>
+
+ <p>"The white horse? Yes, Dieu merci, it's dead! But you're not
+ to talk or think."</p>
+
+ <p>"Give me another kiss, then!"&mdash;from which it was apparent
+ that he knew very well what kind of medicine was best adapted to
+ his ailments.</p>
+
+ <p>The Doctor came down to see him the very first thing every
+ morning, and now he came quietly in, just as Nance had been
+ administering her latest dose.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;ha, nurse! What are you doing to my patient!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm only keeping him quiet, sir, as you told me to," said
+ Nance, with a rosy face.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's the doctor you ought to pay, not the patient. Well, my
+ boy, how are we this morning? Head aching yet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It does feel a bit queer. Tell me all about last night,
+ Doctor!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;ha, yes&mdash;last night! Well, you caught the
+ murderer with a vengeance, my boy&mdash;or he caught
+ you,"&mdash;and then, seeing the puzzlement in the tired eyes, he
+ briefly explained the whole matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"And do you mean it was that awful beast killed the
+ others?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Without a doubt&mdash;and would have killed you in exactly
+ the same way, and exactly the same place, but for my pads and the
+ S&eacute;n&eacute;chal's bullets. Queer thing&mdash;they found
+ the brute lying all in a heap in Coup&eacute;e Bay on the very
+ spot where Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger were found."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay-y-y-y-y!" breathed Gard, with a long sigh of relief and a
+ shiver. "I shall never forget him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, you will&mdash;in time. Think of little Nance here.
+ She's a sight better worth thinking of. And now, Miss Nancy, how
+ much good news can you stand all at once, if you try your very
+ hardest?" he asked, with a sparkle in his eyes that somehow
+ seemed to set hers sparkling too.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh mad&eacute;, Doctor!" and the little hands clasped up on
+ her breast, as was her way when greatly moved.
+ "Not&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>She dared not hope for so much&mdash;the wish of her
+ heart&mdash;just an inch or so behind the desire for Gard's
+ recovery.</p>
+
+ <p>"The cutter this morning brought over one we had feared was
+ lost&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not&mdash;not Bernel?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, my child, Bernel, by God's good mercy! He was picked up
+ by a Granville trawler, and lay there ill for some days, and
+ could only get back by Jersey and Guernsey. He was to come along
+ with the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal in a quarter of an
+ hour&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But Nance had fallen on her knees and buried her face in the
+ bed-clothes, lest any but God should see it in the rapture of its
+ breaking.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dieu merci! Dieu merci! Dieu merci!" she was crying, though
+ none of them heard it.</p>
+
+ <p>And "Thank God!" said Stephen Gard with fervour&mdash;for
+ Bernel, and for himself, but most of all for Nance.</p>
+
+ <blockquote><p>NOTE.&mdash;The names used in this book are necessarily the
+ names still current in Sark. None of the characters presented,
+ however, are in any way connected with any persons now living in
+ the Island.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full">
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14832 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14832)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Maid of the Silver Sea, by John Oxenham,
+Illustrated by Harold Copping
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Maid of the Silver Sea
+
+Author: John Oxenham
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2005 [eBook #14832]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Steven Gibbs and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA
+
+by
+
+JOHN OXENHAM
+
+With Frontispiece in Colour by Harold Copping
+
+Hodder and Stoughton Warwick Square, London, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ MY FRIEND
+ EDWARD BAKER
+ OF LA CHAUMIERE, SARK
+
+ ON WHOSE MOST HOSPITABLE AND SUPREMELY
+ COMFORTABLE VERANDAH, LOOKING OUT
+ TO THE FAIR COAST OF FRANCE, THIS
+ STORY WAS PARTLY WRITTEN, I
+ INSCRIBE THE SAME IN REMEMBRANCE
+ OF MANY
+ DELIGHTFUL DAYS
+ TOGETHER
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN'T DARE
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+ HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART
+
+ CHAPTER X
+ HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+ HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+ HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+ HOW TWO FELL OUT
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ HOW ONE FELL OVER
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ HOW PETER'S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+ HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ HOW HE HELD THE ROCK
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ HOW JULIE'S SCHEMES FELL FLAT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L'ETAT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+ HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+ HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT
+
+
+A girl and a boy lay in a cubby-hole in the north side of the cliff
+overlooking Port Gorey, and watched the goings-on down below.
+
+The sun was tending towards Guernsey and the gulf was filled witn golden
+light. A small brig, unkempt and dirty, was nosing towards the rough
+wooden landing-stage clamped to the opposite rocks, as though doubtful
+of the advisability of attempting its closer acquaintance.
+
+"Mon Gyu, Bern, how I wish they were all at the bottom of the sea!" said
+the girl vehemently.
+
+"Whe--e--e--w!" whistled the boy, and then with a twinkle in his
+eye,--"Who's got a new parasol now?"
+
+"Everybody!--but it's not that. It's the bustle--and the dirt--and the
+noise--and oh--everything! You can't remember what it was like before
+these wretched mines came--no dust, no noise, no bustle, no dirty men,
+no silly women, no nothing as it is now. Just Sark as it used to be. And
+now--! Mon Gyu, yes I wish the sea would break in through their nasty
+tunnels and wash them all away--pumps and engines and houses--everything!"
+
+And up on the hillside at the head of the gulf the great pumping-engine
+clacked monotonously "Never! Never! Never!"
+
+"You've got it bad to-day, Nan," said the boy.
+
+"I've always got it bad. It makes me sick. It has changed everything and
+everybody--everybody except mother and you," she added quickly.
+"Get--get--get! Why we hardly used to know what money was, and now no
+one thinks of anything but getting all they can. It is sickening."
+
+"S--s--s--s--t!" signalled the boy suddenly, at the sound of steps and
+voices on the cliff outside and close at hand.
+
+"Tom," muttered the boy.
+
+"And Peter Mauger," murmured the girl, and they both shrank lower into
+their hiding-place.
+
+It was a tiny natural chamber in the sharp slope of the hill. Ages ago
+the massive granite boulders of the headland, loosened and undercut by
+the ceaseless assaults of wind and weather and the deadly quiet fingers
+of the frost, had come rolling down the slope till they settled afresh
+on new foundations, forming holes and crannies and little angular
+chambers where the splintered shoulders met. In time, the soil silted
+down and covered their asperities, and--like a good colonist--carrying
+in itself the means of increase, it presently brought forth and
+blossomed, and the erstwhile shattered rocks were royally robed in
+russet and purple, and green and gold.
+
+Among these fantastic little chambers Nance had played as a child, and
+had found refuge in them from the persecutions of her big half-brother,
+Tom Hamon. Tom was six when she was born--fourteen accordingly when she
+was at the teasable age of eight, and unusually tempting as a victim by
+reason of her passionate resentment of his unwelcome attentions.
+
+She hated Tom, and Tom had always resented her and her mother's
+intrusion into the family, and Bernel's, when he came, four years after
+Nance.
+
+What his father wanted to marry again for, Tom never could make out. His
+lack of training and limited powers of expression did not indeed permit
+him any distinct reasoning on the matter, but the feeling was there--a
+dull resentment which found its only vent and satisfaction in stolid
+rudeness to his stepmother and the persecution of Nance and Bernel
+whenever occasion offered.
+
+The household was not therefore on too happy a footing.
+
+It consisted, at the time when our story opens, of--Old Mrs.
+Hamon--Grannie--half of whose life had been lived in the nineteenth
+century and half in the eighteenth. She had seen all the wild doings of
+the privateering and free-trading days, and recalled as a comparatively
+recent event the raiding of the Island by the men of Herm, though that
+happened forty years before.
+
+She was for the most part a very reserved and silent old lady, but her
+tongue could bite like a whip when the need arose.
+
+She occupied her own dower-rooms in the house, and rarely went outside
+them. All day long she sat in her great arm-chair by the window in her
+sitting-room, with the door wide open, so that she could see all that
+went on in the house and outside it; and in the sombre depths of her
+great black silk sun-bonnet--long since turned by age and weather to
+dusky green--her watchful eyes had in them something of the inscrutable
+and menacing.
+
+Her wants were very few, and as her income from her one-third of the
+farm had far exceeded her expenses for more than twenty years, she was
+reputed as rich in material matters as she undoubtedly was in
+common-sense and worldly wisdom. Even young Tom was sulkily silent
+before her on the rare occasions when they came into contact.
+
+Next in the family came the nominal head of it, "Old Tom" Hamon, to
+distinguish him from young Tom, his son; a rough, not ill-natured man,
+until the money-getting fever seized him, since which time his
+home-folks had found in him changes that did not make for their comfort.
+
+The discovery of silver in Sark, the opening of the mines, and the
+coming of the English miners--with all the very problematical benefits
+of a vastly increased currency of money, and the sudden introduction of
+new ideas and standards of life and living into a community which had
+hitherto been contented with the order of things known to its
+forefathers--these things had told upon many, but on none more than old
+Tom Hamon.
+
+Suspicious at first of the meaning and doings of these strangers, he
+very soon found them advantageous. He got excellent prices for his farm
+produce, and when his horses and carts were not otherwise engaged he
+could always turn them to account hauling for the mines.
+
+As the silver-fever grew in him he became closer in his dealings both
+abroad and at home. With every pound he could scrimp and save he bought
+shares in the mines and believed in them absolutely. And he went on
+scrimping and saving and buying shares so as to have as large a stake in
+the silver future as possible.
+
+He got no return as yet from his investment, indeed. But that would
+come all right in time, and the more shares he could get hold of the
+larger the ultimate return would be. And so he stinted himself and his
+family, and mortgaged his future, in hopes of wealth which he would not
+have known how to enjoy if he had succeeded in getting it.
+
+So possessed was he with the desire for gain that when young Tom came
+home from sea he left the farming to him, and took to the mining
+himself, and worked harder than he had ever worked in his life before.
+
+He was a sturdy, middle-sized man, with a grizzled bullet head and
+rounded beard, of a dogged and pertinacious disposition, but capable,
+when stirred out of his usual phlegm, of fiery outbursts which overbore
+all argument and opposition. His wife died when his boy Tom was three,
+and after two years of lonely discomfort he married Nancy Poidestre of
+Petit Dixcart, whose people looked upon it as something of a
+_msalliance_ that she should marry out of her own country into Little
+Sark.
+
+Nancy was eminently good-looking and a notable housewife, and she went
+into Tom Hamon's house of La Closerie with every hope and intention of
+making him happy.
+
+But, from the very first, little Tom set his face against her.
+
+It would be hard to say why. Nancy racked her brain for reasons, and
+could find none, and was miserable over it.
+
+His father thrashed him for his rudeness and insolence, which only made
+matters worse.
+
+His own mother had given way to him in everything, and spoiled him
+completely. After her death his father out of pity for his forlorn
+estate, had equally given way to him, and only realised, too late, when
+he tried to bring him to with a round turn, how thoroughly out of hand
+he had got.
+
+When little Tom found, as one consequence of the new mother's arrival,
+that his father thrashed instead of humouring him, he put it all down to
+the new-comer's account, and set himself to her discomfiture in every
+way his barbarous little wits could devise.
+
+He never forgot one awful week he passed in his grandmother's care--a
+week that terminated in the arrival of still another new-comer, who, in
+course of time, developed into little Nance. It is not impossible that
+the remembrance of that black week tended to colour his after-treatment
+of his little half-sister. In spite of her winsomeness he hated her
+always, and did his very best to make life a burden to her.
+
+When, on that memorable occasion, he was hastily flung by his father
+into his grandmother's room, as the result of some wickedness which had
+sorely upset his stepmother, and the door was, most unusually, closed
+behind him, his first natural impulse was to escape as quickly as
+possible.
+
+But he became aware of something unusual and discomforting in the
+atmosphere, and when his grandmother said sternly, "Sit down!" and he
+turned on her to offer his own opinion on the matter, he found the keen
+dark eyes gazing out at him from under the shadowy penthouse of the
+great black sun-bonnet, with so intent and compelling a stare that his
+mouth closed without saying a word. He climbed up on to a chair and
+twisted his feet round the legs by way of anchorage.
+
+Then he sat up and stared back at Grannie, and as an exhibition of
+nonchalance and high spirit, put out his tongue at her.
+
+Grannie only looked at him.
+
+And, bit by bit, the tongue withdrew, and only the gaping mouth was
+left, and above it a pair of frightened green eyes, transmitting to the
+perverse little soul within new impressions and vague terrors.
+
+Before long his left arm went up over his face to shut out the sight of
+Grannie's dreadful staring eyes, and when, after a sufficient interval,
+he ventured a peep at her and found her eyes still fixed on him, he
+howled, "Take it off! Take it off!" and slipped his anchors and slid to
+the floor, hunching his back at this tormentor who could beat him on his
+own ground.
+
+For that week he gave no trouble to any one. But after it he never went
+near Grannie's room, and for years he never spoke to her. When he passed
+her open door, or in front of her window, he hunched his shoulder
+protectively and averted his eyes.
+
+Resenting control in any shape or form, Tom naturally objected to
+school.
+
+His stepmother would have had him go--for his own sake as well as hers.
+But his father took a not unusual Sark view of the matter.
+
+"What's the odds?" said he. "He'll have the farm. Book-learning will be
+no use to him," and in spite of Nancy's protests--which Tom regarded as
+simply the natural outcrop of her ill-will towards him--the boy grew up
+untaught and uncontrolled, and knowing none but the worst of all
+masters--himself.
+
+On occasion, when the tale of provocation reached its limit, his father
+thrashed him, until there came a day when Tom upset the usual course of
+proceedings by snatching the stick out of his father's hands, and would
+have belaboured him in turn if he had not been promptly knocked down.
+
+After that his father judged it best for all concerned that he should
+flight his troublesome wings outside for a while. So he sent him off in
+a trading-ship, in the somewhat forlorn hope that a knowledge of the
+world would knock some of the devil out of him--a hope which, like many
+another, fell short of accomplishment.
+
+The world knocks a good deal out of a man, but it also knocks a good
+deal in. Tom came back from his voyaging knowing a good many things that
+he had not known when he started--a little English among others--and
+most of the others things which had been more profitably left unlearnt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF
+
+
+And little Nance?
+
+The most persistent memories of Nance's childhood were her fear and
+hatred of Tom, and her passionate love for her mother,--and Bernel when
+he came.
+
+"My own," she called these two, and regarded even her father as somewhat
+outside that special pale; esteemed Grannie as an Olympian, benevolently
+inclined, but dwelling on a remote and loftier plane; and feared and
+detested Tom as an open enemy.
+
+And she had reasons.
+
+She was a high-strung child, too strong and healthy to be actually
+nervous, but with every faculty always at its fullest--not only in
+active working order but always actively at work--an admirable subject
+therefore for the malevolence of an enemy whose constant proximity
+offered him endless opportunity.
+
+Much of his boyish persecution never reached the ears of the higher
+powers. Nance very soon came to accept Tom's rough treatment as natural
+from a big fellow of fourteen to a small girl of eight, and she bore it
+stoically and hated him the harder.
+
+Her mother taught her carefully to say her prayers, which included
+petitions for the welfare of Grannie and father and brother Tom, and for
+a time, with the perfunctoriness of childhood, which attaches more
+weight to the act than to the meaning of it, she allowed that to pass
+with a stickle and a slur. But very soon brother Tom was ruthlessly
+dropped out of the ritual, and neither threats nor persuasion could
+induce her to re-establish him.
+
+Later on, and in private, she added to her acknowledged petitions an
+appendix, unmistakably brief and to the point--"And, O God, please kill
+brother Tom!"--and lived in hope.
+
+She was an unusually pretty child, though her prettiness developed
+afterwards--as childish prettiness does not always--into something finer
+and more lasting.
+
+She had, as a child, large dark blue eyes, which wore as a rule a look
+of watchful anxiety--put there by brother Tom. To the end of her life
+she carried the mark of a cut over her right eyebrow, which came within
+an ace of losing her the sight of that eye. It was brother Tom did that.
+
+She had an abundance of flowing brown hair, by which Tom delighted to
+lift her clear off the ground, under threat of additional boxed ears if
+she opened her mouth. The wide, firm little mouth always remained
+closed, but the blue eyes burned fiercely, and the outraged little
+heart, thumping furiously at its impotence, did its best to salve its
+wounds with ceaseless repetition of its own private addition to the
+prescribed form of morning and evening prayer.
+
+Once, even Tom's dull wit caught something of meaning in the blaze of
+the blue eyes.
+
+"What are you saying, you little devil?" he growled, and released her so
+suddenly that she fell on her knees in the mud.
+
+And she put her hands together, as she was in the habit of doing, and
+prayed, "O God, please kill brother Tom!"
+
+"Little devil!" said brother Tom, with a startled red face, and made a
+dash at her; but she had foreseen that and was gone like a flash.
+
+One might have expected her childish comeliness to exercise something of
+a mollifying effect on his brutality. On the contrary, it seemed but to
+increase it. She was so sweet; he was so coarse. She was so small and
+fragile; he was so big and strong. Her prettiness might work on others.
+He would let her see and feel that he was not the kind to be fooled by
+such things.
+
+He had the elemental heartlessness of the savage, which recognises no
+sufferings but its own, and refuses to be affected even by them.
+
+When Nance's kitten, presented to her by their neighbour, Mrs. Helier
+Baker, solved much speculation as to its sex by becoming a mother, Tom
+gladly undertook the task of drowning the superfluous offspring. He got
+so much amusement out of it that, for weeks, Nance's horrified inner
+vision saw little blind heads, half-drowned and mewing piteously,
+striving with feeble pink claws to climb out of the death-tub and being
+ruthlessly set swimming again till they sank.
+
+She hurled herself at Tom as he gloated over his enjoyment, and would
+have asked nothing better than to treat him as he was treating the
+kittens--righteous retribution in her case, not enjoyment!--but he was
+too strong for her. He simply kicked out behind, and before she could
+get up had thrust one of his half-drowned victims into the neck of her
+frock, and the clammy-dead feel of it and its pitiful screaming set her
+shuddering for months whenever she thought of it.
+
+But now and again her tormentor overpassed the bounds and got his
+reward--to Nance's immediate satisfaction but subsequent increased
+tribulation. For whenever he got a thrashing on her account he never
+failed to pay her out in the smaller change of persecution which never
+came to light.
+
+On a pitch-dark, starless night, the high-hedged--and in places
+deep-sunk--lanes of Little Sark are as black as the inside of an ebony
+ruler.
+
+When the moon bathes sea and land in a flood of shimmering silver, or on
+a clear night of stars--and the stars in Sark, you must know, shine
+infinitely larger and closer and brighter than in most other places--the
+darkness below is lifted somewhat by reason of the majestic width and
+height of the glittering dome above. But when moon and stars alike are
+wanting, then the darkness of a Sark lane is a thing to be felt, and--if
+you should happen to be a little girl of eight, with a large imagination
+and sharp ears that have picked up fearsome stories of witches and
+ghosts and evil spirits--to be mortally feared.
+
+Tom had a wholesome dread of such things himself. But the fear of
+fourteen, in a great strong body and no heavenly spark of imagination,
+is not to be compared with the fear of eight and a mind that could
+quiver like a harp even at its own imaginings. And, to compass his ends,
+he would blunt his already dull feelings and turn the darkness to his
+account.
+
+When he knew Nance was out on such a night--on some errand, or in at a
+neighbour's--to crouch in the hedge and leap silently out upon her was
+huge delight; and it was well worth braving the grim possibilities of
+the hedges in order to extort from her the anger in the bleat of terror
+which, as a rule, was all that her paralysed heart permitted, as she
+turned and fled.
+
+Almost more amusing--as considerably extending the enjoyment--was it to
+follow her quietly on such occasions, yet not so quietly but that she
+was perfectly aware of footsteps behind, which stopped when she stopped
+and went on again when she went on, and so kept her nerves on the quiver
+the whole time.
+
+Creeping fearfully along in the blackness, with eyes and ears on the
+strain, and both little shoulders humped against the expected apparition
+of Tom--or worse, she would become aware of the footsteps behind her.
+
+Then she would stop suddenly to make sure, and stand listening
+painfully, and hear nothing but the low hoarse growl of the sea that
+rarely ceases, day or night, among the rocks of Little Sark.
+
+Then she would take a tentative step or two and stop again, and then
+dash on. And always there behind her were the footsteps that followed in
+the dark.
+
+Then she would fumble with her foot for a stone and stoop hastily--for
+you are at a disadvantage with ghosts and with Toms when you stoop--and
+pick it up and hurl it promiscuously in the direction of the footsteps,
+and quaver, in a voice that belied its message, "Go away, Tom Hamon! I
+can see you,"--which was a little white fib born of the black urgency of
+the situation;--"and I'm not the least bit afraid,"--which was most
+decidedly another.
+
+And so the journey would progress fitfully and in spasms, and leave
+nightmare recollections for the disturbance of one's sleep.
+
+But there were variations in the procedure at times.
+
+As when, on one occasion, Nance's undiscriminating projectile elicited
+from the darkness a plaintive "Moo!" which came, she knew, from her
+favourite calf Jeanetton, who had broken her tether in the field and
+sought companionship in the road, and had followed her doubtfully,
+stopping whenever she stopped, and so received the punishment intended
+for another.
+
+Nance kissed the bruise on Jeanetton's ample forehead next day very many
+times, and explained the whole matter to her at considerable length, and
+Jeanetton accepted it all very placidly and bore no ill-will.
+
+Another time, when Nance had taken a very specially compounded cake over
+to her old friend, Mrs. Baker, as a present from her mother, and had
+been kept much longer than she wished--for the old lady's enjoyment of
+her pretty ways and entertaining prattle--she set out for home in fear
+and trembling.
+
+It was one of the pitch-black nights, and she went along on tiptoes,
+hugging the empty plate to her breast, and glancing fearfully over first
+one shoulder, then the other, then over both and back and front all at
+once.
+
+She was almost home, and very grateful for it, when the dreaded black
+figure leaped silently out at her from its crouching place, and she tore
+down the lane to the house, Tom's hoarse guffaws chasing her mockingly.
+
+The open door cleft a solid yellow wedge in the darkness. She was almost
+into it, when her foot caught, and she flung head foremost into the
+light with a scream, and lay there with the blood pouring down her face
+from the broken plate.
+
+A finger's-breadth lower and she would have gone through life one-eyed,
+which would have been a grievous loss to humanity at large, for sweeter
+windows to a large sweet soul never shone than those out of which
+little Nance Hamon's looked.
+
+Most houses may be judged by their windows, but these material windows
+are not always true gauge of what is within. They may be decked to
+deceive, but the clear windows of the soul admit of no disguise. That
+little life tenant is always looking out and showing himself in his true
+colours--whether he knows it or not.
+
+Nance's terrified scream took old Tom out at a bound. He had heard the
+quick rush of her feet and Tom's mocking laughter in the distance. He
+carried Nance in to her mother, snatched up a stick, and went after the
+culprit who had promptly disappeared.
+
+It was two days before Tom sneaked in again and took his thrashing
+dourly. Little Nance had shut her lips tight when her father questioned
+her, and refused to say a word. But he was satisfied as to where the
+blame lay and administered justice with a heavy hand.
+
+Bernel--as soon as he grew to persecutable age--provided Tom with
+another victim. But time was on the victims' side, and when Nance got to
+be twelve--Bernel being then eight and Tom eighteen--their combined
+energies and furies of revolt against his oppressions put matters more
+on a level.
+
+Many a pitched battle they had, and sometimes almost won. But, win or
+lose, the fact that they had no longer to suffer without lifting a hand
+was great gain to them, and the very fact that they had to go about
+together for mutual protection knitted still stronger the ties that
+bound them one to the other.
+
+But, though little Nance's earlier years suffered much from the black
+shadow of brother Tom, they were very far from being years of darkness.
+
+She was of an unusually bright and enquiring disposition, always
+wanting to see and know and understand, interested in everything about
+her, and never satisfied till she had got to the bottom of things, or at
+all events as far down as it was possible for a small girl to get.
+
+Her lively chatter and ceaseless questions left her mother and Grannie
+small chance of stagnation. But, if she asked many questions--and some
+of them posers--it was not simply for the sake of asking, but because
+she truly wanted to know; and even Grannie, who was not naturally
+talkative, never resented her pertinent enquiries, but gave freely of
+her accumulated wisdom and enjoyed herself in the giving.
+
+When she got beyond their depth at times, or outside their limits, she
+would boldly carry her queries--and strange ones they were at times--to
+old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar up in Sark, making nothing of the journey
+and the Coupe in order to solve some, to her, important problem. And he
+not only never refused her but delighted to open to her the stores of a
+well-stocked mind and of the kindest and gentlest of hearts.
+
+Often and often the people of Vauroque and Plaisance would see them
+pass, hand in hand and full of talk, when the Vicar had wished to see
+with his own eyes one or other of Nance's wonderful discoveries, in the
+shape of cave or rock-pool, or deposit of sparkling crystal
+fingers--amethyst and topaz--or what not.
+
+For she was ever lighting on odd and beautiful bits of Nature's
+craftsmanship. Books were hardly to be had in those days, and in place
+of them she climbed fearlessly about the rough cliff-sides and tumbled
+headlands, and looked close at Nature with eyes that missed nothing and
+craved everything.
+
+To the neighbours the headlands were places where rabbits were to be
+shot for dinner, the lower rocks places where ormers and limpets and
+vraie might be found. But to little Nance the rabbits were playfellows
+whose sudden deaths she lamented and resented; the cliff-sides were
+glorious gardens thick with sweet-scented yellow gorse and honeysuckle
+and wild roses, carpeted with primroses and bluebells; and, in their
+season, rich and juicy with blackberries beyond the possibilities of
+picking.
+
+She was on closest visiting terms with innumerable broods of
+newly-hatched birdlings--knew them, indeed, while they were still but
+eggs--delighted in them when they were as yet but skin and
+mouth--rejoiced in their featherings and flyings. Even baby cuckoos were
+a joy to her, though, on their foster-mothers' accounts she resented the
+thriftlessness of their parents, and grew tired each year of their
+monotonous call which ceased not day or night. But of the larks never,
+for their songs seemed to her of heaven, while the cuckoos were of
+earth. The gulls, too, were somewhat difficult from the friendly point
+of view, but she lay for hours overlooking their domestic arrangements
+and envying the wonders of their matchless flight.
+
+And down below the cliffs what marvels she discovered!--marvels which in
+many cases the Vicar was fain to content himself with at second hand,
+since closer acquaintance seemed to him to involve undoubted risk to
+limb if not to life. Little Nance, indeed, hopped down the seamed cliffs
+like a rock pipit, with never a thought of the dangers of the passage,
+and he would stand and watch her with his heart in his mouth, and only
+shake his grey head at her encouraging assertions that it was truly
+truly as easy as easy. For he felt certain that even if he got down he
+would never get up again. And so, when the triumphant shout from below
+told him she was safely landed, he would wave a grateful hand and get
+back from the edge and seat himself securely on a rock, till the rosy
+face came laughing up between him and the shimmering sea, with trophy of
+weed or shell or crystal quartz, and he would tell her all he knew about
+them, and she would try to tell him of all he had missed by not coming
+down.
+
+There were wonderful great basins down there, all lined with pink and
+green corallines, and full of the loveliest weeds and anemones and other
+sea-flowers, and the rivulets that flowed from them to the sea were
+lined pink and green, too. And this that she had brought him was the
+flaming sea-weed, though truly it did not look it now, but in the water
+it was, she assured him, of the loveliest, and there were great bunches
+there so that the dark holes under the rocks were all alight with it.
+
+She coaxed him doubtfully to the descent of the rounded headland facing
+L'Etat, picking out an easy circuitous way for him, and so got him
+safely down to her own special pool, hollowed out of the solid granite
+by centuries of patient grinding on the part of the great boulders
+within.
+
+It was there, peering down at the fishes below, that she expressed a
+wish to imitate them; and he agreeing, she ran up to the farm for a bit
+of rope and was back before he had half comprehended all the beauties of
+the pool. And he had no sooner explained the necessary movements to her
+and she had tried them, than she cast off the rope, shouting, "I can
+swim! I can swim!" and to his amazement swam across the pool and back--a
+good fifty feet each way--chirping with delight in this new-found
+faculty and the tonic kiss of the finest water in the world. But after
+all it was not so very amazing, for she was absolutely without fear, and
+in that water it is difficult to sink.
+
+They were often down there together after that, for close alongside were
+wonderful channels and basins whorled out of the rock in the most
+fantastic ways, and to sit and watch the tide rush up them was a
+never-failing entertainment.
+
+And not far away was a blow-hole of the most extraordinary which shot
+its spray a hundred feet into the air, and if you didn't mind getting
+wet you could sit quite alongside it, so close that you could put your
+hand into it as it came rocketing out of the hole, and then, if the sun
+was right, you sat in the midst of rainbows--a thing Nance had always
+longed to do since she clapped her baby hands at her first one. But the
+Vicar never did that.
+
+And once, in quest of the how and the why, Nance swam into the
+blow-hole's cave at a very low tide, and its size and the dome of its
+roof, compared with the narrowness of its entrance, amazed her, but she
+did not stay long for it gave her the creeps.
+
+These were some of the ways by which little Nance grew to a larger
+estate than most of her fellows, and all these things helped to make her
+what she came to be.
+
+When she grew old enough to assist in the farm, new realms of delight
+opened to her. Chickens, calves, lambs, piglets--she foster-mothered
+them all and knew no weariness in all such duties which were rather
+pleasures.
+
+It was a wounded rabbit, limping into cover under a tangle of gorse and
+blackberry bashes, that discovered to her the entrance to the series of
+little chambers and passages that led right through the headland to the
+side looking into Port Gorey. Which most satisfactory hiding-place she
+and Bernel turned to good account on many an occasion when brother Tom's
+oppression passed endurance.
+
+It had taken time, and much screwing up of childish courage, to explore
+the whole of that extraordinary little burrow, and it was not the work
+of a day.
+
+When Nance crept along the little run made by many generations of
+rabbits, she found that it led finally into a dark crack in the rock,
+and, squeezing through that, she was in a small dark chamber which smelt
+strongly of her friends.
+
+As soon as her eyes recovered from the sudden change from blazing
+sunlight to almost pitch darkness, she perceived a small black opening
+at the far end, and looking through it she saw a lightening of the
+darkness still farther in which tempted her on.
+
+It was a tough scramble even for her, and the closeness of the rocks and
+the loneliness weighed upon her somewhat. But there was that glimmer of
+light ahead and she must know what it was, and so she climbed and
+wriggled over and under the huge splintered rocks till she came to the
+light, like a tiny slit of a window far above her head, and still there
+were passages leading on.
+
+Next day, with Bernel and a tiny crasset lamp for company, she explored
+the burrow to its utmost limits and adopted it at once as their refuge
+and stronghold. And thereafter they spent much time there, especially in
+the end chamber where a tiny slit gave on to Port Gorey, and they could
+lie and watch all that went on down below.
+
+There they solemnly concocted plans for brother Tom's discomfiture, and
+thither they retreated after defeat or victory, while he hunted high
+and low for them and never could make out where they had got to.
+
+Then Tom went off to sea, and life, for those at home, became a joy
+without a flaw--except the thought that he would sometime come
+back--unless he got drowned.
+
+When he returned he was past the boyish bullying and teasing stage, and
+his stunts and twists developed themselves along other lines. Moreover,
+sailor-fashion, he wore a knife in a sheath at the back of his belt.
+
+He found Nance a tall slim girl of sixteen, her childish prettiness just
+beginning to fashion itself into the strength and comeliness of form and
+feature which distinguished her later on.
+
+He swore, with strange oaths, that she was the prettiest bit of goods
+he'd set eyes on since he left home, and he'd seen a many. And he
+wondered to himself if this could really be the Nance he used to hate
+and persecute.
+
+But Nance detested him and all his ways as of old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME
+
+
+Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger seated themselves on a rock within a few feet
+of the narrow slit out of which Nance and Bernel had been looking.
+
+"Ouaie," said Tom, taking up his parable--"wanted me to join him in
+getting a loan on farm, he did."
+
+"Aw, now!"
+
+"Ouaie--a loan on farm, and me to join him, 'cause he couldn' do it
+without. 'And why?' I asked him."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"An' he told me he was goin' to make a fortune out them silver mines."
+
+"Aw!"
+
+"Ouaie! He'd put in every pound he had and every shilling he earned. An'
+the more he could put in the more he would get out."
+
+"Aw!"
+
+"'But,' I said, 'suppos'n it all goes into them big holes and never
+comes out--'"
+
+"Aw!"
+
+"But he's just crazy 'bout them mines. Says there's silver an' lead, and
+guyabble-knows-what-all in 'em, and when they get it out he'll be a rich
+man."
+
+"Aw!" said Peter, nodding his head portentously, as one who had gauged
+the futility of earthly riches.
+
+He was a young man of large possessions but very few words. When he did
+allow his thoughts out they came slowly and in jerks, with lapses at
+times which the hearer had to fill in as best he could.
+
+His father had been an enterprising free-trader, and had made money
+before the family farm came to him on the death of his father. He had
+married another farm and the heiress attached to it, and Peter was the
+result. An only son, both parents dead, two farms and a good round sum
+in the Guernsey Bank, such were Peter's circumstances.
+
+And himself--good-tempered; lazy, since he had no need to work; not
+naturally gifted mentally, and the little he had, barely stirred by the
+short course of schooling which had been deemed sufficient for so
+worldly-well-endowed a boy; tall, loose-limbed, easy going and easily
+led, Peter was the object of much speculation among marriageably
+inclined maiden hearts, and had set his own where it was not wanted.
+
+"Ouaie," continued Tom, "an' if I'd join him in the loan the money'd all
+come to me when he'd done with it."
+
+"Aw!... Money isn't everything.... Can't get all you want sometimes
+when you've got all money you want."
+
+"G'zammin, Peter! You're as crazy 'bout that lass as th' old un is 'bout
+his mines. Why don't ye ask her and ha' done with it?"
+
+"Aw--yes. Well.... You see.... I'm makin' up to her gradual like, and in
+time----"
+
+And Bernel in the hole dug his elbow facetiously into Nance's side.
+
+"Mon Gyu! To think of a slip of a thing like our Nance making a great
+big fellow like you as fool-soft as a bit of tallow!" and Tom stared at
+him in amazement. "Why, I've licked her scores of times, and I used to
+lift her up by the hair of her head."
+
+"I'd ha' knocked your head right off, Tom Hamon, if I'd been there.
+Right off--yes, an' bumped it on the ground."
+
+"No, you wouldn't. 'Cause, in the first place, you couldn't, and in the
+second place you wouldn't have looked at her then. She was no more to
+look at than a bit of a rabbit, slipping about, scared-like, with her
+big eyes all round her."
+
+"Great rough bull of a chap you was, Tom. Ought to had more lickings
+when you was young."
+
+"Aw!" said Tom.
+
+"Join him?" asked Peter after a pause.
+
+"No, I won't, an' he's no right to ask it, an' he knows it. Them dirty
+mines may pay an' they may not, but the farm's a safe thing an' I'll
+stick to it."
+
+"Maybe new capt'n'll make things go better. That's him, I'm thinking,
+just got ashore from brig without breaking his legs," nodding towards
+the wooden landing-stage on the other side of the gulf. For landing at
+Port Gorey was at times a matter requiring both nerve and muscle.
+
+A man, however, had just leaped ashore from the brig, and was now
+standing looking somewhat anxiously after the landing of his baggage,
+which consisted of a wooden chest and an old carpet-bag.
+
+When at last it stood safely on the platform, he cast a comprehensive
+look at his surroundings and then turned to the group of men who had
+come down to watch the boat come in, and four pairs of eyes on the
+opposite side of the gulf watched him curiously, with little thought of
+the tremendous part he was to play in all their lives.
+
+"Where's he stop?" asked Peter.
+
+"Our house."
+
+"Nay!"
+
+"Ouaie, I tell you. He's to stop at our house."
+
+"Why doesn't he go to Barracks?"
+
+"Old Captain's there and they might not agree. Oh ouaie, he'll have his
+hands full, I'm thinking. And if he's not careful it's a crack on the
+head and a drop over the Coupe he'll be getting."
+
+"Ah!" said Peter Mauger.
+
+"Come you along and see what kind of chap he is."
+
+"Aw well, I don't mind," and they strolled away to inspect the new Mine
+Captain, who was to brace up the slackened ropes and bring the
+enterprise to a successful issue.
+
+"Did you know he was going to stop with us, Nance?" asked Bernel, as
+they groped their way out after due interval.
+
+"I heard father tell mother this morning."
+
+"Where's he to sleep?"
+
+"He's to have my room and I'm coming up into the loft. I shall take the
+dark end, and I've put up a curtain across."
+
+"Shoo! We'll hear enough about the mines now," and they crept out behind
+a gorse bush, and went off across the common towards the clump of
+wind-whipped trees inside which the houses of Little Sark clustered for
+companionship and shelter from the south-west gales.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+
+Old Tom Hamon gave the new arrival warm greeting, and pointed out such
+matters as might interest him as they climbed the steep road which led
+up to the plateau and the houses.
+
+"Assay Office, Mr. Gard.... Captain's Office.... Forge.... Sark's Hope
+shaft.... Le Pelley shaft--ninety fathoms below sea-level.... Pump
+shaft ... and yon to east'ard is Prince's shaft.... We go round here
+behind engine-house.... Yon's my house 'mong the trees."
+
+"That's a fine animal," said Gard, stopping suddenly to look at a great
+white horse, which stood nibbling the gorse on the edge of the cliff
+right in the eye of the sun, as it drooped towards Guernsey in a
+holocaust of purple and amber and crimson clouds. The glow of the
+threatening sky threw the great white figure into unusual prominence.
+
+"Yours, Mr. Hamon?" asked Gard--and the white horse flung up its head
+and pealed out a trumpet-like neigh as though resenting the imputation.
+
+"No," said old Tom, staring at the white horse under his shading hand.
+"Seigneur's. What's he doing down here? He's generally kept up at
+Eperquerie, and that's the best place for him. He's an awkward beast at
+times. I must send and tell Mr. Le Pelley where he is."
+
+The little cluster of white, thatched houses stood close together for
+company, but discreetly turned their faces away from one another so that
+no man overlooked or interfered with his neighbour.
+
+Gard found himself in a large room which occupied the whole middle
+portion of the house and served as kitchen and common room for the
+family.
+
+The floor was of trodden earth--hard and dry as cement, with a strip of
+boarding round the sides and in front of the fire-place. Heavy oaken
+beams ran across the roof from which depended a great hanging rack
+littered with all kinds of household odds and ends. Along the beams of
+the roof on hooks hung two long guns. One end of the room was occupied
+by a huge fire-place, in one corner of which stood a new iron cooking
+range, and alongside it a heap of white ashes and some smouldering
+sticks of gorse under a big black iron pot filled the room with the
+fragrance of wood smoke. In the opposite side of the fire-place was an
+iron door closing the great baking oven, and above it ran a wide
+mantel-shelf on which stood china dogs and glass rolling-pins and a
+couple of lamps.
+
+A well-scrubbed white wooden table was set ready for supper. On a very
+ancient-looking black oak stand--cupboard below and shelves above--was
+ranged a vast assortment of crockery ware, and on the walls hung
+potbellied metal jugs and cans which shone like silver.
+
+Two doors led to the other rooms of the house, one of them wide open.
+
+One corner of the room was occupied by a great wooden bin eight feet
+square, filled with dried bracken. On the wide flat side, which looked
+like a form, a woman and a girl were sitting when the two men entered.
+
+Hamon introduced them briefly as his wife and daughter, and, comely
+women as Gard had been accustomed to in his own country of Cornwall,
+there was something about these two, and especially about the younger of
+the two, which made him of a sudden more than satisfied with the
+somewhat doubtful venture to which he had bound himself--set a sudden
+homely warmth in his heart, and made him feel the richer for being
+there--made him, in fact, glad that he had come.
+
+And yet there was nothing in their reception of him that justified the
+feeling.
+
+They nodded, indeed, in answer to his bow, but neither their faces nor
+their manner showed any special joy at his coming.
+
+But that made no difference to him. They were there, and the mere sight
+of the girl's fine mobile face and large dark blue eyes was a thing to
+be grateful for.
+
+"You'll be wanting your supper," said Hamon.
+
+"At your own time, please," said the young man, looking towards Mrs.
+Hamon. "I am really not very hungry"--though truth to tell he well might
+have been, for the food on the brig had left much to be desired even to
+one who had been a sailorman himself.
+
+"It is our usual time," said Mrs. Hamon, "and it is all ready. Will you
+please to sit there."
+
+At the sound of the chairs a boy of fourteen came quietly in and slipped
+into his seat.
+
+His sister had gone off with a portion on a plate through the open door.
+
+Gard was surprised to find himself hoping it was not her custom to take
+her meals in private, and was relieved when she came back presently
+without the plate and sat down by her brother.
+
+"Ah, you, Bernel, as soon as you've done your supper run over and tell
+Mr. Le Pelley that his white stallion is on our common, and he'd better
+send for him."
+
+"I'll ride him home," said the boy exultingly.
+
+"No you won't, Bern," said his sister quickly. "He's not safe. You know
+what an awkward beast he is at times, and you could never get him across
+the Coupe."
+
+"Pooh! I'd ride him across any day."
+
+"Promise me you won't," she said, with a hand on his arm.
+
+"Oh, well, if you say so," he grumbled. "I could manage him all right
+though."
+
+Just then the doorway darkened and two young men entered, and threw
+their caps on the green bed, and sat down with an awkward nod of
+greeting to the company in general.
+
+"My son Tom," said Mr. Hamon, and Tom jerked another awkward nod towards
+the stranger. "And Peter Mauger"--Peter repeated the performance, more
+shyly and awkwardly even than Tom, from a variety of reasons.
+
+Tom was at home, and he had not even been invited--except by Tom. And
+strangers always made him shy. And then there was Nance, with her great
+eyes fixed on him, he knew, though he had not dared to look straight at
+her.
+
+And then the stranger had an air about him--it was hard to say of what,
+but it made Peter Mauger and Tom conscious of personal uncouthness, and
+of a desire to get up and go out and wash their hands and have a shave.
+
+Gard, they knew, was the new captain of the mine, chosen by the
+managers of the company for his experience with men, and he looked as if
+he had been accustomed to order them about.
+
+His eyes were dark and keen, his face full of energy. Being clean-shaven
+his age was doubtful. He might be twenty-five or forty. Nance, in her
+first quick comprehensive glance, had wondered which.
+
+He stood close upon six feet and was broad-chested and
+square-shouldered. A good figure of a man, clean and upstanding, and
+with no nonsense about him. A capable-looking man in every respect, and
+if his manner was quiet and retiring, there was that about him which
+suggested the possibility of explosion if occasion arose.
+
+Not that the Hamon family as a whole, or any member of it, would have
+put the matter quite in that way to itself, or herself. But that,
+vaguely, was the impression produced upon them--an impression of
+uprightness, intelligence, and reserved strength--and the more strongly,
+perhaps, because of late these characteristics had been somewhat
+overshadowed in the Island by the greed of gain and love of display
+engendered by the opening of the mines.
+
+To old Tom Hamon his coming was wholly welcome. It foreshadowed a strong
+and more energetic development of the mines and the speedier realization
+of his most earnest desires.
+
+To Mrs. Hamon it meant some extra household work, which she would gladly
+undertake since it was her husband's wish to have the stranger live with
+them, though in his absorption by the mines she had no sympathy
+whatever.
+
+Nance looked upon him merely as a part of the mines, and therefore to
+be detested along with the noisy engine-house, the pumps, the damp and
+dirty miners, and all the rest of it--the coming of which had so
+completely spoiled her much-loved Sark.
+
+Tom disliked him because he made him feel small and boorish, and of a
+commoner make. And feelings such as that inevitably try to disprove
+themselves by noisy self-assertion.
+
+Accordingly Tom--after various jocular remarks in patois to Peter, who
+would have laughed at them had he dared, but, knowing Nance's feelings
+towards her brother was not sure how she would take it--loudly and
+provocatively to Gard--
+
+"Expect to make them mines pay, monsieur?"
+
+"Well, I hope so. But it's too soon to express an opinion till I've seen
+them."
+
+"They put a lot of money in, and they get a lot of dirt out, but one
+does not hear much of any silver."
+
+"Sometimes the deepest mines prove the best in the end."
+
+"And as long as there's anybody to pay for it I suppose you go on
+digging."
+
+"If I thought the mines had petered out--"
+
+"Eh?" said Peter, and then coughed to hide his confusion when they all
+looked at him.
+
+"I should of course advise the owners to stop work and sink no more
+money."
+
+"It'll be a bad day for Sark when that happens," said old Tom. "But it's
+not going to happen. The silver's there all right. It only wants getting
+out."
+
+"If it's there we'll certainly get it out," said Gard, and although he
+said it quietly enough, old Tom felt much better about things in
+general.
+
+"You're the man for us," he said heartily. "We'll all be rich before we
+die yet."
+
+"Depends when we die," growled Tom--in which observation--obvious as it
+was--there was undoubtedly much truth. And then, his little suggestion
+of provocation having broken like ripples on Gard's imperturbability, he
+turned on Peter and tried to stir him up.
+
+"You don't get on any too fast with your making up to la garche, mon
+gars," he said in the patois again.
+
+"Aw--Tom!" remonstrated Peter, very red in the face at this ruthless
+laying bare of his approaches.
+
+"Get ahead, man! Put your arm round her neck and give her a kiss. That's
+the way to fetch 'em."
+
+At which Nance jumped up with fiery face and sparks in her eyes and left
+the room, and Gard, who understood no word of what had passed, yet
+understood without possibility of doubt that Tom's speech had been
+mortally offensive to his sister, and set him down in his own mind as of
+low esteem and boorish disposition.
+
+As for Peter, to whom such advice was as useless as the act would have
+been impossible at that stage of the proceedings, he was almost as much
+upset as Nance herself. He got up with a shamefaced--
+
+"Aw, Tom, boy, that was not good of you," and made for his hat, while
+Tom sat with a broad grin at the result of his delicate diplomacy, and
+Gard's great regret was that it was not possible for him to take the
+hulking fellow by the neck and bundle him out of doors.
+
+Old Tom made some sharp remark to his son, who replied in kind; Mrs.
+Hamon sat quietly aloof, as she always did when Tom and his father got
+to words, and Bernel made play with his supper, as though such matters
+were of too common occurrence to call for any special attention on his
+part.
+
+Then Nance's face framed in a black sun-bonnet gleamed in at the outer
+door.
+
+"Come along, Bern, and we'll go and tell the Seigneur where his white
+horse is," and she disappeared, and Bernel, having polished off
+everything within reach, got up and followed her.
+
+"Will you please to take a look at the mines to-night?" asked old Tom of
+his guest, anxious to interest him in the work as speedily as possible.
+
+"We might take a bit of a walk, and you can tell me all you will about
+things. But I don't take hold till the first of the month, and I don't
+want to interfere until I have a right to. I suppose my baggage will be
+coming up?"
+
+"Ach, yes! Tom, you take the cart and bring Mr. Gard's things up. They
+are lying on the quay down there. Then we will go along, if you please!"
+
+Old Tom marched him through the wonderful amber twilight to the summit
+of the bluff behind the engine-house--whence Gard could just make out
+his box and carpet-bag still lying on the quay below. And all the way
+the old man was volubly explaining the many changes necessary, in his
+opinion, to bring the business to a paying basis. All which information
+Gard accepted for testing purposes, but gathered from the total the fact
+that through ill health on the part of the departing captain, the ropes
+all round had got slack and that the tightening of them would be a
+matter of no little delicacy and difficulty.
+
+Sark men, Mr. Hamon explained, were very free and independent, and hated
+to be driven. They did piecework--so much per fathom, and were
+constitutionally, he admitted, a bit more particular as to the so much
+than as to the fathom. While the Cornish and Welsh men, receiving weekly
+wages, had also grown slack and did far less work than they did at first
+and than they might, could, and should do.
+
+"But," said old Tom frankly, scratching his head, "I don't know's I'd
+like the job myself. Your men are quiet enough to look at, but they can
+boil over when they're put to it. And our men--well, they're Sark, and
+there's more'n a bit of the devil in them."
+
+"I must get things round bit by bit," said Gard quietly. "It never pays
+to make a fuss and bustle men. Softly does it."
+
+"I'm thinking you can do it if any man can."
+
+"I'll have a good try any way."
+
+"Whereabouts does the Seigneur live?" he asked presently, and
+inconsequently as it seemed, but following out a train of thought of his
+own which needed no guessing at.
+
+"The Seigneur? Over there in Sark--across the Coupe."
+
+"What's the Coupe?"
+
+"The Coupe?--Mon Gyu!"--at such colossal ignorance--"Why, ...the
+Coupe's the Coupe.... Come along, then. Maybe you can get a look at it
+before it's too dark."
+
+They had got quite out of sound of the clanking engine, and were
+travelling a well-made road, when their attention was drawn to a lively
+struggle proceeding on the common between the road and the cliff.
+
+Tom, setting out after the troubled Peter, had caught sight of the
+Seigneur's white horse and had forthwith decided to take him home.
+Peter, agreeing that it was a piece of neighbourliness which the
+Seigneur would appreciate, had turned back to give his assistance.
+
+By some cajolery they had managed to slip a halter with a special length
+of rope over the wary white head, and there for the moment matters hung.
+For the white horse, with his forelegs firmly planted, dragged at one
+end of the rope and the two men at the other, and the issue remained in
+doubt.
+
+The doubt, however, was suddenly solved by the white horse deciding on
+more active measures. He swung his great head to one side, dragged the
+men off their feet and started off at a gallop, they hanging on as best
+they could.
+
+Old Tom and Gard set off after them to see the end of the matter, and
+suddenly, as the roadway dipped between high banks and became a hollow
+way, the white beast gave a shrill squeal, flung up his heels, jerked
+himself free, and vanished like a streak of light into the darkness of
+the lofty bank in front.
+
+"Mon Gyu!" cried old Tom, and sped up the bank to see the end.
+
+But the white horse knew his way and had no fear. They were just in time
+to hear the rattle of his hoofs, as he disappeared with a final shrill
+defiance into the outer darkness on the further side of a mighty gulf,
+while a stone dislodged by his flying feet went clattering down into
+invisible depths.
+
+"He's done it," panted old Tom, while Gard gazed with something like awe
+at the narrow pathway, wavering across from side to side of the great
+abyss, out of which rose the growl of the sea.
+
+"What's this?" he asked.
+
+"Coupe. It's a wonder he managed it. The path slipped in the winter
+and it's narrow in places."
+
+"And do people cross it in the dark?" asked Gard, thinking of the girl
+and boy who had gone to see the Seigneur.
+
+"Och yes! It is not bad when you're used to it. Come and see!" and he
+led the way back across the common to the road.
+
+Gard walked cautiously behind him as he went across the crumbling white
+pathway with the carelessness of custom, and, sailor as he had been, he
+was not sorry when the other side was reached, and he could stand in the
+security of the cutting and look back, and down into the gulf where the
+white waves foamed and growled among the boulders three hundred feet
+below.
+
+"I've seen a many as did not care to cross that, first time they saw
+it," said old Tom with a chuckle.
+
+"Well, I'm not surprised at that. It's apt to make one's head spin."
+
+"I brought captain of brig up here and he wouldn't put a foot on it. Not
+for five hundred pounds, he said."
+
+"It would have taken more than five hundred pounds to piece him together
+if he'd tumbled down there."
+
+"That's so."
+
+A young moon, and a clear sky still rarely light and lofty in the amber
+after-glow, gave them a safe passage back.
+
+When they reached the house among the trees, Gard bethought him of his
+belongings.
+
+"And my things from the quay?" he suggested.
+
+"G'zammin! That boy has forgotten all about them, I'll be bound. I'll
+take the cart down myself."
+
+"I'll go with you."
+
+When they got back with the box and bag, which no one had touched since
+they were dropped on to the platform four hours before, they found that
+Nance and Bernel had got home and gone off to bed, having taken
+advantage of being across in Sark to call on some of their friends
+there.
+
+Gard wondered how they would have fared if they had happened to be on
+the Coupe when the white horse went thundering across.
+
+He dreamed that night that he was cautiously treading an endless white
+path that swung up and down in the darkness like a piece of ribbon in a
+breeze. And a great white horse came plunging at him out of the
+darkness, and just as he gave himself up for lost, a sweet firm face in
+a black sun-bonnet appeared suddenly in front of him, and the white
+horse squealed and leaped over them and disappeared, while the stones he
+had displaced went rattling down into the depths below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING
+
+
+As soon as the old captain's time was up, Gard took up his work in the
+mines with energetic hopefulness.
+
+His hopefulness was unbounded. His energy he tempered with all the tact
+and discretion his knowledge of men, and his experience in handling
+them, had taught him.
+
+His father had been lost at sea the year after his son was born. His
+mother, a good and God-fearing woman, had strained every nerve to give
+her boy an education. She died when Stephen was fourteen. He took to his
+father's calling and had followed it with a certain success for ten
+years, by which time he had attained the position of first mate.
+
+Then the owner of the Botallack Mine, in Cornwall, having come across
+him in the way of business, and been struck by his intelligence and
+aptitude, induced him by a lucrative appointment to try his luck on
+land.
+
+The managers of the Sark Mines, seeking a special man for somewhat
+special circumstances, had applied to Botallack for assistance, and
+Stephen Gard came to Sark as the representative of many hopes which, so
+far, had been somewhat lacking in results.
+
+But, as old Tom Hamon had predicted, he very soon found that he had laid
+his hand to no easy plough.
+
+The Sark men were characteristically difficult, and made the difficulty
+greater by not understanding him--or declining to understand, which came
+to the same thing--when he laid down his ideas and endeavoured to bring
+them to his ways.
+
+Some, without doubt, had no English, and their patois was quite beyond
+him. Others could understand him an they would, but deliberately chose
+not to--partly from a conservative objection to any change whatever, and
+partly from an idea that he had been imported for the purpose of driving
+them, and driving is the last thing a Sark man will submit to.
+
+Old Tom Hamon, and a few others who had a financial interest in the
+mines, assisted him all they could, in hopes of thereby assisting
+themselves, but they were few.
+
+As for the Cornishmen and Welshmen, the success or failure of the Sark
+Mines mattered little to them. There was always mining going on
+somewhere and competent men were always in demand. They were paid so
+much a week, small output or large, and without a doubt the small output
+entailed less labour than the large. They naturally regarded with no
+great favour the man whose present aim in life it was to ensure the
+largest output possible.
+
+And so Gard found himself confronted by many difficulties, and,
+moreover, and greatly to the troubling of his mind, found himself looked
+upon as a dictator and an interloper by the men whom he had hoped to
+benefit.
+
+Concerning the mines themselves he was not called upon for an opinion.
+The managers had satisfied themselves as to the presence of silver. If
+his opinion had been asked it would have confirmed them. But all he had
+to do was to follow the veins and win the ore in paying quantities, and
+he found himself handicapped on every hand by the obstinacy of his men.
+
+Outside business matters he was very well satisfied with his
+surroundings.
+
+In such spare time as he had, he wandered over the Island with eager,
+open eyes, marvelling at its wonders and enjoying its natural beauties
+with rare delight.
+
+The great granite cliffs, with their deep indentations and stimulating
+caves and crannies; the shimmering blue and green sea, with its long
+slow heave which rushed in foam and tumult up the rock-pools and
+gullies; the softer beauties of rounded down and flower-and fern-clad
+slopes honeycombed with rabbit holes; the little sea-gardens teeming
+with novel life; in all these he found his resource and a certain
+consolation for his loneliness.
+
+And in the Hamon household he found much to interest him and not a
+little ground for speculation.
+
+Old Mrs. Hamon--Grannie--had promptly ordered him in for inspection,
+and, after prolonged and careful observation from the interior of the
+black sun-bonnet, had been understood to approve him, since she said
+nothing to the contrary.
+
+It took him some time to arrive at the correct relationship between
+young Tom and Nance and Bernel, for it seemed quite incredible that
+fruit so diverse should spring from one parent stem.
+
+For Tom was all that was rough and boorish--rude to Mrs. Hamon, coarse,
+and at times overbearing to Nance and Bernel, to such an extent, indeed,
+that more than once Gard had difficulty in remembering that he himself
+was only a visitor on sufferance and not entitled to interfere in such
+intimate family matters.
+
+Tom was not slow to perceive this, and in consequence set himself
+deliberately to provoke it by behaviour even more outrageous than usual.
+Time and again Gard would have rejoiced to take him outside and express
+his feelings to their fullest satisfaction.
+
+With Mrs. Hamon and Bernel he was on the most friendly footing, his
+undisguised sentiments in the matter of Tom commending him to them
+decisively.
+
+But with Nance he made no headway whatever.
+
+It was an absolutely new sensation to him, and a satisfaction the
+meaning of which he had not yet fully gauged, to be living under the
+same roof with a girl such as this. He found himself listening for her
+voice outside and the sound of her feet, and learned almost at once to
+distinguish between the clatter of her wooden pattens and any one else's
+when she was busy in the yard or barns.
+
+Even though she held him at coolest arm's length, and repelled any
+slightest attempt at abridgment of the distance, he still rejoiced in
+the sight of her and found the world good because of her presence in it.
+
+He did not understand her feeling about him in the least. He did not
+know that she had had to give up her room for him--that she detested the
+mines and everything tainted by them, and himself as head and forefront
+of the offence--that she regarded him as an outsider and a foreigner and
+therefore quite out of place in Sark. He only knew that he saw very
+little of her and would have liked to see a great deal more.
+
+The very reserve of her treatment of himself--one might even say her
+passive endurance of him--served but to stimulate within him the wish to
+overcome it. The attraction of indifference is a distinct force in life.
+
+There was something so trim and neat and altogether captivating to him
+in the slim energetic figure, in its short blue skirts and print jacket,
+as it whisked to and fro, inside and out, on its multifarious duties,
+and still more in the sweet, serious face, glimmering coyly in the
+shadow of the great sun-bonnet and always moulded to a fine, but, as it
+seemed to him, a somewhat unnatural gravity in his company.
+
+And yet he was quite sure she could be very much otherwise when she
+would. For he had heard her singing over her work, and laughing merrily
+with Bernel; and her face, sweet as it was in its repression, seemed to
+him more fitted for smiles and laughter and joyousness.
+
+He saw, of course, that brother Tom was a constant source of annoyance
+to them all, but especially to her, and his blood boiled impotently on
+her account.
+
+He carried with him--as a delightful memory of her, though not without
+its cloud--the pretty picture she made when he came upon her one day in
+the orchard, milking--for, strictly as the Sabbath may be observed, cows
+must still be milked on a Sunday, not being endowed manna-like, with the
+gift of miraculous double production on a Saturday.
+
+Her head was pressed into her favourite beast's side, and she was
+crooning soothingly to it as the white jets ping-panged into the
+frothing pail, and he stood for a moment watching her unseen.
+
+Then the cow slowly turned her head towards him, considered him gravely
+for a moment, decided he was unnecessary and whisked her tail
+impatiently. Nance's lullaby stopped, she looked round with a reproving
+frown, and he went silently on his way.
+
+It was another Sunday afternoon that, as he lay in the bracken on the
+slope of a headland, he saw two slim figures racing down a bare slope on
+the opposite side of a wide blue gulf, with joyous chatter, and
+recognized Nance and Bernel.
+
+They disappeared and he felt lonely. Then they came picking their way
+round a black spur below, and stood for a minute or two looking down at
+something beneath them. Which something he presently discovered must be
+a pool of size among the rocks, for after a brief retiral, Nance behind
+a boulder and Bernel into a black hollow, they came out again, she
+lightly clad in fluttering white and Bernel in nothing at all, and with
+a shout of delight dived out of sight into the pool below.
+
+He could hear their shouts and laughter echoed back by the huge
+overhanging rocks. He saw them climb out again and sit sunning
+themselves on the grey ledge like a pair of sea-birds, and Nance's
+exiguous white garment no longer fluttered in the breeze.
+
+Then in they went again, and again, and again, till, tiring of the
+limits of the pool--huge as he afterwards found it to be--they crept
+over the barnacled rocks to the sea, and flung themselves fearlessly in,
+and came ploughing through it towards his headland. And he shrank still
+lower among the bracken, for though he had watched the distant little
+figure in white with a slight sense of sacrilege, and absolutely no
+sense of impropriety but only of enjoyment, he would not for all he was
+worth have had her know that he had watched at all, since he could
+imagine how she would resent it.
+
+Nevertheless, these unconscious revelations of her real self were to him
+as jewels of price, and he treasured the memory of them accordingly.
+
+He watched them swim back and disappear among the rocks, and presently
+go merrily up the bare slope again; and he lay long in the bracken,
+scarce daring to move, and when he did, he crept away warily, as one
+guilty of a trespass.
+
+And glad he was that he had done so, for he had proof of her feeling
+that same night at supper.
+
+Peter Mauger came sheepishly in again with Tom, and Tom, when he had
+satisfied the edge of his hunger, must wax facetious in his brotherly
+way.
+
+"Peter and me was sitting among the rocks over against big pool
+s'afternoon and we saw things"--with a grin.
+
+"Aw, Tom!" deprecated Peter in red confusion.
+
+"An' Peter, he said he never seen anything so pretty in all his life
+as--"
+
+"Aw now, Tom, you're a liar! I never said anything about it."
+
+"You thought it, or your face was liar too, my boy. Like a dog after a
+rabbit it was."
+
+"It was just like you both to lie watching," flamed Nance. "If you'd
+both go and jump into the sea every day you'd be a great deal nicer than
+you are; and if you'd stop there it would be a great deal nicer for us."
+
+"Aw--Nance!" from Peter, and a great guffaw from Tom, while Gard devoted
+himself guiltily to his plate.
+
+"You looked nice before you went in," chuckled Tom, who never knew when
+to stop, "but you looked a sight nicer when you came out and sat on
+rocks with it all stuck to you--"
+
+"You're a--a--a disgusting thing, Tom Hamon, and you're just as bad,
+Peter Mauger!" and she looked as if she would have flown at them, but,
+instead, jumped up and flung out of the room.
+
+Gard's innate honesty would not permit him to take up the cudgels this
+time. Inwardly he felt himself involved in her condemnation, though none
+but himself knew it.
+
+But he had taken at times to glowering at Tom, when his rudeness passed
+bounds, in a way which made that young man at once uncomfortable and
+angry, and at times provoked him to clownish attempts at reprisal.
+
+Mrs. Hamon bore with the black sheep quietly, since nothing else was
+possible to her, though her annoyance and distress were visible enough.
+
+Old Tom was completely obsessed with his visions of wealth ever just
+beyond the point of his pick. He toiled long hours in the damp
+darknesses below seas, with the sounds of crashing waves and rolling
+boulders close above him, and at times threateningly audible through the
+stratum of rocks between; and when he did appear at meals he was too
+weary to trouble about anything beyond the immediate satisfaction of his
+needs. Besides, young Tom had long since proved his strength equal to
+his father's, and remonstrance or rebuke would have produced no effect.
+
+As to Bernel, he was only a boy as yet, but he was Nance's boy and all
+she would have wished him.
+
+In time he would grow up and be a match for Tom, and meanwhile she would
+see to it that he grew up as different from Tom in every respect as it
+was possible for a boy to be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES
+
+
+Stephen Gard's experience of women had been small.
+
+His mother had been everything to him till she died, when he was
+fourteen, and he went to sea.
+
+When she was gone, that which she had put into him remained, and kept
+him clear of many of the snares to which the life of the young sailorman
+is peculiarly liable.
+
+When he attained a position of responsibility he had had no time for
+anything else. And so, of his own experience, he knew little of women
+and their ways.
+
+Less, indeed, than Nance knew of men and their ways. And that was not
+very much and tended chiefly to scorn and dissatisfaction, seeing that
+her knowledge was gleaned almost entirely from her experiences of Tom
+and Peter Mauger. Her father was, of course, her father, and on somewhat
+of a different plane from other men.
+
+And so, if Nance was a wonder and a revelation to Gard, Gard was no less
+of, at all events, a novelty in the way of mankind to Nance.
+
+His quiet bearing and good manners, after a life-long course of Tom, had
+a distinct attraction for her.
+
+That he could burst into flame if occasion required, she was convinced.
+For, more than once, out of the corner of her eye and round the edge of
+her sun-bonnet, she had caught his thunderous looks of disgust at some
+of Tom's carryings-on.
+
+She would, perhaps, have been ashamed to confess it but, somewhere down
+in her heart, she rather hoped, sooner or later, to see his lightning as
+well. It would be worth seeing, and she was inclined to think it would
+be good for Tom--and the rest of the family.
+
+For Gard looked as if he could give a good account of himself in case of
+need. His well-built, tight-knit figure gave one the impression that he
+was even stronger than he looked.
+
+If only he had been a Sark man and had nothing to do with those horrid
+mines! But all her greatest dislikes met in him, and she could not bring
+herself to the point of relaxing one iota in these matters of which he
+was unfortunately and unconsciously guilty.
+
+The state of affairs at the mines improved not one whit as the months
+dragged on. There was a smouldering core of discontent which might break
+into flame at any moment--or into disastrous explosion if the necessary
+element were added.
+
+Old Tom did his best, and stood loyally by the new captain and the
+interests of the mine and himself. But he was in a minority and could so
+far do no more than oppose vehement talk to vehement talk, and that, as
+a rule, is much like pouring oil on roaring flames.
+
+Not many of those who were shareholders in the mine were also workers in
+it, and the workers met constantly at the house of a neighbour, who had
+turned his kitchen to an undomestic but profitable purpose by supplying
+drink to the miners at what seemed to the English and Welshmen
+ridiculously low prices.
+
+In that kitchen the new captain and his new methods were vehemently
+discussed and handled roughly enough--in words. And hot words and the
+thoughts they excite, and wild thoughts and the words they find vent in,
+are at times the breeders of deeds that were better left undone.
+
+To all financially interested in the mines the need for strictest
+economy and fullest efficiency was patent enough. It was still a case of
+faith and hope--a case of continual putting in of work and money, and,
+so far, of getting little out--except the dross which intervened between
+them and their highest hopes.
+
+There was silver there without a doubt, and the many thin veins they
+came across lured them on with constant hope of mighty pockets and
+deposits of which these were but the flying indications.
+
+And all putting in and getting nothing out results in stressful times,
+in business ventures as in the case of individuals. The great shafts
+sank deeper and deeper, the galleries branched out far under the sea,
+and there was a constant call for more and more money, lest that already
+sunk should be lost.
+
+Mr. Hamon, disappointed in his view of raising money on the farm by
+Tom's obstinacy, in the bitterness of his spirit and the urgent
+necessities of the mines, conceived a new idea which, if he was able to
+carry it out, would serve the double purpose of satisfying his own needs
+at the recalcitrant Tom's expense.
+
+"I must have more money for the mines," he said to his wife one day in
+private. "I'm thinking of selling the farm."
+
+"Selling the farm?" gasped Mrs. Hamon, doubtful of her own hearing. For
+selling the farm is the very last resource of the utterly unfortunate.
+"Aye, selling the farm. Why not? It'll all come back twenty times over
+when we strike the pockets, and then we can live where we will, or we
+can go across to Guernsey, or to England if you like."
+
+But Mrs. Hamon was silent and full of thought. She had no desire for
+wealth, and still less to live in Guernsey or in England, or anywhere in
+the world but Sark.
+
+He had been a good husband to her on the whole, until this silver craze
+absorbed him. She had never found it necessary to counter his wishes
+before. But this idea of selling the farm cut to the very roots of her
+life.
+
+For Nance's sake and Bernel's she must oppose it with all that was in
+her. If the farm were sold the money would all go into those gaping
+black mouths and bottomless pits at Port Gorey. The home would be broken
+up--an end of all things. It must not be.
+
+"I should think many times before selling the farm if I were you," she
+said quietly, and left it there for the moment.
+
+But old Tom, having made up his mind, and the necessities of the case
+pressing, lost no time over the matter.
+
+"I've been speaking to John Guille about that business," he said, next
+day, in a confidently casual way.
+
+"About--?"
+
+"About the farm. He'll give me six hundred pounds for it and take the
+stock at what it's worth, and he's willing we should stop on as tenants
+at fifty pounds a year rent."
+
+His wife was ominously silent. He glanced at her doubtfully.
+
+"I shall stop on as tenant for the present and Tom can go on working
+it. When we reach the silver, and the money begins to come back, we can
+decide what to do afterwards."
+
+Still his wife said nothing, but her face was white and set. It was hard
+for her to put herself in opposition to him, but here she found it
+necessary. He was going too far.
+
+It was only when the silence had grown ominous and painful, that she
+said, slowly and with difficulty--
+
+"I'm sorry to look like going against you, Tom, but I can't see it right
+you should sell the farm."
+
+"It'll make no difference to you and the young ones. I'll see to that."
+
+"It's not right and you mustn't do it."
+
+"Mustn't do it!--And it's as good as done!"
+
+"It can't be done until your mother and I consent, and we can't see it's
+a right thing to do."
+
+"Can't you see that you're only saving the farm for Tom?" he argued
+wrathfully, bottling his anger as well as he could. "It's nothing to you
+and the young ones in any case."
+
+"I know, but all the same it's not right. If it was to buy another farm
+it would be different, for you could leave it as you choose. But to
+throw away the money on those mines--"
+
+This was a lapse from diplomacy and old Tom resented it.
+
+"Throw the money away!" he shouted, casting all restraint to the winds.
+"Who's going to throw the money away? It's like you women. You never can
+see beyond the ends of your noses. I'll tell you what I'll do--I'll pay
+you out your dower right in hard cash. Will that satisfy you?"
+
+If he died she would have a life interest in one-third of the farm, but
+could not, of course, will it to Nance or Bernel. If he sold the farm
+and paid her her lawful third in cash, she could do what she chose with
+it. It was therefore distinctly to her own interest to fall in with his
+plan.
+
+But, dearly as she would have liked to make some provision, however
+small, for Nance and Bernel, her whole Sark soul was up in arms against
+the idea of selling the farm.
+
+It would feel like a break-up of life. Nothing, she was sure, would ever
+be the same again.
+
+"It's not right," she said simply.
+
+"You're a fool--" and then the look on her quiet face--such a look as
+she might have worn if he had struck her--penetrated the storm-cloud of
+his anger. He remembered her years of wifely patience and faithful
+service, "--a foolish woman. A Sark wife should know which side of her
+bread the butter is on. Can't you see--"
+
+"I know all that, Tom, but I hope you'll give up this notion of selling
+the farm. Your mother feels just as I do about it. We've talked it
+over--"
+
+"I'll talk to her," and he went in at once to the old lady's room.
+
+But Grannie gave him no time for argument.
+
+"It's you's the fool, Tom," she said decisively, as he crossed the
+threshold. "There's not enough silver in Sark to make a plate for your
+coffin."
+
+"I brought out more'n enough to make your plate and mine, myself
+to-day," he said triumphantly.
+
+"Ah, bah! You'd have done better for yourself and for Sark if you'd let
+it lie."
+
+"I'd have done better still if I'd got twice as much."
+
+"If the good God set silver inside Sark, it was because He thought it
+was the best place for it, and it's not for the likes of you to be
+trying to get it out."
+
+"What's it there for if it's not to be got out?"
+
+"You mark me, Tom Hamon, no good will come of all this upsetting and
+digging out the insides of the Island--nenni-gia!"
+
+"Pergui, mother, where do you think all the silver and gold in the world
+came from?"
+
+"It didn't come out of our Sark rocks any way, mon gars."
+
+"Good thing for us if it had, ma f! But, see you here, mother, if I
+sell the farm it's not you and Nance that need trouble. If I pay out
+your dowers in hard cash you're both of you better off than you are now,
+and I'm better off too. It's only Tom could complain, and--"
+
+"It's hard on the lad."
+
+"Bidemme, it's no more than he deserves for his goings-on! Maybe it'll
+do him good to have to work for his living."
+
+"And you would do that to get your bit more money to throw into those
+big holes?"
+
+"Never you mind me. I'll take care of myself, and we'll see who's wisest
+in the end. Now, will you agree to it?"
+
+"I'll talk it over with Nancy again," and the big black sun-bonnet
+nodded with sapient significance. "Send her to me."
+
+"It's from you I got my good sense," said old Tom approvingly, and went
+off in search of his wife, while the clever old lady pondered deep
+schemes.
+
+"Here's the way of it, Nancy," she said, when Mrs. Hamon came in. "He's
+crazy on these silver mines, and he's willing to pay out our dowers,
+yours and mine, so that he may throw the rest into the big holes at Port
+Gorey. Ch'est b'en! Your money and mine take more than half of what he
+gets. If you'll put yours to mine I'll make up the difference from what
+I've saved, and we'll retraite the farm, and it shall go to Nance and
+Bernel when the time comes."
+
+"I can't help thinking it's rather hard on Tom," suggested Mrs. Hamon,
+with less vigour than before.
+
+The idea appealed strongly to her maternal feelings and she had suffered
+much from Tom; still her instinct for right was there and was not to be
+stifled with a word.
+
+"If you feel so when the time comes we could divide it among them, and
+till then Tom would have to behave himself," said the wily old lady,
+with a chuckle.
+
+That again appealed strongly to Mrs. Hamon.
+
+"Yes, I think I would agree to that," she said, after thinking it all
+over.
+
+All things considered, Grannie's scheme was an excellent one and worthy
+of her.
+
+By a curious anomaly of Sark law, though a man may not mortgage his
+property without the consent of his next-in-succession, he can sell it
+outright and do what he chooses with the proceeds. His wife has a dower
+right of one-third of both real and personal estate, into which she
+enters upon his death. The right, however, is there while he still
+lives, and must be taken into consideration in any sale of the property.
+
+All property is sold subject to the "retraite"; in plain English, no
+sale is completed for six weeks, and within that time every member of
+the seller's family, in due order of succession, even to the collateral
+branches, has the right to take over, or withdraw, the property at the
+same price as has been agreed upon, paying in addition to the Seigneur
+the trzime or thirteenth part of the price, as by law provided.
+
+If Grannie's scheme were carried out, therefore, she and Mrs. Hamon
+would become owners of the farm. Tom would be there on sufferance and
+might be kept within bounds or kicked out. Old Tom would have something
+more to throw into the holes at Port Gorey. And Nance and Bernel could
+be adequately provided for. An excellent scheme, therefore, for all
+concerned--except young Tom, who would have to behave himself better
+than he was in the habit of doing or suffer the consequences.
+
+"Yes," said Nancy. "I don't see that I'd be doing right by Nance and
+Bernel not to agree to that. And if Tom behaves himself," at which
+Grannie grunted doubtfully, "he can have his share when the time comes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM
+
+
+So far the discussion as to the sale of the farm had been confined to
+the elders.
+
+Young Tom had viewed John Guille's visits to the place with the lowering
+suspicion of a bull at a stranger's invasion of his field. He wondered
+what was going on and surmised that it was nothing to his advantage.
+
+Words had been rare between him and his father since his refusal to lend
+himself to a loan on the farm, but his suspicion got the better of his
+obstinacy at last.
+
+"What's John Guille want coming about here so much?" he demanded
+bluntly.
+
+"I suppose he can come if he wants to. He's going to buy the farm."
+
+"Going--to--buy--the--farm!... You--going--to--sell--the--farm--away--
+from--me?" roared young Tom, like the bull wounded to the quick.
+
+"Ouaie, pardi! And why not? You had the chance of saving it and you
+wouldn't."
+
+"If you do it, I'll--"
+
+"Ouaie! You'll--"
+
+"I'll--Go'zammin, I'll--I'll--"
+
+"Unless you're a fool, mon gars, you'll be careful what you say or do.
+It'll all come back from the mines and you'll have your share if you
+behave yourself."
+
+"---- you and your mines!" was Tom's valedictory, and he flung away in
+mortal anger; anger, too, which, from a Sark point of view, was by no
+means unjustified. Selling the estate away from the rightful heir was
+disinheritance, a blow below the belt which most testators reserve until
+they are safe from reach of bodily harm.
+
+Tom left the house and cut all connection with his family. He drifted
+away like a threatening cloud, and the sun shone out, and Stephen Gard,
+with the rest, found greater comfort in his room than they had ever
+found in his company.
+
+So gracious, indeed, did the atmosphere of the house become, purged of
+Tom, that Gard, to his great joy, found even Nance not impossible of
+approach.
+
+He had always treated her with extremest deference and courtesy,
+respecting, as far as he was able, her evident wish for nothing but the
+most distant intercourse.
+
+But he was such a very great change from Tom!
+
+She caught his dark eyes fixed on her at times with a look that reminded
+her of Helier Baker's black spaniel's, who was a very close friend of
+hers. They had neither dog nor cat at present at La Closerie, both
+having been scrimped by the silver mines, when old Tom's first bad
+attack of economy came on.
+
+Then, at table, Gard was always quietly on the look-out to anticipate
+her wants. That was a refreshing novelty. Even Bernel, her special
+crony, thought only of his own requirements when food stood before him.
+
+Now and again Gard began to venture on a question direct to her,
+generally concerning some bit of the coast he had been scrambling about,
+and she found it rather pleasant to be able to give information about
+things he did not know to this undoubtedly clever mine captain.
+
+So, little by little, he grew into her barest toleration but apparently
+nothing more, and was puzzled at her aloofness and reserve, not
+understanding at all her bitter feeling against the mines and everything
+connected with them.
+
+The first time he went to church with her and Bernel was a great
+white-stone day to him.
+
+He had gone by himself once every Sunday, and done his best to follow
+the service in French, which he was endeavouring to pick up as best he
+could. And, if he could only now and again come across a word he
+understood, still the being in church and worshipping with others--even
+though it was in an unknown tongue--the sound of the chants and hymns
+and responses, and the mild austerity and reverent intonation of the
+good old Vicar, all induced a Sabbath feeling in him, and made a welcome
+change from the rougher routine of the week, which he would have missed
+most sorely.
+
+On that special afternoon, he had been lying on the green wall of the
+old French fort, enjoying that most wonderful view over the shimmering
+blue sea, with Herm and Jethou resting on it like great green velvet
+cushions, and Guernsey gleaming softly in the distance, and Brecqhou and
+the Gouliot Head, and all the black outlying rocks fringed with creamy
+foam, till it should be time to go along to church.
+
+When he heard voices in the road below and saw Nance and Bernel, he
+jumped up on the spur of the moment, and pushed through the gorse and
+bracken, and stood waiting for them.
+
+"Will you let me join you?" he asked, as they came up, fallen shyly
+silent.
+
+"We don't mind," said Bernel, and they went along together.
+
+"This always strikes me afresh, each time I see it, as one of the most
+extraordinary places I've come across," said Gard, as they dipped down
+towards the Coupe.
+
+"Wait till we're coming home," said Bernel hopefully.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"You see those clouds over there? That's wind--sou'-west--you'll see
+what it's like after church."
+
+"Your gales are as extraordinary as all the rest--and your tides and
+currents and sea-mists. I suppose one must be born here to understand
+them. We have a fine coast in Cornwall, but I think you beat us."
+
+"Of course. This is Sark."
+
+"And does no one ever tumble over the Coupe in the dark?"
+
+"N--o, not often, any way. Nance once saw a man blown over."
+
+"That was a bad thing to see," said Gard, turning towards her. "How was
+it?"
+
+"I was coming from school--"
+
+"All alone?"
+
+"Yes, all alone. The others had gone on; I'd been kept in, and it was
+nearly dark. It was blowing hard, and when I got to the first rock here
+I thought it was going to blow me over. So I went down on my hands and
+knees and was just going to crawl, when old Hirzel Mollet came down the
+other side with a great sheaf of wheat on his back. He was taking it to
+the Seigneur for his tithes. And then in a moment he gave a shout and I
+saw he was gone."
+
+"That was terrible. What did you do?"
+
+"I screamed and crawled back across the narrow bit to the cutting, and
+ran screaming up to the cottages at Plaisance, and Thomas Carr and his
+men came running down. But they could do nothing. They went round in a
+boat from the Creux, but he was dead."
+
+"And how did you get home?"
+
+"Thomas Carr took me across and I ran on alone, but it was months
+before I could forget poor old Hirzel Mollet."
+
+"I should think so, indeed. That was a terrible thing to see."
+
+The opening of the mines, and the influx of the Welsh and Cornishmen and
+their wives and children, with their new and up-to-date ideas of living
+and dressing, had wrought a great and not altogether wholesome change
+upon the original inhabitants.
+
+All the week they were hard at work in their fields or their boats, but
+on Sunday the lonely lanes leading to Little Sark were thronged with
+sightseers, curious to inspect the mines and the latest odd fashions
+among the miners' wives and daughters.
+
+Odd, and extremely useless little parasols, were then the vogue in
+England. The miners' women-folk flaunted these before the dazzled eyes
+of the Sark girls, and Sark forthwith burst into flower of many-coloured
+parasols.
+
+The mine ladies dressed in printed cottons of strange and wonderful
+patterns. The Sark girls must do the same.
+
+"Tiens!" ejaculated Nance more than once, as they walked. "Here is Judi
+Le Masurier with a new pink parasol!--and a straw bonnet with green
+strings!--and every day you'll see her about the fields without so much
+as a sun-bonnet on! And Rachel Guille has got a new print dress all red
+roses and lilac! Mon Gyu, what are we coming to!"
+
+She had many such comments and still more unspoken ones. But Stephen
+Gard, glancing, whenever he could do so unperceived, at the trim but
+plainly-dressed little sun-bonneted figure by his side, vowed in his
+heart that the whole of these others rolled into one were not to be
+compared with her, and that he would give all the silver in the mines of
+Sark to win her appreciation and regard.
+
+As they turned the corner at Vauroque, they came suddenly on a number of
+men lounging on the low wall, and among them Tom Hamon, pipe in mouth
+and hands in pockets.
+
+As they passed he made some jocular remark in the patois which provoked
+a guffaw from the rest, and reddened Nance's face, and caused Bernel to
+glance up at Gard and jerk round angrily towards Tom.
+
+"What did he say?" asked Gard, stopping.
+
+But Nance hurried on and he could not but follow.
+
+"What was it?" he asked again, as he caught up with her.
+
+"If you please, do not mind him. It was just one of his rudenesses."
+
+"They want knocking out of him."
+
+"He is very rude," said Nance, and they passed the Vicarage and turned
+up the stony lane to the church.
+
+Gard was surprised by the speedy verification of Bernel's weather
+forecast. Before the service was over the wind was howling round the
+building with the sounds of unleashed furies, and when they got out it
+was almost dark.
+
+They bent to the gale and pressed on, Gard with a discomforting
+remembrance that the Coupe lay ahead.
+
+As they passed Vauroque there seemed a still larger crowd of loafers at
+the corner, and again Tom's voice called rudely after them.
+
+Gard turned promptly and strode back to where he was sitting on the
+wall, dangling his feet in devil-may-care fashion. Tom jumped down to
+meet him.
+
+"Say that again in English, will you?" said Gard angrily.
+
+"Go to--!" said Tom.
+
+Then Gard's left fist caught him on the hinge of the right jaw, and he
+reeled back among the others who had jumped down to back him up.
+
+"Well--? Want any more?" asked Gard stormily.
+
+"You wait," growled Tom, nursing his jaw, "I'll talk to you one of these
+days."
+
+"Whenever you like, you cur. What you need is a sound thrashing and a
+kick over the Coupe."
+
+To his surprise none of the others joined in. But he did not know them.
+
+They might guffaw at Tom's unseemly pleasantries, but they held him in
+no high esteem--either for himself or for his position, since word of
+the sale of La Closerie had got about.
+
+Then they were a hardy crew and held personal courage and prowess in
+high respect. And in this matter there could be no possible doubt as to
+where the credit lay.
+
+"Goin' to fight him, Tom?" drawled one, in the patois.
+
+"---- him!" growled Tom, but made no move that way.
+
+And Gard turned and went over to Nance and Bernel, who were sheltering
+from the storm in lee of one of the cottages.
+
+If he could have seen it, there was a warmer feeling in her heart for
+him than had ever been there before--a novel feeling, too, of respect
+and confidence such as she had never entertained towards any other man
+in all her life.
+
+For that quick blow had been struck on her behalf, she knew; and it was
+vastly strange, and somehow good, to feel that a great strong man was
+ready to stand up for her and, if necessary, to fight for her.
+
+She pressed silently on against the gale, with an odd little glow in her
+heart, and a feeling as though something new had suddenly come into her
+life.
+
+The gale caught them at the Coupe, and the crossing seemed to Gard not
+without its risks.
+
+Bernel bent and ran on through the darkness without a thought of danger.
+
+Gard hesitated one moment and Nance stretched a hand to him, and he took
+it and went steadily across.
+
+And, oh, the thrill of that first living touch of her! The feel of the
+warm nervous little hand sent a tingling glow through him such as he had
+never in his life experienced before. Verily, a white-stone day this, in
+spite of winds and darkness!
+
+The gale howled like ten thousand demons, and the noise of the waves in
+Grande Grve came up to them in a ceaseless savage roar. Gard confessed
+to himself that, alone, he would never have dared to face that perilous
+storm-swept bridge. But the small hand of a girl made all the difference
+and he stepped alongside her without a tremor.
+
+"B'en, Monsieur Gard, was I right?" shouted Bernel in his ear, as they
+stepped within the shelter of the cutting on the farther side.
+
+"You were right. It's a terrible place in a gale."
+
+"You wait," shouted Bernel. "We're not home yet."
+
+"No more Coupes, any way," and they bent again into the storm.
+
+They had not gone more than a hundred yards when, through some freakish
+funnelling of the tumbled headlands, the gale gripped them like a giant
+playing with pigmies, caught them up, flung them bodily across the road
+and held Gard and Bernel pinned and panting against the green bank,
+while Nance disappeared over it into the shrieking darkness.
+
+"Good heavens!" gasped Gard, fearful lest she should have been blown
+over the cliffs, and wriggled himself up under the ceaseless thrashing
+of the gale and was whirled off the top into the field beyond.
+
+There the pressure was less, and, getting on to his hands and knees to
+crawl in search of Nance, he found her close beside him crouching in the
+lee of the grassy dyke.
+
+He crept into shelter beside her, and presently, in the lull after a
+fiercer blast than usual, she set off, bent almost double, and in a
+moment they were in comparative quiet. Nance crawled through a gap into
+the road and they found Bernel waiting for them.
+
+"Knew you'd come through there. That's what that gap's made for," he
+shouted.
+
+"I've been in many a storm but I never felt wind like that before," said
+Gard, as soon as his breath came back.
+
+"If you'd stopped with me you'd have been all right," said Bernel.
+"There was no need for you to go after Nance. We've been through that
+lots of times, haven't we, Nance?"
+
+"Lots."
+
+"I shall know next time," said Gard, and to Nance it was a fresh
+experience to think of some one going out of his way to be of possible
+service to her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN'T DARE
+
+
+Before the six weeks allowed by Sark law for the retraiting of the
+property had expired, Grannie and Mrs. Hamon put in their claims, and it
+became generally known that they would become the new owners of La
+Closerie, in place of John Guille.
+
+When the rumour at length reached Tom's ears, he, not unnaturally
+perhaps, set down the whole matter as a plot to oust him from his
+heritage and put Nance and Bernel in his place.
+
+So his anger grew, and he was powerless. And the impotence of an angry
+man may lead him into gruesome paths. Smouldering fires burst out at
+times into devastating flames, and maddened bulls put down their heads
+and charge regardless of consequences.
+
+When Tom Hamon asked Peter Mauger to lend him his gun to go
+rabbit-shooting one night, Peter, if he had been a thoughtful man, would
+have declined.
+
+But Peter was above all things easy-going, and anything but thoughtful
+of such matters as surged gloomily in Tom's angry head, and he lent him
+his gun as a matter of course.
+
+And Tom went off across the Coupe into Little Sark, nursing his black
+devil and thinking vaguely and gloomily of the things he would like to
+do. For to rob a man of his rights in this fashion was past a man's
+bearing, and if he was to be ruined for the sake of that solemn-faced
+slip of a Nance and that young limb of a Bernel, he might as well take
+payment for it all, and cut their crowing, and give them something to
+remember him by.
+
+He had no very definite intentions. His mind was a chaos of whirling
+black furies. He would like to pay somebody out for the wrongs under
+which he was suffering--who, or how, was of little moment. He had been
+wounded, he wanted to hit back.
+
+He turned off the Coupe to the left and struck down through the gorse
+and bracken towards the Pot, and then crept along the cliffs and across
+the fields towards La Closerie--still for three days his, in the
+reversion; after that, gone from him irrevocably--a galling shame and
+not to be borne by any man that called himself a man.
+
+Should he lie in the hedge and shoot down the old man as he came in from
+those cursed mines which had started all the trouble? Or should he walk
+right into the house and shoot and fell whatever he came across? If he
+must suffer it would at all events be some satisfaction to think that he
+had made them suffer too.
+
+From where he stood he could look right in through the open door, and
+could hear their voices--Nance and Bernel and Mrs. Hamon--the
+interlopers, the schemers, the stealers of his rights.
+
+The shaft of light was eclipsed suddenly as Nance came out and tripped
+across the yard on some household duty.
+
+He remembered how he used to terrify her by springing out of the
+darkness at her. She had helped to bring all this trouble about.
+
+Why should he not--? Why should he not--?
+
+And while his gun still shook in his hands to the wild throbbing of his
+pulses, Nance passed out of his sight into the barn.
+
+The deed a man may do on the spur of the moment, when his brain is on
+fire, is not so readily done when it has to be thought about.
+
+Then Mrs. Hamon came to the door, and called to Nance to bring with her
+a piece or two of wood for the fire.
+
+Here was his chance! Here was the head and front of the offence, past,
+present, and future! If she had never come into the family there would
+have been no Nance, no Bernel, no selling of the farm, maybe. A movement
+of the arms, the crooking of a finger, and things would be even between
+them.
+
+But--it would still be he who would have to pay--as always!
+
+All through he had been the sufferer, and if he did this thing he must
+suffer still more--always he who must pay.
+
+The man who hesitates is lost, or saved. When the contemplator of evil
+deeds begins also to contemplate consequences, reason is beginning to
+resume her sway.
+
+Then he heard heavy footsteps and voices. His father and Stephen Gard.
+
+Another chance! Gard he hated. There was a bruise on his right jaw
+still. And the old man!--he had cut him out of his inheritance by going
+crazy over those cursed mines.
+
+"I'm sorry you have gone so far," Gard was saying as they passed. "If
+you had consulted me I should have advised against it. Mining is always
+more or less of a speculation. I would never, if I could help it, let
+any man put more into a mine than he can afford to lose."
+
+"If you know a thing's a good thing you want all you can get out of
+it," said old Tom stoutly.
+
+"Yes, if--" and they passed into the house, while Tom in the hedge was
+considering which of them he would soonest see dead.
+
+Now they were all inside together. A full charge of small shot might do
+considerable and satisfactory damage.
+
+But thought of the certain consequences to himself welled coldly up in
+him again, and he slunk noiselessly away, cursing himself for leaving
+undone the work he had come out to do.
+
+On the common above the Pot, a terrified white scut rose almost under
+his feet and sped along in front of him. He blew it into rags, and was
+so ashamed of his prowess that he kicked the remnants into the gorse and
+went home empty-handed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART
+
+
+One of the first things Stephen Gard had seen to, when he got matters
+into his own hands, was the safeguarding of the mines from ever-possible
+irruption of the sea. The great steam pumps kept the workings reasonably
+clear of drainage water, but no earthly power could drain the sea if it
+once got in.
+
+The central shafts had sunk far below sea-level. The lateral galleries
+had, in some cases, run out seawards and were now extending far under
+the sea itself.
+
+From the whirling coils of the tides and races round the coast, he
+judged that the sea-bed was as seamed and broken and full of faults as
+the visible cliffs ashore.
+
+In bad weather, the men in those submarine galleries and the
+outbranching tunnels could hear the crash of the waves above their
+heads, and the rolling and grinding of the mighty boulders with which
+they disported.
+
+If, by chance, the sea should break through, the peril to life and
+property would be great.
+
+He therefore caused to be constructed and fitted inside each tunnel, at
+the point where it branched from its main gallery, a stout iron door,
+roughly hinged at the top and falling, in case of need, into the flange
+of a thick wooden frame. The framework was fitted to the opening on the
+seaward side, in a groove cut deep into the rock round each side and
+top and bottom. The heavy iron door, when open, lay up against the roof
+of the tunnel and was supported by two wooden legs. If the sea should
+break through, the first rush of the water would sweep away the
+supporting legs, the iron door would fall with a crash into the flange
+of the wooden frame, and the greater the pressure the tighter it would
+fit.
+
+So the weight of the sea would seal the iron door against the wooden
+casement, which would swell and press always tighter against the rock,
+and that boring would be closed for ever. And if any man should be
+inside the tunnel when the sea broke through, there he must stop,
+drowned like a rat in its hole, unless by a miracle he could make his
+way along the tunnel before the trap-door fell.
+
+Gard never ceased to enjoin the utmost caution on the men who undertook
+these outermost experimental borings.
+
+His strict injunctions were to cease work at the first sign of water in
+these undersea tunnels, make for the gallery, close the trap, and await
+events.
+
+Believing absolutely in the existence of one or more great central
+deposits whence all these thin veins of silver had come, and hoping to
+strike them at every blow of his pick, old Tom Hamon was the keenest
+explorer and opener of new leads in the mine.
+
+"The silver's there all right," he said, time and again, "it only wants
+finding," and he pushed ahead, here and there, wherever he thought the
+chances most favourable.
+
+He took his rightful pay along with the rest for the work he did, but it
+was not for wages he wrought. Ever just beyond the point of his
+energetic pick lay fortune, and he was after it with all his heart and
+soul and bodily powers.
+
+For months he had been following up a vein which ran out under the sea,
+and grew richer and richer as he laid it bare. He believed it would lead
+him to the mother vein, and that to the heart of all the Sark silver.
+And so he toiled, early and late, and knew no weariness.
+
+His tunnel, in places not more than three and four feet high and between
+two and three feet wide, extended now several hundred feet under the
+sea, and was fitted at the gallery end with the usual raised iron door.
+
+It was hot work in there, in the dim-lighted darkness, in spite of the
+fact that the sea was close above his head. Fortunately, here and there,
+he had come upon curious little chambers like empty bubbles in one-time
+molten rock, ten feet across and as much in height, some of them, and
+curiously whorled and wrought, and these allowed him breathing spaces
+and welcome relief from the crampings of the passage.
+
+When he had broken into such a chamber it needed, at times, no little
+labour to rediscover his vein on the opposite side. But he always found
+it in time, and broke through the farther wall with unusual difficulty,
+and went on.
+
+The men generally worked in pairs, but old Tom would have no one with
+him. He did all the work, picking and hauling the refuse single-handed.
+The work should be his alone, his alone the glory of the great and
+ultimate discovery.
+
+The rocks above him sweated and dripped at times, but that was only to
+be expected and gave him no anxiety. Alone with his eager hopes he
+chipped and picked, and felt no loneliness because of the flame of hope
+that burned within him. Above him he could hear the long roll and growl
+of the wave-tormented boulders--now a dull, heavy fall like the blow of
+a gigantic mallet, and again a long-drawn crash like shingle grinding
+down a hillside. But these things he had heard before and had grown
+accustomed to.
+
+And so it was fated that, one day, after patiently picking round a great
+piece of rock till it was loosened from its ages-old bed, he felt it
+tremble under his hand, and leaning his weight against it, it
+disappeared into space beyond.
+
+That had happened before when he struck one of the chambers, and he felt
+no uneasiness. If there had been water beyond, it would have given him
+notice by oozing round the rock as he loosened it. The brief rush of
+foul gas, which always followed the opening of one of these hollows, he
+avoided by lying flat on the ground until he felt the air about him
+sweeter again.
+
+Then, enlarging the aperture with his pick, he scrambled through into
+this chamber now first opened since time began.
+
+It was like many he had seen before, but considerably larger. Holding
+his light at arm's length, above his head, a million little eyes
+twinkled back at him as the rays shot to and fro on the pointed facets
+of the rock crystals which hung from the roof and started out of the
+walls and ground.
+
+The gleaming fingers seemed all pointed straight at him. Was it in
+mockery or in acknowledgment of his prowess?
+
+For, in among the pointing fingers, it seemed to him that the
+silver-bearing veins ran thick as the setting of an ancient jewel,
+twisted and curling and winding in and out so that his eyes were dazzled
+with the wonder of it all.
+
+"A man! A man at last! Since time began we have awaited him, and this
+is he at last!" so those myriad eyes and pointing fingers seemed to cry
+to him.
+
+And up above, the roar and growl of the sea sounded closer than ever
+before.
+
+But he had found his treasure and he heeded nought beside. Here, of a
+surety, he said to himself, was the silver heart from which the
+scattered veins had been projected. He had found what he had sought with
+such labours and persistency. What else mattered?
+
+And then, without a moment's warning--the end.
+
+No signal crackings, no thin jets or streams from the green immensity
+beyond.
+
+Just one universal collapse, one chaotic climacteric, begun and ended in
+the same instant, as the crust of the chamber, no longer supported by
+the in-pent air, dissolved under the irresistible pressure of the sea.
+
+Where the sparkling chamber had been was a whirling vortex of bubbling
+green water, in which tumbled grotesquely the body of a man.
+
+The water boiled furiously along the tunnel and foamed into the gallery.
+The wooden supports of the iron door gave way; the door sank slowly into
+its appointed place.
+
+Old Tom Hamon was dead and buried.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
+
+
+The news spread quickly.
+
+Tom Hamon heard it as he sat brooding over his wrongs and cursing the
+chicken-heartedness and fear of consequences which had robbed him of his
+revenge.
+
+He started up with an incredulous curse and tore across the Coupe to
+the mines to make sure.
+
+But there was no doubt about it. Old Tom was dead: the six weeks were
+still two days short of their fulfilment; the property was his; his day
+had come.
+
+He walked straight to La Closerie, and stalked grimly into the kitchen,
+where, as it happened, they were sitting over a doleful and long-delayed
+meal.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had been too overwhelmed by the unexpected blow to consider
+all its bearings. Grannie, looking beyond, had foreseen consequences and
+trouble with Tom, and had sent for Stephen Gard and given him some
+elementary instruction relative to the laws of succession in Sark.
+
+Tom stalked in upon them with malevolent triumph. They had tried their
+best to oust him from his inheritance and the act of God had spoiled
+them. He felt almost virtuous.
+
+But his natural truculence, and his not altogether unnatural exultation
+at the frustration of these plans for his own upsetting, overcame all
+else. Of regret for their personal loss and his own he had none.
+
+"Oh--ho! Mighty fine, aren't we, feasting on the best," he began. "Let
+me tell you all this is mine now, spite of all your dirty tricks, and
+you can get out, all of you, and the sooner the better. Eating my best
+butter, too! Ma f, fat is good enough for the likes of you," and he
+stretched a long arm and lifted the dish of golden butter from the
+board--butter, too, which Nance and her mother had made themselves after
+also milking the cows.
+
+"Put that down!" said Gard, in a voice like the taps of a hammer.
+
+"You get out--bravache! Bretteur! I'm master here."
+
+"In six weeks--if you live that long. Until things are properly divided
+you'll keep out of this, if you're well advised."
+
+"I will, will I? We'll see about that, Mister Bully. I know what you're
+up to, trying to fool our Nance with your foreign ways, and I won't have
+it. She's not for the likes of you or any other man that's got a wife
+and children over in England--"
+
+This was the suddenly-thought-of burden of a discussion over the cups
+one night at the canteen, soon after Gard's arrival, when the
+possibility of his being a married man had been mooted and had remained
+in Tom's turgid brain as a fact.
+
+"By the Lord!" cried Gard, starting up in black fury, "if you can't
+behave yourself I'll break every bone in your body."
+
+And Nance's face, which had unconsciously stiffened at Tom's words,
+glowed again at Gard's revelation of the natural man in him, and her
+eyes shone with various emotions--doubts, hopes, fears, and a keen
+interest in what would follow.
+
+The first thing that followed was the dish of butter, which hurtled past
+Gard's head and crashed into the face of the clock, and then fell with a
+flop to the earthen floor.
+
+The next was Tom's lowered head and cumbrous body, as he charged like a
+bull into Gard and both rolled to the ground, the table escaping
+catastrophe by a hair's-breadth.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had sprung up with clasped hands and piteous face. Nance and
+Bernel had sprung up also, with distress in their faces but still more
+of interest. They had come to a certain reliance on Gard's powers, and
+how many and many a time had they longed to be able to give Tom a
+well-deserved thrashing!
+
+Through the open door of her room came Grannie's hard little voice, "Now
+then! Now then! What are you about there?" but no one had time to tell
+her.
+
+Gard was up in a moment, panting hard, for Tom's bull-head had caught
+him in the wind.
+
+"If you want ... to fight ... come outside!" he jerked.
+
+"---- you!" shouted Tom, as he struggled to his knees and then to his
+feet. "I'll smash you!" and he lowered his head and made another blind
+rush.
+
+But this time Gard was ready for him, and a stout buffet on the ear as
+he passed sent him crashing in a heap into the bowels of the clock,
+which had witnessed no such doings since Tom's great-grandfather brought
+it home and stood it in its place, and it testified to its amazement at
+them by standing with hands uplifted at ten minutes to two until it was
+repaired many months afterwards.
+
+Tom got up rather dazedly, and Gard took him by the shoulders and ran
+him outside before he had time to pull himself together.
+
+"Now," said Gard, shaking him as a bull-dog might a calf. "See here!
+You're not wanted here at present, and if you make any more trouble
+you'll suffer for it," and he gave him a final whirl away from the house
+and went in and closed the door.
+
+Tom stood gazing at it in dull fury, thought of smashing the window,
+picked up a stone, remembered just in time that it would be his window,
+so flung the stone and a curse against the door and departed.
+
+"I'm sorry," said Gard, looking deprecatingly at Nance. "I'm afraid I
+lost my temper."
+
+"It was all his fault," said Nance. "Did he hurt you?"
+
+"Only my feelings. He had no right to say such things or do what he
+did."
+
+"It's always good to see him licked," said Bernel with gusto. "Nance and
+I used to try, but he was too big for us."
+
+Mrs. Hamon had gone in with a white face to explain things to Grannie.
+
+She came back presently and said briefly to Gard, "She wants you," and
+he went in to the old lady.
+
+"You did well, Stephen Gard," she chirped. "Stand by them, for they'll
+need it. He's a bad lot is Tom, and he'll make things uncomfortable when
+he comes here to live. When Nancy takes her third of what's left of the
+house, that'll be only two rooms, so you'll have to look out for
+another, and maybe you'll not find it easy to get one in Little Sark. If
+you take my advice you'll try Charles Guille at Clos Bourel, or Thomas
+Carr at the Plaisance Cottages by the Coupe, they're kindly folk
+both. I've told Nancy to get Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux to help her
+portion the lots, and it'll be no easy job, for Tom will choose the best
+and get all he can."
+
+They were agreeably surprised to hear no more of Tom, but learned before
+long that, on the strength of his unexpected good fortune, he had gone
+over to Guernsey to pass, in ways that most appealed to him, the six
+weeks allowed by the law for the settlement of his father's affairs.
+
+Within that six weeks Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux had, on Mrs. Hamon's
+behalf, to allot all old Tom's estate, house, fields, cattle,
+implements, furniture, into three as equal portions as he could contrive
+with his most careful balancing of pros and cons. For, with Solomon-like
+wisdom, Sark law entails upon the widow the apportionment of the three
+lots into which everything is divided, but allows the heir first choice
+of any two of them, the remaining lot becoming the widow's dower.
+
+No light undertaking, therefore, the apportionment of those lots, or the
+widow may be left with only bedrooms to live in, and an ill proportion
+of grazing ground for her cattle and herself to live upon. For, be sure
+that when it comes to the picking of these lots, even the best of sons
+will pick the plums, and when such an one as Tom Hamon is in question it
+is as well to mingle the plums and the sloes with an exactitude of
+proportionment that will allow of no advantage either way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE
+
+
+Gard's isolation was brought home to him when he endeavoured to find
+another lodging in Little Sark.
+
+Accommodation was, of course, limited. Many of the miners had to tramp
+in each day from Sark. There was still, in spite of all his tact and
+efforts, somewhat of a feeling against him as a new-comer, an innovator,
+a tightener of loose cords, and no one offered to change quarters to
+oblige him. And so, in the end, he took Grannie's advice and found a
+room in one of the thatch-roofed cottages which offered their
+white-washed shoulders to the road just where it rose out of the further
+side of the Coupe into Sark.
+
+They were quiet, farmer-fisher folk who lived there, having nothing to
+do with the mines and little beyond a general interest in them.
+
+When not at work, he was thrown much upon himself, and if in his rambles
+he chanced upon Bernel Hamon it was a treat, and if, as happened all too
+seldom, upon Nance as well, an enjoyment beyond words.
+
+But Nance was a busy maid, with hens and chickens, and cows and calves,
+and pigs and piglets claiming her constant attention, and it was only
+now and again that she could so arrange her duties as to allow of a
+flight with Bernel--a flight which always took the way to the sea and
+developed presently into a bathing revel wherein she flung cares and
+clothes to the winds, or into a fishing excursion, in which pleasure and
+profit and somewhat of pain were evenly mixed.
+
+For, though she loved the sea and ate fresh-caught fish with as much
+gusto as any, she hated seeing them caught--almost as much as she hated
+having her fowls or piglets slaughtered for eating purposes, and never
+would touch them--a delicacy of feeling at which Bernel openly scoffed
+but could not laugh her out of.
+
+She had sentiments also regarding the rabbits Bernel shot on the cliffs,
+but being wild, and she herself having had no hand in their upbringing
+and not having known them intimately, she accepted them as natural
+provision, though not without compunctions at times concerning possible
+families of orphans left totally unprovided for.
+
+When she did permit herself a few hours off duty she did it with a
+whole-hearted enjoyment--approaching the nave abandon of
+childhood--which, to Gard's sober restraint, when he was graciously
+permitted to witness it, was wholly charming.
+
+By degrees, and especially after her father's tragic death, Nance's
+feelings towards the stranger had perceptibly changed.
+
+He might be an alien, an Englishman; but he was at all events a
+Cornishman, and she had heard say that the men of Cornwall and of the
+Islands and of the Bretagne had much in common, just as their rugged
+coasts had. And England, after all, was allied to the Islands, belonged
+to them in fact, and was indeed quite as essential a part of the Queen's
+dominions as the Islands themselves, and to harbour unfriendly feeling
+towards your own relations--unless indeed, as in the case of Tom, they
+had given you ample cause--would be surely the mark of a small and
+narrow mind.
+
+And he might be a miner; and mines, and most miners, were naturally
+hateful to her. But he had been a sailor, and was miner only by accident
+as it were, and she knew that he loved the sea. Allowance, she supposed,
+must be made for men getting twists in their brains--like her father. He
+had gone crazy over these mines though he had been sensible enough in
+other matters.
+
+What her careful, surreptitious observation of him, from the depths and
+round the wings of her sun-bonnet, told her was that he was an upright
+man, and true, and bold, with a spirit which he kept well in hand but
+which could blaze like lightning on occasion, and a strength which he
+could turn to excellent purpose when the need arose.
+
+And--and--she admitted it shyly to herself and not without wonder, and
+found herself dwelling upon it as she sang softly to the ping-pang of
+the milk into the pail, or the swoosh of it in the churn--he thought of
+her, Nance Hamon--perhaps he even admired her a little--any way he was
+certainly interested in her, and in his shy reserved way he showed a
+desire for her company which she no longer found pleasure in defeating
+as she had done at first.
+
+Undoubtedly an odd feeling, this, of being cared for by an outside
+man--- but withal tending to increase of self-esteem and therefore not
+unpleasing.
+
+Peter Mauger, indeed--but then she had never looked upon Peter as
+anything but Peter, and the shadow of Tom had always obscured him to
+her. Stephen Gard was a man, and a different kind of a man from Peter
+altogether.
+
+She remembered, with a slight reddening still of the warm brown cheeks
+whenever she thought of it--how, on the previous Sunday afternoon, she
+and Bernel had gone running over the downs through the waist-high
+bracken towards Brenire, the tide in their favourite pool below the
+rocks being too high for bathing. And on the slope above the Cromlech
+they had come suddenly on Gard, lying there looking out over the sea
+towards L'Etat.
+
+He had jumped up at sight of them and stood hesitating a moment.
+
+"Going for a bathe?" he asked, knowing the usual course of their
+proceedings.
+
+"Yes, we were," said Bernel. "You going?" with a glance at the towel
+Gard had brought out on the chance of a dip.
+
+"I'd thought of it, but your tides and currents here are so
+troublesome--"
+
+"Oh, we know all about 'em. They're all right when you know."
+
+"I suppose so, but--" with a look at Nance, "I'll clear out."
+
+"You're not coming?"
+
+"Your sister wouldn't like it."
+
+"Nance?" with a look of surprise. "She won't mind. Will you, Nance?"
+
+Then it was her turn to hesitate, for bathing with Bernel was one thing,
+and with Mr. Gard quite another.
+
+"You'll show me another time, Bernel," said Gard, picking up his towel.
+"I wouldn't like to spoil your fun now."
+
+"But you wouldn't. Would he, Nance?"
+
+"I don't mind--if you'll give me the cave."
+
+"All the caves you want," said Bernel, scornful at such unusual
+stickling on the part of his chum.
+
+"Quite sure you don't mind?" asked Gard, doubtful still.
+
+"If I have the cave. It's generally the one who gets there first, and
+Bern goes quicker than I do."
+
+"Of course. You're only a girl," laughed Bernel, as he raced on down the
+slope.
+
+And Nance laughed too at his brotherly depreciation, and Gard, who had
+never regarded her as only a girl, and whose thoughts of her were very
+absorbing and uplifting, happening to catch her eye, laughed also, and
+so they went down towards the sea in pleasant enough humour and the
+nearest approach to good-fellowship they had yet attained.
+
+Nance disappeared round a corner, and the next he saw of her she was
+swimming boldly out towards Brenire point, and in a moment he and
+Bernel were after her.
+
+"Don't go past the point," jerked Bernel.
+
+"She's gone."
+
+"She's a fish and knows her way," and just then they ploughed into what
+at first looked to Gard like a perfectly smooth spot amid the troubled
+waters, and then he was lifted from below and flung awry and out of his
+stroke, and tossed and tumbled till he felt as helpless as a dead fish.
+Then a fresh coil of the bubbling tide whirled him to one side and he
+was out again in the safety of the dancing waves.
+
+"You see?" cried Bernel. "That's what it's like," and shot into it
+headlong.
+
+And Gard, treading water quietly at a safe distance, saw how, every
+here and there, great crowns of water came surging up from below, with
+such lunging force that they rose in some cases almost a foot above the
+neighbouring level of the sea, and he wondered how any swimmer could
+make way through them. And yet Nance had cleft them like a seal, and he
+could hardly make out her brown head bobbing among the distant waves.
+
+"Is it safe for her?" he cried after Bernel, but the boy's only reply
+was a scornful wave of the arm as he pressed on to join her.
+
+Gard had an ample swim, and was dressed and sitting on a rock, when they
+came leisurely in, and it seemed to him that never in his life had he
+seen anything half so pretty as those shining coils of chestnut hair
+with the sea-drops sparkling in them, and the bright energetic face
+below, browned with sun and wind, rosy-brown now with her long swim, and
+beaded like her hair with pearly drops.
+
+As she swept along below, she gave just one quick up-glance, and then,
+with completest ignorance of his presence, turned her head to Bernel and
+chattered away to him with most determined nonchalance.
+
+She and Bernel used the long effective side-stroke almost entirely, and
+the little arm that flashed in and out so tirelessly was as white as the
+garment that fluttered in wavy convolutions about the lithe little body
+below.
+
+Gard, as he watched her, felt like a discoverer of hidden treasure,
+overwhelmed and intoxicated with the wonder of unexpected riches. He had
+come to this wild little land of Sark after silver, and he said to
+himself that he had found a pearl beyond price.
+
+In a minute or two they were scrambling up the slope and flung
+themselves down beside him for a rest, feeling the strain of unusual
+exertion now that the brace and tonic of the water was off them.
+
+"You are bold swimmers," said Gard.
+
+"She's a fish in the water," said Bernel, "and she made me swim almost
+as soon as I could walk."
+
+"You see," said Nance, in her decisive little way, "many of our Sark men
+won't learn to swim. They think it's mistrusting God. But that seems to
+me foolish. Every man who goes down to the sea ought to be able to
+swim--besides, it's terribly nice."
+
+"Yes, surely, Sark men ought to be able to swim, and they have certainly
+no lack of opportunity. But it's a dangerous coast for those who don't
+know it. Look at that now," and he nodded to the foaming race in front
+of them, between Brenire and a gaunt rocky peak which rose like a
+mountain-top out of the lonely sea. "Why, it must be running five or six
+miles an hour."
+
+From where they sat the sea seemed perfectly calm, a level plain of
+deepest blue, with pale green streaks under the rocks and dark purple
+patches further out, its surface just furrowed with tiny wind-ripples,
+and underneath, a long slow heave like the breathings of the spirit of
+the deep. But, smooth as the blue plain seemed, wave met rock with roar
+and turmoil, and between that outlying peak and the shore the waters
+tore and foamed with wild white crests--tumbling green ridges that were
+never two seconds the same. While all along the great black base of the
+peak the white waves rushed like mighty rockets, flinging long white
+arms up its ragged sides and crashing together at the end in dazzling
+bursts of foam.
+
+"Wonderful!" said Gard. "I've lain here for hours watching it."
+
+"I've swum it," said Nance quietly.
+
+"So've I," said Bernel.
+
+"Never! You two? I wonder you came back alive!"
+
+"On the slack it's not so bad, and at half ebb."
+
+"And what is there to see when you get there?"
+
+"Oh, just rocks, and puffins and gulls. You can hardly walk without
+stepping on them. Do you remember how we sat and watched the baby gulls
+coming out, Nance?"
+
+"Yes," nodded Nance. "And you nearly got your fingers bitten off by a
+puffin when you felt in its hole."
+
+"Ma d, yes! They do bite."
+
+"What do you call the rock?" asked Gard, nodding across at it.
+
+"L'Etat," said Nance. "Mr. Cachemaille once told me that it had most
+likely at one time been joined on to Little Sark by a Coupe, just the
+same as Little Sark is joined to Sark. That's the Coupe, that shelf
+under water where the tide runs so fast. Some day, he said, perhaps our
+Coupe will go and we'll be an island just as L'Etat is."
+
+"It won't be this week," said Bernel philosophically.
+
+"It looks like the top of a high mountain just sticking up out of the
+water," said Gard, fascinated by the ceaseless rush of those monstrous
+waves in an otherwise calm sea.
+
+"I suppose that is what it is," said Nance. "It's far worse at the other
+end. You can't see it from here. No matter how smooth the sea is it
+seems to tumble down over some cliff under water and then come shooting
+up again, and it throws itself at the rocks and sends the spray up into
+the sky."
+
+"I'd like to go and see it," said Gard. "But I don't think I would like
+to swim. Could one get a boat?"
+
+"We have a boat with Nick Mollet in the bay below here," said Bernel.
+"But he's generally out fishing and you're always busy."
+
+"I'll take a holiday some day and you shall take me over."
+
+Time came when they went, but it was hardly a holiday undertaking.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT
+
+
+It was a few days after this that Gard had another proof of Nance's and
+Bernel's fearlessness and prowess in the waters they had conquered into
+friendliness.
+
+Bernel was a great fisherman. He could wheedle out rock-fish by the
+dozen while envious miners sat about him tugging hopefully at empty
+lines.
+
+He had gone down one afternoon to the overhanging wooden slip at Port
+Gorey, and had excellent sport, until a sudden shift of the wind to the
+south-west began piling the waters into the gulf on an incoming tide.
+Then he drew in his lines and sat dangling his legs for a few minutes,
+before gathering up his catch and going home.
+
+Nance saw him from the other headland and came tripping round to see how
+he had fared.
+
+"Bern," she cried, as she came up. "Tell that man he's not safe down
+there. The waves are bad there sometimes."
+
+"Hi, you!" cried Bernel, to a miner who had been watching his success
+and had then climbed down seaward over the furrowed black ledges, hoping
+to do better there. "Come back! It's not safe there."
+
+But the fisherman, intent on his sport, either did not, or would not,
+hear him.
+
+"Oh, well, if you won't," said Bernel.
+
+And then, without warning, a wave greater than any that had gone before
+it, hurled itself up the rocks and came roaring over the black ledges
+into the bay, and the man was gone.
+
+Nance and Bernel had straightened up instantly at the sound of its
+coming.
+
+Their eyes swept the rocks, and caught a glimpse of the dark body
+tumbling with the cascade of foam into Port Gorey.
+
+"Oh, Bern!" cried Nance, with up-clasped hands.
+
+But Bernel, loosing his belt and kicking off his breeches with a glance
+at the derelict, launched himself clear of the pier with a shout. And
+Nance, seeing the bulk of the man, and careless of everything but Bernel
+who seemed so very small compared with him, threw off her sun-bonnet and
+linen jacket, loosed a button, and was gone like a white flash after the
+two of them.
+
+Gard was in the assay office not far away. He heard the shout and ran
+out just in time to see Nance go, and running to the slip he saw their
+clothes lying and the meaning of it all.
+
+Bern had hold of the miner by the collar of his coat, and was doing his
+best with one hand to tow him to the shingle at the head of the gulf,
+the almost drowned one splashing wildly and doing his utmost to get hold
+of and drown his rescuer. Every now and again Bernel found it necessary
+to let go in order to keep out of his way.
+
+Nance swam steadily up and the sinking one made a frantic clutch at her.
+
+"Lie quiet or you shall drown," she cried. "Do you hear? Lie quiet and
+you are safe! See!" and she held his right hand while Bernel took his
+left and the man found himself no longer sinking, and they struck out
+for the shingle.
+
+Others of the miners had run down with ropes, but ropes were useless in
+that deep gulf. Nance and Bernel were doing the only thing possible, and
+Gard saw that they were all right now that the man had ceased to
+struggle.
+
+He picked up Bernel's things, and Nance's, with a curious feeling of
+delight and a touch of shyness, her sun-bonnet, her little linen jacket,
+her woollen skirt, her neat little wooden sabots, and ran swiftly with
+them to the shaft at the head of the gulf.
+
+They would make for the adit, he thought, and so gain the shaft and come
+up by the ladders, if, indeed, John Thomas was in any state to climb
+ladders.
+
+"Bring some brandy," he shouted to one of the men, and ran on. Nance was
+more to him than all the miners in Sark, and it was not brandy she would
+be wanting, he knew, but her clothes.
+
+And, since a man needs both his hands to go down almost perpendicular
+ladders, he left at the top all that she would not instantly need and
+took only the little jacket and the woollen skirt. These he rolled into
+a bundle as he ran, and gripped in his teeth as he began the descent,
+and rejoiced all the way down in this close intimacy with her clothing.
+Indeed, on one of the stages, when he stopped for a moment's breathing,
+he kissed the little garments devoutly, and then laughed shamefacedly at
+himself for his foolishness, and glanced round quickly lest any should
+have witnessed it.
+
+So down, down, till he came to the level, and crept along the adit to
+the shore.
+
+They had dragged John Thomas up on to the shingle, and he lay there
+half-dead and fuller of water than was his custom.
+
+Nance looked up quickly at the sound of Gard's feet, and the paled-brown
+of her face flushed red at sight of him, and then a grateful gleam
+lighted it as he dropped her things into her hand and bent over John
+Thomas, who was showing signs of life in a dazed and water-logged
+fashion.
+
+"You did splendidly, you two," he said to Bernel. "It's a grand thing to
+save a man's life, even if it's only John Thomas," for John Thomas had
+found this land of free spirits too much for him, and had become a
+soaker and an indifferent workman.
+
+"He'll be all right after a bit," he added. "I told them to send down
+some brandy," at which John Thomas groaned heavily to show his
+extremity. "As soon as it comes, Bernel, you help Nance up the ladders.
+Then run home both of you. Your things are at the top, Bernel. And here
+comes the brandy. Now, up you go! Do you think you can manage the
+ladders?" he asked Nance.
+
+"I'll manage them," and they crept away into the darkness of the adit,
+and Nance thought she had never been in such a hideous place in her
+life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY
+
+
+They had been most gratefully and graciously free from Tom since his
+father's death, but he reappeared a day or two before the end of the six
+weeks, and brought with him a wife from Guernsey--not even a Guernsey
+woman, however, but a Frenchwoman from the Cotentin--black-haired,
+black-eyed, good-looking, after the type that would please such an one
+as Tom Hamon--somewhat over-bold of face and manner for the rest of the
+family.
+
+Philip Tanquerel had had to bring all his sagacity to bear on his
+difficult task of apportioning the lots, and Tom, who knew every inch of
+the ground and all its capacities, grinned viciously now and again at
+the acumen displayed in the divisions.
+
+The allotment of the house-room had presented difficulties.
+
+The great kitchen at La Closerie occupied the whole centre third of the
+ground floor, the remaining thirds of the space on each side being taken
+up with the rarely-used best room and three bedrooms, all pretty much of
+a size, and all opening into the kitchen. Up above, under the sloping
+thatch was the great solie or loft, entered from the outside through the
+door-window in the gable by means of a short wooden ladder.
+
+Grannie's dower rights, when Tom's grandfather died, had obtained for
+her the two rooms constituting one-third of the house on the south side
+of the kitchen, and certain rights of use of the kitchen itself. As she
+needed only one room, she had bartered off the other and her kitchen
+rights to her son and his wife in exchange for food and attendance, and
+the arrangement had worked excellently.
+
+But, on her first glimpse of young Tom's quick-eyed, bold-faced
+Frenchwoman, she had vowed she would have none of her; and in the end,
+as the result of some chaffering, it was arranged that Tom and his wife
+should have the kitchen and all the rooms north of it, while Mrs. Hamon
+and Nance and Bernel had the room next Grannie's for a kitchen, and the
+great loft for bedrooms, all the necessary and duly specified
+alterations to be made at Tom's expense, and Mr. Tanquerel to see them
+carried out at once. Grannie's other room was to become their
+sitting-room also and they were to provide for her as hitherto. By
+boarding up the doors leading to the kitchen, and making a new entrance
+to their own rooms, the families were therefore entirely separated, to
+every one's complete satisfaction.
+
+The division of the furniture and kitchen utensils gave Mrs. Hamon all
+she needed. Tom, of course, took as _droit d'ainesse_, before the
+division, the family clock--which still bore signs of strife, and had
+refused to go since that night when Gard's buffet had sent him headlong
+into it; and the farm-ladders and the pilotins--the stone props on which
+the haystacks were built; and in addition to his own full share, as
+between himself and Nance and Bernel, he exacted from them to the
+uttermost farthing the extra seventh part of the value of all they
+received--an Island right, but honoured more in the breach than in the
+observance, and one which, in its exercise, tended to label the
+exerciser as unduly mean and grasping.
+
+Beyond that, everything was so fairly well balanced that Tom found
+himself unable to secure all he had hoped, and so deemed himself
+ill-used, and did not hesitate to express himself in his usual forcible
+manner.
+
+To obtain some of the things he specially wanted, Tanquerel had so
+arranged the lots that he must sacrifice others, and these little
+matters rankled in his mind and obscured his purview.
+
+There was a good deal of unhappy wrangling, but in the end Mrs. Hamon
+and Nance found themselves with a large cornfield, one for pasture, and
+one for mixed crops, potatoes, beans and so on, besides rights of
+grazing and gorse-cutting on a certain stretch of cliff common.
+
+They had also a pony and two cows, and two pigs and a couple of dozen
+hens and a cock--quite enough to keep Nance busy; and to them also fell
+an adequate share of the byres and barns, and the free use of the well.
+
+Tom, however, still looked upon them as interlopers, and grudged them
+every stick and stone, and hoof and claw. If they had never come into
+the family all would have been his. Whatever they had they had snatched
+out of his mouth.
+
+If it had not been for Philip Tanquerel the alterations agreed on would
+never have been completed. He got down the carpenter and mason from
+Sark, stood over them, day by day, till the work was done, and then
+referred them to Tom for payment--and a pleasant and lively time they
+had in getting it.
+
+The conditions resulting from all this were just such as have prevailed
+in hundreds of similar cases, such as are almost inevitable from the
+minute divisions and sub-divisions of small properties. When ill-feeling
+has prevailed beforehand it is by no means likely to be lessened by the
+unavoidable friction of such a distribution.
+
+The open ill-feeling was, however, all on Tom's side. The others had
+suffered him at closer quarters the greater part of their lives. It was
+to them a mighty relief to be boarded off from him, and to feel free at
+last from his unwelcome incursions.
+
+He never spoke to any of them, and when they passed one another on their
+various farm duties a black look and a muttered curse was his only
+greeting.
+
+By means of what fairy tales concerning himself, or his position, or
+Sark, he had induced the lively-eyed Julie to marry him, we may not
+know. But Mrs. Tom very soon let it be known that she considered herself
+woefully misled, and quite thrown away upon such a place as Sark, and
+still more so upon this _ultima thule_ of Little Sark, which she volubly
+asserted was the very last place le bon Dieu had made, and the condition
+in which it was left did Him little credit.
+
+She, at all events, showed no disinclination to chat with her
+neighbours. Very much the contrary. None of them could pass within range
+of her eyes and tongue without a greeting and an invitation to talk.
+
+"Tiens donc, Nancie, ma petite!" she would cry, at sight of Nance. "What
+a hurry you are in. It is hurry and scurry and bustle from morning till
+night with you over there. The hens? Let them wait, ma garche, 'twill
+strengthen their legs to scratch a bit, and 'twill enlighten your mind
+to hear about Guernsey and Granville. Oh the beautiful country! Mon
+Dieu, if only I were back there!"
+
+They all--except, perhaps, Grannie--felt for her--lonely in a strange
+land--and were inclined to do what they could to make her more
+contented. But she desired them chiefly as listeners, and the things she
+had to tell were little to their taste, and less to her credit from
+their point of view, though she herself evidently looked upon them as
+every-day matters, and calculated to inspire these simple island-folk
+with the respect due to a woman of the greater world outside.
+
+Grannie's views of her grand-daughter-in-law had never altered from the
+first moment she set eyes on her.
+
+When Mrs. Tom came in to hear herself talk, one afternoon when Tom was
+away fishing, the old lady simply sat and stared at her from the depths
+of her big black sun-bonnet, and never opened her lips or gave any sign
+of interest or hearing.
+
+"Is she deaf?" asked Mrs. Tom after a while.
+
+"Dear me, no. Grannie hears everything," said Mrs. Hamon, with a smile
+at thought of all the old lady would have to say presently.
+
+"Nom d'un nom, then why doesn't she speak? Is it dumb she is?"
+
+"Neither deaf nor dumb--nor yet a fool," rapped Grannie, so sharply that
+the visitor jumped.
+
+And during the remainder of her visit, no matter to whom she was talking
+or what she was saying, Julie's snapping black eyes would inevitably
+keep working round to the depths of the big black sun-bonnet, and at
+times her discourse lost point and trailed to a ragged end.
+
+"It's my belief that old woman next door is a witch," she said to her
+husband later on.
+
+"She's an old devil," he said bluntly. "She'll put the evil eye on you
+if you don't take care."
+
+"She ought to be burnt," said Mrs. Tom.
+
+"All the same," said Tom musingly, "she's got money, so you'd best be as
+civil to her as she'll let you."
+
+"Mon Dieu! My flesh creeps still at the way she looked at me. She has
+the evil eye without a doubt."
+
+And Grannie?--"Mai grand doux! What does a woman like that want here?"
+said she. "A wide mouth and wanton eyes. La Closerie has never had these
+before--a Frenchwoman too!"--with withering contempt. For, odd as it may
+seem, among this people originally French, and still speaking a patois
+based, like their laws and customs, on the old Norman, there is no term
+of opprobrium more profound than "Frenchman."
+
+Madame Julie flatly refused to subject herself to further peril from
+Grannie's keen but harmless gaze, and contented herself with such
+opportunities of enlarging Nance's outlook on life as casual chats about
+the farm-yard afforded, and found time heavy on her hands.
+
+Ennui, before long, gave place to grumbling, and that to recrimination;
+and from what the others could not help hearing, through the boarded-up
+doors and the floor of the loft, Tom and his wife had a cat-and-dog time
+of it.
+
+Gard had moved over to Plaisance with great regret. But nothing else was
+possible under the altered circumstances at La Closerie, so he made the
+best of it.
+
+It was some consolation to learn that they also missed him.
+
+"Everything's different," grumbled Bernel, one day when they met. "Tom
+and his wife quarrel so that we can hear them through the walls. And
+Grannie sits by the hour without opening her mouth. And mother and Nance
+are as quiet as if they were going to be sick. And I'm getting
+green-mouldy. Seems as if we'd got to the end of things, and nothing was
+ever going to happen again. I think I'll go to Guernsey."
+
+"Do you think they'd like--I mean, would they mind if I came in for a
+chat now and then? It's pretty lonely up at Plaisance too."
+
+"Oh, they'll mind and so will I. When'll you come?"
+
+"I'll look in to-night as I come from the mines--if you're sure--"
+
+"You come and try, and if you don't like it you needn't come
+again"--with a twinkle of the eye.
+
+Nance did not strike him as looking as though she were going to be sick,
+when he went in that night, nor did her mother.
+
+Grannie indeed had little to say, but then she was never over-talkative,
+and when Gard more than once looked at her, and wondered if she had
+fallen asleep, he always found the keen old eyes wide open, and eyeing
+him watchfully as ever out of the depths of the big black sun-bonnet.
+
+Mrs. Hamon asked about his new quarters, and his quiet shake of the head
+and simple--"They're kindly folk, but it's somehow very different"--told
+its own tale.
+
+"They're a bit short-handed, you see," he added, "and so they're all
+kept busy, and at times, I'm afraid, they wish me further."
+
+"And you go all that way back for your dinner each day?" asked Mrs.
+Hamon thoughtfully.
+
+"Well, I have tried taking it with me, but it's not very satisfactory."
+
+"What would you say to coming here for it, as you used to? I think we
+could manage it, Nance. What do you say?"
+
+"We could manage it all right," said Nance, "if--" and then, in spite of
+herself, she could not keep that telltale mouth of hers in order, and
+the attempt to repress a smile only emphasized the dimples at the
+corners. For Gard's face was as eager as a dog's at sight of a rat.
+
+"It will save me such a lot of time," he explained--at which Nance
+dimpled again as she went out to feed her chickens, and left them to
+complete the new arrangement.
+
+And if it had cost Gard every penny of his salary he would still have
+rejoiced at it, and considered his bargain a good one. As it was, it
+cost him no more than the trouble of rearranging his terms with the good
+folks at Plaisance, and it gave a new zest and enjoyment to life since
+it ensured a meeting with Nance at least once each day.
+
+And not with Nance only!
+
+Madame Julie, very weary of herself, and Tom, and her surroundings, and
+Sark, and life in general as understood in Sark, very soon became
+conscious of the regular visits next door of the best-looking young man
+she had yet seen in the Island, and was filled with curiosity concerning
+him.
+
+"He's after that slip of a Nance," she said to herself. "And he has his
+own share of good looks, has that young man."--And then came the
+inevitable, "Mon Dieu, but I wish Tom had been made like that!"
+
+To get a better view of him--and perhaps not without a vague idea of
+ulterior interest and amusement for herself--anything to add a dash of
+colour to the prevailing greyness of her surroundings--she was leaning
+on the gate next day when he came striding up to his dinner, and gave
+him, "Bon jour, m'sieur!" with much heartiness and the full benefit of
+her black eyes and white teeth.
+
+"'Jour, madame!" and he whipped off his hat and passed on into the
+house.
+
+"That was Madame Tom, I suppose, who was leaning over the gate, as I
+came in," he said, as they ate.
+
+"I expect so," said Mrs. Hamon. "She generally seems to have time on her
+hands."
+
+"When Tom's not there," snapped Grannie. "Got her hands full enough when
+he is."
+
+"I should imagine Tom would not be too easy to get on with at times.
+Maybe he'll settle down now he's married."
+
+"Doesn't sound like settling down sometimes," chirped the old lady
+again.
+
+"Oh? I'm sorry to hear that. She doesn't look bad-tempered."
+
+"Tom's got more'n enough for the two of them."
+
+"I'm afraid she finds it a change from what she's been accustomed to,"
+said Mrs. Hamon quietly. "She came in once or twice, but her talk is of
+things that don't interest us, and ours is of things that don't interest
+her, so we can't get as friendly as we would like to be."
+
+"And Tom?"
+
+"Tom considers us all robbers, as he always has done. He gives us his
+blackest face whenever he sees any of us."
+
+"That's unpleasant, seeing you're such close neighbours."
+
+"Yes, it's unpleasant, but we can't help it. It's just Tom. How is your
+work getting on?"
+
+"Not as I would wish," said Gard, with a gloomy wag of the head. "Your
+Sark men are difficult--very difficult, and the others who ought to know
+better, and who do know better"--with more than a touch of warmth--"go
+on as though I was a slave-driver."
+
+"Sark men are hard to drive," said Mrs. Hamon sympathetically.
+
+"They know perfectly well that I want only what is just and right to the
+shareholders. They expect their pay to the last penny, but when I insist
+on a proper return for it they look at me as if they'd like to knock me
+on the head. It's disheartening work. I've been tempted at times to
+throw it all up and go back to England"--at which Nance's heart gave so
+unusual a little kick that she had difficulty in frowning it into
+quietude, and just then Bernel came in with his gun and a couple of
+rabbits.
+
+"Who's going to England?" he asked. "I'll go too."
+
+"No you won't," said Nance sharply. "We want you here."
+
+"It's as dull as Beauregard pond and as dirty, since the m--aw--um!"
+with a deprecatory glance at Gard.
+
+"You'd find most busy places just as dirty," said Gard.
+
+"Then I'll go to sea. That's clean at all events."
+
+"Let's hope things will brighten a bit. You wouldn't find the fo'c'sle
+of a trader as comfortable as La Closerie, my boy,"--and they fell to on
+their dinner and left the matter there.
+
+"Dites-donc, Nannon, ma petite," said Mrs. Tom to Nance, a day or two
+later, "who is the joli gars who comes each day to see you?"
+
+"Mr. Gard from the mines comes up here to get his dinner, if that's what
+you mean."
+
+"Oh--ho! He comes for his dinner, does he? And is that all he comes for,
+little Miss Modesty?"
+
+"That's all," said Nance solemnly.
+
+"Oh yes, without a doubt, that's all. I think I'll ask him next time I
+see him. Why doesn't he go home for his dinner like other people?"
+
+"He's living at Plaisance now and it's far to go. He used to live here,
+you know."
+
+"Ma foi, no, I didn't know. He used to live here? And why did he go to
+Plaisance then?"
+
+"We hadn't room for him, you see."
+
+"But, Mon Dieu, we have room and to spare! There are those two bedrooms
+empty. Why shouldn't he--"
+
+But Nance shook her head at that.
+
+"Why then?" demanded Mrs. Tom, with visions of some one besides Tom to
+talk to of an evening--a good-looking, sensible one too. "Why?"
+
+"He and Tom don't get on well together--"
+
+"Pardi, I'm not surprised at that. It would need an angel out of heaven
+to get on with him sometimes. What induced me ever to marry such a
+grumbler I don't know. I wonder if Monsieur What-is-it?--Gard--would
+come back if I could arrange it?"
+
+But Nance shook her head again.
+
+"Ah--ha, ma garche, and you would sooner he did not--is it not so?"
+
+"I'm quite sure he and Tom would never get on together, and I don't
+think Mr. Gard would come."
+
+"It's worth trying, however. He would be some one to talk to of an
+evening any way."
+
+And so, when Tom came in that evening, she tackled him on the subject.
+
+"Say then, mon beau,"--and as she said it she could not but contrast his
+slouching bulk with the straight, well-knit figure of the other--"why
+should we not take in a lodger as all the rest do? Our two rooms there
+are empty and--"
+
+"Who's the lodger?"
+
+"There is one comes up every day to dinner next door, and would stop
+there altogether if they had the room. Tiens, what's this his name is?
+He's from the mines--"
+
+"You mean Gard--the manager," scowled Tom.
+
+"That's it--Monsieur Gard. Why shouldn't he--"
+
+"Because I'd break his head if I got the chance, and he knows it. Comes
+up there to dinner, does he? How long's he been doing that?"
+
+"For a week now. Couldn't you get over your bad feeling? It would be
+money in our pockets."
+
+"No, I couldn't, and he wouldn't come if you asked him."
+
+"Will you let me try?"
+
+"I tell you he won't come."
+
+"In that case there's no harm in trying. If I can persuade him, will you
+promise to be civil to him, and not try to break his head?"
+
+"He won't come, I tell you."
+
+"And I say he may."
+
+"And you'll nag and nag till you get your own way, I suppose."
+
+"Of course. What's the use of a woman's tongue if she can't get her own
+way with it? Will you promise to behave properly if he comes?"
+
+"I'll behave if he behaves," he growled sulkily. "But we'll neither of
+us get the chance. He won't come."
+
+"Eh bien, we'll see!"
+
+And when Gard came up to dinner next day, she was leaning over the gate
+waiting for him, very tastefully dressed according to her lights, and
+with an engaging smile on her face.
+
+"Dites donc, Monsieur Gard," she said pleasantly. "Our little Nannon was
+telling me you regretted having to live so far away. Why should you not
+come back and occupy your old room? It is lying empty there, and I would
+do my very best to make you comfortable, and you would be close to your
+friends all the time then, instead of having to go across that frightful
+Coupe."
+
+"It is very kind of you, madame," and he stared back at her in much
+surprise, and found himself wondering what on earth had made her marry
+such a man as Tom Hamon. For she was undeniably good-looking and had all
+a Frenchwoman's knack of making the very best of all she had--abundant
+black hair, very neatly twisted up at the back of her head; white teeth
+and full red lips; straight, well-developed figure very neatly dressed;
+and large black eyes which looked capable of so many things, that they
+found it difficult to settle for any length of time to any one
+expression.
+
+"It is very kind of you, madame," said Gard, "but--" and he stood
+looking at her and hesitating how to put it.
+
+"You mean about Tom," she laughed. "But that is all past. I have spoken
+to him, and he promises to behave himself quite properly if you will
+come. Voil!"
+
+Just for a moment the possibilities of the suggestion caught his mind.
+He would be near Nance all the time. He would be saved much tiresome
+walking to and fro. Especially he would be saved that passage of the
+Coupe, which at night, even with a lantern, was not a thing one easily
+got accustomed to, and on stormy nights was enough to make one's hair
+fly. Then this woman was very different from his present landlady, and
+would probably, he thought, have different notions of comfort.
+
+The quick black eyes caught something of what was in him: and he, as
+suddenly, caught something of what lurked, consciously or unconsciously,
+in them, and a little tremor of repugnance shook his heart and braced
+him back to reason.
+
+He shook his head. "It would not do, madame. He and I would never get on
+together, no matter how hard we tried. I thank you for the offer all the
+same," and he made as though to pass her.
+
+"I wish you would come," she said, and laid a pleading hand on his arm.
+"I'm sure he would try to behave. I can generally manage him except when
+he's been drinking. Then I'm afraid of him, and wish some one else was
+at hand. But that's only when he's been out all night at the fishing,
+and it's soon over and done with. Do come, monsieur!"--It was almost a
+whisper now, and she leaned towards him--the rich dark face--the great
+solicitous eyes.
+
+But she had mistaken her man. Perhaps she had not met many like him.
+
+He shook off her hand almost brusquely.
+
+"It is impossible, madame. I could not," and he pushed past just as
+Nance came to the door.
+
+She had seen him coming, heard their voices outside, and wondered what
+was keeping him.
+
+She turned back into the house when she saw Julie, wondering still more.
+For Gard's face was disturbed, and had in it something of the look she
+had seen more than once when he had faced Tom in his tantrums.
+
+And, glancing past him, she had seen what he had not--Julie's face when
+he turned his back on her.
+
+"Mon Gyu!" gasped Nance to herself, and went in wondering.
+
+"She and Tom wanted me to take my old room again, and I refused," was
+all he said.
+
+"Tom wanted you to go there?" said Mrs. Hamon in amazement.
+
+"So she said."
+
+Grannie's disparaging sniff was charged with libel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well?" asked Tom of his wife, when he came in later on with Peter
+Mauger, who had come over for supper. "Got your lodger?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That's what I told you," with a provocative laugh.
+
+"Oh, he'd have come quick enough."
+
+"Would, would he? Then why didn't he?"
+
+"I wouldn't trust myself alone in the house with that man."
+
+"Ah!" said Tom, staring at her. "Always thought he was a bad lot myself,
+didn't I, Peter?"
+
+Peter nodded.
+
+"It's a wonder to me that Mrs. Hamon lets him run after that girl of
+hers as she does," said Julie.
+
+"If I catch him up to any of his tricks I'll break his head for him."
+
+"Maybe it would be a good thing for little Nance if you did."
+
+"Knew he was a toad as soon as I set eyes on him, so did Peter. Didn't
+you, Peter?"
+
+Peter nodded.
+
+"What d'he say to you?" demanded Tom.
+
+"Didn't say much. Asked if you were much away at the fishing and that.
+But the way he looked at me!--I've got the shivers down my back yet,"
+and a virtuous little shudder shook her and made a visible impression on
+Peter.
+
+"Peter and me'll maybe have a word with him one of these days, won't we,
+Peter?"
+
+"Maybe," said Peter.
+
+"We don't want toads like Gard running off with any of our Sark girls,
+do we, Peter?"
+
+"No," said Peter.
+
+"Mr. Gard had better look out for himself or take himself off before
+somebody does it for him. There's plenty wouldn't mind giving him a
+crack on the head and slipping him over the Coupe some dark night."
+
+As to such extreme measures Peter offered no opinion. He looked vaguely
+round the big kitchen as though in search of something that used to be
+there, and said--
+
+"How about supper?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY
+
+
+One dark night Gard sauntered down the cutting towards the Coupe,
+enjoying a last pipe before turning in.
+
+This had become something of a habit with him. The people of Plaisance,
+hard at work all day in the fields, went early to bed and left him to
+follow when he pleased. And to stand securely in that deep cleft, just
+where the protecting walls broke off short and left the narrow path to
+waver on into the darkness, was always fascinating to him.
+
+When the moon flooded the gulf on the left with shimmering silver, and
+the waves broke along the black rocks below in crisp white foam like
+silver frost, he would stand by the hour there and never tire of it.
+
+The moon cast such a mystic glamour over those great voids of darkness
+and over the headlands, melting softly away, fold behind fold, on the
+right, while Little Sark became a mystery land into which the white path
+rambled enticingly and invited one to follow.
+
+And to him, as his eyes followed it till it disappeared over the crown
+of the ridge, it was more than a mystery land--a land of promise, rich
+in La Closerie and Nance.
+
+Always within him, as he watched, was the feeling that if the sweet
+slim figure should come tripping down the moonlit path towards him, he
+would be in no way astonished. When he stood there, watching, it seemed
+to him that it would be entirely fitting for her to come so, in the calm
+soft light that was as pure and sweet as herself.
+
+And at times his eye would light on the grim black pile of L'Etat, lying
+out there in the silvery shimmer like some great monumental cairn, a
+rough and rugged heap of loneliness and mystery--the grimmer and
+lonelier by reason of the twinkling brightness of its setting. And then
+his thoughts would play about the lonely pile, and come back with a
+sense of homely relief to the fairy path which Nance's little feet had
+trod, in light and dark, and storm and shine, since ever she could walk.
+
+He pictured her as a tiny girl running fearlessly across the grim
+pathway to school, dancing in the sunshine, bending to the storm, and
+all alone when she had been kept in--he wondered with a smile what she
+had been kept in for.
+
+He thought of her, as he had seen her, walking to church, her usually
+blithe spirit tuned to sedateness by the very fact, and, to him,
+delightfully stiffened by the further fact that she, almost alone among
+her friends and school-fellows, wore Island costume, while all the rest
+flaunted it in all the colours of the rainbow. And he laughed happily to
+himself, for very joy, at thought of the sweet elusive face in the
+shadow of the great sun-bonnet. There was not a face in all Sark to
+compare with it, nor, for him, in all the world.
+
+But this night, as be stood there pulling slowly at his pipe and
+thinking of Nance, was one of the black nights.
+
+Later on there would be a remnant of a moon, but as yet the sky above
+was an ebon vault without a star, and the gulfs at his feet were pits of
+darkness out of which rose the voices of the sea in solemn rhythmic
+cadence.
+
+Down in Grande Grve, on his right, the waves rolled in almost without a
+sound, as though they feared to disturb the darkness. From the
+intervening moments he could tell how slowly they crept to their curve.
+Their fall was a soft sibilation, a long-drawn sigh. The ever-restless
+sea for once seemed falling to sleep.
+
+And then, as he listened into the darkness, a tiny elfish glimmer
+flickered in the void below, flickered and was gone, and he rubbed his
+eyes for playing him tricks. But the next wave broke slowly round the
+wide curve of the bay in a crescent of lambent flame, and a flood of
+soft, blue-green fire ran swelling up the beach and then with a sigh
+drew slowly back, and all was dark again. Again and again--each wave was
+a miracle of mystic beauty, and he stood there entranced long after his
+pipe had gone dead.
+
+And as he stood gazing down at the wonder of it, his ear caught the
+sound of quick light footsteps coming towards him across the Coupe, and
+he marvelled at the intrepidity of this late traveller. If he had had to
+go across there that night, he would have gone step by step, with
+caution and a lantern; whereas here was no hesitation, but haste and
+assurance.
+
+It was only when she had passed the last bastion, and was almost upon
+him, that he made out that it was a girl.
+
+His heart gave a jump. She had been so much in his thought. Yet, even
+so, it was almost at a venture that he said--
+
+"Nance?"
+
+And yet, again, he had learned to recognize her footsteps at the farm,
+and where the heart is given the senses are subtly acute, and she had
+slackened her pace somewhat as she drew near.
+
+"Yes; I am going to the doctor."
+
+"Why--who--?"
+
+"Grannie is ill--in pain. He will give me something to ease her." He had
+turned and was walking by her side.
+
+"I am sorry. You will let me go with you?"
+
+"There is no need at all--"
+
+"No need, I know; but all the same it would be a pleasure to me to see
+you safely there and back."
+
+She hurried on without speaking. If there had been any light, and he had
+dared to peep inside the black sun-bonnet, he might perhaps have found
+the hint of a smile overlaying her anxiety on Grannie's account.
+
+By the ampler feel of things, and the easing of the slope, he knew they
+were out of the cutting, and presently they were passing Plaisance.
+
+"If you would sooner I did not walk with you, I will fall behind; but I
+couldn't stop here and think of you going on alone," he said.
+
+"That would be foolishness," she said gently. "But there is really no
+need. I have no fears of ghosts or anything like that."
+
+"There might be other kinds of spirits about," he said quietly. "And
+when men drink as some of my fellows do, they are no respecters of
+persons. But this is surely very sudden. Your grandmother seemed all
+right at dinner-time."
+
+"She had bad pains in the afternoon, and they have been getting worse.
+She did not want to have the doctor, but the things she took did her no
+good, and mother said I had better go and ask him for something more."
+
+"And where is Bernel?"
+
+"He went to the fishing with Billy Mollet, and he was not back."
+
+"And suppose the doctor is not in?"
+
+"They will know where he is, and I will go after him."
+
+"Did you see those wonderful waves of fire as you came across the
+Coupe?"
+
+"I have seen them often. When there is more sea on, and it breaks on the
+rocks, it is finer still. It is something in the water, Mr. Cachemaille
+told me."
+
+"I heard your footsteps down there on the Coupe, but I couldn't see a
+sign of you till you were almost against me."
+
+"I saw from the other side that some one was there, but I could not see
+who."
+
+"You have most wonderful eyes in Sark."
+
+"It is never quite dark to me on the darkest night. I suppose it is with
+being used to it."
+
+"You'll have to help me across the Coupe."
+
+"And how will you get back?"
+
+"The moon will be up, and then I can see all right. I don't need much
+light, but I've not been brought up to see through solid black."
+
+The doctor was fortunately in, and knew by ample experience what would
+ease Grannie's pains. So presently they were hurrying back along the
+dark road.
+
+As they turned the corner by Vauroque an open doer cast a great shaft
+of light across the darkness, and there, just as on a previous occasion,
+on the wall lounged half-a-dozen men, and among them was Tom Hamon, who
+had come up to have a drink with his friend Peter.
+
+At sight of him, Nance bent her head and tried to shrink into herself as
+she hurried past.
+
+But Tom had seen her, and the sight of her alone with Gard at that time
+of night roused the virtuous indignation, and other more potent spirits,
+within him.
+
+He sprang down into the road, shouting what sounded like a spate of
+curses in the patois.
+
+Gard stopped and turned, with a keen recollection of the same thing
+having happened before. He remembered too how that occasion ended.
+
+But Nance laid an entreating hand on his arm.
+
+"Please--don't!"
+
+Her voice sounded a little strange to him. If he had been able to see
+her face now he would have found it pallid, in spite of its usual
+healthy brown bloom.
+
+She stood entreatingly till he turned and went on with her.
+
+"He is evidently aching for another thrashing," he said grimly, as he
+stalked beside her.
+
+And presently they were in the cutting, and the unnerving vastness of
+the gulfs opened out on either side. Gard felt like a blindfolded man
+stumbling along a plank.
+
+He involuntarily put out a groping hand and took hold of her cloak. A
+little hand slipped out of the cloak and took his in charge, and so they
+went through the darkness of the narrow way.
+
+He breathed more freely when the further slope was reached, and only
+then became aware that the hand that held his was all of a tremble. The
+next moment he perceived that she was sobbing quietly.
+
+"Nance!" he cried. "What is it? You are crying. Is it anything I--"
+
+"No, no, no!" sobbed the wounded soul convulsively.
+
+"What then? Tell me!"
+
+"I cannot. I cannot."
+
+"Nance--dear!" and he sought her hand again and stood holding it firmly.
+"It is like stabs in my heart to hear you sobbing. I would give my life
+to save you from trouble. Do you believe me, dear?"
+
+"Yes, yes--"
+
+"And you can trust me, dear, can you not? You distrusted me at first, I
+know, but--"
+
+"Oh, I do trust you, and I know you are good. And it is that that makes
+it so wicked of him to say such things about us--"
+
+In her excitement she had let slip more than she intended. She stopped
+abruptly.
+
+"Tom?"
+
+She did not speak, but the wound welled open in another sob.
+
+"Don't trouble about him, dear! I don't know what he said, but if it was
+meant to make you doubt me, it was not true. You are more to me than
+anything in the world, Nance, and I have never loved any other
+woman--except my mother. Do you believe me?"
+
+"Yes--oh, yes! I cannot help believing you. Oh, I wish sometimes that
+Tom was dead. When I was very little I used to pray each night to God to
+kill him."
+
+"I'll teach him to leave you alone."
+
+"I must go now. Grannie is waiting for her medicine."
+
+He took the little hand under his arm and pressed it close to his side,
+and they pushed on down the dark lanes till they came in sight of the
+lights of La Closerie.
+
+Then he bent into the sun-bonnet and sealed his capture of the virginal
+fortress by a passionate kiss on the tremulous little lips. And she,
+with the frankness of a child, reached up and kissed him warmly back.
+
+"Good-night, dear, and God bless you!" he said fervently.
+
+"Can you find your way in the dark?"
+
+"There is the moon. I shall be all right."
+
+She bent her head and ran on towards the lights. He watched her go in at
+the door, and turned and went back along the lane, and his heart was
+high with the joy that was in him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HOW TWO FELL OUT
+
+
+It was but a thin strip of a moon that had risen above the evening
+mists--a mere sickle of red gold--but such as it was it sufficed to lift
+the pall of darkness from the earth and set the black sky back into its
+proper place.
+
+To Gard the night had suddenly become spacious and ample, and the
+peaceful slip of a moon, which grew paler and brighter every minute, was
+full of promise.
+
+He was so full of Nance that he had almost forgotten Tom and his
+scurrilous insolences.
+
+He crossed the Coupe without any difficulty, enjoyed over again the
+recollection of that last crossing, and stood in the cutting on the Sark
+side for a moment to marvel at the change an hour had made in his
+outlook on things in general.
+
+Tom? Why, he could almost forgive Tom, for it was he who had helped to
+bring matters to a head--unconsciously, indeed, and probably quite
+against his wish. Still, he had been the instrument--the drop of acid in
+the solution which had crystallized their love into set form and made it
+visible, and fixed it for life.
+
+Truly, he was half inclined to consider himself under obligation to
+Tom--if only his boorishness could be kept in check for the future. For,
+of a certainty, he was not going to allow Nance to be made miserable by
+his loutish insolences.
+
+He had climbed the cutting and was on the level, when he heard heavy
+footsteps coming towards him, and the next moment he was face to face
+with the object of his thoughts.
+
+Possibly Tom had expected to meet him and had been preparing for the
+fray, for he opened at once with a volley of patois which to Gard was so
+much blank cartridge.
+
+"Oh--ho, le velas--corrupteur! Amuseur! Sducteur! Ou quais noutre
+fille? Quais qu'on avait fait d'elle d'on?"
+
+"Quite finished?" asked Gard quietly, as the other came to a stop for
+want of breath. "Say it all over again in English, and I'll know what
+you're talking about."
+
+"English be----!" he broke out afresh, in a turgid mixture of tongues.
+"Sducteur, amuseur! Where's our Nance? Gaderabotin, what have you done
+with the girl? I know you, corrupteur! Running after men's wives--and
+our Nance, too! See then--you touch la garche and I'll--"
+
+"See here! We've had enough of this," said Gard, gripping him by the
+shoulders and shaking him. "If you weren't drunk I'd thrash you within
+an inch of your life, you brute. Come back when you're sober, and I'll
+give you a lesson in manners."
+
+Tom had been struggling to get his arms up. At last he wrenched himself
+free and came on like a bull. One of his flailing fists caught Gard
+across the face, flattening his nose and filling one eye with stars; the
+other hand, trying to grip his opponent, ripped open his coat, tearing
+away both button and cloth.
+
+"You lout!" cried Gard, his blood up and dripping also from his nose.
+"If you must have it, you shall;" and he squared up to him to administer
+righteous punishment.
+
+And then the futility of it came upon him. The man was three-parts
+drunk, in no condition for a fight, scarce able to attempt even to
+defend himself.
+
+No punishment of Tom drunk would have the slightest moral effect on Tom
+sober. He would remember nothing about it in the morning, except that he
+had been knocked about.
+
+When he received his next lesson in deportment it was Gard's earnest
+desire and hope that it might prove a lasting and final one.
+
+So he decided to postpone it, and contented himself with warding and
+dodging his furious lunges and rushes, and gave him no blow in return.
+Until, at last, after one or two heavy falls of his own occasioning, Tom
+gave it up, spluttered a final commination on his opponent, and turned
+to go home.
+
+He went blunderingly down into the hollow way, and Gard stood watching
+him in doubt.
+
+It seemed hardly possible he could cross the Coupe in that state, and
+he felt a sort of moral responsibility towards him. Much as he detested
+him, he had no wish to see him go reeling over into Coupe bay.
+
+So he set off after him to see him safely across, and Tom, hearing him
+coming, groped in the crumbling side wall till he found a rock of size,
+and sent it hurling up the path with another curse.
+
+Then he blundered on, and Gard followed. And Tom stopped again by one of
+the pinnacles and sought another rock, and flung it, and it dropped
+slowly from point to point till it landed on the shingle three hundred
+feet below.
+
+He stood there in the dim light, cursing volubly in patois and shaking
+his fist at Gard; but at last, to Gard's great relief, he humped his
+back and stumbled away up the cutting on the further side.
+
+And Gard, very sick of it all, and with an aching head and a very tender
+nose, but withal with a warm glow at the heart which no aches or pains
+could damp down, turned and went home to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+HOW ONE FELL OVER
+
+
+Gard's first waking thoughts next morning were of Nance entirely.
+
+He would see her at dinner-time. How would he find her? Last night the
+disturbance of her feelings had shaken her out of herself somewhat, and
+shown her to him in new and delightful lights.
+
+If, this morning, she should be to some extent withdrawn again into her
+natural modest shell, he would not be surprised; and he made up his
+mind, then and there, to be in no wise disappointed. Last night was a
+fact, a delightful fact, on which to build the rosy future.
+
+It was a long time to wait till dinner-time to see her. What if he went
+round that way, before going to work, just to inquire if Tom got home
+all right.
+
+And then the feeling of discomfort in his eye and nose, as though the
+one had shrunk to the size of a pin-point and the other had grown to the
+bulk of a turnip--brought back the whole matter, and on further
+consideration he decided not to go to the farm till the proper time. If
+he came across Tom, the fray would inevitably be resumed at once, and
+his right eye, at the moment, showed a decided disinclination to open to
+its usual extent, or to perform any of the functions properly demanded
+of a right eye contemplating battle.
+
+He must get up at once and bathe it and bring it to reason.
+
+Raw beef, he believed, was the correct treatment under the
+circumstances. But raw beef was almost as obtainable as raw moon, and
+even raw mutton he did not know where he could procure, nor whether it
+would answer the purpose.
+
+So he bathed his bruises with much water, and reduced their excesses to
+some extent, but not enough to escape the eye of his hostess when he
+appeared at breakfast.
+
+"Bin fighting?" she queried dispassionately.
+
+"A one-sided fight. Tom Hamon was drunk last night and hit me in the
+face, but he was not in a condition to fight or I'd have taught him
+better manners."
+
+"He's a rough piece," with a disparaging shake of the head. "It'd take a
+lot to knock him into shape. Try this," and she delved among her stores,
+and found him an ointment of her own compounding which took some of the
+soreness out of his bruises.
+
+But black eyes and swollen noses are impertinently obtrusive and
+disdainful of disguise, and the captain's battle-flags provoked no
+little jocosity among his men that morning.
+
+"Run up against su'then, cap'n?" asked John Hamon the engineer, who was
+one of the few who sided with him.
+
+"Yes, against a drunken fist in the dark. When it's sober I'm going to
+give it a lesson in manners."
+
+"Drunken fisses is hard to teach. You'll have your hands full, cap'n."
+
+It seemed an unusually long morning, but dinner-time came at last and he
+hastened across to the farm, eager for the first sight of the sweet shy
+face hiding in the big sun-bonnet.
+
+Quite contrary to his expectations Nance came hurrying to meet him. She
+had evidently been on the watch for him. Still more to his surprise, her
+face, instead of that look of shy reserve which he had been prepared
+for, was full of anxious questioning. The large dark eyes were full of
+something he had never seen in them before.
+
+"Why--Nance--dear! What is the matter?" he asked quickly.
+
+"Did you meet Tom again last night? Oh," at nearer sight of his bruised
+face, "you did, you did!"
+
+"Yes, dear, I did. Or rather he met me--as you see."
+
+"Did you fight with him?" she panted.
+
+"He was too drunk to fight. He ran at me and gave me this, and my first
+inclination was to give him a sound thrashing. Then I saw it would be no
+good, in the condition he was in, so I just kept him at arm's length
+till he tired of it. He went off at last, and I was so afraid he might
+tumble off the Coupe that I followed him, and he hurled rocks at me
+whenever he came to a stand. But he got across all right, and I went
+back and went to bed. Now, what's all the trouble about?"
+
+"He never came home," she jerked, with a catch in her voice which
+thought only of Tom had never put there.
+
+"Never came home?"
+
+"And they're all out looking for him."
+
+"I wonder if he went back to Peter Mauger's.... If he tried to cross
+that Coupe again--in the condition he was in--"
+
+"He didn't go back to Peter's. Julie went there first of all to ask."
+
+"Good Lord, what can have become of him?"
+
+The answer came unexpectedly round the corner of the house--Julie
+Hamon, in a state of utmost dishevelment and agitation, which turned
+instantly to venomous fury at the sight of Gard and Nance.
+
+Her black hair seemed all a-bristle. Her black eyes flamed. Her dark
+face worked like a quicksand. Her skirts were wet to the waist. Her
+jacket was open at the top, as though she had wrenched at it in a fit of
+choking. Her strong bare throat throbbed convulsively. Her hands, half
+closed at her side, looked as though they wanted something to claw.
+
+"Did you do it?" she cried hoarsely, stalking up to Gard.
+
+"Do what?"
+
+"Kill him."
+
+"Tom?... You don't mean to say--"
+
+"You ought to know. He's there in the school-house, broken to a jelly
+and his head staved in. And they say it's you he fought with last night.
+The marks of it are on your face"--her voice rose to a scream--"Murderer!
+Murderer! Murderer!"
+
+"You wicked--thing!" cried Nance, pale to the lips.
+
+"You--you--you!" foamed Julie. "You're as bad as he is. Because my man
+tried to save you from that--murderer--"
+
+"Oh, you--wicked!--You're crazy," cried Nance, rushing at her as though
+to make an end of her.
+
+And Julie, mad with the strain of the night's anxieties and their abrupt
+and terrible ending, uncurled her claws and struck at her with a
+snarl--tore off her sun-bonnet, and would have ripped up her face, if
+Gard had not flung his arms round her from the back and dragged her
+screaming and kicking towards her own door.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had come running out at sound of the fray. Gard whirled the
+mad woman into her own house and Mrs. Hamon followed her and closed the
+door.
+
+Gard turned to look for Nance.
+
+She was nervously trying to tie on her sun-bonnet by one string.
+
+"Nance, dear," he said, "you don't believe I had anything to do with
+this?"
+
+"Oh no, no! I'm sure you hadn't. But--"
+
+"But?" he asked, looking down into the pale face and bright anxious
+eyes.
+
+"Oh, they may say you did it. They will think it. They are sure to think
+it, and they are so--"
+
+"Don't trouble about it, dear. I know no more about it than you do, and
+they cannot get beyond that. Promise me you won't let it trouble you."
+
+"Oh, I will try. But--"
+
+"Have no fears on my account, Nance. I will go at once and tell them all
+I know about it."
+
+He pressed her hands reassuringly, and she went into the house with
+downcast head and a face full of forebodings, and he set off at once for
+Sark.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME
+
+
+Mrs. Tom had had a troubled night. Anxiety at her husband's continued
+absence had in due time given way to anger, and anger in its turn to
+anxiety again.
+
+In a state of mind compounded of these wearing emotions, she had set out
+in the early morning to find out what had become of him; if he was
+sleeping off a drunken debauch at Peter Mauger's, to give them both a
+vigorous piece of her mind; if he was not there, to find out where he
+was; in any case to vent on some one the pent-up feelings of the night.
+
+Vigorous hammering on Peter Mauger's door produced first his old
+housekeeper, and presently himself, heavy-eyed, dull-witted, and in
+flagrant dishabille, since Mrs. Guille had but a moment ago shaken him
+out of the sleep of those who drink not wisely over-night, with the
+information that a crazy woman wanted him at the door.
+
+"Where's Tom?" demanded Julie, ready to empty the vials of her wrath on
+the delinquent as soon as he was produced.
+
+But Peter's manner at once dissipated that expectation.
+
+"Tom?" he said vaguely, and gazed at her with a bovine stupidity that
+jarred her strained nerves like a blow.
+
+"Yes, Tom--my husband, fool! Where is he?" she asked sharply.
+
+"Where is he?" scratching his tousled head to quicken his wits. "I d'n
+know."
+
+"You don't know? What did you do with him last night, you drunken
+fool?"--by this time the neighbours had come out to learn the news.
+
+Peter gaped at her in astonishment, his muddled wits and aching head
+beginning dimly to realize that something was wrong.
+
+"Tom left here ... last night ... t'go home," he nodded emphatically.
+
+"Well, he never got home," snapped Julie. "And you'd best get your
+clothes on and help me find him. You were both as drunk as pigs, I
+suppose. If he's lying dead in a ditch it's you that'll have the blame."
+
+"Aw now, Julie!"
+
+"Don't Julie me, you fool! Get dressed and do something."
+
+"I'll come. You wait," and he went inside, and put his head into a basin
+of water, and threw on his clothes, and came out presently looking
+anxious and disturbed now that his sluggish brain had begun to work.
+
+"Where you been looking?" he asked.
+
+"Nowhere. I expected to find him here."
+
+"We had a glass or two and then he started off home. He could walk all
+right.... Did you.... You didn't see anything wrong ... anything ... at
+the Coupe?" he asked, with a quick anxious look at her.
+
+"No, I didn't. What do you mean? Oh, mon Dieu!" and she started down the
+road at a run, with Peter lumbering after her and the neighbours in a
+buzzing tail behind.
+
+The cold douche had cooled Peter's hot head, the running quickened his
+blood and his thoughts, a sudden grim fear braced his brain to quite
+unusual activity.
+
+As he ran he recalled the events of the night before; their meeting with
+Gard and Nance; Tom's scurrilous insults.
+
+If Tom and Gard had met again--Gard would be sure to see Nance home. Had
+he met Tom on his way back? And if so--if so--and ill had come to
+Tom--why, Gard might get the blame. And--and--in short, though by
+zig-zag jerks as he ran--if Gard were out of the way for good and all,
+Nance's thoughts might turn to one nearer home. He would be sorry if ill
+had come to Tom, of course. But if Gard could be got rid of he would be
+most uncommonly glad.
+
+And as he panted after Julie, head down with the burden of much
+thinking, just before he reached the sunk way to the Coupe, his eye
+lighted on something in the road that caused him to stop and bend--a
+button with a scrap of blue cloth attached. He picked it up hastily and
+put it in his pocket. On a white stone just by it there were some
+red-brown spots. He pushed it with his foot to the side of the road and
+was down into the cutting before the heavy-footed neighbours came up.
+
+Julie was ranging up and down the narrow pathway, searching the depths
+with a face like a hawk, hanging on to the rough sides of the pinnacles,
+and bending over in a way that elicited warning cries from the others as
+they came streaming down.
+
+But keenest search of the western slope revealed nothing amid its tangle
+of gorse and blackberry bushes, and the eastern cliff fell so sheer, and
+had so many projecting lumps and underfalls, that it was impossible to
+see close in to the foot.
+
+And then one, nimbler witted than the rest, climbed out along the common
+above the northern cliff, whereby, when he had come to the great slope,
+he took the Coupe cliff in flank, and could spy along its base.
+
+And suddenly he stopped, and stiffened like a pointer sighting his bird,
+peered intently for a moment, and gave tongue.
+
+The chase was ended. That they had sought, and feared to find, was
+found.
+
+They came hurrying up, and clustered like cormorants on the slope, Julie
+among them, her face grim and livid in its black setting, her eyes
+blazing fiercely.
+
+The finder pointed it out. They all saw it--a huddled black heap close
+in under the cliff.
+
+Elevated by his discovery, the finder maintained his reputation by doing
+the only thing that could be done. He left them talking and sped away
+across the downs, across the fields, towards Creux harbour.
+
+He might, if he had known it, have found a boat nearer at hand, Rouge
+Terrier way or in Brenire Bay. But he was a Sark man, and a farmer at
+that, and knew little and cared less, of the habits of Little Sark.
+
+And the rest, falling to his idea, streamed after him, for that which
+lay under the cliff could only be gotten out by boat.
+
+So to the Creux, panting the news as he went. And there, willing hands
+dragged a boat rasping down the shingle, and lusty arms, four men rowing
+and one astern sculling and steering at the same time, sent her bounding
+over the water as though it were life she sought, not death. For, though
+no man among them had any smallest hope of finding life in that which
+lay under the cliff, yet must they strain every muscle, till the
+labouring boat seemed to share their anxiety to get there and learn the
+worst.
+
+So, out past the Lches, with the tide boiling round the point; past
+Derrible, with its yawning black mouths; past Dixcart with its patch of
+sand; under the grim bastions of the Cagnon; the clean grey cliffs and
+green downs above, all smiling in the morning sun; the clear green water
+creaming among the black boulders, hissing among their girdles of tawny
+sea-weeds, cascading merrily down their rifted sides; round the
+Convanche corner, so deftly close that the beauty of the water cave is
+bared to them, if they had eye or thought for anything but that which
+lies under the cliff in Coupe Bay. And not a word said all the way--not
+one word. Jokes and laughter go with the boat as a rule, and
+high-pitched nasal patois talk; but here--not a word.
+
+The prow runs grating up the shingle, the heavy feet grind through it
+all in a line, for none of them has any desire to be first. Together
+they bend over that which had been Tom Hamon, and their faces are grim
+and hard as the rocks about them. Not that they are indifferent, but
+that any show of feeling would be looked upon as a sign of weakness.
+
+Under such circumstances men at times give vent to jocularities which
+sound coarse and shocking. But they are not meant so--simply the protest
+of the rough spirit at being thought capable of such unmanly weakness as
+feeling.
+
+But these men were elementally silent. One look had shown them there was
+nothing to be done but that which they had come to do--to carry what
+they had found back to the waiting crowd at the Creux.
+
+They had none of them cared much for this man. He was not a man to make
+close friends. But death had given him a new dignity among them, and the
+rough hands lifted him, and bore him to the boat as tenderly as though a
+jar or a stumble might add to his pains.
+
+And so, but with slower strokes now, as though that slight additional
+burden, that single passenger, weighed them to the water's edge, they
+crawl slowly back the way they came, logged, not with water, but with
+the presence of death.
+
+The narrow beach between the tawny headlands is black with people. Up
+above, on the edge of the cliff, another crowd peers curiously down.
+
+The Snchal is there at the water's edge, Philip Guille of La Ville,
+and the Greffier, William Robert, who is also the schoolmaster, and
+Thomas Le Masurier the Prvt, and Elie Guille the Constable, and Dr.
+Stradling from Dixcart, and the dark-faced, fierce-eyed woman who cannot
+keep still, but ranges to and fro in the lip of the tide, and whom they
+all know now as the wife--the Frenchwoman, though some of them have
+never seen her before.
+
+A buzz runs round as the boat comes slowly past the point of the Lches.
+The woman stops her caged-beast walk and stands gazing fiercely at it,
+as if she would tear its secret out of it before it touched the shore.
+
+The watchers on the cliff have the advantage. Something like a thrill
+runs through them, something between a sigh and a groan breaks from
+them.
+
+The woman wades out to meet the boat. She sees and screams, and chokes.
+The wives on the beach groan in sympathy.
+
+The body is lifted carefully out and laid on the cool grey stones, and
+the woman stands looking at it as a tiger may look at her slaughtered
+mate.
+
+"Stand back! Stand back!" cries the Snchal to the thronging crowd; and
+to the Constable, "Keep them back, you, Elie Guille!" to which Elie
+Guille growls, "Par mad, but that's not easy, see you!"
+
+The Doctor straightens up from his brief examination, and says a word to
+the Snchal, and to the men about him.
+
+A rough stretcher is made out of a couple of oars and a sail, and the
+sombre procession passes through the gloomy old tunnel into the Creux
+Road, and wends its way up to the school-house for proper inquiry to be
+made as to how Tom Hamon came by his death.
+
+And close behind the stretcher walks the dark-faced woman, with her eyes
+like coals of fire, and her dress dragged open as though to stop her
+from choking.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" she says in perpetual
+iteration, through her clenched teeth. But to look at her face and eyes
+you might think it was rather the devil she was calling on.
+
+For, ungracious as their lives had been in many respects, yet this
+violent breaking of the yoke has left the survivor sore and wounded, and
+furious to vent her rage on whom at present she knows not.
+
+She is not allowed inside the school-house--hastily cleared of its usual
+occupants, who dodge about among the crowd outside, enjoying the
+unlooked-for holiday with gusto in spite of its gruesome origin--and so
+she prowls about outside, and the neighbours talk and she hears this,
+that, and the other, and presently, with bitter, black face and rage in
+her heart, she goes off home to find out Stephen Gard if she can, and
+accuse him to his face of the murder of her husband.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HOW PETER'S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT
+
+
+Peter Mauger had kept himself carefully beyond the range of Julie's wild
+black eyes. In the state she was in there was no knowing what she might
+do or say. And the words even of a mad woman sometimes stick like burrs.
+He began to breathe more freely when she whirled away home.
+
+The Snchal and Constable came out of the school-house at last with
+very grave faces.
+
+"The Doctor says his head was staved in with the blows of some round
+blunt thing like a mallet," said the Snchal to the gaping crowd, "and
+we must hold a proper inquiry. Any of you who saw Tom Hamon last night
+will be here at two o'clock to tell us all you know. Tell any others who
+know anything about it that they must be here too," and he went back
+into the school-house, and the buzzing crowd dispersed, with plenty to
+buzz about now in truth.
+
+Peter Mauger went thoughtfully home. He had had no breakfast, and was
+feeling the need of it, and he had something in his mind that he wanted
+to think out.
+
+And as he ate he thought, slowly and ruminatingly, and with many pauses,
+when his jaws stopped working to give his mind freer play, but still
+very much to the purpose, and as soon as he had done he set out to put
+his project into execution.
+
+Just beyond the Coupe he met Gard hurrying towards Sark, and the state
+of Gard's nose and eye, and his torn coat, caught his eye at once.
+
+"What's this about Tom Hamon?" asked Gard hastily.
+
+"He's dead."
+
+"His wife has just told me so. But how did it happen?"
+
+"They're going to find out at school-house at two o'clock. Any that saw
+him last night are to be there. You'd better be there."
+
+"I'm going now."
+
+"All right," said Peter, and went on his way into Little Sark.
+
+His way took him to La Closerie. But he was not anxious to meet Mrs.
+Tom, so he hung about behind the hedges till Nance happened to come out
+of the house, and then he whistled softly and beckoned to her to come to
+him.
+
+Her face was very pale and troubled, and he saw she had been crying.
+
+"I want to speak to you," he said.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Come round here. It's important."
+
+"What is it?" she asked wearily again, when she had joined him behind
+the green dyke.
+
+"It's this, Nance. You--you know I want you. I've always wanted you--"
+
+"Oh--don't!" she cried, with protesting hand. "This is no time. Peter
+Mauger, for--"
+
+"Wait a bit! Here's how it is. Doctor says Tom was killed by some one
+beating his head in with a hammer or something of the kind. Now who beat
+his head in? Who would be most likely to beat his head in? Not me, for
+we were mates. Some one that hated him. Some one that he was always
+quarrelling with--" Her face had grown so white that there was no colour
+even in the trembling lips. She stared at him with terrified eyes.
+
+"You know who I mean," he said. "If it wasn't him that did it I don't
+know who it was."
+
+"It wasn't," she jerked vehemently.
+
+"You'd wish so, of course. But--Look here!--I'm pretty sure they met
+again last night after--"
+
+"Yes, they met, and Tom tried to fight him--"
+
+"Ah--then!"
+
+"And he's gone up at once, as soon as he heard that Tom was found, to
+tell them all about it."
+
+"Aw!"--decidedly crestfallen at the wind being taken out of his sails in
+this fashion. "I--I thought--maybe I could help him--"
+
+"Oh you did, did you?"--plucking up heart at sight of his discomfiture.
+"And how were you going to help him?"
+
+"If he's gone to make a clean breast of it it's all up, of course. If
+he'd kept it to himself--"
+
+"He might have run away, you mean?"
+
+"Safest for him, maybe. Up above Coupe there's a stone with blood on
+it. And I picked up this beside it," and he hauled out the button and
+the bit of blue cloth he had found. "I thought, maybe if he knew about
+these he might think it safest to go."
+
+"Then every one would have the right to say he'd done it, and he didn't.
+He knew no more about it than you did."
+
+"I didn't know anything about it."
+
+"Well, neither did he, and he's not the kind to run away."
+
+"Aw, well--I done my best. You'll remember that, Nance. You know what
+the Sark men are. He'd be safest away. You tell him I say so," and he
+pouched his discounted piece of evidence and turned and went, leaving
+Nance with a heavy heart.
+
+For, as Peter said, she knew what the Sark men were--a law unto
+themselves, and slow to move out of the deep-cut grooves of the past,
+but, once stirred to boiling point, capable of going to any lengths
+without consideration of consequences.
+
+And therein lay Gard's peril.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT
+
+
+Every soul in the Island that could by any means get there, was in or
+outside the school-house, mostly outside, long before the clock struck
+two. Never in their lives had they hurried thither like that before.
+
+A barricade of forms had been made across the room. Within it, at the
+school-master's table, sat the Snchal, Philip Guille, and the Doctor,
+and old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar, ageing rapidly since the tragic
+death of his good friend, the late Seigneur; beside them stood the
+Prvt and the Greffier, behind them lay the body of Tom Hamon covered
+with a sheet.
+
+It was a perfect day, with a cloudless blue sky and blazing sun, and all
+the windows were opened wide. Those inside dripped with perspiration,
+but felt cold chills below their blue guernseys each time they looked at
+that stark figure with the upturned feet beneath the cold white sheet.
+
+Outside the barricade stood Elie Guille, the Constable, and his
+understudy Abraham Baker, the Vingtnier, to keep order and call the
+witnesses.
+
+The Seigneur, Mr. Le Pelley, was away or he would undoubtedly have been
+there too. In his absence the Snchal conducted the proceedings.
+
+In the front row of school-desks, scored with the deep-cut initials of
+generations of Sark boys, sat the dead man's widow, tense and quivering,
+her eyes consuming fires in deep black wells, her face livid, her hands
+clenched still as though waiting for something to rend.
+
+More than one of the men who sat beside her at the desk found, with a
+grim smile, his own name looking up at him out of the maltreated board.
+And one nudged his neighbour and pointed to the name of Tom Hamon, cut
+deeper than any of the others and with the N upside down.
+
+Very briefly the Snchal stated that they were there to find out, if
+they could, how Tom Hamon came by his death, and added very gravely, in
+a deep silence, that after a most careful examination of the body the
+Doctor was of opinion that death had been caused, not by the fall from
+the Coupe, which accounted for the dreadful bruises, but by violent
+blows on the head with a hammer or some sueh thing prior to the fall.
+They wanted to find out all about it.
+
+The Doctor stood up and confirmed what the Snchal had said, went
+somewhat more into detail to substantiate his opinion, and ended by
+saying, "The head, as it happens, is less bruised than any other part of
+the body, except on the crown, and that is practically beaten in, and
+not, I am prepared to swear, by a fall. These wounds were the immediate
+cause of death, and they were made before he fell down the rocks.
+Besides, he went down feet first. The abrasions on the legs and thighs
+prove that beyond a doubt. Then again, the base of the skull is not
+fractured, as it most certainly would have been if he had fallen on his
+head. Death was undoubtedly the result of those wounds in the head. It
+is impossible for me to say for certain with what kind of weapon they
+were made, but it was probably something round and blunt."
+
+"Now," said the Snchal, when the Doctor had finished, and the hum and
+the growl which followed had died down again, "will any of you who know
+anything about this matter come forward and tell us all you know?"
+
+Stephen Gard stood up at once and all eyes settled on him. Then Peter
+Mauger was pushed along from the back, with friendly thumps and growling
+injunctions to speak up. But the looks bestowed on Gard were of quite a
+different quality from those given to Peter, and the men at the table
+could not but notice it.
+
+"We will take Peter Mauger first. Let him be sworn," said the Snchal,
+and Gard sat down.
+
+The Greffier swore Peter in the old Island fashion--"Vous jurez par la
+foi que vous devez Dieu que vous direz la vrit, et rien que la
+vrit, et tous ce que vous connaissez dans cette cause, et que Dieu
+vous soit en aide! (You swear by the faith which you owe to God that you
+will tell the truth, and only the truth, and all that you know
+concerning this case, and so help you God!)"
+
+Peter put up his right hand and swore so to do.
+
+"Now tell us all you know," said the Snchal.
+
+And Peter ramblingly told how he and Tom had been drinking together the
+night before, and how Tom had started off home and he had gone to bed.
+
+"Were you both drunk?"
+
+"Well--"
+
+"Very well, you were. Did you think it right to let your friend go off
+in that condition when he had to cross the Coupe?"
+
+"I've seen him worse, many times, and no harm come to him."
+
+"Well, get on!"
+
+He told how Mrs. Tom woke him up in the morning, and how they had all
+gone in search of the missing man.
+
+"Was it you that found him?"
+
+"No, it was Charles Guille of Clos Bourel. But I found something too."
+
+"What was it?"
+
+"This"--and from under his coat he drew out carefully the white stone
+with its red-brown spots, and from his pocket the button and the scrap
+of blue cloth. And those at the back stood up, with much noise, to see.
+
+The men at the table looked at these scraps of possible evidence with
+interest, as they were placed before them.
+
+"Where did you find these things?"
+
+"Between Plaisance and the Coupe."
+
+"What do you make of them?"
+
+"Seemed to me those red spots might be blood. The other's a button torn
+off some one's coat."
+
+"Have you any idea whose blood and whose coat?"
+
+"The blood I don't know. The button, I believe, is off Mr. Gard's
+coat,"--at which another growl and hum went round.
+
+"And you know nothing more about the matter?"
+
+"That's all I know."
+
+"Very well. Sit down. Mr. Gard!" and Gard pushed his way among
+unyielding legs and shoulders, and stood before the grave-faced men at
+the table.
+
+They all knew him and had all come to esteem what they knew of him. They
+knew also of his difficulties with his men, and that there was a certain
+feeling against him in some quarters. Not one of them thought it likely
+he had done this dreadful thing. But--there was no knowing to what
+lengths even a decent man might go in anger. All their brows pinched a
+little at sight of his torn coat and missing button.
+
+He was duly sworn, and the Snchal bade him tell all he knew of the
+matter.
+
+"That button is mine," he said quietly, holding out the lapel of his
+coat for all to see. "If there is blood on that stone it is mine
+also"--at which a growling laugh of derision went round the spectators.
+
+Gard flushed at this unmistakable sign of hostility. The Snchal
+threatened to turn them all out if anything of the kind happened again,
+and Gard proceeded to recount in minutest detail the happenings of the
+previous night--so far as they concerned himself and Tom Hamon.
+
+"What were you doing down at the Coupe at that time of night?" asked
+the Snchal.
+
+"I had been having a smoke and was just about to turn in when I met Miss
+Hamon hurrying to the Doctor's for some medicine. I asked her permission
+to accompany her, and then took her home to Little Sark. It was when I
+was coming back that I met Tom Hamon."
+
+"Yes, little Nance came to me about half-past ten," said the Doctor, "I
+remember I asked her if she was not afraid to go all that way home
+alone, and she said she had a friend with her."
+
+"Was there any specially bad feeling between you and Tom Hamon?"
+
+"There had always been bad feeling, but any one who knows anything about
+it knows that it was not of my making."
+
+"Will you explain it to us?"
+
+"If you say I must. One does not like to say ill things of the dead."
+
+"We want to get to the bottom of this matter, Mr. Gard. Tell us all you
+know that will help us."
+
+"Very well, sir, but I am sorry to have to go into that. It all began
+through Tom's bad treatment of his stepmother and step-sister and
+brother when I lived at La Closerie. I took sides with them and tried to
+bring him to better manners. We rarely met without his flinging some
+insult after me. They were generally in the patois, but I knew them to
+be insults by his manner and by the way they were greeted by those who
+did understand."
+
+"Had you met last night before you met near the Coupe?"
+
+"We passed Tom by La Vauroque as we came from the Doctor's. He shouted
+something after us, but I did not understand it."
+
+"You don't know what it was that he said?" an unfortunate question on
+the part of the Snchal, and quite unintentionally so on his part. It
+necessitated the introduction of matters Gard would fain have kept out
+of the enquiry.
+
+"Well," he said, with visible reluctance, "I learned afterwards, and by
+accident, something of what he said or meant."
+
+"How was that, and what was it?"
+
+"Is it necessary to go into that? Won't it do if I say it was a very
+gross insult?"
+
+The three at the table conferred for a moment. Then the Snchal said
+very kindly, "I perceive we are getting on to somewhat delicate ground,
+Mr. Gard, but, for your own sake. I would suggest that no occasion
+should be given to any to say that you are hiding anything from the
+court."
+
+"Very well, sir, I have nothing whatever to hide, and I have still less
+to be ashamed of. I found Miss Hamon was weeping bitterly at what her
+brother had said, and I tried to get her to tell me what it was, but she
+would not. I said I knew it was something against me, but I hoped by
+this time she had learned to know and trust me. I told her her sobs cut
+me to the heart and that I would give my life to save her from trouble.
+In a word, I told her I loved her, and in the excitement of the moment
+she dropped a word or two that gave me an inkling of what Tom had said.
+It was casting dirt at both her and myself. Then, as I came home, I met
+Tom as I have told you."
+
+The Snchal considered the matter for a moment. He did not for one
+moment believe that Gard had had any hand in the killing of Tom Hamon.
+But he could not but perceive the hostile feeling that was abroad, and
+his desire was, if possible, to allay it.
+
+"It is, I should think," he said gravely, "past any man's believing
+that, after asking Tom's sister to marry you, you should go straight
+away and kill Tom, even in the hottest of hot blood, though men at such
+times do not always know what they are doing. But you, from what I have
+seen and heard of you, are not such a man. I am going to ask you one
+question in the hope that your answer may have the effect of setting you
+right with all who hear it. Before God--had you any hand in the death of
+this man?--have you any further knowledge of the matter whatever?"
+
+"Before God," said Gard solemnly, his uplifted right hand as steady as
+a rock, "I had no hand in his death. I know nothing more whatever about
+the matter."
+
+"I believe you," said the Snchal.
+
+"And I," said the Doctor.
+
+"And I," said the Vicar gravely, and with much emotion.
+
+But from the spectators there rose a dissentient murmur which caused the
+Vicar to survey his unruly flock with mild amazement and
+disapproval--much as the shepherd might if his sheep had suddenly shed
+their fleeces and become wolves.
+
+And Julie Hamon sprang to her feet with blazing eyes, pointed a shaking
+hand at Gard, and screamed:
+
+"Murderer! Murderer! Murderer!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD
+
+
+Stephen Gard walked slowly down the road towards Plaisance in the lowest
+of spirits.
+
+This strange people amongst whom he had fallen, possessed, in
+pre-eminent degree, what in these later times is known as the defects of
+its qualities.
+
+Black sheep there were, of course, as there are in every community, who
+seemed all defects and possessed of no redeeming qualities whatever.
+But, taken as a whole, the men of Sark were simple, honest according to
+their lights, brave and hardy, very tenacious of their own ideas and
+their island rights, somewhat stubborn and easier to lead than to drive,
+and withal red-blooded, as the result of their ancestry, and given to a
+large despite of foreigners, in which category were included all
+unfortunates born outside the rugged walls of Sark.
+
+He had done his best among them, both for their own interests and those
+of the mines, but no striving would ever make him other than a
+foreigner; and in the depression of spirit consequent on the trying
+experiences of the day, he gloomily pondered the idea of giving up his
+post and finding a more congenial atmosphere elsewhere.
+
+Still, he was a Cornishman, and dour to beat. And, if he had incurred
+unreasonable dislike, he had also lighted on the virgin lode of Nance's
+love and trust, and that, he said to himself with a glow of gratitude,
+outweighed all else.
+
+He had left the school-house at once when he had given his evidence, and
+had heard no more of what had taken place there. The bystanders had let
+him pass without any open opposition, but their faces had been hard and
+unsympathetic, and he recognized that life among them would be anything
+but a sunny road for some time to come.
+
+If the people at Plaisance had told him to clear out and find another
+lodging he would not have been in the least surprised. But they had no
+such thought. In common with all who really got to know him, they had
+come to esteem and like him, and they had no reason to believe that he
+had had anything to do with Tom Hamon's death.
+
+He had pondered these matters wearily till bed-time, and he turned in at
+last sick of himself, and Sark, and things generally. But his brain
+would not sleep, and the longer he lay and the more he tossed and
+turned, the wearier he grew.
+
+Sleep seemed so impossible that he was half inclined to get up and dress
+and go out. The cool night air and the freshness of the dawn would be
+better than this sleepless unresting. Suddenly there came a sharp little
+tap on his window.
+
+A bird, he thought, or a bat.
+
+The tap came again--sharp and imperative.
+
+He got up quietly and went to the window. The night was still dark. As
+he peered into it a hand came up again and tapped once more and he
+opened the window.
+
+"Mr. Gard!"--in a sharp whisper.
+
+"Nance! What is it, dear? Anything wrong?"
+
+"I want you--quick."
+
+"One minute!" and he hastily threw on his things and joined her outside.
+
+"What is it, Nance?" he asked anxiously, wondering what new complication
+had arisen.
+
+"I'll tell you as we go. Come!" and they were speeding noiselessly down
+the road to the Coupe.
+
+There she took his hand, as once before, to lead him safely across, and
+her hand, he perceived, was trembling violently.
+
+They were half way along the narrow path when the hollow way in front
+leading up into Little Sark resounded suddenly with the tramp of heavy
+feet.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" panted Nance, and he could feel her turn and look
+round like a hunted animal.
+
+"Quick!" she whispered. "Behind here! and oh, grip tight!" and she knelt
+and crawled on hands and knees round the base of the nearest pinnacle.
+
+In those days the pinnacles which buttress the Coupe were considerably
+higher and bulkier than they are now, and along their rugged flanks the
+adventurous or sorely-pressed might find precarious footing. But it was
+a nerve-racking experience even in the day-time when the eye could guide
+the foot. Now, in the ebon-black night, it was past thinking of.
+
+Dazed by the suddenness and strangeness of the whole matter, and without
+an inkling of what it all meant, Gard clung like a fly to the bare rock
+and tried his hardest not to think of the sheer three hundred feet that
+lay between him and the black beach below.
+
+In grim and menacing silence, save for the crunch of their heavy feet on
+the crumbling pathway, the men went past, a dozen or more, as it seemed
+to Gard. When the sound of them had died in the hollow on the Sark
+side, Nance whispered, "Quick now! quick!"
+
+They crawled back into the roadway, and she took his hand in hers again
+which shook more than ever, and they sped away into Little Sark.
+
+"Now tell me, Nance. What is it all about?" he panted, as she nipped
+through an opening in a green bank and led the way towards the eastern
+cliffs over by the Pot.
+
+"Oh--it's you they want," she gasped, and he stopped instantly and
+stood, as though he would turn and go back.
+
+"It is no use," she jerked emphatically, between breaths, and dragged
+impatiently at his arm. "You don't know our Sark men.... They do things
+first and are sorry after.... Bernel heard them planning it all.... The
+men from Sark were to meet these ones, and then--"
+
+"But," he said angrily, "running away looks like--"
+
+"No, no! Not here.... And it is only for a time. The truth will come
+out, but it would be too late if they had got you."
+
+"What would they have done with me?"
+
+"Oh--terrible things. They are madmen when they are angry."
+
+He had yielded to her will, and they were speeding swiftly along the
+downs. The path was quite invisible to him. He tripped and stumbled at
+times on tangled roots of gorse and bracken, but she kept on swiftly and
+unerringly, as though the night were light about her.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" he asked, as they crept past the miners'
+cottages on the cliff above Rouge Terrier.
+
+"To Brenire.... To L'Etat.... Bernel went on to find a boat."
+
+And presently they were out on the bald cliff-head, and slipping and
+sliding down it till they came to the ledge, below which Brenire
+spreads out on the water like a giant's hand.
+
+Between her panting breaths Nance whistled a low soft note like the pipe
+of a sea-bird. A like sound came softly up from below, and slipping and
+stumbling again, they were on the beach among mighty boulders girt with
+dripping sea-weed.
+
+Another low pipe out of the darkness, and they had found the boat and
+tumbled into it, wet and bruised, and breathless.
+
+"Dieu merci!" said Bernel, and pulled lustily out to sea.
+
+The swirl of the tide caught them as they cleared Brenire Point, and
+Gard crawled forward to take an oar. Nance did the same, and so set
+Bernel free to scull and steer, the arrangement which dire experience
+has taught the Sark men as best adapted to their rock-strewn waters and
+racing currents.
+
+Gard's mind was in a tumult of revolt, but he sensibly drove his
+feelings through his muscles to the blade of his oar, and said nothing.
+Nance and Bernel were not likely to have gone to these lengths without
+what seemed to them sufficient reason.
+
+And he remembered Nance's trembling arm on the Coupe, and her agonies
+of fear on his account, and so came by degrees to a certain acceptance
+of their view of matters, and therewith a feeling of gratitude for their
+labours and risks on his behalf. For he did not doubt that, should the
+self-appointed administrators of justice learn who had baulked them of
+their prey, they would wreak upon them some of the vengeance they had
+intended for himself.
+
+He saw that it was no light matter these two had undertaken, and as he
+thought it over, and told the black welter under his oar what he thought
+of these wild and hot-headed Sark men, his gratitude grew.
+
+The thin orange sickle of a moon rose at last, high by reason of the
+mists banked thick along the horizon, and afforded them a welcome
+glimmer of light--barely a glimmer indeed, rather a mere thinning of the
+clinging darkness, but enough for Bernel's tutored eye.
+
+He took them in a cautious circuit outside the Quette d'Amont, the
+eastern sentinel of L'Etat, and so, with shipped oars, by means of his
+single scull astern, brought them deftly to the riven black ledges round
+the corner on the south side.
+
+It is a precarious landing at best, and the after scramble up the
+crumbling slope calls for caution even in the light of day. In that
+misleading darkness, clinging with his hands and climbing on the sides
+of his feet, and starting at startled feathered things that squawked and
+fluttered from under his groping hands and feet, Gard found it no easy
+matter to follow Nance, though she carried a great bundle and waited for
+him every now and again. When he looked down next day upon the way they
+had come he marvelled that they had ever reached the top in safety.
+
+"Wait here!" she said at last, when they had attained a somewhat level
+place, and before he had breath for a word she was away down again.
+
+She was back presently with another bundle, and he started when she
+thrust into his hands a long gun, and bade him pick up the first bundle
+and follow her. The feel of the gun brought home to him, as nothing else
+could have done, her and Bernel's views of possible contingencies.
+
+He followed her stumblingly along the rough crown of the ridge, till she
+dipped down a rather smoother slope and came to a stand before what
+seemed to him a heap of huge stones.
+
+"There is shelter in here," she said. "And these things are for your
+comfort. We will bring you more to eat in a day or two--"
+
+"Nance, dear," he said, dropping the gun and the bundle, and laying his
+hand on her slim shoulder. "I have become a sore burden to you--"
+
+"Oh no, no!" she said hastily. "You would have done as much for me, and
+it is because--"
+
+"For you, dear? I would give my life for you, Nance, and here it is you
+who are doing everything, and running all these risks for me."
+
+"It is because I know they are in the wrong. It may be only a day or
+two, and they will thank me when they find out their mistake."
+
+"Well, I thank you and Bernel with my whole heart. Please God I may some
+time be able to repay you!"
+
+"If you are safe, that is all we want. Now I must go. We must get back
+before they miss us."
+
+"God keep you, dear!" and he bent and kissed her, and as before she
+kissed him back with the frankness of a child.
+
+He was about to follow her when she turned to go, but she said
+imperatively, "Stop here, or you may lose yourself in the dark. And in
+the day-time do not walk on the ridge or they may see you--"
+
+"And the gun? What is that for?"
+
+"If they should come here after you, you will keep them off with it,"
+she said, with a spurt of the true Island spirit. "It is your life they
+seek, and they are in the wrong. But no one ever comes here, and you
+will not need it. Now, good-bye! And God have you in His keeping!"
+
+"And you, dearest--and all yours!"--and she was gone like a flitting
+shadow.
+
+And while he still stood peering into the darkness into which she had
+merged, she suddenly materialized again and was by his side.
+
+"I forgot. Bernel told me to tell you it throws a little high. But I
+hope you won't need it. And there is fresh water among the rocks at the
+south end there."
+
+He caught her to him again, and kissed her ardently, and then she was
+gone.
+
+He strained his ears, fearful of hearing her slip or fall in the
+darkness, but she went without displacing a stone, and he was alone with
+the sickly moon, and the sombre sky, and the voices of the rising tide
+along the grim black ledges of his sanctuary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY
+
+
+It all seemed monstrous strange to him, now that he had time to think of
+the actual fact apart from the difficulties of its accomplishment.
+
+An hour ago he was lying in his bed at Plaisance, in low enough spirits,
+indeed, at the outlook before him, but his gloomiest thought had never
+plumbed depths such as this.
+
+He wondered briefly if so extreme a step had been really necessary.
+
+And then he heard again the purposeful tramp of those heavy feet on the
+Coupe, and fathomed again the menace of them.
+
+And he felt Nance's guiding hand trembling violently in his once more,
+and he said to himself that she and Bernel knew better than he how the
+land lay, and that he could not have done other than he had done.
+
+Then he became aware that the dew was drenching him, and so he bent and
+groped in the dark for the shelter Nance had spoken of.
+
+The strip of moon had paled as it rose, the huge white stones glimmered
+faintly in it, and a darker patch below showed him where the entrance
+must be. He crept into the darker patch on his hands and knees, bumping
+his head violently, but once inside found room to sit upright. Snaking
+out again, he laid hold of the two bundles and the gun, and dragged them
+into shelter.
+
+What the bundles contained he could not tell in the dark, but one felt
+like a thick woollen cloak, and the other like a blanket, and among
+their contents he felt a loaf of bread, and a bottle and a powder-flask.
+So he rolled himself up in the blanket and the cloak, and lay wondering
+at the strange case in which he found himself, and so at last fell
+asleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He woke into a dapple of light and shade which filled his wandering wits
+with wonder, till, with a start, he came to himself and remembered.
+
+The place he was in was something like a stone bee-hive, about eight
+feet across from side to side, with a rounded sloping roof rising at its
+highest some four feet from the ground, and the great blocks of which it
+was built fitted so ill in places that the sun shot the darkness through
+and through with innumerable little white arrows of light. The dark
+opening of the night was now a glowing invitation to the day. He shook
+off his wraps and crawled out into the open.
+
+And what an open!
+
+He drew deep breaths of delight at the magnificence of his outlook--its
+vastness, its spaciousness, its wholesome amplitude and loneliness. He
+felt like a new man born solitary into a new world.
+
+The sky, without a cloud, was like a mighty hollowed sapphire, in which
+blazed the clear white sun; and the vast plain of the sea, sweeping away
+into infinity, was a still deeper blue, with here and there long swathes
+of green, and here and there swift-speeding ruffles purple-black.
+
+A brisk easterly breeze set all the face of it a-ripple, and where the
+dancing wavelets caught the sun it glanced and gleamed like sheets of
+molten silver.
+
+"A silver sea! A silver sea!" he cried aloud, and into his mind there
+flashed an incongruous comparison of the bountifulness of Nature's
+silver with the pitiful grains they hacked out of her rocks with such
+toil and hardship.
+
+Away to the south across the silver sea the Jersey cliffs shone clear in
+the sunshine, and on the dimpling plain between, the black Paternosters
+looked so like the sails of boats heading for Sark that he remembered
+suddenly that he was in hiding, and dropped to cover alongside the great
+stones of his shelter.
+
+But careful observation of the square black objects showed him that they
+did not move, and anyway they were much too far away to see him. So he
+took courage again, and, full of curiosity concerning his hiding-place,
+he crept up the southern slope till he reached the ridge of the roof, so
+to speak, and lay there looking over, entranced with the beauty of the
+scene before him.
+
+The whole east coast of Sark right up to the Burons, off the Creux, lay
+basking in the morning light. Dixcart and Derrible held no secrets from
+him; he looked straight up their shining beaches. Their bold headlands
+were like giant-fists reaching out along the water towards him.
+Brenire, the nearest point to his rock, was another mighty grasping
+hand, but between it and him swept a furious race of tossing,
+white-capped waves, with here and there black fangs of rock which stuck
+up through the green waters as though hungering for prey.
+
+He could just see the upper part of the miners' cottages on the cliff
+above Rouge Terrier, but, beyond these and the ruined mill on Hog's
+Back, not another sign of man and his toilsome, troublesome little
+works. But for these, Sark, in its utter loneliness, might have been a
+new-found island, and he its first discoverer.
+
+Ranging on, his eye rested on the shattered fragments of Little Sark,
+scattered broadcast over the sea about its most southerly point--bare
+black pinnacles, ragged ledges, islets, rocklets, reefs, and fangs,
+every one of which seemed to stir the placid sea to wildest wrath.
+Elsewhere it danced and dimpled in the sunshine, with only the long slow
+heave in it to tell of the sleeping giant below, but round each rock,
+and up the sides of his own huge pyramid, it swept in great green
+combers shot with bubbling white, and went tumbling back upon itself in
+rings of boiling foam.
+
+Beyond, he saw the rounded back of Jethou, and just behind it the long
+line of houses in Guernsey.
+
+He lay long enjoying it all, with the warm sun on his back, and the
+brisk wind toning his blood, but no view, however wonderful, will
+satisfy a man's stomach. He had fed the day before mostly on most
+unsatisfying emotions, and now he began to feel the need of something
+more solid. So he crept back along the slope to find out what there was
+for breakfast.
+
+His stores lay about the floor of his resting-place, just as he had
+turned them out in the night; a couple of long loaves, a good-sized
+piece of raw bacon, and another of boiled pork which he thought he
+recognized, some butter in a cloth, a bottle which looked as if it might
+contain spirits, the powder-flask, and a small linen bag containing
+bullets, snail-shot, and percussion caps. These, with Bernel's gun and
+the blanket, and the old woollen cloak, which he recognized as Mr.
+Hamon's roquelaure, and his pipe, and the tobacco he happened to have
+in his pouch, constituted, for the time being, his worldly possessions.
+
+He spread his cloak and blanket in the sun to dry and air, and, doubtful
+whether his rock would supply any further provision or when more might
+reach him from Sark, he proceeded to make a somewhat restricted meal of
+bread and cold pork.
+
+The raw bacon suggested something of a problem. To cook it he must have
+a fire. To have a fire he must have fuel; his tinder-box he always
+carried, of course, for the new matches had not yet penetrated to Sark.
+Moreover, to light a fire might be dangerous as liable to attract
+attention, unless he could do it under cover where no stray gleams could
+get out.
+
+He pondered these matters as he ate, spinning out his exiguous meal to
+its uttermost crumb to make it as satisfying as possible.
+
+He saw his way at once to perfecting his cover. All about him where he
+sat, the grey rock pushed through a thin friable soil like the bones of
+an ill-buried skeleton. And everywhere in the scanty soil grew thick
+little rounded cushions, half grass, half moss, varying in size from an
+apple to a foot-stool, which came out whole at a pluck or a kick. After
+breakfast he would plug up every hole in his shelter, and pile
+half-a-dozen sizeable pieces outside with which to close the front door.
+Then, if he could find anything in the shape of fuel, he saw his way to
+a dinner of fried bacon, but it would have to be after dark when the
+smoke would be invisible.
+
+But first he must find out about his water supply.
+
+Down at the south end, Nance had said. That must be over there, on that
+almost-detached stack of rocks, where the waves seemed to break loudest.
+
+So, after another crawl up to the ridge to make certain that no boats
+were about--for he had frequently seen them fishing in the neighbourhood
+of L'Etat--he crept down the flank of his pyramid almost to sea-level to
+get across to the outer pile.
+
+He had to pick his way with caution across a valley of black rocks,
+rifted and chasmed by the fury of the waves. He could imagine--or
+thought he could, but came far short of it--how the great green rollers
+would thunder through that black gully in the winter storms.
+
+There were great wells lined all round with rich brown sea-weeds, and
+narrow chasms in whose hidden depths the waters swooked and gurgled like
+unseen monsters, and whose broken edges, on which he had to step, were
+like the rough teeth of gigantic saws set up on end alongside one
+another.
+
+He crawled across these rough serrations and scaled the rifted black
+wall in front, and came at once on a number of shallow pools of
+rain-water lying in the hollows of a mighty slab.
+
+But the moment his head rose above the level of the steep black wall his
+ears were filled with a deafening roaring and rushing, supplemented by
+most tremendous dull thuddings which shook the stack like the blows of a
+mighty flail.
+
+From behind a further wall there rose a boiling mist, through which
+lashed up white jets of spray which slanted over the rocks beyond in a
+continuous torrent.
+
+He crawled to the further wall and looked over into a deep black gully,
+some fifteen feet wide and perhaps thirty feet deep, into which, out of
+a perfectly calm sea, most monstrous waves came roaring and leaping,
+till the whole chasm was foaming and spuming like an over-boiling
+milk-pan. In the middle of the chasm, for the further torment of the
+waters, was jammed a huge black rock, against which the incoming green
+avalanche dashed itself to fragments and went rocketing into the air.
+The solid granite at the further end was cleft from summit to base by a
+tiny rift a foot wide through which the boiling spume poured out to the
+sea beyond.
+
+But the marvel was where those gigantic waves came from. Save for the
+dancing wind-ripples and its long, slow internal pulsations, the sea was
+as smooth as a pond to within twenty yards of the rocks. Then it
+suddenly seemed to draw itself together, to draw itself down into itself
+indeed, like a tiger compressing its springs for a leap, and then, with
+a rush and a roar, it launched itself at the rocks with the weight of
+the ocean behind it, and hurtled blindly into the chasm where the black
+rock lay.
+
+It was a most wonderful sight, and Gard sat long watching it, then and
+later, fascinated always and puzzled by that extraordinary
+self-compression and sudden upleap of the waters out of an otherwise
+placid sea.
+
+It was but one more odd expression of Nature's fantastic humour, and the
+nearest he could come to an explanation of it was that, in the sea bed
+just there, was some great fault, some huge chasm into which the waters
+fell and then came leaping out to further torment on the rocks.
+
+It was as he was returning to his own quarters by a somewhat different
+route across the valley of rocks, that he lighted on another find which
+contented him greatly.
+
+In one of the saw-toothed chasms he saw a piece of wood sticking up, and
+climbed along to get it as first contribution to his fire. And when he
+got to it, down below in the gully, he found jammed the whole side of a
+boat, flung up there by some high spring tide and trapped before it
+could escape. Excellent wood for his firing, well tarred and fairly dry.
+He hauled and pulled till he had it all safely up, and then he carried
+it, load after load, to his house, and laid it out in the sun to dry
+still more.
+
+He worked hard all day, keeping a wary outlook for any stray fishermen.
+
+First he culled a great heap of the thin wiry grass which seemed the
+chief product of his rock, and spread it also to dry for a couch. There
+was no bracken for bedding, no gorse for firing. The grass would supply
+the place of the one, the broken boat the other.
+
+Then he made good all the holes in his walls and roof, except one in the
+latter for the escape of the smoke, and built a solid wall of the tufted
+cushions round the seaward side of his doorway, as a screen against his
+light being seen, and as a protection from the south-west wind if it
+should blow up strong in the night.
+
+He found it very strange to be toiling on these elemental matters, with
+never a soul to speak to. He felt like a castaway on a desert island,
+with the additional oddness of knowing himself to be within reach of his
+kind, yet debarred from any communication with them on pain, possibly,
+of death.
+
+At times he felt like a condemned criminal, yet knew that he had done no
+wrong, and that it was only the mistaken justice of a simple people
+that wanted blood for blood, and was not over-heedful as to whose blood
+so long as its own sense of justice was satisfied.
+
+But, he kept saying to himself, things might have been worse with him,
+very much worse, but for Nance and Bernel. And before long, any day, the
+matter might be cleared up and himself reinstated in the opinion of the
+Sark men.
+
+Even that would leave much to be desired, but possibly, he thought, if
+they found they had sorely misjudged him in this matter, they might
+realize that they had done so in other matters also, and that he had
+only been striving to do his duty as he saw it.
+
+And then, wherever else his thoughts led him, there was always Nance,
+and the thought of Nance always set his heart aglow and braced him to
+patient endurance and hope.
+
+He retraced, again and again, all the ways they had travelled together
+in these later days, recalled her every word and look, felt again the
+trembling of her hand--for him--on the Coupe, heard again the tremors
+of her voice as she urged him to safety. And those sweet ingenuous
+kisses she had given him! Yes, indeed, he had much to be grateful for,
+if some things to cavil at, in fortune's dealings.
+
+But, behind all his fair white thought of Nance, was always the black
+background of the whole circumstances of the case, and the grim fact of
+Tom Hamon's death, and he pondered this last with knitted brows from
+every point of view, and strove in vain for a gleam of light on the
+darkness.
+
+Could the Doctor be mistaken, and was Tom's death the simple result of
+his fall over the Coupe? The Doctor's pronouncement, however, seemed
+to leave no loophole of hope there.
+
+If not, then who had killed Tom, and why?
+
+He could think of no one. He could imagine no reason for it.
+
+Tom had been a bully at home, but outside he was on jovial terms with
+his fellows--except only himself. He had to acknowledge to himself the
+seeming justice of the popular feeling. If any man in Sark might, with
+some show of reason, have been suspected of the killing of Tom Hamon, it
+was himself.
+
+Once, by reason of overmuch groping in the dark, an awful doubt came
+upon him--was it possible that, in some horrible wandering of the mind,
+of which he remembered nothing, he had actually done this thing? Done it
+unconsciously, in some over-boiling of hot blood into the brain, which
+in its explosion had blotted out every memory of what had passed?
+
+It was a hideous idea, born of over-strain and overmuch groping after
+non-existent threads in a blind alley.
+
+He tried to get outside himself, and follow Stephen Gard that night and
+see if that terrible thing could have been possible to him.
+
+But he followed himself from point to point, and from moment to moment,
+and accounted for himself to himself without any lapse whatever; unless,
+indeed, his brain had played him false and he had gone out of the house
+again after going into it, and followed Tom and struck him down.
+
+With what? The Doctor said with some blunt instrument like a hammer.
+Where could he have obtained it? What had he done with it?
+
+The idea, while it lasted, was horrible. But he shook it off at last
+and called himself a fool for his pains. He had never harboured thought
+of murder in his life. He had detested Tom, but he had never gone the
+length of wishing him dead. The whole idea was absurd.
+
+All these things he thought over as, his first essential labours
+completed, he lay under the screen of the ridge and watched the sun
+dropping towards Guernsey in a miracle of eventide glories.
+
+Below him, the long slow seas rocketted along the ragged black base of
+his rock with mighty roarings and tumultuous bursts of foam, and on the
+ledges the gulls and cormorants squabbled and shrieked, and took long
+circling flights without fluttering a wing, to show what gulls could do,
+or skimmed darkly just above the waves and into them, to show that
+cormorants were never satisfied. And now and again wild flights of
+red-billed puffins swept up from the water and settled out of his sight
+at the eastern end of the rock, and he promised himself to look them up
+some other day if opportunity offered.
+
+From the constant tumult of the seas about his rock, except just at low
+water, he saw little fear of being taken by surprise, even if his
+presence there became known. Twice only in the twenty-four hours did it
+seem possible for any one to effect a landing there, and at those times
+he promised himself to be on the alert.
+
+He lay there till the sun had gone, and the pale green and amber, and
+the crimson and gold of his going had slowly passed from sea and sky,
+and left them grey and cold; till a single light shone out on Sark,
+which he knew must be in one of the miners' cottages, and many lights
+twinkled in Guernsey; till beneath him he could no longer see the sea,
+but only the white foam fury as it boiled along the rocks. Then he crept
+away to his burrow, rejoicing in the thought of the companionship of a
+fire and hot food.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE
+
+
+It took Gard some time to get his fire started, and when it did blaze
+up, with fine spurts of gas from the tar, and vivid blue and green and
+red flames from the salted wood, the little stone bee-hive glowed like
+an oven and presently grew as hot as one. The smoke escaped but slowly
+through the single hole in the roof, and at last he could stand it no
+longer, and crept out into the night until his fire should have burned
+down to a core of red ashes over which he could grill his dinner.
+
+And what a night! He had seen the stars from many parts of the earth and
+sea, but never, it seemed to him, had he seen such stars as these, so
+close, so large, so wonderfully clean and bright. And, indeed, glory of
+the heavens so supreme as that is possible only far away from man, and
+all the works and habitations of man, and all his feeble efforts at the
+mitigation of the darkness. Nay, for fullest perception, it may be that
+it is necessary for a man to be not only alone in the profundity of
+Nature's night, but to be lifted somewhat out of himself and his natural
+darkness by extremity of joy, or still more of need.
+
+The milky way was as white as though a mighty brush dipped in glittering
+star-dust had been drawn across the velvet dome. The larger stars, many
+of which were old acquaintances and known to him by name, seemed to
+swing so clear and close that they took on quite a new aspect of
+friendliness and cheer. The smaller--I write as he thought--a mighty
+host, an innumerable company quite beyond his ken, still spoke to him in
+a language that he had never forgotten.
+
+Long ago, when he was quite a little boy, he had come upon a great globe
+of the heavens, a much-prized curiosity of his old schoolmaster. Upon it
+appeared all the principal stars linked up into their constellations,
+the shadowy linking lines forming the figures of the Imaginary Ones
+associated with them in the minds of the ancients. There, on the
+varnished round of the globe, ranged the Great and Little Bears, and the
+Dogs, and the Archer, and the Flying Horse, the Lion, and the Crab, and
+the Whale, and the Twins, and Perseus and Andromeda, and Cassiopeia. And
+up there, on the dark inner side of the mighty dome, he seemed to see
+them all again, and time swung back with him for a moment, and he was a
+boy once more.
+
+And, gazing up at them all, their steady shine and many-coloured
+twinklings led him to wonder as to the how and the why of them. From the
+stars to their Maker was but a natural step, and so he came, simply and
+naturally, to thought of the greatness of Him who swung these
+innumerable worlds in their courses, and, from that, to His goodness and
+justice.
+
+Memories of his mother came surging back upon him, and of all her
+goodness and all she had taught him. She had had a mighty, simple trust
+in the goodness of God, and had passed it on to her boy, though his
+rough contact with the world had overworn it all to some extent.
+
+Still, it was all there, and now it all came back to him through the
+hopeful twinkling eyes of those innumerable stars.
+
+"Have courage and hope!" they sang; and though all his little world,
+save those two or three who knew him best, was against him, he stood
+there with his face turned up to the stars, and believed in his heart
+that all would yet be well.
+
+And when at last he turned back to things of earth, he found the stars
+still twinkling in the sea, as though they would not let him go even
+though he gave up looking at them. They gleamed and glanced in the
+smooth-rolling waves till the deep seemed sown with phosphorescence, as
+on that night in Grand Grve; the night Nance came upon him so suddenly
+in the dark and he went on with her to get Grannie's medicine.
+
+Was it possible that that blessed night, that terrible night, was barely
+forty-eight hours old? So much had happened since then, such incredible
+things! It seemed weeks ago. It seemed like a dream; horrid, fantastic,
+wonderfully sweet.
+
+Within that tiny span of hours he had come to the knowledge of Nance's
+love for him. Oh those sweet, frank kisses! If he had died last night;
+if the hot heads in their madness had killed him to balance Tom Hamon's
+account--still he would have lived: for Nance had kissed him.
+
+And within the half of that short span he had been judged a murderer,
+had had to flee for his life, and would, without a doubt, have lost it
+but for Nance.
+
+She had undertaken a mighty risk for him--for him! And she had shown him
+that she loved him, for she had kissed him with her heart in her lips.
+
+And, grateful as he was for all the rest, it was still the recollection
+of those sweet kisses that he thought of most.
+
+So "Hope! Hope!" sang the stars, and his heart was high because his
+conscience was clean and Nance had kissed him.
+
+When at last he crawled into his burrow, his fire was only white ashes,
+and he would not trouble to relight it.
+
+He broke off a piece of bread, and ate it slowly, and thought of Nance,
+and promised himself the larger breakfast. Then he rolled himself in his
+cloak, and slept more soundly than an alderman after a civic feast.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM
+
+
+Next morning, when he crawled out of his burrow, Gard found everything
+swathed in dense white mist. Upon which he promptly lit his fire, and in
+due course enjoyed a more satisfying meal than he had eaten since he
+landed on the rock.
+
+Then he decided to take advantage of the screening mist to explore such
+parts of his prison-house as were not available to him at other times.
+So he walked along the ridge, secure from observation since he could not
+himself see down to the water from it, though the rushings and roarings
+along the black ledges below never ceased.
+
+Every nook and ledge of the out-cropping rock on the south side of the
+ridge was occupied by lady gulls in all stages of their maternal duties.
+From the surprise they expressed at his intrusion, and the way they
+stuck to their nests, they were evidently quite unused to man and his
+ways, and it was all he could do to avoid stepping on them and their
+squawking families as he picked his way along.
+
+He clambered down the eastern slope nearest Sark, and found the ground
+there covered with a fairly deep soil, and green growths that were
+strange to him. The soil was perforated with holes which at first he
+ascribed to rabbits, but when he inserted his hand into one he got such
+a nip from an unusually strong beak that he changed his mind to puffins,
+and, standing quite still for a time, he presently saw the members of
+the colony come creeping out behind their great red bills and scurry off
+across the water in search of breakfast.
+
+Then the great semi-detached pinnacle below attracted him, and he
+scrambled down amid the complaints of a great colony of gulls and
+cormorants but found the tide still too full for him to cross the
+intervening chasm. Those wonderful great green waves out of a smooth sea
+came roaring along the sides of the island and met full tilt in the
+chasm below him, as they leaped exultant from their conflict with the
+rocks. They hurled themselves against one another in wildest fury, and
+the foam of their meeting boiled white along the ledges, and dappled all
+the sea.
+
+As he crawled through the lank wet grass and soft spongy soil, he found
+himself suddenly confronted with a great barrier of fallen rocks; as
+though, at some period of its existence, the north end of the island had
+tapered to a gigantic peak which, in the fulness of its time, had come
+down with a crash, and now lay like a titanic wall from summit to
+sea-board. Huge and forbidding, of all shapes and sizes, the mighty
+fragments barred his course like a menace, and he attacked them warily,
+drawing himself with infinite caution from one to another; over this
+one, under this, deftly between these two, lest an unwary weighting
+should start them on the movement that might grind him to powder.
+
+The fog increased their forbidding aspect tenfold. He could not see a
+foot before him, and could only worm his way among them, testing each
+before he trusted it, and finding at times monsters become but mediocre
+when his hand was on them. More than once he had to rest his hands on
+cautiously-tried ledges and swing his legs forward and grope with his
+feet for foothold, and whether the space below was trifling, or whether
+it ran to incredible depth, he could not tell.
+
+It was a mighty relief to him to come out at last on the other side of
+the wall, and to find himself on the great north slope which faced Sark,
+and so was closed to him in clear weather.
+
+The long thin grass grew rankly here, and was beaded with moisture, but
+he pushed along with an eerie feeling at the wildness of it all.
+
+The mist clung close about him, but had suddenly become luminous. He
+felt as though he were packed loosely all round with cotton wool on
+which a strong light was shining. It gave him a feeling of
+light-headedness. Everything was light about him, and yet he could not
+see more than a couple of feet before his face. The waves roared
+hoarsely below him, and once he had unknowingly got so low down that a
+monstrous white arm, reaching suddenly up out of the depths, seemed
+about to lay hold on him and drag him back with it into the turmoil.
+
+He was panting and full of mist when at last he climbed the second great
+rock barrier and rounded the corner towards the south.
+
+And as he sat resting there, the whiff of a westerly breeze tore a long
+lane in the white shroud, and for a moment he saw, as through a
+telescope, the houses of Guernsey gleaming in bright sunshine. Then it
+closed again, and presently began to drift past him in strange whorls
+and spirals, like hurrying ghosts wrapped hastily in filmy garments,
+which loosed at times and trailed slowly over the rocks and caught and
+clung to their sharp projections. Then the sun completed the rout, and
+the mist-ghosts swept away towards France, harried by the west wind like
+a flock of sheep before the shepherd's dog.
+
+In the afternoon the heat grew so intense that he was driven to the
+wells in the valley of rocks for a bathe, for there was no shelter
+available, and his bee-hive was like an oven.
+
+None of the pools was large enough for a swim, and it was more than a
+man's life was worth to venture among the boiling surges of the outer
+rocks. But he could at all events get under water, if it was only to sit
+there and cool off.
+
+So he stripped, and was just about slipping into a deep still bath,
+emerald green, with a fringe of amber weeds all round its almost
+perpendicular sides, when, glancing down to make sure of an ultimate
+footing, his eye lighted with a shock of surprise on a pair of huge eyes
+looking straight up at him out of the water. They were violet in colour,
+protuberant, and malevolent beyond words.
+
+He sat down suddenly on the baking black rock, with a cold shiver
+running down his back in spite of the scorch of the sun. The utter cold
+malignity of those great violet eyes, and the thought of what would have
+happened if he had stepped into that pool, made him momentarily sick.
+
+He had seen small devil-fish in the pools in Sark, but never one
+approaching this in size. He crept away at last, leaving it in
+possession, and found a pool clear of boulders or caving hollows, and
+sat in it with no great enjoyment, wondering if the great unwholesome
+beast in the other would be likely to climb the cliff and come upon him
+in the night. He thought it unlikely, but still the idea clung to him
+and caused him no little discomfort. He blocked his door that night with
+great green cushions, though he felt doubtful if they would be effective
+against the wiles and strength of a devil-fish, if half that he had
+heard of them was true.
+
+In the middle of the night--for he went to bed early, having nothing
+else to do, except to watch the stars--he woke with a cold start,
+feeling certain that hideous creature had crawled up the slope and was
+feeling all round his house for an entrance.
+
+Certainly _something_ was moving about outside, and feeling over the
+stones in an uncertain, searching kind of a way. And when you have been
+wakened up from a nightmare in which staring devil-eyes played a
+prominent part, _something_ may be anything, and as like as not the
+owner of the eyes.
+
+But even devil-fishes in their most advanced stages have not yet
+attained the power of human speech. If they speak to one another what a
+horrible sound it must be!
+
+It was with a sigh of relief, and a sudden unstringing of the bow, that
+he heard outside--
+
+"Mr. Gard!" and with a lusty kick, which expressed some of his feeling,
+he sent his doorway flying and crawled out after it.
+
+The myriad winking stars lifted the roof of the world and the darkness
+somewhat, sufficient at all events for him to make out that it was not
+Nance.
+
+"You, Bernel?" he queried, as the only possible alternative.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Gard. I've brought you some more things to eat."
+
+"Good lad! I'm a great trouble to you. Where is Nance? In the boat?"
+
+"No, she couldn't come. That Julie's watching her like a cat. It was she
+and Peter stirred up the men against you. All day yesterday the whole
+Island was out looking for you, dead or alive, and very much puzzled as
+to what had become of you. And Julie's got a suspicion that we know.
+They searched the house for you in spite of mother and Grannie, but they
+won't forget Grannie in a hurry, and I don't think they'll come back,"
+and he laughed at the recollection of it.
+
+"What did Grannie do?"
+
+"She just looked at them from under that big black sun-bonnet, and
+muttered things no one heard. But her eyes were like points of burning
+sticks, and they all crept out one after another, afraid of they didn't
+know what. But Julie's been on the watch all day, and would hardly let
+us out of her sight. But she couldn't watch us both when we were not
+together. So Nance got a bundle of things ready for you, and then went
+out with another bundle and Julie followed her, and I slipped off here."
+
+"Bernel, I don't know how to thank you all! What should I have done
+without you?"
+
+"You'd have been dead, most likely. It's not that they cared much for
+Tom, you know, but they don't like the idea of a Sark man being killed
+by a foreigner and no one paying for it."
+
+"But I'm not a foreigner--"
+
+"Yes you are, to them. Of course you're not a Frenchman, but all the
+same you're not a Sark man. Good thing for you you'd lived with us and
+we'd got to know you and like you."
+
+"Yes, that was a good thing indeed. I'm only sorry to have brought you
+trouble and to be such a trouble to you."
+
+"If we thought you'd done it of course we wouldn't trouble. But we know
+you couldn't have."
+
+"Nothing fresh has turned up?"
+
+"Nothing yet. But Nance says it will, sure. Truth must out, she says."
+
+"It's a weary while of coming out sometimes, Bernel. And I can't spend
+the rest of my life here, you know."
+
+"She said you were to keep your heart up. You never know what may
+happen."
+
+"Tell her I can stand it because of all her goodness to me. If I hadn't
+her to think of I might go mad in time."
+
+"I've brought you a rabbit I snared. Nance cooked it."
+
+"That was good of her. Can you eat puffins' eggs?"
+
+"They want a bit of getting used to," laughed the boy. "But they're
+better cooked than raw."
+
+"I can cook them. I found part of an old boat, and I've plugged up all
+the holes in the shelter, and I only light a fire at night. Could I fish
+here?"
+
+"Too big a sea close in. I've got some in the boat. I put out a line as
+I came across. I'll leave you some."
+
+"And have you a bottle--or a bailing-tin? Anything I could bring home
+some water from the pools in? I have to go over there every time I need
+a drink, and in the dark it's not possible."
+
+"You can have the bailer. It's a new one and sound."
+
+"Now tell me, Bernel, if they find out I'm here what will they do?"
+
+"They might come across and try and take you, unless they cool down; and
+that won't be so long as that Julie and Peter talk as they do. She makes
+him do everything she tells him. He's a sheep."
+
+"And if they come across, what do you and Nance expect me to do?"
+
+"You've got my gun," said the boy simply.
+
+"Yes, I've got your gun. But do you expect me to kill some of them?"
+
+"They'd kill you," said Bernel, conclusively. On second thoughts,
+however, he added, "But you needn't kill them. Wing one or two, and the
+rest will let you be. With a gun I could keep all Sark from landing on
+L'Etat."
+
+"Suppose they come in the night? How many landing-places are there?"
+
+"There's another at the end nighest Guernsey, but it's not easy. And
+it's only low tide and half-ebb that lets you ashore here at all."
+
+"How about your boat?"
+
+"She's riding to a line. Tide's running up that way, but I'd better be
+off."
+
+They stumbled through the darkness and the sleeping gulls, which woke in
+fright, and volubly accused one another of nightmares and riotous
+behaviour--and Bernel hauled in his boat, and handed Gard the tin dipper
+and three good-sized bream.
+
+"If you can't eat them all at once, split them open and dry them in the
+sun," he said. "They'll keep for a week that way."
+
+"Tell Nance I think of her every hour of the day, and I pray God the
+truth may come out soon."
+
+"I'll tell her. It'll come out. She says so," and he pulled out into the
+darkness and was gone.
+
+And the Solitary went back to his shelter, secure in the knowledge that
+the tide was on the rise, and half-ebb would not be till well on into
+next day. And he thought of Nance, and of Bernel, and of all the whole
+matter again; white thoughts and black thoughts, but chiefly white
+because of Nance, and Nance was a fact, while the black thoughts were
+shadows confusing as the mist.
+
+He could only devoutly hope and pray that a clean wind might come and
+put the shadows to flight and let the sun of truth shine through.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS
+
+
+Living thus face to face with Nature, and drawn through lack of other
+occupation into unusually intimate association with her, Gard found his
+lonely rock a centre of strange and novel experience.
+
+Situated as he was, even small things forced themselves largely upon his
+observation and wrought themselves into his memory. He found it good to
+lose himself for a time in these visible and tangible actualities,
+rather than in useless efforts after an understanding of the mystery of
+which he was the victim and centre.
+
+He had given over much time to pondering the subject of Tom Hamon's
+death, but had come no nearer any reasonable solution of it. That
+hideous doubt as to himself in the matter recurred at times, but he
+always hastened to dissipate it by some other interest more practical
+and palpable, lest it should bring him to ultimate belief in its
+possibility, and so to madness.
+
+And so he spent hours watching that wonderful roaring cauldron on the
+south stack where his water pools were. Other hours in study of the
+social and domestic economies of gulls and cormorants. He saw families
+of awkward little fawn-coloured squawkers force their way out of their
+shells under his very eves, while indignant mothers told him what they
+thought of him from a safe distance.
+
+He bathed regularly in the heat of the day, but always after careful
+inspection of his chosen pool, and one day fled in haste up the black
+rocks at sight of the tip of a long, quivering, flesh-coloured tentacle
+coming curling round a rock in the close neighbourhood of the pool in
+which he was basking.
+
+That monster under the rock gave him many a bad dream. It seemed to him
+the incarnation of evil, and those horrible, bulging, merciless eyes
+stuck like burrs in his memory.
+
+One day, when he had been watching the cauldron, and filling his tin
+dipper at the freshwater pools, as he came to descend the black wall
+leading to the valley of rocks, he witnessed a little tragedy.
+
+Down below, on the edge of the pool where the octopus dwelt, a silly
+young cormorant was standing gazing into the water, so fascinated with
+something it saw there that it forgot even to jerk its head in search of
+understanding.
+
+Gard stood and watched. He saw a tiny pale worm-like thing come creeping
+up the black rock on which the cormorant squatted. The cormorant saw it
+too, and he was hungry, as all cormorants always are, even after a full
+meal. So presently he made a jab at it with his curved beak, and in a
+moment the pale worm had twisted itself tightly round his silly neck,
+and dragged him screaming and fluttering under the water.
+
+Another day, when he was coming down by the break in the cliff, where
+some great winter wave had bitten out such a slice that the top had come
+tumbling down, he saw the monster sunning itself on the flat rock by the
+side of its pool, like a huge nightmare spider.
+
+The moment he appeared its great eyes settled on his as though it had
+been waiting only for him. And when he stopped, with a feeling of
+shuddering discomfort at its hugeness--for its body seemed considerably
+over a foot in width, while its arms lounging over the rocks were each
+at least six feet long, and looked horribly muscular--he could have
+sworn that one of the great devil-eyes winked familiarly at him, as
+though the beast would say, "Come on, come on! Nice day for a bathe!
+Just waiting for you!"
+
+He could see the loathsome body move as it breathed, swinging
+comfortably in the support of its arms.
+
+In a fury of repulsion he stooped to pick up a rock, but when he hurled
+it the last tentacle was just sliding into the pool, and it seemed to
+him that it waved an ironical farewell before it disappeared.
+
+More than once fishing-boats hovered about his rock, but kept a safe
+distance from the boiling underfalls, and he always lay in hiding till
+they had gone.
+
+But he saw more gracious and beautiful things than these.
+
+As he lay one morning, looking over the ridge at the Sark headlands
+shining in the sun--with a strong west wind driving the waves so briskly
+that, Sark-like, they tossed their white crests into the air in angry
+expostulation long before they met the rocks, and went roaring up them
+in dazzling spouts of foam--his eye lighted on a gleam of unusual colour
+on the racing green plain. It came again and again, and presently, as
+the merry dance waxed wilder still, every white-cap as it tossed into
+the air became a tiny rainbow, and the whole green plain was alive with
+magical flutterings, of colours so dazzling that it seemed bestrewn with
+dancing diamonds. A sight so wonderful that he found himself holding in
+his! breath lest a puff should drive it all away.
+
+That same evening, too, was a glory of colour such as he had never
+dreamed of. The setting sun was ruby; red, and the cloud-bank into which
+he sank was all rimmed with red fire that seemed to corruscate in its
+burning brilliancy.
+
+To Gard indeed, in the somewhat peculiar state of mind induced by his
+sudden cutting-off from his kind and flinging back upon himself, it
+seemed as though the blood-red sun had fallen into a vast consuming fire
+behind that dark, fire-rimmed cloud, and that that was the end of it,
+and it would never rise again.
+
+The sky, right away into the farthest east, was flaming red with a hint
+of underlying smoke below the glow. The sea was a weltering bath of
+blood, and the cliffs of Sark, save for the gleam of white foam at their
+feet, shone as red as though they had just been bodily dipped in it.
+
+His lonely rock, when he looked round at it in wonder, was all
+unfamiliarly red. There was a red fantastic glow in the very air, and he
+himself was as red as though he had in very fact killed Tom Hamon, and
+drenched himself with his blood.
+
+So startling and unnatural was it all, that he found himself wondering
+fearfully if these outside things were really all blood-red, or whether
+something had gone wrong with his brain and eyes, and only caused them
+to look so to him alone, or whether it was indeed the end of all things
+shaping itself slowly under his very eyes. And in that thought and fear
+he was not by any means alone.
+
+But the wonderful red, which in its universality and intensity had
+become overpowering and fearsome, faded at last, and he hailed its going
+with a sigh of relief. His eyes and his brain were all right, he had not
+killed Tom Hamon, and this was not the earth's last sunset.
+
+And again that night, as he sat on the ridge on sentinel duty till the
+rising tide should lock the doors of his castle, the sea all round him
+shone with phosphorescence; every breaking wave along the black plain
+was a lambent gleam of lightning, and where they tore up the sides of
+his rock they were like flames out of a fiery sea, so that he sat there
+looking down upon a weltering band of nickering green and blue fires,
+which clung to the black ledges and dripped slowly back into the
+seething gleam below.
+
+It was all very strange and very awesome, and he wondered what it might
+portend in the way of further marvels.
+
+And he had not long to wait.
+
+Far away in the Atlantic a cyclone had been raging, and carrying havoc
+in its skirts. Now it was whirling towards Europe, and the puffins crept
+deep into their holes, and the gulls circled with disconsolate cries,
+and the cormorants crouched gloomily in lee of their snuggest ledges,
+and all nature seemed waiting for the blow.
+
+Gard was awakened in the morning by the gale tearing at the massive
+stones of his shelter as though it would carry them bodily into the sea.
+
+And when he crawled out, flat like a worm, the wind caught him even so,
+and he had to grimp to earth and anchor himself by projecting pieces of
+rock.
+
+Such seas as these he had never imagined round Sark; forgetting that
+behind Guernsey lay thousands of miles of waters tortured past
+endurance and racing now to escape the fury of the storm.
+
+A white lash of spray came over him as he lay, and soaked him to the
+skin, and, turning his face to the storm, he saw through the chinks of
+his eyes a great wavering white curtain between him and the sky line.
+The south-west portion of his island, where his freshwater pools were,
+and the valley of rocks, were all awash, the mighty waves roaring clean
+over the south stack, and rushing up into the black sky in rockets of
+flying spray. The tide had still some time to run, and he feared what it
+might be like at its fullest. It seemed to him by no means impossible
+that it might sweep the whole rock bare.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM
+
+
+It was a fortunate thing for Gard that the storm--the great storm from
+which, for many a year afterwards, local events in Sark dated--came when
+it did; two days after Bernel's visit and the replenishment of his
+larder. For if he had been caught bare he must have starved.
+
+Eight whole days it lasted, with only two slight abatements which, while
+they raised his hopes only to dash them, still served him mightily.
+
+During the first days he spent much of his time crouched in the lee of
+his bee-hive, watching the terrific play of the waves on his own rock
+and on the Sark headlands.
+
+He wondered if any other man had seen such a storm under such
+conditions. For he was practically at sea on a rock; in the midst of the
+turmoil, yet absolutely unaffected by it.
+
+On shipboard, thought of one's ship and possible consequences had always
+interfered with fullest enjoyment of Nature's paroxysms. It was
+impossible to detach one's thoughts completely and view matters entirely
+from the outside. But here--he was sure his rock had suffered many an
+equal torment--there was nothing to come between him and the elemental
+frenzy. Nothing but--as the days of it ran on--a growing solicitude as
+to what he was going to live on if it continued much longer.
+
+Never was Sark rabbit so completely demolished as was that one that
+Nance had cooked and sent him. Before he had done with it he cracked the
+very bones he had thrown away, for the sake of what was in them, and
+finally chewed the softer parts of the bones themselves to cheat himself
+into the belief that he was eating.
+
+That was after he had devoured every crumb of his bread, and finished
+his three fishes to the extreme points of their tails.
+
+He was, I said, in the very midst of the turmoil yet unaffected by it.
+But that was not so in some respects.
+
+Bodily, as we have seen, the storm bore hardly upon him, since
+rabbit-bones and fish-tails can hardly be looked upon as a nutritious or
+inviting dietary.
+
+But mentally and spiritually the mighty elemental upheaval was wholly
+crushing and uplifting.
+
+As he cowered, with humming head, under the fierce unremitting rush of
+the gale, and felt the great stones of his shelter tremble in it, and
+watched the huge green hills of water, with their roaring white crests,
+go sweeping past to crash in thunder on the cliffs of Sark, he felt
+smaller than he had ever felt before--and that, as a rule, and if it
+come not of self-abnegation through a man's own sin or folly, is
+entirely to his good; possibly in the other case also.
+
+To feel infinitely small and helpless in the hands of an Infinitely
+Great is a spiritual education to any man, and it was so to this man.
+
+He felt himself, in that universal chaos, no more than a speck of
+helpless dust amid the whirling wheels of Nature's inexplicable
+machinery, and clung the tighter to the simple fundamental facts of
+which his heart was sure--behind and above all this was God, who held
+all these things in His hand. And over there in Sark was Nance, the very
+thought of whom was like a coal of fire in his heart, which all the
+gales that ever blew, and all the soddened soaking of ceaseless rain
+from above and ceaseless spray from below, could not even dim.
+
+For long-continued and relentless buffeting such as this tells upon any
+man, no matter what his strength of mind or body to begin with; and a
+perpetually soaked body is apt in time to sodden the soul, unless it
+have something superhuman to cling to, as this man had in his simple
+trust in God and the girl he loved.
+
+In all those stressful days, so far as he could see, the tides--which in
+those parts rise and fall some forty feet, as you may see by the scoured
+bases of the towering cliffs--seemed always at the full, the westerly
+gale driving in the waters remorselessly and piling them up against the
+land without cessation, and as though bent on its destruction.
+
+Great gouts of clotted foam flew over his head in clouds, and plastered
+his rock with shivering sponges. The sheets of spray from his south-west
+rocks lashed him incessantly. His shelter was as wet inside as out, as
+he was himself.
+
+He felt empty and hungry at times, but never thirsty; his skin absorbed
+moisture enough and to spare. But, chilled and clammed and starving, on
+the fifth day when he had crawled into his wet burrow for such small
+relief as it might offer from the ceaseless flailing without, he
+broached his bottle of cognac and drank a little, and found himself the
+better of it.
+
+On the evening of the third day his hopes had risen with a slight
+slackening of the turmoil. He was not sure if the gale had really
+abated, or if it was only that he was growing accustomed to it. But
+under that belief, and the compulsion of a growling stomach, he crawled
+precariously round to the eastern end of the rock where the puffins had
+their holes, lying flat when the great gusts snatched at him as though
+they were bent on hurling him into the water, and gliding on again in
+the intervals. And there, with a piece of his firewood he managed to
+extort half-a-dozen eggs from fiercely expostulating parents. The end of
+his stick was bitten to fragments, but he got his eggs, and was amazed
+at the size of them compared with that of their producers.
+
+The sight of the great wall of tumbled rocks on his right, and the
+sudden remembrance of his previous passage over it, set him wondering if
+it might not be possible to find better shelter in some of those
+fissures across which he had had to swing himself by the hands on the
+previous occasion. For this was the leeward side of the island, and the
+huge bulk of it rose like a protecting shoulder between him and the
+gale, whereas his bee-hive, on the exposed flank of the rock, got the
+full force of it. So he scooped a hole in the friable black soil and
+deposited his eggs in it and crawled along to the wall.
+
+The tumbled fragments looked much less fearsome than they had done in
+the fog. He found no difficulty in clambering among them now, when he
+could see clearly what he was about, and he wormed his way in and out,
+and up and down, but could not light on any of those tricky spaces which
+had seemed to him so dangerous before.
+
+And then, as he crawled under one huge slab, a black void lay before
+him, of no great width but evidently deep. It took many minutes'
+peering into the depths to accustom his eyes to the dimness.
+
+Then it seemed to him that the rough out jutting fragments below would
+afford a holding, and he swung his feet cautiously down and felt round
+for foothold.
+
+Carefully testing everything he touched, he let himself down, inch by
+inch, assured that if he could go down he could certainly get up again.
+
+At first the gale still whistled through the crevices among the
+boulders, but presently he found himself in a silence that was so mighty
+a change from the ceaseless roar to which he was becoming accustomed,
+that he felt as though stricken with deafness. Up above him the light
+filtered down, tempered by the slab under which he had come, and enabled
+him still to find precarious hand and foot hold.
+
+But presently his downward progress was barred by a rough flooring of
+splintered fragments, and he stood panting and looked about him.
+
+His well was about twenty feet deep, he reckoned, and there were gaping
+slits here and there which might lead in towards the rock or out towards
+the sea. He had turned and twisted so much in his descent that it took
+him some time to decide in which direction the sea might lie and in
+which the rock. And, having settled that, he wriggled through a crevice
+and wormed slowly on.
+
+He was almost in the dark now, and could only feel his way. But he was
+used to groping in narrow places, and a spirit of investigation urged
+him on.
+
+Half an hour's strenuous and cautious worming, and a thin trickle of
+light glimmered ahead. He turned and worked his way back at once.
+
+There was no slit opposite the one he had tried, but presently,
+half-way up the well, he made out an opening like the mouth of a small
+adit. His back had been to it as he came down, and so he had missed it.
+
+He climbed up and in, and felt convinced in his own mind that this was
+no simple work of nature. Nature had no doubt begun, but man had
+certainly finished it. For the floor level was comparatively free from
+harshness, and the outjutting projections of the sides and roof had been
+tempered, and progress was not difficult.
+
+It was very narrow, however, and very low, and quite dark. He could only
+drag himself along on his stomach like a worm. But he pushed on with all
+the ardour of a discoverer.
+
+Was it silver? Was it smugglers? Or what? Wholly accidental formation he
+was sure it was not, though he thought it likely that man's handiwork
+had only turned Nature's to account.
+
+The fissure had probably been there from the beginning of time, or it
+might be the result of numberless years of the slow wearing away of a
+softer vein of rock, but some man at some time had lighted on it, and
+followed it up, and with much labour had smoothed its natural asperities
+and used it for his own purposes. And he was keen to learn what those
+purposes were.
+
+To any ordinary man, accustomed to the ordinary amplitudes of life, and
+freedom to stretch his arms and legs and raise his head and fill his
+lungs with fresh air, a passage such as this would have been impossible.
+Here and there, indeed, the walls widened somewhat through some fault in
+the rook, bur for the most part his elbows grazed the sides each time he
+moved them.
+
+Even he, used as he was to such conditions, began at last to feel them
+oppressive. The whole mighty bulk of L'Etat seemed above and about him,
+malignantly intent on crushing him out of existence.
+
+He knew that was only fancy. He had experienced it many times before.
+But the nightmare feeling was there, and it needed all his will at times
+to keep him from a panic attempt at retreat, when the insensate
+rock-walls seemed absolutely settling down on him, and breathing was
+none too easy.
+
+But going back meant literally going backwards, crawling out toes
+foremost; for his elbows scraped the walls and his head the roof, and
+turning was out of the question. The men who had made and used that
+narrow way had undoubtedly gone with a purpose, and not for pleasure.
+And he was bound to learn what that purpose was.
+
+So he set his teeth, and wormed himself slowly along, with pinched face
+and tight-shut mouth, and nostrils opened wide to take in all the air
+they could and let out as little as possible. And, even at that, he had
+to lie still at times, pressed flat against the floor, to let some
+fresher air trickle in above him.
+
+But at last he came to what he sought, though no whit of it could he see
+when he got there. By the sudden cessation of the pressure on his sides
+and head, he was aware of entrance into a larger space, and, with
+forethought quickened by the exigences of his passage, he lay for a
+moment to pant more freely and to think.
+
+His body was in the passage. He knew where the passage led out to. What
+lay ahead he could not tell.
+
+If it was a chamber, as he expected, there might quite possibly be other
+passages leading out of it. And so it would be well to make sure of
+recognizing this one again before he loosed his hold on it. So he
+pulled off one boot, and feeling carefully round the opening, placed it
+just inside as a landmark.
+
+Then he groped on along the right-hand wall to learn the size of the
+chamber, and was immediately thankful that his own passage was safely
+marked, for he came on another opening, and another, and another, and
+labelled them carefully in his mind, "One, two, three."
+
+It was truly eerie work, groping there in that dense darkness and utter
+silence, and trying to the nerves even of one who had never known
+himself guilty of such things. But, being there, he was determined to
+learn all he could.
+
+He clung to his right-hand wall as to a life-rope. If he once got mazed
+in a place like that he might never taste daylight and upper air again.
+
+Of the size of the chamber he could so far form no opinion. He would
+have given much for a light. His flint and steel were indeed in his
+pocket, but he was sodden through and through, and had no means whatever
+of catching a spark if he struck one.
+
+Then, as he groped cautiously along past the third opening, his progress
+was stayed, and not by rock.
+
+He was on his knees, his hands feeling blindly, but with infinite
+enquiry, along the rough rock wall, when he stumbled suddenly over
+something that lay along the ground. Dropping his hands to save himself
+from falling, they lighted on that which lay below, and he started back
+with an exclamation and a shudder. For what he had felt was like the
+hair and face of a man.
+
+He crouched back against the wall, his heart thumping like a ship's
+pump, and the blood belling in his ears, and sat so for very many
+minutes; sat on, until, in that silent blackness, he could hear the
+dull, far-away thud of the waves on the outer walls of the island.
+
+Then, by degrees, he pulled himself together. If it was indeed a man, he
+was undoubtedly dead, and therefore harmless; and having learned this
+much he would know more.
+
+So presently he groped forward, felt again the round head and soft hair,
+and below it and beyond it a heap of what felt like small oblong
+packages done up in wrappings of cloth and tied round with cord.
+
+He picked one up and handled it inquisitively, with a shrewd idea of
+what might be, or might have been, inside. The cord was very loose, as
+though the contents had shrunk since it was tied. As he fumbled with it
+in the dark, it came open and left him no possible room for doubt as to
+what those contents were. He sneezed till the top of his head seemed
+like to lift, and the tears ran down his cheeks in an unceasing stream.
+What had once been tobacco had powdered into snuff, and his rough
+handling of the package had scattered it broadcast.
+
+He turned at last, and lay with his head in his arms against the wall
+until the air should have time to clear, and meanwhile the sneezing had
+quickened his wits.
+
+Here was possible tinder, and by means of those dried-up wrappings he
+might procure a light. If it lasted but five minutes it might enable him
+to solve the problem on which he had stumbled.
+
+He groped again for the opened package, and found it on the dead man's
+face. The wrapper was of tarred cloth, almost perished with age, dry and
+friable. Shaking out the rest of the snuff at arm's length, he picked
+the stuff to pieces and shredded it into tinder. Then he felt about for
+half-a-dozen more packages, carefully slipped their cords and emptied
+out their contents, and getting out his flint and steel, flaked sparks
+into the tinder till it caught and flared, and the interior of the
+cavern leaped at him out of its darkness.
+
+He rolled up one of the empty wrappers like a torch, and lit it, and
+looked about him.
+
+His first hasty glance fell on the dead man, and he got another shock
+from the fact that his feet were lashed together with stout rope, and
+probably his hands also, for they were behind his back, and he lay face
+upward. His coat and short-clothes and buckled shoes spoke of long
+by-gone days, and the skin of his face was brown and shrivelled, so that
+the bones beneath showed grim and gaunt.
+
+Beyond him was a great heap of the same small packages of tobacco, and
+alongside them a pile of small kegs. Gard lit another of his torches,
+and stepped gingerly over to them. He sounded one or two, but found them
+empty. Time had shrunk their stout timbers and tapped their contents.
+
+Then he held up his flickering light and looked quickly round this
+prison-house which had turned into a tomb, and shivered, as a dim idea
+of what it all meant came over him.
+
+It was a large, low, natural rock chamber, and all round the walls were
+black slits which might mean it passages leading on into the bowels of
+the island. To investigate them all would mean the work of many days.
+
+The dead man, the perished packages, the empty kegs--there was nothing
+else, except his own boot lying in the mouth of the largest of the black
+slits, as though anxious on its own account to be gone.
+
+The still air was already becoming heavy with the pungent smoke of his
+torches. He stepped cautiously across to the body again, and picked a
+couple of buttons from the coat. They came off in his hand, and when he
+touched the buckles on the shoes they did the same. Then he turned and
+made for his waiting shoe just as his last torch went out.
+
+The smell of the fresh salt air, when he wriggled out into the well, was
+almost as good as a feast to him. He climbed hastily to the surface,
+and, as he crept out from under the topmost slab, took careful note of
+its position, and then scored with a piece of rock each stone which led
+up to it. For, if ever he should need an inner sanctuary, here was one
+to his hand, and evidently quite unknown to the present generation of
+Sark men.
+
+He recovered his eggs, and crept round the shoulder of the rock. The
+gale pounced on him like a tiger on its half-escaped prey. It beat him
+flat, worried him, did its best to tear him off and fling him into the
+sea. But--Heavens!--how sweet it was after the musty quiet of the
+death-chamber below!
+
+Inch by inch, he worked his way back in the teeth of it, and crawled
+spent into his bee-hive. Then, ravenous with his exertions, he broke one
+of his eggs into his tin dipper, and forthwith emptied it outside, and
+the gale swept away the awful smell of it.
+
+The next was as bad, and his hopes sank to nothing.
+
+The third, however, was all right. He mixed it with some cognac and
+whipped it up with a stick, and the growlers inside fought over it
+contentedly.
+
+He was almost afraid to try another. However, he could get more
+to-morrow. So he broke the fourth, and found it also good, so whipped it
+up with more cognac, and felt happier than he had done since he nibbled
+his rabbit-bones.
+
+As he lay that night, and the gale howled about him more furiously than
+ever, his thoughts ran constantly on the dead man lying in the silent
+darkness down below.
+
+It was very quiet down there, and dry; but this roaring turmoil, with
+its thunderous crashings and hurtling spray, was infinitely more to his
+taste, wet though he was to the bone, and almost deafened with the
+ceaseless uproar. For this, terrible though it was in its majestic fury,
+was life, and that black stillness below was death.
+
+To the tune of the tumult without, he worked out the dead man's story in
+his mind.
+
+It was long ago in the old smuggling days. Some bold free-trader of Sark
+or Guernsey had lighted on that cave and used it as a storehouse. Some
+too energetic revenue officer had disappeared one day and never been
+heard of again. He had been surprised--by the free-traders--perhaps in
+the very act of surprising them--brought over to L'Etat in a boat, been
+dragged through the tunnel, or made to crawl through, perhaps, with
+vicious knife-digs in the rear, and had been left bound in the darkness
+till he should be otherwise disposed of. His captors had been captured
+in turn, or maybe killed, and he had lain there alone and in the dark,
+waiting, waiting for them to return, shouting now and again into the
+muffling darkness, struggling with his bonds, growing weaker and weaker,
+faint with hunger, mad with thirst, until at last he died.
+
+It was horrible to think of, and desperate as his own state was, he
+thanked God heartily that he was not as that other.
+
+Morning brought no slackening of the gale. It seemed to him, if
+anything, to be waxing still more furious.
+
+He had only two eggs left, and they might both be bad ones, but he would
+not have ventured round the headland that day for all the eggs in
+existence.
+
+He broke one presently, in answer to a clamour inside him that would
+brook no denial, and found it good, and lived on it that day, and mused
+between times on the strange fact that a man could feel so mightily
+grateful for the difference between a bad egg and a good one.
+
+His sixth egg turned out a good one also, and the next day there came
+another hopeful lull, which permitted him to harry the puffins once
+more, and gave him a dozen chances against contingencies.
+
+On the eighth day the storm blew itself out, and he looked hopefully
+across at the lonely and weather-beaten cliffs of Sark for the relief
+which he was certain they had been aching to send him.
+
+The waves, however, still ran high, and, though he did not know it till
+later, there was not a boat left afloat round the whole Island. The
+forethoughtful and weather-wise had run them round to the Creux and
+carried them through the tunnel into the roadway behind. All the rest
+had been smashed and sunk and swallowed by the storm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+HOW HE HELD THE ROCK
+
+
+The sun blazed hot next day, and he spread himself out in it to warm,
+and all his soaked things in it to dry, and blessed it for its wholesome
+vigour.
+
+Nance or Bernel would be sure to come as soon as the tide served at
+night, and he would net be sorry for a change of diet; meanwhile, he
+could get along all right with the unwilling assistance of the puffins.
+
+The birds had all crept out of their hiding-places, and were wheeling
+and diving and making up for lost time and busily discussing late events
+at the tops of their voices whenever their bills were not otherwise
+occupied. Where they had all hidden themselves during the storm, he
+could not imagine, but there seemed to be as many of them as ever, and
+they were all quite happy and quarrelsome, except the cormorants, who
+were so ravenous that they could not spare a moment from their diving
+and gobbling, even to quarrel with their neighbours.
+
+He levied on the puffins again, and, after a meal, prowled curiously
+about his rock to see what damage the storm had done, but to his
+surprise found almost none.
+
+It seemed incredible that all should be the same after the deadly
+onslaught of the gale. But it was only in the valley of rocks that he
+found any consequences.
+
+There the huge boulders had been hurled about like marbles: some had
+been tossed overboard, and some, in their fantastic up-piling, spoke
+eloquently of all they had suffered.
+
+But one grim--though to him wholly gracious--deed the storm had wrought
+there. For, out of the pool where the devil-fish dwelt, its monstrous
+limbs streamed up and lay over the sloping rocks, and he dared not
+venture near. But, in the afternoon when he came again to look at it,
+and found it still in the same attitude, something about it struck him
+as odd and unusual.
+
+The great tentacles had never moved, so far as he could see, and there
+was surely something wrong with a devil-fish that did not move.
+
+He hurled a stone, picked out of the landslip at the corner, and hit a
+tentacle full and fair with a dull thud like leather. But the beast
+never moved.
+
+He was suspicious of the wily one, however. The devil, he knew, was
+sometimes busiest when he made least show of business. And it was not
+till next morning, when he found the monster still as before, that he
+ventured down to the pool and looked into it, and saw what had happened.
+
+The waves had hurled a huge boulder into it--and there you may see it to
+this day--and it had fallen on the devil-fish and ground him flat, and
+purged the rock of a horror.
+
+Gard examined the hideous tentacles with the curiosity of intensest
+repulsion; yet could not but stand amazed at the wonderful delicacy and
+finish displayed in the tiny powerful suckers with which each limb was
+furnished on the under side, and the flexible muscularity of the
+monstrous limbs themselves, thick as his biceps where they came out of
+the pool, and tapering to a worm-like point, capable, it seemed to him,
+of picking up a pin.
+
+He was mightily glad the beast was dead, however. It had been a blot on
+Nature's handiwork, and the very thought of it a horror.
+
+The strenuous interlude of the storm, which, to the lonely one exposed
+to its fullest fury, had seemed interminable--every shivering day the
+length of many, and the black howling nights longer still--had had the
+effect of relaxing somewhat his own oversight over himself and his
+precautions against being seen.
+
+L'Etat in a furious sou'-wester is a sight worth seeing. Possibly some
+telescope had been brought to bear on the foam-swept rock when he,
+secure in the general bouleversement and cramped with hunger, had turned
+the forbidden corner with no thought in his mind but eggs.
+
+Possibly again, it was sheer carelessness on his part, born once more of
+the security of the storm and the recent non-necessity for concealment.
+
+However it came about, what happened was that, as he stood in the valley
+of rocks examining his dead monster, he became suddenly aware that a
+fishing-boat had crept round the open end of the valley, and that it
+seemed to him much closer in than he had ever seen one before.
+
+He dropped prone among the boulders at once, but whether he had been
+seen he could not tell--could only vituperate his own carelessness, and
+hope that nothing worse might come of it.
+
+He lay there a very long time, and when at last he ventured to crawl to
+the rocks at the seaward opening, the boat was away on the usual
+fishing-grounds busy with its own concerns, and he persuaded himself
+that its somewhat unusual course had been accidental. The incident,
+however, braced him to his former caution, and he went no more abroad
+without first carefully inspecting the surrounding waters from the
+ridge.
+
+They would be certain to come that night, he felt sure, either Nance or
+Bernel, perhaps both. Yes, he thought most likely they would both come.
+They would, without doubt, be wondering how he had fared during the
+storm, and would be making provision for him.
+
+Perhaps Nance was cooking for him at that very moment, and thinking of
+him as he was of her.
+
+In the certain expectation of their coming, he decided he would not go
+to sleep at all that night, but would crawl down to the landing-place to
+welcome them.
+
+He wondered if that mad woman Julie had given up watching them, and, if
+not, if they would be able to circumvent her again. In any case, he
+hoped that if only one of them came it might be Nance. He fairly ached
+for the sight and sound of her--and the feel of her little hand, and a
+warm frank kiss from the lips that knew no guile.
+
+The sufferings of the storm became as nothing to him in this large hope
+and expectation of her coming.
+
+The intervening hours dragged slowly. It would be half-ebb soon after
+dark, he thought; and he crept up to the ridge and gazed anxiously over
+at the Race between him and Brenire, to see if it showed any unusual
+symptoms after the storm.
+
+It ran furiously enough, but, he said to himself, it would slacken on
+the ebb, and they were so familiar with it that it would take more than
+that to stop them coming.
+
+Before dark the great seas were rolling past, a little quicker than
+usual, he thought, but in long, smooth undulations, which slipped,
+unbroken and soundless, even along the black ledges of his rock. And
+when the stars came out--brighter than ever with the burnishing of the
+gale--the long black backs of the waves, and the darker hollows between,
+were sown so thick with trailing gleams that he could not be certain
+whether it was only star-shine or phosphorescence.
+
+It was all very peaceful and beautiful, however, and very welcome to
+eyes that had not looked upon sun, moon, or star for eight whole nights
+and days, and whose ears had grown hardened to the ceaseless clamour of
+the gale. Nature, indeed, seemed preternaturally quiet, as though
+exhausted with her previous violence or desirous of wiping out the
+remembrance of it; just as small humanity after an outbreak endeavours
+at times to purge the memory of its offence by display of unusual
+amiability and sweetness.
+
+Eager to welcome his confidently expected visitors, Gard crept along the
+ridge as soon as it was dark, and posted himself on the point which, in
+the daylight, commanded the passage from Brenire.
+
+And he sat there so long--so long after his hopes and wishes had flown
+over to Sark and hurried Bernel and Nance into a boat and landed them on
+L'Etat--that the night seemed running out, and he began to fear they
+were not coming, after all.
+
+In the troubled darkness of the Race, he caught gleams at times which
+might be oar-blades or might be only the upfling from the perils below.
+The tide was ebbing, and soon the black fangs with which it was strewn
+would be showing.
+
+At times he convinced himself that the brief gleams moved; but when, to
+ease his eyes of the intolerable strain, he looked up at the stars, it
+seemed to him that they moved also, and so he could not be sure.
+
+But surely there was a gleam that seemed to move and come fitfully
+towards him--or was it only star-shine dancing on the waves of the Race
+which always ran against the tide?
+
+He stood to watch, then lost the gleam, and crouched again disappointed.
+
+The boat must come round Quette d'Amont, the great pile of rock that lay
+off the eastern corner, and the first glimpse he could hope to get of it
+in the darkness would be there.
+
+Then, suddenly, in that curious way in which one sometimes sees more out
+of the tail of one's eye than out of the front of it, he got an
+impression--and with it a start--of something moving noiselessly among
+the tumbled rocks below on his left.
+
+It was a dark night, but the glory of the stars lifted it out of the
+ebony-ruler category. It was a wide, thin, lofty darkness, but still
+black enough along the sides of his rock, and down there it seemed to
+him that something moved, something dim and shadowy and silent.
+
+He thought of the dead man in his chamber down below. Could he be in the
+habit of walking of a night? He thought of ghosts, of which, if popular
+belief was anything to go by, Sark was full; and there was nothing to
+hinder them coming across to L'Etat for their Sabbat. And he thought of
+monster devil-fish climbing, loathsome and soundless, about the dark
+rocks.
+
+He longed for a pair of Sark eyes, and shrank down into a hollow under
+the ridge to watch this thing, with something of a creepy chill between
+his shoulder-blades.
+
+There was certainly something lighter than the surrounding darkness down
+below, and it moved. It turned the corner and flitted along the slope,
+slowly but surely, in the direction of his shelter. Its mode of
+progression, from the little he could make out in the darkness, was just
+such as he would have looked for in a huge octopus hauling itself along
+by its tentacles over the out-cropping rock-bones.
+
+He could not rest there. He must see. He crawled along the ridge as
+quietly as he could manage it, and would have felt happier, whatever it
+was, spirit or monster, if he had had his gun. Now and again it stopped,
+and when it stopped he lay flat to the ground and held his breath, lest
+it should discover him. When it went on, he went on.
+
+When he came to the end of the ridge he saw that the nebulous something
+had apparently stopped just where his house must be.
+
+And then, every sense on the strain, he heard his own name called
+softly, and he laughed to himself for very joy of it, and lay still to
+hear it again, and laughed once more to think that in her simplicity she
+still thought of him as "Mr. Gard." He would teach her to call him
+"Steen," as his mother used to do.
+
+Then he got up quickly and cried, as softly as herself, but with joy and
+laughter in his voice--
+
+"Why, Nance! My dear, I was not sure whether you were a ghost or a
+devil-fish;" and he sprang down towards her.
+
+And then, to his amazement, he saw that she was clad only in the
+clinging white garment in which he had seen her swim.
+
+Her next words confounded him.
+
+"Is Bernel here?"
+
+"Bernel, Nance? No, dear, he is not here. Why--"
+
+"Did he not get here last night?" she jerked sharply.
+
+"No. No one. I was hoping--"
+
+But she had sunk down against the great stones of the shelter, with her
+hands before her face.
+
+"Mon Gyu, mon Gyu! Then he is dead! Oh, my poor one! My dear one!"
+
+"Nance! Nance! What is it all, dearest? Did Bernel try to come across
+last night--"
+
+"Yes, yes! He would come. He said you must be starving. We were all
+anxious about you--"
+
+"And he tried to swim across?"
+
+"Yes, yes! And he is drowned! Oh, my poor, poor boy!"
+
+She was shaking with the sudden chill of dreadful loss. He stooped, and
+felt inside the shelter with a long arm for the old woollen cloak and
+wrapped her carefully in it. He raked out the blanket and made her sit
+with it tucked about her feet. And she was passive in his hands, with
+thought as yet for nothing but her loss.
+
+She was shaken with broken sobs, and in the face of grief such as this
+he could find no words. What could he say? All the words in the world
+could not bring back the dead.
+
+And it was through him this great sorrow had come upon her. He seemed
+fated to bring misfortune on their house.
+
+He wondered if she would hate him for it, though she must know he had
+had no more to do with the matter than with Tom's death.
+
+He put a protecting arm round the old cloak, tentatively, and in some
+fear lest she might resent it, but knew no other way to convey to her
+what was in his heart.
+
+But she did not resent it, and nothing was further from her mind than
+imputing any share in this loss to him.
+
+Some women's hearts are so wonderfully constituted that the greater the
+demands upon them the more they are prepared to give. At times they give
+and give beyond the bounds of reason, and yet amazingly retain their
+faith and hope in the recipients of their gifts.
+
+But that has nothing to do with our story. Except this--that these
+various demands on Nance's fortitude, incurred by her love for Stephen
+Gard, far from weakening her love only made it the stronger. As that
+love came more and more between her and her old surroundings, and
+exacted from her sacrifice after sacrifice, the more she clung to it,
+and looked to it, and let the past go. The partial ostracism brought
+upon her by Gard's outspoken declaration of their mutual feeling--even
+this final offering of her dearly-loved brother--these only bound her
+heart to him the tighter.
+
+"Nance dear!" he said at last, when she had got control of herself
+again. "Is it not possible to hope? He was so good a swimmer. Maybe he
+found the Race too strong and was carried away by it. He may have been
+picked up, and will come back as soon as he is able."
+
+"No," she said, with gloomy decision. "He is dead. I feared for him, for
+I had been to look at the Race just before sundown, and it looked
+terribly strong. But he would go--"
+
+"Why didn't he get a boat?"
+
+"Ah, mon Gyu!" and she started up wildly. "I was forgetting. I was
+thinking only of myself and Bernel. There isn't a boat left alive
+outside the Creux, and he couldn't get one there without them knowing.
+But"--in quick excitement now, to make up for lost time--"they have seen
+you here, and they may come to-night--Achochre that I am! They may be
+here! Come quickly! Your gun!" and she was all on the quiver to be gone.
+
+Gard stooped and pulled out the gun from its hiding-place inside the
+shelter.
+
+"Is it loaded?" she asked sharply.
+
+"Yes. I cleaned it to-day."
+
+"Take your charges with you, and do you hasten back to the place we
+landed the first night. You know?"
+
+"I know. And you?"
+
+"I will go to the other landing-place. But they are not likely to come
+there."
+
+"And if they do?"
+
+"I will manage them," and she slipped into the darkness with the big
+cloak about her.
+
+Gard crept along the slope, and found a roost above the landing-place.
+
+His brain was in a whirl. Bernel had tried to cross to him and was
+drowned. Nance had swum across. Brave girl! Wonderful girl! For
+him!--and for news of Bernel. It was terrible to think of Bernel, dead
+on his account--terrible! It would not be surprising if Nance hated him.
+Yet, what had he done?--what could he do? He had done nothing. He could
+do nothing; and his teeth ground savagely at the craziness of these wild
+Sark men who had brought it all about, and at his own utter impotence.
+
+But Nance did not hate him. And she had swum that dreadful Race to warn
+him. Brave girl! Wonderful girl!
+
+And then--surely the grinding of an oar, as it wrought upon the gunwale
+against an ill-fitted thole-pin--out there by the Quette d'Amont!
+
+His eyes and ears strained into the darkness till they felt like
+cracking.
+
+And the muffled growl of voices!
+
+His heart thumped so, they might have heard it.
+
+He must wait till he was sure they meant to come in. But they must not
+come too close.
+
+It was an ill landing in the dark, and there were various opinions on
+it. But there was no doubt as to their intentions. They were coming in.
+
+"Sheer off there!" cried Gard.
+
+Dead silence below. They had come in some doubt, but their doubts were
+solved now, and there was no longer need for curbed tongues, though,
+indeed, his hollow voice made some of them wonder if it was not a spirit
+that spoke to them.
+
+"It's him!" "The man himself!" "We have him!" "In now and get him!"--was
+the burden of their growls, as they hung on their oars.
+
+"See here, men!" said Gard, invisible even to Sark eyes, against the
+solid darkness of the slope. "There has been trouble and loss enough
+over this matter already, and none of it my making. Do you hear? I say
+again--none of it my making. If you attempt to come ashore there will be
+more trouble, and this time it will be of my making. Keep back!"--as an
+impulsive one gave a tug at his oar. "If you force me to fire, your
+blood be on your own heads. I give you fair warning."
+
+Growls from the boat carried up to him an impression of mixed doubt and
+discomfort--ultimate disbelief in his possession of arms, an energetic
+oath or two, and another creak of the oar.
+
+"Very well! Here's to show you I am armed." The report of his gun made
+Nance jump, at the other side of the island, and set all the birds on
+L'Etat--except the puffins, deep in their holes--circling and screaming.
+
+The small shot tore up the water within a couple of yards of the boat,
+which backed off hastily--much to his satisfaction, for he had feared
+they might rush him before he had time to reload.
+
+He had dropped flat after firing and recharged his gun as he lay. He was
+sure they must have come armed, and feared a volley as soon as his own
+discharge indicated his whereabouts.
+
+As a matter of fact, they had come divided as to the truth of the report
+that there was a man on L'Etat--even then as to him being the man they
+sought. In any case, they had expected to take him unawares, and never
+dreamt of his being armed and on the watch for them.
+
+Thanks to Nance, he had turned the tables on them. It was they who were
+taken unawares.
+
+But if he spoke again, he said to himself, they would be ready for him,
+and their answers would probably take the rude form of bullets. So he
+lay still and waited.
+
+There was a growling disputation in the boat. Then one spoke--
+
+"See then, you, Gard! We will haff you yet, now we know where you are.
+If it takes effery man and effery boat in Sark, we will haff you, now we
+know where you are. You do not kill a Sark man like that and go free.
+Noh--pardie!"
+
+"I have killed no man--" A gun rang out in the boat, and the shot
+spatted on the rocks not a yard from him.
+
+Coming in, they knew, meant certain death for one among them, and, keen
+as they were to lay hands on him, no man had any wish to be that one.
+
+The oars creaked away into the darkness, and he climbed to the ridge to
+make sure they made no attempt on the other side.
+
+But discretion had prevailed. One man could not hold L'Etat from
+invasion at half-a-dozen points at once. They could bide their time, and
+take him by force of numbers.
+
+He heard them go creaking off towards the Creux, and turned and went
+back along the ridge to find Nance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
+
+
+Nance was standing by the shelter, and even in the darkness he could
+tell that she was shaking, in spite of her previous vigorous incitement
+to defence.
+
+"You--you didn't kill any of them?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"No, dear. I warned them off and fired into the water to show them I was
+armed."
+
+"I was afraid. But, there were two shots."
+
+"One of them fired back the next time I spoke, but I was expecting it."
+
+"They are wicked, wicked men, and cruel."
+
+"They are mistaken, that's all. But it comes to much the same thing, and
+I don't see," he said despondently, "how we are ever to prove it to
+them."
+
+"They will come again."
+
+"Yes, they are to come back with every man and every boat in the Island.
+I shall have my hands full. Are there more than these two places where
+they can land?"
+
+"Not good places, and these only when the sea is right. But angry
+men--and ready to shoot you--oh, it is wicked--"
+
+"We must hope the sea will keep them off, and that something may turn up
+to throw some light on the other matter," he said, trying to comfort
+her, though, in truth, the outlook was not hopeful, and he feared
+himself that his time might be short.
+
+"I will stop here and help you," she said, with sudden vehemence. "They
+shall not have you. They shall not! They are wicked, crazy men," and the
+little cloaked figure shook again with the spirit that was in it.
+
+"Dear!" he said, putting his arm round her, and drawing her close. "You
+must not stop. They must not know you have been here. I do not know what
+the end will be. We are in God's hands, and we have done no wrong. But
+if ... if the worst comes, you will remember all your life, dear, that
+to one man you were as an angel from heaven. Nance! Nance! Oh, my dear,
+how can I tell you all you are to me!"--and as he pressed her to him,
+the bare white arms stole out of the cloak and clasped him tightly round
+the neck.
+
+"But how are you going to get back, little one? You cannot possibly swim
+that Race again?" he asked presently, holding her still in his arms and
+looking down at her anxiously.
+
+"Yes, I can swim," she said valiantly. "I knew it would be worse than
+usual, and I brought these"--and she slipped from his arms and groped on
+the ground, and presently held up what felt to him in the darkness like
+a pair of inflated bladders with a broad band between them. "And here is
+a little bread and meat, all I could carry tied on to my head. We feared
+you would be starving."
+
+"You should not have burdened yourself, dear. It might have drowned you.
+And I have eggs--puffins'--"
+
+"Ach!"
+
+"They are better than nothing, and I beat them up with cognac. But are
+you safe in the Race, Nance dear, even with those things?"
+
+"You cannot sink. If Bernel had only taken them! But he laughed at them,
+and now--"
+
+He kissed her sobs away, but was full of anxiety at thought of her in
+the rushing darkness of the Race.
+
+"I will go with you," he said eagerly, "and you will lend me your
+bladders to get back with."
+
+"You would never get back to L'Etat in the dark"--and he knew that that
+was true. "We of Sark can see, but you others--"
+
+"I shall be in misery till I know you are all right," he said anxiously.
+
+"I will run home. My things are in the gorse above Brenire. And I will
+get a lantern and come down by Brenire and wave it to you."
+
+"Will you do that? It will be like a signal from heaven," he said
+eagerly, "a signal from heaven waved by an angel from heaven."
+
+"And to-morrow I will go to the Vicar, and the Snchal, and the
+Seigneur, if he has come home, and I will make them stop these wicked
+men from coming here again."
+
+"Can they?"
+
+"They shall. They must. They are the law and it is not right."
+
+"It is worth trying, at any rate," he said cheerfully, as they reached
+the eastern corner and struck down across his puffin-warren to the point
+immediately opposite Brenire. But he had not much hope that the Vicar
+and the Snchal and the Seigneur all combined would avail him, for the
+men of Sark are a law unto themselves.
+
+"But I've found another hiding-place, Nance, where they could never find
+me."
+
+"Here?--on L'Etat?"
+
+"Yes--inside. I'll show you some time, perhaps, if--"
+
+"Is this where you came ashore?" he asked, as she came to a stand on a
+rough black shelf up which the waves hissed white and venomous.
+
+"We--we always landed here when we swam across," she said, with a little
+break in her voice, as it came home to her again that Bernel would swim
+the Race no more.
+
+"Nance dear, don't give up hope. He may come back yet."
+
+"I have only you left, and they want to kill you," she said sadly.
+
+"I wish I could come with you," as the dark waters swirled below them.
+"It feels terrible to let you go into that all alone."
+
+"It is nothing. The tide is dead slack, and I have these"--swinging the
+bladders in her hand--"if I get tired. Oh, if Bern had only taken
+them--"
+
+"I will kneel on the ridge and pray for your safety till I see your
+light. Dear, God keep you, and bless you for all your goodness and
+courage!"
+
+He strained her to him again, as if he could not let her go to that
+colder embrace that awaited her below.
+
+"I could kiss the very rocks you have stood on," he said passionately.
+
+She kissed him back and dropped the cloak, waited a second till a wave
+had swirled by, then launched into the slack of it, and was gone.
+
+He stood long, peering and listening into the darkness, but heard only
+the welter of the water under the black ledges below, and its scornful
+hiss as it seethed through the fringing sea-weeds.
+
+Then at last he turned and climbed, slowly and heavily, up to the ridge;
+for now he felt the strain of these last full hours, coming on top of
+the longer strain of the storm; and this, and the lack of proper
+feeding, made him feel weak and empty and weary. He knelt down there in
+the darkness, with his face towards the Race where Nance was battling
+with the hungry black waters, and he prayed for her safety as he had
+never prayed for anything in his life before.
+
+"_God keep her! God keep her! God keep her--and bring her safe to land!
+O God, keep her, keep her, keep her, and bring her safe to land!_"
+
+It was a monotonous little prayer, but all his heart was in it, and that
+is all that makes a prayer avail. And when at last, from sheer
+weariness, he sank down on to his heels in science, gazing earnestly out
+into the blackness of the night, his heart prayed on though his lips no
+longer moved.
+
+Could anything have happened to her? Could the black waters have
+swallowed her?
+
+Anything might have happened to her. The waters might have swallowed
+her, as they had Bernel.
+
+The thoughts would surge up behind his prayer, but he prayed them
+down--again and again--and clung to his prayer and his hope.
+
+It seemed hours since they parted, since his last glimpse of her as the
+black waters swallowed the slim white figure, and seemed to laugh
+scornfully at its smallness and weakness.
+
+"_Oh, Nance! Nance! God keep you! God keep you! God keep you! Dear one,
+God keep you! God keep you! God keep you, and bring you safe to land_!"
+
+He was numb with kneeling. If one had come behind him and cut off his
+feet above the ankles, he would have felt no pain. He felt no bodily
+sensation whatever. His body was there on the rock, but his heart was
+out upon the black waters alongside Nance, struggling with her through
+the belching coils, nerving her through the treacherous swirls. And his
+soul--all that was most really and truly him--was agonizing in prayer
+for her before the God to whom he had prayed at his mother's knee, and
+whom she had taught him to look to as a friend and helper in all times
+of need.
+
+He did not even stop--as he well might have done--to think that the
+friend sought only in time of need might have reasonable ground for
+complaint of neglect at other times.
+
+He thought of nothing but that Nance was out there battling with the
+black waters--that he could not lift a finger to help her--that all he
+could do was to pray for her safety with all his heart and soul.
+
+Then, after an age of this numb agony of waiting, a tiny bead of light
+flickered on the outer darkness, as though Hope with a golden pin-point
+had pricked the black curtain of despair, and let a gleam of her glory
+peep through. It swung to and fro, and he fell forward with his face in
+his ice-cold hands and sobbed, "Thank God! Thank God! She is safe! She
+is safe!"
+
+When he tried to get up, his legs gave way under him, and he had to sit
+and wait till they recovered. And when at last he got under way along
+the ridge, he stumbled like a drunken man.
+
+He tangled his feet in the blanket and fell in a heap. He wondered
+dimly where the cloak was--remembered Nance had worn it till she took to
+the sea--and stumbled off through the dark again to find it. Nance had
+worn it. To him it was sacred.
+
+When he got back with it, he wrapped it round him and crept into his
+shelter and slept like a dog.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END
+
+
+He woke next morning with a start. The sun was high, by the shadow of
+his doorway; and by that same token the tide would be at half-ebb, if
+not lower, and the gates of his fortress at his enemy's mercy.
+
+He picked up his gun, listened anxiously for sound of him, and then
+crept cautiously out, with a quick glance along each slope.
+
+Nothing!--nothing but the cheerful sun and the cloudless sky, and the
+empty blue plain of the sea, and the birds circling and diving and
+squabbling as usual--and Nance's little parcel lying where she had
+dropped it. He had had other things to think about last night.
+
+The composure of the birds reassured him somewhat. Still, they might
+have landed on the other side of the rock and be lying in wait for him.
+
+He picked up Nance's parcel with a feeling of reverence. It might have
+cost her her life, in spite of her bladders. Then he climbed cautiously
+to the ridge and peered over.
+
+Sark lay basking in the sunshine, peaceful and placid, as if no son of
+hers had ever had an ill thought of his neighbour, much less sought his
+blood.
+
+Not a boat was in sight, and the birds on the north slope seemed as
+undisturbed as their fellows on the south.
+
+The invasion in force needed time perhaps to prepare and would be all
+the more conclusive when completed.
+
+Meanwhile, he would eat and watch at the same time, for he felt as empty
+as a drum, and an empty man is not in the pinkest of condition for a
+fight.
+
+Never in his life had he tasted bread so sweet!--and the strips of
+boiled bacon in between came surely from a most unusual pig--a porker of
+sorts, without a doubt, and of most extraordinary attainment in the nice
+balancing of lean and fat, and the induing of both with vital juices of
+the utmost strength and sweetness. Truly, a most celestial pig!--and he
+was very hungry.
+
+Had he been a pagan he would most likely have offered a portion of his
+slim rations as thank-offering to his gods, for they had come to him at
+risk of a girl's life. As it was, he ate them very thoughtfully to the
+very last crumb, and was grateful.
+
+They had been wrapped in a piece of white linen, and then tied tightly
+in oiled cloth, and were hardly damped with sea-water. The piece of
+linen and the oiled cloth and the bits of cord he folded up carefully
+and put inside his coat.
+
+They spoke of Nance. If they had drowned her she would have gone with
+them tied on to her head. He took them out again, and kissed them, and
+put them back.
+
+Thank God, she had got through safely! Thank God! Thank God!
+
+He shivered in the blaze of the sun as his eyes rested on the waves of
+the Race, bristling up against the run of the tide as usual, and he
+thought of what it might have meant to him this morning.
+
+It had swallowed Bernel. In spite of his hopeful words to Nance, he
+feared the brave lad was gone. And it might have swallowed Nance. And if
+it had--it might as well have him, too. For it was only thought of Nance
+that made life bearable to him.
+
+The sun wheeled his silvery dance along the waters; the day wore
+on;--and still no sign of the invaders. Sark looked as utterly deserted
+as it must have done in the lone days after the monks left it, when, for
+two hundred years, it was given over to the birds, till de Carteret and
+his merry men came across from Jersey and woke it up to life again.
+
+And then, of a sudden, his heart kicked within him as if it would climb
+into his throat and choke him; for, round the distant point of the
+Lches, a boat had stolen out, and, as he watched it anxiously, there
+came another, and another, and another. They were coming!
+
+Four boat-loads! That ought to be enough to make full sure of him. He
+wondered why they had not come sooner, for the tide was on the rise, and
+the landing-places did not look tempting.
+
+His gun was under his hand, and his powder-flask and his little bag of
+shot. He had no more preparations to make, and he had no wish to fight.
+
+No wish? The thought of it was hateful to him, and yet it was not in
+human nature to give in without a struggle.
+
+But it should be all their doing. All he wanted was to be left in peace.
+Every man has the right to defend his own life.
+
+But then, again--there could be only one end to it, he knew. So why
+fight?
+
+They were coming to make an end of him. What good was it to make an end
+of any of them?
+
+Even if he should succeed in keeping them off this time, the end would
+come all the same, only it would be longer of coming. Why prolong it?
+
+The boats came bounding on like hounds at sight of the quarry. They were
+well filled, four or five men in each boat, besides the oarsmen. Enough,
+surely, to make an end of one lone man.
+
+Would they attempt to land in different places and rush him, he
+wondered. Or would they content themselves with lying off and attempting
+to shoot him down from a distance? The last would be the safest all
+round, both for them and for him--for, landing, they would, for the
+moment, be more or less at his mercy; and, snapping at him from a
+distance, he would have certain chances of cover in his favour.
+
+The top of the ridge was flattened in places, there were even
+depressions here and there, very slight, but quite enough to shelter any
+one lying prone in them from bombardment from sea-level. He chose the
+deepest he could find, and crawled into it, and lay, with his chin in
+his hands, watching the oncoming boats.
+
+If he could have managed it, he would have slipped down to the rock wall
+and crept into his burrow, but it was on that side the boats were
+coming, and the sharp eyes on board would inevitably see him, and so get
+on the track of his hiding-place.
+
+If the chance offered--if they left that end of the rock unspied upon
+for three minutes--he would try it.
+
+They parted at the Quette d'Amont, two going along the south side and
+two along the north. He could hear their voices, their rough jests and
+brief laughter, as they crept past.
+
+It was an odd sensation, this, of lying there like a hunted hare,
+knowing that it was him they were after.
+
+He pressed still closer to the rock, and did not dare to raise his head
+for a look. The voices and the sound of the oars died away, came again,
+died again, as the boats slowly circled the rock, every keen eye on
+board, he knew, searching every nook and cranny for sign of him.
+
+Then a shot rang out, over there towards the south-west, and another,
+and another. Tired of inaction, they were peppering his bee-hive to stir
+him up in case he was fast asleep inside.
+
+The other boats rowed swiftly round to the firing, and he could imagine
+them clustered there in a bunch, watching hopefully for him to come out;
+and his blood boiled and chilled again at thought of what might have
+been if he had been caught napping.
+
+And then, seizing his chance, he crawled to the opposite side of his
+hollow, peeped over, and saw the way clear. If only they would go on
+peppering the bee-hive for another minute or two, he would have time to
+slip down the Sark side of his rock and get to the great wall, and so
+down into his new hiding-place.
+
+If they tried to land, he could perhaps kill or wound two, three,
+half-a-dozen, at risk of his own life. But the end would be the same.
+With a dozen good shots coolly potting at him, he must go down in time,
+and he had no desire either to kill or to be killed.
+
+He wormed himself over the edge of his hollow and hurried along to the
+tumbled rocks, carrying his gun and powder-flask--not that he wanted
+them, but wanted still less to leave them behind. He scrambled over,
+found his marked rocks, and slipped safely under the overhanging slab.
+There he could peep out without danger of being seen; and he was barely
+under cover when the first boat came slowly round again, every bearded
+face intent on the rock, every eye searching for sign of him.
+
+The other boats passed, and as each one came it seemed to him that every
+eye on board looked straight up into his own, and he involuntarily
+shrank down into the shadow of the slab. They could not possibly see
+him, he was certain; and yet a thrill ran through him each time their
+searching glances crossed his own.
+
+The rough jests and laughter of the boats had given way now to angry
+growls at his invisibility. He could hear them cursing him as they
+passed, and even casting doubts on the veracity of his visitors of the
+previous night. And these latter upheld their statements with such
+torrents of red-hot patois that, if they had come to grips and fought
+the matter out, he would not have been in the least surprised.
+
+Then there came a long interval, when no boats came round. They had
+probably taken their courage in their hands and landed, and were
+searching the island. He dropped noiselessly into his well and clambered
+up into the tunnel, and lay there with only his head out.
+
+And, sure enough, before long he heard the sound of big sea-boots
+climbing heavily over the rock wall, and the voices of their owners as
+they passed.
+
+What would they do next, he wondered. Would they imagine him flown, as
+the result of their last night's visit? Or would they believe him still
+on the island and bound to come out of his hiding-place sooner or later?
+Would they give it up and go home? Or would they leave a guard to trap
+him when hunger and thirst brought him out?
+
+He lay patiently in the mouth of his tunnel till long after the last
+glimmer of light had faded from under the big slabs that covered in his
+well. More than once he heard voices, and once they came so close that
+he was sure they had come upon his tracks, and he crept some distance
+down his tunnel to be out of sight. But the alarm proved a false one,
+and the time passed very slowly.
+
+As he lay, he thought of the dead man with the bound hands and feet in
+the silent chamber behind him, bound by the forebears of these men, who,
+in turn, were seeking him, and would treat him as ruthlessly if they
+found him.
+
+He took the lesson to heart, and braced himself to patient endurance,
+though, indeed, he began to ask himself gloomily what was the use of it
+all. In the end, their venomous persistence must make an end of him. One
+man could not fight for ever against a whole community.
+
+And at that he chided himself. Not a whole community! For was not Nance
+on his side--hoping and praying and working for him with all her might
+and main? And her mother, and Grannie, and the Vicar, and the Doctor,
+and the Snchal? He was sure they all knew him far too well to doubt
+him. And all these and the Truth must surely prevail.
+
+But the long strain had been sore on him, and in spite of his anxieties
+he fell asleep in his hole, and dreamed that the dead man came crawling
+down the tunnel, and dragged him back into the chamber, and tied his
+hands and feet, and went away, and left him to die there all alone. And
+so strong was the impression upon him that, when he woke, he lay
+wondering who had loosed his bonds, and could not make out how he had
+got back into the mouth of the tunnel.
+
+It was still quite dark. He was stiff with lying in that cramped place.
+He was strongly tempted to climb out and see how matters lay. For he
+might be able to find out in the dark, whereas daylight would make him
+prisoner again.
+
+He wanted eggs, too. Nance's provision had served him well all day, but
+if he had to spend another day there something more would be welcome.
+
+But then it struck him that if he went up in the dark he might never be
+able to find his way back again. The cleft under the slab was difficult
+to hit upon even in daylight. There were scores of just similar ragged
+black holes among the tumbled rocks of the great wall.
+
+As he lay pondering it all, the grim idea came into his head of dragging
+the dead man through the tunnel, and hoisting him up outside, and
+leaving him propped up among the boulders where they would be sure to
+find him.
+
+He knew how arrantly superstitious they were, most of them. They had
+been brought up on ghosts and witches and evil spirits, and, fearless as
+they might be of things mortal and natural, all that bordered on the
+unknown and uncanny held for them unimaginable terrors. The dead man
+might serve a useful purpose after all; and the grim idea grew.
+
+He could decide nothing, however, till he learned if he had the rock to
+himself; and he determined to take the risk of finding this out.
+
+He cautiously climbed the well, and by the look of the stars he judged
+it still very early morning. A brooding grey darkness covered the sea;
+the sky was dark even in the east.
+
+He slipped off his coat and left it hanging out of the cleft as a
+landmark, and lowered himself silently from rock to rock, till he stood
+among the rank grasses below.
+
+Food first--so, after patient listening for smallest sound or sign of a
+watch, he crept down to the slope where the puffins' nests were, and,
+wrapping his hand in Nance's napkin, managed to get out a dozen eggs
+from as many different holes, in spite of the fierce objections of their
+legitimate owners.
+
+He tied these up carefully in the blood-spotted cloth, and carried them
+up to his cleft. Then he stole away like a shadow, to find out, if he
+could, if there was any one else on the rock besides himself and the
+dead man.
+
+There had been hot disputes on that head in the boats. Those who were
+there for the first time had even gone the length of casting strongest
+possible doubts as to whether those who were there the night before had
+seen or heard anything whatever, and did not hesitate to state their
+belief that they were all on a fool's errand. The others replied in
+kind, and when the further question was mooted as to keeping watch all
+night, the scoffers told the others to keep watch if they chose; for
+themselves, they were going home to their beds.
+
+"Frightened of ghosts, I s'pose," growled one.
+
+"No more than yourself, John Drillot. But we've wasted a day on this
+same fooling, and the man's not here; and for me, I doubt if he's ever
+been here."
+
+"And what of the things we found in the shelter?" said Drillot. "Think
+they came there of themselves?"
+
+"I don't care how they came there. It's not old cloaks and blankets we
+came after. Maybe he has been here. I don't know. But he's not here now,
+and I've had enough of it."
+
+"B'en! I'm not afraid to stop all night--if anyone'll stop with me"--and
+if no one had offered he would have been just as well pleased. "Don't
+know as I'd care to stop all alone."
+
+"Frightened of ghosts, maybe," scoffed the other.
+
+"You stop with me, Tom Guille, and we'll see which is frightenedest of
+ghosts, you or me."
+
+But Tom Guille believed in ghosts as devoutly as any old woman in Sark,
+and he was bound for home, no matter what the rest chose to do.
+
+"There's not a foot of the rock we haven't searched," said he, "and the
+man's not here; so what's the use of waiting all night?"
+
+"Because if he's in hiding it's at night he'll come out."
+
+"Come out of where?"
+
+"Wherever he's got to."
+
+"That's Guernsey, most likely. His friends have arranged to lift him off
+here first chance that came; and it came before we did, and you'll not
+see him in these parts again, I warrant you."
+
+"I'll wait with you, John, if you're set on it, though I doubt Tom's
+right, and the man's gone," said Peter Vaudin of La Ville. And John
+Drillot found himself bound to the adventure.
+
+"Do we keep the boat?" asked Vaudin.
+
+"No ... for then one of us must sit in her all night, or she will bump
+herself to pieces. You will come back for us in the morning, Philip."
+
+"I'll come," said Philip Guille, and presently they stood watching the
+boats pulling lustily homewards, and devoutly wishing they were in them.
+
+Every foot of the rock, as they knew it, had already been carefully
+raked over. The possible hiding-places were few. But no one knows better
+than a Sark man what rocks can do in the way of slits and tunnels and
+caves, and it was just this possibility that had set John Drillot to his
+unwonted, and none too welcome, task. The murderer--as he deemed
+Gard--might have found some place unknown to any of them, and might be
+lying quietly waiting for them to go. If that was so, he must come out
+sooner or later, and the chances were that he would steal out in the
+night.
+
+So the two watchers prowled desultorily about the rock, poking again
+into every place that suggested possible concealment for anything larger
+than a puffin. There might be openings in the rifted basement rocks
+which only the full ebb would discover, and these might lead up into
+chambers where a man could lie high and dry till the tide allowed him
+out again. And so they hung precariously over the waves and poked and
+peered, and found nothing.
+
+They had clambered over the great wall more than once before Vaudin
+said: "G'zamin, John, I wonder if there's any holes here big enough to
+take a man?"
+
+"He'd have to be a little one, and this Gard's not that," and they
+stood looking at the wall. "'Sides, them rocks lie on the rock itself,
+and there's no depth to them."
+
+But Vaudin was not sure that there might not be room for a man to lie
+flat under some of the big slabs, and began to poke about among them.
+
+"Some one's been up here," he said, pointing to one of Gard's own
+scorings.
+
+"Bin up there four times myself," said Drillot, "an' so have all the
+rest. There's no room to hide a man there, Peter. If he's hid anywhere,
+he'll come out in the night. Maybe Philip Guille's right, and he's safe
+in Guernsey by this. Come along to that shelter and let's have a drink."
+
+They had their bottle out of the boat, and they had also come upon
+Gard's bottle of cognac, of which quite half remained. It was a finer
+cordial than their own, so they sat drinking them turn about, and
+watching the sun set, and chatting spasmodically, till it grew too dark
+to do more than sit still with safety.
+
+They were by no means drunk, but the spirits had made them heavy, and
+when John Drillot solemnly suggested that they should keep watch about,
+Peter Vaudin as solemnly agreed, and offered to take first duty.
+
+So John curled his length inside the bee-hive, and made himself
+comfortable with Gard's cloak and blanket, and was presently snoring
+like a whole pig-sty. And that had a soporific effect on Peter. He had
+only stopped behind to oblige John, and personally had little
+expectation of anything coming of it. Moreover, the night air was
+chilly. If he could get that cloak from John now! He crawled in to try,
+but big John was rolled up like a caterpillar. It was warmer inside
+there than out, anyway. And he could keep watch there just as well as
+outside; so he propped himself up alongside John, and braced his mind to
+sentry duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE
+
+
+Having lodged his eggs in a ledge under the big slab, Gard stole away to
+learn, if he could, if he had the rock all to himself.
+
+He wanted water, and he wanted his bottle of cognac and the tin dipper;
+for puffins' eggs, while not unpalatable beaten up with cognac, are of a
+flavour calculated to exercise the strongest stomach when eaten raw.
+
+He feared the men would have made away with all his small possessions,
+but he could only try. So he stole like a shadow round the crown of the
+ridge and along towards the shelter, standing at times motionless for
+whole minutes till the rush of the waves below should pass and give him
+chance of hearing.
+
+But on L'Etat the sound of many waters never ceases night or day, and
+the night wind hummed among the stones of the shelter, and, as it
+happened, John Drillot had just lurched over in avoidance of a lump of
+rock which was intruding on his comfort, and in so doing had lodged his
+heavy boot in Peter Vaudin's ribs, and so their sonorous duet was
+stilled, and neither of them was very sound asleep, when Gard, after
+listening anxiously and hearing nothing, dropped on his hands and knees
+and felt cautiously inside.
+
+Peter felt the blind hand groping in the dark, and was wide awake in an
+instant. He hurled himself at the intruder, as well as a man could who
+had been lying back against the wall half asleep a moment before; and
+Gard turned and sped away along the side of the ridge, with Peter at his
+heels and John Drillot thundering ponderously in the rear.
+
+"What is't, Peter boy?" shouted John.
+
+"It's him. This way!" yelled Peter, out of the dimness in front, as he
+stumbled and staggered along the ragged inadequacies of the ridge.
+
+If Gard had had time for consideration, he would have led them a chase
+elsewhere first, but, in the sudden upsetting of lighting on what he had
+persuaded himself was not there, he lost his head and made straight for
+cover.
+
+Peter Vaudin was at the base of the rock wall as he wriggled silently
+under the big slab, and it was only by a violent jerk that he got his
+foot clear of Peter's grip. And Peter, strung to the occasion, kept his
+hand on the spot where the foot had disappeared, and waited a moment for
+John Drillot to come up before he followed it.
+
+"Gone in here," he jerked, as he climbed cautiously up.
+
+"Can't have gone far, then," panted John. "Sure it was him?"
+
+"Had him by the foot, but he got loose. Here we are," as he poked about,
+and came at last on the hole below the slab. "Come on, John ... can't be
+far away.... Big hole"--as he kicked about down below--"no bottom, far
+as I can see."
+
+"Best wait for daylight, to see where we're getting."
+
+"Oui gia! Man doux, it's not me's going down here till I know what's
+below."
+
+So they sat and kicked their heels and waited for the day, certain in
+their own minds that their quarry was run to earth and as good as
+caught.
+
+Gard had swept down both his coat and his cloth full of eggs in his
+sudden entrance. He stood at the bottom of the well to see if they would
+follow, while Peter's long legs kicked about for foothold. He heard them
+decide to wait for daylight, and then he noiselessly picked up his coat
+and his soppy bundle of broken eggs, pushed them into the tunnel, and
+crawled in after them.
+
+He was trapped, indeed, but he doubted very much if any fisherman on
+Sark would venture down that tunnel. They were brawny men, used to leg
+and elbow room, and, as a rule, heartily detested anything in the shape
+of underground adventure. They might, of course, get over some miners to
+explore for them. Or they might content themselves with sitting down on
+top of his hole until he was starved out. In any case, his rope was
+nearly run; but yet he was not disposed to shorten it by so much as an
+inch.
+
+As he wormed his way along the tunnel, the recollection of those other
+openings off the dead man's cave came back to him. He would try them. He
+pushed on with a spurt of hope.
+
+The tunnel was not nearly so long now that he knew where he was going;
+in fact, now that nothing but it stood between him and capture, it
+seemed woefully inadequate.
+
+When his head and elbows no longer grazed rock he dropped his coat and
+crawled into the chamber. He felt his way round to the dried packages,
+and cautiously emptied half-a-dozen and prepared them for his use.
+
+This set him sneezing so violently that it seemed impossible that the
+watchers outside should not hear him. It also gave him an idea.
+
+He struck a light and kindled one of his torches, and the dead man
+leaped out of the darkness at him as before. That gave him another idea.
+
+Propping up his light on the floor, he emptied package after package of
+the powdered tobacco into the tunnel, and wafted it down towards the
+entrance with his jacket. Then with his knife he cut the lashings from
+the dead man's hands and feet, and carried him across--he was very
+light, for all his substance had long since withered out of him--and
+laid him in the tunnel as though he was making his way out.
+
+If he knew anything of Sark men and miners, he felt fairly secure for
+some time to come, so he sat himself down, as far as possible from the
+snuff, and made such a meal as was possible off puffins' eggs, mixed
+good and bad and unredeemed by any palliating odour and flavour. They
+were not appetising, but they stayed his stomach for the time being.
+
+It was only then that he remembered that he had left his gun and
+powder-flask behind him. He had placed them on a ledge just inside the
+mouth of the tunnel, and in his haste had forgotten to pick them up. He
+had no intention of using them, however, and he would not go back for
+them.
+
+When his scanty meal was done, he cautiously emptied a number of the
+packages and rolled them into torches, and deliberated as to which of
+the black openings he should attempt first.
+
+That one opposite, out of which the dead man's legs sprawled
+grotesquely, was the one by which he had entered. This one, then, near
+which he sat, must run on towards the centre of the island--if it ran on
+at all; and, since all were equally unknown and hopeful, he would try
+this first.
+
+His tarred paper torches, though they burned with a clear flame, gave
+forth a somewhat pungent odour, so he kicked one of the small barrels to
+pieces, and with three of the staves and a piece of string made a holder
+which would carry the torch upright, and also permit him to lay it on
+the ground or push it in front of him, if need be.
+
+The first tunnel ran in about thirty feet, and then the slant of the
+roof met the floor at so sharp an angle that further passage was
+impossible.
+
+The second, third, and fourth the same; and he began to fear they were
+all blind alleys leading nowhere.
+
+The openings near his own entrance tunnel he had left till the last,
+since they obviously led outwards.
+
+Two of them shut down in the same way as all the others, and it was only
+the dogged determination to leave no chance untried that drove him, with
+a fresh supply of torches, down the last one of all, the one alongside
+that out of which the dead man's legs projected.
+
+It took a turn to the left within a dozen feet of the entrance, and,
+like the rest, it presently narrowed down through a slope in the roof;
+but just at its narrowest, when he feared he had come to the end, there
+came a dip in the flooring corresponding to the slope up above, and he
+found he could wriggle through. Once through, the passage widened and
+continued to widen, and the going became very rough and broken, with
+piles of ragged rock and deep black pitfalls in between.
+
+Then, of a sudden, he saw the walls and roof of his passage fall away,
+and his light flickered feebly in the darkness of a vast place, and he
+crouched on the rock up which he had climbed, and sat in wonder.
+
+Somewhere below him he could hear the slow rise and fall of water, dull
+and heavy and without any splash, like the dumb breathing of a captive
+monster.
+
+And every now and again there came, from somewhere beyond, a low dull
+thud, like the blow of a padded hammer, and a distant subdued rustle
+along the outside of the darkness. He knew it was not inside the place
+he was in, for he could hear the soft rise and fall of the water quite
+clearly, but these other sounds came to him from a distance, muted as
+though his ears had suddenly gone deaf.
+
+"Those dull blows," he said to himself, "are the waves on the outside of
+L'Etat. That low rustling is the rush of them along the lower rocks. The
+water inside here probably comes in through some openings below
+tide-level. I am quite safe here, even if they get past the dead man's
+cave--quite safe until I starve. Unless there are fish to be had"--and
+he felt a spark of hope. "And maybe there are devil-fish"--and he
+shivered and glanced below and about him fearfully.
+
+His homely torch did no more than faintly illumine the rock he sat on
+and those close at hand, and cast a gigantic uncouth shadow of himself
+on the rough wall behind. All beyond was solid darkness, blacker even
+than a black Sark night.
+
+He sat wondering vaguely if any before him had penetrated to that
+strange place. It was odd and uncanny to feel that his eyes were the
+very first to look upon it. And then, away in front, and apparently at a
+great distance above him, he became aware of a difference in the solid
+darkness. It seemed almost as though it had thinned. His eye had seemed
+able for a moment to carry beyond the narrow circle of the torch, but
+when he peered into the void to see what this might mean, it all seemed
+solid as before.
+
+As his straining eyes sought relief in something visible, their
+side-glance caught once more that same impression of movement in the
+darkness. And presently it came again and stronger--a strange greenish
+fluttering up in the roof--very faint, as though the roof were smoke on
+which a soft green light played for a moment and vanished.
+
+But by degrees the light grew, though at no time did it become more than
+a wan ghost of a light, and from its curious fluttering he judged that
+it came through water.
+
+Reasoning from the trend of the cavern, he came to the conclusion that
+somewhere on that further side there were openings into the deep water
+beyond, on which the sunlight played and struck at times into the cave,
+and he was keen to look more closely into it.
+
+He lowered his torch to the side of his rock, and its feeble flicker
+fell on a chaos of rocks below. He looked long and cautiously for supple
+yellow arms or tiny whip-like threads which might coil suddenly round
+his legs and drag him to hideous death.
+
+But he saw nothing of the kind. The rocks were dry and bare, not a
+limpet nor a sea-weed visible, and leaving his jacket for a landmark as
+before, he slowly let himself down from one huge boulder to another,
+till he found himself climbing another great pile in front.
+
+When at last his head rose above this ridge, he almost rolled over at
+the sight of two huge green eyes blinking lazily at him out of the
+darkness in front--two great openings far below sea-level, through which
+filtered dimly the wavering green light whose refractions fluttered in
+the roof.
+
+The vast trough below him heaved gently now and then, with a ponderous
+solemnity which filled him with awe. He felt himself an intruder. He
+felt like a fly creeping about a sleeping tiger. He hardly dared to
+breathe, lest the brooding spirit of the place should rise suddenly out
+of some dark corner and squash him on his rock as one does a crawling
+insect; and his anxious eyes swept to and fro for the smallest sign of
+danger.
+
+But, plucking up courage from immunity, and dreading to be caught in the
+dark in that weird place, he crawled over the boulders towards the side
+wall of the cavern to get as near to those openings as possible. From
+the very slight movement of the water, which was ever on the boil round
+the outside of L'Etat, he judged them deep down among the roots of the
+island, far below the turmoil of the surface, but he must see and make
+sure.
+
+With infinite toil and many a scrape and bruise, he got round at last,
+and could look right down into the dim green depths, and what he saw
+there filled him with sickening fear.
+
+The water was crystal clear, and in through the nearer opening, as he
+looked, a huge octopus propelled itself in leisurely fashion, its great
+tentacles streaming out behind, its hideous protruding eyes searching
+eagerly for prey.
+
+Just inside the opening it gathered itself together for a moment, and
+seemed to look so meaningly right up into his eyes that he found himself
+shrinking behind a rock lest it should see him. Then it clamped itself
+to the side of the opening and spread wide its arms for anything that
+might come its way.
+
+He watched it, fascinated. He saw fishes large and small unconsciously
+touch the quivering tentacles, which on the instant twisted round them
+and dragged them in to the rending beak below the hideous eyes. And then
+he saw another similar monster come floating in on similar quest, and in
+a moment they were locked in deadly fight--such a writhing and coiling
+and straining and twisting of monstrous fleshy limbs, which swelled and
+thrilled, and loosed and gripped, with venom past believing--such a
+clamping to this rock and that--such tremendous efforts at dislodgment.
+
+It was a nightmare. It sickened him. He turned and crawled feebly away,
+anxious only now to get out of this awful place without falling foul of
+any similar monsters among the rocks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR
+
+
+From the headland above Brenire, Nance had watched the boats go
+plunging across to L'Etat.
+
+Very early that morning she had sped across the Coupe and up the long
+roads to the Seigneurie, but the Seigneur was away in Guernsey still,
+busied on the vital matter of raising still more money for the mines in
+which he was a firm believer, mortgaging his Seigneurie for the purpose,
+assured in his own mind that all would be well in the end.
+
+Then to the Vicar and the Snchal, and these set off at once for the
+harbour, but found themselves powerless in the face of public opinion.
+Argument and remonstrance alike fell on deaf ears. The Vicar appealed to
+their sense of right; the Snchal forbade their going. But their minds
+were doggedly set on it, and they went.
+
+"I shall hold you to account," stormed Philip Guille.
+
+"B'en, M. le Snchal, we'll pay it all among us," and away they went;
+and back to her look-out by Brenire went Nance, and the Vicar with her
+for comfort in this dark hour.
+
+They watched the boats circling the rock, round and round. They heard
+the firing, and Nance flung herself on the ground in an agony of
+weeping, sure that the end had come. For they could only be firing at
+Gard, and what could one man do against so many?
+
+"They have killed him," she moaned.
+
+And the Vicar could only tighten his pale lips, and smooth her hair with
+his thin white hand, as she writhed on the ground at his side. For he
+could but think she was right. They were good shots, the Sark men, and
+it needs but one bullet to kill a man.
+
+If Nance had looked a moment longer she might have seen Gard slip down
+from the ridge to the wall, but the bombardment of the shelter, which
+gave him his chance, made an end of her hopes, and her face was hidden
+in the turf.
+
+The Vicar's sight was not keen enough to see clearly what was passing.
+But when the men landed on the rock, and overran it in their search, he
+could not fail to see their figures on the ridge against the sky, and an
+exclamation of surprise roused Nance.
+
+"What is it?" she jerked.
+
+"They have landed over there. They seem to be searching the rock."
+
+"Then--" and she sat up suddenly and gazed intently across at L'Etat,
+and then sprang to her feet, a new creature. "For, see you, Mr
+Cachemaille," she cried, "if they had killed him they would not be
+searching for him, nenni-gia!"
+
+"That is true, child," said the Vicar hopefully, and then, less
+hopefully, "but where shall a man hide on L'Etat?"
+
+"Ah now! I remember. Just as I was leaving him last night, he told me--"
+
+"As you were leaving him--last night?" and the old man gazed at her as
+though he doubted his ears or her right senses.
+
+"But yes," she cried impatiently. "I swam across there last night to see
+if Bernel was there and to take him some food. But you are not to tell
+that to any one. And he told me--"
+
+"You swam across?--to L'Etat?"
+
+"Yes, yes! We have done it many times, and, besides, I had the
+bladders--"
+
+The Vicar shook his head helplessly. She forgot to explain so much that
+he did not understand. But he grasped at one thread.
+
+"And Bernel?"
+
+"Ah, my poor Bernel! He is drowned," she said, with a heave of the
+breast, but with her eyes intent on L'Etat. "I wanted him to take the
+bladders, but he would not; and it was the first night after the storm,
+you see, and the waves were big still, and he never got to L'Etat, and
+he never came back; so, you see--"
+
+"Truly, you are being sorely tried, my child. But your brother was a
+better swimmer than most. May we not hope--"
+
+But she shook her head, intent on the doings on the rock, and full, for
+the moment, of the hope she could draw from Gard's hint about a
+hiding-place of which she knew nothing. For if she and Bernel had never
+discovered it, how should these others? And obviously they were
+searching, for they prowled about the rock like ants, and poked here and
+there, and wandered on and came back. And if they still sought they had
+not yet found; and so there was a new spring of hope in her heart.
+
+"Yes, truly, they are searching," she murmured, and forgot the Vicar
+and all else.
+
+He tried to induce her to go back home with him, but she would not move.
+For the moment all her hope in life was in peril on the rock, and she
+must see all that went on; and finally he had to leave her there, and
+she hardly knew that he had gone. She wanted only to be left alone, to
+nurse her new-born hope and watch in fear and trembling for any symptom
+of its overthrow.
+
+But she was not to be left in peace, for Madame Julie had heard the
+firing also, and had come round the headland by the miners' cottages,
+exulting in the fact that her enemy was run to earth at last and was
+meeting righteous punishment.
+
+And as she prowled about there, chafing at the delay in the return of
+the boats, she came suddenly on Nance gazing out at L'Etat with a
+face--not, as Julie would have expected, downcast and woe-begone, but
+full of eager expectancy. And the sight of her, and in such case,
+stirred Julie to venom.
+
+"Ah then--there you are, mademoiselle, listening to the end of your
+fancy gentleman! And the right end, too, ma foi! A man that goes
+knocking his neighbours on the head--it's right he should be shot like a
+rabbit--"
+
+Nance's face quivered, but she did not even look round.
+
+"You'll see them coming back presently, and they'll bring his body back
+with them in the boat, all full of holes. And then I'll feel that my
+Tom's paid for--"
+
+"Do you hear?" she cried, planting herself in front of Nance, and
+jerking her hands up and down in her excitement and the exaspeiation of
+receiving no response. "Do you hear me--you? Or are you gone crazy for
+love of your murderer?"--and she made as though to lay wild hands on the
+girl.
+
+"You are wicked! You are evil! You are a devil!" said Nance through her
+little white teeth, and looked so as though she might fly at her that
+Julie drew off.
+
+"Aha--spitfire!--wildcat!--you would bite?"
+
+Nance, all ashake with disgust, stooped suddenly and picked up a lump of
+rock.
+
+"Go!" she said, in a voice of such concentrated fury that it was little
+more than a whisper. "Go!--before I do you ill;" and she looked so like
+it that Julie turned and fled, expecting the rock between her shoulders
+at every step.
+
+But the rock was on the ground, and Nance was intent again on L'Etat.
+
+She stood there watching, until she saw the boats put off, and then she
+turned and sped like a rabbit--across the waste lands--across the
+Coupe--over Clos Bourel fields into Dixcart--over Hog's Back to the
+Creux.
+
+She ran through the tunnel just as the boats came up, and her eyes were
+wide with expectant fear, as they swept them hungrily.
+
+"What have you done then, out there, Philip Vaudin?" she cried, as his
+boat's nose grated on the shingle.
+
+"Pardi, ma garche, we have done nothing."
+
+"But the shooting?"
+
+"Some one shot at the shelter to see if he was inside, and the rest shot
+because they thought there must be something to shoot at."
+
+"And you have not got him?" asked another disappointedly.
+
+"Never even seen him."
+
+"Ah ba!"
+
+"Either he's gone or he's under cover, though, ma f, I don't know where
+he'd find it on L'Etat," and Nance's heart beat hopefully. "However,
+John Drillot and Peter Vaudin are stopping the night in case he is still
+there and ventures out of his hole," and her heart sank again, and
+kicked rebelliously that a man should be hunted thus, like a rabbit.
+
+She spent a night of misery, wondering what was happening on L'Etat, and
+was at her post above Brenire as soon as it was light.
+
+She saw Philip Vaudin come round from the Creux in his boat and run
+across to the rock, and almost as soon as he had disappeared round
+Quette d'Amont, he came speeding back, alone, and not to the harbour,
+but straight to the fishermen's rough landing-place inside Brenire.
+
+"What is it then, Philip?" she asked anxiously, as he hauled himself up
+the rocks on to the turf.
+
+"I've come for two miners," he panted, for he had come quickly. "They've
+run him to earth in a hole, but they won't either of them go in after
+him, and they want some one who will."
+
+"Ah, then!"
+
+"Yes. He came out in the night, and they chased him, but he got into his
+hole, and they're sitting on it ever since," and he hurried away through
+the waste of gorse and bracken to the miners' cottages.
+
+Volunteers were evidently not over plentiful. It was a considerable time
+before he came back with a Welshman, Evan Morgan, and a young
+Cornishman, John Trevna, and neither of them seemed over eager for the
+job.
+
+"For, see you," had been Morgan's view, "coing in a hole after a man
+what hass a gun iss not a nice pissness, no inteet!" and the Cornishman
+agreed with him.
+
+However, they put off, and Nance crouched in the bracken and watched all
+their doings.
+
+She had long since caught sight of John Drillot and Peter Vaudin sitting
+on the rock wall, and wondered what kind of a hiding-place Gard could
+possibly have found therein. A poor one, she feared, and that the end
+would be quick.
+
+The boat disappeared round the corner, and presently she saw the three
+men join the others at the wall, and they all clustered there and
+talked, and then one by one they disappeared into the wall itself, and
+she sat watching in fear and trembling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT
+
+
+"It iss better to sit here two, three days till he comse out than to go
+in and get yourself killt, yes inteet!" was the burden of Evan Morgan's
+answer to all their arguments for a speedy assault. And "Iss, sure!" was
+Trevna's curt, complete endorsement.
+
+But when, at John Drillot's suggestion, they had squeezed under the slab
+to have a look at what lay below, and had peered down the slit that Gard
+tried first, and had then lighted on the tunnel, and had found the gun
+and powder-flask jammed in a crevice--that put a different face on the
+matter.
+
+And, after prolonged discussion as to the proper method of procedure,
+especially in the matter of precedence, it was at last arranged that
+Evan Morgan should go first with his miner's lamp, and that John Trevna
+should follow close behind, carrying the gun.
+
+"And iss it understood that I shoot him if I see him?" asked Trevna, to
+make sure of his ground and make his conscience easy.
+
+"Pardi, yes, mon gars! Shoot straight, and the Island will thank you,"
+asserted John Drillot.
+
+"Ant for Heaven's sake, John Trevna, see you ton't shoot me behint by
+mistake," urged Evan Morgan; and they disappeared slowly into the
+tunnel, while the other two stood waiting expectantly in the well.
+
+Accustomed as they were to narrow places, this long worm-hole of a
+tunnel, with the doubtful possibilities that lay beyond it, seemed as
+endless to the militant members of the expedition as it did to the
+waiters outside.
+
+Occasionally a hollow sound came booming down the tunnel, when one or
+other grunted out a word of objurgation on the narrowness of things, but
+for the most part they wormed along in silence, Morgan shifting forward
+his lamp, foot by foot, and straining his eyes into the darkness ahead,
+Trevna close behind with his gun at full cock and ready for instant
+action.
+
+"Gad'rabotin, but they take their time, those two!" said John Drillot,
+impatiently, outside.
+
+"It iss going right through to Wailee, I do think," growled Evan Morgan
+inside.
+
+And it was just after that that there broke out in the depths of the
+tunnel a commotion so extraordinary that the listeners outside could
+make nothing at all of it, and could only lurch about in amazement and
+climb up and push their heads into the tunnel, and wonder what it all
+meant. Then, in the midst of the turmoil, there came the thunderous
+bellow of the gun, and after a time a trickle of thin blue smoke floated
+lazily out and hung about the well; and the men outside sniffed
+appreciatively, and said, "Ch'est b'en!" and waited hopefully.
+
+Evan Morgan, shifting forward his light, got an impression of something
+in the narrow way in front, and suddenly he was taken with the biggest
+fit of sneezing he had ever had in his life. He banged down the lamp
+and threw up his head till it cracked against the roof, then banged his
+chin against the floor, and finally propped himself, like a sick dog, on
+his two front paws, and sneezed and sneezed and sneezed for dear life.
+
+Then John Trevna began. He had the sense to lay down his gun, or Morgan
+might have got the charge in his back. And so they sneezed in concert,
+until their heads were clearer than they had been for many a day. And
+the sound of it all to those outside was like the sound of mortal
+combat.
+
+Then Morgan, wiping his streaming eyes on the sleeve of his coat, in a
+state of extreme exhaustion, caught sight of that which lay just beyond
+him, and he saw that it was a man crawling down the tunnel to meet him.
+
+"Shoot, John, shoot! He iss here," he yelled, and laid himself flat to
+give Trevna his chance.
+
+And Trevna, between two sneezes, picked up his gun, though he could see
+nothing to shoot at, and ran the barrel forward above Morgan's head and
+fired, and the roar of it in that confined space came near to deafening
+them both.
+
+The smoke hung thick and choked them, as they gasped it in in gulps
+while they sneezed, and the light had gone out with the concussion.
+
+They lay for a time exhausted. Then the atmosphere cleared somewhat, and
+they lay in the thick darkness straining their ears for any sound, but
+heard nothing.
+
+"What did you see, Evan Morgan?" whispered Trevna at last.
+
+"It wass a man."
+
+"Then I have killed him, for he does not move. Can you light the lamp?"
+
+"I can not--in here. I am coing out. I haf hat enough of this."
+
+"We must take him out, too."
+
+"You can tek him, then, John Trevna. I haf hat enough of him and this
+hole."
+
+"Don't be a fool, Evan Morgan. If it wass a man, and he got that load in
+him as close as that, he iss deader than Tom Hamon."
+
+"Well, you can go an' see. I am coing out," and he began to wriggle
+backwards, and Trevna was fain to go too.
+
+But presently they came to one of the somewhat wider places where the
+wall had fallen away, and Trevna squeezed himself tightly into this.
+
+"You go on, then, Evan Morgan," he said, "if you can get past, and I
+will go back and bring him out."
+
+"You are a fool, John Trevna, to meddle with him any more. Iff the man
+iss dead, he iss just as well left there."
+
+"If he iss dead he cannot harm me, and I would like to see the man I
+have killed."
+
+"Ugh!" grunted Morgan, and crawled on, legs first.
+
+Trevna wormed along up the tunnel, groping cautiously in front of him at
+each forward lurch, and at last his hands fell on what he sought, and at
+the same moment he began sneezing again.
+
+It would be no easy job dragging a dead man all down that tunnel, he
+thought. But when, after cautious feeling here and there, he got a grip
+of the man's coat collar, to his surprise it came away in his hand, but
+at the same time it seemed to him that the body was extraordinarily
+light.
+
+He tried again with a fresh grip on the coat, but it tore like paper,
+and, after thinking it over, he unstrapped his leather belt and got it
+round the man below the armpits, and so was able to haul him slowly
+along.
+
+When Evan Morgan's wriggling legs came slowly out of the tunnel, John
+Drillot and Peter Vaudin were almost dancing with excitement, and their
+first surprise was the sight of him when, by rights, John Trevna should
+have been the one to come out first.
+
+"Well then? What have you done? And where is John Trevna?" cried John
+Drillot.
+
+"Ach! He iss a fool. He hass shot the man and now he will pring him out
+when he woult pe much petter buried where he iss."
+
+"He's quite right. What was all the noise about?"
+
+"That wass the shooting."
+
+"Before that. You all seemed to be howling at once."
+
+"That wass the sneezing. It iss full of sneezing down there," and his
+red eyes still showed the effect of it.
+
+It was a long time before they heard the laboured sounds of Trevna's
+coming. But at last his legs wriggled out, then his body, then with a
+lurch he hauled up to the mouth of the tunnel that which he had brought
+with him. And at sight of it they all started back against the sides of
+the well, with various cries but equal amazement.
+
+"O mon Gyu!" cried Peter Vaudin.
+
+"Thousand devils!" cried John Drillot.
+
+"Heavens an' earth!" gasped Evan Morgan.
+
+John Trevna gazed open-mouthed, for he had little breath left in him.
+
+And from the black mouth of the tunnel the strange and terrible figure
+of the dead man looked quietly down at them and filled them with
+amazement.
+
+Trevna's heavy charge had blown in the top of the skull. The shrunken
+yellow face wore the gaunt eager look of one who had died the slow death
+of starvation. It seemed to be trying to get at them to bite and rend
+them.
+
+Peter Vaudin was the first to climb the wall behind him, but the rest
+were close at his heels, and hustled him up through the crack under the
+slab.
+
+Peter struck down towards the landing-place the moment he had wriggled
+through.
+
+"Stop then, Peter," called John Drillot, in a low insistent voice, lest
+that dreadful thing below should hear him.
+
+"Not me! I've had enough, John Drillot. That is not what we came for ...
+and I had hold of its leg last night," and he shivered at the
+recollection, and the thought that it might have turned on him and
+gripped him with its grisly hands.
+
+"I don't know what it is," began John Drillot, "but--"
+
+"It's the man I shot inside there," said Trevna.
+
+"That man hass peen det a hundert years," said Morgan.
+
+"All the same, he was running about last night," said Peter, "and I had
+hold of his leg"--with another shiver.
+
+"He's dead enough now, anyway," said Drillot.
+
+"Eh b'en! leave him where he is, and let's get away. I've heard say
+there were ghosts on L'Etat, and now I know it. No good comes of
+meddling with these things."
+
+"But we ought to take him with us."
+
+"Take him with us!" almost shrieked Peter. "And let him loose on Sark!
+Why then?"
+
+"Whatever he was last night, he's dead enough now.... Will you help me
+to get him up, John Trevna?"
+
+"Iss, sure! He's got my belt."
+
+"Not in my boat, John Drillot," cried Peter. "Not in my boat. I've had
+enough of him, pardi!" and he set off at speed for the boat.
+
+"Don't be a fool, Peter. You, Evan Morgan, run down and stop him going.
+Come on, John Trevna," and after peering cautiously down to make sure
+the dead man had not moved, they dropped into the well again.
+
+The shrivelled figure was very light, as Trevna had found. It was only
+their repugnance at handling it that made their task a heavy one. One
+above and one below, they managed at last to get it up above ground, and
+then John Trevna slipped his belt to its middle, and carried it with one
+hand down the slope to the boat.
+
+There they found Evan Morgan holding the approach to the landing-place
+against Peter, with a lump of rock, while Philip, in the boat below,
+stood shouting at them to know what was the matter.
+
+At sight of the others and their burden, however, he had no eyes for
+anything else.
+
+"What have you got there, John Drillot?"
+
+"A dead man."
+
+"Aw, then! That's not Gard."
+
+"It's the only man here, anyway. Pull close up, Philip--"
+
+"Not in my boat, John Drillot!" from Peter.
+
+"We must take this to the Snchal," said John angrily. "If you don't
+want to come you can wait here. If you don't make less noise, I will
+knock you on the head myself," and he jumped down into the boat, and
+took the dead man from Trevna, and laid him carefully in the bows. The
+others jumped in, and Peter, sooner than be knocked on the head or left
+behind, sulkily followed, and sat himself on the extreme edge of the
+stern as far away from the dead man as he could get.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL
+
+
+Nance had crouched all the morning, in the bracken above Brenire, on
+the knife-edge of expectancy. And behind her, at a safe distance,
+crouched Julie Hamon, watching Nance and L'Etat at the same time, as a
+cat in the shade watches a sparrow playing in the sunshine.
+
+"What will be the end? What will be the end?" sighed Nance. They had all
+gone down out of sight, across there, and it was terrible to sit here
+waiting, waiting, waiting for what she feared.
+
+If they had indeed run Gard to his hiding-place, as Philip Vaudin had
+said, there could be but one possible end to it; and she sat, sad-eyed
+and wistful, waiting for them to come up again.
+
+It seemed as if they would never come, and she never took her eyes off
+the rock wall on L'Etat.
+
+And then at last she sprang to her feet. One of them had come up again.
+She could not see which. Then the others appeared, and they seemed to
+stand talking. Then one went off round the slope and another ran after
+him, and the other two went back into the rock wall.
+
+What could they be at? She stood gazing intently.
+
+The two came up again, and--yes--they carried something, or one of them
+did, and they two went off round the corner also. And presently she saw
+the boat coming round, and saw by its head that it was for the Creux.
+She turned and sped across by the same way as yesterday, and Julie
+followed her at a safe distance. And it seemed to Nance, as she hurried
+through the familiar hedge-gaps and lanes and across the headlands, that
+the world had lost its brightness, and that life was desperately hard
+and trying.
+
+On Derrible Head there might be a chance of seeing. She ran up to the
+highest point by the old cannon, just as the boat was coming in under La
+Conche.
+
+And--oh, mon Dieu! mon Dieu! yes--there, in the bows, lay the body of a
+man!--and the tears she had kept back all day broke out now in a fury of
+weeping. She could hardly see, but she ran on, falling at times and
+bruising herself, staggering to her feet again, stumbling blindly
+through a mist of tears.
+
+The boat was drawn up by the time she got there, and a curious crowd
+surrounded it. She pushed through. She must see.
+
+And then the weight fell off her heart, and it was all she could do to
+keep from screaming. For this poor thing, whatever it was, was not
+Stephen Gard and never had been.
+
+She wanted to sing and dance and scream her joy aloud. They had not
+found him.
+
+"What is this, John Drillot?" asked Julie, alongside her, black with
+anger, as she pointed to the body.
+
+"Ma f--a ghost, they say. John Trevna shot him, but he had been dead a
+long time before that, though he was alive last night, for Peter had
+hold of his leg as he ran."
+
+"And where is the other--the one you went for?"
+
+"He's not on L'Etat, anyway, ma fille," and they lifted the body on to a
+piece of sailcloth, and carried it off through the tunnel for the
+Snchal to look into.
+
+So Stephen Gard's hiding-place had proved effective, and they had not
+found him. But, of a certainty, he must be starving, and so away home
+sped Nance, to prepare a parcel of food to take across to him. And
+Julie, her black brows pinched together and her face set in a frown of
+venomous intention, never once let her out of her sight.
+
+It was after midnight when Nance stole across the fields, carrying her
+little parcel and her swimming-bladders, and made her way to Brenire
+point.
+
+It was a still night, with a sky full of stars, and her heart was high
+for the moment, though when her thoughts ran on, in spite of her, it
+fell again. For things could not go on this way for ever, and she saw no
+way out.
+
+She dropped her outer things by a bush, and let herself quietly down the
+rocks and into the water, and the black-faced woman who presently stood
+by that bush snarled curses after her and was filled with unholy
+exultation. For Nance could have only one reason for going across there,
+and on the morrow the men should hear of it, and she would give them no
+rest till Gard was made an end of.
+
+What that thing was that they had brought home, she did not know, but
+they were fools to be satisfied with that when the man they had gone
+after was undoubtedly still on the rock.
+
+So she sat down by Nance's gown and cloak, and revolved schemes for her
+discomfiture and the undoing of Stephen Gard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN
+
+
+Nance found the passage of the Race more trying then ever before. The
+strain of these latter days had been very great, and the thought of
+Bernel tended to unnerve her.
+
+On the other hand, the knowledge that Gard had outwitted the whole
+strength of the Island cheered and braced her, and she struggled
+valiantly through the broken waters till at last she hung panting on the
+black ledge where she was in the habit of landing.
+
+She scrambled up among the boulders and made straight for the great
+wall. She had decided in her own mind that he would probably be
+somewhere in there, possibly afraid to come out, as he would not know if
+the Sark men were still on the rock.
+
+As nearly as she could, she climbed to the place she had seen the men go
+in, and then she cried softly, "Steve! Mr. Gard!" and went on calling,
+as she moved up and down along the base of the wall.
+
+And at last her heart jumped wildly as she heard her name faintly from
+inside the wall, and presently Gard himself came crawling from under the
+big slab and jumped down to her side.
+
+"Nance! You are a good angel to me," and he flung his arms round her and
+kissed her again and again.
+
+"But oh, my dear, I would not have you risk your life for me like
+this."
+
+"It is nothing. I am all right," said Nance, forgetting the weariness
+and dangers of the passage in her joy at finding him alive and well. "I
+have brought you food," and she pushed her little parcel into his hands.
+
+"I hardly dare to eat it when I think what it has cost you."
+
+"That would be foolish, and you must be starving."
+
+"Truly, I am hungry--"
+
+"Eat, then!" and she seized the package and began to tear it open. "It
+will make me still more glad to see you eat."
+
+"Well, then--" and Nance was gladder than ever that she had come.
+
+"Have they all gone back?" he asked anxiously, as he munched.
+
+"They came back this morning, bringing a strange dead man."
+
+"I know. I put him there--"
+
+"Who is he?"
+
+"I found him in a cave inside the rock. He had been left there very many
+years ago with his hands and feet tied. I think he must have been a
+Customs officer of long ago."
+
+Nance shivered, and he felt it.
+
+"You are cold, Nance dear, and I am thinking only of myself;" and he
+took off his jacket and put it over her slim wet shoulders, in spite of
+herself.
+
+"If they have all gone back we could go to the shelter. They may have
+left some of the things there;" and they went along and found the cloak
+and blanket, and he wrapped them about her.
+
+"I found a still larger cave out of the other one, and I was in there
+when they came after me. I had put the dead man in the tunnel, and when
+I came back he was gone; but I did not dare to come out, for I was
+afraid they might be on the watch still."
+
+"The dead man frightened them. I do not think they will come back. They
+are afraid of ghosts."
+
+"I hoped he would scare them. But what is to be the end of it all, Nance
+dear? Things cannot go on this way. Would it be possible to get me a
+boat and let me get over to Guernsey?"
+
+"If you will wait a little time, that is what we must do, if the truth
+does not come out."
+
+"And meanwhile you may be drowned in trying to keep me from starving."
+
+"I shall not be drowned and you shall not starve," she said resolutely.
+
+"I would sooner live on puffins' eggs than have you swim across that
+place. My heart goes right down into my feet when I think of it."
+
+"There is no need. I am all right."
+
+"The Snchal and the Seigneur could not stop them?"
+
+"Mr. Le Pelley is in Guernsey still. The Snchal they would not listen
+to. But the truth will come out if only you will wait."
+
+"If I get away, will you come to me, Nance? And all my life I will give
+to making you happy."
+
+"Yes, I will come. But it will be sore leaving Sark. To a Sark-born
+there is no other place in the world like Sark."
+
+"All my life I will give to making up for it."
+
+"We will see. Now I must go, or it will be daylight before I get back."
+
+"I shall be in misery till I know you are safe."
+
+"It will be nearly light. I will wave to you from Brenire;" and they
+went slowly round to the ledges, and parted with kisses; and in the grey
+morning light he could, for a time, follow the little white figure as it
+slipped bravely through the bristling black waves of the Race.
+
+But presently he could see her no more, and could but wait, full of
+anxiety and many prayers, for the signal that should tell of her safety.
+
+But it did not come, and he grew desperate and full of fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HOW JULIE'S SCHEMES FELL FLAT
+
+
+Nance found the return journey still more trying to her strength, but
+she struggled through, and was devoutly thankful when the slack water
+under Brenire was reached.
+
+She waded ashore almost too weary to stand, and had to cling to the
+rough rocks till she recovered her breath. Then, slowly and heavily, she
+dragged herself up the lower ledges to the little plateau where her
+clothes were.
+
+Julie had sat revolving grim schemes in that black head of hers.
+
+She hated the girl. She hated Gard. She hated Sark and every one in it.
+Why had she ever come into these outer wilds? She would have done with
+it all and get away back to the life that was more to her taste.
+
+But first--yes, mon Dieu, she would leave them something to remember her
+by.
+
+She had not a doubt that Gard was still on L'Etat. Nothing else would
+take this girl across there. The shameless hussy!--to go swimming across
+to see her man with nothing but a white shift on!
+
+She could wound Gard through Nance. She could wound Nance through Gard.
+
+She could wait for the girl as she came up the side of the Head, and
+push her down again or crush her with a lump of rock.
+
+But that might mean reprisals on the part of the Islanders. She had had
+experience of the way in which they resented any ill done to one of
+their number by an outsider. She had no wish to join Gard on his rock.
+
+It would be better to hold the girl up to the scorn and contempt of the
+neighbours; that would punish her. And by setting the men on Gard's
+track again, that would punish him and her too.
+
+And so she restrained the natural violence of her temper, which would
+have run to rocks and bodily injury, and waited in the bracken till
+Nance came stumbling along in the half-light. Then up she sprang, with
+an unexpectedness that for the moment took Nance's breath and set her
+heart pounding with dreadful certainties of ghosts.
+
+"So this is how you go to visit your fancy monsieur on the rock, is it,
+little Nance? And with nothing on but that! Oh shame! What will the
+neighbours say when they hear how you swim across to him, and you will
+not dare deny it?"
+
+But Nance, relieved in her mind on the score of ghosts, and regaining
+her composure with her breath, simply turned her back on her and
+proceeded as if she were not there.
+
+"And he is there still!" screamed Julie, dancing round with rage to keep
+face to face with her. "I was sure of it, though those fools could not
+find him. I'll see that he's found or starved out, b'en sr! Yes, if I
+have to go myself and see to it. As for you--shameless one!--it's the
+last time you'll swim across there, yes indeed!"--and she raved on and
+on, as only an angry woman with a grievance can.
+
+Nance slipped her dress over her head and, under cover of it, dropped
+off her wet undergarment, coolly wrung it out, put on her cloak and
+walked away, Julie raging alongside with wild words that tumbled over
+one another in their haste.
+
+Nance walked to the highest point behind Brenire, and waved her white
+garment a dozen times to let Gard know she was safe, and then turned and
+set off home through the waist-high bracken and the great cushions of
+gorse. And close alongside her went Julie, raging and raving the worse
+for her silence; for there is nothing so galling to an angry soul as to
+find its most venomous shafts fall harmless from the triple mail of
+quiet self-possession.
+
+So they came through the other cottages to La Closerie, but the
+neighbours were all asleep, and those who woke at the sound of her
+violence, turned over and said, "It's only that mad Frenchwoman in one
+of her tantrums. Why, in Heaven's name, can't she go to sleep, like
+other folks?"
+
+Nance went into her own house and quietly closed the door. Julie
+hammered on it with her fists, as she would dearly have liked to hammer
+on Nance's face, and then cursed herself off into her own place,
+slamming the door with such violence as to waken all the fowls and set
+all the pigs grunting in their sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH
+
+
+Gard's eyes, straining into the dimness of the coming dawn through what
+seemed to him a most terrible long time, so packed was it with anxious
+fears, caught at last the white flicker of Nance's signal, and he
+dropped down just where he stood, among the rough stones of the ridge,
+with a grateful sigh.
+
+The strain was telling on him. He felt physically weak and worn. Nance's
+devoted love and courage made his heart beat high, indeed, but his fears
+on her account strung his laxed cords to breaking point, and then left
+them looser than before.
+
+He must get away somehow, if only to prevent this constant and terrible
+risking of her life on his behalf.
+
+He hardly dared to hope that his strategy with the dead man would be of
+any permanent benefit to him, though there was no knowing. Examination
+of the body would show that it had been dead for very many years, but
+his knowledge of the Island superstitions made him doubt if any Sark man
+would willingly spend a night on L'Etat for a very long time to come.
+
+On the other hand, if the result of their discussions confirmed them in
+the belief that he was still there, and if, as he constantly feared,
+they should learn of Nance's comings, and visit upon her the venom they
+harboured for him, they might so invest the rock that escape would be
+impossible.
+
+Meagre living, starvation even, he would suffer rather than live more
+amply at risk of Nance's life, but if the hope of ultimate escape was
+taken from him then he might as well give in at once and have done with
+it.
+
+So he lay there, in the broken rocks of the ridge, and looked grimly on
+life. And the sun rose in a red ball over France, and cleft a shining
+track across the grey face of the waters, and drew up the mists and
+thinned away the clouds, till the great plain of the sea and the great
+dome above were all deep flawless blue, and he saw a thin white curl of
+smoke rise from the miners' cottages on Sark.
+
+He lay there listless, nerveless, careless of life almost, an Ishmael
+with every man's hand against him--worse off than Ishmael, he thought,
+since Ishmael had a desert in which to wander, and he was tied to this
+bare rock.
+
+But there was Nance! There was always Nance. And at thought of her, his
+bruised soul found somewhat of comfort and courage once more.
+
+He felt her quivering in his arms again as he pressed her close. He felt
+again the willing surrender of her sweet wet face. And the thought of it
+thrilled his cold blood and set it coursing through his veins like new
+life. Yes, truly, while there was Nance there was hope.
+
+Perhaps the Snchal and the Vicar would prevail upon them. Perhaps they
+would give it up and leave him alone, and then Nance would find him a
+boat and they would get across to Guernsey. Perhaps, as she kept
+insisting, something would happen to discover the truth.
+
+So he lay, while the sun mounted high and baked him on the bare stones,
+but he did not find it hot.
+
+And then, of a sudden, he stiffened and lay watching anxiously. For
+there, from out the Creux had come a boat--and another, and another, and
+another--four boat-loads of them again!
+
+So they were coming, after all, and his hopes died sudden death.
+
+Well--let them come and take him and have their will. He was not the
+first who had paid the price for what he had not done, and human nature
+must fall to pieces if hung too long on tenterhooks.
+
+He watched them listlessly. He could crawl into his innermost cavern, of
+course, and could hold it against them all till the end of time, which
+in this case would be but a trifling span, for a man must eat to live.
+But what was the use? As well die quick as slow, since there could be
+but one end to it. And then, to his very great surprise, the boats crept
+slowly out of sight round the corner of Coupe Bay, and he lay
+wondering.
+
+What could be the meaning of that? Why had they put in there? Why
+couldn't they come on and finish the matter?
+
+The sea was all deserted again. If he had not just happened to catch
+sight of them stealing across there, he would have felt sure they were
+not coming to-day.
+
+Perhaps they were going to wait there till night, though why on earth
+they should wait there instead of at the Creux, was past his
+comprehension.
+
+And then, after a time, to his amazement, he saw them all go crawling
+back the way they had come. One, two, three, four--yes, they were all
+there, and they crept slowly round Lches point and disappeared, and
+left him gaping.
+
+It was past believing. It was altogether beyond him. He lay, with his
+eyes glued to the point round which they had gone, stupid with the
+wonder of it.
+
+They had actually given it up--for to-day, at least, and gone back! He
+cudgelled his brains for the meaning of it all, till they grew dull and
+weary with futile thinking.
+
+Perhaps Nance and the Vicar and the Snchal had prevailed after all!
+Perhaps something had turned up at last to prove to the Sark men their
+misjudgment! Perhaps--well, any way, it was good to be left alone.
+
+He lay there, laxed with the over-strain of all this upsetting, but
+rejoicing placidly in this one more day of life.
+
+He felt like one granted a day's respite as he stands on the scaffold
+with the rope round his neck.
+
+Never had the sun shone so brightly. Never had the silver sea danced so
+merrily. It might be the last he would see of them.
+
+And the sun wheeled on towards Guernsey, and made his deliberate
+preparations for a setting beyond the ordinary; for the sun, you must
+know, takes a very special pride in showing the great cliffs of Sark
+what he can do in the way of transformation scenes and most transcendent
+colouring.
+
+And Stephen Gard lay there under the ridge on L'Etat, with the wonder
+and beauty of it all in his face and in his heart, and said to himself
+that it was probably the last sunset he would ever see, and he was glad
+to have seen it at its best.
+
+He had a vague idea that heaven would be something like that--tenderly
+soft and beautiful, and glowing with radiances of unearthly splendour,
+which whispered to weary hearts of the peace and joy that lay beyond,
+and gently called them home to rest.
+
+His theology was, without doubt, of the most elemental and objective,
+and would not have carried him any great lengths in these days; but, for
+the time being, at all events, it lifted its possessor to a plane of
+thought above his usual, and tended to quietness and peace of mind.
+
+The sky right away into the east was glowing softly with the wonders of
+the sunset, and there the delicate tones changed almost momentarily. As
+his eye followed the tender grace of their transformations, with a
+delight which he could neither have expressed nor explained, it once
+more lighted suddenly upon that which he had been looking for so
+anxiously all day long, and brought him to earth like a broken bird.
+
+Once more a boat had come round the point of Les Lches, and this time
+it was speeding towards him as fast as a sail that was as flat almost as
+a board, and looked to him no more than a thin white cone, could bring
+it.
+
+So they were coming, after all, and this wonderful sunset might be his
+last indeed;--and all the tender beauty of the fleecy clouds thinned and
+paled, and the glory faded as though it had all been but a glorious
+bubble, and that sharp point of white, speeding across the darkening
+sea, had pricked it.
+
+But why on earth were they coming now? They had missed the ebb, and it
+was hours yet to next half-ebb, and they could not hope to land. The
+white waves were boiling all along the ledges, and the sea for twenty
+feet out was a surging dapple of foam laced with seething white bubbles.
+It would be more than any man's life was worth to try and get ashore on
+L'Etat for many an hour yet.
+
+And there was only one boat! What had become of all the others--of the
+threatened invasion in force? He sat and watched it in gloomy wonder.
+
+The boat came racing on. As she cleared Brenire her white sail turned
+to red gold, and the sea below grew purple. There was something white in
+her bows. He got up heavily, doggedly, forced to it against his will,
+and walked along the ridge to the eastern point which commanded the
+landing-place on that side.
+
+There was, without doubt, something white in the bows of the boat, and
+as he stood gazing at it, it took, to his dazed imagination, the strange
+form of Nance waving joyful hands to him.
+
+He drew his hands across his eyes. The storm had been sore on them.
+
+The bristling waves of the Race burst in sheets of spray under the
+glancing bows, but the white spray and the white figure and the pointed
+white sail were all ablaze in the last rays of the sun, and they all
+swam before him as if his head was going round.
+
+She came round Quette d'Amont with a fine sweep, like one bound on
+business of which she had no reason to be ashamed, and dropped her sail
+and lay in the shelter of the rock.
+
+And the white figure in the bows was truly Nance, and she was standing
+and waving and calling to him. And the grey-headed man aft was surely
+Philip Guille, the Snchal, and the faces of the rest were all
+friendly.
+
+He stumbled hastily down to the lower ledges, but the rush and the roar
+there drowned their voices.
+
+What were they trying to tell him? What could they want of him?
+
+The Snchal was standing, hands to mouth, waiting his chance. The
+restless waters below drew back for a moment to gather for a leap, and
+the big voice came booming across the tumult--
+
+"Jump! We'll pick you up! All is well!"
+
+And Gard, without a moment's hesitation, sprang out into the marbled
+foam, and struck out for the boat.
+
+They were all friendly hands that gripped him and hauled him over the
+side, and patted him on the back to get the water out of him--all
+friendly faces that were turned to him; and the dearest face of all,
+lighted with a heavenly gladness, was to him as the face of an angel.
+
+"Tell me!" he gasped, still all astream, wits and clothes alike. And it
+was the Snchal who told him.
+
+"Peter Mauger was killed last night, at the same place as Tom Hamon, and
+in the same way. So these hot-blooded thickheads are convinced at last
+that it wasn't your work."
+
+"Peter Mauger!" he said, gazing vaguely at them all. "But who--"
+
+"We haven't found out yet. But even the thickest of the thickheads can't
+put it down to you"--and the thickheads present grinned in friendly
+fashion, and they ran up the sail with a will, and turned her nose, and
+went racing back to the Creux quicker than they had come.
+
+And Gard sat still with his hand in Nance's two, feeling very weak and
+shaky, and looked vaguely back at L'Etat as it faded and dwindled into a
+dim black triangle of rock.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L'ETAT
+
+
+This is what had happened.
+
+Since Tom Hamon's death, his friend Peter and his widow Julie had, as we
+know, found themselves drawn together by a common detestation of Stephen
+Gard and a common desire for his extinction.
+
+For Peter considered he had been supplanted in Nance's regards, though
+Nance had never regarded him as anything but a nuisance and a boor. And
+Julie considered herself scorned and slighted, though Gard had never
+considered her save as Tom Hamon's wife.
+
+It was they who had stirred up the Sark men against Gard, and they
+missed no opportunity of keeping their ill brew on the boil.
+
+Their offensive alliance brought them much together. Peter was often at
+La Closerie. He was like wax in the hands of the fiery Frenchwoman, and
+she moulded him to her will. The neighbours might have begun to talk,
+but that it was obvious to all that the only bond between them at
+present was their ill-will towards Gard, and in that feeling many shared
+and found nothing strange in Tom's wife and Tom's chief friend joining
+hands to make some one pay for his death.
+
+In time, if it had gone on, the neighbours would doubtless have had
+plenty to say on the subject, for old wives' tongues rattled fast of a
+winter's evening, when they all gathered in this house or that, and sat
+on the sides of the green bed with their feet in the dry fern inside,
+and the oil crasset hanging down in the midst, and plied their needles
+and their tongues and wits all at once, and wrought scandalously good
+guernseys and stockings in spite of it all.
+
+But these were summer evenings yet, and the _veilles_ had not begun, and
+reputations were out at grass till the time came round for their
+inspection and judgment.
+
+And so, when Peter Mauger never reached home the night before this day
+of which we are telling, his old housekeeper, whatever she thought about
+it at the time, only said afterwards that she supposed he had stopped
+somewhere and would turn up all right in the morning, though she
+admitted that he was not in the habit of staying out of a night. Anyway,
+she was an old woman and all alone, and she was not going out to look
+for him at that time of night.
+
+The morning surprised her by his continued absence. Never in his life,
+so far as she knew, had he behaved like this before. Vituperation of him
+gave place to anxiety about him.
+
+She questioned the neighbours. All they knew was that he had been seen
+going down to Little Sark soon after sunset.
+
+"That black Frenchwoman of Tom Hamon's twists him round her finger,"
+said one.
+
+"You tie him up, Mrs. Guille," chuckled another, "or sure as beans
+she'll steal him from you and leave you in the cold."
+
+And then, who should they see coming striding along the road but Madame
+Julie herself, and evidently in a hurry;--in a state of red-hot
+excitement, too, as she drew near. And they waited, hands on hips, to
+hear what she was up to now.
+
+"Where's Peter?" she demanded, a long way in advance. "Tell him I want
+him. That man Gard is still on L'Etat, though those fools who went
+across for him couldn't find him. Cr nom! What are you all staring at,
+then?"
+
+"Where's our Peter?" demanded Mrs. Guille shrilly, with the strident
+note of fear in her voice, as she becked and bobbed towards the
+Frenchwoman like an aged cormorant.
+
+"Peter? I'm asking you. I want him. Where is he?"
+
+"He went to Little Sark last night, and he's never come home."
+
+"Never come home? Why, what's taken him? If he'd been with me last night
+he'd have seen something! That Nance Hamon swam across to the rock with
+nothing on but her shift to take food to Gard, and I caught her at
+it--the shameless hussy!"
+
+"Maybe Peter's heard of it an' gone across with 'em again," suggested
+one. "He was terrible hot against Gard."
+
+"And reason he had to be hot against him," cried Julie. "Who'll find out
+for me where he's got to, and when they're going out after Gard? I would
+go too and see the end of him."
+
+A couple of burly husbands came rolling round the corner towards their
+breakfasts and caught her words.
+
+"Doubt you'll have to go alone, mistress," said one, phlegmatically.
+"There's ghosts on L'Etat, they do say, though sure the one John
+Drillot brought across was dead enough."
+
+"If he's there," said the other, plumbing Julie's feelings, "he's safe
+as a pig in a pen."
+
+"Where's our Peter?" demanded Mrs. Guille.
+
+"Peter? I d'n know. What's come of him?" and they stared blankly at her.
+
+"He went to Little Sark last night to see her"--with a beck of distaste
+towards Julie--"and he's never come home."
+
+The men looked from the speaker to Julie, as though the next word
+necessarily lay with her.
+
+"I never set eyes on him. I was out after that girl. I came here to tell
+him about Gard. Has he been to the harbour?"
+
+"No, he hasn't. We are from there now."
+
+"He's maybe with some of them arranging about going to L'Etat," said
+Julie. "I'll go and find out;" and she set off along the road past the
+windmill.
+
+The morning passed in fruitless enquiries. She asked this one and that,
+every one she could think of, if they had seen Peter, and was met
+everywhere with meaning grins and point-blank denials. Apparently no one
+had set eyes on Peter, and every one seemed to imply that she ought io
+know more about him than any one else.
+
+It was past mid-day before she was back at Vauroque, but Mrs. Guilie was
+still standing in the doorway of Peter's empty house as if she had been
+looking out for news of him ever since.
+
+"Eh b'en? Have you found him?" she cried.
+
+"Not a finger of him!" snapped Julie savagely, tired out with her
+fruitless labours.
+
+"Then he's come to some ill, b s. And if he has--ma f, it's
+you!--it's you!" The old lady's scream of denunciation choked itself
+with its own excess, and the neighbours came running out to learn the
+news.
+
+Stolid minds travel in grooves, and old Mrs. Guille's had been groping
+along possibilities of all kinds, clinging at the same time to the hope
+that Peter would still turn up all right.
+
+Now that her hope was shattered her mind dropped naturally into a grim
+groove, along which it had taken a tentative trip during the morning and
+had recoiled from with a shudder.
+
+The last time Mrs. Tom Hamon had come seeking a man who was missing,
+that man had been found under the Coupe, and so old Mrs. Guille set oft
+for the Coupe as fast as her old legs and her want of breath and
+general agitation would let her.
+
+"Nom de Dieu! What--?" began Julie, with twisted black brows, and then
+drifted on with the rest in Mrs. Guille's wake--all except one or two
+housewives whose men were due for dinner, and knew they must be fed
+whatever had come to Peter Mauger.
+
+"Gaderabotin!" said one of these as he came up, and stood scratching his
+head and gazing down the road after them. "What's taken them all?"
+
+"Think because they found Tom Hamon there, they'll find Peter too,"
+guffawed another, and they rolled on into their homes, chuckling at the
+simplicity of women and children.
+
+Arrived at the Coupe, the little mob of sensation-seekers peered
+fearfully about. One small boy, cleverer or more groovy-minded than the
+rest, struck off along the headland to the left. It was from there
+Charles Guille had seen Tom Hamon. Perhaps from there he would see
+something, too.
+
+And no sooner was he there, where he could see to the foot of the cliffs
+in Coupe Bay, than he commenced to dance and wave his arms like a mad
+thing, because the words he wanted to shout choked him tight so that he
+could hardly breathe.
+
+They streamed out along the cliff and huddled there, struck chill with
+fright in spite of the blazing sun.
+
+For there, under the cliff, in the same spot as they found Tom Hamon,
+lay another dark, huddled figure, and they knew it must be Peter.
+
+The finding of Tom had filled them with anger against Gard. The finding
+of Peter filled them with fear.
+
+Gard had sufficed as explanation and scapegoat for Tom's death, and as
+vent for their feelings. But what of Peter's?
+
+It had not been Gard, then? And if not Gard, who?
+
+For, whoever it was, he was still at large, and any of them might be the
+next.
+
+There were new terrors in the eyes that gazed so wildly on the narrow
+white path and the towering pinnacles of the Coupe. They had been
+familiar with it all, all their lives, but suddenly it had become
+strange to them.
+
+If grisly Death, all bones and scythe, had come stalking along it before
+their eyes at that moment, they would have shrieked, no doubt, and
+fallen flat, but he would have no more than answered to their feelings
+and fulfilled their expectations.
+
+As it was, when the Seigneur's big white stallion stuck his head over
+the green dyke behind them, and gave a shrill neigh at the unexpected
+sight of so many people in a field which was usually occupied only by
+Charles Guille's two mild-eyed cows and their calves, the women screamed
+and the children lied.
+
+"Man doux! but I thought it was the devil himself," said old Mrs.
+Guille. "Oui-gia!" and shook an angry fist at him.
+
+But the discoverer of the body was already away along the road to
+Vauroque, covering the ground like a little incarnation of ill-news.
+
+The exertion of running cleared away the choking, if it took his breath.
+He shouted as he drew near the houses.
+
+"Ah, bah!" growled one of the diners inside. "What's to do now, then?"
+
+"He's there ... Peter ... under Coupe ... Where Tom Hamon...." panted
+the news-bearer as he tore past to his own home. And the rest of
+Vauroque emptied itself into the road and stood looking along it, as the
+stragglers came up, white-faced and wild-eyed.
+
+"He's there," confirmed one woman, twisting up her loosened hair. "And
+just same place where Tom Hamon lay."
+
+"'Tweren't Gard killed _him_, then," said one of the diners, chewing
+over that thought with his last mouthful.
+
+"Nor Tom neither, then, maybe," said another.
+
+"We've bin on wrong tack, then;" and they went off round the corner at a
+speed their build would hardly have credited them with.
+
+One to the Snchal and one to the Doctor, and then to the Creux, both
+telling the news as they went. So that when the officials came hurrying
+through the tunnel the greater part of the Island was waiting for them
+on the shingle, except those who preferred the wider view from the
+cliff above.
+
+Some of the men had been for pulling across at once, but they were
+overborne.
+
+"Doctor said he'd like to have seen him afore he was moved last time,"
+said old John de Carteret weightily, and would not let a boat go out
+till the Doctor and the Snchal came.
+
+It was all waiting for them the moment they arrived, however, and they
+stepped in and swung away round Les Lches, and three other boats
+followed them so closely that it looked almost like a gruesome race who
+should get there first.
+
+There was little talking in any of the boats, but there was some solid
+hard thinking, in a mazed kind of way.
+
+Until they knew more of the facts, indeed, they scarce knew what to
+think yet. But more than one of them remembered disturbedly how they had
+gone in force two days before to fetch Gard off his lonely rock, or to
+make an end of him there; and here they were going in force on a very
+different errand--an errand which, they could not help seeing, would
+bring him off his rock in a very different way, if this present matter
+was what it looked as if it might be.
+
+And the Doctor was not long in giving them the facts, when they had run
+up on to the shingle, and then crunched through it to the place where
+Peter's body lay under the steep black cliff--in the exact spot where
+Tom Hamon's had lain just eighteen days before.
+
+But that it was undoubtedly Peter's face and body, those who had come
+after Tom the last time might have thought they were going through their
+previous experience over again. It was all so like.
+
+They all stood round in a dark, silent group while the Doctor carefully
+examined the body, and the Snchal looked on with stern and troubled
+face.
+
+"It is most extraordinary," said the Doctor, straightening up from his
+task at last, and his face, too, was knitted with perplexity, but had
+something else in it besides. "This man has been done to death in
+exactly the same way as Hamon"--a rustle of surprise shook the group of
+silent onlookers. "The head has been beaten in just as Hamon's was--with
+some blunt rounded tool, I should say. These other wounds and contusions
+are the results of his fall down the cliff. He has been dead at least
+eight hours. Lift him carefully, men. We can do nothing more
+here--unless by chance the one who did it flung his weapon after him,
+and we could find it."
+
+They scattered, and searched the whole dark bay minutely, but found
+nothing. Then with rough gentleness they bore the body to the boat and
+laid it under the thwarts.
+
+"Men!" said the Snchal weightily, as they were just about to climb
+back into their boats. "This matter brings another matter home to all
+our hearts. You have been persecuting another man under the belief that
+he killed Tom Hamon. From what some of us knew of Mr. Gard, we were
+certain he could have had no hand in it. This, I take it, proves it?" He
+looked at the Doctor.
+
+"Undoubtedly!" nodded the Doctor. "The man who killed this one killed
+the other, and that man could not be Stephen Gard, for he is on L'Etat."
+
+"It's God's mercy that you haven't Mr. Gard's blood on your heads. Some
+of you, I know, have done your best that way. Suppose you had killed
+him that other night--what would you have felt as you stood here to-day?
+Take that thought home with you, and may God keep you from like
+misjudgment in the future!"
+
+And they had not a word to say for themselves, but crawled silently
+aboard, and in silence pulled back to Creux Harbour.
+
+Once only old John de Carteret spoke to the Snchal, soon after they
+had started.
+
+"One of them"--nodding over at the boats behind--"could go to the rock
+and bring him off," he suggested.
+
+"I thought of that, but there's one I want to go with me. She'll be down
+at the Creux, I expect, and we'll go as soon as we've disposed of this."
+
+There was a very different feeling visible in the silent crowd that
+awaited them at the harbour this time from that manifested on the last
+occasion, Then, it was a sympathetic anger that united them all in a
+common feeling against the perpetrator of the deed. Now--even before the
+whisper had run round that Peter Mauger had been done to death in the
+same way as Tom Hamon--fear was among them, and doubt. Fear of they knew
+not exactly what, and doubt of they knew not whom.
+
+But here were two men done to death in their midst, and the man on whom
+all their suspicions had settled in the first case could not possibly
+have had anything to do with the second, and so had most likely had
+nothing to do with either--in which case the man who had was still at
+large among them, and no man's life was safe, much less any woman's or
+child's.
+
+Their thoughts did not run, perhaps, quite so clearly as that, but that
+was the result of it all, and their faces showed it. Furthermore, every
+man and woman there began at once to cast about in his and her mind for
+the possible murderer, and men looked at the neighbours whom they had
+known all their lives, with lurking suspicions in their eyes and the
+consideration of strange possibilities in their minds.
+
+Tom Hamon's death had bound them closer together; Peter Mauger's set
+them all apart. The strange dead man up in the school-house added to
+their discomfort.
+
+It was not until the hastily-constructed litter with its gruesome burden
+had been sent off to the Boys' School, in charge of the constables and
+the Doctor, that the Snchal caught sight of Nance's eager white face
+and anxious eyes, in the crowd that lingered still in answer to another
+whisper that had flown round.
+
+If they were at once pig-headed and hot-blooded and suspicious, they
+were also warm-hearted and willing to atone for a mistake--once they
+were sure of it.
+
+No crowd followed Peter on his last journey but one, though the whole
+Island had swarmed after Tom Hamon.
+
+They wanted to see the man who would have been killed for killing Tom,
+though he didn't do it, but for--circumstances, and his own pluck and
+endurance.
+
+And when the Snchal beckoned to one of the circumstances, and put his
+hand on her slim shoulder, and said--
+
+"We are going for him. I thought you would like to come too," her face
+went rosy with gratitude, and the brave little hands clasped up on to
+her breast, as she murmured--
+
+"Oh, M. le Snchal!" and choked at anything more.
+
+Those nearest gave her rough words of encouragement.
+
+"Cheer up, Nance! You'll soon have him back!"
+
+"That's a brave garche! Don't cry about it now!"
+
+"We'll make it up to him, lass. We'll all come and dance at the
+wedding"--and so on.
+
+But the Snchal patted her on the shoulder and asked--
+
+"And where is your brother? He should come, too. I hear you have both
+been in this matter."
+
+"Ah, monsieur!" she said, with brimming eyes and a pathetic little lift
+and fall of the hand, which expressed far more than she could put into
+words. "We fear ... we fear he is drowned. He swam out to the rock taking
+food, and ... and ... we have not seen him since;" and her hand was over
+her face and the tears streaming through.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Another!" said the Snchal, aghast. "When, child? When was
+this?"
+
+"The night after the storm, monsieur."
+
+"Perhaps he is there, on the rock."
+
+"No, monsieur. I was over there myself last night. He never got there,
+and we fear he must be drowned."
+
+"You were over there, child? Why, how did you get across?"
+
+"I swam, monsieur;" and he stared at her in amazement.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! You make up for some of the others," he said
+bluntly. "Come then, and we will make sure of this one, anyhow;" and he
+led the way to John de Carteret's boat, and all the people gave them a
+cheer as they pulled out of the harbour to catch the breeze off the
+Lches.
+
+Then the crowd waited for their return, and talked by snatches of all
+these strange happenings, and discussed and discounted the chances of
+Bernel's being still alive.
+
+"For, see you, the Race! And that was the first night after the storm,
+and it would be running like the deuce, bidemme!" "It's best not to know
+how to swim if it leads you to do things like that, oui-gia!" "When a
+man's time comes, he cuts his cleft in the water, whether he can swim or
+not, crais b'en!" "And that slip of a Nance had been over there last
+night--par mad, some folks have the courage!" "All the same, it was
+madness--"
+
+But behind all the broken chatter, in every mind was the grim question,
+"Who is it, then, that is doing these things amongst us?" And there was
+a feeling of mighty discomfort abroad.
+
+All the same, they cheered vigorously as the boat came speeding back,
+and they saw Gard sitting between Nance and the Snchal, and crowded
+round as it ran up the shingle, and would have lifted him out and
+carried him shoulder-high through the tunnel and up the road, if he
+would have had it.
+
+They saw how his imprisonment on the rock--"Ma f, think of it!--all
+through that storm, too!"--had told upon him. His cheeks were hollow,
+and his eyes sunken, and he looked very weary--"and, man doux, no
+wonder, after eighteen days on L'Etat!"--though their friendly shouts
+had put a touch of colour in his face and a spark in his eyes for the
+moment.
+
+"Now, away home, all of you!" ordered the Snchal. "We've all had
+enough to think about for one day. To-morrow we will see what is to be
+done."
+
+"Too much!" croaked one old crone, who had something of a reputation
+among her neighbours. "What I want to know is--who killed Peter Mauger?"
+
+And that was the question that occupied most minds in Sark that night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL
+
+
+The Doctor insisted on taking care of Gard. He took him into his own
+house at Dixcart, and began at once a course of treatment based on
+common-sense and the then most scientific attainment, and calculated to
+repair the waste of the Rock and build him up anew in the shortest time
+compatible with an efficient and permanent cure.
+
+Even when Gard felt quite himself again and would have returned to his
+work, the genial autocrat would not hear of it.
+
+"Just you stop here, my boy," he ordered. "An experience such as you
+have had needs some getting over. You can stand a good rest and some
+fattening up, and those ---- mines must wait."
+
+Meanwhile, the Island was in a smoulder of suspicion and superstition.
+
+No one had yet ventured openly to point the finger at any reasonably
+possible doer of deeds so dark. Behind carefully closed doors of a
+night, indeed, here and there a whisper suggested that the Frenchwoman
+might be at the bottom of it all. But the mistake that had already been
+made, and the consequences that came so terribly near to completing it
+beyond repair, made them all cautious of open speech or action.
+
+Gard's story explained the mystery of the dead stranger and relieved the
+public mind to that extent.
+
+The Snchal was disposed to agree with his views on the matter.
+
+"I never heard of those caves on L'Etat," he said musingly, as they sat
+over their pipes one night; "and I'm sure no one else knew of them. But
+there was much free-trading round here in the old times, and I've no
+doubt many a Customs man disappeared and was never heard of again, just
+like this one. All the Islands felt very sore about the new regulations,
+and our people stick at nothing when their blood is up."
+
+"They do not," said Gard feelingly.
+
+"I'd like to get into that inner cave," said the Doctor longingly.
+
+"You couldn't," said Gard, looking at his size and girth. "It's a mighty
+tight squeeze under the slab, and that tunnel would beat you. Unless
+you've been brought up to that kind of thing, you couldn't stand it. It
+would give you nightmares for the rest of your life."
+
+"That's a rare lass, that little Nance," said the Snchal. "There's
+some good in Sark after all, Mr. Gard."
+
+"She was an angel to me," said Gard with feeling. "If it had not been
+for her, I could never have held out. Not for what she brought me, but
+the fact that she came. But it was terrible to me to think of her coming
+through that Race. I begged her not to, but she would have her way.
+Three times she risked her life for me--"
+
+"Three times!" said the Snchal. "Ma f, but she's a garche to be proud
+of!"
+
+"Ay, and to be more than proud of," said Gard. "She has given me my
+life, and I will give it all to making her happy."
+
+"I wouldn't swim across to L'Etat for any woman in the world," said the
+Doctor. "Because, in the first place, I couldn't. She must have nerves
+of steel, to say nothing of muscles. In the dark, too! And you wouldn't
+think it to look at her."
+
+"It needed more than nerves or muscles," said Gard quietly.
+
+Not a man among the Islanders--much less a woman--would go anywhere near
+the Coupe after dark. Even Nance confessed to a preference for daylight
+passages. And Gard, when he went down into Little Sark for a walk, as
+part of his cure, could not repress a cold shiver whenever he passed the
+fatal spot where two men had gone over to their deaths.
+
+All the old wives' tales were dug up and passed along, growing as they
+went. Little eyes and mouths grew permanently rounded with horrors, and
+the ground was thoroughly well spaded and planted with sturdy shoots
+warranted to yield a noisome harvest of superstition for generations to
+come.
+
+The occupants of Clos Bourel and Plaisance carefully locked their doors
+of a night now.
+
+Old Mrs. Carr at Plaisance vowed she had heard the White Horses go
+past, on the nights before Tom Hamon and Peter were found. And every one
+knew that when the ghostly horses were heard, some one was going to die.
+But as she had said nothing about it before, her contribution to the
+general uneasiness was received with respect before her face but with
+open doubt behind her back.
+
+Old Nikki Never-mind-his-name--lest his descendants, if he had any,
+take umbrage at the matter--swore that he had not only seen the ghostly
+steed pass Vauroque in the dead of night, but that it bore a rider whose
+head was carried carefully in his right hand. Unfortunately, the
+headless one passed so quickly that Nikki said he could not distinguish
+his features--having looked for them first in the wrong place--and so he
+could not say for certain who the next to die would be; but from the
+knowing wag of his head the neighbours were of opinion that he knew more
+than he chose to tell, and he gained quite a reputation thereby.
+
+But, even here again, doubts were cast upon the matter by some,
+especially those who were acquainted with the old gentleman's
+proclivities towards raw spirits of the material kind that paid the
+lightest of duties in Guernsey.
+
+All these and very many similar matters were discussed by the
+Doctor--who disturbed their minds with horrific accounts of homicidal
+mania taking possession of apparently innocent souls--and the Snchal
+and the Vicar and Stephen Gard, as they sat over their pipes of an
+evening in the Doctor's house. But chiefly the great and troublesome
+question of "Who?"
+
+They were all of one mind that the matter must be looked into. The
+feeling that a danger was loose in the Island, and might at any moment
+fall upon any man, woman, or child, was past endurance. The suspicion
+that It might be any one of those they met every day was insufferable.
+
+The only difficulty was to decide how to look into it--what to do, and
+how.
+
+Each day they feared to hear of some new outrage. But until the
+perpetrator was discovered they could do nothing towards his
+suppression. And, on the other hand, it looked as though they could do
+nothing towards his discovery until he perpetrated some new outrage.
+
+It was Gard who suggested they should watch the Coupe every night,
+armed, and unknown to any but themselves.
+
+And, after much discussion, following out his idea, he and the Snchal
+and the Doctor, who could bowl over a rabbit as well as any of them, lay
+in the heather, on the common above the cutting on the Little Sark side,
+for many nights, guns in hand, and eyes and ears on the strain, but saw
+and heard nothing.
+
+One night, indeed, when there was a high wind, the Doctor's marrow
+crawled in his backbone at the sound of groanings and moanings and most
+dolorous cries for help, coming up out of black Coupe Bay, where they
+had picked up Tom Hamon's and Peter Mauger's dead bodies.
+
+He sweated cold terrors, for he was on the east headland right above the
+bay, till the Snchal crawled over to him and whispered--
+
+"Hear 'em?"
+
+"Y-y-yes. What the d-d-deuce and all--"
+
+"Knew you'd wonder what it was--"
+
+"W-w-wonder?" chittered the Doctor.
+
+"It's only the wind in the cave at the corner below here--"
+
+"Ah! Thought it must be something of that kind," said the Doctor through
+his teeth, clenched hard to keep them in order. "Don't wonder folks
+fight shy of the Coupe. Sounded uncommonly like spirits. Might give
+some folks the jumps."
+
+On another dark and windy night it was the Snchal's turn to get
+something of a fright.
+
+As he lay in the heather, gun in hand, and well wrapped up in his big
+cloak, with all his faculties concentrated on the wavering pathway
+below, it seemed to him that he heard slow heavy footsteps approaching.
+
+His nerves were strung tight. He craned his head to look down into the
+cutting, when suddenly there came a wild snuffle at the back of his
+neck, and as he jumped up with a startled yelp, one part anger and nine
+parts fright, a horse that had grazed down upon him in the darkness,
+leaped back with a snort and a squeal and disappeared into the night.
+
+"Ga'rabotin! but I thought it was the devil himself," said the Snchal,
+as the others came hurrying up. "Why the deuce can't people tie up their
+horses as they do their cows? I'll bring it up at the next Chef
+Plaids"--which consideration restored his shaken equanimity somewhat,
+and made him feel himself again.
+
+Nothing more came of all their watching, and over a jorum of something
+hot one night, after they had returned to the Doctor's house, it was
+himself who said--
+
+"After all, it stands to reason. Some evil-possessed soul seeks victims,
+and has fixed on the Coupe as the place best fitted for his work. No
+one now goes near the Coupe at night--ergo, no victims; ergo,
+no--er--no manifestations."
+
+"H'm! Very clever!" said the Snchal, through his pipe. "Where does
+that leave us, then?"
+
+"We must have a decoy, of course."
+
+"H'm! You'll not get any Sark man to act as decoy to the devil. Besides,
+they would talk, and that would upset the whole thing."
+
+"What about one of your men, Gard?"
+
+"It's a dangerous game for any man to play, Doctor.... I don't quite see
+how one could ask it of them,"--and after a pause of concentrated
+thought and many slow smoke-puffs--"What would you say to me?" and all
+their eyes settled on him--the Doctor's professionally.
+
+"Surely you have suffered enough in this matter, Mr. Gard," suggested
+the Vicar.
+
+"I would give a good deal, and do a good deal, to get to the bottom of
+it all. Things will never settle down properly till this matter is
+disposed of."
+
+That, of course, was obvious to them all, but all had the same feeling
+that he had already suffered enough in the matter.
+
+But consideration of the Doctor's suggestion in all its aspects only
+served to convince them that, if any such scheme was to be carried out,
+it could only be done among themselves, and its dangers were obvious.
+
+It was not a matter to be lightly undertaken by any man. For whoever
+undertook the rle of decoy, undoubtedly took his life in his hands; and
+they spent many evenings over it.
+
+The Vicar was absolutely against the idea, but had no alternative to
+suggest.
+
+"It is simply playing with death," said he, "and no man has a right to
+do that."
+
+"It means a good deal for the Island if we can clear it up," said the
+Snchal.
+
+But, by degrees, they got to discussion of how it might be done, and
+from that to the actual doing was only a heroic step.
+
+The decoy's head must be well padded, of course, for the heads of both
+victims had been the points of attack.
+
+He must be well armed also, and being forewarned and more, he ought to
+be able to give a certain account of himself.
+
+And then the Doctor and the Snchal would be close at hand and on the
+keen look-out for emergencies.
+
+The Doctor undertook to pad his head with something in the nature of a
+turban under his hat, which, he vowed, would resist the impact of iron
+blows better than metal itself.
+
+"Leave my ears loose, anyway," said Gard. "I'd like at all events to be
+able to hear it coming."
+
+The Snchal had a weapon, part pistol and the rest blunderbuss, which
+had belonged to his father, who had always referred to it affectionately
+as his "dunderbush." It had seen strange doings in its time, but had
+been so long retired from the active list, that he undertook to load and
+fire it himself before he said any more about it.
+
+And he did it next day, with a full charge, in his meadow, with the
+assistance of a gate-post and a long cord, and reported it at night as
+in excellent order, and calculated to blow into smithereens anything
+blowable that stood up before it within the short limit of its range.
+
+At this stage in its proceedings the Vicar reluctantly retired from the
+Committee of Public Safety. He acknowledged the sore need of ending the
+suspicious and superstitious fears which were beginning to affect the
+life of the community in various ways. But he could not see his way to
+any participation in means so dangerous to the life of one of their
+number as those suggested.
+
+He did his best to dissuade Gard from it. He even reminded him of the
+duty he owed to Nance. She had undoubtedly saved his life, and she had a
+premier claim upon his consideration--and so on.
+
+To all of which Gard fully assented.
+
+"But," he said gravely, "we are at a deadlock in this other matter, and
+it is just barely possible that this plan may clear it all up. I can't
+say I'm very sanguine that it will. On the other hand, I really don't
+see that any great harm can come to me. The others probably suffered
+because they were taken unawares. I shall go in the hope of meeting it,
+and shall be ready for it. Unless, Vicar, you really think it is the
+devil or something of that sort?"
+
+"I don't know what to think," said the Vicar solemnly. "I cannot bring
+myself to believe any of our Sark men would do such dreadful things. I
+look at each man I meet and say to myself, 'Now, can it be possible it
+is you?--or you?--or you?'--and it does not seem possible; and yet--"
+
+"And yet some one did it, Vicar," said the Doctor, brusquely, "and
+that's just the trouble. Until we find out _who_ did it, any man may
+have done it, and we all look at everybody else, just as you do, and say
+to ourselves, 'Is it you?--or you?--or you?' Though I'm bound to say
+I've not got the length yet of doubting either you or the Snchal, or
+Gard, and I don't think it's myself. It might quite conceivably be any
+one of us, however, prowling about in our sleep and utterly unconscious
+afterwards of evil-doing."
+
+"A most awful possibility," said the Vicar. "God grant it may turn out
+differently from that."
+
+"You never know what this inexplicable machine may do," said the Doctor,
+tapping his head. "However, we'll hope for the best, and I think the
+Snchal and I ought to be able to see Gard through without any very
+disastrous results. If we succeed, he will deserve better of this Island
+than any man I know--and a sight more than this Island deserves of him.
+I quite understand," he said, as Gard looked quickly up. "And it does
+you credit, my boy; but there are not very many men would do it."
+
+"Well, I'm afraid I must leave you to it," said the Vicar, and did so.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS
+
+
+When it began to be noised abroad that Gard was going to and fro across
+the Coupe, even by night, as if nothing had ever happened there, the
+Sark men shrugged their shoulders and said, "Pardie!--sooner him than
+me--oui-gia!"
+
+It was obviously necessary, however, that this should be known. Even the
+cormorant does not fish where fish are never found.
+
+But when he went to and fro by night, he went mailed--according to the
+Doctor's ideas--and armed--according to the Snchal's; and each night
+the Doctor and the Snchal went quietly down, some time in advance, and
+lay hidden on the headlands with their guns, and never took their eyes
+off him and all his surroundings, while he was in sight.
+
+And Gard, in nearing the Little Sark cutting, always kept carefully to
+the right-hand side of the path, though it was somewhat crumbly there
+and had fallen away down the slope towards Grande Grve. For he had gone
+cautiously over the ground beforehand, and decided that if there was any
+possibility of being knocked overboard unawares, he would prefer to go
+over the much gentler slope on the right, where one might even at a
+pinch find lodgment among the rubble and bushes, than over the sheer
+fall into Coupe Bay, where you could drop a stone almost to the shingle
+below.
+
+Nance knew nothing whatever of the matter, or she would undoubtedly and
+most reasonably have had something to say about it. But knowledge of it
+could only upset her, and so perhaps himself, and he had carefully kept
+it from her. Little Sark, moreover, was more isolated than ever by
+reason of the Coupe mystery, and word of his goings and comings--save
+such as had La Closerie for their object in the day-time--never reached
+her.
+
+They were in grievous sorrow down there over Bernel. Gard still preached
+hope, but each day's delay in its realisation seemed to them to make it
+the more unlikely, and their hearts were very sore.
+
+Julie had gone about her work for days after Gard's return like a bereft
+tigress. Then one morning she locked the door of her house, put the key
+in her pocket, and took the cutter for Guernsey; and none regretted her
+going.
+
+And, as it turned out, though that had not been her intention at the
+time, it was the last Sark was to see of her. Rumours reached them later
+of her marriage to a fellow-countryman, with whom she had gone to
+France. The one thing they knew for certain was that she never came back
+to La Closerie, and after due interval, and consequent on other matters,
+they broke open the door and resumed possession of the house.
+
+Night after night Gard slowly crossed the Coupe, lingered in its
+shadows, went on into Little Sark, and came lingering back.
+
+And night after night the Doctor and the Snchal lay in the heather of
+the headlands, guns in hand, waiting for something that never came, and
+then going stiffly home to one or other of their houses, to lubricate
+their joints and console their disappointment with hot punch and much
+tobacco.
+
+"I'm afraid it's no go," was the Doctor's grudging verdict at last, on
+the fourteenth blank night.
+
+"Let's keep on," said Gard. "Things generally happen just when you don't
+expect them."
+
+"That's so," grunted the Snchal. And they decided to keep on.
+
+Fortunately, the nights were warm and mostly fine. When neither moon nor
+stars afforded him light enough for a safe crossing, he took a lantern,
+so that no one who desired to knock him on the head need miss the chance
+for lack of seeing him.
+
+And when, after their lonely waiting, the watchers in the heather saw
+the lantern come joggling down the steep cutting from Sark, they braced
+themselves for eventualities, and hefted their guns, and pricked up
+their ears and made ready.
+
+And when it had wavered slowly along the path between the great pits of
+darkness on either hand, and had gone joggling on into Little Sark, they
+sank back into their formes with each his own particular exclamation,
+and lay waiting till the light came back.
+
+Times of tension and endurance which told upon them all, but bore most
+heavily on Gard, since the onslaught, when it came, must fall upon him,
+and the absolute ignorance as to how and when and whence it might come,
+kept every nerve within him strung like a fiddle-string.
+
+It was the eeriest experience he had ever had, that nightly trip across
+the Coupe;--bad enough when moon or stars afforded him vague and
+distorted glimpses of his ghostly surroundings:--ten times worse when
+the flicker of his lantern barely kept him to the path, and the broken
+gleams ran over the rugged edges and tumbled into the black gulfs at the
+sides;--when every starting shadow might be a murderer leaping out upon
+him, every foot of the walling darkness the murderer's cover, and every
+step he took a step towards death.
+
+A trip, I assure you, that not many men would have been capable of. For
+it did not by any means end with the Coupe. When he got to bed of a
+night, and fell asleep at last, he was still crossing the Coupe with
+his joggling lantern all night long, and suffered things in dreams
+compared with which even his actual experiences were but holiday jaunts.
+
+And at times these grisly imaginings came back upon him as he actually
+walked the narrow path next night, and it was all he could do to keep
+his head and not fling the lantern into the depths of the pit and follow
+it.
+
+They were all getting exceedingly weary of the whole business; indeed,
+it was getting on all their nerves in a way which threatened
+consequences, when, mercifully, the end came--suddenly, not at all as
+they had looked for it, quite outside all their expectation.
+
+It was one of the shrouded nights. The Doctor and the Snchal, flat in
+the heather, saw the lantern issue from the Sark cutting and come
+joggling towards them. They heard a snort of surprise behind them, but
+gave it no special heed. The Snchal grinned briefly at remembrance of
+his fright when the beast snuffled down his neck that other night.
+
+Then, this is what happened.
+
+Gard--his lantern in his left hand, and the Snchal's father's
+"dunderbush" in his right--his eyes pinching spooks out of every inch of
+the black wall about him, and every string at its tightest--had reached
+the crumbly bit of path near the Little Sark side, when, like a clap of
+thunder out of a blue sky, the black silence of the cutting vomited
+uproar--the wild clang and beat of what sounded, in that hollow space,
+like the trampling of a thousand dancing hoofs--shrill neighings and
+whinnyings and screamings, all blended into an indescribable and
+blood-curdling clamour that gashed the night like an outrage.
+
+And then, before even he had time to wonder, the great white stallion
+was upon him--dancing on its hind legs on that narrow path like an
+acrobat, towering above him to twice his own height, striking savagely
+down at him with its great front feet, screaming like a fiend.
+
+He had no time to think. His left arm and the lantern went up with the
+natural instinct of defence. Just one glimpse he got--and never forgot
+it--of vicious white eyes and teeth, flapping red nostrils, wild-flying
+hair, and huge pawing feet descending on him, with the dirty white hair
+splaying out all round them as they came down. Then his right hand went
+up also, and he fired full into all these things. The lantern and the
+blunderbuss went spinning into the gulf, the great feet beat him to the
+ground, and rose and jabbed down at him with all the vicious might that
+lay behind them--the savage white muzzle shrilling its blood-curdling
+screams of triumph all the while--and all this in the space of a second.
+"Good God!" cried the Doctor, craning over the eastern bank of the
+cutting, but fearful of firing into the turmoil lest he should hit Gard,
+so dropped himself bodily over on to the path.
+
+Then the Snchal's Sark eyes saw the great white head, with its flying
+veil of hair, as it towered up for another vicious jab at the fallen
+man, and he emptied both barrels of his gun into it.
+
+A wild scream that shrilled along the night and woke Plaisance and Clos
+Bourel and Vauroque, and the great white devil reared to his fullest
+with wildly beating forefeet, toppled over backwards, and disappeared
+with one hideous thud and a final crash on the shingle of Coupe Bay.
+
+It was worse than they had ever dreamed--as bad almost as some of Gard's
+own nightmares.
+
+"Good God! Good God! Good God!" babbled the Doctor, as he groped in the
+dark for what might be left of their unfortunate decoy.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" gasped the Snchal, with catching
+breath and shaking legs, as he ran round to join him in the search.
+
+But there was no sign of Gard.
+
+"Run, man!--Plaisance--a light!" jerked the Snchal.
+
+"I can't see," groaned the Doctor.
+
+"I'll go!" and he set off at the best pace his years and his shaking
+legs could compass.
+
+Plaisance was standing at its doors, trembling still at that fearsome
+cry, and wondering if it was, perchance, the last trump.
+
+At sight of the panting figure coming up from the Coupe, it scuttled
+and banged the doors tight. "Open! Open, you fools!" cried the
+Snchal, and flung himself against the first door, while those inside,
+under the sure belief that they were keeping out the devil, heaped
+themselves against it to prevent him.
+
+"Dolts! Idiots! Fools!" he cried. "It's me--the Snchal. I want your
+help!" and at that a man peeped out from the next door to make sure this
+was not just another wile of the devil.
+
+"A lantern! Quick!" ordered the Snchal. "And a blanket and a rope--and
+get ready a bed for a wounded man. Come you with me and help!"
+
+"Mais, mon Gyu----!" began the man.
+
+"We've killed the devil, and the Doctor's down there with him----"
+
+"But we don't want him here, M. le Snchal," quavered a woman's voice,
+in terror.
+
+"Fools! It's Mr. Gard that is hurt. The devil's down in Coupe Bay, and
+we've killed him for you."
+
+"Ah then, Gyu marchi! Here's a blanket--and the lantern--rope's in barn.
+You get a bed ready," to the woman, and they went off towards the
+Coupe.
+
+And mighty glad the Doctor was to see them coming. He had begun to fear
+the Snchal had lost his head and made a bolt for home.
+
+He had been sitting under the bank of the cutting as the surest way of
+keeping out of one or other of the black gulfs. But the interval had
+given him time to recover himself, and he jumped up at once, all ready
+for business, and hailed them.
+
+"Down this side, I think," he said, and they swung the lantern over the
+Grande Grve slope below the bit of crumbly pathway.
+
+"Le velas!" said Thomas Carr, and handed the lantern to the Snchal,
+and let himself heavily over the side, and groped his way down to the
+motionless form among the bramble bushes.
+
+"Pardie, he is dead, I do think!" as he bent over it.
+
+"Let's see!" said the Doctor's quick voice at his elbow. "Hand down the
+light;" and the Snchal waited above in grievous anxiety.
+
+"Not dead," said the Doctor at last. "Stunned and badly knocked about.
+He'll come round. Now, how are we to get him up?"
+
+"Here's a blanket--and a rope."
+
+"Good! The blanket!... So!... Now--gently, my man!... Got it, Snchal?
+Right! Ease him down on to the path. That's right! Give me a hand, will
+you? My legs aren't as limber as they used to be. Now we'll get him on
+to a bed and see what the damage is;" and they set off slowly for
+Plaisance.
+
+"My God, Snchal! That passed belief! To think of our never thinking of
+that infernal brute!" said the Doctor, as they stumbled slowly along in
+the joggling light.
+
+"He was possessed of the devil, without a doubt. That last scream of his
+when he got my two bullets--"
+
+"'T woke us," said Carr. "And we wondered what was up. What was it,
+then, monsieur?"
+
+"That devil of a white stallion of Le Pelley's. It was him killed Tom
+Hamon and Peter Mauger, and he tried to kill Mr. Gard. We've been on
+this job for weeks past, while you were all sleeping in your beds."
+
+"Mon Gyu! and we none of us knew anything about it till we heard yon
+scream! And he's dead----"
+
+"He's dead--unless he's the devil," said the Snchal sententiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES
+
+
+Vast was the wonder of the Sark folk when they heard next day of that
+night's doings, and learned who the murderer of the Coupe was, and how
+and by whom he had been laid by the heels.
+
+The whole Island breathed freely once more, and was outspokenly grateful
+to the courage and pertinacity which had lifted from it the cloud and
+the reproach.
+
+Some of them even had the grace to be not a little ashamed of their
+previous doings, but ascribed the greater part of the blame to Tom's
+widow and Peter Mauger.
+
+But it was days before Stephen Gard took any interest in the matter,
+past or present, or in anything whatsoever.
+
+The Doctor's pad undoubtedly saved his life, but no amount of padding
+could avert entirely the fiendish malignity of those merciless iron
+flails.
+
+He lay unconscious for eight-and-forty hours; and the Doctor--though he
+never breathed a word of it, and prophesied complete recovery with the
+utmost cheerfulness and apparent sincerity--had his own grim fears as to
+what the effect of the whole hideous event might be on one who had
+already suffered such undue strain of mind and body.
+
+Fortunately, his fears proved groundless. On the third day, Gard
+quietly opened his eyes on Nance, who had barely left his bedside since
+the Snchal went down to La Closerie himself and brought her back with
+him to Plaisance.
+
+"I've been asleep," he said drowsily. "Anything wrong, Nance dear?" and
+he tried to sit up, but found his head heavy with cold water bandages,
+and a pain about his neck and left shoulder, and his left arm in
+splints, and all the rest of him one great aching bruise.
+
+"Why--" he murmured, in vast surprise.
+
+"You're to lie quite still," said Nance dictatorially, with lifted
+finger. "And you're not to talk or think till the Doctor comes."
+
+"Give me a kiss, then!"--good prima facie evidence, this, that his brain
+had suffered no permanent injury.
+
+"Well, he didn't say anything about that," and she bent over him and
+kissed him with a brimming flood of gratitude in her blue eyes, and he
+lay quiet for a time.
+
+"Is it dead?" he asked suddenly, with a reminiscent shudder which set
+all his bruises aching.
+
+"The white horse? Yes, Dieu merci, it's dead! But you're not to talk or
+think."
+
+"Give me another kiss, then!"--from which it was apparent that he knew
+very well what kind of medicine was best adapted to his ailments.
+
+The Doctor came down to see him the very first thing every morning, and
+now he came quietly in, just as Nance had been administering her latest
+dose.
+
+"Ah--ha, nurse! What are you doing to my patient!"
+
+"I'm only keeping him quiet, sir, as you told me to," said Nance, with a
+rosy face.
+
+"It's the doctor you ought to pay, not the patient. Well, my boy, how
+are we this morning? Head aching yet?"
+
+"It does feel a bit queer. Tell me all about last night, Doctor!"
+
+"Ah--ha, yes--last night! Well, you caught the murderer with a
+vengeance, my boy--or he caught you,"--and then, seeing the puzzlement
+in the tired eyes, he briefly explained the whole matter.
+
+"And do you mean it was that awful beast killed the others?"
+
+"Without a doubt--and would have killed you in exactly the same way, and
+exactly the same place, but for my pads and the Snchal's bullets.
+Queer thing--they found the brute lying all in a heap in Coupe Bay on
+the very spot where Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger were found."
+
+"Ay-y-y-y-y!" breathed Gard, with a long sigh of relief and a shiver. "I
+shall never forget him."
+
+"Oh yes, you will--in time. Think of little Nance here. She's a sight
+better worth thinking of. And now, Miss Nancy, how much good news can
+you stand all at once, if you try your very hardest?" he asked, with a
+sparkle in his eyes that somehow seemed to set hers sparkling too.
+
+"Oh mad, Doctor!" and the little hands clasped up on her breast, as was
+her way when greatly moved. "Not----?"
+
+She dared not hope for so much--the wish of her heart--just an inch or
+so behind the desire for Gard's recovery.
+
+"The cutter this morning brought over one we had feared was lost----"
+
+"Not--not Bernel?"
+
+"Yes, my child, Bernel, by God's good mercy! He was picked up by a
+Granville trawler, and lay there ill for some days, and could only get
+back by Jersey and Guernsey. He was to come along with the Snchal in a
+quarter of an hour--"
+
+But Nance had fallen on her knees and buried her face in the
+bed-clothes, lest any but God should see it in the rapture of its
+breaking.
+
+"Dieu merci! Dieu merci! Dieu merci!" she was crying, though none of
+them heard it.
+
+And "Thank God!" said Stephen Gard with fervour--for Bernel, and for
+himself, but most of all for Nance.
+
+
+ NOTE.--The names used in this book are necessarily the names
+ still current in Sark. None of the characters presented,
+ however, are in any way connected with any persons now living
+ in the Island.
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Maid of the Silver Sea, by John Oxenham,
+Illustrated by Harold Copping
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Maid of the Silver Sea
+
+Author: John Oxenham
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2005 [eBook #14832]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Steven Gibbs and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+A MAID OF THE SILVER SEA
+
+by
+
+JOHN OXENHAM
+
+With Frontispiece in Colour by Harold Copping
+
+Hodder and Stoughton Warwick Square, London, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ MY FRIEND
+ EDWARD BAKER
+ OF LA CHAUMIERE, SARK
+
+ ON WHOSE MOST HOSPITABLE AND SUPREMELY
+ COMFORTABLE VERANDAH, LOOKING OUT
+ TO THE FAIR COAST OF FRANCE, THIS
+ STORY WAS PARTLY WRITTEN, I
+ INSCRIBE THE SAME IN REMEMBRANCE
+ OF MANY
+ DELIGHTFUL DAYS
+ TOGETHER
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN'T DARE
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+ HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART
+
+ CHAPTER X
+ HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+ HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+ HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+ HOW TWO FELL OUT
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ HOW ONE FELL OVER
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ HOW PETER'S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+ HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ HOW HE HELD THE ROCK
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ HOW JULIE'S SCHEMES FELL FLAT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L'ETAT
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+ HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+ HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HOW TWO LAY IN A CLEFT
+
+
+A girl and a boy lay in a cubby-hole in the north side of the cliff
+overlooking Port Gorey, and watched the goings-on down below.
+
+The sun was tending towards Guernsey and the gulf was filled witn golden
+light. A small brig, unkempt and dirty, was nosing towards the rough
+wooden landing-stage clamped to the opposite rocks, as though doubtful
+of the advisability of attempting its closer acquaintance.
+
+"Mon Gyu, Bern, how I wish they were all at the bottom of the sea!" said
+the girl vehemently.
+
+"Whe--e--e--w!" whistled the boy, and then with a twinkle in his
+eye,--"Who's got a new parasol now?"
+
+"Everybody!--but it's not that. It's the bustle--and the dirt--and the
+noise--and oh--everything! You can't remember what it was like before
+these wretched mines came--no dust, no noise, no bustle, no dirty men,
+no silly women, no nothing as it is now. Just Sark as it used to be. And
+now--! Mon Gyu, yes I wish the sea would break in through their nasty
+tunnels and wash them all away--pumps and engines and houses--everything!"
+
+And up on the hillside at the head of the gulf the great pumping-engine
+clacked monotonously "Never! Never! Never!"
+
+"You've got it bad to-day, Nan," said the boy.
+
+"I've always got it bad. It makes me sick. It has changed everything and
+everybody--everybody except mother and you," she added quickly.
+"Get--get--get! Why we hardly used to know what money was, and now no
+one thinks of anything but getting all they can. It is sickening."
+
+"S--s--s--s--t!" signalled the boy suddenly, at the sound of steps and
+voices on the cliff outside and close at hand.
+
+"Tom," muttered the boy.
+
+"And Peter Mauger," murmured the girl, and they both shrank lower into
+their hiding-place.
+
+It was a tiny natural chamber in the sharp slope of the hill. Ages ago
+the massive granite boulders of the headland, loosened and undercut by
+the ceaseless assaults of wind and weather and the deadly quiet fingers
+of the frost, had come rolling down the slope till they settled afresh
+on new foundations, forming holes and crannies and little angular
+chambers where the splintered shoulders met. In time, the soil silted
+down and covered their asperities, and--like a good colonist--carrying
+in itself the means of increase, it presently brought forth and
+blossomed, and the erstwhile shattered rocks were royally robed in
+russet and purple, and green and gold.
+
+Among these fantastic little chambers Nance had played as a child, and
+had found refuge in them from the persecutions of her big half-brother,
+Tom Hamon. Tom was six when she was born--fourteen accordingly when she
+was at the teasable age of eight, and unusually tempting as a victim by
+reason of her passionate resentment of his unwelcome attentions.
+
+She hated Tom, and Tom had always resented her and her mother's
+intrusion into the family, and Bernel's, when he came, four years after
+Nance.
+
+What his father wanted to marry again for, Tom never could make out. His
+lack of training and limited powers of expression did not indeed permit
+him any distinct reasoning on the matter, but the feeling was there--a
+dull resentment which found its only vent and satisfaction in stolid
+rudeness to his stepmother and the persecution of Nance and Bernel
+whenever occasion offered.
+
+The household was not therefore on too happy a footing.
+
+It consisted, at the time when our story opens, of--Old Mrs.
+Hamon--Grannie--half of whose life had been lived in the nineteenth
+century and half in the eighteenth. She had seen all the wild doings of
+the privateering and free-trading days, and recalled as a comparatively
+recent event the raiding of the Island by the men of Herm, though that
+happened forty years before.
+
+She was for the most part a very reserved and silent old lady, but her
+tongue could bite like a whip when the need arose.
+
+She occupied her own dower-rooms in the house, and rarely went outside
+them. All day long she sat in her great arm-chair by the window in her
+sitting-room, with the door wide open, so that she could see all that
+went on in the house and outside it; and in the sombre depths of her
+great black silk sun-bonnet--long since turned by age and weather to
+dusky green--her watchful eyes had in them something of the inscrutable
+and menacing.
+
+Her wants were very few, and as her income from her one-third of the
+farm had far exceeded her expenses for more than twenty years, she was
+reputed as rich in material matters as she undoubtedly was in
+common-sense and worldly wisdom. Even young Tom was sulkily silent
+before her on the rare occasions when they came into contact.
+
+Next in the family came the nominal head of it, "Old Tom" Hamon, to
+distinguish him from young Tom, his son; a rough, not ill-natured man,
+until the money-getting fever seized him, since which time his
+home-folks had found in him changes that did not make for their comfort.
+
+The discovery of silver in Sark, the opening of the mines, and the
+coming of the English miners--with all the very problematical benefits
+of a vastly increased currency of money, and the sudden introduction of
+new ideas and standards of life and living into a community which had
+hitherto been contented with the order of things known to its
+forefathers--these things had told upon many, but on none more than old
+Tom Hamon.
+
+Suspicious at first of the meaning and doings of these strangers, he
+very soon found them advantageous. He got excellent prices for his farm
+produce, and when his horses and carts were not otherwise engaged he
+could always turn them to account hauling for the mines.
+
+As the silver-fever grew in him he became closer in his dealings both
+abroad and at home. With every pound he could scrimp and save he bought
+shares in the mines and believed in them absolutely. And he went on
+scrimping and saving and buying shares so as to have as large a stake in
+the silver future as possible.
+
+He got no return as yet from his investment, indeed. But that would
+come all right in time, and the more shares he could get hold of the
+larger the ultimate return would be. And so he stinted himself and his
+family, and mortgaged his future, in hopes of wealth which he would not
+have known how to enjoy if he had succeeded in getting it.
+
+So possessed was he with the desire for gain that when young Tom came
+home from sea he left the farming to him, and took to the mining
+himself, and worked harder than he had ever worked in his life before.
+
+He was a sturdy, middle-sized man, with a grizzled bullet head and
+rounded beard, of a dogged and pertinacious disposition, but capable,
+when stirred out of his usual phlegm, of fiery outbursts which overbore
+all argument and opposition. His wife died when his boy Tom was three,
+and after two years of lonely discomfort he married Nancy Poidestre of
+Petit Dixcart, whose people looked upon it as something of a
+_mesalliance_ that she should marry out of her own country into Little
+Sark.
+
+Nancy was eminently good-looking and a notable housewife, and she went
+into Tom Hamon's house of La Closerie with every hope and intention of
+making him happy.
+
+But, from the very first, little Tom set his face against her.
+
+It would be hard to say why. Nancy racked her brain for reasons, and
+could find none, and was miserable over it.
+
+His father thrashed him for his rudeness and insolence, which only made
+matters worse.
+
+His own mother had given way to him in everything, and spoiled him
+completely. After her death his father out of pity for his forlorn
+estate, had equally given way to him, and only realised, too late, when
+he tried to bring him to with a round turn, how thoroughly out of hand
+he had got.
+
+When little Tom found, as one consequence of the new mother's arrival,
+that his father thrashed instead of humouring him, he put it all down to
+the new-comer's account, and set himself to her discomfiture in every
+way his barbarous little wits could devise.
+
+He never forgot one awful week he passed in his grandmother's care--a
+week that terminated in the arrival of still another new-comer, who, in
+course of time, developed into little Nance. It is not impossible that
+the remembrance of that black week tended to colour his after-treatment
+of his little half-sister. In spite of her winsomeness he hated her
+always, and did his very best to make life a burden to her.
+
+When, on that memorable occasion, he was hastily flung by his father
+into his grandmother's room, as the result of some wickedness which had
+sorely upset his stepmother, and the door was, most unusually, closed
+behind him, his first natural impulse was to escape as quickly as
+possible.
+
+But he became aware of something unusual and discomforting in the
+atmosphere, and when his grandmother said sternly, "Sit down!" and he
+turned on her to offer his own opinion on the matter, he found the keen
+dark eyes gazing out at him from under the shadowy penthouse of the
+great black sun-bonnet, with so intent and compelling a stare that his
+mouth closed without saying a word. He climbed up on to a chair and
+twisted his feet round the legs by way of anchorage.
+
+Then he sat up and stared back at Grannie, and as an exhibition of
+nonchalance and high spirit, put out his tongue at her.
+
+Grannie only looked at him.
+
+And, bit by bit, the tongue withdrew, and only the gaping mouth was
+left, and above it a pair of frightened green eyes, transmitting to the
+perverse little soul within new impressions and vague terrors.
+
+Before long his left arm went up over his face to shut out the sight of
+Grannie's dreadful staring eyes, and when, after a sufficient interval,
+he ventured a peep at her and found her eyes still fixed on him, he
+howled, "Take it off! Take it off!" and slipped his anchors and slid to
+the floor, hunching his back at this tormentor who could beat him on his
+own ground.
+
+For that week he gave no trouble to any one. But after it he never went
+near Grannie's room, and for years he never spoke to her. When he passed
+her open door, or in front of her window, he hunched his shoulder
+protectively and averted his eyes.
+
+Resenting control in any shape or form, Tom naturally objected to
+school.
+
+His stepmother would have had him go--for his own sake as well as hers.
+But his father took a not unusual Sark view of the matter.
+
+"What's the odds?" said he. "He'll have the farm. Book-learning will be
+no use to him," and in spite of Nancy's protests--which Tom regarded as
+simply the natural outcrop of her ill-will towards him--the boy grew up
+untaught and uncontrolled, and knowing none but the worst of all
+masters--himself.
+
+On occasion, when the tale of provocation reached its limit, his father
+thrashed him, until there came a day when Tom upset the usual course of
+proceedings by snatching the stick out of his father's hands, and would
+have belaboured him in turn if he had not been promptly knocked down.
+
+After that his father judged it best for all concerned that he should
+flight his troublesome wings outside for a while. So he sent him off in
+a trading-ship, in the somewhat forlorn hope that a knowledge of the
+world would knock some of the devil out of him--a hope which, like many
+another, fell short of accomplishment.
+
+The world knocks a good deal out of a man, but it also knocks a good
+deal in. Tom came back from his voyaging knowing a good many things that
+he had not known when he started--a little English among others--and
+most of the others things which had been more profitably left unlearnt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HOW NANCE CAME TO BE HERSELF
+
+
+And little Nance?
+
+The most persistent memories of Nance's childhood were her fear and
+hatred of Tom, and her passionate love for her mother,--and Bernel when
+he came.
+
+"My own," she called these two, and regarded even her father as somewhat
+outside that special pale; esteemed Grannie as an Olympian, benevolently
+inclined, but dwelling on a remote and loftier plane; and feared and
+detested Tom as an open enemy.
+
+And she had reasons.
+
+She was a high-strung child, too strong and healthy to be actually
+nervous, but with every faculty always at its fullest--not only in
+active working order but always actively at work--an admirable subject
+therefore for the malevolence of an enemy whose constant proximity
+offered him endless opportunity.
+
+Much of his boyish persecution never reached the ears of the higher
+powers. Nance very soon came to accept Tom's rough treatment as natural
+from a big fellow of fourteen to a small girl of eight, and she bore it
+stoically and hated him the harder.
+
+Her mother taught her carefully to say her prayers, which included
+petitions for the welfare of Grannie and father and brother Tom, and for
+a time, with the perfunctoriness of childhood, which attaches more
+weight to the act than to the meaning of it, she allowed that to pass
+with a stickle and a slur. But very soon brother Tom was ruthlessly
+dropped out of the ritual, and neither threats nor persuasion could
+induce her to re-establish him.
+
+Later on, and in private, she added to her acknowledged petitions an
+appendix, unmistakably brief and to the point--"And, O God, please kill
+brother Tom!"--and lived in hope.
+
+She was an unusually pretty child, though her prettiness developed
+afterwards--as childish prettiness does not always--into something finer
+and more lasting.
+
+She had, as a child, large dark blue eyes, which wore as a rule a look
+of watchful anxiety--put there by brother Tom. To the end of her life
+she carried the mark of a cut over her right eyebrow, which came within
+an ace of losing her the sight of that eye. It was brother Tom did that.
+
+She had an abundance of flowing brown hair, by which Tom delighted to
+lift her clear off the ground, under threat of additional boxed ears if
+she opened her mouth. The wide, firm little mouth always remained
+closed, but the blue eyes burned fiercely, and the outraged little
+heart, thumping furiously at its impotence, did its best to salve its
+wounds with ceaseless repetition of its own private addition to the
+prescribed form of morning and evening prayer.
+
+Once, even Tom's dull wit caught something of meaning in the blaze of
+the blue eyes.
+
+"What are you saying, you little devil?" he growled, and released her so
+suddenly that she fell on her knees in the mud.
+
+And she put her hands together, as she was in the habit of doing, and
+prayed, "O God, please kill brother Tom!"
+
+"Little devil!" said brother Tom, with a startled red face, and made a
+dash at her; but she had foreseen that and was gone like a flash.
+
+One might have expected her childish comeliness to exercise something of
+a mollifying effect on his brutality. On the contrary, it seemed but to
+increase it. She was so sweet; he was so coarse. She was so small and
+fragile; he was so big and strong. Her prettiness might work on others.
+He would let her see and feel that he was not the kind to be fooled by
+such things.
+
+He had the elemental heartlessness of the savage, which recognises no
+sufferings but its own, and refuses to be affected even by them.
+
+When Nance's kitten, presented to her by their neighbour, Mrs. Helier
+Baker, solved much speculation as to its sex by becoming a mother, Tom
+gladly undertook the task of drowning the superfluous offspring. He got
+so much amusement out of it that, for weeks, Nance's horrified inner
+vision saw little blind heads, half-drowned and mewing piteously,
+striving with feeble pink claws to climb out of the death-tub and being
+ruthlessly set swimming again till they sank.
+
+She hurled herself at Tom as he gloated over his enjoyment, and would
+have asked nothing better than to treat him as he was treating the
+kittens--righteous retribution in her case, not enjoyment!--but he was
+too strong for her. He simply kicked out behind, and before she could
+get up had thrust one of his half-drowned victims into the neck of her
+frock, and the clammy-dead feel of it and its pitiful screaming set her
+shuddering for months whenever she thought of it.
+
+But now and again her tormentor overpassed the bounds and got his
+reward--to Nance's immediate satisfaction but subsequent increased
+tribulation. For whenever he got a thrashing on her account he never
+failed to pay her out in the smaller change of persecution which never
+came to light.
+
+On a pitch-dark, starless night, the high-hedged--and in places
+deep-sunk--lanes of Little Sark are as black as the inside of an ebony
+ruler.
+
+When the moon bathes sea and land in a flood of shimmering silver, or on
+a clear night of stars--and the stars in Sark, you must know, shine
+infinitely larger and closer and brighter than in most other places--the
+darkness below is lifted somewhat by reason of the majestic width and
+height of the glittering dome above. But when moon and stars alike are
+wanting, then the darkness of a Sark lane is a thing to be felt, and--if
+you should happen to be a little girl of eight, with a large imagination
+and sharp ears that have picked up fearsome stories of witches and
+ghosts and evil spirits--to be mortally feared.
+
+Tom had a wholesome dread of such things himself. But the fear of
+fourteen, in a great strong body and no heavenly spark of imagination,
+is not to be compared with the fear of eight and a mind that could
+quiver like a harp even at its own imaginings. And, to compass his ends,
+he would blunt his already dull feelings and turn the darkness to his
+account.
+
+When he knew Nance was out on such a night--on some errand, or in at a
+neighbour's--to crouch in the hedge and leap silently out upon her was
+huge delight; and it was well worth braving the grim possibilities of
+the hedges in order to extort from her the anger in the bleat of terror
+which, as a rule, was all that her paralysed heart permitted, as she
+turned and fled.
+
+Almost more amusing--as considerably extending the enjoyment--was it to
+follow her quietly on such occasions, yet not so quietly but that she
+was perfectly aware of footsteps behind, which stopped when she stopped
+and went on again when she went on, and so kept her nerves on the quiver
+the whole time.
+
+Creeping fearfully along in the blackness, with eyes and ears on the
+strain, and both little shoulders humped against the expected apparition
+of Tom--or worse, she would become aware of the footsteps behind her.
+
+Then she would stop suddenly to make sure, and stand listening
+painfully, and hear nothing but the low hoarse growl of the sea that
+rarely ceases, day or night, among the rocks of Little Sark.
+
+Then she would take a tentative step or two and stop again, and then
+dash on. And always there behind her were the footsteps that followed in
+the dark.
+
+Then she would fumble with her foot for a stone and stoop hastily--for
+you are at a disadvantage with ghosts and with Toms when you stoop--and
+pick it up and hurl it promiscuously in the direction of the footsteps,
+and quaver, in a voice that belied its message, "Go away, Tom Hamon! I
+can see you,"--which was a little white fib born of the black urgency of
+the situation;--"and I'm not the least bit afraid,"--which was most
+decidedly another.
+
+And so the journey would progress fitfully and in spasms, and leave
+nightmare recollections for the disturbance of one's sleep.
+
+But there were variations in the procedure at times.
+
+As when, on one occasion, Nance's undiscriminating projectile elicited
+from the darkness a plaintive "Moo!" which came, she knew, from her
+favourite calf Jeanetton, who had broken her tether in the field and
+sought companionship in the road, and had followed her doubtfully,
+stopping whenever she stopped, and so received the punishment intended
+for another.
+
+Nance kissed the bruise on Jeanetton's ample forehead next day very many
+times, and explained the whole matter to her at considerable length, and
+Jeanetton accepted it all very placidly and bore no ill-will.
+
+Another time, when Nance had taken a very specially compounded cake over
+to her old friend, Mrs. Baker, as a present from her mother, and had
+been kept much longer than she wished--for the old lady's enjoyment of
+her pretty ways and entertaining prattle--she set out for home in fear
+and trembling.
+
+It was one of the pitch-black nights, and she went along on tiptoes,
+hugging the empty plate to her breast, and glancing fearfully over first
+one shoulder, then the other, then over both and back and front all at
+once.
+
+She was almost home, and very grateful for it, when the dreaded black
+figure leaped silently out at her from its crouching place, and she tore
+down the lane to the house, Tom's hoarse guffaws chasing her mockingly.
+
+The open door cleft a solid yellow wedge in the darkness. She was almost
+into it, when her foot caught, and she flung head foremost into the
+light with a scream, and lay there with the blood pouring down her face
+from the broken plate.
+
+A finger's-breadth lower and she would have gone through life one-eyed,
+which would have been a grievous loss to humanity at large, for sweeter
+windows to a large sweet soul never shone than those out of which
+little Nance Hamon's looked.
+
+Most houses may be judged by their windows, but these material windows
+are not always true gauge of what is within. They may be decked to
+deceive, but the clear windows of the soul admit of no disguise. That
+little life tenant is always looking out and showing himself in his true
+colours--whether he knows it or not.
+
+Nance's terrified scream took old Tom out at a bound. He had heard the
+quick rush of her feet and Tom's mocking laughter in the distance. He
+carried Nance in to her mother, snatched up a stick, and went after the
+culprit who had promptly disappeared.
+
+It was two days before Tom sneaked in again and took his thrashing
+dourly. Little Nance had shut her lips tight when her father questioned
+her, and refused to say a word. But he was satisfied as to where the
+blame lay and administered justice with a heavy hand.
+
+Bernel--as soon as he grew to persecutable age--provided Tom with
+another victim. But time was on the victims' side, and when Nance got to
+be twelve--Bernel being then eight and Tom eighteen--their combined
+energies and furies of revolt against his oppressions put matters more
+on a level.
+
+Many a pitched battle they had, and sometimes almost won. But, win or
+lose, the fact that they had no longer to suffer without lifting a hand
+was great gain to them, and the very fact that they had to go about
+together for mutual protection knitted still stronger the ties that
+bound them one to the other.
+
+But, though little Nance's earlier years suffered much from the black
+shadow of brother Tom, they were very far from being years of darkness.
+
+She was of an unusually bright and enquiring disposition, always
+wanting to see and know and understand, interested in everything about
+her, and never satisfied till she had got to the bottom of things, or at
+all events as far down as it was possible for a small girl to get.
+
+Her lively chatter and ceaseless questions left her mother and Grannie
+small chance of stagnation. But, if she asked many questions--and some
+of them posers--it was not simply for the sake of asking, but because
+she truly wanted to know; and even Grannie, who was not naturally
+talkative, never resented her pertinent enquiries, but gave freely of
+her accumulated wisdom and enjoyed herself in the giving.
+
+When she got beyond their depth at times, or outside their limits, she
+would boldly carry her queries--and strange ones they were at times--to
+old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar up in Sark, making nothing of the journey
+and the Coupee in order to solve some, to her, important problem. And he
+not only never refused her but delighted to open to her the stores of a
+well-stocked mind and of the kindest and gentlest of hearts.
+
+Often and often the people of Vauroque and Plaisance would see them
+pass, hand in hand and full of talk, when the Vicar had wished to see
+with his own eyes one or other of Nance's wonderful discoveries, in the
+shape of cave or rock-pool, or deposit of sparkling crystal
+fingers--amethyst and topaz--or what not.
+
+For she was ever lighting on odd and beautiful bits of Nature's
+craftsmanship. Books were hardly to be had in those days, and in place
+of them she climbed fearlessly about the rough cliff-sides and tumbled
+headlands, and looked close at Nature with eyes that missed nothing and
+craved everything.
+
+To the neighbours the headlands were places where rabbits were to be
+shot for dinner, the lower rocks places where ormers and limpets and
+vraie might be found. But to little Nance the rabbits were playfellows
+whose sudden deaths she lamented and resented; the cliff-sides were
+glorious gardens thick with sweet-scented yellow gorse and honeysuckle
+and wild roses, carpeted with primroses and bluebells; and, in their
+season, rich and juicy with blackberries beyond the possibilities of
+picking.
+
+She was on closest visiting terms with innumerable broods of
+newly-hatched birdlings--knew them, indeed, while they were still but
+eggs--delighted in them when they were as yet but skin and
+mouth--rejoiced in their featherings and flyings. Even baby cuckoos were
+a joy to her, though, on their foster-mothers' accounts she resented the
+thriftlessness of their parents, and grew tired each year of their
+monotonous call which ceased not day or night. But of the larks never,
+for their songs seemed to her of heaven, while the cuckoos were of
+earth. The gulls, too, were somewhat difficult from the friendly point
+of view, but she lay for hours overlooking their domestic arrangements
+and envying the wonders of their matchless flight.
+
+And down below the cliffs what marvels she discovered!--marvels which in
+many cases the Vicar was fain to content himself with at second hand,
+since closer acquaintance seemed to him to involve undoubted risk to
+limb if not to life. Little Nance, indeed, hopped down the seamed cliffs
+like a rock pipit, with never a thought of the dangers of the passage,
+and he would stand and watch her with his heart in his mouth, and only
+shake his grey head at her encouraging assertions that it was truly
+truly as easy as easy. For he felt certain that even if he got down he
+would never get up again. And so, when the triumphant shout from below
+told him she was safely landed, he would wave a grateful hand and get
+back from the edge and seat himself securely on a rock, till the rosy
+face came laughing up between him and the shimmering sea, with trophy of
+weed or shell or crystal quartz, and he would tell her all he knew about
+them, and she would try to tell him of all he had missed by not coming
+down.
+
+There were wonderful great basins down there, all lined with pink and
+green corallines, and full of the loveliest weeds and anemones and other
+sea-flowers, and the rivulets that flowed from them to the sea were
+lined pink and green, too. And this that she had brought him was the
+flaming sea-weed, though truly it did not look it now, but in the water
+it was, she assured him, of the loveliest, and there were great bunches
+there so that the dark holes under the rocks were all alight with it.
+
+She coaxed him doubtfully to the descent of the rounded headland facing
+L'Etat, picking out an easy circuitous way for him, and so got him
+safely down to her own special pool, hollowed out of the solid granite
+by centuries of patient grinding on the part of the great boulders
+within.
+
+It was there, peering down at the fishes below, that she expressed a
+wish to imitate them; and he agreeing, she ran up to the farm for a bit
+of rope and was back before he had half comprehended all the beauties of
+the pool. And he had no sooner explained the necessary movements to her
+and she had tried them, than she cast off the rope, shouting, "I can
+swim! I can swim!" and to his amazement swam across the pool and back--a
+good fifty feet each way--chirping with delight in this new-found
+faculty and the tonic kiss of the finest water in the world. But after
+all it was not so very amazing, for she was absolutely without fear, and
+in that water it is difficult to sink.
+
+They were often down there together after that, for close alongside were
+wonderful channels and basins whorled out of the rock in the most
+fantastic ways, and to sit and watch the tide rush up them was a
+never-failing entertainment.
+
+And not far away was a blow-hole of the most extraordinary which shot
+its spray a hundred feet into the air, and if you didn't mind getting
+wet you could sit quite alongside it, so close that you could put your
+hand into it as it came rocketing out of the hole, and then, if the sun
+was right, you sat in the midst of rainbows--a thing Nance had always
+longed to do since she clapped her baby hands at her first one. But the
+Vicar never did that.
+
+And once, in quest of the how and the why, Nance swam into the
+blow-hole's cave at a very low tide, and its size and the dome of its
+roof, compared with the narrowness of its entrance, amazed her, but she
+did not stay long for it gave her the creeps.
+
+These were some of the ways by which little Nance grew to a larger
+estate than most of her fellows, and all these things helped to make her
+what she came to be.
+
+When she grew old enough to assist in the farm, new realms of delight
+opened to her. Chickens, calves, lambs, piglets--she foster-mothered
+them all and knew no weariness in all such duties which were rather
+pleasures.
+
+It was a wounded rabbit, limping into cover under a tangle of gorse and
+blackberry bashes, that discovered to her the entrance to the series of
+little chambers and passages that led right through the headland to the
+side looking into Port Gorey. Which most satisfactory hiding-place she
+and Bernel turned to good account on many an occasion when brother Tom's
+oppression passed endurance.
+
+It had taken time, and much screwing up of childish courage, to explore
+the whole of that extraordinary little burrow, and it was not the work
+of a day.
+
+When Nance crept along the little run made by many generations of
+rabbits, she found that it led finally into a dark crack in the rock,
+and, squeezing through that, she was in a small dark chamber which smelt
+strongly of her friends.
+
+As soon as her eyes recovered from the sudden change from blazing
+sunlight to almost pitch darkness, she perceived a small black opening
+at the far end, and looking through it she saw a lightening of the
+darkness still farther in which tempted her on.
+
+It was a tough scramble even for her, and the closeness of the rocks and
+the loneliness weighed upon her somewhat. But there was that glimmer of
+light ahead and she must know what it was, and so she climbed and
+wriggled over and under the huge splintered rocks till she came to the
+light, like a tiny slit of a window far above her head, and still there
+were passages leading on.
+
+Next day, with Bernel and a tiny crasset lamp for company, she explored
+the burrow to its utmost limits and adopted it at once as their refuge
+and stronghold. And thereafter they spent much time there, especially in
+the end chamber where a tiny slit gave on to Port Gorey, and they could
+lie and watch all that went on down below.
+
+There they solemnly concocted plans for brother Tom's discomfiture, and
+thither they retreated after defeat or victory, while he hunted high
+and low for them and never could make out where they had got to.
+
+Then Tom went off to sea, and life, for those at home, became a joy
+without a flaw--except the thought that he would sometime come
+back--unless he got drowned.
+
+When he returned he was past the boyish bullying and teasing stage, and
+his stunts and twists developed themselves along other lines. Moreover,
+sailor-fashion, he wore a knife in a sheath at the back of his belt.
+
+He found Nance a tall slim girl of sixteen, her childish prettiness just
+beginning to fashion itself into the strength and comeliness of form and
+feature which distinguished her later on.
+
+He swore, with strange oaths, that she was the prettiest bit of goods
+he'd set eyes on since he left home, and he'd seen a many. And he
+wondered to himself if this could really be the Nance he used to hate
+and persecute.
+
+But Nance detested him and all his ways as of old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW THE NEW MINE CAPTAIN CAME
+
+
+Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger seated themselves on a rock within a few feet
+of the narrow slit out of which Nance and Bernel had been looking.
+
+"Ouaie," said Tom, taking up his parable--"wanted me to join him in
+getting a loan on farm, he did."
+
+"Aw, now!"
+
+"Ouaie--a loan on farm, and me to join him, 'cause he couldn' do it
+without. 'And why?' I asked him."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"An' he told me he was goin' to make a fortune out them silver mines."
+
+"Aw!"
+
+"Ouaie! He'd put in every pound he had and every shilling he earned. An'
+the more he could put in the more he would get out."
+
+"Aw!"
+
+"'But,' I said, 'suppos'n it all goes into them big holes and never
+comes out--'"
+
+"Aw!"
+
+"But he's just crazy 'bout them mines. Says there's silver an' lead, and
+guyabble-knows-what-all in 'em, and when they get it out he'll be a rich
+man."
+
+"Aw!" said Peter, nodding his head portentously, as one who had gauged
+the futility of earthly riches.
+
+He was a young man of large possessions but very few words. When he did
+allow his thoughts out they came slowly and in jerks, with lapses at
+times which the hearer had to fill in as best he could.
+
+His father had been an enterprising free-trader, and had made money
+before the family farm came to him on the death of his father. He had
+married another farm and the heiress attached to it, and Peter was the
+result. An only son, both parents dead, two farms and a good round sum
+in the Guernsey Bank, such were Peter's circumstances.
+
+And himself--good-tempered; lazy, since he had no need to work; not
+naturally gifted mentally, and the little he had, barely stirred by the
+short course of schooling which had been deemed sufficient for so
+worldly-well-endowed a boy; tall, loose-limbed, easy going and easily
+led, Peter was the object of much speculation among marriageably
+inclined maiden hearts, and had set his own where it was not wanted.
+
+"Ouaie," continued Tom, "an' if I'd join him in the loan the money'd all
+come to me when he'd done with it."
+
+"Aw!... Money isn't everything.... Can't get all you want sometimes
+when you've got all money you want."
+
+"G'zammin, Peter! You're as crazy 'bout that lass as th' old un is 'bout
+his mines. Why don't ye ask her and ha' done with it?"
+
+"Aw--yes. Well.... You see.... I'm makin' up to her gradual like, and in
+time----"
+
+And Bernel in the hole dug his elbow facetiously into Nance's side.
+
+"Mon Gyu! To think of a slip of a thing like our Nance making a great
+big fellow like you as fool-soft as a bit of tallow!" and Tom stared at
+him in amazement. "Why, I've licked her scores of times, and I used to
+lift her up by the hair of her head."
+
+"I'd ha' knocked your head right off, Tom Hamon, if I'd been there.
+Right off--yes, an' bumped it on the ground."
+
+"No, you wouldn't. 'Cause, in the first place, you couldn't, and in the
+second place you wouldn't have looked at her then. She was no more to
+look at than a bit of a rabbit, slipping about, scared-like, with her
+big eyes all round her."
+
+"Great rough bull of a chap you was, Tom. Ought to had more lickings
+when you was young."
+
+"Aw!" said Tom.
+
+"Join him?" asked Peter after a pause.
+
+"No, I won't, an' he's no right to ask it, an' he knows it. Them dirty
+mines may pay an' they may not, but the farm's a safe thing an' I'll
+stick to it."
+
+"Maybe new capt'n'll make things go better. That's him, I'm thinking,
+just got ashore from brig without breaking his legs," nodding towards
+the wooden landing-stage on the other side of the gulf. For landing at
+Port Gorey was at times a matter requiring both nerve and muscle.
+
+A man, however, had just leaped ashore from the brig, and was now
+standing looking somewhat anxiously after the landing of his baggage,
+which consisted of a wooden chest and an old carpet-bag.
+
+When at last it stood safely on the platform, he cast a comprehensive
+look at his surroundings and then turned to the group of men who had
+come down to watch the boat come in, and four pairs of eyes on the
+opposite side of the gulf watched him curiously, with little thought of
+the tremendous part he was to play in all their lives.
+
+"Where's he stop?" asked Peter.
+
+"Our house."
+
+"Nay!"
+
+"Ouaie, I tell you. He's to stop at our house."
+
+"Why doesn't he go to Barracks?"
+
+"Old Captain's there and they might not agree. Oh ouaie, he'll have his
+hands full, I'm thinking. And if he's not careful it's a crack on the
+head and a drop over the Coupee he'll be getting."
+
+"Ah!" said Peter Mauger.
+
+"Come you along and see what kind of chap he is."
+
+"Aw well, I don't mind," and they strolled away to inspect the new Mine
+Captain, who was to brace up the slackened ropes and bring the
+enterprise to a successful issue.
+
+"Did you know he was going to stop with us, Nance?" asked Bernel, as
+they groped their way out after due interval.
+
+"I heard father tell mother this morning."
+
+"Where's he to sleep?"
+
+"He's to have my room and I'm coming up into the loft. I shall take the
+dark end, and I've put up a curtain across."
+
+"Shoo! We'll hear enough about the mines now," and they crept out behind
+a gorse bush, and went off across the common towards the clump of
+wind-whipped trees inside which the houses of Little Sark clustered for
+companionship and shelter from the south-west gales.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW GARD MADE NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+
+Old Tom Hamon gave the new arrival warm greeting, and pointed out such
+matters as might interest him as they climbed the steep road which led
+up to the plateau and the houses.
+
+"Assay Office, Mr. Gard.... Captain's Office.... Forge.... Sark's Hope
+shaft.... Le Pelley shaft--ninety fathoms below sea-level.... Pump
+shaft ... and yon to east'ard is Prince's shaft.... We go round here
+behind engine-house.... Yon's my house 'mong the trees."
+
+"That's a fine animal," said Gard, stopping suddenly to look at a great
+white horse, which stood nibbling the gorse on the edge of the cliff
+right in the eye of the sun, as it drooped towards Guernsey in a
+holocaust of purple and amber and crimson clouds. The glow of the
+threatening sky threw the great white figure into unusual prominence.
+
+"Yours, Mr. Hamon?" asked Gard--and the white horse flung up its head
+and pealed out a trumpet-like neigh as though resenting the imputation.
+
+"No," said old Tom, staring at the white horse under his shading hand.
+"Seigneur's. What's he doing down here? He's generally kept up at
+Eperquerie, and that's the best place for him. He's an awkward beast at
+times. I must send and tell Mr. Le Pelley where he is."
+
+The little cluster of white, thatched houses stood close together for
+company, but discreetly turned their faces away from one another so that
+no man overlooked or interfered with his neighbour.
+
+Gard found himself in a large room which occupied the whole middle
+portion of the house and served as kitchen and common room for the
+family.
+
+The floor was of trodden earth--hard and dry as cement, with a strip of
+boarding round the sides and in front of the fire-place. Heavy oaken
+beams ran across the roof from which depended a great hanging rack
+littered with all kinds of household odds and ends. Along the beams of
+the roof on hooks hung two long guns. One end of the room was occupied
+by a huge fire-place, in one corner of which stood a new iron cooking
+range, and alongside it a heap of white ashes and some smouldering
+sticks of gorse under a big black iron pot filled the room with the
+fragrance of wood smoke. In the opposite side of the fire-place was an
+iron door closing the great baking oven, and above it ran a wide
+mantel-shelf on which stood china dogs and glass rolling-pins and a
+couple of lamps.
+
+A well-scrubbed white wooden table was set ready for supper. On a very
+ancient-looking black oak stand--cupboard below and shelves above--was
+ranged a vast assortment of crockery ware, and on the walls hung
+potbellied metal jugs and cans which shone like silver.
+
+Two doors led to the other rooms of the house, one of them wide open.
+
+One corner of the room was occupied by a great wooden bin eight feet
+square, filled with dried bracken. On the wide flat side, which looked
+like a form, a woman and a girl were sitting when the two men entered.
+
+Hamon introduced them briefly as his wife and daughter, and, comely
+women as Gard had been accustomed to in his own country of Cornwall,
+there was something about these two, and especially about the younger of
+the two, which made him of a sudden more than satisfied with the
+somewhat doubtful venture to which he had bound himself--set a sudden
+homely warmth in his heart, and made him feel the richer for being
+there--made him, in fact, glad that he had come.
+
+And yet there was nothing in their reception of him that justified the
+feeling.
+
+They nodded, indeed, in answer to his bow, but neither their faces nor
+their manner showed any special joy at his coming.
+
+But that made no difference to him. They were there, and the mere sight
+of the girl's fine mobile face and large dark blue eyes was a thing to
+be grateful for.
+
+"You'll be wanting your supper," said Hamon.
+
+"At your own time, please," said the young man, looking towards Mrs.
+Hamon. "I am really not very hungry"--though truth to tell he well might
+have been, for the food on the brig had left much to be desired even to
+one who had been a sailorman himself.
+
+"It is our usual time," said Mrs. Hamon, "and it is all ready. Will you
+please to sit there."
+
+At the sound of the chairs a boy of fourteen came quietly in and slipped
+into his seat.
+
+His sister had gone off with a portion on a plate through the open door.
+
+Gard was surprised to find himself hoping it was not her custom to take
+her meals in private, and was relieved when she came back presently
+without the plate and sat down by her brother.
+
+"Ah, you, Bernel, as soon as you've done your supper run over and tell
+Mr. Le Pelley that his white stallion is on our common, and he'd better
+send for him."
+
+"I'll ride him home," said the boy exultingly.
+
+"No you won't, Bern," said his sister quickly. "He's not safe. You know
+what an awkward beast he is at times, and you could never get him across
+the Coupee."
+
+"Pooh! I'd ride him across any day."
+
+"Promise me you won't," she said, with a hand on his arm.
+
+"Oh, well, if you say so," he grumbled. "I could manage him all right
+though."
+
+Just then the doorway darkened and two young men entered, and threw
+their caps on the green bed, and sat down with an awkward nod of
+greeting to the company in general.
+
+"My son Tom," said Mr. Hamon, and Tom jerked another awkward nod towards
+the stranger. "And Peter Mauger"--Peter repeated the performance, more
+shyly and awkwardly even than Tom, from a variety of reasons.
+
+Tom was at home, and he had not even been invited--except by Tom. And
+strangers always made him shy. And then there was Nance, with her great
+eyes fixed on him, he knew, though he had not dared to look straight at
+her.
+
+And then the stranger had an air about him--it was hard to say of what,
+but it made Peter Mauger and Tom conscious of personal uncouthness, and
+of a desire to get up and go out and wash their hands and have a shave.
+
+Gard, they knew, was the new captain of the mine, chosen by the
+managers of the company for his experience with men, and he looked as if
+he had been accustomed to order them about.
+
+His eyes were dark and keen, his face full of energy. Being clean-shaven
+his age was doubtful. He might be twenty-five or forty. Nance, in her
+first quick comprehensive glance, had wondered which.
+
+He stood close upon six feet and was broad-chested and
+square-shouldered. A good figure of a man, clean and upstanding, and
+with no nonsense about him. A capable-looking man in every respect, and
+if his manner was quiet and retiring, there was that about him which
+suggested the possibility of explosion if occasion arose.
+
+Not that the Hamon family as a whole, or any member of it, would have
+put the matter quite in that way to itself, or herself. But that,
+vaguely, was the impression produced upon them--an impression of
+uprightness, intelligence, and reserved strength--and the more strongly,
+perhaps, because of late these characteristics had been somewhat
+overshadowed in the Island by the greed of gain and love of display
+engendered by the opening of the mines.
+
+To old Tom Hamon his coming was wholly welcome. It foreshadowed a strong
+and more energetic development of the mines and the speedier realization
+of his most earnest desires.
+
+To Mrs. Hamon it meant some extra household work, which she would gladly
+undertake since it was her husband's wish to have the stranger live with
+them, though in his absorption by the mines she had no sympathy
+whatever.
+
+Nance looked upon him merely as a part of the mines, and therefore to
+be detested along with the noisy engine-house, the pumps, the damp and
+dirty miners, and all the rest of it--the coming of which had so
+completely spoiled her much-loved Sark.
+
+Tom disliked him because he made him feel small and boorish, and of a
+commoner make. And feelings such as that inevitably try to disprove
+themselves by noisy self-assertion.
+
+Accordingly Tom--after various jocular remarks in patois to Peter, who
+would have laughed at them had he dared, but, knowing Nance's feelings
+towards her brother was not sure how she would take it--loudly and
+provocatively to Gard--
+
+"Expect to make them mines pay, monsieur?"
+
+"Well, I hope so. But it's too soon to express an opinion till I've seen
+them."
+
+"They put a lot of money in, and they get a lot of dirt out, but one
+does not hear much of any silver."
+
+"Sometimes the deepest mines prove the best in the end."
+
+"And as long as there's anybody to pay for it I suppose you go on
+digging."
+
+"If I thought the mines had petered out--"
+
+"Eh?" said Peter, and then coughed to hide his confusion when they all
+looked at him.
+
+"I should of course advise the owners to stop work and sink no more
+money."
+
+"It'll be a bad day for Sark when that happens," said old Tom. "But it's
+not going to happen. The silver's there all right. It only wants getting
+out."
+
+"If it's there we'll certainly get it out," said Gard, and although he
+said it quietly enough, old Tom felt much better about things in
+general.
+
+"You're the man for us," he said heartily. "We'll all be rich before we
+die yet."
+
+"Depends when we die," growled Tom--in which observation--obvious as it
+was--there was undoubtedly much truth. And then, his little suggestion
+of provocation having broken like ripples on Gard's imperturbability, he
+turned on Peter and tried to stir him up.
+
+"You don't get on any too fast with your making up to la garche, mon
+gars," he said in the patois again.
+
+"Aw--Tom!" remonstrated Peter, very red in the face at this ruthless
+laying bare of his approaches.
+
+"Get ahead, man! Put your arm round her neck and give her a kiss. That's
+the way to fetch 'em."
+
+At which Nance jumped up with fiery face and sparks in her eyes and left
+the room, and Gard, who understood no word of what had passed, yet
+understood without possibility of doubt that Tom's speech had been
+mortally offensive to his sister, and set him down in his own mind as of
+low esteem and boorish disposition.
+
+As for Peter, to whom such advice was as useless as the act would have
+been impossible at that stage of the proceedings, he was almost as much
+upset as Nance herself. He got up with a shamefaced--
+
+"Aw, Tom, boy, that was not good of you," and made for his hat, while
+Tom sat with a broad grin at the result of his delicate diplomacy, and
+Gard's great regret was that it was not possible for him to take the
+hulking fellow by the neck and bundle him out of doors.
+
+Old Tom made some sharp remark to his son, who replied in kind; Mrs.
+Hamon sat quietly aloof, as she always did when Tom and his father got
+to words, and Bernel made play with his supper, as though such matters
+were of too common occurrence to call for any special attention on his
+part.
+
+Then Nance's face framed in a black sun-bonnet gleamed in at the outer
+door.
+
+"Come along, Bern, and we'll go and tell the Seigneur where his white
+horse is," and she disappeared, and Bernel, having polished off
+everything within reach, got up and followed her.
+
+"Will you please to take a look at the mines to-night?" asked old Tom of
+his guest, anxious to interest him in the work as speedily as possible.
+
+"We might take a bit of a walk, and you can tell me all you will about
+things. But I don't take hold till the first of the month, and I don't
+want to interfere until I have a right to. I suppose my baggage will be
+coming up?"
+
+"Ach, yes! Tom, you take the cart and bring Mr. Gard's things up. They
+are lying on the quay down there. Then we will go along, if you please!"
+
+Old Tom marched him through the wonderful amber twilight to the summit
+of the bluff behind the engine-house--whence Gard could just make out
+his box and carpet-bag still lying on the quay below. And all the way
+the old man was volubly explaining the many changes necessary, in his
+opinion, to bring the business to a paying basis. All which information
+Gard accepted for testing purposes, but gathered from the total the fact
+that through ill health on the part of the departing captain, the ropes
+all round had got slack and that the tightening of them would be a
+matter of no little delicacy and difficulty.
+
+Sark men, Mr. Hamon explained, were very free and independent, and hated
+to be driven. They did piecework--so much per fathom, and were
+constitutionally, he admitted, a bit more particular as to the so much
+than as to the fathom. While the Cornish and Welsh men, receiving weekly
+wages, had also grown slack and did far less work than they did at first
+and than they might, could, and should do.
+
+"But," said old Tom frankly, scratching his head, "I don't know's I'd
+like the job myself. Your men are quiet enough to look at, but they can
+boil over when they're put to it. And our men--well, they're Sark, and
+there's more'n a bit of the devil in them."
+
+"I must get things round bit by bit," said Gard quietly. "It never pays
+to make a fuss and bustle men. Softly does it."
+
+"I'm thinking you can do it if any man can."
+
+"I'll have a good try any way."
+
+"Whereabouts does the Seigneur live?" he asked presently, and
+inconsequently as it seemed, but following out a train of thought of his
+own which needed no guessing at.
+
+"The Seigneur? Over there in Sark--across the Coupee."
+
+"What's the Coupee?"
+
+"The Coupee?--Mon Gyu!"--at such colossal ignorance--"Why, ...the
+Coupee's the Coupee.... Come along, then. Maybe you can get a look at it
+before it's too dark."
+
+They had got quite out of sound of the clanking engine, and were
+travelling a well-made road, when their attention was drawn to a lively
+struggle proceeding on the common between the road and the cliff.
+
+Tom, setting out after the troubled Peter, had caught sight of the
+Seigneur's white horse and had forthwith decided to take him home.
+Peter, agreeing that it was a piece of neighbourliness which the
+Seigneur would appreciate, had turned back to give his assistance.
+
+By some cajolery they had managed to slip a halter with a special length
+of rope over the wary white head, and there for the moment matters hung.
+For the white horse, with his forelegs firmly planted, dragged at one
+end of the rope and the two men at the other, and the issue remained in
+doubt.
+
+The doubt, however, was suddenly solved by the white horse deciding on
+more active measures. He swung his great head to one side, dragged the
+men off their feet and started off at a gallop, they hanging on as best
+they could.
+
+Old Tom and Gard set off after them to see the end of the matter, and
+suddenly, as the roadway dipped between high banks and became a hollow
+way, the white beast gave a shrill squeal, flung up his heels, jerked
+himself free, and vanished like a streak of light into the darkness of
+the lofty bank in front.
+
+"Mon Gyu!" cried old Tom, and sped up the bank to see the end.
+
+But the white horse knew his way and had no fear. They were just in time
+to hear the rattle of his hoofs, as he disappeared with a final shrill
+defiance into the outer darkness on the further side of a mighty gulf,
+while a stone dislodged by his flying feet went clattering down into
+invisible depths.
+
+"He's done it," panted old Tom, while Gard gazed with something like awe
+at the narrow pathway, wavering across from side to side of the great
+abyss, out of which rose the growl of the sea.
+
+"What's this?" he asked.
+
+"Coupee. It's a wonder he managed it. The path slipped in the winter
+and it's narrow in places."
+
+"And do people cross it in the dark?" asked Gard, thinking of the girl
+and boy who had gone to see the Seigneur.
+
+"Och yes! It is not bad when you're used to it. Come and see!" and he
+led the way back across the common to the road.
+
+Gard walked cautiously behind him as he went across the crumbling white
+pathway with the carelessness of custom, and, sailor as he had been, he
+was not sorry when the other side was reached, and he could stand in the
+security of the cutting and look back, and down into the gulf where the
+white waves foamed and growled among the boulders three hundred feet
+below.
+
+"I've seen a many as did not care to cross that, first time they saw
+it," said old Tom with a chuckle.
+
+"Well, I'm not surprised at that. It's apt to make one's head spin."
+
+"I brought captain of brig up here and he wouldn't put a foot on it. Not
+for five hundred pounds, he said."
+
+"It would have taken more than five hundred pounds to piece him together
+if he'd tumbled down there."
+
+"That's so."
+
+A young moon, and a clear sky still rarely light and lofty in the amber
+after-glow, gave them a safe passage back.
+
+When they reached the house among the trees, Gard bethought him of his
+belongings.
+
+"And my things from the quay?" he suggested.
+
+"G'zammin! That boy has forgotten all about them, I'll be bound. I'll
+take the cart down myself."
+
+"I'll go with you."
+
+When they got back with the box and bag, which no one had touched since
+they were dropped on to the platform four hours before, they found that
+Nance and Bernel had got home and gone off to bed, having taken
+advantage of being across in Sark to call on some of their friends
+there.
+
+Gard wondered how they would have fared if they had happened to be on
+the Coupee when the white horse went thundering across.
+
+He dreamed that night that he was cautiously treading an endless white
+path that swung up and down in the darkness like a piece of ribbon in a
+breeze. And a great white horse came plunging at him out of the
+darkness, and just as he gave himself up for lost, a sweet firm face in
+a black sun-bonnet appeared suddenly in front of him, and the white
+horse squealed and leaped over them and disappeared, while the stones he
+had displaced went rattling down into the depths below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HOW NANCE SHONE THROUGH HER MODEST VEILING
+
+
+As soon as the old captain's time was up, Gard took up his work in the
+mines with energetic hopefulness.
+
+His hopefulness was unbounded. His energy he tempered with all the tact
+and discretion his knowledge of men, and his experience in handling
+them, had taught him.
+
+His father had been lost at sea the year after his son was born. His
+mother, a good and God-fearing woman, had strained every nerve to give
+her boy an education. She died when Stephen was fourteen. He took to his
+father's calling and had followed it with a certain success for ten
+years, by which time he had attained the position of first mate.
+
+Then the owner of the Botallack Mine, in Cornwall, having come across
+him in the way of business, and been struck by his intelligence and
+aptitude, induced him by a lucrative appointment to try his luck on
+land.
+
+The managers of the Sark Mines, seeking a special man for somewhat
+special circumstances, had applied to Botallack for assistance, and
+Stephen Gard came to Sark as the representative of many hopes which, so
+far, had been somewhat lacking in results.
+
+But, as old Tom Hamon had predicted, he very soon found that he had laid
+his hand to no easy plough.
+
+The Sark men were characteristically difficult, and made the difficulty
+greater by not understanding him--or declining to understand, which came
+to the same thing--when he laid down his ideas and endeavoured to bring
+them to his ways.
+
+Some, without doubt, had no English, and their patois was quite beyond
+him. Others could understand him an they would, but deliberately chose
+not to--partly from a conservative objection to any change whatever, and
+partly from an idea that he had been imported for the purpose of driving
+them, and driving is the last thing a Sark man will submit to.
+
+Old Tom Hamon, and a few others who had a financial interest in the
+mines, assisted him all they could, in hopes of thereby assisting
+themselves, but they were few.
+
+As for the Cornishmen and Welshmen, the success or failure of the Sark
+Mines mattered little to them. There was always mining going on
+somewhere and competent men were always in demand. They were paid so
+much a week, small output or large, and without a doubt the small output
+entailed less labour than the large. They naturally regarded with no
+great favour the man whose present aim in life it was to ensure the
+largest output possible.
+
+And so Gard found himself confronted by many difficulties, and,
+moreover, and greatly to the troubling of his mind, found himself looked
+upon as a dictator and an interloper by the men whom he had hoped to
+benefit.
+
+Concerning the mines themselves he was not called upon for an opinion.
+The managers had satisfied themselves as to the presence of silver. If
+his opinion had been asked it would have confirmed them. But all he had
+to do was to follow the veins and win the ore in paying quantities, and
+he found himself handicapped on every hand by the obstinacy of his men.
+
+Outside business matters he was very well satisfied with his
+surroundings.
+
+In such spare time as he had, he wandered over the Island with eager,
+open eyes, marvelling at its wonders and enjoying its natural beauties
+with rare delight.
+
+The great granite cliffs, with their deep indentations and stimulating
+caves and crannies; the shimmering blue and green sea, with its long
+slow heave which rushed in foam and tumult up the rock-pools and
+gullies; the softer beauties of rounded down and flower-and fern-clad
+slopes honeycombed with rabbit holes; the little sea-gardens teeming
+with novel life; in all these he found his resource and a certain
+consolation for his loneliness.
+
+And in the Hamon household he found much to interest him and not a
+little ground for speculation.
+
+Old Mrs. Hamon--Grannie--had promptly ordered him in for inspection,
+and, after prolonged and careful observation from the interior of the
+black sun-bonnet, had been understood to approve him, since she said
+nothing to the contrary.
+
+It took him some time to arrive at the correct relationship between
+young Tom and Nance and Bernel, for it seemed quite incredible that
+fruit so diverse should spring from one parent stem.
+
+For Tom was all that was rough and boorish--rude to Mrs. Hamon, coarse,
+and at times overbearing to Nance and Bernel, to such an extent, indeed,
+that more than once Gard had difficulty in remembering that he himself
+was only a visitor on sufferance and not entitled to interfere in such
+intimate family matters.
+
+Tom was not slow to perceive this, and in consequence set himself
+deliberately to provoke it by behaviour even more outrageous than usual.
+Time and again Gard would have rejoiced to take him outside and express
+his feelings to their fullest satisfaction.
+
+With Mrs. Hamon and Bernel he was on the most friendly footing, his
+undisguised sentiments in the matter of Tom commending him to them
+decisively.
+
+But with Nance he made no headway whatever.
+
+It was an absolutely new sensation to him, and a satisfaction the
+meaning of which he had not yet fully gauged, to be living under the
+same roof with a girl such as this. He found himself listening for her
+voice outside and the sound of her feet, and learned almost at once to
+distinguish between the clatter of her wooden pattens and any one else's
+when she was busy in the yard or barns.
+
+Even though she held him at coolest arm's length, and repelled any
+slightest attempt at abridgment of the distance, he still rejoiced in
+the sight of her and found the world good because of her presence in it.
+
+He did not understand her feeling about him in the least. He did not
+know that she had had to give up her room for him--that she detested the
+mines and everything tainted by them, and himself as head and forefront
+of the offence--that she regarded him as an outsider and a foreigner and
+therefore quite out of place in Sark. He only knew that he saw very
+little of her and would have liked to see a great deal more.
+
+The very reserve of her treatment of himself--one might even say her
+passive endurance of him--served but to stimulate within him the wish to
+overcome it. The attraction of indifference is a distinct force in life.
+
+There was something so trim and neat and altogether captivating to him
+in the slim energetic figure, in its short blue skirts and print jacket,
+as it whisked to and fro, inside and out, on its multifarious duties,
+and still more in the sweet, serious face, glimmering coyly in the
+shadow of the great sun-bonnet and always moulded to a fine, but, as it
+seemed to him, a somewhat unnatural gravity in his company.
+
+And yet he was quite sure she could be very much otherwise when she
+would. For he had heard her singing over her work, and laughing merrily
+with Bernel; and her face, sweet as it was in its repression, seemed to
+him more fitted for smiles and laughter and joyousness.
+
+He saw, of course, that brother Tom was a constant source of annoyance
+to them all, but especially to her, and his blood boiled impotently on
+her account.
+
+He carried with him--as a delightful memory of her, though not without
+its cloud--the pretty picture she made when he came upon her one day in
+the orchard, milking--for, strictly as the Sabbath may be observed, cows
+must still be milked on a Sunday, not being endowed manna-like, with the
+gift of miraculous double production on a Saturday.
+
+Her head was pressed into her favourite beast's side, and she was
+crooning soothingly to it as the white jets ping-panged into the
+frothing pail, and he stood for a moment watching her unseen.
+
+Then the cow slowly turned her head towards him, considered him gravely
+for a moment, decided he was unnecessary and whisked her tail
+impatiently. Nance's lullaby stopped, she looked round with a reproving
+frown, and he went silently on his way.
+
+It was another Sunday afternoon that, as he lay in the bracken on the
+slope of a headland, he saw two slim figures racing down a bare slope on
+the opposite side of a wide blue gulf, with joyous chatter, and
+recognized Nance and Bernel.
+
+They disappeared and he felt lonely. Then they came picking their way
+round a black spur below, and stood for a minute or two looking down at
+something beneath them. Which something he presently discovered must be
+a pool of size among the rocks, for after a brief retiral, Nance behind
+a boulder and Bernel into a black hollow, they came out again, she
+lightly clad in fluttering white and Bernel in nothing at all, and with
+a shout of delight dived out of sight into the pool below.
+
+He could hear their shouts and laughter echoed back by the huge
+overhanging rocks. He saw them climb out again and sit sunning
+themselves on the grey ledge like a pair of sea-birds, and Nance's
+exiguous white garment no longer fluttered in the breeze.
+
+Then in they went again, and again, and again, till, tiring of the
+limits of the pool--huge as he afterwards found it to be--they crept
+over the barnacled rocks to the sea, and flung themselves fearlessly in,
+and came ploughing through it towards his headland. And he shrank still
+lower among the bracken, for though he had watched the distant little
+figure in white with a slight sense of sacrilege, and absolutely no
+sense of impropriety but only of enjoyment, he would not for all he was
+worth have had her know that he had watched at all, since he could
+imagine how she would resent it.
+
+Nevertheless, these unconscious revelations of her real self were to him
+as jewels of price, and he treasured the memory of them accordingly.
+
+He watched them swim back and disappear among the rocks, and presently
+go merrily up the bare slope again; and he lay long in the bracken,
+scarce daring to move, and when he did, he crept away warily, as one
+guilty of a trespass.
+
+And glad he was that he had done so, for he had proof of her feeling
+that same night at supper.
+
+Peter Mauger came sheepishly in again with Tom, and Tom, when he had
+satisfied the edge of his hunger, must wax facetious in his brotherly
+way.
+
+"Peter and me was sitting among the rocks over against big pool
+s'afternoon and we saw things"--with a grin.
+
+"Aw, Tom!" deprecated Peter in red confusion.
+
+"An' Peter, he said he never seen anything so pretty in all his life
+as--"
+
+"Aw now, Tom, you're a liar! I never said anything about it."
+
+"You thought it, or your face was liar too, my boy. Like a dog after a
+rabbit it was."
+
+"It was just like you both to lie watching," flamed Nance. "If you'd
+both go and jump into the sea every day you'd be a great deal nicer than
+you are; and if you'd stop there it would be a great deal nicer for us."
+
+"Aw--Nance!" from Peter, and a great guffaw from Tom, while Gard devoted
+himself guiltily to his plate.
+
+"You looked nice before you went in," chuckled Tom, who never knew when
+to stop, "but you looked a sight nicer when you came out and sat on
+rocks with it all stuck to you--"
+
+"You're a--a--a disgusting thing, Tom Hamon, and you're just as bad,
+Peter Mauger!" and she looked as if she would have flown at them, but,
+instead, jumped up and flung out of the room.
+
+Gard's innate honesty would not permit him to take up the cudgels this
+time. Inwardly he felt himself involved in her condemnation, though none
+but himself knew it.
+
+But he had taken at times to glowering at Tom, when his rudeness passed
+bounds, in a way which made that young man at once uncomfortable and
+angry, and at times provoked him to clownish attempts at reprisal.
+
+Mrs. Hamon bore with the black sheep quietly, since nothing else was
+possible to her, though her annoyance and distress were visible enough.
+
+Old Tom was completely obsessed with his visions of wealth ever just
+beyond the point of his pick. He toiled long hours in the damp
+darknesses below seas, with the sounds of crashing waves and rolling
+boulders close above him, and at times threateningly audible through the
+stratum of rocks between; and when he did appear at meals he was too
+weary to trouble about anything beyond the immediate satisfaction of his
+needs. Besides, young Tom had long since proved his strength equal to
+his father's, and remonstrance or rebuke would have produced no effect.
+
+As to Bernel, he was only a boy as yet, but he was Nance's boy and all
+she would have wished him.
+
+In time he would grow up and be a match for Tom, and meanwhile she would
+see to it that he grew up as different from Tom in every respect as it
+was possible for a boy to be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOW GRANNIE SCHEMED SCHEMES
+
+
+Stephen Gard's experience of women had been small.
+
+His mother had been everything to him till she died, when he was
+fourteen, and he went to sea.
+
+When she was gone, that which she had put into him remained, and kept
+him clear of many of the snares to which the life of the young sailorman
+is peculiarly liable.
+
+When he attained a position of responsibility he had had no time for
+anything else. And so, of his own experience, he knew little of women
+and their ways.
+
+Less, indeed, than Nance knew of men and their ways. And that was not
+very much and tended chiefly to scorn and dissatisfaction, seeing that
+her knowledge was gleaned almost entirely from her experiences of Tom
+and Peter Mauger. Her father was, of course, her father, and on somewhat
+of a different plane from other men.
+
+And so, if Nance was a wonder and a revelation to Gard, Gard was no less
+of, at all events, a novelty in the way of mankind to Nance.
+
+His quiet bearing and good manners, after a life-long course of Tom, had
+a distinct attraction for her.
+
+That he could burst into flame if occasion required, she was convinced.
+For, more than once, out of the corner of her eye and round the edge of
+her sun-bonnet, she had caught his thunderous looks of disgust at some
+of Tom's carryings-on.
+
+She would, perhaps, have been ashamed to confess it but, somewhere down
+in her heart, she rather hoped, sooner or later, to see his lightning as
+well. It would be worth seeing, and she was inclined to think it would
+be good for Tom--and the rest of the family.
+
+For Gard looked as if he could give a good account of himself in case of
+need. His well-built, tight-knit figure gave one the impression that he
+was even stronger than he looked.
+
+If only he had been a Sark man and had nothing to do with those horrid
+mines! But all her greatest dislikes met in him, and she could not bring
+herself to the point of relaxing one iota in these matters of which he
+was unfortunately and unconsciously guilty.
+
+The state of affairs at the mines improved not one whit as the months
+dragged on. There was a smouldering core of discontent which might break
+into flame at any moment--or into disastrous explosion if the necessary
+element were added.
+
+Old Tom did his best, and stood loyally by the new captain and the
+interests of the mine and himself. But he was in a minority and could so
+far do no more than oppose vehement talk to vehement talk, and that, as
+a rule, is much like pouring oil on roaring flames.
+
+Not many of those who were shareholders in the mine were also workers in
+it, and the workers met constantly at the house of a neighbour, who had
+turned his kitchen to an undomestic but profitable purpose by supplying
+drink to the miners at what seemed to the English and Welshmen
+ridiculously low prices.
+
+In that kitchen the new captain and his new methods were vehemently
+discussed and handled roughly enough--in words. And hot words and the
+thoughts they excite, and wild thoughts and the words they find vent in,
+are at times the breeders of deeds that were better left undone.
+
+To all financially interested in the mines the need for strictest
+economy and fullest efficiency was patent enough. It was still a case of
+faith and hope--a case of continual putting in of work and money, and,
+so far, of getting little out--except the dross which intervened between
+them and their highest hopes.
+
+There was silver there without a doubt, and the many thin veins they
+came across lured them on with constant hope of mighty pockets and
+deposits of which these were but the flying indications.
+
+And all putting in and getting nothing out results in stressful times,
+in business ventures as in the case of individuals. The great shafts
+sank deeper and deeper, the galleries branched out far under the sea,
+and there was a constant call for more and more money, lest that already
+sunk should be lost.
+
+Mr. Hamon, disappointed in his view of raising money on the farm by
+Tom's obstinacy, in the bitterness of his spirit and the urgent
+necessities of the mines, conceived a new idea which, if he was able to
+carry it out, would serve the double purpose of satisfying his own needs
+at the recalcitrant Tom's expense.
+
+"I must have more money for the mines," he said to his wife one day in
+private. "I'm thinking of selling the farm."
+
+"Selling the farm?" gasped Mrs. Hamon, doubtful of her own hearing. For
+selling the farm is the very last resource of the utterly unfortunate.
+"Aye, selling the farm. Why not? It'll all come back twenty times over
+when we strike the pockets, and then we can live where we will, or we
+can go across to Guernsey, or to England if you like."
+
+But Mrs. Hamon was silent and full of thought. She had no desire for
+wealth, and still less to live in Guernsey or in England, or anywhere in
+the world but Sark.
+
+He had been a good husband to her on the whole, until this silver craze
+absorbed him. She had never found it necessary to counter his wishes
+before. But this idea of selling the farm cut to the very roots of her
+life.
+
+For Nance's sake and Bernel's she must oppose it with all that was in
+her. If the farm were sold the money would all go into those gaping
+black mouths and bottomless pits at Port Gorey. The home would be broken
+up--an end of all things. It must not be.
+
+"I should think many times before selling the farm if I were you," she
+said quietly, and left it there for the moment.
+
+But old Tom, having made up his mind, and the necessities of the case
+pressing, lost no time over the matter.
+
+"I've been speaking to John Guille about that business," he said, next
+day, in a confidently casual way.
+
+"About--?"
+
+"About the farm. He'll give me six hundred pounds for it and take the
+stock at what it's worth, and he's willing we should stop on as tenants
+at fifty pounds a year rent."
+
+His wife was ominously silent. He glanced at her doubtfully.
+
+"I shall stop on as tenant for the present and Tom can go on working
+it. When we reach the silver, and the money begins to come back, we can
+decide what to do afterwards."
+
+Still his wife said nothing, but her face was white and set. It was hard
+for her to put herself in opposition to him, but here she found it
+necessary. He was going too far.
+
+It was only when the silence had grown ominous and painful, that she
+said, slowly and with difficulty--
+
+"I'm sorry to look like going against you, Tom, but I can't see it right
+you should sell the farm."
+
+"It'll make no difference to you and the young ones. I'll see to that."
+
+"It's not right and you mustn't do it."
+
+"Mustn't do it!--And it's as good as done!"
+
+"It can't be done until your mother and I consent, and we can't see it's
+a right thing to do."
+
+"Can't you see that you're only saving the farm for Tom?" he argued
+wrathfully, bottling his anger as well as he could. "It's nothing to you
+and the young ones in any case."
+
+"I know, but all the same it's not right. If it was to buy another farm
+it would be different, for you could leave it as you choose. But to
+throw away the money on those mines--"
+
+This was a lapse from diplomacy and old Tom resented it.
+
+"Throw the money away!" he shouted, casting all restraint to the winds.
+"Who's going to throw the money away? It's like you women. You never can
+see beyond the ends of your noses. I'll tell you what I'll do--I'll pay
+you out your dower right in hard cash. Will that satisfy you?"
+
+If he died she would have a life interest in one-third of the farm, but
+could not, of course, will it to Nance or Bernel. If he sold the farm
+and paid her her lawful third in cash, she could do what she chose with
+it. It was therefore distinctly to her own interest to fall in with his
+plan.
+
+But, dearly as she would have liked to make some provision, however
+small, for Nance and Bernel, her whole Sark soul was up in arms against
+the idea of selling the farm.
+
+It would feel like a break-up of life. Nothing, she was sure, would ever
+be the same again.
+
+"It's not right," she said simply.
+
+"You're a fool--" and then the look on her quiet face--such a look as
+she might have worn if he had struck her--penetrated the storm-cloud of
+his anger. He remembered her years of wifely patience and faithful
+service, "--a foolish woman. A Sark wife should know which side of her
+bread the butter is on. Can't you see--"
+
+"I know all that, Tom, but I hope you'll give up this notion of selling
+the farm. Your mother feels just as I do about it. We've talked it
+over--"
+
+"I'll talk to her," and he went in at once to the old lady's room.
+
+But Grannie gave him no time for argument.
+
+"It's you's the fool, Tom," she said decisively, as he crossed the
+threshold. "There's not enough silver in Sark to make a plate for your
+coffin."
+
+"I brought out more'n enough to make your plate and mine, myself
+to-day," he said triumphantly.
+
+"Ah, bah! You'd have done better for yourself and for Sark if you'd let
+it lie."
+
+"I'd have done better still if I'd got twice as much."
+
+"If the good God set silver inside Sark, it was because He thought it
+was the best place for it, and it's not for the likes of you to be
+trying to get it out."
+
+"What's it there for if it's not to be got out?"
+
+"You mark me, Tom Hamon, no good will come of all this upsetting and
+digging out the insides of the Island--nenni-gia!"
+
+"Pergui, mother, where do you think all the silver and gold in the world
+came from?"
+
+"It didn't come out of our Sark rocks any way, mon gars."
+
+"Good thing for us if it had, ma fe! But, see you here, mother, if I
+sell the farm it's not you and Nance that need trouble. If I pay out
+your dowers in hard cash you're both of you better off than you are now,
+and I'm better off too. It's only Tom could complain, and--"
+
+"It's hard on the lad."
+
+"Bidemme, it's no more than he deserves for his goings-on! Maybe it'll
+do him good to have to work for his living."
+
+"And you would do that to get your bit more money to throw into those
+big holes?"
+
+"Never you mind me. I'll take care of myself, and we'll see who's wisest
+in the end. Now, will you agree to it?"
+
+"I'll talk it over with Nancy again," and the big black sun-bonnet
+nodded with sapient significance. "Send her to me."
+
+"It's from you I got my good sense," said old Tom approvingly, and went
+off in search of his wife, while the clever old lady pondered deep
+schemes.
+
+"Here's the way of it, Nancy," she said, when Mrs. Hamon came in. "He's
+crazy on these silver mines, and he's willing to pay out our dowers,
+yours and mine, so that he may throw the rest into the big holes at Port
+Gorey. Ch'est b'en! Your money and mine take more than half of what he
+gets. If you'll put yours to mine I'll make up the difference from what
+I've saved, and we'll retraite the farm, and it shall go to Nance and
+Bernel when the time comes."
+
+"I can't help thinking it's rather hard on Tom," suggested Mrs. Hamon,
+with less vigour than before.
+
+The idea appealed strongly to her maternal feelings and she had suffered
+much from Tom; still her instinct for right was there and was not to be
+stifled with a word.
+
+"If you feel so when the time comes we could divide it among them, and
+till then Tom would have to behave himself," said the wily old lady,
+with a chuckle.
+
+That again appealed strongly to Mrs. Hamon.
+
+"Yes, I think I would agree to that," she said, after thinking it all
+over.
+
+All things considered, Grannie's scheme was an excellent one and worthy
+of her.
+
+By a curious anomaly of Sark law, though a man may not mortgage his
+property without the consent of his next-in-succession, he can sell it
+outright and do what he chooses with the proceeds. His wife has a dower
+right of one-third of both real and personal estate, into which she
+enters upon his death. The right, however, is there while he still
+lives, and must be taken into consideration in any sale of the property.
+
+All property is sold subject to the "retraite"; in plain English, no
+sale is completed for six weeks, and within that time every member of
+the seller's family, in due order of succession, even to the collateral
+branches, has the right to take over, or withdraw, the property at the
+same price as has been agreed upon, paying in addition to the Seigneur
+the trezieme or thirteenth part of the price, as by law provided.
+
+If Grannie's scheme were carried out, therefore, she and Mrs. Hamon
+would become owners of the farm. Tom would be there on sufferance and
+might be kept within bounds or kicked out. Old Tom would have something
+more to throw into the holes at Port Gorey. And Nance and Bernel could
+be adequately provided for. An excellent scheme, therefore, for all
+concerned--except young Tom, who would have to behave himself better
+than he was in the habit of doing or suffer the consequences.
+
+"Yes," said Nancy. "I don't see that I'd be doing right by Nance and
+Bernel not to agree to that. And if Tom behaves himself," at which
+Grannie grunted doubtfully, "he can have his share when the time comes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HOW GARD FOUGHT GALES AND TOM
+
+
+So far the discussion as to the sale of the farm had been confined to
+the elders.
+
+Young Tom had viewed John Guille's visits to the place with the lowering
+suspicion of a bull at a stranger's invasion of his field. He wondered
+what was going on and surmised that it was nothing to his advantage.
+
+Words had been rare between him and his father since his refusal to lend
+himself to a loan on the farm, but his suspicion got the better of his
+obstinacy at last.
+
+"What's John Guille want coming about here so much?" he demanded
+bluntly.
+
+"I suppose he can come if he wants to. He's going to buy the farm."
+
+"Going--to--buy--the--farm!... You--going--to--sell--the--farm--away--
+from--me?" roared young Tom, like the bull wounded to the quick.
+
+"Ouaie, pardi! And why not? You had the chance of saving it and you
+wouldn't."
+
+"If you do it, I'll--"
+
+"Ouaie! You'll--"
+
+"I'll--Go'zammin, I'll--I'll--"
+
+"Unless you're a fool, mon gars, you'll be careful what you say or do.
+It'll all come back from the mines and you'll have your share if you
+behave yourself."
+
+"---- you and your mines!" was Tom's valedictory, and he flung away in
+mortal anger; anger, too, which, from a Sark point of view, was by no
+means unjustified. Selling the estate away from the rightful heir was
+disinheritance, a blow below the belt which most testators reserve until
+they are safe from reach of bodily harm.
+
+Tom left the house and cut all connection with his family. He drifted
+away like a threatening cloud, and the sun shone out, and Stephen Gard,
+with the rest, found greater comfort in his room than they had ever
+found in his company.
+
+So gracious, indeed, did the atmosphere of the house become, purged of
+Tom, that Gard, to his great joy, found even Nance not impossible of
+approach.
+
+He had always treated her with extremest deference and courtesy,
+respecting, as far as he was able, her evident wish for nothing but the
+most distant intercourse.
+
+But he was such a very great change from Tom!
+
+She caught his dark eyes fixed on her at times with a look that reminded
+her of Helier Baker's black spaniel's, who was a very close friend of
+hers. They had neither dog nor cat at present at La Closerie, both
+having been scrimped by the silver mines, when old Tom's first bad
+attack of economy came on.
+
+Then, at table, Gard was always quietly on the look-out to anticipate
+her wants. That was a refreshing novelty. Even Bernel, her special
+crony, thought only of his own requirements when food stood before him.
+
+Now and again Gard began to venture on a question direct to her,
+generally concerning some bit of the coast he had been scrambling about,
+and she found it rather pleasant to be able to give information about
+things he did not know to this undoubtedly clever mine captain.
+
+So, little by little, he grew into her barest toleration but apparently
+nothing more, and was puzzled at her aloofness and reserve, not
+understanding at all her bitter feeling against the mines and everything
+connected with them.
+
+The first time he went to church with her and Bernel was a great
+white-stone day to him.
+
+He had gone by himself once every Sunday, and done his best to follow
+the service in French, which he was endeavouring to pick up as best he
+could. And, if he could only now and again come across a word he
+understood, still the being in church and worshipping with others--even
+though it was in an unknown tongue--the sound of the chants and hymns
+and responses, and the mild austerity and reverent intonation of the
+good old Vicar, all induced a Sabbath feeling in him, and made a welcome
+change from the rougher routine of the week, which he would have missed
+most sorely.
+
+On that special afternoon, he had been lying on the green wall of the
+old French fort, enjoying that most wonderful view over the shimmering
+blue sea, with Herm and Jethou resting on it like great green velvet
+cushions, and Guernsey gleaming softly in the distance, and Brecqhou and
+the Gouliot Head, and all the black outlying rocks fringed with creamy
+foam, till it should be time to go along to church.
+
+When he heard voices in the road below and saw Nance and Bernel, he
+jumped up on the spur of the moment, and pushed through the gorse and
+bracken, and stood waiting for them.
+
+"Will you let me join you?" he asked, as they came up, fallen shyly
+silent.
+
+"We don't mind," said Bernel, and they went along together.
+
+"This always strikes me afresh, each time I see it, as one of the most
+extraordinary places I've come across," said Gard, as they dipped down
+towards the Coupee.
+
+"Wait till we're coming home," said Bernel hopefully.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"You see those clouds over there? That's wind--sou'-west--you'll see
+what it's like after church."
+
+"Your gales are as extraordinary as all the rest--and your tides and
+currents and sea-mists. I suppose one must be born here to understand
+them. We have a fine coast in Cornwall, but I think you beat us."
+
+"Of course. This is Sark."
+
+"And does no one ever tumble over the Coupee in the dark?"
+
+"N--o, not often, any way. Nance once saw a man blown over."
+
+"That was a bad thing to see," said Gard, turning towards her. "How was
+it?"
+
+"I was coming from school--"
+
+"All alone?"
+
+"Yes, all alone. The others had gone on; I'd been kept in, and it was
+nearly dark. It was blowing hard, and when I got to the first rock here
+I thought it was going to blow me over. So I went down on my hands and
+knees and was just going to crawl, when old Hirzel Mollet came down the
+other side with a great sheaf of wheat on his back. He was taking it to
+the Seigneur for his tithes. And then in a moment he gave a shout and I
+saw he was gone."
+
+"That was terrible. What did you do?"
+
+"I screamed and crawled back across the narrow bit to the cutting, and
+ran screaming up to the cottages at Plaisance, and Thomas Carre and his
+men came running down. But they could do nothing. They went round in a
+boat from the Creux, but he was dead."
+
+"And how did you get home?"
+
+"Thomas Carre took me across and I ran on alone, but it was months
+before I could forget poor old Hirzel Mollet."
+
+"I should think so, indeed. That was a terrible thing to see."
+
+The opening of the mines, and the influx of the Welsh and Cornishmen and
+their wives and children, with their new and up-to-date ideas of living
+and dressing, had wrought a great and not altogether wholesome change
+upon the original inhabitants.
+
+All the week they were hard at work in their fields or their boats, but
+on Sunday the lonely lanes leading to Little Sark were thronged with
+sightseers, curious to inspect the mines and the latest odd fashions
+among the miners' wives and daughters.
+
+Odd, and extremely useless little parasols, were then the vogue in
+England. The miners' women-folk flaunted these before the dazzled eyes
+of the Sark girls, and Sark forthwith burst into flower of many-coloured
+parasols.
+
+The mine ladies dressed in printed cottons of strange and wonderful
+patterns. The Sark girls must do the same.
+
+"Tiens!" ejaculated Nance more than once, as they walked. "Here is Judi
+Le Masurier with a new pink parasol!--and a straw bonnet with green
+strings!--and every day you'll see her about the fields without so much
+as a sun-bonnet on! And Rachel Guille has got a new print dress all red
+roses and lilac! Mon Gyu, what are we coming to!"
+
+She had many such comments and still more unspoken ones. But Stephen
+Gard, glancing, whenever he could do so unperceived, at the trim but
+plainly-dressed little sun-bonneted figure by his side, vowed in his
+heart that the whole of these others rolled into one were not to be
+compared with her, and that he would give all the silver in the mines of
+Sark to win her appreciation and regard.
+
+As they turned the corner at Vauroque, they came suddenly on a number of
+men lounging on the low wall, and among them Tom Hamon, pipe in mouth
+and hands in pockets.
+
+As they passed he made some jocular remark in the patois which provoked
+a guffaw from the rest, and reddened Nance's face, and caused Bernel to
+glance up at Gard and jerk round angrily towards Tom.
+
+"What did he say?" asked Gard, stopping.
+
+But Nance hurried on and he could not but follow.
+
+"What was it?" he asked again, as he caught up with her.
+
+"If you please, do not mind him. It was just one of his rudenesses."
+
+"They want knocking out of him."
+
+"He is very rude," said Nance, and they passed the Vicarage and turned
+up the stony lane to the church.
+
+Gard was surprised by the speedy verification of Bernel's weather
+forecast. Before the service was over the wind was howling round the
+building with the sounds of unleashed furies, and when they got out it
+was almost dark.
+
+They bent to the gale and pressed on, Gard with a discomforting
+remembrance that the Coupee lay ahead.
+
+As they passed Vauroque there seemed a still larger crowd of loafers at
+the corner, and again Tom's voice called rudely after them.
+
+Gard turned promptly and strode back to where he was sitting on the
+wall, dangling his feet in devil-may-care fashion. Tom jumped down to
+meet him.
+
+"Say that again in English, will you?" said Gard angrily.
+
+"Go to--!" said Tom.
+
+Then Gard's left fist caught him on the hinge of the right jaw, and he
+reeled back among the others who had jumped down to back him up.
+
+"Well--? Want any more?" asked Gard stormily.
+
+"You wait," growled Tom, nursing his jaw, "I'll talk to you one of these
+days."
+
+"Whenever you like, you cur. What you need is a sound thrashing and a
+kick over the Coupee."
+
+To his surprise none of the others joined in. But he did not know them.
+
+They might guffaw at Tom's unseemly pleasantries, but they held him in
+no high esteem--either for himself or for his position, since word of
+the sale of La Closerie had got about.
+
+Then they were a hardy crew and held personal courage and prowess in
+high respect. And in this matter there could be no possible doubt as to
+where the credit lay.
+
+"Goin' to fight him, Tom?" drawled one, in the patois.
+
+"---- him!" growled Tom, but made no move that way.
+
+And Gard turned and went over to Nance and Bernel, who were sheltering
+from the storm in lee of one of the cottages.
+
+If he could have seen it, there was a warmer feeling in her heart for
+him than had ever been there before--a novel feeling, too, of respect
+and confidence such as she had never entertained towards any other man
+in all her life.
+
+For that quick blow had been struck on her behalf, she knew; and it was
+vastly strange, and somehow good, to feel that a great strong man was
+ready to stand up for her and, if necessary, to fight for her.
+
+She pressed silently on against the gale, with an odd little glow in her
+heart, and a feeling as though something new had suddenly come into her
+life.
+
+The gale caught them at the Coupee, and the crossing seemed to Gard not
+without its risks.
+
+Bernel bent and ran on through the darkness without a thought of danger.
+
+Gard hesitated one moment and Nance stretched a hand to him, and he took
+it and went steadily across.
+
+And, oh, the thrill of that first living touch of her! The feel of the
+warm nervous little hand sent a tingling glow through him such as he had
+never in his life experienced before. Verily, a white-stone day this, in
+spite of winds and darkness!
+
+The gale howled like ten thousand demons, and the noise of the waves in
+Grande Greve came up to them in a ceaseless savage roar. Gard confessed
+to himself that, alone, he would never have dared to face that perilous
+storm-swept bridge. But the small hand of a girl made all the difference
+and he stepped alongside her without a tremor.
+
+"B'en, Monsieur Gard, was I right?" shouted Bernel in his ear, as they
+stepped within the shelter of the cutting on the farther side.
+
+"You were right. It's a terrible place in a gale."
+
+"You wait," shouted Bernel. "We're not home yet."
+
+"No more Coupees, any way," and they bent again into the storm.
+
+They had not gone more than a hundred yards when, through some freakish
+funnelling of the tumbled headlands, the gale gripped them like a giant
+playing with pigmies, caught them up, flung them bodily across the road
+and held Gard and Bernel pinned and panting against the green bank,
+while Nance disappeared over it into the shrieking darkness.
+
+"Good heavens!" gasped Gard, fearful lest she should have been blown
+over the cliffs, and wriggled himself up under the ceaseless thrashing
+of the gale and was whirled off the top into the field beyond.
+
+There the pressure was less, and, getting on to his hands and knees to
+crawl in search of Nance, he found her close beside him crouching in the
+lee of the grassy dyke.
+
+He crept into shelter beside her, and presently, in the lull after a
+fiercer blast than usual, she set off, bent almost double, and in a
+moment they were in comparative quiet. Nance crawled through a gap into
+the road and they found Bernel waiting for them.
+
+"Knew you'd come through there. That's what that gap's made for," he
+shouted.
+
+"I've been in many a storm but I never felt wind like that before," said
+Gard, as soon as his breath came back.
+
+"If you'd stopped with me you'd have been all right," said Bernel.
+"There was no need for you to go after Nance. We've been through that
+lots of times, haven't we, Nance?"
+
+"Lots."
+
+"I shall know next time," said Gard, and to Nance it was a fresh
+experience to think of some one going out of his way to be of possible
+service to her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+HOW TOM WANTED TO BUT DIDN'T DARE
+
+
+Before the six weeks allowed by Sark law for the retraiting of the
+property had expired, Grannie and Mrs. Hamon put in their claims, and it
+became generally known that they would become the new owners of La
+Closerie, in place of John Guille.
+
+When the rumour at length reached Tom's ears, he, not unnaturally
+perhaps, set down the whole matter as a plot to oust him from his
+heritage and put Nance and Bernel in his place.
+
+So his anger grew, and he was powerless. And the impotence of an angry
+man may lead him into gruesome paths. Smouldering fires burst out at
+times into devastating flames, and maddened bulls put down their heads
+and charge regardless of consequences.
+
+When Tom Hamon asked Peter Mauger to lend him his gun to go
+rabbit-shooting one night, Peter, if he had been a thoughtful man, would
+have declined.
+
+But Peter was above all things easy-going, and anything but thoughtful
+of such matters as surged gloomily in Tom's angry head, and he lent him
+his gun as a matter of course.
+
+And Tom went off across the Coupee into Little Sark, nursing his black
+devil and thinking vaguely and gloomily of the things he would like to
+do. For to rob a man of his rights in this fashion was past a man's
+bearing, and if he was to be ruined for the sake of that solemn-faced
+slip of a Nance and that young limb of a Bernel, he might as well take
+payment for it all, and cut their crowing, and give them something to
+remember him by.
+
+He had no very definite intentions. His mind was a chaos of whirling
+black furies. He would like to pay somebody out for the wrongs under
+which he was suffering--who, or how, was of little moment. He had been
+wounded, he wanted to hit back.
+
+He turned off the Coupee to the left and struck down through the gorse
+and bracken towards the Pot, and then crept along the cliffs and across
+the fields towards La Closerie--still for three days his, in the
+reversion; after that, gone from him irrevocably--a galling shame and
+not to be borne by any man that called himself a man.
+
+Should he lie in the hedge and shoot down the old man as he came in from
+those cursed mines which had started all the trouble? Or should he walk
+right into the house and shoot and fell whatever he came across? If he
+must suffer it would at all events be some satisfaction to think that he
+had made them suffer too.
+
+From where he stood he could look right in through the open door, and
+could hear their voices--Nance and Bernel and Mrs. Hamon--the
+interlopers, the schemers, the stealers of his rights.
+
+The shaft of light was eclipsed suddenly as Nance came out and tripped
+across the yard on some household duty.
+
+He remembered how he used to terrify her by springing out of the
+darkness at her. She had helped to bring all this trouble about.
+
+Why should he not--? Why should he not--?
+
+And while his gun still shook in his hands to the wild throbbing of his
+pulses, Nance passed out of his sight into the barn.
+
+The deed a man may do on the spur of the moment, when his brain is on
+fire, is not so readily done when it has to be thought about.
+
+Then Mrs. Hamon came to the door, and called to Nance to bring with her
+a piece or two of wood for the fire.
+
+Here was his chance! Here was the head and front of the offence, past,
+present, and future! If she had never come into the family there would
+have been no Nance, no Bernel, no selling of the farm, maybe. A movement
+of the arms, the crooking of a finger, and things would be even between
+them.
+
+But--it would still be he who would have to pay--as always!
+
+All through he had been the sufferer, and if he did this thing he must
+suffer still more--always he who must pay.
+
+The man who hesitates is lost, or saved. When the contemplator of evil
+deeds begins also to contemplate consequences, reason is beginning to
+resume her sway.
+
+Then he heard heavy footsteps and voices. His father and Stephen Gard.
+
+Another chance! Gard he hated. There was a bruise on his right jaw
+still. And the old man!--he had cut him out of his inheritance by going
+crazy over those cursed mines.
+
+"I'm sorry you have gone so far," Gard was saying as they passed. "If
+you had consulted me I should have advised against it. Mining is always
+more or less of a speculation. I would never, if I could help it, let
+any man put more into a mine than he can afford to lose."
+
+"If you know a thing's a good thing you want all you can get out of
+it," said old Tom stoutly.
+
+"Yes, if--" and they passed into the house, while Tom in the hedge was
+considering which of them he would soonest see dead.
+
+Now they were all inside together. A full charge of small shot might do
+considerable and satisfactory damage.
+
+But thought of the certain consequences to himself welled coldly up in
+him again, and he slunk noiselessly away, cursing himself for leaving
+undone the work he had come out to do.
+
+On the common above the Pot, a terrified white scut rose almost under
+his feet and sped along in front of him. He blew it into rags, and was
+so ashamed of his prowess that he kicked the remnants into the gorse and
+went home empty-handed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW OLD TOM FOUND THE SILVER HEART
+
+
+One of the first things Stephen Gard had seen to, when he got matters
+into his own hands, was the safeguarding of the mines from ever-possible
+irruption of the sea. The great steam pumps kept the workings reasonably
+clear of drainage water, but no earthly power could drain the sea if it
+once got in.
+
+The central shafts had sunk far below sea-level. The lateral galleries
+had, in some cases, run out seawards and were now extending far under
+the sea itself.
+
+From the whirling coils of the tides and races round the coast, he
+judged that the sea-bed was as seamed and broken and full of faults as
+the visible cliffs ashore.
+
+In bad weather, the men in those submarine galleries and the
+outbranching tunnels could hear the crash of the waves above their
+heads, and the rolling and grinding of the mighty boulders with which
+they disported.
+
+If, by chance, the sea should break through, the peril to life and
+property would be great.
+
+He therefore caused to be constructed and fitted inside each tunnel, at
+the point where it branched from its main gallery, a stout iron door,
+roughly hinged at the top and falling, in case of need, into the flange
+of a thick wooden frame. The framework was fitted to the opening on the
+seaward side, in a groove cut deep into the rock round each side and
+top and bottom. The heavy iron door, when open, lay up against the roof
+of the tunnel and was supported by two wooden legs. If the sea should
+break through, the first rush of the water would sweep away the
+supporting legs, the iron door would fall with a crash into the flange
+of the wooden frame, and the greater the pressure the tighter it would
+fit.
+
+So the weight of the sea would seal the iron door against the wooden
+casement, which would swell and press always tighter against the rock,
+and that boring would be closed for ever. And if any man should be
+inside the tunnel when the sea broke through, there he must stop,
+drowned like a rat in its hole, unless by a miracle he could make his
+way along the tunnel before the trap-door fell.
+
+Gard never ceased to enjoin the utmost caution on the men who undertook
+these outermost experimental borings.
+
+His strict injunctions were to cease work at the first sign of water in
+these undersea tunnels, make for the gallery, close the trap, and await
+events.
+
+Believing absolutely in the existence of one or more great central
+deposits whence all these thin veins of silver had come, and hoping to
+strike them at every blow of his pick, old Tom Hamon was the keenest
+explorer and opener of new leads in the mine.
+
+"The silver's there all right," he said, time and again, "it only wants
+finding," and he pushed ahead, here and there, wherever he thought the
+chances most favourable.
+
+He took his rightful pay along with the rest for the work he did, but it
+was not for wages he wrought. Ever just beyond the point of his
+energetic pick lay fortune, and he was after it with all his heart and
+soul and bodily powers.
+
+For months he had been following up a vein which ran out under the sea,
+and grew richer and richer as he laid it bare. He believed it would lead
+him to the mother vein, and that to the heart of all the Sark silver.
+And so he toiled, early and late, and knew no weariness.
+
+His tunnel, in places not more than three and four feet high and between
+two and three feet wide, extended now several hundred feet under the
+sea, and was fitted at the gallery end with the usual raised iron door.
+
+It was hot work in there, in the dim-lighted darkness, in spite of the
+fact that the sea was close above his head. Fortunately, here and there,
+he had come upon curious little chambers like empty bubbles in one-time
+molten rock, ten feet across and as much in height, some of them, and
+curiously whorled and wrought, and these allowed him breathing spaces
+and welcome relief from the crampings of the passage.
+
+When he had broken into such a chamber it needed, at times, no little
+labour to rediscover his vein on the opposite side. But he always found
+it in time, and broke through the farther wall with unusual difficulty,
+and went on.
+
+The men generally worked in pairs, but old Tom would have no one with
+him. He did all the work, picking and hauling the refuse single-handed.
+The work should be his alone, his alone the glory of the great and
+ultimate discovery.
+
+The rocks above him sweated and dripped at times, but that was only to
+be expected and gave him no anxiety. Alone with his eager hopes he
+chipped and picked, and felt no loneliness because of the flame of hope
+that burned within him. Above him he could hear the long roll and growl
+of the wave-tormented boulders--now a dull, heavy fall like the blow of
+a gigantic mallet, and again a long-drawn crash like shingle grinding
+down a hillside. But these things he had heard before and had grown
+accustomed to.
+
+And so it was fated that, one day, after patiently picking round a great
+piece of rock till it was loosened from its ages-old bed, he felt it
+tremble under his hand, and leaning his weight against it, it
+disappeared into space beyond.
+
+That had happened before when he struck one of the chambers, and he felt
+no uneasiness. If there had been water beyond, it would have given him
+notice by oozing round the rock as he loosened it. The brief rush of
+foul gas, which always followed the opening of one of these hollows, he
+avoided by lying flat on the ground until he felt the air about him
+sweeter again.
+
+Then, enlarging the aperture with his pick, he scrambled through into
+this chamber now first opened since time began.
+
+It was like many he had seen before, but considerably larger. Holding
+his light at arm's length, above his head, a million little eyes
+twinkled back at him as the rays shot to and fro on the pointed facets
+of the rock crystals which hung from the roof and started out of the
+walls and ground.
+
+The gleaming fingers seemed all pointed straight at him. Was it in
+mockery or in acknowledgment of his prowess?
+
+For, in among the pointing fingers, it seemed to him that the
+silver-bearing veins ran thick as the setting of an ancient jewel,
+twisted and curling and winding in and out so that his eyes were dazzled
+with the wonder of it all.
+
+"A man! A man at last! Since time began we have awaited him, and this
+is he at last!" so those myriad eyes and pointing fingers seemed to cry
+to him.
+
+And up above, the roar and growl of the sea sounded closer than ever
+before.
+
+But he had found his treasure and he heeded nought beside. Here, of a
+surety, he said to himself, was the silver heart from which the
+scattered veins had been projected. He had found what he had sought with
+such labours and persistency. What else mattered?
+
+And then, without a moment's warning--the end.
+
+No signal crackings, no thin jets or streams from the green immensity
+beyond.
+
+Just one universal collapse, one chaotic climacteric, begun and ended in
+the same instant, as the crust of the chamber, no longer supported by
+the in-pent air, dissolved under the irresistible pressure of the sea.
+
+Where the sparkling chamber had been was a whirling vortex of bubbling
+green water, in which tumbled grotesquely the body of a man.
+
+The water boiled furiously along the tunnel and foamed into the gallery.
+The wooden supports of the iron door gave way; the door sank slowly into
+its appointed place.
+
+Old Tom Hamon was dead and buried.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
+
+
+The news spread quickly.
+
+Tom Hamon heard it as he sat brooding over his wrongs and cursing the
+chicken-heartedness and fear of consequences which had robbed him of his
+revenge.
+
+He started up with an incredulous curse and tore across the Coupee to
+the mines to make sure.
+
+But there was no doubt about it. Old Tom was dead: the six weeks were
+still two days short of their fulfilment; the property was his; his day
+had come.
+
+He walked straight to La Closerie, and stalked grimly into the kitchen,
+where, as it happened, they were sitting over a doleful and long-delayed
+meal.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had been too overwhelmed by the unexpected blow to consider
+all its bearings. Grannie, looking beyond, had foreseen consequences and
+trouble with Tom, and had sent for Stephen Gard and given him some
+elementary instruction relative to the laws of succession in Sark.
+
+Tom stalked in upon them with malevolent triumph. They had tried their
+best to oust him from his inheritance and the act of God had spoiled
+them. He felt almost virtuous.
+
+But his natural truculence, and his not altogether unnatural exultation
+at the frustration of these plans for his own upsetting, overcame all
+else. Of regret for their personal loss and his own he had none.
+
+"Oh--ho! Mighty fine, aren't we, feasting on the best," he began. "Let
+me tell you all this is mine now, spite of all your dirty tricks, and
+you can get out, all of you, and the sooner the better. Eating my best
+butter, too! Ma fe, fat is good enough for the likes of you," and he
+stretched a long arm and lifted the dish of golden butter from the
+board--butter, too, which Nance and her mother had made themselves after
+also milking the cows.
+
+"Put that down!" said Gard, in a voice like the taps of a hammer.
+
+"You get out--bravache! Bretteur! I'm master here."
+
+"In six weeks--if you live that long. Until things are properly divided
+you'll keep out of this, if you're well advised."
+
+"I will, will I? We'll see about that, Mister Bully. I know what you're
+up to, trying to fool our Nance with your foreign ways, and I won't have
+it. She's not for the likes of you or any other man that's got a wife
+and children over in England--"
+
+This was the suddenly-thought-of burden of a discussion over the cups
+one night at the canteen, soon after Gard's arrival, when the
+possibility of his being a married man had been mooted and had remained
+in Tom's turgid brain as a fact.
+
+"By the Lord!" cried Gard, starting up in black fury, "if you can't
+behave yourself I'll break every bone in your body."
+
+And Nance's face, which had unconsciously stiffened at Tom's words,
+glowed again at Gard's revelation of the natural man in him, and her
+eyes shone with various emotions--doubts, hopes, fears, and a keen
+interest in what would follow.
+
+The first thing that followed was the dish of butter, which hurtled past
+Gard's head and crashed into the face of the clock, and then fell with a
+flop to the earthen floor.
+
+The next was Tom's lowered head and cumbrous body, as he charged like a
+bull into Gard and both rolled to the ground, the table escaping
+catastrophe by a hair's-breadth.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had sprung up with clasped hands and piteous face. Nance and
+Bernel had sprung up also, with distress in their faces but still more
+of interest. They had come to a certain reliance on Gard's powers, and
+how many and many a time had they longed to be able to give Tom a
+well-deserved thrashing!
+
+Through the open door of her room came Grannie's hard little voice, "Now
+then! Now then! What are you about there?" but no one had time to tell
+her.
+
+Gard was up in a moment, panting hard, for Tom's bull-head had caught
+him in the wind.
+
+"If you want ... to fight ... come outside!" he jerked.
+
+"---- you!" shouted Tom, as he struggled to his knees and then to his
+feet. "I'll smash you!" and he lowered his head and made another blind
+rush.
+
+But this time Gard was ready for him, and a stout buffet on the ear as
+he passed sent him crashing in a heap into the bowels of the clock,
+which had witnessed no such doings since Tom's great-grandfather brought
+it home and stood it in its place, and it testified to its amazement at
+them by standing with hands uplifted at ten minutes to two until it was
+repaired many months afterwards.
+
+Tom got up rather dazedly, and Gard took him by the shoulders and ran
+him outside before he had time to pull himself together.
+
+"Now," said Gard, shaking him as a bull-dog might a calf. "See here!
+You're not wanted here at present, and if you make any more trouble
+you'll suffer for it," and he gave him a final whirl away from the house
+and went in and closed the door.
+
+Tom stood gazing at it in dull fury, thought of smashing the window,
+picked up a stone, remembered just in time that it would be his window,
+so flung the stone and a curse against the door and departed.
+
+"I'm sorry," said Gard, looking deprecatingly at Nance. "I'm afraid I
+lost my temper."
+
+"It was all his fault," said Nance. "Did he hurt you?"
+
+"Only my feelings. He had no right to say such things or do what he
+did."
+
+"It's always good to see him licked," said Bernel with gusto. "Nance and
+I used to try, but he was too big for us."
+
+Mrs. Hamon had gone in with a white face to explain things to Grannie.
+
+She came back presently and said briefly to Gard, "She wants you," and
+he went in to the old lady.
+
+"You did well, Stephen Gard," she chirped. "Stand by them, for they'll
+need it. He's a bad lot is Tom, and he'll make things uncomfortable when
+he comes here to live. When Nancy takes her third of what's left of the
+house, that'll be only two rooms, so you'll have to look out for
+another, and maybe you'll not find it easy to get one in Little Sark. If
+you take my advice you'll try Charles Guille at Clos Bourel, or Thomas
+Carre at the Plaisance Cottages by the Coupee, they're kindly folk
+both. I've told Nancy to get Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux to help her
+portion the lots, and it'll be no easy job, for Tom will choose the best
+and get all he can."
+
+They were agreeably surprised to hear no more of Tom, but learned before
+long that, on the strength of his unexpected good fortune, he had gone
+over to Guernsey to pass, in ways that most appealed to him, the six
+weeks allowed by the law for the settlement of his father's affairs.
+
+Within that six weeks Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux had, on Mrs. Hamon's
+behalf, to allot all old Tom's estate, house, fields, cattle,
+implements, furniture, into three as equal portions as he could contrive
+with his most careful balancing of pros and cons. For, with Solomon-like
+wisdom, Sark law entails upon the widow the apportionment of the three
+lots into which everything is divided, but allows the heir first choice
+of any two of them, the remaining lot becoming the widow's dower.
+
+No light undertaking, therefore, the apportionment of those lots, or the
+widow may be left with only bedrooms to live in, and an ill proportion
+of grazing ground for her cattle and herself to live upon. For, be sure
+that when it comes to the picking of these lots, even the best of sons
+will pick the plums, and when such an one as Tom Hamon is in question it
+is as well to mingle the plums and the sloes with an exactitude of
+proportionment that will allow of no advantage either way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE
+
+
+Gard's isolation was brought home to him when he endeavoured to find
+another lodging in Little Sark.
+
+Accommodation was, of course, limited. Many of the miners had to tramp
+in each day from Sark. There was still, in spite of all his tact and
+efforts, somewhat of a feeling against him as a new-comer, an innovator,
+a tightener of loose cords, and no one offered to change quarters to
+oblige him. And so, in the end, he took Grannie's advice and found a
+room in one of the thatch-roofed cottages which offered their
+white-washed shoulders to the road just where it rose out of the further
+side of the Coupee into Sark.
+
+They were quiet, farmer-fisher folk who lived there, having nothing to
+do with the mines and little beyond a general interest in them.
+
+When not at work, he was thrown much upon himself, and if in his rambles
+he chanced upon Bernel Hamon it was a treat, and if, as happened all too
+seldom, upon Nance as well, an enjoyment beyond words.
+
+But Nance was a busy maid, with hens and chickens, and cows and calves,
+and pigs and piglets claiming her constant attention, and it was only
+now and again that she could so arrange her duties as to allow of a
+flight with Bernel--a flight which always took the way to the sea and
+developed presently into a bathing revel wherein she flung cares and
+clothes to the winds, or into a fishing excursion, in which pleasure and
+profit and somewhat of pain were evenly mixed.
+
+For, though she loved the sea and ate fresh-caught fish with as much
+gusto as any, she hated seeing them caught--almost as much as she hated
+having her fowls or piglets slaughtered for eating purposes, and never
+would touch them--a delicacy of feeling at which Bernel openly scoffed
+but could not laugh her out of.
+
+She had sentiments also regarding the rabbits Bernel shot on the cliffs,
+but being wild, and she herself having had no hand in their upbringing
+and not having known them intimately, she accepted them as natural
+provision, though not without compunctions at times concerning possible
+families of orphans left totally unprovided for.
+
+When she did permit herself a few hours off duty she did it with a
+whole-hearted enjoyment--approaching the naive abandon of
+childhood--which, to Gard's sober restraint, when he was graciously
+permitted to witness it, was wholly charming.
+
+By degrees, and especially after her father's tragic death, Nance's
+feelings towards the stranger had perceptibly changed.
+
+He might be an alien, an Englishman; but he was at all events a
+Cornishman, and she had heard say that the men of Cornwall and of the
+Islands and of the Bretagne had much in common, just as their rugged
+coasts had. And England, after all, was allied to the Islands, belonged
+to them in fact, and was indeed quite as essential a part of the Queen's
+dominions as the Islands themselves, and to harbour unfriendly feeling
+towards your own relations--unless indeed, as in the case of Tom, they
+had given you ample cause--would be surely the mark of a small and
+narrow mind.
+
+And he might be a miner; and mines, and most miners, were naturally
+hateful to her. But he had been a sailor, and was miner only by accident
+as it were, and she knew that he loved the sea. Allowance, she supposed,
+must be made for men getting twists in their brains--like her father. He
+had gone crazy over these mines though he had been sensible enough in
+other matters.
+
+What her careful, surreptitious observation of him, from the depths and
+round the wings of her sun-bonnet, told her was that he was an upright
+man, and true, and bold, with a spirit which he kept well in hand but
+which could blaze like lightning on occasion, and a strength which he
+could turn to excellent purpose when the need arose.
+
+And--and--she admitted it shyly to herself and not without wonder, and
+found herself dwelling upon it as she sang softly to the ping-pang of
+the milk into the pail, or the swoosh of it in the churn--he thought of
+her, Nance Hamon--perhaps he even admired her a little--any way he was
+certainly interested in her, and in his shy reserved way he showed a
+desire for her company which she no longer found pleasure in defeating
+as she had done at first.
+
+Undoubtedly an odd feeling, this, of being cared for by an outside
+man--- but withal tending to increase of self-esteem and therefore not
+unpleasing.
+
+Peter Mauger, indeed--but then she had never looked upon Peter as
+anything but Peter, and the shadow of Tom had always obscured him to
+her. Stephen Gard was a man, and a different kind of a man from Peter
+altogether.
+
+She remembered, with a slight reddening still of the warm brown cheeks
+whenever she thought of it--how, on the previous Sunday afternoon, she
+and Bernel had gone running over the downs through the waist-high
+bracken towards Breniere, the tide in their favourite pool below the
+rocks being too high for bathing. And on the slope above the Cromlech
+they had come suddenly on Gard, lying there looking out over the sea
+towards L'Etat.
+
+He had jumped up at sight of them and stood hesitating a moment.
+
+"Going for a bathe?" he asked, knowing the usual course of their
+proceedings.
+
+"Yes, we were," said Bernel. "You going?" with a glance at the towel
+Gard had brought out on the chance of a dip.
+
+"I'd thought of it, but your tides and currents here are so
+troublesome--"
+
+"Oh, we know all about 'em. They're all right when you know."
+
+"I suppose so, but--" with a look at Nance, "I'll clear out."
+
+"You're not coming?"
+
+"Your sister wouldn't like it."
+
+"Nance?" with a look of surprise. "She won't mind. Will you, Nance?"
+
+Then it was her turn to hesitate, for bathing with Bernel was one thing,
+and with Mr. Gard quite another.
+
+"You'll show me another time, Bernel," said Gard, picking up his towel.
+"I wouldn't like to spoil your fun now."
+
+"But you wouldn't. Would he, Nance?"
+
+"I don't mind--if you'll give me the cave."
+
+"All the caves you want," said Bernel, scornful at such unusual
+stickling on the part of his chum.
+
+"Quite sure you don't mind?" asked Gard, doubtful still.
+
+"If I have the cave. It's generally the one who gets there first, and
+Bern goes quicker than I do."
+
+"Of course. You're only a girl," laughed Bernel, as he raced on down the
+slope.
+
+And Nance laughed too at his brotherly depreciation, and Gard, who had
+never regarded her as only a girl, and whose thoughts of her were very
+absorbing and uplifting, happening to catch her eye, laughed also, and
+so they went down towards the sea in pleasant enough humour and the
+nearest approach to good-fellowship they had yet attained.
+
+Nance disappeared round a corner, and the next he saw of her she was
+swimming boldly out towards Breniere point, and in a moment he and
+Bernel were after her.
+
+"Don't go past the point," jerked Bernel.
+
+"She's gone."
+
+"She's a fish and knows her way," and just then they ploughed into what
+at first looked to Gard like a perfectly smooth spot amid the troubled
+waters, and then he was lifted from below and flung awry and out of his
+stroke, and tossed and tumbled till he felt as helpless as a dead fish.
+Then a fresh coil of the bubbling tide whirled him to one side and he
+was out again in the safety of the dancing waves.
+
+"You see?" cried Bernel. "That's what it's like," and shot into it
+headlong.
+
+And Gard, treading water quietly at a safe distance, saw how, every
+here and there, great crowns of water came surging up from below, with
+such lunging force that they rose in some cases almost a foot above the
+neighbouring level of the sea, and he wondered how any swimmer could
+make way through them. And yet Nance had cleft them like a seal, and he
+could hardly make out her brown head bobbing among the distant waves.
+
+"Is it safe for her?" he cried after Bernel, but the boy's only reply
+was a scornful wave of the arm as he pressed on to join her.
+
+Gard had an ample swim, and was dressed and sitting on a rock, when they
+came leisurely in, and it seemed to him that never in his life had he
+seen anything half so pretty as those shining coils of chestnut hair
+with the sea-drops sparkling in them, and the bright energetic face
+below, browned with sun and wind, rosy-brown now with her long swim, and
+beaded like her hair with pearly drops.
+
+As she swept along below, she gave just one quick up-glance, and then,
+with completest ignorance of his presence, turned her head to Bernel and
+chattered away to him with most determined nonchalance.
+
+She and Bernel used the long effective side-stroke almost entirely, and
+the little arm that flashed in and out so tirelessly was as white as the
+garment that fluttered in wavy convolutions about the lithe little body
+below.
+
+Gard, as he watched her, felt like a discoverer of hidden treasure,
+overwhelmed and intoxicated with the wonder of unexpected riches. He had
+come to this wild little land of Sark after silver, and he said to
+himself that he had found a pearl beyond price.
+
+In a minute or two they were scrambling up the slope and flung
+themselves down beside him for a rest, feeling the strain of unusual
+exertion now that the brace and tonic of the water was off them.
+
+"You are bold swimmers," said Gard.
+
+"She's a fish in the water," said Bernel, "and she made me swim almost
+as soon as I could walk."
+
+"You see," said Nance, in her decisive little way, "many of our Sark men
+won't learn to swim. They think it's mistrusting God. But that seems to
+me foolish. Every man who goes down to the sea ought to be able to
+swim--besides, it's terribly nice."
+
+"Yes, surely, Sark men ought to be able to swim, and they have certainly
+no lack of opportunity. But it's a dangerous coast for those who don't
+know it. Look at that now," and he nodded to the foaming race in front
+of them, between Breniere and a gaunt rocky peak which rose like a
+mountain-top out of the lonely sea. "Why, it must be running five or six
+miles an hour."
+
+From where they sat the sea seemed perfectly calm, a level plain of
+deepest blue, with pale green streaks under the rocks and dark purple
+patches further out, its surface just furrowed with tiny wind-ripples,
+and underneath, a long slow heave like the breathings of the spirit of
+the deep. But, smooth as the blue plain seemed, wave met rock with roar
+and turmoil, and between that outlying peak and the shore the waters
+tore and foamed with wild white crests--tumbling green ridges that were
+never two seconds the same. While all along the great black base of the
+peak the white waves rushed like mighty rockets, flinging long white
+arms up its ragged sides and crashing together at the end in dazzling
+bursts of foam.
+
+"Wonderful!" said Gard. "I've lain here for hours watching it."
+
+"I've swum it," said Nance quietly.
+
+"So've I," said Bernel.
+
+"Never! You two? I wonder you came back alive!"
+
+"On the slack it's not so bad, and at half ebb."
+
+"And what is there to see when you get there?"
+
+"Oh, just rocks, and puffins and gulls. You can hardly walk without
+stepping on them. Do you remember how we sat and watched the baby gulls
+coming out, Nance?"
+
+"Yes," nodded Nance. "And you nearly got your fingers bitten off by a
+puffin when you felt in its hole."
+
+"Ma de, yes! They do bite."
+
+"What do you call the rock?" asked Gard, nodding across at it.
+
+"L'Etat," said Nance. "Mr. Cachemaille once told me that it had most
+likely at one time been joined on to Little Sark by a Coupee, just the
+same as Little Sark is joined to Sark. That's the Coupee, that shelf
+under water where the tide runs so fast. Some day, he said, perhaps our
+Coupee will go and we'll be an island just as L'Etat is."
+
+"It won't be this week," said Bernel philosophically.
+
+"It looks like the top of a high mountain just sticking up out of the
+water," said Gard, fascinated by the ceaseless rush of those monstrous
+waves in an otherwise calm sea.
+
+"I suppose that is what it is," said Nance. "It's far worse at the other
+end. You can't see it from here. No matter how smooth the sea is it
+seems to tumble down over some cliff under water and then come shooting
+up again, and it throws itself at the rocks and sends the spray up into
+the sky."
+
+"I'd like to go and see it," said Gard. "But I don't think I would like
+to swim. Could one get a boat?"
+
+"We have a boat with Nick Mollet in the bay below here," said Bernel.
+"But he's generally out fishing and you're always busy."
+
+"I'll take a holiday some day and you shall take me over."
+
+Time came when they went, but it was hardly a holiday undertaking.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+HOW NANCE CAME UP THE MAIN SHAFT WITHOUT GOING DOWN IT
+
+
+It was a few days after this that Gard had another proof of Nance's and
+Bernel's fearlessness and prowess in the waters they had conquered into
+friendliness.
+
+Bernel was a great fisherman. He could wheedle out rock-fish by the
+dozen while envious miners sat about him tugging hopefully at empty
+lines.
+
+He had gone down one afternoon to the overhanging wooden slip at Port
+Gorey, and had excellent sport, until a sudden shift of the wind to the
+south-west began piling the waters into the gulf on an incoming tide.
+Then he drew in his lines and sat dangling his legs for a few minutes,
+before gathering up his catch and going home.
+
+Nance saw him from the other headland and came tripping round to see how
+he had fared.
+
+"Bern," she cried, as she came up. "Tell that man he's not safe down
+there. The waves are bad there sometimes."
+
+"Hi, you!" cried Bernel, to a miner who had been watching his success
+and had then climbed down seaward over the furrowed black ledges, hoping
+to do better there. "Come back! It's not safe there."
+
+But the fisherman, intent on his sport, either did not, or would not,
+hear him.
+
+"Oh, well, if you won't," said Bernel.
+
+And then, without warning, a wave greater than any that had gone before
+it, hurled itself up the rocks and came roaring over the black ledges
+into the bay, and the man was gone.
+
+Nance and Bernel had straightened up instantly at the sound of its
+coming.
+
+Their eyes swept the rocks, and caught a glimpse of the dark body
+tumbling with the cascade of foam into Port Gorey.
+
+"Oh, Bern!" cried Nance, with up-clasped hands.
+
+But Bernel, loosing his belt and kicking off his breeches with a glance
+at the derelict, launched himself clear of the pier with a shout. And
+Nance, seeing the bulk of the man, and careless of everything but Bernel
+who seemed so very small compared with him, threw off her sun-bonnet and
+linen jacket, loosed a button, and was gone like a white flash after the
+two of them.
+
+Gard was in the assay office not far away. He heard the shout and ran
+out just in time to see Nance go, and running to the slip he saw their
+clothes lying and the meaning of it all.
+
+Bern had hold of the miner by the collar of his coat, and was doing his
+best with one hand to tow him to the shingle at the head of the gulf,
+the almost drowned one splashing wildly and doing his utmost to get hold
+of and drown his rescuer. Every now and again Bernel found it necessary
+to let go in order to keep out of his way.
+
+Nance swam steadily up and the sinking one made a frantic clutch at her.
+
+"Lie quiet or you shall drown," she cried. "Do you hear? Lie quiet and
+you are safe! See!" and she held his right hand while Bernel took his
+left and the man found himself no longer sinking, and they struck out
+for the shingle.
+
+Others of the miners had run down with ropes, but ropes were useless in
+that deep gulf. Nance and Bernel were doing the only thing possible, and
+Gard saw that they were all right now that the man had ceased to
+struggle.
+
+He picked up Bernel's things, and Nance's, with a curious feeling of
+delight and a touch of shyness, her sun-bonnet, her little linen jacket,
+her woollen skirt, her neat little wooden sabots, and ran swiftly with
+them to the shaft at the head of the gulf.
+
+They would make for the adit, he thought, and so gain the shaft and come
+up by the ladders, if, indeed, John Thomas was in any state to climb
+ladders.
+
+"Bring some brandy," he shouted to one of the men, and ran on. Nance was
+more to him than all the miners in Sark, and it was not brandy she would
+be wanting, he knew, but her clothes.
+
+And, since a man needs both his hands to go down almost perpendicular
+ladders, he left at the top all that she would not instantly need and
+took only the little jacket and the woollen skirt. These he rolled into
+a bundle as he ran, and gripped in his teeth as he began the descent,
+and rejoiced all the way down in this close intimacy with her clothing.
+Indeed, on one of the stages, when he stopped for a moment's breathing,
+he kissed the little garments devoutly, and then laughed shamefacedly at
+himself for his foolishness, and glanced round quickly lest any should
+have witnessed it.
+
+So down, down, till he came to the level, and crept along the adit to
+the shore.
+
+They had dragged John Thomas up on to the shingle, and he lay there
+half-dead and fuller of water than was his custom.
+
+Nance looked up quickly at the sound of Gard's feet, and the paled-brown
+of her face flushed red at sight of him, and then a grateful gleam
+lighted it as he dropped her things into her hand and bent over John
+Thomas, who was showing signs of life in a dazed and water-logged
+fashion.
+
+"You did splendidly, you two," he said to Bernel. "It's a grand thing to
+save a man's life, even if it's only John Thomas," for John Thomas had
+found this land of free spirits too much for him, and had become a
+soaker and an indifferent workman.
+
+"He'll be all right after a bit," he added. "I told them to send down
+some brandy," at which John Thomas groaned heavily to show his
+extremity. "As soon as it comes, Bernel, you help Nance up the ladders.
+Then run home both of you. Your things are at the top, Bernel. And here
+comes the brandy. Now, up you go! Do you think you can manage the
+ladders?" he asked Nance.
+
+"I'll manage them," and they crept away into the darkness of the adit,
+and Nance thought she had never been in such a hideous place in her
+life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HOW GARD REFUSED AN OFFER AND MADE AN ENEMY
+
+
+They had been most gratefully and graciously free from Tom since his
+father's death, but he reappeared a day or two before the end of the six
+weeks, and brought with him a wife from Guernsey--not even a Guernsey
+woman, however, but a Frenchwoman from the Cotentin--black-haired,
+black-eyed, good-looking, after the type that would please such an one
+as Tom Hamon--somewhat over-bold of face and manner for the rest of the
+family.
+
+Philip Tanquerel had had to bring all his sagacity to bear on his
+difficult task of apportioning the lots, and Tom, who knew every inch of
+the ground and all its capacities, grinned viciously now and again at
+the acumen displayed in the divisions.
+
+The allotment of the house-room had presented difficulties.
+
+The great kitchen at La Closerie occupied the whole centre third of the
+ground floor, the remaining thirds of the space on each side being taken
+up with the rarely-used best room and three bedrooms, all pretty much of
+a size, and all opening into the kitchen. Up above, under the sloping
+thatch was the great solie or loft, entered from the outside through the
+door-window in the gable by means of a short wooden ladder.
+
+Grannie's dower rights, when Tom's grandfather died, had obtained for
+her the two rooms constituting one-third of the house on the south side
+of the kitchen, and certain rights of use of the kitchen itself. As she
+needed only one room, she had bartered off the other and her kitchen
+rights to her son and his wife in exchange for food and attendance, and
+the arrangement had worked excellently.
+
+But, on her first glimpse of young Tom's quick-eyed, bold-faced
+Frenchwoman, she had vowed she would have none of her; and in the end,
+as the result of some chaffering, it was arranged that Tom and his wife
+should have the kitchen and all the rooms north of it, while Mrs. Hamon
+and Nance and Bernel had the room next Grannie's for a kitchen, and the
+great loft for bedrooms, all the necessary and duly specified
+alterations to be made at Tom's expense, and Mr. Tanquerel to see them
+carried out at once. Grannie's other room was to become their
+sitting-room also and they were to provide for her as hitherto. By
+boarding up the doors leading to the kitchen, and making a new entrance
+to their own rooms, the families were therefore entirely separated, to
+every one's complete satisfaction.
+
+The division of the furniture and kitchen utensils gave Mrs. Hamon all
+she needed. Tom, of course, took as _droit d'ainesse_, before the
+division, the family clock--which still bore signs of strife, and had
+refused to go since that night when Gard's buffet had sent him headlong
+into it; and the farm-ladders and the pilotins--the stone props on which
+the haystacks were built; and in addition to his own full share, as
+between himself and Nance and Bernel, he exacted from them to the
+uttermost farthing the extra seventh part of the value of all they
+received--an Island right, but honoured more in the breach than in the
+observance, and one which, in its exercise, tended to label the
+exerciser as unduly mean and grasping.
+
+Beyond that, everything was so fairly well balanced that Tom found
+himself unable to secure all he had hoped, and so deemed himself
+ill-used, and did not hesitate to express himself in his usual forcible
+manner.
+
+To obtain some of the things he specially wanted, Tanquerel had so
+arranged the lots that he must sacrifice others, and these little
+matters rankled in his mind and obscured his purview.
+
+There was a good deal of unhappy wrangling, but in the end Mrs. Hamon
+and Nance found themselves with a large cornfield, one for pasture, and
+one for mixed crops, potatoes, beans and so on, besides rights of
+grazing and gorse-cutting on a certain stretch of cliff common.
+
+They had also a pony and two cows, and two pigs and a couple of dozen
+hens and a cock--quite enough to keep Nance busy; and to them also fell
+an adequate share of the byres and barns, and the free use of the well.
+
+Tom, however, still looked upon them as interlopers, and grudged them
+every stick and stone, and hoof and claw. If they had never come into
+the family all would have been his. Whatever they had they had snatched
+out of his mouth.
+
+If it had not been for Philip Tanquerel the alterations agreed on would
+never have been completed. He got down the carpenter and mason from
+Sark, stood over them, day by day, till the work was done, and then
+referred them to Tom for payment--and a pleasant and lively time they
+had in getting it.
+
+The conditions resulting from all this were just such as have prevailed
+in hundreds of similar cases, such as are almost inevitable from the
+minute divisions and sub-divisions of small properties. When ill-feeling
+has prevailed beforehand it is by no means likely to be lessened by the
+unavoidable friction of such a distribution.
+
+The open ill-feeling was, however, all on Tom's side. The others had
+suffered him at closer quarters the greater part of their lives. It was
+to them a mighty relief to be boarded off from him, and to feel free at
+last from his unwelcome incursions.
+
+He never spoke to any of them, and when they passed one another on their
+various farm duties a black look and a muttered curse was his only
+greeting.
+
+By means of what fairy tales concerning himself, or his position, or
+Sark, he had induced the lively-eyed Julie to marry him, we may not
+know. But Mrs. Tom very soon let it be known that she considered herself
+woefully misled, and quite thrown away upon such a place as Sark, and
+still more so upon this _ultima thule_ of Little Sark, which she volubly
+asserted was the very last place le bon Dieu had made, and the condition
+in which it was left did Him little credit.
+
+She, at all events, showed no disinclination to chat with her
+neighbours. Very much the contrary. None of them could pass within range
+of her eyes and tongue without a greeting and an invitation to talk.
+
+"Tiens donc, Nancie, ma petite!" she would cry, at sight of Nance. "What
+a hurry you are in. It is hurry and scurry and bustle from morning till
+night with you over there. The hens? Let them wait, ma garche, 'twill
+strengthen their legs to scratch a bit, and 'twill enlighten your mind
+to hear about Guernsey and Granville. Oh the beautiful country! Mon
+Dieu, if only I were back there!"
+
+They all--except, perhaps, Grannie--felt for her--lonely in a strange
+land--and were inclined to do what they could to make her more
+contented. But she desired them chiefly as listeners, and the things she
+had to tell were little to their taste, and less to her credit from
+their point of view, though she herself evidently looked upon them as
+every-day matters, and calculated to inspire these simple island-folk
+with the respect due to a woman of the greater world outside.
+
+Grannie's views of her grand-daughter-in-law had never altered from the
+first moment she set eyes on her.
+
+When Mrs. Tom came in to hear herself talk, one afternoon when Tom was
+away fishing, the old lady simply sat and stared at her from the depths
+of her big black sun-bonnet, and never opened her lips or gave any sign
+of interest or hearing.
+
+"Is she deaf?" asked Mrs. Tom after a while.
+
+"Dear me, no. Grannie hears everything," said Mrs. Hamon, with a smile
+at thought of all the old lady would have to say presently.
+
+"Nom d'un nom, then why doesn't she speak? Is it dumb she is?"
+
+"Neither deaf nor dumb--nor yet a fool," rapped Grannie, so sharply that
+the visitor jumped.
+
+And during the remainder of her visit, no matter to whom she was talking
+or what she was saying, Julie's snapping black eyes would inevitably
+keep working round to the depths of the big black sun-bonnet, and at
+times her discourse lost point and trailed to a ragged end.
+
+"It's my belief that old woman next door is a witch," she said to her
+husband later on.
+
+"She's an old devil," he said bluntly. "She'll put the evil eye on you
+if you don't take care."
+
+"She ought to be burnt," said Mrs. Tom.
+
+"All the same," said Tom musingly, "she's got money, so you'd best be as
+civil to her as she'll let you."
+
+"Mon Dieu! My flesh creeps still at the way she looked at me. She has
+the evil eye without a doubt."
+
+And Grannie?--"Mai grand doux! What does a woman like that want here?"
+said she. "A wide mouth and wanton eyes. La Closerie has never had these
+before--a Frenchwoman too!"--with withering contempt. For, odd as it may
+seem, among this people originally French, and still speaking a patois
+based, like their laws and customs, on the old Norman, there is no term
+of opprobrium more profound than "Frenchman."
+
+Madame Julie flatly refused to subject herself to further peril from
+Grannie's keen but harmless gaze, and contented herself with such
+opportunities of enlarging Nance's outlook on life as casual chats about
+the farm-yard afforded, and found time heavy on her hands.
+
+Ennui, before long, gave place to grumbling, and that to recrimination;
+and from what the others could not help hearing, through the boarded-up
+doors and the floor of the loft, Tom and his wife had a cat-and-dog time
+of it.
+
+Gard had moved over to Plaisance with great regret. But nothing else was
+possible under the altered circumstances at La Closerie, so he made the
+best of it.
+
+It was some consolation to learn that they also missed him.
+
+"Everything's different," grumbled Bernel, one day when they met. "Tom
+and his wife quarrel so that we can hear them through the walls. And
+Grannie sits by the hour without opening her mouth. And mother and Nance
+are as quiet as if they were going to be sick. And I'm getting
+green-mouldy. Seems as if we'd got to the end of things, and nothing was
+ever going to happen again. I think I'll go to Guernsey."
+
+"Do you think they'd like--I mean, would they mind if I came in for a
+chat now and then? It's pretty lonely up at Plaisance too."
+
+"Oh, they'll mind and so will I. When'll you come?"
+
+"I'll look in to-night as I come from the mines--if you're sure--"
+
+"You come and try, and if you don't like it you needn't come
+again"--with a twinkle of the eye.
+
+Nance did not strike him as looking as though she were going to be sick,
+when he went in that night, nor did her mother.
+
+Grannie indeed had little to say, but then she was never over-talkative,
+and when Gard more than once looked at her, and wondered if she had
+fallen asleep, he always found the keen old eyes wide open, and eyeing
+him watchfully as ever out of the depths of the big black sun-bonnet.
+
+Mrs. Hamon asked about his new quarters, and his quiet shake of the head
+and simple--"They're kindly folk, but it's somehow very different"--told
+its own tale.
+
+"They're a bit short-handed, you see," he added, "and so they're all
+kept busy, and at times, I'm afraid, they wish me further."
+
+"And you go all that way back for your dinner each day?" asked Mrs.
+Hamon thoughtfully.
+
+"Well, I have tried taking it with me, but it's not very satisfactory."
+
+"What would you say to coming here for it, as you used to? I think we
+could manage it, Nance. What do you say?"
+
+"We could manage it all right," said Nance, "if--" and then, in spite of
+herself, she could not keep that telltale mouth of hers in order, and
+the attempt to repress a smile only emphasized the dimples at the
+corners. For Gard's face was as eager as a dog's at sight of a rat.
+
+"It will save me such a lot of time," he explained--at which Nance
+dimpled again as she went out to feed her chickens, and left them to
+complete the new arrangement.
+
+And if it had cost Gard every penny of his salary he would still have
+rejoiced at it, and considered his bargain a good one. As it was, it
+cost him no more than the trouble of rearranging his terms with the good
+folks at Plaisance, and it gave a new zest and enjoyment to life since
+it ensured a meeting with Nance at least once each day.
+
+And not with Nance only!
+
+Madame Julie, very weary of herself, and Tom, and her surroundings, and
+Sark, and life in general as understood in Sark, very soon became
+conscious of the regular visits next door of the best-looking young man
+she had yet seen in the Island, and was filled with curiosity concerning
+him.
+
+"He's after that slip of a Nance," she said to herself. "And he has his
+own share of good looks, has that young man."--And then came the
+inevitable, "Mon Dieu, but I wish Tom had been made like that!"
+
+To get a better view of him--and perhaps not without a vague idea of
+ulterior interest and amusement for herself--anything to add a dash of
+colour to the prevailing greyness of her surroundings--she was leaning
+on the gate next day when he came striding up to his dinner, and gave
+him, "Bon jour, m'sieur!" with much heartiness and the full benefit of
+her black eyes and white teeth.
+
+"'Jour, madame!" and he whipped off his hat and passed on into the
+house.
+
+"That was Madame Tom, I suppose, who was leaning over the gate, as I
+came in," he said, as they ate.
+
+"I expect so," said Mrs. Hamon. "She generally seems to have time on her
+hands."
+
+"When Tom's not there," snapped Grannie. "Got her hands full enough when
+he is."
+
+"I should imagine Tom would not be too easy to get on with at times.
+Maybe he'll settle down now he's married."
+
+"Doesn't sound like settling down sometimes," chirped the old lady
+again.
+
+"Oh? I'm sorry to hear that. She doesn't look bad-tempered."
+
+"Tom's got more'n enough for the two of them."
+
+"I'm afraid she finds it a change from what she's been accustomed to,"
+said Mrs. Hamon quietly. "She came in once or twice, but her talk is of
+things that don't interest us, and ours is of things that don't interest
+her, so we can't get as friendly as we would like to be."
+
+"And Tom?"
+
+"Tom considers us all robbers, as he always has done. He gives us his
+blackest face whenever he sees any of us."
+
+"That's unpleasant, seeing you're such close neighbours."
+
+"Yes, it's unpleasant, but we can't help it. It's just Tom. How is your
+work getting on?"
+
+"Not as I would wish," said Gard, with a gloomy wag of the head. "Your
+Sark men are difficult--very difficult, and the others who ought to know
+better, and who do know better"--with more than a touch of warmth--"go
+on as though I was a slave-driver."
+
+"Sark men are hard to drive," said Mrs. Hamon sympathetically.
+
+"They know perfectly well that I want only what is just and right to the
+shareholders. They expect their pay to the last penny, but when I insist
+on a proper return for it they look at me as if they'd like to knock me
+on the head. It's disheartening work. I've been tempted at times to
+throw it all up and go back to England"--at which Nance's heart gave so
+unusual a little kick that she had difficulty in frowning it into
+quietude, and just then Bernel came in with his gun and a couple of
+rabbits.
+
+"Who's going to England?" he asked. "I'll go too."
+
+"No you won't," said Nance sharply. "We want you here."
+
+"It's as dull as Beauregard pond and as dirty, since the m--aw--um!"
+with a deprecatory glance at Gard.
+
+"You'd find most busy places just as dirty," said Gard.
+
+"Then I'll go to sea. That's clean at all events."
+
+"Let's hope things will brighten a bit. You wouldn't find the fo'c'sle
+of a trader as comfortable as La Closerie, my boy,"--and they fell to on
+their dinner and left the matter there.
+
+"Dites-donc, Nannon, ma petite," said Mrs. Tom to Nance, a day or two
+later, "who is the joli gars who comes each day to see you?"
+
+"Mr. Gard from the mines comes up here to get his dinner, if that's what
+you mean."
+
+"Oh--ho! He comes for his dinner, does he? And is that all he comes for,
+little Miss Modesty?"
+
+"That's all," said Nance solemnly.
+
+"Oh yes, without a doubt, that's all. I think I'll ask him next time I
+see him. Why doesn't he go home for his dinner like other people?"
+
+"He's living at Plaisance now and it's far to go. He used to live here,
+you know."
+
+"Ma foi, no, I didn't know. He used to live here? And why did he go to
+Plaisance then?"
+
+"We hadn't room for him, you see."
+
+"But, Mon Dieu, we have room and to spare! There are those two bedrooms
+empty. Why shouldn't he--"
+
+But Nance shook her head at that.
+
+"Why then?" demanded Mrs. Tom, with visions of some one besides Tom to
+talk to of an evening--a good-looking, sensible one too. "Why?"
+
+"He and Tom don't get on well together--"
+
+"Pardi, I'm not surprised at that. It would need an angel out of heaven
+to get on with him sometimes. What induced me ever to marry such a
+grumbler I don't know. I wonder if Monsieur What-is-it?--Gard--would
+come back if I could arrange it?"
+
+But Nance shook her head again.
+
+"Ah--ha, ma garche, and you would sooner he did not--is it not so?"
+
+"I'm quite sure he and Tom would never get on together, and I don't
+think Mr. Gard would come."
+
+"It's worth trying, however. He would be some one to talk to of an
+evening any way."
+
+And so, when Tom came in that evening, she tackled him on the subject.
+
+"Say then, mon beau,"--and as she said it she could not but contrast his
+slouching bulk with the straight, well-knit figure of the other--"why
+should we not take in a lodger as all the rest do? Our two rooms there
+are empty and--"
+
+"Who's the lodger?"
+
+"There is one comes up every day to dinner next door, and would stop
+there altogether if they had the room. Tiens, what's this his name is?
+He's from the mines--"
+
+"You mean Gard--the manager," scowled Tom.
+
+"That's it--Monsieur Gard. Why shouldn't he--"
+
+"Because I'd break his head if I got the chance, and he knows it. Comes
+up there to dinner, does he? How long's he been doing that?"
+
+"For a week now. Couldn't you get over your bad feeling? It would be
+money in our pockets."
+
+"No, I couldn't, and he wouldn't come if you asked him."
+
+"Will you let me try?"
+
+"I tell you he won't come."
+
+"In that case there's no harm in trying. If I can persuade him, will you
+promise to be civil to him, and not try to break his head?"
+
+"He won't come, I tell you."
+
+"And I say he may."
+
+"And you'll nag and nag till you get your own way, I suppose."
+
+"Of course. What's the use of a woman's tongue if she can't get her own
+way with it? Will you promise to behave properly if he comes?"
+
+"I'll behave if he behaves," he growled sulkily. "But we'll neither of
+us get the chance. He won't come."
+
+"Eh bien, we'll see!"
+
+And when Gard came up to dinner next day, she was leaning over the gate
+waiting for him, very tastefully dressed according to her lights, and
+with an engaging smile on her face.
+
+"Dites donc, Monsieur Gard," she said pleasantly. "Our little Nannon was
+telling me you regretted having to live so far away. Why should you not
+come back and occupy your old room? It is lying empty there, and I would
+do my very best to make you comfortable, and you would be close to your
+friends all the time then, instead of having to go across that frightful
+Coupee."
+
+"It is very kind of you, madame," and he stared back at her in much
+surprise, and found himself wondering what on earth had made her marry
+such a man as Tom Hamon. For she was undeniably good-looking and had all
+a Frenchwoman's knack of making the very best of all she had--abundant
+black hair, very neatly twisted up at the back of her head; white teeth
+and full red lips; straight, well-developed figure very neatly dressed;
+and large black eyes which looked capable of so many things, that they
+found it difficult to settle for any length of time to any one
+expression.
+
+"It is very kind of you, madame," said Gard, "but--" and he stood
+looking at her and hesitating how to put it.
+
+"You mean about Tom," she laughed. "But that is all past. I have spoken
+to him, and he promises to behave himself quite properly if you will
+come. Voila!"
+
+Just for a moment the possibilities of the suggestion caught his mind.
+He would be near Nance all the time. He would be saved much tiresome
+walking to and fro. Especially he would be saved that passage of the
+Coupee, which at night, even with a lantern, was not a thing one easily
+got accustomed to, and on stormy nights was enough to make one's hair
+fly. Then this woman was very different from his present landlady, and
+would probably, he thought, have different notions of comfort.
+
+The quick black eyes caught something of what was in him: and he, as
+suddenly, caught something of what lurked, consciously or unconsciously,
+in them, and a little tremor of repugnance shook his heart and braced
+him back to reason.
+
+He shook his head. "It would not do, madame. He and I would never get on
+together, no matter how hard we tried. I thank you for the offer all the
+same," and he made as though to pass her.
+
+"I wish you would come," she said, and laid a pleading hand on his arm.
+"I'm sure he would try to behave. I can generally manage him except when
+he's been drinking. Then I'm afraid of him, and wish some one else was
+at hand. But that's only when he's been out all night at the fishing,
+and it's soon over and done with. Do come, monsieur!"--It was almost a
+whisper now, and she leaned towards him--the rich dark face--the great
+solicitous eyes.
+
+But she had mistaken her man. Perhaps she had not met many like him.
+
+He shook off her hand almost brusquely.
+
+"It is impossible, madame. I could not," and he pushed past just as
+Nance came to the door.
+
+She had seen him coming, heard their voices outside, and wondered what
+was keeping him.
+
+She turned back into the house when she saw Julie, wondering still more.
+For Gard's face was disturbed, and had in it something of the look she
+had seen more than once when he had faced Tom in his tantrums.
+
+And, glancing past him, she had seen what he had not--Julie's face when
+he turned his back on her.
+
+"Mon Gyu!" gasped Nance to herself, and went in wondering.
+
+"She and Tom wanted me to take my old room again, and I refused," was
+all he said.
+
+"Tom wanted you to go there?" said Mrs. Hamon in amazement.
+
+"So she said."
+
+Grannie's disparaging sniff was charged with libel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well?" asked Tom of his wife, when he came in later on with Peter
+Mauger, who had come over for supper. "Got your lodger?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That's what I told you," with a provocative laugh.
+
+"Oh, he'd have come quick enough."
+
+"Would, would he? Then why didn't he?"
+
+"I wouldn't trust myself alone in the house with that man."
+
+"Ah!" said Tom, staring at her. "Always thought he was a bad lot myself,
+didn't I, Peter?"
+
+Peter nodded.
+
+"It's a wonder to me that Mrs. Hamon lets him run after that girl of
+hers as she does," said Julie.
+
+"If I catch him up to any of his tricks I'll break his head for him."
+
+"Maybe it would be a good thing for little Nance if you did."
+
+"Knew he was a toad as soon as I set eyes on him, so did Peter. Didn't
+you, Peter?"
+
+Peter nodded.
+
+"What d'he say to you?" demanded Tom.
+
+"Didn't say much. Asked if you were much away at the fishing and that.
+But the way he looked at me!--I've got the shivers down my back yet,"
+and a virtuous little shudder shook her and made a visible impression on
+Peter.
+
+"Peter and me'll maybe have a word with him one of these days, won't we,
+Peter?"
+
+"Maybe," said Peter.
+
+"We don't want toads like Gard running off with any of our Sark girls,
+do we, Peter?"
+
+"No," said Peter.
+
+"Mr. Gard had better look out for himself or take himself off before
+somebody does it for him. There's plenty wouldn't mind giving him a
+crack on the head and slipping him over the Coupee some dark night."
+
+As to such extreme measures Peter offered no opinion. He looked vaguely
+round the big kitchen as though in search of something that used to be
+there, and said--
+
+"How about supper?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+HOW THEY WENT THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE NARROW WAY
+
+
+One dark night Gard sauntered down the cutting towards the Coupee,
+enjoying a last pipe before turning in.
+
+This had become something of a habit with him. The people of Plaisance,
+hard at work all day in the fields, went early to bed and left him to
+follow when he pleased. And to stand securely in that deep cleft, just
+where the protecting walls broke off short and left the narrow path to
+waver on into the darkness, was always fascinating to him.
+
+When the moon flooded the gulf on the left with shimmering silver, and
+the waves broke along the black rocks below in crisp white foam like
+silver frost, he would stand by the hour there and never tire of it.
+
+The moon cast such a mystic glamour over those great voids of darkness
+and over the headlands, melting softly away, fold behind fold, on the
+right, while Little Sark became a mystery land into which the white path
+rambled enticingly and invited one to follow.
+
+And to him, as his eyes followed it till it disappeared over the crown
+of the ridge, it was more than a mystery land--a land of promise, rich
+in La Closerie and Nance.
+
+Always within him, as he watched, was the feeling that if the sweet
+slim figure should come tripping down the moonlit path towards him, he
+would be in no way astonished. When he stood there, watching, it seemed
+to him that it would be entirely fitting for her to come so, in the calm
+soft light that was as pure and sweet as herself.
+
+And at times his eye would light on the grim black pile of L'Etat, lying
+out there in the silvery shimmer like some great monumental cairn, a
+rough and rugged heap of loneliness and mystery--the grimmer and
+lonelier by reason of the twinkling brightness of its setting. And then
+his thoughts would play about the lonely pile, and come back with a
+sense of homely relief to the fairy path which Nance's little feet had
+trod, in light and dark, and storm and shine, since ever she could walk.
+
+He pictured her as a tiny girl running fearlessly across the grim
+pathway to school, dancing in the sunshine, bending to the storm, and
+all alone when she had been kept in--he wondered with a smile what she
+had been kept in for.
+
+He thought of her, as he had seen her, walking to church, her usually
+blithe spirit tuned to sedateness by the very fact, and, to him,
+delightfully stiffened by the further fact that she, almost alone among
+her friends and school-fellows, wore Island costume, while all the rest
+flaunted it in all the colours of the rainbow. And he laughed happily to
+himself, for very joy, at thought of the sweet elusive face in the
+shadow of the great sun-bonnet. There was not a face in all Sark to
+compare with it, nor, for him, in all the world.
+
+But this night, as be stood there pulling slowly at his pipe and
+thinking of Nance, was one of the black nights.
+
+Later on there would be a remnant of a moon, but as yet the sky above
+was an ebon vault without a star, and the gulfs at his feet were pits of
+darkness out of which rose the voices of the sea in solemn rhythmic
+cadence.
+
+Down in Grande Greve, on his right, the waves rolled in almost without a
+sound, as though they feared to disturb the darkness. From the
+intervening moments he could tell how slowly they crept to their curve.
+Their fall was a soft sibilation, a long-drawn sigh. The ever-restless
+sea for once seemed falling to sleep.
+
+And then, as he listened into the darkness, a tiny elfish glimmer
+flickered in the void below, flickered and was gone, and he rubbed his
+eyes for playing him tricks. But the next wave broke slowly round the
+wide curve of the bay in a crescent of lambent flame, and a flood of
+soft, blue-green fire ran swelling up the beach and then with a sigh
+drew slowly back, and all was dark again. Again and again--each wave was
+a miracle of mystic beauty, and he stood there entranced long after his
+pipe had gone dead.
+
+And as he stood gazing down at the wonder of it, his ear caught the
+sound of quick light footsteps coming towards him across the Coupee, and
+he marvelled at the intrepidity of this late traveller. If he had had to
+go across there that night, he would have gone step by step, with
+caution and a lantern; whereas here was no hesitation, but haste and
+assurance.
+
+It was only when she had passed the last bastion, and was almost upon
+him, that he made out that it was a girl.
+
+His heart gave a jump. She had been so much in his thought. Yet, even
+so, it was almost at a venture that he said--
+
+"Nance?"
+
+And yet, again, he had learned to recognize her footsteps at the farm,
+and where the heart is given the senses are subtly acute, and she had
+slackened her pace somewhat as she drew near.
+
+"Yes; I am going to the doctor."
+
+"Why--who--?"
+
+"Grannie is ill--in pain. He will give me something to ease her." He had
+turned and was walking by her side.
+
+"I am sorry. You will let me go with you?"
+
+"There is no need at all--"
+
+"No need, I know; but all the same it would be a pleasure to me to see
+you safely there and back."
+
+She hurried on without speaking. If there had been any light, and he had
+dared to peep inside the black sun-bonnet, he might perhaps have found
+the hint of a smile overlaying her anxiety on Grannie's account.
+
+By the ampler feel of things, and the easing of the slope, he knew they
+were out of the cutting, and presently they were passing Plaisance.
+
+"If you would sooner I did not walk with you, I will fall behind; but I
+couldn't stop here and think of you going on alone," he said.
+
+"That would be foolishness," she said gently. "But there is really no
+need. I have no fears of ghosts or anything like that."
+
+"There might be other kinds of spirits about," he said quietly. "And
+when men drink as some of my fellows do, they are no respecters of
+persons. But this is surely very sudden. Your grandmother seemed all
+right at dinner-time."
+
+"She had bad pains in the afternoon, and they have been getting worse.
+She did not want to have the doctor, but the things she took did her no
+good, and mother said I had better go and ask him for something more."
+
+"And where is Bernel?"
+
+"He went to the fishing with Billy Mollet, and he was not back."
+
+"And suppose the doctor is not in?"
+
+"They will know where he is, and I will go after him."
+
+"Did you see those wonderful waves of fire as you came across the
+Coupee?"
+
+"I have seen them often. When there is more sea on, and it breaks on the
+rocks, it is finer still. It is something in the water, Mr. Cachemaille
+told me."
+
+"I heard your footsteps down there on the Coupee, but I couldn't see a
+sign of you till you were almost against me."
+
+"I saw from the other side that some one was there, but I could not see
+who."
+
+"You have most wonderful eyes in Sark."
+
+"It is never quite dark to me on the darkest night. I suppose it is with
+being used to it."
+
+"You'll have to help me across the Coupee."
+
+"And how will you get back?"
+
+"The moon will be up, and then I can see all right. I don't need much
+light, but I've not been brought up to see through solid black."
+
+The doctor was fortunately in, and knew by ample experience what would
+ease Grannie's pains. So presently they were hurrying back along the
+dark road.
+
+As they turned the corner by Vauroque an open doer cast a great shaft
+of light across the darkness, and there, just as on a previous occasion,
+on the wall lounged half-a-dozen men, and among them was Tom Hamon, who
+had come up to have a drink with his friend Peter.
+
+At sight of him, Nance bent her head and tried to shrink into herself as
+she hurried past.
+
+But Tom had seen her, and the sight of her alone with Gard at that time
+of night roused the virtuous indignation, and other more potent spirits,
+within him.
+
+He sprang down into the road, shouting what sounded like a spate of
+curses in the patois.
+
+Gard stopped and turned, with a keen recollection of the same thing
+having happened before. He remembered too how that occasion ended.
+
+But Nance laid an entreating hand on his arm.
+
+"Please--don't!"
+
+Her voice sounded a little strange to him. If he had been able to see
+her face now he would have found it pallid, in spite of its usual
+healthy brown bloom.
+
+She stood entreatingly till he turned and went on with her.
+
+"He is evidently aching for another thrashing," he said grimly, as he
+stalked beside her.
+
+And presently they were in the cutting, and the unnerving vastness of
+the gulfs opened out on either side. Gard felt like a blindfolded man
+stumbling along a plank.
+
+He involuntarily put out a groping hand and took hold of her cloak. A
+little hand slipped out of the cloak and took his in charge, and so they
+went through the darkness of the narrow way.
+
+He breathed more freely when the further slope was reached, and only
+then became aware that the hand that held his was all of a tremble. The
+next moment he perceived that she was sobbing quietly.
+
+"Nance!" he cried. "What is it? You are crying. Is it anything I--"
+
+"No, no, no!" sobbed the wounded soul convulsively.
+
+"What then? Tell me!"
+
+"I cannot. I cannot."
+
+"Nance--dear!" and he sought her hand again and stood holding it firmly.
+"It is like stabs in my heart to hear you sobbing. I would give my life
+to save you from trouble. Do you believe me, dear?"
+
+"Yes, yes--"
+
+"And you can trust me, dear, can you not? You distrusted me at first, I
+know, but--"
+
+"Oh, I do trust you, and I know you are good. And it is that that makes
+it so wicked of him to say such things about us--"
+
+In her excitement she had let slip more than she intended. She stopped
+abruptly.
+
+"Tom?"
+
+She did not speak, but the wound welled open in another sob.
+
+"Don't trouble about him, dear! I don't know what he said, but if it was
+meant to make you doubt me, it was not true. You are more to me than
+anything in the world, Nance, and I have never loved any other
+woman--except my mother. Do you believe me?"
+
+"Yes--oh, yes! I cannot help believing you. Oh, I wish sometimes that
+Tom was dead. When I was very little I used to pray each night to God to
+kill him."
+
+"I'll teach him to leave you alone."
+
+"I must go now. Grannie is waiting for her medicine."
+
+He took the little hand under his arm and pressed it close to his side,
+and they pushed on down the dark lanes till they came in sight of the
+lights of La Closerie.
+
+Then he bent into the sun-bonnet and sealed his capture of the virginal
+fortress by a passionate kiss on the tremulous little lips. And she,
+with the frankness of a child, reached up and kissed him warmly back.
+
+"Good-night, dear, and God bless you!" he said fervently.
+
+"Can you find your way in the dark?"
+
+"There is the moon. I shall be all right."
+
+She bent her head and ran on towards the lights. He watched her go in at
+the door, and turned and went back along the lane, and his heart was
+high with the joy that was in him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HOW TWO FELL OUT
+
+
+It was but a thin strip of a moon that had risen above the evening
+mists--a mere sickle of red gold--but such as it was it sufficed to lift
+the pall of darkness from the earth and set the black sky back into its
+proper place.
+
+To Gard the night had suddenly become spacious and ample, and the
+peaceful slip of a moon, which grew paler and brighter every minute, was
+full of promise.
+
+He was so full of Nance that he had almost forgotten Tom and his
+scurrilous insolences.
+
+He crossed the Coupee without any difficulty, enjoyed over again the
+recollection of that last crossing, and stood in the cutting on the Sark
+side for a moment to marvel at the change an hour had made in his
+outlook on things in general.
+
+Tom? Why, he could almost forgive Tom, for it was he who had helped to
+bring matters to a head--unconsciously, indeed, and probably quite
+against his wish. Still, he had been the instrument--the drop of acid in
+the solution which had crystallized their love into set form and made it
+visible, and fixed it for life.
+
+Truly, he was half inclined to consider himself under obligation to
+Tom--if only his boorishness could be kept in check for the future. For,
+of a certainty, he was not going to allow Nance to be made miserable by
+his loutish insolences.
+
+He had climbed the cutting and was on the level, when he heard heavy
+footsteps coming towards him, and the next moment he was face to face
+with the object of his thoughts.
+
+Possibly Tom had expected to meet him and had been preparing for the
+fray, for he opened at once with a volley of patois which to Gard was so
+much blank cartridge.
+
+"Oh--ho, le velas--corrupteur! Amuseur! Seducteur! Ou quais noutre
+fille? Quais qu'on avait fait d'elle d'on?"
+
+"Quite finished?" asked Gard quietly, as the other came to a stop for
+want of breath. "Say it all over again in English, and I'll know what
+you're talking about."
+
+"English be----!" he broke out afresh, in a turgid mixture of tongues.
+"Seducteur, amuseur! Where's our Nance? Gaderabotin, what have you done
+with the girl? I know you, corrupteur! Running after men's wives--and
+our Nance, too! See then--you touch la garche and I'll--"
+
+"See here! We've had enough of this," said Gard, gripping him by the
+shoulders and shaking him. "If you weren't drunk I'd thrash you within
+an inch of your life, you brute. Come back when you're sober, and I'll
+give you a lesson in manners."
+
+Tom had been struggling to get his arms up. At last he wrenched himself
+free and came on like a bull. One of his flailing fists caught Gard
+across the face, flattening his nose and filling one eye with stars; the
+other hand, trying to grip his opponent, ripped open his coat, tearing
+away both button and cloth.
+
+"You lout!" cried Gard, his blood up and dripping also from his nose.
+"If you must have it, you shall;" and he squared up to him to administer
+righteous punishment.
+
+And then the futility of it came upon him. The man was three-parts
+drunk, in no condition for a fight, scarce able to attempt even to
+defend himself.
+
+No punishment of Tom drunk would have the slightest moral effect on Tom
+sober. He would remember nothing about it in the morning, except that he
+had been knocked about.
+
+When he received his next lesson in deportment it was Gard's earnest
+desire and hope that it might prove a lasting and final one.
+
+So he decided to postpone it, and contented himself with warding and
+dodging his furious lunges and rushes, and gave him no blow in return.
+Until, at last, after one or two heavy falls of his own occasioning, Tom
+gave it up, spluttered a final commination on his opponent, and turned
+to go home.
+
+He went blunderingly down into the hollow way, and Gard stood watching
+him in doubt.
+
+It seemed hardly possible he could cross the Coupee in that state, and
+he felt a sort of moral responsibility towards him. Much as he detested
+him, he had no wish to see him go reeling over into Coupee bay.
+
+So he set off after him to see him safely across, and Tom, hearing him
+coming, groped in the crumbling side wall till he found a rock of size,
+and sent it hurling up the path with another curse.
+
+Then he blundered on, and Gard followed. And Tom stopped again by one of
+the pinnacles and sought another rock, and flung it, and it dropped
+slowly from point to point till it landed on the shingle three hundred
+feet below.
+
+He stood there in the dim light, cursing volubly in patois and shaking
+his fist at Gard; but at last, to Gard's great relief, he humped his
+back and stumbled away up the cutting on the further side.
+
+And Gard, very sick of it all, and with an aching head and a very tender
+nose, but withal with a warm glow at the heart which no aches or pains
+could damp down, turned and went home to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+HOW ONE FELL OVER
+
+
+Gard's first waking thoughts next morning were of Nance entirely.
+
+He would see her at dinner-time. How would he find her? Last night the
+disturbance of her feelings had shaken her out of herself somewhat, and
+shown her to him in new and delightful lights.
+
+If, this morning, she should be to some extent withdrawn again into her
+natural modest shell, he would not be surprised; and he made up his
+mind, then and there, to be in no wise disappointed. Last night was a
+fact, a delightful fact, on which to build the rosy future.
+
+It was a long time to wait till dinner-time to see her. What if he went
+round that way, before going to work, just to inquire if Tom got home
+all right.
+
+And then the feeling of discomfort in his eye and nose, as though the
+one had shrunk to the size of a pin-point and the other had grown to the
+bulk of a turnip--brought back the whole matter, and on further
+consideration he decided not to go to the farm till the proper time. If
+he came across Tom, the fray would inevitably be resumed at once, and
+his right eye, at the moment, showed a decided disinclination to open to
+its usual extent, or to perform any of the functions properly demanded
+of a right eye contemplating battle.
+
+He must get up at once and bathe it and bring it to reason.
+
+Raw beef, he believed, was the correct treatment under the
+circumstances. But raw beef was almost as obtainable as raw moon, and
+even raw mutton he did not know where he could procure, nor whether it
+would answer the purpose.
+
+So he bathed his bruises with much water, and reduced their excesses to
+some extent, but not enough to escape the eye of his hostess when he
+appeared at breakfast.
+
+"Bin fighting?" she queried dispassionately.
+
+"A one-sided fight. Tom Hamon was drunk last night and hit me in the
+face, but he was not in a condition to fight or I'd have taught him
+better manners."
+
+"He's a rough piece," with a disparaging shake of the head. "It'd take a
+lot to knock him into shape. Try this," and she delved among her stores,
+and found him an ointment of her own compounding which took some of the
+soreness out of his bruises.
+
+But black eyes and swollen noses are impertinently obtrusive and
+disdainful of disguise, and the captain's battle-flags provoked no
+little jocosity among his men that morning.
+
+"Run up against su'then, cap'n?" asked John Hamon the engineer, who was
+one of the few who sided with him.
+
+"Yes, against a drunken fist in the dark. When it's sober I'm going to
+give it a lesson in manners."
+
+"Drunken fisses is hard to teach. You'll have your hands full, cap'n."
+
+It seemed an unusually long morning, but dinner-time came at last and he
+hastened across to the farm, eager for the first sight of the sweet shy
+face hiding in the big sun-bonnet.
+
+Quite contrary to his expectations Nance came hurrying to meet him. She
+had evidently been on the watch for him. Still more to his surprise, her
+face, instead of that look of shy reserve which he had been prepared
+for, was full of anxious questioning. The large dark eyes were full of
+something he had never seen in them before.
+
+"Why--Nance--dear! What is the matter?" he asked quickly.
+
+"Did you meet Tom again last night? Oh," at nearer sight of his bruised
+face, "you did, you did!"
+
+"Yes, dear, I did. Or rather he met me--as you see."
+
+"Did you fight with him?" she panted.
+
+"He was too drunk to fight. He ran at me and gave me this, and my first
+inclination was to give him a sound thrashing. Then I saw it would be no
+good, in the condition he was in, so I just kept him at arm's length
+till he tired of it. He went off at last, and I was so afraid he might
+tumble off the Coupee that I followed him, and he hurled rocks at me
+whenever he came to a stand. But he got across all right, and I went
+back and went to bed. Now, what's all the trouble about?"
+
+"He never came home," she jerked, with a catch in her voice which
+thought only of Tom had never put there.
+
+"Never came home?"
+
+"And they're all out looking for him."
+
+"I wonder if he went back to Peter Mauger's.... If he tried to cross
+that Coupee again--in the condition he was in--"
+
+"He didn't go back to Peter's. Julie went there first of all to ask."
+
+"Good Lord, what can have become of him?"
+
+The answer came unexpectedly round the corner of the house--Julie
+Hamon, in a state of utmost dishevelment and agitation, which turned
+instantly to venomous fury at the sight of Gard and Nance.
+
+Her black hair seemed all a-bristle. Her black eyes flamed. Her dark
+face worked like a quicksand. Her skirts were wet to the waist. Her
+jacket was open at the top, as though she had wrenched at it in a fit of
+choking. Her strong bare throat throbbed convulsively. Her hands, half
+closed at her side, looked as though they wanted something to claw.
+
+"Did you do it?" she cried hoarsely, stalking up to Gard.
+
+"Do what?"
+
+"Kill him."
+
+"Tom?... You don't mean to say--"
+
+"You ought to know. He's there in the school-house, broken to a jelly
+and his head staved in. And they say it's you he fought with last night.
+The marks of it are on your face"--her voice rose to a scream--"Murderer!
+Murderer! Murderer!"
+
+"You wicked--thing!" cried Nance, pale to the lips.
+
+"You--you--you!" foamed Julie. "You're as bad as he is. Because my man
+tried to save you from that--murderer--"
+
+"Oh, you--wicked!--You're crazy," cried Nance, rushing at her as though
+to make an end of her.
+
+And Julie, mad with the strain of the night's anxieties and their abrupt
+and terrible ending, uncurled her claws and struck at her with a
+snarl--tore off her sun-bonnet, and would have ripped up her face, if
+Gard had not flung his arms round her from the back and dragged her
+screaming and kicking towards her own door.
+
+Mrs. Hamon had come running out at sound of the fray. Gard whirled the
+mad woman into her own house and Mrs. Hamon followed her and closed the
+door.
+
+Gard turned to look for Nance.
+
+She was nervously trying to tie on her sun-bonnet by one string.
+
+"Nance, dear," he said, "you don't believe I had anything to do with
+this?"
+
+"Oh no, no! I'm sure you hadn't. But--"
+
+"But?" he asked, looking down into the pale face and bright anxious
+eyes.
+
+"Oh, they may say you did it. They will think it. They are sure to think
+it, and they are so--"
+
+"Don't trouble about it, dear. I know no more about it than you do, and
+they cannot get beyond that. Promise me you won't let it trouble you."
+
+"Oh, I will try. But--"
+
+"Have no fears on my account, Nance. I will go at once and tell them all
+I know about it."
+
+He pressed her hands reassuringly, and she went into the house with
+downcast head and a face full of forebodings, and he set off at once for
+Sark.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HOW TOM WENT TO SCHOOL FOR THE LAST TIME
+
+
+Mrs. Tom had had a troubled night. Anxiety at her husband's continued
+absence had in due time given way to anger, and anger in its turn to
+anxiety again.
+
+In a state of mind compounded of these wearing emotions, she had set out
+in the early morning to find out what had become of him; if he was
+sleeping off a drunken debauch at Peter Mauger's, to give them both a
+vigorous piece of her mind; if he was not there, to find out where he
+was; in any case to vent on some one the pent-up feelings of the night.
+
+Vigorous hammering on Peter Mauger's door produced first his old
+housekeeper, and presently himself, heavy-eyed, dull-witted, and in
+flagrant dishabille, since Mrs. Guille had but a moment ago shaken him
+out of the sleep of those who drink not wisely over-night, with the
+information that a crazy woman wanted him at the door.
+
+"Where's Tom?" demanded Julie, ready to empty the vials of her wrath on
+the delinquent as soon as he was produced.
+
+But Peter's manner at once dissipated that expectation.
+
+"Tom?" he said vaguely, and gazed at her with a bovine stupidity that
+jarred her strained nerves like a blow.
+
+"Yes, Tom--my husband, fool! Where is he?" she asked sharply.
+
+"Where is he?" scratching his tousled head to quicken his wits. "I d'n
+know."
+
+"You don't know? What did you do with him last night, you drunken
+fool?"--by this time the neighbours had come out to learn the news.
+
+Peter gaped at her in astonishment, his muddled wits and aching head
+beginning dimly to realize that something was wrong.
+
+"Tom left here ... last night ... t'go home," he nodded emphatically.
+
+"Well, he never got home," snapped Julie. "And you'd best get your
+clothes on and help me find him. You were both as drunk as pigs, I
+suppose. If he's lying dead in a ditch it's you that'll have the blame."
+
+"Aw now, Julie!"
+
+"Don't Julie me, you fool! Get dressed and do something."
+
+"I'll come. You wait," and he went inside, and put his head into a basin
+of water, and threw on his clothes, and came out presently looking
+anxious and disturbed now that his sluggish brain had begun to work.
+
+"Where you been looking?" he asked.
+
+"Nowhere. I expected to find him here."
+
+"We had a glass or two and then he started off home. He could walk all
+right.... Did you.... You didn't see anything wrong ... anything ... at
+the Coupee?" he asked, with a quick anxious look at her.
+
+"No, I didn't. What do you mean? Oh, mon Dieu!" and she started down the
+road at a run, with Peter lumbering after her and the neighbours in a
+buzzing tail behind.
+
+The cold douche had cooled Peter's hot head, the running quickened his
+blood and his thoughts, a sudden grim fear braced his brain to quite
+unusual activity.
+
+As he ran he recalled the events of the night before; their meeting with
+Gard and Nance; Tom's scurrilous insults.
+
+If Tom and Gard had met again--Gard would be sure to see Nance home. Had
+he met Tom on his way back? And if so--if so--and ill had come to
+Tom--why, Gard might get the blame. And--and--in short, though by
+zig-zag jerks as he ran--if Gard were out of the way for good and all,
+Nance's thoughts might turn to one nearer home. He would be sorry if ill
+had come to Tom, of course. But if Gard could be got rid of he would be
+most uncommonly glad.
+
+And as he panted after Julie, head down with the burden of much
+thinking, just before he reached the sunk way to the Coupee, his eye
+lighted on something in the road that caused him to stop and bend--a
+button with a scrap of blue cloth attached. He picked it up hastily and
+put it in his pocket. On a white stone just by it there were some
+red-brown spots. He pushed it with his foot to the side of the road and
+was down into the cutting before the heavy-footed neighbours came up.
+
+Julie was ranging up and down the narrow pathway, searching the depths
+with a face like a hawk, hanging on to the rough sides of the pinnacles,
+and bending over in a way that elicited warning cries from the others as
+they came streaming down.
+
+But keenest search of the western slope revealed nothing amid its tangle
+of gorse and blackberry bushes, and the eastern cliff fell so sheer, and
+had so many projecting lumps and underfalls, that it was impossible to
+see close in to the foot.
+
+And then one, nimbler witted than the rest, climbed out along the common
+above the northern cliff, whereby, when he had come to the great slope,
+he took the Coupee cliff in flank, and could spy along its base.
+
+And suddenly he stopped, and stiffened like a pointer sighting his bird,
+peered intently for a moment, and gave tongue.
+
+The chase was ended. That they had sought, and feared to find, was
+found.
+
+They came hurrying up, and clustered like cormorants on the slope, Julie
+among them, her face grim and livid in its black setting, her eyes
+blazing fiercely.
+
+The finder pointed it out. They all saw it--a huddled black heap close
+in under the cliff.
+
+Elevated by his discovery, the finder maintained his reputation by doing
+the only thing that could be done. He left them talking and sped away
+across the downs, across the fields, towards Creux harbour.
+
+He might, if he had known it, have found a boat nearer at hand, Rouge
+Terrier way or in Breniere Bay. But he was a Sark man, and a farmer at
+that, and knew little and cared less, of the habits of Little Sark.
+
+And the rest, falling to his idea, streamed after him, for that which
+lay under the cliff could only be gotten out by boat.
+
+So to the Creux, panting the news as he went. And there, willing hands
+dragged a boat rasping down the shingle, and lusty arms, four men rowing
+and one astern sculling and steering at the same time, sent her bounding
+over the water as though it were life she sought, not death. For, though
+no man among them had any smallest hope of finding life in that which
+lay under the cliff, yet must they strain every muscle, till the
+labouring boat seemed to share their anxiety to get there and learn the
+worst.
+
+So, out past the Laches, with the tide boiling round the point; past
+Derrible, with its yawning black mouths; past Dixcart with its patch of
+sand; under the grim bastions of the Cagnon; the clean grey cliffs and
+green downs above, all smiling in the morning sun; the clear green water
+creaming among the black boulders, hissing among their girdles of tawny
+sea-weeds, cascading merrily down their rifted sides; round the
+Convanche corner, so deftly close that the beauty of the water cave is
+bared to them, if they had eye or thought for anything but that which
+lies under the cliff in Coupee Bay. And not a word said all the way--not
+one word. Jokes and laughter go with the boat as a rule, and
+high-pitched nasal patois talk; but here--not a word.
+
+The prow runs grating up the shingle, the heavy feet grind through it
+all in a line, for none of them has any desire to be first. Together
+they bend over that which had been Tom Hamon, and their faces are grim
+and hard as the rocks about them. Not that they are indifferent, but
+that any show of feeling would be looked upon as a sign of weakness.
+
+Under such circumstances men at times give vent to jocularities which
+sound coarse and shocking. But they are not meant so--simply the protest
+of the rough spirit at being thought capable of such unmanly weakness as
+feeling.
+
+But these men were elementally silent. One look had shown them there was
+nothing to be done but that which they had come to do--to carry what
+they had found back to the waiting crowd at the Creux.
+
+They had none of them cared much for this man. He was not a man to make
+close friends. But death had given him a new dignity among them, and the
+rough hands lifted him, and bore him to the boat as tenderly as though a
+jar or a stumble might add to his pains.
+
+And so, but with slower strokes now, as though that slight additional
+burden, that single passenger, weighed them to the water's edge, they
+crawl slowly back the way they came, logged, not with water, but with
+the presence of death.
+
+The narrow beach between the tawny headlands is black with people. Up
+above, on the edge of the cliff, another crowd peers curiously down.
+
+The Senechal is there at the water's edge, Philip Guille of La Ville,
+and the Greffier, William Robert, who is also the schoolmaster, and
+Thomas Le Masurier the Prevot, and Elie Guille the Constable, and Dr.
+Stradling from Dixcart, and the dark-faced, fierce-eyed woman who cannot
+keep still, but ranges to and fro in the lip of the tide, and whom they
+all know now as the wife--the Frenchwoman, though some of them have
+never seen her before.
+
+A buzz runs round as the boat comes slowly past the point of the Laches.
+The woman stops her caged-beast walk and stands gazing fiercely at it,
+as if she would tear its secret out of it before it touched the shore.
+
+The watchers on the cliff have the advantage. Something like a thrill
+runs through them, something between a sigh and a groan breaks from
+them.
+
+The woman wades out to meet the boat. She sees and screams, and chokes.
+The wives on the beach groan in sympathy.
+
+The body is lifted carefully out and laid on the cool grey stones, and
+the woman stands looking at it as a tiger may look at her slaughtered
+mate.
+
+"Stand back! Stand back!" cries the Senechal to the thronging crowd; and
+to the Constable, "Keep them back, you, Elie Guille!" to which Elie
+Guille growls, "Par made, but that's not easy, see you!"
+
+The Doctor straightens up from his brief examination, and says a word to
+the Senechal, and to the men about him.
+
+A rough stretcher is made out of a couple of oars and a sail, and the
+sombre procession passes through the gloomy old tunnel into the Creux
+Road, and wends its way up to the school-house for proper inquiry to be
+made as to how Tom Hamon came by his death.
+
+And close behind the stretcher walks the dark-faced woman, with her eyes
+like coals of fire, and her dress dragged open as though to stop her
+from choking.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" she says in perpetual
+iteration, through her clenched teeth. But to look at her face and eyes
+you might think it was rather the devil she was calling on.
+
+For, ungracious as their lives had been in many respects, yet this
+violent breaking of the yoke has left the survivor sore and wounded, and
+furious to vent her rage on whom at present she knows not.
+
+She is not allowed inside the school-house--hastily cleared of its usual
+occupants, who dodge about among the crowd outside, enjoying the
+unlooked-for holiday with gusto in spite of its gruesome origin--and so
+she prowls about outside, and the neighbours talk and she hears this,
+that, and the other, and presently, with bitter, black face and rage in
+her heart, she goes off home to find out Stephen Gard if she can, and
+accuse him to his face of the murder of her husband.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HOW PETER'S DIPLOMACY CAME TO NOUGHT
+
+
+Peter Mauger had kept himself carefully beyond the range of Julie's wild
+black eyes. In the state she was in there was no knowing what she might
+do or say. And the words even of a mad woman sometimes stick like burrs.
+He began to breathe more freely when she whirled away home.
+
+The Senechal and Constable came out of the school-house at last with
+very grave faces.
+
+"The Doctor says his head was staved in with the blows of some round
+blunt thing like a mallet," said the Senechal to the gaping crowd, "and
+we must hold a proper inquiry. Any of you who saw Tom Hamon last night
+will be here at two o'clock to tell us all you know. Tell any others who
+know anything about it that they must be here too," and he went back
+into the school-house, and the buzzing crowd dispersed, with plenty to
+buzz about now in truth.
+
+Peter Mauger went thoughtfully home. He had had no breakfast, and was
+feeling the need of it, and he had something in his mind that he wanted
+to think out.
+
+And as he ate he thought, slowly and ruminatingly, and with many pauses,
+when his jaws stopped working to give his mind freer play, but still
+very much to the purpose, and as soon as he had done he set out to put
+his project into execution.
+
+Just beyond the Coupee he met Gard hurrying towards Sark, and the state
+of Gard's nose and eye, and his torn coat, caught his eye at once.
+
+"What's this about Tom Hamon?" asked Gard hastily.
+
+"He's dead."
+
+"His wife has just told me so. But how did it happen?"
+
+"They're going to find out at school-house at two o'clock. Any that saw
+him last night are to be there. You'd better be there."
+
+"I'm going now."
+
+"All right," said Peter, and went on his way into Little Sark.
+
+His way took him to La Closerie. But he was not anxious to meet Mrs.
+Tom, so he hung about behind the hedges till Nance happened to come out
+of the house, and then he whistled softly and beckoned to her to come to
+him.
+
+Her face was very pale and troubled, and he saw she had been crying.
+
+"I want to speak to you," he said.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Come round here. It's important."
+
+"What is it?" she asked wearily again, when she had joined him behind
+the green dyke.
+
+"It's this, Nance. You--you know I want you. I've always wanted you--"
+
+"Oh--don't!" she cried, with protesting hand. "This is no time. Peter
+Mauger, for--"
+
+"Wait a bit! Here's how it is. Doctor says Tom was killed by some one
+beating his head in with a hammer or something of the kind. Now who beat
+his head in? Who would be most likely to beat his head in? Not me, for
+we were mates. Some one that hated him. Some one that he was always
+quarrelling with--" Her face had grown so white that there was no colour
+even in the trembling lips. She stared at him with terrified eyes.
+
+"You know who I mean," he said. "If it wasn't him that did it I don't
+know who it was."
+
+"It wasn't," she jerked vehemently.
+
+"You'd wish so, of course. But--Look here!--I'm pretty sure they met
+again last night after--"
+
+"Yes, they met, and Tom tried to fight him--"
+
+"Ah--then!"
+
+"And he's gone up at once, as soon as he heard that Tom was found, to
+tell them all about it."
+
+"Aw!"--decidedly crestfallen at the wind being taken out of his sails in
+this fashion. "I--I thought--maybe I could help him--"
+
+"Oh you did, did you?"--plucking up heart at sight of his discomfiture.
+"And how were you going to help him?"
+
+"If he's gone to make a clean breast of it it's all up, of course. If
+he'd kept it to himself--"
+
+"He might have run away, you mean?"
+
+"Safest for him, maybe. Up above Coupee there's a stone with blood on
+it. And I picked up this beside it," and he hauled out the button and
+the bit of blue cloth he had found. "I thought, maybe if he knew about
+these he might think it safest to go."
+
+"Then every one would have the right to say he'd done it, and he didn't.
+He knew no more about it than you did."
+
+"I didn't know anything about it."
+
+"Well, neither did he, and he's not the kind to run away."
+
+"Aw, well--I done my best. You'll remember that, Nance. You know what
+the Sark men are. He'd be safest away. You tell him I say so," and he
+pouched his discounted piece of evidence and turned and went, leaving
+Nance with a heavy heart.
+
+For, as Peter said, she knew what the Sark men were--a law unto
+themselves, and slow to move out of the deep-cut grooves of the past,
+but, once stirred to boiling point, capable of going to any lengths
+without consideration of consequences.
+
+And therein lay Gard's peril.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW THE SARK MEN FELT ABOUT IT
+
+
+Every soul in the Island that could by any means get there, was in or
+outside the school-house, mostly outside, long before the clock struck
+two. Never in their lives had they hurried thither like that before.
+
+A barricade of forms had been made across the room. Within it, at the
+school-master's table, sat the Senechal, Philip Guille, and the Doctor,
+and old Mr. Cachemaille, the Vicar, ageing rapidly since the tragic
+death of his good friend, the late Seigneur; beside them stood the
+Prevot and the Greffier, behind them lay the body of Tom Hamon covered
+with a sheet.
+
+It was a perfect day, with a cloudless blue sky and blazing sun, and all
+the windows were opened wide. Those inside dripped with perspiration,
+but felt cold chills below their blue guernseys each time they looked at
+that stark figure with the upturned feet beneath the cold white sheet.
+
+Outside the barricade stood Elie Guille, the Constable, and his
+understudy Abraham Baker, the Vingtenier, to keep order and call the
+witnesses.
+
+The Seigneur, Mr. Le Pelley, was away or he would undoubtedly have been
+there too. In his absence the Senechal conducted the proceedings.
+
+In the front row of school-desks, scored with the deep-cut initials of
+generations of Sark boys, sat the dead man's widow, tense and quivering,
+her eyes consuming fires in deep black wells, her face livid, her hands
+clenched still as though waiting for something to rend.
+
+More than one of the men who sat beside her at the desk found, with a
+grim smile, his own name looking up at him out of the maltreated board.
+And one nudged his neighbour and pointed to the name of Tom Hamon, cut
+deeper than any of the others and with the N upside down.
+
+Very briefly the Senechal stated that they were there to find out, if
+they could, how Tom Hamon came by his death, and added very gravely, in
+a deep silence, that after a most careful examination of the body the
+Doctor was of opinion that death had been caused, not by the fall from
+the Coupee, which accounted for the dreadful bruises, but by violent
+blows on the head with a hammer or some sueh thing prior to the fall.
+They wanted to find out all about it.
+
+The Doctor stood up and confirmed what the Senechal had said, went
+somewhat more into detail to substantiate his opinion, and ended by
+saying, "The head, as it happens, is less bruised than any other part of
+the body, except on the crown, and that is practically beaten in, and
+not, I am prepared to swear, by a fall. These wounds were the immediate
+cause of death, and they were made before he fell down the rocks.
+Besides, he went down feet first. The abrasions on the legs and thighs
+prove that beyond a doubt. Then again, the base of the skull is not
+fractured, as it most certainly would have been if he had fallen on his
+head. Death was undoubtedly the result of those wounds in the head. It
+is impossible for me to say for certain with what kind of weapon they
+were made, but it was probably something round and blunt."
+
+"Now," said the Senechal, when the Doctor had finished, and the hum and
+the growl which followed had died down again, "will any of you who know
+anything about this matter come forward and tell us all you know?"
+
+Stephen Gard stood up at once and all eyes settled on him. Then Peter
+Mauger was pushed along from the back, with friendly thumps and growling
+injunctions to speak up. But the looks bestowed on Gard were of quite a
+different quality from those given to Peter, and the men at the table
+could not but notice it.
+
+"We will take Peter Mauger first. Let him be sworn," said the Senechal,
+and Gard sat down.
+
+The Greffier swore Peter in the old Island fashion--"Vous jurez par la
+foi que vous devez a Dieu que vous direz la verite, et rien que la
+verite, et tous ce que vous connaissez dans cette cause, et que Dieu
+vous soit en aide! (You swear by the faith which you owe to God that you
+will tell the truth, and only the truth, and all that you know
+concerning this case, and so help you God!)"
+
+Peter put up his right hand and swore so to do.
+
+"Now tell us all you know," said the Senechal.
+
+And Peter ramblingly told how he and Tom had been drinking together the
+night before, and how Tom had started off home and he had gone to bed.
+
+"Were you both drunk?"
+
+"Well--"
+
+"Very well, you were. Did you think it right to let your friend go off
+in that condition when he had to cross the Coupee?"
+
+"I've seen him worse, many times, and no harm come to him."
+
+"Well, get on!"
+
+He told how Mrs. Tom woke him up in the morning, and how they had all
+gone in search of the missing man.
+
+"Was it you that found him?"
+
+"No, it was Charles Guille of Clos Bourel. But I found something too."
+
+"What was it?"
+
+"This"--and from under his coat he drew out carefully the white stone
+with its red-brown spots, and from his pocket the button and the scrap
+of blue cloth. And those at the back stood up, with much noise, to see.
+
+The men at the table looked at these scraps of possible evidence with
+interest, as they were placed before them.
+
+"Where did you find these things?"
+
+"Between Plaisance and the Coupee."
+
+"What do you make of them?"
+
+"Seemed to me those red spots might be blood. The other's a button torn
+off some one's coat."
+
+"Have you any idea whose blood and whose coat?"
+
+"The blood I don't know. The button, I believe, is off Mr. Gard's
+coat,"--at which another growl and hum went round.
+
+"And you know nothing more about the matter?"
+
+"That's all I know."
+
+"Very well. Sit down. Mr. Gard!" and Gard pushed his way among
+unyielding legs and shoulders, and stood before the grave-faced men at
+the table.
+
+They all knew him and had all come to esteem what they knew of him. They
+knew also of his difficulties with his men, and that there was a certain
+feeling against him in some quarters. Not one of them thought it likely
+he had done this dreadful thing. But--there was no knowing to what
+lengths even a decent man might go in anger. All their brows pinched a
+little at sight of his torn coat and missing button.
+
+He was duly sworn, and the Senechal bade him tell all he knew of the
+matter.
+
+"That button is mine," he said quietly, holding out the lapel of his
+coat for all to see. "If there is blood on that stone it is mine
+also"--at which a growling laugh of derision went round the spectators.
+
+Gard flushed at this unmistakable sign of hostility. The Senechal
+threatened to turn them all out if anything of the kind happened again,
+and Gard proceeded to recount in minutest detail the happenings of the
+previous night--so far as they concerned himself and Tom Hamon.
+
+"What were you doing down at the Coupee at that time of night?" asked
+the Senechal.
+
+"I had been having a smoke and was just about to turn in when I met Miss
+Hamon hurrying to the Doctor's for some medicine. I asked her permission
+to accompany her, and then took her home to Little Sark. It was when I
+was coming back that I met Tom Hamon."
+
+"Yes, little Nance came to me about half-past ten," said the Doctor, "I
+remember I asked her if she was not afraid to go all that way home
+alone, and she said she had a friend with her."
+
+"Was there any specially bad feeling between you and Tom Hamon?"
+
+"There had always been bad feeling, but any one who knows anything about
+it knows that it was not of my making."
+
+"Will you explain it to us?"
+
+"If you say I must. One does not like to say ill things of the dead."
+
+"We want to get to the bottom of this matter, Mr. Gard. Tell us all you
+know that will help us."
+
+"Very well, sir, but I am sorry to have to go into that. It all began
+through Tom's bad treatment of his stepmother and step-sister and
+brother when I lived at La Closerie. I took sides with them and tried to
+bring him to better manners. We rarely met without his flinging some
+insult after me. They were generally in the patois, but I knew them to
+be insults by his manner and by the way they were greeted by those who
+did understand."
+
+"Had you met last night before you met near the Coupee?"
+
+"We passed Tom by La Vauroque as we came from the Doctor's. He shouted
+something after us, but I did not understand it."
+
+"You don't know what it was that he said?" an unfortunate question on
+the part of the Senechal, and quite unintentionally so on his part. It
+necessitated the introduction of matters Gard would fain have kept out
+of the enquiry.
+
+"Well," he said, with visible reluctance, "I learned afterwards, and by
+accident, something of what he said or meant."
+
+"How was that, and what was it?"
+
+"Is it necessary to go into that? Won't it do if I say it was a very
+gross insult?"
+
+The three at the table conferred for a moment. Then the Senechal said
+very kindly, "I perceive we are getting on to somewhat delicate ground,
+Mr. Gard, but, for your own sake. I would suggest that no occasion
+should be given to any to say that you are hiding anything from the
+court."
+
+"Very well, sir, I have nothing whatever to hide, and I have still less
+to be ashamed of. I found Miss Hamon was weeping bitterly at what her
+brother had said, and I tried to get her to tell me what it was, but she
+would not. I said I knew it was something against me, but I hoped by
+this time she had learned to know and trust me. I told her her sobs cut
+me to the heart and that I would give my life to save her from trouble.
+In a word, I told her I loved her, and in the excitement of the moment
+she dropped a word or two that gave me an inkling of what Tom had said.
+It was casting dirt at both her and myself. Then, as I came home, I met
+Tom as I have told you."
+
+The Senechal considered the matter for a moment. He did not for one
+moment believe that Gard had had any hand in the killing of Tom Hamon.
+But he could not but perceive the hostile feeling that was abroad, and
+his desire was, if possible, to allay it.
+
+"It is, I should think," he said gravely, "past any man's believing
+that, after asking Tom's sister to marry you, you should go straight
+away and kill Tom, even in the hottest of hot blood, though men at such
+times do not always know what they are doing. But you, from what I have
+seen and heard of you, are not such a man. I am going to ask you one
+question in the hope that your answer may have the effect of setting you
+right with all who hear it. Before God--had you any hand in the death of
+this man?--have you any further knowledge of the matter whatever?"
+
+"Before God," said Gard solemnly, his uplifted right hand as steady as
+a rock, "I had no hand in his death. I know nothing more whatever about
+the matter."
+
+"I believe you," said the Senechal.
+
+"And I," said the Doctor.
+
+"And I," said the Vicar gravely, and with much emotion.
+
+But from the spectators there rose a dissentient murmur which caused the
+Vicar to survey his unruly flock with mild amazement and
+disapproval--much as the shepherd might if his sheep had suddenly shed
+their fleeces and become wolves.
+
+And Julie Hamon sprang to her feet with blazing eyes, pointed a shaking
+hand at Gard, and screamed:
+
+"Murderer! Murderer! Murderer!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HOW SARK CRAVED BLOOD FOR BLOOD
+
+
+Stephen Gard walked slowly down the road towards Plaisance in the lowest
+of spirits.
+
+This strange people amongst whom he had fallen, possessed, in
+pre-eminent degree, what in these later times is known as the defects of
+its qualities.
+
+Black sheep there were, of course, as there are in every community, who
+seemed all defects and possessed of no redeeming qualities whatever.
+But, taken as a whole, the men of Sark were simple, honest according to
+their lights, brave and hardy, very tenacious of their own ideas and
+their island rights, somewhat stubborn and easier to lead than to drive,
+and withal red-blooded, as the result of their ancestry, and given to a
+large despite of foreigners, in which category were included all
+unfortunates born outside the rugged walls of Sark.
+
+He had done his best among them, both for their own interests and those
+of the mines, but no striving would ever make him other than a
+foreigner; and in the depression of spirit consequent on the trying
+experiences of the day, he gloomily pondered the idea of giving up his
+post and finding a more congenial atmosphere elsewhere.
+
+Still, he was a Cornishman, and dour to beat. And, if he had incurred
+unreasonable dislike, he had also lighted on the virgin lode of Nance's
+love and trust, and that, he said to himself with a glow of gratitude,
+outweighed all else.
+
+He had left the school-house at once when he had given his evidence, and
+had heard no more of what had taken place there. The bystanders had let
+him pass without any open opposition, but their faces had been hard and
+unsympathetic, and he recognized that life among them would be anything
+but a sunny road for some time to come.
+
+If the people at Plaisance had told him to clear out and find another
+lodging he would not have been in the least surprised. But they had no
+such thought. In common with all who really got to know him, they had
+come to esteem and like him, and they had no reason to believe that he
+had had anything to do with Tom Hamon's death.
+
+He had pondered these matters wearily till bed-time, and he turned in at
+last sick of himself, and Sark, and things generally. But his brain
+would not sleep, and the longer he lay and the more he tossed and
+turned, the wearier he grew.
+
+Sleep seemed so impossible that he was half inclined to get up and dress
+and go out. The cool night air and the freshness of the dawn would be
+better than this sleepless unresting. Suddenly there came a sharp little
+tap on his window.
+
+A bird, he thought, or a bat.
+
+The tap came again--sharp and imperative.
+
+He got up quietly and went to the window. The night was still dark. As
+he peered into it a hand came up again and tapped once more and he
+opened the window.
+
+"Mr. Gard!"--in a sharp whisper.
+
+"Nance! What is it, dear? Anything wrong?"
+
+"I want you--quick."
+
+"One minute!" and he hastily threw on his things and joined her outside.
+
+"What is it, Nance?" he asked anxiously, wondering what new complication
+had arisen.
+
+"I'll tell you as we go. Come!" and they were speeding noiselessly down
+the road to the Coupee.
+
+There she took his hand, as once before, to lead him safely across, and
+her hand, he perceived, was trembling violently.
+
+They were half way along the narrow path when the hollow way in front
+leading up into Little Sark resounded suddenly with the tramp of heavy
+feet.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" panted Nance, and he could feel her turn and look
+round like a hunted animal.
+
+"Quick!" she whispered. "Behind here! and oh, grip tight!" and she knelt
+and crawled on hands and knees round the base of the nearest pinnacle.
+
+In those days the pinnacles which buttress the Coupee were considerably
+higher and bulkier than they are now, and along their rugged flanks the
+adventurous or sorely-pressed might find precarious footing. But it was
+a nerve-racking experience even in the day-time when the eye could guide
+the foot. Now, in the ebon-black night, it was past thinking of.
+
+Dazed by the suddenness and strangeness of the whole matter, and without
+an inkling of what it all meant, Gard clung like a fly to the bare rock
+and tried his hardest not to think of the sheer three hundred feet that
+lay between him and the black beach below.
+
+In grim and menacing silence, save for the crunch of their heavy feet on
+the crumbling pathway, the men went past, a dozen or more, as it seemed
+to Gard. When the sound of them had died in the hollow on the Sark
+side, Nance whispered, "Quick now! quick!"
+
+They crawled back into the roadway, and she took his hand in hers again
+which shook more than ever, and they sped away into Little Sark.
+
+"Now tell me, Nance. What is it all about?" he panted, as she nipped
+through an opening in a green bank and led the way towards the eastern
+cliffs over by the Pot.
+
+"Oh--it's you they want," she gasped, and he stopped instantly and
+stood, as though he would turn and go back.
+
+"It is no use," she jerked emphatically, between breaths, and dragged
+impatiently at his arm. "You don't know our Sark men.... They do things
+first and are sorry after.... Bernel heard them planning it all.... The
+men from Sark were to meet these ones, and then--"
+
+"But," he said angrily, "running away looks like--"
+
+"No, no! Not here.... And it is only for a time. The truth will come
+out, but it would be too late if they had got you."
+
+"What would they have done with me?"
+
+"Oh--terrible things. They are madmen when they are angry."
+
+He had yielded to her will, and they were speeding swiftly along the
+downs. The path was quite invisible to him. He tripped and stumbled at
+times on tangled roots of gorse and bracken, but she kept on swiftly and
+unerringly, as though the night were light about her.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" he asked, as they crept past the miners'
+cottages on the cliff above Rouge Terrier.
+
+"To Breniere.... To L'Etat.... Bernel went on to find a boat."
+
+And presently they were out on the bald cliff-head, and slipping and
+sliding down it till they came to the ledge, below which Breniere
+spreads out on the water like a giant's hand.
+
+Between her panting breaths Nance whistled a low soft note like the pipe
+of a sea-bird. A like sound came softly up from below, and slipping and
+stumbling again, they were on the beach among mighty boulders girt with
+dripping sea-weed.
+
+Another low pipe out of the darkness, and they had found the boat and
+tumbled into it, wet and bruised, and breathless.
+
+"Dieu merci!" said Bernel, and pulled lustily out to sea.
+
+The swirl of the tide caught them as they cleared Breniere Point, and
+Gard crawled forward to take an oar. Nance did the same, and so set
+Bernel free to scull and steer, the arrangement which dire experience
+has taught the Sark men as best adapted to their rock-strewn waters and
+racing currents.
+
+Gard's mind was in a tumult of revolt, but he sensibly drove his
+feelings through his muscles to the blade of his oar, and said nothing.
+Nance and Bernel were not likely to have gone to these lengths without
+what seemed to them sufficient reason.
+
+And he remembered Nance's trembling arm on the Coupee, and her agonies
+of fear on his account, and so came by degrees to a certain acceptance
+of their view of matters, and therewith a feeling of gratitude for their
+labours and risks on his behalf. For he did not doubt that, should the
+self-appointed administrators of justice learn who had baulked them of
+their prey, they would wreak upon them some of the vengeance they had
+intended for himself.
+
+He saw that it was no light matter these two had undertaken, and as he
+thought it over, and told the black welter under his oar what he thought
+of these wild and hot-headed Sark men, his gratitude grew.
+
+The thin orange sickle of a moon rose at last, high by reason of the
+mists banked thick along the horizon, and afforded them a welcome
+glimmer of light--barely a glimmer indeed, rather a mere thinning of the
+clinging darkness, but enough for Bernel's tutored eye.
+
+He took them in a cautious circuit outside the Quette d'Amont, the
+eastern sentinel of L'Etat, and so, with shipped oars, by means of his
+single scull astern, brought them deftly to the riven black ledges round
+the corner on the south side.
+
+It is a precarious landing at best, and the after scramble up the
+crumbling slope calls for caution even in the light of day. In that
+misleading darkness, clinging with his hands and climbing on the sides
+of his feet, and starting at startled feathered things that squawked and
+fluttered from under his groping hands and feet, Gard found it no easy
+matter to follow Nance, though she carried a great bundle and waited for
+him every now and again. When he looked down next day upon the way they
+had come he marvelled that they had ever reached the top in safety.
+
+"Wait here!" she said at last, when they had attained a somewhat level
+place, and before he had breath for a word she was away down again.
+
+She was back presently with another bundle, and he started when she
+thrust into his hands a long gun, and bade him pick up the first bundle
+and follow her. The feel of the gun brought home to him, as nothing else
+could have done, her and Bernel's views of possible contingencies.
+
+He followed her stumblingly along the rough crown of the ridge, till she
+dipped down a rather smoother slope and came to a stand before what
+seemed to him a heap of huge stones.
+
+"There is shelter in here," she said. "And these things are for your
+comfort. We will bring you more to eat in a day or two--"
+
+"Nance, dear," he said, dropping the gun and the bundle, and laying his
+hand on her slim shoulder. "I have become a sore burden to you--"
+
+"Oh no, no!" she said hastily. "You would have done as much for me, and
+it is because--"
+
+"For you, dear? I would give my life for you, Nance, and here it is you
+who are doing everything, and running all these risks for me."
+
+"It is because I know they are in the wrong. It may be only a day or
+two, and they will thank me when they find out their mistake."
+
+"Well, I thank you and Bernel with my whole heart. Please God I may some
+time be able to repay you!"
+
+"If you are safe, that is all we want. Now I must go. We must get back
+before they miss us."
+
+"God keep you, dear!" and he bent and kissed her, and as before she
+kissed him back with the frankness of a child.
+
+He was about to follow her when she turned to go, but she said
+imperatively, "Stop here, or you may lose yourself in the dark. And in
+the day-time do not walk on the ridge or they may see you--"
+
+"And the gun? What is that for?"
+
+"If they should come here after you, you will keep them off with it,"
+she said, with a spurt of the true Island spirit. "It is your life they
+seek, and they are in the wrong. But no one ever comes here, and you
+will not need it. Now, good-bye! And God have you in His keeping!"
+
+"And you, dearest--and all yours!"--and she was gone like a flitting
+shadow.
+
+And while he still stood peering into the darkness into which she had
+merged, she suddenly materialized again and was by his side.
+
+"I forgot. Bernel told me to tell you it throws a little high. But I
+hope you won't need it. And there is fresh water among the rocks at the
+south end there."
+
+He caught her to him again, and kissed her ardently, and then she was
+gone.
+
+He strained his ears, fearful of hearing her slip or fall in the
+darkness, but she went without displacing a stone, and he was alone with
+the sickly moon, and the sombre sky, and the voices of the rising tide
+along the grim black ledges of his sanctuary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+HOW LOVE TOOK LOVE TO SANCTUARY
+
+
+It all seemed monstrous strange to him, now that he had time to think of
+the actual fact apart from the difficulties of its accomplishment.
+
+An hour ago he was lying in his bed at Plaisance, in low enough spirits,
+indeed, at the outlook before him, but his gloomiest thought had never
+plumbed depths such as this.
+
+He wondered briefly if so extreme a step had been really necessary.
+
+And then he heard again the purposeful tramp of those heavy feet on the
+Coupee, and fathomed again the menace of them.
+
+And he felt Nance's guiding hand trembling violently in his once more,
+and he said to himself that she and Bernel knew better than he how the
+land lay, and that he could not have done other than he had done.
+
+Then he became aware that the dew was drenching him, and so he bent and
+groped in the dark for the shelter Nance had spoken of.
+
+The strip of moon had paled as it rose, the huge white stones glimmered
+faintly in it, and a darker patch below showed him where the entrance
+must be. He crept into the darker patch on his hands and knees, bumping
+his head violently, but once inside found room to sit upright. Snaking
+out again, he laid hold of the two bundles and the gun, and dragged them
+into shelter.
+
+What the bundles contained he could not tell in the dark, but one felt
+like a thick woollen cloak, and the other like a blanket, and among
+their contents he felt a loaf of bread, and a bottle and a powder-flask.
+So he rolled himself up in the blanket and the cloak, and lay wondering
+at the strange case in which he found himself, and so at last fell
+asleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He woke into a dapple of light and shade which filled his wandering wits
+with wonder, till, with a start, he came to himself and remembered.
+
+The place he was in was something like a stone bee-hive, about eight
+feet across from side to side, with a rounded sloping roof rising at its
+highest some four feet from the ground, and the great blocks of which it
+was built fitted so ill in places that the sun shot the darkness through
+and through with innumerable little white arrows of light. The dark
+opening of the night was now a glowing invitation to the day. He shook
+off his wraps and crawled out into the open.
+
+And what an open!
+
+He drew deep breaths of delight at the magnificence of his outlook--its
+vastness, its spaciousness, its wholesome amplitude and loneliness. He
+felt like a new man born solitary into a new world.
+
+The sky, without a cloud, was like a mighty hollowed sapphire, in which
+blazed the clear white sun; and the vast plain of the sea, sweeping away
+into infinity, was a still deeper blue, with here and there long swathes
+of green, and here and there swift-speeding ruffles purple-black.
+
+A brisk easterly breeze set all the face of it a-ripple, and where the
+dancing wavelets caught the sun it glanced and gleamed like sheets of
+molten silver.
+
+"A silver sea! A silver sea!" he cried aloud, and into his mind there
+flashed an incongruous comparison of the bountifulness of Nature's
+silver with the pitiful grains they hacked out of her rocks with such
+toil and hardship.
+
+Away to the south across the silver sea the Jersey cliffs shone clear in
+the sunshine, and on the dimpling plain between, the black Paternosters
+looked so like the sails of boats heading for Sark that he remembered
+suddenly that he was in hiding, and dropped to cover alongside the great
+stones of his shelter.
+
+But careful observation of the square black objects showed him that they
+did not move, and anyway they were much too far away to see him. So he
+took courage again, and, full of curiosity concerning his hiding-place,
+he crept up the southern slope till he reached the ridge of the roof, so
+to speak, and lay there looking over, entranced with the beauty of the
+scene before him.
+
+The whole east coast of Sark right up to the Burons, off the Creux, lay
+basking in the morning light. Dixcart and Derrible held no secrets from
+him; he looked straight up their shining beaches. Their bold headlands
+were like giant-fists reaching out along the water towards him.
+Breniere, the nearest point to his rock, was another mighty grasping
+hand, but between it and him swept a furious race of tossing,
+white-capped waves, with here and there black fangs of rock which stuck
+up through the green waters as though hungering for prey.
+
+He could just see the upper part of the miners' cottages on the cliff
+above Rouge Terrier, but, beyond these and the ruined mill on Hog's
+Back, not another sign of man and his toilsome, troublesome little
+works. But for these, Sark, in its utter loneliness, might have been a
+new-found island, and he its first discoverer.
+
+Ranging on, his eye rested on the shattered fragments of Little Sark,
+scattered broadcast over the sea about its most southerly point--bare
+black pinnacles, ragged ledges, islets, rocklets, reefs, and fangs,
+every one of which seemed to stir the placid sea to wildest wrath.
+Elsewhere it danced and dimpled in the sunshine, with only the long slow
+heave in it to tell of the sleeping giant below, but round each rock,
+and up the sides of his own huge pyramid, it swept in great green
+combers shot with bubbling white, and went tumbling back upon itself in
+rings of boiling foam.
+
+Beyond, he saw the rounded back of Jethou, and just behind it the long
+line of houses in Guernsey.
+
+He lay long enjoying it all, with the warm sun on his back, and the
+brisk wind toning his blood, but no view, however wonderful, will
+satisfy a man's stomach. He had fed the day before mostly on most
+unsatisfying emotions, and now he began to feel the need of something
+more solid. So he crept back along the slope to find out what there was
+for breakfast.
+
+His stores lay about the floor of his resting-place, just as he had
+turned them out in the night; a couple of long loaves, a good-sized
+piece of raw bacon, and another of boiled pork which he thought he
+recognized, some butter in a cloth, a bottle which looked as if it might
+contain spirits, the powder-flask, and a small linen bag containing
+bullets, snail-shot, and percussion caps. These, with Bernel's gun and
+the blanket, and the old woollen cloak, which he recognized as Mr.
+Hamon's roquelaure, and his pipe, and the tobacco he happened to have
+in his pouch, constituted, for the time being, his worldly possessions.
+
+He spread his cloak and blanket in the sun to dry and air, and, doubtful
+whether his rock would supply any further provision or when more might
+reach him from Sark, he proceeded to make a somewhat restricted meal of
+bread and cold pork.
+
+The raw bacon suggested something of a problem. To cook it he must have
+a fire. To have a fire he must have fuel; his tinder-box he always
+carried, of course, for the new matches had not yet penetrated to Sark.
+Moreover, to light a fire might be dangerous as liable to attract
+attention, unless he could do it under cover where no stray gleams could
+get out.
+
+He pondered these matters as he ate, spinning out his exiguous meal to
+its uttermost crumb to make it as satisfying as possible.
+
+He saw his way at once to perfecting his cover. All about him where he
+sat, the grey rock pushed through a thin friable soil like the bones of
+an ill-buried skeleton. And everywhere in the scanty soil grew thick
+little rounded cushions, half grass, half moss, varying in size from an
+apple to a foot-stool, which came out whole at a pluck or a kick. After
+breakfast he would plug up every hole in his shelter, and pile
+half-a-dozen sizeable pieces outside with which to close the front door.
+Then, if he could find anything in the shape of fuel, he saw his way to
+a dinner of fried bacon, but it would have to be after dark when the
+smoke would be invisible.
+
+But first he must find out about his water supply.
+
+Down at the south end, Nance had said. That must be over there, on that
+almost-detached stack of rocks, where the waves seemed to break loudest.
+
+So, after another crawl up to the ridge to make certain that no boats
+were about--for he had frequently seen them fishing in the neighbourhood
+of L'Etat--he crept down the flank of his pyramid almost to sea-level to
+get across to the outer pile.
+
+He had to pick his way with caution across a valley of black rocks,
+rifted and chasmed by the fury of the waves. He could imagine--or
+thought he could, but came far short of it--how the great green rollers
+would thunder through that black gully in the winter storms.
+
+There were great wells lined all round with rich brown sea-weeds, and
+narrow chasms in whose hidden depths the waters swooked and gurgled like
+unseen monsters, and whose broken edges, on which he had to step, were
+like the rough teeth of gigantic saws set up on end alongside one
+another.
+
+He crawled across these rough serrations and scaled the rifted black
+wall in front, and came at once on a number of shallow pools of
+rain-water lying in the hollows of a mighty slab.
+
+But the moment his head rose above the level of the steep black wall his
+ears were filled with a deafening roaring and rushing, supplemented by
+most tremendous dull thuddings which shook the stack like the blows of a
+mighty flail.
+
+From behind a further wall there rose a boiling mist, through which
+lashed up white jets of spray which slanted over the rocks beyond in a
+continuous torrent.
+
+He crawled to the further wall and looked over into a deep black gully,
+some fifteen feet wide and perhaps thirty feet deep, into which, out of
+a perfectly calm sea, most monstrous waves came roaring and leaping,
+till the whole chasm was foaming and spuming like an over-boiling
+milk-pan. In the middle of the chasm, for the further torment of the
+waters, was jammed a huge black rock, against which the incoming green
+avalanche dashed itself to fragments and went rocketing into the air.
+The solid granite at the further end was cleft from summit to base by a
+tiny rift a foot wide through which the boiling spume poured out to the
+sea beyond.
+
+But the marvel was where those gigantic waves came from. Save for the
+dancing wind-ripples and its long, slow internal pulsations, the sea was
+as smooth as a pond to within twenty yards of the rocks. Then it
+suddenly seemed to draw itself together, to draw itself down into itself
+indeed, like a tiger compressing its springs for a leap, and then, with
+a rush and a roar, it launched itself at the rocks with the weight of
+the ocean behind it, and hurtled blindly into the chasm where the black
+rock lay.
+
+It was a most wonderful sight, and Gard sat long watching it, then and
+later, fascinated always and puzzled by that extraordinary
+self-compression and sudden upleap of the waters out of an otherwise
+placid sea.
+
+It was but one more odd expression of Nature's fantastic humour, and the
+nearest he could come to an explanation of it was that, in the sea bed
+just there, was some great fault, some huge chasm into which the waters
+fell and then came leaping out to further torment on the rocks.
+
+It was as he was returning to his own quarters by a somewhat different
+route across the valley of rocks, that he lighted on another find which
+contented him greatly.
+
+In one of the saw-toothed chasms he saw a piece of wood sticking up, and
+climbed along to get it as first contribution to his fire. And when he
+got to it, down below in the gully, he found jammed the whole side of a
+boat, flung up there by some high spring tide and trapped before it
+could escape. Excellent wood for his firing, well tarred and fairly dry.
+He hauled and pulled till he had it all safely up, and then he carried
+it, load after load, to his house, and laid it out in the sun to dry
+still more.
+
+He worked hard all day, keeping a wary outlook for any stray fishermen.
+
+First he culled a great heap of the thin wiry grass which seemed the
+chief product of his rock, and spread it also to dry for a couch. There
+was no bracken for bedding, no gorse for firing. The grass would supply
+the place of the one, the broken boat the other.
+
+Then he made good all the holes in his walls and roof, except one in the
+latter for the escape of the smoke, and built a solid wall of the tufted
+cushions round the seaward side of his doorway, as a screen against his
+light being seen, and as a protection from the south-west wind if it
+should blow up strong in the night.
+
+He found it very strange to be toiling on these elemental matters, with
+never a soul to speak to. He felt like a castaway on a desert island,
+with the additional oddness of knowing himself to be within reach of his
+kind, yet debarred from any communication with them on pain, possibly,
+of death.
+
+At times he felt like a condemned criminal, yet knew that he had done no
+wrong, and that it was only the mistaken justice of a simple people
+that wanted blood for blood, and was not over-heedful as to whose blood
+so long as its own sense of justice was satisfied.
+
+But, he kept saying to himself, things might have been worse with him,
+very much worse, but for Nance and Bernel. And before long, any day, the
+matter might be cleared up and himself reinstated in the opinion of the
+Sark men.
+
+Even that would leave much to be desired, but possibly, he thought, if
+they found they had sorely misjudged him in this matter, they might
+realize that they had done so in other matters also, and that he had
+only been striving to do his duty as he saw it.
+
+And then, wherever else his thoughts led him, there was always Nance,
+and the thought of Nance always set his heart aglow and braced him to
+patient endurance and hope.
+
+He retraced, again and again, all the ways they had travelled together
+in these later days, recalled her every word and look, felt again the
+trembling of her hand--for him--on the Coupee, heard again the tremors
+of her voice as she urged him to safety. And those sweet ingenuous
+kisses she had given him! Yes, indeed, he had much to be grateful for,
+if some things to cavil at, in fortune's dealings.
+
+But, behind all his fair white thought of Nance, was always the black
+background of the whole circumstances of the case, and the grim fact of
+Tom Hamon's death, and he pondered this last with knitted brows from
+every point of view, and strove in vain for a gleam of light on the
+darkness.
+
+Could the Doctor be mistaken, and was Tom's death the simple result of
+his fall over the Coupee? The Doctor's pronouncement, however, seemed
+to leave no loophole of hope there.
+
+If not, then who had killed Tom, and why?
+
+He could think of no one. He could imagine no reason for it.
+
+Tom had been a bully at home, but outside he was on jovial terms with
+his fellows--except only himself. He had to acknowledge to himself the
+seeming justice of the popular feeling. If any man in Sark might, with
+some show of reason, have been suspected of the killing of Tom Hamon, it
+was himself.
+
+Once, by reason of overmuch groping in the dark, an awful doubt came
+upon him--was it possible that, in some horrible wandering of the mind,
+of which he remembered nothing, he had actually done this thing? Done it
+unconsciously, in some over-boiling of hot blood into the brain, which
+in its explosion had blotted out every memory of what had passed?
+
+It was a hideous idea, born of over-strain and overmuch groping after
+non-existent threads in a blind alley.
+
+He tried to get outside himself, and follow Stephen Gard that night and
+see if that terrible thing could have been possible to him.
+
+But he followed himself from point to point, and from moment to moment,
+and accounted for himself to himself without any lapse whatever; unless,
+indeed, his brain had played him false and he had gone out of the house
+again after going into it, and followed Tom and struck him down.
+
+With what? The Doctor said with some blunt instrument like a hammer.
+Where could he have obtained it? What had he done with it?
+
+The idea, while it lasted, was horrible. But he shook it off at last
+and called himself a fool for his pains. He had never harboured thought
+of murder in his life. He had detested Tom, but he had never gone the
+length of wishing him dead. The whole idea was absurd.
+
+All these things he thought over as, his first essential labours
+completed, he lay under the screen of the ridge and watched the sun
+dropping towards Guernsey in a miracle of eventide glories.
+
+Below him, the long slow seas rocketted along the ragged black base of
+his rock with mighty roarings and tumultuous bursts of foam, and on the
+ledges the gulls and cormorants squabbled and shrieked, and took long
+circling flights without fluttering a wing, to show what gulls could do,
+or skimmed darkly just above the waves and into them, to show that
+cormorants were never satisfied. And now and again wild flights of
+red-billed puffins swept up from the water and settled out of his sight
+at the eastern end of the rock, and he promised himself to look them up
+some other day if opportunity offered.
+
+From the constant tumult of the seas about his rock, except just at low
+water, he saw little fear of being taken by surprise, even if his
+presence there became known. Twice only in the twenty-four hours did it
+seem possible for any one to effect a landing there, and at those times
+he promised himself to be on the alert.
+
+He lay there till the sun had gone, and the pale green and amber, and
+the crimson and gold of his going had slowly passed from sea and sky,
+and left them grey and cold; till a single light shone out on Sark,
+which he knew must be in one of the miners' cottages, and many lights
+twinkled in Guernsey; till beneath him he could no longer see the sea,
+but only the white foam fury as it boiled along the rocks. Then he crept
+away to his burrow, rejoicing in the thought of the companionship of a
+fire and hot food.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HOW THE STARS SANG OF HOPE
+
+
+It took Gard some time to get his fire started, and when it did blaze
+up, with fine spurts of gas from the tar, and vivid blue and green and
+red flames from the salted wood, the little stone bee-hive glowed like
+an oven and presently grew as hot as one. The smoke escaped but slowly
+through the single hole in the roof, and at last he could stand it no
+longer, and crept out into the night until his fire should have burned
+down to a core of red ashes over which he could grill his dinner.
+
+And what a night! He had seen the stars from many parts of the earth and
+sea, but never, it seemed to him, had he seen such stars as these, so
+close, so large, so wonderfully clean and bright. And, indeed, glory of
+the heavens so supreme as that is possible only far away from man, and
+all the works and habitations of man, and all his feeble efforts at the
+mitigation of the darkness. Nay, for fullest perception, it may be that
+it is necessary for a man to be not only alone in the profundity of
+Nature's night, but to be lifted somewhat out of himself and his natural
+darkness by extremity of joy, or still more of need.
+
+The milky way was as white as though a mighty brush dipped in glittering
+star-dust had been drawn across the velvet dome. The larger stars, many
+of which were old acquaintances and known to him by name, seemed to
+swing so clear and close that they took on quite a new aspect of
+friendliness and cheer. The smaller--I write as he thought--a mighty
+host, an innumerable company quite beyond his ken, still spoke to him in
+a language that he had never forgotten.
+
+Long ago, when he was quite a little boy, he had come upon a great globe
+of the heavens, a much-prized curiosity of his old schoolmaster. Upon it
+appeared all the principal stars linked up into their constellations,
+the shadowy linking lines forming the figures of the Imaginary Ones
+associated with them in the minds of the ancients. There, on the
+varnished round of the globe, ranged the Great and Little Bears, and the
+Dogs, and the Archer, and the Flying Horse, the Lion, and the Crab, and
+the Whale, and the Twins, and Perseus and Andromeda, and Cassiopeia. And
+up there, on the dark inner side of the mighty dome, he seemed to see
+them all again, and time swung back with him for a moment, and he was a
+boy once more.
+
+And, gazing up at them all, their steady shine and many-coloured
+twinklings led him to wonder as to the how and the why of them. From the
+stars to their Maker was but a natural step, and so he came, simply and
+naturally, to thought of the greatness of Him who swung these
+innumerable worlds in their courses, and, from that, to His goodness and
+justice.
+
+Memories of his mother came surging back upon him, and of all her
+goodness and all she had taught him. She had had a mighty, simple trust
+in the goodness of God, and had passed it on to her boy, though his
+rough contact with the world had overworn it all to some extent.
+
+Still, it was all there, and now it all came back to him through the
+hopeful twinkling eyes of those innumerable stars.
+
+"Have courage and hope!" they sang; and though all his little world,
+save those two or three who knew him best, was against him, he stood
+there with his face turned up to the stars, and believed in his heart
+that all would yet be well.
+
+And when at last he turned back to things of earth, he found the stars
+still twinkling in the sea, as though they would not let him go even
+though he gave up looking at them. They gleamed and glanced in the
+smooth-rolling waves till the deep seemed sown with phosphorescence, as
+on that night in Grand Greve; the night Nance came upon him so suddenly
+in the dark and he went on with her to get Grannie's medicine.
+
+Was it possible that that blessed night, that terrible night, was barely
+forty-eight hours old? So much had happened since then, such incredible
+things! It seemed weeks ago. It seemed like a dream; horrid, fantastic,
+wonderfully sweet.
+
+Within that tiny span of hours he had come to the knowledge of Nance's
+love for him. Oh those sweet, frank kisses! If he had died last night;
+if the hot heads in their madness had killed him to balance Tom Hamon's
+account--still he would have lived: for Nance had kissed him.
+
+And within the half of that short span he had been judged a murderer,
+had had to flee for his life, and would, without a doubt, have lost it
+but for Nance.
+
+She had undertaken a mighty risk for him--for him! And she had shown him
+that she loved him, for she had kissed him with her heart in her lips.
+
+And, grateful as he was for all the rest, it was still the recollection
+of those sweet kisses that he thought of most.
+
+So "Hope! Hope!" sang the stars, and his heart was high because his
+conscience was clean and Nance had kissed him.
+
+When at last he crawled into his burrow, his fire was only white ashes,
+and he would not trouble to relight it.
+
+He broke off a piece of bread, and ate it slowly, and thought of Nance,
+and promised himself the larger breakfast. Then he rolled himself in his
+cloak, and slept more soundly than an alderman after a civic feast.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+HOW NANCE SENT FOOD AND HOPE TO HIM
+
+
+Next morning, when he crawled out of his burrow, Gard found everything
+swathed in dense white mist. Upon which he promptly lit his fire, and in
+due course enjoyed a more satisfying meal than he had eaten since he
+landed on the rock.
+
+Then he decided to take advantage of the screening mist to explore such
+parts of his prison-house as were not available to him at other times.
+So he walked along the ridge, secure from observation since he could not
+himself see down to the water from it, though the rushings and roarings
+along the black ledges below never ceased.
+
+Every nook and ledge of the out-cropping rock on the south side of the
+ridge was occupied by lady gulls in all stages of their maternal duties.
+From the surprise they expressed at his intrusion, and the way they
+stuck to their nests, they were evidently quite unused to man and his
+ways, and it was all he could do to avoid stepping on them and their
+squawking families as he picked his way along.
+
+He clambered down the eastern slope nearest Sark, and found the ground
+there covered with a fairly deep soil, and green growths that were
+strange to him. The soil was perforated with holes which at first he
+ascribed to rabbits, but when he inserted his hand into one he got such
+a nip from an unusually strong beak that he changed his mind to puffins,
+and, standing quite still for a time, he presently saw the members of
+the colony come creeping out behind their great red bills and scurry off
+across the water in search of breakfast.
+
+Then the great semi-detached pinnacle below attracted him, and he
+scrambled down amid the complaints of a great colony of gulls and
+cormorants but found the tide still too full for him to cross the
+intervening chasm. Those wonderful great green waves out of a smooth sea
+came roaring along the sides of the island and met full tilt in the
+chasm below him, as they leaped exultant from their conflict with the
+rocks. They hurled themselves against one another in wildest fury, and
+the foam of their meeting boiled white along the ledges, and dappled all
+the sea.
+
+As he crawled through the lank wet grass and soft spongy soil, he found
+himself suddenly confronted with a great barrier of fallen rocks; as
+though, at some period of its existence, the north end of the island had
+tapered to a gigantic peak which, in the fulness of its time, had come
+down with a crash, and now lay like a titanic wall from summit to
+sea-board. Huge and forbidding, of all shapes and sizes, the mighty
+fragments barred his course like a menace, and he attacked them warily,
+drawing himself with infinite caution from one to another; over this
+one, under this, deftly between these two, lest an unwary weighting
+should start them on the movement that might grind him to powder.
+
+The fog increased their forbidding aspect tenfold. He could not see a
+foot before him, and could only worm his way among them, testing each
+before he trusted it, and finding at times monsters become but mediocre
+when his hand was on them. More than once he had to rest his hands on
+cautiously-tried ledges and swing his legs forward and grope with his
+feet for foothold, and whether the space below was trifling, or whether
+it ran to incredible depth, he could not tell.
+
+It was a mighty relief to him to come out at last on the other side of
+the wall, and to find himself on the great north slope which faced Sark,
+and so was closed to him in clear weather.
+
+The long thin grass grew rankly here, and was beaded with moisture, but
+he pushed along with an eerie feeling at the wildness of it all.
+
+The mist clung close about him, but had suddenly become luminous. He
+felt as though he were packed loosely all round with cotton wool on
+which a strong light was shining. It gave him a feeling of
+light-headedness. Everything was light about him, and yet he could not
+see more than a couple of feet before his face. The waves roared
+hoarsely below him, and once he had unknowingly got so low down that a
+monstrous white arm, reaching suddenly up out of the depths, seemed
+about to lay hold on him and drag him back with it into the turmoil.
+
+He was panting and full of mist when at last he climbed the second great
+rock barrier and rounded the corner towards the south.
+
+And as he sat resting there, the whiff of a westerly breeze tore a long
+lane in the white shroud, and for a moment he saw, as through a
+telescope, the houses of Guernsey gleaming in bright sunshine. Then it
+closed again, and presently began to drift past him in strange whorls
+and spirals, like hurrying ghosts wrapped hastily in filmy garments,
+which loosed at times and trailed slowly over the rocks and caught and
+clung to their sharp projections. Then the sun completed the rout, and
+the mist-ghosts swept away towards France, harried by the west wind like
+a flock of sheep before the shepherd's dog.
+
+In the afternoon the heat grew so intense that he was driven to the
+wells in the valley of rocks for a bathe, for there was no shelter
+available, and his bee-hive was like an oven.
+
+None of the pools was large enough for a swim, and it was more than a
+man's life was worth to venture among the boiling surges of the outer
+rocks. But he could at all events get under water, if it was only to sit
+there and cool off.
+
+So he stripped, and was just about slipping into a deep still bath,
+emerald green, with a fringe of amber weeds all round its almost
+perpendicular sides, when, glancing down to make sure of an ultimate
+footing, his eye lighted with a shock of surprise on a pair of huge eyes
+looking straight up at him out of the water. They were violet in colour,
+protuberant, and malevolent beyond words.
+
+He sat down suddenly on the baking black rock, with a cold shiver
+running down his back in spite of the scorch of the sun. The utter cold
+malignity of those great violet eyes, and the thought of what would have
+happened if he had stepped into that pool, made him momentarily sick.
+
+He had seen small devil-fish in the pools in Sark, but never one
+approaching this in size. He crept away at last, leaving it in
+possession, and found a pool clear of boulders or caving hollows, and
+sat in it with no great enjoyment, wondering if the great unwholesome
+beast in the other would be likely to climb the cliff and come upon him
+in the night. He thought it unlikely, but still the idea clung to him
+and caused him no little discomfort. He blocked his door that night with
+great green cushions, though he felt doubtful if they would be effective
+against the wiles and strength of a devil-fish, if half that he had
+heard of them was true.
+
+In the middle of the night--for he went to bed early, having nothing
+else to do, except to watch the stars--he woke with a cold start,
+feeling certain that hideous creature had crawled up the slope and was
+feeling all round his house for an entrance.
+
+Certainly _something_ was moving about outside, and feeling over the
+stones in an uncertain, searching kind of a way. And when you have been
+wakened up from a nightmare in which staring devil-eyes played a
+prominent part, _something_ may be anything, and as like as not the
+owner of the eyes.
+
+But even devil-fishes in their most advanced stages have not yet
+attained the power of human speech. If they speak to one another what a
+horrible sound it must be!
+
+It was with a sigh of relief, and a sudden unstringing of the bow, that
+he heard outside--
+
+"Mr. Gard!" and with a lusty kick, which expressed some of his feeling,
+he sent his doorway flying and crawled out after it.
+
+The myriad winking stars lifted the roof of the world and the darkness
+somewhat, sufficient at all events for him to make out that it was not
+Nance.
+
+"You, Bernel?" he queried, as the only possible alternative.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Gard. I've brought you some more things to eat."
+
+"Good lad! I'm a great trouble to you. Where is Nance? In the boat?"
+
+"No, she couldn't come. That Julie's watching her like a cat. It was she
+and Peter stirred up the men against you. All day yesterday the whole
+Island was out looking for you, dead or alive, and very much puzzled as
+to what had become of you. And Julie's got a suspicion that we know.
+They searched the house for you in spite of mother and Grannie, but they
+won't forget Grannie in a hurry, and I don't think they'll come back,"
+and he laughed at the recollection of it.
+
+"What did Grannie do?"
+
+"She just looked at them from under that big black sun-bonnet, and
+muttered things no one heard. But her eyes were like points of burning
+sticks, and they all crept out one after another, afraid of they didn't
+know what. But Julie's been on the watch all day, and would hardly let
+us out of her sight. But she couldn't watch us both when we were not
+together. So Nance got a bundle of things ready for you, and then went
+out with another bundle and Julie followed her, and I slipped off here."
+
+"Bernel, I don't know how to thank you all! What should I have done
+without you?"
+
+"You'd have been dead, most likely. It's not that they cared much for
+Tom, you know, but they don't like the idea of a Sark man being killed
+by a foreigner and no one paying for it."
+
+"But I'm not a foreigner--"
+
+"Yes you are, to them. Of course you're not a Frenchman, but all the
+same you're not a Sark man. Good thing for you you'd lived with us and
+we'd got to know you and like you."
+
+"Yes, that was a good thing indeed. I'm only sorry to have brought you
+trouble and to be such a trouble to you."
+
+"If we thought you'd done it of course we wouldn't trouble. But we know
+you couldn't have."
+
+"Nothing fresh has turned up?"
+
+"Nothing yet. But Nance says it will, sure. Truth must out, she says."
+
+"It's a weary while of coming out sometimes, Bernel. And I can't spend
+the rest of my life here, you know."
+
+"She said you were to keep your heart up. You never know what may
+happen."
+
+"Tell her I can stand it because of all her goodness to me. If I hadn't
+her to think of I might go mad in time."
+
+"I've brought you a rabbit I snared. Nance cooked it."
+
+"That was good of her. Can you eat puffins' eggs?"
+
+"They want a bit of getting used to," laughed the boy. "But they're
+better cooked than raw."
+
+"I can cook them. I found part of an old boat, and I've plugged up all
+the holes in the shelter, and I only light a fire at night. Could I fish
+here?"
+
+"Too big a sea close in. I've got some in the boat. I put out a line as
+I came across. I'll leave you some."
+
+"And have you a bottle--or a bailing-tin? Anything I could bring home
+some water from the pools in? I have to go over there every time I need
+a drink, and in the dark it's not possible."
+
+"You can have the bailer. It's a new one and sound."
+
+"Now tell me, Bernel, if they find out I'm here what will they do?"
+
+"They might come across and try and take you, unless they cool down; and
+that won't be so long as that Julie and Peter talk as they do. She makes
+him do everything she tells him. He's a sheep."
+
+"And if they come across, what do you and Nance expect me to do?"
+
+"You've got my gun," said the boy simply.
+
+"Yes, I've got your gun. But do you expect me to kill some of them?"
+
+"They'd kill you," said Bernel, conclusively. On second thoughts,
+however, he added, "But you needn't kill them. Wing one or two, and the
+rest will let you be. With a gun I could keep all Sark from landing on
+L'Etat."
+
+"Suppose they come in the night? How many landing-places are there?"
+
+"There's another at the end nighest Guernsey, but it's not easy. And
+it's only low tide and half-ebb that lets you ashore here at all."
+
+"How about your boat?"
+
+"She's riding to a line. Tide's running up that way, but I'd better be
+off."
+
+They stumbled through the darkness and the sleeping gulls, which woke in
+fright, and volubly accused one another of nightmares and riotous
+behaviour--and Bernel hauled in his boat, and handed Gard the tin dipper
+and three good-sized bream.
+
+"If you can't eat them all at once, split them open and dry them in the
+sun," he said. "They'll keep for a week that way."
+
+"Tell Nance I think of her every hour of the day, and I pray God the
+truth may come out soon."
+
+"I'll tell her. It'll come out. She says so," and he pulled out into the
+darkness and was gone.
+
+And the Solitary went back to his shelter, secure in the knowledge that
+the tide was on the rise, and half-ebb would not be till well on into
+next day. And he thought of Nance, and of Bernel, and of all the whole
+matter again; white thoughts and black thoughts, but chiefly white
+because of Nance, and Nance was a fact, while the black thoughts were
+shadows confusing as the mist.
+
+He could only devoutly hope and pray that a clean wind might come and
+put the shadows to flight and let the sun of truth shine through.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+HOW HE SAW STRANGE SIGHTS
+
+
+Living thus face to face with Nature, and drawn through lack of other
+occupation into unusually intimate association with her, Gard found his
+lonely rock a centre of strange and novel experience.
+
+Situated as he was, even small things forced themselves largely upon his
+observation and wrought themselves into his memory. He found it good to
+lose himself for a time in these visible and tangible actualities,
+rather than in useless efforts after an understanding of the mystery of
+which he was the victim and centre.
+
+He had given over much time to pondering the subject of Tom Hamon's
+death, but had come no nearer any reasonable solution of it. That
+hideous doubt as to himself in the matter recurred at times, but he
+always hastened to dissipate it by some other interest more practical
+and palpable, lest it should bring him to ultimate belief in its
+possibility, and so to madness.
+
+And so he spent hours watching that wonderful roaring cauldron on the
+south stack where his water pools were. Other hours in study of the
+social and domestic economies of gulls and cormorants. He saw families
+of awkward little fawn-coloured squawkers force their way out of their
+shells under his very eves, while indignant mothers told him what they
+thought of him from a safe distance.
+
+He bathed regularly in the heat of the day, but always after careful
+inspection of his chosen pool, and one day fled in haste up the black
+rocks at sight of the tip of a long, quivering, flesh-coloured tentacle
+coming curling round a rock in the close neighbourhood of the pool in
+which he was basking.
+
+That monster under the rock gave him many a bad dream. It seemed to him
+the incarnation of evil, and those horrible, bulging, merciless eyes
+stuck like burrs in his memory.
+
+One day, when he had been watching the cauldron, and filling his tin
+dipper at the freshwater pools, as he came to descend the black wall
+leading to the valley of rocks, he witnessed a little tragedy.
+
+Down below, on the edge of the pool where the octopus dwelt, a silly
+young cormorant was standing gazing into the water, so fascinated with
+something it saw there that it forgot even to jerk its head in search of
+understanding.
+
+Gard stood and watched. He saw a tiny pale worm-like thing come creeping
+up the black rock on which the cormorant squatted. The cormorant saw it
+too, and he was hungry, as all cormorants always are, even after a full
+meal. So presently he made a jab at it with his curved beak, and in a
+moment the pale worm had twisted itself tightly round his silly neck,
+and dragged him screaming and fluttering under the water.
+
+Another day, when he was coming down by the break in the cliff, where
+some great winter wave had bitten out such a slice that the top had come
+tumbling down, he saw the monster sunning itself on the flat rock by the
+side of its pool, like a huge nightmare spider.
+
+The moment he appeared its great eyes settled on his as though it had
+been waiting only for him. And when he stopped, with a feeling of
+shuddering discomfort at its hugeness--for its body seemed considerably
+over a foot in width, while its arms lounging over the rocks were each
+at least six feet long, and looked horribly muscular--he could have
+sworn that one of the great devil-eyes winked familiarly at him, as
+though the beast would say, "Come on, come on! Nice day for a bathe!
+Just waiting for you!"
+
+He could see the loathsome body move as it breathed, swinging
+comfortably in the support of its arms.
+
+In a fury of repulsion he stooped to pick up a rock, but when he hurled
+it the last tentacle was just sliding into the pool, and it seemed to
+him that it waved an ironical farewell before it disappeared.
+
+More than once fishing-boats hovered about his rock, but kept a safe
+distance from the boiling underfalls, and he always lay in hiding till
+they had gone.
+
+But he saw more gracious and beautiful things than these.
+
+As he lay one morning, looking over the ridge at the Sark headlands
+shining in the sun--with a strong west wind driving the waves so briskly
+that, Sark-like, they tossed their white crests into the air in angry
+expostulation long before they met the rocks, and went roaring up them
+in dazzling spouts of foam--his eye lighted on a gleam of unusual colour
+on the racing green plain. It came again and again, and presently, as
+the merry dance waxed wilder still, every white-cap as it tossed into
+the air became a tiny rainbow, and the whole green plain was alive with
+magical flutterings, of colours so dazzling that it seemed bestrewn with
+dancing diamonds. A sight so wonderful that he found himself holding in
+his! breath lest a puff should drive it all away.
+
+That same evening, too, was a glory of colour such as he had never
+dreamed of. The setting sun was ruby; red, and the cloud-bank into which
+he sank was all rimmed with red fire that seemed to corruscate in its
+burning brilliancy.
+
+To Gard indeed, in the somewhat peculiar state of mind induced by his
+sudden cutting-off from his kind and flinging back upon himself, it
+seemed as though the blood-red sun had fallen into a vast consuming fire
+behind that dark, fire-rimmed cloud, and that that was the end of it,
+and it would never rise again.
+
+The sky, right away into the farthest east, was flaming red with a hint
+of underlying smoke below the glow. The sea was a weltering bath of
+blood, and the cliffs of Sark, save for the gleam of white foam at their
+feet, shone as red as though they had just been bodily dipped in it.
+
+His lonely rock, when he looked round at it in wonder, was all
+unfamiliarly red. There was a red fantastic glow in the very air, and he
+himself was as red as though he had in very fact killed Tom Hamon, and
+drenched himself with his blood.
+
+So startling and unnatural was it all, that he found himself wondering
+fearfully if these outside things were really all blood-red, or whether
+something had gone wrong with his brain and eyes, and only caused them
+to look so to him alone, or whether it was indeed the end of all things
+shaping itself slowly under his very eyes. And in that thought and fear
+he was not by any means alone.
+
+But the wonderful red, which in its universality and intensity had
+become overpowering and fearsome, faded at last, and he hailed its going
+with a sigh of relief. His eyes and his brain were all right, he had not
+killed Tom Hamon, and this was not the earth's last sunset.
+
+And again that night, as he sat on the ridge on sentinel duty till the
+rising tide should lock the doors of his castle, the sea all round him
+shone with phosphorescence; every breaking wave along the black plain
+was a lambent gleam of lightning, and where they tore up the sides of
+his rock they were like flames out of a fiery sea, so that he sat there
+looking down upon a weltering band of nickering green and blue fires,
+which clung to the black ledges and dripped slowly back into the
+seething gleam below.
+
+It was all very strange and very awesome, and he wondered what it might
+portend in the way of further marvels.
+
+And he had not long to wait.
+
+Far away in the Atlantic a cyclone had been raging, and carrying havoc
+in its skirts. Now it was whirling towards Europe, and the puffins crept
+deep into their holes, and the gulls circled with disconsolate cries,
+and the cormorants crouched gloomily in lee of their snuggest ledges,
+and all nature seemed waiting for the blow.
+
+Gard was awakened in the morning by the gale tearing at the massive
+stones of his shelter as though it would carry them bodily into the sea.
+
+And when he crawled out, flat like a worm, the wind caught him even so,
+and he had to grimp to earth and anchor himself by projecting pieces of
+rock.
+
+Such seas as these he had never imagined round Sark; forgetting that
+behind Guernsey lay thousands of miles of waters tortured past
+endurance and racing now to escape the fury of the storm.
+
+A white lash of spray came over him as he lay, and soaked him to the
+skin, and, turning his face to the storm, he saw through the chinks of
+his eyes a great wavering white curtain between him and the sky line.
+The south-west portion of his island, where his freshwater pools were,
+and the valley of rocks, were all awash, the mighty waves roaring clean
+over the south stack, and rushing up into the black sky in rockets of
+flying spray. The tide had still some time to run, and he feared what it
+might be like at its fullest. It seemed to him by no means impossible
+that it might sweep the whole rock bare.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+HOW HE LIVED THROUGH THE GREAT STORM
+
+
+It was a fortunate thing for Gard that the storm--the great storm from
+which, for many a year afterwards, local events in Sark dated--came when
+it did; two days after Bernel's visit and the replenishment of his
+larder. For if he had been caught bare he must have starved.
+
+Eight whole days it lasted, with only two slight abatements which, while
+they raised his hopes only to dash them, still served him mightily.
+
+During the first days he spent much of his time crouched in the lee of
+his bee-hive, watching the terrific play of the waves on his own rock
+and on the Sark headlands.
+
+He wondered if any other man had seen such a storm under such
+conditions. For he was practically at sea on a rock; in the midst of the
+turmoil, yet absolutely unaffected by it.
+
+On shipboard, thought of one's ship and possible consequences had always
+interfered with fullest enjoyment of Nature's paroxysms. It was
+impossible to detach one's thoughts completely and view matters entirely
+from the outside. But here--he was sure his rock had suffered many an
+equal torment--there was nothing to come between him and the elemental
+frenzy. Nothing but--as the days of it ran on--a growing solicitude as
+to what he was going to live on if it continued much longer.
+
+Never was Sark rabbit so completely demolished as was that one that
+Nance had cooked and sent him. Before he had done with it he cracked the
+very bones he had thrown away, for the sake of what was in them, and
+finally chewed the softer parts of the bones themselves to cheat himself
+into the belief that he was eating.
+
+That was after he had devoured every crumb of his bread, and finished
+his three fishes to the extreme points of their tails.
+
+He was, I said, in the very midst of the turmoil yet unaffected by it.
+But that was not so in some respects.
+
+Bodily, as we have seen, the storm bore hardly upon him, since
+rabbit-bones and fish-tails can hardly be looked upon as a nutritious or
+inviting dietary.
+
+But mentally and spiritually the mighty elemental upheaval was wholly
+crushing and uplifting.
+
+As he cowered, with humming head, under the fierce unremitting rush of
+the gale, and felt the great stones of his shelter tremble in it, and
+watched the huge green hills of water, with their roaring white crests,
+go sweeping past to crash in thunder on the cliffs of Sark, he felt
+smaller than he had ever felt before--and that, as a rule, and if it
+come not of self-abnegation through a man's own sin or folly, is
+entirely to his good; possibly in the other case also.
+
+To feel infinitely small and helpless in the hands of an Infinitely
+Great is a spiritual education to any man, and it was so to this man.
+
+He felt himself, in that universal chaos, no more than a speck of
+helpless dust amid the whirling wheels of Nature's inexplicable
+machinery, and clung the tighter to the simple fundamental facts of
+which his heart was sure--behind and above all this was God, who held
+all these things in His hand. And over there in Sark was Nance, the very
+thought of whom was like a coal of fire in his heart, which all the
+gales that ever blew, and all the soddened soaking of ceaseless rain
+from above and ceaseless spray from below, could not even dim.
+
+For long-continued and relentless buffeting such as this tells upon any
+man, no matter what his strength of mind or body to begin with; and a
+perpetually soaked body is apt in time to sodden the soul, unless it
+have something superhuman to cling to, as this man had in his simple
+trust in God and the girl he loved.
+
+In all those stressful days, so far as he could see, the tides--which in
+those parts rise and fall some forty feet, as you may see by the scoured
+bases of the towering cliffs--seemed always at the full, the westerly
+gale driving in the waters remorselessly and piling them up against the
+land without cessation, and as though bent on its destruction.
+
+Great gouts of clotted foam flew over his head in clouds, and plastered
+his rock with shivering sponges. The sheets of spray from his south-west
+rocks lashed him incessantly. His shelter was as wet inside as out, as
+he was himself.
+
+He felt empty and hungry at times, but never thirsty; his skin absorbed
+moisture enough and to spare. But, chilled and clammed and starving, on
+the fifth day when he had crawled into his wet burrow for such small
+relief as it might offer from the ceaseless flailing without, he
+broached his bottle of cognac and drank a little, and found himself the
+better of it.
+
+On the evening of the third day his hopes had risen with a slight
+slackening of the turmoil. He was not sure if the gale had really
+abated, or if it was only that he was growing accustomed to it. But
+under that belief, and the compulsion of a growling stomach, he crawled
+precariously round to the eastern end of the rock where the puffins had
+their holes, lying flat when the great gusts snatched at him as though
+they were bent on hurling him into the water, and gliding on again in
+the intervals. And there, with a piece of his firewood he managed to
+extort half-a-dozen eggs from fiercely expostulating parents. The end of
+his stick was bitten to fragments, but he got his eggs, and was amazed
+at the size of them compared with that of their producers.
+
+The sight of the great wall of tumbled rocks on his right, and the
+sudden remembrance of his previous passage over it, set him wondering if
+it might not be possible to find better shelter in some of those
+fissures across which he had had to swing himself by the hands on the
+previous occasion. For this was the leeward side of the island, and the
+huge bulk of it rose like a protecting shoulder between him and the
+gale, whereas his bee-hive, on the exposed flank of the rock, got the
+full force of it. So he scooped a hole in the friable black soil and
+deposited his eggs in it and crawled along to the wall.
+
+The tumbled fragments looked much less fearsome than they had done in
+the fog. He found no difficulty in clambering among them now, when he
+could see clearly what he was about, and he wormed his way in and out,
+and up and down, but could not light on any of those tricky spaces which
+had seemed to him so dangerous before.
+
+And then, as he crawled under one huge slab, a black void lay before
+him, of no great width but evidently deep. It took many minutes'
+peering into the depths to accustom his eyes to the dimness.
+
+Then it seemed to him that the rough out jutting fragments below would
+afford a holding, and he swung his feet cautiously down and felt round
+for foothold.
+
+Carefully testing everything he touched, he let himself down, inch by
+inch, assured that if he could go down he could certainly get up again.
+
+At first the gale still whistled through the crevices among the
+boulders, but presently he found himself in a silence that was so mighty
+a change from the ceaseless roar to which he was becoming accustomed,
+that he felt as though stricken with deafness. Up above him the light
+filtered down, tempered by the slab under which he had come, and enabled
+him still to find precarious hand and foot hold.
+
+But presently his downward progress was barred by a rough flooring of
+splintered fragments, and he stood panting and looked about him.
+
+His well was about twenty feet deep, he reckoned, and there were gaping
+slits here and there which might lead in towards the rock or out towards
+the sea. He had turned and twisted so much in his descent that it took
+him some time to decide in which direction the sea might lie and in
+which the rock. And, having settled that, he wriggled through a crevice
+and wormed slowly on.
+
+He was almost in the dark now, and could only feel his way. But he was
+used to groping in narrow places, and a spirit of investigation urged
+him on.
+
+Half an hour's strenuous and cautious worming, and a thin trickle of
+light glimmered ahead. He turned and worked his way back at once.
+
+There was no slit opposite the one he had tried, but presently,
+half-way up the well, he made out an opening like the mouth of a small
+adit. His back had been to it as he came down, and so he had missed it.
+
+He climbed up and in, and felt convinced in his own mind that this was
+no simple work of nature. Nature had no doubt begun, but man had
+certainly finished it. For the floor level was comparatively free from
+harshness, and the outjutting projections of the sides and roof had been
+tempered, and progress was not difficult.
+
+It was very narrow, however, and very low, and quite dark. He could only
+drag himself along on his stomach like a worm. But he pushed on with all
+the ardour of a discoverer.
+
+Was it silver? Was it smugglers? Or what? Wholly accidental formation he
+was sure it was not, though he thought it likely that man's handiwork
+had only turned Nature's to account.
+
+The fissure had probably been there from the beginning of time, or it
+might be the result of numberless years of the slow wearing away of a
+softer vein of rock, but some man at some time had lighted on it, and
+followed it up, and with much labour had smoothed its natural asperities
+and used it for his own purposes. And he was keen to learn what those
+purposes were.
+
+To any ordinary man, accustomed to the ordinary amplitudes of life, and
+freedom to stretch his arms and legs and raise his head and fill his
+lungs with fresh air, a passage such as this would have been impossible.
+Here and there, indeed, the walls widened somewhat through some fault in
+the rook, bur for the most part his elbows grazed the sides each time he
+moved them.
+
+Even he, used as he was to such conditions, began at last to feel them
+oppressive. The whole mighty bulk of L'Etat seemed above and about him,
+malignantly intent on crushing him out of existence.
+
+He knew that was only fancy. He had experienced it many times before.
+But the nightmare feeling was there, and it needed all his will at times
+to keep him from a panic attempt at retreat, when the insensate
+rock-walls seemed absolutely settling down on him, and breathing was
+none too easy.
+
+But going back meant literally going backwards, crawling out toes
+foremost; for his elbows scraped the walls and his head the roof, and
+turning was out of the question. The men who had made and used that
+narrow way had undoubtedly gone with a purpose, and not for pleasure.
+And he was bound to learn what that purpose was.
+
+So he set his teeth, and wormed himself slowly along, with pinched face
+and tight-shut mouth, and nostrils opened wide to take in all the air
+they could and let out as little as possible. And, even at that, he had
+to lie still at times, pressed flat against the floor, to let some
+fresher air trickle in above him.
+
+But at last he came to what he sought, though no whit of it could he see
+when he got there. By the sudden cessation of the pressure on his sides
+and head, he was aware of entrance into a larger space, and, with
+forethought quickened by the exigences of his passage, he lay for a
+moment to pant more freely and to think.
+
+His body was in the passage. He knew where the passage led out to. What
+lay ahead he could not tell.
+
+If it was a chamber, as he expected, there might quite possibly be other
+passages leading out of it. And so it would be well to make sure of
+recognizing this one again before he loosed his hold on it. So he
+pulled off one boot, and feeling carefully round the opening, placed it
+just inside as a landmark.
+
+Then he groped on along the right-hand wall to learn the size of the
+chamber, and was immediately thankful that his own passage was safely
+marked, for he came on another opening, and another, and another, and
+labelled them carefully in his mind, "One, two, three."
+
+It was truly eerie work, groping there in that dense darkness and utter
+silence, and trying to the nerves even of one who had never known
+himself guilty of such things. But, being there, he was determined to
+learn all he could.
+
+He clung to his right-hand wall as to a life-rope. If he once got mazed
+in a place like that he might never taste daylight and upper air again.
+
+Of the size of the chamber he could so far form no opinion. He would
+have given much for a light. His flint and steel were indeed in his
+pocket, but he was sodden through and through, and had no means whatever
+of catching a spark if he struck one.
+
+Then, as he groped cautiously along past the third opening, his progress
+was stayed, and not by rock.
+
+He was on his knees, his hands feeling blindly, but with infinite
+enquiry, along the rough rock wall, when he stumbled suddenly over
+something that lay along the ground. Dropping his hands to save himself
+from falling, they lighted on that which lay below, and he started back
+with an exclamation and a shudder. For what he had felt was like the
+hair and face of a man.
+
+He crouched back against the wall, his heart thumping like a ship's
+pump, and the blood belling in his ears, and sat so for very many
+minutes; sat on, until, in that silent blackness, he could hear the
+dull, far-away thud of the waves on the outer walls of the island.
+
+Then, by degrees, he pulled himself together. If it was indeed a man, he
+was undoubtedly dead, and therefore harmless; and having learned this
+much he would know more.
+
+So presently he groped forward, felt again the round head and soft hair,
+and below it and beyond it a heap of what felt like small oblong
+packages done up in wrappings of cloth and tied round with cord.
+
+He picked one up and handled it inquisitively, with a shrewd idea of
+what might be, or might have been, inside. The cord was very loose, as
+though the contents had shrunk since it was tied. As he fumbled with it
+in the dark, it came open and left him no possible room for doubt as to
+what those contents were. He sneezed till the top of his head seemed
+like to lift, and the tears ran down his cheeks in an unceasing stream.
+What had once been tobacco had powdered into snuff, and his rough
+handling of the package had scattered it broadcast.
+
+He turned at last, and lay with his head in his arms against the wall
+until the air should have time to clear, and meanwhile the sneezing had
+quickened his wits.
+
+Here was possible tinder, and by means of those dried-up wrappings he
+might procure a light. If it lasted but five minutes it might enable him
+to solve the problem on which he had stumbled.
+
+He groped again for the opened package, and found it on the dead man's
+face. The wrapper was of tarred cloth, almost perished with age, dry and
+friable. Shaking out the rest of the snuff at arm's length, he picked
+the stuff to pieces and shredded it into tinder. Then he felt about for
+half-a-dozen more packages, carefully slipped their cords and emptied
+out their contents, and getting out his flint and steel, flaked sparks
+into the tinder till it caught and flared, and the interior of the
+cavern leaped at him out of its darkness.
+
+He rolled up one of the empty wrappers like a torch, and lit it, and
+looked about him.
+
+His first hasty glance fell on the dead man, and he got another shock
+from the fact that his feet were lashed together with stout rope, and
+probably his hands also, for they were behind his back, and he lay face
+upward. His coat and short-clothes and buckled shoes spoke of long
+by-gone days, and the skin of his face was brown and shrivelled, so that
+the bones beneath showed grim and gaunt.
+
+Beyond him was a great heap of the same small packages of tobacco, and
+alongside them a pile of small kegs. Gard lit another of his torches,
+and stepped gingerly over to them. He sounded one or two, but found them
+empty. Time had shrunk their stout timbers and tapped their contents.
+
+Then he held up his flickering light and looked quickly round this
+prison-house which had turned into a tomb, and shivered, as a dim idea
+of what it all meant came over him.
+
+It was a large, low, natural rock chamber, and all round the walls were
+black slits which might mean it passages leading on into the bowels of
+the island. To investigate them all would mean the work of many days.
+
+The dead man, the perished packages, the empty kegs--there was nothing
+else, except his own boot lying in the mouth of the largest of the black
+slits, as though anxious on its own account to be gone.
+
+The still air was already becoming heavy with the pungent smoke of his
+torches. He stepped cautiously across to the body again, and picked a
+couple of buttons from the coat. They came off in his hand, and when he
+touched the buckles on the shoes they did the same. Then he turned and
+made for his waiting shoe just as his last torch went out.
+
+The smell of the fresh salt air, when he wriggled out into the well, was
+almost as good as a feast to him. He climbed hastily to the surface,
+and, as he crept out from under the topmost slab, took careful note of
+its position, and then scored with a piece of rock each stone which led
+up to it. For, if ever he should need an inner sanctuary, here was one
+to his hand, and evidently quite unknown to the present generation of
+Sark men.
+
+He recovered his eggs, and crept round the shoulder of the rock. The
+gale pounced on him like a tiger on its half-escaped prey. It beat him
+flat, worried him, did its best to tear him off and fling him into the
+sea. But--Heavens!--how sweet it was after the musty quiet of the
+death-chamber below!
+
+Inch by inch, he worked his way back in the teeth of it, and crawled
+spent into his bee-hive. Then, ravenous with his exertions, he broke one
+of his eggs into his tin dipper, and forthwith emptied it outside, and
+the gale swept away the awful smell of it.
+
+The next was as bad, and his hopes sank to nothing.
+
+The third, however, was all right. He mixed it with some cognac and
+whipped it up with a stick, and the growlers inside fought over it
+contentedly.
+
+He was almost afraid to try another. However, he could get more
+to-morrow. So he broke the fourth, and found it also good, so whipped it
+up with more cognac, and felt happier than he had done since he nibbled
+his rabbit-bones.
+
+As he lay that night, and the gale howled about him more furiously than
+ever, his thoughts ran constantly on the dead man lying in the silent
+darkness down below.
+
+It was very quiet down there, and dry; but this roaring turmoil, with
+its thunderous crashings and hurtling spray, was infinitely more to his
+taste, wet though he was to the bone, and almost deafened with the
+ceaseless uproar. For this, terrible though it was in its majestic fury,
+was life, and that black stillness below was death.
+
+To the tune of the tumult without, he worked out the dead man's story in
+his mind.
+
+It was long ago in the old smuggling days. Some bold free-trader of Sark
+or Guernsey had lighted on that cave and used it as a storehouse. Some
+too energetic revenue officer had disappeared one day and never been
+heard of again. He had been surprised--by the free-traders--perhaps in
+the very act of surprising them--brought over to L'Etat in a boat, been
+dragged through the tunnel, or made to crawl through, perhaps, with
+vicious knife-digs in the rear, and had been left bound in the darkness
+till he should be otherwise disposed of. His captors had been captured
+in turn, or maybe killed, and he had lain there alone and in the dark,
+waiting, waiting for them to return, shouting now and again into the
+muffling darkness, struggling with his bonds, growing weaker and weaker,
+faint with hunger, mad with thirst, until at last he died.
+
+It was horrible to think of, and desperate as his own state was, he
+thanked God heartily that he was not as that other.
+
+Morning brought no slackening of the gale. It seemed to him, if
+anything, to be waxing still more furious.
+
+He had only two eggs left, and they might both be bad ones, but he would
+not have ventured round the headland that day for all the eggs in
+existence.
+
+He broke one presently, in answer to a clamour inside him that would
+brook no denial, and found it good, and lived on it that day, and mused
+between times on the strange fact that a man could feel so mightily
+grateful for the difference between a bad egg and a good one.
+
+His sixth egg turned out a good one also, and the next day there came
+another hopeful lull, which permitted him to harry the puffins once
+more, and gave him a dozen chances against contingencies.
+
+On the eighth day the storm blew itself out, and he looked hopefully
+across at the lonely and weather-beaten cliffs of Sark for the relief
+which he was certain they had been aching to send him.
+
+The waves, however, still ran high, and, though he did not know it till
+later, there was not a boat left afloat round the whole Island. The
+forethoughtful and weather-wise had run them round to the Creux and
+carried them through the tunnel into the roadway behind. All the rest
+had been smashed and sunk and swallowed by the storm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+HOW HE HELD THE ROCK
+
+
+The sun blazed hot next day, and he spread himself out in it to warm,
+and all his soaked things in it to dry, and blessed it for its wholesome
+vigour.
+
+Nance or Bernel would be sure to come as soon as the tide served at
+night, and he would net be sorry for a change of diet; meanwhile, he
+could get along all right with the unwilling assistance of the puffins.
+
+The birds had all crept out of their hiding-places, and were wheeling
+and diving and making up for lost time and busily discussing late events
+at the tops of their voices whenever their bills were not otherwise
+occupied. Where they had all hidden themselves during the storm, he
+could not imagine, but there seemed to be as many of them as ever, and
+they were all quite happy and quarrelsome, except the cormorants, who
+were so ravenous that they could not spare a moment from their diving
+and gobbling, even to quarrel with their neighbours.
+
+He levied on the puffins again, and, after a meal, prowled curiously
+about his rock to see what damage the storm had done, but to his
+surprise found almost none.
+
+It seemed incredible that all should be the same after the deadly
+onslaught of the gale. But it was only in the valley of rocks that he
+found any consequences.
+
+There the huge boulders had been hurled about like marbles: some had
+been tossed overboard, and some, in their fantastic up-piling, spoke
+eloquently of all they had suffered.
+
+But one grim--though to him wholly gracious--deed the storm had wrought
+there. For, out of the pool where the devil-fish dwelt, its monstrous
+limbs streamed up and lay over the sloping rocks, and he dared not
+venture near. But, in the afternoon when he came again to look at it,
+and found it still in the same attitude, something about it struck him
+as odd and unusual.
+
+The great tentacles had never moved, so far as he could see, and there
+was surely something wrong with a devil-fish that did not move.
+
+He hurled a stone, picked out of the landslip at the corner, and hit a
+tentacle full and fair with a dull thud like leather. But the beast
+never moved.
+
+He was suspicious of the wily one, however. The devil, he knew, was
+sometimes busiest when he made least show of business. And it was not
+till next morning, when he found the monster still as before, that he
+ventured down to the pool and looked into it, and saw what had happened.
+
+The waves had hurled a huge boulder into it--and there you may see it to
+this day--and it had fallen on the devil-fish and ground him flat, and
+purged the rock of a horror.
+
+Gard examined the hideous tentacles with the curiosity of intensest
+repulsion; yet could not but stand amazed at the wonderful delicacy and
+finish displayed in the tiny powerful suckers with which each limb was
+furnished on the under side, and the flexible muscularity of the
+monstrous limbs themselves, thick as his biceps where they came out of
+the pool, and tapering to a worm-like point, capable, it seemed to him,
+of picking up a pin.
+
+He was mightily glad the beast was dead, however. It had been a blot on
+Nature's handiwork, and the very thought of it a horror.
+
+The strenuous interlude of the storm, which, to the lonely one exposed
+to its fullest fury, had seemed interminable--every shivering day the
+length of many, and the black howling nights longer still--had had the
+effect of relaxing somewhat his own oversight over himself and his
+precautions against being seen.
+
+L'Etat in a furious sou'-wester is a sight worth seeing. Possibly some
+telescope had been brought to bear on the foam-swept rock when he,
+secure in the general bouleversement and cramped with hunger, had turned
+the forbidden corner with no thought in his mind but eggs.
+
+Possibly again, it was sheer carelessness on his part, born once more of
+the security of the storm and the recent non-necessity for concealment.
+
+However it came about, what happened was that, as he stood in the valley
+of rocks examining his dead monster, he became suddenly aware that a
+fishing-boat had crept round the open end of the valley, and that it
+seemed to him much closer in than he had ever seen one before.
+
+He dropped prone among the boulders at once, but whether he had been
+seen he could not tell--could only vituperate his own carelessness, and
+hope that nothing worse might come of it.
+
+He lay there a very long time, and when at last he ventured to crawl to
+the rocks at the seaward opening, the boat was away on the usual
+fishing-grounds busy with its own concerns, and he persuaded himself
+that its somewhat unusual course had been accidental. The incident,
+however, braced him to his former caution, and he went no more abroad
+without first carefully inspecting the surrounding waters from the
+ridge.
+
+They would be certain to come that night, he felt sure, either Nance or
+Bernel, perhaps both. Yes, he thought most likely they would both come.
+They would, without doubt, be wondering how he had fared during the
+storm, and would be making provision for him.
+
+Perhaps Nance was cooking for him at that very moment, and thinking of
+him as he was of her.
+
+In the certain expectation of their coming, he decided he would not go
+to sleep at all that night, but would crawl down to the landing-place to
+welcome them.
+
+He wondered if that mad woman Julie had given up watching them, and, if
+not, if they would be able to circumvent her again. In any case, he
+hoped that if only one of them came it might be Nance. He fairly ached
+for the sight and sound of her--and the feel of her little hand, and a
+warm frank kiss from the lips that knew no guile.
+
+The sufferings of the storm became as nothing to him in this large hope
+and expectation of her coming.
+
+The intervening hours dragged slowly. It would be half-ebb soon after
+dark, he thought; and he crept up to the ridge and gazed anxiously over
+at the Race between him and Breniere, to see if it showed any unusual
+symptoms after the storm.
+
+It ran furiously enough, but, he said to himself, it would slacken on
+the ebb, and they were so familiar with it that it would take more than
+that to stop them coming.
+
+Before dark the great seas were rolling past, a little quicker than
+usual, he thought, but in long, smooth undulations, which slipped,
+unbroken and soundless, even along the black ledges of his rock. And
+when the stars came out--brighter than ever with the burnishing of the
+gale--the long black backs of the waves, and the darker hollows between,
+were sown so thick with trailing gleams that he could not be certain
+whether it was only star-shine or phosphorescence.
+
+It was all very peaceful and beautiful, however, and very welcome to
+eyes that had not looked upon sun, moon, or star for eight whole nights
+and days, and whose ears had grown hardened to the ceaseless clamour of
+the gale. Nature, indeed, seemed preternaturally quiet, as though
+exhausted with her previous violence or desirous of wiping out the
+remembrance of it; just as small humanity after an outbreak endeavours
+at times to purge the memory of its offence by display of unusual
+amiability and sweetness.
+
+Eager to welcome his confidently expected visitors, Gard crept along the
+ridge as soon as it was dark, and posted himself on the point which, in
+the daylight, commanded the passage from Breniere.
+
+And he sat there so long--so long after his hopes and wishes had flown
+over to Sark and hurried Bernel and Nance into a boat and landed them on
+L'Etat--that the night seemed running out, and he began to fear they
+were not coming, after all.
+
+In the troubled darkness of the Race, he caught gleams at times which
+might be oar-blades or might be only the upfling from the perils below.
+The tide was ebbing, and soon the black fangs with which it was strewn
+would be showing.
+
+At times he convinced himself that the brief gleams moved; but when, to
+ease his eyes of the intolerable strain, he looked up at the stars, it
+seemed to him that they moved also, and so he could not be sure.
+
+But surely there was a gleam that seemed to move and come fitfully
+towards him--or was it only star-shine dancing on the waves of the Race
+which always ran against the tide?
+
+He stood to watch, then lost the gleam, and crouched again disappointed.
+
+The boat must come round Quette d'Amont, the great pile of rock that lay
+off the eastern corner, and the first glimpse he could hope to get of it
+in the darkness would be there.
+
+Then, suddenly, in that curious way in which one sometimes sees more out
+of the tail of one's eye than out of the front of it, he got an
+impression--and with it a start--of something moving noiselessly among
+the tumbled rocks below on his left.
+
+It was a dark night, but the glory of the stars lifted it out of the
+ebony-ruler category. It was a wide, thin, lofty darkness, but still
+black enough along the sides of his rock, and down there it seemed to
+him that something moved, something dim and shadowy and silent.
+
+He thought of the dead man in his chamber down below. Could he be in the
+habit of walking of a night? He thought of ghosts, of which, if popular
+belief was anything to go by, Sark was full; and there was nothing to
+hinder them coming across to L'Etat for their Sabbat. And he thought of
+monster devil-fish climbing, loathsome and soundless, about the dark
+rocks.
+
+He longed for a pair of Sark eyes, and shrank down into a hollow under
+the ridge to watch this thing, with something of a creepy chill between
+his shoulder-blades.
+
+There was certainly something lighter than the surrounding darkness down
+below, and it moved. It turned the corner and flitted along the slope,
+slowly but surely, in the direction of his shelter. Its mode of
+progression, from the little he could make out in the darkness, was just
+such as he would have looked for in a huge octopus hauling itself along
+by its tentacles over the out-cropping rock-bones.
+
+He could not rest there. He must see. He crawled along the ridge as
+quietly as he could manage it, and would have felt happier, whatever it
+was, spirit or monster, if he had had his gun. Now and again it stopped,
+and when it stopped he lay flat to the ground and held his breath, lest
+it should discover him. When it went on, he went on.
+
+When he came to the end of the ridge he saw that the nebulous something
+had apparently stopped just where his house must be.
+
+And then, every sense on the strain, he heard his own name called
+softly, and he laughed to himself for very joy of it, and lay still to
+hear it again, and laughed once more to think that in her simplicity she
+still thought of him as "Mr. Gard." He would teach her to call him
+"Steen," as his mother used to do.
+
+Then he got up quickly and cried, as softly as herself, but with joy and
+laughter in his voice--
+
+"Why, Nance! My dear, I was not sure whether you were a ghost or a
+devil-fish;" and he sprang down towards her.
+
+And then, to his amazement, he saw that she was clad only in the
+clinging white garment in which he had seen her swim.
+
+Her next words confounded him.
+
+"Is Bernel here?"
+
+"Bernel, Nance? No, dear, he is not here. Why--"
+
+"Did he not get here last night?" she jerked sharply.
+
+"No. No one. I was hoping--"
+
+But she had sunk down against the great stones of the shelter, with her
+hands before her face.
+
+"Mon Gyu, mon Gyu! Then he is dead! Oh, my poor one! My dear one!"
+
+"Nance! Nance! What is it all, dearest? Did Bernel try to come across
+last night--"
+
+"Yes, yes! He would come. He said you must be starving. We were all
+anxious about you--"
+
+"And he tried to swim across?"
+
+"Yes, yes! And he is drowned! Oh, my poor, poor boy!"
+
+She was shaking with the sudden chill of dreadful loss. He stooped, and
+felt inside the shelter with a long arm for the old woollen cloak and
+wrapped her carefully in it. He raked out the blanket and made her sit
+with it tucked about her feet. And she was passive in his hands, with
+thought as yet for nothing but her loss.
+
+She was shaken with broken sobs, and in the face of grief such as this
+he could find no words. What could he say? All the words in the world
+could not bring back the dead.
+
+And it was through him this great sorrow had come upon her. He seemed
+fated to bring misfortune on their house.
+
+He wondered if she would hate him for it, though she must know he had
+had no more to do with the matter than with Tom's death.
+
+He put a protecting arm round the old cloak, tentatively, and in some
+fear lest she might resent it, but knew no other way to convey to her
+what was in his heart.
+
+But she did not resent it, and nothing was further from her mind than
+imputing any share in this loss to him.
+
+Some women's hearts are so wonderfully constituted that the greater the
+demands upon them the more they are prepared to give. At times they give
+and give beyond the bounds of reason, and yet amazingly retain their
+faith and hope in the recipients of their gifts.
+
+But that has nothing to do with our story. Except this--that these
+various demands on Nance's fortitude, incurred by her love for Stephen
+Gard, far from weakening her love only made it the stronger. As that
+love came more and more between her and her old surroundings, and
+exacted from her sacrifice after sacrifice, the more she clung to it,
+and looked to it, and let the past go. The partial ostracism brought
+upon her by Gard's outspoken declaration of their mutual feeling--even
+this final offering of her dearly-loved brother--these only bound her
+heart to him the tighter.
+
+"Nance dear!" he said at last, when she had got control of herself
+again. "Is it not possible to hope? He was so good a swimmer. Maybe he
+found the Race too strong and was carried away by it. He may have been
+picked up, and will come back as soon as he is able."
+
+"No," she said, with gloomy decision. "He is dead. I feared for him, for
+I had been to look at the Race just before sundown, and it looked
+terribly strong. But he would go--"
+
+"Why didn't he get a boat?"
+
+"Ah, mon Gyu!" and she started up wildly. "I was forgetting. I was
+thinking only of myself and Bernel. There isn't a boat left alive
+outside the Creux, and he couldn't get one there without them knowing.
+But"--in quick excitement now, to make up for lost time--"they have seen
+you here, and they may come to-night--Achochre that I am! They may be
+here! Come quickly! Your gun!" and she was all on the quiver to be gone.
+
+Gard stooped and pulled out the gun from its hiding-place inside the
+shelter.
+
+"Is it loaded?" she asked sharply.
+
+"Yes. I cleaned it to-day."
+
+"Take your charges with you, and do you hasten back to the place we
+landed the first night. You know?"
+
+"I know. And you?"
+
+"I will go to the other landing-place. But they are not likely to come
+there."
+
+"And if they do?"
+
+"I will manage them," and she slipped into the darkness with the big
+cloak about her.
+
+Gard crept along the slope, and found a roost above the landing-place.
+
+His brain was in a whirl. Bernel had tried to cross to him and was
+drowned. Nance had swum across. Brave girl! Wonderful girl! For
+him!--and for news of Bernel. It was terrible to think of Bernel, dead
+on his account--terrible! It would not be surprising if Nance hated him.
+Yet, what had he done?--what could he do? He had done nothing. He could
+do nothing; and his teeth ground savagely at the craziness of these wild
+Sark men who had brought it all about, and at his own utter impotence.
+
+But Nance did not hate him. And she had swum that dreadful Race to warn
+him. Brave girl! Wonderful girl!
+
+And then--surely the grinding of an oar, as it wrought upon the gunwale
+against an ill-fitted thole-pin--out there by the Quette d'Amont!
+
+His eyes and ears strained into the darkness till they felt like
+cracking.
+
+And the muffled growl of voices!
+
+His heart thumped so, they might have heard it.
+
+He must wait till he was sure they meant to come in. But they must not
+come too close.
+
+It was an ill landing in the dark, and there were various opinions on
+it. But there was no doubt as to their intentions. They were coming in.
+
+"Sheer off there!" cried Gard.
+
+Dead silence below. They had come in some doubt, but their doubts were
+solved now, and there was no longer need for curbed tongues, though,
+indeed, his hollow voice made some of them wonder if it was not a spirit
+that spoke to them.
+
+"It's him!" "The man himself!" "We have him!" "In now and get him!"--was
+the burden of their growls, as they hung on their oars.
+
+"See here, men!" said Gard, invisible even to Sark eyes, against the
+solid darkness of the slope. "There has been trouble and loss enough
+over this matter already, and none of it my making. Do you hear? I say
+again--none of it my making. If you attempt to come ashore there will be
+more trouble, and this time it will be of my making. Keep back!"--as an
+impulsive one gave a tug at his oar. "If you force me to fire, your
+blood be on your own heads. I give you fair warning."
+
+Growls from the boat carried up to him an impression of mixed doubt and
+discomfort--ultimate disbelief in his possession of arms, an energetic
+oath or two, and another creak of the oar.
+
+"Very well! Here's to show you I am armed." The report of his gun made
+Nance jump, at the other side of the island, and set all the birds on
+L'Etat--except the puffins, deep in their holes--circling and screaming.
+
+The small shot tore up the water within a couple of yards of the boat,
+which backed off hastily--much to his satisfaction, for he had feared
+they might rush him before he had time to reload.
+
+He had dropped flat after firing and recharged his gun as he lay. He was
+sure they must have come armed, and feared a volley as soon as his own
+discharge indicated his whereabouts.
+
+As a matter of fact, they had come divided as to the truth of the report
+that there was a man on L'Etat--even then as to him being the man they
+sought. In any case, they had expected to take him unawares, and never
+dreamt of his being armed and on the watch for them.
+
+Thanks to Nance, he had turned the tables on them. It was they who were
+taken unawares.
+
+But if he spoke again, he said to himself, they would be ready for him,
+and their answers would probably take the rude form of bullets. So he
+lay still and waited.
+
+There was a growling disputation in the boat. Then one spoke--
+
+"See then, you, Gard! We will haff you yet, now we know where you are.
+If it takes effery man and effery boat in Sark, we will haff you, now we
+know where you are. You do not kill a Sark man like that and go free.
+Noh--pardie!"
+
+"I have killed no man--" A gun rang out in the boat, and the shot
+spatted on the rocks not a yard from him.
+
+Coming in, they knew, meant certain death for one among them, and, keen
+as they were to lay hands on him, no man had any wish to be that one.
+
+The oars creaked away into the darkness, and he climbed to the ridge to
+make sure they made no attempt on the other side.
+
+But discretion had prevailed. One man could not hold L'Etat from
+invasion at half-a-dozen points at once. They could bide their time, and
+take him by force of numbers.
+
+He heard them go creaking off towards the Creux, and turned and went
+back along the ridge to find Nance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+HOW ONE CAME TO HIM LIKE AN ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
+
+
+Nance was standing by the shelter, and even in the darkness he could
+tell that she was shaking, in spite of her previous vigorous incitement
+to defence.
+
+"You--you didn't kill any of them?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"No, dear. I warned them off and fired into the water to show them I was
+armed."
+
+"I was afraid. But, there were two shots."
+
+"One of them fired back the next time I spoke, but I was expecting it."
+
+"They are wicked, wicked men, and cruel."
+
+"They are mistaken, that's all. But it comes to much the same thing, and
+I don't see," he said despondently, "how we are ever to prove it to
+them."
+
+"They will come again."
+
+"Yes, they are to come back with every man and every boat in the Island.
+I shall have my hands full. Are there more than these two places where
+they can land?"
+
+"Not good places, and these only when the sea is right. But angry
+men--and ready to shoot you--oh, it is wicked--"
+
+"We must hope the sea will keep them off, and that something may turn up
+to throw some light on the other matter," he said, trying to comfort
+her, though, in truth, the outlook was not hopeful, and he feared
+himself that his time might be short.
+
+"I will stop here and help you," she said, with sudden vehemence. "They
+shall not have you. They shall not! They are wicked, crazy men," and the
+little cloaked figure shook again with the spirit that was in it.
+
+"Dear!" he said, putting his arm round her, and drawing her close. "You
+must not stop. They must not know you have been here. I do not know what
+the end will be. We are in God's hands, and we have done no wrong. But
+if ... if the worst comes, you will remember all your life, dear, that
+to one man you were as an angel from heaven. Nance! Nance! Oh, my dear,
+how can I tell you all you are to me!"--and as he pressed her to him,
+the bare white arms stole out of the cloak and clasped him tightly round
+the neck.
+
+"But how are you going to get back, little one? You cannot possibly swim
+that Race again?" he asked presently, holding her still in his arms and
+looking down at her anxiously.
+
+"Yes, I can swim," she said valiantly. "I knew it would be worse than
+usual, and I brought these"--and she slipped from his arms and groped on
+the ground, and presently held up what felt to him in the darkness like
+a pair of inflated bladders with a broad band between them. "And here is
+a little bread and meat, all I could carry tied on to my head. We feared
+you would be starving."
+
+"You should not have burdened yourself, dear. It might have drowned you.
+And I have eggs--puffins'--"
+
+"Ach!"
+
+"They are better than nothing, and I beat them up with cognac. But are
+you safe in the Race, Nance dear, even with those things?"
+
+"You cannot sink. If Bernel had only taken them! But he laughed at them,
+and now--"
+
+He kissed her sobs away, but was full of anxiety at thought of her in
+the rushing darkness of the Race.
+
+"I will go with you," he said eagerly, "and you will lend me your
+bladders to get back with."
+
+"You would never get back to L'Etat in the dark"--and he knew that that
+was true. "We of Sark can see, but you others--"
+
+"I shall be in misery till I know you are all right," he said anxiously.
+
+"I will run home. My things are in the gorse above Breniere. And I will
+get a lantern and come down by Breniere and wave it to you."
+
+"Will you do that? It will be like a signal from heaven," he said
+eagerly, "a signal from heaven waved by an angel from heaven."
+
+"And to-morrow I will go to the Vicar, and the Senechal, and the
+Seigneur, if he has come home, and I will make them stop these wicked
+men from coming here again."
+
+"Can they?"
+
+"They shall. They must. They are the law and it is not right."
+
+"It is worth trying, at any rate," he said cheerfully, as they reached
+the eastern corner and struck down across his puffin-warren to the point
+immediately opposite Breniere. But he had not much hope that the Vicar
+and the Senechal and the Seigneur all combined would avail him, for the
+men of Sark are a law unto themselves.
+
+"But I've found another hiding-place, Nance, where they could never find
+me."
+
+"Here?--on L'Etat?"
+
+"Yes--inside. I'll show you some time, perhaps, if--"
+
+"Is this where you came ashore?" he asked, as she came to a stand on a
+rough black shelf up which the waves hissed white and venomous.
+
+"We--we always landed here when we swam across," she said, with a little
+break in her voice, as it came home to her again that Bernel would swim
+the Race no more.
+
+"Nance dear, don't give up hope. He may come back yet."
+
+"I have only you left, and they want to kill you," she said sadly.
+
+"I wish I could come with you," as the dark waters swirled below them.
+"It feels terrible to let you go into that all alone."
+
+"It is nothing. The tide is dead slack, and I have these"--swinging the
+bladders in her hand--"if I get tired. Oh, if Bern had only taken
+them--"
+
+"I will kneel on the ridge and pray for your safety till I see your
+light. Dear, God keep you, and bless you for all your goodness and
+courage!"
+
+He strained her to him again, as if he could not let her go to that
+colder embrace that awaited her below.
+
+"I could kiss the very rocks you have stood on," he said passionately.
+
+She kissed him back and dropped the cloak, waited a second till a wave
+had swirled by, then launched into the slack of it, and was gone.
+
+He stood long, peering and listening into the darkness, but heard only
+the welter of the water under the black ledges below, and its scornful
+hiss as it seethed through the fringing sea-weeds.
+
+Then at last he turned and climbed, slowly and heavily, up to the ridge;
+for now he felt the strain of these last full hours, coming on top of
+the longer strain of the storm; and this, and the lack of proper
+feeding, made him feel weak and empty and weary. He knelt down there in
+the darkness, with his face towards the Race where Nance was battling
+with the hungry black waters, and he prayed for her safety as he had
+never prayed for anything in his life before.
+
+"_God keep her! God keep her! God keep her--and bring her safe to land!
+O God, keep her, keep her, keep her, and bring her safe to land!_"
+
+It was a monotonous little prayer, but all his heart was in it, and that
+is all that makes a prayer avail. And when at last, from sheer
+weariness, he sank down on to his heels in science, gazing earnestly out
+into the blackness of the night, his heart prayed on though his lips no
+longer moved.
+
+Could anything have happened to her? Could the black waters have
+swallowed her?
+
+Anything might have happened to her. The waters might have swallowed
+her, as they had Bernel.
+
+The thoughts would surge up behind his prayer, but he prayed them
+down--again and again--and clung to his prayer and his hope.
+
+It seemed hours since they parted, since his last glimpse of her as the
+black waters swallowed the slim white figure, and seemed to laugh
+scornfully at its smallness and weakness.
+
+"_Oh, Nance! Nance! God keep you! God keep you! God keep you! Dear one,
+God keep you! God keep you! God keep you, and bring you safe to land_!"
+
+He was numb with kneeling. If one had come behind him and cut off his
+feet above the ankles, he would have felt no pain. He felt no bodily
+sensation whatever. His body was there on the rock, but his heart was
+out upon the black waters alongside Nance, struggling with her through
+the belching coils, nerving her through the treacherous swirls. And his
+soul--all that was most really and truly him--was agonizing in prayer
+for her before the God to whom he had prayed at his mother's knee, and
+whom she had taught him to look to as a friend and helper in all times
+of need.
+
+He did not even stop--as he well might have done--to think that the
+friend sought only in time of need might have reasonable ground for
+complaint of neglect at other times.
+
+He thought of nothing but that Nance was out there battling with the
+black waters--that he could not lift a finger to help her--that all he
+could do was to pray for her safety with all his heart and soul.
+
+Then, after an age of this numb agony of waiting, a tiny bead of light
+flickered on the outer darkness, as though Hope with a golden pin-point
+had pricked the black curtain of despair, and let a gleam of her glory
+peep through. It swung to and fro, and he fell forward with his face in
+his ice-cold hands and sobbed, "Thank God! Thank God! She is safe! She
+is safe!"
+
+When he tried to get up, his legs gave way under him, and he had to sit
+and wait till they recovered. And when at last he got under way along
+the ridge, he stumbled like a drunken man.
+
+He tangled his feet in the blanket and fell in a heap. He wondered
+dimly where the cloak was--remembered Nance had worn it till she took to
+the sea--and stumbled off through the dark again to find it. Nance had
+worn it. To him it was sacred.
+
+When he got back with it, he wrapped it round him and crept into his
+shelter and slept like a dog.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+HOW THE OTHERS CAME TO MAKE AN END
+
+
+He woke next morning with a start. The sun was high, by the shadow of
+his doorway; and by that same token the tide would be at half-ebb, if
+not lower, and the gates of his fortress at his enemy's mercy.
+
+He picked up his gun, listened anxiously for sound of him, and then
+crept cautiously out, with a quick glance along each slope.
+
+Nothing!--nothing but the cheerful sun and the cloudless sky, and the
+empty blue plain of the sea, and the birds circling and diving and
+squabbling as usual--and Nance's little parcel lying where she had
+dropped it. He had had other things to think about last night.
+
+The composure of the birds reassured him somewhat. Still, they might
+have landed on the other side of the rock and be lying in wait for him.
+
+He picked up Nance's parcel with a feeling of reverence. It might have
+cost her her life, in spite of her bladders. Then he climbed cautiously
+to the ridge and peered over.
+
+Sark lay basking in the sunshine, peaceful and placid, as if no son of
+hers had ever had an ill thought of his neighbour, much less sought his
+blood.
+
+Not a boat was in sight, and the birds on the north slope seemed as
+undisturbed as their fellows on the south.
+
+The invasion in force needed time perhaps to prepare and would be all
+the more conclusive when completed.
+
+Meanwhile, he would eat and watch at the same time, for he felt as empty
+as a drum, and an empty man is not in the pinkest of condition for a
+fight.
+
+Never in his life had he tasted bread so sweet!--and the strips of
+boiled bacon in between came surely from a most unusual pig--a porker of
+sorts, without a doubt, and of most extraordinary attainment in the nice
+balancing of lean and fat, and the induing of both with vital juices of
+the utmost strength and sweetness. Truly, a most celestial pig!--and he
+was very hungry.
+
+Had he been a pagan he would most likely have offered a portion of his
+slim rations as thank-offering to his gods, for they had come to him at
+risk of a girl's life. As it was, he ate them very thoughtfully to the
+very last crumb, and was grateful.
+
+They had been wrapped in a piece of white linen, and then tied tightly
+in oiled cloth, and were hardly damped with sea-water. The piece of
+linen and the oiled cloth and the bits of cord he folded up carefully
+and put inside his coat.
+
+They spoke of Nance. If they had drowned her she would have gone with
+them tied on to her head. He took them out again, and kissed them, and
+put them back.
+
+Thank God, she had got through safely! Thank God! Thank God!
+
+He shivered in the blaze of the sun as his eyes rested on the waves of
+the Race, bristling up against the run of the tide as usual, and he
+thought of what it might have meant to him this morning.
+
+It had swallowed Bernel. In spite of his hopeful words to Nance, he
+feared the brave lad was gone. And it might have swallowed Nance. And if
+it had--it might as well have him, too. For it was only thought of Nance
+that made life bearable to him.
+
+The sun wheeled his silvery dance along the waters; the day wore
+on;--and still no sign of the invaders. Sark looked as utterly deserted
+as it must have done in the lone days after the monks left it, when, for
+two hundred years, it was given over to the birds, till de Carteret and
+his merry men came across from Jersey and woke it up to life again.
+
+And then, of a sudden, his heart kicked within him as if it would climb
+into his throat and choke him; for, round the distant point of the
+Laches, a boat had stolen out, and, as he watched it anxiously, there
+came another, and another, and another. They were coming!
+
+Four boat-loads! That ought to be enough to make full sure of him. He
+wondered why they had not come sooner, for the tide was on the rise, and
+the landing-places did not look tempting.
+
+His gun was under his hand, and his powder-flask and his little bag of
+shot. He had no more preparations to make, and he had no wish to fight.
+
+No wish? The thought of it was hateful to him, and yet it was not in
+human nature to give in without a struggle.
+
+But it should be all their doing. All he wanted was to be left in peace.
+Every man has the right to defend his own life.
+
+But then, again--there could be only one end to it, he knew. So why
+fight?
+
+They were coming to make an end of him. What good was it to make an end
+of any of them?
+
+Even if he should succeed in keeping them off this time, the end would
+come all the same, only it would be longer of coming. Why prolong it?
+
+The boats came bounding on like hounds at sight of the quarry. They were
+well filled, four or five men in each boat, besides the oarsmen. Enough,
+surely, to make an end of one lone man.
+
+Would they attempt to land in different places and rush him, he
+wondered. Or would they content themselves with lying off and attempting
+to shoot him down from a distance? The last would be the safest all
+round, both for them and for him--for, landing, they would, for the
+moment, be more or less at his mercy; and, snapping at him from a
+distance, he would have certain chances of cover in his favour.
+
+The top of the ridge was flattened in places, there were even
+depressions here and there, very slight, but quite enough to shelter any
+one lying prone in them from bombardment from sea-level. He chose the
+deepest he could find, and crawled into it, and lay, with his chin in
+his hands, watching the oncoming boats.
+
+If he could have managed it, he would have slipped down to the rock wall
+and crept into his burrow, but it was on that side the boats were
+coming, and the sharp eyes on board would inevitably see him, and so get
+on the track of his hiding-place.
+
+If the chance offered--if they left that end of the rock unspied upon
+for three minutes--he would try it.
+
+They parted at the Quette d'Amont, two going along the south side and
+two along the north. He could hear their voices, their rough jests and
+brief laughter, as they crept past.
+
+It was an odd sensation, this, of lying there like a hunted hare,
+knowing that it was him they were after.
+
+He pressed still closer to the rock, and did not dare to raise his head
+for a look. The voices and the sound of the oars died away, came again,
+died again, as the boats slowly circled the rock, every keen eye on
+board, he knew, searching every nook and cranny for sign of him.
+
+Then a shot rang out, over there towards the south-west, and another,
+and another. Tired of inaction, they were peppering his bee-hive to stir
+him up in case he was fast asleep inside.
+
+The other boats rowed swiftly round to the firing, and he could imagine
+them clustered there in a bunch, watching hopefully for him to come out;
+and his blood boiled and chilled again at thought of what might have
+been if he had been caught napping.
+
+And then, seizing his chance, he crawled to the opposite side of his
+hollow, peeped over, and saw the way clear. If only they would go on
+peppering the bee-hive for another minute or two, he would have time to
+slip down the Sark side of his rock and get to the great wall, and so
+down into his new hiding-place.
+
+If they tried to land, he could perhaps kill or wound two, three,
+half-a-dozen, at risk of his own life. But the end would be the same.
+With a dozen good shots coolly potting at him, he must go down in time,
+and he had no desire either to kill or to be killed.
+
+He wormed himself over the edge of his hollow and hurried along to the
+tumbled rocks, carrying his gun and powder-flask--not that he wanted
+them, but wanted still less to leave them behind. He scrambled over,
+found his marked rocks, and slipped safely under the overhanging slab.
+There he could peep out without danger of being seen; and he was barely
+under cover when the first boat came slowly round again, every bearded
+face intent on the rock, every eye searching for sign of him.
+
+The other boats passed, and as each one came it seemed to him that every
+eye on board looked straight up into his own, and he involuntarily
+shrank down into the shadow of the slab. They could not possibly see
+him, he was certain; and yet a thrill ran through him each time their
+searching glances crossed his own.
+
+The rough jests and laughter of the boats had given way now to angry
+growls at his invisibility. He could hear them cursing him as they
+passed, and even casting doubts on the veracity of his visitors of the
+previous night. And these latter upheld their statements with such
+torrents of red-hot patois that, if they had come to grips and fought
+the matter out, he would not have been in the least surprised.
+
+Then there came a long interval, when no boats came round. They had
+probably taken their courage in their hands and landed, and were
+searching the island. He dropped noiselessly into his well and clambered
+up into the tunnel, and lay there with only his head out.
+
+And, sure enough, before long he heard the sound of big sea-boots
+climbing heavily over the rock wall, and the voices of their owners as
+they passed.
+
+What would they do next, he wondered. Would they imagine him flown, as
+the result of their last night's visit? Or would they believe him still
+on the island and bound to come out of his hiding-place sooner or later?
+Would they give it up and go home? Or would they leave a guard to trap
+him when hunger and thirst brought him out?
+
+He lay patiently in the mouth of his tunnel till long after the last
+glimmer of light had faded from under the big slabs that covered in his
+well. More than once he heard voices, and once they came so close that
+he was sure they had come upon his tracks, and he crept some distance
+down his tunnel to be out of sight. But the alarm proved a false one,
+and the time passed very slowly.
+
+As he lay, he thought of the dead man with the bound hands and feet in
+the silent chamber behind him, bound by the forebears of these men, who,
+in turn, were seeking him, and would treat him as ruthlessly if they
+found him.
+
+He took the lesson to heart, and braced himself to patient endurance,
+though, indeed, he began to ask himself gloomily what was the use of it
+all. In the end, their venomous persistence must make an end of him. One
+man could not fight for ever against a whole community.
+
+And at that he chided himself. Not a whole community! For was not Nance
+on his side--hoping and praying and working for him with all her might
+and main? And her mother, and Grannie, and the Vicar, and the Doctor,
+and the Senechal? He was sure they all knew him far too well to doubt
+him. And all these and the Truth must surely prevail.
+
+But the long strain had been sore on him, and in spite of his anxieties
+he fell asleep in his hole, and dreamed that the dead man came crawling
+down the tunnel, and dragged him back into the chamber, and tied his
+hands and feet, and went away, and left him to die there all alone. And
+so strong was the impression upon him that, when he woke, he lay
+wondering who had loosed his bonds, and could not make out how he had
+got back into the mouth of the tunnel.
+
+It was still quite dark. He was stiff with lying in that cramped place.
+He was strongly tempted to climb out and see how matters lay. For he
+might be able to find out in the dark, whereas daylight would make him
+prisoner again.
+
+He wanted eggs, too. Nance's provision had served him well all day, but
+if he had to spend another day there something more would be welcome.
+
+But then it struck him that if he went up in the dark he might never be
+able to find his way back again. The cleft under the slab was difficult
+to hit upon even in daylight. There were scores of just similar ragged
+black holes among the tumbled rocks of the great wall.
+
+As he lay pondering it all, the grim idea came into his head of dragging
+the dead man through the tunnel, and hoisting him up outside, and
+leaving him propped up among the boulders where they would be sure to
+find him.
+
+He knew how arrantly superstitious they were, most of them. They had
+been brought up on ghosts and witches and evil spirits, and, fearless as
+they might be of things mortal and natural, all that bordered on the
+unknown and uncanny held for them unimaginable terrors. The dead man
+might serve a useful purpose after all; and the grim idea grew.
+
+He could decide nothing, however, till he learned if he had the rock to
+himself; and he determined to take the risk of finding this out.
+
+He cautiously climbed the well, and by the look of the stars he judged
+it still very early morning. A brooding grey darkness covered the sea;
+the sky was dark even in the east.
+
+He slipped off his coat and left it hanging out of the cleft as a
+landmark, and lowered himself silently from rock to rock, till he stood
+among the rank grasses below.
+
+Food first--so, after patient listening for smallest sound or sign of a
+watch, he crept down to the slope where the puffins' nests were, and,
+wrapping his hand in Nance's napkin, managed to get out a dozen eggs
+from as many different holes, in spite of the fierce objections of their
+legitimate owners.
+
+He tied these up carefully in the blood-spotted cloth, and carried them
+up to his cleft. Then he stole away like a shadow, to find out, if he
+could, if there was any one else on the rock besides himself and the
+dead man.
+
+There had been hot disputes on that head in the boats. Those who were
+there for the first time had even gone the length of casting strongest
+possible doubts as to whether those who were there the night before had
+seen or heard anything whatever, and did not hesitate to state their
+belief that they were all on a fool's errand. The others replied in
+kind, and when the further question was mooted as to keeping watch all
+night, the scoffers told the others to keep watch if they chose; for
+themselves, they were going home to their beds.
+
+"Frightened of ghosts, I s'pose," growled one.
+
+"No more than yourself, John Drillot. But we've wasted a day on this
+same fooling, and the man's not here; and for me, I doubt if he's ever
+been here."
+
+"And what of the things we found in the shelter?" said Drillot. "Think
+they came there of themselves?"
+
+"I don't care how they came there. It's not old cloaks and blankets we
+came after. Maybe he has been here. I don't know. But he's not here now,
+and I've had enough of it."
+
+"B'en! I'm not afraid to stop all night--if anyone'll stop with me"--and
+if no one had offered he would have been just as well pleased. "Don't
+know as I'd care to stop all alone."
+
+"Frightened of ghosts, maybe," scoffed the other.
+
+"You stop with me, Tom Guille, and we'll see which is frightenedest of
+ghosts, you or me."
+
+But Tom Guille believed in ghosts as devoutly as any old woman in Sark,
+and he was bound for home, no matter what the rest chose to do.
+
+"There's not a foot of the rock we haven't searched," said he, "and the
+man's not here; so what's the use of waiting all night?"
+
+"Because if he's in hiding it's at night he'll come out."
+
+"Come out of where?"
+
+"Wherever he's got to."
+
+"That's Guernsey, most likely. His friends have arranged to lift him off
+here first chance that came; and it came before we did, and you'll not
+see him in these parts again, I warrant you."
+
+"I'll wait with you, John, if you're set on it, though I doubt Tom's
+right, and the man's gone," said Peter Vaudin of La Ville. And John
+Drillot found himself bound to the adventure.
+
+"Do we keep the boat?" asked Vaudin.
+
+"No ... for then one of us must sit in her all night, or she will bump
+herself to pieces. You will come back for us in the morning, Philip."
+
+"I'll come," said Philip Guille, and presently they stood watching the
+boats pulling lustily homewards, and devoutly wishing they were in them.
+
+Every foot of the rock, as they knew it, had already been carefully
+raked over. The possible hiding-places were few. But no one knows better
+than a Sark man what rocks can do in the way of slits and tunnels and
+caves, and it was just this possibility that had set John Drillot to his
+unwonted, and none too welcome, task. The murderer--as he deemed
+Gard--might have found some place unknown to any of them, and might be
+lying quietly waiting for them to go. If that was so, he must come out
+sooner or later, and the chances were that he would steal out in the
+night.
+
+So the two watchers prowled desultorily about the rock, poking again
+into every place that suggested possible concealment for anything larger
+than a puffin. There might be openings in the rifted basement rocks
+which only the full ebb would discover, and these might lead up into
+chambers where a man could lie high and dry till the tide allowed him
+out again. And so they hung precariously over the waves and poked and
+peered, and found nothing.
+
+They had clambered over the great wall more than once before Vaudin
+said: "G'zamin, John, I wonder if there's any holes here big enough to
+take a man?"
+
+"He'd have to be a little one, and this Gard's not that," and they
+stood looking at the wall. "'Sides, them rocks lie on the rock itself,
+and there's no depth to them."
+
+But Vaudin was not sure that there might not be room for a man to lie
+flat under some of the big slabs, and began to poke about among them.
+
+"Some one's been up here," he said, pointing to one of Gard's own
+scorings.
+
+"Bin up there four times myself," said Drillot, "an' so have all the
+rest. There's no room to hide a man there, Peter. If he's hid anywhere,
+he'll come out in the night. Maybe Philip Guille's right, and he's safe
+in Guernsey by this. Come along to that shelter and let's have a drink."
+
+They had their bottle out of the boat, and they had also come upon
+Gard's bottle of cognac, of which quite half remained. It was a finer
+cordial than their own, so they sat drinking them turn about, and
+watching the sun set, and chatting spasmodically, till it grew too dark
+to do more than sit still with safety.
+
+They were by no means drunk, but the spirits had made them heavy, and
+when John Drillot solemnly suggested that they should keep watch about,
+Peter Vaudin as solemnly agreed, and offered to take first duty.
+
+So John curled his length inside the bee-hive, and made himself
+comfortable with Gard's cloak and blanket, and was presently snoring
+like a whole pig-sty. And that had a soporific effect on Peter. He had
+only stopped behind to oblige John, and personally had little
+expectation of anything coming of it. Moreover, the night air was
+chilly. If he could get that cloak from John now! He crawled in to try,
+but big John was rolled up like a caterpillar. It was warmer inside
+there than out, anyway. And he could keep watch there just as well as
+outside; so he propped himself up alongside John, and braced his mind to
+sentry duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+HOW HE CAME INTO AN UNKNOWN PLACE
+
+
+Having lodged his eggs in a ledge under the big slab, Gard stole away to
+learn, if he could, if he had the rock all to himself.
+
+He wanted water, and he wanted his bottle of cognac and the tin dipper;
+for puffins' eggs, while not unpalatable beaten up with cognac, are of a
+flavour calculated to exercise the strongest stomach when eaten raw.
+
+He feared the men would have made away with all his small possessions,
+but he could only try. So he stole like a shadow round the crown of the
+ridge and along towards the shelter, standing at times motionless for
+whole minutes till the rush of the waves below should pass and give him
+chance of hearing.
+
+But on L'Etat the sound of many waters never ceases night or day, and
+the night wind hummed among the stones of the shelter, and, as it
+happened, John Drillot had just lurched over in avoidance of a lump of
+rock which was intruding on his comfort, and in so doing had lodged his
+heavy boot in Peter Vaudin's ribs, and so their sonorous duet was
+stilled, and neither of them was very sound asleep, when Gard, after
+listening anxiously and hearing nothing, dropped on his hands and knees
+and felt cautiously inside.
+
+Peter felt the blind hand groping in the dark, and was wide awake in an
+instant. He hurled himself at the intruder, as well as a man could who
+had been lying back against the wall half asleep a moment before; and
+Gard turned and sped away along the side of the ridge, with Peter at his
+heels and John Drillot thundering ponderously in the rear.
+
+"What is't, Peter boy?" shouted John.
+
+"It's him. This way!" yelled Peter, out of the dimness in front, as he
+stumbled and staggered along the ragged inadequacies of the ridge.
+
+If Gard had had time for consideration, he would have led them a chase
+elsewhere first, but, in the sudden upsetting of lighting on what he had
+persuaded himself was not there, he lost his head and made straight for
+cover.
+
+Peter Vaudin was at the base of the rock wall as he wriggled silently
+under the big slab, and it was only by a violent jerk that he got his
+foot clear of Peter's grip. And Peter, strung to the occasion, kept his
+hand on the spot where the foot had disappeared, and waited a moment for
+John Drillot to come up before he followed it.
+
+"Gone in here," he jerked, as he climbed cautiously up.
+
+"Can't have gone far, then," panted John. "Sure it was him?"
+
+"Had him by the foot, but he got loose. Here we are," as he poked about,
+and came at last on the hole below the slab. "Come on, John ... can't be
+far away.... Big hole"--as he kicked about down below--"no bottom, far
+as I can see."
+
+"Best wait for daylight, to see where we're getting."
+
+"Oui gia! Man doux, it's not me's going down here till I know what's
+below."
+
+So they sat and kicked their heels and waited for the day, certain in
+their own minds that their quarry was run to earth and as good as
+caught.
+
+Gard had swept down both his coat and his cloth full of eggs in his
+sudden entrance. He stood at the bottom of the well to see if they would
+follow, while Peter's long legs kicked about for foothold. He heard them
+decide to wait for daylight, and then he noiselessly picked up his coat
+and his soppy bundle of broken eggs, pushed them into the tunnel, and
+crawled in after them.
+
+He was trapped, indeed, but he doubted very much if any fisherman on
+Sark would venture down that tunnel. They were brawny men, used to leg
+and elbow room, and, as a rule, heartily detested anything in the shape
+of underground adventure. They might, of course, get over some miners to
+explore for them. Or they might content themselves with sitting down on
+top of his hole until he was starved out. In any case, his rope was
+nearly run; but yet he was not disposed to shorten it by so much as an
+inch.
+
+As he wormed his way along the tunnel, the recollection of those other
+openings off the dead man's cave came back to him. He would try them. He
+pushed on with a spurt of hope.
+
+The tunnel was not nearly so long now that he knew where he was going;
+in fact, now that nothing but it stood between him and capture, it
+seemed woefully inadequate.
+
+When his head and elbows no longer grazed rock he dropped his coat and
+crawled into the chamber. He felt his way round to the dried packages,
+and cautiously emptied half-a-dozen and prepared them for his use.
+
+This set him sneezing so violently that it seemed impossible that the
+watchers outside should not hear him. It also gave him an idea.
+
+He struck a light and kindled one of his torches, and the dead man
+leaped out of the darkness at him as before. That gave him another idea.
+
+Propping up his light on the floor, he emptied package after package of
+the powdered tobacco into the tunnel, and wafted it down towards the
+entrance with his jacket. Then with his knife he cut the lashings from
+the dead man's hands and feet, and carried him across--he was very
+light, for all his substance had long since withered out of him--and
+laid him in the tunnel as though he was making his way out.
+
+If he knew anything of Sark men and miners, he felt fairly secure for
+some time to come, so he sat himself down, as far as possible from the
+snuff, and made such a meal as was possible off puffins' eggs, mixed
+good and bad and unredeemed by any palliating odour and flavour. They
+were not appetising, but they stayed his stomach for the time being.
+
+It was only then that he remembered that he had left his gun and
+powder-flask behind him. He had placed them on a ledge just inside the
+mouth of the tunnel, and in his haste had forgotten to pick them up. He
+had no intention of using them, however, and he would not go back for
+them.
+
+When his scanty meal was done, he cautiously emptied a number of the
+packages and rolled them into torches, and deliberated as to which of
+the black openings he should attempt first.
+
+That one opposite, out of which the dead man's legs sprawled
+grotesquely, was the one by which he had entered. This one, then, near
+which he sat, must run on towards the centre of the island--if it ran on
+at all; and, since all were equally unknown and hopeful, he would try
+this first.
+
+His tarred paper torches, though they burned with a clear flame, gave
+forth a somewhat pungent odour, so he kicked one of the small barrels to
+pieces, and with three of the staves and a piece of string made a holder
+which would carry the torch upright, and also permit him to lay it on
+the ground or push it in front of him, if need be.
+
+The first tunnel ran in about thirty feet, and then the slant of the
+roof met the floor at so sharp an angle that further passage was
+impossible.
+
+The second, third, and fourth the same; and he began to fear they were
+all blind alleys leading nowhere.
+
+The openings near his own entrance tunnel he had left till the last,
+since they obviously led outwards.
+
+Two of them shut down in the same way as all the others, and it was only
+the dogged determination to leave no chance untried that drove him, with
+a fresh supply of torches, down the last one of all, the one alongside
+that out of which the dead man's legs projected.
+
+It took a turn to the left within a dozen feet of the entrance, and,
+like the rest, it presently narrowed down through a slope in the roof;
+but just at its narrowest, when he feared he had come to the end, there
+came a dip in the flooring corresponding to the slope up above, and he
+found he could wriggle through. Once through, the passage widened and
+continued to widen, and the going became very rough and broken, with
+piles of ragged rock and deep black pitfalls in between.
+
+Then, of a sudden, he saw the walls and roof of his passage fall away,
+and his light flickered feebly in the darkness of a vast place, and he
+crouched on the rock up which he had climbed, and sat in wonder.
+
+Somewhere below him he could hear the slow rise and fall of water, dull
+and heavy and without any splash, like the dumb breathing of a captive
+monster.
+
+And every now and again there came, from somewhere beyond, a low dull
+thud, like the blow of a padded hammer, and a distant subdued rustle
+along the outside of the darkness. He knew it was not inside the place
+he was in, for he could hear the soft rise and fall of the water quite
+clearly, but these other sounds came to him from a distance, muted as
+though his ears had suddenly gone deaf.
+
+"Those dull blows," he said to himself, "are the waves on the outside of
+L'Etat. That low rustling is the rush of them along the lower rocks. The
+water inside here probably comes in through some openings below
+tide-level. I am quite safe here, even if they get past the dead man's
+cave--quite safe until I starve. Unless there are fish to be had"--and
+he felt a spark of hope. "And maybe there are devil-fish"--and he
+shivered and glanced below and about him fearfully.
+
+His homely torch did no more than faintly illumine the rock he sat on
+and those close at hand, and cast a gigantic uncouth shadow of himself
+on the rough wall behind. All beyond was solid darkness, blacker even
+than a black Sark night.
+
+He sat wondering vaguely if any before him had penetrated to that
+strange place. It was odd and uncanny to feel that his eyes were the
+very first to look upon it. And then, away in front, and apparently at a
+great distance above him, he became aware of a difference in the solid
+darkness. It seemed almost as though it had thinned. His eye had seemed
+able for a moment to carry beyond the narrow circle of the torch, but
+when he peered into the void to see what this might mean, it all seemed
+solid as before.
+
+As his straining eyes sought relief in something visible, their
+side-glance caught once more that same impression of movement in the
+darkness. And presently it came again and stronger--a strange greenish
+fluttering up in the roof--very faint, as though the roof were smoke on
+which a soft green light played for a moment and vanished.
+
+But by degrees the light grew, though at no time did it become more than
+a wan ghost of a light, and from its curious fluttering he judged that
+it came through water.
+
+Reasoning from the trend of the cavern, he came to the conclusion that
+somewhere on that further side there were openings into the deep water
+beyond, on which the sunlight played and struck at times into the cave,
+and he was keen to look more closely into it.
+
+He lowered his torch to the side of his rock, and its feeble flicker
+fell on a chaos of rocks below. He looked long and cautiously for supple
+yellow arms or tiny whip-like threads which might coil suddenly round
+his legs and drag him to hideous death.
+
+But he saw nothing of the kind. The rocks were dry and bare, not a
+limpet nor a sea-weed visible, and leaving his jacket for a landmark as
+before, he slowly let himself down from one huge boulder to another,
+till he found himself climbing another great pile in front.
+
+When at last his head rose above this ridge, he almost rolled over at
+the sight of two huge green eyes blinking lazily at him out of the
+darkness in front--two great openings far below sea-level, through which
+filtered dimly the wavering green light whose refractions fluttered in
+the roof.
+
+The vast trough below him heaved gently now and then, with a ponderous
+solemnity which filled him with awe. He felt himself an intruder. He
+felt like a fly creeping about a sleeping tiger. He hardly dared to
+breathe, lest the brooding spirit of the place should rise suddenly out
+of some dark corner and squash him on his rock as one does a crawling
+insect; and his anxious eyes swept to and fro for the smallest sign of
+danger.
+
+But, plucking up courage from immunity, and dreading to be caught in the
+dark in that weird place, he crawled over the boulders towards the side
+wall of the cavern to get as near to those openings as possible. From
+the very slight movement of the water, which was ever on the boil round
+the outside of L'Etat, he judged them deep down among the roots of the
+island, far below the turmoil of the surface, but he must see and make
+sure.
+
+With infinite toil and many a scrape and bruise, he got round at last,
+and could look right down into the dim green depths, and what he saw
+there filled him with sickening fear.
+
+The water was crystal clear, and in through the nearer opening, as he
+looked, a huge octopus propelled itself in leisurely fashion, its great
+tentacles streaming out behind, its hideous protruding eyes searching
+eagerly for prey.
+
+Just inside the opening it gathered itself together for a moment, and
+seemed to look so meaningly right up into his eyes that he found himself
+shrinking behind a rock lest it should see him. Then it clamped itself
+to the side of the opening and spread wide its arms for anything that
+might come its way.
+
+He watched it, fascinated. He saw fishes large and small unconsciously
+touch the quivering tentacles, which on the instant twisted round them
+and dragged them in to the rending beak below the hideous eyes. And then
+he saw another similar monster come floating in on similar quest, and in
+a moment they were locked in deadly fight--such a writhing and coiling
+and straining and twisting of monstrous fleshy limbs, which swelled and
+thrilled, and loosed and gripped, with venom past believing--such a
+clamping to this rock and that--such tremendous efforts at dislodgment.
+
+It was a nightmare. It sickened him. He turned and crawled feebly away,
+anxious only now to get out of this awful place without falling foul of
+any similar monsters among the rocks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+HOW NANCE WATCHED FROM AFAR
+
+
+From the headland above Breniere, Nance had watched the boats go
+plunging across to L'Etat.
+
+Very early that morning she had sped across the Coupee and up the long
+roads to the Seigneurie, but the Seigneur was away in Guernsey still,
+busied on the vital matter of raising still more money for the mines in
+which he was a firm believer, mortgaging his Seigneurie for the purpose,
+assured in his own mind that all would be well in the end.
+
+Then to the Vicar and the Senechal, and these set off at once for the
+harbour, but found themselves powerless in the face of public opinion.
+Argument and remonstrance alike fell on deaf ears. The Vicar appealed to
+their sense of right; the Senechal forbade their going. But their minds
+were doggedly set on it, and they went.
+
+"I shall hold you to account," stormed Philip Guille.
+
+"B'en, M. le Senechal, we'll pay it all among us," and away they went;
+and back to her look-out by Breniere went Nance, and the Vicar with her
+for comfort in this dark hour.
+
+They watched the boats circling the rock, round and round. They heard
+the firing, and Nance flung herself on the ground in an agony of
+weeping, sure that the end had come. For they could only be firing at
+Gard, and what could one man do against so many?
+
+"They have killed him," she moaned.
+
+And the Vicar could only tighten his pale lips, and smooth her hair with
+his thin white hand, as she writhed on the ground at his side. For he
+could but think she was right. They were good shots, the Sark men, and
+it needs but one bullet to kill a man.
+
+If Nance had looked a moment longer she might have seen Gard slip down
+from the ridge to the wall, but the bombardment of the shelter, which
+gave him his chance, made an end of her hopes, and her face was hidden
+in the turf.
+
+The Vicar's sight was not keen enough to see clearly what was passing.
+But when the men landed on the rock, and overran it in their search, he
+could not fail to see their figures on the ridge against the sky, and an
+exclamation of surprise roused Nance.
+
+"What is it?" she jerked.
+
+"They have landed over there. They seem to be searching the rock."
+
+"Then--" and she sat up suddenly and gazed intently across at L'Etat,
+and then sprang to her feet, a new creature. "For, see you, Mr
+Cachemaille," she cried, "if they had killed him they would not be
+searching for him, nenni-gia!"
+
+"That is true, child," said the Vicar hopefully, and then, less
+hopefully, "but where shall a man hide on L'Etat?"
+
+"Ah now! I remember. Just as I was leaving him last night, he told me--"
+
+"As you were leaving him--last night?" and the old man gazed at her as
+though he doubted his ears or her right senses.
+
+"But yes," she cried impatiently. "I swam across there last night to see
+if Bernel was there and to take him some food. But you are not to tell
+that to any one. And he told me--"
+
+"You swam across?--to L'Etat?"
+
+"Yes, yes! We have done it many times, and, besides, I had the
+bladders--"
+
+The Vicar shook his head helplessly. She forgot to explain so much that
+he did not understand. But he grasped at one thread.
+
+"And Bernel?"
+
+"Ah, my poor Bernel! He is drowned," she said, with a heave of the
+breast, but with her eyes intent on L'Etat. "I wanted him to take the
+bladders, but he would not; and it was the first night after the storm,
+you see, and the waves were big still, and he never got to L'Etat, and
+he never came back; so, you see--"
+
+"Truly, you are being sorely tried, my child. But your brother was a
+better swimmer than most. May we not hope--"
+
+But she shook her head, intent on the doings on the rock, and full, for
+the moment, of the hope she could draw from Gard's hint about a
+hiding-place of which she knew nothing. For if she and Bernel had never
+discovered it, how should these others? And obviously they were
+searching, for they prowled about the rock like ants, and poked here and
+there, and wandered on and came back. And if they still sought they had
+not yet found; and so there was a new spring of hope in her heart.
+
+"Yes, truly, they are searching," she murmured, and forgot the Vicar
+and all else.
+
+He tried to induce her to go back home with him, but she would not move.
+For the moment all her hope in life was in peril on the rock, and she
+must see all that went on; and finally he had to leave her there, and
+she hardly knew that he had gone. She wanted only to be left alone, to
+nurse her new-born hope and watch in fear and trembling for any symptom
+of its overthrow.
+
+But she was not to be left in peace, for Madame Julie had heard the
+firing also, and had come round the headland by the miners' cottages,
+exulting in the fact that her enemy was run to earth at last and was
+meeting righteous punishment.
+
+And as she prowled about there, chafing at the delay in the return of
+the boats, she came suddenly on Nance gazing out at L'Etat with a
+face--not, as Julie would have expected, downcast and woe-begone, but
+full of eager expectancy. And the sight of her, and in such case,
+stirred Julie to venom.
+
+"Ah then--there you are, mademoiselle, listening to the end of your
+fancy gentleman! And the right end, too, ma foi! A man that goes
+knocking his neighbours on the head--it's right he should be shot like a
+rabbit--"
+
+Nance's face quivered, but she did not even look round.
+
+"You'll see them coming back presently, and they'll bring his body back
+with them in the boat, all full of holes. And then I'll feel that my
+Tom's paid for--"
+
+"Do you hear?" she cried, planting herself in front of Nance, and
+jerking her hands up and down in her excitement and the exaspeiation of
+receiving no response. "Do you hear me--you? Or are you gone crazy for
+love of your murderer?"--and she made as though to lay wild hands on the
+girl.
+
+"You are wicked! You are evil! You are a devil!" said Nance through her
+little white teeth, and looked so as though she might fly at her that
+Julie drew off.
+
+"Aha--spitfire!--wildcat!--you would bite?"
+
+Nance, all ashake with disgust, stooped suddenly and picked up a lump of
+rock.
+
+"Go!" she said, in a voice of such concentrated fury that it was little
+more than a whisper. "Go!--before I do you ill;" and she looked so like
+it that Julie turned and fled, expecting the rock between her shoulders
+at every step.
+
+But the rock was on the ground, and Nance was intent again on L'Etat.
+
+She stood there watching, until she saw the boats put off, and then she
+turned and sped like a rabbit--across the waste lands--across the
+Coupee--over Clos Bourel fields into Dixcart--over Hog's Back to the
+Creux.
+
+She ran through the tunnel just as the boats came up, and her eyes were
+wide with expectant fear, as they swept them hungrily.
+
+"What have you done then, out there, Philip Vaudin?" she cried, as his
+boat's nose grated on the shingle.
+
+"Pardi, ma garche, we have done nothing."
+
+"But the shooting?"
+
+"Some one shot at the shelter to see if he was inside, and the rest shot
+because they thought there must be something to shoot at."
+
+"And you have not got him?" asked another disappointedly.
+
+"Never even seen him."
+
+"Ah ba!"
+
+"Either he's gone or he's under cover, though, ma fe, I don't know where
+he'd find it on L'Etat," and Nance's heart beat hopefully. "However,
+John Drillot and Peter Vaudin are stopping the night in case he is still
+there and ventures out of his hole," and her heart sank again, and
+kicked rebelliously that a man should be hunted thus, like a rabbit.
+
+She spent a night of misery, wondering what was happening on L'Etat, and
+was at her post above Breniere as soon as it was light.
+
+She saw Philip Vaudin come round from the Creux in his boat and run
+across to the rock, and almost as soon as he had disappeared round
+Quette d'Amont, he came speeding back, alone, and not to the harbour,
+but straight to the fishermen's rough landing-place inside Breniere.
+
+"What is it then, Philip?" she asked anxiously, as he hauled himself up
+the rocks on to the turf.
+
+"I've come for two miners," he panted, for he had come quickly. "They've
+run him to earth in a hole, but they won't either of them go in after
+him, and they want some one who will."
+
+"Ah, then!"
+
+"Yes. He came out in the night, and they chased him, but he got into his
+hole, and they're sitting on it ever since," and he hurried away through
+the waste of gorse and bracken to the miners' cottages.
+
+Volunteers were evidently not over plentiful. It was a considerable time
+before he came back with a Welshman, Evan Morgan, and a young
+Cornishman, John Trevna, and neither of them seemed over eager for the
+job.
+
+"For, see you," had been Morgan's view, "coing in a hole after a man
+what hass a gun iss not a nice pissness, no inteet!" and the Cornishman
+agreed with him.
+
+However, they put off, and Nance crouched in the bracken and watched all
+their doings.
+
+She had long since caught sight of John Drillot and Peter Vaudin sitting
+on the rock wall, and wondered what kind of a hiding-place Gard could
+possibly have found therein. A poor one, she feared, and that the end
+would be quick.
+
+The boat disappeared round the corner, and presently she saw the three
+men join the others at the wall, and they all clustered there and
+talked, and then one by one they disappeared into the wall itself, and
+she sat watching in fear and trembling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+HOW TWO WENT IN AND THREE CAME OUT
+
+
+"It iss better to sit here two, three days till he comse out than to go
+in and get yourself killt, yes inteet!" was the burden of Evan Morgan's
+answer to all their arguments for a speedy assault. And "Iss, sure!" was
+Trevna's curt, complete endorsement.
+
+But when, at John Drillot's suggestion, they had squeezed under the slab
+to have a look at what lay below, and had peered down the slit that Gard
+tried first, and had then lighted on the tunnel, and had found the gun
+and powder-flask jammed in a crevice--that put a different face on the
+matter.
+
+And, after prolonged discussion as to the proper method of procedure,
+especially in the matter of precedence, it was at last arranged that
+Evan Morgan should go first with his miner's lamp, and that John Trevna
+should follow close behind, carrying the gun.
+
+"And iss it understood that I shoot him if I see him?" asked Trevna, to
+make sure of his ground and make his conscience easy.
+
+"Pardi, yes, mon gars! Shoot straight, and the Island will thank you,"
+asserted John Drillot.
+
+"Ant for Heaven's sake, John Trevna, see you ton't shoot me behint by
+mistake," urged Evan Morgan; and they disappeared slowly into the
+tunnel, while the other two stood waiting expectantly in the well.
+
+Accustomed as they were to narrow places, this long worm-hole of a
+tunnel, with the doubtful possibilities that lay beyond it, seemed as
+endless to the militant members of the expedition as it did to the
+waiters outside.
+
+Occasionally a hollow sound came booming down the tunnel, when one or
+other grunted out a word of objurgation on the narrowness of things, but
+for the most part they wormed along in silence, Morgan shifting forward
+his lamp, foot by foot, and straining his eyes into the darkness ahead,
+Trevna close behind with his gun at full cock and ready for instant
+action.
+
+"Gad'rabotin, but they take their time, those two!" said John Drillot,
+impatiently, outside.
+
+"It iss going right through to Wailee, I do think," growled Evan Morgan
+inside.
+
+And it was just after that that there broke out in the depths of the
+tunnel a commotion so extraordinary that the listeners outside could
+make nothing at all of it, and could only lurch about in amazement and
+climb up and push their heads into the tunnel, and wonder what it all
+meant. Then, in the midst of the turmoil, there came the thunderous
+bellow of the gun, and after a time a trickle of thin blue smoke floated
+lazily out and hung about the well; and the men outside sniffed
+appreciatively, and said, "Ch'est b'en!" and waited hopefully.
+
+Evan Morgan, shifting forward his light, got an impression of something
+in the narrow way in front, and suddenly he was taken with the biggest
+fit of sneezing he had ever had in his life. He banged down the lamp
+and threw up his head till it cracked against the roof, then banged his
+chin against the floor, and finally propped himself, like a sick dog, on
+his two front paws, and sneezed and sneezed and sneezed for dear life.
+
+Then John Trevna began. He had the sense to lay down his gun, or Morgan
+might have got the charge in his back. And so they sneezed in concert,
+until their heads were clearer than they had been for many a day. And
+the sound of it all to those outside was like the sound of mortal
+combat.
+
+Then Morgan, wiping his streaming eyes on the sleeve of his coat, in a
+state of extreme exhaustion, caught sight of that which lay just beyond
+him, and he saw that it was a man crawling down the tunnel to meet him.
+
+"Shoot, John, shoot! He iss here," he yelled, and laid himself flat to
+give Trevna his chance.
+
+And Trevna, between two sneezes, picked up his gun, though he could see
+nothing to shoot at, and ran the barrel forward above Morgan's head and
+fired, and the roar of it in that confined space came near to deafening
+them both.
+
+The smoke hung thick and choked them, as they gasped it in in gulps
+while they sneezed, and the light had gone out with the concussion.
+
+They lay for a time exhausted. Then the atmosphere cleared somewhat, and
+they lay in the thick darkness straining their ears for any sound, but
+heard nothing.
+
+"What did you see, Evan Morgan?" whispered Trevna at last.
+
+"It wass a man."
+
+"Then I have killed him, for he does not move. Can you light the lamp?"
+
+"I can not--in here. I am coing out. I haf hat enough of this."
+
+"We must take him out, too."
+
+"You can tek him, then, John Trevna. I haf hat enough of him and this
+hole."
+
+"Don't be a fool, Evan Morgan. If it wass a man, and he got that load in
+him as close as that, he iss deader than Tom Hamon."
+
+"Well, you can go an' see. I am coing out," and he began to wriggle
+backwards, and Trevna was fain to go too.
+
+But presently they came to one of the somewhat wider places where the
+wall had fallen away, and Trevna squeezed himself tightly into this.
+
+"You go on, then, Evan Morgan," he said, "if you can get past, and I
+will go back and bring him out."
+
+"You are a fool, John Trevna, to meddle with him any more. Iff the man
+iss dead, he iss just as well left there."
+
+"If he iss dead he cannot harm me, and I would like to see the man I
+have killed."
+
+"Ugh!" grunted Morgan, and crawled on, legs first.
+
+Trevna wormed along up the tunnel, groping cautiously in front of him at
+each forward lurch, and at last his hands fell on what he sought, and at
+the same moment he began sneezing again.
+
+It would be no easy job dragging a dead man all down that tunnel, he
+thought. But when, after cautious feeling here and there, he got a grip
+of the man's coat collar, to his surprise it came away in his hand, but
+at the same time it seemed to him that the body was extraordinarily
+light.
+
+He tried again with a fresh grip on the coat, but it tore like paper,
+and, after thinking it over, he unstrapped his leather belt and got it
+round the man below the armpits, and so was able to haul him slowly
+along.
+
+When Evan Morgan's wriggling legs came slowly out of the tunnel, John
+Drillot and Peter Vaudin were almost dancing with excitement, and their
+first surprise was the sight of him when, by rights, John Trevna should
+have been the one to come out first.
+
+"Well then? What have you done? And where is John Trevna?" cried John
+Drillot.
+
+"Ach! He iss a fool. He hass shot the man and now he will pring him out
+when he woult pe much petter buried where he iss."
+
+"He's quite right. What was all the noise about?"
+
+"That wass the shooting."
+
+"Before that. You all seemed to be howling at once."
+
+"That wass the sneezing. It iss full of sneezing down there," and his
+red eyes still showed the effect of it.
+
+It was a long time before they heard the laboured sounds of Trevna's
+coming. But at last his legs wriggled out, then his body, then with a
+lurch he hauled up to the mouth of the tunnel that which he had brought
+with him. And at sight of it they all started back against the sides of
+the well, with various cries but equal amazement.
+
+"O mon Gyu!" cried Peter Vaudin.
+
+"Thousand devils!" cried John Drillot.
+
+"Heavens an' earth!" gasped Evan Morgan.
+
+John Trevna gazed open-mouthed, for he had little breath left in him.
+
+And from the black mouth of the tunnel the strange and terrible figure
+of the dead man looked quietly down at them and filled them with
+amazement.
+
+Trevna's heavy charge had blown in the top of the skull. The shrunken
+yellow face wore the gaunt eager look of one who had died the slow death
+of starvation. It seemed to be trying to get at them to bite and rend
+them.
+
+Peter Vaudin was the first to climb the wall behind him, but the rest
+were close at his heels, and hustled him up through the crack under the
+slab.
+
+Peter struck down towards the landing-place the moment he had wriggled
+through.
+
+"Stop then, Peter," called John Drillot, in a low insistent voice, lest
+that dreadful thing below should hear him.
+
+"Not me! I've had enough, John Drillot. That is not what we came for ...
+and I had hold of its leg last night," and he shivered at the
+recollection, and the thought that it might have turned on him and
+gripped him with its grisly hands.
+
+"I don't know what it is," began John Drillot, "but--"
+
+"It's the man I shot inside there," said Trevna.
+
+"That man hass peen det a hundert years," said Morgan.
+
+"All the same, he was running about last night," said Peter, "and I had
+hold of his leg"--with another shiver.
+
+"He's dead enough now, anyway," said Drillot.
+
+"Eh b'en! leave him where he is, and let's get away. I've heard say
+there were ghosts on L'Etat, and now I know it. No good comes of
+meddling with these things."
+
+"But we ought to take him with us."
+
+"Take him with us!" almost shrieked Peter. "And let him loose on Sark!
+Why then?"
+
+"Whatever he was last night, he's dead enough now.... Will you help me
+to get him up, John Trevna?"
+
+"Iss, sure! He's got my belt."
+
+"Not in my boat, John Drillot," cried Peter. "Not in my boat. I've had
+enough of him, pardi!" and he set off at speed for the boat.
+
+"Don't be a fool, Peter. You, Evan Morgan, run down and stop him going.
+Come on, John Trevna," and after peering cautiously down to make sure
+the dead man had not moved, they dropped into the well again.
+
+The shrivelled figure was very light, as Trevna had found. It was only
+their repugnance at handling it that made their task a heavy one. One
+above and one below, they managed at last to get it up above ground, and
+then John Trevna slipped his belt to its middle, and carried it with one
+hand down the slope to the boat.
+
+There they found Evan Morgan holding the approach to the landing-place
+against Peter, with a lump of rock, while Philip, in the boat below,
+stood shouting at them to know what was the matter.
+
+At sight of the others and their burden, however, he had no eyes for
+anything else.
+
+"What have you got there, John Drillot?"
+
+"A dead man."
+
+"Aw, then! That's not Gard."
+
+"It's the only man here, anyway. Pull close up, Philip--"
+
+"Not in my boat, John Drillot!" from Peter.
+
+"We must take this to the Senechal," said John angrily. "If you don't
+want to come you can wait here. If you don't make less noise, I will
+knock you on the head myself," and he jumped down into the boat, and
+took the dead man from Trevna, and laid him carefully in the bows. The
+others jumped in, and Peter, sooner than be knocked on the head or left
+behind, sulkily followed, and sat himself on the extreme edge of the
+stern as far away from the dead man as he could get.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+HOW JULIE MEDITATED EVIL
+
+
+Nance had crouched all the morning, in the bracken above Breniere, on
+the knife-edge of expectancy. And behind her, at a safe distance,
+crouched Julie Hamon, watching Nance and L'Etat at the same time, as a
+cat in the shade watches a sparrow playing in the sunshine.
+
+"What will be the end? What will be the end?" sighed Nance. They had all
+gone down out of sight, across there, and it was terrible to sit here
+waiting, waiting, waiting for what she feared.
+
+If they had indeed run Gard to his hiding-place, as Philip Vaudin had
+said, there could be but one possible end to it; and she sat, sad-eyed
+and wistful, waiting for them to come up again.
+
+It seemed as if they would never come, and she never took her eyes off
+the rock wall on L'Etat.
+
+And then at last she sprang to her feet. One of them had come up again.
+She could not see which. Then the others appeared, and they seemed to
+stand talking. Then one went off round the slope and another ran after
+him, and the other two went back into the rock wall.
+
+What could they be at? She stood gazing intently.
+
+The two came up again, and--yes--they carried something, or one of them
+did, and they two went off round the corner also. And presently she saw
+the boat coming round, and saw by its head that it was for the Creux.
+She turned and sped across by the same way as yesterday, and Julie
+followed her at a safe distance. And it seemed to Nance, as she hurried
+through the familiar hedge-gaps and lanes and across the headlands, that
+the world had lost its brightness, and that life was desperately hard
+and trying.
+
+On Derrible Head there might be a chance of seeing. She ran up to the
+highest point by the old cannon, just as the boat was coming in under La
+Conchee.
+
+And--oh, mon Dieu! mon Dieu! yes--there, in the bows, lay the body of a
+man!--and the tears she had kept back all day broke out now in a fury of
+weeping. She could hardly see, but she ran on, falling at times and
+bruising herself, staggering to her feet again, stumbling blindly
+through a mist of tears.
+
+The boat was drawn up by the time she got there, and a curious crowd
+surrounded it. She pushed through. She must see.
+
+And then the weight fell off her heart, and it was all she could do to
+keep from screaming. For this poor thing, whatever it was, was not
+Stephen Gard and never had been.
+
+She wanted to sing and dance and scream her joy aloud. They had not
+found him.
+
+"What is this, John Drillot?" asked Julie, alongside her, black with
+anger, as she pointed to the body.
+
+"Ma fe--a ghost, they say. John Trevna shot him, but he had been dead a
+long time before that, though he was alive last night, for Peter had
+hold of his leg as he ran."
+
+"And where is the other--the one you went for?"
+
+"He's not on L'Etat, anyway, ma fille," and they lifted the body on to a
+piece of sailcloth, and carried it off through the tunnel for the
+Senechal to look into.
+
+So Stephen Gard's hiding-place had proved effective, and they had not
+found him. But, of a certainty, he must be starving, and so away home
+sped Nance, to prepare a parcel of food to take across to him. And
+Julie, her black brows pinched together and her face set in a frown of
+venomous intention, never once let her out of her sight.
+
+It was after midnight when Nance stole across the fields, carrying her
+little parcel and her swimming-bladders, and made her way to Breniere
+point.
+
+It was a still night, with a sky full of stars, and her heart was high
+for the moment, though when her thoughts ran on, in spite of her, it
+fell again. For things could not go on this way for ever, and she saw no
+way out.
+
+She dropped her outer things by a bush, and let herself quietly down the
+rocks and into the water, and the black-faced woman who presently stood
+by that bush snarled curses after her and was filled with unholy
+exultation. For Nance could have only one reason for going across there,
+and on the morrow the men should hear of it, and she would give them no
+rest till Gard was made an end of.
+
+What that thing was that they had brought home, she did not know, but
+they were fools to be satisfied with that when the man they had gone
+after was undoubtedly still on the rock.
+
+So she sat down by Nance's gown and cloak, and revolved schemes for her
+discomfiture and the undoing of Stephen Gard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+HOW HOPE CAME ONCE AGAIN
+
+
+Nance found the passage of the Race more trying then ever before. The
+strain of these latter days had been very great, and the thought of
+Bernel tended to unnerve her.
+
+On the other hand, the knowledge that Gard had outwitted the whole
+strength of the Island cheered and braced her, and she struggled
+valiantly through the broken waters till at last she hung panting on the
+black ledge where she was in the habit of landing.
+
+She scrambled up among the boulders and made straight for the great
+wall. She had decided in her own mind that he would probably be
+somewhere in there, possibly afraid to come out, as he would not know if
+the Sark men were still on the rock.
+
+As nearly as she could, she climbed to the place she had seen the men go
+in, and then she cried softly, "Steve! Mr. Gard!" and went on calling,
+as she moved up and down along the base of the wall.
+
+And at last her heart jumped wildly as she heard her name faintly from
+inside the wall, and presently Gard himself came crawling from under the
+big slab and jumped down to her side.
+
+"Nance! You are a good angel to me," and he flung his arms round her and
+kissed her again and again.
+
+"But oh, my dear, I would not have you risk your life for me like
+this."
+
+"It is nothing. I am all right," said Nance, forgetting the weariness
+and dangers of the passage in her joy at finding him alive and well. "I
+have brought you food," and she pushed her little parcel into his hands.
+
+"I hardly dare to eat it when I think what it has cost you."
+
+"That would be foolish, and you must be starving."
+
+"Truly, I am hungry--"
+
+"Eat, then!" and she seized the package and began to tear it open. "It
+will make me still more glad to see you eat."
+
+"Well, then--" and Nance was gladder than ever that she had come.
+
+"Have they all gone back?" he asked anxiously, as he munched.
+
+"They came back this morning, bringing a strange dead man."
+
+"I know. I put him there--"
+
+"Who is he?"
+
+"I found him in a cave inside the rock. He had been left there very many
+years ago with his hands and feet tied. I think he must have been a
+Customs officer of long ago."
+
+Nance shivered, and he felt it.
+
+"You are cold, Nance dear, and I am thinking only of myself;" and he
+took off his jacket and put it over her slim wet shoulders, in spite of
+herself.
+
+"If they have all gone back we could go to the shelter. They may have
+left some of the things there;" and they went along and found the cloak
+and blanket, and he wrapped them about her.
+
+"I found a still larger cave out of the other one, and I was in there
+when they came after me. I had put the dead man in the tunnel, and when
+I came back he was gone; but I did not dare to come out, for I was
+afraid they might be on the watch still."
+
+"The dead man frightened them. I do not think they will come back. They
+are afraid of ghosts."
+
+"I hoped he would scare them. But what is to be the end of it all, Nance
+dear? Things cannot go on this way. Would it be possible to get me a
+boat and let me get over to Guernsey?"
+
+"If you will wait a little time, that is what we must do, if the truth
+does not come out."
+
+"And meanwhile you may be drowned in trying to keep me from starving."
+
+"I shall not be drowned and you shall not starve," she said resolutely.
+
+"I would sooner live on puffins' eggs than have you swim across that
+place. My heart goes right down into my feet when I think of it."
+
+"There is no need. I am all right."
+
+"The Senechal and the Seigneur could not stop them?"
+
+"Mr. Le Pelley is in Guernsey still. The Senechal they would not listen
+to. But the truth will come out if only you will wait."
+
+"If I get away, will you come to me, Nance? And all my life I will give
+to making you happy."
+
+"Yes, I will come. But it will be sore leaving Sark. To a Sark-born
+there is no other place in the world like Sark."
+
+"All my life I will give to making up for it."
+
+"We will see. Now I must go, or it will be daylight before I get back."
+
+"I shall be in misery till I know you are safe."
+
+"It will be nearly light. I will wave to you from Breniere;" and they
+went slowly round to the ledges, and parted with kisses; and in the grey
+morning light he could, for a time, follow the little white figure as it
+slipped bravely through the bristling black waves of the Race.
+
+But presently he could see her no more, and could but wait, full of
+anxiety and many prayers, for the signal that should tell of her safety.
+
+But it did not come, and he grew desperate and full of fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HOW JULIE'S SCHEMES FELL FLAT
+
+
+Nance found the return journey still more trying to her strength, but
+she struggled through, and was devoutly thankful when the slack water
+under Breniere was reached.
+
+She waded ashore almost too weary to stand, and had to cling to the
+rough rocks till she recovered her breath. Then, slowly and heavily, she
+dragged herself up the lower ledges to the little plateau where her
+clothes were.
+
+Julie had sat revolving grim schemes in that black head of hers.
+
+She hated the girl. She hated Gard. She hated Sark and every one in it.
+Why had she ever come into these outer wilds? She would have done with
+it all and get away back to the life that was more to her taste.
+
+But first--yes, mon Dieu, she would leave them something to remember her
+by.
+
+She had not a doubt that Gard was still on L'Etat. Nothing else would
+take this girl across there. The shameless hussy!--to go swimming across
+to see her man with nothing but a white shift on!
+
+She could wound Gard through Nance. She could wound Nance through Gard.
+
+She could wait for the girl as she came up the side of the Head, and
+push her down again or crush her with a lump of rock.
+
+But that might mean reprisals on the part of the Islanders. She had had
+experience of the way in which they resented any ill done to one of
+their number by an outsider. She had no wish to join Gard on his rock.
+
+It would be better to hold the girl up to the scorn and contempt of the
+neighbours; that would punish her. And by setting the men on Gard's
+track again, that would punish him and her too.
+
+And so she restrained the natural violence of her temper, which would
+have run to rocks and bodily injury, and waited in the bracken till
+Nance came stumbling along in the half-light. Then up she sprang, with
+an unexpectedness that for the moment took Nance's breath and set her
+heart pounding with dreadful certainties of ghosts.
+
+"So this is how you go to visit your fancy monsieur on the rock, is it,
+little Nance? And with nothing on but that! Oh shame! What will the
+neighbours say when they hear how you swim across to him, and you will
+not dare deny it?"
+
+But Nance, relieved in her mind on the score of ghosts, and regaining
+her composure with her breath, simply turned her back on her and
+proceeded as if she were not there.
+
+"And he is there still!" screamed Julie, dancing round with rage to keep
+face to face with her. "I was sure of it, though those fools could not
+find him. I'll see that he's found or starved out, b'en sur! Yes, if I
+have to go myself and see to it. As for you--shameless one!--it's the
+last time you'll swim across there, yes indeed!"--and she raved on and
+on, as only an angry woman with a grievance can.
+
+Nance slipped her dress over her head and, under cover of it, dropped
+off her wet undergarment, coolly wrung it out, put on her cloak and
+walked away, Julie raging alongside with wild words that tumbled over
+one another in their haste.
+
+Nance walked to the highest point behind Breniere, and waved her white
+garment a dozen times to let Gard know she was safe, and then turned and
+set off home through the waist-high bracken and the great cushions of
+gorse. And close alongside her went Julie, raging and raving the worse
+for her silence; for there is nothing so galling to an angry soul as to
+find its most venomous shafts fall harmless from the triple mail of
+quiet self-possession.
+
+So they came through the other cottages to La Closerie, but the
+neighbours were all asleep, and those who woke at the sound of her
+violence, turned over and said, "It's only that mad Frenchwoman in one
+of her tantrums. Why, in Heaven's name, can't she go to sleep, like
+other folks?"
+
+Nance went into her own house and quietly closed the door. Julie
+hammered on it with her fists, as she would dearly have liked to hammer
+on Nance's face, and then cursed herself off into her own place,
+slamming the door with such violence as to waken all the fowls and set
+all the pigs grunting in their sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+HOW AN ANGEL CAME BRINGING THE TRUTH
+
+
+Gard's eyes, straining into the dimness of the coming dawn through what
+seemed to him a most terrible long time, so packed was it with anxious
+fears, caught at last the white flicker of Nance's signal, and he
+dropped down just where he stood, among the rough stones of the ridge,
+with a grateful sigh.
+
+The strain was telling on him. He felt physically weak and worn. Nance's
+devoted love and courage made his heart beat high, indeed, but his fears
+on her account strung his laxed cords to breaking point, and then left
+them looser than before.
+
+He must get away somehow, if only to prevent this constant and terrible
+risking of her life on his behalf.
+
+He hardly dared to hope that his strategy with the dead man would be of
+any permanent benefit to him, though there was no knowing. Examination
+of the body would show that it had been dead for very many years, but
+his knowledge of the Island superstitions made him doubt if any Sark man
+would willingly spend a night on L'Etat for a very long time to come.
+
+On the other hand, if the result of their discussions confirmed them in
+the belief that he was still there, and if, as he constantly feared,
+they should learn of Nance's comings, and visit upon her the venom they
+harboured for him, they might so invest the rock that escape would be
+impossible.
+
+Meagre living, starvation even, he would suffer rather than live more
+amply at risk of Nance's life, but if the hope of ultimate escape was
+taken from him then he might as well give in at once and have done with
+it.
+
+So he lay there, in the broken rocks of the ridge, and looked grimly on
+life. And the sun rose in a red ball over France, and cleft a shining
+track across the grey face of the waters, and drew up the mists and
+thinned away the clouds, till the great plain of the sea and the great
+dome above were all deep flawless blue, and he saw a thin white curl of
+smoke rise from the miners' cottages on Sark.
+
+He lay there listless, nerveless, careless of life almost, an Ishmael
+with every man's hand against him--worse off than Ishmael, he thought,
+since Ishmael had a desert in which to wander, and he was tied to this
+bare rock.
+
+But there was Nance! There was always Nance. And at thought of her, his
+bruised soul found somewhat of comfort and courage once more.
+
+He felt her quivering in his arms again as he pressed her close. He felt
+again the willing surrender of her sweet wet face. And the thought of it
+thrilled his cold blood and set it coursing through his veins like new
+life. Yes, truly, while there was Nance there was hope.
+
+Perhaps the Senechal and the Vicar would prevail upon them. Perhaps they
+would give it up and leave him alone, and then Nance would find him a
+boat and they would get across to Guernsey. Perhaps, as she kept
+insisting, something would happen to discover the truth.
+
+So he lay, while the sun mounted high and baked him on the bare stones,
+but he did not find it hot.
+
+And then, of a sudden, he stiffened and lay watching anxiously. For
+there, from out the Creux had come a boat--and another, and another, and
+another--four boat-loads of them again!
+
+So they were coming, after all, and his hopes died sudden death.
+
+Well--let them come and take him and have their will. He was not the
+first who had paid the price for what he had not done, and human nature
+must fall to pieces if hung too long on tenterhooks.
+
+He watched them listlessly. He could crawl into his innermost cavern, of
+course, and could hold it against them all till the end of time, which
+in this case would be but a trifling span, for a man must eat to live.
+But what was the use? As well die quick as slow, since there could be
+but one end to it. And then, to his very great surprise, the boats crept
+slowly out of sight round the corner of Coupee Bay, and he lay
+wondering.
+
+What could be the meaning of that? Why had they put in there? Why
+couldn't they come on and finish the matter?
+
+The sea was all deserted again. If he had not just happened to catch
+sight of them stealing across there, he would have felt sure they were
+not coming to-day.
+
+Perhaps they were going to wait there till night, though why on earth
+they should wait there instead of at the Creux, was past his
+comprehension.
+
+And then, after a time, to his amazement, he saw them all go crawling
+back the way they had come. One, two, three, four--yes, they were all
+there, and they crept slowly round Laches point and disappeared, and
+left him gaping.
+
+It was past believing. It was altogether beyond him. He lay, with his
+eyes glued to the point round which they had gone, stupid with the
+wonder of it.
+
+They had actually given it up--for to-day, at least, and gone back! He
+cudgelled his brains for the meaning of it all, till they grew dull and
+weary with futile thinking.
+
+Perhaps Nance and the Vicar and the Senechal had prevailed after all!
+Perhaps something had turned up at last to prove to the Sark men their
+misjudgment! Perhaps--well, any way, it was good to be left alone.
+
+He lay there, laxed with the over-strain of all this upsetting, but
+rejoicing placidly in this one more day of life.
+
+He felt like one granted a day's respite as he stands on the scaffold
+with the rope round his neck.
+
+Never had the sun shone so brightly. Never had the silver sea danced so
+merrily. It might be the last he would see of them.
+
+And the sun wheeled on towards Guernsey, and made his deliberate
+preparations for a setting beyond the ordinary; for the sun, you must
+know, takes a very special pride in showing the great cliffs of Sark
+what he can do in the way of transformation scenes and most transcendent
+colouring.
+
+And Stephen Gard lay there under the ridge on L'Etat, with the wonder
+and beauty of it all in his face and in his heart, and said to himself
+that it was probably the last sunset he would ever see, and he was glad
+to have seen it at its best.
+
+He had a vague idea that heaven would be something like that--tenderly
+soft and beautiful, and glowing with radiances of unearthly splendour,
+which whispered to weary hearts of the peace and joy that lay beyond,
+and gently called them home to rest.
+
+His theology was, without doubt, of the most elemental and objective,
+and would not have carried him any great lengths in these days; but, for
+the time being, at all events, it lifted its possessor to a plane of
+thought above his usual, and tended to quietness and peace of mind.
+
+The sky right away into the east was glowing softly with the wonders of
+the sunset, and there the delicate tones changed almost momentarily. As
+his eye followed the tender grace of their transformations, with a
+delight which he could neither have expressed nor explained, it once
+more lighted suddenly upon that which he had been looking for so
+anxiously all day long, and brought him to earth like a broken bird.
+
+Once more a boat had come round the point of Les Laches, and this time
+it was speeding towards him as fast as a sail that was as flat almost as
+a board, and looked to him no more than a thin white cone, could bring
+it.
+
+So they were coming, after all, and this wonderful sunset might be his
+last indeed;--and all the tender beauty of the fleecy clouds thinned and
+paled, and the glory faded as though it had all been but a glorious
+bubble, and that sharp point of white, speeding across the darkening
+sea, had pricked it.
+
+But why on earth were they coming now? They had missed the ebb, and it
+was hours yet to next half-ebb, and they could not hope to land. The
+white waves were boiling all along the ledges, and the sea for twenty
+feet out was a surging dapple of foam laced with seething white bubbles.
+It would be more than any man's life was worth to try and get ashore on
+L'Etat for many an hour yet.
+
+And there was only one boat! What had become of all the others--of the
+threatened invasion in force? He sat and watched it in gloomy wonder.
+
+The boat came racing on. As she cleared Breniere her white sail turned
+to red gold, and the sea below grew purple. There was something white in
+her bows. He got up heavily, doggedly, forced to it against his will,
+and walked along the ridge to the eastern point which commanded the
+landing-place on that side.
+
+There was, without doubt, something white in the bows of the boat, and
+as he stood gazing at it, it took, to his dazed imagination, the strange
+form of Nance waving joyful hands to him.
+
+He drew his hands across his eyes. The storm had been sore on them.
+
+The bristling waves of the Race burst in sheets of spray under the
+glancing bows, but the white spray and the white figure and the pointed
+white sail were all ablaze in the last rays of the sun, and they all
+swam before him as if his head was going round.
+
+She came round Quette d'Amont with a fine sweep, like one bound on
+business of which she had no reason to be ashamed, and dropped her sail
+and lay in the shelter of the rock.
+
+And the white figure in the bows was truly Nance, and she was standing
+and waving and calling to him. And the grey-headed man aft was surely
+Philip Guille, the Senechal, and the faces of the rest were all
+friendly.
+
+He stumbled hastily down to the lower ledges, but the rush and the roar
+there drowned their voices.
+
+What were they trying to tell him? What could they want of him?
+
+The Senechal was standing, hands to mouth, waiting his chance. The
+restless waters below drew back for a moment to gather for a leap, and
+the big voice came booming across the tumult--
+
+"Jump! We'll pick you up! All is well!"
+
+And Gard, without a moment's hesitation, sprang out into the marbled
+foam, and struck out for the boat.
+
+They were all friendly hands that gripped him and hauled him over the
+side, and patted him on the back to get the water out of him--all
+friendly faces that were turned to him; and the dearest face of all,
+lighted with a heavenly gladness, was to him as the face of an angel.
+
+"Tell me!" he gasped, still all astream, wits and clothes alike. And it
+was the Senechal who told him.
+
+"Peter Mauger was killed last night, at the same place as Tom Hamon, and
+in the same way. So these hot-blooded thickheads are convinced at last
+that it wasn't your work."
+
+"Peter Mauger!" he said, gazing vaguely at them all. "But who--"
+
+"We haven't found out yet. But even the thickest of the thickheads can't
+put it down to you"--and the thickheads present grinned in friendly
+fashion, and they ran up the sail with a will, and turned her nose, and
+went racing back to the Creux quicker than they had come.
+
+And Gard sat still with his hand in Nance's two, feeling very weak and
+shaky, and looked vaguely back at L'Etat as it faded and dwindled into a
+dim black triangle of rock.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+HOW HE CAME HOME FROM L'ETAT
+
+
+This is what had happened.
+
+Since Tom Hamon's death, his friend Peter and his widow Julie had, as we
+know, found themselves drawn together by a common detestation of Stephen
+Gard and a common desire for his extinction.
+
+For Peter considered he had been supplanted in Nance's regards, though
+Nance had never regarded him as anything but a nuisance and a boor. And
+Julie considered herself scorned and slighted, though Gard had never
+considered her save as Tom Hamon's wife.
+
+It was they who had stirred up the Sark men against Gard, and they
+missed no opportunity of keeping their ill brew on the boil.
+
+Their offensive alliance brought them much together. Peter was often at
+La Closerie. He was like wax in the hands of the fiery Frenchwoman, and
+she moulded him to her will. The neighbours might have begun to talk,
+but that it was obvious to all that the only bond between them at
+present was their ill-will towards Gard, and in that feeling many shared
+and found nothing strange in Tom's wife and Tom's chief friend joining
+hands to make some one pay for his death.
+
+In time, if it had gone on, the neighbours would doubtless have had
+plenty to say on the subject, for old wives' tongues rattled fast of a
+winter's evening, when they all gathered in this house or that, and sat
+on the sides of the green bed with their feet in the dry fern inside,
+and the oil crasset hanging down in the midst, and plied their needles
+and their tongues and wits all at once, and wrought scandalously good
+guernseys and stockings in spite of it all.
+
+But these were summer evenings yet, and the _veilles_ had not begun, and
+reputations were out at grass till the time came round for their
+inspection and judgment.
+
+And so, when Peter Mauger never reached home the night before this day
+of which we are telling, his old housekeeper, whatever she thought about
+it at the time, only said afterwards that she supposed he had stopped
+somewhere and would turn up all right in the morning, though she
+admitted that he was not in the habit of staying out of a night. Anyway,
+she was an old woman and all alone, and she was not going out to look
+for him at that time of night.
+
+The morning surprised her by his continued absence. Never in his life,
+so far as she knew, had he behaved like this before. Vituperation of him
+gave place to anxiety about him.
+
+She questioned the neighbours. All they knew was that he had been seen
+going down to Little Sark soon after sunset.
+
+"That black Frenchwoman of Tom Hamon's twists him round her finger,"
+said one.
+
+"You tie him up, Mrs. Guille," chuckled another, "or sure as beans
+she'll steal him from you and leave you in the cold."
+
+And then, who should they see coming striding along the road but Madame
+Julie herself, and evidently in a hurry;--in a state of red-hot
+excitement, too, as she drew near. And they waited, hands on hips, to
+hear what she was up to now.
+
+"Where's Peter?" she demanded, a long way in advance. "Tell him I want
+him. That man Gard is still on L'Etat, though those fools who went
+across for him couldn't find him. Cre nom! What are you all staring at,
+then?"
+
+"Where's our Peter?" demanded Mrs. Guille shrilly, with the strident
+note of fear in her voice, as she becked and bobbed towards the
+Frenchwoman like an aged cormorant.
+
+"Peter? I'm asking you. I want him. Where is he?"
+
+"He went to Little Sark last night, and he's never come home."
+
+"Never come home? Why, what's taken him? If he'd been with me last night
+he'd have seen something! That Nance Hamon swam across to the rock with
+nothing on but her shift to take food to Gard, and I caught her at
+it--the shameless hussy!"
+
+"Maybe Peter's heard of it an' gone across with 'em again," suggested
+one. "He was terrible hot against Gard."
+
+"And reason he had to be hot against him," cried Julie. "Who'll find out
+for me where he's got to, and when they're going out after Gard? I would
+go too and see the end of him."
+
+A couple of burly husbands came rolling round the corner towards their
+breakfasts and caught her words.
+
+"Doubt you'll have to go alone, mistress," said one, phlegmatically.
+"There's ghosts on L'Etat, they do say, though sure the one John
+Drillot brought across was dead enough."
+
+"If he's there," said the other, plumbing Julie's feelings, "he's safe
+as a pig in a pen."
+
+"Where's our Peter?" demanded Mrs. Guille.
+
+"Peter? I d'n know. What's come of him?" and they stared blankly at her.
+
+"He went to Little Sark last night to see her"--with a beck of distaste
+towards Julie--"and he's never come home."
+
+The men looked from the speaker to Julie, as though the next word
+necessarily lay with her.
+
+"I never set eyes on him. I was out after that girl. I came here to tell
+him about Gard. Has he been to the harbour?"
+
+"No, he hasn't. We are from there now."
+
+"He's maybe with some of them arranging about going to L'Etat," said
+Julie. "I'll go and find out;" and she set off along the road past the
+windmill.
+
+The morning passed in fruitless enquiries. She asked this one and that,
+every one she could think of, if they had seen Peter, and was met
+everywhere with meaning grins and point-blank denials. Apparently no one
+had set eyes on Peter, and every one seemed to imply that she ought io
+know more about him than any one else.
+
+It was past mid-day before she was back at Vauroque, but Mrs. Guilie was
+still standing in the doorway of Peter's empty house as if she had been
+looking out for news of him ever since.
+
+"Eh b'en? Have you found him?" she cried.
+
+"Not a finger of him!" snapped Julie savagely, tired out with her
+fruitless labours.
+
+"Then he's come to some ill, ba su. And if he has--ma fe, it's
+you!--it's you!" The old lady's scream of denunciation choked itself
+with its own excess, and the neighbours came running out to learn the
+news.
+
+Stolid minds travel in grooves, and old Mrs. Guille's had been groping
+along possibilities of all kinds, clinging at the same time to the hope
+that Peter would still turn up all right.
+
+Now that her hope was shattered her mind dropped naturally into a grim
+groove, along which it had taken a tentative trip during the morning and
+had recoiled from with a shudder.
+
+The last time Mrs. Tom Hamon had come seeking a man who was missing,
+that man had been found under the Coupee, and so old Mrs. Guille set oft
+for the Coupee as fast as her old legs and her want of breath and
+general agitation would let her.
+
+"Nom de Dieu! What--?" began Julie, with twisted black brows, and then
+drifted on with the rest in Mrs. Guille's wake--all except one or two
+housewives whose men were due for dinner, and knew they must be fed
+whatever had come to Peter Mauger.
+
+"Gaderabotin!" said one of these as he came up, and stood scratching his
+head and gazing down the road after them. "What's taken them all?"
+
+"Think because they found Tom Hamon there, they'll find Peter too,"
+guffawed another, and they rolled on into their homes, chuckling at the
+simplicity of women and children.
+
+Arrived at the Coupee, the little mob of sensation-seekers peered
+fearfully about. One small boy, cleverer or more groovy-minded than the
+rest, struck off along the headland to the left. It was from there
+Charles Guille had seen Tom Hamon. Perhaps from there he would see
+something, too.
+
+And no sooner was he there, where he could see to the foot of the cliffs
+in Coupee Bay, than he commenced to dance and wave his arms like a mad
+thing, because the words he wanted to shout choked him tight so that he
+could hardly breathe.
+
+They streamed out along the cliff and huddled there, struck chill with
+fright in spite of the blazing sun.
+
+For there, under the cliff, in the same spot as they found Tom Hamon,
+lay another dark, huddled figure, and they knew it must be Peter.
+
+The finding of Tom had filled them with anger against Gard. The finding
+of Peter filled them with fear.
+
+Gard had sufficed as explanation and scapegoat for Tom's death, and as
+vent for their feelings. But what of Peter's?
+
+It had not been Gard, then? And if not Gard, who?
+
+For, whoever it was, he was still at large, and any of them might be the
+next.
+
+There were new terrors in the eyes that gazed so wildly on the narrow
+white path and the towering pinnacles of the Coupee. They had been
+familiar with it all, all their lives, but suddenly it had become
+strange to them.
+
+If grisly Death, all bones and scythe, had come stalking along it before
+their eyes at that moment, they would have shrieked, no doubt, and
+fallen flat, but he would have no more than answered to their feelings
+and fulfilled their expectations.
+
+As it was, when the Seigneur's big white stallion stuck his head over
+the green dyke behind them, and gave a shrill neigh at the unexpected
+sight of so many people in a field which was usually occupied only by
+Charles Guille's two mild-eyed cows and their calves, the women screamed
+and the children lied.
+
+"Man doux! but I thought it was the devil himself," said old Mrs.
+Guille. "Oui-gia!" and shook an angry fist at him.
+
+But the discoverer of the body was already away along the road to
+Vauroque, covering the ground like a little incarnation of ill-news.
+
+The exertion of running cleared away the choking, if it took his breath.
+He shouted as he drew near the houses.
+
+"Ah, bah!" growled one of the diners inside. "What's to do now, then?"
+
+"He's there ... Peter ... under Coupee ... Where Tom Hamon...." panted
+the news-bearer as he tore past to his own home. And the rest of
+Vauroque emptied itself into the road and stood looking along it, as the
+stragglers came up, white-faced and wild-eyed.
+
+"He's there," confirmed one woman, twisting up her loosened hair. "And
+just same place where Tom Hamon lay."
+
+"'Tweren't Gard killed _him_, then," said one of the diners, chewing
+over that thought with his last mouthful.
+
+"Nor Tom neither, then, maybe," said another.
+
+"We've bin on wrong tack, then;" and they went off round the corner at a
+speed their build would hardly have credited them with.
+
+One to the Senechal and one to the Doctor, and then to the Creux, both
+telling the news as they went. So that when the officials came hurrying
+through the tunnel the greater part of the Island was waiting for them
+on the shingle, except those who preferred the wider view from the
+cliff above.
+
+Some of the men had been for pulling across at once, but they were
+overborne.
+
+"Doctor said he'd like to have seen him afore he was moved last time,"
+said old John de Carteret weightily, and would not let a boat go out
+till the Doctor and the Senechal came.
+
+It was all waiting for them the moment they arrived, however, and they
+stepped in and swung away round Les Laches, and three other boats
+followed them so closely that it looked almost like a gruesome race who
+should get there first.
+
+There was little talking in any of the boats, but there was some solid
+hard thinking, in a mazed kind of way.
+
+Until they knew more of the facts, indeed, they scarce knew what to
+think yet. But more than one of them remembered disturbedly how they had
+gone in force two days before to fetch Gard off his lonely rock, or to
+make an end of him there; and here they were going in force on a very
+different errand--an errand which, they could not help seeing, would
+bring him off his rock in a very different way, if this present matter
+was what it looked as if it might be.
+
+And the Doctor was not long in giving them the facts, when they had run
+up on to the shingle, and then crunched through it to the place where
+Peter's body lay under the steep black cliff--in the exact spot where
+Tom Hamon's had lain just eighteen days before.
+
+But that it was undoubtedly Peter's face and body, those who had come
+after Tom the last time might have thought they were going through their
+previous experience over again. It was all so like.
+
+They all stood round in a dark, silent group while the Doctor carefully
+examined the body, and the Senechal looked on with stern and troubled
+face.
+
+"It is most extraordinary," said the Doctor, straightening up from his
+task at last, and his face, too, was knitted with perplexity, but had
+something else in it besides. "This man has been done to death in
+exactly the same way as Hamon"--a rustle of surprise shook the group of
+silent onlookers. "The head has been beaten in just as Hamon's was--with
+some blunt rounded tool, I should say. These other wounds and contusions
+are the results of his fall down the cliff. He has been dead at least
+eight hours. Lift him carefully, men. We can do nothing more
+here--unless by chance the one who did it flung his weapon after him,
+and we could find it."
+
+They scattered, and searched the whole dark bay minutely, but found
+nothing. Then with rough gentleness they bore the body to the boat and
+laid it under the thwarts.
+
+"Men!" said the Senechal weightily, as they were just about to climb
+back into their boats. "This matter brings another matter home to all
+our hearts. You have been persecuting another man under the belief that
+he killed Tom Hamon. From what some of us knew of Mr. Gard, we were
+certain he could have had no hand in it. This, I take it, proves it?" He
+looked at the Doctor.
+
+"Undoubtedly!" nodded the Doctor. "The man who killed this one killed
+the other, and that man could not be Stephen Gard, for he is on L'Etat."
+
+"It's God's mercy that you haven't Mr. Gard's blood on your heads. Some
+of you, I know, have done your best that way. Suppose you had killed
+him that other night--what would you have felt as you stood here to-day?
+Take that thought home with you, and may God keep you from like
+misjudgment in the future!"
+
+And they had not a word to say for themselves, but crawled silently
+aboard, and in silence pulled back to Creux Harbour.
+
+Once only old John de Carteret spoke to the Senechal, soon after they
+had started.
+
+"One of them"--nodding over at the boats behind--"could go to the rock
+and bring him off," he suggested.
+
+"I thought of that, but there's one I want to go with me. She'll be down
+at the Creux, I expect, and we'll go as soon as we've disposed of this."
+
+There was a very different feeling visible in the silent crowd that
+awaited them at the harbour this time from that manifested on the last
+occasion, Then, it was a sympathetic anger that united them all in a
+common feeling against the perpetrator of the deed. Now--even before the
+whisper had run round that Peter Mauger had been done to death in the
+same way as Tom Hamon--fear was among them, and doubt. Fear of they knew
+not exactly what, and doubt of they knew not whom.
+
+But here were two men done to death in their midst, and the man on whom
+all their suspicions had settled in the first case could not possibly
+have had anything to do with the second, and so had most likely had
+nothing to do with either--in which case the man who had was still at
+large among them, and no man's life was safe, much less any woman's or
+child's.
+
+Their thoughts did not run, perhaps, quite so clearly as that, but that
+was the result of it all, and their faces showed it. Furthermore, every
+man and woman there began at once to cast about in his and her mind for
+the possible murderer, and men looked at the neighbours whom they had
+known all their lives, with lurking suspicions in their eyes and the
+consideration of strange possibilities in their minds.
+
+Tom Hamon's death had bound them closer together; Peter Mauger's set
+them all apart. The strange dead man up in the school-house added to
+their discomfort.
+
+It was not until the hastily-constructed litter with its gruesome burden
+had been sent off to the Boys' School, in charge of the constables and
+the Doctor, that the Senechal caught sight of Nance's eager white face
+and anxious eyes, in the crowd that lingered still in answer to another
+whisper that had flown round.
+
+If they were at once pig-headed and hot-blooded and suspicious, they
+were also warm-hearted and willing to atone for a mistake--once they
+were sure of it.
+
+No crowd followed Peter on his last journey but one, though the whole
+Island had swarmed after Tom Hamon.
+
+They wanted to see the man who would have been killed for killing Tom,
+though he didn't do it, but for--circumstances, and his own pluck and
+endurance.
+
+And when the Senechal beckoned to one of the circumstances, and put his
+hand on her slim shoulder, and said--
+
+"We are going for him. I thought you would like to come too," her face
+went rosy with gratitude, and the brave little hands clasped up on to
+her breast, as she murmured--
+
+"Oh, M. le Senechal!" and choked at anything more.
+
+Those nearest gave her rough words of encouragement.
+
+"Cheer up, Nance! You'll soon have him back!"
+
+"That's a brave garche! Don't cry about it now!"
+
+"We'll make it up to him, lass. We'll all come and dance at the
+wedding"--and so on.
+
+But the Senechal patted her on the shoulder and asked--
+
+"And where is your brother? He should come, too. I hear you have both
+been in this matter."
+
+"Ah, monsieur!" she said, with brimming eyes and a pathetic little lift
+and fall of the hand, which expressed far more than she could put into
+words. "We fear ... we fear he is drowned. He swam out to the rock taking
+food, and ... and ... we have not seen him since;" and her hand was over
+her face and the tears streaming through.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Another!" said the Senechal, aghast. "When, child? When was
+this?"
+
+"The night after the storm, monsieur."
+
+"Perhaps he is there, on the rock."
+
+"No, monsieur. I was over there myself last night. He never got there,
+and we fear he must be drowned."
+
+"You were over there, child? Why, how did you get across?"
+
+"I swam, monsieur;" and he stared at her in amazement.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! You make up for some of the others," he said
+bluntly. "Come then, and we will make sure of this one, anyhow;" and he
+led the way to John de Carteret's boat, and all the people gave them a
+cheer as they pulled out of the harbour to catch the breeze off the
+Laches.
+
+Then the crowd waited for their return, and talked by snatches of all
+these strange happenings, and discussed and discounted the chances of
+Bernel's being still alive.
+
+"For, see you, the Race! And that was the first night after the storm,
+and it would be running like the deuce, bidemme!" "It's best not to know
+how to swim if it leads you to do things like that, oui-gia!" "When a
+man's time comes, he cuts his cleft in the water, whether he can swim or
+not, crais b'en!" "And that slip of a Nance had been over there last
+night--par made, some folks have the courage!" "All the same, it was
+madness--"
+
+But behind all the broken chatter, in every mind was the grim question,
+"Who is it, then, that is doing these things amongst us?" And there was
+a feeling of mighty discomfort abroad.
+
+All the same, they cheered vigorously as the boat came speeding back,
+and they saw Gard sitting between Nance and the Senechal, and crowded
+round as it ran up the shingle, and would have lifted him out and
+carried him shoulder-high through the tunnel and up the road, if he
+would have had it.
+
+They saw how his imprisonment on the rock--"Ma fe, think of it!--all
+through that storm, too!"--had told upon him. His cheeks were hollow,
+and his eyes sunken, and he looked very weary--"and, man doux, no
+wonder, after eighteen days on L'Etat!"--though their friendly shouts
+had put a touch of colour in his face and a spark in his eyes for the
+moment.
+
+"Now, away home, all of you!" ordered the Senechal. "We've all had
+enough to think about for one day. To-morrow we will see what is to be
+done."
+
+"Too much!" croaked one old crone, who had something of a reputation
+among her neighbours. "What I want to know is--who killed Peter Mauger?"
+
+And that was the question that occupied most minds in Sark that night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+HOW THEY LAID TRAPS FOR THE DEVIL
+
+
+The Doctor insisted on taking care of Gard. He took him into his own
+house at Dixcart, and began at once a course of treatment based on
+common-sense and the then most scientific attainment, and calculated to
+repair the waste of the Rock and build him up anew in the shortest time
+compatible with an efficient and permanent cure.
+
+Even when Gard felt quite himself again and would have returned to his
+work, the genial autocrat would not hear of it.
+
+"Just you stop here, my boy," he ordered. "An experience such as you
+have had needs some getting over. You can stand a good rest and some
+fattening up, and those ---- mines must wait."
+
+Meanwhile, the Island was in a smoulder of suspicion and superstition.
+
+No one had yet ventured openly to point the finger at any reasonably
+possible doer of deeds so dark. Behind carefully closed doors of a
+night, indeed, here and there a whisper suggested that the Frenchwoman
+might be at the bottom of it all. But the mistake that had already been
+made, and the consequences that came so terribly near to completing it
+beyond repair, made them all cautious of open speech or action.
+
+Gard's story explained the mystery of the dead stranger and relieved the
+public mind to that extent.
+
+The Senechal was disposed to agree with his views on the matter.
+
+"I never heard of those caves on L'Etat," he said musingly, as they sat
+over their pipes one night; "and I'm sure no one else knew of them. But
+there was much free-trading round here in the old times, and I've no
+doubt many a Customs man disappeared and was never heard of again, just
+like this one. All the Islands felt very sore about the new regulations,
+and our people stick at nothing when their blood is up."
+
+"They do not," said Gard feelingly.
+
+"I'd like to get into that inner cave," said the Doctor longingly.
+
+"You couldn't," said Gard, looking at his size and girth. "It's a mighty
+tight squeeze under the slab, and that tunnel would beat you. Unless
+you've been brought up to that kind of thing, you couldn't stand it. It
+would give you nightmares for the rest of your life."
+
+"That's a rare lass, that little Nance," said the Senechal. "There's
+some good in Sark after all, Mr. Gard."
+
+"She was an angel to me," said Gard with feeling. "If it had not been
+for her, I could never have held out. Not for what she brought me, but
+the fact that she came. But it was terrible to me to think of her coming
+through that Race. I begged her not to, but she would have her way.
+Three times she risked her life for me--"
+
+"Three times!" said the Senechal. "Ma fe, but she's a garche to be proud
+of!"
+
+"Ay, and to be more than proud of," said Gard. "She has given me my
+life, and I will give it all to making her happy."
+
+"I wouldn't swim across to L'Etat for any woman in the world," said the
+Doctor. "Because, in the first place, I couldn't. She must have nerves
+of steel, to say nothing of muscles. In the dark, too! And you wouldn't
+think it to look at her."
+
+"It needed more than nerves or muscles," said Gard quietly.
+
+Not a man among the Islanders--much less a woman--would go anywhere near
+the Coupee after dark. Even Nance confessed to a preference for daylight
+passages. And Gard, when he went down into Little Sark for a walk, as
+part of his cure, could not repress a cold shiver whenever he passed the
+fatal spot where two men had gone over to their deaths.
+
+All the old wives' tales were dug up and passed along, growing as they
+went. Little eyes and mouths grew permanently rounded with horrors, and
+the ground was thoroughly well spaded and planted with sturdy shoots
+warranted to yield a noisome harvest of superstition for generations to
+come.
+
+The occupants of Clos Bourel and Plaisance carefully locked their doors
+of a night now.
+
+Old Mrs. Carre at Plaisance vowed she had heard the White Horses go
+past, on the nights before Tom Hamon and Peter were found. And every one
+knew that when the ghostly horses were heard, some one was going to die.
+But as she had said nothing about it before, her contribution to the
+general uneasiness was received with respect before her face but with
+open doubt behind her back.
+
+Old Nikki Never-mind-his-name--lest his descendants, if he had any,
+take umbrage at the matter--swore that he had not only seen the ghostly
+steed pass Vauroque in the dead of night, but that it bore a rider whose
+head was carried carefully in his right hand. Unfortunately, the
+headless one passed so quickly that Nikki said he could not distinguish
+his features--having looked for them first in the wrong place--and so he
+could not say for certain who the next to die would be; but from the
+knowing wag of his head the neighbours were of opinion that he knew more
+than he chose to tell, and he gained quite a reputation thereby.
+
+But, even here again, doubts were cast upon the matter by some,
+especially those who were acquainted with the old gentleman's
+proclivities towards raw spirits of the material kind that paid the
+lightest of duties in Guernsey.
+
+All these and very many similar matters were discussed by the
+Doctor--who disturbed their minds with horrific accounts of homicidal
+mania taking possession of apparently innocent souls--and the Senechal
+and the Vicar and Stephen Gard, as they sat over their pipes of an
+evening in the Doctor's house. But chiefly the great and troublesome
+question of "Who?"
+
+They were all of one mind that the matter must be looked into. The
+feeling that a danger was loose in the Island, and might at any moment
+fall upon any man, woman, or child, was past endurance. The suspicion
+that It might be any one of those they met every day was insufferable.
+
+The only difficulty was to decide how to look into it--what to do, and
+how.
+
+Each day they feared to hear of some new outrage. But until the
+perpetrator was discovered they could do nothing towards his
+suppression. And, on the other hand, it looked as though they could do
+nothing towards his discovery until he perpetrated some new outrage.
+
+It was Gard who suggested they should watch the Coupee every night,
+armed, and unknown to any but themselves.
+
+And, after much discussion, following out his idea, he and the Senechal
+and the Doctor, who could bowl over a rabbit as well as any of them, lay
+in the heather, on the common above the cutting on the Little Sark side,
+for many nights, guns in hand, and eyes and ears on the strain, but saw
+and heard nothing.
+
+One night, indeed, when there was a high wind, the Doctor's marrow
+crawled in his backbone at the sound of groanings and moanings and most
+dolorous cries for help, coming up out of black Coupee Bay, where they
+had picked up Tom Hamon's and Peter Mauger's dead bodies.
+
+He sweated cold terrors, for he was on the east headland right above the
+bay, till the Senechal crawled over to him and whispered--
+
+"Hear 'em?"
+
+"Y-y-yes. What the d-d-deuce and all--"
+
+"Knew you'd wonder what it was--"
+
+"W-w-wonder?" chittered the Doctor.
+
+"It's only the wind in the cave at the corner below here--"
+
+"Ah! Thought it must be something of that kind," said the Doctor through
+his teeth, clenched hard to keep them in order. "Don't wonder folks
+fight shy of the Coupee. Sounded uncommonly like spirits. Might give
+some folks the jumps."
+
+On another dark and windy night it was the Senechal's turn to get
+something of a fright.
+
+As he lay in the heather, gun in hand, and well wrapped up in his big
+cloak, with all his faculties concentrated on the wavering pathway
+below, it seemed to him that he heard slow heavy footsteps approaching.
+
+His nerves were strung tight. He craned his head to look down into the
+cutting, when suddenly there came a wild snuffle at the back of his
+neck, and as he jumped up with a startled yelp, one part anger and nine
+parts fright, a horse that had grazed down upon him in the darkness,
+leaped back with a snort and a squeal and disappeared into the night.
+
+"Ga'rabotin! but I thought it was the devil himself," said the Senechal,
+as the others came hurrying up. "Why the deuce can't people tie up their
+horses as they do their cows? I'll bring it up at the next Chef
+Plaids"--which consideration restored his shaken equanimity somewhat,
+and made him feel himself again.
+
+Nothing more came of all their watching, and over a jorum of something
+hot one night, after they had returned to the Doctor's house, it was
+himself who said--
+
+"After all, it stands to reason. Some evil-possessed soul seeks victims,
+and has fixed on the Coupee as the place best fitted for his work. No
+one now goes near the Coupee at night--ergo, no victims; ergo,
+no--er--no manifestations."
+
+"H'm! Very clever!" said the Senechal, through his pipe. "Where does
+that leave us, then?"
+
+"We must have a decoy, of course."
+
+"H'm! You'll not get any Sark man to act as decoy to the devil. Besides,
+they would talk, and that would upset the whole thing."
+
+"What about one of your men, Gard?"
+
+"It's a dangerous game for any man to play, Doctor.... I don't quite see
+how one could ask it of them,"--and after a pause of concentrated
+thought and many slow smoke-puffs--"What would you say to me?" and all
+their eyes settled on him--the Doctor's professionally.
+
+"Surely you have suffered enough in this matter, Mr. Gard," suggested
+the Vicar.
+
+"I would give a good deal, and do a good deal, to get to the bottom of
+it all. Things will never settle down properly till this matter is
+disposed of."
+
+That, of course, was obvious to them all, but all had the same feeling
+that he had already suffered enough in the matter.
+
+But consideration of the Doctor's suggestion in all its aspects only
+served to convince them that, if any such scheme was to be carried out,
+it could only be done among themselves, and its dangers were obvious.
+
+It was not a matter to be lightly undertaken by any man. For whoever
+undertook the role of decoy, undoubtedly took his life in his hands; and
+they spent many evenings over it.
+
+The Vicar was absolutely against the idea, but had no alternative to
+suggest.
+
+"It is simply playing with death," said he, "and no man has a right to
+do that."
+
+"It means a good deal for the Island if we can clear it up," said the
+Senechal.
+
+But, by degrees, they got to discussion of how it might be done, and
+from that to the actual doing was only a heroic step.
+
+The decoy's head must be well padded, of course, for the heads of both
+victims had been the points of attack.
+
+He must be well armed also, and being forewarned and more, he ought to
+be able to give a certain account of himself.
+
+And then the Doctor and the Senechal would be close at hand and on the
+keen look-out for emergencies.
+
+The Doctor undertook to pad his head with something in the nature of a
+turban under his hat, which, he vowed, would resist the impact of iron
+blows better than metal itself.
+
+"Leave my ears loose, anyway," said Gard. "I'd like at all events to be
+able to hear it coming."
+
+The Senechal had a weapon, part pistol and the rest blunderbuss, which
+had belonged to his father, who had always referred to it affectionately
+as his "dunderbush." It had seen strange doings in its time, but had
+been so long retired from the active list, that he undertook to load and
+fire it himself before he said any more about it.
+
+And he did it next day, with a full charge, in his meadow, with the
+assistance of a gate-post and a long cord, and reported it at night as
+in excellent order, and calculated to blow into smithereens anything
+blowable that stood up before it within the short limit of its range.
+
+At this stage in its proceedings the Vicar reluctantly retired from the
+Committee of Public Safety. He acknowledged the sore need of ending the
+suspicious and superstitious fears which were beginning to affect the
+life of the community in various ways. But he could not see his way to
+any participation in means so dangerous to the life of one of their
+number as those suggested.
+
+He did his best to dissuade Gard from it. He even reminded him of the
+duty he owed to Nance. She had undoubtedly saved his life, and she had a
+premier claim upon his consideration--and so on.
+
+To all of which Gard fully assented.
+
+"But," he said gravely, "we are at a deadlock in this other matter, and
+it is just barely possible that this plan may clear it all up. I can't
+say I'm very sanguine that it will. On the other hand, I really don't
+see that any great harm can come to me. The others probably suffered
+because they were taken unawares. I shall go in the hope of meeting it,
+and shall be ready for it. Unless, Vicar, you really think it is the
+devil or something of that sort?"
+
+"I don't know what to think," said the Vicar solemnly. "I cannot bring
+myself to believe any of our Sark men would do such dreadful things. I
+look at each man I meet and say to myself, 'Now, can it be possible it
+is you?--or you?--or you?'--and it does not seem possible; and yet--"
+
+"And yet some one did it, Vicar," said the Doctor, brusquely, "and
+that's just the trouble. Until we find out _who_ did it, any man may
+have done it, and we all look at everybody else, just as you do, and say
+to ourselves, 'Is it you?--or you?--or you?' Though I'm bound to say
+I've not got the length yet of doubting either you or the Senechal, or
+Gard, and I don't think it's myself. It might quite conceivably be any
+one of us, however, prowling about in our sleep and utterly unconscious
+afterwards of evil-doing."
+
+"A most awful possibility," said the Vicar. "God grant it may turn out
+differently from that."
+
+"You never know what this inexplicable machine may do," said the Doctor,
+tapping his head. "However, we'll hope for the best, and I think the
+Senechal and I ought to be able to see Gard through without any very
+disastrous results. If we succeed, he will deserve better of this Island
+than any man I know--and a sight more than this Island deserves of him.
+I quite understand," he said, as Gard looked quickly up. "And it does
+you credit, my boy; but there are not very many men would do it."
+
+"Well, I'm afraid I must leave you to it," said the Vicar, and did so.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+HOW THEY LAID THE DEVIL BY THE HEELS
+
+
+When it began to be noised abroad that Gard was going to and fro across
+the Coupee, even by night, as if nothing had ever happened there, the
+Sark men shrugged their shoulders and said, "Pardie!--sooner him than
+me--oui-gia!"
+
+It was obviously necessary, however, that this should be known. Even the
+cormorant does not fish where fish are never found.
+
+But when he went to and fro by night, he went mailed--according to the
+Doctor's ideas--and armed--according to the Senechal's; and each night
+the Doctor and the Senechal went quietly down, some time in advance, and
+lay hidden on the headlands with their guns, and never took their eyes
+off him and all his surroundings, while he was in sight.
+
+And Gard, in nearing the Little Sark cutting, always kept carefully to
+the right-hand side of the path, though it was somewhat crumbly there
+and had fallen away down the slope towards Grande Greve. For he had gone
+cautiously over the ground beforehand, and decided that if there was any
+possibility of being knocked overboard unawares, he would prefer to go
+over the much gentler slope on the right, where one might even at a
+pinch find lodgment among the rubble and bushes, than over the sheer
+fall into Coupee Bay, where you could drop a stone almost to the shingle
+below.
+
+Nance knew nothing whatever of the matter, or she would undoubtedly and
+most reasonably have had something to say about it. But knowledge of it
+could only upset her, and so perhaps himself, and he had carefully kept
+it from her. Little Sark, moreover, was more isolated than ever by
+reason of the Coupee mystery, and word of his goings and comings--save
+such as had La Closerie for their object in the day-time--never reached
+her.
+
+They were in grievous sorrow down there over Bernel. Gard still preached
+hope, but each day's delay in its realisation seemed to them to make it
+the more unlikely, and their hearts were very sore.
+
+Julie had gone about her work for days after Gard's return like a bereft
+tigress. Then one morning she locked the door of her house, put the key
+in her pocket, and took the cutter for Guernsey; and none regretted her
+going.
+
+And, as it turned out, though that had not been her intention at the
+time, it was the last Sark was to see of her. Rumours reached them later
+of her marriage to a fellow-countryman, with whom she had gone to
+France. The one thing they knew for certain was that she never came back
+to La Closerie, and after due interval, and consequent on other matters,
+they broke open the door and resumed possession of the house.
+
+Night after night Gard slowly crossed the Coupee, lingered in its
+shadows, went on into Little Sark, and came lingering back.
+
+And night after night the Doctor and the Senechal lay in the heather of
+the headlands, guns in hand, waiting for something that never came, and
+then going stiffly home to one or other of their houses, to lubricate
+their joints and console their disappointment with hot punch and much
+tobacco.
+
+"I'm afraid it's no go," was the Doctor's grudging verdict at last, on
+the fourteenth blank night.
+
+"Let's keep on," said Gard. "Things generally happen just when you don't
+expect them."
+
+"That's so," grunted the Senechal. And they decided to keep on.
+
+Fortunately, the nights were warm and mostly fine. When neither moon nor
+stars afforded him light enough for a safe crossing, he took a lantern,
+so that no one who desired to knock him on the head need miss the chance
+for lack of seeing him.
+
+And when, after their lonely waiting, the watchers in the heather saw
+the lantern come joggling down the steep cutting from Sark, they braced
+themselves for eventualities, and hefted their guns, and pricked up
+their ears and made ready.
+
+And when it had wavered slowly along the path between the great pits of
+darkness on either hand, and had gone joggling on into Little Sark, they
+sank back into their formes with each his own particular exclamation,
+and lay waiting till the light came back.
+
+Times of tension and endurance which told upon them all, but bore most
+heavily on Gard, since the onslaught, when it came, must fall upon him,
+and the absolute ignorance as to how and when and whence it might come,
+kept every nerve within him strung like a fiddle-string.
+
+It was the eeriest experience he had ever had, that nightly trip across
+the Coupee;--bad enough when moon or stars afforded him vague and
+distorted glimpses of his ghostly surroundings:--ten times worse when
+the flicker of his lantern barely kept him to the path, and the broken
+gleams ran over the rugged edges and tumbled into the black gulfs at the
+sides;--when every starting shadow might be a murderer leaping out upon
+him, every foot of the walling darkness the murderer's cover, and every
+step he took a step towards death.
+
+A trip, I assure you, that not many men would have been capable of. For
+it did not by any means end with the Coupee. When he got to bed of a
+night, and fell asleep at last, he was still crossing the Coupee with
+his joggling lantern all night long, and suffered things in dreams
+compared with which even his actual experiences were but holiday jaunts.
+
+And at times these grisly imaginings came back upon him as he actually
+walked the narrow path next night, and it was all he could do to keep
+his head and not fling the lantern into the depths of the pit and follow
+it.
+
+They were all getting exceedingly weary of the whole business; indeed,
+it was getting on all their nerves in a way which threatened
+consequences, when, mercifully, the end came--suddenly, not at all as
+they had looked for it, quite outside all their expectation.
+
+It was one of the shrouded nights. The Doctor and the Senechal, flat in
+the heather, saw the lantern issue from the Sark cutting and come
+joggling towards them. They heard a snort of surprise behind them, but
+gave it no special heed. The Senechal grinned briefly at remembrance of
+his fright when the beast snuffled down his neck that other night.
+
+Then, this is what happened.
+
+Gard--his lantern in his left hand, and the Senechal's father's
+"dunderbush" in his right--his eyes pinching spooks out of every inch of
+the black wall about him, and every string at its tightest--had reached
+the crumbly bit of path near the Little Sark side, when, like a clap of
+thunder out of a blue sky, the black silence of the cutting vomited
+uproar--the wild clang and beat of what sounded, in that hollow space,
+like the trampling of a thousand dancing hoofs--shrill neighings and
+whinnyings and screamings, all blended into an indescribable and
+blood-curdling clamour that gashed the night like an outrage.
+
+And then, before even he had time to wonder, the great white stallion
+was upon him--dancing on its hind legs on that narrow path like an
+acrobat, towering above him to twice his own height, striking savagely
+down at him with its great front feet, screaming like a fiend.
+
+He had no time to think. His left arm and the lantern went up with the
+natural instinct of defence. Just one glimpse he got--and never forgot
+it--of vicious white eyes and teeth, flapping red nostrils, wild-flying
+hair, and huge pawing feet descending on him, with the dirty white hair
+splaying out all round them as they came down. Then his right hand went
+up also, and he fired full into all these things. The lantern and the
+blunderbuss went spinning into the gulf, the great feet beat him to the
+ground, and rose and jabbed down at him with all the vicious might that
+lay behind them--the savage white muzzle shrilling its blood-curdling
+screams of triumph all the while--and all this in the space of a second.
+"Good God!" cried the Doctor, craning over the eastern bank of the
+cutting, but fearful of firing into the turmoil lest he should hit Gard,
+so dropped himself bodily over on to the path.
+
+Then the Senechal's Sark eyes saw the great white head, with its flying
+veil of hair, as it towered up for another vicious jab at the fallen
+man, and he emptied both barrels of his gun into it.
+
+A wild scream that shrilled along the night and woke Plaisance and Clos
+Bourel and Vauroque, and the great white devil reared to his fullest
+with wildly beating forefeet, toppled over backwards, and disappeared
+with one hideous thud and a final crash on the shingle of Coupee Bay.
+
+It was worse than they had ever dreamed--as bad almost as some of Gard's
+own nightmares.
+
+"Good God! Good God! Good God!" babbled the Doctor, as he groped in the
+dark for what might be left of their unfortunate decoy.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" gasped the Senechal, with catching
+breath and shaking legs, as he ran round to join him in the search.
+
+But there was no sign of Gard.
+
+"Run, man!--Plaisance--a light!" jerked the Senechal.
+
+"I can't see," groaned the Doctor.
+
+"I'll go!" and he set off at the best pace his years and his shaking
+legs could compass.
+
+Plaisance was standing at its doors, trembling still at that fearsome
+cry, and wondering if it was, perchance, the last trump.
+
+At sight of the panting figure coming up from the Coupee, it scuttled
+and banged the doors tight. "Open! Open, you fools!" cried the
+Senechal, and flung himself against the first door, while those inside,
+under the sure belief that they were keeping out the devil, heaped
+themselves against it to prevent him.
+
+"Dolts! Idiots! Fools!" he cried. "It's me--the Senechal. I want your
+help!" and at that a man peeped out from the next door to make sure this
+was not just another wile of the devil.
+
+"A lantern! Quick!" ordered the Senechal. "And a blanket and a rope--and
+get ready a bed for a wounded man. Come you with me and help!"
+
+"Mais, mon Gyu----!" began the man.
+
+"We've killed the devil, and the Doctor's down there with him----"
+
+"But we don't want him here, M. le Senechal," quavered a woman's voice,
+in terror.
+
+"Fools! It's Mr. Gard that is hurt. The devil's down in Coupee Bay, and
+we've killed him for you."
+
+"Ah then, Gyu marchi! Here's a blanket--and the lantern--rope's in barn.
+You get a bed ready," to the woman, and they went off towards the
+Coupee.
+
+And mighty glad the Doctor was to see them coming. He had begun to fear
+the Senechal had lost his head and made a bolt for home.
+
+He had been sitting under the bank of the cutting as the surest way of
+keeping out of one or other of the black gulfs. But the interval had
+given him time to recover himself, and he jumped up at once, all ready
+for business, and hailed them.
+
+"Down this side, I think," he said, and they swung the lantern over the
+Grande Greve slope below the bit of crumbly pathway.
+
+"Le velas!" said Thomas Carre, and handed the lantern to the Senechal,
+and let himself heavily over the side, and groped his way down to the
+motionless form among the bramble bushes.
+
+"Pardie, he is dead, I do think!" as he bent over it.
+
+"Let's see!" said the Doctor's quick voice at his elbow. "Hand down the
+light;" and the Senechal waited above in grievous anxiety.
+
+"Not dead," said the Doctor at last. "Stunned and badly knocked about.
+He'll come round. Now, how are we to get him up?"
+
+"Here's a blanket--and a rope."
+
+"Good! The blanket!... So!... Now--gently, my man!... Got it, Senechal?
+Right! Ease him down on to the path. That's right! Give me a hand, will
+you? My legs aren't as limber as they used to be. Now we'll get him on
+to a bed and see what the damage is;" and they set off slowly for
+Plaisance.
+
+"My God, Senechal! That passed belief! To think of our never thinking of
+that infernal brute!" said the Doctor, as they stumbled slowly along in
+the joggling light.
+
+"He was possessed of the devil, without a doubt. That last scream of his
+when he got my two bullets--"
+
+"'T woke us," said Carre. "And we wondered what was up. What was it,
+then, monsieur?"
+
+"That devil of a white stallion of Le Pelley's. It was him killed Tom
+Hamon and Peter Mauger, and he tried to kill Mr. Gard. We've been on
+this job for weeks past, while you were all sleeping in your beds."
+
+"Mon Gyu! and we none of us knew anything about it till we heard yon
+scream! And he's dead----"
+
+"He's dead--unless he's the devil," said the Senechal sententiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+HOW THEY THANKED GOD FOR HIS MERCIES
+
+
+Vast was the wonder of the Sark folk when they heard next day of that
+night's doings, and learned who the murderer of the Coupee was, and how
+and by whom he had been laid by the heels.
+
+The whole Island breathed freely once more, and was outspokenly grateful
+to the courage and pertinacity which had lifted from it the cloud and
+the reproach.
+
+Some of them even had the grace to be not a little ashamed of their
+previous doings, but ascribed the greater part of the blame to Tom's
+widow and Peter Mauger.
+
+But it was days before Stephen Gard took any interest in the matter,
+past or present, or in anything whatsoever.
+
+The Doctor's pad undoubtedly saved his life, but no amount of padding
+could avert entirely the fiendish malignity of those merciless iron
+flails.
+
+He lay unconscious for eight-and-forty hours; and the Doctor--though he
+never breathed a word of it, and prophesied complete recovery with the
+utmost cheerfulness and apparent sincerity--had his own grim fears as to
+what the effect of the whole hideous event might be on one who had
+already suffered such undue strain of mind and body.
+
+Fortunately, his fears proved groundless. On the third day, Gard
+quietly opened his eyes on Nance, who had barely left his bedside since
+the Senechal went down to La Closerie himself and brought her back with
+him to Plaisance.
+
+"I've been asleep," he said drowsily. "Anything wrong, Nance dear?" and
+he tried to sit up, but found his head heavy with cold water bandages,
+and a pain about his neck and left shoulder, and his left arm in
+splints, and all the rest of him one great aching bruise.
+
+"Why--" he murmured, in vast surprise.
+
+"You're to lie quite still," said Nance dictatorially, with lifted
+finger. "And you're not to talk or think till the Doctor comes."
+
+"Give me a kiss, then!"--good prima facie evidence, this, that his brain
+had suffered no permanent injury.
+
+"Well, he didn't say anything about that," and she bent over him and
+kissed him with a brimming flood of gratitude in her blue eyes, and he
+lay quiet for a time.
+
+"Is it dead?" he asked suddenly, with a reminiscent shudder which set
+all his bruises aching.
+
+"The white horse? Yes, Dieu merci, it's dead! But you're not to talk or
+think."
+
+"Give me another kiss, then!"--from which it was apparent that he knew
+very well what kind of medicine was best adapted to his ailments.
+
+The Doctor came down to see him the very first thing every morning, and
+now he came quietly in, just as Nance had been administering her latest
+dose.
+
+"Ah--ha, nurse! What are you doing to my patient!"
+
+"I'm only keeping him quiet, sir, as you told me to," said Nance, with a
+rosy face.
+
+"It's the doctor you ought to pay, not the patient. Well, my boy, how
+are we this morning? Head aching yet?"
+
+"It does feel a bit queer. Tell me all about last night, Doctor!"
+
+"Ah--ha, yes--last night! Well, you caught the murderer with a
+vengeance, my boy--or he caught you,"--and then, seeing the puzzlement
+in the tired eyes, he briefly explained the whole matter.
+
+"And do you mean it was that awful beast killed the others?"
+
+"Without a doubt--and would have killed you in exactly the same way, and
+exactly the same place, but for my pads and the Senechal's bullets.
+Queer thing--they found the brute lying all in a heap in Coupee Bay on
+the very spot where Tom Hamon and Peter Mauger were found."
+
+"Ay-y-y-y-y!" breathed Gard, with a long sigh of relief and a shiver. "I
+shall never forget him."
+
+"Oh yes, you will--in time. Think of little Nance here. She's a sight
+better worth thinking of. And now, Miss Nancy, how much good news can
+you stand all at once, if you try your very hardest?" he asked, with a
+sparkle in his eyes that somehow seemed to set hers sparkling too.
+
+"Oh made, Doctor!" and the little hands clasped up on her breast, as was
+her way when greatly moved. "Not----?"
+
+She dared not hope for so much--the wish of her heart--just an inch or
+so behind the desire for Gard's recovery.
+
+"The cutter this morning brought over one we had feared was lost----"
+
+"Not--not Bernel?"
+
+"Yes, my child, Bernel, by God's good mercy! He was picked up by a
+Granville trawler, and lay there ill for some days, and could only get
+back by Jersey and Guernsey. He was to come along with the Senechal in a
+quarter of an hour--"
+
+But Nance had fallen on her knees and buried her face in the
+bed-clothes, lest any but God should see it in the rapture of its
+breaking.
+
+"Dieu merci! Dieu merci! Dieu merci!" she was crying, though none of
+them heard it.
+
+And "Thank God!" said Stephen Gard with fervour--for Bernel, and for
+himself, but most of all for Nance.
+
+
+ NOTE.--The names used in this book are necessarily the names
+ still current in Sark. None of the characters presented,
+ however, are in any way connected with any persons now living
+ in the Island.
+
+
+
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