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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearl of Pearl Island, by John Oxenham
+
+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: Pearl of Pearl Island
+
+Author: John Oxenham
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2005 [EBook #15259]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Steven Gibbs and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND
+
+BY JOHN OXENHAM
+
+HODDER AND STOUGHTON
+PUBLISHERS LONDON
+1908
+
+
+
+
+TO MY WIFE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART THE FIRST PEARL
+PART THE SECOND LOST PEARL
+PART THE THIRD PEARL ISLAND
+PART THE FOURTH PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND
+PART THE FIFTH PEARL IN A RING
+PART THE SIXTH SMALLER PEARLS
+
+
+
+
+ PEARL OF THE PEARL OF THE SILVER SEA!
+
+ PEARL Iridescent! Pearl of the sea!
+
+ Shimmering, glimmering Pearl of the sea!
+ White in the sun-flecked silver sea,
+ White in the moon-decked silver sea,
+ White in the wrath of the silver sea,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ Lapped in the smile of the Silver Sea,
+ Ringed in the foam of the Silver Sea,
+ Glamoured in mists of the Silver Sea,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ Glancing and glimmering under the sun,
+ Jewel and casket all in one,
+ Joy supreme of the sun's day-dream,
+ Soft in the gleam of the golden beam,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ Splendour of Hope in the rising sun,
+ Glory of Love in the noonday sun,
+ Wonder of Faith in the setting sun,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+
+ Gaunt and grim to the outer world,
+ Jewel and casket all impearled
+ With the kiss of the Silver Sea!--
+ With the flying kiss of the Silver Sea,
+ With the long sweet kiss of the Silver Sea,
+ With the rainbow kiss of the Silver Sea,--
+
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ And oh the sight,--the wonderful sight,
+ When calm and white, in the mystic light,
+ Of her quivering pathway, broad and bright,
+ The Queen of the Night, in silver dight,
+ Sails over the Silver Sea!
+
+ Wherever I go, and wherever I be,
+ The joy and the longing are there with me,--
+ The gleam And the glamour come back to me,--
+ In a mystical rapture there comes to me,
+ The call of the Silver Sea!
+ As needle to pole is my heart to thee,
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+
+ Pearl of the Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ To some you are Margaret, but to me,
+ Always and ever, wherever I be,
+ You are Pearl of the Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+
+ J.C.G.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FIRST
+
+
+I
+
+ NOTE.--_It would be impossible to depict the Sark of to-day
+ without using the names native to the Island. All such names
+ here employed, however, are used without any reference whatever
+ to any actual persons who may happen to bear similar names in
+ Sark. The characters are to be taken as types. The incidents are
+ in many cases fact._
+
+
+If you want murders, mysteries, or mud--pass on! This is a simple,
+straightforward love-story.
+
+
+"Jock, my lad," said Lady Elspeth softly, nodding her head very many
+times, in that very knowing way of hers which made her look like a
+Lord Chief Justice and a Fairy Godmother all in one, "I've found you
+out."
+
+And when the shrewd old soul of her looked him gently through and
+through in that fashion, he knew very much better than to attempt any
+evasion.
+
+"Ah!" he said meekly, "I was afraid someone would, sooner or later.
+I've been living in constant dread of it. But it's happened before,
+you know, between you and me. What is it this time, dear Lady
+Elspeth?"
+
+"Here have I been imputing grace to you for your kindly attentions to
+a poor old woman whose race is nearly run, and setting you up above
+the rest of them therefor, and lo, my idol----"
+
+"Ah!" he said again, with a reproving wag of the head, for he knew now
+what was coming,--"idols are perverse, camstairy things at best, you
+know, and a bit out of date too. And, besides,"--with a touch of
+remonstrance--"at your age and with your bringing-up----"
+
+"Ay, ay, ye may be as insulting as ye choose, my laddie, and fling my
+age and my upbringing in my face like a very man----"
+
+"There isn't a face like it in all England, and as to----"
+
+"I prefer ye to say Britain, as I've told ye before. Your bit England
+is only a portion of the kingdom, and in very many respects the
+poorest portion, notably in brains and manners and beauty. But ye
+cannot draw me off like that, my laddie, whether it's meant for a
+compliment or no. I was just about telling you you were a fraud----"
+
+"You hadn't got quite that length, you know, but----"
+
+"Will I prove it to you? Haven't you been coming here as regular as
+the milkman for a month past----"
+
+"Oh, come now!--Only once a day. I've an idea milkie comes twice, and
+besides----"
+
+"And what did ye come for, my lad?" with an emphatic nod and a
+menacing shake of the frail white hand, pricelessly jewelled above,
+comfortably black-silk-mittened below. "Tell me that now! What did ye
+come for?"
+
+"To see the dearest old lady in England--Britain, I mean. And--"
+
+"Yes?--And?--" and she watched him, with her head a little on one side
+and her eyes shining brightly, like an expectant motherly robin
+hopping on treasure trove.
+
+He smiled back at her and said nothing. He knew she knew without his
+telling.
+
+"And so I was only second fiddle--" she began, with an assumption of
+scornful irascibility which became her less than her very oldest cap.
+
+"Oh, dear me, no! Leader of the orchestra!--Proprietor of the
+house!--Sole director and manager and--"
+
+"Tuts! It was Margaret Brandt you came to see," and the twinkling
+brown eyes held the merry gray ones with a steady challenge.
+
+"Partly,--and I was just about to say so when you interrupted me--"
+
+"Ay! Were you now? Ye can out with things quick enough at times, my
+laddie!"
+
+"Well, you see, there are some things one does not speak about until
+one feels one has an absolute right to."
+
+"You'd have told your mother, Jock."
+
+"Perhaps, I'm not sure,--not yet--not, at all events, until--"
+
+"And wasn't I to take her place when she left you all alone?"
+
+"And so you have. You're just the dearest and sweetest old--"
+
+"Second fiddle! Come away and we'll talk of Margaret, since that's all
+you come for."
+
+"And isn't she worth coming for? Did you ever in all your life see
+anything more wonderful than Margaret Brandt?"
+
+And she looked at him for half a minute with a twinkle in the shrewd
+old eyes, which had surely seen many strange and wonderful things
+since the first wonders passed and gave place to the common things of
+life. Beautiful eyes they were still,--of a very tender brown, and
+shining always with kindly feeling and deepest interest in the person
+she was talking to.
+
+I do not know how it may be with you, but, personally, I detest people
+whose eyes and thoughts go wandering away over your left shoulder
+while you are talking with them. It may be, of course, that you are
+not much of a talker and are simply boring them, but, all the same,
+mental squinters are not to my liking.
+
+But Lady Elspeth was never bored--visibly, at all events, and while
+you talked with her you were the one person in the world in whom she
+was interested.
+
+Margaret's eyes had something of the same in them, but they were very
+deep blue, and there was in them just that touch of maidenly reserve
+which best becomes a maiden's eyes, until, to one at all events, she
+may lay it aside and let her heart shine through.
+
+Lady Elspeth looked at him, then, for half a minute, with a starry
+twinkle, and then said, with a finality of conviction that made her
+dearer to him than ever--
+
+"Never!" and he kissed her hand with fervour,--and not ungracefully,
+since the action, though foreign to him, was absolutely spontaneous.
+
+"But--!" she said firmly. And he sat up.
+
+"But me no buts," he said. "And why?"
+
+"Well, you see, Margaret is by way of being an heiress--and you are
+not."
+
+"I'm sorry. But, you see, I couldn't very well be if I tried. Still
+I'm not absolutely penniless, and--"
+
+"Tuts, boy! What you have is just about enough to pay Jeremiah
+Pixley's servants' wages."
+
+"D-hang Jeremiah Pixley!"
+
+"D-hang is not a nice expression to use before a lady, let me tell
+you. What you have, as, I was saying, is just enough to make or mar
+you--"
+
+"It's going to make me. I can live on it till things begin to come my
+way."
+
+"Everyone writes nowadays," she said, with a dubious shake of the
+head. "Who reads all the books passes my comprehension. I suppose you
+have all just to buy one another's to make a bit of a living out of
+it."
+
+"Like those washing people! But it's not quite as bad as all that.
+There are still some intelligent people who buy books--good books, of
+course, I mean."
+
+"Not many, I'm afraid. They read reviews and chatter as though they'd
+read the books. And if they really want to read them they get them out
+of a library. You don't see bought books lying on the tables, as you
+used to do when I was a girl, and they were scarcer and dearer. How is
+this last one going?"
+
+"I have reason to believe my publishers are not absolutely
+broken-hearted over it, which leads me to think that they have
+probably done pretty well out of it. They are not what you might call
+a gushing race, you know, but they have given me a kind of cautious
+half-hint that they might not refuse to look at my next if I offered
+it to them on my bended knees. But let us get back to our--to Miss
+Brandt. I had no idea she was an heiress. I have really never thought
+of money in the matter, except as to how I could earn enough to offer
+it to her."
+
+"She has a fair portion--about two thousand a year, I believe. Her
+father was Danish Consul in Glasgow, and had a shipping business
+there. I should not be surprised if Mr. Pixley had views of his own
+concerning Margaret's portion and his son--and of course Margaret
+herself."
+
+"Will you permit me to say, 'Hang Mr. Pixley!' dear Lady Elspeth? It
+would be such a relief--if you're sure you don't mind."
+
+"You may say 'Hang Mr. Pixley!' though it is not an expression I am in
+the habit of using myself. But please don't begin it with a D."
+
+"Hang Mr. Pixley, and Mr. Pixley's son, and all his intentions!" he
+said fervently and with visible relish.
+
+"Yes," she nodded slowly, as though savouring it; and then added, with
+a delicious twinkle of the soft brown eyes, "There is something in
+that that appeals to me. Jeremiah Pixley is almost too good for this
+world. At least--"
+
+"He is absolutely unwholesomely good. My own private opinion is that
+he's a disreputable old blackg--I mean whited sepulchre."
+
+"Unwholesomely good!" She nodded again. "Yes,--that, I think, very
+fairly expresses him. 'Unco' guid,' we would say up north. But, all
+the same, he is Margaret's uncle and guardian and trustee. He is also
+the kind of man whom nothing can turn from a line he has once
+adopted."
+
+"I know. Pigheaded as a War-Office-mule," he side-tracked hastily.
+
+For she had looked at him with a momentary bristle of enquiry in the
+gentle brown eyes, and he remembered, just in time, that her husband
+had once held the reins in Pall Mall for half a year, when, feeling
+atrophy creeping on, he resigned office and died three months later.
+
+He hastened to add,--"The ordinary Army-mule, you know, is specially
+constructed with a cast-iron mouth, and a neck of granite, and a
+disposition like--like Mr. Pixley's. I imagine Mr. Pixley can be
+excessively unpleasant when he tries. To me he is excessively
+unpleasant even to think of, and without any exertion whatever on his
+part."
+
+"Yes. Mrs. Pixley would rather convey that impression. She is always
+depressed and apprehensive-looking. But she is very fond of Margaret,
+and that no doubt is why--But I suppose she really has no choice in
+the matter, until she comes of age--"
+
+"Mrs. Pixley?"
+
+"Until Margaret comes into her own she is no doubt obliged to submit
+to her guardian's views. It is difficult to imagine anyone not a
+Pixley living in the Pixley atmosphere of their own free will. What is
+the son like? I have only seen him once or twice. Does he take after
+his father?"
+
+"He's about twice as tall, and several times as wide in some respects,
+I should say,--certainly in the matter of the enjoyment of life. He's
+not bad-looking--in a kind of a way, you know,--that is, for those who
+like that kind of looks,--a trifle fleshy perhaps. But he's a fair
+dancer, and sings a song well, and can talk about nothing as nicely
+as any man I ever met. It's an accomplishment I often envy."
+
+"I wouldn't trouble about it, if I were you. There are things more
+worth doing in the world. And that reminds me. We were talking of your
+books. I've been wanting to tell you that your love-scenes are not
+altogether to my liking. They are just a little--well, not quite--"
+
+"Yes, I know," he said sadly. "You see, I lack experience in such
+things. Now, if Margaret--"
+
+"Don't tell me you want to use her simply as a model," she began, with
+another incipient gentle bristle.
+
+"I want her as a model and a great many other things besides, dear
+Lady Elspeth. I love Margaret Brandt with every atom of good that is
+in me."
+
+"And she?" with a nod and a sparkle.
+
+"Ah! There now--that's what I don't know. She's not one to wear her
+heart on her sleeve. At times I have dared to hope. Then again I have
+feared--"
+
+"That is quite right. That is quite as it should be. Anything more, so
+early as this, would imply unmaidenliness on her part."
+
+"Truly? You mean it? You are, without exception, the most charming old
+lady in the world! You relieve my mind immensely. You see, she is
+always so sweet and charming. But then she could not be anything
+else, and it may really mean nothing. Do you really think I may hope?"
+
+"'White-handed Hope, thou hovering angel, girt with golden wings,'"
+she quoted, with a smile.
+
+"That's Margaret," he murmured rapturously.
+
+"It's a poor kind of man that gives up hope until he lies in his
+coffin, and even then--" and she nodded thoughtfully, as though
+tempted to a descent into metaphysics.
+
+"Let us talk of bridal wreaths. They are very much nicer to think of
+than coffins when one is discussing Margaret Brandt."
+
+"She is very sweet and very beautiful--"
+
+"There never was anyone like her in this world--unless it was my
+mother and yourself."
+
+"Let Margaret be first with you, my boy. That also is as it should be.
+Neither your dear mother nor I stand in need of empty compliments.
+Margaret Brandt is worthy any good man's whole heart, and perhaps I
+can be of some help to you. But, all the same, remember what I've
+said. You may be too late in the field."
+
+"You are just the splendidest old lady in the world," he said
+exuberantly; and added, with a touch of gloom, "She was talking of
+going off to the Riviera."
+
+"Ah, then, I suppose I shall be in eclipse also, until she returns."
+
+"Oh no, you won't. We can talk of her, you know," at which Lady
+Elspeth's eyes twinkled merrily.
+
+"What would you say to convoying a troublesome old lady to the
+Riviera, yourself, Jock?"
+
+"You?" and he jumped up delightedly,--and just at that point old
+Hamish opened the door of the cosy room, and announced--
+
+"Miss Brandt, mem!"
+
+
+II
+
+"Miss Brandt, mem!" announced old Hamish, in as dry and matter-of-fact
+a voice as though it were only, "Here's the doctor, mem!" or "Dinner's
+ready, mem!" and Margaret herself came in, rosy-faced and bright-eyed
+from the kiss of the wind outside.
+
+Lady Elspeth laughed enjoyably at the sight of her, and touched the
+bell for tea.
+
+"You are always like a breath from the heather to me, my dear, or a
+glimpse of Schiehallion," said she, as they kissed, and Graeme stood
+reverently looking on, as at a holy rite.
+
+"Oh, surely I'm not as rugged and wrinkled as all that!" laughed
+Margaret. "And I certainly am not bald. How do you do, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"There is no need to ask you that question, at any rate," he said,
+with visible appreciation.
+
+"I have loved Schiehallion all my life," said Lady Elspeth. "To me
+there is no mountain in the world to compare with it. You see how
+one's judgment is biassed by one's affections. And how is Mrs. Pixley
+to-day, my dear?"
+
+"She is much as usual, dear Lady Elspeth. She is never very lively,
+you know. If anything, I think she is, perhaps, a trifle less lively
+than usual just now."
+
+"And Mr. Pixley is as busied in good works as ever, I suppose."
+
+"As busy as ever--outside,"--at which gentle thrust the others smiled.
+
+"It's all very well to laugh," remonstrated Margaret, "but truly, you
+know, philanthropy, like charity, would be none the less commendable
+to its relations if it sometimes remembered that it had a home. I
+sometimes think that if ever there was a deserving case it is poor
+Aunt Susan."
+
+"And young Mr. Pixley? Doesn't he liven you up?" asked Lady Elspeth.
+"He is very good company, I am told."
+
+"Oh, Charles is excellent company. If we didn't see him now and again
+the house would be like a tomb. But he's not there all the time, and
+we have relapses. He has his own rooms elsewhere, you know. And I'm
+really not surprised. It taxes even him to lighten the deadly dulness
+of Melgrave Square."
+
+"It must be a great comfort to Mrs. Pixley to have you with her, my
+dear."
+
+"I can't make up for all she lacks in other directions," said
+Margaret, with a shake of the head. "I get quite angry with Uncle
+Jeremiah sometimes. He is so--so absorbed in benefiting other people
+that he--Well, you can understand how delightful it is to be able to
+run in here and find the sun always shining."
+
+"Thank you, my dear," said Lady Elspeth, with a twinkle in the brown
+eyes. "Some people carry their own sunshine with them wherever they
+go."
+
+"And some people decidedly don't," said Margaret, who was evidently
+suffering from some unusual exhibition of Pixleyism.
+
+"It is generally possible to find a ray or so somewhere about, if you
+know where to look for it," suggested Graeme.
+
+"I was just accusing Jock of coming here as regularly as the milkman,"
+twinkled Lady Elspeth.
+
+"We have a community of tastes, you see," he said, looking across at
+Margaret. "I also have a craving for sunshine, and I naturally come
+where I know it is to be found," and Lady Elspeth's eyes twinkled
+knowingly again.
+
+"It's a good conceit of myself I'll be getting, if you two go on like
+this."
+
+"I'm quite sure you will never think half as well of yourself as your
+friends do," said Graeme.
+
+"Besides, you might even pass some of the credit on to us for the
+excellent taste we display."
+
+"Ay, ay! Well, it's good to be young," said Lady Elspeth.
+
+"And it's very good to have delightful old sunbeams for friends."
+
+"To say nothing of the young ones," laughed the old lady.
+
+"They speak for themselves."
+
+"We are becoming quite a mutual admiration society," said Margaret.
+"Have you been dining with your fellow Friars lately, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"I'm sorry to say I've been neglecting my privileges in that respect.
+I haven't been there for an age--not since that last Ladies' Dinner,
+in fact. You see, I'm an infant there yet, and I scarcely know
+anybody, and I've been very busy--"
+
+"Chasing sunbeams," suggested Lady Elspeth.
+
+"And other things."
+
+"You are busy on another book?" asked Margaret.
+
+"Just getting one under way. It takes a little time to get things into
+proper shape, but once it is going, the work is very absorbing and
+sheer delight. You were talking of going abroad again. Are you still
+thinking of it?"
+
+"I was hoping to get away. I wanted Aunt Susan to come with me to the
+Riviera, but she flatly refuses to leave home at present, so I'm
+afraid that's off."
+
+"Well, now, that's curious. I've been feeling something of an
+inclination that way myself," said Lady Elspeth. "I wonder if you'd
+feel like coming with me, Margaret. I don't believe we would quarrel."
+
+"Oh, I would be delighted, dear Lady Elspeth, and I'll promise not to
+quarrel whatever you do to me."
+
+"Who ever heard of sunbeams quarrelling?" said Graeme gaily, with Lady
+Elspeth's earlier suggestion to himself dancing in his brain. "But
+think of London left utterly sunless."
+
+"London will never miss us," said Margaret. "It still has bridge, and
+we are neither of us players."
+
+And then, having an appointment from which he could not escape, and
+knowing that they always enjoyed a little personal chat, he
+reluctantly took his leave, and left them to the discussion of their
+new plans.
+
+
+III
+
+He had met Margaret Brandt for the first time at a Ladies' Banquet of
+the Whitefriars Club.
+
+Providence,--I insist upon this. No mere chance set them next to one
+another at that hospitable board,--Providence, forecasting the future,
+placed them side by side, and he was introduced to her by his good
+friend Adam Black, who had the privilege of her acquaintance and sat
+opposite enjoying them greatly.
+
+For they were both eminently good to look upon;--Margaret, tall and
+slender, and of a most gracious figure and bearing, with thoughtful,
+dark-blue eyes, a very charming face accentuated by the
+characteristics of her northern descent, and a wealth of shining brown
+hair coiled about her shapely head;--Graeme, tall, clean-built, of an
+outdoor complexion, with nothing of the student about him save his
+deep, reflective eyes, and the little lines in the corners which
+wrinkled up so readily at the overflowing humours of life.
+
+It was Charles Pixley--Charles Svendt Pixley, to accord him fullest
+justice, which I am most anxious to do--who brought her, and to that
+extent we are his debtors.
+
+Though why Pixley should be a Whitefriar passes one's comprehension.
+His pretensions to literature were, I should say, bounded by his Stock
+Exchange notebook and his betting-book. He had not even read Graeme's
+latest, though it was genuinely in its second--somewhat
+limited--edition, and he did not even smile affably when Adam Black
+introduced them. Graeme, however, had no fault to find with him for
+that. There were others in like dismal case.
+
+Pixley nodded cursorily at the introduction, with a
+"How-d'ye-do-who-the-deuce-are-you?" expression on his face. He struck
+Graeme as not bad-looking, in a somewhat over-fed and self-indulgent
+fashion, and inclined to superciliousness and self-complacency, if not
+to actual superiority and condescension. It occurred to him afterwards
+that this might arise from his absorption in his companion, for he
+turned again at once to Miss Brandt and began chattering like a lively
+and intelligent parrot.
+
+Graeme was one of the silent and observant ones, and he could not but
+think how beneficent Nature is in casting us in many moulds. If we
+were all built alike, he thought, and all dribbled smart inanities,
+and nothing but inanities, with the glibness of a Charles Pixley, what
+a world it would be!
+
+However, it was Charles Pixley who brought Margaret Brandt to that
+dinner, and Graeme sat on the other side of her there. And so, Charles
+Svendt--blessings on thee, unworthy friar though thou be!
+
+And presently, Miss Brandt, wearying no doubt of _perdrix, perdrix,
+toujours perdrix_,--that is to say of Charles's sprightly chatter, of
+which she doubtless got more than enough at home,--essayed
+conversation with the silent one at her other side, and, one may
+suppose, found it more to her taste, or more of a novelty, than the
+Pixley outflow.
+
+For, once started, she and Graeme talked together most of the
+evening--breaking off reluctantly to drink various toasts to people in
+whom they had, at the moment, no remotest interest whatever, and
+recovering the thread of their conversation before they resumed their
+seats.
+
+Only one toast really interested Graeme, and that was "The Ladies--the
+Guests of the Evening"; and that he drank right heartily, with his
+eyes on Miss Brandt's sparkling face, and if it had been left to
+himself he would have converted it from plural to singular and drunk
+to her alone.
+
+Adam Black, excellent fellow, and gifted beyond most with wisdom and
+insight, and the condensed milk of human kindness, took upon himself
+the burden of Pixley, and engaged that eminent financier so deeply in
+talk concerning matters of import, that Miss Brandt and Graeme found
+themselves at liberty to enjoy one another to their hearts' content.
+
+They talked on many subjects--tentatively, and as sounding novel
+depths--in a way that occasioned one of them, at all events, very
+great surprise. Indeed, it seemed to him afterwards that, for a silent
+and observant man, he had been led into quite unwonted, but none the
+less very enjoyable, ways. He went home that night feeling very much
+as Columbus must have done when his New World swam before his eyes in
+misted glory. He too had sighted a new world. He had discovered
+Margaret Brandt.
+
+She had travelled widely over Europe, he learned, and was looking
+forward with eagerness to another tour in the near future. They
+discovered a common liking for many of the places she had visited.
+
+She was a wide and intelligent reader. To him it was a rare pleasure
+to meet one.
+
+"New places, and new books, and new people are always a joy to me,"
+she said, in a glow of naïve enthusiasm. And then she blushed slightly
+lest he should discover a personal application in the last-named, or
+even in the last two.
+
+But Graeme was thinking of her, and was formulating her character from
+the delicious little bits of self-revelation which slipped out every
+now and again.
+
+"Yes," he said, "new things are very enjoyable, and in these times
+there is no lack of them. The tendency, I should say, is towards
+superfluity. But new places----! There are surely not many left except
+the North Pole and the South. Everybody goes everywhere nowadays, and
+you tumble over friends in Damascus and find your tailor picnicking on
+the slopes of Lebanon."
+
+Now, as it chanced,--if you admit such a thing as chance in so tangled
+a coil as this complex world of ours,--Adam Black had just tucked
+Charles Pixley into a close little argumentative corner, and given him
+food for contemplation, and catching Graeme's last remark, he smiled
+across the table, and in a word of four letters dropped a seed into
+several lives which bore odd fruit and blossom.
+
+"Ever been to Sark, Graeme?" he asked.
+
+"Sark? No. Let me see----"
+
+"Channel Islands. You go across from Guernsey. If ever you want relief
+from your fellows--to finish a book, or to start one, or just to
+grizzle and find yourself--try Sark. It's the most wonderful little
+place, and it's amazing how few people know it."
+
+Then Charles Pixley bethought him of a fresh line of argument, and
+engaged Black, and was promptly shown the error of his ways; and
+Margaret Brandt and Graeme resumed their discussion of places and
+books and people. And before that evening ended, with such affinity of
+tastes, their feet were fairly set in the rosy path of friendship.
+
+Now that is how it all began, and that explains what happened
+afterwards when the right time came.
+
+Chance, forsooth! We know better.
+
+
+IV
+
+Not long after that dinner, Lady Elspeth Gordon came up to town for
+the first time after her husband's death.
+
+She had been John Graeme's mother's closest friend, and when he was
+left alone in the world, the dear old lady, before she had fully
+recovered from her own sore loss, took upon herself a friendly
+supervision of him and his small affairs, and their intercourse was
+very delightful.
+
+For Lady Elspeth knew everybody worth knowing, and all that was to be
+known about the rest; and those gentle brown eyes of hers had missed
+little of what had gone on around her since she first came to London,
+fifty years before. She had known Wellington, and Palmerston, and John
+Russell, and Disraeli, and Gladstone, and Louis Napoleon, and
+Garibaldi, and many more. She was a veritable golden link with the
+past, and a storehouse of reminiscence and delightful insight into
+human nature.
+
+And--since she knew everyone worth knowing, Graeme very soon
+discovered that she knew Margaret Brandt, and Miss Brandt's very
+frequent visits to Phillimore Gardens proved that she was an
+acceptable visitor there.
+
+Upon that, his own visits to Lady Elspeth naturally became still more
+frequent than before,--approximating even, as she had said, the record
+of the milkman,--and, though his dear old friend might rate him gently
+as to the motives for his coming, he had every reason to believe that
+her sympathies were with him, and that she would do what she could to
+further his hopes.
+
+He had never, however, openly discussed Margaret with her until that
+afternoon of which I have already spoken.
+
+Miss Brandt, you see, was always most graciously kind and charming
+whenever they met. But that was just her natural self. She was
+charming and gracious to everyone--even to Charles Pixley, the while
+he swamped her with inane tittle-tattle, and higher proof of grace
+than that it would be difficult to imagine.
+
+And, since she was charming to all, Graeme felt that he could base no
+solid hopes on her gracious treatment of himself, though the quiet
+recollection of every smallest detail of it would set him all aglow
+with hope for days after each chance meeting. And so he had never
+ventured to discuss the matter with Lady Elspeth, and would not have
+done so that afternoon had she not herself opened it.
+
+The dear old lady's encouragement, however, deepened and strengthened
+his hopes, in spite of her insidious hints concerning Mr. Pixley's
+possible intentions. For she was a shrewd, shrewd woman, and those
+soft brown eyes of hers saw far and deep. And, since she bade him
+hope, hope he would, though every brick in London town became a Pixley
+set on thwarting him.
+
+The fact of Margaret's means being, for the present at all events, so
+much larger than his own, he would not allow to trouble him. It was
+Margaret herself he wanted, and had wanted long before he heard she
+had money. The troublesome accident of her possessions should not come
+between them if he could help it. He did not for one moment believe
+she would ever think so ill of him as to believe that he wanted her
+for anything but herself. And in any case, if kind Providence bestowed
+her upon him, he would insist on her money being all settled on
+herself absolutely and irrevocably.
+
+Since that never-to-be-forgotten dinner, they had come across one
+another at Lady Elspeth's with sufficient frequency to open the eyes
+of that astute old lady to the heart-state of one of them at all
+events. Possibly she knew more of the heart and mind of the other than
+she cared to say in plain words; but, as a woman, she would naturally
+abide by the rules of the game. In the smaller games of life it is
+woman's privilege, indeed, to stretch and twist all rules to suit her
+own convenience, but in this great game of love, woman stands by woman
+and the womanly rules of the game--unless, indeed, she craves the
+stakes for herself, in which case----
+
+And so--although Lady Elspeth favoured him, that afternoon, only with
+vague generalities as to the pleasures of hope, and afforded him no
+solid standing-ground for the sole of his hopeful foot, but left him
+to discover that for himself, as was only right and proper--his heart
+stood high, and he looked forward with joyous anticipation to the
+future.
+
+The radiant sun of all his rosy heavens was Margaret Brandt, and he
+would not for one moment admit the possibility of its clouding by
+anything of the name of Pixley.
+
+
+V
+
+Graeme had not the entrée of the Pixley mansion.
+
+Mr. Pixley he knew, by repute only, as the head of Pixley's, the great
+law-firm, in Lincoln's Inn. Mrs. Pixley he had never met.
+
+Mr. Pixley was a bright and shining light--yea, a veritable
+light-house--of respectability and benevolence, and bushel coverings
+were relegated to their proper place outside his scheme of life. His
+charities were large, wide-spread, religiously advertised in the
+donation columns of the daily papers, and doubtless palliated the
+effects of multitudes of other people's sins.
+
+He was a church-warden, president and honorary treasurer of numerous
+philanthropical societies--in a word, at once a pillar and
+corner-stone of his profession, his church, and his country.
+
+He was also a smug little man with a fresh, well-fed face, bordered by
+a touch of old-fashioned, gray side-whisker, rather outstanding blue
+eyes, and he carried, and sometimes used as it was intended to be
+used, a heavy gold pince-nez, which more frequently, however, acted as
+a kind of lightning-conductor for the expression of his feelings. A
+pince-nez of many parts:--now it was a scalping-knife, slaughtering
+the hopes of some harried victim of the law; and again, it was a bâton
+beating time to a hymn or the National Anthem; possibly it was, in
+moments of relaxation, a jester's wand poking fun at ancient cronies,
+though indeed a somewhat full-blooded imagination is required for
+that. I have heard that once when, in the fervour of a speech, Mr.
+Pixley dropped his pince-nez among the reporters below, he was utterly
+unable to continue until the fetish was recovered and handed back to
+him. It is an undoubted fact that though you might forget the exact
+lines of Mr. Pixley's face and even his words, you never forgot the
+fascinating evolutions of his heavy gold pince-nez. Like a Frenchman's
+hands, it told even more than his face or his words.
+
+He had a good voice, and a deportment which had, without doubt, been
+specially created for the chairmanship of public meetings. And he was
+Margaret Brandt's uncle by marriage, her guardian and trustee, and the
+father of Charles Svendt, on whose account Lady Elspeth had thought
+well to throw out warning hints of possible paternal intentions
+respecting Margaret and her fortune.
+
+From every point of view Graeme detested Mr. Pixley, though he had
+never passed a word with him. He was too perfect, too immaculate. His
+"unco' guidness," as Lady Elspeth would have said, bordered on
+ostentation. The sight and sound of him aroused in some people a wild
+inclination towards unaccustomed profanity and wallowing in the mire.
+He was so undisguisedly and self-satisfiedly better than his fellows
+that one felt his long and flawless life almost in the nature of a
+rebuke if not an affront. He was too obtrusively good for this world.
+One could not but feel that if he had been cut off in his youth, and
+buried under a very white marble slab and an appropriate inscription,
+both he and the world would have been far more comfortably
+circumstanced. And John Graeme devoutly wished he had been so
+favoured, for, in that case, he could neither have been Margaret's
+uncle, trustee, nor guardian, and it is possible that there would also
+have been no Charles Svendt Pixley to trouble the course of his own
+true love.
+
+But of Charles Svendt I have no harsh word to say. He could not help
+being his father's son, and one must not blame him for the
+unavoidable. And, in most respects, he was as unlike his worthy parent
+as circumstances permitted.
+
+He was on the Stock Exchange and doing well there. He had very
+comfortable rooms near St. James's Square, and enjoyed life in his own
+way and at his own not inconsiderable expense. When Margaret Brandt
+was at home, however, he was much at his father's house in Melgrave
+Square.
+
+He made no pretence to unco' guidness whatever. He subscribed to
+nothing outside the House, with two exceptions--the Dogs' Home at
+Battersea, and the Home of Rest for Aged Horses at Acton--signs of
+grace both these offerings, I take it!
+
+To all other demands he invariably replied,--"Can't burn the candle
+at both ends, my dear sir. The governor charitables for the whole
+family. He'll give you something if you'll let him head the list and
+keep it standing."
+
+No, we have no fault to find with Charles Svendt. Time came when he
+was weighed and not found wanting.
+
+Graeme and he had run across one another occasionally--at the
+Travellers' Club and elsewhere--but their acquaintance had never
+ripened to the point of introduction till that night at the
+Whitefriars' dinner. After that they were on nodding terms, but not
+much more, until--well, until later.
+
+So, though there was hope in his heart, born of Lady Elspeth's
+approval and quiet suggestings, John Graeme was still somewhat
+doubtful as to Margaret Brandt's feelings towards him, and quite at a
+loss how to arrive at a more exact knowledge of them.
+
+Too precipitate an advance might end in utter rout. And opportunities
+of approach were all too infrequent for his wishes.
+
+Their chance meetings were rare and exquisite pleasures,--to be looked
+forward to with an eagerness that held within it the strange
+possibility of pain through sheer excess of longing;--to be enjoyed
+like the glory of a fleeting dream;--to be looked back upon with
+touches of regret at opportunities missed;--to be dwelt upon for days
+and nights with alternate hope and misgiving, with the rapturous
+recalling of every tone of the sweet voice, of every word it had
+uttered, of every gracious gesture, and every most minute and subtle
+change in the sweetest face and the frankest and most charming eyes in
+the world.
+
+
+VI
+
+Their acquaintance had blossomed thus far, when a dire disaster
+happened and justified all his fears.
+
+He ran gaily up the steps of Lady Elspeth's house one afternoon,
+brimming with hope that kindly fortune might bring Margaret that way
+that day, and was hurled into deepest depths of despair by old Hamish
+as soon as he opened the door.
+
+"Ech, Mr. Graeme!" said the old man, with his grizzled old face tuned
+to befitting concern. "Her leddyship's awa' to Inverstrife at a
+moment's notice. She had a tailegram late last night saying the little
+leddy--the Countess, ye ken--was very bad, and would she go at once.
+And she and Jannet were off by the first train this morning. They aye
+send for us, ye ken, when anything by-ordinar's to the fore. It's the
+little leddy's first, ye understand, and ye'll mind that her own
+mother died two years ago."
+
+"Well, well! I'm sorry you've had such an upsetting, Hamish. And
+there's no knowing when Lady Elspeth will return, I suppose?"
+
+"It a' depends on the little leddy, Mr. Graeme. Her leddyship will
+stay till everything's all right, ye may depend upon that. She told me
+to give you her kindest regairds and beg you to excuse her not
+writing. They were all on their heads, so to speak, as ye can
+understand."
+
+"Yes, of course. Well, we must just hope the little lady will pull
+through all right. If I don't hear from Lady Elspeth I will call now
+and again for your latest news."
+
+"Surely, sir. Jannet'll be letting me know, if her leddyship's too
+busy. Miss Brandt was here about hauf an hour ago," he added, with
+unmoved face;--to think of any man, even so ancient a man as old
+Hamish, being able to state a fact so great as that with unmoved face!
+And there was actually no sign of reminiscent and lingering after-glow
+perceptible in him!--but Graeme was not at all sure that there was not
+a veiled twinkle away down in the depths of his little blue-gray eyes.
+
+"Ah! Miss Brandt has been here! She would be surprised too----"
+
+"She was that, sir,--and a bit disappointed, it seemed to me----"
+
+Yes, there _was_ a twinkle in the old fellow's eyes! Oh, he knew, he
+knew without a doubt. Trust old Hamish for not missing much that was
+to the fore. He and his old wife, Jannet Gordon, had been in Lady
+Elspeth's service for over forty years, ever since her leddyship
+married into the family, and Lady Elspeth trusted them both implicitly
+and discussed most matters very freely with them. The dilatations of
+those three shrewd old people, concerning things in general, and the
+men and women of their acquaintance in particular, would have been
+rare, rare hearing.
+
+"Well, I'll call again in a day or two, Hamish," and he went away
+along the gloomy streets, which were all ablaze with soft April
+sunshine, and yet to him had suddenly become darkened. For he saw at a
+glance all that this was like to do for him.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE SECOND
+
+
+I
+
+The rare delight of his meetings with Margaret was at an end. Bluff
+Fortune had slammed the door in his face, and White-handed Hope had
+folded her golden wings and sat moping with melancholy mien.
+
+He wandered into Kensington Gardens, but the daffodils swung their
+heads despondently, and the gorgeous masses of hyacinths made him
+think of funeral plumes on horses' heads.
+
+He went on into the Park. She might be driving there, and he might
+catch glimpse of her. But she was not, and all the rest were less than
+nothing to him.
+
+He found himself at Hyde Park Corner and back again at Kensington
+Gate. But the door was still closed in his face, and he longed for the
+sight of somebody else's as he had never longed before.
+
+The post was of course open to him, but, at this stage at all events,
+he felt that the written word would be eminently inadequate and
+unsatisfying.
+
+He wanted, when he approached that mighty question, to look into her
+eyes and see her answer in their pure depths before it reached her
+lips,--to watch the fluttering heart-signals in her sweet face and
+learn from them more than all the words in the world could tell.
+Letters were, at best, to actual speech but as actual speech would be
+to all that his heart-quickened eyes would discover if he could but
+ask her face to face.
+
+And besides--he would have wished to make his footing somewhat surer
+before putting everything to the test.
+
+But, since matters had gone thus far, it was quite out of the question
+to let them stop there unresolved. Either the precious cargo must be
+brought safely into port or the derelict must be sunk and the fairway
+cleared. The question was--how to proceed?
+
+The unwritten laws of social usage would hardly permit him to carry
+the Pixley mansion by assault and insist on seeing Miss Brandt.
+Besides, that might expose her to annoyance, and that he would not
+upon any consideration.
+
+And so, before he reached his rooms, his mind was groping clumsily
+after written phrases which should in some sort express that which was
+in him without saying too much too soon,--which should delicately hint
+his regrets at this sudden curtailment of their acquaintance, and
+leave it for her to say whether or no she regarded the matter in the
+same light.
+
+Lady Elspeth's sudden summons to the north furnished an acceptable
+text. Margaret was not to know that he knew of her call at Phillimore
+Gardens. It was surely but a friendly act on his part to inform her of
+a matter so nearly concerning one who was dear to them both.
+
+It took a considerable time, however, and the expenditure of much
+thought and ink and paper, before he succeeded in producing a letter
+in any degree to his liking. And even when it was written many
+perusals only served to deepen his doubts.
+
+In any case, it was the best he could do under the circumstances, and
+since he could not see her answer in her eyes or in her face, the
+words she would send him in reply would surely afford his quickened
+perceptions some indication of her feeling, though nothing to what her
+presence would have told him.
+
+So he wrote--
+
+ "Dear Miss Brandt,--When I called at Lady Elspeth Gordon's this
+ afternoon, I learned, to my very great regret, in which I dare
+ to hope you may participate, that our dear old friend had been
+ summoned to Inverstrife at almost a moment's notice, by the
+ sudden illness of her niece, the Countess of Assynt.
+
+ "I trust her visit may not need to be a very extended one, but
+ Lady Elspeth is such a tower of strength to all who seek her
+ help that she is not likely to return so long as she can be of
+ any possible assistance to her friends.
+
+ "For reasons which, perhaps, I need not particularise, her
+ sudden departure is to me a loss beyond its apparent magnitude.
+ The hours I have spent at her house have been among the
+ brightest of my life. You also have enjoyed her friendship. I
+ venture to hope that you also will miss her.
+
+ "Should I not have the pleasure of seeing you for some little
+ time, I would beg of you to bear me in your kindly
+ remembrance.--Sincerely yours,
+
+ "JOHN C. GRAEME."
+
+Did it say too much? Would she look upon it as an overstepping of the
+limits their acquaintance had reached?
+
+Did it say enough? Could she possibly overlook the things he would so
+dearly have liked to say but had left unsaid?
+
+Did it say too little? Could she possibly deem it an unnecessary
+liberty, and cold at that? He did not think she could by any
+possibility look at it in that light.
+
+But after it was at last surely lodged in the pillar-box, all these
+doubts came back upon him with tenfold force, and his sleep that night
+would have been short-commons for a nightingale.
+
+She would get his letter by the first post in the morning. Would she
+answer it at once? Or would she wait half a day considering it?
+
+Either course held hopeful possibilities. A prompt answer would
+surely suggest a concurrence of feeling. An answer delayed would
+without doubt mean that she was pondering his words and reading
+between the lines. So he possessed his soul in patience, of a somewhat
+attenuated texture, and waited in hope.
+
+But the whole day passed, and the night, and the next morning's post
+still brought him nothing,--nothing but an intimation from a publisher
+of excellent standing that he would not decline to look over the
+manuscript of his next book if he was open to an offer. And this
+important document he tossed on one side as lightly as if it were a
+begging letter or a tailor's advertisement.
+
+What were any other letters, or all the letters in the world, to him
+when the one letter he desired was not there?
+
+All that bright April day he waited indoors, in order to get
+Margaret's letter the moment it arrived. For how should he wander
+abroad, in gloomy-blazing streets or desolate-teeming parks with that
+anxiously-expected letter possibly awaiting him at home?
+
+The callous passage of the last post, after knocking cheerfully at
+every door but his own, left him wondering and desperate.
+
+Could he by any possibility have addressed his letter wrongly? It was
+not easy to make a mistake in No. 1 Melgrave Square.
+
+Could it have gone astray? The Post Office was abominably careless at
+times. One was constantly hearing of letters slipping down behind
+desks and monstrously delivered twenty years after date. What earthly
+good would that letter be delivered when he was forty-seven and
+Margaret Brandt somewhere in the neighbourhood of forty? Truly, it was
+monstrous, it was abominable that such carelessness should be
+permitted in the public departments!
+
+Could Margaret have taken umbrage at anything he had said? He conned
+his rough draft with solicitous care. It seemed new and strange and
+crude to him. He feared at each word to come upon the one that might
+have offended her. But no word, no phrase, nothing even of all that he
+had left unsaid sprang up before his horrified eyes to choke him with
+a sense of inadequacy, or inadvertency, or trespass.
+
+No sleep got he that night for cudgelling his tired brains for reasons
+why no answer had come from Margaret.
+
+Could she be ill? She was well enough, two days before, to call at
+Lady Elspeth's house. But, of course, even in a day one may take a
+chill and be prostrated.
+
+The possibility of that was brought home to him next morning by his
+landlady's surprised stare and exclamation at sight of his face.
+
+"Law, Mr. John!"--she had been handmaid to his mother for many years
+and he was still always Mr. John to her,--"Have you got the influenza
+too? Everyone seems to have it nowadays."
+
+He reassured her on the point. But every friend he met that day
+credited him with it, and suggested remedies and precautions
+sufficient to have made an end of any ordinary man.
+
+He was vexed to think his face so clear an index of his feelings, but,
+truly, his spirits were none of the best and the weather was
+enervatingly warm.
+
+It was quite inconceivable to him that Margaret Brandt should, of
+knowledge and intention, drop their pleasant acquaintance in this
+fashion. He believed he knew her well enough to know that, even if she
+had any fault to find with his letter, she would still have replied to
+it, and would have delicately conveyed her feeling in her answer.
+
+Then, either she had never received it, or, for some good reason or
+other, she was unable to reply.
+
+He went down to Melgrave Square to make sure that No. 1 was still
+there. Possibly he might come across Margaret in the neighbourhood. If
+he did he would know at a glance if she had received his letter.
+
+But No. 1 offered him no explanations. It stood as usual, large and
+prim and precise, the very acme of solid, sober wealth and assertive
+moral rectitude. He was strongly tempted to call and ask for Miss
+Brandt, but it was only ten o'clock in the morning, and the house
+looked so truly an embodiment in stucco of Mrs. Grundy and Jeremiah
+Pixley, that he forbore and went on his melancholy way.
+
+First, to his rooms again, to see if by chance the letter had come in
+his absence. Then, as it had not, to Lady Elspeth Gordon's for old
+Hamish's latest news, which, in a letter from his wife, was
+satisfactory as far as it went, but pointed to a protracted stay. And
+then, with stern resolution, up to Baker Street and away by train to
+Chesham, for a long day's tramp through the Buckingham hills and
+dales, by Chenies to Chorley Wood and Rickmansworth, so to weary the
+body that the wearier brain should get some rest that night.
+
+The sweet soft air and sunshine, the leisurely life of the villages,
+and the cheerful unfoldings of the spring, in wood and field and
+hedgerow, brought him to a more hopeful frame of mind. Every sparrow
+twittered hope. The thrushes and young blackbirds fluted it
+melodiously. It was impossible to remain unhopeful in such goodly
+company. Something unexpected, accidental, untoward, had prevented
+Margaret replying to his letter. Time would clear it up and set him
+wondering at his lapse from fullest faith.
+
+Also--he would risk even further rebuff. He would write again, and
+this time he would trust no precarious and problematical post-office.
+He would drop his letter into the Pixley letter-box himself, and so be
+sure that it got there.
+
+If then no answer,--to the winds with Mrs. Grundy and all her coils
+and conventions! He would call and see Margaret himself, and learn
+from her own eyes and face and lips how matters stood, and Mrs. Grundy
+might dance and scream on the step outside until she grew tired of the
+exercise.
+
+There was joy and hope in action once more. Patient waiting on
+slowly-dying Hope is surely the direst moral and mental torture to
+which poor humanity can be subjected. That is where woman
+pre-eminently overpasses man. Woman can wait unmurmuringly on dying
+Hope till the last breath is gone, then silently take up her burden
+and go on her way--or, if the strain has been too great, fold quiet
+hands on quiet heart and follow her dead hopes into the living hope
+beyond. Man must aye be doing--and as often as not, such natural
+judgment as he possesses being warped and jangled by the strain of
+waiting, he succeeds only in making matters worse and a more complete
+fool of himself.
+
+To be writing to Margaret again was to be living in hope once more.
+
+If nothing came of this, he would call at the Pixley house.
+
+If nothing came of that--he grew valiant in his new access of life--he
+would beard Jeremiah Pixley in his den in Lincoln's Inn, state clearly
+how matters stood, and request permission to approach his ward.
+
+After all, this is a free country, and all men are equal under the
+law, though he had his own doubts as to whether he would find himself
+quite equal to that gleaming pillar of light, Mr. Jeremiah Pixley.
+
+So he wrote--
+
+ "DEAR MISS BRANDT,--I wrote to you a few days ago, giving you
+ the information of our dear friend Lady Elspeth's sudden summons
+ to Inverstrife, to attend her niece, the Countess of Assynt.
+
+ "I hope you will not consider it presumption on my part to
+ express the fear that my letter has somehow miscarried--probably
+ through some oversight of my own, or carelessness on the part of
+ the postal authorities.
+
+ "You will, I know, be glad to hear that Lady Elspeth
+ accomplished her journey in safety and without undue discomfort.
+ But Lady Assynt's condition makes it probable that her stay may
+ be somewhat prolonged.
+
+ "I venture to hope that you may regret this as much as I do. All
+ who enjoyed Lady Elspeth's friendship and hospitality cannot but
+ miss her sorely.
+
+ "I hope, however, that I may still have the pleasure of meeting
+ you occasionally elsewhere. When one has not the habit of
+ readily making new friendships one clings the more firmly to
+ those already made.--Sincerely yours,
+
+ "JOHN C. GRAEME."
+
+That letter he dropped into the Pixley letterbox himself that night,
+and so was assured of its delivery. But two days passed in waning
+hope, and the afternoon of the third found him on the doorstep of No.
+1 Melgrave Square.
+
+
+II
+
+"Miss Brandt?"
+
+The solemn-faced man-servant eyed him suspiciously as a stranger. He
+looked, to Graeme, like a superannuated official of the Court of
+Chancery.
+
+"Miss Brandt is not at home, sir."
+
+"Mrs. Pixley?"
+
+"Mrs. Pixley is not at home, sir."
+
+Was he right or wrong, he wondered, in thinking he detected a gleam of
+satisfied anticipation, of gratified understanding, in the solemn
+one's otherwise rigid eye--as of one who had been told to expect this
+and was lugubriously contented that it had duly come to pass?
+
+However, there was nothing more to be done there at the moment. The
+polite conventions, to say nothing of the law, forbade him the
+pleasure of hurling the outcast of Chancery into the kennel and
+forcing his way in. Instead, he hailed a hansom and drove straight to
+Lincoln's Inn, boldly demanded audience of Mr. Pixley on pressing
+private business, and presently found himself in the presence.
+
+Mr. Pixley stood on the hearthrug with his back to the fire, and
+handled his gold pince-nez defensively.
+
+Here also Graeme had an intuition that he was expected, which was
+somewhat odd, you know, unless his letters had been handed to Mr.
+Pixley for perusal, which did not seem likely.
+
+Mr. Pixley bowed formally and he responded--the salute before the
+click of the foils.
+
+Mr. Pixley stood expectant, but by no means inviting of confidences
+such as his visitor was about to tender him. Rather he seemed fully
+armed for the defence, especially in the matter of the heavy gold
+pince-nez, which he held threateningly, after the manner of the
+headsman of old towards the victim on whom he was about to operate.
+
+"I have taken the liberty of calling, Mr. Pixley," said Graeme,--and
+Mr. Pixley's manner in subtle fashion conveyed his full recognition of
+the fact that liberty it undoubtedly was, and that he had no smallest
+shadow of a right to be there,--"to inquire after Miss Brandt."
+
+"Miss Brandt?" said Mr. Pixley vaguely, as though the name were new
+and strange to him. Or perhaps it was an endeavour on his part to
+express the impassable gulf which lay between his visitor and his
+ward, and the profound amazement he felt at any attempt on his
+visitor's part to abridge it. He also made a little involuntary
+preliminary cut at him with the pince-nez, as much as to say, "If this
+my weapon were of a size commensurate with my wishes and your
+colossal impudence, your head would lie upon the ground, young man."
+
+"I have had the pleasure of meeting Miss Brandt at Lady Elspeth
+Gordon's and elsewhere. I think I may claim that we were on terms of
+friendship. Lady Elspeth has been called from home very suddenly to
+the bedside of her niece, Lady Assynt, and I have written twice to
+Miss Brandt and have had no reply. It struck me that she might be ill
+and I have called to inquire."
+
+This was all lame enough no doubt, and so he felt it, but it was only
+in the nature of preliminary feinting. They were not yet at grips.
+
+"Ah!" with ponderous deliberation, "you have called to inquire if Miss
+Brandt is ill. I have pleasure in informing you that she is not."
+
+"I am glad to hear that, at all events. Might I ask if you are aware
+of any reason why she should not have received my letters--or replied
+to them?"
+
+"Two questions," said Mr. Pixley, cutting them in slices with his
+pince-nez, as though they were to be charged up to his visitor at so
+much per pound. "There is no reason whatever why Miss Brandt should
+not have received your letters. There may be the best possible reasons
+why she should not reply to them."
+
+"So far as I have been able to form an opinion of Miss Brandt it is
+quite unlike her not to have, at all events, acknowledged them."
+
+"Ah! Your opportunities have probably been limited, Mr.--er--"--with
+a glance at the card--"Graeme, and you may possibly be--from your
+calling upon me I judge you undoubtedly are--ignorant of the facts of
+the case," and the gold pince-nez hammered that into the stolid young
+man's head.
+
+"Perhaps you would be so good as to enlighten me."
+
+"It would perhaps be as well to do so. To be perfectly frank with you,
+Mr. Graeme, my ward had the very best of reasons for handing your
+letters to me and not replying to them herself."
+
+"Really! I would esteem it a favour, Mr. Pixley, if you would
+enlighten me further."
+
+"Certainly!" with an airy wave of the pince-nez. "I intend to do so.
+The simple fact of my ward's engagement to my son, and that they are
+looking forward to the celebration of their marriage in something less
+than three months, will probably suffice to explain Miss Brandt's
+disinclination to enter into correspondence with a comparative
+stranger,"--and the pince-nez shredded Graeme's hopes into little
+pieces and scattered them about the floor.
+
+"Miss Brandt is engaged to your son?" he jerked, feeling not a little
+foolish, and decidedly downhearted.
+
+"As I have informed you. It is a union to which we have been looking
+hopefully forward for some time past--a most excellent conjunction of
+hearts and fortunes. My ward possesses some means, as you are
+doubtless aware,"--with an insolent thrust of the pince-nez at the
+would-be suitor's honour,--"and my son is also well provided for in
+that respect."
+
+"Then--I am afraid my visit is something in the nature of an
+intrusion." Mr. Pixley bowed his fullest acquiescence in this very
+proper estimate of his position, and the pince-nez intimated that the
+way out lay just behind him and that the sooner he took advantage of
+it the better.
+
+"I can only say, by way of apology," added Graeme, "that I was wholly
+unaware of what you have just told me. I will wish you good-day, Mr.
+Pixley."
+
+Mr. Pixley and the pince-nez wafted him towards the door, and the
+lumpy cobbles of the courtyard outside seemed to him, for the moment,
+absolutely typical of life.
+
+He went back home numbed and sore at heart. It was hard to believe
+this of Margaret Brandt.
+
+And yet--he said to himself--it was wholly he who was to blame. He had
+deceived himself. He had wished to believe what he had so earnestly
+desired should be. Possibly he had closed his eyes to facts and
+indications which might have enlightened him if he had been on the
+look-out for them. Possibly--well, there!--he had played the fool
+unconsciously, and he was not the first. It only remained for him now
+to play the man.
+
+He felt sore, and bruised, and run down, and for the moment somewhat
+at odds with life. He would get away from it all to some remote
+corner, to rest for a time and recover tone, and then to work. For
+work, after all, is the mighty healer and tonic, and when it is to
+one's taste there are few wounds it cannot salve.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE THIRD
+
+
+I
+
+Six o'clock next morning found Graeme on the deck of the _Ibex_ as she
+threaded her way swiftly among the bristling black rocks that guard
+the coast of Guernsey.
+
+Herm and Jethou lay sleeping in the eye of the sun. Beyond them lay a
+filmy blue whaleback of an island which he was told was Sark, and it
+was to Sark he was bound.
+
+And wherefore Sark, when, within reasonable limits, all the wide world
+lay open to him?
+
+Truly, it might not be easy to say. But this I know,--having so far
+learned the lesson of life, though missing much else--that at times,
+perhaps at all times, when we think our choice of ways our very
+own,--when we stand in doubt at the crossroads of life, and then
+decide on this path or that, and pride ourselves on the exercise of
+our high prerogative as free agents,--the result, when we look back,
+bears in upon our hearts the mighty fact that a higher mind than our
+own has been quietly at work, shaping our ends and moulding and
+rounding our lives. We may doubt it at times. We may take all the
+credit to ourselves for dangers passed and tiny victories won, but in
+due time the eyes of our understanding are opened--and we know.
+
+Possibly it was the rapt eulogiums of his friend Black--who had spent
+the previous summer in Sark, and had ever since been seeking words
+strong enough in which to paint its charms--that forced its name to
+the front when he stood facing the wide world, that lacked, for him at
+all events, a Margaret Brandt, and was therefore void and desolate.
+
+"If ever you seek perfect peace, relief from your fellows, and the
+simple life, try Sark--and see that you live in a cottage!" he
+remembered Adam Black murmuring softly, as they sat smoking at the
+Travellers' one night, shortly after that memorable dinner of the
+Whitefriars'. And then he had heaved a sigh of regret at thought of
+being where he was when he might have been in Sark.
+
+Graeme knew nothing whatever of Sark save what his friend had let fall
+at times. "Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark," recalled his
+short-jacket and broad-collar days, and the last of the quartette had
+always somehow conjured up in his mind the image of a bleak,
+inaccessible rock set in a stormy sea, where no one lived if he could
+possibly find shelter elsewhere,--an Ultima Thule, difficult of access
+and still more difficult of exit, a weather-bound little spot into
+which you scrambled precariously by means of boats and ladders, and
+out of which you might not be able to get for weeks on end.
+
+But Sark was to hold a very different place in his mind henceforth.
+The name of Calais burnt itself into the heart of Queen Mary by reason
+of loss. Surely on John Graeme's heart the name of Sark may hope to
+find itself in living letters, for in Sark he was to find more than he
+had lost--new grace and charm in life, new hopes, new life itself.
+
+He had gone straight home from Lincoln's Inn, and packed his
+portmanteau, knowing only that he was going away somewhere out of
+things, caring little where, so long as it was remote and lonely.
+
+Fellow-man--and especially woman--was distasteful to him at the
+moment. He craved only Solitude the Soother, and Nature the Healer.
+
+He packed all he thought he might need for a couple of months' stay,
+and among other things the manuscript he had been at work upon until
+more pressing matters intervened. He felt, indeed, no slightest
+inclination towards it, or anything else, at present. But that might
+come, for Work and he were tried friends.
+
+He wrote briefly to Lady Elspeth telling her how things were with him,
+and that he was going away for a time. He did not tell her where, for
+the simple reason that at the moment of writing he did not know
+himself. Sark came into his mind later.
+
+He told his landlady that he was going away for a change, and she
+remarked in motherly fashion that she was glad to hear it, and it was
+high time too. He told her to keep all his letters till he sent for
+them. He had no importunate correspondents, his next book was as good
+as placed, and all he desired at the moment was to cut the painter,
+and drift into some quiet backwater where he could lie up till life
+should wear a more cheerful face.
+
+And so no single soul knew where he had gone, and he said to himself,
+somewhat bitterly, and quite untruthfully, that no single soul cared.
+
+He had paced the deck all night. The swift smooth motion of the boat,
+with a slight slow roll in it, was very soothing; and the first
+tremulous hints of the dawn, and the wonder of its slow unfolding, and
+the coming of the sun were things to be remembered.
+
+The cold gaunt aloofness, and weltering loneliness of the Casquets
+appealed to him strongly. Just the kind of place, he said to himself,
+for a heart-sick traveller to crawl into and grizzle until he found
+himself again.
+
+As they turned and swung in straight between the little lighthouse on
+White Rock and Castle Cornet, the bright early sunshine was bathing
+all the rising terraces of St. Peter Port in a golden haze. Such a
+quaint medley of gray weathered walls and mellowed red roofs, from
+which the thin blue smoke of early fires crept lazily up to mingle
+with the haze above! Such restful banks of greenery! Such a startling
+blaze of windows flashing back unconscious greetings to the sun! This
+too was a sight worth remembering. For a wounded soul he was somewhat
+surprised at the enjoyment these things afforded him.
+
+A further surprise was the pleasure he found in the reduction of a
+hearty appetite at an hotel on the front. Come! He was not as hard hit
+as he had thought! There was life in the young dog yet.
+
+But these encouraging symptoms were doubtless due to the temporary
+exhilaration of the journey. The workaday bustle of the quays renewed
+his desire for the solitary places, and he set out to find means of
+transport to the little whalebacked island out there in the golden
+shimmer of the sun.
+
+There was no steamer till the following day, he learned, and delay was
+not to his mind. So presently he came to an arrangement with an
+elderly party in blue, with a red-weathered face and grizzled hair, to
+put him and his two portmanteaux across to Sark for the sum of five
+shillings English.
+
+"To Havver Gosslin," said the aged mariner, with much emphasis, and a
+canny look which conveyed to Graeme nothing more than a simple and
+praiseworthy desire on his part to avoid any possibility of mistake.
+
+"To Sark," said Graeme, with equal emphasis.
+
+"Ay, ay!" said the other; and so it came that the new-comer's initial
+experience of the little island went far towards the confirmation of
+the vague ideas of his childhood as to its inaccessibility.
+
+The ancient called to a younger man, and they strolled away along the
+harbour wall to get the baggage.
+
+
+II
+
+"Ee see," said the old gentleman, as soon as they had pulled out past
+Castle Cornet, and had hoisted the masts and two rather dirty sprit
+sails, and had run out the bowsprit and a new clean jib with a view to
+putting the best possible face on matters, and were beginning to catch
+occasional puffs of a soft westerly breeze and to wallow slowly
+along,--"Ee see, time's o' consekens to me and my son. We got to arn
+our livin'. An' Havver Gosslin's this side the island an' th' Creux's
+t'other side, an' th' currents round them points is the very divvle."
+
+"That's all right, as long as you land me in Sark."
+
+"The very divvle," and the grizzled head wagged reminiscently. "I seen
+'em go right up to Casquets and haf-way to Jarsey trying to get across
+to Sark. An' when time's o' consekens an' you got to arn your livin',
+you don' want to be playin' 'bout Casquets an' Jarsey 'stid of gittin'
+'cross to Sark an' done wi' it."
+
+"Not a bit of it. You're quite right. Try some of this,"--as he began
+fumbling meaningly with a black stump of a pipe.
+
+He filled up, and passed on the pouch to his son, who was lying on the
+thwarts forward, and he also filled up and passed it back with a nod.
+
+"What's this?" asked Graeme.
+
+"Jetto. Mr. Lee--Sir Austin 'e is now--brother o' Passon Lee o' the
+Port," with a backward jerk of the head, "'e rents it."
+
+"Live there?"
+
+"Naw--rabbits."
+
+"And the bigger island yonder?"
+
+"'At's Harm. 'T's a Garman man has that--Prince Bloocher, they calls
+him. Keeps kangyroos there an' orstrichers an' things. Don't let
+annybody ashore there now 'cept just to Shell Beach, which he can't
+help."
+
+They struck straight across to the long high-ridged island in front,
+and Graeme's untutored eyes found no special beauty in it.
+
+There was about it, however, a vague gray aloofness which chimed with
+his spirit, a sober austerity as of a stricken whale,--a mother-whale
+surely, for was not her young one there at her nose,--fled here to
+heal her wound perchance, and desirous only of solitude.
+
+But, as they drew nearer, the vague blue-gray bloom of the whaleback
+resolved itself into a mantle of velvet green, which ran down every
+rib and spine until it broke off sharp at varying heights and let the
+bare bones through; and all below the break was clean naked
+rock--black, cream-yellow, gray, red, brown,--with everywhere a tawny
+fringe of seaweed, since the tide was at its lowest. Below the fringe
+the rocks were scoured almost white, and whiter still at their feet,
+like a tangled drapery of ragged lace, was the foam of the long slow
+seas.
+
+And the solid silhouette of the island broke suddenly into bosky
+valleys soft with trees and bracken, and cliff-ringed bays, with
+wide-spread arms of tumbled rock whose outer ends were tiny islets and
+hungry reefs.
+
+"Brecqhou," said the ancient mariner, as they swung past a long green
+island with beetling cliffs, and yawning caverns, and comet-like
+rushes of white foam among the chaos of rocks below.
+
+Then they swirled through a tumbling race, where the waters came up
+writhing and boiling from strife with hidden rocks below,--past the
+dark chasm between Brecqhou and the mainland of Sark, through which
+the race roared with the voice of many waters--and so into a quiet
+haven where hard-worked boats lay resting from their labours.
+
+There was a beach of tumbled rocks and seaweed at the head of the bay,
+and there the grim cliffs fell back into a steep green gully which
+suggested possibility of ascent. But instead of running in there, the
+sails were furled and the boat nosed slowly towards the overhanging
+side of the cliff, where a broad iron ladder fell precariously into
+the water with its top projecting out beyond its base, so that to
+climb it one had to lie on one's back, so to speak.
+
+The ancient one eyed his passenger whimsically as the boat stole up to
+the rungs, so Graeme permitted himself no more than a careless glance
+at the forbidding ladder and asked, "How about the baggage?"
+
+"We'll see to et," grinned the ancient, and stood, hands on hips and
+face twisted into a grim smile, while the stranger laid hold of the
+rusty iron and started upwards, with no slightest idea where the end
+of the venture might land him.
+
+With the after-assistance of a neighbour of somewhat more genial
+construction,--inasmuch as it at all events stood upright, and did not
+lean over the opposite way of ladders in general,--the top rung landed
+him on a little platform, whence a rope and some foot-holes in the
+rock, and finally a zigzag path, invited further ascent still.
+
+The portmanteaux were hauled up by a rope and shouldered by his
+guardian angels, and they toiled slowly up the steep.
+
+Each step developed new beauties behind and on either side. At the top
+he would fain have rested to drink it all in, but his guides went
+stolidly on,--towards drink of a more palpable description, he doubted
+not; and he remembered that time was of consekens, and tore himself
+away from that most wonderful view and panted after them.
+
+The zigzag path led round clumps of flaming gorse to a gap in a rough
+stone wall, and so to a tall granite pillar which crowned the cliff
+and commemorated a disaster. It was erected, he saw, to the memory of
+a Mr. Jeremiah Pilcher who had been drowned just below in attempting
+the passage to Guernsey. He had but one regret at the moment--that it
+was not instead to the memory of Mr. Jeremiah Pixley.
+
+
+III
+
+Down verdant lanes--past thatched cottages, past a windmill, past
+houses of more substantial mien, with a glimpse down a rolling green
+valley----
+
+"Hotel?" asked the ancient abruptly, from beneath his load.
+
+"No, I want rooms in some cottage. Can you----"
+
+"John Philip," said the ancient one didactically, and trudged on, and
+finally dumped his share of the burden at the door of what looked like
+a house but was a shop, in fact the shop.
+
+He went inside and Graeme followed him. A genial-faced elderly man,
+with gray hair and long gray beard and gray shirt-sleeves, leaned over
+the counter, talking in an unknown tongue to a blue-guernseyed
+fisherman, and a quiet-faced old lady in a black velvet hair-net stood
+listening.
+
+They all looked up and saluted the ancient one with ejaculations of
+surprise in the unknown tongue, and Graeme stared hard at the
+gray-bearded man, while they all discussed him to his face.
+
+"Mr. De Carteret," said the ancient at last, with a jerk of the head
+towards Gray-Beard. "He tell you where to find rooms."
+
+"Thanks! Do you speak any English, Mr. De Carteret?"
+
+The pleasant old face broke into a smile. "I am En-glish," he said,
+with a quaint soft intonation, and as one who speaks a foreign tongue,
+and beamed genially on his young compatriot.
+
+"That's all right then. Do you know you're very like Count Tolstoi?"
+
+"I haf been told so, but I do not know him. What is it you would like,
+if you please to tell me?"
+
+"I want a sitting-room and a bedroom for a month or so, perhaps
+more,--not at an hotel. I want to be quiet and all to myself."
+
+"Ah--you don' want an hotel. You want to be quiet," and he nodded
+understandingly. "But the hotels is quiet joost now--"
+
+"I'd sooner have rooms in a cottage if I can get them."
+
+Count Tolstoi turned to the fisherman to whom he had been speaking,
+and discussed the matter at length with him in the patois.
+
+Then, to Graeme, "If you please to go with him. His wife has roomss to
+let. You will be quite comfortable there."
+
+Graeme thanked him, and as soon as he had settled satisfactorily with
+his boatmen, his new keeper picked up both his bags, and led him along
+a stony way past the post-office, to a creeper-covered cottage, which
+turned a cold shoulder to the road and looked coyly into a little
+courtyard paved with cobble-stones and secluded from the outer world
+by a granite wall three feet high.
+
+And as they went, the young man asked his silent guide somewhat
+doubtfully, "And do you speak English?"
+
+"Oh yes. We all speak English," he said, with a quiet smile, "except a
+few of the older folks, maybe, and they mostly understand it though
+they're slow to talk."
+
+"And your name?"
+
+"John Carré,"--which he pronounced Caury.
+
+"Now that's very odd," laughed Graeme, and stood to enjoy it. "My name
+is Corrie too, and John Corrie at that."
+
+"So!" said the other quietly, with a glance from under his brows which
+might mean surprise or only gentle doubt as to the stranger's
+veracity. And, so odd was the coincidence, that the newcomer saw no
+necessity to spoil it by telling him that his forebears had left him
+also the family name of Graeme.
+
+A large brown dog, smooth of hair and of a fine and thoughtful
+countenance, got up from the doorstep and gave them courteous
+greeting, and a small, white, rough-coated terrier hurried out of the
+kitchen and twisted himself into kinks of delight at sound of their
+voices. And that decided it before ever Graeme looked at the rooms.
+For if there was one thing he liked when he wanted to be alone, it was
+the friendly companionship of a couple of cheerful dogs.
+
+And that is how he came,--without any special intent that way, but
+through, as one might say, a purely accidental combination of
+circumstances--to be living in that cottage in the Rue Lucas in the
+little isle of Sark, and under a name that was indeed his own but not
+the whole of his own. And herein the future was looking after itself
+and preparing the way for that which was to be.
+
+
+IV
+
+The cottage was apparently empty. His guide and namesake looked into
+the kitchen, and called up a stair which led out of it, but got no
+answer.
+
+"She will be up at the house," he said, and turned and went off up the
+garden behind, while the dogs raced on in front to show the way.
+
+Through a cleft in the high green bank topped by a thick hedge of
+hawthorn, they came out into a garden of less utilitarian aspect. Here
+were shrubs and flowers, palms and conifers and pale eucalyptus trees,
+clumps of purple iris and clove pinks, roses just coming to the bud,
+and beyond, a very charming bungalow, built solidly of gray granite
+and red tiles, with a wide verandah all round. A pleasant-faced woman
+in a large black sunbonnet came out of the open front door as they
+went up the path.
+
+"My wife," murmured Carré, and proceeded quietly to explain matters in
+an undertone of patois.
+
+"I hope you speak English also, Mrs. Carré," said Graeme.
+
+"Oh yess," with a quick smile. "We are all English here."
+
+"Surely you are Welsh," he said, for he had met just that same
+cheerful type of face in Wales.
+
+"Noh, I am Sark," she smiled again. "I can gif you a sitting-room and
+a bet-room"--and they proceeded to business, and then the dogs
+escorted them back to the cottage, to see the stranger fairly inducted
+to his new abode, and to let him understand that they rejoiced at his
+coming and would visit him often.
+
+He thought he would be very comfortable there, but why the
+sitting-room was not the bedroom he never could understand. For it was
+only a quarter the size of the other, and its single window looked
+into a field, and a rough granite wall clothed with tiny rock-weeds
+hid all view of the road and its infrequent traffic. While the bedroom
+was a room of size, and its two windows gave on to the covered well
+and the cobbled forecourt, and offered passers-by, if so inclined,
+oblique views of its occupant in the act of dressing if he forgot to
+pull down the blind.
+
+The windows of both rooms were set low in the massive granite walls,
+and being always wide open, they offered, and indeed invited, easy
+access to--say, a grave-faced gentlemanly brown dog and a spasmodic
+rough-coated terrier without a tail, whenever the spirit moved them to
+incursion, which it invariably did at meal-times and frequently in
+between.
+
+These two new friends of his--for they were never mere acquaintances,
+but adopted him into fullest brotherhood at sight--proved no small
+factors in Graeme's extrication from the depths.
+
+Human companionship, even of the loftiest, most philosophic, most
+gracious, would, for the time being, have jarred and ruffled his
+naturally equable spirit. Two only exceptions might have been
+conceivably possible--some humble, large-souled friend, anxious only
+to anticipate his slightest wish, desirous only of his company,
+and--dumb, and so unable to fret him with inane talk; or--Margaret
+Brandt.
+
+The first he could have endured. The latter--ah, God! How he would
+have rejoiced in her! The spirit groaned within him at times in
+agonised longing for her; and the glories of the sweet spring days, in
+a land where spring is joyous and radiant beyond most, turned gray and
+cheerless in the shadow of his loss. What Might Have Been stabbed What
+Was to the heart and let its life-blood run.
+
+But, since neither of these was available, a benignant Providence
+provided him with friends entirely to his taste. For the great brown
+hound, Punch, was surely, despite the name men had given him, a
+nobleman by birth and breeding. Powerful and beautifully made, the
+sight of his long lithe bounds, as he quartered the cliff-sides in
+silent chase of fowl and fur, was a thing to rejoice in; so exquisite
+in its tireless grace, so perfect in its unconscious exhibition of
+power and restraint. For the brown dog never gave tongue, and he never
+killed. He chased for the keen enjoyment of the chase, and no man had
+ever heard him speak.
+
+He was the first dumb dog Graeme had ever come across, and the
+pathetic yearning in his solemn brown eyes was full of infinite appeal
+to one who suffered also from an unforgettable loss. He answered to
+his name with a dignified appreciation of its incongruity, and the
+tail-less white terrier, more appropriately, to that of Scamp.
+
+
+V
+
+They were on the very best of terms, these two friends of his,
+possibly because of their absolute unlikeness,--Punch, large, solemn,
+imperturbable, with a beautifully-curved slow-waving tail and no
+voice; Scamp, a bundle of wriggling nerves moved by electricity, with
+a sharp excited bark and not even the stump of a tail. When he needed
+to wag he wagged the whole of his body behind his front legs.
+
+These two were sitting watching him expectantly as Mrs. Carré brought
+in his dinner that first day, and she instantly ordered them out.
+
+Punch rose at once, cast one look of grave appeal at Graeme, as who
+would say--"Sorry to leave you, but this is the kind of thing I have
+to put up with,"--and walked slowly away. Scamp grovelled flat and
+crawled to the door like a long hairy caterpillar.
+
+"Oh, let them stop," said Graeme. "I like them by me," and the
+culprits turned hopefully with pricked ears and anxious faces.
+
+"Mais non! They are troublesome beasts. Allez, Ponch! Allez, Scamp! A
+couche!"--and their heads and ears drooped and they slunk away.
+
+But, presently, there came a rustling at the wide-open window which
+gave on to the field at the back, and Graeme laughed out--and he had
+not smiled for days--at sight of two deprecatingly anxious faces
+looking in upon him,--a solemn brown one with black spots above the
+eloquent grave eyes, and a roguish white one with pink blemishes on a
+twisting black nose. And while the large brown face loomed steadily
+above two powerful front paws, the small white face only appeared at
+intervals as the nervous little body below flung it up to the sill in
+a series of spasmodic leaps.
+
+"We would esteem it a very great favour, if you are quite sure it
+would not inconvenience you," said Punch, as plain as speech.
+
+"Do, do, do, do, do give us leave!" signalled Scamp, with every twist
+of his quivering nose, and every gleam of his glancing eyes, and every
+hair on end.
+
+A click of the tongue, a noiseless graceful bound, and Punch was at
+his side. A wild scrambling rush, a wriggle on the sill, a patter over
+the window-seat, and Scamp was twisting himself into white
+figure-eights all over the room, with tremendous energy but not a
+sound save the soft pad of his tiny dancing feet.
+
+Then, as he ate, the great brown head pillowed itself softly on his
+knee, and the eloquent brown eyes looked up into his in a way that a
+stone image could hardly have resisted. The while Scamp, on his hind
+legs, beat the air frantically with his front paws to attract
+attention to his needs and danced noiselessly all over the floor.
+
+He gauged their characters with interest. When he gave them morsels
+turn about, Punch awaited his with gentlemanly patience, and even when
+purposely passed by in order to see what he would do, obtruded his
+claims by nothing more than a gentle movement of the head on his
+friend's knee; while Scamp, in like case, twisted himself into knots
+of anxiety and came perilously near to utterance.
+
+The difference between them when, through lack of intimate knowledge
+of their likes and dislikes, they got something not entirely to their
+taste, was also very typical. Punch would retire quietly into
+obscurity, and having disposed of the objectionable morsel
+somehow--either by a strenuous swallow or in some corner--would
+quietly reappear, lay his head on Graeme's knee again, and work it up
+to his lap with a series of propitiatory little jerks that never
+failed of their object. Scamp, on the other hand, would hold it in his
+mouth for a moment till he had savoured it, then place it meekly on
+the floor, bow his head to the ground, and grovel flat with
+deprecatory white-eyed up-glances, and as clearly as dog could say,
+would murmur,--"Oh, Man, Lord of all that go on four legs, forgive thy
+humble little servant in that he is unable with enjoyment to eat that
+thou hast of thy bounty tendered him! The fault is wholly his. Yet, of
+thy great clemency, punish him not beyond his capacity, for his very
+small body is merely a bundle of nerves, and they lie so very close to
+the skin that even a harsh word from thee will set them quivering for
+an hour." But, at a comforting word, he was up in a flash dancing and
+sparring away as gaily as ever.
+
+Then, when Mrs. Carré brought in the next course, they both retired
+discreetly below the tent of the tablecloth. But she, knowing them of
+old perhaps, found them out at once and cried, "Ah you! I see you
+there! You are just troublesome beasts!" But, seeing that her guest
+was in the conspiracy, she permitted them for that once; and in time,
+seeing that he really desired their company, she allowed them to
+remain as a matter of course and without any preliminary harrying.
+
+
+VI
+
+One other acquaintance he made during these dark days,--perhaps one
+ought to say an acquaintance and a half, if indeed the half in this
+case was not greater than the whole, a matter which Graeme never fully
+decided in his own mind,--a small person of grim and gloomy
+tendencies, whose sombre humours chimed at times with his own,--and
+that small person's familiar.
+
+His name was Johnnie Vautrin, and, as far as Graeme could make out, he
+was about eight years old in actual years, but aged beyond belief in
+black arts which made him a terror to his kind. And his familiar, in
+the person of an enormous black cat, which came and went, was named
+Marielihou.
+
+Johnnie, and presumably Marielihou, lived with an ancient dame who was
+held by some to be their great-grandmother, and by some to be
+Marielihou herself. This was a moot and much-discussed point among the
+neighbours. What was beyond dispute was that Johnnie was said to be
+grievously maltreated by her at times, and to lead her a deuce of a
+life, and she him. The family came originally from Guernsey and had
+married into Sark, and, for this and other reasons, was still looked
+askance at by the neighbours.
+
+Both Johnnie and his ancient relative were popularly--or
+unpopularly--credited with powers of mischief which secured them
+immunities and privileges beyond the common and not a little prudently
+concealed dislike.
+
+Old Mrs. Vautrin could put the evil eye on her neighbours' cows and
+stop their milk, on their churns and stop their butter, on their
+kettles and stop their boiling.
+
+Johnnie claimed equal powers, but excelled in forecasts of bad weather
+and ill luck and evil generally, and, since there was no end to his
+prognostications, they occasionally came true, and when they did he
+exulted greatly and let no one forget it.
+
+He had a long, humorously snaky, little face, a deep sepulchral voice,
+which broke into squeaks in moments of excitement, and curious black
+eyes with apparently no pupils--little glittering black wells of ill
+intent, with which he cowed dogs and set small children screaming and
+grown ones swearing. His little body was as malformed as his twisted
+little soul, and he generally sat in the hedge taking his pleasure off
+the passers-by, much to their discomfort.
+
+Johnnie also saw ghosts, or said he did, which came to much the same
+thing since none could prove to the contrary. He had even slept one
+night in an outhouse up at the Seigneurie, and had carefully locked
+the door, and so the little old lady in white, who only appears to
+those who lock their doors of a night, came to him, and, according to
+Johnnie, they carried on a long and edifying conversation to their
+mutual satisfaction.
+
+He had also a cheerful habit of visiting sick folks and telling them
+he had seen their spirits in the lanes at night, and so they might
+just as well give up all hopes of getting better. On payment of a
+small fee, however, he was at times, according to his humour, willing
+to admit that it might have been somebody else's ghost he had seen,
+but in either case his visitations tended to cheerfulness in none but
+himself. He was great on the meanings--dismal ones mostly--of flights
+of birds and falling stars and fallen twigs. And he had been known to
+throw a branch of hawthorn into a house which had incurred his
+displeasure.
+
+The men scoffed at him openly, and occasionally gave him surreptitious
+pennies. The women and children feared him; and the dogs, to the last
+one, detested him but gave him wide berth.
+
+Graeme had very soon run across the little misanthrope and, in his own
+black humour, found him amusing. They rarely met without a trial of
+wit, or parted without a transfer of coppers from the large pocket to
+the small. Wherefore Johnnie made a special nest in the hedge opposite
+the cottage, and waylaid his copper-mine systematically and greatly to
+his own satisfaction and emolument. But, like the dogs, though on a
+lower level, he too was not without his effect on Graeme's spirits,
+and if he did not lift him up he certainly at times helped him out of
+himself and his gloomy thoughts.
+
+
+VII
+
+"You're just an unmitigated little humbug, Johnnie," said Graeme, as
+he leaned over the wall smoking, to the small boy whose acquaintance
+he had made the previous day, and who had promptly foretold a storm
+which had not come.
+
+"Unmitigumbug! Guyablle! Qu'es' ce que c'es' que ça?" echoed the small
+boy, with very wide eyes.
+
+"You, my son. Your black magic's all humbug. It lacks the essential
+attribute of fulfilment. It doesn't work. Black magic that doesn't
+work is humbug."
+
+"Black-mack-chick! My Good! You do talk!"
+
+"What about that storm?"
+
+"Ah ouaie! Well, you wait. It come."
+
+"So will Christmas, and the summer after next, if we wait long enough.
+On the same terms I foretell thunders and lightnings, rain, hail,
+snow, and fiery vapours, followed by lunar rainbows and waterspouts."
+
+"Go'zamin!" said Johnnie, with a touch of reluctant admiration at such
+an outflow of eloquence; and then, by way of set-off, "I sec six black
+crows, 's mawn'n."
+
+"Ah--really? And what do you gather from such a procession as that
+now?"
+
+"Some un's gwain' to die," in a tone of vast satisfaction.
+
+"Of course, of course--if we wait long enough. It's perhaps you.
+You'll die yourself sometime, you know."
+
+"Noh, I wun't. No 'n'll ivver see me die. I'll just turn into
+sun'th'n--a gull maybe," as one floated by on moveless wing, the very
+poetry of motion; and the fathomless black eyes followed it with
+pathetic longing.
+
+"Cormorant more likely, I should say."
+
+"Noh, I wun't. I don' like corm'rants. They stink. Mebbe I'll be a
+hawk,"--as his eye fell on one, like a brown leaf nailed against the
+blue sky. "Did ee hear White Horse last night?"
+
+"I did hear a horse in the night, Johnnie, but I couldn't swear that
+he was a white one."
+
+"Didn' git up an' look out?" disappointedly.
+
+"No, I didn't. Why should I get up to look out at a horse? I can see
+horses any day without getting out of bed in the middle of the night."
+
+"'Twus the White Horse of the Coupée,"--in a weird whisper.--"I heerd
+him start in Little Sark, and come across Coupée, an' up by Colinette,
+an' past this house. An' if you'd ha' looked out an' seen him, you'd
+ha' died."
+
+"Good old White Horse! I'm glad I stopped in bed. Did you see him
+yourself now?"
+
+"I've rid him! Yes!--an' told him where to go," with a ghoulish nod.
+
+"Quite friendly with ghosts and things, eh?"
+
+"I don' mind 'em. I seen the ole lady up at the big house. Yes, an'
+talked to her too."
+
+"Clever boy! Put the evil eye on her?"
+
+"Noh, ee cann't."
+
+"Can't? Why, I thought you were a past master in all little matters of
+that kind."
+
+"Ee cann't put evil eye on a ghost," with infinite scorn.
+
+"Oh, she's a ghost, is she? And what did you talk about?"
+
+"You coul'n't understan'," grunted Johnnie, to whom his meeting with
+the White Lady was a treasured memory if a somewhat tender subject.
+
+
+VIII
+
+And Marielihou? Ah, Marielihou was a black mystery. Sometimes she was
+there, and sometimes she wasn't, and if at such times you asked
+Johnnie where she was, he would reply mysteriously, "Aw, she's busy."
+
+And busy Marielihou was, always and at all times. If Graeme found her
+in the hedge with Johnnie, she was busy licking her lips with vicious
+enjoyment as though she had just finished eating something that had
+screamed as it died. Or she was licking them snarlishly and
+surreptitiously, and sharpening her claws, as though just about
+starting out after something to eat--something which he knew would
+certainly scream as it died. For Marielihou was a mighty hunter, and
+her long black body could be seen about the cliffs at any time of
+night or day, creeping and worming along, then, of a sudden, pointing
+and stiffening, and flashing on to her prey like the black death she
+was.
+
+Six full-grown rabbits had Marielihou been known to bring home in a
+single day, to say nothing of all the others that had gone to the
+satisfaction of her own inappeasable lust for rabbit-flesh and
+slaughter.
+
+As to the strange tales the neighbours whispered about her, Graeme
+could make neither head nor tail of them. But when old Tom Hamon put
+it to him direct, he had to confess that he never had seen old Mother
+Vautrin and Marielihou together, nor both at the same time.
+
+"B'en!" said old Tom, as if that ended the matter. "An' I tell you, if
+I had a silver bullet I'd soon try what that Marrlyou's made of."
+
+"And why a silver bullet?" asked Graeme.
+
+"'Cause--Lead bullets an't no good 'gainst the likes o' Marrlyou.
+Many's the wan I've sent after her, ay, an' through her, and she none
+the worse. Guyablle!" and old Tom spat viciously.
+
+"Perhaps you missed her," suggested Graeme, not unreasonably as he
+thought.
+
+"Missed her!" with immense scorn. "I tell ee bullets goes clean
+through her, in one side an' out t'other, an' she never a bit the
+worse. I've foun' 'em myself spatted on rock just where she sat."
+
+"Well, why don't you get a silver bullet and try again?"
+
+"Ah! Teks some getting does silver bullets."
+
+"How much?"
+
+"A shill'n would mek a little wan," and Graeme gave him a shilling to
+try his luck, because Marielihou's unsportsmanlike behaviour did not
+commend itself to him.
+
+But it took many shillings to obtain anything definite in the way of
+results, and Graeme had his own humorous suspicions as to the billets
+some of them found, and gently chaffed old Tom on the subject whenever
+they met.
+
+"You wait," said Tom, with mysterious nods.
+
+
+IX
+
+Graeme's sober intention had been to put Margaret Brandt, and the
+agonising regrets that clung to every thought of her, strenuously out
+of his mind. But that he found more possible in the intention than in
+the accomplishment.
+
+The first shock of loss numbs one's mental susceptibilities, of
+course, much as a blow on the head affects the nervous system. The
+bands are off the wheels, the machinery is out of order, and the
+friction seems reduced. It is when the machine tries to work again
+that the full effects of the jar are felt.
+
+And so he found it now. As mind and body recovered tone in the whole
+vitalising atmosphere of the wondrous little isle,--the air, the sea,
+the sense of remoteness, the placid life of the place, the abounding
+beauties of cliff and crag and cave,--his heart awoke also to the
+aching sense of its loss.
+
+All outward things--all save Johnny Vautrin, and Marielihou, and old
+Tom Hamon, and several others--sang abundantly of the peace and
+fulness and joy of life, but his heart was still so sore from its
+bruising that at times these outward beauties seemed only to mock him
+with their brightness.
+
+In the first shock of his downcasting, wounded pride said, "I will
+show no sign. I will forget her. I will salve the bruise with work.
+Margaret Brandt is not the only woman in the world. In time some other
+shall take her place;"--and he tried his hardest to believe it.
+
+But body is one thing and mind another. The body you may compel to any
+mortal thing, but the mind is of a different order, and strongest will
+cannot whip it to heel at times. Forbid it thought of thing or person
+and the forbidden is just that which will persist in obtruding itself
+to the exclusion of all else.
+
+And so, in spite of him, the dull ache in his heart at every thought
+of Margaret murmured without ceasing, "There is none like her--none!"
+And crush and compel it as he might, the truth would out, and out the
+more the more he tried to crush it.
+
+And so at times, in spite of his surroundings, his spirits dragged in
+lowest deeps.
+
+Work he could not as yet, for the work of the writer demands absolute
+concentration and most complete surrender, and all his faculties were
+centred, in spite of himself, on Margaret Brandt and his own great
+loss in her.
+
+He rambled all over the island with his dog friends, risked skin and
+bones in precarious descents into apparently impossible depths,
+scrambled laboriously among the ragged bastions of the Coupée and
+Little Sark, explored endless caverns, loitered by day in bosky lanes,
+and roamed restlessly by night under the brightest stars he had ever
+seen.
+
+But, wherever he went--down underground in the Boutiques or the
+Gouliots; or lying on the Eperquerie among the flaming gorse and
+cloudlike stretches of primroses; or standing on Longue Pointe while
+the sun sank in unearthly splendours behind Herm and Guernsey; or
+watching from the windmill the throbbing life-lights all round the
+wide horizon;--wherever he was, and whatever he was doing, there with
+him always was the poignant remembrance of Margaret Brandt and his
+loss in her.
+
+His heart ached so, at thought of the emptiness and desolation of the
+years that lay before him, that at times his body ached also, and the
+spirit within him groaned in sympathy.
+
+Life without Margaret! What was it worth?
+
+Though it brought him riches and honours overpassing his hopes--and he
+doubted now at times if that were possible, lacking the inspiration of
+Margaret--what was it worth?
+
+Riches and honours, won at the true sword's point of earnest work,
+were good and worth the winning. But yet, without Margaret, they were
+as nothing to him. His whole heart cried aloud for Margaret. Without
+her all the full rich hues of life faded into dull gray ashes.
+
+With Margaret to strive for, he had felt himself capable of mighty
+things. Without her--!
+
+And that she should throw herself away on a Charles Pixley!--Charles
+the smiling, the imperturbable, the fount of irrepressible chatter and
+everlasting inanities! How could such a one as Charles Pixley possibly
+satisfy her nobler nature? Out of the question! Impossible! But then
+it is just possible that he was not exactly in the best state of mind
+for forming an unbiassed opinion on so large a question as that.
+
+Anyway he was out of it, and Margaret Brandt was henceforth nothing to
+him. If he said it once he said it hundreds of times, as if the simple
+reiteration of so obvious a truth would make it one whit the truer,
+when his whole heart was clamouring that Margaret was all the worlds
+to him and the only thing in the world that he wanted.
+
+With an eye, perhaps, to his obvious lack of cheerfulness, his
+namesake and host suggested various diversions,--fishing for congers
+and rock-fish, a voyage round the island, a trip across to Herm, a day
+among the rabbits on. Brecqhou. But he wanted none of them. His life
+was flapping on a broken wing and all he wanted was to be left alone.
+
+In time the wound would heal, and he would take up his work again and
+find his solace in it. But wounds such as this are not healed in a
+day. It was raw and sore yet, the new skin had not had time to form.
+
+He recalled Lady Elspeth's dissatisfaction with his love-scenes, and
+thought, grimly, that now he could at all events enter fully into the
+feelings of the man who had lost the prize, and would be able to
+depict them to the life. If the choice had been left to him he would
+gladly have dispensed with all such knowledge to its profoundest
+depths, if only the prize had remained to him. But the choice had been
+Margaret's, and the prize was Charles Pixley's.
+
+If there was one thing he could have imagined without actual
+experience, it was how a man may feel when he loses. What he could not
+at present by any possibility conceive was--how it might feel to be
+the accepted lover of such a girl as Margaret Brandt.
+
+Confound her money! If it were not for that, Pixley would probably
+never have wanted to marry her. Money was answerable for half the
+ills of life, and the contrariness of woman for the other half.
+Confound money! Confound--Well, truly, his state of mind was not a
+happy one.
+
+
+X
+
+But there was something in the crisp Sark air that, by degrees and all
+unconsciously, braced both mind and body;--something broadening and
+uplifting in the wide free outlook from every headland; something
+restorative of the grip of life in the rush and roar of the mighty
+waves and the silent endurance of the rocks; something so large and
+aloof and restful in the wide sweep of sea and sky; something so
+hopeful and regenerative in the glorious exuberance of the spring--the
+flaming gorse, the mystic stretches of bluebells, the sunny sweeps of
+primroses, the soft uncurlings of the bracken, the bursting life of
+the hedgerows, the joyous songs of the larks--that presently, and in
+due season, earthly worries began to fall back into their proper
+places below the horizon, and a new Graeme--a Graeme born of Sark and
+Trouble--looked out of the old Graeme eyes and began to contemplate
+life from new points of view.
+
+It took time, however. Love is a plant of most capricious and
+surprising growth. It may take years to root and blossom. It may
+spring up in a day, yet strike its roots right through the heart and
+hold it as firmly as the growth of the years. And, once the heart is
+enmeshed in the golden filaments, it is a most dolorous work to
+disentangle it.
+
+For the first two weeks his mind ran constantly on his loss.
+Momentarily it might be diverted by outward things, but always it came
+back with a sharp shock, and a bitter sense of deprivation, to the
+fact that Margaret Brandt had passed out of his life and left behind
+her an aching void.
+
+Did he sit precariously among the ragged scarps and pinnacles of
+Little Sark, while the western seas raged furiously at his feet and
+the Souffleur shot its rockets of snowy spray high into the gray
+sky--through the passing film of the spray, and the marbled coils of
+the tumbling waves, the face of Margaret Brandt looked out at him.
+
+Did he stride among the dew-drenched, gold-spangled gorse bushes on
+the Eperquerie, while the sun came up with ever fresh glories behind
+the distant hills of France--Margaret's face was there in the sunrise.
+
+Did he stand above Havre Gosselin in the gloaming, while the sun sank
+behind Herm and Guernsey in splendours such as he had never dreamed
+of--just so, he said to himself, Margaret had gone out of his life and
+left it gray and cheerless as the night side of Brecqhou.
+
+Wherever he was and whatever he did, it was always Margaret,
+Margaret,--and Margaret lost to him.
+
+By the end of the third week, however, the tonic effects of the strong
+sea air and water began to work inwards. Healthy body would no longer
+suffer sick heart. He had taken his morning plunge hitherto as a
+matter of course, now he began to enjoy it and to look forward to
+it--certain index of all-round recovery.
+
+His appetite grew till he felt it needed an apology, at which Mrs.
+Carré laughed enjoyably. He began to take more interest in his
+surroundings for their own sakes. His thoughts of Margaret, with their
+after-glow of tender memory, were like the soft sad haze which falls
+on Guernsey when the sun has sunk and left behind it, in the upper
+sky, its slowly dying fires of dull red amber and gold.
+
+Towards the end of the fourth week he tentatively fished out his
+manuscript and began to read it--with pauses. He grew interested in
+it. He saw new possibilities in the story.--His life was getting back
+on to the rails again.
+
+
+XI
+
+Greater bodily peace and comfort than he found in that thick-set,
+creeper-covered, little cottage in the Rue Lucas, man might scarcely
+hope for. Anything more would have tended to luxury and made for
+restraint.
+
+He was free as the wind to come and go as he listed, to roam the
+lonely lanes all night and watch the coming of the dawn--which he did;
+or to lie abed all day--which he did not; to do any mortal thing that
+pleased him, so long only as he gave his hostess full and fair warning
+of the state of his appetite and the times when it must be satisfied.
+
+His quarters were not perhaps palatial, but what man, king of himself
+alone, would live in a palace?
+
+He bumped his head with the utmost regularity against the lintel of
+the front door each time he entered, and only learned at last to bob
+by instinct. And the beams in the ceilings were so low that they
+claimed recognition somewhat after the manner of a boisterous
+acquaintance.
+
+But doors and windows were always open, night and day, and his good
+friends the dogs came in to greet him by way of the windows quite as
+often as by the doors.
+
+All through the black times those two were his close companions, and
+no better could he have had. They asked nothing of him--or almost
+nothing, and they gave him all they had. They were grateful from the
+bottom of their large hearts for any slightest sign of recognition.
+And they were proud of his company, which to others would have proved
+somewhat of a wet blanket. Without a doubt they assisted mightily in
+his cure, though neither he nor they knew it.
+
+Every morning when he jumped up to see the weather, the first things
+that met him when he reached the open window, were four eager eyes
+full of welcome, and a grave intelligent brown face and hopeful
+swinging tail, and a dancing white face and little wriggling body.
+
+Then he would pull up the blinds and they would enter with an easy
+bound and a scramble, and while he hastily flung on his things they
+would prowl about, now pushing investigating noses into an open
+drawer, and again taking a passing drink out of his water-jug by way
+of first breakfast.
+
+Then, away through the gaps in the jewelled hedges, with the larks at
+their matins overhead, and the tethered cows nuzzling out the dainty
+morning grasses, and watching the intruders speculatively till they
+passed out of sight into the next field.
+
+"Which way? Which way? Which way?" shrieked Scamp, as he tore to and
+fro down every possible road to show that all were absolutely alike to
+him. While Punch bounded lightly to the first dividing of the ways and
+waited there with slow-swinging tail to see which road Man would
+choose.
+
+The Harbour--or Les Lâches--which? Every morning Scamp raced hopefully
+towards the sweet-smelling tunnel of hawthorn trees that led down to
+the other tunnel in the rock and the tiny harbour, because, for a very
+small dog, the granite slip was much easier to compass than the steep
+ledges of Les Lâches. And every morning Punch waited quietly at
+Colinette to see how Man would go.
+
+And when the tide was low and the harbour empty, Punch knew it was Les
+Lâches almost before Man's face had turned that way, and off he went
+at a gallop, and Scamp came tearing back with expostulatory yelps, and
+got in Punch's way and was rolled head over heels, but always came
+right side up at the fourth turn and rushed on without even a
+remonstrance, for that was a very small price to pay for the exalted
+companionship of Punch and Man.
+
+So, past La Peignerie and La Forge, with the thin blue smoke of gorse
+fires floating down from every dumpy chimney and adding a flavour to
+the sweetest air in the world,--with a morning greeting from everyone
+they met--over the heights and down the zigzag path to the sloping
+ledges, and in they went, all three, into the clearest and crispest
+water in the world, water that tingled and sparkled, full charged with
+life and energy.
+
+Then shivers and shakes, and hasty play with a towel, and they were
+racing back across the heights to breakfast and the passing of another
+day, of which the greatest charm had passed already with that plunge
+into the life-giving sea.
+
+If you are inclined to think that I enlarge too much on these two
+friends of his, let me remind you that a man is known by the company
+he keeps, and these two were Graeme's sole companions for many a
+day--those first dark days in the sunny little isle, when all human
+companionship would have been abhorrent to him.
+
+In their company he found himself again. Their friendship weaned him
+by degrees from the jaundiced view of life which Margaret's
+dereliction had induced. They drew him, in time, from his brooding
+melancholy, and through the upbuilding of the body restored him to a
+quieter mind.
+
+Let no man despise the help of a dog, for there are times when the
+friendship of a dog is more sufferable, and of more avail, and far
+more comforting, than that of any ordinary human being.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FOURTH
+
+
+I
+
+It was just two days before the end of Graeme's fourth week in Sark.
+His spirits were rising to the requirements of his work, and he was
+looking forward with quite novel enjoyment to a steady spell of
+writing, when his hostess startled him, as she cleared away his
+breakfast, by saying--
+
+"It iss the day after to-morrow you will be going?"
+
+"Eh? What? Going? No, I'm not going, Mrs. Carré. What made you think I
+was going? Why, I've only just come."
+
+His landlady put down the dishes on the table again as a concrete
+expression of surprise, put her hands on her hips by way of taking
+grip of herself, and stared at him.
+
+"You are not going? Noh? But it wass just for the month I thought you
+kem."
+
+"Not at all. I may stop two months, three months,--all my life
+perhaps. Won't you let me live and die here if I want to?"
+
+"Ach, then! It iss not to die we woult want you. But I thought my man
+said it wass just for the month you kem, and--my Good!--I haf let your
+roomss for the day after to-morrow," and her face had lost its usual
+smile and was full of distress and bewilderment.
+
+"You've let my rooms? Oh, come now!--But now I think of it, I believe
+I did say something about a month or so, when I spoke to John Philip.
+Well now, what will you do? Put me out into the road? Or can you find
+me somewhere else?--though I'm quite sure you'll not be able to find
+me any place as comfortable as this."
+
+"Whatt will we do?" she said, much disturbed, and gazed at him
+thoughtfully. Then, with sudden inspiration, "There iss the big house
+up the garden?" and looked at him hopefully.
+
+"But it's empty."
+
+"Everything iss there, and all ready for them to come any time they
+want to. It woult only mean making up a bed and you coult come here
+for your meals."
+
+"That would do first-rate if you can arrange it."
+
+"I will write to Mrs. Lee to-day and ask her to tell me by the
+telegraph. It will be all right."
+
+"That's all right then. Who's the wretched person who is turning me
+out of here?"
+
+"It is two leddies. They wrote to the Vicar, and he asked John Philip
+and he told my man."
+
+"Two ladies! Then I can't possibly have my meals in here. You'd better
+let me join you in the kitchen,"--a consummation he had been striving
+after for some time past, in fact ever since his literary instincts
+had shaken off the thrall and got their heads above the mists,--with a
+view, of course, of turning a more intimate knowledge of his
+surroundings to profitable account.
+
+But his hostess was jealous of her kitchen and would not hear of it.
+
+"There iss no need. I will arrange it, and you will tek your meals in
+here just as usual. Which room woult you like in the big house?"
+
+"I'll go up and have a look round. Does it make any difference to you
+which I choose? I'd like one with a balcony if it's all the same to
+you."
+
+"It iss all the sem, and I will get it ready for you as soon ass I
+hear from Mrs. Lee. You will not be afraid, all alone by yourself up
+there?"
+
+"Afraid? No. What is there to be afraid of?"
+
+"Och, I do not know. Only--all alone--sometimes one iss afraid--"
+
+"There aren't any ghosts about, are there?"
+
+"Ghosts? Noh!"--with a ghost of a laugh. "I do not believe in ghosts
+or any such things, though some people does. There are some
+people"--very scornfully--"will not go by the churchyard at night,
+and"--lest so sceptical a mind should provoke reprisal--"I do not know
+that I woult myself. And down by the Coupée--But the house there iss
+too new to have anything like that." "Well, if I see any I'll try and
+catch one and bring it down to breakfast."
+
+And so it was arranged that, if the permission of the owner of the Red
+House could be obtained, he should sleep there and come down to the
+cottage for his meals, Mrs. Carré undertaking that no inconvenience
+should thereby be caused to any of those concerned.
+
+He strolled up the garden, with the dogs racing in front, to choose
+his bedroom, and came across his host unwillingly busy with hoe and
+spade in the potato patch. His whole aspect betokened such undisguised
+sufferance that Graeme could not repress a smile.
+
+"Like it?" he asked.
+
+"Noh!"
+
+"Sooner be at the fishing?"
+
+A nod and a brief smile, and Graeme left him to his unwelcome labours,
+and passed through the gap in the tall hedge to his new abode.
+
+It was a well-built house, gray granite below and red tiles up above,
+with a wide verandah round the lower storey and white balconies to the
+upper one; the inside was all polished pitch pine, and the rooms were
+large and airy and suitably furnished for summer occupancy. It was
+left in Mrs. Carré's charge, and she and the sun and wind kept it
+always sweet and clean, and ready for use at an hour's notice.
+
+With the assistance of his two friends, who displayed an active and
+intelligent interest in the matter, he chose the room with the largest
+balcony, and said to himself that the coming of the ladies was, after
+all, a blessing in disguise. He believed he would be even more
+comfortable there than he had been at the cottage. He would have been
+quite willing to move in at once if that had been possible.
+
+Next morning, however, the permission duly arrived, and in many trips
+he gaily carried all his belongings up the garden and installed
+himself in the balcony room.
+
+It was a very delightful room, with fine wide outlook--over towards
+the church in its dark embowerment of evergreen oaks, which some of
+the folk would not pass by night; over the long sweep of the land
+towards Little Sark; then, over to the left, a glimpse of the sea and
+a dark blue film on the horizon which he knew was Jersey.
+
+This room and the balcony outside should be his workshop, he decided,
+and he looked forward, with an eagerness to which he had been stranger
+for weeks past, to burying himself in his work and finding in it
+solace and new strength.
+
+
+II
+
+Graeme possessed a lively imagination, else surely he had never taken
+to writing. But a lively imagination, sole occupant of a ten-roomed
+house in a strange land whose inhabitants believed firmly in ghosts
+and spirits and things that walked by night, and that house but a
+stone's-throw from the black churchyard where such discomforting
+things might naturally be supposed to congregate, was not nearly so
+enjoyable a possession at midnight as in the full light of day.
+
+He lay awake for hours, hearing what seemed to him uncanny sounds
+about the house, inside and out. The night wind sighed through the
+heavy pale leaves of the eucalyptus trees, and set the roses and
+honeysuckle on the verandah posts whispering and tapping. In the stark
+silence, sounds came out of the other nine empty rooms as though they
+chose that quiet time for passing confidences. The stairs creaked as
+though invisible feet passed up and down. And once he could have sworn
+to stealthy footsteps along the verandah below his window.
+
+He laughed at his own foolishness. Ghosts, he vowed, he did not
+believe in, and the Sark men were notably honest. All the same it was
+close on daylight before he slept.
+
+When he pushed through the dewy hedge and went down to the cottage
+for breakfast, his hostess's eyes twinkled as she asked, "You did not
+see any ghosts--Noh?"
+
+"Not a ghost, but all the same it did feel a bit lonesome. What would
+you say to my taking Punch with me to-night, just for company?"
+
+"Yess indeed, tek him. He iss quiet. The other iss too lively."
+
+"And when do your ladies arrive?"
+
+"With the boat. When will you be pleased to have your dinner?"
+
+"I'm off to Little Sark for the day. How would seven o'clock suit you
+and them?"
+
+"I will mek it suit. They will haf dinner before or after. It will be
+quite all right."
+
+He spent the day with the dogs, scrambling among the rugged bastions
+at the south end of the island, investigated the old silver mines,
+bathed, all three, in the great basin of Venus in the hollow under the
+southern cliffs, and came home after sunset, tired and ravenous.
+
+"Well, have your ladies come?" he asked, as he sat down to his dinner.
+
+"Oh yess, they are come. They are gone for a walk. One of them is Miss
+Hen and the other iss Miss Chum."
+
+"Good Lord, what names! Two old maids, I presume,--curls and
+spectacles and that kind of thing!"
+
+"They are not old, noh. And they are ferry nice to look at,
+especially Miss Chum."
+
+"Well, well, so she ought to be to make up for her name."
+
+"They were quite put out to think of having turned you out of your
+roomss--"
+
+"Not half as much as I was, but you can assure them that I am
+delighted they came. It's as nice a house as one could wish for, and
+if you can arrange the meals all right I'll not trouble them in the
+least. How long are they going to stay?"
+
+"They are like you. They do not know. It may be a month, it may be
+more."
+
+"Oh well, I'll keep out of their way as much as possible. People who
+come to Sark come to be quiet, I expect. Don't trouble about coffee
+tonight, Mrs. Carré. I shall just have a smoke and then turn in. I'm
+tired but and I want a good night's rest."
+
+"Ah yess. Well, you will tek Punch to-night, and then you will hear no
+ghosts."
+
+The sky was still softly suffused with the clear rose and amber of the
+sunset when he leaned over the wall, as he filled his pipe, and looked
+out into the darkening road.
+
+"Har-Héri! Qué-hou-hou!" croaked a hoarse little voice in the hedge
+opposite.
+
+"Hello, Johnnie-boy! That you?"
+
+"Where you bin te-day?"
+
+"Where have I been? Down in Little Sark, prowling about the mines,
+stealing lumps of silver----"
+
+"Godzamin! They an't any silver now."
+
+"No? All right, my son. Then I'm telling you fibs."
+
+"Show me."
+
+"Ah, I don't carry it about with me."
+
+"An't got any." And presently, as Graeme lit up, without deigning any
+answer,--"I seen a ghost las' night."
+
+"Clever boy! What did you make out of it?"
+
+"'Twas the ghost of old Tom Hamon's father. Was all white and
+dead-like."
+
+"You're too previous, Johnnie. He's getting better."
+
+"He's a-goin' to die."
+
+"So are you sometime."
+
+"No, I a'n't. Show me 'at silver."
+
+"Sometime, perhaps, if you ask nicely. I'm going to bed now. Come
+along, Punch! Goodnight, Johnnie! Keep your eyes skinned for ghosts.
+Capital night for them, I should say," and he went off up the garden,
+with Punch stalking solemnly alongside.
+
+And Johnnie Vautrin erected himself on his hands and haunches to see
+where he was going, while the vivacious Scamp, shut up in the
+wood-house and bereft of his bedfellow, and doubtless fearful of
+ghosts in every nerve of his quivering little body, rent the still
+night with his expostulations, as he heard them go past.
+
+The scent of the pipe was lingering still in the forecourt when the
+ladies turned in out of the road, and they just caught a glimpse of
+the smoker disappearing through the gap in the hedge.
+
+"Ah-ha! There goes the Bogey-Man!" said Miss Hen. "Does this dear
+little dog carry on this way all through the night, Mrs. Carré?"
+
+"It iss becos the gentleman hass tekken Punch up to the house to kip
+away the ghosts," smiled Mrs. Carré.
+
+"I should say this one would have been of more use."
+
+"He will be quiet soon. Scamp, bad beast, be qui-et! A couche!"
+
+"To keep away ghosts! What a muff he must be!" said Miss Hen. "Chum,
+what do you say to putting on white sheets and giving him a scare? If
+we did a skirly-whirly à la Loie Fuller, below his window, he'd
+probably have blue fits. Ghosts, indeed!"
+
+"If that big brown Punch got out at you it's you would have the blue
+fits," said Miss Chum. "The Sark air is getting into your head,
+Hennie."
+
+"Of course it is. That's what we came for, isn't it? You'll feel it
+yourself before you're two days older, my child. You're looking better
+than I've seen you for a month past."
+
+"It's so delightful to feel free," said Miss Chum.
+
+
+III
+
+Thoroughly tired out, and with a guardian angel on the mat at his
+bedside, in the shape of a long brown body which sought fresh ease in
+an occasional sprawl, and flopped a responsive tail each time he
+dropped a friendly pat on to its head in the dark--Graeme looked
+confidently for a sound night's rest.
+
+He fell asleep indeed at once, but woke with a start sometime in the
+night, with the impression of a sound in his ears. Had he really heard
+something? Or was it only the tail-end of a dream? Wood-lined houses
+talk in the night. Was it only the pitch pine whispering of the old
+free days in the scented woods? He could not be sure, so he lay still
+and listened.
+
+And as he waited, it came again--a low, wailing cry, long-drawn and
+somewhat curdling to the blood.
+
+Outside or inside? He could not be sure.
+
+Cats? Cats can do wonders in the way of uncanny noises, but somehow
+this did not sound like cats. There was something human, or inhuman,
+in it, and his door suddenly shook as though something tried to get
+in.
+
+He bethought him to feel for Punch. But his hand fell on space, and as
+he struck a match to see the time and what had become of his
+companion, the church bell tolled one dismal stroke, and he saw Punch
+standing like a bronze statue at the door, with his nose down at the
+crack, his tail on the droop, and every hair apparently on the
+bristle.
+
+At the glow of the match the drooping tail gave one slow swing, but he
+did not look round.
+
+Graeme struck another match, and lit his candle, and jumped into his
+shoes.
+
+"What is it, old fellow?" And Punch scraped furiously at the door
+again, and so explained that part of the matter.
+
+There came a sudden scuffling fall against the door. Punch rasped at
+it with his front feet in strenuous silence. If he had been able to
+give voice it would have been a relief to both of them. His mute
+anxiety added to the weirdness of the proceedings, and Graeme
+experienced a novel creeping about the nape of the neck.
+
+Ghosts or no ghosts, however, it had to be looked into. He picked up a
+heavy boot, turned the key, and flung open the door. Punch went down
+the stairs in two long bounds, and a rush of cold air put out the
+candle. He laid it down and followed cautiously, ready to launch the
+boot at the first sign of uncanniness.
+
+The rush of night air came through a small pantry opening off the
+hall. The window in it was wide open, and there was no sign of Punch.
+He and the ghost had evidently gone through that way. Graeme and the
+boot followed.
+
+It was a dark night between moons. The velvet-black vault was
+brilliant with stars, but the earth was full of shadows. The fleshy
+leaves of the eucalyptus trees showed pale against the darkness. The
+night wind set them rustling eerily. From somewhere beyond them, past
+the dark hedge, there came a sound of subdued strife. Graeme clutched
+his boot and sped towards it, drenched with dew from every disturbed
+branch.
+
+The sounds led him into the potato patch in the lower garden, and in
+the dimness he became aware that Punch was standing on something that
+struggled to get up and was held down by the great brown paws and
+body.
+
+No ghost, evidently. Graeme dropped his boot and stooped and laid hold
+of the struggler, and knew in a moment, in spite of his own
+disturbance of mind, that this ghost at all events had materialised
+into the bodily form of Master Johnnie Vautrin, and he wondered how
+many more might have done the same if they had been followed up as
+closely.
+
+He lifted the squirming small boy who had not spoken a word.
+
+"So this is what Sark ghosts are made of, is it, Master Johnnie?" he
+asked, giving him a shake. "You little scamp! For once you shall have
+what you jolly well deserve," and he carried him, kicking and
+wriggling, back to the house, shoved him through the window, and held
+him with one hand while he got through himself. Punch followed with
+an easy bound, and they all went upstairs. Graeme found his candle,
+and lit it and looked at his prisoner.
+
+Johnnie was covered with mould from the potato patch, but his black
+eyes gleamed through it as brightly as ever, and, as far as Graeme
+could distinguish through its masking, his face showed no sign of
+confusion.
+
+"Do you know what we do with naughty little ghosts in England,
+Johnnie?"
+
+Johnnie's eyes glittered like a snake's.
+
+"We spank 'em, Johnnie. I'm going to spank you--hard."
+
+Then Johnnie spoke.
+
+"I'll put tha evil eye on you."
+
+"Two if you like, my son,--or twenty if you've got 'em handy. Evil
+eyes rather tickle me. We'll see which makes most impression--my hand
+or your eye," and he laid the black-magic man across his knee, and
+gave him such a genuine motherly quilting as he had never experienced
+in his life before. Hot blows he was accustomed to, but this cool,
+relentless, tingling flagellation, all on the one spot, and continued
+till every particle of blood in his body seemed to leap to meet each
+stroke, was new to him, and it made a great and lasting impression.
+
+He did not cry, but tried to bite and scratch the operator, and Punch
+stood looking on with a grave smile on his face and a slowly swinging
+tail expressive of the greatest satisfaction.
+
+Discipline over, Graeme handed him out through the pantry window, bade
+him to go home to bed, and fastened the window behind him. The night
+passed without further disturbance, and Graeme awoke as the dawn
+glimmered golden on his wide-open window.
+
+In ten minutes he was racing bareheaded past Colinette and La Forge
+towards Les Lâches, a towel round his neck and Punch bounding silently
+by his side. They had stolen out the back way through the top of the
+post-office fields, and had left Scamp still prisoner in the
+woodhouse, lest the hysterical joy of his release should disturb the
+ladies.
+
+And presently they were racing back home, all aglow with the tingling
+kisses of the waves, and rough of hair with the salt and the wind.
+
+The sun was up but not yet stripped for the long day's race to the
+west. The eastern skies still gleamed through a faery haze with the
+soft iridescence of a young ormer shell, the tender pinks and greens
+and golds of the new day's birth-chamber mellowing upwards into the
+glorious blue of a day of days.
+
+ 'The year's at the spring,
+ The day's at the morn;
+ Morning's at seven;
+ The hillside's dew-pearled:
+ The lark's on the wing;
+ The snail's on the thorn;
+ God's in his heaven--
+ All's right with the world!'
+
+The lilt of the joyous words had often been with him as he sped
+through the sleeping fields to his morning plunge.
+
+This day of days, as though his soul forecasted what was coming, they
+sang in his heart and on his lips. His cure was surely near
+completion. The salt was regaining its savour. Life was worth living
+again.
+
+And it was then, when he had come through the valley and was ready to
+climb again, that the glory came to him.
+
+As the two friends sprang lightly over the turf wall into the garden
+of the Red House, they saw a sight which one of them will not forget
+as long as he lives.
+
+In the gap of the tall hedge, where the path led down to the
+cottage,--ringed in its darkness like a lovely picture in a sombre
+frame, with a pale eucalyptus rising stately on either side; and
+behind it all, and gleaming softly through and round it all, the
+tender glories of the new day,--stood a girl in a dove-coloured dress,
+bareheaded, holding the dew-pearled branches apart with her two hands,
+and gazing at him with wide eyes, and parted lips, and startled face.
+
+And the girl was Margaret Brandt.
+
+
+IV
+
+Graeme's first thought was that he was dreaming. He blinked his eyes
+to make sure they were not playing him false.
+
+If she had disappeared at that moment, he would have sworn to
+hallucinations and the visibility of spirits to the day of his death.
+
+But she did not disappear, and Punch proved her no spirit by stalking
+gravely up to give her welcome. Without taking her startled eyes off
+Graeme, she dropped one white hand on to the great brown head and the
+diamonds sprinkled her dove-coloured dress.
+
+"Mr. Graeme!" she said, in a voice which very fully expressed her own
+doubts as to his reality also.
+
+"Mar--Miss Brandt? ... Is it possible?"
+
+They had both drawn nearer, he along the broad gravel walk, she along
+the narrow path between the eucalyptus trees.
+
+"Are you quite sure you are real?" he asked breathlessly, and for
+answer she laughed and stretched a friendly hand towards him.
+
+He took it with shining eyes, and then bent suddenly and kissed it
+gently, and his eyes were shining still more brightly as she drew it
+hastily away.
+
+"But whatever brings you here?" she asked abruptly.
+
+"We're just out of the sea,"--and the joy of the sea and the morning,
+and this greatest thing of all, was in his face.
+
+"But _why_ are you here? What are you doing here?"
+
+"Doing? We're living here."
+
+"Did you know I was here? How----?" she began, with a puzzled wrinkle
+of the fair white brow, and stopped.
+
+"I did not know. I wish I had."
+
+"If you did not know, how--why----?"
+
+"If I had known perhaps I should not have dared to follow you. On the
+whole I'm glad I did not know."
+
+"I don't understand.... How long have you been here?"
+
+"Just four weeks," he said, with a smile at thought of the blackness
+of those four weeks now that he stood in the sunshine.
+
+"Four weeks! Then you mean--you mean that I--that we--followed----"
+
+"In the mere matter of time, yes!--and of place too," he laughed."
+For you turned me out of my rooms."
+
+"Do you mean to say you are the Bogey-Man?"
+
+"Well,--no one ever called me so to my face before, but I'm bound to
+say I've felt uncommonly like one for the past four or five weeks."
+
+"Come with me," she said hastily. "I must put this right at once, or
+Hennie----" and she turned and went through the gap in the hedge.
+
+"Put what right?" he asked, as he followed.
+
+"Oh--you," she said hastily.
+
+"I'm all right--now. And who is Hennie?"
+
+"My friend Miss Penny--"
+
+"I beg your pardon. I thought you said Hennie."
+
+"Henrietta Penny. She was at school with me. We are taking care of one
+another."
+
+They had come to the forecourt of the cottage.
+
+"Hen!" cried Margaret. The window was wide open, but the blind was
+discreetly down.
+
+"Hello, Chum!" came back in muffled tones. "What's up now? Been and
+got yourself lost again?"
+
+"Come out, dear. I want you."
+
+"Half a jiff, old girl. Give a fellow a chance with his back hair. You
+had first tub this morning, remember." At which Graeme's eyes twinkled
+in unison with Margaret's.
+
+"There's a gentleman waiting to see you, dear," said Margaret, to
+prevent any further revelations.
+
+"A _what_?"--and there followed a clatter of falling implements as
+though a sudden start had sent them flying. "Wretch!--to upset one
+like that! It's that big brown dog, I suppose. I know you, my child!"
+
+Then the blind whirled up and a merry face, in a cloud of dishevelled
+hair, looked out, a pair of horrified eyes rested momentarily on
+Graeme, and the blind rattled down again with something that sounded
+like a muffled feminine objurgation.
+
+And presently the inner door opened and Miss Penny came forth
+demurely, and bowed distantly in the direction of Margaret and Graeme.
+
+She was of average height but inclined to plumpness, and so looked
+smaller than Margaret; and she had no great pretensions to beauty,
+Graeme thought--but then he was biassed for life and incapable of free
+and impartial judgment--save such as might be found in a very frank
+face given to much laughter, a rather wide mouth and nice white teeth,
+abundant dark hair and a pair of challenging brown eyes which now,
+getting over their first confusion--and finding herself at all events
+fully dressed, wherein she had the advantage of him--rested with much
+appreciation on the young man in front of her.
+
+The salt water was still in his hair, and the discrepancies in his
+hasty attire were but partly hidden by the damp towel round his neck.
+Nevertheless he was very good to look upon. His moustache showed crisp
+against the healthy brown of his face; his hair, short as it was, had
+a natural ripple which sea-water could not reduce; and his eyes were
+brimming with the new joy of life and repressed laughter. Miss Penny
+liked the looks of him.
+
+"Margaret Brandt, I will never forgive you as long as I live," said
+she emphatically.
+
+"All right, dear! This is Mr. Bogey-man whose rooms we have
+appropriated. He wished to be introduced to the other malefactor. Miss
+Henrietta Penny--Mr. John Graeme! Mr. Graeme and I have met before."
+
+If Mr. John Graeme had had more experience of women, the flash that
+shot across from the brown eyes to the dark blue ones might have told
+him stories--for instance, that his name and would-have-been standing
+towards her friend were not entirely unknown to Miss Penny; that, for
+a brief half second, she wondered--doubted--and instantly chid herself
+for such a thought in connection with Margaret Brandt.
+
+But Margaret herself, being a woman, caught the momentary challenge
+and repelled it steadily.
+
+"I am very pleased to meet you, Miss Penny--in such a place, and in
+such company. I have heard of you from Miss Brandt," said Graeme.
+
+"Never till five minutes ago," laughed Margaret.
+
+"Yes, if you will pardon me--once before, at Lady Elspeth Gordon's.
+Unless I am mistaken, Miss Penny had just been across to Dublin to
+take a degree which Cambridge ungallantly declined to confer upon
+her."
+
+"Quite right!" said Miss Penny. "M.A. They're misogynists at
+Cambridge."
+
+"Will you oblige me by informing Miss Penny, Mr. Graeme, that this
+meeting is purely accidental? I caught a spark in her eye and I know
+what it means. Had you the very slightest idea that we were coming to
+Sark?"
+
+"Not the remotest. When I saw you standing in the hedge there, with
+the morning glories all about you, I first doubted my eyes, then I
+thought you a vision--"
+
+"And do you think it possible that I knew of you being here?"
+
+"I am certain you did not. Nobody knows. I left no address, and I told
+no one where I was going. I have not had a letter since I left London.
+I have been buried alive in this heavenly little place."
+
+"There now, Mademoiselle," said Margaret, with a bow. "Are you
+satisfied now?"
+
+"I was satisfied before you opened your mouth, my dear. The
+possibility inevitably suggested itself, but it was stillborn. Has not
+our friendship passed its seventh birthday?"
+
+"Thank you, dear. But the coincidence of our coming to bury ourselves
+in Sark, and Mr. Graeme's coming to bury himself in Sark, was almost
+unbelievable."
+
+"Not at all," said Miss Penny. "If you could both trace back you would
+probably find the same original spring of action--a chance word from
+some common friend, or some article you have both read. Then, when
+circumstances loosed the spring, you both shot in the same direction.
+What was it loosed your spring, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"Well,--I wanted to get away out of things. I'm busy on a book, you
+see, and I'd heard of Sark--"
+
+"Same here!" said Miss Penny--"less the book. We wanted to get away
+out of things--and people, and we'd heard of Sark, and here we are.
+Was it you suggested Sark, or I, Meg?"
+
+"I'm sure I don't know, dear. You, I should think."
+
+"I will take all the credit of it."
+
+Just then Mrs. Carré, who had been down to John Philip's for bread,
+turned in out of the road with a loaf under each arm. At sight of all
+her guests fraternising, her face lit up with a broad smile, and
+Scamp, who had whirled in after her, twisted himself into
+hieroglyphics of delight and rent the air with his expression of it,
+and then launched himself at Punch and taxed him with perfidy in going
+off to bathe without him.
+
+"Ah, you have med friends with the leddies," she said to Graeme.
+"Scamp! Bad beast, be qui-et! A couche!"
+
+"I'm doing my best, Mrs. Carré."
+
+"That iss very nice."
+
+"Very nice, indeed!" And Miss Penny asserted afterwards that he was
+looking at Margaret all the time.
+
+"I told them you were a nice quiet gentleman and wouldn't disturb them
+at all," said Mrs. Carré.
+
+"I'll do my very best not to. So far the disturbance has been all on
+their side, but I'm standing it very well, you see. You'll let me show
+you the sights, won't you?" he said to Miss Brandt. "I've been here a
+month, you see, and I know it all like a book. I've done nothing but
+moon about since I came--"
+
+"I thought you were busy on a book," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Er--well, you see, you have to do a lot of thinking before you start
+writing. I've been thinking," and perhaps more than one of them had a
+fairly shrewd suspicion as to the line his thoughts had taken.
+
+"Now, if I don't cut away and dress, and get my breakfast and clear
+out, I shall be in the way of the ladies, and Mrs. Carré will never
+forgive me," he said. "I do hope you will include me in your plans for
+the day."
+
+His bow included them both, and he sped off up the path through the
+high hedge, with the two dogs racing alongside.
+
+"Meg, my child, we will go for a little walk," said Miss Penny.
+
+
+V
+
+The salt Sark air is uplifting at all times. The sea-water has a crisp
+effervescence of its own which tones and braces mind and body alike.
+Add to these the wonder of Margaret's unexpected presence there and,
+if the gift of large imagination be yours, you may possibly
+arrive--within a hundred miles or so--of the state of John Graeme's
+feelings as he raced up that path and bounded up the stairs of the Red
+House four at a time.
+
+He looked out of the wide-open window across the fields, while the
+dogs, as usual, took the opportunity of appeasing their thirst at his
+water-jug,--for water lies at the bottom of deep cool wells in Sark,
+and sensible dogs take their chances when they offer.
+
+Was this the room he had left an hour ago in the fresh of the dawn--a
+man whose gray future was just beginning to lift its bruised head out
+of the shadows?
+
+Were those gleaming emerald fields the dim wastes he had sped across
+with his dumb companion, feeling as friendly towards him as towards
+anything on earth?
+
+Were those trees over there, with the glow of spring-gold in their
+tender green leaves, the gloomy guardians of the churchyard where
+ghosts walked of a night?
+
+Was that streak of blue away beyond the uplands, with the purple film
+along its rim, only the sea and a hint of Jersey, or was it a glimpse
+of heaven?
+
+Was he, in very truth, that John Graeme who, for thirty days past, had
+been striving with all his might to root the thought of Margaret
+Brandt out of his life--and succeeding not at all?
+
+It was the face of a stranger--a stranger with new joy of life in his
+sparkling eyes--that looked back at him out of the glass, as he plied
+his brushes, and tied his neck-tie with a careful assiduity to which
+the John Graeme of the past thirty days had been a stranger indeed.
+
+It was amazing. It was almost past belief. Yet this was himself, and
+there was the gap in the dark hedge--never dark again to him so long
+as one twig of it lived--the gap where he had come upon her standing
+like a goddess of the morning with the glories of the dawn all about
+her. And somewhere not far away, under this same heavenly blue sky,
+was Margaret. And there was no sign or hint of Jeremiah Pixley in her
+atmosphere--nor of Charles Svendt.
+
+What could it possibly all mean?
+
+Miss Penny--Hennie Penny! What a delightfully ludicrous name! And what
+a delightful creature she was!--Miss Penny, unless he had been
+dreaming, had said they had come to get away from things--and people!
+Now what did she mean by that--if she really had said it and he had
+not been dreaming?
+
+Was it possible Margaret had come to get away from Jeremiah Pixley and
+Charles Svendt? On the face of it, it seemed not impossible, for
+Graeme's only wonder was that she could ever have borne with them so
+long.
+
+His brain was in a whirl. The eyes of his understanding were as the
+eyes of one immured for thirty days in a dark cell and then dragged
+suddenly into the full blaze of the sun. If he had just drunk a magnum
+of champagne he could not have felt more elevated, and he would
+certainly have felt very different. For his eye was clear as a jewel,
+and his hand was steady as a rock, though his heart had not yet
+settled to its beat and the red blood danced in his veins like fire.
+
+"Jock, my lad," he said to himself, as he got the knot of his tie to
+his liking at last,--"keep a grip of yourself and go steady. Such a
+thing is enough to throw any man a bit off the rails. Ca' canny, my
+lad, ca' canny!"
+
+
+VI
+
+"Meg, I rather like young men with rippled hair," said Miss Hennie
+Penny, as they passed the Carrefour and strolled between the dewy
+hedges towards La Tour, with larks by the dozen bursting their hearts
+in the freshness of the morning above them.
+
+"Do you, dear? I thought you scorned young men?"
+
+"As a class, yes!--Especially the Cambridge variety. But not in
+particular. I make an exception in this case."
+
+"So good of you!" murmured Margaret in her best company manner.
+
+"Why did you never tell me how nice he was?"
+
+"Tell you how nice he was? I don't remember ever discussing him with
+you in any shape or form whatever."
+
+"Not to say discussed exactly, but you can't deny that you've
+mentioned him occasionally."
+
+"So I have William Shakespeare and Alfred Tennyson--"
+
+"And Charles Pixley!"
+
+"That's quite different--"
+
+"You're right, my dear. This is a horse of quite another colour. An
+awfully decent colour too. I'm glad you appreciate it. He's as brown
+as a gipsy and not an ounce of flab about him. Charles Pixley is
+mostly flab--"
+
+"Don't be rude, Hen. You don't know Charles. And do drop your school
+slang--"
+
+"Can't, my child. It's part of my holiday, so none of your pi-jaw! If
+you want me to enjoy myself you must let me have my head. You can't
+imagine how awfully good it tastes when you've been doing your best to
+choke girls off it for a year or two. It's one of the outward and
+visible signs of emancipation. This is another!" and she sprang up the
+high turf bank of the orchard of La Tour and danced a breakdown on it,
+and then jumped back into the road with ballooning skirts, to the
+intense amazement of old Mrs. Hamon of Le Fort, who had just come
+round the corner to draw sweet water from the La Tour well.
+
+"People will think you're crazy," remonstrated Margaret.
+
+"So I am, and you're my keeper, though it's supposed to be the other
+way about. The air of Sark has got into my head. What a quaint bonnet
+that old lady has! I wonder what colour it was in its infancy.
+Good-morning, ma'am! Isn't this a glorious day?" And old Madame Hamon
+murmured a word and passed hastily on lest worse should befall.
+
+"Hennie, be sensible for a minute or two. I want you to consider
+something seriously."
+
+"Sensible, if you like, Chummie, for 'tis my nature to.
+Serious?--Never! How could one, with those larks bursting themselves
+in a sky like that? And did you ever see hedges like these in all your
+life? What's it all about?--Ripply-Hair?"
+
+"Yes. Don't you see how awkward the whole matter is--"
+
+"Awkward for Charles Pixley maybe. I don't see that anybody else need
+worry themselves thin about it."
+
+"I'm not thinking of Mr. Pixley. It's--"
+
+"Ripply-Hair? Well, that's all right! Jolly sight nicer to think about
+him. I like his eyes too. There's something in them that seems to
+invite one's confidence. Perhaps you haven't noticed it? If I had a
+father-confessor--which, thank's-be, I haven't, and a jolly good thing
+for him!--I should stipulate for him having eyes just like that.
+Ripply hair too, I think. Yes. I should insist on his having hair just
+like Mr. Graeme's."
+
+They had strolled along past Le Fort till the road lost itself in a
+field above Banquette, and there they came to an involuntary stand and
+stood gazing.
+
+Before them, the long, broken slopes of the Eperquerie swept down from
+the heights to the sea, one vast blaze of flaming gorse--a tumultuous
+torrent of solid sunshine stayed suddenly in its course. And, in below
+the sunshine of the gorse, where rough Mother Earth should have been,
+there lay instead a soft sunset cloud, the tender cream-yellow and
+green of myriads of primroses and the just uncurling fronds of the
+bracken--primroses in such unbroken sheets and masses as to give a
+weird effect of remoteness and impalpability to that which was solid
+and close at hand.
+
+"Wonderful!" murmured Margaret.
+
+"Glorious!" murmured Miss Penny. "Is it really old Mother Earth we're
+looking at?"
+
+"No, dear! It's a bit of the sky fallen down there and the sun has
+rolled over it into the sea. See the bits of him in the wavelets! And
+did you ever in your life see a green like that water below the
+rocks?"
+
+"Sky and sun above, sun and sky below!--with trimmings of liquid
+emerald and sapphire, shot with white and gold. Meg, my child, this is
+a long way from No. 1 Melgrave Square."
+
+"A long, long way!" assented Margaret thoughtfully. And then, to take
+advantage of her companion's comparative soberness through the
+stirring of her feelings,--"Hennie, do you think we ought to stop?"
+
+"Stop?" and Miss Penny fronted her squarely. "Stop? Why, we've only
+just come. What's disgruntling you, Chummie?"
+
+"Can't you see how awkward it is?"
+
+"Well,--that depends--"
+
+"No one would believe it was all pure accident."
+
+"Perhaps it isn't," said Miss Penny oracularly.
+
+"Why, what do you mean?" said Margaret, bristling in her turn.
+
+"Oh, I'm imputing no guile, my child. I'm miles away up past that kind
+of thing. What I mean is this--perhaps it was meant to be, and you
+couldn't help yourselves. Now if that should be the case, it would be
+flying in the face of Providence to go and upset it all. What are your
+feelings towards him?"
+
+"Feelings? I have no feelings--"
+
+"Oh yes, you have, my child. You're not made of marble, though you can
+look it when you try. Why, I have myself. I like him--the little I've
+seen of him--and in spite of the fact that he caught me doing my hair,
+which is enough to turn anyone against anyone. I shall probably like
+him still more the better I get to know him. What have you against
+him?"
+
+"I've nothing whatever against him. I--"
+
+"Then, my dear, we'll sit tight. If anyone should go it's he, since
+he's been here a month, and we've only been one day. But if he goes it
+will only be because you make him. You've no ill-will towards him?"
+
+"I've no feeling at all about him, except that it's awkward his being
+here."
+
+"Then we'll just put the blame on Providence, and sit tight, as I said
+before. I'll see you come to no harm, my child. I could make that
+young man, or any young man, fly to the other end of the island by
+simply looking at him."
+
+"Think so, dear?" and Margaret, the issue being decided for her, came
+back to equanimity.
+
+"Sure!" said Miss Penny.
+
+
+VII
+
+He was sitting on the low stone wall that shut off the cobble-paved
+forecourt from the road, with his back towards them, when they
+sauntered through the open door after breakfast. He was smoking the
+choice after-breakfast pipe of peace, legs dangling, back bent, hands
+loosely clasped between his knees. He was very beautifully dressed as
+regards tie and collar--for the rest, light tweeds and cap of the
+same, and shoes which struck Miss Penny as flat. But these things she
+only noticed later. At present all she saw was a square light-tweed
+back, and a curl of fragrant smoke rising over its left shoulder.
+
+Below him in the dust were his two friends,--Punch, gravely observant
+of his every movement, and occasionally following the smoke with an
+interested eye; Scamp, no less watchful, but panting like a motor-car,
+and apparently exhausted with unrewarded scoutings up and down every
+possible route for the day's programme.
+
+In the hedge, on the opposite side of the road, sat a very small boy
+bunched up into an odd little heap, out of which looked a long sharp
+little face and a pair of black eyes as sharp as gimlets and as bright
+as a rat's, and beside him sat a big black cat busy on its toilet,
+which it interrupted in order to eye the ladies keenly when they
+appeared.
+
+"Now, see you here, my son," they heard from the other side of the
+broad tweed back, "if you don't make it fine for the next thirty days
+you and I will have words together. If you want it to rain, let it
+rain in the night. Not a drop after four A.M., you understand. If you
+turn it on after four in the morning there'll be another rupture of
+diplomatic relations between you and me, same as there was last
+night."
+
+The small boy's beady eyes twinkled, and he squeaked a few words in
+Sarkese.
+
+"You have the advantage of me, Johnnie. And I've told you before it's
+not polite to address a gentleman in a language he's not familiar
+with, when you're perfectly acquainted with his own. The only word I
+caught was 'Guyablle!' and that's not a word for young people like you
+and me, though it may suit Marielihou. I'm very much afraid I'll have
+to speak to the schoolmaster about you, after all, and to the Vicar
+too, maybe. What? A Wesleyan, are you? Very well then, it's Monsieur
+Bisson I must speak to."
+
+Here the small boy, with his face crumpled up into a grin, pointed a
+thin grimy finger past the young man, and he turned and saw the
+ladies. He doffed his cap and jumped down and tapped out his pipe, and
+the dogs sprang up expectant;--Punch, grave as ever but light on his
+feet for instant start; Scamp twisting himself into figure-eights, and
+rending the air with such yelps of delight that not a word could they
+pass.
+
+"Johnnie! Stop him!" shouted Graeme. The small boy in the hedge flung
+out his arm with a sudden threatening gesture, and the circling Scamp
+fled through the gateway and up the garden with a shriek of dismay,
+and remained there yelping as if he had been struck.
+
+"Odd that, isn't it?" said Graeme. "Johnnie's the only person that can
+stop that small dog talking; and, what's more, he can do it a hundred
+yards away. If the dog can see him that's enough, and yet they're good
+enough friends as a rule. Look at Punch!"
+
+The big brown fellow was standing eyeing the small boy with an odd
+expression, intent, expectant, doubtful, with just a touch of
+apprehension in it, and perhaps of latent anger.
+
+"Can you do it with Punch?" asked Miss Penny.
+
+The small boy shook his head. "Godzamin, he'd eat me if I tried," he
+said, and lifted his eyes from the dog's, and the dog walked quietly
+up to Margaret and pushed his great head under her hand.
+
+"He's a fine fellow," she said, caressing him.
+
+"A most gentlemanly dog," said Miss Penny. "His eyes are absolutely
+poetical,--charged with thoughts too deep for words."
+
+"Yes, he's dumb," said Graeme, stooping to pull a long brown ear.
+
+"Really?" asked Margaret, looking into his face to make sure he was
+not joking.
+
+"We've been close friends for a month now, and I've never heard his
+voice even in a whisper, nor has anyone else. I've an idea Johnnie
+here has put a spell on him."
+
+"Poor old fellow!" said Margaret, fondling the big brown head.
+
+"Oh, he's quite happy--bold as a lion and graceful as a panther, and
+Scamp talks more than enough for the two of them."
+
+"And what a fine big cat you have, Johnnie!" said Miss Penny, and
+stretched a friendly hand towards Marielihou. "What do you call it?"
+
+"Marrlyou," growled Johnnie; and Marielihou bristled and spat at the
+advancing white hand, which retired rapidly.
+
+"The nasty beast!" said Miss Penny, and Marielihou glared at her with
+eyes of scorching green fire.
+
+"Marielihou is not good company for anyone but herself," said Graeme.
+"Now, where would you like to go?"
+
+"We were up that way before breakfast," said Miss Penny, nodding due
+north.
+
+"Been to the Coupée yet?"
+
+"No, we've been nowhere except just along here. We were afraid of
+getting lost or tumbling over the edges."
+
+"Then you must see the Coupée at once. And we'll call at John Philip's
+as we pass, to get you some shoes."
+
+"Shoes?" and each stuck out a dainty brown boot and examined it
+critically for inadequacies, and then looked up at him enquiringly.
+
+"Yes, I know. They're delicious, but in Sark you must wear Sark
+shoes--this kind of thing"--sticking up his own--"or you may come to a
+sudden end. And, seeing that you're in my charge--"
+
+"Oh?" said Margaret.
+
+"Come along to John Philip's," said Miss Penny. And as they turned
+down the road with Punch, the hedge opened and Scamp came wriggling
+through, with white-eyed glances for Johnnie Vautrin and Marielihou
+sitting in the bushes farther up.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Miss Penny and Graeme did most of the talking. Margaret was unusually
+silent, pondering, perhaps, her friend's utterances of the early
+morning, and still wondering at the strange turn of events that had so
+unexpectedly thrown herself and John Graeme into such close
+companionship that he could actually claim to be in charge of her, and
+had proved it beyond question by making her buy a pair of shoes which
+she considered anything but shapely.
+
+Graeme understood and kept to his looking-glass promise.
+
+His heart was dancing within him. It was impossible to keep the lilt
+of it entirely out of his eyes. They were radiant with this
+unlooked-for happiness.
+
+It was Margaret's shadow that mingled with his own on the sunny
+road--when it wasn't Miss Penny's. It was Margaret's pleated blue
+skirt that swung beside him to a tune that set his pulses leaping.
+Miss Penny's skirt was there too, indeed, but a thousand of it
+flapping in a gale would not have quickened his pulse by half a beat.
+
+And Miss Penny probably understood--some things, or parts of
+things--or thought she did, and was extremely happy in that which was
+vouchsafed to her. Oh, she knew, did Miss Penny! She had not, indeed,
+had much--if put into a corner and made to confess to bare and
+literal truth, not any--experience, that is personal and practical
+experience, of such matters,--if, indeed, such matters are capable of
+being brought to the test of such a word as practical. But she had
+read much about them--in search of truth, and right and fitting books
+to be admitted to the school library--and she knew all about it. And
+here, unless she, Henrietta Penny, was very much mistaken, was a
+veritable live love-affair budding and blossoming--at least she hoped
+it would blossom--before her very eyes. Budding it undoubtedly was, on
+one side at all events, and blossom it certainly should if she could
+help it on; for he had ripply hair, and deep attractive eyes, and a
+frank open face, and she liked him.
+
+They were suddenly in the shade, threading a narrow cutting between
+high gorse-topped banks of crumbly yellow rock. Then, without any
+warning, the rock-walls fell away. They were out into the sunshine
+again, and in front stretched a wavering rock path, the narrow crown
+of a ridge whose sides sank sharply out of sight. From somewhere far
+away below came the surge and rush of many waters.
+
+"This is the Coupée," said Graeme, as the dogs raced across. "Over
+there is Little Sark."
+
+"It is grand!" said Margaret, gazing at the huge rock buttresses whose
+loins came up through the white foam three hundred feet below.
+
+"It's awful!" said Miss Penny. "You're never going across, Mr.
+Graeme?" as he strolled on along the narrow ridge.
+
+"Surely! Why not? It's perfectly safe. There was a wooden railing at
+this side, but it fell over about a fortnight ago, and at present the
+good folks of Little Sark and Big Sark are discussing who ought to put
+up a new one. I happened to be sitting over there when it fell. A
+party of visitors came down the cutting here, and one was just going
+to lean on the railing, to look down into the gulf there, when he had
+the sense to try it first with his foot and it went with a crash, and
+they got a scare and went back to the hotel to eat lobsters. It was
+really useless as protection, but it made one feel safer to have it
+there."
+
+"It's horrible," said Miss Penny emphatically.
+
+"Safe as London Bridge, if you'll only believe it. It's a good four
+feet wide. The school children used to trot over when it was not more
+than two and a half."
+
+"And none of them fell over?"
+
+"Never a one. Why should they?"
+
+"Meg, my dear," said Miss Penny, with a sudden flash of incongruity,"
+this is truly a _very_ great change from Melgrave Square."
+
+"It is," laughed Margaret. "Are you coming, Hennie?"
+
+"I'll--I'll risk it if Mr. Graeme will personally conduct me. He's in
+charge of us, you know."
+
+"Certainly!" and he held out his hand to her, and then looked at
+Margaret. "Will you please wait here till I come back for you?" And
+catching, as he thought, a sign of mutiny in her face,--"Although it's
+perfectly safe it's perhaps just as well to have company the first
+time you cross."
+
+"Very well," she said, and Miss Penny clung convulsively to the strong
+unwavering hand while she gingerly trod the narrow way, and the dogs
+raced half-way to meet them.
+
+"Go _away_!" she shrieked, and the dogs turned on their pivots and
+sped back.
+
+"Now, you see!" he said, when she stood safe on the rounded shoulder
+of Little Sark. "Where was the trouble?"
+
+"It's perfectly easy, Meg," cried Miss Penny, uplifted with her
+accomplishment.
+
+He wondered whether she would vouchsafe him her hand or attempt the
+passage alone. But she put her hand into his without hesitation, and
+thenceforth and for ever the Coupée held for him a touch of sacred
+glamour. For the soft hand throbbed in his, and every throb thrilled
+right up into his heart and set it dancing to some such tune as that
+which sang in David when he danced before the Ark. But his hand was
+firm, and his head was steady, for that which he held in charge was
+the dearest thing in life to him.
+
+Three hundred blessed feet was the span of the Coupée. How fervently
+he wished them three thousand--ay, three million! For every step
+accorded him a throb, and heart-throbs such as these are among the
+precious things of life.
+
+Neither of them spoke one word. Common-places were very much out of
+place, and the things that were in his heart he might not speak--yet.
+
+"Didn't I say so?" cried Miss Penny, as they stepped ashore on Little
+Sark. "It's as easy as winking."
+
+"I never said it wasn't," said Margaret, with a deep breath. "But I
+doubt if you'd have come across alone, my child."
+
+"It was certainly pleasanter to have something to hold on to," said
+Miss Penny.
+
+And Graeme thought so too.
+
+
+IX
+
+Little Sark provides ample opportunity for the adventurous scrambler,
+and Graeme, having tested the novel sensation of those delicious
+heart-thrills, was eager for more.
+
+They prowled round the old silver mines, and sat on the great rocks at
+Port Gorey which had in those olden times served for a jetty, while he
+told them how Peter Le Pelley had mortgaged the island to further his
+quest after the silver, and how a whole ship-load of it sank within a
+stone's throw of the place where they sat, and with it the Seigneur's
+hopes and fortunes.
+
+They peered into the old houses and down the disused shafts, lined now
+with matted growth of ivy and clinging ferns,--the bottomless pits
+into which the Le Pelley heritage had disappeared. Then he took them
+for mild refection to Mrs. Mollet's cottage; and after a rest,--and
+with their gracious permission, a pipe,--he led them across to the
+wild south walls of the island, with their great chasms and fissures
+and tumbled strata, their massive pinnacles, and deep narrow inlets
+and tunnels where the waves champed and roared in everlasting
+darkness.
+
+The dogs harried the rabbits untiringly, Punch in long lithe bounds
+that were a joy to behold; Scamp in panting hysterics which gave
+over-ample warning of his coming and precluded all possibilities of
+capture.
+
+Graeme led them down the face of the cliff fronting L'Etac, the great
+rock island that was once a part of Little Sark itself.
+
+"Once upon a time there was a Coupée across here," he said. "Some time
+our Coupée will disappear and Little Sark will be an island also."
+
+"Not before we get back, I hope," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Not before we get back, _I_ hope," said Graeme, for would he not hold
+Margaret's hand again on the homeward journey?
+
+Down the cliff, along white saw-teeth of upturned veins of quartz,
+with Margaret's hand in his, then back for Miss Penny, till they sat
+looking down into a deep dark basin, almost circular: lined with the
+most lovely pink and heliotrope corallines: studded with anemones,
+brown and red and green: every point and ledge decked with
+delicately-fronded sea-ferns and mosses: and the whole overhung with
+threatening masses of rock.
+
+"Venus's Bath," he told them. "Those round stones at the bottom have
+churned about in there for hundreds of years, I suppose. The tide
+fills it each time, as you will see presently, but the stones cannot
+get out and they've helped to make their own prison-house,--wherein I
+perceive a moral. It's a delicious plunge from that rock."
+
+"You bathe here?" asked Margaret.
+
+"I and the dogs bathe here at times. There's one other thing you must
+see, and I think you may see it to-day. The tide is right, and the
+wind is right, and there's a good sea on."
+
+They waited till the long waves came swirling up over the rocks and
+filled the basin and set the great round stones at the bottom grinding
+angrily. Then off again along the splintered face of the cliff, one by
+one, that is two by two over the difficult bits, till he had them
+seated among some ragged boulders with the waves foaming white below
+them, and swooking and plunking in hidden hollow places.
+
+The wind was rising, and the crash of the seas on the rocks made
+speech impossible. He pointed suddenly along the cliff face, and not
+twenty yards away, with a hiss and a roar, a furious spout of water
+shot up into the air a rocket of white foam, a hundred feet high, and
+fell with a crash over the rocks and into the sea.
+
+Twenty times they watched it roar up into the sky, and then they
+crawled back up the face of the cliff, wind-whipped and rosy-faced,
+and with the taste of salt in their mouths.
+
+"That is a fine sight," said Margaret, with sparkling eyes and diamond
+drops in her wind-blown hair. He thought he had never seen her so
+absolutely lovely before. He had certainly never seen anyone to
+compare with her.
+
+"That's the Souffleur--the blow-hole. There's a bigger one still in
+Saignie Bay, we'll look it up if the wind gets round to the
+north-west. I'm glad you've seen this one. It was just a chance."
+
+"I'm blow-holed all to rags, and, Meg, your hair is absolutely
+disgraceful," said Miss Penny. So differently may different eyes
+regard the same object, especially when the heart has a say in it. He
+would have given all he was worth for an offered lock of that
+wind-blown hair.
+
+As Margaret turned she caught his eye, perhaps caught something of
+what was in it.
+
+"Am I as bad as all that?" she laughed in rosy confusion.
+
+"You're"--he began impetuously, but caught himself in time.--"You're
+all right. When you go to see the Souffleur you must expect to get a
+bit blown."
+
+"It's worth it," she said. "And I'm sure we're much obliged to you for
+taking us. We could never have got there alone."
+
+"We'd never have got to Little Sark, to say nothing of the Souffleur,"
+said Miss Penny very emphatically.
+
+"And now perhaps you'll forgive me for making you buy those shoes."
+
+"My, yes! They're great," said Miss Penny, looking critically at her
+feet. "But decidedly they're not beautiful."
+
+
+X
+
+They loitered homewards, chatting discursively of many things, in a
+way that made for intimacy. Miss Penny and Graeme, indeed, still did
+most of the actual speaking, as he remembered afterwards, but Margaret
+was in no way outside their talk, and if she did not say much it is
+probable that she listened and thought none the less.
+
+The Coupée afforded Graeme another all-too-short span of delight,
+while Margaret's hand throbbed in his and she entrusted herself to his
+protection.
+
+He took them home by the Windmill, and through the fields and
+hedge-gaps into the grounds of the Red House, and in his heart's eye
+saw Margaret standing once more in the opening of the tall hedge with
+the morning glory all about her--just as he would remember her all his
+life.
+
+"Time?" demanded Miss Penny, as they passed along the verandah.
+
+"Half-past seven."
+
+"Then you are half an hour late for your dinner. I propose that we ask
+Mrs. Carré to serve us all together to-night," said Miss Penny, "or we
+may all fare the worse."
+
+"I shall be delighted," began Graeme exuberantly, "unless--" and he
+snapped a glance at Miss Brandt.
+
+"We shall be glad if you will join us," she said quickly.
+
+"I will be there in two minutes," he said, and sped up the Red House
+stairs to make ready.
+
+"I hope to goodness he won't," said Miss Penny, as they passed through
+the hedge. "Now don't you say a word to me, Margaret Brandt. It was
+you invited him"
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"'We shall be glad if you will join us.' If that isn't an invitation
+I'd like to know what it is. And I heard you say it with my own two
+ears,--moi qui vous parle, as we say here."
+
+"You know perfectly well that I could not possibly do anything else,
+Hennie. I believe you just did it on purpose. I don't know what's come
+over you."
+
+"John Graeme. I like him. And after all he'd done for us--that Coupée,
+and Venus's Bath, and the Souffleur, and he like to lose his dinner
+over it all! What could a kind motherly person like me do but
+suggest--simply suggest, in the vaguest manner possible--"
+
+"Yes?--" as she stopped in a challenging way.
+
+"I merely threw out the suggestion, I say, in the vaguest possible
+way, that as we were nearly dying of hunger he should allow us to ask
+Mrs. Carré to let us have our dinner half an hour earlier than
+usual--"
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"And then you struck in, in your usual lordly fashion, and begged him
+to join us. And I'm bound to say he took it very well, not to say
+jumped at it."
+
+"Hennie, you're a--"
+
+"Yes, I know. And if I live I'll be a be-a, and perhaps more
+besides,"--with a cryptic nod.
+
+"Now, what do you mean by that?"
+
+"Wait patiently, my child, and you'll see."
+
+"I believe the Sark air is affecting your--whatever you've got inside
+that giddy head of yours."
+
+"Of course it is. That's what I came for, and to keep you out of
+mischief, you infantile law-breaker."
+
+
+XI
+
+Graeme's two minutes were each set with considerably more than the
+regulation sixty seconds--diamond seconds of glowing anticipation,
+every one of them. And, to his credit, be it recorded that he allotted
+several of them to the invocation of most fervent blessings on Miss
+Penny, who, at the moment, was vigorously disclaiming any pretension
+thereto.
+
+But, quite soon enough for his hosts, as he considered them,--his
+guests, according to Miss Penny,--he appeared at the cottage, bodily
+and mentally prepared for the feast, and showing both in manner and
+attire due sense of the honour conferred upon him.
+
+It was a festive, and for one of them at all events, a
+never-to-be-forgotten meal. The strong Sark air had got into all their
+heads, and whatever prudish notions might have been working in
+Margaret, she had bidden them to heel and took her pleasure as it
+came.
+
+Her mood, however, for the moment was receptive rather than
+expressive. Miss Penny and Graeme still did most of the talking, and
+Margaret sat and listened and laughed, not a little astonished at
+finding herself in that galley.
+
+"What is the penalty for aiding and abetting a criminal in an evasion
+of the law, Mr. Graeme?" chirped Miss Penny one time, and took
+Margaret's energetic below-table expostulation without a wince.
+
+"It would depend, I should say, on the particular dye of criminal.
+What has your friend been up to, Miss Penny? Is he a particularly
+black specimen?"
+
+"In the first place he's a she, and in the next place her complexion
+has a decided tendency towards blonde. As to dye--I am in a position
+to state on oath that she does not."
+
+For a moment he was mystified, then his eye fell on Margaret's face,
+full of glorious confusion at this base betrayal by her bosom friend.
+
+"The Sark air does get into people's heads like that at times," he
+said diplomatically. "It's just in the first few days. But you soon
+get used to it. I felt just the same myself--losing faith in things
+and thinking ill of my friends, and so on. You'll be quite all right
+in a day or two, Miss Penny,"--with a touch of sympathetic
+commiseration in his voice.
+
+"Oh, I'm quite all right now," said Miss Penny enjoyably. "I thought
+it only right and proper to let you know where you stand. At the
+present moment you are as likely as not aiding and abetting a breaker
+of the British laws and her accomplice. You may become involved in
+serious complications, you see."
+
+"If that means that I can be of any service in the matter I shall be
+only too delighted,--if you will not look upon me as an intruder." He
+spoke to Miss Penny but looked at Margaret.
+
+"Ah-ha! Qualms of conscience----"
+
+"Hennie is a little raised, Mr. Graeme," broke in Margaret. "Please
+excuse her. A good night's rest will make her all right."
+
+"Never felt better in my life," sparkled Miss Penny. "But seriously,
+Mr. Graeme, it is only right you should understand, for we don't quite
+know where we are ourselves, and I'm going to tell you even though
+Margaret kicks all the skin off my leg in the process. In a
+word,--we've bolted."
+
+"Bolted?" he echoed, all aglow with hopeful interest.
+
+"Yes--from Mr. Pixley and all his works. And as he had been
+threatening to make us a Ward of Court, you see--well, there you are,
+don't you know."
+
+"I see," he said, and there was a new light in his eyes as he looked
+at Margaret, and his soul danced within him again as David's before
+the Ark.
+
+"For reasons which seemed adequate to myself, Mr. Graeme,"--began
+Margaret, in more sober explanation.
+
+"They were, they were. I am sure of it," sang his heart. And his brain
+asked eagerly, "Had Charles Svendt anything to do with it, I wonder?"
+
+"--I thought it well to remove myself from the care of my guardian
+Mr. Pixley----"
+
+"Splendid girl! Splendid girl!" sang his heart.
+
+"--And as I have still some of my time to serve----"
+
+"How long, O Lord, how long?" chaunted his heart, with no sense of
+impropriety, for it was sounding pæans of joyful hope.
+
+"--You see----" said Margaret.
+
+"I see."
+
+"Do you think they could make me go back to him?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"To Mr. Pixley? Certainly not--that is if your reasons for leaving him
+seemed adequate to the Court, as I am sure they would."
+
+She offered no explanation on this point. All that she left unsaid,
+and that he would have given much to hear, seemed dancing just inside
+Miss Penny's sparkling eyes, and as like as not to come dancing out at
+any moment.
+
+"You see," said Graeme, "I happen to have been making some enquiries
+from a legal friend on that very point----"
+
+"Oh!" said Margaret, and Miss Penny's eyes danced carmagnoles.
+
+"In connection with a story, you know. One likes to get one's legal
+points all right. In any case, as I was just about to tell Miss Penny
+for the benefit of her criminal friend, there would be lots of red
+tape to unwind before they could do anything, and this little isle of
+Sark is the quaintest place in the world in the matter of its own old
+observances and their integrity, and the rejection of new ideas. Mr.
+Pixley does not know you are here, of course?"
+
+"Not much, or he'd have been over by special boat long since," said
+Miss Penny. "We managed it splendidly."
+
+"And how long?" began Graeme, in pursuance of his train of thought,
+but stopped short at sound of the words, since they bore distant
+resemblance to a curiosity which seemed to himself impertinent.
+
+But Miss Penny knew no such compunctions. She did not want to miss one
+jot or tittle of her enjoyment of the situation.
+
+"About six months," said she quickly.
+
+"Well, I should think we"--how delightful to him that "we," and how
+Miss Penny rejoiced in it!--"could hold them at bay for that length of
+time. The machinery of the law is slow and cumbersome at best, and in
+this case, I imagine, it would not be difficult to put a few
+additional spokes in its wheels."
+
+If his face was anything to go by there were many more questions he
+would have liked to put--judicial questions, you understand, for a
+fuller comprehension of the case. But he would not venture them yet.
+He had got ample food for reflection for the moment, and his hopes
+stood high.
+
+Never for him had there been a dinner equal to that one. Better ones
+he had partaken of in plenty. But the full board and the quality of
+the faring are not the only things, nor by any means the chief things,
+that go to the making of a feast.
+
+The nearest approach to it had been that dinner with the Whitefriars,
+at which he first met Margaret Brandt, and that did not come within
+measurable distance of this one.
+
+
+
+XII
+
+"Will you be pleased to tek your dinner with the leddies again
+to-night?" asked Mrs. Carré, as she gave Graeme his breakfast next
+morning.
+
+"I would be delighted," he said doubtfully. "But are you quite sure
+they would wish it, Mrs. Carré."
+
+"But you did get on all right with them," she said, eyeing him
+wonderingly. "They are very nice leddies, I am sure."
+
+"Oh, we got on first rate. We didn't quarrel over the food or fall out
+in any way. But----"
+
+"Well then?"
+
+"Will it be any easier for you?" he asked thoughtfully.
+
+"Well, of course, it will be once setting instead of twice, and that
+iss easier----"
+
+"Then suppose you put it to them on that ground, Mrs. Carré, solely on
+that ground, you understand. And if they are agreeable, I--well, I
+shall not raise any objections."
+
+And so, presently, Mrs. Carré said to the ladies, "You did get on all
+right with the gentleman last night, yes?"
+
+"Oh, quite, Mrs. Carré," sparkled Miss Penny.
+
+"I wass wondering if it would please you to dine all at once together
+again each night. You see, it would save me the trouble of setting
+twice. I did ask him and he said he didn't mind if you didn't. He iss
+a very nice quiet gentleman, I am sure."
+
+"I'm sure it's very good of him," said Miss Penny. "By all means serve
+us all at once together, Mrs. Carré. I guess we can stand it if he
+can."
+
+"That iss all right then," said Mrs. Carré, and the common evening
+meal became an institution--to Graeme's vast enjoyment.
+
+
+XIII
+
+When the girls went into their room after breakfast to put on their
+hats and scrambling shoes, they saw Graeme sitting on the low stone
+wall, as usual, smoking his after-breakfast pipe, and they caught a
+part of the conversation in progress between him and Johnny Vautrin.
+
+"I see five crows 's mawnin'," they heard in Johnnie's sepulchral
+voice.
+
+"Really, now! Catch any?"
+
+"There wuss five crows."
+
+"Ah--five? That's an odd number! And what special ill-luck do you
+infer from five crows, Johnnie?"
+
+"Someone's goan to be sick," said Johnnie, with joyous anticipation.
+
+"Dear me! That's what five crows mean, is it?"
+
+"Ouaie!"
+
+"They didn't go into particulars, I suppose,--as to who it is likely
+to be, for instance, and the exact nature of the seizure?"
+
+"They flew over to church there and settled in black trees."
+
+"Vicar, maybe, since they went that way."
+
+"Mebbe!"--hopefully.
+
+"Well, well! Perhaps if we gave him a hint he might take some
+precautions."
+
+"Couldn' tek nauthen 'd be any use 'gainst crows. Go'zamin, they
+knows!"
+
+"You're just a confirmed old croaker, Johnnie."
+
+"A'n't!" said Johnnie.
+
+"Where's our old friend Marielihou?"
+
+"She's a-busy," said Johnnie, wriggling uncomfortably.
+
+"Ah,--killing something, I presume. Is it going to keep fine for the
+next three or four weeks?"
+
+"I don' think."
+
+"You don't, you little rascal?"
+
+"You might do your best for us, Johnnie," said Miss Penny, as they
+came through the gap in the wall. "And if it keeps fine all the time
+I'll give you--let me see, I'll give you a shilling when we go away."
+
+Johnnie's avidious little claw reached out eagerly.
+
+"Godzamin!" said he. "Gimme it now, an' I'll do my best."
+
+"Earn it, my child," said Miss Penny, and they went on up the road,
+leaving Johnnie scowling in the hedge.
+
+"Well, where would you like to go to-day?" asked Graeme. "Will you
+leave yourselves in my hands again?"
+
+"I'm sure we can't do better," said Miss Penny heartily. "Yesterday
+was a day of days. What do you say, Meg?"
+
+"It looks as though we were going to occupy a great deal of Mr.
+Graeme's time," said Meg non-committally.
+
+"It could not possibly be better occupied," he said exuberantly.
+
+"And how about your story, Mr. Graeme? Is it at a standstill?" asked
+Miss Penny.
+
+"Not at all. It's getting on capitally."
+
+"Why, when do you work at it?"
+
+"Oh,--between times, and when the spirit moves me and I've got
+nothing better to do."
+
+"Is that how one writes books?"
+
+"Sometimes. How do you feel about caves?"
+
+"Ripping! If there's one thing we revel in it's caves, principally
+because we know nothing about them."
+
+"Then we'll break you in on Grève de la Ville. They're comparatively
+easy, and another day we'll do the Boutiques and the Gouliots. Then we
+can get a whole day full of caves by going round the island in a
+boat--red caves and green caves and black caves and barking-dog
+caves--all sorts and conditions of caves--caves studded all round with
+anemones, and caves bristling with tiny jewelled sponges. Sark is just
+a honeycomb of caves."
+
+"Spiffing!" said Miss Penny. "If Mr. Pixley gets on our track we'll
+play hide-and-seek in them with him."
+
+"Then we ought to spend a day on Brecqhou--"
+
+"A day on Brecqhou without a doubt!"
+
+"And if we can get the boat from Guernsey to call for us at the
+Eperquerie, and can get a boat there to put us aboard, we might manage
+Alderney."
+
+"Sounds a bit if-fy, but tempting thereby. Margaret, my dear, our work
+is cut out for us."
+
+"And Mr. Graeme's cut out from him, I'm afraid."
+
+"Oh, not at all, I assure you. It's going ahead like steam," and they
+began to descend into Grève de la Ville, the dogs as usual ranging the
+cliff-sides after rabbits, disappearing altogether at times and then
+flashing suddenly into view half a mile away among the gorse and
+bracken.
+
+Sark scrambling requires caution and constant asistance from the
+practised to the unpractised hand, and Graeme omitted none of the
+necessary precautions. Whereby Margaret's throbbing hand was much in
+his,--so, indeed, was Miss Penny's, but that was quite another
+matter,--and every convulsive grip of the little hand, though it was
+caused by nothing more than the uncertainties of the way, set his
+heart dancing and riveted the golden chains still more firmly round
+it.
+
+There are difficult bits in those caves in the Grève de la
+Ville,--steep ascents, and black drops in sheer faith into unknown
+depths, and tight squeezes past sloping shelves which seem on the
+point of closing and cracking one like a nut; and when they crawled
+out at last into a boulder-strewn plateau, open to the sea on one side
+only, they sighed gratefully at the ample height and breadth of
+things, and sank down on the shingle to breathe the free air and
+sunshine.
+
+He amused them by telling them how, the last time he was there, he
+found an elderly gentleman sitting with his head in his hands, on that
+exact spot. And how, at sight of the new-comer, he had come running to
+him and fallen sobbing on his neck. He had been there for over an
+hour seeking the way out, and not being able to find it, had got into
+a panic.
+
+"I wonder if you could find the place we came in, now?" said Graeme.
+"Scamp, lie down, sir, and don't give me away!"
+
+"Why, certainly, it's just there," said Miss Penny, jumping up
+energetically and marching across, while the dogs grinned open-mouthed
+at her lack of perception. For it wasn't there at all, and she
+searched without avail, and at last sat down again saying, "Well, I
+sympathise with your old gentleman, Mr. Graeme. If I was all alone
+here, and unable to find that hole, I should go into hysterics, though
+it's not a thing I'm given to. I suppose we did get in somehow."
+
+"Obviously! And that's where the advantage of a guide comes in, you
+see."
+
+"I, for one, appreciate him highly, I can assure you. Where is that
+wretched hole?"
+
+"Here it is, you see. It's a tricky place. I shall never forget the
+look of relief on that old fellow's face at sight of me. I believe he
+thinks to this day that I saved his life. He stuck to me like a leech
+all the way through the further caves and till we got back to the
+entrance."
+
+"We're not through them yet then?"
+
+"Through? Bless me no, we're only just starting, but there's no use
+hurrying. Tide's right, and we have plenty of time."
+
+"I feel as if I'd been lost and found again," said Miss Penny. "If
+Mr. Pixley comes along we'll induce him in here and leave him to find
+his way out."
+
+"It would take more than you to get Mr. Pixley in here, Hennie," said
+Margaret quietly. "He'd never venture off the roads, even if he risked
+his life in reaching Sark. He's much too careful of himself."
+
+"He thinks a good deal more of himself than I do," said Miss Penny.
+"With all deference to you, Meg, since he's a relative, I consider him
+a jolly old humbug."
+
+
+XIV
+
+The days were packed with enjoyment for Graeme; not less for Miss
+Penny; nor--illuminated and titillated with a conposed expectancy as
+to whither all this might be leading her--for Margaret herself.
+
+Graeme took the joyful burden of their proper entertainment entirely
+on his own shoulders. He reaped in full now the harvest of his lonely
+wanderings, and compared those former gloomy days with these golden
+ones with a heart so jubilant that the light of it shone in his eyes
+and in his face, and made him fairly radiant.
+
+"That young man grows handsomer every day," was Miss Penny's
+appreciative comment, in the privacy of hair-brushing.
+
+Margaret expressed no opinion.
+
+"I thought him uncommonly good-looking as soon as I set eyes on him,
+but he's growing upon me. I do hope, for his sake, that I shan't fall
+in love with him."
+
+And at that a tiny gleam of a smile hovered for a moment in the curves
+of Margaret's lips, behind the silken screen of her hair.
+
+No trouble was too great for him if it added to their pleasure. He
+provisioned their expeditions with lavish discrimination. He forgot
+nothing,--not even the salt. He carried burdens and kindled fires for
+the boiling of kettles, and saw to their comfort and more, in every
+possible way. He assisted them up and down steep places, and
+Margaret's hand grew accustomed to the steady strength of his. She
+came to look for the helping hand whenever the ways grew difficult. At
+times she--yes, actually, she caught herself grudging Hennie-Penny
+what seemed to her too long an appropriation of it.
+
+Never surely were the beauties of Sark seen under happier auspices, or
+through eyes attuned to more lively appreciation. For love-lit eyes
+see all things lovely, and no more perfect loveliness of sea and rock
+and flower and sky may be found than such as go to the making of this
+little isle of Sark.
+
+He guided their more active energies through the anemone-studded and
+sponge-fringed caves under the Gouliots; through the long
+rough-polished, sea-scoured passages of the Boutiques; down the seamed
+cliffs at Les Fontaines and Grande Grève; along the precarious tracks
+and iron rings into Derrible; with the assistance of a rope, into Le
+Pot. And for rest-times they spent long delightful afternoons sitting
+among the blazing gorse cushions of the Eperquerie, and on that great
+rock that elbows Tintageu into the waves, and looks down on the one
+side on Port du Moulin and the Autelets, and on the other into Pegane
+Bay and Port á la Jument.
+
+This high perch had a peculiar fascination for Margaret. She could
+have sat there day after day with perfect enjoyment. She never tired
+of it all--the crisp green waters below, with their dazzling fringe of
+foam round every gray rock and headland; the gold-tipped pinnacles of
+the Autelets, with their fluttering halos of gulls and sea-pies and
+cormorants, and their ridi-fringe of tawny seaweed and foamy lace; the
+rounded slopes of the Eperquerie; the bold cliffs behind, with their
+sprawling gray feet in the emerald sea, and their green and gold
+shoulders humping up into the blue sky; beyond them the black Gouliot
+rocks and foaming Race, and the long soft bulk of Brecqhou with its
+seamy sides and black-mouthed caves.
+
+And here one day they had a novel experience, and Margaret learned
+something--got fullest proof, at all events, of something her heart
+had already told her.
+
+They were sitting in the sea-ward cleft of this great rock behind
+Tintageu, one afternoon, and Graeme had just succeeded in getting the
+kettle to boil by means of an armful of old gorse bushes, when,
+straightening up for a rest, he said suddenly,--"Hello! Look at that
+now!" and pointed out towards Guernsey.
+
+And there they saw a low white cloud, lying on the sea as though it
+had just dropped solidly out of the sky. Sea and sky were vivid vital
+blue, the sun shone brilliantly, Guernsey, Jethou, and Herm gleamed
+like jewels, and the white cloud lay between the upper and the nether
+blue like the white ghost of a new-born island not yet invested with
+the attributes of earth.
+
+And, as they watched, it crept quickly along the blue-enamelled plain.
+It swallowed up the southern cliffs of Guernsey. Its creeping nose was
+level with the tall Doyle column. It crept on and on, till Castle
+Cornet disappeared and Peter Port was lost to sight. On and on--Jethou
+was gone, and bit by bit the long green and gold slopes of Herm were
+conquered, and its long white spear of sand ran out of the low white
+cloud. And still on, till all the outlying rocks and islands vanished,
+and where had been the glow and colour of life was nothing now but
+that strange pall-like cloud.
+
+The blue of the sea in front had whitened, and suddenly the sentinel
+rocks at the tail of Brecqhou disappeared, and the white cloud came
+sweeping towards the watchers on the rock by Tintageu.
+
+"We're in for it too," said Graeme, hastily emptying his kettle and
+packing up the tea-things. "Seems to me we'd better get ashore."
+
+But the cloud was on them, soft films of gauzy mist with the sun still
+bright overhead. Then quickly-rolling folds of dense white cloud
+blotted out everything but the path on which they stood. The gorse and
+blue-bells and sea-pinks at their feet drooped suddenly wan and
+colourless, as though stricken with mortal sickness, and wept sad
+tears. They stood bewildered, while the pallid folds grew thicker and
+thicker, lit from above with a strange spectral glare, and coiling
+about them like the trailing garments of an army of ghosts. From the
+unseen abysses all round came the growl and wash of wave on rock and
+shingle, from the cliff above Pegane came the frightened bleat of a
+lamb, and an invisible gull went squawking over their heads on his way
+inland.
+
+With an instinct for safer quarters, Miss Penny had started off
+towards the path which led precariously across the narrow neck to the
+mainland. The neck itself, with white clouds of mist billowing on
+either side, and streaming raggedly across the path, looked fearsome
+enough. She gave a startled cry and stood still.
+
+"Stay here!" said Graeme to Margaret. "Don't move an inch!" and he
+felt his way, foot by foot, towards the causeway.
+
+And Margaret, who had been regarding it all simply as a curious
+experience, felt suddenly very lonely and not very safe.
+
+She heard him speak to Miss Penny, but she could not see two feet in
+front of her.
+
+Then, after what seemed a long time, she heard above her--
+
+"Miss Brandt? Margaret? Oh, good God!"--and there was in his voice a
+note that was new to her. Sharp and strident with keenest anxiety, it
+set a sudden fire in her heart, for it was for her.
+
+"I am here, Mr. Graeme," she cried, and he came plunging down to her
+through the dripping gorse and bracken.
+
+"Thank God!" he said fervently. "Why ever did you move?"
+
+"I have not stirred."
+
+"I must have got wrong. It is blinding. It will be safest to wait
+here, I think. Will you hold on to my arm?"
+
+And as she slipped her hand through it she felt it trembling--the arm
+that had always been so strong and steadfast in her service--and she
+knew that this too was for her.
+
+"Where is Hennie?" she asked.
+
+"She's all right. I made her sit down among the bushes and told her
+she'd surely get smashed if she moved."
+
+It was a good half-hour before the cloud drew off and they saw
+Guernsey, Herm, and Jethou sparkling in the sun once more.
+
+Then they crossed the narrow path over the neck, and Margaret was glad
+they had not attempted it in the fog.
+
+They picked up Miss Penny, damp but cheerful, and went home. For
+everything was dripping, and the pleasures of camping out were over
+for that day, but there were fires about that all the fogs that ever
+had been could not begin to extinguish.
+
+
+XV
+
+As the girls sat basking in the window-seat for a few minutes after
+breakfast one morning, they surprised a private conversation between
+their cavalier and Master Johnnie Vautrin. Graeme, with his back to
+them, sat smoking on the low stone wall. Johnnie was, as usual,
+bunched up in the hedge opposite.
+
+"Well, Johnnie?" they heard. "Seen any crows this morning?"
+
+"Ouaie!"
+
+"How many then, you wretched little croaker?"
+
+"J'annéveu deu et j'annéveu troy."
+
+"Ah now, it's not polite--as I've told you before--to talk to an
+uneducated foreigner, in a language he does not understand. How many,
+in such English as you have attained to, and what did they mean
+according to your wizardry?"
+
+"Pergui, you, too, are not polite! Your words are like
+this"--measuring off an expanding half yard in the air,--"they are all
+wind."
+
+"Smart boy! How many crows did you see this morning?"
+
+"First I saw two and then I saw three."
+
+"Two and three make five. Croaker! Five crows mean someone's going to
+be sick. And which way did they go this time?"
+
+"Noh, noh! First it wass two, and when they had gone then it wass
+three more."
+
+"I see. And two black crows--what might they mean now?"
+
+"Two crows they mean good luck."
+
+"Clever boy! Continue! Three black crows mean----?"
+
+"Three crows--they mean a marrying,--ouaie, Dame!"
+
+"Ah, a marrying! That's better! That is very much better. It strikes
+me, Johnnie, that two lucky crows are worth twopence, and three
+marrying crows are worth threepence. And as luck would have it I've
+got exactly five pennies in my pocket. Catch, bearer of good tidings!
+Here you are--one, two, three, four, five! Well caught! Is it going to
+keep fine?" and Marielihou stopped licking herself to look at Graeme,
+and then went on again with an air of,--"I could tell you things if I
+would, but it's not worth while,"--in her ugly green eyes.
+
+"I don' think," said Johnnie, jumping at the chance of ill news.
+
+"You don't, you little rascal? Here, give me back my hard-earned
+pence! You're a little humbug."
+
+"What's Johnnie been up to now?" asked Miss Penny, as she came out
+into the open.
+
+"He's giving me lessons in necromancy and the black art of crows. He
+declines to pledge his honour on the continued brightness of the day."
+
+"Oh, Johnnie! And we're going to Brecqhou!"
+
+"I cann'd help."
+
+"But you might send us on our way rejoicing."
+
+"Gimme six pennies an' I will say it will be fine."
+
+"I'm beginning to think you're of a grasping disposition, Johnnie. If
+you don't take care you'll die rich."
+
+"Go'zamin, I wu'n't mind."
+
+Then Graeme came out again, with the hamper he had had packed in the
+kitchen under his own supervision, and their cloaks, which, thanks to
+Johnnie, he had picked off the nails in the passage, and they set off
+for Havre Gosselin and Brecqhou.
+
+
+XVI
+
+"You'll not forget to come back for us about eight," Graeme shouted to
+the boatmen, as they pushed off from the fretted black rock on which
+their passengers had just made precarious landing.
+
+"Nossir!" and they pulled away to their fishing.
+
+"If it should be a fine sunset," he explained to the ladies, "the view
+of the Sark cliffs from Belême there, opposite the Gouliots, is one of
+the finest sights in the island."
+
+The place they had landed was a rough ledge on the south side just
+under the Pente-à-Fouaille, some distance past the Pirates' Cave, and
+the ascent, though steep, was not so difficult as it looked. Graeme,
+however, in his capacity of chaperon, insisted on convoying them
+separately to the top--whereby he got holding Margaret's hand for the
+space of sixty pulse-beats--and then went down again for the cloaks
+and provisions.
+
+Brecqhou, at the moment, was uninhabited. Its late occupant had thrown
+up his post suddenly, and gone to live on Sark with his wife, and a
+new caretaker had not yet been appointed. So they went straight to the
+house, deposited their belongings in the sitting-room, and then
+started out for a long ramble round the island.
+
+First they struck west to Le Nesté, and scrambled among the rough
+rocks of the Point, stepping cautiously over the gulls' nests which
+lay thick all about, some with eggs and some with young.
+
+The wonders of the sea-gardens in the rock-pools of Moie Batarde, and
+the entrancing views of Herm and Jethou and Guernsey, gleaming across
+the sapphire sea, with a magnificent range of snowy cloud-mountain
+breasting slowly up the deep blue of the sky behind, and looking solid
+enough to sit on, as Miss Penny said, absorbed them till midday.
+
+Then they returned to the house, lit a fire of dried gorse, filled
+their kettle at the well and set it to boil, and carried out a table
+and chairs, for eating indoors was out of the question with such
+beneficence of sunshine inviting them to the open.
+
+All the afternoon was occupied with the wonders of the Creux-à-Vaches,
+with its bold scarps and rounded slopes draped with ferns and
+enamelled with flowers, and the crannies and indentations of the
+northern side of the island. They sat for a time on Belême cliff
+entranced with the wonderful view of the bold western headlands of
+Sark, unrolled before them like a gigantic panorama from Bec-du-Nez to
+the Moie de Bretagne,--a sight the like of which one might travel many
+thousand miles and still not equal. And they promised themselves a
+still finer view when the setting sun washed every cliff and crag and
+cranny with living gold.
+
+But as they turned to tramp through the ragwort and bracken towards
+the house, intent on cups of tea, the sight of the western sky gave
+them sudden start. The solid range of snow-white cloud-mountains had
+climbed the heavens half-way to the zenith, and was stretching thin
+white streamers still further afield. And its base in the west had
+grown dark and threatening, with pallid wisps of cloud scudding up it
+like flying scouts bearing ill tidings.
+
+"Wind, I'm afraid," said Graeme, "and maybe thunder--"
+
+And as he spoke a zigzag flash ripped open the dark screen, and a
+crackling peal came rattling over the lead-coloured sea and bellowed
+past them in long-drawn reverberations.
+
+"Johnnie was right after all, the little monkey."
+
+"I'm sorry now I didn't give him that sixpence," said Miss Penny.
+
+"I don't suppose it would have made much difference--except to
+Johnnie. However, I hope it will soon blow over. Good thing we've got
+a shelter, and we can enjoy our tea while the elements settle matters
+among themselves outside."
+
+The storm broke over them before the kettle boiled. The rain thrashed
+the house fiercely under the impulse of a wild south-west wind, which
+grew wilder every minute, and the thunder bellowed about them as
+though the very heavens were cracking.
+
+"This is a trifle rough on inoffensive pilgrims," said Graeme. "I'm
+really sorry to have got you into it."
+
+"You didn't do it on purpose, did you, Mr. Graeme?" asked Miss Penny,
+with pointed emphasis.
+
+"I did not. I devoutly wish you were both safe home in the Rue Lucas."
+
+"All in good time. Meanwhile, we might be worse off, and this tea is
+going to be excellent. Margaret, my child, do you know that tea under
+these conditions is infinitely preferable to tea in Melgrave Square,
+under any conditions whatsoever?"
+
+"It is certainly a change," said Margaret.
+
+"And a very decided improvement. It's what some of my young friends
+would call 'just awfully jolly decent,'" said Miss Penny.
+
+"We're not out of the wood--that is to say, the island--yet,"
+suggested Graeme.
+
+"Or we shouldn't be here enjoying ourselves like this. Brecqhou is
+sheer delight."
+
+"On a fine day," said Margaret quietly.
+
+"Or in a thunderstorm," asserted Miss Penny militantly. But Margaret
+would not fight lest it should seem like casting reflections on their
+present estate.
+
+The thunder rolled over the wide waters with a majesty of utterance
+novel to their unaccustomed city ears, the rain drew a storm-gray veil
+over everything past the well, the wind waxed into hysterical fury,
+tore at the roof and gables, and went shrieking on over Sark. And
+above the rush of wind and rain, in the short pauses between the
+thunder-peals, the hoarse roar of the waves along the black bastions
+of Brecqhou grew louder and louder in their ears.
+
+Graeme's face grew somewhat anxious, as he stood at the window and
+peered westward as far as he could see, and found nothing but fury and
+blackness there. He had a dim recollection of hearing of outer islands
+such as this being cut off from the mainland for days at a time. He
+could imagine what the sea must be like among the tumbled rocks below.
+And he had seen the Race of the Gouliot in storm time once before, and
+doubted much if any boat would face the whirl and rush of its piled-up
+waters.
+
+What on earth were they to do if the men could not get across for
+them?
+
+Suppose they had to pass the night there?
+
+Good Heavens! Suppose they could not get across for days? What were
+they to live on?--to come at once to the lowest but most pressing
+necessity of the situation?
+
+They had weather-proof shelter. Firing they could procure from the
+interior woodwork of the house and outbuildings. And they had a small
+amount of tea and sugar, and half a tin of condensed milk, and rather
+more than half of the day's provisions, since they had contemplated
+high tea before embarking again. He determined that, if the storm
+showed no signs of abating, the high tea must be a low one, since its
+constituents might possibly have to serve for to-morrow's breakfast
+as well.
+
+Both girls, their own perceptions strung tight by the electric state
+of matters outside, noticed the touch of anxiety in his face as he
+turned from the window, but both declined to show it.
+
+"How's her head, Captain?" asked Miss Penny jovially.
+
+"Dead on to a lee shore," he answered in her own humour. "But the
+anchorage is good and we're not likely to drift."
+
+"Come! That's something to be thankful for, under the circumstances.
+Brecqhou banging broadside on to that big black Gouliot rock would be
+a most unpleasant experience. How about the sunset cliffs of Sark?"
+
+"They're very much under a cloud. I'm afraid we must pass them for
+this time and choose a better. The cliffs indeed are there, but the
+sun is much a-wanting."
+
+"Hamlet without the ghost of a father or even a sun."
+
+"Truly!" And looking at Margaret, he said earnestly, "I can't tell you
+how sorry I am it has turned out this way."
+
+"But it is no fault of yours, Mr. Graeme. No one could possibly have
+foreseen such a breakdown in the weather, with such a glorious morning
+as we had."
+
+"After all, I'm not at all sure it isn't all Mr. Graeme's fault," said
+Miss Penny musingly.
+
+"As how?" he asked.
+
+"Didn't you stop me giving Johnnie Vautrin six demanded pennies to
+keep it fine all day?"
+
+"I discouraged the imposition, certainly. But I don't suppose Johnnie
+could have done much--except with your sixpence."
+
+"He's a queer clever boy, is Johnnie. He certainly said it wasn't
+going to keep fine."
+
+"Little humbug!"
+
+"Yet you gave him fivepence for seeing--or saying he saw--two crows
+and three crows, because two crows mean good luck and three crows
+mean----"
+
+"You talk as if you believed his nonsense, Hennie," broke in Margaret.
+
+"Perhaps I do--to some extent. He certainly declined to pledge himself
+to a fine day, and it remains to be seen if the rest of his--"
+
+"--Humbug," suggested Graeme.
+
+"We'll say predictions, since we're in a superstitious land,--come
+true. I shouldn't be a bit surprised. Thunderstorms are not, as a
+rule, deadly, and it is conceivable that they may, at times, even be
+means of grace. Would you mind piling some more gorse on that fire,
+Mr. Graeme? A counter-illumination is cheerful when the heavens
+without are all black and blazing. What a joke it would be if we had
+to stop here all night!"--she said it with intention, and Graeme
+understood and blessed her.
+
+"We'll hope it won't come to that," he said, as lightly as he could
+make it. "But, if it should, we could make ourselves fairly
+comfortable. Robinson Crusoes up to date!"
+
+"No--Swiss Family Robinsons!" was Margaret's quota to the lightening
+of gloom. "The way everything turned up just when that interesting
+family required it struck me as marvellous even when I was a child."
+
+"You always were of an acutely enquiring--not to say
+doubting--disposition, my dear, ever since I knew you," said Miss
+Penny.
+
+"I always liked to get at the true truth of things, and humbug always
+annoyed me."
+
+"No wonder you found Mr. Pixley a trial, dear," said Miss Penny.
+
+"You don't mean to cast stones of doubt at that shining pillar of the
+law and society, Miss Penny?" said Graeme, tempted to enlarge on so
+congenial a subject.
+
+"Mr. Pixley does not appeal to me--nor I to him. I like him just as
+much as he likes me. And that's just that much,"--with a snap of the
+fingers.
+
+"I'm afraid you and I are in the same boat," said Graeme enjoyably.
+
+"I shouldn't be a bit surprised,--and for the same reason. We both
+like--"
+
+"What shall we do for provisions, Mr. Graeme, if the storm continues?"
+asked Margaret, and Miss Penny smiled knowingly.
+
+"I suggest husbanding those we have. It can't surely last long."
+
+"Mrs. Carré was telling us the other night that once no steamer could
+get to Sark from Guernsey for three weeks," chirped Miss Penny. "If a
+steamer couldn't get to Sark, how should a small boat get to
+Brecqhou--Q.E.D.?"
+
+"Gracious!" cried Margaret in dismay.
+
+"Mr. Graeme would have to catch rabbits for us--and fish. And I
+believe there are potatoes growing outside there. Our clothing will be
+in rags, Meg. Mr. Graeme will be a wild man of the woods, and all our
+portraits will appear in the illustrated papers. The Outcasts of
+Brecqhou. Marooned on an Uninhabited Island. Three Weeks Alone."
+
+"I'm off for a look round," said Graeme. "If that boat should be
+waiting for us, somewhere down below, it would be too stupid for us to
+be waiting for it up here," and he turned up his coat collar and
+pulled his cap over his brows.
+
+"You'll get soaked," said Margaret. "Please take this, it will help a
+little," and she jumped up and thrust her golfing cloak into his
+hands. He seemed about to refuse, then thanked her hastily, and threw
+it over his shoulders and went out.
+
+The wind caught him and whirled him along towards Belême cliffs. He
+tacked to the south and made a slant for the place where they had
+landed. As soon as he was out of sight of the house he drew the hood
+of the cloak over his head and rejoiced in it.
+
+To be wearing her cloak brought Margaret appreciably nearer. Possibly
+that hood had even been over her head, had touched her shining hair,
+her fair soft cheek. He pressed it to his face, to his lips, and the
+hot blood danced in his veins at his temerity. The gale bellowed
+outside and drove him staggering, but inside the hood was the
+uplifting warmth and glow of personal contact with the beloved. Her
+very mantle was sacred to him. He fancied he could detect in it a
+subtle intimation of herself. He hugged it close, and leaned back upon
+the gale, and drifted towards the southern cliffs.
+
+One glance at the black rocks below,--now hidden by the rushing fury
+of the surges, now outstanding gaunt and grim, with creamy cascades
+pouring back into the roaring welter below,--showed him how impossible
+it would have been for any boat to approach there.
+
+He plunged on through the masses of dripping ragwort towards the
+eastern cliff, and stood absorbed by the grim fury of the Gouliot
+Race. The driven waves split on the western point of Brecqhou and came
+rocketing along the ragged black rocks on either side in wild bursts
+of foam. The Gouliot Passage was roaring with the noise of many
+waters, and boiling and seething like a gigantic pot. The sea was
+white with beaten spume for half a mile each way, and up through the
+tumbling marbled surface great black coils of water came writhing and
+bubbling from their tribulation on the hidden rocks below. The black
+fangs of the Gouliots were grimmer than ever. The long line of scoured
+granite cliffs on either side looked like great bald-headed eagles
+peering out hungrily for their prey.
+
+There were no boats at the anchorage in Havre Gosselin. He learned
+afterwards that they had all run to the shelter of Creux Harbour on
+the other side of the island. He breasted the gale and headed for the
+house.
+
+"I'm very much afraid we're stuck for the night," he said, as they
+looked up enquiringly on his entrance. "There's not a sign of a boat,
+and I'm quite sure no boat could face that sea. Sark looks like an
+outcast island--the very end of the world."
+
+"Then we'll make ourselves comfortable here," said Miss Penny. "We
+began to fear you'd been blown over the cliffs. Is there plenty of
+wood in the house?"
+
+"I'll go and get some more," and he came back with a great armful of
+broken driftwood, and went again for as much gorse as he could carry
+in a rude wooden fork he found near the stack.
+
+"You must be soaked through and through," said Margaret.
+
+"Bit damp, but your cloak was a great help," and he piled gorse and
+chunks of wood on the fire till its roaring almost drowned the noise
+of the storm outside.
+
+
+XVII
+
+"Well, I call this absolutely ripping," said Miss Penny exuberantly,
+as they sat by the fire of many-coloured flames, after a slender cup
+of tea and as hearty a meal as Graeme would allow them in view of
+possible contingencies. "Do please smoke, Mr. Graeme. It just needs a
+whiff of tobacco to complete our enjoyment."
+
+"Sark," she added, leaning back with her hands clasped behind her
+head, "when no one knows you're there, is just heavenly. No letters,
+no telegrams, no intrusion of the commonplace outside world! Those are
+distinctly heavenly attributes, you know--"
+
+It was truly extraordinary how, with nothing more than a very general
+intention thereto, she played into his hands at times. Here now was a
+very simple question he had been wanting to put to Miss Brandt for
+days past. For the answer to it might shed light in several
+directions. But he had been loth to force matters, and had quietly
+waited such opportunity as might arise in a natural way without undue
+obtrusion of the doubt that was in his mind.
+
+"'Peace--perfect peace!' as Adam Black used to sigh," he said. "And
+by the way"--turning to Margaret--"speaking of letters, I have often
+wondered at times if you ever received two that I sent you concerning
+Lady Elspeth--just about the time she was called away to Scotland?"
+
+She looked back at him with surprise, and his question was answered
+and his doubt solved before ever she opened her lips.
+
+"About Lady Elspeth? No,--I certainly never got them."
+
+"H'm!" he nodded thoughtfully. "The first I feared might have gone
+astray through some stupidity of the post-office. But the second I
+dropped into your letter-box myself. Moreover--"
+
+"I never got them,"--with a charming touch of colour.
+
+"Moreover----?" said Miss Penny expectantly, with a dancing light in
+her eyes.
+
+"Well," he said, after a pause, "to tell you the whole story, Mr.
+Pixley assured me that you had had them and had handed them on to
+him."
+
+"Mr. Pixley said that?" and Margaret sat up, with very much more than
+a touch of colour in her face now. In fact it was militantly red and
+vastly indignant.
+
+"Yes. I--well, I called upon him at his office just to find out
+if--well, if you were ill or anything like that, you know. And among
+other interesting information he told me that, and cut off my head
+with his glasses and threw my remains out into the street;" at which
+Margaret smiled through her indignation.
+
+"Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny emphatically, "is a--a Johnnie Vautrin
+on a larger scale. Had he any other interesting items of information
+for you, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"Well--yes, he had. But I can estimate them now at their proper value,
+and it can rest there."
+
+"It was Mr. Black's enthusiasm for Sark at that Whitefriars' dinner
+that put it into my head when--when we were wondering where to go. I
+remember now," said Margaret.
+
+"It was Black's enthusiasm for Sark that put it into _my_ head when
+_I_ was wondering where to go," said Graeme.
+
+"There you are, you see," said Miss Penny. "I knew you must have had
+some common inspiration."
+
+"I am greatly indebted to Black. He's one of the finest fellows I
+know. He's done me more than one good turn, but I shall always count
+Sark his chiefest achievement," said Graeme heartily.
+
+
+XVIII
+
+The wind howled round the house, and whuffled in the chimney, and sent
+spurts of sweet-scented smoke to mingle with the fuller flavour of
+Graeme's tobacco. The walls were bare plaster, discoloured with age
+and careless usage. The chairs were common kitchen chairs, and the
+table a plain deal one. But the driftwood burned with flames whose
+forked tongues sang silently but eloquently of wanderings under many
+skies, of rainbow isles in sunny seas, of vivid golden days and the
+black wonders of tropic nights, of storms and calms, and all the
+untold mysteries of the pitiless sea.
+
+But to two at least of the party--and perhaps even to three--that bare
+room was radiant beyond any they had ever known.
+
+Orange and amber lightening into sunshine, purple into heliotrope,
+tender greens and lucent blues, burning crimson and fiery red, were
+the flames of the driftwood, and in these surely the imagination may
+find its happiest auguries. For if the dancing flames, out of their
+chastened knowledge, sang only of the past, in the minds of their
+watchers they were singing of futures brighter and more glowing than
+anything the past had ever known. And so, to two at least of
+them,--and perhaps to three,--never surely was there room so radiant
+as that bare room in that empty house on Brecqhou.
+
+Miss Penny had the high endowment of a large heart, a wide
+imagination, and sentiment sufficient for a high-class girls'
+boarding-school.
+
+She found herself for the moment out of place, yet she could not
+remove herself without too obvious an intention. She did the next best
+thing. She settled herself on her chair in a corner, slipped off her
+shoes, sat on her feet, and went to sleep.
+
+Margaret, indeed, glanced at her suspiciously once or twice, without
+moving her head by so much as a hair's-breadth. But she seemed really
+and truly asleep, and for a moment Margaret was amazed that anyone
+could think of sleep in that enchanted room. But then she remembered
+that it was different--Hennie was Hennie, and she was she, and it was
+for her that the crystal ball of life had opened of a sudden and shown
+the radiance within.
+
+How long they sat in silence before the rainbow fire she never knew.
+
+Hennie was snoring gently--purring as one might say--in the most
+genuinely ingenuous fashion.
+
+Graeme, in the riot of happy possibilities evoked by the disclosure of
+Mr. Pixley's perfidy, would have been content to sit there for ever,
+since Margaret was at his side. It was enough to know that she was
+there. He did not need to turn his head to enjoy the sight of her with
+gross material vision. Every tight-strung fibre of his being told him
+of her nearness, in ways compared with which sight and sound and touch
+are gross and feeble travesties of communication. Their spirits surely
+reached out and touched in that silent communion before the rainbow
+fire.
+
+There were many things he wanted to ask her now. But they could wait,
+they could wait. The Doubting Castles he had built in his despair had
+had no foundations. He was building anew already, and now with rosy
+hope and golden faith, and the topstones of his building mingled with
+the stars.
+
+He woke of a sudden to a sense of lack of consideration for her in his
+own enjoyment. Doubtless she was tired out, and was only kept from
+following Miss Penny's example by his crass stupidity in sitting there
+in that stolid fashion.
+
+"Pray forgive me!" he said, as he rose quietly. "You must be tired,
+too. I will take the other room and you can join Miss Penny."
+
+"I'm not the least tired. I never felt more awake in my life. Surely
+the wind has fallen."
+
+He went to the door and opened it and looked out.
+
+"It is only a lull. It will probably blow up again stronger than
+ever," and as he turned he found her at his elbow.
+
+"Let us go outside," she said, and he could have taken her into his
+arms. Instead, he tiptoed across the room and got her cloak, and
+placed it on her shoulders with a new, vast sense of proprietorship.
+
+He knew just how she felt. Even that room of rare delights was not
+large enough just then for her and for him. The whole wide world, and
+the illimitable heights of the heavens, could scarce contain that
+which was in them. Their hearts were full, and that which was in them
+was that of which God is the ultimate perfection. And in their ears,
+in the gaps of the storm, was the roaring thunder of the great white
+waves as they tore along the black sides of Brecqhou.
+
+"Tell me more about those letters," she said briefly. "What did you
+write?"
+
+"I wrote, nominally, to inform you of Lady Elspeth's sudden call to
+Scotland, but actually to tell you how sorely I regretted the sudden
+break in our acquaintance which had become to me so very great a
+delight."
+
+"And when you got no answer?"
+
+"I waited and waited, and then I had a sudden fear that you might be
+ill. And to satisfy myself I called on Mr. Pixley at his office. He
+told me you were quite well, that you had had my letters, and had
+handed them to him."
+
+"Anything more?"
+
+"Yes,--he said you were shortly to marry his son."
+
+"That is what he wished,--and that is why I am here."
+
+"Thank God! Then I may tell you, Margaret. I had been building castles
+and you were mistress of them all and of my whole heart. When Mr.
+Pixley knocked them into dust I came here to fight it out by myself,
+and a black time I had. Then God, in His goodness, put it into your
+heart to come too. Will you marry me, Margaret?"
+
+"Yes, Jock."
+
+And there, in the lull of the gale, in the lee of the lonely house on
+Brecqhou, they plighted their troth with no more need of feeble words,
+for their hearts had gone out to one another.
+
+And all along the gaunt black rocks the great waves, which a moment
+before had been growling in dull agony, roared a mighty chorus of
+delight, and rolled it up the sloping seams of Longue Pointe, and
+flashed it on in thunderous bursts of foam from Bec-du-Nez to L'Etac.
+
+And Miss Henrietta Penny, awakening about this time, and finding
+herself alone, laughed happily to herself, and sighed just once, and
+said from her heart, "God bless them!"--and did not go to sleep again,
+though to look at her you would never have known it, save for the fact
+that she no longer purred in her sleep,--for the woman has yet to be
+born who ever pleaded guilty to actual snoring.
+
+
+XIX
+
+Graeme slept that night just as much as might have been expected under
+the circumstances, and that was not one wink. Nevertheless, when
+morning came, he felt as strong and joyous as a young god. New life
+had come to him in the night, and he felt equal to the conquering of
+worlds. For love is life, and the strength and the joy of it.
+
+He was out with the dawn, to a gray rushing morning full of the sounds
+of sea and wind. He drew a canful of water from the well, and had such
+a wash as no soap and a handkerchief would permit of. Then he drew
+another canful and left it outside the door of the ladies' room, and
+strode off to Belême to see if the boats had got back to their
+anchorage. But the little bay was a scene of storm and strife, a wild
+confusion of raging seas and stubborn rocks, the fruits of the
+conflict flying up the cliffs in spongy gouts of spume, and dappling
+the waters far and wide with fantasies of troubled marbling,--and
+there was not a boat to be seen.
+
+But the sight of the great white seas roaring up the Sark headlands,
+as far as he could see on either hand, was one never to be forgotten.
+It was worth the price they had paid, even though it spelt a further
+term of captivity, and he turned back to his duties with that new glad
+glow in his heart which was no longer simply hope but the full and
+gracious assurance of loftiest attainment.
+
+He had seen potatoes growing in a plot near the house. So, after
+lighting a fire in the kitchen and setting the kettle to boil, he
+rooted about till he found the remains of a spade and set himself to
+unaccustomed labours.
+
+When Miss Penny came out of her room, freshfaced and comely
+coiffured, she found a ring of potatoes roasting in the ashes and the
+kettle boiling, and Graeme came in, bright-eyed and wind-whipped,
+wiping his hands on a very damp handkerchief.
+
+"I am so glad, Mr. Graeme," she said, with sparkling eyes and face,
+and hearty outstretched hand.
+
+"Margaret has told you?"
+
+"Of course Margaret has told me. Am I not her keeper, and haven't I
+been hoping for this since ever I saw you?"
+
+"That is very good of you. I thought, perhaps--"
+
+"Thought it might take me by surprise, I suppose--and perhaps that I
+might take it badly? Not a bit! It fulfils my very highest hopes. And
+I can assure you you have got a prize. There are not many girls like
+Margaret Brandt."
+
+"Don't I know it? I have known it from the very first time I met
+her--at that blessed Whitefriars' dinner."
+
+"I think you will make her very happy."
+
+"I promise you I will do my very best."
+
+And then Margaret came into the kitchen and knew what was toward.
+
+She looked like a queen and a princess and a goddess all in one, with
+a flood of happy colour in her face and a glad glow in her eyes, and
+no more hint of maidenly shyness about her than was right and natural.
+And Miss Penny's eyes were misty of a sudden, as Graeme went quickly
+up to her friend, and feasted his hungry eyes on her face for a
+moment, and then bent and gallantly kissed her hand. For in both their
+faces was the great glad light that is the very light of life, and
+Miss Penny was wondering if, in some distant future time, it might
+perchance be vouchsafed to her also to attain thereto.
+
+"I hope you both slept well," he said gaily. "I've done my best in the
+provisioning line. I know we've got plenty of salt, for one generally
+forgets it and so I always put in two packets."
+
+"You've done splendidly," said Miss Penny, tying up tea in a piece of
+muslin and dropping it into the kettle.
+
+"I'd have tried for a rabbit, but I wasn't sure if either of you could
+skin it--"
+
+"Ugh! Don't mention it!"
+
+"And I knew I couldn't, so we'll have to put up with roasted potatoes
+and imagine the rabbit. I've been told they do that in some parts of
+Ireland,--hang up a bit of bacon in a corner and point at it with the
+potato and so imagine the flavour."
+
+"Potatoes are excellent faring--when there's nothing better to be
+had," said Miss Penny, rooting in the basket. "However, here are three
+of yesterday's sandwiches, slightly faded, and some biscuits--in good
+condition, thanks to the tin. Come, we shan't absolutely starve!"
+
+And they enjoyed that meal--two of them, at all events, and perhaps
+three--as they had never enjoyed a meal before.
+
+"And the weather?" asked Margaret.
+
+"The blessed weather is just as it was; perhaps even a bit more
+so,--the most glorious weather that ever was on land or sea!"
+
+"But----" said Margaret, smiling at his effervescence.
+
+"No, I'm afraid it can't last very much longer, and potatoes and salt
+I know would begin to pall in time. After breakfast you shall see the
+grandest sight of your lives,--and for the rest, we will live in
+hope."
+
+
+
+XX
+
+And, after all, they saw what they had specially come to see--a sunset
+from Belême cliff.
+
+For the day remained gray and boisterous until late in the afternoon.
+They had lunched--with less exuberance than they had breakfasted--on
+potatoes and salt and a thin medicinal-tasting decoction made from
+breakfast's tea-leaves; they were looking forward with no undue
+eagerness to potato dinner without even the palliative of medicinal
+tea; and even Miss Penny acknowledged that, choice being offered her,
+she would give the preference to some other vegetable for a week to
+come;--when, of a sudden, the gray veil of the west opened slowly,
+like the lifting of an iron curtain, and let the light behind shine
+through.
+
+And the light was as they could imagine the light of heaven--a pure
+lucent yellow as of the early primrose, but diaphanous and almost
+transparent, as though this, which seemed to them light, was itself in
+reality but an outer veil hiding the still greater glory behind. The
+curtain lifted but a span, and the lower rim of it curved in a gentle
+arch from the middle of Guernsey to the filmy line of Alderney. All
+below the sharp-cut rim was the sea of heavenly primrose, with here
+and there a floating purple island edged with gold. All above was
+sombre plum-colour flushed with rose, the edges fraying in the wind,
+and floating in thin rosy streamers up the dark sky above.
+
+The sun, larger than they had ever seen him in their lives, dropped
+gently like a great brass shield from behind the dark curtain into the
+sea of primrose light, and the primrose flushed with crimson over
+Guernsey and with tender green and blue over Alderney.
+
+They hastened away to Belême cliff, and then they saw what they had
+hoped to see, and more;--the mighty granite frontlets of Sark all
+washed with living gold--- shining from their long conflict with the
+waves, and gleaming, every one, like a jewel,--from Bec-du-Nez to Moie
+de Bretagne. And, out in the dimness, behind which lay Jersey, there
+suddenly appeared the perfect circle of a rainbow such as none of them
+had ever dreamed of--a perfect orb of the living colours of the
+Promise--resting bodily on the dark sea like a gigantic iridescent
+soap-bubble, glowing and pulsing and throbbing under the level beams
+of the setting sun.
+
+"Wonderful!" murmured Margaret.
+
+"I never saw more than half a bow before," whispered Miss Penny.
+
+"Nor I," said Graeme. "But then, you see, nothing ever was as it is
+now. Things happened last night."
+
+At which Miss Penny smiled and murmured, "Of course! That accounts for
+everything. The whole world is changed."
+
+And they watched and watched, in breathless admiration, first the
+cliffs, and then the bow, and then the sun, and then the cliffs and
+bow again, till the last tiny rim of the sun sank behind the dark line
+of Herm, and the bow went out with a snap, and the cliffs in front
+grew gray and sank back into their sleep, as the shadows crept up out
+of the sea.
+
+And, presently, the primrose sea in the clouds lost its transparent
+softness and flushed with rose and carmine. The tender greens and
+blues in the north deepened, and the sky above glowed crimson right
+into the far east. And the sea below was like a ripe plum with a
+rippling bloom upon it, and then it answered to the glow "above and
+became like burnished copper. And over it, from the south end of Sark,
+came a dancing white sail, at sight of which Graeme leaped to his
+feet.
+
+"The show is over," he cried, "and here comes your highnesses'
+carriage."
+
+"I wouldn't have missed it for anything," said Margaret softly, with a
+rapt face still.
+
+"It was worth living on potatoes for a month for," said Miss Penny.
+"All the same, I hope Mrs. Carré will have some dinner for us when we
+get home."
+
+The boat was heading for the Pente-à-Fouaille where they had landed
+the day before, and they hurried to meet it, Graeme full of misgivings
+as to the embarkation, for the waves were still roaring up the rocks
+in bursts of foam, though the wind had fallen somewhat.
+
+But the boatmen knew their business, and had brought an extra hand for
+its safe accomplishment. They dropped the sail and pulled round a
+corner of the black rock. Then, while two of them kept the boat from
+destruction, the other stood and Graeme dropped the girls one by one
+into his arms, and was a very thankful man when he tumbled in himself,
+all in a heap, and wiped the big drops of sweat from his brow.
+
+A stroke or two with the oars and they were plunging back through the
+hissing white caps, but not, as he had expected, to Havre Gosselin.
+
+"Where to?" he shouted to the blue-guernseyed stalwart nearest him.
+
+"Grande Grève. We couldn' beach in Havre Gosselin, and mebbe the
+leddies wouldn' like to climb the ladders," with a grin at the
+leddies.
+
+"Not much!" said Miss Penny. "Margaret, my dear, prepare yourself! I'm
+going to be sick if this goes on much longer."
+
+But before she had time to be sick they had rounded the shoulder of
+Port-és-Saies, and their boat's nose ran up the soft sand of a low
+tide in Grande Grève, and the green waves came curling exultantly in
+over the stern. The men leaped out and hauled bravely, and in a moment
+the girls were ashore.
+
+"Couldn' get back nohow last night, sir. 'Twould a bin as much as our
+lives were worth. Hope ye didn' starve," said the spokesman with
+another genial grin.
+
+"No, we didn't expect you. We dug potatoes and cooked them. Here you
+are, and thanks for coming as soon as you could," and, from their
+smiling faces, their reward without doubt covered not only that which
+they had actually done but that also which they had unwittingly helped
+to do.
+
+The boat shoved off and made for its own anchorage, and Graeme led the
+girls up the toilsome path to the Coupée.
+
+It was after nine when they reached the cottage, and the first thing
+they saw was Johnnie Vautrin sitting in the hedge opposite, with
+Marielihou licking her lips alongside.
+
+"I just seen seven crows," cried Johnnie gleefully.
+
+"Little rascal! You dream crows," said Graeme, whose desires at the
+moment ran to something more palatable and satisfying.
+
+"And what do seven crows mean, Johnnie?" asked Margaret.
+
+"Seven crows means everything's oll right!"
+
+"Clever boy! You see just what you want to see," said Graeme, and then
+Mrs. Carré appeared at the door of the cottage.
+
+"Ah then, here you are!" she said, with a large welcoming smile. "And
+the dinner I haf been keeping for you for an hour an' more."
+
+"You're a good angel, Mrs. Carré," said Graeme gratefully. "We are a
+bit late, aren't we? I hope you've put yesterday's dinner and to-day's
+together. We've had nothing to eat to speak of for a month. What did
+you think when we never turned up last night?"
+
+"Oh, but I knew you would be all right. There iss a house on Brecqhou,
+and there iss watter, and you had things to eat, and it was better on
+Brecqhou last night than on the watter."
+
+"It was," said Graeme heartily, and sped off up the garden for a
+much-needed wash and brush-up.
+
+
+XXI
+
+"Now what would I like myself if I was in their place?" asked Miss
+Penny of herself, while she rectified the omissions of the last two
+days in the matter of Nature's cravings for a more varied diet than
+Brecqhou afforded.
+
+"Why, to be alone and free from the observation of Miss Hennie Penny,"
+she promptly answered herself, and as promptly acted on it.
+
+"Meg, my dear, I am aweary. I am not accustomed to playing Swiss
+Family Robinson. By your leave, Monsieur and Mademoiselle, I will wish
+you good-night and pleasant dreams," and she went off into the
+bedroom.
+
+"May she have as tactful a chaperone when her own time comes," said
+Graeme, with a smile. "Do you think you would sleep better if you went
+to bed at once or if you had a little walk first?"
+
+"I am not the least bit sleepy," said Margaret.
+
+"Then a stroll will do you good," and they went out into the night.
+And Miss Penny, as she heard their feet on the cobbles, smiled to
+herself a little wistfully.
+
+Such a night of stars! The gale had swept the heavens and thinned the
+upper air till the Milky Way was a wide white track strewn thick with
+jewels, and the greater lights shone large and close. As they
+sauntered in silence towards La Tour, their faces towards the stars
+among which their full hearts were ranging in glorious companionship,
+one of the lesser lights silently loosed its hold and dropped slowly
+from zenith to horizon, in a fiery groove that momentarily eclipsed
+all else.
+
+And while Graeme was still pressing to his heart the soft arm that lay
+in his, in silent enjoyment of the sight and at their sharing it,
+another star swung loose, and another, and another, till the
+glittering vault seemed laced with fiery trails and they stood in rapt
+admiration.
+
+"What a sight!" said Margaret softly. "I have never seen anything like
+that before."
+
+"Nor I. The very stars rejoice with us.... You have made me the
+happiest man in all the world this day, Margaret. I can hardly believe
+it is real ..."
+
+"I am real," she said, with a low warm little laugh. "And I am happy.
+Kiss me, Jock!" and he kissed her there under the falling stars, and
+she him, in a way that left no doubt as to what was in them, and the
+evening incense of the honeysuckle and hawthorn wafted fragrance all
+about them.
+
+There was still a tender touch of colour in the sky over the western
+sea as they came out on the Eperquerie.
+
+"When are you free, Margaret?" he asked,--the first word since they
+kissed in the lane.
+
+"I am twenty-one on New Year's Day."
+
+"Six whole months! How can we possibly wait all that time?"
+
+"Why should we?" she asked delightfully.
+
+"Undoubtedly--why should we?" he said, on fire with her charming
+readiness. "You are probably by this time ringed with legal pains and
+penalties, but they are all less than nothing."
+
+"What could they do?"
+
+"I believe they clap the male malefactor into prison----"
+
+"I will go with you."
+
+"I'm not sure if there are any married cells."
+
+"And how long would they keep us there?"
+
+"Till, in their opinion, I had purged my contempt, I believe."
+
+"And how long would that be?"
+
+"I've no idea. It probably depends on circumstances. Do you know that,
+until Lady Elspeth told me, I had rib idea that you had any money. It
+was rather a blow to me."
+
+"I don't see why."
+
+"But I told our old friend that if--well, if, you understand--I should
+insist on everything you had being settled on yourself."
+
+"You and Lady Elspeth seem to have discussed matters pretty freely,"
+she said, with a laugh.
+
+"She's the dearest old lady in the world, and delights in mothering
+me. She got me in a corner that afternoon, and taxed me with coming to
+her house for reasons other than simply to see herself----"
+
+"And you----?"
+
+"I had to own up, of course, and then she crushed me by telling me
+that you were an heiress, and that Mr. Pixley probably had views of
+his own concerning you."
+
+"Which he had, but they happened not to coincide with mine, and so I
+came to Sark."
+
+"Happy day! I see you yet, standing in the hedge by the Red House, and
+I believing you a vision."
+
+"I could hardly believe my eyes either. You seemed to come jumping
+right out of the sky."
+
+"I jumped right into heaven--the highest jump that ever was made."
+
+"I was a bit put out at first, you know----"
+
+"I know you were."
+
+"I thought you had learned we were coming, and had followed us here."
+
+"Whereas----" he laughed.
+
+"Exactly!"
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FIFTH
+
+
+I
+
+"But yes, I can marry you in the church," said the Vicar, blowing out
+smoke, and laughing enjoyably across at Graeme, who sat in another
+garden chair under the big trees in front of the Vicarage.
+
+"In spite of the fact that we are aliens?"
+
+"Oh, it is not so bad as that. We ab-sorbed you by conquest and so you
+are really a part of us. We are all one family now."
+
+"And such a marriage would be perfectly legal and unassailable?"
+
+"I shall marry you more firmly than if you were married in
+Cant-er-bury Cath-edral," laughed the Vicar.
+
+"That should suffice. But why more firmly? How improve on perfection?"
+
+"I will tell you," said the Vicar, with increased enjoyment, as he
+leaned forward and tapped Graeme's knee. "It is this way.--If you are
+married in Cant-er-bury Cath-edral you can be divorced,--n'est-ce pas?
+Oui! Eh bien!--If you are married in my church of Sark you can never
+be divorced. C'est ça! It is the old Norman law."
+
+"We will be married in your church of Sark," said Graeme, with
+conviction.
+
+"That is right. I shall marry you so that you shall never be able to
+get away from one another."
+
+"Please God, we'll never want to!"
+
+"Ah yes! Of course. C'est ça!"
+
+
+II
+
+"We have never had a case of the kind, as far as I know. Certainly not
+in my time," said the Seigneur, smiling quizzically across the
+tea-table at Graeme. "But you gentlemen of the pen are allowed a
+certain amount of license in such matters, are you not?"
+
+"We sometimes take it, anyhow. But one likes to stick as close to fact
+as possible."
+
+They were sitting in the shady corner in front of the Seigneurie, with
+four dogs basking in the sun beyond, and beyond them the shaven lawns
+and motionless trees, the leafy green tunnel that led to the lane, and
+a lovely glimpse into the enclosed gardens through the ancient gateway
+whose stones had known the saints of old.
+
+Graeme had put a certain proposition to the Lord of the Island,
+nominally in connection with the story he was busy upon, but in
+reality of vital concern to the larger story in which Margaret and he
+were writing the history of their lives.
+
+"Sark, you know, is a portion of the British Empire, or perhaps I
+should say the British Empire belongs to Sark, but we are not under
+British law. We are a law unto ourselves here," said the Seigneur.
+
+"And the authority of a British Court would carry no weight with you?
+In the case I have put to you, if the Court of Chancery ordered you to
+surrender the young lady, you would refuse to do so?"
+
+"I could refuse to do so. What I actually would do might depend on
+circumstances."
+
+"I see," said Graeme musingly, and decided that the Seigneur's
+goodwill was worthy of every possible cultivation both by himself and
+Margaret. For he did not look like one who would help a friend into
+trouble.
+
+
+III
+
+"I've been thinking a good deal about it, and I really don't see any
+reason why we should wait,"--said Graeme, looking at Margaret.
+
+And Miss Penny said "Hear! Hear!" so energetically that Margaret
+laughed merrily.
+
+"We are both of one mind in the matter, an life is all too short at
+its longest, and most especially when it offers you all its very best
+with both hands--"
+
+"Hear! _Hear_!" said Miss Penny.
+
+"And time is fleeting," concluded the orator.
+
+"And that kettle is boiling over again," and Miss Penny jumped up and
+ran to the rescue.
+
+They were spending a long day in Grande Grève--the spot that had
+special claims upon their liking since their landing there after that
+memorable trip to Brecqhou. They had brought a full day's rations,
+prepared with solicitous discrimination by Graeme himself, and a
+kettle, and a great round tin can of fresh water from the well at
+Dixcart, and a smaller one of milk.
+
+So high were their spirits that they had even scoffed at Johnnie
+Vautrin's intimation that he had seen a magpie that morning, and it
+had flown over their house. But magpie or no magpie they were bent on
+enjoyment, and they left Johnnie and Marielihou muttering black spells
+into the hawthorn hedge, and went off with the dogs down the scented
+lanes, through the valley where the blue-bells draped the hillsides in
+such masses that they walked as it were between a blue heaven and a
+blue earth, and so by the meadow-paths to the Coupée.
+
+Their descent of the rough path down the side of the Coupée with all
+this impedimenta had not been without incident, but eventually every
+thing and person had been got to the bottom in safety.
+
+Then, while the dogs raced in the lip of the tide and Scamp filled the
+bay with his barkings, the girls had disappeared among the tumbled
+rocks under the cliff, and Graeme had sought seclusion at the other
+end of the bay. And presently they had met again on the gleaming
+stretch of sand; he in orthodox tight-fitting dark-blue elastic web
+which set off his long limbs and broad shoulders to great advantage;
+Hennie Penny in pale blue, her somewhat plump figure redeemed by the
+merry face which recognised all its owner's deficiencies and more than
+made up for them all; Margaret, tall, slim, shapely, revealing fresh
+graces with every movement,--a sea-goddess in pale pink--a sight to
+set the heart of a marble statue plunging with delight.
+
+Hennie Penny persisted in wearing an unbecoming cap like a sponge-bag,
+which subjected her to comment.
+
+Margaret's crowning glory was coiled in thick plaits on top of her
+head, and if it got wet it got wet and she heeded it not.
+
+Both girls had draped themselves in long towels for the walk down to
+the water, and Graeme's heart sang with joy at the surpassing beauty
+of this radiant girl who had given her heart and herself and her life
+into his keeping.
+
+Dainty clothing counts for much in a girl's appearance. Not every
+girl shows to advantage in bathing costume. But when she does, she
+knows it, and the hearts of men are her stepping-stones.
+
+Hennie Penny was a cautious swimmer. She preferred depths soundable at
+any moment by the dropping of a foot, and if the foot did not
+instantly touch bottom she fell into a panic and screamed, which added
+not a little to the hilarity of their bathes.
+
+Margaret and Graeme, however, were both at home in the water. They
+delighted to set their faces to the open and breast steadily out to
+sea, rejoicing in the conquest of the waves. But he always watched
+over her with solicitous care, for there are currents, and
+cross-currents, and treacherous undertows round those coasts, and the
+wary swimmer is the wiser man.
+
+And the dogs always swam with them, Punch lunging boldly ahead with
+the ease and grace of a seal, looking round now and again to see if
+they were coming, and turning the moment they turned. While Scamp,
+away in the rear, thrashed along spasmodically, with a yelp for every
+stroke, but would not be left out of it. The sight of his anxious
+little face and twisting nose more than once set Margaret laughing, so
+that she had to turn on her back and float till she got over it,
+greatly to the small dog's satisfaction.
+
+Full of life and the mighty joy of it, they found the going unusually
+easy that day. The water was like the kiss of new life, crisp, tonic,
+vitalising. There was no more than a breath of wind, no more than a
+ruffle on the backs of the long blue rollers that came sweeping slowly
+in out of the West.
+
+Graeme, as he glanced round in his long side-strokes at the lovely
+eager face gemmed with sparkling water-jewels, took full deep breaths
+of delight and gratitude to the All-Goodness that had vouchsafed him
+such a prize.
+
+The kiss of the life-giving water had induced a tender flush of colour
+in the soft white neck, as though the pink of her bathing-suit had
+spread upwards. He could see the pulsing blue veins in neck and temple
+as she rose to her stroke. A tiny tendril of water-darkened hair
+lifted and fell on her neck like a filament of seaweed on a polished
+rock. Her eyes were very bright, and seemed larger than usual with the
+strenuous joy of it all. The wonder of her beauty absorbed him. He
+could hardly turn his face from it. He would have been content to go
+on swimming so for ever.
+
+But, glancing past the sweet face one time, he saw that they had gone
+farther than he knew, and Scamp had turned long since and was yelping
+towards the shore.
+
+"Better turn now," he said quietly, and she floated for a moment's
+rest, then turned and they headed for the shore, and Punch passed them
+noiselessly.
+
+They ploughed along in good cheer for a time, and then, of a sudden,
+it seemed to him that they were making but poor progress.
+
+He fixed his eyes on a rock on the shore and swam steadily on.
+
+They had been opposite it. Twenty strokes, and the rock, instead of
+facing them, had swung slowly to the north. They were making less than
+no progress. They were drifting. They were in the grip of a current
+that was carrying them towards the black fangs of Pointe la Joue.
+
+A cold sweat broke out among the sea-drops on his brow. Pointe la Joue
+is an ill place to land, even if they could make it, and the chances
+were that the current would carry them past.
+
+How to tell her without undue upsetting? A panic might bring disaster.
+
+He looked round at her. The bright face was high and resolute. She was
+not aware of the danger, but from that look on her face he did not
+think she would go to pieces when he told her.
+
+The rock he had been watching stood now at an angle to their course.
+
+"Are you tired, Meg?" he asked.
+
+"I'm all right."
+
+"Turn on your back and float for a minute or two," and he set the
+example, and Punch saw and came slipping back to them.
+
+"We're in a cross current," he said quietly. "And we're making no
+way--"
+
+"I know. I was watching a rock on the shore. What's the best thing to
+do?"
+
+"We'll rest for a few minutes and then go with the tide round Pointe
+la Joue. We can land in Vermandés. You're not cold, are you?"
+
+"Not a bit."
+
+When he lifted his head the Coupée was shortened to a span, and the
+southern headland folded over it as he looked. They were drifting as
+fast as a man could walk at his fastest. They were abreast the black
+rocks of La Joue.
+
+"Now, dearest, a little spurt and we shall be in the slack. If you get
+tired, tell me," and they struck out vigorously on a shoreward slant
+in the direction they were going.
+
+There should have been a backwater round the corner of Vermandés. He
+had counted on it. And there was one, but so swift was the rush of the
+tide round the out-jutting rocks of La Joue, that for some minutes, as
+they battled with the rough edge of it, it was touch and go with them.
+
+At a word from her his arm would be at her service. But she fought
+bravely on, and could admire Punch's graceful action even then. The
+waves smacked her rudely in the face. Great writhing coils came
+belching up from below and burst under her chin and almost swamped
+her. One, as strong as a snake, rose suddenly under her, flung her off
+her stroke, rolled her over, made her for a moment feel utterly
+helpless.
+
+"Jock!"
+
+He had been watching her closely. His arm flashed out in front of her.
+
+"Grip!" and she hung on to it and it felt like a bar of steel.
+
+"Now!"--when she had recovered herself somewhat. "Grip the top of my
+suit."--She hooked her fingers into it and he struck out through the
+turmoil.
+
+It was a tough little fight. She struck out vigorously behind to help
+him. And, though the losing of the fight might mean tragedy and two
+white bodies ragging forlornly along the black teeth of Little Sark,
+she still had time to notice the mighty play of muscles in his back
+and arms, and the swelling veins in his sunburnt neck, and the crisp
+rippled hair above, and she rejoiced mightily in him. And--while
+possible deaths lurked all about them--her soul grew large within her
+at thought of the brave heart in front, and the strenuous will, and
+the shapely body, and the powerful muscles--all battling for her--all
+hers--and she theirs. What matter if they were beaten, if they but
+went out together! What matter Death so long as he did not divide
+them! So uplifted was she with the joy of him.
+
+And then, with a final wrestle, they were in slack water, and she
+loosed her hold and struck out alongside him.
+
+And presently he was helping her carefully up a seamed black rock,
+and the hand she gripped was shaking now, and she knew it was not for
+himself.
+
+"Thank God!" said Graeme fervently, as he sank down heavily beside
+her, and panted while the water ran out of them, and Punch scrambled
+up and lay quietly alongside. "Meg,--we were in peril."
+
+"Jock," she said jerkily, for her heart was going now quicker than
+usual, "I do not believe I would have minded--if we'd gone together."
+
+"Ay--together, but, God be thanked, it did not come to that!"
+
+They sat in silence for a time, finding themselves, while the green
+seas swelled up to their feet, and sank out of sight below, and their
+rock was laced with cascades of creamy foam.
+
+"How shall we get back?" asked Margaret at last. "Hennie will be in
+desperation. She will think we are drowned."
+
+"We can climb the head and round into Grande Grève, but it would be
+pretty rough on the feet. Or we can wait till the tide turns and swim
+in again--"
+
+"When will it turn?"
+
+"It's full at noon," he said, studying the waters in front. "But how
+that affects matters here none but a Sarkman could say. Tides here are
+a law unto themselves, like the people."
+
+"How would that do?" asked Margaret, as a black boat came slowly
+round the rocks from Les Fontaines, sculled by an elderly fisherman.
+
+"It is old Billy Mollet after his lobster-pots," and he stood up and
+coo-eed to the new-comer, and waved his arms till Billy saw them and
+stared hard and then turned leisurely their way.
+
+"Guyablle!" said the old man, as he drew in. "What you doin' there
+now?"
+
+"Got carried out of Grande Grève by a current, Mr. Mollet. Will you
+take us back in your boat?"
+
+"Ay, ay!" and he brought the boat as near to the rock as he dared, and
+his weather-stained old eyes settled hypnotically on the fairest
+burden his old tub had ever carried, as Graeme handed her carefully
+down and helped her to spring into the dancing craft, and then sprang
+in himself with bleeding feet and shins, while Punch leaped lightly
+after him and crawled under a thwart.
+
+"Ye must ha' been well out for tide to catch ye," said Billy, with no
+eyes for anything but the vision in clinging pink.
+
+"Yes, we were too far out and couldn't get back."
+
+"Tide runs round them rocks."
+
+He dropped his oar into the rowlock and Graeme took the other, and in
+five minutes they were speeding across the sands of Grande
+Grève--Margaret to cover, Graeme to his pocket for Billy's reward.
+
+Miss Penny had a driftwood fire roaring among the rocks, and the
+kettle was boiling.
+
+"Where on earth have you two been?" she cried, at sight of Margaret
+skipping over the stones to her dressing-room, and got only the wave
+of a white arm in reply.
+
+And presently Graeme came along in easy piratical costume of shirt and
+trousers and red sash, and sat down and lit a pipe.
+
+"We went a bit farther than we intended," he explained, but did not
+tell her how nearly they had gone out of bounds altogether.
+
+"You'll enjoy a cup of tea. You look as if you'd been working hard."
+
+"There is a bit of a current round that point."
+
+"Ah, you should follow a good example and keep within touch of the
+bottom. Here you are, Meg--fresh made for every customer. Help
+yourself, Mr. Graeme. I've had mine, I couldn't wait. Tea never tastes
+so good as when you're half full of salt-water, and I got right out of
+my depth once and swallowed tons. I screamed to you two to come and
+save me, but you never paid the slightest attention, and for all you
+cared I might have been drowned five times over."
+
+"One would have been quite once too many," said Graeme, holding out
+his cup. "For then you couldn't have lighted that fire and made this
+tea. And I'm half inclined to think we wouldn't be enjoying it a
+quarter so much if a little blue corpse lay out there on the shining
+sand, and we'd had to turn to and make it ourselves."
+
+"Horrible!" said Miss Penny, with a little shiver. "With your little
+blue corpses! It's all very well to joke about it, but I assure you,
+for a minute or so, I thought I was done for. The bottom seemed to
+have sunk, and I was just going after it when my foot came on a rock
+and that helped me to kick ashore."
+
+"A narrow escape," said Graeme, with a sympathetic wag of the head.
+"You've no right to risk your life that way. We still need you. What
+do you say to being bridesmaid at a Sark wedding?"
+
+"It is the hope of my life," said Miss Penny, sparkling like Mars in a
+clear evening sky.
+
+"I really don't see any reason why we should wait"--said Graeme,
+looking very earnestly at Margaret, and behind the look was the
+thought, born of what they had just come through together, that life
+spills many a full cup before the thirsty lips have tasted it. "What
+do you say, Margaret?"
+
+And she, knowing well what was in him, and being of the same mind,
+said, "I am ready, Jock. When you will."
+
+"I'll call on the Vicar to-morrow," he said joyfully. "It would be
+such a pity to disappoint the hope of Miss Penny's life,"--as that
+young person came back with the merry kettle.
+
+"I am indebted to you," said Hennie Penny. "What about dresses, Meg?"
+
+
+IV
+
+It was that same night, as they were sauntering home from a starlight
+ramble, that they came on Johnnie Vautrin crouched in the hedge with
+Marielihou, and Marielihou had her hind leg bound up in a piece of
+white rag.
+
+"Hello, Johnnie! What's the matter with Marielihou?" asked Graeme. And
+Marielihou turned her malevolent yellow-green eyes on him and looked
+curses.
+
+"Goderabetin! She've got hurt."
+
+"Oh! How was that?"
+
+"I d'n know. Wisht I knowed who done it;" and just then, as luck would
+have it, old Tom Hamon came sauntering along in the gloaming, smoking
+a contemplative pipe with long slow puffs.
+
+And at sight of him Marielihou ruffled and swelled to twice her size,
+and raked up most horrible and blood-curdling oaths from away down in
+her inside into her black throat, and spat them out at him, as he came
+up, in a fusillade that sounded like ripraps, and her eyes flamed
+baleful fires.
+
+"Cuss away, y'ould witch!" said old Tom, with a grin through his
+pipe-stem. "How's the leg?" and Marielihou with a final volley
+disappeared among the bushes, and Johnnie crawled after her.
+
+"What on earth does he mean?" whispered Meg.
+
+"Mr. Hamon has an idea that Marielihou and old Mme. Vautrin have
+something in common. In fact I believe he goes so far as to say that
+they are one and the same. Black magic, you know,--witchcraft, and all
+that kind of thing."
+
+"How horrid!"
+
+"B'en!" chuckled old Tom again. "You find out how 'tis with th' old
+witch. We know how 'tis with Marrlyou. 'Twere the silver bullet did
+it. If sh' 'adn't jumped 'twould ha' gone through 'er 'ead," and he
+went off chuckling through his pipe-stem.
+
+And the next evening, as they were sauntering slowly through the
+darkening lanes to the windmill, to see the life-lights flash out all
+round the horizon, it happened that they met the doctor just turning
+out of his gate.
+
+"Hello, doctor! How's old Mme. Vautrin to-day?" asked Graeme.
+
+"She's going on all right," said the doctor, with a touch of surprise.
+"There seems a quite unusual amount of interest in that old lady all
+of a sudden. How is it?"
+
+"What is it's wrong with her?"
+
+And the doctor eyed him curiously for a moment, and then said, "Well,
+she says she hurt her leg ormering, slipped on a rock and got the hook
+in it. But--Well, it's a bad leg anyway, and she won't go ormering or
+anything else for a good long time to come."
+
+Which matter, in the light of old Tom Hamon's silver bullets and
+evident knowledge of Marielihou's injury, left them all very much
+puzzled, though, as Graeme acknowledged, there might be nothing in it
+after all.
+
+
+V
+
+It was just after the second lesson, the following Sunday, that the
+Vicar stood up, tall and stately, his youthful face below the gray
+hair all alight with the enjoyment of this unusual break in the even
+tenour of his way, and soared into unaccustomed and very carefully
+enunciated English.
+
+"I pub-lish thee Banns of Marrr-i-ache between John Cor-rie Graeme of
+Lonn-donn and Mar-garet Brandt of Lonn-donn. If any of you know cause,
+or just im-ped-i-ment, why these two pair-sons should not be joined
+to-gether in holy matri-mony, ye are to de-clare it. This is thee
+first time of as-king."
+
+Margaret and Miss Penny and Graeme heard it from their back seat
+among the school-children, and found it good.
+
+There were not very many visitors there. Such as there were felt a
+momentary surprise at two English people choosing to get married in
+Sark, though, if it had been put to them, they must have confessed
+that there was no lovelier place in the world to be married in. They
+also wondered what kind of people they were.
+
+Some few of the habitants knew them and turned and grinned
+encouragingly, though even they were not quite certain in their own
+minds as to which of the two ladies was the one who was to be married.
+The children all smiled as a matter of course and of nature.
+
+And Margaret felt no shadow of regret at thought of the gauds and
+fripperies of a fashionable wedding which would not be hers. In John
+Graeme's true love she had the kernel. The rest was of small account
+to her.
+
+And that little church of Sark, plain walled and bare of ornament,
+always exerted upon her a most profoundly deepening and uplifting
+influence. It epitomised the life of the remote little island. Here
+its people were baptized, confirmed, married, buried.
+
+And here and there, on the otherwise naked walls, was a white marble
+tablet to the memory of some who had gone down to the sea and never
+returned. And these she had studied and mused upon with emotion the
+first time she went there, for surely none could read them without
+being deeply touched.
+
+ "A la memoire de John William Falle, âgé de 37 ans, et de son
+ fils William Slowley Falle, âgé de 17 ans, Fils et petit fils de
+ William Falle, Ecr. de Beau Regard, Sercq. Qui furent noyés
+ 20'eme jour d'Avril 1903, durant la traversée de Guernsey a
+ Sercq. 'Ta voie a été par la mer et tes sentiers dans les
+ grosses eaux.'"
+
+ "A la memoire de Pierre Le Pelley, Ecuyer, Seigneur de Serk,
+ noyé près la Pointe du Nez, dans une Tempête, le 13 Mars, 1839,
+ âgé de 40 ans. Son corps n'a pas été retrouvé; mais la mer
+ rendra ses morts."
+
+ "In memory of Eugène Grut Victor Cachemaille, second son of the
+ Revd. J.L.V. Cachemaille, Vicar of Sark. Born Jan. 14, 1840, and
+ lost at sea in command of the _Ariel_, which left London for
+ Sydney, Feby. 1872, and was heard of no more. 'He was not, for
+ God took him.'"
+
+Yes, she would sooner be married in that solemn little church than in
+Westminster Abbey, for there there would be mighty distractions, while
+here there would be nought to come between her and God and the true
+man to whom she was giving herself with a full heart.
+
+
+VI
+
+"This is the second time of asking."
+
+"This is the third time of asking."
+
+And so far none had discovered any just cause or impediment why John
+Corrie Graeme and Margaret Brandt should not in due course be joined
+together in holy matrimony.
+
+On the occasion of the third asking, however, one in the congregation,
+a casual visitor and in no way personally concerned in the matter,
+found it of sufficient interest to make mention of it in a letter
+home, and so unwittingly played his little part in the story.
+
+Meanwhile, the glorious summer days between the askings were golden
+days of ever-increasing delight to Graeme and Margaret, and of rich
+enjoyment to Miss Penny.
+
+Never was there more complaisant chaperone than Hennie Penny. For, you
+see, she took no little credit to herself for having helped to bring
+about their happiness, and the very least she could do was to further
+it in every way in her power.
+
+In her own quaint way she enjoyed their "lovering," as she called it,
+almost as much as they did themselves. And that being so, they would
+have felt it selfish on their part to deprive her of any portion of
+her rightful share in it.
+
+And that was how Miss Hennie Penny became so very knowing in such
+matters, and also why she lived in a state of perpetual amazement at
+the change that had come over her friend.
+
+For Margaret, affianced to the man who had her whole heart, was a very
+different being from Margaret harassed and worried by Mr. Pixley and
+his schemes for her possession and possessions.
+
+Charming and beautiful as she had always been, this new Margaret was
+to the old as a radiant butterfly to its chrysalis,--as the glory of
+the opening flower to the promise of the bud. And Hennie Penny's
+quickened intelligence, projecting itself into the future, could
+fathom heights and depths and greater glories still to come.
+
+But even now, when they went along the lanes festooned as for a
+wedding with honeysuckle and wild roses, the faces of those they met
+lighted up at sight of them, and few but turned to look after them
+when they had passed, and Miss Penny's truthful soul took none of the
+silent homage to herself.
+
+Margaret was supremely happy. She could not have hidden it if she had
+tried. She made no attempt to do so. She gave herself up to the
+rapturous enjoyment of their "lovering" with all the naïve abandon of
+a delighted child. The little ties and tapes and conventions, which
+trammel more or less all but the very simplest lives, fell from her,
+snapped by the expansion of her love-exalted soul. She was back to the
+simple elementals. She loved Jock, Jock loved her. They were happy as
+the day was long. Why on earth should they not show it? If she had had
+her way she would have had every soul in all the world as happy as
+they two were.
+
+"I feel like an elderly nurse with two very young children," said Miss
+Penny to the pair of exuberants.
+
+"O Wise Nurse! We shall never be so young again," laughed Graeme.
+
+"But we are never going to grow any older inside," laughed Margaret.
+
+"Never!" said Graeme, with the conviction of absolute knowledge, and
+carolled softly--
+
+ "O it's good to be young in the days of one's youth!
+ Yes, in truth and in truth,
+ It's the very best thing in the world to be young,
+ To be young, to be young in one's youth."
+
+"Very apropos!" said Miss Penny. "Did you make it on the spot?"
+
+"In anticipation," he laughed. "It's the opening song in a very
+charming comic opera I once committed. But it was too good for the
+present frivolous age, and so I have to perform it myself."
+
+"I would like to give all the children on the island--" began
+Margaret.
+
+"All the other children--" corrected Graeme.
+
+"All the children--including Hennie and you and me--the jolliest feast
+they've ever had in their lives, the day we are married."
+
+"Of course we will, and the doctor shall get in an extra supply of
+palliatives. They shall look back in after years and say--'Do you
+remember that feast we had when the loveliest of all the angels came
+down from heaven and was married to that delightful
+Englishman?'--Briton, I ought to say! I do wish our dear old Lady
+Elspeth could be here. How she would enjoy it!--'That feast,' they
+will say, 'when we were all ill for a month after and the doctor died
+of overwork.' They will date back to it as ancient peoples did to the
+Flood. It will be a Great White Stone Day to generations to come. Let
+us hope there will be no new white stones over yonder"--nodding in the
+direction of the churchyard--"in commemoration of that great day."
+
+"We will draw the line short of that," said Margaret seriously.
+
+"We'll give them all the gâche they can eat--home-made, and such as
+their constitutions are accustomed to,--and fruit and frivolities from
+Guernsey. I'll go across the Saturday before--"
+
+"_We_ will go across," said Margaret.
+
+"Of course we will. We older children will go, and we'll take Nurse
+with us,"--with a bow towards Hennie Penny,--"and we'll make a day of
+it, and have ices again at that place in the Arcade, and then we'll go
+round the shops and clear them out for the benefit of Sark."
+
+"Ripping!" said Miss Penny.
+
+
+VII
+
+They had already made one trip to Guernsey, crossing by the early
+Saturday boat and returning the same evening.
+
+But that was a strictly business affair.
+
+"We're feeling frightfully fossilised at having bought nothing, except
+what we absolutely needed, for nearly a month," said Miss Penny. "From
+that point of view I should imagine the Garden of Eden may have been
+just a trifle slow--"
+
+"Ah, you see, Mother Eve hadn't had the advantages of a superior
+education," said Graeme.
+
+"And there are some fripperies we simply _must_ have," said Miss
+Penny, "even for a runaway wedding like this. You see, when we decided
+to come here we had no idea how much farther we were going, and so we
+couldn't possibly provide. Of course if we had known you were here--"
+
+At which Margaret laughed.
+
+"You would have provided accordingly," said Graeme. "Well, you must
+put all the blame on to Mr. Pixley. I wonder what he would say if he
+knew all about it."
+
+"He would use language unadapted to prayer-meetings and public
+platforms," said Miss Penny. "He can, you know, when he tries hard."
+
+"I imagined so. It will be rather amusing to see what he'll do when he
+finds out."
+
+"He'll do the very nastiest thing that is open to him, whatever that
+is, and poor Mrs. Pixley will have an exceedingly bad time. And he'll
+probably have a fit on his own account."
+
+"Oh, we can hardly expect him to be so kind as all that--"
+
+"The only one I'm sorry for is Charles Svendt. He's really not half a
+bad sort, in his way, you know," said Miss Penny.
+
+"I'm sorry, but I'm afraid, under the circumstances, I can't squeeze
+out any sympathy even for Charles Svendt."
+
+Arrived at St. Peter Port, the ladies permitted him to attend them to
+the door of the largest drapery establishment they could find, and
+then told him he was at liberty to go and enjoy himself for a couple
+of hours.
+
+"Two hours? Good Heavens! What can you want in there for two hours?"
+
+"Usual thing!" sparkled Miss Penny. "Tablecloths!"--with which cryptic
+utterance he had to be satisfied.
+
+"And where do we meet again--if ever?"
+
+"Hauteville House--Victor Hugo's. It's part of your honeymoon--a bit
+on account."
+
+"And whereabouts is it?"
+
+"No idea. If we can find it, you can. Au revoir!"
+
+He went first to get his hair cut, since the practice of the tonsorial
+art in Sark is still in the bowl-and-scissors stage.
+
+Then he sought out a lawyer of repute, whose name he had got from the
+Vicar, and gave him instructions for the drawing of a brief but
+comprehensive deed of settlement of all Margaret's portion on herself
+absolutely and entirely. While this important document was being
+engrossed, he sought out the Rector of St. Peter Port, in George
+Place, and in a short but pleasant interview was accepted as tenant of
+the whole of the Red House in Sark for the month of July, with the
+option of a longer stay if he chose.
+
+Then back to the lawyer's, where he signed his deed, paid the fees,
+and took it away with him.
+
+After that, to fill in the time occupied elsewhere by the purchase of
+mythical tablecloths, he rambled up and down the quaint
+foreign-flavoured streets till he found a jeweller's shop of size, in
+the Arcade, and decided, after careful inspection from the outside,
+that it would answer all requirements.
+
+For he had a ring and half a ring to buy for Margaret, and he thought
+he would buy one also for Hennie Penny, as a pleasant reminder of
+their good days in Sark.
+
+So utterly unconventional had their proceedings been, so thoroughly
+had the spirit of the remote little island possessed them, and so
+all-sufficient had they been to one another, that the thought of an
+engagement ring had troubled his mind as little as the lack of it had
+troubled Margaret's. But the absolute necessity of a wedding ring had
+reminded him of his lapse, and now he would repair it on a scale
+remotely commensurate with his feelings. Remotely, because, if his
+pocket had borne any relation to his feelings, he would have bought up
+the whole shop and lavished its contents upon her, though he knew that
+the simple golden circlet would far outweigh all else in her mind.
+
+He was waiting placidly for them in the shade of the dark trees of
+Hauteville, when they came panting up the steep way, flushed with
+victory and the joys of purchase after long abstinence.
+
+"Well, has the proprietor of that big shop retired with a competence?"
+he asked, as he threw away the end of his cigar.
+
+"Can you lend us our boat-fares home?" gasped Miss Penny.
+
+"So bad as all that? I can't say yet. I've not begun my own purchases.
+We'll see when I'm through. If I'm cleaned out too we'll offer to work
+our passages."
+
+"You can pawn your watch. Meg and I haven't got one between us. We
+left them at home on purpose."
+
+"Thoughtful of you. Now let us into the treasure-house."
+
+They enjoyed the wonders of Hauteville immensely,--objectively, the
+wonderful carved work and the tapestries, the china and the
+furniture,--the odd little bedroom with the bed on the floor, so that
+the Master could roll out to his work at any moment of inspiration,
+and the huge balconies, and the glass eyrie on the roof whence he
+surveyed his wide horizons, and where, above the world, he
+worked;--and subjectively, the whole quaint flavour and austere
+literary atmosphere of the place.
+
+"No wonder he produced masterpieces," said Graeme, delighting in it
+all. "The view alone is an inspiration."
+
+Then he took them up to Old Government House for lunch and a rest in
+the garden, and then away to the Arcade to the jeweller's shop, which
+proved adequate to all his demands;--for Margaret, a half-hoop of
+diamonds which the jeweller, with an air of sincerity, assured them
+were as fine stones as he had ever seen in the course of a long and
+prosperous career. Which ring Margaret would thenceforth value before
+all her others, though in the simple matter of intrinsic worth her
+jewel-case could beat it hollow.--And a plain gold circlet which, when
+she got it, would be more precious to her than all the rest put
+together.--And for Miss Penny, in spite of her protestations, a
+handsome signet ring which, when cornered, she chose in preference to
+a more feminine jewel, and which was left to be engraved with her
+family crest and motto.
+
+"I have never adopted the habit of rings," she said, as they drifted
+towards the ice-shop. "Chiefly, perhaps, because I never had any worth
+wearing. But I've always thought I would like to wear a crest signet.
+I shall prize this, Mr. Graeme, as the very greatest treasure I
+have--"
+
+"Until someone gives you a plain gold one, Hennie, and that will put
+all the rest into the shade," said Margaret.
+
+"Ah!" said Miss Penny.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Their journey home--that is, to Sark--that day was not entirely
+without incident. For when they got down to the quay, Sark had
+disappeared completely, and Herm and Jethou were no more than wan
+ghosts of their natural selves, in a dense white mist.
+
+"Ah-ha! Here is our old friend of Tintageu," said Graeme jovially.
+"Well, I must confess to bearing him no ill-feeling--if he doesn't
+land us on a rock this time. Going, captain?"
+
+"Oh yess, we go. I think it will lift," said Captain Bichard.
+
+"Don't run us on a rock anyway."
+
+"I won'd run you on no rock. I coult smell my way across;" and they
+started, feeling their way cautiously past Castle Cornet, into the
+open, where black jaws lined with white teeth lie in wait for the
+unwary.
+
+And just as they got to the south of Jethou they saw a sight the like
+of which none of them had ever seen before, nor, from the exclamations
+about them, had any of the rest.
+
+The mist in front was like a soft white curtain, and upon it, straight
+ahead of their bows, appeared suddenly a mighty silver bow, not a
+rainbow, because there was no rain and so there were no colours. But,
+like the bow they had seen from Belême Cliff, this also was a perfect
+circle, all but a tiny segment where it appeared to rest upon the sea,
+and its only colour was a dazzling silvery sheen which waxed as they
+watched it in breathless silence. Then it waned, bit by bit, till at
+last it was gone, and only the white mist curtain remained.
+
+"How very lovely!" murmured Margaret.
+
+"A good omen for certain," said Miss Penny. "Even Johnnie Vautrin
+couldn't make any ill news out of that. It was your wedding arch,
+Meg."
+
+"Well, that's the first time I ever saw a white rainbow," said Graeme
+to the captain.
+
+"First time I ever saw one myself, sir."
+
+"Not very common then."
+
+"Never heard of one before."
+
+"We're evidently in luck."
+
+"Mebbe, but we won't crow till we've made the Creux. Kip your eyes
+skinned, lads!"
+
+"Ay, ay, zur!" and the crew lined the bulwarks on their knees, with
+their chins on the rail, their eyes peering into the puzzling veil in
+front, and their ears alert for the wash of wave on rock.
+
+They were going slow, hardly moving in fact at times, waiting to pick
+up their course as any possible mark should come into view, with
+muttered comments from the puzzled lookouts, and an occasional growl
+of dissent from views propounded by the younger members, while the
+passengers all stood in silent discomfort as though ready for
+contingencies.
+
+For the tides and currents in those seas are strange and gruesome.
+Even as they lay, apparently motionless, with the sea as smooth as oil
+all round them, there came a sudden turmoil, and they were in a wild
+race of waters, with bubbling coils and swirls and frothing gouts of
+foam from rocks that lay fathoms deep below.
+
+"La Grune," growled one of the keen-eyed watchers, and was discounted
+at once by doubtful growls from the rest.
+
+Then a black ledge loomed through the mist and faded again before they
+had more than a glimpse of it.
+
+"Les Dents," ventured one.
+
+"Hautes Boues,"--so divergent were their views.
+
+A sound of waters and another dark loom of rock.
+
+"Sercul," said one.
+
+"L'Etac," said another.
+
+Then the engine bell tanged sharply, and they went ahead. The captain
+had seen more than the rest and knew where he was, and they all
+breathed more freely. And presently, with a wide berth to the dangers
+of the south-east coast, they nosed slowly in again, picked up La
+Conchée without dissentients, and so into Creux Harbour in a way that
+seemed to Graeme little short of marvellous.
+
+"Fogs at sea are beastly--there is no other word for it--but all the
+same I'm glad we saw the Wedding-Bow," said Miss Penny.
+
+
+IX
+
+They had fixed on the Wednesday following the last time of asking, for
+their wedding-day. But when they came to discuss the matter with Mrs.
+Carré, it was found that an alteration would be necessary.
+
+"Ah, but that will not do," said their landlady, who was in high
+feather at so unique an event taking place in her cottage, so to
+speak, though, as a matter of fact, the festivities were to be carried
+out within the ampler precincts of the Red House. "You see, old Mr.
+Hamon he iss died very sudden--"
+
+"Not old Tom surely?" asked Graeme.
+
+"He iss old Tom's father, and they will bury him on Wednesday, and you
+would not like to be married the sem day--"
+
+"No, indeed," said Margaret. "We will wait."
+
+"And, you see, all them that would be coming to the wedding would be
+at the funeral, for efferybody belongs to efferybody else here."
+
+"Must be a bit awkward at times," suggested Graeme.
+
+"Oh noh!" with a touch of airy aloofness. "I haf been at a wedding and
+a funeral and a baptism all in one week all among the sem people. And
+I was at one young man's wedding one day last year and at his funeral
+the same day the next week after."
+
+"That was dreadful," said Margaret. "Do you think it would be safe to
+fix it for the following Wednesday, Mrs. Carré?"
+
+"Oh yes, I think! There iss no one very sick. Mr. Hamon he wass a very
+old man and he died very sudden. He wass just knocking a nail in the
+pigsty and he drop down and died."
+
+"Poor old man!"
+
+"He wass very old and he wass a good man. No one ever said any harm of
+old Mr. Hamon."
+
+"Then if no one else dies we'll say the following Wednesday," said
+Graeme. "And if--well, if anything happens to prevent it, then we must
+go across to Guernsey and get Mr. Lee to marry us."
+
+"Oh, but that woult not do. We will keep them all alive till you are
+married. It woult neffer do to disappoint them all when we are all
+looking forward to it here."
+
+"Very well then, see you all keep alive."
+
+"And you will come to old Mr. Hamon's funeral?"
+
+"H'm! I don't know. We'll see, Mrs. Carré. We'd sooner be at our own
+wedding, you know, than at anybody else's funeral."
+
+"They woult like it iff you woult. And he was a goot old man. They
+tell me to ask if you woult be pleased to come."
+
+"If they would like us to come we will come, Mrs. Carré," said
+Margaret.
+
+And so it came about that instead of kneeling before the altar that
+Wednesday they stood by the graveside.
+
+
+X
+
+The Red House and the cottage were centres--nay, whirlpools--of mighty
+activities for days beforehand.
+
+Mrs. Carré insisted on cleaning down the Red House from top to bottom
+for the home-coming of the bride, though, to Graeme's masculine
+perceptions, its panelling of polished pitch pine from floor to
+ceiling, in which you could see yourself as in a mirror, had always
+appeared the very acme of cleanliness and comfort, with the additional
+merit of a tendency towards churchwardly thoughts.
+
+But when he ventured on a mild remonstrance anent the necessity for
+so gigantic an upsetting, Mrs. Carré laughingly said, "Ach, you are
+only a man. You woult neffer see"--and whirled her broom to the
+endangerment of his head.
+
+For Margaret's honeymoon--that, is, such of it as she had not enjoyed
+before her marriage--was to consist of a change of residence from the
+cottage, and a walk up the garden and through the hedge of gracious
+Memories, to the wider--ah, how much wider!--as much wider and larger
+and more beautiful as wifehood at its best is wider and larger and
+more beautiful than maidenhood at its best--to the wider accommodation
+of the Red House. And Mrs. Carré was determined that it should be
+speckless and sweet, and fit in every way for the coming of so
+beautiful a bride.
+
+She had found them a young girl, Betsy Lefevre, a niece of her own, to
+serve as handmaid during their occupancy of the house, but insisted
+herself on acting as cook and general housekeeper. Miss Penny was to
+reside at the cottage for a week after the wedding, but was to go up
+the garden to her meals, and at the end of that time she was to join
+them at the Red House as an honoured guest.
+
+And the kitchen at the cottage, and the kitchen at the House, and
+several other kitchens in the neighbourhood, were baking gâche enough
+apparently to feed a regiment, and as the day approached, roasts of
+beef and mutton, and hams and other substantial fare, were much in
+evidence. And the kitchens were thronged with ladies in sun-bonnets,
+which had originally been black but were now somewhat off-colour with
+age and weather, and all the ladies' faces were as full of importance
+as if they had been Cabinet ministers in the throes of a crisis.
+
+Among these concentric energies, Margaret and Miss Penny completed
+their own simple preparations, and Graeme busied himself with the
+details of the children's feast which was to take place in an adjacent
+field.
+
+He went down to the harbour to meet the Tuesday morning's boat which
+was to bring over the fruit and frivolities ordered from
+Guernsey--strawberries enough to start a jam factory, grapes enough to
+stock a greengrocer's shop, chocolates, sweets, Christmas crackers and
+fancy biscuits, in what he hoped would prove sufficiency, but had his
+doubts at times when he saw the eager expectancy with which he was
+regarded by every youngster he met.
+
+He was just starting out when Johnnie Vautrin hailed him from his lair
+in the hedge.
+
+"Heh, Mist' Graeme! I seen--"
+
+"Better not, Johnnie!" he said, with a warning finger. "If it's
+anything uncomfortable I'll come right over and jump on you and
+Marrlyou."
+
+"Goderabetin, you dassen't!"
+
+"Oh, dassen't I? If you don't see everything good for this week, and
+fine weather too, you little imp, I'll--"
+
+"Qué-hou-hou!" croaked Johnnie, and Marielihou yawned and made a
+futile attempt to wash behind her ears but found it discomforting to a
+sore hind-leg, so gave it up and spat at him instead.
+
+"And, moreover, I won't have you at my party."
+
+"Hou-hou! I'm coming. Ma'm'zelle she ask me."
+
+"I'll tell her to send you back-word."
+
+"She wun't, she wun't. Where you goin'?"
+
+"To the harbour, to see if all the good things have come for the other
+little boys and girls."
+
+"Oh la-la! Good things and bad things come by the boat. Sometime it'll
+sink and drown 'em all."
+
+"Little rascal!" and he waved his hand and went on.
+
+"Late, isn't she, Carré?" he asked, as he leaned over the sea-wall
+with the rest.
+
+"She's late, sir."
+
+"I hope nothing's happened to her. I'll never forgive her if she's
+made an end of my sweet things for the kiddies."
+
+"She'll come."
+
+And she came. With a shrill peal she came round the Burons and made
+for the harbour.
+
+And Graeme, wedged into the corner of the iron railing where it looks
+out to sea, to make sure at the earliest possible moment that that
+which he had come to meet was there, met of a sudden more than he had
+looked for.
+
+"Well ... I'll be hanged!" he jerked to himself, and then began to
+laugh internally.
+
+For, standing on the upper deck of the small steamer, and looking,
+somehow, very much out of place there, was a tall but portly young
+gentleman, in a bowler hat and travelling coat and a monocle, whose
+face showed none of the usual symptoms of the Sark lover. To judge
+from his expression, the little island impressed him anything but
+favourably. It offered him none of the relaxations and amusements to
+which he was accustomed. It looked, on the face of it, an uncivilised
+kind of a place, out of which a man might be ejected without ceremony
+if he chose to make himself objectionable.
+
+Graeme kept out of sight among the other crowders of the quay till the
+bowler hat came bobbing up the gangway. Then he smote its owner so
+jovially on the shoulder that his monocle shot the full length of its
+cord and the hat came within an ace of tumbling overboard.
+
+"Hello, Pixley! This _is_ good of you. You're just in time to give us
+your blessing."
+
+"Aw! Hello!" said Charles Svendt, agape at the too friendly greeting.
+"That you, Graeme?"
+
+"The worst half of me, my boy. Margaret's up at the house. You'll be
+quite a surprise to her."
+
+"Aw!" said Charles Svendt thoughtfully, as he readjusted his eyeglass.
+"Demned queer place, this!" and he gazed round lugubriously.
+
+"It is that, my boy. Queerer than you think, and queerer people."
+
+"Aw! Is there any--aw--place to stop at?"
+
+"Thinking of stopping over night? Oh yes, several very decent hotels."
+
+"Aw! Which are you at yourself now?"
+
+"I? Oh, I'm a resident. I've got a house here."
+
+"Dooce you have! Well, now, where would you stop if you were me?"
+
+"Well, if I were you I should stop at the Old Government House--"
+
+"Right! Whereabouts is it?"
+
+"It's over in Guernsey. Boat returns at five sharp."
+
+"Aw! Quite so! Very good! But I've got--er--business here, don't you
+know."
+
+"Oh? Thinking of opening a branch here? Well, there's Stock's--but I
+doubt if you'd fit in there--"
+
+"Fit? Why not fit? Stocks are my line."
+
+"I think I'd try the Bel-Air if I were you--"
+
+"Which is nearest?" asked Charles Svendt, looking round
+depreciatively.
+
+"Bel-Air. Just along the tunnel there--"
+
+"Good Lord! Along the tunnel--"
+
+"Excuse me for a moment. I've got some things coming by this boat. I
+must see to them," and Graeme sped away to attend to his frivolities.
+
+
+XI
+
+"And what special business brings you to Sark, Pixley?" asked Graeme,
+as they passed through the tunnel of rock and climbed the steep way of
+the Creux--its high banks masses of ferns, its hedges ablaze with
+honeysuckle and roses, its trees interwoven into a thick canopy
+overhead,--a living green tunnel shot with quivering sunbeams. All of
+which was lost on Charles Svendt, whose chest was going like a
+steam-pump and whose legs were quivering with the unusual strain.
+Graeme regretted that he had not been landed on the ladders at Havre
+Gosselin, where he himself came ashore. He would dearly have liked to
+follow the portly one up those ladders and heard his comments.
+
+In reply to Graeme's question he shook his head mutely and staggered
+on--past the upper reaches, where the corded roots of the overhanging
+trees came thrusting through the banks like twisting serpents; past
+the wells of sweet water that lay dark and still below, and ran over
+into the road, and trickled away down the sides in little streams; out
+into the sunshine and the quickening of the breeze;--till he dropped
+exhausted into a chair outside the door of the Bel-Air.
+
+He sat there panting for close on five minutes, with unaccustomed
+perspiration streaming down his red face, and then he said "Demn!"
+and proceeded to mop himself up with his handkerchief.
+
+Then he held up a finger to a distant waiter in the dining-room, and
+when he came, murmured, "Whisky--soda--two," and fanned himself
+vigorously till they came.
+
+"Better?" asked Graeme, as they nodded and drank.
+
+"Heap better! What a demnable place to get into!"
+
+"There are one or two other entrances--"
+
+"Better?"
+
+"No, worse."
+
+"Demn!"
+
+"Now," he said presently, when his heart had got back to normal and he
+had lit a cigarette. "Let's talk business. Am I in time?"
+
+"For the wedding? Just in time. It's tomorrow."
+
+"Aw--er--you know what I've come for, I suppose?"
+
+"I can imagine, but you may as well save yourself useless trouble. You
+can't do anything."
+
+"Think not?"
+
+"Sure. English--I should say, British--law doesn't run here, and
+you've no _locus standi_ if it did."
+
+"She's under age and her guardian objects. I represent him."
+
+"He can object all he wants to, and you can represent him all you
+want to. It won't make the slightest difference."
+
+"I can appear at the ceremony and show cause why it should not
+proceed."
+
+"What cause?"
+
+"Her guardian objects. The parson would hardly proceed in face of my
+objection."
+
+"I think you'll find he would. However, we'll go and ask him
+presently. We'll pay a visit to the Seigneur also."
+
+"Who's the Seigneur?"
+
+"Lord Paramount of the island. His word goes. If he chooses, as he
+probably will, to tell you to go also, you'll have to go."
+
+"Demn'd if I will!"
+
+"He'll see to that. He'll put the Sénéchal and the Greffier and the
+Prévôt and the two constables and the Vingténier on to you, and bundle
+you out like a sack of potatoes."
+
+"Oh, come, Graeme! This is the twentieth century!"
+
+"That's another of your little mistakes, my friend. I can't tell you
+just exactly what year it is here, but it's somewhere between 1066
+and, say, 1200 A.D."
+
+"Afraid I don't quite catch on."
+
+"Exactly! That's why you'll be off in this scene. We're under feudal
+law here, with a mixture of Home Rule. We don't care twopence for your
+English courts, and as for English lawyers, they're not much liked
+here, I believe."
+
+"Rum hole!" mused Charles Svendt.
+
+"Rum hole to make yourself a nuisance in. Jolly place to be happy in."
+
+"H'm!" And presently he asked, "Where are you stopping?"
+
+"I'll go along and tell the girls you're here--"
+
+"Girls?"
+
+"Miss Penny came with Margaret--"
+
+"Aw--Miss Penny!"
+
+"You'd better have your lunch here. They'll give you lobsters fresh
+from the kettle, and I'll stroll round later on and we'll get this
+matter settled up. So long!" and he went away up the Avenue and across
+the fields home.
+
+And he went thoughtfully. It was annoying this man cropping up like
+this at the eleventh hour. Nothing, he felt sure, would come of his
+interference, but it might disturb Margaret and the general harmony of
+to-morrow's proceedings.
+
+Her wedding-day is a somewhat nervous time for a girl, under the best
+of circumstances, he supposed. And though Margaret was as little given
+to nerves as anyone he had ever met, the possibility of a public
+attempt to stop her wedding might be fairly calculated to upset her.
+
+Feudal as were the laws of the island, he could hardly knock Pixley on
+the head, as would have happened in less anachronistic times. And so
+he went thoughtfully.
+
+
+XII
+
+Margaret and Miss Penny were lying in long chairs on the verandah when
+he came over the green wall into the Red House garden, by the same gap
+as he had used that first morning when he came upon Margaret standing
+in the hedge.
+
+They were resting from labours, joyful, but none the less tiring.
+
+"Jock, we were just wanting you!" said Margaret, sitting up. "Have all
+the things come all right?"
+
+"All come all right," and he wondered how she would take his next
+announcement. "In fact more came than we expected."
+
+"I guess we can use it all," said Miss Penny. "You've no idea of the
+capacity of children. I know something about it, and these children
+are more expansible even than school-girls."
+
+"I was surprised to meet a gentleman down there who says he has come
+across on purpose for the wedding."
+
+"A gentleman--come for the wedding?" and both girls eyed him as
+pictured terriers greet the word "Rats!"
+
+"I'll give you three guesses."
+
+"Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Bull's-eye first shot! Clever girl!"
+
+"Not really, Jock!" said Margaret, with a suspicion of dismay in her
+voice.
+
+"Well, Charles Svendt anyway--as representing the old man, he says."
+
+"But what has he come for, and how did he get to know?"
+
+"I didn't ask him. It was quite enough to see him there. He says he's
+going to stop it,"--and Margaret's cheeks flamed,--"but I've assured
+him that he can't, and I'll take jolly good care that he doesn't, if I
+have to knock him on the head and drop him off the Coupée."
+
+"It would be shameful of him if he tried," cried Miss Penny. "Just let
+me have a talk with him, Mr. Graeme, and I'll make him wish he'd never
+been born. He's really not such a bad sort, you know. Where is he?"
+
+"I left him at the Bel-Air about to tackle lobsters. My idea is to
+take him to the Vicar, then to the Seigneur. They both understand the
+whole matter. I explained it fully when I told them we intended
+getting married here. When they understand that this is the gentleman
+who would like to occupy my place, and that he has no legal grounds
+for interfering, I think they will open his eyes--"
+
+"I do hope he won't make any trouble in the church," said Margaret,
+with a little flutter.
+
+"I'll promise you he won't."
+
+"I'm sure he won't, if you can make it quite clear that it could not
+possibly accomplish what, I suppose, his father sent him to try to
+do," said Miss Penny. "Charles Pixley is no fool, though he has his
+little peculiarities."
+
+"It would be a wonder if he hadn't some, after his daddie," said
+Graeme lightly. "I'm sorry he's come, Meg, but I'm certain you don't
+need to worry about him. If I could have knocked him on the head and
+dropped him in the sea and said nothing to nobody--"
+
+"Don't be absurd, Jock," said Margaret, and her voice showed that the
+matter was troubling her in spite of his assurances.
+
+"After lunch I shall call for him and take him for a little walk. If
+you'd seen him when he got to the Bel-Air after toiling up the Creux
+Road! He was nearly in pieces. I'll trot him round to the Vicarage,
+and then to the Seigneurie, and then I'll bring him here and turn him
+over to you and Hennie Penny. He'll be as limp as a rag by that time,
+and as wax in your hands."
+
+Nevertheless, Margaret could not quite get rid of the feeling of
+discomfort which the news of Charles Pixley's arrival had cast over
+her, and Graeme anathematised that young man most fervently each time
+he glanced at her face.
+
+
+XIII
+
+After lunch Graeme went back to the hotel, and found Pixley lolling on
+the seat outside, in a much more contented frame of mind than on his
+first arrival.
+
+"You were right as to their lobsters, anyhow, Graeme," he said.
+"They're almost worth coming all the way for."
+
+"All right. Now if you're rested we'll go for a stroll, and I'll set
+your mind at rest as to to-morrow. Then you'll be able to enjoy your
+dinner in a proper frame of mind."
+
+"How far is it?"
+
+"Just up there and round the corner. We'll see the Vicar first and you
+can try your hand on him."
+
+The Vicar received them with jovial bonhomie.
+
+"Ah-ha! The bridegroom cometh out of his chamber! And your friend? He
+is the best man--no?"
+
+"He's not quite made up his mind yet, Vicar. Perhaps you can persuade
+him to it."
+
+"But it is an honour--n'est-ce pas? To attend so beautiful a bride to
+the altar--"
+
+"Well, you see, the fact is--Mr. Pixley would have preferred reversing
+the positions. He would like to have been bridegroom and me to be best
+man."
+
+"Ah--so! Well, it is not surprising--"
+
+"Moreover, he would like to stop the wedding now if he could--"
+
+"Ach, non! That is not possible," said the Vicar wrathfully, the
+southern blood blazing in his face. "What would you do, my good sir,
+and why?"
+
+"Miss Brandt is my father's ward," said Pixley sturdily. "My father
+objects to this marriage. He has sent me over to stop it."
+
+"I understand," said the Vicar. "He wished his ward to marry you, but
+Miss Brandt made her own choice, which she had a perfect right to do,
+and, ma foi--" leaning back in his chair and regarding the two faces
+in front of him, he did not finish his sentence in words, but
+contented himself with cryptic nods whose meaning, we may hope, was
+lost upon Charles Svendt's _amour propre_.
+
+"And what would you do?" asked the Vicar presently.
+
+"Well, if necessary, I can get up in the church and state that there
+is just cause for stopping the marriage--"
+
+"What just cause, I should ask you?"
+
+"I have told you. My father--"
+
+"I would not listen. I would order them to put you out--to carry you
+out, if necessary, for making dis-turb-ance in my church. I would tell
+them to sit on you in the churchyard till the wedding was over. What
+good would you do? Ach, non! Be advised, my good sir, and re-linquish
+any such in-tention. It will ac-complish nothing and only lead to your
+own con-fusion."
+
+"My father is applying to have Miss Brandt made a ward in Chancery--"
+
+"By that time she will be Mrs. Graeme, and I am sure very happy,"
+shrugged the Vicar. "Non--you can do nothing, and, if you will be
+guided, you will not try."
+
+And Charles Svendt lapsed into thoughtfulness.
+
+
+XIV
+
+"This is the Seigneurie," said Graeme, as they turned off the road,
+through the latched gate, into the deep-shaded avenue.
+
+The Seigneur came to them in the Long Drawing-Room, where once upon a
+time the peacocks danced on the Queen's luncheon.
+
+"Your time is getting short, Mr. Graeme," he said, with a quiet smile.
+"I hear of great doings in preparation at St. Magloire"--which was the
+official title of the Red House. "Have you given the doctor fair
+warning?"
+
+"Oh, we'll try to keep them within bounds, Seigneur. My friend, Mr.
+Pixley here,"--the Seigneur made Mr. Pixley a seigneurial bow,--"has
+it in his mind to stop the proceedings if he can--"
+
+"Oh?" said the Seigneur, with a glower of surprise. "And why?"
+
+"Well, you see," said Pixley, "Miss Brandt is under age. She is my
+father's ward and he has other views for her--"
+
+"Which obviously do not agree with Miss Brandt's."
+
+"That is as it may be. But she is acting absolutely in opposition to
+his expressed wishes in this matter, and until she is of age she is
+under his authority."
+
+"Just as far as he is in position to exert it, I presume."
+
+"He is now applying to have her made a ward in Chancery, when, of
+course, she will be under the jurisdiction of the court."
+
+"If you come to me, Mr. Pixley, when Miss Brandt is a ward of court, I
+will tell you now what my answer would be. I should tell you that your
+English court has no jurisdiction here. Miss Brandt is out of bounds
+and is quite free to do as she pleases. I have had the pleasure of
+making her acquaintance and Mr. Graeme's, and I should be sorry--for
+you--if you did anything to annoy them. In fact--" and he looked so
+fixedly at Charles Svendt, while evidently revolving some extreme idea
+in his mind, that that young gentleman's assurance fell several
+degrees, and he found himself thinking of dungeons and deportation.
+
+It was to Graeme, however, that the Seigneur turned.
+
+"If you have any reason to fear annoyance in this matter, Mr. Graeme,
+perhaps you will let me know as early as possible, and I will take
+measures--"
+
+"Thousand thanks, Seigneur! Mr. Pixley will, I hope, think better of
+it. If not--well, I will send you word."
+
+
+XV
+
+Pixley was very silent as they walked back along the road to the Red
+House.
+
+The ladies had tea ready on the verandah.
+
+"Well, Charles," said Margaret, as he bowed before them, and Graeme
+nodded and smiled reassuringly at her over his back, "I won't pretend
+that I'm glad to see you. Why did you undertake so foolish an errand?"
+
+"Perhaps Mr. Pixley could hardly help himself," said Miss Penny,
+sympathising somewhat with the awkwardness of his position.
+
+"That is so," he said, with a grateful glance at her. "You see, the
+governor is crazy wild over this matter. It was only Sunday night he
+heard of it. A friend of young Greatorex wrote him that he'd heard
+your banns put up, and Greatorex congratulated the governor after
+church, and the governor nearly had a fit. He came over to my place
+like a whirlwind and practically ordered me to come across instanter
+and stop it. I may say," he said, looking at Margaret, "I tried to
+reason with him. I told him he must know that if you'd gone that
+length I was out of it, and nothing he could do would alter matters.
+But he would not hear a word. He simply raved until I promised to come
+over by first boat and see what could be done."
+
+"You've only done your duty, Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny. "But you
+simply can't stop it, so is it any good making any trouble? Put it on
+the highest grounds. You have had warmer feelings for Meg than she
+could reciprocate. You can possibly make some disturbance at her
+wedding, which would be painful to her and utterly useless to
+yourself. Is it worth while?"
+
+"No, I'm dem--er--hanged if it is! I see I can do no good, and I'll be
+hammered if I'll play dog in the manger, even to oblige the governor.
+It's a disappointment to me, you know,"--he was looking at Miss
+Penny's bright face, surcharged with deepest sympathy.
+
+"Of course it is," she said gently. "But a strong man bears his
+disappointments without wincing. I think you're acting nobly."
+
+"Say, Graeme, will you have me as best man?"
+
+"Delighted, my dear fellow. Miss Penny has been breaking her heart at
+thought of having no partner at the ceremony."
+
+"Right! Then we'll say no more about it. How did you all come to meet
+here? Put-up job?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said Graeme. "Pure coincidence--or Providence,
+we'll say. You remember that Whitefriars' dinner, when Adam Black sat
+opposite to us? He was just back from Sark, and he said, 'If ever you
+want relief from your fellows--try Sark.' Well, later on, I had no
+reason to believe there was anything between you and Margaret, and I
+called on your father at his office. He sliced me into scraps with his
+eye-glass and flung the bits out into Lincoln's Inn,"--at which
+Charles Svendt grinned amusedly, as though he were familiar with the
+process.--"I wanted to get away somewhere to piece up again. Sark came
+into my head, and I came. A month later my landlady told me she had
+let my rooms to two ladies, as she had understood I was only stopping
+for a month, and I had to turn out and come up here. And, to my vast
+amazement, the two ladies proved to be Margaret and Miss Penny. How is
+that for coincidence?"
+
+"I was standing in the hedge there," said Margaret, "early in the
+morning of the day after we got here, and Jock came leaping over the
+dyke there with a great brown dog, and stopped as if he'd been shot--"
+
+"I thought you were a ghost, you see."
+
+"And I couldn't believe my eyes. Then I asked him what he meant by
+following us here, and it turned out that it was we who had followed
+him, and turned him out of his cottage moreover."
+
+"Deuced odd!" said Charles Svendt, screwing in his eye-glass and
+regarding them comprehensively. "Almost makes one believe in--er--"
+
+"Telepathy and that kind of thing," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Er--exactly--just so, don't you know!" and his glance rested on her
+with appreciation as upon a kindred soul.
+
+
+XVI
+
+Charles Svendt dined with them that evening, and in the process
+developed heights and depths of genial common-sense which quite
+surprised some among them.
+
+They took him for a stroll up to the Eperquerie in the cool of the
+gloaming, and showed him more shooting stars than ever he had seen in
+his life, and a silver sickle of a moon, and a western sky still
+smouldering with the afterglow of a crimson and amber sunset, and he
+acknowledged that, from some points of view, Sark had advantages over
+Throgmorton Street.
+
+In the natural course of things, Margaret and Graeme walked together,
+and since they could not go four abreast among the gorse cushions,
+Charles Svendt and Miss Penny had to put up with one another, and
+seemed to get on remarkably well. More than once Graeme squeezed
+Margaret's arm within his own and chuckled, as he heard the animated
+talk and laughter from the pair behind.
+
+"I'm very glad he's taken a sensible view of the matter," said
+Margaret.
+
+"Oh, Charles Svendt is no fool, and he certainly would have been if
+he'd done anything but what he has done. He saw that he could do no
+good and might get into trouble. The Seigneur scowled dungeons and
+gibbets at him, and he looked decidedly uncomfortable."
+
+"I will tender the Seigneur my very best thanks the first time I see
+him."
+
+When the men had seen the ladies home, they strolled up the garden to
+the Red House for a final smoke.
+
+"Say, Graeme, I've been wondering what you'd have done if I'd played
+mule and persisted in kicking up my heels in church. I asked Miss
+Penny--and, by Jove, I tell you, that's about as sensible a girl as
+I've met for a long time--"
+
+"Miss Penny is an extremely clever girl and an exceptionally fine
+character. Good family too. Her father was the Brigadier-General Penny
+who was killed in Afghanistan."
+
+"So?"
+
+"She's an M.A., and she's worked like a slave to educate her brothers
+and sisters, and they're all turning out well. I don't know any girl,
+except Meg, of whom I think so highly as Hennie Penny."
+
+"Henrietta?"
+
+Graeme nodded.
+
+"Well now," said Pixley presently. "As a matter of information, what
+was in your mind to do if I'd gone on?"
+
+"You'd never have got as far as the church, my boy."
+
+"No? Why?"
+
+"If the Seigneur hadn't stopped you, I would. But I'm inclined to
+think he'd have seen to you all right."
+
+"By Jove, he looked it! What would he have done?"
+
+"Confined you as a harmless lunatic till the ceremony was over, I
+should say, and then sent you home with the proverbial insect in your
+ear."
+
+"And if he hadn't?"
+
+"Then I should have taken matters into my own hands and bottled you up
+till you couldn't do any mischief. You could have hauled me before the
+court here, and I'd probably have been fined one and eightpence. It
+would have been worth the money, and cheap at the price, simply to see
+the proceedings."
+
+"It's an extraordinary place this."
+
+"It's without exception the most delightful little place in the
+world."
+
+"Jolly nice house you've got here too. Think of stopping long?"
+
+"Some months probably. The curious thing about Sark is that the longer
+you stop the longer you want to stop. It grows on you. First week I
+was here it seemed to me very small--felt afraid of walking fast lest
+I should step over the edge, and all that kind of thing. Now that I've
+been here a couple of months it is growing bigger every day. I'm not
+sure that one could know Sark under a lifetime. We'll take you round
+in a boat and show it you from the outside."
+
+"I'll have to get back, I'm sorry to say. You see, I started at a
+moment's notice. Things are duller than a ditch in the City, but I'd
+no chance to make any arrangements for a stay. But I'll tell you what.
+If you're stopping on here and like to send me an invitation for a
+week or two, I'd come like a shot. I'll take a carriage up that road
+from the harbour, though, next time. Jove! I felt like a convict on
+the treadmill."
+
+"You have the invitation now, my boy, and we'll be delighted to see
+you whenever it suits you to come."
+
+"That's very good of you. Miss Penny be stopping on with you?"
+
+"As long as she will. She'd got a bit run down and it's done her a
+heap of good."
+
+"Well, if you'll show me how to go, I'll toddle off home now. I
+haven't the remotest idea where my digs are."
+
+And Graeme led him through the back fields among the tethered cows,
+who stopped their slow chewing as they passed, and lay gazing after
+them in blank astonishment, into the Avenue and so to the Bel-Air.
+
+"I'll come round then a bit before eleven and we'll all go along
+together," was Charles Svendt's parting word.
+
+"Right! Au revoir!" and Graeme went home across the fields smiling
+happily to himself.
+
+
+XVII
+
+When Graeme came swinging over the green dyke in the early morning,
+with his towel round his neck and his two dogs racing in front, he
+found the Seigneur sitting in a long chair in the verandah, with four
+aristocratic dogs wandering about, who proceeded to intimate to Punch
+and Scamp that they were rather low fisher-dogs and not of seigneurial
+rank.
+
+"Well, what about your would-be breaker of the peace?" asked the
+Seigneur, with a smile.
+
+"He's come to his senses. I was going to bring you word as soon as I
+thought you'd be up. He's promised to be best man, and I'm hoping to
+get him to play heavy father also and give the bride away."
+
+"Capital!"
+
+"He was very anxious last night to know what would have happened if,
+as he put it, he'd persisted in playing mule and kicking up his heels
+in church."
+
+"We'd have tied his heels so that he couldn't kick much," said the
+Seigneur, with his deep quizzical smile.
+
+"That's what I told him. He seemed to think Sark a decidedly odd kind
+of place. But he's getting to like it, and I've invited him to come
+and visit us later on."
+
+"That's all right as long as he behaves himself."
+
+"Oh, he's a very decent chap. The only thing I had against him was
+that he wanted to marry my wife."
+
+"Then all the ways are smooth now?"
+
+"All smooth now, thanks to your assistance!"
+
+"Well, all happiness to you both!" said the Seigneur as he rose. "My
+wife sends all good wishes"--for the Lady of the Manor lay sick in the
+great house among the trees and he would not leave her.
+
+
+XVIII
+
+As Graeme proposed, they talk still of that wedding in Sark.
+
+Everything went smoothly. The Vicar had coached himself, by wifely
+tuition and much private repetition, into a certain familiarity with
+the Wedding Service in English, but would still have been more at home
+with it in French.
+
+The church was more crowded than it had been within the memory of
+woman. Margaret looked charming, and Miss Penny absolutely pretty.
+Charles Svendt could hardly take his eyes off her, and caught himself
+wondering what the dooce she had done to herself since last night.
+For, by Jove! she's as pretty almost as Margaret herself--he said to
+himself.
+
+And if Jeremiah Pixley could have seen his son, in fatherly fashion
+give away the bride that should have been his, he would without doubt
+have had fits--if the first one had not been of such a character as to
+obviate the necessity for any additional ones.
+
+The habitants, old and young, had made holiday, donned their best as
+if it were Sunday, and crowded the church as if it were all the
+Sundays of the year rolled into one.
+
+The Vicar had serious thoughts of improving so unique an occasion, but
+wisely decided to confine himself to the intricacies of the English
+language as displayed in The Form of the Solemnisation of Matrimony.
+
+Mrs. Vicar presided at the harmonium, which had been specially tuned
+for the occasion, and the choir enjoyed to the full their privileges
+of position and observation and made ample use of them.
+
+And when his friends knelt before the chancel rail,--to the exceeding
+scandal of the Vicar and Mrs. Vicar and the choir and all who saw, and
+to the vast enjoyment of Miss Penny and Charles Svendt and all the
+other youngsters in the place,--Punch walked solemnly up the aisle and
+stood behind them, with slow-swinging tail and a look of anticipation
+on his gravely interested face, while outside, Scamp, in the hands of
+some enterprising stickler for forms and ceremonies, rent the air with
+sharp cries of disappointment.
+
+But John Graeme's soul, uplifted mightily within him at this glorious
+consummation of his hopes, and ranging high among the stars, saw none
+of these things. He held Margaret's hand in his, and looked into her
+radiant and blushing face, and vowed mighty vows for her happiness,
+and thanked God fervently for bringing this great thing to pass.
+
+And Margaret's eye caught the marble slab, placed in the side wall of
+the chancel by the late Seigneur who built it, and prayed in her heart
+that the temple of their two lives might equally be builded--"to the
+Glory of God and with much care."
+
+
+XIX
+
+The small girls from the school, all specially arrayed in fancy white
+pinafores with knots of pink ribbon, burst out of the church like a
+merry bombshell while the less picturesque final ceremonies were being
+completed. When Graeme and Margaret came smiling down the aisle, the
+busy little maids were still vociferously strewing the path outside
+with green rushes and wild iris, and as they passed, those who had
+emptied their baskets ran back and picked up hasty armfuls of the
+scattered flowers, and ran on in front and strewed them again, so that
+for quite a long way their progress was one of gradually diminishing
+splendour.
+
+But past the gap in the road, which led across country to the Red
+House, no flower-strewers came. For there the excited chatterers broke
+and whirled through like a flight of sea-pies, and made straight for
+the field of more substantial delights lest the boys should secure all
+the best places.
+
+The wedding-party, however, having disdained the use of carriages for
+so short a distance, strolled quietly along the scented lanes, past
+the Boys' School, and by the Carrefour, with no apprehension of the
+feast beginning until they arrived, or of being relegated to back
+seats if they were late.
+
+The cottage and the Red House had been buzzing hives since dawn, Mrs.
+Carré handling her forces and volunteers and supernumeraries with the
+skill of a veteran, and with encouragement so shrill and animated that
+it sounded like scolding, but was in reality only emphatic patois.
+
+She had, indeed, left matters in the hands of certain tried elders
+while she sped across the fields to the church for a few minutes, just
+to see that everything there was done properly and in order. But she
+was back in the thick of things before the wedding-party reached home,
+and everything was ready and in apple-pie order for a merry-making
+such as Sark had not seen for many a day.
+
+First, the children were settled at their long tables in the field
+behind the house, with good things enough in front of them, and active
+assistants enough behind them, to keep them quiet for a good long time
+to come.
+
+Graeme and Margaret went round bidding them all enjoy themselves to
+their fullest, which they cheerfully promised to do, and the eager
+youngsters gave them back wish for wish, with one eye for them and one
+for the unusual dainties on the tables.
+
+"Hello, Johnnie!" said Graeme to that young man, gorging stolidly,
+with a palpable interval between him and his neighbour on either hand,
+but with no other visible signs of wizardry about him. "Getting on all
+right?"
+
+But there was no room for speech in Johnnie's mouth just then. He
+winked one black eye solemnly and devoted himself to the business in
+hand.
+
+And Punch and Scamp, accepted favourites of the host and hostess, tore
+to and fro in vain attempt to keep pace with all the attentions
+lavished upon them by the guests as soon as their own desires had been
+satisfied. They devoured everything that was offered and attainable
+before it was withdrawn, and had no need to ask for more unless in the
+matter of storage-room.
+
+Everybody was very happy and very excited, for no such feast had been
+in Sark within the memory of the oldest child present. And if Charles
+Svendt's Stock-Exchange friends could have seen him--merrily circling
+the tables and exhorting already distent youngsters to still greater
+and greater exertions; poking them in the ribs to prove, against their
+own better judgment, but in accordance with their inclinations, that
+there was assuredly still room for more; bidding them "Mangez!
+Mangez!" in the one word of French he could recall as specially
+applicable at the moment--it is certain they would not have known him.
+
+And Miss Penny, too, looked as if she had never enjoyed herself so
+much in her life, and backed him up in all his endeavours right
+heartily. And now and again, when Charles Svendt looked at her, he
+said to himself, "By Jove, she's as good-looking a girl as I know, and
+as clever as they make 'em!"
+
+For there is no greater beautifier in the world than happiness, and
+Hennie Penny was completely and quite unusually happy.
+
+To the actual wedding-feast, Graeme had asked the Vicar and his wife,
+and such of the neighbours as he had come to know personally,
+especially not forgetting his very first friend in the island, whom he
+still always called Count Tolstoi, and Mrs. De Carteret. For the rest,
+he had given Mrs. Carré carte-blanche to invite whom she deemed well
+among her friends, and she had exercised her privilege with judgment
+and enjoyment.
+
+The Sénéchal was there, and the Greffier, and the Prévôt and the
+members of the Court, _ex officio_, so to speak, and the Wesleyan
+minister who was on excellent terms with the Vicar, and the
+Post-Master and his jovial white-haired father, who built the boats
+and coffins for the community, and had supplied the tables for the
+feast; and many more--a right goodly company of stalwart,
+weather-browned men and pleasant-faced women, all vastly happy to be
+assisting at so unusual an event as an English wedding.
+
+They drank the health of the bride and bridegroom in the special
+mulled wine thereto ordained by custom and prepared according to the
+laws of the Medes and Persians. And Graeme, on behalf of himself and
+his wife, assured them that there was no place in the world like Sark,
+and that they had never enjoyed a wedding so much in all their lives,
+and that if they had to be married a hundred times they could wish no
+happier wedding than Sark had given them.
+
+And of all that company, none beamed more brightly, nor enjoyed
+himself more, than Charles Pixley, who, having come to curse, had, in
+most approved fashion, stayed to bless, and had even beaten the
+prophet's record by giving away to another the treasure he had desired
+for himself.
+
+In the usual course of things, after the feasting would have come
+games and songs until dark. But that had been adjudged too much of an
+ordeal by the ladies, and the onus of it was laid upon the youngsters
+outside. While Margaret and Miss Penny rested from their labours, and
+Mrs. Carré and her helpers cleared the rooms for the festivities of
+the evening, and prepared the milder and more intermittent refections
+necessary thereto, Graeme and Pixley and the Vicar and others set the
+children to games and races, for which indeed their previous exertions
+at the tables had not best fitted them, but which nevertheless, or
+perhaps on that very account, were provocative of much laughter and
+merriment.
+
+Then, when it grew dark, and the reluctant youngsters had been cajoled
+and dragged and packed off to bed, the hitherto-unprovided-for
+section--the young men and maidens, all in their best and a trifle shy
+to begin with--came flocking in for their share in the festivities,
+and Orpheus and Terpsichore held the floor for the rest of the night.
+
+And they did dance! Margaret and Miss Penny and Graeme and Pixley
+thought they had seen dancing before, but dancing such as this it had
+never been theirs to witness.
+
+If it lacked anything in grace--and far be it from me to say so--it
+more than made up for all by its inexhaustible energy and tireless
+enjoyment. The men had brought their own music in the shape of a
+concertina, which passed from hand to hand and with which they all
+seemed on equally friendly terms.
+
+Jokes, laughter, round dances, refreshments, interludes of smokings
+and gigglings in the darkness of the verandah, occasional more
+intellectual flights in the shape of songs and recitations,--mostly of
+a somewhat lugubrious tendency, to judge by the faces of the auditors,
+but being mostly in patois they were unintelligible to the British
+foreigners,--more dances,--coats off now, to reduce the temperature of
+the performers,--more refreshments, more dances,--dances with
+broomsticks held between the partners, over which they slipped and
+skipped to the tune of caustic comments by the onlookers,--dances
+between caps laid on the floor and which must on no account be touched
+by the dancers. And always the cry to the musician of the moment
+was,--"Faster! Faster!"--and the race between Orpheus and
+Terpsichore--between the music and the flying feet, grew still more
+fast and furious.
+
+Now Charles Svendt, as we know, did not look like a dancing man, but
+dancing was one of the superficial accomplishments in which he
+excelled.
+
+Miss Penny, also, through much experience with girls, was lighter of
+foot than she looked.
+
+They stood for a time watching, and presently both their feet were
+tapping to the quickstep of the rest.
+
+"Let's have a shot at it," said Charles. "Will you?" and he looked
+down at her.
+
+"I'd love to," and in a moment they were whirling in the circle with
+the rest, but with a grace that none there could rival,--gallant
+dancers as the Sark boys and girls are.
+
+"Delightful!" murmured Charles Svendt. "You dance like an angel, and
+we fit splendidly," and Hennie Penny found a man's arm about her
+decidedly and delightfully more inspiriting than all the arms of all
+the schoolgirls in the world, and danced as she had never danced
+before.
+
+So swift and light and smooth and graceful was their flight that
+before long the rest tailed off and all stood propped against the
+walls to watch them.
+
+"We've got the floor all to ourselves," murmured Miss Penny at last,
+as she woke to the fact.
+
+"We've licked them into fits on their own ground," he laughed in her
+ear. "You can dance and no mistake. It's a treat to dance with a
+really good dancer."
+
+"I think we ought to stop. We're stopping their fun," said Hennie
+Penny, and when he led her to a seat the rest of the room all clapped
+their enjoyment.
+
+Graeme and Margaret danced a round or two to endorse the festivities,
+but they were not in it with Pixley and Hennie Penny, and they soon
+dropped out and clapped heartily with the rest.
+
+When Charles Svendt, later on, suggested another dance, Miss Penny
+bade him go and dance with one of the Sark girls.
+
+"But I don't want to dance with any of them. Besides, I don't know any
+of 'em, and I couldn't talk to her if I did."
+
+"Oh yes, you can. They all speak English."
+
+"Do they now? It don't sound like it. Come on, Miss Penny. They
+wouldn't enjoy it and I wouldn't enjoy it, and I never enjoyed
+anything so much in my life as that last round."
+
+So Hennie took pity on him, and they danced many times amid great
+applause.
+
+"Awfully good of you!" said Charles Svendt, as the dawn came peeping
+in through the east windows and the open front door; and Mrs. Carré,
+as Mistress of the Ceremonies, and a very tired one at that, bluffly
+informed the company that it was time to go home.
+
+"I've enjoyed it immensely," said Hennie Penny, and if her face was
+any index to her feelings, there was no mistake about it.
+
+
+XX
+
+None of them will ever forget that great day.
+
+Still less is any of them likely to forget the day that followed.
+
+As dancing only ceased when the sun was about rising, before-breakfast
+bathing was declared off for that day, and they arranged to meet later
+on and stroll quietly down to Dixcart Bay during the morning and all
+bathe together there. Charles Svendt laughingly prepared them for an
+exhibition of incompetence by stating that his swimming wasn't a patch
+on his dancing, but that he could get along. Miss Penny gaily gave him
+points as to her own peculiar methods of swimming, which, as we know,
+demanded instant and easy touch of sand or stone at any moment of the
+halting progression. He confessed to a like prejudice in favour of
+something solid within reach of his sinking capacity, and they agreed
+to help one another.
+
+They called for him at the hotel about eleven o'clock, and went joking
+through the sunny lanes of Petit Dixcart, crossed the brook that runs
+out of Hart's-Tongue Valley, and followed it by the winding path along
+the side of the cliff, among the gorse and ferns, down into the bay.
+
+They had a right merry bathe with no grave casualties. Miss Penny,
+indeed, got out of her depth twice, to the extent of quite two inches,
+and shrieked for help, which Charles Svendt gallantly hastened to
+render; while Graeme and Margaret swam across from head to head,
+watched enviously by the paddlers in shallow waters.
+
+They went home by the climbing path up the hillside, rested on The
+Quarter-deck while Charles Svendt got his breath back, and so, by the
+old Dixcart hotel, and the new one nestling among its flowers and
+trees, and up the Valley, to the Vicarage.
+
+The Vicar was basking in the shade of the trees in front of the house.
+
+"Ah-ha--Mr. and Mrs. Graeme! Good-morning! You are none the worse for
+being married? Non?" as he shook hands joyously all round, with both
+hands at once.
+
+"Not a bit," laughed Graeme. "We're all as happy as sandboys."
+
+"Comment donc--sandboys? What is that?"
+
+"Happy little boys who dispense with clothes and paddle all day in the
+sand and water."
+
+"Ah--you have been bathing! What energie! And you danced till--?"
+
+"About four o'clock, I suppose. The sun was just thinking of rising as
+we were thinking of retiring."
+
+"But it is marvellous! And you are not tired?"
+
+"The bathe has freshened us all up," said Margaret.
+
+Then Mrs. Vicar came out at sound of their voices, and felicitated
+them, and begged them to rest a while in the shade. But they were all
+hungry, and Charles Svendt laughingly asserted that he had swallowed
+so much salt-water, in rescuing Miss Penny from a watery grave, that
+his constitution absolutely needed a tiny tot of whisky, or the
+consequences might be serious.
+
+So they went laughingly on their way, and Charles tried his best to
+get Miss Penny to go and show him the way to the Bel-Air, pleading
+absolute confusion still as to the points of the compass and the lie
+of the land.
+
+He was to lunch with them at the Red House, but insisted on going home
+first to straighten up and make himself presentable. So they led him
+to the Avenue, and set his face straight down it, and bade him follow
+his nose and turn neither to the right hand nor to the left, and then
+they turned off through the fields by their own short-cut, and went
+merrily home.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE SIXTH
+
+
+I
+
+Graeme was just finishing a beautiful knot in his tie, when he heard
+hasty feet crossing the verandah to the open front door. There was
+some unknown quantity in them that gave him sudden start.
+
+"Graeme!" sharp, hoarse,--a voice he did not recognise.
+
+He ran hastily out of the east bedroom, which he was using as a
+dressing-room.
+
+"Hello there!" as he sprang down the stairs, "Why--Pixley? What's
+wrong, man?"
+
+For Charles Pixley was standing there, leaning in at the doorway,
+looking as though he would fall headlong but for the supporting jamb.
+He had a brown envelope in his hand and a crumpled pink telegram. His
+face was white, and drawn, and haggard. His very figure seemed to have
+shrunk in these few minutes. Never had Graeme seen so ghastly a change
+in a man in so short a time.
+
+Before Pixley could speak Miss Penny came hurrying along the path with
+a face full of sympathetic anxiety.
+
+"What is it?" she asked. "I saw Mr. Pixley pass, and his face
+frightened me. Oh, what is wrong?"
+
+Pixley glanced at her out of his woeful eyes, and at Margaret, who had
+just come running down the stairs. He seemed to hesitate for a moment.
+Then he groaned--
+
+"You will have to know," and motioned them all into the dining-room
+and shut the door.
+
+"This "--jerking out the telegram--"was waiting for me," and he handed
+it to Graeme, who smoothed it out and read, while Pixley dropped into
+a chair.
+
+"Pixley. Bel-Air. Sark.
+
+"Zizel, Amadou, Zebu, Zeta. Eno."
+
+"Code," said Pixley briefly. "Meanings underneath," and dropped his
+head into his hands.
+
+"Zizel," read Graeme slowly--"There is bad news. Amadou--your father.
+Zebu--has bolted. Zeta--we fear the smash will be a bad one. Eno--?"
+
+"My partner's initials--they certify the wire," said Pixley hoarsely.
+
+And they looked soberly at one another and very pitifully at the
+broken man before them.
+
+"Don't take it too hard, Pixley," said Graeme quietly, laying a
+friendly hand on the other's shoulder. "It may not be as bad as this
+puts it. Codes are brutally bald things, you know"
+
+The bowed head shook pitifully. He raised his white face and looked
+round at them with a shocked shrinking in his eyes.
+
+"God forgive him!" he jerked. "And God forgive me, for I have doubted
+him at times! He was so--so--so demned good"--and Graeme's lips
+twitched in spite of himself, so closely was the expression in accord
+with his own feelings. But Pixley did not see the twitch, for he was
+looking at Margaret and Hennie Penny, and he was saying with
+vehemence--
+
+"Will you believe me that I knew absolutely nothing of this? He never
+discussed his affairs with me nor I mine with him, and we had no
+business together except on purely business lines. If he had to buy or
+sell he sent it my way, of course,--nothing more. You will believe me,
+Graeme--"
+
+"Every word, my boy--"
+
+"We all believe it, Mr. Pixley," said Hennie Penny warmly.
+
+"And I know it, Charles," said Margaret.
+
+"It is very good of you all," he groaned. "I must get back at once,
+Graeme. How soon is there a boat?"
+
+"Five o'clock. You'll have to stop a night in Guernsey, which is a
+nuisance."
+
+Charles Svendt shook his head in dumb misery. It was crushing to be so
+far away--thirty hours at least, and he gnashing within to be on the
+spot and at work, learning the worst, seeing what could be done.
+
+Then, with a preliminary knock on the door, Mrs. Carré came in with
+brilliant lobsters and crisp lettuces for lunch, and, hungry as they
+all were, their souls loathed the thought of eating.
+
+"They are just out of the pot," beamed she, "and the lettuces were
+growing not five min'ts ago. Ech!"--at sight of Pixley--"is he ill?"
+
+"Mr. Pixley has just had bad news from home, Mrs. Carré," said Graeme.
+"He will have to go by to-day's boat."
+
+"Ach, but I am sorry! And him so happy yesterday and dancing the best
+in the room," and her pleasant face clouded sympathetically.
+
+"Meg, I'll go up to your room for a minute and finish my hair," said
+Hennie Penny. "I ran out just as I was--"
+
+"It was very kind of you," said Charles Svendt, and the general
+sympathy seemed to comfort him somewhat.
+
+"No good feeling too bad about it, old man, till you know all the
+facts," said Graeme, when the girls had gone off upstairs.
+
+"It hits me, Graeme. Not financially, as I said. But in every other
+way it hits me hard.--Have you reached the point of seeing that it may
+hit her too?"--and he nodded towards upstairs.
+
+"I suppose there was a glimmering idea of the chance of that at the
+back of my head somewhere, but we won't trouble about it just now. How
+about your mother?"
+
+Pixley shook his head dismally again. "It will be a terrible blow to
+her. He was a bit hard and cold at home, you know, but she looked up
+to him as immaculate. Yes, it will hit her very hard. As to money, of
+course, she will be all right. I have plenty. But the talk and the
+scandal--" and he groaned again at thought of it all.
+
+"Send her over here for a time--or bring her yourself. We have heaps
+of room here. Miss Penny is coming to stop with us next week. Your
+mother was always fond of Margaret, I believe."
+
+"She was--very fond of her.... That's a good thought of yours, Graeme.
+Are you sure Margaret--?"
+
+
+"Of course she would. She and Miss Penny will just take care of her,
+and no word of the troubles will reach her. That's the thing to do,
+and maybe you'll find things not as bad as you expect when you get
+back."
+
+But, from the look of him, Charles Svendt had small hope of matters
+being anything but what he feared.
+
+When the girls came down they made an apology of a meal, for, in spite
+of their hunger, the stricken look of their friend took their
+appetites away.
+
+The thought that there might still lurk in their minds a suspicion
+that he had had some knowledge of his father's position, when he came
+across to stop their marriage, still troubled him.
+
+"I do hope you will all believe me when I say that I knew absolutely
+nothing of it all," he said, when they had finished an almost silent
+meal. "When I said I had doubted him at times, I simply meant that his
+everlasting and--and--well, very assertive philanthropies palled upon
+me. It was a little difficult at times to believe in the genuineness
+of it all, for we did not see very much of it at home, as you
+know,"--he looked at Margaret, who nodded. "In business matters he
+could be as hard as nails, and it was not easy to fit it all
+together."
+
+"Not one of us believes anything of the kind of you, old man. Just get
+that right out of your head, once for all. We're only sorry for your
+sake that the trouble has come, and I'm sure we all hope it will turn
+out not so bad as you fear," said Graeme heartily.
+
+"What about your mother, Charles?" said Margaret. "I'm afraid she will
+feel this dreadfully. Hennie and I were talking about it upstairs, and
+we were wondering if you could get her to come and stop with us for a
+time--"
+
+"You see!" said Graeme, with a smile at Pixley. And to Margaret--"I
+suggested exactly the same thing while you were up doing your hair."
+
+"It's awfully good of you all," said Charles. "If you're quite sure--"
+
+"We're quite sure. Send her to us at once as soon as you reach home,
+and Jock shall meet her in Guernsey."
+
+"I think I'd perhaps better bring her across myself. I don't suppose
+there will be much I can do when I've heard the worst--if they've got
+to it yet. Things may be all tangled up, and it may take time. And for
+ten days or so, until folks have had time to forget, the name of
+Pixley won't be one to be proud of."
+
+"Come if you can," said Graeme heartily. "You've seen nothing of Sark
+yet."
+
+
+II
+
+They all went down to the harbour to see him off--as is the custom
+when one's friends leave Sark. And when Charles Svendt had shaken
+hands with Margaret and Miss Penny--and had found a touch of comfort
+in the sympathetic droop of their faces--and had fancied Miss Penny's
+bright eyes were at once brighter and mistier than usual--and had
+thanked them again very humbly for all their kindness--he turned to
+say good-bye to Graeme.
+
+"Come away, man!" said Jock cheerfully. "I'm coming too. Meg's given
+me a holiday, and I'm going to shake a free leg again in Guernsey--"
+
+But Charles thought he saw through that.
+
+"Don't you come on my account, Graeme"
+
+"Not on your account at all, my boy, but the accounts of a good many
+shopkeepers over there which I've got to straighten out at once, while
+all the little differences are fresh in my mind. Something wrong in
+nearly all of them--some over, some under--and I'm still a bit of a
+business man though I do write books."
+
+For, when Pixley went off to pack his portmanteau, Graeme had said to
+his wife, "Meg dear, what do you think of my going across to Peter
+Port with that young man? He'll have a bad black time all by himself.
+He's holding himself in before us, but when he's alone it'll all come
+back on him in a heap and he'll feel it."
+
+And Margaret had said, "Yes, dear, go. You'll be a great comfort to
+him. I am very very sorry for him."
+
+The last flicker of the waving handkerchiefs above the sea-wall, and
+their responsive wavings from the boat, had been abruptly cut by the
+intervening bastion of Les Lâches, but Charles Svendt still leaned
+with his arms on the rail and looked back as though he could pierce
+the granite cliff and see the girls still standing there, and Graeme
+stood patiently behind him.
+
+He straightened up at last with a sigh.
+
+"I'm glad I came," he said, "though if I'd had any idea what was going
+to happen I'd have drowned myself first. It's when one's in
+trouble"--as though this were a discovery of his own--"that one finds
+out how kind people can be."
+
+"Yes, trouble has its uses. I had a deuce of a time for the first few
+weeks after I got here. Your dad had told me you and Margaret were to
+be married very shortly, and it knocked life into a cocked-hat for
+me--"
+
+"That's what he would have liked. Do you know, Graeme, I've been
+thinking that it's just possible your marriage helped to precipitate
+matters with him. I don't know, of course; but if he has been juggling
+her money in any way, he may have been counting on a marriage between
+us to help straighten things. Then, when he heard nothing from me--"
+
+"It's possible. But if it acted as quickly as all that, I'm afraid the
+chances for Margaret's portion are pretty small."
+
+"Gad! That would hurt me more than anything. I shall do everything in
+my power--"
+
+"I'm sure of it, my dear fellow. And you must understand that her
+money--whatever it is--has never entered into our calculations in any
+way. I knew nothing of it till Lady Elspeth Gordon told me, and I had
+it all settled on her before the wedding took place. If it is gone we
+can do without it."
+
+And Charles Svendt, if he said nothing, thought all the more.
+
+
+III
+
+The two girls were standing in the outermost seaward corner of the
+breakwater, as though they had never moved, when the _Assistance_ came
+nosing round Les Lâches next morning, and made for the harbour. And to
+Graeme, the sight of his wife, after a separation of eighteen hours,
+was like a life-giving stream to a pilgrim of the desert, or the
+blessing of light to a darkened soul. His heart swelled almost to
+paining-point for very joy of her. He took deep breaths of gratitude
+for this sweet crowning of his life. He wondered vaguely why he should
+be so blest above all other men. He vowed his vows again and his eyes
+were misty.
+
+They saw him standing by the captain, and waved glad welcomes, and
+presently, his glimpse into the depths of Margaret's eyes as he kissed
+her, told him that he had been missed even as he had missed.
+
+"I am glad I went with him," he said, as they climbed the steep Creux
+Road. "It did him good to talk. He's feeling it terribly."
+
+He did not tell them that they had got the previous day's papers in
+St. Peter Port, and that their scathing comments on a peculiarly bad
+failure, and on the remarkable contrast between the profession and the
+practice of Jeremiah Pixley's life, had driven Charles Svendt almost
+crazy. The wound was raw in their hearts. There was no need to turn
+the knife in it.
+
+"We shall see him back here with Mrs. Pixley before the middle of next
+week, unless I'm very much mistaken," he said. "He says there's
+nothing doing on the Stock Exchange, and he can fix things with his
+partner to get away for a time, and it seems the wisest thing to do."
+
+"I have liked Charles better this time than I ever did in my life
+before," said Margaret. "And I am very very sorry for him and Mrs.
+Pixley."
+
+"He's not half a bad fellow," said Graeme heartily.
+
+And perhaps, if it had been put to Miss Penny, she would have improved
+even upon that.
+
+"I hope you're not very set on being a rich woman, Meg," said Graeme,
+when they were alone together.
+
+"Oh, but I am," she said, with a smile which all the riches in the
+world could not have bought from her, or brought to her.
+
+"Yes, I know,"--and he gathered the smile with a kiss. "But in coarse
+material wealth, I mean."
+
+"I'm just as set on it as you are. I want just as much as will make
+you happy. You mean Mr. Pixley has made away with it all?"
+
+"I'm very much afraid so, but I guess we can get along all right
+without it."
+
+"Of course we can--splendidly. I'm a famous housekeeper and you'll be
+a famous author. There couldn't be a better team. It will bring out
+the very best that's in us."
+
+"We can never come to actual want anyway, for my little bit--which, by
+the way, Lady Elspeth once took the trouble to impress upon me was
+just about enough to pay Mr. Pixley's servants' wages--is in Consols,
+and they're not likely to crack up. And my last book brought me about
+fifty pounds--"
+
+"It ought to have brought you five thousand. I'm sure it was good
+enough."
+
+"Of course it was, but it takes time to work up to the five thousand
+point. Some get there, I suppose. But I should imagine more starve off
+at the fifty line."
+
+"We could live like princes on a couple of hundred a year in Sark
+here."
+
+"It would pall on you in time, I'm afraid."
+
+"You've been here twice as long as I have. Has it begun to pall on you
+yet?"
+
+"I don't think it would ever pall on me, if I lived here for a
+century. But then I've got my work, you see."
+
+"And I've got you, my dear. When you and Sark begin to pall I'll
+promise to let you know. It's heavenly."
+
+"Oh, I don't claim all that, you know. Don't expect _too_ much--"
+
+"Will Charles be involved at all, do you think, Jock?"
+
+"I don't think so. They had not much to do with one another in
+business matters."
+
+"I'm glad of that. Do you know"--with an introspective look in her
+eyes--"I've an idea--"
+
+"Hennie Penny?"
+
+Margaret nodded.
+
+"That would be capital. She'd make him an excellent wife."
+
+"I'm sure she would. She's just what he needs. She's as good as gold,
+and she has more genuine common-sense than anyone I know."
+
+"Thousand thanks!"
+
+"Oh, we're exceptions to all rules. But I do hope something--I mean
+everything--may come of it. And we would all have reason to bless this
+blessed little island all our days."
+
+"Some of us will, anyway. It certainly shall not go unblest."
+
+
+IV
+
+On the Tuesday afternoon Graeme received a brief telegram from Charles
+Pixley--"Crossing tonight." And Wednesday morning found them all on
+the sea-wall awaiting the arrival of the steamer from Guernsey.
+
+"There he is--in the front corner of the upper deck--keen to get here
+as soon as possible, I should say. I know just how he feels," said
+Graeme, with a laugh. "Looks a bit different from what he did the
+first time he came."
+
+"That's Mrs. Pixley on the side seat," said Margaret, and they waved
+their welcomes.
+
+There were two ladies on the side seat, and both stood up and waved
+vigorously in reply.
+
+"Why--who--?" began Margaret. And then--excitedly, "Jock--I believe
+it's Lady Elspeth. I'm certain it is. It is. It is."
+
+"Just like her! Hurrah for the Gordons!" and he sent them welcomes
+which a world full of Pixleys alone could not have excited in him.
+
+"Now this _is_ delightful," he said, as he sprang on board and rushed
+at Lady Elspeth.
+
+"All right, my boy! Don't shake my hand right off, if you can help it.
+Here, you may give me a kiss, though it's contrary to the usages of my
+country. We'll pretend I'm your mother again. Now say how do you do to
+Mrs. Pixley. How's Margaret? I've got crows to pick with you young
+people--"
+
+"Make it seven, or it's unlucky," laughed Graeme.
+
+"Eh? What?"
+
+"Tell you later. We're great believers in crows here. Mrs. Pixley, I
+am very glad indeed to see you here. Charles, old man, you've done
+splendidly."
+
+Charles wrung his hand in silence. His face was sober, with a latent
+glow of expectation in it. When he had seen to the luggage he joined
+the group on the quay, and it was Miss Penny who was the first to see
+him coming.
+
+"Welcome back to Sark!" she said cheerfully.
+
+"I'm uncommonly glad to be here. Everybody all right? How's Mrs.
+Carré?"
+
+"Everybody's first-rate, especially Meg and Jock. Their spirits are
+enough to inflate the island."
+
+"It's good to be young," and the sober mask lifted slightly and let
+the inner light shine through.
+
+
+V
+
+"Go to an hotel?" said Margaret indignantly, in reply to a suggestion
+from Lady Elspeth. "Indeed you'll do nothing of the kind,"--and, as
+the old lady hesitated still,--"If you do I'll never speak to you
+again as long as I live."
+
+"Oh well, I couldn't stand that--"
+
+"Of course you couldn't. Neither could I. An hotel indeed!"--with
+withering scorn--"And we with four empty bedrooms crying aloud at
+night because two of their fellows are occupied and they are left out
+in the cold! An hotel! I'd just like to see you!"
+
+"My guidness! Is she often like this, Jock?"
+
+"Oh, always! I thought you knew her. Why couldn't you warn me in
+time?--No!" as Lady Elspeth attempted to speak--"It's too late now.
+We're bound for life. There's no cutting the bond. The Vicar told us
+so."
+
+"You're both clean daft together," said the old lady, with dancing
+eyes. "Well, I'll stop in one of your crying bedrooms--on conditions.
+We'll talk about that later on. Where's the rest of the island, and
+how do you get to it?"
+
+"Old ladies and luggage ride. We youngsters walk. There's Charles
+waiting for you at the carriage. There you are! Au revoir!"
+
+As the young people breasted the steep, Pixley--forgetting entirely
+his vow never to do it on foot again--unfolded to them Lady Elspeth's
+idea, which simply was, that if the Red House could hold them all,--of
+which she had her doubts, in spite of his assertions,--they should all
+share expenses and such household duties as so large a party would
+involve.
+
+"You see--if you don't mind it, Mrs. Graeme,"--with an apologetic look
+at Margaret,--"it will give the two old ladies something to do and
+will leave us young folks freer to get about."
+
+"It's a capital arrangement if the old ladies don't mind. Mrs. Carré
+can get in another girl. It will keep them all busy seeing that we
+have enough to eat. But they'll soon get used to looking forward two
+or three days and ordering Friday's dinner on Tuesday."
+
+"How long can you stop, old man?" asked Graeme.
+
+"A fortnight--all being well," and there was a touch of soberness in
+it as he said that. "There's really nothing doing, and Ormerod's a
+good fellow and insisted on it."
+
+"We can do heaps in a fortnight," said Miss Penny jubilantly. "However
+did you manage to catch Lady Elspeth?"
+
+"She's a grand old lady. I found her with my mother when I got there.
+She'd been with her ever since--since the trouble. And when I proposed
+bringing my mother she said at once that she was coming too. She had
+crows to pick with you two, and so on. I expect she thought my mother
+would feel things less if she was with her."
+
+"She's an old dear," said Margaret. "They shall both have the very
+best time we can give them."
+
+"I shall take them conger-eeling," said Graeme,--"and to Venus's Bath"
+
+"And down the Boutiques and the Gouliots"--suggested Margaret.
+
+"And ormering in Grande Grève," laughed Miss Penny, who had spent a
+day there on that alluring pursuit and had come home bruised and wet
+and dirty.
+
+"Oh, there's lots of fun in store for them," said Graeme, laughing
+like a schoolboy out for a holiday. "And, as Hennie Penny says, we can
+do heaps in a fortnight."
+
+
+VI
+
+Having made up their minds that there was no earthly reason why
+Charles Pixley and Hennie Penny should not be as happy as they were
+themselves, Margaret and Graeme saw to it that nothing should be
+awanting in the way of opportunity.
+
+Miss Penny's natural goodness of heart impelled her to the most
+delicate consideration towards Mrs. Pixley. Hennie Penny, you see, had
+come bravely through dire troubles of her own, and tribulation softens
+the heart as it does the ormer. She anticipated the nervous old lady's
+every want, soothed her bruised susceptibilities in a thousand hidden
+ways, tended her as lovingly as an only daughter might have done,--and
+all out of the sheer necessity of her heart, and with never a thought
+of reward other than the satisfaction of her own desire for the
+happiness of all about her.
+
+Not that the others were one whit less considerate, but, in the
+natural course of things, Miss Penny's heart and time were, perhaps, a
+little more at liberty for outside service, and in Mrs. Pixley the
+opportunity met her half-way.
+
+It is safe to say that the old lady had never in her life been so much
+made of. Margaret had always been gentle and sweet with her; but the
+cold white light of Mr. Pixley's unco' guidness had always cast a
+shadow upon the household, and Margaret had got from under it
+whenever the chance offered.
+
+"You are very good to me, my dear," Charles heard his mother say to
+Hennie Penny, one day when they two were alone together and did not
+know anyone was near. "If I had ever had a daughter I would have liked
+her to be like you. How did you learn to be so thoughtful of other
+people?"
+
+"I think it must have been through having come through lots of
+troubles of my own," said Hennie Penny simply.
+
+"Troubles abound," said the tremulous old lady. "You have drawn the
+sting of yours and kept only the honey," which saying astonished
+Charles greatly. He had no idea his mother could say things like that.
+She had had time to think plenty of them, indeed, but there had never
+been room for more than one shining light in the household and that
+had cast strong shadows.
+
+Charles had gone quietly away smiling to himself, and had been in
+cheerful spirits for the rest of the day.
+
+The first night, when the ladies had gone chattering upstairs to make
+sure that all the arrangements were in order, Graeme and Pixley sat
+out on the verandah smoking a final pipe.
+
+The ladies' voices floated through the open windows as they passed
+from room to room, and Graeme laughed softly. "What's up?" asked
+Pixley, gazing at him soberly.
+
+"I was thinking of the changes here since the first night I slept in
+this house all by myself, and heard ghosts creeping about and all
+kinds of noises."
+
+"Much jollier to hear _them_," said Charles, as Miss Penny's and
+Margaret's laughter came floating down the softness of the night.
+
+"Ay, indeed! Very much jollier," and they smoked and listened.
+
+No word had so far passed between them as to the troubles that lay
+behind. There had, indeed, been no opportunity until now, and Graeme
+had no mind to broach the matter.
+
+But Pixley had only been waiting till they could discuss things alone,
+and the time had come.
+
+"It will take them months to get to the bottom of things over there,"
+he said quietly. "I saw the accountants, and they say everything's in
+a dreadful mess. He must have been involved for years. It makes me
+absolutely sick to think of it all, Graeme, and him--"
+
+"I'm sure it must, old chap. Why think of it? It's done, and it can't
+be undone, and everyone knows you had nothing to do with it."
+
+"I know. Everyone is very kind, but I can't get rid of it. It's with
+me all the time like a dirty shadow."
+
+"We'll chase it away. No place like Sark for getting rid of bogeys and
+worries."
+
+"How things will come out it's impossible to say. I made special
+enquiries into Margaret's affairs, and it's quite certain he's
+tampered with her money, but they could not say yet to what extent. On
+the other hand, certain of her securities are intact, so everything is
+not gone. But what I wanted to say was this. I am determined that
+Margaret shall not suffer, whatever may have happened. Any deficiency
+I shall make good myself."
+
+"My dear fellow, she would never hear of it."
+
+"That's why I'm talking to you."
+
+"Well, I won't hear of it either. As I told you before, it was a
+trouble to me when I heard she had any money. Whatever she had I
+settled on herself, and we can get on very well without it."
+
+"All the same I'm not going to have her lose anything through
+my--through him. Neither you nor she can stop me doing what I like
+with my own money."
+
+"We can refuse to touch it."
+
+"That would be nonsense."
+
+"Not half as bad as you crippling yourself for life to make good what
+you'd never made away with."
+
+"It wouldn't do that," said Charles quietly. "Ormerod's a long-headed
+fellow, and we made some pretty good hits before the bottom dropped
+out of things. You must let me have my own way in this matter, Graeme,
+if it's only for my own peace of mind. I'm going to ask Miss Penny to
+be my wife. Do you think--"
+
+"My dear fellow," said Graeme, jumping up and shaking him heartily by
+the hand, "that's the best bit of news I've heard since Meg said 'I
+will' in the church there. She's an absolutely splendid girl, is
+Hennie. Except Meg herself, I don't know any girl I admire so much.
+She's as good and sweet as they make 'em, and for sound common-sense
+she's a perfect gold mine."
+
+"And you don't think--?"
+
+"I've never heard a hint of anyone else. Like me to ask Meg? She'd be
+sure to know. Girls talk of these things, you know."
+
+"I don't know. Would it be quite--"
+
+"Everything's fair in love and war,--proverbial, my boy. But I'm
+pretty sure you've a clear field, and I congratulate you both with all
+my heart. Come to think of it, she's been as dull as a ditch since you
+went away"
+
+"Really?"
+
+"Fact! I was trying the other night to prove to her that she'd got
+influenza coming on, or hay-fever, or something of the kind. She's as
+different as chalk from cheese since eleven o'clock to-day. It's you,
+I'll bet you a sovereign."
+
+Charles did not respond to the offer. He sat smoking quietly and let
+his thoughts run along brighter paths than they had done for days.
+
+
+VII
+
+At breakfast next morning Graeme soberly suggested to Lady Elspeth
+that she should go conger-eeling with him that day. And the shrewd
+brown eyes looked into his, and twinkled in response to the deep blue
+and the brown ones opposite, and she said, "I mind I was just a wee
+bit feather-headed myself for a while after I was married. I caught
+congers before you were short-coated, my laddie, but I'm not going
+catching them now."
+
+"They are a bit rampageous when they're grown up," he admitted. "We
+got one the other day about as thick round as one's leg, and it barked
+like a dog and tried to bite."
+
+"And does he make you go congering, my dear?" she asked Margaret.
+
+"Make?" scoffed Graeme. "Make, forsooth? How little you know! I'd like
+to see the man who could make that young person do anything but just
+what she wishes. Why, she twists us all round her little finger
+and----"
+
+"Ay, ay! Well, discipline is good for the young, and you're just
+nothing but a laddie in some things."
+
+"I'm going to keep so all my life. So's Meg! Well, suppose we say
+ormering then, if congering's too lively. Hennie Penny's an awful dab
+at ormering. If you'd seen her the other night when she came home! A
+tangle of vraic was an old lady's best cap in comparison--"
+
+"And how many did I get, and how many did you get?" retorted Miss
+Penny.
+
+"I got six and you got seven--"
+
+"Seventeen, and you stole four of your six from Meg."
+
+"Oh well, I found the mushrooms, coming home, and they were worth a
+pailful of ormers."
+
+"You didn't beat them long enough. Ormers take a lot of beating," she
+explained to Lady Elspeth.
+
+"Thumping, she means. My mushrooms beat them hollow,--tender and
+delicate and fragrant"--and he sniffed appreciatively as though he
+could scent them still.--"Your ormers were like shoe-soles."
+
+"And as to the mushrooms," continued Hennie Penny, "you'd never have
+found them if I hadn't tumbled into them, and then you thought they
+were toadstools."
+
+"Oh well!--Who can't take a hook out of a whiting's mouth? Who was it
+screamed when the lobster looked at her?"
+
+"It nearly took a piece out of me."
+
+"Who nearly upset the boat when a baby devilfish came up in the pot?
+And it wasn't above that size!"
+
+"I draw the line at devil-fish. They're no' canny."
+
+"Do they generally go on like this?" asked Lady Elspeth of Margaret.
+
+"All the time," said Margaret, with a matronly air. "They're just a
+couple of children. I keep them out of mischief as well as I can, but
+it's hard work at times."
+
+"She's just every bit as bad, you know, when we're alone," said Miss
+Penny. "But she's got her company manners on just now. You should see
+her when she's bathing."
+
+"Ah--yes! You should see her when she's bathing," said Graeme, with a
+smack of the lips. "All the little waves and crabs and lobsters keep
+bobbing up to have another look at her. In Venus's Bath the other
+day--"
+
+"Now, children, stop your fooling. Where shall we go to-day?" laughed
+Margaret, and Lady Elspeth could hardly take her eyes off her, so
+winsomely, so radiantly happy was she.
+
+"We old folks will stay at home and talk to Mrs. Carré," said Lady
+Elspeth. "You young ones can go off and do what you like."
+
+"Oh no, you don't," said Graeme. "You didn't come here to loaf in a
+verandah. When you come to Sark you've got to enjoy yourselves,
+whether you want to or not. Suppose we take lunch along to the
+Eperquerie, and the elders can bask and snooze, and we'll bathe three
+times off that black ledge under Les Fontaines. And if the Seigneur's
+out fishing perhaps he'll take some of us with him, those who don't
+scream when the poor fish gets a hook in its throat. And you'll see
+Margaret out on the loose. She always goes it when she's swimming."
+
+"I hope you won't venture too far out, Charles," said Mrs. Pixley,
+with visions of his limp body being carried home.
+
+"Miss Penny and I are sensible people when we're bathing," said
+Charles. "We don't lose our heads--"
+
+"Nor any of the rest of you,--nor touch of the stones," laughed
+Graeme.
+
+"That's so," said Charles. "We like to know what's below us and that
+it's not too far away."
+
+"It's very wise," said Mrs. Pixley plaintively. "One hears of such
+dreadful accidents. I'm very glad you're so sensible, my dear," to
+Miss Penny.
+
+"Oh, I'm dreadfully sensible at times, especially when I'm bathing.
+But that's because I can only swim with one foot at the bottom."
+
+"Any beach about there?" enquired Charles forethoughtfully.
+
+"Nice little bit just round the corner, with a cave and all,--capital
+place for children. Paddle by the hour without going in above your
+ankles."
+
+And so they wandered slowly up the scented lanes past the Seigneurie,
+laden with the usual paraphernalia of a bathing-lunch, and came out on
+the Eperquerie.
+
+They established the old ladies in a gorsy nook, built a fireplace of
+loose stones, and collected fuel, and laid the fire ready for the
+match, which Lady Elspeth was to apply whenever they waved to her.
+
+"If She isn't fast asleep," said Graeme.
+
+Then they pointed out all the things that lay about, so that they
+might take an intelligent interest in their surroundings,--Guernsey,
+and Herm, and Jethou, and Alderney, and the Casquets, and the coast of
+France, and the Seigneur in his boat, and then they trooped off like a
+party of school-children.
+
+And presently the old ladies saw them scrambling down the black,
+scarped sides of the headland opposite, and then they disappeared
+behind rocks and into crannies. Then a pink meteor flashed from the
+black ledge, followed in an instant by a dark-blue one, and both went
+breasting out to sea. And in front of the cave two less venturesome
+figures beguiled the onlookers and themselves into the belief that
+they were swimming, though they never went out of their depth and
+sounded anxiously for it at every second stroke.
+
+And up above, the larks trilled joyously, and the air was soft and
+sweet as the air of heaven; and down below, the water was bluer than
+the sky and clear as crystal, so that they could see the great white
+rocks which lay away down in the depths, and they looked like
+sea-monsters crawling after their prey. And the shouts of the swimmers
+came mellowly up to them, and they could see their little limbs
+jerking like the limbs of frogs.
+
+"It is good to be here," said Lady Elspeth enjoyably.
+
+"It is very very good to be here. I am very glad we came," said Mrs.
+Pixley, with a sigh that was not all sadness.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Many such days of sheer delight they had, and kept the dark cloud
+resolutely below their horizon. They accommodated their activities to
+the limited powers of the elders, and took them wherever it was
+reasonably possible for them to go. They chartered a boat for the day,
+and took them and all the luncheon-things round from Creux Harbour to
+Grande Grève, subjecting Charles to long-unaccustomed labours at the
+oar. In the same way they introduced them to Dixcart Bay, and
+Derrible, and Grêve de la Ville; and, choosing a fit day, they
+circumnavigated the island again in three boat-loads, landing for
+lunch on an even keel on Brenière, and penetrating into every
+accessible cave they came to,--Mrs. Pixley enjoying the wonders in
+fear and trembling, and breathing freely only when they were safely
+out in the open once more. And Graeme and Margaret watched the
+approximating of Hennie Penny and Charles with infinite delight. It
+needed only a full understanding between these two to complete their
+own great happiness.
+
+But the dark cloud was there, though they might refuse to look at it,
+and clouds below the horizon have a way of rising, especially dark
+ones.
+
+The post-office in Sark is a cottage, or the part of a cottage, turned
+from private to public use. In former times the service was of a very
+perfunctory character, Providence largely taking the place of
+post-master while that official attended first to his fishing and then
+to his duties, and any who had good and valid reason to expect a
+letter came down to the mail-bag where it lay on the beach and went
+through it for themselves.
+
+The advent of visitors accustomed to more exact and business-like
+methods, however, has done away with this Arcadian simplicity, and now
+each day when the boat is in, all who prefer not to wait for the tardy
+delivery at their own houses, collect gradually round the official
+cottage, and in due course, and after the exercise of virtues, receive
+their mail across the counter. And some tear their letters open at
+once, regardless of spectators, and devour them on the spot, but the
+wiser carry them home for private consumption. For one never knows for
+certain what of heartbreak and disaster the most innocent-looking
+envelope may contain.
+
+Graeme and Margaret and Miss Penny, however, being in retreat, and
+having cut the painter with the outside world, had not cultivated the
+post-office until Charles and Lady Elspeth arrived. But, as Charles
+had to keep more or less in touch with Throgmorton Street, they had
+now got into the habit of calling with him for his letters, except
+when the doing so interfered with the programme for the day. And many
+an amusing, and sometimes touching, insight did they get there into
+human nature. Graeme said it was worth while the trouble of going,
+just to sit in the hedge opposite and watch people's faces, especially
+the faces of those who tore open their letters and those who got none.
+
+They were sitting so in the hedge one morning, quietly watching and
+commenting silently, and by looks only, on the vagaries of the
+letter-scramblers, and Charles had pushed into the crowded little room
+to antedate the delivery by a few minutes if possible.
+
+As he came out, with his letters in his hand, they all saw at a glance
+that something had happened. His face, which had been gradually
+relaxing to its old look of jovial good-fellowship and satisfaction
+with the world, was tight and hard, and yet they saw that he had not
+opened a letter. He turned up the road with a mere jerk of the head,
+and they followed wondering, and all, as it came out afterwards, with
+the same dim idea as to the possible cause of his upsetting.
+
+He handed Margaret a couple of letters for Lady Elspeth, and made an
+attempt at conversation as they went along, but the cloud they had
+been keeping out of sight was visible now to all of them. Among the
+unopened letters in his hand was one which disturbed him even before
+he knew what was in it, and they could only wait, with troubled minds,
+for developments.
+
+Charles went straight to his room, as he usually did when business
+matters claimed his attention, and from the look on his face Graeme
+judged that the scramble, fixed for that day on account of a specially
+low tide, round the Autelets, whose rock-pools and phosphorescent
+seaweeds and beds of flourishing anemones were a perpetual delight,
+would be off for the time being at all events.
+
+But Pixley came down presently and intimated that he was ready, and
+they trooped away, leaving the elders at home for a day's rest, since
+rock-scrambling was outside their limits.
+
+Their progress, however, was not the usual light-hearted saunter
+enlivened by merry jokes and laughter. The lanes were fragrant as
+ever, the air was full of larks and sunshine, but the cloud had risen
+and overshadowed them, and Graeme guessed why Charles had come. There
+was something he wanted to discuss with them alone, out of the hearing
+of his mother and Lady Elspeth.
+
+He was not surprised--when they had scrambled down into Port du
+Moulin, and had passed through the arch, and were sitting on the rocks
+above the first of the sea-gardens,--when Charles said, "There's
+something I want to consult you about, and I couldn't do it at the
+house, as I want it kept to ourselves. I got this, this morning. Will
+you read it?" and he handed Graeme a letter. Graeme opened it and read
+it out.
+
+
+ "99A HIGH STREET, ALDERNEY.
+
+ "MY DEAR CHARLES,--I will not at the moment attempt any
+ explanation of the calamity which has befallen our house. If you
+ knew all, you would not blame me as I fear you must be doing. Let
+ me say, however, that I have every reason to hope that in course
+ of time I may be able to redeem the position by making good all
+ deficiencies and so clearing our name of reproach. To do so, I
+ must get away--to Spain in the first instance, and for that I
+ need your assistance. The end came unexpectedly and took me
+ unawares, and I am almost penniless here. In asking your help, I
+ do so the more confidently as, in the path I have indicated, lies
+ the only hope of redemption. In assisting me you will not only be
+ doing what a prosperous son might reasonably be expected to do
+ for his father in his day of misfortune, but you will be acting
+ for the general weal in putting me into a position to make good
+ what I have all unwittingly become responsible for, and to that
+ sacred end the remainder of my life shall be most solemnly
+ dedicated.
+
+ "I came here from Cherbourg, and am for the moment safe from
+ oversight. As soon as you place me in position to do so, I shall
+ get away and begin my new life-work, which I am earnestly
+ desirous of doing at the earliest possible moment.
+
+ "Address me as above--Revd. J. Peace.
+
+ "Your affectionate FATHER."
+
+Graeme kept the humorous wrinkles about his eyes and mouth in order
+with difficulty as he read this very characteristic effusion, but
+Margaret was the only one who saw it. Charles had kept his eyes
+intently on the pool below, and Miss Penny had been regarding him
+sympathetically.
+
+"What do you make of it?" said Charles. "It makes me sick."
+
+"He evidently needs your help," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Yes, but have I the right to give it him? That's the question."
+
+"He says----" began Graeme.
+
+"Oh, he says!" growled Charles. "Trouble is, he's been saying for the
+last twenty years, and it has all been a lie. This is probably all a
+lie too. Not all"--he added grimly. "As I read it, he has got funds
+stowed away somewhere and he's anxious to get to them."
+
+"So that he may make restitution," urged Miss Penny.
+
+"Yes, that's what he says," said Charles, in a tone that showed no
+slightest tincture of conviction. "What would you do," he asked,
+looking up at Graeme, "if you were in my place?"
+
+Graeme filled his pipe thoughtfully.
+
+"Let us look at it quietly all round," he said, and lit up and puffed
+away contemplatively.
+
+"From what he says,"--checking off his points on his fingers,--"if you
+don't assist him, he may be taken, and the--the unpleasantness of the
+situation be thereby increased.... I do not see that his punishment
+would help anyone--except maybe as a deterrent, and that is
+problematical.... I gather from this, as you do, that he has funds
+awaiting him somewhere.... You have no great faith in his promises--"
+
+"None," growled Charles.
+
+"And I presume, as a business man, you would count a bird in the hand
+worth several in the bush--in other words, you would sooner have what
+he has stowed away--somewhere, than what he hopes to make some time--"
+
+"Sight sooner!"
+
+"Then, I should say, offer him such assistance as he needs to get
+away, and, if you can see your way to it, a bit to live on afterwards,
+on condition of his placing in your hands everything he has got stowed
+away, so that you can pass it on to the receiver."
+
+Charles shook his head. "I couldn't trust him."
+
+"Then there's only one thing to do if he agrees, and that is to go
+with him and bring the property back with you."
+
+Charles groaned. "It may mean the Argentine. Spain's no place for
+investments these days."
+
+"It's rough on you, old man, but it's the best I can think of," said
+Graeme.
+
+"And supposing he tells me to go hang?"
+
+"Then," said Graeme, with a shrug, "I don't see that you can help him.
+I have no personal feeling against him whatever, but I cannot see how
+you can help him except on some such lines as I've indicated. How does
+it strike you, Meg?"
+
+But Margaret shook her head. "I feel very much as you do. If he is
+caught and punished it will only add to Mrs. Pixley's and Charles's
+trouble, and benefit nobody. But he is very obstinate. He has
+evidently planned out his future. I doubt if he'll turn from it."
+
+"And you, Hennie?" asked Graeme.
+
+"I think you should help him if you possibly can. It's horrible to
+think of him hiding there and in fear of being caught--"
+
+"Helping him in any case is against the law--"
+
+"Blood is thicker than water," said Hennie Penny earnestly.
+
+"--But if some present benefit was to come to his creditors I should
+consider it right to do it, not otherwise."
+
+"Suppose you go across, and see him, and talk it over with him, Mr.
+Pixley?" said Hennie Penny.
+
+"I suppose that's the only thing to be done," groaned Charles. "How do
+you get there?"
+
+"The _Courier_ would call here by arrangement--up at the Eperquerie,"
+said Graeme. "She can't come in, of course. It means lying out in a
+small boat and waiting for her. What do you say to us all going? In
+fact, unless we do, how are we going to explain Charles's going to
+Mrs. Pixley?"
+
+Charles nodded.
+
+"You could go and see him and we could talk it over again afterwards.
+I'm inclined to think that he won't accept, you know."
+
+"I don't believe he will, and it'll be a bit hard to refuse him any
+help, if he really is on his beam ends."
+
+"He wouldn't have written to you if he could have done without, you
+may count upon that."
+
+"Is he as safe there as he seems to think?" asked Charles.
+
+"Yes, I think so. Safer probably than in Cherbourg. It's an
+out-of-the-way place, from all accounts."
+
+Discuss it as they would, they could not get beyond Graeme's proposal,
+and so at last they went back home, decided on the visit to Alderney
+on the morrow, but all feeling doubtful, and some of them distinctly
+nervous, as to the outcome of it.
+
+
+IX
+
+The little party that lay in wait for the Alderney steamer in old Jack
+Guille's boat off the Eperquerie, next morning, was eminently lacking
+in the vivacity that usually distinguishes such parties when the sea
+is smooth and the sky is blue. In fact, when they got on board, the
+Captain decided in his own mind that they must all have quarrelled
+before starting. There was no sign of anything of the kind about them
+now, it is true, but that might just be their good manners. For
+English people are not like the Sark and Guernsey folk, who, when they
+do quarrel, let all the world know about it.
+
+These four had apparently little to say to one another and less to
+anyone else. If they had been going to a funeral they could hardly
+have been more reserved.
+
+And to something very like a funeral they were going, with the added
+anxiety of very grave doubts as to the result of their visit.
+
+They had had no difficulty in persuading the elder ladies that
+Alderney was not for them. The steep path down to the Eperquerie
+landing, and the tumbling about in a small boat until the steamer
+came, did not greatly appeal to them. Moreover, Lady Elspeth's clear
+eyes had noticed the signs of their clouding, in spite of their
+efforts after naturalness, for to experienced eyes there is nothing so
+unnatural as the attempt to be natural. If Mrs. Pixley noticed nothing
+it was probably because her faculties had not yet fully recovered from
+the shock to which they had been subjected. If she noticed she said
+nothing, having no desire, perhaps, to add to the weight of her
+already heavy burden.
+
+"Now, my boy, what is it?" Lady Elspeth asked, when she had persuaded
+Graeme to take her for a stroll in the evening, under plea of cramp
+through overmuch sitting.
+
+"Jeremiah Pixley is in Alderney and has written to Charles begging his
+help to get on his way."
+
+"Ah! And what are you going to do about it?".
+
+Graeme outlined their ideas on the matter.
+
+"He's an old rascal," said Lady Elspeth softly. "I doubt very much if
+you'll get anything out of him."
+
+"Can you suggest any better way of dealing with the matter?"
+
+"I don't know that I can at the moment, but I doubt if you'll get any
+satisfaction out of him. He'll stick to all he can, and his promise of
+restitution is all bunkum, I should fear."
+
+"And would you help him to get away in any case?"
+
+"Personally, I think a course of penal servitude would be of the
+greatest service to him. But, for Charles's sake and his mother's, the
+sooner the whole matter is buried the better, and so I should be sorry
+to hear of him being taken. It would only revive the scandal."
+
+"That's just what we all feel;" and he saw that the problem of
+Jeremiah Pixley was too much even for Lady Elspeth.
+
+And so the party of four on the _Courier_ lacked vivacity, and found
+no enjoyment in the lonely austerity of the Casquets or Ortach; and
+the frowning southern cliffs of Alderney itself, as the steamer raced
+up the Swinge to Braye Harbour, seemed to them but a poor copy of
+their own little isle of Sark, lacking its gem-like qualities. But
+then their minds were intent upon the business ahead and their outlook
+was darkened.
+
+
+X
+
+"Would you like me to come up with you, Charles?" Graeme asked, as the
+steamer rounded the breakwater.
+
+"Yes, I'd like it," said Charles gloomily. "But I think I'd better go
+alone. I don't believe anything's going to come of it."
+
+"I'm afraid not--as far as we're concerned. You'll just have to keep a
+stiff upper lip and stick to what you believe the right thing to do."
+To which Charles replied only with a grim nod, and they went ashore.
+
+"We'll walk up to the town with you," said Graeme, when they got
+outside the harbour precincts. "When you've got as far as you can with
+him, come down to the shore due West. You'll find us by that old fort
+we saw from the boat;" and presently they branched off towards the
+sea, while Charles went doggedly on into St. Anne on as miserable an
+errand as ever son had.
+
+He tramped on along the hot white road, till he found himself in the
+sleepy little town, where the grass grew between the granite sets in
+the roadways and a dreamy listlessness pervaded all things. He sought
+out No. 99A High Street and knocked on the door.
+
+It was opened by an elderly woman who seemed surprised at sight of a
+visitor.
+
+"Mr. Peace?" asked Charles, feeling thereby _particeps criminis_.
+
+"He's inside. Will you come in?"
+
+She opened a door off the passage, said, "A gentleman to see you;" and
+Charles went in and closed the door behind him.
+
+His father had started up from a couch where he had been lying. There
+was a startled look in his eyes and his face was pale and worn, but a
+touch of colour came back into his cheeks when he saw who his visitor
+was.
+
+He had shaved off his bit of side whisker. His face was grayer and
+thinner and his body somewhat shrunken, even in these few days. He
+wore a white tie, and his coat and waistcoat were of clerical cut. On
+the table was a pair of gold spectacles and on the sideboard a soft
+billycock hat. He looked the not-too-well-off country parson to the
+life. The only outward and visible sign of the old Jeremiah was the
+heavy gold pince-nez which lay between the top buttons of his
+waistcoat, which he hauled out and fingered as of old the moment he
+began to speak.
+
+"Ah, Charles! This is good of you. I hardly expected a personal visit.
+I was beginning to fear you had not got my letter, or that you had
+decided not to answer it."
+
+"It followed me to Sark."
+
+"Ah! you are back in Sark?"
+
+"I thought it well to take my mother there, to be out of things for a
+time."
+
+"Quite so, quite so! That was very thoughtful of you. This is a
+terrible calamity that has befallen us. But, as I said in my letter, I
+have every hope of being able to redeem matters if I can only get to
+where that is possible."
+
+"Where's that?"
+
+"Well, in the first place to Spain--"
+
+"And afterwards?"
+
+Mr. Pixley hesitated. "Perhaps--for your own sake--it would be as well
+you should not know--for the present, at all events. You may be asked
+questions. If you don't know, you can truthfully say so."
+
+"I gather that you have funds put away somewhere."
+
+"If I can get to where I want to go, I can at all events make a fresh
+start. And I am prepared to devote the rest of my life to the one
+object I have named.... The last few years have been very wearying. I
+have had trouble with my heart at times;" and he put his hand to his
+side to emphasise it. "But if I can get quietly away I shall soon pull
+round and be ready for work again, now that the strain is over."
+
+"You know you're asking me to do what I've no right to do?" said
+Charles gloomily.
+
+"I know, my boy, and it is very bitter for me to have to ask it. But I
+can't get away without your help, and the alternative is not pleasant
+to think of--for either of us.... I do not ask more than I would
+willingly have done for you if the positions were reversed.... On the
+whole, I do not think I have been a bad father to you. Circumstances,
+indeed, have been too strong for me at the end, but--"
+
+"I am willing to do what you want--and more, on one condition."
+
+"What is that? Anything in reason--"
+
+"I will provide you with funds to get away, and I will send you three
+hundred pounds each year--"
+
+"Good lad!"
+
+"On condition that you hand over to me all the property you've got
+stowed away--"
+
+"Damn!"
+
+"So that I may hand it over to your creditors."
+
+"Why not write at once to Scotland Yard and tell them where I am? But,
+after all, I'm not sure that even your world would applaud so filial
+an act as that."
+
+"I'm prepared to make sacrifices myself to help right some of this
+wrong--"
+
+"I had to make many for you, my boy, before you were old enough to
+understand it--before my own position was assured. Ay, and since too.
+I would have flung it all up years ago but for you. I wanted you to be
+set firmly on your feet before the crash came. It has been killing
+work. I'm glad it's over--whatever the end may be. If you can't see
+your way to help me, the end is obvious and close at hand. I have, I
+think, something under two pounds in my pocket. If I'd waited to get
+more I should not be here. The end came unexpectedly. Old Coxley
+called for some securities which I had--which I couldn't give him at
+the moment, and I had to go at once or not at all."
+
+Charles stood up. He would have liked to tell him all he felt about
+the matter. How the tampering with securities hit him more hardly than
+almost anything could have done, since straight dealing in such
+matters is the very first of Stock Exchange tenets. How, if he had
+come to him, he would have strained himself to the utmost to set
+things right.
+
+But, facile talker as he was on matters that were of no account, he
+found himself strangely tongue-tied here.
+
+"Well?" he asked. "Will you let me help you?"
+
+"As you will, my boy ... If you do, it offers me a chance--my only
+chance. If you don't----" he shrugged his heavy shoulders meaningly.
+
+"Do what I ask," urged Charles. "It is the only possible amends you
+can make."
+
+Mr. Pixley shook his head. "It is out of the question. I could do
+nothing with three hundred a year----"
+
+"You could live quietly on that in many places."
+
+"I don't want simply to live. I want to work and redeem myself."
+
+"You have worked hard enough and long enough," said Charles; and he
+might have added, as was in his mind, "And it has all ended in this."
+
+"I would like to help you," he said, as he moved slowly towards the
+door, striving hard to keep the stiff upper lip Graeme had enjoined on
+him. "But I don't think you should expect me to do what I know to be
+wrong. I'll do what I said----"
+
+Mr. Pixley shook his head. His face was gray, his lips pinched in.
+Charles went out and closed the door behind him.
+
+But he could not leave him so. He had known from the first that he
+would have to help him, right or wrong.
+
+He opened the door again quietly and went in. His father was sitting
+at the table with his head in his hands. Charles laid down the money
+he had, with Graeme's assistance, prepared, laid his hand on his
+shoulder for a moment, and went quietly out again, and out of the
+house.
+
+It was a miserable business altogether. He never forgot that last
+sight of him sitting at the mean little table in the mean little room
+with his head in his hands.
+
+
+XI
+
+Charles went soberly down the green slopes towards the sea, and
+presently discovered the dismantled fort they had seen from the
+steamer as they ran up the Swinge that morning. And sitting on the
+broken wall of a gun platform was a figure which he knew by the dress
+to be Miss Penny.
+
+She had evidently been on the look-out for him. She stood up and waved
+her hand, and he waved his in reply, and plunged down the slope. His
+heart was sore at what had just passed. It turned gratefully to one
+whom he knew to be full of sympathy for him.
+
+When he reached the foot of the hill, they were crossing the causeway
+which led from the fort to the shore.
+
+"Well, old man, you've got through with it?" said Graeme; and all
+their faces showed the anxiety that was in them to know how he had
+prospered.
+
+He nodded. "Let's go back and sit there for a few minutes. I feel
+like a whipped dog;" and they all went back to the fort, which, in its
+dismantlement and ruin, whispered soothingly of the rest and peace
+that sometimes lie beyond broken hopes and strenuous times.
+
+"Well, how did you find him?" asked Graeme, as they seated themselves
+on the broken wall again, with the fair blue plain of the sea dimpling
+and dancing in front.
+
+"Very broken, but as obstinate as ever," said Charles gloomily.
+"Wouldn't listen to my proposal, says he's set on redeeming himself,
+and so on. I offered him all I could, but it was no use. So I left
+him--"
+
+"You never did--" began Miss Penny, with a pained look on her face.
+
+"I did. But I couldn't leave it so. I went back, and he was sitting
+with his head in his hands.... I just gave him all I had brought and
+came away.... I know it was all wrong--"
+
+"It wasn't. You did quite right," said Miss Penny vehemently.
+
+"I don't suppose any of us would have done differently when it came to
+the point. I don't really see what else you could have done," said
+Graeme.
+
+"He reminded me of all he had done for me when I was a boy, and so on,
+and told me that if I didn't help him there was no hope for him. I did
+my best--"
+
+"You have done quite right, Charles," said Margaret. "I do hope he
+will get away all right."
+
+As he gave them the details of his interview, their quiet sympathy
+restored him by degrees to himself. The bruised, whipped soreness wore
+off, to some extent at all events, and there remained chiefly a
+feeling of thankfulness that the matter was over, and that, in doing
+the only thing possible to him, if he offended against the law, he had
+still done what commended itself to his own heart and to those whose
+good opinion he chiefly valued.
+
+If there were no signs of merriment about them as they wandered
+quietly about the strand, if they still bore something of the aspect
+of a funeral party, it was at all events the aspect of a party after
+the funeral. Their corpse was laid, so far as they were concerned, and
+their thoughts and hearts were more at liberty to turn to other
+matters.
+
+They have none of them ever cared greatly for Alderney, and they
+always speak of it as a remote, unfriendly, melancholy, and slow
+little place, lacking the gem-like beauty and joyous vitality of Sark.
+But then one's outlook is always coloured by one's inlook, and an
+overcast mind sees all things shadowed.
+
+They lunched at the Scott Hotel, in the garden, and felt better than
+they had done for two days when their feet once more trod the deck of
+the _Courier_.
+
+The southern cliffs were filmy blue in the distance, Ortach and the
+Casquets were dim against the horizon, and Charles and Miss Penny
+stood together in the stern looking back over the long straight track
+of the boat, and thinking both of the lonely one in the mean little
+house in St. Anne. Margaret and Graeme had stood watching for a time,
+and had then stolen away forward. Their outlook was ahead, where Sark
+was rising boldly out of the blue waters.
+
+"I doubt if we'll ever hear anything more of him," said Charles, with
+a sigh at thought of it all.
+
+"You will always remember that you have done your duty by him. You
+could not have done more."
+
+"You have been very kind to me all through, very kind, all of you. And
+you especially.... Hennie--will you marry me?"
+
+And she looked up at him with a happy face, and said quietly, "Yes, I
+will. I believe we can make one another very happy."
+
+"I'm sure we can. Come along and tell the others;" and they also
+turned from the past and went forward.
+
+
+
+
+WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+Hearts in Exile._
+
+With Photogravure Frontispiece by HAROLD COPPING. THIRD EDITION. Crown
+8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"Exceptionally powerful, vivid, and realistic.... Sketched with a
+generous hand and bold touches, the characters hold trie reader's
+sympathies throughout. The most graphic, vigorous, and lifelike
+presentment of Russian administrative barbarity which we recollect to
+have ever come across."--_Daily Telegraph_.
+
+
+
+A Princess of Vascovy.
+
+Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"Mr. Oxenham tells a good exciting story with great swing and zest. It
+seems almost unnecessary to recommend a story that is in every way
+worthy of the pen that produced 'Barbe of Grand Bayou.' 'A Princess of
+Vascovy' is just as picturesquely romantic and just as full of
+incident and adventure as Mr. Oxenham's most famous
+work."--_Athenaum_.
+
+
+
+White Fire.
+
+Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.
+
+"'White Fire' combines religion and adventure; but the date is modern,
+and the admirable missionary and his undaunted wife and comrades
+protect their converts in the South Seas from kidnappers and other
+pests with the aid of Maxims and Winchester rifles. Mr. John Oxenham
+has already proved his descriptive and analytic powers, and these
+strong-hearted champions of morality are not less original than their
+surroundings are romantic. A tidal wave is among the trials of the
+hero's constancy. The illustrations by Mr. Grenville Manton are
+good."--_Athenaum_.
+
+
+
+Barbe of Grand Bayou.
+
+Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.
+
+"There is a fascination about Mr. John Oxenham's books which grows
+upon one. Barbe is a clean-cut, fine drawn character, human, alive,
+womanly, real. Her history is so simply related, with such convincing
+straightforwardness that one is bound to admit it could not have
+happened otherwise. It had to be. The tribulations of the pair of
+lovers are delightfully set forth with the art of the true story
+teller. Quite one of the best books of the winter season; worth buying
+and reading; not merely ordering from the library."--_Academy_.
+
+
+
+Giant Circumstance.
+
+Illustrated by CHARLES HORRELL.
+
+THIRD EDITION. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"A hearty and manly book, written in telling style of which Mr.
+Oxenham has proved himself a master."--_Times_.
+
+"Told in Mr. Oxenham's usual spirited and vivid style. Those who
+relish a good story well told will welcome 'Giant Circumstance,' and
+will set it on a level with the best of Mr. Oxenham's
+books."--_British Weekly._
+
+"A good story--should prove popular."--_Athenæum_.
+
+"Bright, healthy, and interesting, will strengthen his position in the
+regard of readers who like a good story of the doings of wholesome
+unexaggerated characters."--_Daily Telegraph_.
+
+
+
+Rising Fortunes.
+
+Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+
+
+Carette of Sark.
+
+Illustrated. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"All who either know the Channel Islands or love a full-blooded,
+exciting story, should speedily make the acquaintance of
+Carette."--_Pall Mall Gazette_.
+
+"No one who likes tales of adventure--and who does not--could wish for
+a better tale than this. It is of Sark, in the beginning of last
+century, when its people were peaceable and law-abiding, save on the
+question of 'free trade' and when privateering was a legitimate
+business; so naturally adventurers were more easily come by than in
+conventional days like these. The youth who tells the tale, one Philip
+Carré by name, comes by them all too easily for his liking. He is
+scarcely out of one peril before he is into another, and quite
+split-hairbreadth are his escapes from the Terrible Torode of Herm.
+And it is all on account of Carette, charming Carette, the pride of
+the island, and worth many dangers to win."--_Daily Chronicle_.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearl of Pearl Island, by John Oxenham
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearl of Pearl Island, by John Oxenham
+
+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: Pearl of Pearl Island
+
+Author: John Oxenham
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2005 [EBook #15259]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Steven Gibbs and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND</h1>
+
+ <h2>BY JOHN OXENHAM</h2>
+
+ <h5>WITH SIXTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN SPECIALLY
+ FOR THIS BOOK</h5>
+
+ <h5>HODDER AND STOUGHTON<br />
+ PUBLISHERS LONDON<br />
+ <br />
+ 1908</h5>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h4>TO MY WIFE</h4>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a> <img src=
+ "images/frontispiece.jpg" width="296" height="427" alt=
+ "Frontispiece (untitled)" title="Frontispiece (untitled)" />
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+
+ <p><a href="#ILLUSTRATIONS"><b>ILLUSTRATIONS</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#PEARL_OF_THE_PEARL_OF_THE_SILVER_SEA"><b>PEARL OF THE
+ PEARL OF THE SILVER SEA!</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#PART_THE_FIRST"><b>PART THE
+ FIRST</b></a>&mdash;PEARL<br />
+ <a href="#PART_THE_SECOND"><b>PART THE SECOND</b></a>&mdash;LOST
+ PEARL<br />
+ <a href="#PART_THE_THIRD"><b>PART THE THIRD</b></a>&mdash;PEARL
+ ISLAND<br />
+ <a href="#PART_THE_FOURTH"><b>PART THE FOURTH</b></a>&mdash;PEARL
+ OF PEARL ISLAND<br />
+ <a href="#PART_THE_FIFTH"><b>PART THE FIFTH</b></a>&mdash;PEARL
+ IN A RING<br />
+ <a href="#PART_THE_SIXTH"><b>PART THE SIXTH</b></a>&mdash;SMALLER
+ PEARLS<br />
+ <a href="#WORKS_BY_THE_SAME_AUTHOR"><b>WORKS BY THE SAME
+ AUTHOR</b></a><br /></p><!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id=
+ "ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+ <p><b><a href="#frontispiece">Frontispiece
+ (untitled)</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp001">THE CONVANCHE CAVERN</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp055">HAVRE GOSSELIN LADDERS</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp076">IN LITTLE SARK</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp101">THE GAP IN THE HEDGE</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp112">IN THE FRESHNESS OF THE MORNING</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp129">THE SOUFFLEUR</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp147">IN DERRIBLE BAY</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp149">THE ROCK BEHIND TINTAGEU</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp151">IN THE WINDOW-SEAT</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp177">SARK CLIFFS, FROM BEL&Ecirc;ME</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp187">THE SEIGNEURIE GARDEN</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp197">IN GRANDE GR&Egrave;VE</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp221">THE HARBOUR</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp239">IN THE GLOAMING</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp285">ROUND THE ISLAND</a></b><br />
+ <b><a href="#fp289">UNDER THE AUTELETS</a></b><br /></p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PEARL_OF_THE_PEARL_OF_THE_SILVER_SEA" id=
+ "PEARL_OF_THE_PEARL_OF_THE_SILVER_SEA"></a>PEARL OF THE PEARL OF
+ THE SILVER SEA!</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>PEARL Iridescent! Pearl of the sea!<br /></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>Shimmering, glimmering Pearl of the sea!<br /></span>
+ <span class="i2">White in the sun-flecked silver
+ sea,<br /></span> <span class="i2">White in the moon-decked
+ silver sea,<br /></span> <span class="i2">White in the wrath
+ of the silver sea,&mdash;<br /></span> <span>Pearl of the
+ Silver Sea!<br /></span> <span class="i2">Lapped in the smile
+ of the Silver Sea,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Ringed in
+ the foam of the Silver Sea,<br /></span> <span class=
+ "i2">Glamoured in mists of the Silver
+ Sea,&mdash;<br /></span> <span>Pearl of the Silver
+ Sea!<br /></span> <span class="i2">Glancing and glimmering
+ under the sun,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Jewel and casket
+ all in one,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Joy supreme of the
+ sun's day-dream,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Soft in the
+ gleam of the golden beam,&mdash;<br /></span> <span>Pearl of
+ the Silver Sea!<br /></span> <span class="i2">Splendour of
+ Hope in the rising sun,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Glory
+ of Love in the noonday sun,<br /></span> <span class=
+ "i2">Wonder of Faith in the setting sun,&mdash;<br /></span>
+ <span>Pearl of the Silver Sea!<br /></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">Gaunt and grim to the outer
+ world,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Jewel and casket all
+ impearled<br /></span> <span class="i2">With the kiss of the
+ Silver Sea!&mdash;<br /></span> <span class="i2">With the
+ flying kiss of the Silver Sea,<br /></span> <span class=
+ "i2">With the long sweet kiss of the Silver Sea,<br /></span>
+ <span class="i2">With the rainbow kiss of the Silver
+ Sea,&mdash;<br /></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>Pearl of the Silver Sea!<br /></span> <span class=
+ "i2">And oh the sight,&mdash;the wonderful
+ sight,<br /></span> <span class="i2">When calm and white, in
+ the mystic light,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Of her
+ quivering pathway, broad and bright,<br /></span>
+ <span class="i2">The Queen of the Night, in silver
+ dight,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Sails over the Silver
+ Sea!<br /></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>Wherever I go, and wherever I be,<br /></span>
+ <span>The joy and the longing are there with
+ me,&mdash;<br /></span> <span>The gleam And the glamour come
+ back to me,&mdash;<br /></span> <span>In a mystical rapture
+ there comes to me,<br /></span> <span>The call of the Silver
+ Sea!<br /></span> <span>As needle to pole is my heart to
+ thee,<br /></span> <span>Pearl of the Silver
+ Sea!<br /></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>Pearl of the Pearl of the Silver Sea!<br /></span>
+ <span>To some you are Margaret, but to me,<br /></span>
+ <span>Always and ever, wherever I be,<br /></span> <span>You
+ are Pearl of the Pearl of the Silver Sea!<br /></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>J.C.G.<br /></span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp001" id="fp001"></a> <img src="images/fp001.jpg"
+ width="327" height="559" alt="THE CONVANCHE CAVERN" title=
+ "THE CONVANCHE CAVERN" /> <h5>THE CONVANCHE CAVERN</h5>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PART_THE_FIRST" id="PART_THE_FIRST"></a>PART THE
+ FIRST</h2>
+
+ <h4>I</h4>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>NOTE.&mdash;<i>It would be impossible to depict the Sark of
+ to-day without using the names native to the Island. All such
+ names here employed, however, are used without any reference
+ whatever to any actual persons who may happen to bear similar
+ names in Sark. The characters are to be taken as types. The
+ incidents are in many cases fact.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>If you want murders, mysteries, or mud&mdash;pass on! This is
+ a simple, straightforward love-story.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jock, my lad," said Lady Elspeth softly, nodding her head
+ very many times, in that very knowing way of hers which made her
+ look like a Lord Chief Justice and a Fairy Godmother all in one,
+ "I've found you out."</p>
+
+ <p>And when the shrewd old soul of her looked him gently through
+ and through in that fashion, he knew very much better than to
+ attempt any evasion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" he said meekly, "I was afraid someone would, sooner or
+ later. I've been living in constant dread of it. But it's
+ happened before, you know, between you and me. What is it this
+ time, dear Lady Elspeth?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Here have I been imputing grace to you for your kindly
+ attentions to a poor old woman whose race is nearly run, and
+ setting you up above the rest of them therefor, and lo, my
+ idol&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" he said again, with a reproving wag of the head, for he
+ knew now what was coming,&mdash;"idols are perverse, camstairy
+ things at best, you know, and a bit out of date too. And,
+ besides,"&mdash;with a touch of remonstrance&mdash;"at your age
+ and with your bringing-up&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, ay, ye may be as insulting as ye choose, my laddie, and
+ fling my age and my upbringing in my face like a very
+ man&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There isn't a face like it in all England, and as
+ to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I prefer ye to say Britain, as I've told ye before. Your bit
+ England is only a portion of the kingdom, and in very many
+ respects the poorest portion, notably in brains and manners and
+ beauty. But ye cannot draw me off like that, my laddie, whether
+ it's meant for a compliment or no. I was just about telling you
+ you were a fraud&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You hadn't got quite that length, you know,
+ but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Will I prove it to you? Haven't you been coming here as
+ regular as the milkman for a month past&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, come now!&mdash;Only once a day. I've an idea milkie
+ comes twice, and besides&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And what did ye come for, my lad?" with an emphatic nod and a
+ menacing shake of the frail white hand, pricelessly jewelled
+ above, comfortably black-silk-mittened below. "Tell me that now!
+ What did ye come for?"</p>
+
+ <p>"To see the dearest old lady in England&mdash;Britain, I mean.
+ And&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes?&mdash;And?&mdash;" and she watched him, with her head a
+ little on one side and her eyes shining brightly, like an
+ expectant motherly robin hopping on treasure trove.</p>
+
+ <p>He smiled back at her and said nothing. He knew she knew
+ without his telling.</p>
+
+ <p>"And so I was only second fiddle&mdash;" she began, with an
+ assumption of scornful irascibility which became her less than
+ her very oldest cap.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, dear me, no! Leader of the orchestra!&mdash;Proprietor of
+ the house!&mdash;Sole director and manager and&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Tuts! It was Margaret Brandt you came to see," and the
+ twinkling brown eyes held the merry gray ones with a steady
+ challenge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Partly,&mdash;and I was just about to say so when you
+ interrupted me&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay! Were you now? Ye can out with things quick enough at
+ times, my laddie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, you see, there are some things one does not speak about
+ until one feels one has an absolute right to."</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd have told your mother, Jock."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps, I'm not sure,&mdash;not yet&mdash;not, at all
+ events, until&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And wasn't I to take her place when she left you all
+ alone?"</p>
+
+ <p>"And so you have. You're just the dearest and sweetest
+ old&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Second fiddle! Come away and we'll talk of Margaret, since
+ that's all you come for."</p>
+
+ <p>"And isn't she worth coming for? Did you ever in all your life
+ see anything more wonderful than Margaret Brandt?"</p>
+
+ <p>And she looked at him for half a minute with a twinkle in the
+ shrewd old eyes, which had surely seen many strange and wonderful
+ things since the first wonders passed and gave place to the
+ common things of life. Beautiful eyes they were still,&mdash;of a
+ very tender brown, and shining always with kindly feeling and
+ deepest interest in the person she was talking to.</p>
+
+ <p>I do not know how it may be with you, but, personally, I
+ detest people whose eyes and thoughts go wandering away over your
+ left shoulder while you are talking with them. It may be, of
+ course, that you are not much of a talker and are simply boring
+ them, but, all the same, mental squinters are not to my
+ liking.</p>
+
+ <p>But Lady Elspeth was never bored&mdash;visibly, at all events,
+ and while you talked with her you were the one person in the
+ world in whom she was interested.</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret's eyes had something of the same in them, but they
+ were very deep blue, and there was in them just that touch of
+ maidenly reserve which best becomes a maiden's eyes, until, to
+ one at all events, she may lay it aside and let her heart shine
+ through.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Elspeth looked at him, then, for half a minute, with a
+ starry twinkle, and then said, with a finality of conviction that
+ made her dearer to him than ever&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Never!" and he kissed her hand with fervour,&mdash;and not
+ ungracefully, since the action, though foreign to him, was
+ absolutely spontaneous.</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;!" she said firmly. And he sat up.</p>
+
+ <p>"But me no buts," he said. "And why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, you see, Margaret is by way of being an
+ heiress&mdash;and you are not."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry. But, you see, I couldn't very well be if I tried.
+ Still I'm not absolutely penniless, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Tuts, boy! What you have is just about enough to pay Jeremiah
+ Pixley's servants' wages."</p>
+
+ <p>"D-hang Jeremiah Pixley!"</p>
+
+ <p>"D-hang is not a nice expression to use before a lady, let me
+ tell you. What you have, as, I was saying, is just enough to make
+ or mar you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's going to make me. I can live on it till things begin to
+ come my way."</p>
+
+ <p>"Everyone writes nowadays," she said, with a dubious shake of
+ the head. "Who reads all the books passes my comprehension. I
+ suppose you have all just to buy one another's to make a bit of a
+ living out of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Like those washing people! But it's not quite as bad as all
+ that. There are still some intelligent people who buy
+ books&mdash;good books, of course, I mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not many, I'm afraid. They read reviews and chatter as though
+ they'd read the books. And if they really want to read them they
+ get them out of a library. You don't see bought books lying on
+ the tables, as you used to do when I was a girl, and they were
+ scarcer and dearer. How is this last one going?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have reason to believe my publishers are not absolutely
+ broken-hearted over it, which leads me to think that they have
+ probably done pretty well out of it. They are not what you might
+ call a gushing race, you know, but they have given me a kind of
+ cautious half-hint that they might not refuse to look at my next
+ if I offered it to them on my bended knees. But let us get back
+ to our&mdash;to Miss Brandt. I had no idea she was an heiress. I
+ have really never thought of money in the matter, except as to
+ how I could earn enough to offer it to her."</p>
+
+ <p>"She has a fair portion&mdash;about two thousand a year, I
+ believe. Her father was Danish Consul in Glasgow, and had a
+ shipping business there. I should not be surprised if Mr. Pixley
+ had views of his own concerning Margaret's portion and his
+ son&mdash;and of course Margaret herself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you permit me to say, 'Hang Mr. Pixley!' dear Lady
+ Elspeth? It would be such a relief&mdash;if you're sure you don't
+ mind."</p>
+
+ <p>"You may say 'Hang Mr. Pixley!' though it is not an expression
+ I am in the habit of using myself. But please don't begin it with
+ a D."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hang Mr. Pixley, and Mr. Pixley's son, and all his
+ intentions!" he said fervently and with visible relish.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," she nodded slowly, as though savouring it; and then
+ added, with a delicious twinkle of the soft brown eyes, "There is
+ something in that that appeals to me. Jeremiah Pixley is almost
+ too good for this world. At least&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"He is absolutely unwholesomely good. My own private opinion
+ is that he's a disreputable old blackg&mdash;I mean whited
+ sepulchre."</p>
+
+ <p>"Unwholesomely good!" She nodded again. "Yes,&mdash;that, I
+ think, very fairly expresses him. 'Unco' guid,' we would say up
+ north. But, all the same, he is Margaret's uncle and guardian and
+ trustee. He is also the kind of man whom nothing can turn from a
+ line he has once adopted."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know. Pigheaded as a War-Office-mule," he side-tracked
+ hastily.</p>
+
+ <p>For she had looked at him with a momentary bristle of enquiry
+ in the gentle brown eyes, and he remembered, just in time, that
+ her husband had once held the reins in Pall Mall for half a year,
+ when, feeling atrophy creeping on, he resigned office and died
+ three months later.</p>
+
+ <p>He hastened to add,&mdash;"The ordinary Army-mule, you know,
+ is specially constructed with a cast-iron mouth, and a neck of
+ granite, and a disposition like&mdash;like Mr. Pixley's. I
+ imagine Mr. Pixley can be excessively unpleasant when he tries.
+ To me he is excessively unpleasant even to think of, and without
+ any exertion whatever on his part."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. Mrs. Pixley would rather convey that impression. She is
+ always depressed and apprehensive-looking. But she is very fond
+ of Margaret, and that no doubt is why&mdash;But I suppose she
+ really has no choice in the matter, until she comes of
+ age&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Pixley?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Until Margaret comes into her own she is no doubt obliged to
+ submit to her guardian's views. It is difficult to imagine anyone
+ not a Pixley living in the Pixley atmosphere of their own free
+ will. What is the son like? I have only seen him once or twice.
+ Does he take after his father?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's about twice as tall, and several times as wide in some
+ respects, I should say,&mdash;certainly in the matter of the
+ enjoyment of life. He's not bad-looking&mdash;in a kind of a way,
+ you know,&mdash;that is, for those who like that kind of
+ looks,&mdash;a trifle fleshy perhaps. But he's a fair dancer, and
+ sings a song well, and can talk about nothing as nicely as any
+ man I ever met. It's an accomplishment I often envy."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wouldn't trouble about it, if I were you. There are things
+ more worth doing in the world. And that reminds me. We were
+ talking of your books. I've been wanting to tell you that your
+ love-scenes are not altogether to my liking. They are just a
+ little&mdash;well, not quite&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I know," he said sadly. "You see, I lack experience in
+ such things. Now, if Margaret&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't tell me you want to use her simply as a model," she
+ began, with another incipient gentle bristle.</p>
+
+ <p>"I want her as a model and a great many other things besides,
+ dear Lady Elspeth. I love Margaret Brandt with every atom of good
+ that is in me."</p>
+
+ <p>"And she?" with a nod and a sparkle.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! There now&mdash;that's what I don't know. She's not one
+ to wear her heart on her sleeve. At times I have dared to hope.
+ Then again I have feared&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is quite right. That is quite as it should be. Anything
+ more, so early as this, would imply unmaidenliness on her
+ part."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly? You mean it? You are, without exception, the most
+ charming old lady in the world! You relieve my mind immensely.
+ You see, she is always so sweet and charming. But then she could
+ not be anything else, and it may really mean nothing. Do you
+ really think I may hope?"</p>
+
+ <p>"'White-handed Hope, thou hovering angel, girt with golden
+ wings,'" she quoted, with a smile.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's Margaret," he murmured rapturously.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a poor kind of man that gives up hope until he lies in
+ his coffin, and even then&mdash;" and she nodded thoughtfully, as
+ though tempted to a descent into metaphysics.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let us talk of bridal wreaths. They are very much nicer to
+ think of than coffins when one is discussing Margaret
+ Brandt."</p>
+
+ <p>"She is very sweet and very beautiful&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There never was anyone like her in this world&mdash;unless it
+ was my mother and yourself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Let Margaret be first with you, my boy. That also is as it
+ should be. Neither your dear mother nor I stand in need of empty
+ compliments. Margaret Brandt is worthy any good man's whole
+ heart, and perhaps I can be of some help to you. But, all the
+ same, remember what I've said. You may be too late in the
+ field."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are just the splendidest old lady in the world," he said
+ exuberantly; and added, with a touch of gloom, "She was talking
+ of going off to the Riviera."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, then, I suppose I shall be in eclipse also, until she
+ returns."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no, you won't. We can talk of her, you know," at which
+ Lady Elspeth's eyes twinkled merrily.</p>
+
+ <p>"What would you say to convoying a troublesome old lady to the
+ Riviera, yourself, Jock?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You?" and he jumped up delightedly,&mdash;and just at that
+ point old Hamish opened the door of the cosy room, and
+ announced&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt, mem!"</p>
+
+ <h4>II</h4>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt, mem!" announced old Hamish, in as dry and
+ matter-of-fact a voice as though it were only, "Here's the
+ doctor, mem!" or "Dinner's ready, mem!" and Margaret herself came
+ in, rosy-faced and bright-eyed from the kiss of the wind
+ outside.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Elspeth laughed enjoyably at the sight of her, and
+ touched the bell for tea.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are always like a breath from the heather to me, my dear,
+ or a glimpse of Schiehallion," said she, as they kissed, and
+ Graeme stood reverently looking on, as at a holy rite.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, surely I'm not as rugged and wrinkled as all that!"
+ laughed Margaret. "And I certainly am not bald. How do you do,
+ Mr. Graeme?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There is no need to ask you that question, at any rate," he
+ said, with visible appreciation.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have loved Schiehallion all my life," said Lady Elspeth.
+ "To me there is no mountain in the world to compare with it. You
+ see how one's judgment is biassed by one's affections. And how is
+ Mrs. Pixley to-day, my dear?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She is much as usual, dear Lady Elspeth. She is never very
+ lively, you know. If anything, I think she is, perhaps, a trifle
+ less lively than usual just now."</p>
+
+ <p>"And Mr. Pixley is as busied in good works as ever, I
+ suppose."</p>
+
+ <p>"As busy as ever&mdash;outside,"&mdash;at which gentle thrust
+ the others smiled.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's all very well to laugh," remonstrated Margaret, "but
+ truly, you know, philanthropy, like charity, would be none the
+ less commendable to its relations if it sometimes remembered that
+ it had a home. I sometimes think that if ever there was a
+ deserving case it is poor Aunt Susan."</p>
+
+ <p>"And young Mr. Pixley? Doesn't he liven you up?" asked Lady
+ Elspeth. "He is very good company, I am told."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Charles is excellent company. If we didn't see him now
+ and again the house would be like a tomb. But he's not there all
+ the time, and we have relapses. He has his own rooms elsewhere,
+ you know. And I'm really not surprised. It taxes even him to
+ lighten the deadly dulness of Melgrave Square."</p>
+
+ <p>"It must be a great comfort to Mrs. Pixley to have you with
+ her, my dear."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can't make up for all she lacks in other directions," said
+ Margaret, with a shake of the head. "I get quite angry with Uncle
+ Jeremiah sometimes. He is so&mdash;so absorbed in benefiting
+ other people that he&mdash;Well, you can understand how
+ delightful it is to be able to run in here and find the sun
+ always shining."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, my dear," said Lady Elspeth, with a twinkle in the
+ brown eyes. "Some people carry their own sunshine with them
+ wherever they go."</p>
+
+ <p>"And some people decidedly don't," said Margaret, who was
+ evidently suffering from some unusual exhibition of
+ Pixleyism.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is generally possible to find a ray or so somewhere about,
+ if you know where to look for it," suggested Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"I was just accusing Jock of coming here as regularly as the
+ milkman," twinkled Lady Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"We have a community of tastes, you see," he said, looking
+ across at Margaret. "I also have a craving for sunshine, and I
+ naturally come where I know it is to be found," and Lady
+ Elspeth's eyes twinkled knowingly again.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a good conceit of myself I'll be getting, if you two go
+ on like this."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm quite sure you will never think half as well of yourself
+ as your friends do," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides, you might even pass some of the credit on to us for
+ the excellent taste we display."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, ay! Well, it's good to be young," said Lady Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"And it's very good to have delightful old sunbeams for
+ friends."</p>
+
+ <p>"To say nothing of the young ones," laughed the old lady.</p>
+
+ <p>"They speak for themselves."</p>
+
+ <p>"We are becoming quite a mutual admiration society," said
+ Margaret. "Have you been dining with your fellow Friars lately,
+ Mr. Graeme?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry to say I've been neglecting my privileges in that
+ respect. I haven't been there for an age&mdash;not since that
+ last Ladies' Dinner, in fact. You see, I'm an infant there yet,
+ and I scarcely know anybody, and I've been very busy&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Chasing sunbeams," suggested Lady Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"And other things."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are busy on another book?" asked Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just getting one under way. It takes a little time to get
+ things into proper shape, but once it is going, the work is very
+ absorbing and sheer delight. You were talking of going abroad
+ again. Are you still thinking of it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was hoping to get away. I wanted Aunt Susan to come with me
+ to the Riviera, but she flatly refuses to leave home at present,
+ so I'm afraid that's off."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, now, that's curious. I've been feeling something of an
+ inclination that way myself," said Lady Elspeth. "I wonder if
+ you'd feel like coming with me, Margaret. I don't believe we
+ would quarrel."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I would be delighted, dear Lady Elspeth, and I'll promise
+ not to quarrel whatever you do to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who ever heard of sunbeams quarrelling?" said Graeme gaily,
+ with Lady Elspeth's earlier suggestion to himself dancing in his
+ brain. "But think of London left utterly sunless."</p>
+
+ <p>"London will never miss us," said Margaret. "It still has
+ bridge, and we are neither of us players."</p>
+
+ <p>And then, having an appointment from which he could not
+ escape, and knowing that they always enjoyed a little personal
+ chat, he reluctantly took his leave, and left them to the
+ discussion of their new plans.</p>
+
+ <h4>III</h4>
+
+ <p>He had met Margaret Brandt for the first time at a Ladies'
+ Banquet of the Whitefriars Club.</p>
+
+ <p>Providence,&mdash;I insist upon this. No mere chance set them
+ next to one another at that hospitable board,&mdash;Providence,
+ forecasting the future, placed them side by side, and he was
+ introduced to her by his good friend Adam Black, who had the
+ privilege of her acquaintance and sat opposite enjoying them
+ greatly.</p>
+
+ <p>For they were both eminently good to look
+ upon;&mdash;Margaret, tall and slender, and of a most gracious
+ figure and bearing, with thoughtful, dark-blue eyes, a very
+ charming face accentuated by the characteristics of her northern
+ descent, and a wealth of shining brown hair coiled about her
+ shapely head;&mdash;Graeme, tall, clean-built, of an outdoor
+ complexion, with nothing of the student about him save his deep,
+ reflective eyes, and the little lines in the corners which
+ wrinkled up so readily at the overflowing humours of life.</p>
+
+ <p>It was Charles Pixley&mdash;Charles Svendt Pixley, to accord
+ him fullest justice, which I am most anxious to do&mdash;who
+ brought her, and to that extent we are his debtors.</p>
+
+ <p>Though why Pixley should be a Whitefriar passes one's
+ comprehension. His pretensions to literature were, I should say,
+ bounded by his Stock Exchange notebook and his betting-book. He
+ had not even read Graeme's latest, though it was genuinely in its
+ second&mdash;somewhat limited&mdash;edition, and he did not even
+ smile affably when Adam Black introduced them. Graeme, however,
+ had no fault to find with him for that. There were others in like
+ dismal case.</p>
+
+ <p>Pixley nodded cursorily at the introduction, with a
+ "How-d'ye-do-who-the-deuce-are-you?" expression on his face. He
+ struck Graeme as not bad-looking, in a somewhat over-fed and
+ self-indulgent fashion, and inclined to superciliousness and
+ self-complacency, if not to actual superiority and condescension.
+ It occurred to him afterwards that this might arise from his
+ absorption in his companion, for he turned again at once to Miss
+ Brandt and began chattering like a lively and intelligent
+ parrot.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme was one of the silent and observant ones, and he could
+ not but think how beneficent Nature is in casting us in many
+ moulds. If we were all built alike, he thought, and all dribbled
+ smart inanities, and nothing but inanities, with the glibness of
+ a Charles Pixley, what a world it would be!</p>
+
+ <p>However, it was Charles Pixley who brought Margaret Brandt to
+ that dinner, and Graeme sat on the other side of her there. And
+ so, Charles Svendt&mdash;blessings on thee, unworthy friar though
+ thou be!</p>
+
+ <p>And presently, Miss Brandt, wearying no doubt of <i>perdrix,
+ perdrix, toujours perdrix</i>,&mdash;that is to say of Charles's
+ sprightly chatter, of which she doubtless got more than enough at
+ home,&mdash;essayed conversation with the silent one at her other
+ side, and, one may suppose, found it more to her taste, or more
+ of a novelty, than the Pixley outflow.</p>
+
+ <p>For, once started, she and Graeme talked together most of the
+ evening&mdash;breaking off reluctantly to drink various toasts to
+ people in whom they had, at the moment, no remotest interest
+ whatever, and recovering the thread of their conversation before
+ they resumed their seats.</p>
+
+ <p>Only one toast really interested Graeme, and that was "The
+ Ladies&mdash;the Guests of the Evening"; and that he drank right
+ heartily, with his eyes on Miss Brandt's sparkling face, and if
+ it had been left to himself he would have converted it from
+ plural to singular and drunk to her alone.</p>
+
+ <p>Adam Black, excellent fellow, and gifted beyond most with
+ wisdom and insight, and the condensed milk of human kindness,
+ took upon himself the burden of Pixley, and engaged that eminent
+ financier so deeply in talk concerning matters of import, that
+ Miss Brandt and Graeme found themselves at liberty to enjoy one
+ another to their hearts' content.</p>
+
+ <p>They talked on many subjects&mdash;tentatively, and as
+ sounding novel depths&mdash;in a way that occasioned one of them,
+ at all events, very great surprise. Indeed, it seemed to him
+ afterwards that, for a silent and observant man, he had been led
+ into quite unwonted, but none the less very enjoyable, ways. He
+ went home that night feeling very much as Columbus must have done
+ when his New World swam before his eyes in misted glory. He too
+ had sighted a new world. He had discovered Margaret Brandt.</p>
+
+ <p>She had travelled widely over Europe, he learned, and was
+ looking forward with eagerness to another tour in the near
+ future. They discovered a common liking for many of the places
+ she had visited.</p>
+
+ <p>She was a wide and intelligent reader. To him it was a rare
+ pleasure to meet one.</p>
+
+ <p>"New places, and new books, and new people are always a joy to
+ me," she said, in a glow of na&iuml;ve enthusiasm. And then she
+ blushed slightly lest he should discover a personal application
+ in the last-named, or even in the last two.</p>
+
+ <p>But Graeme was thinking of her, and was formulating her
+ character from the delicious little bits of self-revelation which
+ slipped out every now and again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," he said, "new things are very enjoyable, and in these
+ times there is no lack of them. The tendency, I should say, is
+ towards superfluity. But new places&mdash;&mdash;! There are
+ surely not many left except the North Pole and the South.
+ Everybody goes everywhere nowadays, and you tumble over friends
+ in Damascus and find your tailor picnicking on the slopes of
+ Lebanon."</p>
+
+ <p>Now, as it chanced,&mdash;if you admit such a thing as chance
+ in so tangled a coil as this complex world of ours,&mdash;Adam
+ Black had just tucked Charles Pixley into a close little
+ argumentative corner, and given him food for contemplation, and
+ catching Graeme's last remark, he smiled across the table, and in
+ a word of four letters dropped a seed into several lives which
+ bore odd fruit and blossom.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ever been to Sark, Graeme?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sark? No. Let me see&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Channel Islands. You go across from Guernsey. If ever you
+ want relief from your fellows&mdash;to finish a book, or to start
+ one, or just to grizzle and find yourself&mdash;try Sark. It's
+ the most wonderful little place, and it's amazing how few people
+ know it."</p>
+
+ <p>Then Charles Pixley bethought him of a fresh line of argument,
+ and engaged Black, and was promptly shown the error of his ways;
+ and Margaret Brandt and Graeme resumed their discussion of places
+ and books and people. And before that evening ended, with such
+ affinity of tastes, their feet were fairly set in the rosy path
+ of friendship.</p>
+
+ <p>Now that is how it all began, and that explains what happened
+ afterwards when the right time came.</p>
+
+ <p>Chance, forsooth! We know better.</p>
+
+ <h4>IV</h4>
+
+ <p>Not long after that dinner, Lady Elspeth Gordon came up to
+ town for the first time after her husband's death.</p>
+
+ <p>She had been John Graeme's mother's closest friend, and when
+ he was left alone in the world, the dear old lady, before she had
+ fully recovered from her own sore loss, took upon herself a
+ friendly supervision of him and his small affairs, and their
+ intercourse was very delightful.</p>
+
+ <p>For Lady Elspeth knew everybody worth knowing, and all that
+ was to be known about the rest; and those gentle brown eyes of
+ hers had missed little of what had gone on around her since she
+ first came to London, fifty years before. She had known
+ Wellington, and Palmerston, and John Russell, and Disraeli, and
+ Gladstone, and Louis Napoleon, and Garibaldi, and many more. She
+ was a veritable golden link with the past, and a storehouse of
+ reminiscence and delightful insight into human nature.</p>
+
+ <p>And&mdash;since she knew everyone worth knowing, Graeme very
+ soon discovered that she knew Margaret Brandt, and Miss Brandt's
+ very frequent visits to Phillimore Gardens proved that she was an
+ acceptable visitor there.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon that, his own visits to Lady Elspeth naturally became
+ still more frequent than before,&mdash;approximating even, as she
+ had said, the record of the milkman,&mdash;and, though his dear
+ old friend might rate him gently as to the motives for his
+ coming, he had every reason to believe that her sympathies were
+ with him, and that she would do what she could to further his
+ hopes.</p>
+
+ <p>He had never, however, openly discussed Margaret with her
+ until that afternoon of which I have already spoken.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Brandt, you see, was always most graciously kind and
+ charming whenever they met. But that was just her natural self.
+ She was charming and gracious to everyone&mdash;even to Charles
+ Pixley, the while he swamped her with inane tittle-tattle, and
+ higher proof of grace than that it would be difficult to
+ imagine.</p>
+
+ <p>And, since she was charming to all, Graeme felt that he could
+ base no solid hopes on her gracious treatment of himself, though
+ the quiet recollection of every smallest detail of it would set
+ him all aglow with hope for days after each chance meeting. And
+ so he had never ventured to discuss the matter with Lady Elspeth,
+ and would not have done so that afternoon had she not herself
+ opened it.</p>
+
+ <p>The dear old lady's encouragement, however, deepened and
+ strengthened his hopes, in spite of her insidious hints
+ concerning Mr. Pixley's possible intentions. For she was a
+ shrewd, shrewd woman, and those soft brown eyes of hers saw far
+ and deep. And, since she bade him hope, hope he would, though
+ every brick in London town became a Pixley set on thwarting
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>The fact of Margaret's means being, for the present at all
+ events, so much larger than his own, he would not allow to
+ trouble him. It was Margaret herself he wanted, and had wanted
+ long before he heard she had money. The troublesome accident of
+ her possessions should not come between them if he could help it.
+ He did not for one moment believe she would ever think so ill of
+ him as to believe that he wanted her for anything but herself.
+ And in any case, if kind Providence bestowed her upon him, he
+ would insist on her money being all settled on herself absolutely
+ and irrevocably.</p>
+
+ <p>Since that never-to-be-forgotten dinner, they had come across
+ one another at Lady Elspeth's with sufficient frequency to open
+ the eyes of that astute old lady to the heart-state of one of
+ them at all events. Possibly she knew more of the heart and mind
+ of the other than she cared to say in plain words; but, as a
+ woman, she would naturally abide by the rules of the game. In the
+ smaller games of life it is woman's privilege, indeed, to stretch
+ and twist all rules to suit her own convenience, but in this
+ great game of love, woman stands by woman and the womanly rules
+ of the game&mdash;unless, indeed, she craves the stakes for
+ herself, in which case&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And so&mdash;although Lady Elspeth favoured him, that
+ afternoon, only with vague generalities as to the pleasures of
+ hope, and afforded him no solid standing-ground for the sole of
+ his hopeful foot, but left him to discover that for himself, as
+ was only right and proper&mdash;his heart stood high, and he
+ looked forward with joyous anticipation to the future.</p>
+
+ <p>The radiant sun of all his rosy heavens was Margaret Brandt,
+ and he would not for one moment admit the possibility of its
+ clouding by anything of the name of Pixley.</p>
+
+ <h4>V</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme had not the entr&eacute;e of the Pixley mansion.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley he knew, by repute only, as the head of Pixley's,
+ the great law-firm, in Lincoln's Inn. Mrs. Pixley he had never
+ met.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley was a bright and shining light&mdash;yea, a
+ veritable light-house&mdash;of respectability and benevolence,
+ and bushel coverings were relegated to their proper place outside
+ his scheme of life. His charities were large, wide-spread,
+ religiously advertised in the donation columns of the daily
+ papers, and doubtless palliated the effects of multitudes of
+ other people's sins.</p>
+
+ <p>He was a church-warden, president and honorary treasurer of
+ numerous philanthropical societies&mdash;in a word, at once a
+ pillar and corner-stone of his profession, his church, and his
+ country.</p>
+
+ <p>He was also a smug little man with a fresh, well-fed face,
+ bordered by a touch of old-fashioned, gray side-whisker, rather
+ outstanding blue eyes, and he carried, and sometimes used as it
+ was intended to be used, a heavy gold pince-nez, which more
+ frequently, however, acted as a kind of lightning-conductor for
+ the expression of his feelings. A pince-nez of many
+ parts:&mdash;now it was a scalping-knife, slaughtering the hopes
+ of some harried victim of the law; and again, it was a
+ b&acirc;ton beating time to a hymn or the National Anthem;
+ possibly it was, in moments of relaxation, a jester's wand poking
+ fun at ancient cronies, though indeed a somewhat full-blooded
+ imagination is required for that. I have heard that once when, in
+ the fervour of a speech, Mr. Pixley dropped his pince-nez among
+ the reporters below, he was utterly unable to continue until the
+ fetish was recovered and handed back to him. It is an undoubted
+ fact that though you might forget the exact lines of Mr. Pixley's
+ face and even his words, you never forgot the fascinating
+ evolutions of his heavy gold pince-nez. Like a Frenchman's hands,
+ it told even more than his face or his words.</p>
+
+ <p>He had a good voice, and a deportment which had, without
+ doubt, been specially created for the chairmanship of public
+ meetings. And he was Margaret Brandt's uncle by marriage, her
+ guardian and trustee, and the father of Charles Svendt, on whose
+ account Lady Elspeth had thought well to throw out warning hints
+ of possible paternal intentions respecting Margaret and her
+ fortune.</p>
+
+ <p>From every point of view Graeme detested Mr. Pixley, though he
+ had never passed a word with him. He was too perfect, too
+ immaculate. His "unco' guidness," as Lady Elspeth would have
+ said, bordered on ostentation. The sight and sound of him aroused
+ in some people a wild inclination towards unaccustomed profanity
+ and wallowing in the mire. He was so undisguisedly and
+ self-satisfiedly better than his fellows that one felt his long
+ and flawless life almost in the nature of a rebuke if not an
+ affront. He was too obtrusively good for this world. One could
+ not but feel that if he had been cut off in his youth, and buried
+ under a very white marble slab and an appropriate inscription,
+ both he and the world would have been far more comfortably
+ circumstanced. And John Graeme devoutly wished he had been so
+ favoured, for, in that case, he could neither have been
+ Margaret's uncle, trustee, nor guardian, and it is possible that
+ there would also have been no Charles Svendt Pixley to trouble
+ the course of his own true love.</p>
+
+ <p>But of Charles Svendt I have no harsh word to say. He could
+ not help being his father's son, and one must not blame him for
+ the unavoidable. And, in most respects, he was as unlike his
+ worthy parent as circumstances permitted.</p>
+
+ <p>He was on the Stock Exchange and doing well there. He had very
+ comfortable rooms near St. James's Square, and enjoyed life in
+ his own way and at his own not inconsiderable expense. When
+ Margaret Brandt was at home, however, he was much at his father's
+ house in Melgrave Square.</p>
+
+ <p>He made no pretence to unco' guidness whatever. He subscribed
+ to nothing outside the House, with two exceptions&mdash;the Dogs'
+ Home at Battersea, and the Home of Rest for Aged Horses at
+ Acton&mdash;signs of grace both these offerings, I take it!</p>
+
+ <p>To all other demands he invariably replied,&mdash;"Can't burn
+ the candle at both ends, my dear sir. The governor charitables
+ for the whole family. He'll give you something if you'll let him
+ head the list and keep it standing."</p>
+
+ <p>No, we have no fault to find with Charles Svendt. Time came
+ when he was weighed and not found wanting.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme and he had run across one another occasionally&mdash;at
+ the Travellers' Club and elsewhere&mdash;but their acquaintance
+ had never ripened to the point of introduction till that night at
+ the Whitefriars' dinner. After that they were on nodding terms,
+ but not much more, until&mdash;well, until later.</p>
+
+ <p>So, though there was hope in his heart, born of Lady Elspeth's
+ approval and quiet suggestings, John Graeme was still somewhat
+ doubtful as to Margaret Brandt's feelings towards him, and quite
+ at a loss how to arrive at a more exact knowledge of them.</p>
+
+ <p>Too precipitate an advance might end in utter rout. And
+ opportunities of approach were all too infrequent for his
+ wishes.</p>
+
+ <p>Their chance meetings were rare and exquisite
+ pleasures,&mdash;to be looked forward to with an eagerness that
+ held within it the strange possibility of pain through sheer
+ excess of longing;&mdash;to be enjoyed like the glory of a
+ fleeting dream;&mdash;to be looked back upon with touches of
+ regret at opportunities missed;&mdash;to be dwelt upon for days
+ and nights with alternate hope and misgiving, with the rapturous
+ recalling of every tone of the sweet voice, of every word it had
+ uttered, of every gracious gesture, and every most minute and
+ subtle change in the sweetest face and the frankest and most
+ charming eyes in the world.</p>
+
+ <h4>VI</h4>
+
+ <p>Their acquaintance had blossomed thus far, when a dire
+ disaster happened and justified all his fears.</p>
+
+ <p>He ran gaily up the steps of Lady Elspeth's house one
+ afternoon, brimming with hope that kindly fortune might bring
+ Margaret that way that day, and was hurled into deepest depths of
+ despair by old Hamish as soon as he opened the door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ech, Mr. Graeme!" said the old man, with his grizzled old
+ face tuned to befitting concern. "Her leddyship's awa' to
+ Inverstrife at a moment's notice. She had a tailegram late last
+ night saying the little leddy&mdash;the Countess, ye
+ ken&mdash;was very bad, and would she go at once. And she and
+ Jannet were off by the first train this morning. They aye send
+ for us, ye ken, when anything by-ordinar's to the fore. It's the
+ little leddy's first, ye understand, and ye'll mind that her own
+ mother died two years ago."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well! I'm sorry you've had such an upsetting, Hamish.
+ And there's no knowing when Lady Elspeth will return, I
+ suppose?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It a' depends on the little leddy, Mr. Graeme. Her leddyship
+ will stay till everything's all right, ye may depend upon that.
+ She told me to give you her kindest regairds and beg you to
+ excuse her not writing. They were all on their heads, so to
+ speak, as ye can understand."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, of course. Well, we must just hope the little lady will
+ pull through all right. If I don't hear from Lady Elspeth I will
+ call now and again for your latest news."</p>
+
+ <p>"Surely, sir. Jannet'll be letting me know, if her leddyship's
+ too busy. Miss Brandt was here about hauf an hour ago," he added,
+ with unmoved face;&mdash;to think of any man, even so ancient a
+ man as old Hamish, being able to state a fact so great as that
+ with unmoved face! And there was actually no sign of reminiscent
+ and lingering after-glow perceptible in him!&mdash;but Graeme was
+ not at all sure that there was not a veiled twinkle away down in
+ the depths of his little blue-gray eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! Miss Brandt has been here! She would be surprised
+ too&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"She was that, sir,&mdash;and a bit disappointed, it seemed to
+ me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, there <i>was</i> a twinkle in the old fellow's eyes! Oh,
+ he knew, he knew without a doubt. Trust old Hamish for not
+ missing much that was to the fore. He and his old wife, Jannet
+ Gordon, had been in Lady Elspeth's service for over forty years,
+ ever since her leddyship married into the family, and Lady
+ Elspeth trusted them both implicitly and discussed most matters
+ very freely with them. The dilatations of those three shrewd old
+ people, concerning things in general, and the men and women of
+ their acquaintance in particular, would have been rare, rare
+ hearing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I'll call again in a day or two, Hamish," and he went
+ away along the gloomy streets, which were all ablaze with soft
+ April sunshine, and yet to him had suddenly become darkened. For
+ he saw at a glance all that this was like to do for him.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PART_THE_SECOND" id="PART_THE_SECOND"></a>PART THE
+ SECOND</h2>
+
+ <h4>I</h4>
+
+ <p>The rare delight of his meetings with Margaret was at an end.
+ Bluff Fortune had slammed the door in his face, and White-handed
+ Hope had folded her golden wings and sat moping with melancholy
+ mien.</p>
+
+ <p>He wandered into Kensington Gardens, but the daffodils swung
+ their heads despondently, and the gorgeous masses of hyacinths
+ made him think of funeral plumes on horses' heads.</p>
+
+ <p>He went on into the Park. She might be driving there, and he
+ might catch glimpse of her. But she was not, and all the rest
+ were less than nothing to him.</p>
+
+ <p>He found himself at Hyde Park Corner and back again at
+ Kensington Gate. But the door was still closed in his face, and
+ he longed for the sight of somebody else's as he had never longed
+ before.</p>
+
+ <p>The post was of course open to him, but, at this stage at all
+ events, he felt that the written word would be eminently
+ inadequate and unsatisfying.</p>
+
+ <p>He wanted, when he approached that mighty question, to look
+ into her eyes and see her answer in their pure depths before it
+ reached her lips,&mdash;to watch the fluttering heart-signals in
+ her sweet face and learn from them more than all the words in the
+ world could tell. Letters were, at best, to actual speech but as
+ actual speech would be to all that his heart-quickened eyes would
+ discover if he could but ask her face to face.</p>
+
+ <p>And besides&mdash;he would have wished to make his footing
+ somewhat surer before putting everything to the test.</p>
+
+ <p>But, since matters had gone thus far, it was quite out of the
+ question to let them stop there unresolved. Either the precious
+ cargo must be brought safely into port or the derelict must be
+ sunk and the fairway cleared. The question was&mdash;how to
+ proceed?</p>
+
+ <p>The unwritten laws of social usage would hardly permit him to
+ carry the Pixley mansion by assault and insist on seeing Miss
+ Brandt. Besides, that might expose her to annoyance, and that he
+ would not upon any consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, before he reached his rooms, his mind was groping
+ clumsily after written phrases which should in some sort express
+ that which was in him without saying too much too
+ soon,&mdash;which should delicately hint his regrets at this
+ sudden curtailment of their acquaintance, and leave it for her to
+ say whether or no she regarded the matter in the same light.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Elspeth's sudden summons to the north furnished an
+ acceptable text. Margaret was not to know that he knew of her
+ call at Phillimore Gardens. It was surely but a friendly act on
+ his part to inform her of a matter so nearly concerning one who
+ was dear to them both.</p>
+
+ <p>It took a considerable time, however, and the expenditure of
+ much thought and ink and paper, before he succeeded in producing
+ a letter in any degree to his liking. And even when it was
+ written many perusals only served to deepen his doubts.</p>
+
+ <p>In any case, it was the best he could do under the
+ circumstances, and since he could not see her answer in her eyes
+ or in her face, the words she would send him in reply would
+ surely afford his quickened perceptions some indication of her
+ feeling, though nothing to what her presence would have told
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>So he wrote&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Dear Miss Brandt,&mdash;When I called at Lady Elspeth
+ Gordon's this afternoon, I learned, to my very great regret, in
+ which I dare to hope you may participate, that our dear old
+ friend had been summoned to Inverstrife at almost a moment's
+ notice, by the sudden illness of her niece, the Countess of
+ Assynt.</p>
+
+ <p>"I trust her visit may not need to be a very extended one,
+ but Lady Elspeth is such a tower of strength to all who seek
+ her help that she is not likely to return so long as she can be
+ of any possible assistance to her friends.</p>
+
+ <p>"For reasons which, perhaps, I need not particularise, her
+ sudden departure is to me a loss beyond its apparent magnitude.
+ The hours I have spent at her house have been among the
+ brightest of my life. You also have enjoyed her friendship. I
+ venture to hope that you also will miss her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Should I not have the pleasure of seeing you for some
+ little time, I would beg of you to bear me in your kindly
+ remembrance.&mdash;Sincerely yours,</p>
+
+ <p>"JOHN C. GRAEME."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Did it say too much? Would she look upon it as an overstepping
+ of the limits their acquaintance had reached?</p>
+
+ <p>Did it say enough? Could she possibly overlook the things he
+ would so dearly have liked to say but had left unsaid?</p>
+
+ <p>Did it say too little? Could she possibly deem it an
+ unnecessary liberty, and cold at that? He did not think she could
+ by any possibility look at it in that light.</p>
+
+ <p>But after it was at last surely lodged in the pillar-box, all
+ these doubts came back upon him with tenfold force, and his sleep
+ that night would have been short-commons for a nightingale.</p>
+
+ <p>She would get his letter by the first post in the morning.
+ Would she answer it at once? Or would she wait half a day
+ considering it?</p>
+
+ <p>Either course held hopeful possibilities. A prompt answer
+ would surely suggest a concurrence of feeling. An answer delayed
+ would without doubt mean that she was pondering his words and
+ reading between the lines. So he possessed his soul in patience,
+ of a somewhat attenuated texture, and waited in hope.</p>
+
+ <p>But the whole day passed, and the night, and the next
+ morning's post still brought him nothing,&mdash;nothing but an
+ intimation from a publisher of excellent standing that he would
+ not decline to look over the manuscript of his next book if he
+ was open to an offer. And this important document he tossed on
+ one side as lightly as if it were a begging letter or a tailor's
+ advertisement.</p>
+
+ <p>What were any other letters, or all the letters in the world,
+ to him when the one letter he desired was not there?</p>
+
+ <p>All that bright April day he waited indoors, in order to get
+ Margaret's letter the moment it arrived. For how should he wander
+ abroad, in gloomy-blazing streets or desolate-teeming parks with
+ that anxiously-expected letter possibly awaiting him at home?</p>
+
+ <p>The callous passage of the last post, after knocking
+ cheerfully at every door but his own, left him wondering and
+ desperate.</p>
+
+ <p>Could he by any possibility have addressed his letter wrongly?
+ It was not easy to make a mistake in No. 1 Melgrave Square.</p>
+
+ <p>Could it have gone astray? The Post Office was abominably
+ careless at times. One was constantly hearing of letters slipping
+ down behind desks and monstrously delivered twenty years after
+ date. What earthly good would that letter be delivered when he
+ was forty-seven and Margaret Brandt somewhere in the
+ neighbourhood of forty? Truly, it was monstrous, it was
+ abominable that such carelessness should be permitted in the
+ public departments!</p>
+
+ <p>Could Margaret have taken umbrage at anything he had said? He
+ conned his rough draft with solicitous care. It seemed new and
+ strange and crude to him. He feared at each word to come upon the
+ one that might have offended her. But no word, no phrase, nothing
+ even of all that he had left unsaid sprang up before his
+ horrified eyes to choke him with a sense of inadequacy, or
+ inadvertency, or trespass.</p>
+
+ <p>No sleep got he that night for cudgelling his tired brains for
+ reasons why no answer had come from Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>Could she be ill? She was well enough, two days before, to
+ call at Lady Elspeth's house. But, of course, even in a day one
+ may take a chill and be prostrated.</p>
+
+ <p>The possibility of that was brought home to him next morning
+ by his landlady's surprised stare and exclamation at sight of his
+ face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Law, Mr. John!"&mdash;she had been handmaid to his mother for
+ many years and he was still always Mr. John to her,&mdash;"Have
+ you got the influenza too? Everyone seems to have it
+ nowadays."</p>
+
+ <p>He reassured her on the point. But every friend he met that
+ day credited him with it, and suggested remedies and precautions
+ sufficient to have made an end of any ordinary man.</p>
+
+ <p>He was vexed to think his face so clear an index of his
+ feelings, but, truly, his spirits were none of the best and the
+ weather was enervatingly warm.</p>
+
+ <p>It was quite inconceivable to him that Margaret Brandt should,
+ of knowledge and intention, drop their pleasant acquaintance in
+ this fashion. He believed he knew her well enough to know that,
+ even if she had any fault to find with his letter, she would
+ still have replied to it, and would have delicately conveyed her
+ feeling in her answer.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, either she had never received it, or, for some good
+ reason or other, she was unable to reply.</p>
+
+ <p>He went down to Melgrave Square to make sure that No. 1 was
+ still there. Possibly he might come across Margaret in the
+ neighbourhood. If he did he would know at a glance if she had
+ received his letter.</p>
+
+ <p>But No. 1 offered him no explanations. It stood as usual,
+ large and prim and precise, the very acme of solid, sober wealth
+ and assertive moral rectitude. He was strongly tempted to call
+ and ask for Miss Brandt, but it was only ten o'clock in the
+ morning, and the house looked so truly an embodiment in stucco of
+ Mrs. Grundy and Jeremiah Pixley, that he forbore and went on his
+ melancholy way.</p>
+
+ <p>First, to his rooms again, to see if by chance the letter had
+ come in his absence. Then, as it had not, to Lady Elspeth
+ Gordon's for old Hamish's latest news, which, in a letter from
+ his wife, was satisfactory as far as it went, but pointed to a
+ protracted stay. And then, with stern resolution, up to Baker
+ Street and away by train to Chesham, for a long day's tramp
+ through the Buckingham hills and dales, by Chenies to Chorley
+ Wood and Rickmansworth, so to weary the body that the wearier
+ brain should get some rest that night.</p>
+
+ <p>The sweet soft air and sunshine, the leisurely life of the
+ villages, and the cheerful unfoldings of the spring, in wood and
+ field and hedgerow, brought him to a more hopeful frame of mind.
+ Every sparrow twittered hope. The thrushes and young blackbirds
+ fluted it melodiously. It was impossible to remain unhopeful in
+ such goodly company. Something unexpected, accidental, untoward,
+ had prevented Margaret replying to his letter. Time would clear
+ it up and set him wondering at his lapse from fullest faith.</p>
+
+ <p>Also&mdash;he would risk even further rebuff. He would write
+ again, and this time he would trust no precarious and
+ problematical post-office. He would drop his letter into the
+ Pixley letter-box himself, and so be sure that it got there.</p>
+
+ <p>If then no answer,&mdash;to the winds with Mrs. Grundy and all
+ her coils and conventions! He would call and see Margaret
+ himself, and learn from her own eyes and face and lips how
+ matters stood, and Mrs. Grundy might dance and scream on the step
+ outside until she grew tired of the exercise.</p>
+
+ <p>There was joy and hope in action once more. Patient waiting on
+ slowly-dying Hope is surely the direst moral and mental torture
+ to which poor humanity can be subjected. That is where woman
+ pre-eminently overpasses man. Woman can wait unmurmuringly on
+ dying Hope till the last breath is gone, then silently take up
+ her burden and go on her way&mdash;or, if the strain has been too
+ great, fold quiet hands on quiet heart and follow her dead hopes
+ into the living hope beyond. Man must aye be doing&mdash;and as
+ often as not, such natural judgment as he possesses being warped
+ and jangled by the strain of waiting, he succeeds only in making
+ matters worse and a more complete fool of himself.</p>
+
+ <p>To be writing to Margaret again was to be living in hope once
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>If nothing came of this, he would call at the Pixley
+ house.</p>
+
+ <p>If nothing came of that&mdash;he grew valiant in his new
+ access of life&mdash;he would beard Jeremiah Pixley in his den in
+ Lincoln's Inn, state clearly how matters stood, and request
+ permission to approach his ward.</p>
+
+ <p>After all, this is a free country, and all men are equal under
+ the law, though he had his own doubts as to whether he would find
+ himself quite equal to that gleaming pillar of light, Mr.
+ Jeremiah Pixley.</p>
+
+ <p>So he wrote&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"DEAR MISS BRANDT,&mdash;I wrote to you a few days ago,
+ giving you the information of our dear friend Lady Elspeth's
+ sudden summons to Inverstrife, to attend her niece, the
+ Countess of Assynt.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope you will not consider it presumption on my part to
+ express the fear that my letter has somehow
+ miscarried&mdash;probably through some oversight of my own, or
+ carelessness on the part of the postal authorities.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will, I know, be glad to hear that Lady Elspeth
+ accomplished her journey in safety and without undue
+ discomfort. But Lady Assynt's condition makes it probable that
+ her stay may be somewhat prolonged.</p>
+
+ <p>"I venture to hope that you may regret this as much as I do.
+ All who enjoyed Lady Elspeth's friendship and hospitality
+ cannot but miss her sorely.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope, however, that I may still have the pleasure of
+ meeting you occasionally elsewhere. When one has not the habit
+ of readily making new friendships one clings the more firmly to
+ those already made.&mdash;Sincerely yours,</p>
+
+ <p>"JOHN C. GRAEME."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>That letter he dropped into the Pixley letterbox himself that
+ night, and so was assured of its delivery. But two days passed in
+ waning hope, and the afternoon of the third found him on the
+ doorstep of No. 1 Melgrave Square.</p>
+
+ <h4>II</h4>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt?"</p>
+
+ <p>The solemn-faced man-servant eyed him suspiciously as a
+ stranger. He looked, to Graeme, like a superannuated official of
+ the Court of Chancery.</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt is not at home, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Pixley?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Pixley is not at home, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>Was he right or wrong, he wondered, in thinking he detected a
+ gleam of satisfied anticipation, of gratified understanding, in
+ the solemn one's otherwise rigid eye&mdash;as of one who had been
+ told to expect this and was lugubriously contented that it had
+ duly come to pass?</p>
+
+ <p>However, there was nothing more to be done there at the
+ moment. The polite conventions, to say nothing of the law,
+ forbade him the pleasure of hurling the outcast of Chancery into
+ the kennel and forcing his way in. Instead, he hailed a hansom
+ and drove straight to Lincoln's Inn, boldly demanded audience of
+ Mr. Pixley on pressing private business, and presently found
+ himself in the presence.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley stood on the hearthrug with his back to the fire,
+ and handled his gold pince-nez defensively.</p>
+
+ <p>Here also Graeme had an intuition that he was expected, which
+ was somewhat odd, you know, unless his letters had been handed to
+ Mr. Pixley for perusal, which did not seem likely.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley bowed formally and he responded&mdash;the salute
+ before the click of the foils.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley stood expectant, but by no means inviting of
+ confidences such as his visitor was about to tender him. Rather
+ he seemed fully armed for the defence, especially in the matter
+ of the heavy gold pince-nez, which he held threateningly, after
+ the manner of the headsman of old towards the victim on whom he
+ was about to operate.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have taken the liberty of calling, Mr. Pixley," said
+ Graeme,&mdash;and Mr. Pixley's manner in subtle fashion conveyed
+ his full recognition of the fact that liberty it undoubtedly was,
+ and that he had no smallest shadow of a right to be
+ there,&mdash;"to inquire after Miss Brandt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt?" said Mr. Pixley vaguely, as though the name
+ were new and strange to him. Or perhaps it was an endeavour on
+ his part to express the impassable gulf which lay between his
+ visitor and his ward, and the profound amazement he felt at any
+ attempt on his visitor's part to abridge it. He also made a
+ little involuntary preliminary cut at him with the pince-nez, as
+ much as to say, "If this my weapon were of a size commensurate
+ with my wishes and your colossal impudence, your head would lie
+ upon the ground, young man."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have had the pleasure of meeting Miss Brandt at Lady
+ Elspeth Gordon's and elsewhere. I think I may claim that we were
+ on terms of friendship. Lady Elspeth has been called from home
+ very suddenly to the bedside of her niece, Lady Assynt, and I
+ have written twice to Miss Brandt and have had no reply. It
+ struck me that she might be ill and I have called to
+ inquire."</p>
+
+ <p>This was all lame enough no doubt, and so he felt it, but it
+ was only in the nature of preliminary feinting. They were not yet
+ at grips.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" with ponderous deliberation, "you have called to inquire
+ if Miss Brandt is ill. I have pleasure in informing you that she
+ is not."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am glad to hear that, at all events. Might I ask if you are
+ aware of any reason why she should not have received my
+ letters&mdash;or replied to them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Two questions," said Mr. Pixley, cutting them in slices with
+ his pince-nez, as though they were to be charged up to his
+ visitor at so much per pound. "There is no reason whatever why
+ Miss Brandt should not have received your letters. There may be
+ the best possible reasons why she should not reply to them."</p>
+
+ <p>"So far as I have been able to form an opinion of Miss Brandt
+ it is quite unlike her not to have, at all events, acknowledged
+ them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! Your opportunities have probably been limited,
+ Mr.&mdash;er&mdash;"&mdash;with a glance at the
+ card&mdash;"Graeme, and you may possibly be&mdash;from your
+ calling upon me I judge you undoubtedly are&mdash;ignorant of the
+ facts of the case," and the gold pince-nez hammered that into the
+ stolid young man's head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you would be so good as to enlighten me."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would perhaps be as well to do so. To be perfectly frank
+ with you, Mr. Graeme, my ward had the very best of reasons for
+ handing your letters to me and not replying to them herself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Really! I would esteem it a favour, Mr. Pixley, if you would
+ enlighten me further."</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly!" with an airy wave of the pince-nez. "I intend to
+ do so. The simple fact of my ward's engagement to my son, and
+ that they are looking forward to the celebration of their
+ marriage in something less than three months, will probably
+ suffice to explain Miss Brandt's disinclination to enter into
+ correspondence with a comparative stranger,"&mdash;and the
+ pince-nez shredded Graeme's hopes into little pieces and
+ scattered them about the floor.</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt is engaged to your son?" he jerked, feeling not a
+ little foolish, and decidedly downhearted.</p>
+
+ <p>"As I have informed you. It is a union to which we have been
+ looking hopefully forward for some time past&mdash;a most
+ excellent conjunction of hearts and fortunes. My ward possesses
+ some means, as you are doubtless aware,"&mdash;with an insolent
+ thrust of the pince-nez at the would-be suitor's
+ honour,&mdash;"and my son is also well provided for in that
+ respect."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then&mdash;I am afraid my visit is something in the nature of
+ an intrusion." Mr. Pixley bowed his fullest acquiescence in this
+ very proper estimate of his position, and the pince-nez intimated
+ that the way out lay just behind him and that the sooner he took
+ advantage of it the better.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can only say, by way of apology," added Graeme, "that I was
+ wholly unaware of what you have just told me. I will wish you
+ good-day, Mr. Pixley."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley and the pince-nez wafted him towards the door, and
+ the lumpy cobbles of the courtyard outside seemed to him, for the
+ moment, absolutely typical of life.</p>
+
+ <p>He went back home numbed and sore at heart. It was hard to
+ believe this of Margaret Brandt.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet&mdash;he said to himself&mdash;it was wholly he who
+ was to blame. He had deceived himself. He had wished to believe
+ what he had so earnestly desired should be. Possibly he had
+ closed his eyes to facts and indications which might have
+ enlightened him if he had been on the look-out for them.
+ Possibly&mdash;well, there!&mdash;he had played the fool
+ unconsciously, and he was not the first. It only remained for him
+ now to play the man.</p>
+
+ <p>He felt sore, and bruised, and run down, and for the moment
+ somewhat at odds with life. He would get away from it all to some
+ remote corner, to rest for a time and recover tone, and then to
+ work. For work, after all, is the mighty healer and tonic, and
+ when it is to one's taste there are few wounds it cannot
+ salve.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PART_THE_THIRD" id="PART_THE_THIRD"></a>PART THE
+ THIRD</h2>
+
+ <h4>I</h4>
+
+ <p>Six o'clock next morning found Graeme on the deck of the
+ <i>Ibex</i> as she threaded her way swiftly among the bristling
+ black rocks that guard the coast of Guernsey.</p>
+
+ <p>Herm and Jethou lay sleeping in the eye of the sun. Beyond
+ them lay a filmy blue whaleback of an island which he was told
+ was Sark, and it was to Sark he was bound.</p>
+
+ <p>And wherefore Sark, when, within reasonable limits, all the
+ wide world lay open to him?</p>
+
+ <p>Truly, it might not be easy to say. But this I
+ know,&mdash;having so far learned the lesson of life, though
+ missing much else&mdash;that at times, perhaps at all times, when
+ we think our choice of ways our very own,&mdash;when we stand in
+ doubt at the crossroads of life, and then decide on this path or
+ that, and pride ourselves on the exercise of our high prerogative
+ as free agents,&mdash;the result, when we look back, bears in
+ upon our hearts the mighty fact that a higher mind than our own
+ has been quietly at work, shaping our ends and moulding and
+ rounding our lives. We may doubt it at times. We may take all the
+ credit to ourselves for dangers passed and tiny victories won,
+ but in due time the eyes of our understanding are
+ opened&mdash;and we know.</p>
+
+ <p>Possibly it was the rapt eulogiums of his friend
+ Black&mdash;who had spent the previous summer in Sark, and had
+ ever since been seeking words strong enough in which to paint its
+ charms&mdash;that forced its name to the front when he stood
+ facing the wide world, that lacked, for him at all events, a
+ Margaret Brandt, and was therefore void and desolate.</p>
+
+ <p>"If ever you seek perfect peace, relief from your fellows, and
+ the simple life, try Sark&mdash;and see that you live in a
+ cottage!" he remembered Adam Black murmuring softly, as they sat
+ smoking at the Travellers' one night, shortly after that
+ memorable dinner of the Whitefriars'. And then he had heaved a
+ sigh of regret at thought of being where he was when he might
+ have been in Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme knew nothing whatever of Sark save what his friend had
+ let fall at times. "Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark,"
+ recalled his short-jacket and broad-collar days, and the last of
+ the quartette had always somehow conjured up in his mind the
+ image of a bleak, inaccessible rock set in a stormy sea, where no
+ one lived if he could possibly find shelter elsewhere,&mdash;an
+ Ultima Thule, difficult of access and still more difficult of
+ exit, a weather-bound little spot into which you scrambled
+ precariously by means of boats and ladders, and out of which you
+ might not be able to get for weeks on end.</p>
+
+ <p>But Sark was to hold a very different place in his mind
+ henceforth. The name of Calais burnt itself into the heart of
+ Queen Mary by reason of loss. Surely on John Graeme's heart the
+ name of Sark may hope to find itself in living letters, for in
+ Sark he was to find more than he had lost&mdash;new grace and
+ charm in life, new hopes, new life itself.</p>
+
+ <p>He had gone straight home from Lincoln's Inn, and packed his
+ portmanteau, knowing only that he was going away somewhere out of
+ things, caring little where, so long as it was remote and
+ lonely.</p>
+
+ <p>Fellow-man&mdash;and especially woman&mdash;was distasteful to
+ him at the moment. He craved only Solitude the Soother, and
+ Nature the Healer.</p>
+
+ <p>He packed all he thought he might need for a couple of months'
+ stay, and among other things the manuscript he had been at work
+ upon until more pressing matters intervened. He felt, indeed, no
+ slightest inclination towards it, or anything else, at present.
+ But that might come, for Work and he were tried friends.</p>
+
+ <p>He wrote briefly to Lady Elspeth telling her how things were
+ with him, and that he was going away for a time. He did not tell
+ her where, for the simple reason that at the moment of writing he
+ did not know himself. Sark came into his mind later.</p>
+
+ <p>He told his landlady that he was going away for a change, and
+ she remarked in motherly fashion that she was glad to hear it,
+ and it was high time too. He told her to keep all his letters
+ till he sent for them. He had no importunate correspondents, his
+ next book was as good as placed, and all he desired at the moment
+ was to cut the painter, and drift into some quiet backwater where
+ he could lie up till life should wear a more cheerful face.</p>
+
+ <p>And so no single soul knew where he had gone, and he said to
+ himself, somewhat bitterly, and quite untruthfully, that no
+ single soul cared.</p>
+
+ <p>He had paced the deck all night. The swift smooth motion of
+ the boat, with a slight slow roll in it, was very soothing; and
+ the first tremulous hints of the dawn, and the wonder of its slow
+ unfolding, and the coming of the sun were things to be
+ remembered.</p>
+
+ <p>The cold gaunt aloofness, and weltering loneliness of the
+ Casquets appealed to him strongly. Just the kind of place, he
+ said to himself, for a heart-sick traveller to crawl into and
+ grizzle until he found himself again.</p>
+
+ <p>As they turned and swung in straight between the little
+ lighthouse on White Rock and Castle Cornet, the bright early
+ sunshine was bathing all the rising terraces of St. Peter Port in
+ a golden haze. Such a quaint medley of gray weathered walls and
+ mellowed red roofs, from which the thin blue smoke of early fires
+ crept lazily up to mingle with the haze above! Such restful banks
+ of greenery! Such a startling blaze of windows flashing back
+ unconscious greetings to the sun! This too was a sight worth
+ remembering. For a wounded soul he was somewhat surprised at the
+ enjoyment these things afforded him.</p>
+
+ <p>A further surprise was the pleasure he found in the reduction
+ of a hearty appetite at an hotel on the front. Come! He was not
+ as hard hit as he had thought! There was life in the young dog
+ yet.</p>
+
+ <p>But these encouraging symptoms were doubtless due to the
+ temporary exhilaration of the journey. The workaday bustle of the
+ quays renewed his desire for the solitary places, and he set out
+ to find means of transport to the little whalebacked island out
+ there in the golden shimmer of the sun.</p>
+
+ <p>There was no steamer till the following day, he learned, and
+ delay was not to his mind. So presently he came to an arrangement
+ with an elderly party in blue, with a red-weathered face and
+ grizzled hair, to put him and his two portmanteaux across to Sark
+ for the sum of five shillings English.</p>
+
+ <p>"To Havver Gosslin," said the aged mariner, with much
+ emphasis, and a canny look which conveyed to Graeme nothing more
+ than a simple and praiseworthy desire on his part to avoid any
+ possibility of mistake.</p>
+
+ <p>"To Sark," said Graeme, with equal emphasis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, ay!" said the other; and so it came that the new-comer's
+ initial experience of the little island went far towards the
+ confirmation of the vague ideas of his childhood as to its
+ inaccessibility.</p>
+
+ <p>The ancient called to a younger man, and they strolled away
+ along the harbour wall to get the baggage.</p>
+
+ <h4>II</h4>
+
+ <p>"Ee see," said the old gentleman, as soon as they had pulled
+ out past Castle Cornet, and had hoisted the masts and two rather
+ dirty sprit sails, and had run out the bowsprit and a new clean
+ jib with a view to putting the best possible face on matters, and
+ were beginning to catch occasional puffs of a soft westerly
+ breeze and to wallow slowly along,&mdash;"Ee see, time's o'
+ consekens to me and my son. We got to arn our livin'. An' Havver
+ Gosslin's this side the island an' th' Creux's t'other side, an'
+ th' currents round them points is the very divvle."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right, as long as you land me in Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"The very divvle," and the grizzled head wagged reminiscently.
+ "I seen 'em go right up to Casquets and haf-way to Jarsey trying
+ to get across to Sark. An' when time's o' consekens an' you got
+ to arn your livin', you don' want to be playin' 'bout Casquets
+ an' Jarsey 'stid of gittin' 'cross to Sark an' done wi' it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a bit of it. You're quite right. Try some of
+ this,"&mdash;as he began fumbling meaningly with a black stump of
+ a pipe.</p>
+
+ <p>He filled up, and passed on the pouch to his son, who was
+ lying on the thwarts forward, and he also filled up and passed it
+ back with a nod.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's this?" asked Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jetto. Mr. Lee&mdash;Sir Austin 'e is now&mdash;brother o'
+ Passon Lee o' the Port," with a backward jerk of the head, "'e
+ rents it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Live there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Naw&mdash;rabbits."</p>
+
+ <p>"And the bigger island yonder?"</p>
+
+ <p>"'At's Harm. 'T's a Garman man has that&mdash;Prince Bloocher,
+ they calls him. Keeps kangyroos there an' orstrichers an' things.
+ Don't let annybody ashore there now 'cept just to Shell Beach,
+ which he can't help."</p>
+
+ <p>They struck straight across to the long high-ridged island in
+ front, and Graeme's untutored eyes found no special beauty in
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>There was about it, however, a vague gray aloofness which
+ chimed with his spirit, a sober austerity as of a stricken
+ whale,&mdash;a mother-whale surely, for was not her young one
+ there at her nose,&mdash;fled here to heal her wound perchance,
+ and desirous only of solitude.</p>
+
+ <p>But, as they drew nearer, the vague blue-gray bloom of the
+ whaleback resolved itself into a mantle of velvet green, which
+ ran down every rib and spine until it broke off sharp at varying
+ heights and let the bare bones through; and all below the break
+ was clean naked rock&mdash;black, cream-yellow, gray, red,
+ brown,&mdash;with everywhere a tawny fringe of seaweed, since the
+ tide was at its lowest. Below the fringe the rocks were scoured
+ almost white, and whiter still at their feet, like a tangled
+ drapery of ragged lace, was the foam of the long slow seas.</p>
+
+ <p>And the solid silhouette of the island broke suddenly into
+ bosky valleys soft with trees and bracken, and cliff-ringed bays,
+ with wide-spread arms of tumbled rock whose outer ends were tiny
+ islets and hungry reefs.</p>
+
+ <p>"Brecqhou," said the ancient mariner, as they swung past a
+ long green island with beetling cliffs, and yawning caverns, and
+ comet-like rushes of white foam among the chaos of rocks
+ below.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they swirled through a tumbling race, where the waters
+ came up writhing and boiling from strife with hidden rocks
+ below,&mdash;past the dark chasm between Brecqhou and the
+ mainland of Sark, through which the race roared with the voice of
+ many waters&mdash;and so into a quiet haven where hard-worked
+ boats lay resting from their labours.</p>
+
+ <p>There was a beach of tumbled rocks and seaweed at the head of
+ the bay, and there the grim cliffs fell back into a steep green
+ gully which suggested possibility of ascent. But instead of
+ running in there, the sails were furled and the boat nosed slowly
+ towards the overhanging side of the cliff, where a broad iron
+ ladder fell precariously into the water with its top projecting
+ out beyond its base, so that to climb it one had to lie on one's
+ back, so to speak.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp055" id="fp055"></a> <img src="images/fp055.jpg"
+ width="336" height="558" alt="HAVRE GOSSELIN LADDERS" title=
+ "HAVRE GOSSELIN LADDERS" /> <h5>HAVRE GOSSELIN LADDERS</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The ancient one eyed his passenger whimsically as the boat
+ stole up to the rungs, so Graeme permitted himself no more than a
+ careless glance at the forbidding ladder and asked, "How about
+ the baggage?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll see to et," grinned the ancient, and stood, hands on
+ hips and face twisted into a grim smile, while the stranger laid
+ hold of the rusty iron and started upwards, with no slightest
+ idea where the end of the venture might land him.</p>
+
+ <p>With the after-assistance of a neighbour of somewhat more
+ genial construction,&mdash;inasmuch as it at all events stood
+ upright, and did not lean over the opposite way of ladders in
+ general,&mdash;the top rung landed him on a little platform,
+ whence a rope and some foot-holes in the rock, and finally a
+ zigzag path, invited further ascent still.</p>
+
+ <p>The portmanteaux were hauled up by a rope and shouldered by
+ his guardian angels, and they toiled slowly up the steep.</p>
+
+ <p>Each step developed new beauties behind and on either side. At
+ the top he would fain have rested to drink it all in, but his
+ guides went stolidly on,&mdash;towards drink of a more palpable
+ description, he doubted not; and he remembered that time was of
+ consekens, and tore himself away from that most wonderful view
+ and panted after them.</p>
+
+ <p>The zigzag path led round clumps of flaming gorse to a gap in
+ a rough stone wall, and so to a tall granite pillar which crowned
+ the cliff and commemorated a disaster. It was erected, he saw, to
+ the memory of a Mr. Jeremiah Pilcher who had been drowned just
+ below in attempting the passage to Guernsey. He had but one
+ regret at the moment&mdash;that it was not instead to the memory
+ of Mr. Jeremiah Pixley.</p>
+
+ <h4>III</h4>
+
+ <p>Down verdant lanes&mdash;past thatched cottages, past a
+ windmill, past houses of more substantial mien, with a glimpse
+ down a rolling green valley&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Hotel?" asked the ancient abruptly, from beneath his
+ load.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I want rooms in some cottage. Can you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"John Philip," said the ancient one didactically, and trudged
+ on, and finally dumped his share of the burden at the door of
+ what looked like a house but was a shop, in fact the shop.</p>
+
+ <p>He went inside and Graeme followed him. A genial-faced elderly
+ man, with gray hair and long gray beard and gray shirt-sleeves,
+ leaned over the counter, talking in an unknown tongue to a
+ blue-guernseyed fisherman, and a quiet-faced old lady in a black
+ velvet hair-net stood listening.</p>
+
+ <p>They all looked up and saluted the ancient one with
+ ejaculations of surprise in the unknown tongue, and Graeme stared
+ hard at the gray-bearded man, while they all discussed him to his
+ face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. De Carteret," said the ancient at last, with a jerk of
+ the head towards Gray-Beard. "He tell you where to find
+ rooms."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thanks! Do you speak any English, Mr. De Carteret?"</p>
+
+ <p>The pleasant old face broke into a smile. "I am En-glish," he
+ said, with a quaint soft intonation, and as one who speaks a
+ foreign tongue, and beamed genially on his young compatriot.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right then. Do you know you're very like Count
+ Tolstoi?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I haf been told so, but I do not know him. What is it you
+ would like, if you please to tell me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I want a sitting-room and a bedroom for a month or so,
+ perhaps more,&mdash;not at an hotel. I want to be quiet and all
+ to myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;you don' want an hotel. You want to be quiet," and
+ he nodded understandingly. "But the hotels is quiet joost
+ now&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd sooner have rooms in a cottage if I can get them."</p>
+
+ <p>Count Tolstoi turned to the fisherman to whom he had been
+ speaking, and discussed the matter at length with him in the
+ patois.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, to Graeme, "If you please to go with him. His wife has
+ roomss to let. You will be quite comfortable there."</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme thanked him, and as soon as he had settled
+ satisfactorily with his boatmen, his new keeper picked up both
+ his bags, and led him along a stony way past the post-office, to
+ a creeper-covered cottage, which turned a cold shoulder to the
+ road and looked coyly into a little courtyard paved with
+ cobble-stones and secluded from the outer world by a granite wall
+ three feet high.</p>
+
+ <p>And as they went, the young man asked his silent guide
+ somewhat doubtfully, "And do you speak English?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes. We all speak English," he said, with a quiet smile,
+ "except a few of the older folks, maybe, and they mostly
+ understand it though they're slow to talk."</p>
+
+ <p>"And your name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"John Carr&eacute;,"&mdash;which he pronounced Caury.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now that's very odd," laughed Graeme, and stood to enjoy it.
+ "My name is Corrie too, and John Corrie at that."</p>
+
+ <p>"So!" said the other quietly, with a glance from under his
+ brows which might mean surprise or only gentle doubt as to the
+ stranger's veracity. And, so odd was the coincidence, that the
+ newcomer saw no necessity to spoil it by telling him that his
+ forebears had left him also the family name of Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>A large brown dog, smooth of hair and of a fine and thoughtful
+ countenance, got up from the doorstep and gave them courteous
+ greeting, and a small, white, rough-coated terrier hurried out of
+ the kitchen and twisted himself into kinks of delight at sound of
+ their voices. And that decided it before ever Graeme looked at
+ the rooms. For if there was one thing he liked when he wanted to
+ be alone, it was the friendly companionship of a couple of
+ cheerful dogs.</p>
+
+ <p>And that is how he came,&mdash;without any special intent that
+ way, but through, as one might say, a purely accidental
+ combination of circumstances&mdash;to be living in that cottage
+ in the Rue Lucas in the little isle of Sark, and under a name
+ that was indeed his own but not the whole of his own. And herein
+ the future was looking after itself and preparing the way for
+ that which was to be.</p>
+
+ <h4>IV</h4>
+
+ <p>The cottage was apparently empty. His guide and namesake
+ looked into the kitchen, and called up a stair which led out of
+ it, but got no answer.</p>
+
+ <p>"She will be up at the house," he said, and turned and went
+ off up the garden behind, while the dogs raced on in front to
+ show the way.</p>
+
+ <p>Through a cleft in the high green bank topped by a thick hedge
+ of hawthorn, they came out into a garden of less utilitarian
+ aspect. Here were shrubs and flowers, palms and conifers and pale
+ eucalyptus trees, clumps of purple iris and clove pinks, roses
+ just coming to the bud, and beyond, a very charming bungalow,
+ built solidly of gray granite and red tiles, with a wide verandah
+ all round. A pleasant-faced woman in a large black sunbonnet came
+ out of the open front door as they went up the path.</p>
+
+ <p>"My wife," murmured Carr&eacute;, and proceeded quietly to
+ explain matters in an undertone of patois.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope you speak English also, Mrs. Carr&eacute;," said
+ Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yess," with a quick smile. "We are all English here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Surely you are Welsh," he said, for he had met just that same
+ cheerful type of face in Wales.</p>
+
+ <p>"Noh, I am Sark," she smiled again. "I can gif you a
+ sitting-room and a bet-room"&mdash;and they proceeded to
+ business, and then the dogs escorted them back to the cottage, to
+ see the stranger fairly inducted to his new abode, and to let him
+ understand that they rejoiced at his coming and would visit him
+ often.</p>
+
+ <p>He thought he would be very comfortable there, but why the
+ sitting-room was not the bedroom he never could understand. For
+ it was only a quarter the size of the other, and its single
+ window looked into a field, and a rough granite wall clothed with
+ tiny rock-weeds hid all view of the road and its infrequent
+ traffic. While the bedroom was a room of size, and its two
+ windows gave on to the covered well and the cobbled forecourt,
+ and offered passers-by, if so inclined, oblique views of its
+ occupant in the act of dressing if he forgot to pull down the
+ blind.</p>
+
+ <p>The windows of both rooms were set low in the massive granite
+ walls, and being always wide open, they offered, and indeed
+ invited, easy access to&mdash;say, a grave-faced gentlemanly
+ brown dog and a spasmodic rough-coated terrier without a tail,
+ whenever the spirit moved them to incursion, which it invariably
+ did at meal-times and frequently in between.</p>
+
+ <p>These two new friends of his&mdash;for they were never mere
+ acquaintances, but adopted him into fullest brotherhood at
+ sight&mdash;proved no small factors in Graeme's extrication from
+ the depths.</p>
+
+ <p>Human companionship, even of the loftiest, most philosophic,
+ most gracious, would, for the time being, have jarred and ruffled
+ his naturally equable spirit. Two only exceptions might have been
+ conceivably possible&mdash;some humble, large-souled friend,
+ anxious only to anticipate his slightest wish, desirous only of
+ his company, and&mdash;dumb, and so unable to fret him with inane
+ talk; or&mdash;Margaret Brandt.</p>
+
+ <p>The first he could have endured. The latter&mdash;ah, God! How
+ he would have rejoiced in her! The spirit groaned within him at
+ times in agonised longing for her; and the glories of the sweet
+ spring days, in a land where spring is joyous and radiant beyond
+ most, turned gray and cheerless in the shadow of his loss. What
+ Might Have Been stabbed What Was to the heart and let its
+ life-blood run.</p>
+
+ <p>But, since neither of these was available, a benignant
+ Providence provided him with friends entirely to his taste. For
+ the great brown hound, Punch, was surely, despite the name men
+ had given him, a nobleman by birth and breeding. Powerful and
+ beautifully made, the sight of his long lithe bounds, as he
+ quartered the cliff-sides in silent chase of fowl and fur, was a
+ thing to rejoice in; so exquisite in its tireless grace, so
+ perfect in its unconscious exhibition of power and restraint. For
+ the brown dog never gave tongue, and he never killed. He chased
+ for the keen enjoyment of the chase, and no man had ever heard
+ him speak.</p>
+
+ <p>He was the first dumb dog Graeme had ever come across, and the
+ pathetic yearning in his solemn brown eyes was full of infinite
+ appeal to one who suffered also from an unforgettable loss. He
+ answered to his name with a dignified appreciation of its
+ incongruity, and the tail-less white terrier, more appropriately,
+ to that of Scamp.</p>
+
+ <h4>V</h4>
+
+ <p>They were on the very best of terms, these two friends of his,
+ possibly because of their absolute unlikeness,&mdash;Punch,
+ large, solemn, imperturbable, with a beautifully-curved
+ slow-waving tail and no voice; Scamp, a bundle of wriggling
+ nerves moved by electricity, with a sharp excited bark and not
+ even the stump of a tail. When he needed to wag he wagged the
+ whole of his body behind his front legs.</p>
+
+ <p>These two were sitting watching him expectantly as Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute; brought in his dinner that first day, and she
+ instantly ordered them out.</p>
+
+ <p>Punch rose at once, cast one look of grave appeal at Graeme,
+ as who would say&mdash;"Sorry to leave you, but this is the kind
+ of thing I have to put up with,"&mdash;and walked slowly away.
+ Scamp grovelled flat and crawled to the door like a long hairy
+ caterpillar.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, let them stop," said Graeme. "I like them by me," and the
+ culprits turned hopefully with pricked ears and anxious
+ faces.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mais non! They are troublesome beasts. Allez, Ponch! Allez,
+ Scamp! A couche!"&mdash;and their heads and ears drooped and they
+ slunk away.</p>
+
+ <p>But, presently, there came a rustling at the wide-open window
+ which gave on to the field at the back, and Graeme laughed
+ out&mdash;and he had not smiled for days&mdash;at sight of two
+ deprecatingly anxious faces looking in upon him,&mdash;a solemn
+ brown one with black spots above the eloquent grave eyes, and a
+ roguish white one with pink blemishes on a twisting black nose.
+ And while the large brown face loomed steadily above two powerful
+ front paws, the small white face only appeared at intervals as
+ the nervous little body below flung it up to the sill in a series
+ of spasmodic leaps.</p>
+
+ <p>"We would esteem it a very great favour, if you are quite sure
+ it would not inconvenience you," said Punch, as plain as
+ speech.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do, do, do, do, do give us leave!" signalled Scamp, with
+ every twist of his quivering nose, and every gleam of his
+ glancing eyes, and every hair on end.</p>
+
+ <p>A click of the tongue, a noiseless graceful bound, and Punch
+ was at his side. A wild scrambling rush, a wriggle on the sill, a
+ patter over the window-seat, and Scamp was twisting himself into
+ white figure-eights all over the room, with tremendous energy but
+ not a sound save the soft pad of his tiny dancing feet.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, as he ate, the great brown head pillowed itself softly
+ on his knee, and the eloquent brown eyes looked up into his in a
+ way that a stone image could hardly have resisted. The while
+ Scamp, on his hind legs, beat the air frantically with his front
+ paws to attract attention to his needs and danced noiselessly all
+ over the floor.</p>
+
+ <p>He gauged their characters with interest. When he gave them
+ morsels turn about, Punch awaited his with gentlemanly patience,
+ and even when purposely passed by in order to see what he would
+ do, obtruded his claims by nothing more than a gentle movement of
+ the head on his friend's knee; while Scamp, in like case, twisted
+ himself into knots of anxiety and came perilously near to
+ utterance.</p>
+
+ <p>The difference between them when, through lack of intimate
+ knowledge of their likes and dislikes, they got something not
+ entirely to their taste, was also very typical. Punch would
+ retire quietly into obscurity, and having disposed of the
+ objectionable morsel somehow&mdash;either by a strenuous swallow
+ or in some corner&mdash;would quietly reappear, lay his head on
+ Graeme's knee again, and work it up to his lap with a series of
+ propitiatory little jerks that never failed of their object.
+ Scamp, on the other hand, would hold it in his mouth for a moment
+ till he had savoured it, then place it meekly on the floor, bow
+ his head to the ground, and grovel flat with deprecatory
+ white-eyed up-glances, and as clearly as dog could say, would
+ murmur,&mdash;"Oh, Man, Lord of all that go on four legs, forgive
+ thy humble little servant in that he is unable with enjoyment to
+ eat that thou hast of thy bounty tendered him! The fault is
+ wholly his. Yet, of thy great clemency, punish him not beyond his
+ capacity, for his very small body is merely a bundle of nerves,
+ and they lie so very close to the skin that even a harsh word
+ from thee will set them quivering for an hour." But, at a
+ comforting word, he was up in a flash dancing and sparring away
+ as gaily as ever.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, when Mrs. Carr&eacute; brought in the next course, they
+ both retired discreetly below the tent of the tablecloth. But
+ she, knowing them of old perhaps, found them out at once and
+ cried, "Ah you! I see you there! You are just troublesome
+ beasts!" But, seeing that her guest was in the conspiracy, she
+ permitted them for that once; and in time, seeing that he really
+ desired their company, she allowed them to remain as a matter of
+ course and without any preliminary harrying.</p>
+
+ <h4>VI</h4>
+
+ <p>One other acquaintance he made during these dark
+ days,&mdash;perhaps one ought to say an acquaintance and a half,
+ if indeed the half in this case was not greater than the whole, a
+ matter which Graeme never fully decided in his own mind,&mdash;a
+ small person of grim and gloomy tendencies, whose sombre humours
+ chimed at times with his own,&mdash;and that small person's
+ familiar.</p>
+
+ <p>His name was Johnnie Vautrin, and, as far as Graeme could make
+ out, he was about eight years old in actual years, but aged
+ beyond belief in black arts which made him a terror to his kind.
+ And his familiar, in the person of an enormous black cat, which
+ came and went, was named Marielihou.</p>
+
+ <p>Johnnie, and presumably Marielihou, lived with an ancient dame
+ who was held by some to be their great-grandmother, and by some
+ to be Marielihou herself. This was a moot and much-discussed
+ point among the neighbours. What was beyond dispute was that
+ Johnnie was said to be grievously maltreated by her at times, and
+ to lead her a deuce of a life, and she him. The family came
+ originally from Guernsey and had married into Sark, and, for this
+ and other reasons, was still looked askance at by the
+ neighbours.</p>
+
+ <p>Both Johnnie and his ancient relative were popularly&mdash;or
+ unpopularly&mdash;credited with powers of mischief which secured
+ them immunities and privileges beyond the common and not a little
+ prudently concealed dislike.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Mrs. Vautrin could put the evil eye on her neighbours'
+ cows and stop their milk, on their churns and stop their butter,
+ on their kettles and stop their boiling.</p>
+
+ <p>Johnnie claimed equal powers, but excelled in forecasts of bad
+ weather and ill luck and evil generally, and, since there was no
+ end to his prognostications, they occasionally came true, and
+ when they did he exulted greatly and let no one forget it.</p>
+
+ <p>He had a long, humorously snaky, little face, a deep
+ sepulchral voice, which broke into squeaks in moments of
+ excitement, and curious black eyes with apparently no
+ pupils&mdash;little glittering black wells of ill intent, with
+ which he cowed dogs and set small children screaming and grown
+ ones swearing. His little body was as malformed as his twisted
+ little soul, and he generally sat in the hedge taking his
+ pleasure off the passers-by, much to their discomfort.</p>
+
+ <p>Johnnie also saw ghosts, or said he did, which came to much
+ the same thing since none could prove to the contrary. He had
+ even slept one night in an outhouse up at the Seigneurie, and had
+ carefully locked the door, and so the little old lady in white,
+ who only appears to those who lock their doors of a night, came
+ to him, and, according to Johnnie, they carried on a long and
+ edifying conversation to their mutual satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>He had also a cheerful habit of visiting sick folks and
+ telling them he had seen their spirits in the lanes at night, and
+ so they might just as well give up all hopes of getting better.
+ On payment of a small fee, however, he was at times, according to
+ his humour, willing to admit that it might have been somebody
+ else's ghost he had seen, but in either case his visitations
+ tended to cheerfulness in none but himself. He was great on the
+ meanings&mdash;dismal ones mostly&mdash;of flights of birds and
+ falling stars and fallen twigs. And he had been known to throw a
+ branch of hawthorn into a house which had incurred his
+ displeasure.</p>
+
+ <p>The men scoffed at him openly, and occasionally gave him
+ surreptitious pennies. The women and children feared him; and the
+ dogs, to the last one, detested him but gave him wide berth.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme had very soon run across the little misanthrope and, in
+ his own black humour, found him amusing. They rarely met without
+ a trial of wit, or parted without a transfer of coppers from the
+ large pocket to the small. Wherefore Johnnie made a special nest
+ in the hedge opposite the cottage, and waylaid his copper-mine
+ systematically and greatly to his own satisfaction and emolument.
+ But, like the dogs, though on a lower level, he too was not
+ without his effect on Graeme's spirits, and if he did not lift
+ him up he certainly at times helped him out of himself and his
+ gloomy thoughts.</p>
+
+ <h4>VII</h4>
+
+ <p>"You're just an unmitigated little humbug, Johnnie," said
+ Graeme, as he leaned over the wall smoking, to the small boy
+ whose acquaintance he had made the previous day, and who had
+ promptly foretold a storm which had not come.</p>
+
+ <p>"Unmitigumbug! Guyablle! Qu'es' ce que c'es' que &ccedil;a?"
+ echoed the small boy, with very wide eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"You, my son. Your black magic's all humbug. It lacks the
+ essential attribute of fulfilment. It doesn't work. Black magic
+ that doesn't work is humbug."</p>
+
+ <p>"Black-mack-chick! My Good! You do talk!"</p>
+
+ <p>"What about that storm?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah ouaie! Well, you wait. It come."</p>
+
+ <p>"So will Christmas, and the summer after next, if we wait long
+ enough. On the same terms I foretell thunders and lightnings,
+ rain, hail, snow, and fiery vapours, followed by lunar rainbows
+ and waterspouts."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go'zamin!" said Johnnie, with a touch of reluctant admiration
+ at such an outflow of eloquence; and then, by way of set-off, "I
+ sec six black crows, 's mawn'n."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;really? And what do you gather from such a
+ procession as that now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Some un's gwain' to die," in a tone of vast satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course, of course&mdash;if we wait long enough. It's
+ perhaps you. You'll die yourself sometime, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Noh, I wun't. No 'n'll ivver see me die. I'll just turn into
+ sun'th'n&mdash;a gull maybe," as one floated by on moveless wing,
+ the very poetry of motion; and the fathomless black eyes followed
+ it with pathetic longing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cormorant more likely, I should say."</p>
+
+ <p>"Noh, I wun't. I don' like corm'rants. They stink. Mebbe I'll
+ be a hawk,"&mdash;as his eye fell on one, like a brown leaf
+ nailed against the blue sky. "Did ee hear White Horse last
+ night?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I did hear a horse in the night, Johnnie, but I couldn't
+ swear that he was a white one."</p>
+
+ <p>"Didn' git up an' look out?" disappointedly.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I didn't. Why should I get up to look out at a horse? I
+ can see horses any day without getting out of bed in the middle
+ of the night."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Twus the White Horse of the Coup&eacute;e,"&mdash;in a weird
+ whisper.&mdash;"I heerd him start in Little Sark, and come across
+ Coup&eacute;e, an' up by Colinette, an' past this house. An' if
+ you'd ha' looked out an' seen him, you'd ha' died."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good old White Horse! I'm glad I stopped in bed. Did you see
+ him yourself now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've rid him! Yes!&mdash;an' told him where to go," with a
+ ghoulish nod.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite friendly with ghosts and things, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don' mind 'em. I seen the ole lady up at the big house.
+ Yes, an' talked to her too."</p>
+
+ <p>"Clever boy! Put the evil eye on her?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Noh, ee cann't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't? Why, I thought you were a past master in all little
+ matters of that kind."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ee cann't put evil eye on a ghost," with infinite scorn.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, she's a ghost, is she? And what did you talk about?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You coul'n't understan'," grunted Johnnie, to whom his
+ meeting with the White Lady was a treasured memory if a somewhat
+ tender subject.</p>
+
+ <h4>VIII</h4>
+
+ <p>And Marielihou? Ah, Marielihou was a black mystery. Sometimes
+ she was there, and sometimes she wasn't, and if at such times you
+ asked Johnnie where she was, he would reply mysteriously, "Aw,
+ she's busy."</p>
+
+ <p>And busy Marielihou was, always and at all times. If Graeme
+ found her in the hedge with Johnnie, she was busy licking her
+ lips with vicious enjoyment as though she had just finished
+ eating something that had screamed as it died. Or she was licking
+ them snarlishly and surreptitiously, and sharpening her claws, as
+ though just about starting out after something to
+ eat&mdash;something which he knew would certainly scream as it
+ died. For Marielihou was a mighty hunter, and her long black body
+ could be seen about the cliffs at any time of night or day,
+ creeping and worming along, then, of a sudden, pointing and
+ stiffening, and flashing on to her prey like the black death she
+ was.</p>
+
+ <p>Six full-grown rabbits had Marielihou been known to bring home
+ in a single day, to say nothing of all the others that had gone
+ to the satisfaction of her own inappeasable lust for rabbit-flesh
+ and slaughter.</p>
+
+ <p>As to the strange tales the neighbours whispered about her,
+ Graeme could make neither head nor tail of them. But when old Tom
+ Hamon put it to him direct, he had to confess that he never had
+ seen old Mother Vautrin and Marielihou together, nor both at the
+ same time.</p>
+
+ <p>"B'en!" said old Tom, as if that ended the matter. "An' I tell
+ you, if I had a silver bullet I'd soon try what that Marrlyou's
+ made of."</p>
+
+ <p>"And why a silver bullet?" asked Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Cause&mdash;Lead bullets an't no good 'gainst the likes o'
+ Marrlyou. Many's the wan I've sent after her, ay, an' through
+ her, and she none the worse. Guyablle!" and old Tom spat
+ viciously.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you missed her," suggested Graeme, not unreasonably
+ as he thought.</p>
+
+ <p>"Missed her!" with immense scorn. "I tell ee bullets goes
+ clean through her, in one side an' out t'other, an' she never a
+ bit the worse. I've foun' 'em myself spatted on rock just where
+ she sat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, why don't you get a silver bullet and try again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! Teks some getting does silver bullets."</p>
+
+ <p>"How much?"</p>
+
+ <p>"A shill'n would mek a little wan," and Graeme gave him a
+ shilling to try his luck, because Marielihou's unsportsmanlike
+ behaviour did not commend itself to him.</p>
+
+ <p>But it took many shillings to obtain anything definite in the
+ way of results, and Graeme had his own humorous suspicions as to
+ the billets some of them found, and gently chaffed old Tom on the
+ subject whenever they met.</p>
+
+ <p>"You wait," said Tom, with mysterious nods.</p>
+
+ <h4>IX</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme's sober intention had been to put Margaret Brandt, and
+ the agonising regrets that clung to every thought of her,
+ strenuously out of his mind. But that he found more possible in
+ the intention than in the accomplishment.</p>
+
+ <p>The first shock of loss numbs one's mental susceptibilities,
+ of course, much as a blow on the head affects the nervous system.
+ The bands are off the wheels, the machinery is out of order, and
+ the friction seems reduced. It is when the machine tries to work
+ again that the full effects of the jar are felt.</p>
+
+ <p>And so he found it now. As mind and body recovered tone in the
+ whole vitalising atmosphere of the wondrous little
+ isle,&mdash;the air, the sea, the sense of remoteness, the placid
+ life of the place, the abounding beauties of cliff and crag and
+ cave,&mdash;his heart awoke also to the aching sense of its
+ loss.</p>
+
+ <p>All outward things&mdash;all save Johnny Vautrin, and
+ Marielihou, and old Tom Hamon, and several others&mdash;sang
+ abundantly of the peace and fulness and joy of life, but his
+ heart was still so sore from its bruising that at times these
+ outward beauties seemed only to mock him with their
+ brightness.</p>
+
+ <p>In the first shock of his downcasting, wounded pride said, "I
+ will show no sign. I will forget her. I will salve the bruise
+ with work. Margaret Brandt is not the only woman in the world. In
+ time some other shall take her place;"&mdash;and he tried his
+ hardest to believe it.</p>
+
+ <p>But body is one thing and mind another. The body you may
+ compel to any mortal thing, but the mind is of a different order,
+ and strongest will cannot whip it to heel at times. Forbid it
+ thought of thing or person and the forbidden is just that which
+ will persist in obtruding itself to the exclusion of all
+ else.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, in spite of him, the dull ache in his heart at every
+ thought of Margaret murmured without ceasing, "There is none like
+ her&mdash;none!" And crush and compel it as he might, the truth
+ would out, and out the more the more he tried to crush it.</p>
+
+ <p>And so at times, in spite of his surroundings, his spirits
+ dragged in lowest deeps.</p>
+
+ <p>Work he could not as yet, for the work of the writer demands
+ absolute concentration and most complete surrender, and all his
+ faculties were centred, in spite of himself, on Margaret Brandt
+ and his own great loss in her.</p>
+
+ <p>He rambled all over the island with his dog friends, risked
+ skin and bones in precarious descents into apparently impossible
+ depths, scrambled laboriously among the ragged bastions of the
+ Coup&eacute;e and Little Sark, explored endless caverns, loitered
+ by day in bosky lanes, and roamed restlessly by night under the
+ brightest stars he had ever seen.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp076" id="fp076"></a> <img src="images/fp076.jpg"
+ width="327" height="556" alt="IN LITTLE SARK" title=
+ "IN LITTLE SARK" /> <h5>IN LITTLE SARK</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But, wherever he went&mdash;down underground in the Boutiques
+ or the Gouliots; or lying on the Eperquerie among the flaming
+ gorse and cloudlike stretches of primroses; or standing on Longue
+ Pointe while the sun sank in unearthly splendours behind Herm and
+ Guernsey; or watching from the windmill the throbbing life-lights
+ all round the wide horizon;&mdash;wherever he was, and whatever
+ he was doing, there with him always was the poignant remembrance
+ of Margaret Brandt and his loss in her.</p>
+
+ <p>His heart ached so, at thought of the emptiness and desolation
+ of the years that lay before him, that at times his body ached
+ also, and the spirit within him groaned in sympathy.</p>
+
+ <p>Life without Margaret! What was it worth?</p>
+
+ <p>Though it brought him riches and honours overpassing his
+ hopes&mdash;and he doubted now at times if that were possible,
+ lacking the inspiration of Margaret&mdash;what was it worth?</p>
+
+ <p>Riches and honours, won at the true sword's point of earnest
+ work, were good and worth the winning. But yet, without Margaret,
+ they were as nothing to him. His whole heart cried aloud for
+ Margaret. Without her all the full rich hues of life faded into
+ dull gray ashes.</p>
+
+ <p>With Margaret to strive for, he had felt himself capable of
+ mighty things. Without her&mdash;!</p>
+
+ <p>And that she should throw herself away on a Charles
+ Pixley!&mdash;Charles the smiling, the imperturbable, the fount
+ of irrepressible chatter and everlasting inanities! How could
+ such a one as Charles Pixley possibly satisfy her nobler nature?
+ Out of the question! Impossible! But then it is just possible
+ that he was not exactly in the best state of mind for forming an
+ unbiassed opinion on so large a question as that.</p>
+
+ <p>Anyway he was out of it, and Margaret Brandt was henceforth
+ nothing to him. If he said it once he said it hundreds of times,
+ as if the simple reiteration of so obvious a truth would make it
+ one whit the truer, when his whole heart was clamouring that
+ Margaret was all the worlds to him and the only thing in the
+ world that he wanted.</p>
+
+ <p>With an eye, perhaps, to his obvious lack of cheerfulness, his
+ namesake and host suggested various diversions,&mdash;fishing for
+ congers and rock-fish, a voyage round the island, a trip across
+ to Herm, a day among the rabbits on. Brecqhou. But he wanted none
+ of them. His life was flapping on a broken wing and all he wanted
+ was to be left alone.</p>
+
+ <p>In time the wound would heal, and he would take up his work
+ again and find his solace in it. But wounds such as this are not
+ healed in a day. It was raw and sore yet, the new skin had not
+ had time to form.</p>
+
+ <p>He recalled Lady Elspeth's dissatisfaction with his
+ love-scenes, and thought, grimly, that now he could at all events
+ enter fully into the feelings of the man who had lost the prize,
+ and would be able to depict them to the life. If the choice had
+ been left to him he would gladly have dispensed with all such
+ knowledge to its profoundest depths, if only the prize had
+ remained to him. But the choice had been Margaret's, and the
+ prize was Charles Pixley's.</p>
+
+ <p>If there was one thing he could have imagined without actual
+ experience, it was how a man may feel when he loses. What he
+ could not at present by any possibility conceive was&mdash;how it
+ might feel to be the accepted lover of such a girl as Margaret
+ Brandt.</p>
+
+ <p>Confound her money! If it were not for that, Pixley would
+ probably never have wanted to marry her. Money was answerable for
+ half the ills of life, and the contrariness of woman for the
+ other half. Confound money! Confound&mdash;Well, truly, his state
+ of mind was not a happy one.</p>
+
+ <h4>X</h4>
+
+ <p>But there was something in the crisp Sark air that, by degrees
+ and all unconsciously, braced both mind and body;&mdash;something
+ broadening and uplifting in the wide free outlook from every
+ headland; something restorative of the grip of life in the rush
+ and roar of the mighty waves and the silent endurance of the
+ rocks; something so large and aloof and restful in the wide sweep
+ of sea and sky; something so hopeful and regenerative in the
+ glorious exuberance of the spring&mdash;the flaming gorse, the
+ mystic stretches of bluebells, the sunny sweeps of primroses, the
+ soft uncurlings of the bracken, the bursting life of the
+ hedgerows, the joyous songs of the larks&mdash;that presently,
+ and in due season, earthly worries began to fall back into their
+ proper places below the horizon, and a new Graeme&mdash;a Graeme
+ born of Sark and Trouble&mdash;looked out of the old Graeme eyes
+ and began to contemplate life from new points of view.</p>
+
+ <p>It took time, however. Love is a plant of most capricious and
+ surprising growth. It may take years to root and blossom. It may
+ spring up in a day, yet strike its roots right through the heart
+ and hold it as firmly as the growth of the years. And, once the
+ heart is enmeshed in the golden filaments, it is a most dolorous
+ work to disentangle it.</p>
+
+ <p>For the first two weeks his mind ran constantly on his loss.
+ Momentarily it might be diverted by outward things, but always it
+ came back with a sharp shock, and a bitter sense of deprivation,
+ to the fact that Margaret Brandt had passed out of his life and
+ left behind her an aching void.</p>
+
+ <p>Did he sit precariously among the ragged scarps and pinnacles
+ of Little Sark, while the western seas raged furiously at his
+ feet and the Souffleur shot its rockets of snowy spray high into
+ the gray sky&mdash;through the passing film of the spray, and the
+ marbled coils of the tumbling waves, the face of Margaret Brandt
+ looked out at him.</p>
+
+ <p>Did he stride among the dew-drenched, gold-spangled gorse
+ bushes on the Eperquerie, while the sun came up with ever fresh
+ glories behind the distant hills of France&mdash;Margaret's face
+ was there in the sunrise.</p>
+
+ <p>Did he stand above Havre Gosselin in the gloaming, while the
+ sun sank behind Herm and Guernsey in splendours such as he had
+ never dreamed of&mdash;just so, he said to himself, Margaret had
+ gone out of his life and left it gray and cheerless as the night
+ side of Brecqhou.</p>
+
+ <p>Wherever he was and whatever he did, it was always Margaret,
+ Margaret,&mdash;and Margaret lost to him.</p>
+
+ <p>By the end of the third week, however, the tonic effects of
+ the strong sea air and water began to work inwards. Healthy body
+ would no longer suffer sick heart. He had taken his morning
+ plunge hitherto as a matter of course, now he began to enjoy it
+ and to look forward to it&mdash;certain index of all-round
+ recovery.</p>
+
+ <p>His appetite grew till he felt it needed an apology, at which
+ Mrs. Carr&eacute; laughed enjoyably. He began to take more
+ interest in his surroundings for their own sakes. His thoughts of
+ Margaret, with their after-glow of tender memory, were like the
+ soft sad haze which falls on Guernsey when the sun has sunk and
+ left behind it, in the upper sky, its slowly dying fires of dull
+ red amber and gold.</p>
+
+ <p>Towards the end of the fourth week he tentatively fished out
+ his manuscript and began to read it&mdash;with pauses. He grew
+ interested in it. He saw new possibilities in the
+ story.&mdash;His life was getting back on to the rails again.</p>
+
+ <h4>XI</h4>
+
+ <p>Greater bodily peace and comfort than he found in that
+ thick-set, creeper-covered, little cottage in the Rue Lucas, man
+ might scarcely hope for. Anything more would have tended to
+ luxury and made for restraint.</p>
+
+ <p>He was free as the wind to come and go as he listed, to roam
+ the lonely lanes all night and watch the coming of the
+ dawn&mdash;which he did; or to lie abed all day&mdash;which he
+ did not; to do any mortal thing that pleased him, so long only as
+ he gave his hostess full and fair warning of the state of his
+ appetite and the times when it must be satisfied.</p>
+
+ <p>His quarters were not perhaps palatial, but what man, king of
+ himself alone, would live in a palace?</p>
+
+ <p>He bumped his head with the utmost regularity against the
+ lintel of the front door each time he entered, and only learned
+ at last to bob by instinct. And the beams in the ceilings were so
+ low that they claimed recognition somewhat after the manner of a
+ boisterous acquaintance.</p>
+
+ <p>But doors and windows were always open, night and day, and his
+ good friends the dogs came in to greet him by way of the windows
+ quite as often as by the doors.</p>
+
+ <p>All through the black times those two were his close
+ companions, and no better could he have had. They asked nothing
+ of him&mdash;or almost nothing, and they gave him all they had.
+ They were grateful from the bottom of their large hearts for any
+ slightest sign of recognition. And they were proud of his
+ company, which to others would have proved somewhat of a wet
+ blanket. Without a doubt they assisted mightily in his cure,
+ though neither he nor they knew it.</p>
+
+ <p>Every morning when he jumped up to see the weather, the first
+ things that met him when he reached the open window, were four
+ eager eyes full of welcome, and a grave intelligent brown face
+ and hopeful swinging tail, and a dancing white face and little
+ wriggling body.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he would pull up the blinds and they would enter with an
+ easy bound and a scramble, and while he hastily flung on his
+ things they would prowl about, now pushing investigating noses
+ into an open drawer, and again taking a passing drink out of his
+ water-jug by way of first breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, away through the gaps in the jewelled hedges, with the
+ larks at their matins overhead, and the tethered cows nuzzling
+ out the dainty morning grasses, and watching the intruders
+ speculatively till they passed out of sight into the next
+ field.</p>
+
+ <p>"Which way? Which way? Which way?" shrieked Scamp, as he tore
+ to and fro down every possible road to show that all were
+ absolutely alike to him. While Punch bounded lightly to the first
+ dividing of the ways and waited there with slow-swinging tail to
+ see which road Man would choose.</p>
+
+ <p>The Harbour&mdash;or Les L&acirc;ches&mdash;which? Every
+ morning Scamp raced hopefully towards the sweet-smelling tunnel
+ of hawthorn trees that led down to the other tunnel in the rock
+ and the tiny harbour, because, for a very small dog, the granite
+ slip was much easier to compass than the steep ledges of Les
+ L&acirc;ches. And every morning Punch waited quietly at Colinette
+ to see how Man would go.</p>
+
+ <p>And when the tide was low and the harbour empty, Punch knew it
+ was Les L&acirc;ches almost before Man's face had turned that
+ way, and off he went at a gallop, and Scamp came tearing back
+ with expostulatory yelps, and got in Punch's way and was rolled
+ head over heels, but always came right side up at the fourth turn
+ and rushed on without even a remonstrance, for that was a very
+ small price to pay for the exalted companionship of Punch and
+ Man.</p>
+
+ <p>So, past La Peignerie and La Forge, with the thin blue smoke
+ of gorse fires floating down from every dumpy chimney and adding
+ a flavour to the sweetest air in the world,&mdash;with a morning
+ greeting from everyone they met&mdash;over the heights and down
+ the zigzag path to the sloping ledges, and in they went, all
+ three, into the clearest and crispest water in the world, water
+ that tingled and sparkled, full charged with life and energy.</p>
+
+ <p>Then shivers and shakes, and hasty play with a towel, and they
+ were racing back across the heights to breakfast and the passing
+ of another day, of which the greatest charm had passed already
+ with that plunge into the life-giving sea.</p>
+
+ <p>If you are inclined to think that I enlarge too much on these
+ two friends of his, let me remind you that a man is known by the
+ company he keeps, and these two were Graeme's sole companions for
+ many a day&mdash;those first dark days in the sunny little isle,
+ when all human companionship would have been abhorrent to
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>In their company he found himself again. Their friendship
+ weaned him by degrees from the jaundiced view of life which
+ Margaret's dereliction had induced. They drew him, in time, from
+ his brooding melancholy, and through the upbuilding of the body
+ restored him to a quieter mind.</p>
+
+ <p>Let no man despise the help of a dog, for there are times when
+ the friendship of a dog is more sufferable, and of more avail,
+ and far more comforting, than that of any ordinary human
+ being.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PART_THE_FOURTH" id="PART_THE_FOURTH"></a>PART THE
+ FOURTH</h2>
+
+ <h4>I</h4>
+
+ <p>It was just two days before the end of Graeme's fourth week in
+ Sark. His spirits were rising to the requirements of his work,
+ and he was looking forward with quite novel enjoyment to a steady
+ spell of writing, when his hostess startled him, as she cleared
+ away his breakfast, by saying&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"It iss the day after to-morrow you will be going?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? What? Going? No, I'm not going, Mrs. Carr&eacute;. What
+ made you think I was going? Why, I've only just come."</p>
+
+ <p>His landlady put down the dishes on the table again as a
+ concrete expression of surprise, put her hands on her hips by way
+ of taking grip of herself, and stared at him.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are not going? Noh? But it wass just for the month I
+ thought you kem."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not at all. I may stop two months, three months,&mdash;all my
+ life perhaps. Won't you let me live and die here if I want
+ to?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach, then! It iss not to die we woult want you. But I thought
+ my man said it wass just for the month you kem, and&mdash;my
+ Good!&mdash;I haf let your roomss for the day after to-morrow,"
+ and her face had lost its usual smile and was full of distress
+ and bewilderment.</p>
+
+ <p>"You've let my rooms? Oh, come now!&mdash;But now I think of
+ it, I believe I did say something about a month or so, when I
+ spoke to John Philip. Well now, what will you do? Put me out into
+ the road? Or can you find me somewhere else?&mdash;though I'm
+ quite sure you'll not be able to find me any place as comfortable
+ as this."</p>
+
+ <p>"Whatt will we do?" she said, much disturbed, and gazed at him
+ thoughtfully. Then, with sudden inspiration, "There iss the big
+ house up the garden?" and looked at him hopefully.</p>
+
+ <p>"But it's empty."</p>
+
+ <p>"Everything iss there, and all ready for them to come any time
+ they want to. It woult only mean making up a bed and you coult
+ come here for your meals."</p>
+
+ <p>"That would do first-rate if you can arrange it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will write to Mrs. Lee to-day and ask her to tell me by the
+ telegraph. It will be all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right then. Who's the wretched person who is
+ turning me out of here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is two leddies. They wrote to the Vicar, and he asked John
+ Philip and he told my man."</p>
+
+ <p>"Two ladies! Then I can't possibly have my meals in here.
+ You'd better let me join you in the kitchen,"&mdash;a
+ consummation he had been striving after for some time past, in
+ fact ever since his literary instincts had shaken off the thrall
+ and got their heads above the mists,&mdash;with a view, of
+ course, of turning a more intimate knowledge of his surroundings
+ to profitable account.</p>
+
+ <p>But his hostess was jealous of her kitchen and would not hear
+ of it.</p>
+
+ <p>"There iss no need. I will arrange it, and you will tek your
+ meals in here just as usual. Which room woult you like in the big
+ house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go up and have a look round. Does it make any difference
+ to you which I choose? I'd like one with a balcony if it's all
+ the same to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"It iss all the sem, and I will get it ready for you as soon
+ ass I hear from Mrs. Lee. You will not be afraid, all alone by
+ yourself up there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Afraid? No. What is there to be afraid of?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Och, I do not know. Only&mdash;all alone&mdash;sometimes one
+ iss afraid&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There aren't any ghosts about, are there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ghosts? Noh!"&mdash;with a ghost of a laugh. "I do not
+ believe in ghosts or any such things, though some people does.
+ There are some people"&mdash;very scornfully&mdash;"will not go
+ by the churchyard at night, and"&mdash;lest so sceptical a mind
+ should provoke reprisal&mdash;"I do not know that I woult myself.
+ And down by the Coup&eacute;e&mdash;But the house there iss too
+ new to have anything like that." "Well, if I see any I'll try and
+ catch one and bring it down to breakfast."</p>
+
+ <p>And so it was arranged that, if the permission of the owner of
+ the Red House could be obtained, he should sleep there and come
+ down to the cottage for his meals, Mrs. Carr&eacute; undertaking
+ that no inconvenience should thereby be caused to any of those
+ concerned.</p>
+
+ <p>He strolled up the garden, with the dogs racing in front, to
+ choose his bedroom, and came across his host unwillingly busy
+ with hoe and spade in the potato patch. His whole aspect
+ betokened such undisguised sufferance that Graeme could not
+ repress a smile.</p>
+
+ <p>"Like it?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Noh!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sooner be at the fishing?"</p>
+
+ <p>A nod and a brief smile, and Graeme left him to his unwelcome
+ labours, and passed through the gap in the tall hedge to his new
+ abode.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a well-built house, gray granite below and red tiles up
+ above, with a wide verandah round the lower storey and white
+ balconies to the upper one; the inside was all polished pitch
+ pine, and the rooms were large and airy and suitably furnished
+ for summer occupancy. It was left in Mrs. Carr&eacute;'s charge,
+ and she and the sun and wind kept it always sweet and clean, and
+ ready for use at an hour's notice.</p>
+
+ <p>With the assistance of his two friends, who displayed an
+ active and intelligent interest in the matter, he chose the room
+ with the largest balcony, and said to himself that the coming of
+ the ladies was, after all, a blessing in disguise. He believed he
+ would be even more comfortable there than he had been at the
+ cottage. He would have been quite willing to move in at once if
+ that had been possible.</p>
+
+ <p>Next morning, however, the permission duly arrived, and in
+ many trips he gaily carried all his belongings up the garden and
+ installed himself in the balcony room.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a very delightful room, with fine wide
+ outlook&mdash;over towards the church in its dark embowerment of
+ evergreen oaks, which some of the folk would not pass by night;
+ over the long sweep of the land towards Little Sark; then, over
+ to the left, a glimpse of the sea and a dark blue film on the
+ horizon which he knew was Jersey.</p>
+
+ <p>This room and the balcony outside should be his workshop, he
+ decided, and he looked forward, with an eagerness to which he had
+ been stranger for weeks past, to burying himself in his work and
+ finding in it solace and new strength.</p>
+
+ <h4>II</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme possessed a lively imagination, else surely he had
+ never taken to writing. But a lively imagination, sole occupant
+ of a ten-roomed house in a strange land whose inhabitants
+ believed firmly in ghosts and spirits and things that walked by
+ night, and that house but a stone's-throw from the black
+ churchyard where such discomforting things might naturally be
+ supposed to congregate, was not nearly so enjoyable a possession
+ at midnight as in the full light of day.</p>
+
+ <p>He lay awake for hours, hearing what seemed to him uncanny
+ sounds about the house, inside and out. The night wind sighed
+ through the heavy pale leaves of the eucalyptus trees, and set
+ the roses and honeysuckle on the verandah posts whispering and
+ tapping. In the stark silence, sounds came out of the other nine
+ empty rooms as though they chose that quiet time for passing
+ confidences. The stairs creaked as though invisible feet passed
+ up and down. And once he could have sworn to stealthy footsteps
+ along the verandah below his window.</p>
+
+ <p>He laughed at his own foolishness. Ghosts, he vowed, he did
+ not believe in, and the Sark men were notably honest. All the
+ same it was close on daylight before he slept.</p>
+
+ <p>When he pushed through the dewy hedge and went down to the
+ cottage for breakfast, his hostess's eyes twinkled as she asked,
+ "You did not see any ghosts&mdash;Noh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a ghost, but all the same it did feel a bit lonesome.
+ What would you say to my taking Punch with me to-night, just for
+ company?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yess indeed, tek him. He iss quiet. The other iss too
+ lively."</p>
+
+ <p>"And when do your ladies arrive?"</p>
+
+ <p>"With the boat. When will you be pleased to have your
+ dinner?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm off to Little Sark for the day. How would seven o'clock
+ suit you and them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will mek it suit. They will haf dinner before or after. It
+ will be quite all right."</p>
+
+ <p>He spent the day with the dogs, scrambling among the rugged
+ bastions at the south end of the island, investigated the old
+ silver mines, bathed, all three, in the great basin of Venus in
+ the hollow under the southern cliffs, and came home after sunset,
+ tired and ravenous.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, have your ladies come?" he asked, as he sat down to his
+ dinner.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yess, they are come. They are gone for a walk. One of them
+ is Miss Hen and the other iss Miss Chum."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good Lord, what names! Two old maids, I presume,&mdash;curls
+ and spectacles and that kind of thing!"</p>
+
+ <p>"They are not old, noh. And they are ferry nice to look at,
+ especially Miss Chum."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well, so she ought to be to make up for her name."</p>
+
+ <p>"They were quite put out to think of having turned you out of
+ your roomss&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not half as much as I was, but you can assure them that I am
+ delighted they came. It's as nice a house as one could wish for,
+ and if you can arrange the meals all right I'll not trouble them
+ in the least. How long are they going to stay?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They are like you. They do not know. It may be a month, it
+ may be more."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh well, I'll keep out of their way as much as possible.
+ People who come to Sark come to be quiet, I expect. Don't trouble
+ about coffee tonight, Mrs. Carr&eacute;. I shall just have a
+ smoke and then turn in. I'm tired but and I want a good night's
+ rest."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah yess. Well, you will tek Punch to-night, and then you will
+ hear no ghosts."</p>
+
+ <p>The sky was still softly suffused with the clear rose and
+ amber of the sunset when he leaned over the wall, as he filled
+ his pipe, and looked out into the darkening road.</p>
+
+ <p>"Har-H&eacute;ri! Qu&eacute;-hou-hou!" croaked a hoarse little
+ voice in the hedge opposite.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, Johnnie-boy! That you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Where you bin te-day?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Where have I been? Down in Little Sark, prowling about the
+ mines, stealing lumps of silver&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Godzamin! They an't any silver now."</p>
+
+ <p>"No? All right, my son. Then I'm telling you fibs."</p>
+
+ <p>"Show me."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, I don't carry it about with me."</p>
+
+ <p>"An't got any." And presently, as Graeme lit up, without
+ deigning any answer,&mdash;"I seen a ghost las' night."</p>
+
+ <p>"Clever boy! What did you make out of it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"'Twas the ghost of old Tom Hamon's father. Was all white and
+ dead-like."</p>
+
+ <p>"You're too previous, Johnnie. He's getting better."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's a-goin' to die."</p>
+
+ <p>"So are you sometime."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I a'n't. Show me 'at silver."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sometime, perhaps, if you ask nicely. I'm going to bed now.
+ Come along, Punch! Goodnight, Johnnie! Keep your eyes skinned for
+ ghosts. Capital night for them, I should say," and he went off up
+ the garden, with Punch stalking solemnly alongside.</p>
+
+ <p>And Johnnie Vautrin erected himself on his hands and haunches
+ to see where he was going, while the vivacious Scamp, shut up in
+ the wood-house and bereft of his bedfellow, and doubtless fearful
+ of ghosts in every nerve of his quivering little body, rent the
+ still night with his expostulations, as he heard them go
+ past.</p>
+
+ <p>The scent of the pipe was lingering still in the forecourt
+ when the ladies turned in out of the road, and they just caught a
+ glimpse of the smoker disappearing through the gap in the
+ hedge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-ha! There goes the Bogey-Man!" said Miss Hen. "Does this
+ dear little dog carry on this way all through the night, Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It iss becos the gentleman hass tekken Punch up to the house
+ to kip away the ghosts," smiled Mrs. Carr&eacute;.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should say this one would have been of more use."</p>
+
+ <p>"He will be quiet soon. Scamp, bad beast, be qui-et! A
+ couche!"</p>
+
+ <p>"To keep away ghosts! What a muff he must be!" said Miss Hen.
+ "Chum, what do you say to putting on white sheets and giving him
+ a scare? If we did a skirly-whirly &agrave; la Loie Fuller, below
+ his window, he'd probably have blue fits. Ghosts, indeed!"</p>
+
+ <p>"If that big brown Punch got out at you it's you would have
+ the blue fits," said Miss Chum. "The Sark air is getting into
+ your head, Hennie."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course it is. That's what we came for, isn't it? You'll
+ feel it yourself before you're two days older, my child. You're
+ looking better than I've seen you for a month past."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's so delightful to feel free," said Miss Chum.</p>
+
+ <h4>III</h4>
+
+ <p>Thoroughly tired out, and with a guardian angel on the mat at
+ his bedside, in the shape of a long brown body which sought fresh
+ ease in an occasional sprawl, and flopped a responsive tail each
+ time he dropped a friendly pat on to its head in the
+ dark&mdash;Graeme looked confidently for a sound night's
+ rest.</p>
+
+ <p>He fell asleep indeed at once, but woke with a start sometime
+ in the night, with the impression of a sound in his ears. Had he
+ really heard something? Or was it only the tail-end of a dream?
+ Wood-lined houses talk in the night. Was it only the pitch pine
+ whispering of the old free days in the scented woods? He could
+ not be sure, so he lay still and listened.</p>
+
+ <p>And as he waited, it came again&mdash;a low, wailing cry,
+ long-drawn and somewhat curdling to the blood.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside or inside? He could not be sure.</p>
+
+ <p>Cats? Cats can do wonders in the way of uncanny noises, but
+ somehow this did not sound like cats. There was something human,
+ or inhuman, in it, and his door suddenly shook as though
+ something tried to get in.</p>
+
+ <p>He bethought him to feel for Punch. But his hand fell on
+ space, and as he struck a match to see the time and what had
+ become of his companion, the church bell tolled one dismal
+ stroke, and he saw Punch standing like a bronze statue at the
+ door, with his nose down at the crack, his tail on the droop, and
+ every hair apparently on the bristle.</p>
+
+ <p>At the glow of the match the drooping tail gave one slow
+ swing, but he did not look round.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme struck another match, and lit his candle, and jumped
+ into his shoes.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it, old fellow?" And Punch scraped furiously at the
+ door again, and so explained that part of the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>There came a sudden scuffling fall against the door. Punch
+ rasped at it with his front feet in strenuous silence. If he had
+ been able to give voice it would have been a relief to both of
+ them. His mute anxiety added to the weirdness of the proceedings,
+ and Graeme experienced a novel creeping about the nape of the
+ neck.</p>
+
+ <p>Ghosts or no ghosts, however, it had to be looked into. He
+ picked up a heavy boot, turned the key, and flung open the door.
+ Punch went down the stairs in two long bounds, and a rush of cold
+ air put out the candle. He laid it down and followed cautiously,
+ ready to launch the boot at the first sign of uncanniness.</p>
+
+ <p>The rush of night air came through a small pantry opening off
+ the hall. The window in it was wide open, and there was no sign
+ of Punch. He and the ghost had evidently gone through that way.
+ Graeme and the boot followed.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a dark night between moons. The velvet-black vault was
+ brilliant with stars, but the earth was full of shadows. The
+ fleshy leaves of the eucalyptus trees showed pale against the
+ darkness. The night wind set them rustling eerily. From somewhere
+ beyond them, past the dark hedge, there came a sound of subdued
+ strife. Graeme clutched his boot and sped towards it, drenched
+ with dew from every disturbed branch.</p>
+
+ <p>The sounds led him into the potato patch in the lower garden,
+ and in the dimness he became aware that Punch was standing on
+ something that struggled to get up and was held down by the great
+ brown paws and body.</p>
+
+ <p>No ghost, evidently. Graeme dropped his boot and stooped and
+ laid hold of the struggler, and knew in a moment, in spite of his
+ own disturbance of mind, that this ghost at all events had
+ materialised into the bodily form of Master Johnnie Vautrin, and
+ he wondered how many more might have done the same if they had
+ been followed up as closely.</p>
+
+ <p>He lifted the squirming small boy who had not spoken a
+ word.</p>
+
+ <p>"So this is what Sark ghosts are made of, is it, Master
+ Johnnie?" he asked, giving him a shake. "You little scamp! For
+ once you shall have what you jolly well deserve," and he carried
+ him, kicking and wriggling, back to the house, shoved him through
+ the window, and held him with one hand while he got through
+ himself. Punch followed with an easy bound, and they all went
+ upstairs. Graeme found his candle, and lit it and looked at his
+ prisoner.</p>
+
+ <p>Johnnie was covered with mould from the potato patch, but his
+ black eyes gleamed through it as brightly as ever, and, as far as
+ Graeme could distinguish through its masking, his face showed no
+ sign of confusion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know what we do with naughty little ghosts in England,
+ Johnnie?"</p>
+
+ <p>Johnnie's eyes glittered like a snake's.</p>
+
+ <p>"We spank 'em, Johnnie. I'm going to spank
+ you&mdash;hard."</p>
+
+ <p>Then Johnnie spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll put tha evil eye on you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Two if you like, my son,&mdash;or twenty if you've got 'em
+ handy. Evil eyes rather tickle me. We'll see which makes most
+ impression&mdash;my hand or your eye," and he laid the
+ black-magic man across his knee, and gave him such a genuine
+ motherly quilting as he had never experienced in his life before.
+ Hot blows he was accustomed to, but this cool, relentless,
+ tingling flagellation, all on the one spot, and continued till
+ every particle of blood in his body seemed to leap to meet each
+ stroke, was new to him, and it made a great and lasting
+ impression.</p>
+
+ <p>He did not cry, but tried to bite and scratch the operator,
+ and Punch stood looking on with a grave smile on his face and a
+ slowly swinging tail expressive of the greatest satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>Discipline over, Graeme handed him out through the pantry
+ window, bade him to go home to bed, and fastened the window
+ behind him. The night passed without further disturbance, and
+ Graeme awoke as the dawn glimmered golden on his wide-open
+ window.</p>
+
+ <p>In ten minutes he was racing bareheaded past Colinette and La
+ Forge towards Les L&acirc;ches, a towel round his neck and Punch
+ bounding silently by his side. They had stolen out the back way
+ through the top of the post-office fields, and had left Scamp
+ still prisoner in the woodhouse, lest the hysterical joy of his
+ release should disturb the ladies.</p>
+
+ <p>And presently they were racing back home, all aglow with the
+ tingling kisses of the waves, and rough of hair with the salt and
+ the wind.</p>
+
+ <p>The sun was up but not yet stripped for the long day's race to
+ the west. The eastern skies still gleamed through a faery haze
+ with the soft iridescence of a young ormer shell, the tender
+ pinks and greens and golds of the new day's birth-chamber
+ mellowing upwards into the glorious blue of a day of days.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>'The year's at the spring,<br /></span> <span>The day's
+ at the morn;<br /></span> <span>Morning's at
+ seven;<br /></span> <span>The hillside's
+ dew-pearled:<br /></span> <span>The lark's on the
+ wing;<br /></span> <span>The snail's on the
+ thorn;<br /></span> <span>God's in his
+ heaven&mdash;<br /></span> <span>All's right with the
+ world!'<br /></span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The lilt of the joyous words had often been with him as he
+ sped through the sleeping fields to his morning plunge.</p>
+
+ <p>This day of days, as though his soul forecasted what was
+ coming, they sang in his heart and on his lips. His cure was
+ surely near completion. The salt was regaining its savour. Life
+ was worth living again.</p>
+
+ <p>And it was then, when he had come through the valley and was
+ ready to climb again, that the glory came to him.</p>
+
+ <p>As the two friends sprang lightly over the turf wall into the
+ garden of the Red House, they saw a sight which one of them will
+ not forget as long as he lives.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp101" id="fp101"></a> <img src="images/fp101.jpg"
+ width="562" height="338" alt=
+ "The Red House. The gap in the hedge. The cottage." title=
+ "The Red House. The gap in the hedge. The cottage." /> <h5>The
+ Red House. The gap in the hedge. The cottage.</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In the gap of the tall hedge, where the path led down to the
+ cottage,&mdash;ringed in its darkness like a lovely picture in a
+ sombre frame, with a pale eucalyptus rising stately on either
+ side; and behind it all, and gleaming softly through and round it
+ all, the tender glories of the new day,&mdash;stood a girl in a
+ dove-coloured dress, bareheaded, holding the dew-pearled branches
+ apart with her two hands, and gazing at him with wide eyes, and
+ parted lips, and startled face.</p>
+
+ <p>And the girl was Margaret Brandt.</p>
+
+ <h4>IV</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme's first thought was that he was dreaming. He blinked
+ his eyes to make sure they were not playing him false.</p>
+
+ <p>If she had disappeared at that moment, he would have sworn to
+ hallucinations and the visibility of spirits to the day of his
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>But she did not disappear, and Punch proved her no spirit by
+ stalking gravely up to give her welcome. Without taking her
+ startled eyes off Graeme, she dropped one white hand on to the
+ great brown head and the diamonds sprinkled her dove-coloured
+ dress.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Graeme!" she said, in a voice which very fully expressed
+ her own doubts as to his reality also.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mar&mdash;Miss Brandt? ... Is it possible?"</p>
+
+ <p>They had both drawn nearer, he along the broad gravel walk,
+ she along the narrow path between the eucalyptus trees.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are you quite sure you are real?" he asked breathlessly, and
+ for answer she laughed and stretched a friendly hand towards
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>He took it with shining eyes, and then bent suddenly and
+ kissed it gently, and his eyes were shining still more brightly
+ as she drew it hastily away.</p>
+
+ <p>"But whatever brings you here?" she asked abruptly.</p>
+
+ <p>"We're just out of the sea,"&mdash;and the joy of the sea and
+ the morning, and this greatest thing of all, was in his face.</p>
+
+ <p>"But <i>why</i> are you here? What are you doing here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Doing? We're living here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you know I was here? How&mdash;&mdash;?" she began, with
+ a puzzled wrinkle of the fair white brow, and stopped.</p>
+
+ <p>"I did not know. I wish I had."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you did not know, how&mdash;why&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If I had known perhaps I should not have dared to follow you.
+ On the whole I'm glad I did not know."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't understand.... How long have you been here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just four weeks," he said, with a smile at thought of the
+ blackness of those four weeks now that he stood in the
+ sunshine.</p>
+
+ <p>"Four weeks! Then you mean&mdash;you mean that I&mdash;that
+ we&mdash;followed&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"In the mere matter of time, yes!&mdash;and of place too," he
+ laughed." For you turned me out of my rooms."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you mean to say you are the Bogey-Man?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well,&mdash;no one ever called me so to my face before, but
+ I'm bound to say I've felt uncommonly like one for the past four
+ or five weeks."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come with me," she said hastily. "I must put this right at
+ once, or Hennie&mdash;&mdash;" and she turned and went through
+ the gap in the hedge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Put what right?" he asked, as he followed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh&mdash;you," she said hastily.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm all right&mdash;now. And who is Hennie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My friend Miss Penny&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I beg your pardon. I thought you said Hennie."</p>
+
+ <p>"Henrietta Penny. She was at school with me. We are taking
+ care of one another."</p>
+
+ <p>They had come to the forecourt of the cottage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hen!" cried Margaret. The window was wide open, but the blind
+ was discreetly down.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, Chum!" came back in muffled tones. "What's up now?
+ Been and got yourself lost again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Come out, dear. I want you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Half a jiff, old girl. Give a fellow a chance with his back
+ hair. You had first tub this morning, remember." At which
+ Graeme's eyes twinkled in unison with Margaret's.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's a gentleman waiting to see you, dear," said Margaret,
+ to prevent any further revelations.</p>
+
+ <p>"A <i>what</i>?"&mdash;and there followed a clatter of falling
+ implements as though a sudden start had sent them flying.
+ "Wretch!&mdash;to upset one like that! It's that big brown dog, I
+ suppose. I know you, my child!"</p>
+
+ <p>Then the blind whirled up and a merry face, in a cloud of
+ dishevelled hair, looked out, a pair of horrified eyes rested
+ momentarily on Graeme, and the blind rattled down again with
+ something that sounded like a muffled feminine objurgation.</p>
+
+ <p>And presently the inner door opened and Miss Penny came forth
+ demurely, and bowed distantly in the direction of Margaret and
+ Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>She was of average height but inclined to plumpness, and so
+ looked smaller than Margaret; and she had no great pretensions to
+ beauty, Graeme thought&mdash;but then he was biassed for life and
+ incapable of free and impartial judgment&mdash;save such as might
+ be found in a very frank face given to much laughter, a rather
+ wide mouth and nice white teeth, abundant dark hair and a pair of
+ challenging brown eyes which now, getting over their first
+ confusion&mdash;and finding herself at all events fully dressed,
+ wherein she had the advantage of him&mdash;rested with much
+ appreciation on the young man in front of her.</p>
+
+ <p>The salt water was still in his hair, and the discrepancies in
+ his hasty attire were but partly hidden by the damp towel round
+ his neck. Nevertheless he was very good to look upon. His
+ moustache showed crisp against the healthy brown of his face; his
+ hair, short as it was, had a natural ripple which sea-water could
+ not reduce; and his eyes were brimming with the new joy of life
+ and repressed laughter. Miss Penny liked the looks of him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Margaret Brandt, I will never forgive you as long as I live,"
+ said she emphatically.</p>
+
+ <p>"All right, dear! This is Mr. Bogey-man whose rooms we have
+ appropriated. He wished to be introduced to the other malefactor.
+ Miss Henrietta Penny&mdash;Mr. John Graeme! Mr. Graeme and I have
+ met before."</p>
+
+ <p>If Mr. John Graeme had had more experience of women, the flash
+ that shot across from the brown eyes to the dark blue ones might
+ have told him stories&mdash;for instance, that his name and
+ would-have-been standing towards her friend were not entirely
+ unknown to Miss Penny; that, for a brief half second, she
+ wondered&mdash;doubted&mdash;and instantly chid herself for such
+ a thought in connection with Margaret Brandt.</p>
+
+ <p>But Margaret herself, being a woman, caught the momentary
+ challenge and repelled it steadily.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am very pleased to meet you, Miss Penny&mdash;in such a
+ place, and in such company. I have heard of you from Miss
+ Brandt," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never till five minutes ago," laughed Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, if you will pardon me&mdash;once before, at Lady Elspeth
+ Gordon's. Unless I am mistaken, Miss Penny had just been across
+ to Dublin to take a degree which Cambridge ungallantly declined
+ to confer upon her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite right!" said Miss Penny. "M.A. They're misogynists at
+ Cambridge."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you oblige me by informing Miss Penny, Mr. Graeme, that
+ this meeting is purely accidental? I caught a spark in her eye
+ and I know what it means. Had you the very slightest idea that we
+ were coming to Sark?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not the remotest. When I saw you standing in the hedge there,
+ with the morning glories all about you, I first doubted my eyes,
+ then I thought you a vision&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And do you think it possible that I knew of you being
+ here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am certain you did not. Nobody knows. I left no address,
+ and I told no one where I was going. I have not had a letter
+ since I left London. I have been buried alive in this heavenly
+ little place."</p>
+
+ <p>"There now, Mademoiselle," said Margaret, with a bow. "Are you
+ satisfied now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was satisfied before you opened your mouth, my dear. The
+ possibility inevitably suggested itself, but it was stillborn.
+ Has not our friendship passed its seventh birthday?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, dear. But the coincidence of our coming to bury
+ ourselves in Sark, and Mr. Graeme's coming to bury himself in
+ Sark, was almost unbelievable."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not at all," said Miss Penny. "If you could both trace back
+ you would probably find the same original spring of
+ action&mdash;a chance word from some common friend, or some
+ article you have both read. Then, when circumstances loosed the
+ spring, you both shot in the same direction. What was it loosed
+ your spring, Mr. Graeme?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well,&mdash;I wanted to get away out of things. I'm busy on a
+ book, you see, and I'd heard of Sark&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Same here!" said Miss Penny&mdash;"less the book. We wanted
+ to get away out of things&mdash;and people, and we'd heard of
+ Sark, and here we are. Was it you suggested Sark, or I, Meg?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure I don't know, dear. You, I should think."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will take all the credit of it."</p>
+
+ <p>Just then Mrs. Carr&eacute;, who had been down to John
+ Philip's for bread, turned in out of the road with a loaf under
+ each arm. At sight of all her guests fraternising, her face lit
+ up with a broad smile, and Scamp, who had whirled in after her,
+ twisted himself into hieroglyphics of delight and rent the air
+ with his expression of it, and then launched himself at Punch and
+ taxed him with perfidy in going off to bathe without him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, you have med friends with the leddies," she said to
+ Graeme. "Scamp! Bad beast, be qui-et! A couche!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm doing my best, Mrs. Carr&eacute;."</p>
+
+ <p>"That iss very nice."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very nice, indeed!" And Miss Penny asserted afterwards that
+ he was looking at Margaret all the time.</p>
+
+ <p>"I told them you were a nice quiet gentleman and wouldn't
+ disturb them at all," said Mrs. Carr&eacute;.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll do my very best not to. So far the disturbance has been
+ all on their side, but I'm standing it very well, you see. You'll
+ let me show you the sights, won't you?" he said to Miss Brandt.
+ "I've been here a month, you see, and I know it all like a book.
+ I've done nothing but moon about since I came&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought you were busy on a book," said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Er&mdash;well, you see, you have to do a lot of thinking
+ before you start writing. I've been thinking," and perhaps more
+ than one of them had a fairly shrewd suspicion as to the line his
+ thoughts had taken.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, if I don't cut away and dress, and get my breakfast and
+ clear out, I shall be in the way of the ladies, and Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute; will never forgive me," he said. "I do hope you will
+ include me in your plans for the day."</p>
+
+ <p>His bow included them both, and he sped off up the path
+ through the high hedge, with the two dogs racing alongside.</p>
+
+ <p>"Meg, my child, we will go for a little walk," said Miss
+ Penny.</p>
+
+ <h4>V</h4>
+
+ <p>The salt Sark air is uplifting at all times. The sea-water has
+ a crisp effervescence of its own which tones and braces mind and
+ body alike. Add to these the wonder of Margaret's unexpected
+ presence there and, if the gift of large imagination be yours,
+ you may possibly arrive&mdash;within a hundred miles or
+ so&mdash;of the state of John Graeme's feelings as he raced up
+ that path and bounded up the stairs of the Red House four at a
+ time.</p>
+
+ <p>He looked out of the wide-open window across the fields, while
+ the dogs, as usual, took the opportunity of appeasing their
+ thirst at his water-jug,&mdash;for water lies at the bottom of
+ deep cool wells in Sark, and sensible dogs take their chances
+ when they offer.</p>
+
+ <p>Was this the room he had left an hour ago in the fresh of the
+ dawn&mdash;a man whose gray future was just beginning to lift its
+ bruised head out of the shadows?</p>
+
+ <p>Were those gleaming emerald fields the dim wastes he had sped
+ across with his dumb companion, feeling as friendly towards him
+ as towards anything on earth?</p>
+
+ <p>Were those trees over there, with the glow of spring-gold in
+ their tender green leaves, the gloomy guardians of the churchyard
+ where ghosts walked of a night?</p>
+
+ <p>Was that streak of blue away beyond the uplands, with the
+ purple film along its rim, only the sea and a hint of Jersey, or
+ was it a glimpse of heaven?</p>
+
+ <p>Was he, in very truth, that John Graeme who, for thirty days
+ past, had been striving with all his might to root the thought of
+ Margaret Brandt out of his life&mdash;and succeeding not at
+ all?</p>
+
+ <p>It was the face of a stranger&mdash;a stranger with new joy of
+ life in his sparkling eyes&mdash;that looked back at him out of
+ the glass, as he plied his brushes, and tied his neck-tie with a
+ careful assiduity to which the John Graeme of the past thirty
+ days had been a stranger indeed.</p>
+
+ <p>It was amazing. It was almost past belief. Yet this was
+ himself, and there was the gap in the dark hedge&mdash;never dark
+ again to him so long as one twig of it lived&mdash;the gap where
+ he had come upon her standing like a goddess of the morning with
+ the glories of the dawn all about her. And somewhere not far
+ away, under this same heavenly blue sky, was Margaret. And there
+ was no sign or hint of Jeremiah Pixley in her
+ atmosphere&mdash;nor of Charles Svendt.</p>
+
+ <p>What could it possibly all mean?</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Penny&mdash;Hennie Penny! What a delightfully ludicrous
+ name! And what a delightful creature she was!&mdash;Miss Penny,
+ unless he had been dreaming, had said they had come to get away
+ from things&mdash;and people! Now what did she mean by
+ that&mdash;if she really had said it and he had not been
+ dreaming?</p>
+
+ <p>Was it possible Margaret had come to get away from Jeremiah
+ Pixley and Charles Svendt? On the face of it, it seemed not
+ impossible, for Graeme's only wonder was that she could ever have
+ borne with them so long.</p>
+
+ <p>His brain was in a whirl. The eyes of his understanding were
+ as the eyes of one immured for thirty days in a dark cell and
+ then dragged suddenly into the full blaze of the sun. If he had
+ just drunk a magnum of champagne he could not have felt more
+ elevated, and he would certainly have felt very different. For
+ his eye was clear as a jewel, and his hand was steady as a rock,
+ though his heart had not yet settled to its beat and the red
+ blood danced in his veins like fire.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jock, my lad," he said to himself, as he got the knot of his
+ tie to his liking at last,&mdash;"keep a grip of yourself and go
+ steady. Such a thing is enough to throw any man a bit off the
+ rails. Ca' canny, my lad, ca' canny!"</p>
+
+ <h4>VI</h4>
+
+ <p>"Meg, I rather like young men with rippled hair," said Miss
+ Hennie Penny, as they passed the Carrefour and strolled between
+ the dewy hedges towards La Tour, with larks by the dozen bursting
+ their hearts in the freshness of the morning above them.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp112" id="fp112"></a> <img src="images/fp112.jpg"
+ width="557" height="331" alt=
+ "&quot;In the freshness of the morning&quot;&mdash;" title=
+ "&quot;In the freshness of the morning&quot;&mdash;" /> <h5>"In
+ the freshness of the morning"&mdash;</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Do you, dear? I thought you scorned young men?"</p>
+
+ <p>"As a class, yes!&mdash;Especially the Cambridge variety. But
+ not in particular. I make an exception in this case."</p>
+
+ <p>"So good of you!" murmured Margaret in her best company
+ manner.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why did you never tell me how nice he was?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell you how nice he was? I don't remember ever discussing
+ him with you in any shape or form whatever."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not to say discussed exactly, but you can't deny that you've
+ mentioned him occasionally."</p>
+
+ <p>"So I have William Shakespeare and Alfred Tennyson&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And Charles Pixley!"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's quite different&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You're right, my dear. This is a horse of quite another
+ colour. An awfully decent colour too. I'm glad you appreciate it.
+ He's as brown as a gipsy and not an ounce of flab about him.
+ Charles Pixley is mostly flab&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be rude, Hen. You don't know Charles. And do drop your
+ school slang&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't, my child. It's part of my holiday, so none of your
+ pi-jaw! If you want me to enjoy myself you must let me have my
+ head. You can't imagine how awfully good it tastes when you've
+ been doing your best to choke girls off it for a year or two.
+ It's one of the outward and visible signs of emancipation. This
+ is another!" and she sprang up the high turf bank of the orchard
+ of La Tour and danced a breakdown on it, and then jumped back
+ into the road with ballooning skirts, to the intense amazement of
+ old Mrs. Hamon of Le Fort, who had just come round the corner to
+ draw sweet water from the La Tour well.</p>
+
+ <p>"People will think you're crazy," remonstrated Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"So I am, and you're my keeper, though it's supposed to be the
+ other way about. The air of Sark has got into my head. What a
+ quaint bonnet that old lady has! I wonder what colour it was in
+ its infancy. Good-morning, ma'am! Isn't this a glorious day?" And
+ old Madame Hamon murmured a word and passed hastily on lest worse
+ should befall.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hennie, be sensible for a minute or two. I want you to
+ consider something seriously."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sensible, if you like, Chummie, for 'tis my nature to.
+ Serious?&mdash;Never! How could one, with those larks bursting
+ themselves in a sky like that? And did you ever see hedges like
+ these in all your life? What's it all
+ about?&mdash;Ripply-Hair?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. Don't you see how awkward the whole matter
+ is&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Awkward for Charles Pixley maybe. I don't see that anybody
+ else need worry themselves thin about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not thinking of Mr. Pixley. It's&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ripply-Hair? Well, that's all right! Jolly sight nicer to
+ think about him. I like his eyes too. There's something in them
+ that seems to invite one's confidence. Perhaps you haven't
+ noticed it? If I had a father-confessor&mdash;which, thank's-be,
+ I haven't, and a jolly good thing for him!&mdash;I should
+ stipulate for him having eyes just like that. Ripply hair too, I
+ think. Yes. I should insist on his having hair just like Mr.
+ Graeme's."</p>
+
+ <p>They had strolled along past Le Fort till the road lost itself
+ in a field above Banquette, and there they came to an involuntary
+ stand and stood gazing.</p>
+
+ <p>Before them, the long, broken slopes of the Eperquerie swept
+ down from the heights to the sea, one vast blaze of flaming
+ gorse&mdash;a tumultuous torrent of solid sunshine stayed
+ suddenly in its course. And, in below the sunshine of the gorse,
+ where rough Mother Earth should have been, there lay instead a
+ soft sunset cloud, the tender cream-yellow and green of myriads
+ of primroses and the just uncurling fronds of the
+ bracken&mdash;primroses in such unbroken sheets and masses as to
+ give a weird effect of remoteness and impalpability to that which
+ was solid and close at hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wonderful!" murmured Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Glorious!" murmured Miss Penny. "Is it really old Mother
+ Earth we're looking at?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, dear! It's a bit of the sky fallen down there and the sun
+ has rolled over it into the sea. See the bits of him in the
+ wavelets! And did you ever in your life see a green like that
+ water below the rocks?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sky and sun above, sun and sky below!&mdash;with trimmings of
+ liquid emerald and sapphire, shot with white and gold. Meg, my
+ child, this is a long way from No. 1 Melgrave Square."</p>
+
+ <p>"A long, long way!" assented Margaret thoughtfully. And then,
+ to take advantage of her companion's comparative soberness
+ through the stirring of her feelings,&mdash;"Hennie, do you think
+ we ought to stop?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop?" and Miss Penny fronted her squarely. "Stop? Why, we've
+ only just come. What's disgruntling you, Chummie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't you see how awkward it is?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well,&mdash;that depends&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No one would believe it was all pure accident."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps it isn't," said Miss Penny oracularly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, what do you mean?" said Margaret, bristling in her
+ turn.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'm imputing no guile, my child. I'm miles away up past
+ that kind of thing. What I mean is this&mdash;perhaps it was
+ meant to be, and you couldn't help yourselves. Now if that should
+ be the case, it would be flying in the face of Providence to go
+ and upset it all. What are your feelings towards him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Feelings? I have no feelings&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, you have, my child. You're not made of marble, though
+ you can look it when you try. Why, I have myself. I like
+ him&mdash;the little I've seen of him&mdash;and in spite of the
+ fact that he caught me doing my hair, which is enough to turn
+ anyone against anyone. I shall probably like him still more the
+ better I get to know him. What have you against him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've nothing whatever against him. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then, my dear, we'll sit tight. If anyone should go it's he,
+ since he's been here a month, and we've only been one day. But if
+ he goes it will only be because you make him. You've no ill-will
+ towards him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've no feeling at all about him, except that it's awkward
+ his being here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we'll just put the blame on Providence, and sit tight,
+ as I said before. I'll see you come to no harm, my child. I could
+ make that young man, or any young man, fly to the other end of
+ the island by simply looking at him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Think so, dear?" and Margaret, the issue being decided for
+ her, came back to equanimity.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure!" said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <h4>VII</h4>
+
+ <p>He was sitting on the low stone wall that shut off the
+ cobble-paved forecourt from the road, with his back towards them,
+ when they sauntered through the open door after breakfast. He was
+ smoking the choice after-breakfast pipe of peace, legs dangling,
+ back bent, hands loosely clasped between his knees. He was very
+ beautifully dressed as regards tie and collar&mdash;for the rest,
+ light tweeds and cap of the same, and shoes which struck Miss
+ Penny as flat. But these things she only noticed later. At
+ present all she saw was a square light-tweed back, and a curl of
+ fragrant smoke rising over its left shoulder.</p>
+
+ <p>Below him in the dust were his two friends,&mdash;Punch,
+ gravely observant of his every movement, and occasionally
+ following the smoke with an interested eye; Scamp, no less
+ watchful, but panting like a motor-car, and apparently exhausted
+ with unrewarded scoutings up and down every possible route for
+ the day's programme.</p>
+
+ <p>In the hedge, on the opposite side of the road, sat a very
+ small boy bunched up into an odd little heap, out of which looked
+ a long sharp little face and a pair of black eyes as sharp as
+ gimlets and as bright as a rat's, and beside him sat a big black
+ cat busy on its toilet, which it interrupted in order to eye the
+ ladies keenly when they appeared.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, see you here, my son," they heard from the other side of
+ the broad tweed back, "if you don't make it fine for the next
+ thirty days you and I will have words together. If you want it to
+ rain, let it rain in the night. Not a drop after four A.M., you
+ understand. If you turn it on after four in the morning there'll
+ be another rupture of diplomatic relations between you and me,
+ same as there was last night."</p>
+
+ <p>The small boy's beady eyes twinkled, and he squeaked a few
+ words in Sarkese.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have the advantage of me, Johnnie. And I've told you
+ before it's not polite to address a gentleman in a language he's
+ not familiar with, when you're perfectly acquainted with his own.
+ The only word I caught was 'Guyablle!' and that's not a word for
+ young people like you and me, though it may suit Marielihou. I'm
+ very much afraid I'll have to speak to the schoolmaster about
+ you, after all, and to the Vicar too, maybe. What? A Wesleyan,
+ are you? Very well then, it's Monsieur Bisson I must speak
+ to."</p>
+
+ <p>Here the small boy, with his face crumpled up into a grin,
+ pointed a thin grimy finger past the young man, and he turned and
+ saw the ladies. He doffed his cap and jumped down and tapped out
+ his pipe, and the dogs sprang up expectant;&mdash;Punch, grave as
+ ever but light on his feet for instant start; Scamp twisting
+ himself into figure-eights, and rending the air with such yelps
+ of delight that not a word could they pass.</p>
+
+ <p>"Johnnie! Stop him!" shouted Graeme. The small boy in the
+ hedge flung out his arm with a sudden threatening gesture, and
+ the circling Scamp fled through the gateway and up the garden
+ with a shriek of dismay, and remained there yelping as if he had
+ been struck.</p>
+
+ <p>"Odd that, isn't it?" said Graeme. "Johnnie's the only person
+ that can stop that small dog talking; and, what's more, he can do
+ it a hundred yards away. If the dog can see him that's enough,
+ and yet they're good enough friends as a rule. Look at
+ Punch!"</p>
+
+ <p>The big brown fellow was standing eyeing the small boy with an
+ odd expression, intent, expectant, doubtful, with just a touch of
+ apprehension in it, and perhaps of latent anger.</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you do it with Punch?" asked Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>The small boy shook his head. "Godzamin, he'd eat me if I
+ tried," he said, and lifted his eyes from the dog's, and the dog
+ walked quietly up to Margaret and pushed his great head under her
+ hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's a fine fellow," she said, caressing him.</p>
+
+ <p>"A most gentlemanly dog," said Miss Penny. "His eyes are
+ absolutely poetical,&mdash;charged with thoughts too deep for
+ words."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, he's dumb," said Graeme, stooping to pull a long brown
+ ear.</p>
+
+ <p>"Really?" asked Margaret, looking into his face to make sure
+ he was not joking.</p>
+
+ <p>"We've been close friends for a month now, and I've never
+ heard his voice even in a whisper, nor has anyone else. I've an
+ idea Johnnie here has put a spell on him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Poor old fellow!" said Margaret, fondling the big brown
+ head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, he's quite happy&mdash;bold as a lion and graceful as a
+ panther, and Scamp talks more than enough for the two of
+ them."</p>
+
+ <p>"And what a fine big cat you have, Johnnie!" said Miss Penny,
+ and stretched a friendly hand towards Marielihou. "What do you
+ call it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Marrlyou," growled Johnnie; and Marielihou bristled and spat
+ at the advancing white hand, which retired rapidly.</p>
+
+ <p>"The nasty beast!" said Miss Penny, and Marielihou glared at
+ her with eyes of scorching green fire.</p>
+
+ <p>"Marielihou is not good company for anyone but herself," said
+ Graeme. "Now, where would you like to go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We were up that way before breakfast," said Miss Penny,
+ nodding due north.</p>
+
+ <p>"Been to the Coup&eacute;e yet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, we've been nowhere except just along here. We were afraid
+ of getting lost or tumbling over the edges."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you must see the Coup&eacute;e at once. And we'll call
+ at John Philip's as we pass, to get you some shoes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shoes?" and each stuck out a dainty brown boot and examined
+ it critically for inadequacies, and then looked up at him
+ enquiringly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I know. They're delicious, but in Sark you must wear
+ Sark shoes&mdash;this kind of thing"&mdash;sticking up his
+ own&mdash;"or you may come to a sudden end. And, seeing that
+ you're in my charge&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh?" said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come along to John Philip's," said Miss Penny. And as they
+ turned down the road with Punch, the hedge opened and Scamp came
+ wriggling through, with white-eyed glances for Johnnie Vautrin
+ and Marielihou sitting in the bushes farther up.</p>
+
+ <h4>VIII</h4>
+
+ <p>Miss Penny and Graeme did most of the talking. Margaret was
+ unusually silent, pondering, perhaps, her friend's utterances of
+ the early morning, and still wondering at the strange turn of
+ events that had so unexpectedly thrown herself and John Graeme
+ into such close companionship that he could actually claim to be
+ in charge of her, and had proved it beyond question by making her
+ buy a pair of shoes which she considered anything but
+ shapely.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme understood and kept to his looking-glass promise.</p>
+
+ <p>His heart was dancing within him. It was impossible to keep
+ the lilt of it entirely out of his eyes. They were radiant with
+ this unlooked-for happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>It was Margaret's shadow that mingled with his own on the
+ sunny road&mdash;when it wasn't Miss Penny's. It was Margaret's
+ pleated blue skirt that swung beside him to a tune that set his
+ pulses leaping. Miss Penny's skirt was there too, indeed, but a
+ thousand of it flapping in a gale would not have quickened his
+ pulse by half a beat.</p>
+
+ <p>And Miss Penny probably understood&mdash;some things, or parts
+ of things&mdash;or thought she did, and was extremely happy in
+ that which was vouchsafed to her. Oh, she knew, did Miss Penny!
+ She had not, indeed, had much&mdash;if put into a corner and made
+ to confess to bare and literal truth, not any&mdash;experience,
+ that is personal and practical experience, of such
+ matters,&mdash;if, indeed, such matters are capable of being
+ brought to the test of such a word as practical. But she had read
+ much about them&mdash;in search of truth, and right and fitting
+ books to be admitted to the school library&mdash;and she knew all
+ about it. And here, unless she, Henrietta Penny, was very much
+ mistaken, was a veritable live love-affair budding and
+ blossoming&mdash;at least she hoped it would blossom&mdash;before
+ her very eyes. Budding it undoubtedly was, on one side at all
+ events, and blossom it certainly should if she could help it on;
+ for he had ripply hair, and deep attractive eyes, and a frank
+ open face, and she liked him.</p>
+
+ <p>They were suddenly in the shade, threading a narrow cutting
+ between high gorse-topped banks of crumbly yellow rock. Then,
+ without any warning, the rock-walls fell away. They were out into
+ the sunshine again, and in front stretched a wavering rock path,
+ the narrow crown of a ridge whose sides sank sharply out of
+ sight. From somewhere far away below came the surge and rush of
+ many waters.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is the Coup&eacute;e," said Graeme, as the dogs raced
+ across. "Over there is Little Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is grand!" said Margaret, gazing at the huge rock
+ buttresses whose loins came up through the white foam three
+ hundred feet below.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's awful!" said Miss Penny. "You're never going across, Mr.
+ Graeme?" as he strolled on along the narrow ridge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Surely! Why not? It's perfectly safe. There was a wooden
+ railing at this side, but it fell over about a fortnight ago, and
+ at present the good folks of Little Sark and Big Sark are
+ discussing who ought to put up a new one. I happened to be
+ sitting over there when it fell. A party of visitors came down
+ the cutting here, and one was just going to lean on the railing,
+ to look down into the gulf there, when he had the sense to try it
+ first with his foot and it went with a crash, and they got a
+ scare and went back to the hotel to eat lobsters. It was really
+ useless as protection, but it made one feel safer to have it
+ there."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's horrible," said Miss Penny emphatically.</p>
+
+ <p>"Safe as London Bridge, if you'll only believe it. It's a good
+ four feet wide. The school children used to trot over when it was
+ not more than two and a half."</p>
+
+ <p>"And none of them fell over?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Never a one. Why should they?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Meg, my dear," said Miss Penny, with a sudden flash of
+ incongruity," this is truly a <i>very</i> great change from
+ Melgrave Square."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is," laughed Margaret. "Are you coming, Hennie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll&mdash;I'll risk it if Mr. Graeme will personally conduct
+ me. He's in charge of us, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly!" and he held out his hand to her, and then looked
+ at Margaret. "Will you please wait here till I come back for
+ you?" And catching, as he thought, a sign of mutiny in her
+ face,&mdash;"Although it's perfectly safe it's perhaps just as
+ well to have company the first time you cross."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well," she said, and Miss Penny clung convulsively to
+ the strong unwavering hand while she gingerly trod the narrow
+ way, and the dogs raced half-way to meet them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go <i>away</i>!" she shrieked, and the dogs turned on their
+ pivots and sped back.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, you see!" he said, when she stood safe on the rounded
+ shoulder of Little Sark. "Where was the trouble?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's perfectly easy, Meg," cried Miss Penny, uplifted with
+ her accomplishment.</p>
+
+ <p>He wondered whether she would vouchsafe him her hand or
+ attempt the passage alone. But she put her hand into his without
+ hesitation, and thenceforth and for ever the Coup&eacute;e held
+ for him a touch of sacred glamour. For the soft hand throbbed in
+ his, and every throb thrilled right up into his heart and set it
+ dancing to some such tune as that which sang in David when he
+ danced before the Ark. But his hand was firm, and his head was
+ steady, for that which he held in charge was the dearest thing in
+ life to him.</p>
+
+ <p>Three hundred blessed feet was the span of the Coup&eacute;e.
+ How fervently he wished them three thousand&mdash;ay, three
+ million! For every step accorded him a throb, and heart-throbs
+ such as these are among the precious things of life.</p>
+
+ <p>Neither of them spoke one word. Common-places were very much
+ out of place, and the things that were in his heart he might not
+ speak&mdash;yet.</p>
+
+ <p>"Didn't I say so?" cried Miss Penny, as they stepped ashore on
+ Little Sark. "It's as easy as winking."</p>
+
+ <p>"I never said it wasn't," said Margaret, with a deep breath.
+ "But I doubt if you'd have come across alone, my child."</p>
+
+ <p>"It was certainly pleasanter to have something to hold on to,"
+ said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>And Graeme thought so too.</p>
+
+ <h4>IX</h4>
+
+ <p>Little Sark provides ample opportunity for the adventurous
+ scrambler, and Graeme, having tested the novel sensation of those
+ delicious heart-thrills, was eager for more.</p>
+
+ <p>They prowled round the old silver mines, and sat on the great
+ rocks at Port Gorey which had in those olden times served for a
+ jetty, while he told them how Peter Le Pelley had mortgaged the
+ island to further his quest after the silver, and how a whole
+ ship-load of it sank within a stone's throw of the place where
+ they sat, and with it the Seigneur's hopes and fortunes.</p>
+
+ <p>They peered into the old houses and down the disused shafts,
+ lined now with matted growth of ivy and clinging ferns,&mdash;the
+ bottomless pits into which the Le Pelley heritage had
+ disappeared. Then he took them for mild refection to Mrs.
+ Mollet's cottage; and after a rest,&mdash;and with their gracious
+ permission, a pipe,&mdash;he led them across to the wild south
+ walls of the island, with their great chasms and fissures and
+ tumbled strata, their massive pinnacles, and deep narrow inlets
+ and tunnels where the waves champed and roared in everlasting
+ darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>The dogs harried the rabbits untiringly, Punch in long lithe
+ bounds that were a joy to behold; Scamp in panting hysterics
+ which gave over-ample warning of his coming and precluded all
+ possibilities of capture.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme led them down the face of the cliff fronting L'Etac,
+ the great rock island that was once a part of Little Sark
+ itself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Once upon a time there was a Coup&eacute;e across here," he
+ said. "Some time our Coup&eacute;e will disappear and Little Sark
+ will be an island also."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not before we get back, I hope," said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not before we get back, <i>I</i> hope," said Graeme, for
+ would he not hold Margaret's hand again on the homeward
+ journey?</p>
+
+ <p>Down the cliff, along white saw-teeth of upturned veins of
+ quartz, with Margaret's hand in his, then back for Miss Penny,
+ till they sat looking down into a deep dark basin, almost
+ circular: lined with the most lovely pink and heliotrope
+ corallines: studded with anemones, brown and red and green: every
+ point and ledge decked with delicately-fronded sea-ferns and
+ mosses: and the whole overhung with threatening masses of
+ rock.</p>
+
+ <p>"Venus's Bath," he told them. "Those round stones at the
+ bottom have churned about in there for hundreds of years, I
+ suppose. The tide fills it each time, as you will see presently,
+ but the stones cannot get out and they've helped to make their
+ own prison-house,&mdash;wherein I perceive a moral. It's a
+ delicious plunge from that rock."</p>
+
+ <p>"You bathe here?" asked Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"I and the dogs bathe here at times. There's one other thing
+ you must see, and I think you may see it to-day. The tide is
+ right, and the wind is right, and there's a good sea on."</p>
+
+ <p>They waited till the long waves came swirling up over the
+ rocks and filled the basin and set the great round stones at the
+ bottom grinding angrily. Then off again along the splintered face
+ of the cliff, one by one, that is two by two over the difficult
+ bits, till he had them seated among some ragged boulders with the
+ waves foaming white below them, and swooking and plunking in
+ hidden hollow places.</p>
+
+ <p>The wind was rising, and the crash of the seas on the rocks
+ made speech impossible. He pointed suddenly along the cliff face,
+ and not twenty yards away, with a hiss and a roar, a furious
+ spout of water shot up into the air a rocket of white foam, a
+ hundred feet high, and fell with a crash over the rocks and into
+ the sea.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp129" id="fp129"></a> <img src="images/fp129.jpg"
+ width="329" height="558" alt="THE SOUFFLEUR IN LITTLE SARK"
+ title="THE SOUFFLEUR IN LITTLE SARK" /> <h5>THE SOUFFLEUR IN
+ LITTLE SARK</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Twenty times they watched it roar up into the sky, and then
+ they crawled back up the face of the cliff, wind-whipped and
+ rosy-faced, and with the taste of salt in their mouths.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is a fine sight," said Margaret, with sparkling eyes and
+ diamond drops in her wind-blown hair. He thought he had never
+ seen her so absolutely lovely before. He had certainly never seen
+ anyone to compare with her.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's the Souffleur&mdash;the blow-hole. There's a bigger
+ one still in Saignie Bay, we'll look it up if the wind gets round
+ to the north-west. I'm glad you've seen this one. It was just a
+ chance."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm blow-holed all to rags, and, Meg, your hair is absolutely
+ disgraceful," said Miss Penny. So differently may different eyes
+ regard the same object, especially when the heart has a say in
+ it. He would have given all he was worth for an offered lock of
+ that wind-blown hair.</p>
+
+ <p>As Margaret turned she caught his eye, perhaps caught
+ something of what was in it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I as bad as all that?" she laughed in rosy confusion.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're"&mdash;he began impetuously, but caught himself in
+ time.&mdash;"You're all right. When you go to see the Souffleur
+ you must expect to get a bit blown."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's worth it," she said. "And I'm sure we're much obliged to
+ you for taking us. We could never have got there alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"We'd never have got to Little Sark, to say nothing of the
+ Souffleur," said Miss Penny very emphatically.</p>
+
+ <p>"And now perhaps you'll forgive me for making you buy those
+ shoes."</p>
+
+ <p>"My, yes! They're great," said Miss Penny, looking critically
+ at her feet. "But decidedly they're not beautiful."</p>
+
+ <h4>X</h4>
+
+ <p>They loitered homewards, chatting discursively of many things,
+ in a way that made for intimacy. Miss Penny and Graeme, indeed,
+ still did most of the actual speaking, as he remembered
+ afterwards, but Margaret was in no way outside their talk, and if
+ she did not say much it is probable that she listened and thought
+ none the less.</p>
+
+ <p>The Coup&eacute;e afforded Graeme another all-too-short span
+ of delight, while Margaret's hand throbbed in his and she
+ entrusted herself to his protection.</p>
+
+ <p>He took them home by the Windmill, and through the fields and
+ hedge-gaps into the grounds of the Red House, and in his heart's
+ eye saw Margaret standing once more in the opening of the tall
+ hedge with the morning glory all about her&mdash;just as he would
+ remember her all his life.</p>
+
+ <p>"Time?" demanded Miss Penny, as they passed along the
+ verandah.</p>
+
+ <p>"Half-past seven."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you are half an hour late for your dinner. I propose
+ that we ask Mrs. Carr&eacute; to serve us all together to-night,"
+ said Miss Penny, "or we may all fare the worse."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall be delighted," began Graeme exuberantly,
+ "unless&mdash;" and he snapped a glance at Miss Brandt.</p>
+
+ <p>"We shall be glad if you will join us," she said quickly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I will be there in two minutes," he said, and sped up the Red
+ House stairs to make ready.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope to goodness he won't," said Miss Penny, as they passed
+ through the hedge. "Now don't you say a word to me, Margaret
+ Brandt. It was you invited him"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!"</p>
+
+ <p>"'We shall be glad if you will join us.' If that isn't an
+ invitation I'd like to know what it is. And I heard you say it
+ with my own two ears,&mdash;moi qui vous parle, as we say
+ here."</p>
+
+ <p>"You know perfectly well that I could not possibly do anything
+ else, Hennie. I believe you just did it on purpose. I don't know
+ what's come over you."</p>
+
+ <p>"John Graeme. I like him. And after all he'd done for
+ us&mdash;that Coup&eacute;e, and Venus's Bath, and the Souffleur,
+ and he like to lose his dinner over it all! What could a kind
+ motherly person like me do but suggest&mdash;simply suggest, in
+ the vaguest manner possible&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes?&mdash;" as she stopped in a challenging way.</p>
+
+ <p>"I merely threw out the suggestion, I say, in the vaguest
+ possible way, that as we were nearly dying of hunger he should
+ allow us to ask Mrs. Carr&eacute; to let us have our dinner half
+ an hour earlier than usual&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And then you struck in, in your usual lordly fashion, and
+ begged him to join us. And I'm bound to say he took it very well,
+ not to say jumped at it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hennie, you're a&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I know. And if I live I'll be a be-a, and perhaps more
+ besides,"&mdash;with a cryptic nod.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, what do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait patiently, my child, and you'll see."</p>
+
+ <p>"I believe the Sark air is affecting your&mdash;whatever
+ you've got inside that giddy head of yours."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course it is. That's what I came for, and to keep you out
+ of mischief, you infantile law-breaker."</p>
+
+ <h4>XI</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme's two minutes were each set with considerably more than
+ the regulation sixty seconds&mdash;diamond seconds of glowing
+ anticipation, every one of them. And, to his credit, be it
+ recorded that he allotted several of them to the invocation of
+ most fervent blessings on Miss Penny, who, at the moment, was
+ vigorously disclaiming any pretension thereto.</p>
+
+ <p>But, quite soon enough for his hosts, as he considered
+ them,&mdash;his guests, according to Miss Penny,&mdash;he
+ appeared at the cottage, bodily and mentally prepared for the
+ feast, and showing both in manner and attire due sense of the
+ honour conferred upon him.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a festive, and for one of them at all events, a
+ never-to-be-forgotten meal. The strong Sark air had got into all
+ their heads, and whatever prudish notions might have been working
+ in Margaret, she had bidden them to heel and took her pleasure as
+ it came.</p>
+
+ <p>Her mood, however, for the moment was receptive rather than
+ expressive. Miss Penny and Graeme still did most of the talking,
+ and Margaret sat and listened and laughed, not a little
+ astonished at finding herself in that galley.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is the penalty for aiding and abetting a criminal in an
+ evasion of the law, Mr. Graeme?" chirped Miss Penny one time, and
+ took Margaret's energetic below-table expostulation without a
+ wince.</p>
+
+ <p>"It would depend, I should say, on the particular dye of
+ criminal. What has your friend been up to, Miss Penny? Is he a
+ particularly black specimen?"</p>
+
+ <p>"In the first place he's a she, and in the next place her
+ complexion has a decided tendency towards blonde. As to
+ dye&mdash;I am in a position to state on oath that she does
+ not."</p>
+
+ <p>For a moment he was mystified, then his eye fell on Margaret's
+ face, full of glorious confusion at this base betrayal by her
+ bosom friend.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Sark air does get into people's heads like that at
+ times," he said diplomatically. "It's just in the first few days.
+ But you soon get used to it. I felt just the same
+ myself&mdash;losing faith in things and thinking ill of my
+ friends, and so on. You'll be quite all right in a day or two,
+ Miss Penny,"&mdash;with a touch of sympathetic commiseration in
+ his voice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'm quite all right now," said Miss Penny enjoyably. "I
+ thought it only right and proper to let you know where you stand.
+ At the present moment you are as likely as not aiding and
+ abetting a breaker of the British laws and her accomplice. You
+ may become involved in serious complications, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"If that means that I can be of any service in the matter I
+ shall be only too delighted,&mdash;if you will not look upon me
+ as an intruder." He spoke to Miss Penny but looked at
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-ha! Qualms of conscience&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Hennie is a little raised, Mr. Graeme," broke in Margaret.
+ "Please excuse her. A good night's rest will make her all
+ right."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never felt better in my life," sparkled Miss Penny. "But
+ seriously, Mr. Graeme, it is only right you should understand,
+ for we don't quite know where we are ourselves, and I'm going to
+ tell you even though Margaret kicks all the skin off my leg in
+ the process. In a word,&mdash;we've bolted."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bolted?" he echoed, all aglow with hopeful interest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes&mdash;from Mr. Pixley and all his works. And as he had
+ been threatening to make us a Ward of Court, you see&mdash;well,
+ there you are, don't you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see," he said, and there was a new light in his eyes as he
+ looked at Margaret, and his soul danced within him again as
+ David's before the Ark.</p>
+
+ <p>"For reasons which seemed adequate to myself, Mr.
+ Graeme,"&mdash;began Margaret, in more sober explanation.</p>
+
+ <p>"They were, they were. I am sure of it," sang his heart. And
+ his brain asked eagerly, "Had Charles Svendt anything to do with
+ it, I wonder?"</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;I thought it well to remove myself from the care of my
+ guardian Mr. Pixley&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Splendid girl! Splendid girl!" sang his heart.</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;And as I have still some of my time to
+ serve&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"How long, O Lord, how long?" chaunted his heart, with no
+ sense of impropriety, for it was sounding p&aelig;ans of joyful
+ hope.</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;You see&mdash;&mdash;" said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"I see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you think they could make me go back to him?" she asked
+ anxiously.</p>
+
+ <p>"To Mr. Pixley? Certainly not&mdash;that is if your reasons
+ for leaving him seemed adequate to the Court, as I am sure they
+ would."</p>
+
+ <p>She offered no explanation on this point. All that she left
+ unsaid, and that he would have given much to hear, seemed dancing
+ just inside Miss Penny's sparkling eyes, and as like as not to
+ come dancing out at any moment.</p>
+
+ <p>"You see," said Graeme, "I happen to have been making some
+ enquiries from a legal friend on that very
+ point&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" said Margaret, and Miss Penny's eyes danced
+ carmagnoles.</p>
+
+ <p>"In connection with a story, you know. One likes to get one's
+ legal points all right. In any case, as I was just about to tell
+ Miss Penny for the benefit of her criminal friend, there would be
+ lots of red tape to unwind before they could do anything, and
+ this little isle of Sark is the quaintest place in the world in
+ the matter of its own old observances and their integrity, and
+ the rejection of new ideas. Mr. Pixley does not know you are
+ here, of course?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not much, or he'd have been over by special boat long since,"
+ said Miss Penny. "We managed it splendidly."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how long?" began Graeme, in pursuance of his train of
+ thought, but stopped short at sound of the words, since they bore
+ distant resemblance to a curiosity which seemed to himself
+ impertinent.</p>
+
+ <p>But Miss Penny knew no such compunctions. She did not want to
+ miss one jot or tittle of her enjoyment of the situation.</p>
+
+ <p>"About six months," said she quickly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I should think we"&mdash;how delightful to him that
+ "we," and how Miss Penny rejoiced in it!&mdash;"could hold them
+ at bay for that length of time. The machinery of the law is slow
+ and cumbersome at best, and in this case, I imagine, it would not
+ be difficult to put a few additional spokes in its wheels."</p>
+
+ <p>If his face was anything to go by there were many more
+ questions he would have liked to put&mdash;judicial questions,
+ you understand, for a fuller comprehension of the case. But he
+ would not venture them yet. He had got ample food for reflection
+ for the moment, and his hopes stood high.</p>
+
+ <p>Never for him had there been a dinner equal to that one.
+ Better ones he had partaken of in plenty. But the full board and
+ the quality of the faring are not the only things, nor by any
+ means the chief things, that go to the making of a feast.</p>
+
+ <p>The nearest approach to it had been that dinner with the
+ Whitefriars, at which he first met Margaret Brandt, and that did
+ not come within measurable distance of this one.</p>
+
+ <h4>XII</h4>
+
+ <p>"Will you be pleased to tek your dinner with the leddies again
+ to-night?" asked Mrs. Carr&eacute;, as she gave Graeme his
+ breakfast next morning.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would be delighted," he said doubtfully. "But are you quite
+ sure they would wish it, Mrs. Carr&eacute;."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you did get on all right with them," she said, eyeing him
+ wonderingly. "They are very nice leddies, I am sure."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, we got on first rate. We didn't quarrel over the food or
+ fall out in any way. But&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Will it be any easier for you?" he asked thoughtfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, of course, it will be once setting instead of twice,
+ and that iss easier&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then suppose you put it to them on that ground, Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute;, solely on that ground, you understand. And if they
+ are agreeable, I&mdash;well, I shall not raise any
+ objections."</p>
+
+ <p>And so, presently, Mrs. Carr&eacute; said to the ladies, "You
+ did get on all right with the gentleman last night, yes?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, quite, Mrs. Carr&eacute;," sparkled Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wass wondering if it would please you to dine all at once
+ together again each night. You see, it would save me the trouble
+ of setting twice. I did ask him and he said he didn't mind if you
+ didn't. He iss a very nice quiet gentleman, I am sure."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure it's very good of him," said Miss Penny. "By all
+ means serve us all at once together, Mrs. Carr&eacute;. I guess
+ we can stand it if he can."</p>
+
+ <p>"That iss all right then," said Mrs. Carr&eacute;, and the
+ common evening meal became an institution&mdash;to Graeme's vast
+ enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <h4>XIII</h4>
+
+ <p>When the girls went into their room after breakfast to put on
+ their hats and scrambling shoes, they saw Graeme sitting on the
+ low stone wall, as usual, smoking his after-breakfast pipe, and
+ they caught a part of the conversation in progress between him
+ and Johnny Vautrin.</p>
+
+ <p>"I see five crows 's mawnin'," they heard in Johnnie's
+ sepulchral voice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Really, now! Catch any?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There wuss five crows."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;five? That's an odd number! And what special
+ ill-luck do you infer from five crows, Johnnie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Someone's goan to be sick," said Johnnie, with joyous
+ anticipation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear me! That's what five crows mean, is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"They didn't go into particulars, I suppose,&mdash;as to who
+ it is likely to be, for instance, and the exact nature of the
+ seizure?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They flew over to church there and settled in black
+ trees."</p>
+
+ <p>"Vicar, maybe, since they went that way."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mebbe!"&mdash;hopefully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well! Perhaps if we gave him a hint he might take some
+ precautions."</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn' tek nauthen 'd be any use 'gainst crows. Go'zamin,
+ they knows!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You're just a confirmed old croaker, Johnnie."</p>
+
+ <p>"A'n't!" said Johnnie.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's our old friend Marielihou?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She's a-busy," said Johnnie, wriggling uncomfortably.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah,&mdash;killing something, I presume. Is it going to keep
+ fine for the next three or four weeks?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don' think."</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't, you little rascal?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You might do your best for us, Johnnie," said Miss Penny, as
+ they came through the gap in the wall. "And if it keeps fine all
+ the time I'll give you&mdash;let me see, I'll give you a shilling
+ when we go away."</p>
+
+ <p>Johnnie's avidious little claw reached out eagerly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Godzamin!" said he. "Gimme it now, an' I'll do my best."</p>
+
+ <p>"Earn it, my child," said Miss Penny, and they went on up the
+ road, leaving Johnnie scowling in the hedge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, where would you like to go to-day?" asked Graeme. "Will
+ you leave yourselves in my hands again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure we can't do better," said Miss Penny heartily.
+ "Yesterday was a day of days. What do you say, Meg?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It looks as though we were going to occupy a great deal of
+ Mr. Graeme's time," said Meg non-committally.</p>
+
+ <p>"It could not possibly be better occupied," he said
+ exuberantly.</p>
+
+ <p>"And how about your story, Mr. Graeme? Is it at a standstill?"
+ asked Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not at all. It's getting on capitally."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, when do you work at it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh,&mdash;between times, and when the spirit moves me and
+ I've got nothing better to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is that how one writes books?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sometimes. How do you feel about caves?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ripping! If there's one thing we revel in it's caves,
+ principally because we know nothing about them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we'll break you in on Gr&egrave;ve de la Ville. They're
+ comparatively easy, and another day we'll do the Boutiques and
+ the Gouliots. Then we can get a whole day full of caves by going
+ round the island in a boat&mdash;red caves and green caves and
+ black caves and barking-dog caves&mdash;all sorts and conditions
+ of caves&mdash;caves studded all round with anemones, and caves
+ bristling with tiny jewelled sponges. Sark is just a honeycomb of
+ caves."</p>
+
+ <p>"Spiffing!" said Miss Penny. "If Mr. Pixley gets on our track
+ we'll play hide-and-seek in them with him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we ought to spend a day on Brecqhou&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"A day on Brecqhou without a doubt!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And if we can get the boat from Guernsey to call for us at
+ the Eperquerie, and can get a boat there to put us aboard, we
+ might manage Alderney."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sounds a bit if-fy, but tempting thereby. Margaret, my dear,
+ our work is cut out for us."</p>
+
+ <p>"And Mr. Graeme's cut out from him, I'm afraid."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, not at all, I assure you. It's going ahead like steam,"
+ and they began to descend into Gr&egrave;ve de la Ville, the dogs
+ as usual ranging the cliff-sides after rabbits, disappearing
+ altogether at times and then flashing suddenly into view half a
+ mile away among the gorse and bracken.</p>
+
+ <p>Sark scrambling requires caution and constant asistance from
+ the practised to the unpractised hand, and Graeme omitted none of
+ the necessary precautions. Whereby Margaret's throbbing hand was
+ much in his,&mdash;so, indeed, was Miss Penny's, but that was
+ quite another matter,&mdash;and every convulsive grip of the
+ little hand, though it was caused by nothing more than the
+ uncertainties of the way, set his heart dancing and riveted the
+ golden chains still more firmly round it.</p>
+
+ <p>There are difficult bits in those caves in the Gr&egrave;ve de
+ la Ville,&mdash;steep ascents, and black drops in sheer faith
+ into unknown depths, and tight squeezes past sloping shelves
+ which seem on the point of closing and cracking one like a nut;
+ and when they crawled out at last into a boulder-strewn plateau,
+ open to the sea on one side only, they sighed gratefully at the
+ ample height and breadth of things, and sank down on the shingle
+ to breathe the free air and sunshine.</p>
+
+ <p>He amused them by telling them how, the last time he was
+ there, he found an elderly gentleman sitting with his head in his
+ hands, on that exact spot. And how, at sight of the new-comer, he
+ had come running to him and fallen sobbing on his neck. He had
+ been there for over an hour seeking the way out, and not being
+ able to find it, had got into a panic.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder if you could find the place we came in, now?" said
+ Graeme. "Scamp, lie down, sir, and don't give me away!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, certainly, it's just there," said Miss Penny, jumping up
+ energetically and marching across, while the dogs grinned
+ open-mouthed at her lack of perception. For it wasn't there at
+ all, and she searched without avail, and at last sat down again
+ saying, "Well, I sympathise with your old gentleman, Mr. Graeme.
+ If I was all alone here, and unable to find that hole, I should
+ go into hysterics, though it's not a thing I'm given to. I
+ suppose we did get in somehow."</p>
+
+ <p>"Obviously! And that's where the advantage of a guide comes
+ in, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"I, for one, appreciate him highly, I can assure you. Where is
+ that wretched hole?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Here it is, you see. It's a tricky place. I shall never
+ forget the look of relief on that old fellow's face at sight of
+ me. I believe he thinks to this day that I saved his life. He
+ stuck to me like a leech all the way through the further caves
+ and till we got back to the entrance."</p>
+
+ <p>"We're not through them yet then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Through? Bless me no, we're only just starting, but there's
+ no use hurrying. Tide's right, and we have plenty of time."</p>
+
+ <p>"I feel as if I'd been lost and found again," said Miss Penny.
+ "If Mr. Pixley comes along we'll induce him in here and leave him
+ to find his way out."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would take more than you to get Mr. Pixley in here,
+ Hennie," said Margaret quietly. "He'd never venture off the
+ roads, even if he risked his life in reaching Sark. He's much too
+ careful of himself."</p>
+
+ <p>"He thinks a good deal more of himself than I do," said Miss
+ Penny. "With all deference to you, Meg, since he's a relative, I
+ consider him a jolly old humbug."</p>
+
+ <h4>XIV</h4>
+
+ <p>The days were packed with enjoyment for Graeme; not less for
+ Miss Penny; nor&mdash;illuminated and titillated with a conposed
+ expectancy as to whither all this might be leading her&mdash;for
+ Margaret herself.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme took the joyful burden of their proper entertainment
+ entirely on his own shoulders. He reaped in full now the harvest
+ of his lonely wanderings, and compared those former gloomy days
+ with these golden ones with a heart so jubilant that the light of
+ it shone in his eyes and in his face, and made him fairly
+ radiant.</p>
+
+ <p>"That young man grows handsomer every day," was Miss Penny's
+ appreciative comment, in the privacy of hair-brushing.</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret expressed no opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought him uncommonly good-looking as soon as I set eyes
+ on him, but he's growing upon me. I do hope, for his sake, that I
+ shan't fall in love with him."</p>
+
+ <p>And at that a tiny gleam of a smile hovered for a moment in
+ the curves of Margaret's lips, behind the silken screen of her
+ hair.</p>
+
+ <p>No trouble was too great for him if it added to their
+ pleasure. He provisioned their expeditions with lavish
+ discrimination. He forgot nothing,&mdash;not even the salt. He
+ carried burdens and kindled fires for the boiling of kettles, and
+ saw to their comfort and more, in every possible way. He assisted
+ them up and down steep places, and Margaret's hand grew
+ accustomed to the steady strength of his. She came to look for
+ the helping hand whenever the ways grew difficult. At times
+ she&mdash;yes, actually, she caught herself grudging Hennie-Penny
+ what seemed to her too long an appropriation of it.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp147" id="fp147"></a> <img src="images/fp147.jpg"
+ width="329" height="558" alt="IN DERRIBLE BAY" title=
+ "IN DERRIBLE BAY" /> <h5>IN DERRIBLE BAY</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Never surely were the beauties of Sark seen under happier
+ auspices, or through eyes attuned to more lively appreciation.
+ For love-lit eyes see all things lovely, and no more perfect
+ loveliness of sea and rock and flower and sky may be found than
+ such as go to the making of this little isle of Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>He guided their more active energies through the
+ anemone-studded and sponge-fringed caves under the Gouliots;
+ through the long rough-polished, sea-scoured passages of the
+ Boutiques; down the seamed cliffs at Les Fontaines and Grande
+ Gr&egrave;ve; along the precarious tracks and iron rings into
+ Derrible; with the assistance of a rope, into Le Pot. And for
+ rest-times they spent long delightful afternoons sitting among
+ the blazing gorse cushions of the Eperquerie, and on that great
+ rock that elbows Tintageu into the waves, and looks down on the
+ one side on Port du Moulin and the Autelets, and on the other
+ into Pegane Bay and Port &aacute; la Jument.</p>
+
+ <p>This high perch had a peculiar fascination for Margaret. She
+ could have sat there day after day with perfect enjoyment. She
+ never tired of it all&mdash;the crisp green waters below, with
+ their dazzling fringe of foam round every gray rock and headland;
+ the gold-tipped pinnacles of the Autelets, with their fluttering
+ halos of gulls and sea-pies and cormorants, and their ridi-fringe
+ of tawny seaweed and foamy lace; the rounded slopes of the
+ Eperquerie; the bold cliffs behind, with their sprawling gray
+ feet in the emerald sea, and their green and gold shoulders
+ humping up into the blue sky; beyond them the black Gouliot rocks
+ and foaming Race, and the long soft bulk of Brecqhou with its
+ seamy sides and black-mouthed caves.</p>
+
+ <p>And here one day they had a novel experience, and Margaret
+ learned something&mdash;got fullest proof, at all events, of
+ something her heart had already told her.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp149" id="fp149"></a> <img src="images/fp149.jpg"
+ width="544" height="323" alt="THE GREAT ROCK BEHIND TINTAGEU"
+ title="THE GREAT ROCK BEHIND TINTAGEU" /> <h5>THE GREAT ROCK
+ BEHIND TINTAGEU</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They were sitting in the sea-ward cleft of this great rock
+ behind Tintageu, one afternoon, and Graeme had just succeeded in
+ getting the kettle to boil by means of an armful of old gorse
+ bushes, when, straightening up for a rest, he said
+ suddenly,&mdash;"Hello! Look at that now!" and pointed out
+ towards Guernsey.</p>
+
+ <p>And there they saw a low white cloud, lying on the sea as
+ though it had just dropped solidly out of the sky. Sea and sky
+ were vivid vital blue, the sun shone brilliantly, Guernsey,
+ Jethou, and Herm gleamed like jewels, and the white cloud lay
+ between the upper and the nether blue like the white ghost of a
+ new-born island not yet invested with the attributes of
+ earth.</p>
+
+ <p>And, as they watched, it crept quickly along the
+ blue-enamelled plain. It swallowed up the southern cliffs of
+ Guernsey. Its creeping nose was level with the tall Doyle column.
+ It crept on and on, till Castle Cornet disappeared and Peter Port
+ was lost to sight. On and on&mdash;Jethou was gone, and bit by
+ bit the long green and gold slopes of Herm were conquered, and
+ its long white spear of sand ran out of the low white cloud. And
+ still on, till all the outlying rocks and islands vanished, and
+ where had been the glow and colour of life was nothing now but
+ that strange pall-like cloud.</p>
+
+ <p>The blue of the sea in front had whitened, and suddenly the
+ sentinel rocks at the tail of Brecqhou disappeared, and the white
+ cloud came sweeping towards the watchers on the rock by
+ Tintageu.</p>
+
+ <p>"We're in for it too," said Graeme, hastily emptying his
+ kettle and packing up the tea-things. "Seems to me we'd better
+ get ashore."</p>
+
+ <p>But the cloud was on them, soft films of gauzy mist with the
+ sun still bright overhead. Then quickly-rolling folds of dense
+ white cloud blotted out everything but the path on which they
+ stood. The gorse and blue-bells and sea-pinks at their feet
+ drooped suddenly wan and colourless, as though stricken with
+ mortal sickness, and wept sad tears. They stood bewildered, while
+ the pallid folds grew thicker and thicker, lit from above with a
+ strange spectral glare, and coiling about them like the trailing
+ garments of an army of ghosts. From the unseen abysses all round
+ came the growl and wash of wave on rock and shingle, from the
+ cliff above Pegane came the frightened bleat of a lamb, and an
+ invisible gull went squawking over their heads on his way
+ inland.</p>
+
+ <p>With an instinct for safer quarters, Miss Penny had started
+ off towards the path which led precariously across the narrow
+ neck to the mainland. The neck itself, with white clouds of mist
+ billowing on either side, and streaming raggedly across the path,
+ looked fearsome enough. She gave a startled cry and stood
+ still.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stay here!" said Graeme to Margaret. "Don't move an inch!"
+ and he felt his way, foot by foot, towards the causeway.</p>
+
+ <p>And Margaret, who had been regarding it all simply as a
+ curious experience, felt suddenly very lonely and not very
+ safe.</p>
+
+ <p>She heard him speak to Miss Penny, but she could not see two
+ feet in front of her.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, after what seemed a long time, she heard above
+ her&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt? Margaret? Oh, good God!"&mdash;and there was in
+ his voice a note that was new to her. Sharp and strident with
+ keenest anxiety, it set a sudden fire in her heart, for it was
+ for her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am here, Mr. Graeme," she cried, and he came plunging down
+ to her through the dripping gorse and bracken.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank God!" he said fervently. "Why ever did you move?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have not stirred."</p>
+
+ <p>"I must have got wrong. It is blinding. It will be safest to
+ wait here, I think. Will you hold on to my arm?"</p>
+
+ <p>And as she slipped her hand through it she felt it
+ trembling&mdash;the arm that had always been so strong and
+ steadfast in her service&mdash;and she knew that this too was for
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where is Hennie?" she asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's all right. I made her sit down among the bushes and
+ told her she'd surely get smashed if she moved."</p>
+
+ <p>It was a good half-hour before the cloud drew off and they saw
+ Guernsey, Herm, and Jethou sparkling in the sun once more.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they crossed the narrow path over the neck, and Margaret
+ was glad they had not attempted it in the fog.</p>
+
+ <p>They picked up Miss Penny, damp but cheerful, and went home.
+ For everything was dripping, and the pleasures of camping out
+ were over for that day, but there were fires about that all the
+ fogs that ever had been could not begin to extinguish.</p>
+
+ <h4>XV</h4>
+
+ <p>As the girls sat basking in the window-seat for a few minutes
+ after breakfast one morning, they surprised a private
+ conversation between their cavalier and Master Johnnie Vautrin.
+ Graeme, with his back to them, sat smoking on the low stone wall.
+ Johnnie was, as usual, bunched up in the hedge opposite.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp151" id="fp151"></a> <img src="images/fp151.jpg"
+ width="333" height="556" alt=
+ "&quot;Basking in the window-seat&quot;" title=
+ "&quot;Basking in the window-seat&quot;" /> <h5>"Basking in the
+ window-seat"</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Well, Johnnie?" they heard. "Seen any crows this
+ morning?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ouaie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"How many then, you wretched little croaker?"</p>
+
+ <p>"J'ann&eacute;veu deu et j'ann&eacute;veu troy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah now, it's not polite&mdash;as I've told you
+ before&mdash;to talk to an uneducated foreigner, in a language he
+ does not understand. How many, in such English as you have
+ attained to, and what did they mean according to your
+ wizardry?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pergui, you, too, are not polite! Your words are like
+ this"&mdash;measuring off an expanding half yard in the
+ air,&mdash;"they are all wind."</p>
+
+ <p>"Smart boy! How many crows did you see this morning?"</p>
+
+ <p>"First I saw two and then I saw three."</p>
+
+ <p>"Two and three make five. Croaker! Five crows mean someone's
+ going to be sick. And which way did they go this time?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Noh, noh! First it wass two, and when they had gone then it
+ wass three more."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see. And two black crows&mdash;what might they mean
+ now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Two crows they mean good luck."</p>
+
+ <p>"Clever boy! Continue! Three black crows
+ mean&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Three crows&mdash;they mean a marrying,&mdash;ouaie,
+ Dame!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, a marrying! That's better! That is very much better. It
+ strikes me, Johnnie, that two lucky crows are worth twopence, and
+ three marrying crows are worth threepence. And as luck would have
+ it I've got exactly five pennies in my pocket. Catch, bearer of
+ good tidings! Here you are&mdash;one, two, three, four, five!
+ Well caught! Is it going to keep fine?" and Marielihou stopped
+ licking herself to look at Graeme, and then went on again with an
+ air of,&mdash;"I could tell you things if I would, but it's not
+ worth while,"&mdash;in her ugly green eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don' think," said Johnnie, jumping at the chance of ill
+ news.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't, you little rascal? Here, give me back my
+ hard-earned pence! You're a little humbug."</p>
+
+ <p>"What's Johnnie been up to now?" asked Miss Penny, as she came
+ out into the open.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's giving me lessons in necromancy and the black art of
+ crows. He declines to pledge his honour on the continued
+ brightness of the day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Johnnie! And we're going to Brecqhou!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I cann'd help."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you might send us on our way rejoicing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gimme six pennies an' I will say it will be fine."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm beginning to think you're of a grasping disposition,
+ Johnnie. If you don't take care you'll die rich."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go'zamin, I wu'n't mind."</p>
+
+ <p>Then Graeme came out again, with the hamper he had had packed
+ in the kitchen under his own supervision, and their cloaks,
+ which, thanks to Johnnie, he had picked off the nails in the
+ passage, and they set off for Havre Gosselin and Brecqhou.</p>
+
+ <h4>XVI</h4>
+
+ <p>"You'll not forget to come back for us about eight," Graeme
+ shouted to the boatmen, as they pushed off from the fretted black
+ rock on which their passengers had just made precarious
+ landing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nossir!" and they pulled away to their fishing.</p>
+
+ <p>"If it should be a fine sunset," he explained to the ladies,
+ "the view of the Sark cliffs from Bel&ecirc;me there, opposite
+ the Gouliots, is one of the finest sights in the island."</p>
+
+ <p>The place they had landed was a rough ledge on the south side
+ just under the Pente-&agrave;-Fouaille, some distance past the
+ Pirates' Cave, and the ascent, though steep, was not so difficult
+ as it looked. Graeme, however, in his capacity of chaperon,
+ insisted on convoying them separately to the top&mdash;whereby he
+ got holding Margaret's hand for the space of sixty
+ pulse-beats&mdash;and then went down again for the cloaks and
+ provisions.</p>
+
+ <p>Brecqhou, at the moment, was uninhabited. Its late occupant
+ had thrown up his post suddenly, and gone to live on Sark with
+ his wife, and a new caretaker had not yet been appointed. So they
+ went straight to the house, deposited their belongings in the
+ sitting-room, and then started out for a long ramble round the
+ island.</p>
+
+ <p>First they struck west to Le Nest&eacute;, and scrambled among
+ the rough rocks of the Point, stepping cautiously over the gulls'
+ nests which lay thick all about, some with eggs and some with
+ young.</p>
+
+ <p>The wonders of the sea-gardens in the rock-pools of Moie
+ Batarde, and the entrancing views of Herm and Jethou and
+ Guernsey, gleaming across the sapphire sea, with a magnificent
+ range of snowy cloud-mountain breasting slowly up the deep blue
+ of the sky behind, and looking solid enough to sit on, as Miss
+ Penny said, absorbed them till midday.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they returned to the house, lit a fire of dried gorse,
+ filled their kettle at the well and set it to boil, and carried
+ out a table and chairs, for eating indoors was out of the
+ question with such beneficence of sunshine inviting them to the
+ open.</p>
+
+ <p>All the afternoon was occupied with the wonders of the
+ Creux-&agrave;-Vaches, with its bold scarps and rounded slopes
+ draped with ferns and enamelled with flowers, and the crannies
+ and indentations of the northern side of the island. They sat for
+ a time on Bel&ecirc;me cliff entranced with the wonderful view of
+ the bold western headlands of Sark, unrolled before them like a
+ gigantic panorama from Bec-du-Nez to the Moie de
+ Bretagne,&mdash;a sight the like of which one might travel many
+ thousand miles and still not equal. And they promised themselves
+ a still finer view when the setting sun washed every cliff and
+ crag and cranny with living gold.</p>
+
+ <p>But as they turned to tramp through the ragwort and bracken
+ towards the house, intent on cups of tea, the sight of the
+ western sky gave them sudden start. The solid range of snow-white
+ cloud-mountains had climbed the heavens half-way to the zenith,
+ and was stretching thin white streamers still further afield. And
+ its base in the west had grown dark and threatening, with pallid
+ wisps of cloud scudding up it like flying scouts bearing ill
+ tidings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wind, I'm afraid," said Graeme, "and maybe
+ thunder&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>And as he spoke a zigzag flash ripped open the dark screen,
+ and a crackling peal came rattling over the lead-coloured sea and
+ bellowed past them in long-drawn reverberations.</p>
+
+ <p>"Johnnie was right after all, the little monkey."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry now I didn't give him that sixpence," said Miss
+ Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't suppose it would have made much
+ difference&mdash;except to Johnnie. However, I hope it will soon
+ blow over. Good thing we've got a shelter, and we can enjoy our
+ tea while the elements settle matters among themselves
+ outside."</p>
+
+ <p>The storm broke over them before the kettle boiled. The rain
+ thrashed the house fiercely under the impulse of a wild
+ south-west wind, which grew wilder every minute, and the thunder
+ bellowed about them as though the very heavens were cracking.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is a trifle rough on inoffensive pilgrims," said Graeme.
+ "I'm really sorry to have got you into it."</p>
+
+ <p>"You didn't do it on purpose, did you, Mr. Graeme?" asked Miss
+ Penny, with pointed emphasis.</p>
+
+ <p>"I did not. I devoutly wish you were both safe home in the Rue
+ Lucas."</p>
+
+ <p>"All in good time. Meanwhile, we might be worse off, and this
+ tea is going to be excellent. Margaret, my child, do you know
+ that tea under these conditions is infinitely preferable to tea
+ in Melgrave Square, under any conditions whatsoever?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is certainly a change," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"And a very decided improvement. It's what some of my young
+ friends would call 'just awfully jolly decent,'" said Miss
+ Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"We're not out of the wood&mdash;that is to say, the
+ island&mdash;yet," suggested Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Or we shouldn't be here enjoying ourselves like this.
+ Brecqhou is sheer delight."</p>
+
+ <p>"On a fine day," said Margaret quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Or in a thunderstorm," asserted Miss Penny militantly. But
+ Margaret would not fight lest it should seem like casting
+ reflections on their present estate.</p>
+
+ <p>The thunder rolled over the wide waters with a majesty of
+ utterance novel to their unaccustomed city ears, the rain drew a
+ storm-gray veil over everything past the well, the wind waxed
+ into hysterical fury, tore at the roof and gables, and went
+ shrieking on over Sark. And above the rush of wind and rain, in
+ the short pauses between the thunder-peals, the hoarse roar of
+ the waves along the black bastions of Brecqhou grew louder and
+ louder in their ears.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme's face grew somewhat anxious, as he stood at the window
+ and peered westward as far as he could see, and found nothing but
+ fury and blackness there. He had a dim recollection of hearing of
+ outer islands such as this being cut off from the mainland for
+ days at a time. He could imagine what the sea must be like among
+ the tumbled rocks below. And he had seen the Race of the Gouliot
+ in storm time once before, and doubted much if any boat would
+ face the whirl and rush of its piled-up waters.</p>
+
+ <p>What on earth were they to do if the men could not get across
+ for them?</p>
+
+ <p>Suppose they had to pass the night there?</p>
+
+ <p>Good Heavens! Suppose they could not get across for days? What
+ were they to live on?&mdash;to come at once to the lowest but
+ most pressing necessity of the situation?</p>
+
+ <p>They had weather-proof shelter. Firing they could procure from
+ the interior woodwork of the house and outbuildings. And they had
+ a small amount of tea and sugar, and half a tin of condensed
+ milk, and rather more than half of the day's provisions, since
+ they had contemplated high tea before embarking again. He
+ determined that, if the storm showed no signs of abating, the
+ high tea must be a low one, since its constituents might possibly
+ have to serve for to-morrow's breakfast as well.</p>
+
+ <p>Both girls, their own perceptions strung tight by the electric
+ state of matters outside, noticed the touch of anxiety in his
+ face as he turned from the window, but both declined to show
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"How's her head, Captain?" asked Miss Penny jovially.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dead on to a lee shore," he answered in her own humour. "But
+ the anchorage is good and we're not likely to drift."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come! That's something to be thankful for, under the
+ circumstances. Brecqhou banging broadside on to that big black
+ Gouliot rock would be a most unpleasant experience. How about the
+ sunset cliffs of Sark?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They're very much under a cloud. I'm afraid we must pass them
+ for this time and choose a better. The cliffs indeed are there,
+ but the sun is much a-wanting."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hamlet without the ghost of a father or even a sun."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly!" And looking at Margaret, he said earnestly, "I can't
+ tell you how sorry I am it has turned out this way."</p>
+
+ <p>"But it is no fault of yours, Mr. Graeme. No one could
+ possibly have foreseen such a breakdown in the weather, with such
+ a glorious morning as we had."</p>
+
+ <p>"After all, I'm not at all sure it isn't all Mr. Graeme's
+ fault," said Miss Penny musingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"As how?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Didn't you stop me giving Johnnie Vautrin six demanded
+ pennies to keep it fine all day?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I discouraged the imposition, certainly. But I don't suppose
+ Johnnie could have done much&mdash;except with your
+ sixpence."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's a queer clever boy, is Johnnie. He certainly said it
+ wasn't going to keep fine."</p>
+
+ <p>"Little humbug!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yet you gave him fivepence for seeing&mdash;or saying he
+ saw&mdash;two crows and three crows, because two crows mean good
+ luck and three crows mean&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You talk as if you believed his nonsense, Hennie," broke in
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps I do&mdash;to some extent. He certainly declined to
+ pledge himself to a fine day, and it remains to be seen if the
+ rest of his&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;Humbug," suggested Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll say predictions, since we're in a superstitious
+ land,&mdash;come true. I shouldn't be a bit surprised.
+ Thunderstorms are not, as a rule, deadly, and it is conceivable
+ that they may, at times, even be means of grace. Would you mind
+ piling some more gorse on that fire, Mr. Graeme? A
+ counter-illumination is cheerful when the heavens without are all
+ black and blazing. What a joke it would be if we had to stop here
+ all night!"&mdash;she said it with intention, and Graeme
+ understood and blessed her.</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll hope it won't come to that," he said, as lightly as he
+ could make it. "But, if it should, we could make ourselves fairly
+ comfortable. Robinson Crusoes up to date!"</p>
+
+ <p>"No&mdash;Swiss Family Robinsons!" was Margaret's quota to the
+ lightening of gloom. "The way everything turned up just when that
+ interesting family required it struck me as marvellous even when
+ I was a child."</p>
+
+ <p>"You always were of an acutely enquiring&mdash;not to say
+ doubting&mdash;disposition, my dear, ever since I knew you," said
+ Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"I always liked to get at the true truth of things, and humbug
+ always annoyed me."</p>
+
+ <p>"No wonder you found Mr. Pixley a trial, dear," said Miss
+ Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't mean to cast stones of doubt at that shining pillar
+ of the law and society, Miss Penny?" said Graeme, tempted to
+ enlarge on so congenial a subject.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Pixley does not appeal to me&mdash;nor I to him. I like
+ him just as much as he likes me. And that's just that
+ much,"&mdash;with a snap of the fingers.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid you and I are in the same boat," said Graeme
+ enjoyably.</p>
+
+ <p>"I shouldn't be a bit surprised,&mdash;and for the same
+ reason. We both like&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"What shall we do for provisions, Mr. Graeme, if the storm
+ continues?" asked Margaret, and Miss Penny smiled knowingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I suggest husbanding those we have. It can't surely last
+ long."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Carr&eacute; was telling us the other night that once no
+ steamer could get to Sark from Guernsey for three weeks," chirped
+ Miss Penny. "If a steamer couldn't get to Sark, how should a
+ small boat get to Brecqhou&mdash;Q.E.D.?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Gracious!" cried Margaret in dismay.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Graeme would have to catch rabbits for us&mdash;and fish.
+ And I believe there are potatoes growing outside there. Our
+ clothing will be in rags, Meg. Mr. Graeme will be a wild man of
+ the woods, and all our portraits will appear in the illustrated
+ papers. The Outcasts of Brecqhou. Marooned on an Uninhabited
+ Island. Three Weeks Alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm off for a look round," said Graeme. "If that boat should
+ be waiting for us, somewhere down below, it would be too stupid
+ for us to be waiting for it up here," and he turned up his coat
+ collar and pulled his cap over his brows.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll get soaked," said Margaret. "Please take this, it will
+ help a little," and she jumped up and thrust her golfing cloak
+ into his hands. He seemed about to refuse, then thanked her
+ hastily, and threw it over his shoulders and went out.</p>
+
+ <p>The wind caught him and whirled him along towards Bel&ecirc;me
+ cliffs. He tacked to the south and made a slant for the place
+ where they had landed. As soon as he was out of sight of the
+ house he drew the hood of the cloak over his head and rejoiced in
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>To be wearing her cloak brought Margaret appreciably nearer.
+ Possibly that hood had even been over her head, had touched her
+ shining hair, her fair soft cheek. He pressed it to his face, to
+ his lips, and the hot blood danced in his veins at his temerity.
+ The gale bellowed outside and drove him staggering, but inside
+ the hood was the uplifting warmth and glow of personal contact
+ with the beloved. Her very mantle was sacred to him. He fancied
+ he could detect in it a subtle intimation of herself. He hugged
+ it close, and leaned back upon the gale, and drifted towards the
+ southern cliffs.</p>
+
+ <p>One glance at the black rocks below,&mdash;now hidden by the
+ rushing fury of the surges, now outstanding gaunt and grim, with
+ creamy cascades pouring back into the roaring welter
+ below,&mdash;showed him how impossible it would have been for any
+ boat to approach there.</p>
+
+ <p>He plunged on through the masses of dripping ragwort towards
+ the eastern cliff, and stood absorbed by the grim fury of the
+ Gouliot Race. The driven waves split on the western point of
+ Brecqhou and came rocketing along the ragged black rocks on
+ either side in wild bursts of foam. The Gouliot Passage was
+ roaring with the noise of many waters, and boiling and seething
+ like a gigantic pot. The sea was white with beaten spume for half
+ a mile each way, and up through the tumbling marbled surface
+ great black coils of water came writhing and bubbling from their
+ tribulation on the hidden rocks below. The black fangs of the
+ Gouliots were grimmer than ever. The long line of scoured granite
+ cliffs on either side looked like great bald-headed eagles
+ peering out hungrily for their prey.</p>
+
+ <p>There were no boats at the anchorage in Havre Gosselin. He
+ learned afterwards that they had all run to the shelter of Creux
+ Harbour on the other side of the island. He breasted the gale and
+ headed for the house.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm very much afraid we're stuck for the night," he said, as
+ they looked up enquiringly on his entrance. "There's not a sign
+ of a boat, and I'm quite sure no boat could face that sea. Sark
+ looks like an outcast island&mdash;the very end of the
+ world."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we'll make ourselves comfortable here," said Miss Penny.
+ "We began to fear you'd been blown over the cliffs. Is there
+ plenty of wood in the house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go and get some more," and he came back with a great
+ armful of broken driftwood, and went again for as much gorse as
+ he could carry in a rude wooden fork he found near the stack.</p>
+
+ <p>"You must be soaked through and through," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bit damp, but your cloak was a great help," and he piled
+ gorse and chunks of wood on the fire till its roaring almost
+ drowned the noise of the storm outside.</p>
+
+ <h4>XVII</h4>
+
+ <p>"Well, I call this absolutely ripping," said Miss Penny
+ exuberantly, as they sat by the fire of many-coloured flames,
+ after a slender cup of tea and as hearty a meal as Graeme would
+ allow them in view of possible contingencies. "Do please smoke,
+ Mr. Graeme. It just needs a whiff of tobacco to complete our
+ enjoyment."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sark," she added, leaning back with her hands clasped behind
+ her head, "when no one knows you're there, is just heavenly. No
+ letters, no telegrams, no intrusion of the commonplace outside
+ world! Those are distinctly heavenly attributes, you
+ know&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>It was truly extraordinary how, with nothing more than a very
+ general intention thereto, she played into his hands at times.
+ Here now was a very simple question he had been wanting to put to
+ Miss Brandt for days past. For the answer to it might shed light
+ in several directions. But he had been loth to force matters, and
+ had quietly waited such opportunity as might arise in a natural
+ way without undue obtrusion of the doubt that was in his
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Peace&mdash;perfect peace!' as Adam Black used to sigh," he
+ said. "And by the way"&mdash;turning to Margaret&mdash;"speaking
+ of letters, I have often wondered at times if you ever received
+ two that I sent you concerning Lady Elspeth&mdash;just about the
+ time she was called away to Scotland?"</p>
+
+ <p>She looked back at him with surprise, and his question was
+ answered and his doubt solved before ever she opened her
+ lips.</p>
+
+ <p>"About Lady Elspeth? No,&mdash;I certainly never got
+ them."</p>
+
+ <p>"H'm!" he nodded thoughtfully. "The first I feared might have
+ gone astray through some stupidity of the post-office. But the
+ second I dropped into your letter-box myself.
+ Moreover&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I never got them,"&mdash;with a charming touch of colour.</p>
+
+ <p>"Moreover&mdash;&mdash;?" said Miss Penny expectantly, with a
+ dancing light in her eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," he said, after a pause, "to tell you the whole story,
+ Mr. Pixley assured me that you had had them and had handed them
+ on to him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Pixley said that?" and Margaret sat up, with very much
+ more than a touch of colour in her face now. In fact it was
+ militantly red and vastly indignant.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. I&mdash;well, I called upon him at his office just to
+ find out if&mdash;well, if you were ill or anything like that,
+ you know. And among other interesting information he told me
+ that, and cut off my head with his glasses and threw my remains
+ out into the street;" at which Margaret smiled through her
+ indignation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny emphatically, "is a&mdash;a
+ Johnnie Vautrin on a larger scale. Had he any other interesting
+ items of information for you, Mr. Graeme?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well&mdash;yes, he had. But I can estimate them now at their
+ proper value, and it can rest there."</p>
+
+ <p>"It was Mr. Black's enthusiasm for Sark at that Whitefriars'
+ dinner that put it into my head when&mdash;when we were wondering
+ where to go. I remember now," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was Black's enthusiasm for Sark that put it into <i>my</i>
+ head when <i>I</i> was wondering where to go," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"There you are, you see," said Miss Penny. "I knew you must
+ have had some common inspiration."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am greatly indebted to Black. He's one of the finest
+ fellows I know. He's done me more than one good turn, but I shall
+ always count Sark his chiefest achievement," said Graeme
+ heartily.</p>
+
+ <h4>XVIII</h4>
+
+ <p>The wind howled round the house, and whuffled in the chimney,
+ and sent spurts of sweet-scented smoke to mingle with the fuller
+ flavour of Graeme's tobacco. The walls were bare plaster,
+ discoloured with age and careless usage. The chairs were common
+ kitchen chairs, and the table a plain deal one. But the driftwood
+ burned with flames whose forked tongues sang silently but
+ eloquently of wanderings under many skies, of rainbow isles in
+ sunny seas, of vivid golden days and the black wonders of tropic
+ nights, of storms and calms, and all the untold mysteries of the
+ pitiless sea.</p>
+
+ <p>But to two at least of the party&mdash;and perhaps even to
+ three&mdash;that bare room was radiant beyond any they had ever
+ known.</p>
+
+ <p>Orange and amber lightening into sunshine, purple into
+ heliotrope, tender greens and lucent blues, burning crimson and
+ fiery red, were the flames of the driftwood, and in these surely
+ the imagination may find its happiest auguries. For if the
+ dancing flames, out of their chastened knowledge, sang only of
+ the past, in the minds of their watchers they were singing of
+ futures brighter and more glowing than anything the past had ever
+ known. And so, to two at least of them,&mdash;and perhaps to
+ three,&mdash;never surely was there room so radiant as that bare
+ room in that empty house on Brecqhou.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Penny had the high endowment of a large heart, a wide
+ imagination, and sentiment sufficient for a high-class girls'
+ boarding-school.</p>
+
+ <p>She found herself for the moment out of place, yet she could
+ not remove herself without too obvious an intention. She did the
+ next best thing. She settled herself on her chair in a corner,
+ slipped off her shoes, sat on her feet, and went to sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret, indeed, glanced at her suspiciously once or twice,
+ without moving her head by so much as a hair's-breadth. But she
+ seemed really and truly asleep, and for a moment Margaret was
+ amazed that anyone could think of sleep in that enchanted room.
+ But then she remembered that it was different&mdash;Hennie was
+ Hennie, and she was she, and it was for her that the crystal ball
+ of life had opened of a sudden and shown the radiance within.</p>
+
+ <p>How long they sat in silence before the rainbow fire she never
+ knew.</p>
+
+ <p>Hennie was snoring gently&mdash;purring as one might
+ say&mdash;in the most genuinely ingenuous fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme, in the riot of happy possibilities evoked by the
+ disclosure of Mr. Pixley's perfidy, would have been content to
+ sit there for ever, since Margaret was at his side. It was enough
+ to know that she was there. He did not need to turn his head to
+ enjoy the sight of her with gross material vision. Every
+ tight-strung fibre of his being told him of her nearness, in ways
+ compared with which sight and sound and touch are gross and
+ feeble travesties of communication. Their spirits surely reached
+ out and touched in that silent communion before the rainbow
+ fire.</p>
+
+ <p>There were many things he wanted to ask her now. But they
+ could wait, they could wait. The Doubting Castles he had built in
+ his despair had had no foundations. He was building anew already,
+ and now with rosy hope and golden faith, and the topstones of his
+ building mingled with the stars.</p>
+
+ <p>He woke of a sudden to a sense of lack of consideration for
+ her in his own enjoyment. Doubtless she was tired out, and was
+ only kept from following Miss Penny's example by his crass
+ stupidity in sitting there in that stolid fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pray forgive me!" he said, as he rose quietly. "You must be
+ tired, too. I will take the other room and you can join Miss
+ Penny."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not the least tired. I never felt more awake in my life.
+ Surely the wind has fallen."</p>
+
+ <p>He went to the door and opened it and looked out.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is only a lull. It will probably blow up again stronger
+ than ever," and as he turned he found her at his elbow.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let us go outside," she said, and he could have taken her
+ into his arms. Instead, he tiptoed across the room and got her
+ cloak, and placed it on her shoulders with a new, vast sense of
+ proprietorship.</p>
+
+ <p>He knew just how she felt. Even that room of rare delights was
+ not large enough just then for her and for him. The whole wide
+ world, and the illimitable heights of the heavens, could scarce
+ contain that which was in them. Their hearts were full, and that
+ which was in them was that of which God is the ultimate
+ perfection. And in their ears, in the gaps of the storm, was the
+ roaring thunder of the great white waves as they tore along the
+ black sides of Brecqhou.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell me more about those letters," she said briefly. "What
+ did you write?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I wrote, nominally, to inform you of Lady Elspeth's sudden
+ call to Scotland, but actually to tell you how sorely I regretted
+ the sudden break in our acquaintance which had become to me so
+ very great a delight."</p>
+
+ <p>"And when you got no answer?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I waited and waited, and then I had a sudden fear that you
+ might be ill. And to satisfy myself I called on Mr. Pixley at his
+ office. He told me you were quite well, that you had had my
+ letters, and had handed them to him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Anything more?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes,&mdash;he said you were shortly to marry his son."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is what he wished,&mdash;and that is why I am here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank God! Then I may tell you, Margaret. I had been building
+ castles and you were mistress of them all and of my whole heart.
+ When Mr. Pixley knocked them into dust I came here to fight it
+ out by myself, and a black time I had. Then God, in His goodness,
+ put it into your heart to come too. Will you marry me,
+ Margaret?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, Jock."</p>
+
+ <p>And there, in the lull of the gale, in the lee of the lonely
+ house on Brecqhou, they plighted their troth with no more need of
+ feeble words, for their hearts had gone out to one another.</p>
+
+ <p>And all along the gaunt black rocks the great waves, which a
+ moment before had been growling in dull agony, roared a mighty
+ chorus of delight, and rolled it up the sloping seams of Longue
+ Pointe, and flashed it on in thunderous bursts of foam from
+ Bec-du-Nez to L'Etac.</p>
+
+ <p>And Miss Henrietta Penny, awakening about this time, and
+ finding herself alone, laughed happily to herself, and sighed
+ just once, and said from her heart, "God bless them!"&mdash;and
+ did not go to sleep again, though to look at her you would never
+ have known it, save for the fact that she no longer purred in her
+ sleep,&mdash;for the woman has yet to be born who ever pleaded
+ guilty to actual snoring.</p>
+
+ <h4>XIX</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme slept that night just as much as might have been
+ expected under the circumstances, and that was not one wink.
+ Nevertheless, when morning came, he felt as strong and joyous as
+ a young god. New life had come to him in the night, and he felt
+ equal to the conquering of worlds. For love is life, and the
+ strength and the joy of it.</p>
+
+ <p>He was out with the dawn, to a gray rushing morning full of
+ the sounds of sea and wind. He drew a canful of water from the
+ well, and had such a wash as no soap and a handkerchief would
+ permit of. Then he drew another canful and left it outside the
+ door of the ladies' room, and strode off to Bel&ecirc;me to see
+ if the boats had got back to their anchorage. But the little bay
+ was a scene of storm and strife, a wild confusion of raging seas
+ and stubborn rocks, the fruits of the conflict flying up the
+ cliffs in spongy gouts of spume, and dappling the waters far and
+ wide with fantasies of troubled marbling,&mdash;and there was not
+ a boat to be seen.</p>
+
+ <p>But the sight of the great white seas roaring up the Sark
+ headlands, as far as he could see on either hand, was one never
+ to be forgotten. It was worth the price they had paid, even
+ though it spelt a further term of captivity, and he turned back
+ to his duties with that new glad glow in his heart which was no
+ longer simply hope but the full and gracious assurance of
+ loftiest attainment.</p>
+
+ <p>He had seen potatoes growing in a plot near the house. So,
+ after lighting a fire in the kitchen and setting the kettle to
+ boil, he rooted about till he found the remains of a spade and
+ set himself to unaccustomed labours.</p>
+
+ <p>When Miss Penny came out of her room, freshfaced and comely
+ coiffured, she found a ring of potatoes roasting in the ashes and
+ the kettle boiling, and Graeme came in, bright-eyed and
+ wind-whipped, wiping his hands on a very damp handkerchief.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am so glad, Mr. Graeme," she said, with sparkling eyes and
+ face, and hearty outstretched hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Margaret has told you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course Margaret has told me. Am I not her keeper, and
+ haven't I been hoping for this since ever I saw you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is very good of you. I thought, perhaps&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thought it might take me by surprise, I suppose&mdash;and
+ perhaps that I might take it badly? Not a bit! It fulfils my very
+ highest hopes. And I can assure you you have got a prize. There
+ are not many girls like Margaret Brandt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't I know it? I have known it from the very first time I
+ met her&mdash;at that blessed Whitefriars' dinner."</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you will make her very happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"I promise you I will do my very best."</p>
+
+ <p>And then Margaret came into the kitchen and knew what was
+ toward.</p>
+
+ <p>She looked like a queen and a princess and a goddess all in
+ one, with a flood of happy colour in her face and a glad glow in
+ her eyes, and no more hint of maidenly shyness about her than was
+ right and natural. And Miss Penny's eyes were misty of a sudden,
+ as Graeme went quickly up to her friend, and feasted his hungry
+ eyes on her face for a moment, and then bent and gallantly kissed
+ her hand. For in both their faces was the great glad light that
+ is the very light of life, and Miss Penny was wondering if, in
+ some distant future time, it might perchance be vouchsafed to her
+ also to attain thereto.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope you both slept well," he said gaily. "I've done my
+ best in the provisioning line. I know we've got plenty of salt,
+ for one generally forgets it and so I always put in two
+ packets."</p>
+
+ <p>"You've done splendidly," said Miss Penny, tying up tea in a
+ piece of muslin and dropping it into the kettle.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd have tried for a rabbit, but I wasn't sure if either of
+ you could skin it&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ugh! Don't mention it!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And I knew I couldn't, so we'll have to put up with roasted
+ potatoes and imagine the rabbit. I've been told they do that in
+ some parts of Ireland,&mdash;hang up a bit of bacon in a corner
+ and point at it with the potato and so imagine the flavour."</p>
+
+ <p>"Potatoes are excellent faring&mdash;when there's nothing
+ better to be had," said Miss Penny, rooting in the basket.
+ "However, here are three of yesterday's sandwiches, slightly
+ faded, and some biscuits&mdash;in good condition, thanks to the
+ tin. Come, we shan't absolutely starve!"</p>
+
+ <p>And they enjoyed that meal&mdash;two of them, at all events,
+ and perhaps three&mdash;as they had never enjoyed a meal
+ before.</p>
+
+ <p>"And the weather?" asked Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"The blessed weather is just as it was; perhaps even a bit
+ more so,&mdash;the most glorious weather that ever was on land or
+ sea!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;&mdash;" said Margaret, smiling at his
+ effervescence.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I'm afraid it can't last very much longer, and potatoes
+ and salt I know would begin to pall in time. After breakfast you
+ shall see the grandest sight of your lives,&mdash;and for the
+ rest, we will live in hope."</p>
+
+ <h4>XX</h4>
+
+ <p>And, after all, they saw what they had specially come to
+ see&mdash;a sunset from Bel&ecirc;me cliff.</p>
+
+ <p>For the day remained gray and boisterous until late in the
+ afternoon. They had lunched&mdash;with less exuberance than they
+ had breakfasted&mdash;on potatoes and salt and a thin
+ medicinal-tasting decoction made from breakfast's tea-leaves;
+ they were looking forward with no undue eagerness to potato
+ dinner without even the palliative of medicinal tea; and even
+ Miss Penny acknowledged that, choice being offered her, she would
+ give the preference to some other vegetable for a week to
+ come;&mdash;when, of a sudden, the gray veil of the west opened
+ slowly, like the lifting of an iron curtain, and let the light
+ behind shine through.</p>
+
+ <p>And the light was as they could imagine the light of
+ heaven&mdash;a pure lucent yellow as of the early primrose, but
+ diaphanous and almost transparent, as though this, which seemed
+ to them light, was itself in reality but an outer veil hiding the
+ still greater glory behind. The curtain lifted but a span, and
+ the lower rim of it curved in a gentle arch from the middle of
+ Guernsey to the filmy line of Alderney. All below the sharp-cut
+ rim was the sea of heavenly primrose, with here and there a
+ floating purple island edged with gold. All above was sombre
+ plum-colour flushed with rose, the edges fraying in the wind, and
+ floating in thin rosy streamers up the dark sky above.</p>
+
+ <p>The sun, larger than they had ever seen him in their lives,
+ dropped gently like a great brass shield from behind the dark
+ curtain into the sea of primrose light, and the primrose flushed
+ with crimson over Guernsey and with tender green and blue over
+ Alderney.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp177" id="fp177"></a> <img src="images/fp177.jpg"
+ width="560" height="329" alt=
+ "THE GRANITE FRONTLETS OF SARK FROM BEL&Ecirc;ME CLIFF ON BRECQHOU"
+ title=
+ "THE GRANITE FRONTLETS OF SARK FROM BEL&Ecirc;ME CLIFF ON BRECQHOU" />
+ <h5>THE GRANITE FRONTLETS OF SARK FROM BEL&Ecirc;ME CLIFF ON
+ BRECQHOU</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They hastened away to Bel&ecirc;me cliff, and then they saw
+ what they had hoped to see, and more;&mdash;the mighty granite
+ frontlets of Sark all washed with living gold&mdash;- shining
+ from their long conflict with the waves, and gleaming, every one,
+ like a jewel,&mdash;from Bec-du-Nez to Moie de Bretagne. And, out
+ in the dimness, behind which lay Jersey, there suddenly appeared
+ the perfect circle of a rainbow such as none of them had ever
+ dreamed of&mdash;a perfect orb of the living colours of the
+ Promise&mdash;resting bodily on the dark sea like a gigantic
+ iridescent soap-bubble, glowing and pulsing and throbbing under
+ the level beams of the setting sun.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wonderful!" murmured Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"I never saw more than half a bow before," whispered Miss
+ Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor I," said Graeme. "But then, you see, nothing ever was as
+ it is now. Things happened last night."</p>
+
+ <p>At which Miss Penny smiled and murmured, "Of course! That
+ accounts for everything. The whole world is changed."</p>
+
+ <p>And they watched and watched, in breathless admiration, first
+ the cliffs, and then the bow, and then the sun, and then the
+ cliffs and bow again, till the last tiny rim of the sun sank
+ behind the dark line of Herm, and the bow went out with a snap,
+ and the cliffs in front grew gray and sank back into their sleep,
+ as the shadows crept up out of the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>And, presently, the primrose sea in the clouds lost its
+ transparent softness and flushed with rose and carmine. The
+ tender greens and blues in the north deepened, and the sky above
+ glowed crimson right into the far east. And the sea below was
+ like a ripe plum with a rippling bloom upon it, and then it
+ answered to the glow "above and became like burnished copper. And
+ over it, from the south end of Sark, came a dancing white sail,
+ at sight of which Graeme leaped to his feet.</p>
+
+ <p>"The show is over," he cried, "and here comes your highnesses'
+ carriage."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wouldn't have missed it for anything," said Margaret
+ softly, with a rapt face still.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was worth living on potatoes for a month for," said Miss
+ Penny. "All the same, I hope Mrs. Carr&eacute; will have some
+ dinner for us when we get home."</p>
+
+ <p>The boat was heading for the Pente-&agrave;-Fouaille where
+ they had landed the day before, and they hurried to meet it,
+ Graeme full of misgivings as to the embarkation, for the waves
+ were still roaring up the rocks in bursts of foam, though the
+ wind had fallen somewhat.</p>
+
+ <p>But the boatmen knew their business, and had brought an extra
+ hand for its safe accomplishment. They dropped the sail and
+ pulled round a corner of the black rock. Then, while two of them
+ kept the boat from destruction, the other stood and Graeme
+ dropped the girls one by one into his arms, and was a very
+ thankful man when he tumbled in himself, all in a heap, and wiped
+ the big drops of sweat from his brow.</p>
+
+ <p>A stroke or two with the oars and they were plunging back
+ through the hissing white caps, but not, as he had expected, to
+ Havre Gosselin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where to?" he shouted to the blue-guernseyed stalwart nearest
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Grande Gr&egrave;ve. We couldn' beach in Havre Gosselin, and
+ mebbe the leddies wouldn' like to climb the ladders," with a grin
+ at the leddies.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not much!" said Miss Penny. "Margaret, my dear, prepare
+ yourself! I'm going to be sick if this goes on much longer."</p>
+
+ <p>But before she had time to be sick they had rounded the
+ shoulder of Port-&eacute;s-Saies, and their boat's nose ran up
+ the soft sand of a low tide in Grande Gr&egrave;ve, and the green
+ waves came curling exultantly in over the stern. The men leaped
+ out and hauled bravely, and in a moment the girls were
+ ashore.</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn' get back nohow last night, sir. 'Twould a bin as much
+ as our lives were worth. Hope ye didn' starve," said the
+ spokesman with another genial grin.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, we didn't expect you. We dug potatoes and cooked them.
+ Here you are, and thanks for coming as soon as you could," and,
+ from their smiling faces, their reward without doubt covered not
+ only that which they had actually done but that also which they
+ had unwittingly helped to do.</p>
+
+ <p>The boat shoved off and made for its own anchorage, and Graeme
+ led the girls up the toilsome path to the Coup&eacute;e.</p>
+
+ <p>It was after nine when they reached the cottage, and the first
+ thing they saw was Johnnie Vautrin sitting in the hedge opposite,
+ with Marielihou licking her lips alongside.</p>
+
+ <p>"I just seen seven crows," cried Johnnie gleefully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Little rascal! You dream crows," said Graeme, whose desires
+ at the moment ran to something more palatable and satisfying.</p>
+
+ <p>"And what do seven crows mean, Johnnie?" asked Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Seven crows means everything's oll right!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Clever boy! You see just what you want to see," said Graeme,
+ and then Mrs. Carr&eacute; appeared at the door of the
+ cottage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah then, here you are!" she said, with a large welcoming
+ smile. "And the dinner I haf been keeping for you for an hour an'
+ more."</p>
+
+ <p>"You're a good angel, Mrs. Carr&eacute;," said Graeme
+ gratefully. "We are a bit late, aren't we? I hope you've put
+ yesterday's dinner and to-day's together. We've had nothing to
+ eat to speak of for a month. What did you think when we never
+ turned up last night?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but I knew you would be all right. There iss a house on
+ Brecqhou, and there iss watter, and you had things to eat, and it
+ was better on Brecqhou last night than on the watter."</p>
+
+ <p>"It was," said Graeme heartily, and sped off up the garden for
+ a much-needed wash and brush-up.</p>
+
+ <h4>XXI</h4>
+
+ <p>"Now what would I like myself if I was in their place?" asked
+ Miss Penny of herself, while she rectified the omissions of the
+ last two days in the matter of Nature's cravings for a more
+ varied diet than Brecqhou afforded.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, to be alone and free from the observation of Miss Hennie
+ Penny," she promptly answered herself, and as promptly acted on
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Meg, my dear, I am aweary. I am not accustomed to playing
+ Swiss Family Robinson. By your leave, Monsieur and Mademoiselle,
+ I will wish you good-night and pleasant dreams," and she went off
+ into the bedroom.</p>
+
+ <p>"May she have as tactful a chaperone when her own time comes,"
+ said Graeme, with a smile. "Do you think you would sleep better
+ if you went to bed at once or if you had a little walk
+ first?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not the least bit sleepy," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then a stroll will do you good," and they went out into the
+ night. And Miss Penny, as she heard their feet on the cobbles,
+ smiled to herself a little wistfully.</p>
+
+ <p>Such a night of stars! The gale had swept the heavens and
+ thinned the upper air till the Milky Way was a wide white track
+ strewn thick with jewels, and the greater lights shone large and
+ close. As they sauntered in silence towards La Tour, their faces
+ towards the stars among which their full hearts were ranging in
+ glorious companionship, one of the lesser lights silently loosed
+ its hold and dropped slowly from zenith to horizon, in a fiery
+ groove that momentarily eclipsed all else.</p>
+
+ <p>And while Graeme was still pressing to his heart the soft arm
+ that lay in his, in silent enjoyment of the sight and at their
+ sharing it, another star swung loose, and another, and another,
+ till the glittering vault seemed laced with fiery trails and they
+ stood in rapt admiration.</p>
+
+ <p>"What a sight!" said Margaret softly. "I have never seen
+ anything like that before."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor I. The very stars rejoice with us.... You have made me
+ the happiest man in all the world this day, Margaret. I can
+ hardly believe it is real ..."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am real," she said, with a low warm little laugh. "And I am
+ happy. Kiss me, Jock!" and he kissed her there under the falling
+ stars, and she him, in a way that left no doubt as to what was in
+ them, and the evening incense of the honeysuckle and hawthorn
+ wafted fragrance all about them.</p>
+
+ <p>There was still a tender touch of colour in the sky over the
+ western sea as they came out on the Eperquerie.</p>
+
+ <p>"When are you free, Margaret?" he asked,&mdash;the first word
+ since they kissed in the lane.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am twenty-one on New Year's Day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Six whole months! How can we possibly wait all that
+ time?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why should we?" she asked delightfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Undoubtedly&mdash;why should we?" he said, on fire with her
+ charming readiness. "You are probably by this time ringed with
+ legal pains and penalties, but they are all less than
+ nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"What could they do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I believe they clap the male malefactor into
+ prison&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will go with you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not sure if there are any married cells."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how long would they keep us there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Till, in their opinion, I had purged my contempt, I
+ believe."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how long would that be?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've no idea. It probably depends on circumstances. Do you
+ know that, until Lady Elspeth told me, I had rib idea that you
+ had any money. It was rather a blow to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't see why."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I told our old friend that if&mdash;well, if, you
+ understand&mdash;I should insist on everything you had being
+ settled on yourself."</p>
+
+ <p>"You and Lady Elspeth seem to have discussed matters pretty
+ freely," she said, with a laugh.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's the dearest old lady in the world, and delights in
+ mothering me. She got me in a corner that afternoon, and taxed me
+ with coming to her house for reasons other than simply to see
+ herself&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And you&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I had to own up, of course, and then she crushed me by
+ telling me that you were an heiress, and that Mr. Pixley probably
+ had views of his own concerning you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Which he had, but they happened not to coincide with mine,
+ and so I came to Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"Happy day! I see you yet, standing in the hedge by the Red
+ House, and I believing you a vision."</p>
+
+ <p>"I could hardly believe my eyes either. You seemed to come
+ jumping right out of the sky."</p>
+
+ <p>"I jumped right into heaven&mdash;the highest jump that ever
+ was made."</p>
+
+ <p>"I was a bit put out at first, you know&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know you were."</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought you had learned we were coming, and had followed us
+ here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Whereas&mdash;&mdash;" he laughed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Exactly!"</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PART_THE_FIFTH" id="PART_THE_FIFTH"></a>PART THE
+ FIFTH</h2>
+
+ <h4>I</h4>
+
+ <p>"But yes, I can marry you in the church," said the Vicar,
+ blowing out smoke, and laughing enjoyably across at Graeme, who
+ sat in another garden chair under the big trees in front of the
+ Vicarage.</p>
+
+ <p>"In spite of the fact that we are aliens?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it is not so bad as that. We ab-sorbed you by conquest
+ and so you are really a part of us. We are all one family
+ now."</p>
+
+ <p>"And such a marriage would be perfectly legal and
+ unassailable?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall marry you more firmly than if you were married in
+ Cant-er-bury Cath-edral," laughed the Vicar.</p>
+
+ <p>"That should suffice. But why more firmly? How improve on
+ perfection?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will tell you," said the Vicar, with increased enjoyment,
+ as he leaned forward and tapped Graeme's knee. "It is this
+ way.&mdash;If you are married in Cant-er-bury Cath-edral you can
+ be divorced,&mdash;n'est-ce pas? Oui! Eh bien!&mdash;If you are
+ married in my church of Sark you can never be divorced. C'est
+ &ccedil;a! It is the old Norman law."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will be married in your church of Sark," said Graeme, with
+ conviction.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is right. I shall marry you so that you shall never be
+ able to get away from one another."</p>
+
+ <p>"Please God, we'll never want to!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah yes! Of course. C'est &ccedil;a!"</p>
+
+ <h4>II</h4>
+
+ <p>"We have never had a case of the kind, as far as I know.
+ Certainly not in my time," said the Seigneur, smiling quizzically
+ across the tea-table at Graeme. "But you gentlemen of the pen are
+ allowed a certain amount of license in such matters, are you
+ not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We sometimes take it, anyhow. But one likes to stick as close
+ to fact as possible."</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp187" id="fp187"></a> <img src="images/fp187.jpg"
+ width="561" height="331" alt=
+ "A CORNER OF THE SEIGNEURIE GARDEN" title=
+ "A CORNER OF THE SEIGNEURIE GARDEN" /> <h5>A CORNER OF THE
+ SEIGNEURIE GARDEN</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They were sitting in the shady corner in front of the
+ Seigneurie, with four dogs basking in the sun beyond, and beyond
+ them the shaven lawns and motionless trees, the leafy green
+ tunnel that led to the lane, and a lovely glimpse into the
+ enclosed gardens through the ancient gateway whose stones had
+ known the saints of old.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme had put a certain proposition to the Lord of the
+ Island, nominally in connection with the story he was busy upon,
+ but in reality of vital concern to the larger story in which
+ Margaret and he were writing the history of their lives.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sark, you know, is a portion of the British Empire, or
+ perhaps I should say the British Empire belongs to Sark, but we
+ are not under British law. We are a law unto ourselves here,"
+ said the Seigneur.</p>
+
+ <p>"And the authority of a British Court would carry no weight
+ with you? In the case I have put to you, if the Court of Chancery
+ ordered you to surrender the young lady, you would refuse to do
+ so?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I could refuse to do so. What I actually would do might
+ depend on circumstances."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see," said Graeme musingly, and decided that the Seigneur's
+ goodwill was worthy of every possible cultivation both by himself
+ and Margaret. For he did not look like one who would help a
+ friend into trouble.</p>
+
+ <h4>III</h4>
+
+ <p>"I've been thinking a good deal about it, and I really don't
+ see any reason why we should wait,"&mdash;said Graeme, looking at
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>And Miss Penny said "Hear! Hear!" so energetically that
+ Margaret laughed merrily.</p>
+
+ <p>"We are both of one mind in the matter, an life is all too
+ short at its longest, and most especially when it offers you all
+ its very best with both hands&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Hear! <i>Hear</i>!" said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"And time is fleeting," concluded the orator.</p>
+
+ <p>"And that kettle is boiling over again," and Miss Penny jumped
+ up and ran to the rescue.</p>
+
+ <p>They were spending a long day in Grande Gr&egrave;ve&mdash;the
+ spot that had special claims upon their liking since their
+ landing there after that memorable trip to Brecqhou. They had
+ brought a full day's rations, prepared with solicitous
+ discrimination by Graeme himself, and a kettle, and a great round
+ tin can of fresh water from the well at Dixcart, and a smaller
+ one of milk.</p>
+
+ <p>So high were their spirits that they had even scoffed at
+ Johnnie Vautrin's intimation that he had seen a magpie that
+ morning, and it had flown over their house. But magpie or no
+ magpie they were bent on enjoyment, and they left Johnnie and
+ Marielihou muttering black spells into the hawthorn hedge, and
+ went off with the dogs down the scented lanes, through the valley
+ where the blue-bells draped the hillsides in such masses that
+ they walked as it were between a blue heaven and a blue earth,
+ and so by the meadow-paths to the Coup&eacute;e.</p>
+
+ <p>Their descent of the rough path down the side of the
+ Coup&eacute;e with all this impedimenta had not been without
+ incident, but eventually every thing and person had been got to
+ the bottom in safety.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, while the dogs raced in the lip of the tide and Scamp
+ filled the bay with his barkings, the girls had disappeared among
+ the tumbled rocks under the cliff, and Graeme had sought
+ seclusion at the other end of the bay. And presently they had met
+ again on the gleaming stretch of sand; he in orthodox
+ tight-fitting dark-blue elastic web which set off his long limbs
+ and broad shoulders to great advantage; Hennie Penny in pale
+ blue, her somewhat plump figure redeemed by the merry face which
+ recognised all its owner's deficiencies and more than made up for
+ them all; Margaret, tall, slim, shapely, revealing fresh graces
+ with every movement,&mdash;a sea-goddess in pale pink&mdash;a
+ sight to set the heart of a marble statue plunging with
+ delight.</p>
+
+ <p>Hennie Penny persisted in wearing an unbecoming cap like a
+ sponge-bag, which subjected her to comment.</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret's crowning glory was coiled in thick plaits on top of
+ her head, and if it got wet it got wet and she heeded it not.</p>
+
+ <p>Both girls had draped themselves in long towels for the walk
+ down to the water, and Graeme's heart sang with joy at the
+ surpassing beauty of this radiant girl who had given her heart
+ and herself and her life into his keeping.</p>
+
+ <p>Dainty clothing counts for much in a girl's appearance. Not
+ every girl shows to advantage in bathing costume. But when she
+ does, she knows it, and the hearts of men are her
+ stepping-stones.</p>
+
+ <p>Hennie Penny was a cautious swimmer. She preferred depths
+ soundable at any moment by the dropping of a foot, and if the
+ foot did not instantly touch bottom she fell into a panic and
+ screamed, which added not a little to the hilarity of their
+ bathes.</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret and Graeme, however, were both at home in the water.
+ They delighted to set their faces to the open and breast steadily
+ out to sea, rejoicing in the conquest of the waves. But he always
+ watched over her with solicitous care, for there are currents,
+ and cross-currents, and treacherous undertows round those coasts,
+ and the wary swimmer is the wiser man.</p>
+
+ <p>And the dogs always swam with them, Punch lunging boldly ahead
+ with the ease and grace of a seal, looking round now and again to
+ see if they were coming, and turning the moment they turned.
+ While Scamp, away in the rear, thrashed along spasmodically, with
+ a yelp for every stroke, but would not be left out of it. The
+ sight of his anxious little face and twisting nose more than once
+ set Margaret laughing, so that she had to turn on her back and
+ float till she got over it, greatly to the small dog's
+ satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>Full of life and the mighty joy of it, they found the going
+ unusually easy that day. The water was like the kiss of new life,
+ crisp, tonic, vitalising. There was no more than a breath of
+ wind, no more than a ruffle on the backs of the long blue rollers
+ that came sweeping slowly in out of the West.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme, as he glanced round in his long side-strokes at the
+ lovely eager face gemmed with sparkling water-jewels, took full
+ deep breaths of delight and gratitude to the All-Goodness that
+ had vouchsafed him such a prize.</p>
+
+ <p>The kiss of the life-giving water had induced a tender flush
+ of colour in the soft white neck, as though the pink of her
+ bathing-suit had spread upwards. He could see the pulsing blue
+ veins in neck and temple as she rose to her stroke. A tiny
+ tendril of water-darkened hair lifted and fell on her neck like a
+ filament of seaweed on a polished rock. Her eyes were very
+ bright, and seemed larger than usual with the strenuous joy of it
+ all. The wonder of her beauty absorbed him. He could hardly turn
+ his face from it. He would have been content to go on swimming so
+ for ever.</p>
+
+ <p>But, glancing past the sweet face one time, he saw that they
+ had gone farther than he knew, and Scamp had turned long since
+ and was yelping towards the shore.</p>
+
+ <p>"Better turn now," he said quietly, and she floated for a
+ moment's rest, then turned and they headed for the shore, and
+ Punch passed them noiselessly.</p>
+
+ <p>They ploughed along in good cheer for a time, and then, of a
+ sudden, it seemed to him that they were making but poor
+ progress.</p>
+
+ <p>He fixed his eyes on a rock on the shore and swam steadily
+ on.</p>
+
+ <p>They had been opposite it. Twenty strokes, and the rock,
+ instead of facing them, had swung slowly to the north. They were
+ making less than no progress. They were drifting. They were in
+ the grip of a current that was carrying them towards the black
+ fangs of Pointe la Joue.</p>
+
+ <p>A cold sweat broke out among the sea-drops on his brow. Pointe
+ la Joue is an ill place to land, even if they could make it, and
+ the chances were that the current would carry them past.</p>
+
+ <p>How to tell her without undue upsetting? A panic might bring
+ disaster.</p>
+
+ <p>He looked round at her. The bright face was high and resolute.
+ She was not aware of the danger, but from that look on her face
+ he did not think she would go to pieces when he told her.</p>
+
+ <p>The rock he had been watching stood now at an angle to their
+ course.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are you tired, Meg?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"Turn on your back and float for a minute or two," and he set
+ the example, and Punch saw and came slipping back to them.</p>
+
+ <p>"We're in a cross current," he said quietly. "And we're making
+ no way&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know. I was watching a rock on the shore. What's the best
+ thing to do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll rest for a few minutes and then go with the tide round
+ Pointe la Joue. We can land in Vermand&eacute;s. You're not cold,
+ are you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a bit."</p>
+
+ <p>When he lifted his head the Coup&eacute;e was shortened to a
+ span, and the southern headland folded over it as he looked. They
+ were drifting as fast as a man could walk at his fastest. They
+ were abreast the black rocks of La Joue.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, dearest, a little spurt and we shall be in the slack. If
+ you get tired, tell me," and they struck out vigorously on a
+ shoreward slant in the direction they were going.</p>
+
+ <p>There should have been a backwater round the corner of
+ Vermand&eacute;s. He had counted on it. And there was one, but so
+ swift was the rush of the tide round the out-jutting rocks of La
+ Joue, that for some minutes, as they battled with the rough edge
+ of it, it was touch and go with them.</p>
+
+ <p>At a word from her his arm would be at her service. But she
+ fought bravely on, and could admire Punch's graceful action even
+ then. The waves smacked her rudely in the face. Great writhing
+ coils came belching up from below and burst under her chin and
+ almost swamped her. One, as strong as a snake, rose suddenly
+ under her, flung her off her stroke, rolled her over, made her
+ for a moment feel utterly helpless.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jock!"</p>
+
+ <p>He had been watching her closely. His arm flashed out in front
+ of her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Grip!" and she hung on to it and it felt like a bar of
+ steel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now!"&mdash;when she had recovered herself somewhat. "Grip
+ the top of my suit."&mdash;She hooked her fingers into it and he
+ struck out through the turmoil.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a tough little fight. She struck out vigorously behind
+ to help him. And, though the losing of the fight might mean
+ tragedy and two white bodies ragging forlornly along the black
+ teeth of Little Sark, she still had time to notice the mighty
+ play of muscles in his back and arms, and the swelling veins in
+ his sunburnt neck, and the crisp rippled hair above, and she
+ rejoiced mightily in him. And&mdash;while possible deaths lurked
+ all about them&mdash;her soul grew large within her at thought of
+ the brave heart in front, and the strenuous will, and the shapely
+ body, and the powerful muscles&mdash;all battling for
+ her&mdash;all hers&mdash;and she theirs. What matter if they were
+ beaten, if they but went out together! What matter Death so long
+ as he did not divide them! So uplifted was she with the joy of
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, with a final wrestle, they were in slack water, and
+ she loosed her hold and struck out alongside him.</p>
+
+ <p>And presently he was helping her carefully up a seamed black
+ rock, and the hand she gripped was shaking now, and she knew it
+ was not for himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank God!" said Graeme fervently, as he sank down heavily
+ beside her, and panted while the water ran out of them, and Punch
+ scrambled up and lay quietly alongside. "Meg,&mdash;we were in
+ peril."</p>
+
+ <p>"Jock," she said jerkily, for her heart was going now quicker
+ than usual, "I do not believe I would have minded&mdash;if we'd
+ gone together."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay&mdash;together, but, God be thanked, it did not come to
+ that!"</p>
+
+ <p>They sat in silence for a time, finding themselves, while the
+ green seas swelled up to their feet, and sank out of sight below,
+ and their rock was laced with cascades of creamy foam.</p>
+
+ <p>"How shall we get back?" asked Margaret at last. "Hennie will
+ be in desperation. She will think we are drowned."</p>
+
+ <p>"We can climb the head and round into Grande Gr&egrave;ve, but
+ it would be pretty rough on the feet. Or we can wait till the
+ tide turns and swim in again&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"When will it turn?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's full at noon," he said, studying the waters in front.
+ "But how that affects matters here none but a Sarkman could say.
+ Tides here are a law unto themselves, like the people."</p>
+
+ <p>"How would that do?" asked Margaret, as a black boat came
+ slowly round the rocks from Les Fontaines, sculled by an elderly
+ fisherman.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is old Billy Mollet after his lobster-pots," and he stood
+ up and coo-eed to the new-comer, and waved his arms till Billy
+ saw them and stared hard and then turned leisurely their way.</p>
+
+ <p>"Guyablle!" said the old man, as he drew in. "What you doin'
+ there now?"</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp197" id="fp197"></a> <img src="images/fp197.jpg"
+ width="563" height="330" alt="THE SANDS OF GRANDE GR&Egrave;VE"
+ title="THE SANDS OF GRANDE GR&Egrave;VE" /> <h5>THE SANDS OF
+ GRANDE GR&Egrave;VE</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Got carried out of Grande Gr&egrave;ve by a current, Mr.
+ Mollet. Will you take us back in your boat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, ay!" and he brought the boat as near to the rock as he
+ dared, and his weather-stained old eyes settled hypnotically on
+ the fairest burden his old tub had ever carried, as Graeme handed
+ her carefully down and helped her to spring into the dancing
+ craft, and then sprang in himself with bleeding feet and shins,
+ while Punch leaped lightly after him and crawled under a
+ thwart.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye must ha' been well out for tide to catch ye," said Billy,
+ with no eyes for anything but the vision in clinging pink.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, we were too far out and couldn't get back."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tide runs round them rocks."</p>
+
+ <p>He dropped his oar into the rowlock and Graeme took the other,
+ and in five minutes they were speeding across the sands of Grande
+ Gr&egrave;ve&mdash;Margaret to cover, Graeme to his pocket for
+ Billy's reward.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Penny had a driftwood fire roaring among the rocks, and
+ the kettle was boiling.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where on earth have you two been?" she cried, at sight of
+ Margaret skipping over the stones to her dressing-room, and got
+ only the wave of a white arm in reply.</p>
+
+ <p>And presently Graeme came along in easy piratical costume of
+ shirt and trousers and red sash, and sat down and lit a pipe.</p>
+
+ <p>"We went a bit farther than we intended," he explained, but
+ did not tell her how nearly they had gone out of bounds
+ altogether.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll enjoy a cup of tea. You look as if you'd been working
+ hard."</p>
+
+ <p>"There is a bit of a current round that point."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, you should follow a good example and keep within touch of
+ the bottom. Here you are, Meg&mdash;fresh made for every
+ customer. Help yourself, Mr. Graeme. I've had mine, I couldn't
+ wait. Tea never tastes so good as when you're half full of
+ salt-water, and I got right out of my depth once and swallowed
+ tons. I screamed to you two to come and save me, but you never
+ paid the slightest attention, and for all you cared I might have
+ been drowned five times over."</p>
+
+ <p>"One would have been quite once too many," said Graeme,
+ holding out his cup. "For then you couldn't have lighted that
+ fire and made this tea. And I'm half inclined to think we
+ wouldn't be enjoying it a quarter so much if a little blue corpse
+ lay out there on the shining sand, and we'd had to turn to and
+ make it ourselves."</p>
+
+ <p>"Horrible!" said Miss Penny, with a little shiver. "With your
+ little blue corpses! It's all very well to joke about it, but I
+ assure you, for a minute or so, I thought I was done for. The
+ bottom seemed to have sunk, and I was just going after it when my
+ foot came on a rock and that helped me to kick ashore."</p>
+
+ <p>"A narrow escape," said Graeme, with a sympathetic wag of the
+ head. "You've no right to risk your life that way. We still need
+ you. What do you say to being bridesmaid at a Sark wedding?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is the hope of my life," said Miss Penny, sparkling like
+ Mars in a clear evening sky.</p>
+
+ <p>"I really don't see any reason why we should wait"&mdash;said
+ Graeme, looking very earnestly at Margaret, and behind the look
+ was the thought, born of what they had just come through
+ together, that life spills many a full cup before the thirsty
+ lips have tasted it. "What do you say, Margaret?"</p>
+
+ <p>And she, knowing well what was in him, and being of the same
+ mind, said, "I am ready, Jock. When you will."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll call on the Vicar to-morrow," he said joyfully. "It
+ would be such a pity to disappoint the hope of Miss Penny's
+ life,"&mdash;as that young person came back with the merry
+ kettle.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am indebted to you," said Hennie Penny. "What about
+ dresses, Meg?"</p>
+
+ <h4>IV</h4>
+
+ <p>It was that same night, as they were sauntering home from a
+ starlight ramble, that they came on Johnnie Vautrin crouched in
+ the hedge with Marielihou, and Marielihou had her hind leg bound
+ up in a piece of white rag.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, Johnnie! What's the matter with Marielihou?" asked
+ Graeme. And Marielihou turned her malevolent yellow-green eyes on
+ him and looked curses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Goderabetin! She've got hurt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! How was that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I d'n know. Wisht I knowed who done it;" and just then, as
+ luck would have it, old Tom Hamon came sauntering along in the
+ gloaming, smoking a contemplative pipe with long slow puffs.</p>
+
+ <p>And at sight of him Marielihou ruffled and swelled to twice
+ her size, and raked up most horrible and blood-curdling oaths
+ from away down in her inside into her black throat, and spat them
+ out at him, as he came up, in a fusillade that sounded like
+ ripraps, and her eyes flamed baleful fires.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cuss away, y'ould witch!" said old Tom, with a grin through
+ his pipe-stem. "How's the leg?" and Marielihou with a final
+ volley disappeared among the bushes, and Johnnie crawled after
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"What on earth does he mean?" whispered Meg.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Hamon has an idea that Marielihou and old Mme. Vautrin
+ have something in common. In fact I believe he goes so far as to
+ say that they are one and the same. Black magic, you
+ know,&mdash;witchcraft, and all that kind of thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"How horrid!"</p>
+
+ <p>"B'en!" chuckled old Tom again. "You find out how 'tis with
+ th' old witch. We know how 'tis with Marrlyou. 'Twere the silver
+ bullet did it. If sh' 'adn't jumped 'twould ha' gone through 'er
+ 'ead," and he went off chuckling through his pipe-stem.</p>
+
+ <p>And the next evening, as they were sauntering slowly through
+ the darkening lanes to the windmill, to see the life-lights flash
+ out all round the horizon, it happened that they met the doctor
+ just turning out of his gate.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, doctor! How's old Mme. Vautrin to-day?" asked
+ Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's going on all right," said the doctor, with a touch of
+ surprise. "There seems a quite unusual amount of interest in that
+ old lady all of a sudden. How is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it's wrong with her?"</p>
+
+ <p>And the doctor eyed him curiously for a moment, and then said,
+ "Well, she says she hurt her leg ormering, slipped on a rock and
+ got the hook in it. But&mdash;Well, it's a bad leg anyway, and
+ she won't go ormering or anything else for a good long time to
+ come."</p>
+
+ <p>Which matter, in the light of old Tom Hamon's silver bullets
+ and evident knowledge of Marielihou's injury, left them all very
+ much puzzled, though, as Graeme acknowledged, there might be
+ nothing in it after all.</p>
+
+ <h4>V</h4>
+
+ <p>It was just after the second lesson, the following Sunday,
+ that the Vicar stood up, tall and stately, his youthful face
+ below the gray hair all alight with the enjoyment of this unusual
+ break in the even tenour of his way, and soared into unaccustomed
+ and very carefully enunciated English.</p>
+
+ <p>"I pub-lish thee Banns of Marrr-i-ache between John Cor-rie
+ Graeme of Lonn-donn and Mar-garet Brandt of Lonn-donn. If any of
+ you know cause, or just im-ped-i-ment, why these two pair-sons
+ should not be joined to-gether in holy matri-mony, ye are to
+ de-clare it. This is thee first time of as-king."</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret and Miss Penny and Graeme heard it from their back
+ seat among the school-children, and found it good.</p>
+
+ <p>There were not very many visitors there. Such as there were
+ felt a momentary surprise at two English people choosing to get
+ married in Sark, though, if it had been put to them, they must
+ have confessed that there was no lovelier place in the world to
+ be married in. They also wondered what kind of people they
+ were.</p>
+
+ <p>Some few of the habitants knew them and turned and grinned
+ encouragingly, though even they were not quite certain in their
+ own minds as to which of the two ladies was the one who was to be
+ married. The children all smiled as a matter of course and of
+ nature.</p>
+
+ <p>And Margaret felt no shadow of regret at thought of the gauds
+ and fripperies of a fashionable wedding which would not be hers.
+ In John Graeme's true love she had the kernel. The rest was of
+ small account to her.</p>
+
+ <p>And that little church of Sark, plain walled and bare of
+ ornament, always exerted upon her a most profoundly deepening and
+ uplifting influence. It epitomised the life of the remote little
+ island. Here its people were baptized, confirmed, married,
+ buried.</p>
+
+ <p>And here and there, on the otherwise naked walls, was a white
+ marble tablet to the memory of some who had gone down to the sea
+ and never returned. And these she had studied and mused upon with
+ emotion the first time she went there, for surely none could read
+ them without being deeply touched.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"A la memoire de John William Falle, &acirc;g&eacute; de 37
+ ans, et de son fils William Slowley Falle, &acirc;g&eacute; de
+ 17 ans, Fils et petit fils de William Falle, Ecr. de Beau
+ Regard, Sercq. Qui furent noy&eacute;s 20'eme jour d'Avril
+ 1903, durant la travers&eacute;e de Guernsey a Sercq. 'Ta voie
+ a &eacute;t&eacute; par la mer et tes sentiers dans les grosses
+ eaux.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"A la memoire de Pierre Le Pelley, Ecuyer, Seigneur de Serk,
+ noy&eacute; pr&egrave;s la Pointe du Nez, dans une
+ Temp&ecirc;te, le 13 Mars, 1839, &acirc;g&eacute; de 40 ans.
+ Son corps n'a pas &eacute;t&eacute; retrouv&eacute;; mais la
+ mer rendra ses morts."</p>
+
+ <p>"In memory of Eug&egrave;ne Grut Victor Cachemaille, second
+ son of the Revd. J.L.V. Cachemaille, Vicar of Sark. Born Jan.
+ 14, 1840, and lost at sea in command of the <i>Ariel</i>, which
+ left London for Sydney, Feby. 1872, and was heard of no more.
+ 'He was not, for God took him.'"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Yes, she would sooner be married in that solemn little church
+ than in Westminster Abbey, for there there would be mighty
+ distractions, while here there would be nought to come between
+ her and God and the true man to whom she was giving herself with
+ a full heart.</p>
+
+ <h4>VI</h4>
+
+ <p>"This is the second time of asking."</p>
+
+ <p>"This is the third time of asking."</p>
+
+ <p>And so far none had discovered any just cause or impediment
+ why John Corrie Graeme and Margaret Brandt should not in due
+ course be joined together in holy matrimony.</p>
+
+ <p>On the occasion of the third asking, however, one in the
+ congregation, a casual visitor and in no way personally concerned
+ in the matter, found it of sufficient interest to make mention of
+ it in a letter home, and so unwittingly played his little part in
+ the story.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, the glorious summer days between the askings were
+ golden days of ever-increasing delight to Graeme and Margaret,
+ and of rich enjoyment to Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>Never was there more complaisant chaperone than Hennie Penny.
+ For, you see, she took no little credit to herself for having
+ helped to bring about their happiness, and the very least she
+ could do was to further it in every way in her power.</p>
+
+ <p>In her own quaint way she enjoyed their "lovering," as she
+ called it, almost as much as they did themselves. And that being
+ so, they would have felt it selfish on their part to deprive her
+ of any portion of her rightful share in it.</p>
+
+ <p>And that was how Miss Hennie Penny became so very knowing in
+ such matters, and also why she lived in a state of perpetual
+ amazement at the change that had come over her friend.</p>
+
+ <p>For Margaret, affianced to the man who had her whole heart,
+ was a very different being from Margaret harassed and worried by
+ Mr. Pixley and his schemes for her possession and
+ possessions.</p>
+
+ <p>Charming and beautiful as she had always been, this new
+ Margaret was to the old as a radiant butterfly to its
+ chrysalis,&mdash;as the glory of the opening flower to the
+ promise of the bud. And Hennie Penny's quickened intelligence,
+ projecting itself into the future, could fathom heights and
+ depths and greater glories still to come.</p>
+
+ <p>But even now, when they went along the lanes festooned as for
+ a wedding with honeysuckle and wild roses, the faces of those
+ they met lighted up at sight of them, and few but turned to look
+ after them when they had passed, and Miss Penny's truthful soul
+ took none of the silent homage to herself.</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret was supremely happy. She could not have hidden it if
+ she had tried. She made no attempt to do so. She gave herself up
+ to the rapturous enjoyment of their "lovering" with all the
+ na&iuml;ve abandon of a delighted child. The little ties and
+ tapes and conventions, which trammel more or less all but the
+ very simplest lives, fell from her, snapped by the expansion of
+ her love-exalted soul. She was back to the simple elementals. She
+ loved Jock, Jock loved her. They were happy as the day was long.
+ Why on earth should they not show it? If she had had her way she
+ would have had every soul in all the world as happy as they two
+ were.</p>
+
+ <p>"I feel like an elderly nurse with two very young children,"
+ said Miss Penny to the pair of exuberants.</p>
+
+ <p>"O Wise Nurse! We shall never be so young again," laughed
+ Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"But we are never going to grow any older inside," laughed
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never!" said Graeme, with the conviction of absolute
+ knowledge, and carolled softly&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"O it's good to be young in the days of one's
+ youth!<br /></span> <span>Yes, in truth and in
+ truth,<br /></span> <span>It's the very best thing in the
+ world to be young,<br /></span> <span>To be young, to be
+ young in one's youth."<br /></span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Very apropos!" said Miss Penny. "Did you make it on the
+ spot?"</p>
+
+ <p>"In anticipation," he laughed. "It's the opening song in a
+ very charming comic opera I once committed. But it was too good
+ for the present frivolous age, and so I have to perform it
+ myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"I would like to give all the children on the island&mdash;"
+ began Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"All the other children&mdash;" corrected Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"All the children&mdash;including Hennie and you and
+ me&mdash;the jolliest feast they've ever had in their lives, the
+ day we are married."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course we will, and the doctor shall get in an extra
+ supply of palliatives. They shall look back in after years and
+ say&mdash;'Do you remember that feast we had when the loveliest
+ of all the angels came down from heaven and was married to that
+ delightful Englishman?'&mdash;Briton, I ought to say! I do wish
+ our dear old Lady Elspeth could be here. How she would enjoy
+ it!&mdash;'That feast,' they will say, 'when we were all ill for
+ a month after and the doctor died of overwork.' They will date
+ back to it as ancient peoples did to the Flood. It will be a
+ Great White Stone Day to generations to come. Let us hope there
+ will be no new white stones over yonder"&mdash;nodding in the
+ direction of the churchyard&mdash;"in commemoration of that great
+ day."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will draw the line short of that," said Margaret
+ seriously.</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll give them all the g&acirc;che they can
+ eat&mdash;home-made, and such as their constitutions are
+ accustomed to,&mdash;and fruit and frivolities from Guernsey.
+ I'll go across the Saturday before&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>We</i> will go across," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course we will. We older children will go, and we'll take
+ Nurse with us,"&mdash;with a bow towards Hennie Penny,&mdash;"and
+ we'll make a day of it, and have ices again at that place in the
+ Arcade, and then we'll go round the shops and clear them out for
+ the benefit of Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ripping!" said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <h4>VII</h4>
+
+ <p>They had already made one trip to Guernsey, crossing by the
+ early Saturday boat and returning the same evening.</p>
+
+ <p>But that was a strictly business affair.</p>
+
+ <p>"We're feeling frightfully fossilised at having bought
+ nothing, except what we absolutely needed, for nearly a month,"
+ said Miss Penny. "From that point of view I should imagine the
+ Garden of Eden may have been just a trifle slow&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, you see, Mother Eve hadn't had the advantages of a
+ superior education," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"And there are some fripperies we simply <i>must</i> have,"
+ said Miss Penny, "even for a runaway wedding like this. You see,
+ when we decided to come here we had no idea how much farther we
+ were going, and so we couldn't possibly provide. Of course if we
+ had known you were here&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>At which Margaret laughed.</p>
+
+ <p>"You would have provided accordingly," said Graeme. "Well, you
+ must put all the blame on to Mr. Pixley. I wonder what he would
+ say if he knew all about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"He would use language unadapted to prayer-meetings and public
+ platforms," said Miss Penny. "He can, you know, when he tries
+ hard."</p>
+
+ <p>"I imagined so. It will be rather amusing to see what he'll do
+ when he finds out."</p>
+
+ <p>"He'll do the very nastiest thing that is open to him,
+ whatever that is, and poor Mrs. Pixley will have an exceedingly
+ bad time. And he'll probably have a fit on his own account."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, we can hardly expect him to be so kind as all
+ that&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"The only one I'm sorry for is Charles Svendt. He's really not
+ half a bad sort, in his way, you know," said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry, but I'm afraid, under the circumstances, I can't
+ squeeze out any sympathy even for Charles Svendt."</p>
+
+ <p>Arrived at St. Peter Port, the ladies permitted him to attend
+ them to the door of the largest drapery establishment they could
+ find, and then told him he was at liberty to go and enjoy himself
+ for a couple of hours.</p>
+
+ <p>"Two hours? Good Heavens! What can you want in there for two
+ hours?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Usual thing!" sparkled Miss Penny. "Tablecloths!"&mdash;with
+ which cryptic utterance he had to be satisfied.</p>
+
+ <p>"And where do we meet again&mdash;if ever?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Hauteville House&mdash;Victor Hugo's. It's part of your
+ honeymoon&mdash;a bit on account."</p>
+
+ <p>"And whereabouts is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No idea. If we can find it, you can. Au revoir!"</p>
+
+ <p>He went first to get his hair cut, since the practice of the
+ tonsorial art in Sark is still in the bowl-and-scissors
+ stage.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he sought out a lawyer of repute, whose name he had got
+ from the Vicar, and gave him instructions for the drawing of a
+ brief but comprehensive deed of settlement of all Margaret's
+ portion on herself absolutely and entirely. While this important
+ document was being engrossed, he sought out the Rector of St.
+ Peter Port, in George Place, and in a short but pleasant
+ interview was accepted as tenant of the whole of the Red House in
+ Sark for the month of July, with the option of a longer stay if
+ he chose.</p>
+
+ <p>Then back to the lawyer's, where he signed his deed, paid the
+ fees, and took it away with him.</p>
+
+ <p>After that, to fill in the time occupied elsewhere by the
+ purchase of mythical tablecloths, he rambled up and down the
+ quaint foreign-flavoured streets till he found a jeweller's shop
+ of size, in the Arcade, and decided, after careful inspection
+ from the outside, that it would answer all requirements.</p>
+
+ <p>For he had a ring and half a ring to buy for Margaret, and he
+ thought he would buy one also for Hennie Penny, as a pleasant
+ reminder of their good days in Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>So utterly unconventional had their proceedings been, so
+ thoroughly had the spirit of the remote little island possessed
+ them, and so all-sufficient had they been to one another, that
+ the thought of an engagement ring had troubled his mind as little
+ as the lack of it had troubled Margaret's. But the absolute
+ necessity of a wedding ring had reminded him of his lapse, and
+ now he would repair it on a scale remotely commensurate with his
+ feelings. Remotely, because, if his pocket had borne any relation
+ to his feelings, he would have bought up the whole shop and
+ lavished its contents upon her, though he knew that the simple
+ golden circlet would far outweigh all else in her mind.</p>
+
+ <p>He was waiting placidly for them in the shade of the dark
+ trees of Hauteville, when they came panting up the steep way,
+ flushed with victory and the joys of purchase after long
+ abstinence.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, has the proprietor of that big shop retired with a
+ competence?" he asked, as he threw away the end of his cigar.</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you lend us our boat-fares home?" gasped Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"So bad as all that? I can't say yet. I've not begun my own
+ purchases. We'll see when I'm through. If I'm cleaned out too
+ we'll offer to work our passages."</p>
+
+ <p>"You can pawn your watch. Meg and I haven't got one between
+ us. We left them at home on purpose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thoughtful of you. Now let us into the treasure-house."</p>
+
+ <p>They enjoyed the wonders of Hauteville
+ immensely,&mdash;objectively, the wonderful carved work and the
+ tapestries, the china and the furniture,&mdash;the odd little
+ bedroom with the bed on the floor, so that the Master could roll
+ out to his work at any moment of inspiration, and the huge
+ balconies, and the glass eyrie on the roof whence he surveyed his
+ wide horizons, and where, above the world, he worked;&mdash;and
+ subjectively, the whole quaint flavour and austere literary
+ atmosphere of the place.</p>
+
+ <p>"No wonder he produced masterpieces," said Graeme, delighting
+ in it all. "The view alone is an inspiration."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he took them up to Old Government House for lunch and a
+ rest in the garden, and then away to the Arcade to the jeweller's
+ shop, which proved adequate to all his demands;&mdash;for
+ Margaret, a half-hoop of diamonds which the jeweller, with an air
+ of sincerity, assured them were as fine stones as he had ever
+ seen in the course of a long and prosperous career. Which ring
+ Margaret would thenceforth value before all her others, though in
+ the simple matter of intrinsic worth her jewel-case could beat it
+ hollow.&mdash;And a plain gold circlet which, when she got it,
+ would be more precious to her than all the rest put
+ together.&mdash;And for Miss Penny, in spite of her
+ protestations, a handsome signet ring which, when cornered, she
+ chose in preference to a more feminine jewel, and which was left
+ to be engraved with her family crest and motto.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have never adopted the habit of rings," she said, as they
+ drifted towards the ice-shop. "Chiefly, perhaps, because I never
+ had any worth wearing. But I've always thought I would like to
+ wear a crest signet. I shall prize this, Mr. Graeme, as the very
+ greatest treasure I have&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Until someone gives you a plain gold one, Hennie, and that
+ will put all the rest into the shade," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <h4>VIII</h4>
+
+ <p>Their journey home&mdash;that is, to Sark&mdash;that day was
+ not entirely without incident. For when they got down to the
+ quay, Sark had disappeared completely, and Herm and Jethou were
+ no more than wan ghosts of their natural selves, in a dense white
+ mist.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-ha! Here is our old friend of Tintageu," said Graeme
+ jovially. "Well, I must confess to bearing him no
+ ill-feeling&mdash;if he doesn't land us on a rock this time.
+ Going, captain?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yess, we go. I think it will lift," said Captain
+ Bichard.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't run us on a rock anyway."</p>
+
+ <p>"I won'd run you on no rock. I coult smell my way across;" and
+ they started, feeling their way cautiously past Castle Cornet,
+ into the open, where black jaws lined with white teeth lie in
+ wait for the unwary.</p>
+
+ <p>And just as they got to the south of Jethou they saw a sight
+ the like of which none of them had ever seen before, nor, from
+ the exclamations about them, had any of the rest.</p>
+
+ <p>The mist in front was like a soft white curtain, and upon it,
+ straight ahead of their bows, appeared suddenly a mighty silver
+ bow, not a rainbow, because there was no rain and so there were
+ no colours. But, like the bow they had seen from Bel&ecirc;me
+ Cliff, this also was a perfect circle, all but a tiny segment
+ where it appeared to rest upon the sea, and its only colour was a
+ dazzling silvery sheen which waxed as they watched it in
+ breathless silence. Then it waned, bit by bit, till at last it
+ was gone, and only the white mist curtain remained.</p>
+
+ <p>"How very lovely!" murmured Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"A good omen for certain," said Miss Penny. "Even Johnnie
+ Vautrin couldn't make any ill news out of that. It was your
+ wedding arch, Meg."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, that's the first time I ever saw a white rainbow," said
+ Graeme to the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"First time I ever saw one myself, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not very common then."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never heard of one before."</p>
+
+ <p>"We're evidently in luck."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mebbe, but we won't crow till we've made the Creux. Kip your
+ eyes skinned, lads!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, ay, zur!" and the crew lined the bulwarks on their knees,
+ with their chins on the rail, their eyes peering into the
+ puzzling veil in front, and their ears alert for the wash of wave
+ on rock.</p>
+
+ <p>They were going slow, hardly moving in fact at times, waiting
+ to pick up their course as any possible mark should come into
+ view, with muttered comments from the puzzled lookouts, and an
+ occasional growl of dissent from views propounded by the younger
+ members, while the passengers all stood in silent discomfort as
+ though ready for contingencies.</p>
+
+ <p>For the tides and currents in those seas are strange and
+ gruesome. Even as they lay, apparently motionless, with the sea
+ as smooth as oil all round them, there came a sudden turmoil, and
+ they were in a wild race of waters, with bubbling coils and
+ swirls and frothing gouts of foam from rocks that lay fathoms
+ deep below.</p>
+
+ <p>"La Grune," growled one of the keen-eyed watchers, and was
+ discounted at once by doubtful growls from the rest.</p>
+
+ <p>Then a black ledge loomed through the mist and faded again
+ before they had more than a glimpse of it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Les Dents," ventured one.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hautes Boues,"&mdash;so divergent were their views.</p>
+
+ <p>A sound of waters and another dark loom of rock.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sercul," said one.</p>
+
+ <p>"L'Etac," said another.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the engine bell tanged sharply, and they went ahead. The
+ captain had seen more than the rest and knew where he was, and
+ they all breathed more freely. And presently, with a wide berth
+ to the dangers of the south-east coast, they nosed slowly in
+ again, picked up La Conch&eacute;e without dissentients, and so
+ into Creux Harbour in a way that seemed to Graeme little short of
+ marvellous.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fogs at sea are beastly&mdash;there is no other word for
+ it&mdash;but all the same I'm glad we saw the Wedding-Bow," said
+ Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <h4>IX</h4>
+
+ <p>They had fixed on the Wednesday following the last time of
+ asking, for their wedding-day. But when they came to discuss the
+ matter with Mrs. Carr&eacute;, it was found that an alteration
+ would be necessary.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, but that will not do," said their landlady, who was in
+ high feather at so unique an event taking place in her cottage,
+ so to speak, though, as a matter of fact, the festivities were to
+ be carried out within the ampler precincts of the Red House. "You
+ see, old Mr. Hamon he iss died very sudden&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not old Tom surely?" asked Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"He iss old Tom's father, and they will bury him on Wednesday,
+ and you would not like to be married the sem day&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, indeed," said Margaret. "We will wait."</p>
+
+ <p>"And, you see, all them that would be coming to the wedding
+ would be at the funeral, for efferybody belongs to efferybody
+ else here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Must be a bit awkward at times," suggested Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh noh!" with a touch of airy aloofness. "I haf been at a
+ wedding and a funeral and a baptism all in one week all among the
+ sem people. And I was at one young man's wedding one day last
+ year and at his funeral the same day the next week after."</p>
+
+ <p>"That was dreadful," said Margaret. "Do you think it would be
+ safe to fix it for the following Wednesday, Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, I think! There iss no one very sick. Mr. Hamon he
+ wass a very old man and he died very sudden. He wass just
+ knocking a nail in the pigsty and he drop down and died."</p>
+
+ <p>"Poor old man!"</p>
+
+ <p>"He wass very old and he wass a good man. No one ever said any
+ harm of old Mr. Hamon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then if no one else dies we'll say the following Wednesday,"
+ said Graeme. "And if&mdash;well, if anything happens to prevent
+ it, then we must go across to Guernsey and get Mr. Lee to marry
+ us."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but that woult not do. We will keep them all alive till
+ you are married. It woult neffer do to disappoint them all when
+ we are all looking forward to it here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well then, see you all keep alive."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you will come to old Mr. Hamon's funeral?"</p>
+
+ <p>"H'm! I don't know. We'll see, Mrs. Carr&eacute;. We'd sooner
+ be at our own wedding, you know, than at anybody else's
+ funeral."</p>
+
+ <p>"They woult like it iff you woult. And he was a goot old man.
+ They tell me to ask if you woult be pleased to come."</p>
+
+ <p>"If they would like us to come we will come, Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute;," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>And so it came about that instead of kneeling before the altar
+ that Wednesday they stood by the graveside.</p>
+
+ <h4>X</h4>
+
+ <p>The Red House and the cottage were centres&mdash;nay,
+ whirlpools&mdash;of mighty activities for days beforehand.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Carr&eacute; insisted on cleaning down the Red House from
+ top to bottom for the home-coming of the bride, though, to
+ Graeme's masculine perceptions, its panelling of polished pitch
+ pine from floor to ceiling, in which you could see yourself as in
+ a mirror, had always appeared the very acme of cleanliness and
+ comfort, with the additional merit of a tendency towards
+ churchwardly thoughts.</p>
+
+ <p>But when he ventured on a mild remonstrance anent the
+ necessity for so gigantic an upsetting, Mrs. Carr&eacute;
+ laughingly said, "Ach, you are only a man. You woult neffer
+ see"&mdash;and whirled her broom to the endangerment of his
+ head.</p>
+
+ <p>For Margaret's honeymoon&mdash;that, is, such of it as she had
+ not enjoyed before her marriage&mdash;was to consist of a change
+ of residence from the cottage, and a walk up the garden and
+ through the hedge of gracious Memories, to the wider&mdash;ah,
+ how much wider!&mdash;as much wider and larger and more beautiful
+ as wifehood at its best is wider and larger and more beautiful
+ than maidenhood at its best&mdash;to the wider accommodation of
+ the Red House. And Mrs. Carr&eacute; was determined that it
+ should be speckless and sweet, and fit in every way for the
+ coming of so beautiful a bride.</p>
+
+ <p>She had found them a young girl, Betsy Lefevre, a niece of her
+ own, to serve as handmaid during their occupancy of the house,
+ but insisted herself on acting as cook and general housekeeper.
+ Miss Penny was to reside at the cottage for a week after the
+ wedding, but was to go up the garden to her meals, and at the end
+ of that time she was to join them at the Red House as an honoured
+ guest.</p>
+
+ <p>And the kitchen at the cottage, and the kitchen at the House,
+ and several other kitchens in the neighbourhood, were baking
+ g&acirc;che enough apparently to feed a regiment, and as the day
+ approached, roasts of beef and mutton, and hams and other
+ substantial fare, were much in evidence. And the kitchens were
+ thronged with ladies in sun-bonnets, which had originally been
+ black but were now somewhat off-colour with age and weather, and
+ all the ladies' faces were as full of importance as if they had
+ been Cabinet ministers in the throes of a crisis.</p>
+
+ <p>Among these concentric energies, Margaret and Miss Penny
+ completed their own simple preparations, and Graeme busied
+ himself with the details of the children's feast which was to
+ take place in an adjacent field.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp221" id="fp221"></a> <img src="images/fp221.jpg"
+ width="549" height="332" alt=
+ "THE HARBOUR, FROM LES L&Acirc;CHES" title=
+ "THE HARBOUR, FROM LES L&Acirc;CHES" /> <h5>THE HARBOUR, FROM
+ LES L&Acirc;CHES</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>He went down to the harbour to meet the Tuesday morning's boat
+ which was to bring over the fruit and frivolities ordered from
+ Guernsey&mdash;strawberries enough to start a jam factory, grapes
+ enough to stock a greengrocer's shop, chocolates, sweets,
+ Christmas crackers and fancy biscuits, in what he hoped would
+ prove sufficiency, but had his doubts at times when he saw the
+ eager expectancy with which he was regarded by every youngster he
+ met.</p>
+
+ <p>He was just starting out when Johnnie Vautrin hailed him from
+ his lair in the hedge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Heh, Mist' Graeme! I seen&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Better not, Johnnie!" he said, with a warning finger. "If
+ it's anything uncomfortable I'll come right over and jump on you
+ and Marrlyou."</p>
+
+ <p>"Goderabetin, you dassen't!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, dassen't I? If you don't see everything good for this
+ week, and fine weather too, you little imp, I'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Qu&eacute;-hou-hou!" croaked Johnnie, and Marielihou yawned
+ and made a futile attempt to wash behind her ears but found it
+ discomforting to a sore hind-leg, so gave it up and spat at him
+ instead.</p>
+
+ <p>"And, moreover, I won't have you at my party."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hou-hou! I'm coming. Ma'm'zelle she ask me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll tell her to send you back-word."</p>
+
+ <p>"She wun't, she wun't. Where you goin'?"</p>
+
+ <p>"To the harbour, to see if all the good things have come for
+ the other little boys and girls."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh la-la! Good things and bad things come by the boat.
+ Sometime it'll sink and drown 'em all."</p>
+
+ <p>"Little rascal!" and he waved his hand and went on.</p>
+
+ <p>"Late, isn't she, Carr&eacute;?" he asked, as he leaned over
+ the sea-wall with the rest.</p>
+
+ <p>"She's late, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope nothing's happened to her. I'll never forgive her if
+ she's made an end of my sweet things for the kiddies."</p>
+
+ <p>"She'll come."</p>
+
+ <p>And she came. With a shrill peal she came round the Burons and
+ made for the harbour.</p>
+
+ <p>And Graeme, wedged into the corner of the iron railing where
+ it looks out to sea, to make sure at the earliest possible moment
+ that that which he had come to meet was there, met of a sudden
+ more than he had looked for.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well ... I'll be hanged!" he jerked to himself, and then
+ began to laugh internally.</p>
+
+ <p>For, standing on the upper deck of the small steamer, and
+ looking, somehow, very much out of place there, was a tall but
+ portly young gentleman, in a bowler hat and travelling coat and a
+ monocle, whose face showed none of the usual symptoms of the Sark
+ lover. To judge from his expression, the little island impressed
+ him anything but favourably. It offered him none of the
+ relaxations and amusements to which he was accustomed. It looked,
+ on the face of it, an uncivilised kind of a place, out of which a
+ man might be ejected without ceremony if he chose to make himself
+ objectionable.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme kept out of sight among the other crowders of the quay
+ till the bowler hat came bobbing up the gangway. Then he smote
+ its owner so jovially on the shoulder that his monocle shot the
+ full length of its cord and the hat came within an ace of
+ tumbling overboard.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, Pixley! This <i>is</i> good of you. You're just in
+ time to give us your blessing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw! Hello!" said Charles Svendt, agape at the too friendly
+ greeting. "That you, Graeme?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The worst half of me, my boy. Margaret's up at the house.
+ You'll be quite a surprise to her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw!" said Charles Svendt thoughtfully, as he readjusted his
+ eyeglass. "Demned queer place, this!" and he gazed round
+ lugubriously.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is that, my boy. Queerer than you think, and queerer
+ people."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw! Is there any&mdash;aw&mdash;place to stop at?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thinking of stopping over night? Oh yes, several very decent
+ hotels."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw! Which are you at yourself now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I? Oh, I'm a resident. I've got a house here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dooce you have! Well, now, where would you stop if you were
+ me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, if I were you I should stop at the Old Government
+ House&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Right! Whereabouts is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's over in Guernsey. Boat returns at five sharp."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw! Quite so! Very good! But I've got&mdash;er&mdash;business
+ here, don't you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh? Thinking of opening a branch here? Well, there's
+ Stock's&mdash;but I doubt if you'd fit in there&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Fit? Why not fit? Stocks are my line."</p>
+
+ <p>"I think I'd try the Bel-Air if I were you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Which is nearest?" asked Charles Svendt, looking round
+ depreciatively.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bel-Air. Just along the tunnel there&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Good Lord! Along the tunnel&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Excuse me for a moment. I've got some things coming by this
+ boat. I must see to them," and Graeme sped away to attend to his
+ frivolities.</p>
+
+ <h4>XI</h4>
+
+ <p>"And what special business brings you to Sark, Pixley?" asked
+ Graeme, as they passed through the tunnel of rock and climbed the
+ steep way of the Creux&mdash;its high banks masses of ferns, its
+ hedges ablaze with honeysuckle and roses, its trees interwoven
+ into a thick canopy overhead,&mdash;a living green tunnel shot
+ with quivering sunbeams. All of which was lost on Charles Svendt,
+ whose chest was going like a steam-pump and whose legs were
+ quivering with the unusual strain. Graeme regretted that he had
+ not been landed on the ladders at Havre Gosselin, where he
+ himself came ashore. He would dearly have liked to follow the
+ portly one up those ladders and heard his comments.</p>
+
+ <p>In reply to Graeme's question he shook his head mutely and
+ staggered on&mdash;past the upper reaches, where the corded roots
+ of the overhanging trees came thrusting through the banks like
+ twisting serpents; past the wells of sweet water that lay dark
+ and still below, and ran over into the road, and trickled away
+ down the sides in little streams; out into the sunshine and the
+ quickening of the breeze;&mdash;till he dropped exhausted into a
+ chair outside the door of the Bel-Air.</p>
+
+ <p>He sat there panting for close on five minutes, with
+ unaccustomed perspiration streaming down his red face, and then
+ he said "Demn!" and proceeded to mop himself up with his
+ handkerchief.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he held up a finger to a distant waiter in the
+ dining-room, and when he came, murmured,
+ "Whisky&mdash;soda&mdash;two," and fanned himself vigorously till
+ they came.</p>
+
+ <p>"Better?" asked Graeme, as they nodded and drank.</p>
+
+ <p>"Heap better! What a demnable place to get into!"</p>
+
+ <p>"There are one or two other entrances&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Better?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, worse."</p>
+
+ <p>"Demn!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Now," he said presently, when his heart had got back to
+ normal and he had lit a cigarette. "Let's talk business. Am I in
+ time?"</p>
+
+ <p>"For the wedding? Just in time. It's tomorrow."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw&mdash;er&mdash;you know what I've come for, I
+ suppose?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I can imagine, but you may as well save yourself useless
+ trouble. You can't do anything."</p>
+
+ <p>"Think not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure. English&mdash;I should say, British&mdash;law doesn't
+ run here, and you've no <i>locus standi</i> if it did."</p>
+
+ <p>"She's under age and her guardian objects. I represent
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>"He can object all he wants to, and you can represent him all
+ you want to. It won't make the slightest difference."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can appear at the ceremony and show cause why it should not
+ proceed."</p>
+
+ <p>"What cause?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Her guardian objects. The parson would hardly proceed in face
+ of my objection."</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you'll find he would. However, we'll go and ask him
+ presently. We'll pay a visit to the Seigneur also."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's the Seigneur?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Lord Paramount of the island. His word goes. If he chooses,
+ as he probably will, to tell you to go also, you'll have to
+ go."</p>
+
+ <p>"Demn'd if I will!"</p>
+
+ <p>"He'll see to that. He'll put the S&eacute;n&eacute;chal and
+ the Greffier and the Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t and the two constables
+ and the Vingt&eacute;nier on to you, and bundle you out like a
+ sack of potatoes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, come, Graeme! This is the twentieth century!"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's another of your little mistakes, my friend. I can't
+ tell you just exactly what year it is here, but it's somewhere
+ between 1066 and, say, 1200 A.D."</p>
+
+ <p>"Afraid I don't quite catch on."</p>
+
+ <p>"Exactly! That's why you'll be off in this scene. We're under
+ feudal law here, with a mixture of Home Rule. We don't care
+ twopence for your English courts, and as for English lawyers,
+ they're not much liked here, I believe."</p>
+
+ <p>"Rum hole!" mused Charles Svendt.</p>
+
+ <p>"Rum hole to make yourself a nuisance in. Jolly place to be
+ happy in."</p>
+
+ <p>"H'm!" And presently he asked, "Where are you stopping?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go along and tell the girls you're here&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Girls?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Penny came with Margaret&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw&mdash;Miss Penny!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd better have your lunch here. They'll give you lobsters
+ fresh from the kettle, and I'll stroll round later on and we'll
+ get this matter settled up. So long!" and he went away up the
+ Avenue and across the fields home.</p>
+
+ <p>And he went thoughtfully. It was annoying this man cropping up
+ like this at the eleventh hour. Nothing, he felt sure, would come
+ of his interference, but it might disturb Margaret and the
+ general harmony of to-morrow's proceedings.</p>
+
+ <p>Her wedding-day is a somewhat nervous time for a girl, under
+ the best of circumstances, he supposed. And though Margaret was
+ as little given to nerves as anyone he had ever met, the
+ possibility of a public attempt to stop her wedding might be
+ fairly calculated to upset her.</p>
+
+ <p>Feudal as were the laws of the island, he could hardly knock
+ Pixley on the head, as would have happened in less anachronistic
+ times. And so he went thoughtfully.</p>
+
+ <h4>XII</h4>
+
+ <p>Margaret and Miss Penny were lying in long chairs on the
+ verandah when he came over the green wall into the Red House
+ garden, by the same gap as he had used that first morning when he
+ came upon Margaret standing in the hedge.</p>
+
+ <p>They were resting from labours, joyful, but none the less
+ tiring.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jock, we were just wanting you!" said Margaret, sitting up.
+ "Have all the things come all right?"</p>
+
+ <p>"All come all right," and he wondered how she would take his
+ next announcement. "In fact more came than we expected."</p>
+
+ <p>"I guess we can use it all," said Miss Penny. "You've no idea
+ of the capacity of children. I know something about it, and these
+ children are more expansible even than school-girls."</p>
+
+ <p>"I was surprised to meet a gentleman down there who says he
+ has come across on purpose for the wedding."</p>
+
+ <p>"A gentleman&mdash;come for the wedding?" and both girls eyed
+ him as pictured terriers greet the word "Rats!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll give you three guesses."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bull's-eye first shot! Clever girl!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not really, Jock!" said Margaret, with a suspicion of dismay
+ in her voice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Charles Svendt anyway&mdash;as representing the old
+ man, he says."</p>
+
+ <p>"But what has he come for, and how did he get to know?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I didn't ask him. It was quite enough to see him there. He
+ says he's going to stop it,"&mdash;and Margaret's cheeks
+ flamed,&mdash;"but I've assured him that he can't, and I'll take
+ jolly good care that he doesn't, if I have to knock him on the
+ head and drop him off the Coup&eacute;e."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would be shameful of him if he tried," cried Miss Penny.
+ "Just let me have a talk with him, Mr. Graeme, and I'll make him
+ wish he'd never been born. He's really not such a bad sort, you
+ know. Where is he?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I left him at the Bel-Air about to tackle lobsters. My idea
+ is to take him to the Vicar, then to the Seigneur. They both
+ understand the whole matter. I explained it fully when I told
+ them we intended getting married here. When they understand that
+ this is the gentleman who would like to occupy my place, and that
+ he has no legal grounds for interfering, I think they will open
+ his eyes&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I do hope he won't make any trouble in the church," said
+ Margaret, with a little flutter.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll promise you he won't."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure he won't, if you can make it quite clear that it
+ could not possibly accomplish what, I suppose, his father sent
+ him to try to do," said Miss Penny. "Charles Pixley is no fool,
+ though he has his little peculiarities."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would be a wonder if he hadn't some, after his daddie,"
+ said Graeme lightly. "I'm sorry he's come, Meg, but I'm certain
+ you don't need to worry about him. If I could have knocked him on
+ the head and dropped him in the sea and said nothing to
+ nobody&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be absurd, Jock," said Margaret, and her voice showed
+ that the matter was troubling her in spite of his assurances.</p>
+
+ <p>"After lunch I shall call for him and take him for a little
+ walk. If you'd seen him when he got to the Bel-Air after toiling
+ up the Creux Road! He was nearly in pieces. I'll trot him round
+ to the Vicarage, and then to the Seigneurie, and then I'll bring
+ him here and turn him over to you and Hennie Penny. He'll be as
+ limp as a rag by that time, and as wax in your hands."</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, Margaret could not quite get rid of the feeling
+ of discomfort which the news of Charles Pixley's arrival had cast
+ over her, and Graeme anathematised that young man most fervently
+ each time he glanced at her face.</p>
+
+ <h4>XIII</h4>
+
+ <p>After lunch Graeme went back to the hotel, and found Pixley
+ lolling on the seat outside, in a much more contented frame of
+ mind than on his first arrival.</p>
+
+ <p>"You were right as to their lobsters, anyhow, Graeme," he
+ said. "They're almost worth coming all the way for."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right. Now if you're rested we'll go for a stroll, and
+ I'll set your mind at rest as to to-morrow. Then you'll be able
+ to enjoy your dinner in a proper frame of mind."</p>
+
+ <p>"How far is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just up there and round the corner. We'll see the Vicar first
+ and you can try your hand on him."</p>
+
+ <p>The Vicar received them with jovial bonhomie.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-ha! The bridegroom cometh out of his chamber! And your
+ friend? He is the best man&mdash;no?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's not quite made up his mind yet, Vicar. Perhaps you can
+ persuade him to it."</p>
+
+ <p>"But it is an honour&mdash;n'est-ce pas? To attend so
+ beautiful a bride to the altar&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, you see, the fact is&mdash;Mr. Pixley would have
+ preferred reversing the positions. He would like to have been
+ bridegroom and me to be best man."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;so! Well, it is not surprising&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Moreover, he would like to stop the wedding now if he
+ could&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach, non! That is not possible," said the Vicar wrathfully,
+ the southern blood blazing in his face. "What would you do, my
+ good sir, and why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Brandt is my father's ward," said Pixley sturdily. "My
+ father objects to this marriage. He has sent me over to stop
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I understand," said the Vicar. "He wished his ward to marry
+ you, but Miss Brandt made her own choice, which she had a perfect
+ right to do, and, ma foi&mdash;" leaning back in his chair and
+ regarding the two faces in front of him, he did not finish his
+ sentence in words, but contented himself with cryptic nods whose
+ meaning, we may hope, was lost upon Charles Svendt's <i>amour
+ propre</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"And what would you do?" asked the Vicar presently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, if necessary, I can get up in the church and state that
+ there is just cause for stopping the marriage&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"What just cause, I should ask you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have told you. My father&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I would not listen. I would order them to put you
+ out&mdash;to carry you out, if necessary, for making
+ dis-turb-ance in my church. I would tell them to sit on you in
+ the churchyard till the wedding was over. What good would you do?
+ Ach, non! Be advised, my good sir, and re-linquish any such
+ in-tention. It will ac-complish nothing and only lead to your own
+ con-fusion."</p>
+
+ <p>"My father is applying to have Miss Brandt made a ward in
+ Chancery&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"By that time she will be Mrs. Graeme, and I am sure very
+ happy," shrugged the Vicar. "Non&mdash;you can do nothing, and,
+ if you will be guided, you will not try."</p>
+
+ <p>And Charles Svendt lapsed into thoughtfulness.</p>
+
+ <h4>XIV</h4>
+
+ <p>"This is the Seigneurie," said Graeme, as they turned off the
+ road, through the latched gate, into the deep-shaded avenue.</p>
+
+ <p>The Seigneur came to them in the Long Drawing-Room, where once
+ upon a time the peacocks danced on the Queen's luncheon.</p>
+
+ <p>"Your time is getting short, Mr. Graeme," he said, with a
+ quiet smile. "I hear of great doings in preparation at St.
+ Magloire"&mdash;which was the official title of the Red House.
+ "Have you given the doctor fair warning?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, we'll try to keep them within bounds, Seigneur. My
+ friend, Mr. Pixley here,"&mdash;the Seigneur made Mr. Pixley a
+ seigneurial bow,&mdash;"has it in his mind to stop the
+ proceedings if he can&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh?" said the Seigneur, with a glower of surprise. "And
+ why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, you see," said Pixley, "Miss Brandt is under age. She
+ is my father's ward and he has other views for her&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Which obviously do not agree with Miss Brandt's."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is as it may be. But she is acting absolutely in
+ opposition to his expressed wishes in this matter, and until she
+ is of age she is under his authority."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just as far as he is in position to exert it, I presume."</p>
+
+ <p>"He is now applying to have her made a ward in Chancery, when,
+ of course, she will be under the jurisdiction of the court."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you come to me, Mr. Pixley, when Miss Brandt is a ward of
+ court, I will tell you now what my answer would be. I should tell
+ you that your English court has no jurisdiction here. Miss Brandt
+ is out of bounds and is quite free to do as she pleases. I have
+ had the pleasure of making her acquaintance and Mr. Graeme's, and
+ I should be sorry&mdash;for you&mdash;if you did anything to
+ annoy them. In fact&mdash;" and he looked so fixedly at Charles
+ Svendt, while evidently revolving some extreme idea in his mind,
+ that that young gentleman's assurance fell several degrees, and
+ he found himself thinking of dungeons and deportation.</p>
+
+ <p>It was to Graeme, however, that the Seigneur turned.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you have any reason to fear annoyance in this matter, Mr.
+ Graeme, perhaps you will let me know as early as possible, and I
+ will take measures&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thousand thanks, Seigneur! Mr. Pixley will, I hope, think
+ better of it. If not&mdash;well, I will send you word."</p>
+
+ <h4>XV</h4>
+
+ <p>Pixley was very silent as they walked back along the road to
+ the Red House.</p>
+
+ <p>The ladies had tea ready on the verandah.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Charles," said Margaret, as he bowed before them, and
+ Graeme nodded and smiled reassuringly at her over his back, "I
+ won't pretend that I'm glad to see you. Why did you undertake so
+ foolish an errand?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps Mr. Pixley could hardly help himself," said Miss
+ Penny, sympathising somewhat with the awkwardness of his
+ position.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is so," he said, with a grateful glance at her. "You
+ see, the governor is crazy wild over this matter. It was only
+ Sunday night he heard of it. A friend of young Greatorex wrote
+ him that he'd heard your banns put up, and Greatorex
+ congratulated the governor after church, and the governor nearly
+ had a fit. He came over to my place like a whirlwind and
+ practically ordered me to come across instanter and stop it. I
+ may say," he said, looking at Margaret, "I tried to reason with
+ him. I told him he must know that if you'd gone that length I was
+ out of it, and nothing he could do would alter matters. But he
+ would not hear a word. He simply raved until I promised to come
+ over by first boat and see what could be done."</p>
+
+ <p>"You've only done your duty, Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny.
+ "But you simply can't stop it, so is it any good making any
+ trouble? Put it on the highest grounds. You have had warmer
+ feelings for Meg than she could reciprocate. You can possibly
+ make some disturbance at her wedding, which would be painful to
+ her and utterly useless to yourself. Is it worth while?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I'm dem&mdash;er&mdash;hanged if it is! I see I can do no
+ good, and I'll be hammered if I'll play dog in the manger, even
+ to oblige the governor. It's a disappointment to me, you
+ know,"&mdash;he was looking at Miss Penny's bright face,
+ surcharged with deepest sympathy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course it is," she said gently. "But a strong man bears
+ his disappointments without wincing. I think you're acting
+ nobly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Say, Graeme, will you have me as best man?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Delighted, my dear fellow. Miss Penny has been breaking her
+ heart at thought of having no partner at the ceremony."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right! Then we'll say no more about it. How did you all come
+ to meet here? Put-up job?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a bit of it," said Graeme. "Pure coincidence&mdash;or
+ Providence, we'll say. You remember that Whitefriars' dinner,
+ when Adam Black sat opposite to us? He was just back from Sark,
+ and he said, 'If ever you want relief from your fellows&mdash;try
+ Sark.' Well, later on, I had no reason to believe there was
+ anything between you and Margaret, and I called on your father at
+ his office. He sliced me into scraps with his eye-glass and flung
+ the bits out into Lincoln's Inn,"&mdash;at which Charles Svendt
+ grinned amusedly, as though he were familiar with the
+ process.&mdash;"I wanted to get away somewhere to piece up again.
+ Sark came into my head, and I came. A month later my landlady
+ told me she had let my rooms to two ladies, as she had understood
+ I was only stopping for a month, and I had to turn out and come
+ up here. And, to my vast amazement, the two ladies proved to be
+ Margaret and Miss Penny. How is that for coincidence?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was standing in the hedge there," said Margaret, "early in
+ the morning of the day after we got here, and Jock came leaping
+ over the dyke there with a great brown dog, and stopped as if
+ he'd been shot&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought you were a ghost, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"And I couldn't believe my eyes. Then I asked him what he
+ meant by following us here, and it turned out that it was we who
+ had followed him, and turned him out of his cottage
+ moreover."</p>
+
+ <p>"Deuced odd!" said Charles Svendt, screwing in his eye-glass
+ and regarding them comprehensively. "Almost makes one believe
+ in&mdash;er&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Telepathy and that kind of thing," said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Er&mdash;exactly&mdash;just so, don't you know!" and his
+ glance rested on her with appreciation as upon a kindred
+ soul.</p>
+
+ <h4>XVI</h4>
+
+ <p>Charles Svendt dined with them that evening, and in the
+ process developed heights and depths of genial common-sense which
+ quite surprised some among them.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp239" id="fp239"></a> <img src="images/fp239.jpg"
+ width="544" height="332" alt="IN THE COOL OF THE GLOAMING"
+ title="IN THE COOL OF THE GLOAMING" /> <h5>IN THE COOL OF THE
+ GLOAMING</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They took him for a stroll up to the Eperquerie in the cool of
+ the gloaming, and showed him more shooting stars than ever he had
+ seen in his life, and a silver sickle of a moon, and a western
+ sky still smouldering with the afterglow of a crimson and amber
+ sunset, and he acknowledged that, from some points of view, Sark
+ had advantages over Throgmorton Street.</p>
+
+ <p>In the natural course of things, Margaret and Graeme walked
+ together, and since they could not go four abreast among the
+ gorse cushions, Charles Svendt and Miss Penny had to put up with
+ one another, and seemed to get on remarkably well. More than once
+ Graeme squeezed Margaret's arm within his own and chuckled, as he
+ heard the animated talk and laughter from the pair behind.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm very glad he's taken a sensible view of the matter," said
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Charles Svendt is no fool, and he certainly would have
+ been if he'd done anything but what he has done. He saw that he
+ could do no good and might get into trouble. The Seigneur scowled
+ dungeons and gibbets at him, and he looked decidedly
+ uncomfortable."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will tender the Seigneur my very best thanks the first time
+ I see him."</p>
+
+ <p>When the men had seen the ladies home, they strolled up the
+ garden to the Red House for a final smoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say, Graeme, I've been wondering what you'd have done if I'd
+ played mule and persisted in kicking up my heels in church. I
+ asked Miss Penny&mdash;and, by Jove, I tell you, that's about as
+ sensible a girl as I've met for a long time&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Penny is an extremely clever girl and an exceptionally
+ fine character. Good family too. Her father was the
+ Brigadier-General Penny who was killed in Afghanistan."</p>
+
+ <p>"So?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She's an M.A., and she's worked like a slave to educate her
+ brothers and sisters, and they're all turning out well. I don't
+ know any girl, except Meg, of whom I think so highly as Hennie
+ Penny."</p>
+
+ <p>"Henrietta?"</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme nodded.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well now," said Pixley presently. "As a matter of
+ information, what was in your mind to do if I'd gone on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd never have got as far as the church, my boy."</p>
+
+ <p>"No? Why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If the Seigneur hadn't stopped you, I would. But I'm inclined
+ to think he'd have seen to you all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"By Jove, he looked it! What would he have done?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Confined you as a harmless lunatic till the ceremony was
+ over, I should say, and then sent you home with the proverbial
+ insect in your ear."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if he hadn't?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then I should have taken matters into my own hands and
+ bottled you up till you couldn't do any mischief. You could have
+ hauled me before the court here, and I'd probably have been fined
+ one and eightpence. It would have been worth the money, and cheap
+ at the price, simply to see the proceedings."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's an extraordinary place this."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's without exception the most delightful little place in
+ the world."</p>
+
+ <p>"Jolly nice house you've got here too. Think of stopping
+ long?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Some months probably. The curious thing about Sark is that
+ the longer you stop the longer you want to stop. It grows on you.
+ First week I was here it seemed to me very small&mdash;felt
+ afraid of walking fast lest I should step over the edge, and all
+ that kind of thing. Now that I've been here a couple of months it
+ is growing bigger every day. I'm not sure that one could know
+ Sark under a lifetime. We'll take you round in a boat and show it
+ you from the outside."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll have to get back, I'm sorry to say. You see, I started
+ at a moment's notice. Things are duller than a ditch in the City,
+ but I'd no chance to make any arrangements for a stay. But I'll
+ tell you what. If you're stopping on here and like to send me an
+ invitation for a week or two, I'd come like a shot. I'll take a
+ carriage up that road from the harbour, though, next time. Jove!
+ I felt like a convict on the treadmill."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have the invitation now, my boy, and we'll be delighted
+ to see you whenever it suits you to come."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's very good of you. Miss Penny be stopping on with
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"As long as she will. She'd got a bit run down and it's done
+ her a heap of good."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, if you'll show me how to go, I'll toddle off home now.
+ I haven't the remotest idea where my digs are."</p>
+
+ <p>And Graeme led him through the back fields among the tethered
+ cows, who stopped their slow chewing as they passed, and lay
+ gazing after them in blank astonishment, into the Avenue and so
+ to the Bel-Air.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll come round then a bit before eleven and we'll all go
+ along together," was Charles Svendt's parting word.</p>
+
+ <p>"Right! Au revoir!" and Graeme went home across the fields
+ smiling happily to himself.</p>
+
+ <h4>XVII</h4>
+
+ <p>When Graeme came swinging over the green dyke in the early
+ morning, with his towel round his neck and his two dogs racing in
+ front, he found the Seigneur sitting in a long chair in the
+ verandah, with four aristocratic dogs wandering about, who
+ proceeded to intimate to Punch and Scamp that they were rather
+ low fisher-dogs and not of seigneurial rank.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, what about your would-be breaker of the peace?" asked
+ the Seigneur, with a smile.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's come to his senses. I was going to bring you word as
+ soon as I thought you'd be up. He's promised to be best man, and
+ I'm hoping to get him to play heavy father also and give the
+ bride away."</p>
+
+ <p>"Capital!"</p>
+
+ <p>"He was very anxious last night to know what would have
+ happened if, as he put it, he'd persisted in playing mule and
+ kicking up his heels in church."</p>
+
+ <p>"We'd have tied his heels so that he couldn't kick much," said
+ the Seigneur, with his deep quizzical smile.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what I told him. He seemed to think Sark a decidedly
+ odd kind of place. But he's getting to like it, and I've invited
+ him to come and visit us later on."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right as long as he behaves himself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, he's a very decent chap. The only thing I had against him
+ was that he wanted to marry my wife."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then all the ways are smooth now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"All smooth now, thanks to your assistance!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, all happiness to you both!" said the Seigneur as he
+ rose. "My wife sends all good wishes"&mdash;for the Lady of the
+ Manor lay sick in the great house among the trees and he would
+ not leave her.</p>
+
+ <h4>XVIII</h4>
+
+ <p>As Graeme proposed, they talk still of that wedding in
+ Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>Everything went smoothly. The Vicar had coached himself, by
+ wifely tuition and much private repetition, into a certain
+ familiarity with the Wedding Service in English, but would still
+ have been more at home with it in French.</p>
+
+ <p>The church was more crowded than it had been within the memory
+ of woman. Margaret looked charming, and Miss Penny absolutely
+ pretty. Charles Svendt could hardly take his eyes off her, and
+ caught himself wondering what the dooce she had done to herself
+ since last night. For, by Jove! she's as pretty almost as
+ Margaret herself&mdash;he said to himself.</p>
+
+ <p>And if Jeremiah Pixley could have seen his son, in fatherly
+ fashion give away the bride that should have been his, he would
+ without doubt have had fits&mdash;if the first one had not been
+ of such a character as to obviate the necessity for any
+ additional ones.</p>
+
+ <p>The habitants, old and young, had made holiday, donned their
+ best as if it were Sunday, and crowded the church as if it were
+ all the Sundays of the year rolled into one.</p>
+
+ <p>The Vicar had serious thoughts of improving so unique an
+ occasion, but wisely decided to confine himself to the
+ intricacies of the English language as displayed in The Form of
+ the Solemnisation of Matrimony.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Vicar presided at the harmonium, which had been specially
+ tuned for the occasion, and the choir enjoyed to the full their
+ privileges of position and observation and made ample use of
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>And when his friends knelt before the chancel rail,&mdash;to
+ the exceeding scandal of the Vicar and Mrs. Vicar and the choir
+ and all who saw, and to the vast enjoyment of Miss Penny and
+ Charles Svendt and all the other youngsters in the
+ place,&mdash;Punch walked solemnly up the aisle and stood behind
+ them, with slow-swinging tail and a look of anticipation on his
+ gravely interested face, while outside, Scamp, in the hands of
+ some enterprising stickler for forms and ceremonies, rent the air
+ with sharp cries of disappointment.</p>
+
+ <p>But John Graeme's soul, uplifted mightily within him at this
+ glorious consummation of his hopes, and ranging high among the
+ stars, saw none of these things. He held Margaret's hand in his,
+ and looked into her radiant and blushing face, and vowed mighty
+ vows for her happiness, and thanked God fervently for bringing
+ this great thing to pass.</p>
+
+ <p>And Margaret's eye caught the marble slab, placed in the side
+ wall of the chancel by the late Seigneur who built it, and prayed
+ in her heart that the temple of their two lives might equally be
+ builded&mdash;"to the Glory of God and with much care."</p>
+
+ <h4>XIX</h4>
+
+ <p>The small girls from the school, all specially arrayed in
+ fancy white pinafores with knots of pink ribbon, burst out of the
+ church like a merry bombshell while the less picturesque final
+ ceremonies were being completed. When Graeme and Margaret came
+ smiling down the aisle, the busy little maids were still
+ vociferously strewing the path outside with green rushes and wild
+ iris, and as they passed, those who had emptied their baskets ran
+ back and picked up hasty armfuls of the scattered flowers, and
+ ran on in front and strewed them again, so that for quite a long
+ way their progress was one of gradually diminishing
+ splendour.</p>
+
+ <p>But past the gap in the road, which led across country to the
+ Red House, no flower-strewers came. For there the excited
+ chatterers broke and whirled through like a flight of sea-pies,
+ and made straight for the field of more substantial delights lest
+ the boys should secure all the best places.</p>
+
+ <p>The wedding-party, however, having disdained the use of
+ carriages for so short a distance, strolled quietly along the
+ scented lanes, past the Boys' School, and by the Carrefour, with
+ no apprehension of the feast beginning until they arrived, or of
+ being relegated to back seats if they were late.</p>
+
+ <p>The cottage and the Red House had been buzzing hives since
+ dawn, Mrs. Carr&eacute; handling her forces and volunteers and
+ supernumeraries with the skill of a veteran, and with
+ encouragement so shrill and animated that it sounded like
+ scolding, but was in reality only emphatic patois.</p>
+
+ <p>She had, indeed, left matters in the hands of certain tried
+ elders while she sped across the fields to the church for a few
+ minutes, just to see that everything there was done properly and
+ in order. But she was back in the thick of things before the
+ wedding-party reached home, and everything was ready and in
+ apple-pie order for a merry-making such as Sark had not seen for
+ many a day.</p>
+
+ <p>First, the children were settled at their long tables in the
+ field behind the house, with good things enough in front of them,
+ and active assistants enough behind them, to keep them quiet for
+ a good long time to come.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme and Margaret went round bidding them all enjoy
+ themselves to their fullest, which they cheerfully promised to
+ do, and the eager youngsters gave them back wish for wish, with
+ one eye for them and one for the unusual dainties on the
+ tables.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, Johnnie!" said Graeme to that young man, gorging
+ stolidly, with a palpable interval between him and his neighbour
+ on either hand, but with no other visible signs of wizardry about
+ him. "Getting on all right?"</p>
+
+ <p>But there was no room for speech in Johnnie's mouth just then.
+ He winked one black eye solemnly and devoted himself to the
+ business in hand.</p>
+
+ <p>And Punch and Scamp, accepted favourites of the host and
+ hostess, tore to and fro in vain attempt to keep pace with all
+ the attentions lavished upon them by the guests as soon as their
+ own desires had been satisfied. They devoured everything that was
+ offered and attainable before it was withdrawn, and had no need
+ to ask for more unless in the matter of storage-room.</p>
+
+ <p>Everybody was very happy and very excited, for no such feast
+ had been in Sark within the memory of the oldest child present.
+ And if Charles Svendt's Stock-Exchange friends could have seen
+ him&mdash;merrily circling the tables and exhorting already
+ distent youngsters to still greater and greater exertions; poking
+ them in the ribs to prove, against their own better judgment, but
+ in accordance with their inclinations, that there was assuredly
+ still room for more; bidding them "Mangez! Mangez!" in the one
+ word of French he could recall as specially applicable at the
+ moment&mdash;it is certain they would not have known him.</p>
+
+ <p>And Miss Penny, too, looked as if she had never enjoyed
+ herself so much in her life, and backed him up in all his
+ endeavours right heartily. And now and again, when Charles Svendt
+ looked at her, he said to himself, "By Jove, she's as
+ good-looking a girl as I know, and as clever as they make
+ 'em!"</p>
+
+ <p>For there is no greater beautifier in the world than
+ happiness, and Hennie Penny was completely and quite unusually
+ happy.</p>
+
+ <p>To the actual wedding-feast, Graeme had asked the Vicar and
+ his wife, and such of the neighbours as he had come to know
+ personally, especially not forgetting his very first friend in
+ the island, whom he still always called Count Tolstoi, and Mrs.
+ De Carteret. For the rest, he had given Mrs. Carr&eacute;
+ carte-blanche to invite whom she deemed well among her friends,
+ and she had exercised her privilege with judgment and
+ enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <p>The S&eacute;n&eacute;chal was there, and the Greffier, and
+ the Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t and the members of the Court, <i>ex
+ officio</i>, so to speak, and the Wesleyan minister who was on
+ excellent terms with the Vicar, and the Post-Master and his
+ jovial white-haired father, who built the boats and coffins for
+ the community, and had supplied the tables for the feast; and
+ many more&mdash;a right goodly company of stalwart,
+ weather-browned men and pleasant-faced women, all vastly happy to
+ be assisting at so unusual an event as an English wedding.</p>
+
+ <p>They drank the health of the bride and bridegroom in the
+ special mulled wine thereto ordained by custom and prepared
+ according to the laws of the Medes and Persians. And Graeme, on
+ behalf of himself and his wife, assured them that there was no
+ place in the world like Sark, and that they had never enjoyed a
+ wedding so much in all their lives, and that if they had to be
+ married a hundred times they could wish no happier wedding than
+ Sark had given them.</p>
+
+ <p>And of all that company, none beamed more brightly, nor
+ enjoyed himself more, than Charles Pixley, who, having come to
+ curse, had, in most approved fashion, stayed to bless, and had
+ even beaten the prophet's record by giving away to another the
+ treasure he had desired for himself.</p>
+
+ <p>In the usual course of things, after the feasting would have
+ come games and songs until dark. But that had been adjudged too
+ much of an ordeal by the ladies, and the onus of it was laid upon
+ the youngsters outside. While Margaret and Miss Penny rested from
+ their labours, and Mrs. Carr&eacute; and her helpers cleared the
+ rooms for the festivities of the evening, and prepared the milder
+ and more intermittent refections necessary thereto, Graeme and
+ Pixley and the Vicar and others set the children to games and
+ races, for which indeed their previous exertions at the tables
+ had not best fitted them, but which nevertheless, or perhaps on
+ that very account, were provocative of much laughter and
+ merriment.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, when it grew dark, and the reluctant youngsters had been
+ cajoled and dragged and packed off to bed, the
+ hitherto-unprovided-for section&mdash;the young men and maidens,
+ all in their best and a trifle shy to begin with&mdash;came
+ flocking in for their share in the festivities, and Orpheus and
+ Terpsichore held the floor for the rest of the night.</p>
+
+ <p>And they did dance! Margaret and Miss Penny and Graeme and
+ Pixley thought they had seen dancing before, but dancing such as
+ this it had never been theirs to witness.</p>
+
+ <p>If it lacked anything in grace&mdash;and far be it from me to
+ say so&mdash;it more than made up for all by its inexhaustible
+ energy and tireless enjoyment. The men had brought their own
+ music in the shape of a concertina, which passed from hand to
+ hand and with which they all seemed on equally friendly
+ terms.</p>
+
+ <p>Jokes, laughter, round dances, refreshments, interludes of
+ smokings and gigglings in the darkness of the verandah,
+ occasional more intellectual flights in the shape of songs and
+ recitations,&mdash;mostly of a somewhat lugubrious tendency, to
+ judge by the faces of the auditors, but being mostly in patois
+ they were unintelligible to the British foreigners,&mdash;more
+ dances,&mdash;coats off now, to reduce the temperature of the
+ performers,&mdash;more refreshments, more dances,&mdash;dances
+ with broomsticks held between the partners, over which they
+ slipped and skipped to the tune of caustic comments by the
+ onlookers,&mdash;dances between caps laid on the floor and which
+ must on no account be touched by the dancers. And always the cry
+ to the musician of the moment was,&mdash;"Faster!
+ Faster!"&mdash;and the race between Orpheus and
+ Terpsichore&mdash;between the music and the flying feet, grew
+ still more fast and furious.</p>
+
+ <p>Now Charles Svendt, as we know, did not look like a dancing
+ man, but dancing was one of the superficial accomplishments in
+ which he excelled.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Penny, also, through much experience with girls, was
+ lighter of foot than she looked.</p>
+
+ <p>They stood for a time watching, and presently both their feet
+ were tapping to the quickstep of the rest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's have a shot at it," said Charles. "Will you?" and he
+ looked down at her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd love to," and in a moment they were whirling in the
+ circle with the rest, but with a grace that none there could
+ rival,&mdash;gallant dancers as the Sark boys and girls are.</p>
+
+ <p>"Delightful!" murmured Charles Svendt. "You dance like an
+ angel, and we fit splendidly," and Hennie Penny found a man's arm
+ about her decidedly and delightfully more inspiriting than all
+ the arms of all the schoolgirls in the world, and danced as she
+ had never danced before.</p>
+
+ <p>So swift and light and smooth and graceful was their flight
+ that before long the rest tailed off and all stood propped
+ against the walls to watch them.</p>
+
+ <p>"We've got the floor all to ourselves," murmured Miss Penny at
+ last, as she woke to the fact.</p>
+
+ <p>"We've licked them into fits on their own ground," he laughed
+ in her ear. "You can dance and no mistake. It's a treat to dance
+ with a really good dancer."</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we ought to stop. We're stopping their fun," said
+ Hennie Penny, and when he led her to a seat the rest of the room
+ all clapped their enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme and Margaret danced a round or two to endorse the
+ festivities, but they were not in it with Pixley and Hennie
+ Penny, and they soon dropped out and clapped heartily with the
+ rest.</p>
+
+ <p>When Charles Svendt, later on, suggested another dance, Miss
+ Penny bade him go and dance with one of the Sark girls.</p>
+
+ <p>"But I don't want to dance with any of them. Besides, I don't
+ know any of 'em, and I couldn't talk to her if I did."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, you can. They all speak English."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do they now? It don't sound like it. Come on, Miss Penny.
+ They wouldn't enjoy it and I wouldn't enjoy it, and I never
+ enjoyed anything so much in my life as that last round."</p>
+
+ <p>So Hennie took pity on him, and they danced many times amid
+ great applause.</p>
+
+ <p>"Awfully good of you!" said Charles Svendt, as the dawn came
+ peeping in through the east windows and the open front door; and
+ Mrs. Carr&eacute;, as Mistress of the Ceremonies, and a very
+ tired one at that, bluffly informed the company that it was time
+ to go home.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've enjoyed it immensely," said Hennie Penny, and if her
+ face was any index to her feelings, there was no mistake about
+ it.</p>
+
+ <h4>XX</h4>
+
+ <p>None of them will ever forget that great day.</p>
+
+ <p>Still less is any of them likely to forget the day that
+ followed.</p>
+
+ <p>As dancing only ceased when the sun was about rising,
+ before-breakfast bathing was declared off for that day, and they
+ arranged to meet later on and stroll quietly down to Dixcart Bay
+ during the morning and all bathe together there. Charles Svendt
+ laughingly prepared them for an exhibition of incompetence by
+ stating that his swimming wasn't a patch on his dancing, but that
+ he could get along. Miss Penny gaily gave him points as to her
+ own peculiar methods of swimming, which, as we know, demanded
+ instant and easy touch of sand or stone at any moment of the
+ halting progression. He confessed to a like prejudice in favour
+ of something solid within reach of his sinking capacity, and they
+ agreed to help one another.</p>
+
+ <p>They called for him at the hotel about eleven o'clock, and
+ went joking through the sunny lanes of Petit Dixcart, crossed the
+ brook that runs out of Hart's-Tongue Valley, and followed it by
+ the winding path along the side of the cliff, among the gorse and
+ ferns, down into the bay.</p>
+
+ <p>They had a right merry bathe with no grave casualties. Miss
+ Penny, indeed, got out of her depth twice, to the extent of quite
+ two inches, and shrieked for help, which Charles Svendt gallantly
+ hastened to render; while Graeme and Margaret swam across from
+ head to head, watched enviously by the paddlers in shallow
+ waters.</p>
+
+ <p>They went home by the climbing path up the hillside, rested on
+ The Quarter-deck while Charles Svendt got his breath back, and
+ so, by the old Dixcart hotel, and the new one nestling among its
+ flowers and trees, and up the Valley, to the Vicarage.</p>
+
+ <p>The Vicar was basking in the shade of the trees in front of
+ the house.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-ha&mdash;Mr. and Mrs. Graeme! Good-morning! You are none
+ the worse for being married? Non?" as he shook hands joyously all
+ round, with both hands at once.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a bit," laughed Graeme. "We're all as happy as
+ sandboys."</p>
+
+ <p>"Comment donc&mdash;sandboys? What is that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Happy little boys who dispense with clothes and paddle all
+ day in the sand and water."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;you have been bathing! What energie! And you danced
+ till&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"About four o'clock, I suppose. The sun was just thinking of
+ rising as we were thinking of retiring."</p>
+
+ <p>"But it is marvellous! And you are not tired?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The bathe has freshened us all up," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Mrs. Vicar came out at sound of their voices, and
+ felicitated them, and begged them to rest a while in the shade.
+ But they were all hungry, and Charles Svendt laughingly asserted
+ that he had swallowed so much salt-water, in rescuing Miss Penny
+ from a watery grave, that his constitution absolutely needed a
+ tiny tot of whisky, or the consequences might be serious.</p>
+
+ <p>So they went laughingly on their way, and Charles tried his
+ best to get Miss Penny to go and show him the way to the Bel-Air,
+ pleading absolute confusion still as to the points of the compass
+ and the lie of the land.</p>
+
+ <p>He was to lunch with them at the Red House, but insisted on
+ going home first to straighten up and make himself presentable.
+ So they led him to the Avenue, and set his face straight down it,
+ and bade him follow his nose and turn neither to the right hand
+ nor to the left, and then they turned off through the fields by
+ their own short-cut, and went merrily home.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="PART_THE_SIXTH" id="PART_THE_SIXTH"></a>PART THE
+ SIXTH</h2>
+
+ <h4>I</h4>
+
+ <p>Graeme was just finishing a beautiful knot in his tie, when he
+ heard hasty feet crossing the verandah to the open front door.
+ There was some unknown quantity in them that gave him sudden
+ start.</p>
+
+ <p>"Graeme!" sharp, hoarse,&mdash;a voice he did not
+ recognise.</p>
+
+ <p>He ran hastily out of the east bedroom, which he was using as
+ a dressing-room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello there!" as he sprang down the stairs,
+ "Why&mdash;Pixley? What's wrong, man?"</p>
+
+ <p>For Charles Pixley was standing there, leaning in at the
+ doorway, looking as though he would fall headlong but for the
+ supporting jamb. He had a brown envelope in his hand and a
+ crumpled pink telegram. His face was white, and drawn, and
+ haggard. His very figure seemed to have shrunk in these few
+ minutes. Never had Graeme seen so ghastly a change in a man in so
+ short a time.</p>
+
+ <p>Before Pixley could speak Miss Penny came hurrying along the
+ path with a face full of sympathetic anxiety.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it?" she asked. "I saw Mr. Pixley pass, and his face
+ frightened me. Oh, what is wrong?"</p>
+
+ <p>Pixley glanced at her out of his woeful eyes, and at Margaret,
+ who had just come running down the stairs. He seemed to hesitate
+ for a moment. Then he groaned&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"You will have to know," and motioned them all into the
+ dining-room and shut the door.</p>
+
+ <p>"This "&mdash;jerking out the telegram&mdash;"was waiting for
+ me," and he handed it to Graeme, who smoothed it out and read,
+ while Pixley dropped into a chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pixley. Bel-Air. Sark.</p>
+
+ <p>"Zizel, Amadou, Zebu, Zeta. Eno."</p>
+
+ <p>"Code," said Pixley briefly. "Meanings underneath," and
+ dropped his head into his hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Zizel," read Graeme slowly&mdash;"There is bad news.
+ Amadou&mdash;your father. Zebu&mdash;has bolted. Zeta&mdash;we
+ fear the smash will be a bad one. Eno&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My partner's initials&mdash;they certify the wire," said
+ Pixley hoarsely.</p>
+
+ <p>And they looked soberly at one another and very pitifully at
+ the broken man before them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't take it too hard, Pixley," said Graeme quietly, laying
+ a friendly hand on the other's shoulder. "It may not be as bad as
+ this puts it. Codes are brutally bald things, you know"</p>
+
+ <p>The bowed head shook pitifully. He raised his white face and
+ looked round at them with a shocked shrinking in his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"God forgive him!" he jerked. "And God forgive me, for I have
+ doubted him at times! He was so&mdash;so&mdash;so demned
+ good"&mdash;and Graeme's lips twitched in spite of himself, so
+ closely was the expression in accord with his own feelings. But
+ Pixley did not see the twitch, for he was looking at Margaret and
+ Hennie Penny, and he was saying with vehemence&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you believe me that I knew absolutely nothing of this?
+ He never discussed his affairs with me nor I mine with him, and
+ we had no business together except on purely business lines. If
+ he had to buy or sell he sent it my way, of course,&mdash;nothing
+ more. You will believe me, Graeme&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Every word, my boy&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"We all believe it, Mr. Pixley," said Hennie Penny warmly.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I know it, Charles," said Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is very good of you all," he groaned. "I must get back at
+ once, Graeme. How soon is there a boat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Five o'clock. You'll have to stop a night in Guernsey, which
+ is a nuisance."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles Svendt shook his head in dumb misery. It was crushing
+ to be so far away&mdash;thirty hours at least, and he gnashing
+ within to be on the spot and at work, learning the worst, seeing
+ what could be done.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, with a preliminary knock on the door, Mrs. Carr&eacute;
+ came in with brilliant lobsters and crisp lettuces for lunch,
+ and, hungry as they all were, their souls loathed the thought of
+ eating.</p>
+
+ <p>"They are just out of the pot," beamed she, "and the lettuces
+ were growing not five min'ts ago. Ech!"&mdash;at sight of
+ Pixley&mdash;"is he ill?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Pixley has just had bad news from home, Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute;," said Graeme. "He will have to go by to-day's
+ boat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach, but I am sorry! And him so happy yesterday and dancing
+ the best in the room," and her pleasant face clouded
+ sympathetically.</p>
+
+ <p>"Meg, I'll go up to your room for a minute and finish my
+ hair," said Hennie Penny. "I ran out just as I was&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It was very kind of you," said Charles Svendt, and the
+ general sympathy seemed to comfort him somewhat.</p>
+
+ <p>"No good feeling too bad about it, old man, till you know all
+ the facts," said Graeme, when the girls had gone off
+ upstairs.</p>
+
+ <p>"It hits me, Graeme. Not financially, as I said. But in every
+ other way it hits me hard.&mdash;Have you reached the point of
+ seeing that it may hit her too?"&mdash;and he nodded towards
+ upstairs.</p>
+
+ <p>"I suppose there was a glimmering idea of the chance of that
+ at the back of my head somewhere, but we won't trouble about it
+ just now. How about your mother?"</p>
+
+ <p>Pixley shook his head dismally again. "It will be a terrible
+ blow to her. He was a bit hard and cold at home, you know, but
+ she looked up to him as immaculate. Yes, it will hit her very
+ hard. As to money, of course, she will be all right. I have
+ plenty. But the talk and the scandal&mdash;" and he groaned again
+ at thought of it all.</p>
+
+ <p>"Send her over here for a time&mdash;or bring her yourself. We
+ have heaps of room here. Miss Penny is coming to stop with us
+ next week. Your mother was always fond of Margaret, I
+ believe."</p>
+
+ <p>"She was&mdash;very fond of her.... That's a good thought of
+ yours, Graeme. Are you sure Margaret&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course she would. She and Miss Penny will just take care
+ of her, and no word of the troubles will reach her. That's the
+ thing to do, and maybe you'll find things not as bad as you
+ expect when you get back."</p>
+
+ <p>But, from the look of him, Charles Svendt had small hope of
+ matters being anything but what he feared.</p>
+
+ <p>When the girls came down they made an apology of a meal, for,
+ in spite of their hunger, the stricken look of their friend took
+ their appetites away.</p>
+
+ <p>The thought that there might still lurk in their minds a
+ suspicion that he had had some knowledge of his father's
+ position, when he came across to stop their marriage, still
+ troubled him.</p>
+
+ <p>"I do hope you will all believe me when I say that I knew
+ absolutely nothing of it all," he said, when they had finished an
+ almost silent meal. "When I said I had doubted him at times, I
+ simply meant that his everlasting and&mdash;and&mdash;well, very
+ assertive philanthropies palled upon me. It was a little
+ difficult at times to believe in the genuineness of it all, for
+ we did not see very much of it at home, as you know,"&mdash;he
+ looked at Margaret, who nodded. "In business matters he could be
+ as hard as nails, and it was not easy to fit it all
+ together."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not one of us believes anything of the kind of you, old man.
+ Just get that right out of your head, once for all. We're only
+ sorry for your sake that the trouble has come, and I'm sure we
+ all hope it will turn out not so bad as you fear," said Graeme
+ heartily.</p>
+
+ <p>"What about your mother, Charles?" said Margaret. "I'm afraid
+ she will feel this dreadfully. Hennie and I were talking about it
+ upstairs, and we were wondering if you could get her to come and
+ stop with us for a time&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You see!" said Graeme, with a smile at Pixley. And to
+ Margaret&mdash;"I suggested exactly the same thing while you were
+ up doing your hair."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's awfully good of you all," said Charles. "If you're quite
+ sure&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"We're quite sure. Send her to us at once as soon as you reach
+ home, and Jock shall meet her in Guernsey."</p>
+
+ <p>"I think I'd perhaps better bring her across myself. I don't
+ suppose there will be much I can do when I've heard the
+ worst&mdash;if they've got to it yet. Things may be all tangled
+ up, and it may take time. And for ten days or so, until folks
+ have had time to forget, the name of Pixley won't be one to be
+ proud of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come if you can," said Graeme heartily. "You've seen nothing
+ of Sark yet."</p>
+
+ <h4>II</h4>
+
+ <p>They all went down to the harbour to see him off&mdash;as is
+ the custom when one's friends leave Sark. And when Charles Svendt
+ had shaken hands with Margaret and Miss Penny&mdash;and had found
+ a touch of comfort in the sympathetic droop of their
+ faces&mdash;and had fancied Miss Penny's bright eyes were at once
+ brighter and mistier than usual&mdash;and had thanked them again
+ very humbly for all their kindness&mdash;he turned to say
+ good-bye to Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come away, man!" said Jock cheerfully. "I'm coming too. Meg's
+ given me a holiday, and I'm going to shake a free leg again in
+ Guernsey&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But Charles thought he saw through that.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't you come on my account, Graeme"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not on your account at all, my boy, but the accounts of a
+ good many shopkeepers over there which I've got to straighten out
+ at once, while all the little differences are fresh in my mind.
+ Something wrong in nearly all of them&mdash;some over, some
+ under&mdash;and I'm still a bit of a business man though I do
+ write books."</p>
+
+ <p>For, when Pixley went off to pack his portmanteau, Graeme had
+ said to his wife, "Meg dear, what do you think of my going across
+ to Peter Port with that young man? He'll have a bad black time
+ all by himself. He's holding himself in before us, but when he's
+ alone it'll all come back on him in a heap and he'll feel
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>And Margaret had said, "Yes, dear, go. You'll be a great
+ comfort to him. I am very very sorry for him."</p>
+
+ <p>The last flicker of the waving handkerchiefs above the
+ sea-wall, and their responsive wavings from the boat, had been
+ abruptly cut by the intervening bastion of Les L&acirc;ches, but
+ Charles Svendt still leaned with his arms on the rail and looked
+ back as though he could pierce the granite cliff and see the
+ girls still standing there, and Graeme stood patiently behind
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>He straightened up at last with a sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm glad I came," he said, "though if I'd had any idea what
+ was going to happen I'd have drowned myself first. It's when
+ one's in trouble"&mdash;as though this were a discovery of his
+ own&mdash;"that one finds out how kind people can be."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, trouble has its uses. I had a deuce of a time for the
+ first few weeks after I got here. Your dad had told me you and
+ Margaret were to be married very shortly, and it knocked life
+ into a cocked-hat for me&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what he would have liked. Do you know, Graeme, I've
+ been thinking that it's just possible your marriage helped to
+ precipitate matters with him. I don't know, of course; but if he
+ has been juggling her money in any way, he may have been counting
+ on a marriage between us to help straighten things. Then, when he
+ heard nothing from me&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's possible. But if it acted as quickly as all that, I'm
+ afraid the chances for Margaret's portion are pretty small."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gad! That would hurt me more than anything. I shall do
+ everything in my power&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure of it, my dear fellow. And you must understand that
+ her money&mdash;whatever it is&mdash;has never entered into our
+ calculations in any way. I knew nothing of it till Lady Elspeth
+ Gordon told me, and I had it all settled on her before the
+ wedding took place. If it is gone we can do without it."</p>
+
+ <p>And Charles Svendt, if he said nothing, thought all the
+ more.</p>
+
+ <h4>III</h4>
+
+ <p>The two girls were standing in the outermost seaward corner of
+ the breakwater, as though they had never moved, when the
+ <i>Assistance</i> came nosing round Les L&acirc;ches next
+ morning, and made for the harbour. And to Graeme, the sight of
+ his wife, after a separation of eighteen hours, was like a
+ life-giving stream to a pilgrim of the desert, or the blessing of
+ light to a darkened soul. His heart swelled almost to
+ paining-point for very joy of her. He took deep breaths of
+ gratitude for this sweet crowning of his life. He wondered
+ vaguely why he should be so blest above all other men. He vowed
+ his vows again and his eyes were misty.</p>
+
+ <p>They saw him standing by the captain, and waved glad welcomes,
+ and presently, his glimpse into the depths of Margaret's eyes as
+ he kissed her, told him that he had been missed even as he had
+ missed.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am glad I went with him," he said, as they climbed the
+ steep Creux Road. "It did him good to talk. He's feeling it
+ terribly."</p>
+
+ <p>He did not tell them that they had got the previous day's
+ papers in St. Peter Port, and that their scathing comments on a
+ peculiarly bad failure, and on the remarkable contrast between
+ the profession and the practice of Jeremiah Pixley's life, had
+ driven Charles Svendt almost crazy. The wound was raw in their
+ hearts. There was no need to turn the knife in it.</p>
+
+ <p>"We shall see him back here with Mrs. Pixley before the middle
+ of next week, unless I'm very much mistaken," he said. "He says
+ there's nothing doing on the Stock Exchange, and he can fix
+ things with his partner to get away for a time, and it seems the
+ wisest thing to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have liked Charles better this time than I ever did in my
+ life before," said Margaret. "And I am very very sorry for him
+ and Mrs. Pixley."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's not half a bad fellow," said Graeme heartily.</p>
+
+ <p>And perhaps, if it had been put to Miss Penny, she would have
+ improved even upon that.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope you're not very set on being a rich woman, Meg," said
+ Graeme, when they were alone together.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but I am," she said, with a smile which all the riches in
+ the world could not have bought from her, or brought to her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I know,"&mdash;and he gathered the smile with a kiss.
+ "But in coarse material wealth, I mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm just as set on it as you are. I want just as much as will
+ make you happy. You mean Mr. Pixley has made away with it
+ all?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm very much afraid so, but I guess we can get along all
+ right without it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course we can&mdash;splendidly. I'm a famous housekeeper
+ and you'll be a famous author. There couldn't be a better team.
+ It will bring out the very best that's in us."</p>
+
+ <p>"We can never come to actual want anyway, for my little
+ bit&mdash;which, by the way, Lady Elspeth once took the trouble
+ to impress upon me was just about enough to pay Mr. Pixley's
+ servants' wages&mdash;is in Consols, and they're not likely to
+ crack up. And my last book brought me about fifty
+ pounds&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It ought to have brought you five thousand. I'm sure it was
+ good enough."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course it was, but it takes time to work up to the five
+ thousand point. Some get there, I suppose. But I should imagine
+ more starve off at the fifty line."</p>
+
+ <p>"We could live like princes on a couple of hundred a year in
+ Sark here."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would pall on you in time, I'm afraid."</p>
+
+ <p>"You've been here twice as long as I have. Has it begun to
+ pall on you yet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't think it would ever pall on me, if I lived here for a
+ century. But then I've got my work, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"And I've got you, my dear. When you and Sark begin to pall
+ I'll promise to let you know. It's heavenly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I don't claim all that, you know. Don't expect <i>too</i>
+ much&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Will Charles be involved at all, do you think, Jock?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't think so. They had not much to do with one another in
+ business matters."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm glad of that. Do you know"&mdash;with an introspective
+ look in her eyes&mdash;"I've an idea&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Hennie Penny?"</p>
+
+ <p>Margaret nodded.</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be capital. She'd make him an excellent wife."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure she would. She's just what he needs. She's as good
+ as gold, and she has more genuine common-sense than anyone I
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thousand thanks!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, we're exceptions to all rules. But I do hope
+ something&mdash;I mean everything&mdash;may come of it. And we
+ would all have reason to bless this blessed little island all our
+ days."</p>
+
+ <p>"Some of us will, anyway. It certainly shall not go
+ unblest."</p>
+
+ <h4>IV</h4>
+
+ <p>On the Tuesday afternoon Graeme received a brief telegram from
+ Charles Pixley&mdash;"Crossing tonight." And Wednesday morning
+ found them all on the sea-wall awaiting the arrival of the
+ steamer from Guernsey.</p>
+
+ <p>"There he is&mdash;in the front corner of the upper
+ deck&mdash;keen to get here as soon as possible, I should say. I
+ know just how he feels," said Graeme, with a laugh. "Looks a bit
+ different from what he did the first time he came."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's Mrs. Pixley on the side seat," said Margaret, and they
+ waved their welcomes.</p>
+
+ <p>There were two ladies on the side seat, and both stood up and
+ waved vigorously in reply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;who&mdash;?" began Margaret. And
+ then&mdash;excitedly, "Jock&mdash;I believe it's Lady Elspeth.
+ I'm certain it is. It is. It is."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just like her! Hurrah for the Gordons!" and he sent them
+ welcomes which a world full of Pixleys alone could not have
+ excited in him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now this <i>is</i> delightful," he said, as he sprang on
+ board and rushed at Lady Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"All right, my boy! Don't shake my hand right off, if you can
+ help it. Here, you may give me a kiss, though it's contrary to
+ the usages of my country. We'll pretend I'm your mother again.
+ Now say how do you do to Mrs. Pixley. How's Margaret? I've got
+ crows to pick with you young people&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Make it seven, or it's unlucky," laughed Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? What?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell you later. We're great believers in crows here. Mrs.
+ Pixley, I am very glad indeed to see you here. Charles, old man,
+ you've done splendidly."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles wrung his hand in silence. His face was sober, with a
+ latent glow of expectation in it. When he had seen to the luggage
+ he joined the group on the quay, and it was Miss Penny who was
+ the first to see him coming.</p>
+
+ <p>"Welcome back to Sark!" she said cheerfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm uncommonly glad to be here. Everybody all right? How's
+ Mrs. Carr&eacute;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Everybody's first-rate, especially Meg and Jock. Their
+ spirits are enough to inflate the island."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's good to be young," and the sober mask lifted slightly
+ and let the inner light shine through.</p>
+
+ <h4>V</h4>
+
+ <p>"Go to an hotel?" said Margaret indignantly, in reply to a
+ suggestion from Lady Elspeth. "Indeed you'll do nothing of the
+ kind,"&mdash;and, as the old lady hesitated still,&mdash;"If you
+ do I'll never speak to you again as long as I live."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh well, I couldn't stand that&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course you couldn't. Neither could I. An hotel
+ indeed!"&mdash;with withering scorn&mdash;"And we with four empty
+ bedrooms crying aloud at night because two of their fellows are
+ occupied and they are left out in the cold! An hotel! I'd just
+ like to see you!"</p>
+
+ <p>"My guidness! Is she often like this, Jock?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, always! I thought you knew her. Why couldn't you warn me
+ in time?&mdash;No!" as Lady Elspeth attempted to
+ speak&mdash;"It's too late now. We're bound for life. There's no
+ cutting the bond. The Vicar told us so."</p>
+
+ <p>"You're both clean daft together," said the old lady, with
+ dancing eyes. "Well, I'll stop in one of your crying
+ bedrooms&mdash;on conditions. We'll talk about that later on.
+ Where's the rest of the island, and how do you get to it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Old ladies and luggage ride. We youngsters walk. There's
+ Charles waiting for you at the carriage. There you are! Au
+ revoir!"</p>
+
+ <p>As the young people breasted the steep,
+ Pixley&mdash;forgetting entirely his vow never to do it on foot
+ again&mdash;unfolded to them Lady Elspeth's idea, which simply
+ was, that if the Red House could hold them all,&mdash;of which
+ she had her doubts, in spite of his assertions,&mdash;they should
+ all share expenses and such household duties as so large a party
+ would involve.</p>
+
+ <p>"You see&mdash;if you don't mind it, Mrs. Graeme,"&mdash;with
+ an apologetic look at Margaret,&mdash;"it will give the two old
+ ladies something to do and will leave us young folks freer to get
+ about."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a capital arrangement if the old ladies don't mind. Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute; can get in another girl. It will keep them all busy
+ seeing that we have enough to eat. But they'll soon get used to
+ looking forward two or three days and ordering Friday's dinner on
+ Tuesday."</p>
+
+ <p>"How long can you stop, old man?" asked Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"A fortnight&mdash;all being well," and there was a touch of
+ soberness in it as he said that. "There's really nothing doing,
+ and Ormerod's a good fellow and insisted on it."</p>
+
+ <p>"We can do heaps in a fortnight," said Miss Penny jubilantly.
+ "However did you manage to catch Lady Elspeth?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She's a grand old lady. I found her with my mother when I got
+ there. She'd been with her ever since&mdash;since the trouble.
+ And when I proposed bringing my mother she said at once that she
+ was coming too. She had crows to pick with you two, and so on. I
+ expect she thought my mother would feel things less if she was
+ with her."</p>
+
+ <p>"She's an old dear," said Margaret. "They shall both have the
+ very best time we can give them."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall take them conger-eeling," said Graeme,&mdash;"and to
+ Venus's Bath"</p>
+
+ <p>"And down the Boutiques and the Gouliots"&mdash;suggested
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"And ormering in Grande Gr&egrave;ve," laughed Miss Penny, who
+ had spent a day there on that alluring pursuit and had come home
+ bruised and wet and dirty.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, there's lots of fun in store for them," said Graeme,
+ laughing like a schoolboy out for a holiday. "And, as Hennie
+ Penny says, we can do heaps in a fortnight."</p>
+
+ <h4>VI</h4>
+
+ <p>Having made up their minds that there was no earthly reason
+ why Charles Pixley and Hennie Penny should not be as happy as
+ they were themselves, Margaret and Graeme saw to it that nothing
+ should be awanting in the way of opportunity.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Penny's natural goodness of heart impelled her to the
+ most delicate consideration towards Mrs. Pixley. Hennie Penny,
+ you see, had come bravely through dire troubles of her own, and
+ tribulation softens the heart as it does the ormer. She
+ anticipated the nervous old lady's every want, soothed her
+ bruised susceptibilities in a thousand hidden ways, tended her as
+ lovingly as an only daughter might have done,&mdash;and all out
+ of the sheer necessity of her heart, and with never a thought of
+ reward other than the satisfaction of her own desire for the
+ happiness of all about her.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that the others were one whit less considerate, but, in
+ the natural course of things, Miss Penny's heart and time were,
+ perhaps, a little more at liberty for outside service, and in
+ Mrs. Pixley the opportunity met her half-way.</p>
+
+ <p>It is safe to say that the old lady had never in her life been
+ so much made of. Margaret had always been gentle and sweet with
+ her; but the cold white light of Mr. Pixley's unco' guidness had
+ always cast a shadow upon the household, and Margaret had got
+ from under it whenever the chance offered.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are very good to me, my dear," Charles heard his mother
+ say to Hennie Penny, one day when they two were alone together
+ and did not know anyone was near. "If I had ever had a daughter I
+ would have liked her to be like you. How did you learn to be so
+ thoughtful of other people?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I think it must have been through having come through lots of
+ troubles of my own," said Hennie Penny simply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Troubles abound," said the tremulous old lady. "You have
+ drawn the sting of yours and kept only the honey," which saying
+ astonished Charles greatly. He had no idea his mother could say
+ things like that. She had had time to think plenty of them,
+ indeed, but there had never been room for more than one shining
+ light in the household and that had cast strong shadows.</p>
+
+ <p>Charles had gone quietly away smiling to himself, and had been
+ in cheerful spirits for the rest of the day.</p>
+
+ <p>The first night, when the ladies had gone chattering upstairs
+ to make sure that all the arrangements were in order, Graeme and
+ Pixley sat out on the verandah smoking a final pipe.</p>
+
+ <p>The ladies' voices floated through the open windows as they
+ passed from room to room, and Graeme laughed softly. "What's up?"
+ asked Pixley, gazing at him soberly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I was thinking of the changes here since the first night I
+ slept in this house all by myself, and heard ghosts creeping
+ about and all kinds of noises."</p>
+
+ <p>"Much jollier to hear <i>them</i>," said Charles, as Miss
+ Penny's and Margaret's laughter came floating down the softness
+ of the night.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, indeed! Very much jollier," and they smoked and
+ listened.</p>
+
+ <p>No word had so far passed between them as to the troubles that
+ lay behind. There had, indeed, been no opportunity until now, and
+ Graeme had no mind to broach the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>But Pixley had only been waiting till they could discuss
+ things alone, and the time had come.</p>
+
+ <p>"It will take them months to get to the bottom of things over
+ there," he said quietly. "I saw the accountants, and they say
+ everything's in a dreadful mess. He must have been involved for
+ years. It makes me absolutely sick to think of it all, Graeme,
+ and him&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure it must, old chap. Why think of it? It's done, and
+ it can't be undone, and everyone knows you had nothing to do with
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know. Everyone is very kind, but I can't get rid of it.
+ It's with me all the time like a dirty shadow."</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll chase it away. No place like Sark for getting rid of
+ bogeys and worries."</p>
+
+ <p>"How things will come out it's impossible to say. I made
+ special enquiries into Margaret's affairs, and it's quite certain
+ he's tampered with her money, but they could not say yet to what
+ extent. On the other hand, certain of her securities are intact,
+ so everything is not gone. But what I wanted to say was this. I
+ am determined that Margaret shall not suffer, whatever may have
+ happened. Any deficiency I shall make good myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear fellow, she would never hear of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's why I'm talking to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I won't hear of it either. As I told you before, it was
+ a trouble to me when I heard she had any money. Whatever she had
+ I settled on herself, and we can get on very well without
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"All the same I'm not going to have her lose anything through
+ my&mdash;through him. Neither you nor she can stop me doing what
+ I like with my own money."</p>
+
+ <p>"We can refuse to touch it."</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be nonsense."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not half as bad as you crippling yourself for life to make
+ good what you'd never made away with."</p>
+
+ <p>"It wouldn't do that," said Charles quietly. "Ormerod's a
+ long-headed fellow, and we made some pretty good hits before the
+ bottom dropped out of things. You must let me have my own way in
+ this matter, Graeme, if it's only for my own peace of mind. I'm
+ going to ask Miss Penny to be my wife. Do you think&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear fellow," said Graeme, jumping up and shaking him
+ heartily by the hand, "that's the best bit of news I've heard
+ since Meg said 'I will' in the church there. She's an absolutely
+ splendid girl, is Hennie. Except Meg herself, I don't know any
+ girl I admire so much. She's as good and sweet as they make 'em,
+ and for sound common-sense she's a perfect gold mine."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you don't think&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've never heard a hint of anyone else. Like me to ask Meg?
+ She'd be sure to know. Girls talk of these things, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know. Would it be quite&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Everything's fair in love and war,&mdash;proverbial, my boy.
+ But I'm pretty sure you've a clear field, and I congratulate you
+ both with all my heart. Come to think of it, she's been as dull
+ as a ditch since you went away"</p>
+
+ <p>"Really?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Fact! I was trying the other night to prove to her that she'd
+ got influenza coming on, or hay-fever, or something of the kind.
+ She's as different as chalk from cheese since eleven o'clock
+ to-day. It's you, I'll bet you a sovereign."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles did not respond to the offer. He sat smoking quietly
+ and let his thoughts run along brighter paths than they had done
+ for days.</p>
+
+ <h4>VII</h4>
+
+ <p>At breakfast next morning Graeme soberly suggested to Lady
+ Elspeth that she should go conger-eeling with him that day. And
+ the shrewd brown eyes looked into his, and twinkled in response
+ to the deep blue and the brown ones opposite, and she said, "I
+ mind I was just a wee bit feather-headed myself for a while after
+ I was married. I caught congers before you were short-coated, my
+ laddie, but I'm not going catching them now."</p>
+
+ <p>"They are a bit rampageous when they're grown up," he
+ admitted. "We got one the other day about as thick round as one's
+ leg, and it barked like a dog and tried to bite."</p>
+
+ <p>"And does he make you go congering, my dear?" she asked
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"Make?" scoffed Graeme. "Make, forsooth? How little you know!
+ I'd like to see the man who could make that young person do
+ anything but just what she wishes. Why, she twists us all round
+ her little finger and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, ay! Well, discipline is good for the young, and you're
+ just nothing but a laddie in some things."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm going to keep so all my life. So's Meg! Well, suppose we
+ say ormering then, if congering's too lively. Hennie Penny's an
+ awful dab at ormering. If you'd seen her the other night when she
+ came home! A tangle of vraic was an old lady's best cap in
+ comparison&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And how many did I get, and how many did you get?" retorted
+ Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"I got six and you got seven&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Seventeen, and you stole four of your six from Meg."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh well, I found the mushrooms, coming home, and they were
+ worth a pailful of ormers."</p>
+
+ <p>"You didn't beat them long enough. Ormers take a lot of
+ beating," she explained to Lady Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thumping, she means. My mushrooms beat them
+ hollow,&mdash;tender and delicate and fragrant"&mdash;and he
+ sniffed appreciatively as though he could scent them
+ still.&mdash;"Your ormers were like shoe-soles."</p>
+
+ <p>"And as to the mushrooms," continued Hennie Penny, "you'd
+ never have found them if I hadn't tumbled into them, and then you
+ thought they were toadstools."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh well!&mdash;Who can't take a hook out of a whiting's
+ mouth? Who was it screamed when the lobster looked at her?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It nearly took a piece out of me."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who nearly upset the boat when a baby devilfish came up in
+ the pot? And it wasn't above that size!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I draw the line at devil-fish. They're no' canny."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do they generally go on like this?" asked Lady Elspeth of
+ Margaret.</p>
+
+ <p>"All the time," said Margaret, with a matronly air. "They're
+ just a couple of children. I keep them out of mischief as well as
+ I can, but it's hard work at times."</p>
+
+ <p>"She's just every bit as bad, you know, when we're alone,"
+ said Miss Penny. "But she's got her company manners on just now.
+ You should see her when she's bathing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;yes! You should see her when she's bathing," said
+ Graeme, with a smack of the lips. "All the little waves and crabs
+ and lobsters keep bobbing up to have another look at her. In
+ Venus's Bath the other day&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, children, stop your fooling. Where shall we go to-day?"
+ laughed Margaret, and Lady Elspeth could hardly take her eyes off
+ her, so winsomely, so radiantly happy was she.</p>
+
+ <p>"We old folks will stay at home and talk to Mrs.
+ Carr&eacute;," said Lady Elspeth. "You young ones can go off and
+ do what you like."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no, you don't," said Graeme. "You didn't come here to loaf
+ in a verandah. When you come to Sark you've got to enjoy
+ yourselves, whether you want to or not. Suppose we take lunch
+ along to the Eperquerie, and the elders can bask and snooze, and
+ we'll bathe three times off that black ledge under Les Fontaines.
+ And if the Seigneur's out fishing perhaps he'll take some of us
+ with him, those who don't scream when the poor fish gets a hook
+ in its throat. And you'll see Margaret out on the loose. She
+ always goes it when she's swimming."</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope you won't venture too far out, Charles," said Mrs.
+ Pixley, with visions of his limp body being carried home.</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Penny and I are sensible people when we're bathing,"
+ said Charles. "We don't lose our heads&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor any of the rest of you,&mdash;nor touch of the stones,"
+ laughed Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's so," said Charles. "We like to know what's below us
+ and that it's not too far away."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's very wise," said Mrs. Pixley plaintively. "One hears of
+ such dreadful accidents. I'm very glad you're so sensible, my
+ dear," to Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'm dreadfully sensible at times, especially when I'm
+ bathing. But that's because I can only swim with one foot at the
+ bottom."</p>
+
+ <p>"Any beach about there?" enquired Charles
+ forethoughtfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nice little bit just round the corner, with a cave and
+ all,&mdash;capital place for children. Paddle by the hour without
+ going in above your ankles."</p>
+
+ <p>And so they wandered slowly up the scented lanes past the
+ Seigneurie, laden with the usual paraphernalia of a
+ bathing-lunch, and came out on the Eperquerie.</p>
+
+ <p>They established the old ladies in a gorsy nook, built a
+ fireplace of loose stones, and collected fuel, and laid the fire
+ ready for the match, which Lady Elspeth was to apply whenever
+ they waved to her.</p>
+
+ <p>"If She isn't fast asleep," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they pointed out all the things that lay about, so that
+ they might take an intelligent interest in their
+ surroundings,&mdash;Guernsey, and Herm, and Jethou, and Alderney,
+ and the Casquets, and the coast of France, and the Seigneur in
+ his boat, and then they trooped off like a party of
+ school-children.</p>
+
+ <p>And presently the old ladies saw them scrambling down the
+ black, scarped sides of the headland opposite, and then they
+ disappeared behind rocks and into crannies. Then a pink meteor
+ flashed from the black ledge, followed in an instant by a
+ dark-blue one, and both went breasting out to sea. And in front
+ of the cave two less venturesome figures beguiled the onlookers
+ and themselves into the belief that they were swimming, though
+ they never went out of their depth and sounded anxiously for it
+ at every second stroke.</p>
+
+ <p>And up above, the larks trilled joyously, and the air was soft
+ and sweet as the air of heaven; and down below, the water was
+ bluer than the sky and clear as crystal, so that they could see
+ the great white rocks which lay away down in the depths, and they
+ looked like sea-monsters crawling after their prey. And the
+ shouts of the swimmers came mellowly up to them, and they could
+ see their little limbs jerking like the limbs of frogs.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is good to be here," said Lady Elspeth enjoyably.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is very very good to be here. I am very glad we came,"
+ said Mrs. Pixley, with a sigh that was not all sadness.</p>
+
+ <h4>VIII</h4>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp285" id="fp285"></a> <img src="images/fp285.jpg"
+ width="550" height="332" alt="ROUND THE ISLAND IN THE BOATS"
+ title="ROUND THE ISLAND IN THE BOATS" /> <h5>ROUND THE ISLAND IN
+ THE BOATS</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Many such days of sheer delight they had, and kept the dark
+ cloud resolutely below their horizon. They accommodated their
+ activities to the limited powers of the elders, and took them
+ wherever it was reasonably possible for them to go. They
+ chartered a boat for the day, and took them and all the
+ luncheon-things round from Creux Harbour to Grande Gr&egrave;ve,
+ subjecting Charles to long-unaccustomed labours at the oar. In
+ the same way they introduced them to Dixcart Bay, and Derrible,
+ and Gr&ecirc;ve de la Ville; and, choosing a fit day, they
+ circumnavigated the island again in three boat-loads, landing for
+ lunch on an even keel on Breni&egrave;re, and penetrating into
+ every accessible cave they came to,&mdash;Mrs. Pixley enjoying
+ the wonders in fear and trembling, and breathing freely only when
+ they were safely out in the open once more. And Graeme and
+ Margaret watched the approximating of Hennie Penny and Charles
+ with infinite delight. It needed only a full understanding
+ between these two to complete their own great happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>But the dark cloud was there, though they might refuse to look
+ at it, and clouds below the horizon have a way of rising,
+ especially dark ones.</p>
+
+ <p>The post-office in Sark is a cottage, or the part of a
+ cottage, turned from private to public use. In former times the
+ service was of a very perfunctory character, Providence largely
+ taking the place of post-master while that official attended
+ first to his fishing and then to his duties, and any who had good
+ and valid reason to expect a letter came down to the mail-bag
+ where it lay on the beach and went through it for themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>The advent of visitors accustomed to more exact and
+ business-like methods, however, has done away with this Arcadian
+ simplicity, and now each day when the boat is in, all who prefer
+ not to wait for the tardy delivery at their own houses, collect
+ gradually round the official cottage, and in due course, and
+ after the exercise of virtues, receive their mail across the
+ counter. And some tear their letters open at once, regardless of
+ spectators, and devour them on the spot, but the wiser carry them
+ home for private consumption. For one never knows for certain
+ what of heartbreak and disaster the most innocent-looking
+ envelope may contain.</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme and Margaret and Miss Penny, however, being in retreat,
+ and having cut the painter with the outside world, had not
+ cultivated the post-office until Charles and Lady Elspeth
+ arrived. But, as Charles had to keep more or less in touch with
+ Throgmorton Street, they had now got into the habit of calling
+ with him for his letters, except when the doing so interfered
+ with the programme for the day. And many an amusing, and
+ sometimes touching, insight did they get there into human nature.
+ Graeme said it was worth while the trouble of going, just to sit
+ in the hedge opposite and watch people's faces, especially the
+ faces of those who tore open their letters and those who got
+ none.</p>
+
+ <p>They were sitting so in the hedge one morning, quietly
+ watching and commenting silently, and by looks only, on the
+ vagaries of the letter-scramblers, and Charles had pushed into
+ the crowded little room to antedate the delivery by a few minutes
+ if possible.</p>
+
+ <p>As he came out, with his letters in his hand, they all saw at
+ a glance that something had happened. His face, which had been
+ gradually relaxing to its old look of jovial good-fellowship and
+ satisfaction with the world, was tight and hard, and yet they saw
+ that he had not opened a letter. He turned up the road with a
+ mere jerk of the head, and they followed wondering, and all, as
+ it came out afterwards, with the same dim idea as to the possible
+ cause of his upsetting.</p>
+
+ <p>He handed Margaret a couple of letters for Lady Elspeth, and
+ made an attempt at conversation as they went along, but the cloud
+ they had been keeping out of sight was visible now to all of
+ them. Among the unopened letters in his hand was one which
+ disturbed him even before he knew what was in it, and they could
+ only wait, with troubled minds, for developments.</p>
+
+ <p>Charles went straight to his room, as he usually did when
+ business matters claimed his attention, and from the look on his
+ face Graeme judged that the scramble, fixed for that day on
+ account of a specially low tide, round the Autelets, whose
+ rock-pools and phosphorescent seaweeds and beds of flourishing
+ anemones were a perpetual delight, would be off for the time
+ being at all events.</p>
+
+ <p>But Pixley came down presently and intimated that he was
+ ready, and they trooped away, leaving the elders at home for a
+ day's rest, since rock-scrambling was outside their limits.</p>
+
+ <p>Their progress, however, was not the usual light-hearted
+ saunter enlivened by merry jokes and laughter. The lanes were
+ fragrant as ever, the air was full of larks and sunshine, but the
+ cloud had risen and overshadowed them, and Graeme guessed why
+ Charles had come. There was something he wanted to discuss with
+ them alone, out of the hearing of his mother and Lady
+ Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="fp289" id="fp289"></a> <img src="images/fp289.jpg"
+ width="562" height="334" alt=
+ "THE SEA-GARDENS UNDER THE AUTELETS" title=
+ "THE SEA-GARDENS UNDER THE AUTELETS" /> <h5>THE SEA-GARDENS
+ UNDER THE AUTELETS</h5>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>He was not surprised&mdash;when they had scrambled down into
+ Port du Moulin, and had passed through the arch, and were sitting
+ on the rocks above the first of the sea-gardens,&mdash;when
+ Charles said, "There's something I want to consult you about, and
+ I couldn't do it at the house, as I want it kept to ourselves. I
+ got this, this morning. Will you read it?" and he handed Graeme a
+ letter. Graeme opened it and read it out.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"99A HIGH STREET, ALDERNEY.</p>
+
+ <p>"MY DEAR CHARLES,&mdash;I will not at the moment attempt any
+ explanation of the calamity which has befallen our house. If
+ you knew all, you would not blame me as I fear you must be
+ doing. Let me say, however, that I have every reason to hope
+ that in course of time I may be able to redeem the position by
+ making good all deficiencies and so clearing our name of
+ reproach. To do so, I must get away&mdash;to Spain in the first
+ instance, and for that I need your assistance. The end came
+ unexpectedly and took me unawares, and I am almost penniless
+ here. In asking your help, I do so the more confidently as, in
+ the path I have indicated, lies the only hope of redemption. In
+ assisting me you will not only be doing what a prosperous son
+ might reasonably be expected to do for his father in his day of
+ misfortune, but you will be acting for the general weal in
+ putting me into a position to make good what I have all
+ unwittingly become responsible for, and to that sacred end the
+ remainder of my life shall be most solemnly dedicated.</p>
+
+ <p>"I came here from Cherbourg, and am for the moment safe from
+ oversight. As soon as you place me in position to do so, I
+ shall get away and begin my new life-work, which I am earnestly
+ desirous of doing at the earliest possible moment.</p>
+
+ <p>"Address me as above&mdash;Revd. J. Peace.</p>
+
+ <p>"Your affectionate FATHER."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Graeme kept the humorous wrinkles about his eyes and mouth in
+ order with difficulty as he read this very characteristic
+ effusion, but Margaret was the only one who saw it. Charles had
+ kept his eyes intently on the pool below, and Miss Penny had been
+ regarding him sympathetically.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you make of it?" said Charles. "It makes me
+ sick."</p>
+
+ <p>"He evidently needs your help," said Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, but have I the right to give it him? That's the
+ question."</p>
+
+ <p>"He says&mdash;&mdash;" began Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, he says!" growled Charles. "Trouble is, he's been saying
+ for the last twenty years, and it has all been a lie. This is
+ probably all a lie too. Not all"&mdash;he added grimly. "As I
+ read it, he has got funds stowed away somewhere and he's anxious
+ to get to them."</p>
+
+ <p>"So that he may make restitution," urged Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, that's what he says," said Charles, in a tone that
+ showed no slightest tincture of conviction. "What would you do,"
+ he asked, looking up at Graeme, "if you were in my place?"</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme filled his pipe thoughtfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let us look at it quietly all round," he said, and lit up and
+ puffed away contemplatively.</p>
+
+ <p>"From what he says,"&mdash;checking off his points on his
+ fingers,&mdash;"if you don't assist him, he may be taken, and
+ the&mdash;the unpleasantness of the situation be thereby
+ increased.... I do not see that his punishment would help
+ anyone&mdash;except maybe as a deterrent, and that is
+ problematical.... I gather from this, as you do, that he has
+ funds awaiting him somewhere.... You have no great faith in his
+ promises&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"None," growled Charles.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I presume, as a business man, you would count a bird in
+ the hand worth several in the bush&mdash;in other words, you
+ would sooner have what he has stowed away&mdash;somewhere, than
+ what he hopes to make some time&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sight sooner!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then, I should say, offer him such assistance as he needs to
+ get away, and, if you can see your way to it, a bit to live on
+ afterwards, on condition of his placing in your hands everything
+ he has got stowed away, so that you can pass it on to the
+ receiver."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles shook his head. "I couldn't trust him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then there's only one thing to do if he agrees, and that is
+ to go with him and bring the property back with you."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles groaned. "It may mean the Argentine. Spain's no place
+ for investments these days."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's rough on you, old man, but it's the best I can think
+ of," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"And supposing he tells me to go hang?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then," said Graeme, with a shrug, "I don't see that you can
+ help him. I have no personal feeling against him whatever, but I
+ cannot see how you can help him except on some such lines as I've
+ indicated. How does it strike you, Meg?"</p>
+
+ <p>But Margaret shook her head. "I feel very much as you do. If
+ he is caught and punished it will only add to Mrs. Pixley's and
+ Charles's trouble, and benefit nobody. But he is very obstinate.
+ He has evidently planned out his future. I doubt if he'll turn
+ from it."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you, Hennie?" asked Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you should help him if you possibly can. It's
+ horrible to think of him hiding there and in fear of being
+ caught&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Helping him in any case is against the law&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Blood is thicker than water," said Hennie Penny
+ earnestly.</p>
+
+ <p>"&mdash;But if some present benefit was to come to his
+ creditors I should consider it right to do it, not
+ otherwise."</p>
+
+ <p>"Suppose you go across, and see him, and talk it over with
+ him, Mr. Pixley?" said Hennie Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>"I suppose that's the only thing to be done," groaned Charles.
+ "How do you get there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The <i>Courier</i> would call here by arrangement&mdash;up at
+ the Eperquerie," said Graeme. "She can't come in, of course. It
+ means lying out in a small boat and waiting for her. What do you
+ say to us all going? In fact, unless we do, how are we going to
+ explain Charles's going to Mrs. Pixley?"</p>
+
+ <p>Charles nodded.</p>
+
+ <p>"You could go and see him and we could talk it over again
+ afterwards. I'm inclined to think that he won't accept, you
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't believe he will, and it'll be a bit hard to refuse
+ him any help, if he really is on his beam ends."</p>
+
+ <p>"He wouldn't have written to you if he could have done
+ without, you may count upon that."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is he as safe there as he seems to think?" asked Charles.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I think so. Safer probably than in Cherbourg. It's an
+ out-of-the-way place, from all accounts."</p>
+
+ <p>Discuss it as they would, they could not get beyond Graeme's
+ proposal, and so at last they went back home, decided on the
+ visit to Alderney on the morrow, but all feeling doubtful, and
+ some of them distinctly nervous, as to the outcome of it.</p>
+
+ <h4>IX</h4>
+
+ <p>The little party that lay in wait for the Alderney steamer in
+ old Jack Guille's boat off the Eperquerie, next morning, was
+ eminently lacking in the vivacity that usually distinguishes such
+ parties when the sea is smooth and the sky is blue. In fact, when
+ they got on board, the Captain decided in his own mind that they
+ must all have quarrelled before starting. There was no sign of
+ anything of the kind about them now, it is true, but that might
+ just be their good manners. For English people are not like the
+ Sark and Guernsey folk, who, when they do quarrel, let all the
+ world know about it.</p>
+
+ <p>These four had apparently little to say to one another and
+ less to anyone else. If they had been going to a funeral they
+ could hardly have been more reserved.</p>
+
+ <p>And to something very like a funeral they were going, with the
+ added anxiety of very grave doubts as to the result of their
+ visit.</p>
+
+ <p>They had had no difficulty in persuading the elder ladies that
+ Alderney was not for them. The steep path down to the Eperquerie
+ landing, and the tumbling about in a small boat until the steamer
+ came, did not greatly appeal to them. Moreover, Lady Elspeth's
+ clear eyes had noticed the signs of their clouding, in spite of
+ their efforts after naturalness, for to experienced eyes there is
+ nothing so unnatural as the attempt to be natural. If Mrs. Pixley
+ noticed nothing it was probably because her faculties had not yet
+ fully recovered from the shock to which they had been subjected.
+ If she noticed she said nothing, having no desire, perhaps, to
+ add to the weight of her already heavy burden.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, my boy, what is it?" Lady Elspeth asked, when she had
+ persuaded Graeme to take her for a stroll in the evening, under
+ plea of cramp through overmuch sitting.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jeremiah Pixley is in Alderney and has written to Charles
+ begging his help to get on his way."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! And what are you going to do about it?".</p>
+
+ <p>Graeme outlined their ideas on the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's an old rascal," said Lady Elspeth softly. "I doubt very
+ much if you'll get anything out of him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you suggest any better way of dealing with the
+ matter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know that I can at the moment, but I doubt if you'll
+ get any satisfaction out of him. He'll stick to all he can, and
+ his promise of restitution is all bunkum, I should fear."</p>
+
+ <p>"And would you help him to get away in any case?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Personally, I think a course of penal servitude would be of
+ the greatest service to him. But, for Charles's sake and his
+ mother's, the sooner the whole matter is buried the better, and
+ so I should be sorry to hear of him being taken. It would only
+ revive the scandal."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's just what we all feel;" and he saw that the problem of
+ Jeremiah Pixley was too much even for Lady Elspeth.</p>
+
+ <p>And so the party of four on the <i>Courier</i> lacked
+ vivacity, and found no enjoyment in the lonely austerity of the
+ Casquets or Ortach; and the frowning southern cliffs of Alderney
+ itself, as the steamer raced up the Swinge to Braye Harbour,
+ seemed to them but a poor copy of their own little isle of Sark,
+ lacking its gem-like qualities. But then their minds were intent
+ upon the business ahead and their outlook was darkened.</p>
+
+ <h4>X</h4>
+
+ <p>"Would you like me to come up with you, Charles?" Graeme
+ asked, as the steamer rounded the breakwater.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I'd like it," said Charles gloomily. "But I think I'd
+ better go alone. I don't believe anything's going to come of
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid not&mdash;as far as we're concerned. You'll just
+ have to keep a stiff upper lip and stick to what you believe the
+ right thing to do." To which Charles replied only with a grim
+ nod, and they went ashore.</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll walk up to the town with you," said Graeme, when they
+ got outside the harbour precincts. "When you've got as far as you
+ can with him, come down to the shore due West. You'll find us by
+ that old fort we saw from the boat;" and presently they branched
+ off towards the sea, while Charles went doggedly on into St. Anne
+ on as miserable an errand as ever son had.</p>
+
+ <p>He tramped on along the hot white road, till he found himself
+ in the sleepy little town, where the grass grew between the
+ granite sets in the roadways and a dreamy listlessness pervaded
+ all things. He sought out No. 99A High Street and knocked on the
+ door.</p>
+
+ <p>It was opened by an elderly woman who seemed surprised at
+ sight of a visitor.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Peace?" asked Charles, feeling thereby <i>particeps
+ criminis</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's inside. Will you come in?"</p>
+
+ <p>She opened a door off the passage, said, "A gentleman to see
+ you;" and Charles went in and closed the door behind him.</p>
+
+ <p>His father had started up from a couch where he had been
+ lying. There was a startled look in his eyes and his face was
+ pale and worn, but a touch of colour came back into his cheeks
+ when he saw who his visitor was.</p>
+
+ <p>He had shaved off his bit of side whisker. His face was grayer
+ and thinner and his body somewhat shrunken, even in these few
+ days. He wore a white tie, and his coat and waistcoat were of
+ clerical cut. On the table was a pair of gold spectacles and on
+ the sideboard a soft billycock hat. He looked the
+ not-too-well-off country parson to the life. The only outward and
+ visible sign of the old Jeremiah was the heavy gold pince-nez
+ which lay between the top buttons of his waistcoat, which he
+ hauled out and fingered as of old the moment he began to
+ speak.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Charles! This is good of you. I hardly expected a
+ personal visit. I was beginning to fear you had not got my
+ letter, or that you had decided not to answer it."</p>
+
+ <p>"It followed me to Sark."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! you are back in Sark?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought it well to take my mother there, to be out of
+ things for a time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite so, quite so! That was very thoughtful of you. This is
+ a terrible calamity that has befallen us. But, as I said in my
+ letter, I have every hope of being able to redeem matters if I
+ can only get to where that is possible."</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, in the first place to Spain&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And afterwards?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley hesitated. "Perhaps&mdash;for your own
+ sake&mdash;it would be as well you should not know&mdash;for the
+ present, at all events. You may be asked questions. If you don't
+ know, you can truthfully say so."</p>
+
+ <p>"I gather that you have funds put away somewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>"If I can get to where I want to go, I can at all events make
+ a fresh start. And I am prepared to devote the rest of my life to
+ the one object I have named.... The last few years have been very
+ wearying. I have had trouble with my heart at times;" and he put
+ his hand to his side to emphasise it. "But if I can get quietly
+ away I shall soon pull round and be ready for work again, now
+ that the strain is over."</p>
+
+ <p>"You know you're asking me to do what I've no right to do?"
+ said Charles gloomily.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know, my boy, and it is very bitter for me to have to ask
+ it. But I can't get away without your help, and the alternative
+ is not pleasant to think of&mdash;for either of us.... I do not
+ ask more than I would willingly have done for you if the
+ positions were reversed.... On the whole, I do not think I have
+ been a bad father to you. Circumstances, indeed, have been too
+ strong for me at the end, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am willing to do what you want&mdash;and more, on one
+ condition."</p>
+
+ <p>"What is that? Anything in reason&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will provide you with funds to get away, and I will send
+ you three hundred pounds each year&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Good lad!"</p>
+
+ <p>"On condition that you hand over to me all the property you've
+ got stowed away&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Damn!"</p>
+
+ <p>"So that I may hand it over to your creditors."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not write at once to Scotland Yard and tell them where I
+ am? But, after all, I'm not sure that even your world would
+ applaud so filial an act as that."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm prepared to make sacrifices myself to help right some of
+ this wrong&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I had to make many for you, my boy, before you were old
+ enough to understand it&mdash;before my own position was assured.
+ Ay, and since too. I would have flung it all up years ago but for
+ you. I wanted you to be set firmly on your feet before the crash
+ came. It has been killing work. I'm glad it's over&mdash;whatever
+ the end may be. If you can't see your way to help me, the end is
+ obvious and close at hand. I have, I think, something under two
+ pounds in my pocket. If I'd waited to get more I should not be
+ here. The end came unexpectedly. Old Coxley called for some
+ securities which I had&mdash;which I couldn't give him at the
+ moment, and I had to go at once or not at all."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles stood up. He would have liked to tell him all he felt
+ about the matter. How the tampering with securities hit him more
+ hardly than almost anything could have done, since straight
+ dealing in such matters is the very first of Stock Exchange
+ tenets. How, if he had come to him, he would have strained
+ himself to the utmost to set things right.</p>
+
+ <p>But, facile talker as he was on matters that were of no
+ account, he found himself strangely tongue-tied here.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well?" he asked. "Will you let me help you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"As you will, my boy ... If you do, it offers me a
+ chance&mdash;my only chance. If you don't&mdash;&mdash;" he
+ shrugged his heavy shoulders meaningly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do what I ask," urged Charles. "It is the only possible
+ amends you can make."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley shook his head. "It is out of the question. I could
+ do nothing with three hundred a year&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You could live quietly on that in many places."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't want simply to live. I want to work and redeem
+ myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have worked hard enough and long enough," said Charles;
+ and he might have added, as was in his mind, "And it has all
+ ended in this."</p>
+
+ <p>"I would like to help you," he said, as he moved slowly
+ towards the door, striving hard to keep the stiff upper lip
+ Graeme had enjoined on him. "But I don't think you should expect
+ me to do what I know to be wrong. I'll do what I
+ said&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Pixley shook his head. His face was gray, his lips pinched
+ in. Charles went out and closed the door behind him.</p>
+
+ <p>But he could not leave him so. He had known from the first
+ that he would have to help him, right or wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>He opened the door again quietly and went in. His father was
+ sitting at the table with his head in his hands. Charles laid
+ down the money he had, with Graeme's assistance, prepared, laid
+ his hand on his shoulder for a moment, and went quietly out
+ again, and out of the house.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a miserable business altogether. He never forgot that
+ last sight of him sitting at the mean little table in the mean
+ little room with his head in his hands.</p>
+
+ <h4>XI</h4>
+
+ <p>Charles went soberly down the green slopes towards the sea,
+ and presently discovered the dismantled fort they had seen from
+ the steamer as they ran up the Swinge that morning. And sitting
+ on the broken wall of a gun platform was a figure which he knew
+ by the dress to be Miss Penny.</p>
+
+ <p>She had evidently been on the look-out for him. She stood up
+ and waved her hand, and he waved his in reply, and plunged down
+ the slope. His heart was sore at what had just passed. It turned
+ gratefully to one whom he knew to be full of sympathy for
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>When he reached the foot of the hill, they were crossing the
+ causeway which led from the fort to the shore.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, old man, you've got through with it?" said Graeme; and
+ all their faces showed the anxiety that was in them to know how
+ he had prospered.</p>
+
+ <p>He nodded. "Let's go back and sit there for a few minutes. I
+ feel like a whipped dog;" and they all went back to the fort,
+ which, in its dismantlement and ruin, whispered soothingly of the
+ rest and peace that sometimes lie beyond broken hopes and
+ strenuous times.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, how did you find him?" asked Graeme, as they seated
+ themselves on the broken wall again, with the fair blue plain of
+ the sea dimpling and dancing in front.</p>
+
+ <p>"Very broken, but as obstinate as ever," said Charles
+ gloomily. "Wouldn't listen to my proposal, says he's set on
+ redeeming himself, and so on. I offered him all I could, but it
+ was no use. So I left him&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You never did&mdash;" began Miss Penny, with a pained look on
+ her face.</p>
+
+ <p>"I did. But I couldn't leave it so. I went back, and he was
+ sitting with his head in his hands.... I just gave him all I had
+ brought and came away.... I know it was all wrong&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It wasn't. You did quite right," said Miss Penny
+ vehemently.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't suppose any of us would have done differently when it
+ came to the point. I don't really see what else you could have
+ done," said Graeme.</p>
+
+ <p>"He reminded me of all he had done for me when I was a boy,
+ and so on, and told me that if I didn't help him there was no
+ hope for him. I did my best&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You have done quite right, Charles," said Margaret. "I do
+ hope he will get away all right."</p>
+
+ <p>As he gave them the details of his interview, their quiet
+ sympathy restored him by degrees to himself. The bruised, whipped
+ soreness wore off, to some extent at all events, and there
+ remained chiefly a feeling of thankfulness that the matter was
+ over, and that, in doing the only thing possible to him, if he
+ offended against the law, he had still done what commended itself
+ to his own heart and to those whose good opinion he chiefly
+ valued.</p>
+
+ <p>If there were no signs of merriment about them as they
+ wandered quietly about the strand, if they still bore something
+ of the aspect of a funeral party, it was at all events the aspect
+ of a party after the funeral. Their corpse was laid, so far as
+ they were concerned, and their thoughts and hearts were more at
+ liberty to turn to other matters.</p>
+
+ <p>They have none of them ever cared greatly for Alderney, and
+ they always speak of it as a remote, unfriendly, melancholy, and
+ slow little place, lacking the gem-like beauty and joyous
+ vitality of Sark. But then one's outlook is always coloured by
+ one's inlook, and an overcast mind sees all things shadowed.</p>
+
+ <p>They lunched at the Scott Hotel, in the garden, and felt
+ better than they had done for two days when their feet once more
+ trod the deck of the <i>Courier</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>The southern cliffs were filmy blue in the distance, Ortach
+ and the Casquets were dim against the horizon, and Charles and
+ Miss Penny stood together in the stern looking back over the long
+ straight track of the boat, and thinking both of the lonely one
+ in the mean little house in St. Anne. Margaret and Graeme had
+ stood watching for a time, and had then stolen away forward.
+ Their outlook was ahead, where Sark was rising boldly out of the
+ blue waters.</p>
+
+ <p>"I doubt if we'll ever hear anything more of him," said
+ Charles, with a sigh at thought of it all.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will always remember that you have done your duty by him.
+ You could not have done more."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have been very kind to me all through, very kind, all of
+ you. And you especially.... Hennie&mdash;will you marry me?"</p>
+
+ <p>And she looked up at him with a happy face, and said quietly,
+ "Yes, I will. I believe we can make one another very happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure we can. Come along and tell the others;" and they
+ also turned from the past and went forward.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <h2><a name="WORKS_BY_THE_SAME_AUTHOR" id=
+ "WORKS_BY_THE_SAME_AUTHOR"></a>WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</h2>
+
+ <p><b>Hearts in Exile.</b></p>
+
+ <p>With Photogravure Frontispiece by HAROLD COPPING. THIRD
+ EDITION. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.</p>
+
+ <p>"Exceptionally powerful, vivid, and realistic.... Sketched
+ with a generous hand and bold touches, the characters hold trie
+ reader's sympathies throughout. The most graphic, vigorous, and
+ lifelike presentment of Russian administrative barbarity which we
+ recollect to have ever come across."&mdash;<i>Daily
+ Telegraph</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>A Princess of Vascovy.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Oxenham tells a good exciting story with great swing and
+ zest. It seems almost unnecessary to recommend a story that is in
+ every way worthy of the pen that produced 'Barbe of Grand Bayou.'
+ 'A Princess of Vascovy' is just as picturesquely romantic and
+ just as full of incident and adventure as Mr. Oxenham's most
+ famous work."&mdash;<i>Athenaum</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>White Fire.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+ <p>"'White Fire' combines religion and adventure; but the date is
+ modern, and the admirable missionary and his undaunted wife and
+ comrades protect their converts in the South Seas from kidnappers
+ and other pests with the aid of Maxims and Winchester rifles. Mr.
+ John Oxenham has already proved his descriptive and analytic
+ powers, and these strong-hearted champions of morality are not
+ less original than their surroundings are romantic. A tidal wave
+ is among the trials of the hero's constancy. The illustrations by
+ Mr. Grenville Manton are good."&mdash;<i>Athenaum</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>Barbe of Grand Bayou.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+ <p>"There is a fascination about Mr. John Oxenham's books which
+ grows upon one. Barbe is a clean-cut, fine drawn character,
+ human, alive, womanly, real. Her history is so simply related,
+ with such convincing straightforwardness that one is bound to
+ admit it could not have happened otherwise. It had to be. The
+ tribulations of the pair of lovers are delightfully set forth
+ with the art of the true story teller. Quite one of the best
+ books of the winter season; worth buying and reading; not merely
+ ordering from the library."&mdash;<i>Academy</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>Giant Circumstance.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Illustrated by CHARLES HORRELL.</p>
+
+ <p>THIRD EDITION. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.</p>
+
+ <p>"A hearty and manly book, written in telling style of which
+ Mr. Oxenham has proved himself a master."&mdash;<i>Times</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"Told in Mr. Oxenham's usual spirited and vivid style. Those
+ who relish a good story well told will welcome 'Giant
+ Circumstance,' and will set it on a level with the best of Mr.
+ Oxenham's books."&mdash;<i>British Weekly.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"A good story&mdash;should prove
+ popular."&mdash;<i>Athen&aelig;um</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bright, healthy, and interesting, will strengthen his
+ position in the regard of readers who like a good story of the
+ doings of wholesome unexaggerated characters."&mdash;<i>Daily
+ Telegraph</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>Rising Fortunes.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.</p>
+
+ <p><b>Carette of Sark.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Illustrated. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.</p>
+
+ <p>"All who either know the Channel Islands or love a
+ full-blooded, exciting story, should speedily make the
+ acquaintance of Carette."&mdash;<i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"No one who likes tales of adventure&mdash;and who does
+ not&mdash;could wish for a better tale than this. It is of Sark,
+ in the beginning of last century, when its people were peaceable
+ and law-abiding, save on the question of 'free trade' and when
+ privateering was a legitimate business; so naturally adventurers
+ were more easily come by than in conventional days like these.
+ The youth who tells the tale, one Philip Carr&eacute; by name,
+ comes by them all too easily for his liking. He is scarcely out
+ of one peril before he is into another, and quite
+ split-hairbreadth are his escapes from the Terrible Torode of
+ Herm. And it is all on account of Carette, charming Carette, the
+ pride of the island, and worth many dangers to
+ win."&mdash;<i>Daily Chronicle</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearl of Pearl Island, by John Oxenham
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearl of Pearl Island, by John Oxenham
+
+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: Pearl of Pearl Island
+
+Author: John Oxenham
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2005 [EBook #15259]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Steven Gibbs and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND
+
+BY JOHN OXENHAM
+
+HODDER AND STOUGHTON
+PUBLISHERS LONDON
+1908
+
+
+
+
+TO MY WIFE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART THE FIRST PEARL
+PART THE SECOND LOST PEARL
+PART THE THIRD PEARL ISLAND
+PART THE FOURTH PEARL OF PEARL ISLAND
+PART THE FIFTH PEARL IN A RING
+PART THE SIXTH SMALLER PEARLS
+
+
+
+
+ PEARL OF THE PEARL OF THE SILVER SEA!
+
+ PEARL Iridescent! Pearl of the sea!
+
+ Shimmering, glimmering Pearl of the sea!
+ White in the sun-flecked silver sea,
+ White in the moon-decked silver sea,
+ White in the wrath of the silver sea,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ Lapped in the smile of the Silver Sea,
+ Ringed in the foam of the Silver Sea,
+ Glamoured in mists of the Silver Sea,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ Glancing and glimmering under the sun,
+ Jewel and casket all in one,
+ Joy supreme of the sun's day-dream,
+ Soft in the gleam of the golden beam,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ Splendour of Hope in the rising sun,
+ Glory of Love in the noonday sun,
+ Wonder of Faith in the setting sun,--
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+
+ Gaunt and grim to the outer world,
+ Jewel and casket all impearled
+ With the kiss of the Silver Sea!--
+ With the flying kiss of the Silver Sea,
+ With the long sweet kiss of the Silver Sea,
+ With the rainbow kiss of the Silver Sea,--
+
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ And oh the sight,--the wonderful sight,
+ When calm and white, in the mystic light,
+ Of her quivering pathway, broad and bright,
+ The Queen of the Night, in silver dight,
+ Sails over the Silver Sea!
+
+ Wherever I go, and wherever I be,
+ The joy and the longing are there with me,--
+ The gleam And the glamour come back to me,--
+ In a mystical rapture there comes to me,
+ The call of the Silver Sea!
+ As needle to pole is my heart to thee,
+ Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+
+ Pearl of the Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+ To some you are Margaret, but to me,
+ Always and ever, wherever I be,
+ You are Pearl of the Pearl of the Silver Sea!
+
+ J.C.G.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FIRST
+
+
+I
+
+ NOTE.--_It would be impossible to depict the Sark of to-day
+ without using the names native to the Island. All such names
+ here employed, however, are used without any reference whatever
+ to any actual persons who may happen to bear similar names in
+ Sark. The characters are to be taken as types. The incidents are
+ in many cases fact._
+
+
+If you want murders, mysteries, or mud--pass on! This is a simple,
+straightforward love-story.
+
+
+"Jock, my lad," said Lady Elspeth softly, nodding her head very many
+times, in that very knowing way of hers which made her look like a
+Lord Chief Justice and a Fairy Godmother all in one, "I've found you
+out."
+
+And when the shrewd old soul of her looked him gently through and
+through in that fashion, he knew very much better than to attempt any
+evasion.
+
+"Ah!" he said meekly, "I was afraid someone would, sooner or later.
+I've been living in constant dread of it. But it's happened before,
+you know, between you and me. What is it this time, dear Lady
+Elspeth?"
+
+"Here have I been imputing grace to you for your kindly attentions to
+a poor old woman whose race is nearly run, and setting you up above
+the rest of them therefor, and lo, my idol----"
+
+"Ah!" he said again, with a reproving wag of the head, for he knew now
+what was coming,--"idols are perverse, camstairy things at best, you
+know, and a bit out of date too. And, besides,"--with a touch of
+remonstrance--"at your age and with your bringing-up----"
+
+"Ay, ay, ye may be as insulting as ye choose, my laddie, and fling my
+age and my upbringing in my face like a very man----"
+
+"There isn't a face like it in all England, and as to----"
+
+"I prefer ye to say Britain, as I've told ye before. Your bit England
+is only a portion of the kingdom, and in very many respects the
+poorest portion, notably in brains and manners and beauty. But ye
+cannot draw me off like that, my laddie, whether it's meant for a
+compliment or no. I was just about telling you you were a fraud----"
+
+"You hadn't got quite that length, you know, but----"
+
+"Will I prove it to you? Haven't you been coming here as regular as
+the milkman for a month past----"
+
+"Oh, come now!--Only once a day. I've an idea milkie comes twice, and
+besides----"
+
+"And what did ye come for, my lad?" with an emphatic nod and a
+menacing shake of the frail white hand, pricelessly jewelled above,
+comfortably black-silk-mittened below. "Tell me that now! What did ye
+come for?"
+
+"To see the dearest old lady in England--Britain, I mean. And--"
+
+"Yes?--And?--" and she watched him, with her head a little on one side
+and her eyes shining brightly, like an expectant motherly robin
+hopping on treasure trove.
+
+He smiled back at her and said nothing. He knew she knew without his
+telling.
+
+"And so I was only second fiddle--" she began, with an assumption of
+scornful irascibility which became her less than her very oldest cap.
+
+"Oh, dear me, no! Leader of the orchestra!--Proprietor of the
+house!--Sole director and manager and--"
+
+"Tuts! It was Margaret Brandt you came to see," and the twinkling
+brown eyes held the merry gray ones with a steady challenge.
+
+"Partly,--and I was just about to say so when you interrupted me--"
+
+"Ay! Were you now? Ye can out with things quick enough at times, my
+laddie!"
+
+"Well, you see, there are some things one does not speak about until
+one feels one has an absolute right to."
+
+"You'd have told your mother, Jock."
+
+"Perhaps, I'm not sure,--not yet--not, at all events, until--"
+
+"And wasn't I to take her place when she left you all alone?"
+
+"And so you have. You're just the dearest and sweetest old--"
+
+"Second fiddle! Come away and we'll talk of Margaret, since that's all
+you come for."
+
+"And isn't she worth coming for? Did you ever in all your life see
+anything more wonderful than Margaret Brandt?"
+
+And she looked at him for half a minute with a twinkle in the shrewd
+old eyes, which had surely seen many strange and wonderful things
+since the first wonders passed and gave place to the common things of
+life. Beautiful eyes they were still,--of a very tender brown, and
+shining always with kindly feeling and deepest interest in the person
+she was talking to.
+
+I do not know how it may be with you, but, personally, I detest people
+whose eyes and thoughts go wandering away over your left shoulder
+while you are talking with them. It may be, of course, that you are
+not much of a talker and are simply boring them, but, all the same,
+mental squinters are not to my liking.
+
+But Lady Elspeth was never bored--visibly, at all events, and while
+you talked with her you were the one person in the world in whom she
+was interested.
+
+Margaret's eyes had something of the same in them, but they were very
+deep blue, and there was in them just that touch of maidenly reserve
+which best becomes a maiden's eyes, until, to one at all events, she
+may lay it aside and let her heart shine through.
+
+Lady Elspeth looked at him, then, for half a minute, with a starry
+twinkle, and then said, with a finality of conviction that made her
+dearer to him than ever--
+
+"Never!" and he kissed her hand with fervour,--and not ungracefully,
+since the action, though foreign to him, was absolutely spontaneous.
+
+"But--!" she said firmly. And he sat up.
+
+"But me no buts," he said. "And why?"
+
+"Well, you see, Margaret is by way of being an heiress--and you are
+not."
+
+"I'm sorry. But, you see, I couldn't very well be if I tried. Still
+I'm not absolutely penniless, and--"
+
+"Tuts, boy! What you have is just about enough to pay Jeremiah
+Pixley's servants' wages."
+
+"D-hang Jeremiah Pixley!"
+
+"D-hang is not a nice expression to use before a lady, let me tell
+you. What you have, as, I was saying, is just enough to make or mar
+you--"
+
+"It's going to make me. I can live on it till things begin to come my
+way."
+
+"Everyone writes nowadays," she said, with a dubious shake of the
+head. "Who reads all the books passes my comprehension. I suppose you
+have all just to buy one another's to make a bit of a living out of
+it."
+
+"Like those washing people! But it's not quite as bad as all that.
+There are still some intelligent people who buy books--good books, of
+course, I mean."
+
+"Not many, I'm afraid. They read reviews and chatter as though they'd
+read the books. And if they really want to read them they get them out
+of a library. You don't see bought books lying on the tables, as you
+used to do when I was a girl, and they were scarcer and dearer. How is
+this last one going?"
+
+"I have reason to believe my publishers are not absolutely
+broken-hearted over it, which leads me to think that they have
+probably done pretty well out of it. They are not what you might call
+a gushing race, you know, but they have given me a kind of cautious
+half-hint that they might not refuse to look at my next if I offered
+it to them on my bended knees. But let us get back to our--to Miss
+Brandt. I had no idea she was an heiress. I have really never thought
+of money in the matter, except as to how I could earn enough to offer
+it to her."
+
+"She has a fair portion--about two thousand a year, I believe. Her
+father was Danish Consul in Glasgow, and had a shipping business
+there. I should not be surprised if Mr. Pixley had views of his own
+concerning Margaret's portion and his son--and of course Margaret
+herself."
+
+"Will you permit me to say, 'Hang Mr. Pixley!' dear Lady Elspeth? It
+would be such a relief--if you're sure you don't mind."
+
+"You may say 'Hang Mr. Pixley!' though it is not an expression I am in
+the habit of using myself. But please don't begin it with a D."
+
+"Hang Mr. Pixley, and Mr. Pixley's son, and all his intentions!" he
+said fervently and with visible relish.
+
+"Yes," she nodded slowly, as though savouring it; and then added, with
+a delicious twinkle of the soft brown eyes, "There is something in
+that that appeals to me. Jeremiah Pixley is almost too good for this
+world. At least--"
+
+"He is absolutely unwholesomely good. My own private opinion is that
+he's a disreputable old blackg--I mean whited sepulchre."
+
+"Unwholesomely good!" She nodded again. "Yes,--that, I think, very
+fairly expresses him. 'Unco' guid,' we would say up north. But, all
+the same, he is Margaret's uncle and guardian and trustee. He is also
+the kind of man whom nothing can turn from a line he has once
+adopted."
+
+"I know. Pigheaded as a War-Office-mule," he side-tracked hastily.
+
+For she had looked at him with a momentary bristle of enquiry in the
+gentle brown eyes, and he remembered, just in time, that her husband
+had once held the reins in Pall Mall for half a year, when, feeling
+atrophy creeping on, he resigned office and died three months later.
+
+He hastened to add,--"The ordinary Army-mule, you know, is specially
+constructed with a cast-iron mouth, and a neck of granite, and a
+disposition like--like Mr. Pixley's. I imagine Mr. Pixley can be
+excessively unpleasant when he tries. To me he is excessively
+unpleasant even to think of, and without any exertion whatever on his
+part."
+
+"Yes. Mrs. Pixley would rather convey that impression. She is always
+depressed and apprehensive-looking. But she is very fond of Margaret,
+and that no doubt is why--But I suppose she really has no choice in
+the matter, until she comes of age--"
+
+"Mrs. Pixley?"
+
+"Until Margaret comes into her own she is no doubt obliged to submit
+to her guardian's views. It is difficult to imagine anyone not a
+Pixley living in the Pixley atmosphere of their own free will. What is
+the son like? I have only seen him once or twice. Does he take after
+his father?"
+
+"He's about twice as tall, and several times as wide in some respects,
+I should say,--certainly in the matter of the enjoyment of life. He's
+not bad-looking--in a kind of a way, you know,--that is, for those who
+like that kind of looks,--a trifle fleshy perhaps. But he's a fair
+dancer, and sings a song well, and can talk about nothing as nicely
+as any man I ever met. It's an accomplishment I often envy."
+
+"I wouldn't trouble about it, if I were you. There are things more
+worth doing in the world. And that reminds me. We were talking of your
+books. I've been wanting to tell you that your love-scenes are not
+altogether to my liking. They are just a little--well, not quite--"
+
+"Yes, I know," he said sadly. "You see, I lack experience in such
+things. Now, if Margaret--"
+
+"Don't tell me you want to use her simply as a model," she began, with
+another incipient gentle bristle.
+
+"I want her as a model and a great many other things besides, dear
+Lady Elspeth. I love Margaret Brandt with every atom of good that is
+in me."
+
+"And she?" with a nod and a sparkle.
+
+"Ah! There now--that's what I don't know. She's not one to wear her
+heart on her sleeve. At times I have dared to hope. Then again I have
+feared--"
+
+"That is quite right. That is quite as it should be. Anything more, so
+early as this, would imply unmaidenliness on her part."
+
+"Truly? You mean it? You are, without exception, the most charming old
+lady in the world! You relieve my mind immensely. You see, she is
+always so sweet and charming. But then she could not be anything
+else, and it may really mean nothing. Do you really think I may hope?"
+
+"'White-handed Hope, thou hovering angel, girt with golden wings,'"
+she quoted, with a smile.
+
+"That's Margaret," he murmured rapturously.
+
+"It's a poor kind of man that gives up hope until he lies in his
+coffin, and even then--" and she nodded thoughtfully, as though
+tempted to a descent into metaphysics.
+
+"Let us talk of bridal wreaths. They are very much nicer to think of
+than coffins when one is discussing Margaret Brandt."
+
+"She is very sweet and very beautiful--"
+
+"There never was anyone like her in this world--unless it was my
+mother and yourself."
+
+"Let Margaret be first with you, my boy. That also is as it should be.
+Neither your dear mother nor I stand in need of empty compliments.
+Margaret Brandt is worthy any good man's whole heart, and perhaps I
+can be of some help to you. But, all the same, remember what I've
+said. You may be too late in the field."
+
+"You are just the splendidest old lady in the world," he said
+exuberantly; and added, with a touch of gloom, "She was talking of
+going off to the Riviera."
+
+"Ah, then, I suppose I shall be in eclipse also, until she returns."
+
+"Oh no, you won't. We can talk of her, you know," at which Lady
+Elspeth's eyes twinkled merrily.
+
+"What would you say to convoying a troublesome old lady to the
+Riviera, yourself, Jock?"
+
+"You?" and he jumped up delightedly,--and just at that point old
+Hamish opened the door of the cosy room, and announced--
+
+"Miss Brandt, mem!"
+
+
+II
+
+"Miss Brandt, mem!" announced old Hamish, in as dry and matter-of-fact
+a voice as though it were only, "Here's the doctor, mem!" or "Dinner's
+ready, mem!" and Margaret herself came in, rosy-faced and bright-eyed
+from the kiss of the wind outside.
+
+Lady Elspeth laughed enjoyably at the sight of her, and touched the
+bell for tea.
+
+"You are always like a breath from the heather to me, my dear, or a
+glimpse of Schiehallion," said she, as they kissed, and Graeme stood
+reverently looking on, as at a holy rite.
+
+"Oh, surely I'm not as rugged and wrinkled as all that!" laughed
+Margaret. "And I certainly am not bald. How do you do, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"There is no need to ask you that question, at any rate," he said,
+with visible appreciation.
+
+"I have loved Schiehallion all my life," said Lady Elspeth. "To me
+there is no mountain in the world to compare with it. You see how
+one's judgment is biassed by one's affections. And how is Mrs. Pixley
+to-day, my dear?"
+
+"She is much as usual, dear Lady Elspeth. She is never very lively,
+you know. If anything, I think she is, perhaps, a trifle less lively
+than usual just now."
+
+"And Mr. Pixley is as busied in good works as ever, I suppose."
+
+"As busy as ever--outside,"--at which gentle thrust the others smiled.
+
+"It's all very well to laugh," remonstrated Margaret, "but truly, you
+know, philanthropy, like charity, would be none the less commendable
+to its relations if it sometimes remembered that it had a home. I
+sometimes think that if ever there was a deserving case it is poor
+Aunt Susan."
+
+"And young Mr. Pixley? Doesn't he liven you up?" asked Lady Elspeth.
+"He is very good company, I am told."
+
+"Oh, Charles is excellent company. If we didn't see him now and again
+the house would be like a tomb. But he's not there all the time, and
+we have relapses. He has his own rooms elsewhere, you know. And I'm
+really not surprised. It taxes even him to lighten the deadly dulness
+of Melgrave Square."
+
+"It must be a great comfort to Mrs. Pixley to have you with her, my
+dear."
+
+"I can't make up for all she lacks in other directions," said
+Margaret, with a shake of the head. "I get quite angry with Uncle
+Jeremiah sometimes. He is so--so absorbed in benefiting other people
+that he--Well, you can understand how delightful it is to be able to
+run in here and find the sun always shining."
+
+"Thank you, my dear," said Lady Elspeth, with a twinkle in the brown
+eyes. "Some people carry their own sunshine with them wherever they
+go."
+
+"And some people decidedly don't," said Margaret, who was evidently
+suffering from some unusual exhibition of Pixleyism.
+
+"It is generally possible to find a ray or so somewhere about, if you
+know where to look for it," suggested Graeme.
+
+"I was just accusing Jock of coming here as regularly as the milkman,"
+twinkled Lady Elspeth.
+
+"We have a community of tastes, you see," he said, looking across at
+Margaret. "I also have a craving for sunshine, and I naturally come
+where I know it is to be found," and Lady Elspeth's eyes twinkled
+knowingly again.
+
+"It's a good conceit of myself I'll be getting, if you two go on like
+this."
+
+"I'm quite sure you will never think half as well of yourself as your
+friends do," said Graeme.
+
+"Besides, you might even pass some of the credit on to us for the
+excellent taste we display."
+
+"Ay, ay! Well, it's good to be young," said Lady Elspeth.
+
+"And it's very good to have delightful old sunbeams for friends."
+
+"To say nothing of the young ones," laughed the old lady.
+
+"They speak for themselves."
+
+"We are becoming quite a mutual admiration society," said Margaret.
+"Have you been dining with your fellow Friars lately, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"I'm sorry to say I've been neglecting my privileges in that respect.
+I haven't been there for an age--not since that last Ladies' Dinner,
+in fact. You see, I'm an infant there yet, and I scarcely know
+anybody, and I've been very busy--"
+
+"Chasing sunbeams," suggested Lady Elspeth.
+
+"And other things."
+
+"You are busy on another book?" asked Margaret.
+
+"Just getting one under way. It takes a little time to get things into
+proper shape, but once it is going, the work is very absorbing and
+sheer delight. You were talking of going abroad again. Are you still
+thinking of it?"
+
+"I was hoping to get away. I wanted Aunt Susan to come with me to the
+Riviera, but she flatly refuses to leave home at present, so I'm
+afraid that's off."
+
+"Well, now, that's curious. I've been feeling something of an
+inclination that way myself," said Lady Elspeth. "I wonder if you'd
+feel like coming with me, Margaret. I don't believe we would quarrel."
+
+"Oh, I would be delighted, dear Lady Elspeth, and I'll promise not to
+quarrel whatever you do to me."
+
+"Who ever heard of sunbeams quarrelling?" said Graeme gaily, with Lady
+Elspeth's earlier suggestion to himself dancing in his brain. "But
+think of London left utterly sunless."
+
+"London will never miss us," said Margaret. "It still has bridge, and
+we are neither of us players."
+
+And then, having an appointment from which he could not escape, and
+knowing that they always enjoyed a little personal chat, he
+reluctantly took his leave, and left them to the discussion of their
+new plans.
+
+
+III
+
+He had met Margaret Brandt for the first time at a Ladies' Banquet of
+the Whitefriars Club.
+
+Providence,--I insist upon this. No mere chance set them next to one
+another at that hospitable board,--Providence, forecasting the future,
+placed them side by side, and he was introduced to her by his good
+friend Adam Black, who had the privilege of her acquaintance and sat
+opposite enjoying them greatly.
+
+For they were both eminently good to look upon;--Margaret, tall and
+slender, and of a most gracious figure and bearing, with thoughtful,
+dark-blue eyes, a very charming face accentuated by the
+characteristics of her northern descent, and a wealth of shining brown
+hair coiled about her shapely head;--Graeme, tall, clean-built, of an
+outdoor complexion, with nothing of the student about him save his
+deep, reflective eyes, and the little lines in the corners which
+wrinkled up so readily at the overflowing humours of life.
+
+It was Charles Pixley--Charles Svendt Pixley, to accord him fullest
+justice, which I am most anxious to do--who brought her, and to that
+extent we are his debtors.
+
+Though why Pixley should be a Whitefriar passes one's comprehension.
+His pretensions to literature were, I should say, bounded by his Stock
+Exchange notebook and his betting-book. He had not even read Graeme's
+latest, though it was genuinely in its second--somewhat
+limited--edition, and he did not even smile affably when Adam Black
+introduced them. Graeme, however, had no fault to find with him for
+that. There were others in like dismal case.
+
+Pixley nodded cursorily at the introduction, with a
+"How-d'ye-do-who-the-deuce-are-you?" expression on his face. He struck
+Graeme as not bad-looking, in a somewhat over-fed and self-indulgent
+fashion, and inclined to superciliousness and self-complacency, if not
+to actual superiority and condescension. It occurred to him afterwards
+that this might arise from his absorption in his companion, for he
+turned again at once to Miss Brandt and began chattering like a lively
+and intelligent parrot.
+
+Graeme was one of the silent and observant ones, and he could not but
+think how beneficent Nature is in casting us in many moulds. If we
+were all built alike, he thought, and all dribbled smart inanities,
+and nothing but inanities, with the glibness of a Charles Pixley, what
+a world it would be!
+
+However, it was Charles Pixley who brought Margaret Brandt to that
+dinner, and Graeme sat on the other side of her there. And so, Charles
+Svendt--blessings on thee, unworthy friar though thou be!
+
+And presently, Miss Brandt, wearying no doubt of _perdrix, perdrix,
+toujours perdrix_,--that is to say of Charles's sprightly chatter, of
+which she doubtless got more than enough at home,--essayed
+conversation with the silent one at her other side, and, one may
+suppose, found it more to her taste, or more of a novelty, than the
+Pixley outflow.
+
+For, once started, she and Graeme talked together most of the
+evening--breaking off reluctantly to drink various toasts to people in
+whom they had, at the moment, no remotest interest whatever, and
+recovering the thread of their conversation before they resumed their
+seats.
+
+Only one toast really interested Graeme, and that was "The Ladies--the
+Guests of the Evening"; and that he drank right heartily, with his
+eyes on Miss Brandt's sparkling face, and if it had been left to
+himself he would have converted it from plural to singular and drunk
+to her alone.
+
+Adam Black, excellent fellow, and gifted beyond most with wisdom and
+insight, and the condensed milk of human kindness, took upon himself
+the burden of Pixley, and engaged that eminent financier so deeply in
+talk concerning matters of import, that Miss Brandt and Graeme found
+themselves at liberty to enjoy one another to their hearts' content.
+
+They talked on many subjects--tentatively, and as sounding novel
+depths--in a way that occasioned one of them, at all events, very
+great surprise. Indeed, it seemed to him afterwards that, for a silent
+and observant man, he had been led into quite unwonted, but none the
+less very enjoyable, ways. He went home that night feeling very much
+as Columbus must have done when his New World swam before his eyes in
+misted glory. He too had sighted a new world. He had discovered
+Margaret Brandt.
+
+She had travelled widely over Europe, he learned, and was looking
+forward with eagerness to another tour in the near future. They
+discovered a common liking for many of the places she had visited.
+
+She was a wide and intelligent reader. To him it was a rare pleasure
+to meet one.
+
+"New places, and new books, and new people are always a joy to me,"
+she said, in a glow of naive enthusiasm. And then she blushed slightly
+lest he should discover a personal application in the last-named, or
+even in the last two.
+
+But Graeme was thinking of her, and was formulating her character from
+the delicious little bits of self-revelation which slipped out every
+now and again.
+
+"Yes," he said, "new things are very enjoyable, and in these times
+there is no lack of them. The tendency, I should say, is towards
+superfluity. But new places----! There are surely not many left except
+the North Pole and the South. Everybody goes everywhere nowadays, and
+you tumble over friends in Damascus and find your tailor picnicking on
+the slopes of Lebanon."
+
+Now, as it chanced,--if you admit such a thing as chance in so tangled
+a coil as this complex world of ours,--Adam Black had just tucked
+Charles Pixley into a close little argumentative corner, and given him
+food for contemplation, and catching Graeme's last remark, he smiled
+across the table, and in a word of four letters dropped a seed into
+several lives which bore odd fruit and blossom.
+
+"Ever been to Sark, Graeme?" he asked.
+
+"Sark? No. Let me see----"
+
+"Channel Islands. You go across from Guernsey. If ever you want relief
+from your fellows--to finish a book, or to start one, or just to
+grizzle and find yourself--try Sark. It's the most wonderful little
+place, and it's amazing how few people know it."
+
+Then Charles Pixley bethought him of a fresh line of argument, and
+engaged Black, and was promptly shown the error of his ways; and
+Margaret Brandt and Graeme resumed their discussion of places and
+books and people. And before that evening ended, with such affinity of
+tastes, their feet were fairly set in the rosy path of friendship.
+
+Now that is how it all began, and that explains what happened
+afterwards when the right time came.
+
+Chance, forsooth! We know better.
+
+
+IV
+
+Not long after that dinner, Lady Elspeth Gordon came up to town for
+the first time after her husband's death.
+
+She had been John Graeme's mother's closest friend, and when he was
+left alone in the world, the dear old lady, before she had fully
+recovered from her own sore loss, took upon herself a friendly
+supervision of him and his small affairs, and their intercourse was
+very delightful.
+
+For Lady Elspeth knew everybody worth knowing, and all that was to be
+known about the rest; and those gentle brown eyes of hers had missed
+little of what had gone on around her since she first came to London,
+fifty years before. She had known Wellington, and Palmerston, and John
+Russell, and Disraeli, and Gladstone, and Louis Napoleon, and
+Garibaldi, and many more. She was a veritable golden link with the
+past, and a storehouse of reminiscence and delightful insight into
+human nature.
+
+And--since she knew everyone worth knowing, Graeme very soon
+discovered that she knew Margaret Brandt, and Miss Brandt's very
+frequent visits to Phillimore Gardens proved that she was an
+acceptable visitor there.
+
+Upon that, his own visits to Lady Elspeth naturally became still more
+frequent than before,--approximating even, as she had said, the record
+of the milkman,--and, though his dear old friend might rate him gently
+as to the motives for his coming, he had every reason to believe that
+her sympathies were with him, and that she would do what she could to
+further his hopes.
+
+He had never, however, openly discussed Margaret with her until that
+afternoon of which I have already spoken.
+
+Miss Brandt, you see, was always most graciously kind and charming
+whenever they met. But that was just her natural self. She was
+charming and gracious to everyone--even to Charles Pixley, the while
+he swamped her with inane tittle-tattle, and higher proof of grace
+than that it would be difficult to imagine.
+
+And, since she was charming to all, Graeme felt that he could base no
+solid hopes on her gracious treatment of himself, though the quiet
+recollection of every smallest detail of it would set him all aglow
+with hope for days after each chance meeting. And so he had never
+ventured to discuss the matter with Lady Elspeth, and would not have
+done so that afternoon had she not herself opened it.
+
+The dear old lady's encouragement, however, deepened and strengthened
+his hopes, in spite of her insidious hints concerning Mr. Pixley's
+possible intentions. For she was a shrewd, shrewd woman, and those
+soft brown eyes of hers saw far and deep. And, since she bade him
+hope, hope he would, though every brick in London town became a Pixley
+set on thwarting him.
+
+The fact of Margaret's means being, for the present at all events, so
+much larger than his own, he would not allow to trouble him. It was
+Margaret herself he wanted, and had wanted long before he heard she
+had money. The troublesome accident of her possessions should not come
+between them if he could help it. He did not for one moment believe
+she would ever think so ill of him as to believe that he wanted her
+for anything but herself. And in any case, if kind Providence bestowed
+her upon him, he would insist on her money being all settled on
+herself absolutely and irrevocably.
+
+Since that never-to-be-forgotten dinner, they had come across one
+another at Lady Elspeth's with sufficient frequency to open the eyes
+of that astute old lady to the heart-state of one of them at all
+events. Possibly she knew more of the heart and mind of the other than
+she cared to say in plain words; but, as a woman, she would naturally
+abide by the rules of the game. In the smaller games of life it is
+woman's privilege, indeed, to stretch and twist all rules to suit her
+own convenience, but in this great game of love, woman stands by woman
+and the womanly rules of the game--unless, indeed, she craves the
+stakes for herself, in which case----
+
+And so--although Lady Elspeth favoured him, that afternoon, only with
+vague generalities as to the pleasures of hope, and afforded him no
+solid standing-ground for the sole of his hopeful foot, but left him
+to discover that for himself, as was only right and proper--his heart
+stood high, and he looked forward with joyous anticipation to the
+future.
+
+The radiant sun of all his rosy heavens was Margaret Brandt, and he
+would not for one moment admit the possibility of its clouding by
+anything of the name of Pixley.
+
+
+V
+
+Graeme had not the entree of the Pixley mansion.
+
+Mr. Pixley he knew, by repute only, as the head of Pixley's, the great
+law-firm, in Lincoln's Inn. Mrs. Pixley he had never met.
+
+Mr. Pixley was a bright and shining light--yea, a veritable
+light-house--of respectability and benevolence, and bushel coverings
+were relegated to their proper place outside his scheme of life. His
+charities were large, wide-spread, religiously advertised in the
+donation columns of the daily papers, and doubtless palliated the
+effects of multitudes of other people's sins.
+
+He was a church-warden, president and honorary treasurer of numerous
+philanthropical societies--in a word, at once a pillar and
+corner-stone of his profession, his church, and his country.
+
+He was also a smug little man with a fresh, well-fed face, bordered by
+a touch of old-fashioned, gray side-whisker, rather outstanding blue
+eyes, and he carried, and sometimes used as it was intended to be
+used, a heavy gold pince-nez, which more frequently, however, acted as
+a kind of lightning-conductor for the expression of his feelings. A
+pince-nez of many parts:--now it was a scalping-knife, slaughtering
+the hopes of some harried victim of the law; and again, it was a baton
+beating time to a hymn or the National Anthem; possibly it was, in
+moments of relaxation, a jester's wand poking fun at ancient cronies,
+though indeed a somewhat full-blooded imagination is required for
+that. I have heard that once when, in the fervour of a speech, Mr.
+Pixley dropped his pince-nez among the reporters below, he was utterly
+unable to continue until the fetish was recovered and handed back to
+him. It is an undoubted fact that though you might forget the exact
+lines of Mr. Pixley's face and even his words, you never forgot the
+fascinating evolutions of his heavy gold pince-nez. Like a Frenchman's
+hands, it told even more than his face or his words.
+
+He had a good voice, and a deportment which had, without doubt, been
+specially created for the chairmanship of public meetings. And he was
+Margaret Brandt's uncle by marriage, her guardian and trustee, and the
+father of Charles Svendt, on whose account Lady Elspeth had thought
+well to throw out warning hints of possible paternal intentions
+respecting Margaret and her fortune.
+
+From every point of view Graeme detested Mr. Pixley, though he had
+never passed a word with him. He was too perfect, too immaculate. His
+"unco' guidness," as Lady Elspeth would have said, bordered on
+ostentation. The sight and sound of him aroused in some people a wild
+inclination towards unaccustomed profanity and wallowing in the mire.
+He was so undisguisedly and self-satisfiedly better than his fellows
+that one felt his long and flawless life almost in the nature of a
+rebuke if not an affront. He was too obtrusively good for this world.
+One could not but feel that if he had been cut off in his youth, and
+buried under a very white marble slab and an appropriate inscription,
+both he and the world would have been far more comfortably
+circumstanced. And John Graeme devoutly wished he had been so
+favoured, for, in that case, he could neither have been Margaret's
+uncle, trustee, nor guardian, and it is possible that there would also
+have been no Charles Svendt Pixley to trouble the course of his own
+true love.
+
+But of Charles Svendt I have no harsh word to say. He could not help
+being his father's son, and one must not blame him for the
+unavoidable. And, in most respects, he was as unlike his worthy parent
+as circumstances permitted.
+
+He was on the Stock Exchange and doing well there. He had very
+comfortable rooms near St. James's Square, and enjoyed life in his own
+way and at his own not inconsiderable expense. When Margaret Brandt
+was at home, however, he was much at his father's house in Melgrave
+Square.
+
+He made no pretence to unco' guidness whatever. He subscribed to
+nothing outside the House, with two exceptions--the Dogs' Home at
+Battersea, and the Home of Rest for Aged Horses at Acton--signs of
+grace both these offerings, I take it!
+
+To all other demands he invariably replied,--"Can't burn the candle
+at both ends, my dear sir. The governor charitables for the whole
+family. He'll give you something if you'll let him head the list and
+keep it standing."
+
+No, we have no fault to find with Charles Svendt. Time came when he
+was weighed and not found wanting.
+
+Graeme and he had run across one another occasionally--at the
+Travellers' Club and elsewhere--but their acquaintance had never
+ripened to the point of introduction till that night at the
+Whitefriars' dinner. After that they were on nodding terms, but not
+much more, until--well, until later.
+
+So, though there was hope in his heart, born of Lady Elspeth's
+approval and quiet suggestings, John Graeme was still somewhat
+doubtful as to Margaret Brandt's feelings towards him, and quite at a
+loss how to arrive at a more exact knowledge of them.
+
+Too precipitate an advance might end in utter rout. And opportunities
+of approach were all too infrequent for his wishes.
+
+Their chance meetings were rare and exquisite pleasures,--to be looked
+forward to with an eagerness that held within it the strange
+possibility of pain through sheer excess of longing;--to be enjoyed
+like the glory of a fleeting dream;--to be looked back upon with
+touches of regret at opportunities missed;--to be dwelt upon for days
+and nights with alternate hope and misgiving, with the rapturous
+recalling of every tone of the sweet voice, of every word it had
+uttered, of every gracious gesture, and every most minute and subtle
+change in the sweetest face and the frankest and most charming eyes in
+the world.
+
+
+VI
+
+Their acquaintance had blossomed thus far, when a dire disaster
+happened and justified all his fears.
+
+He ran gaily up the steps of Lady Elspeth's house one afternoon,
+brimming with hope that kindly fortune might bring Margaret that way
+that day, and was hurled into deepest depths of despair by old Hamish
+as soon as he opened the door.
+
+"Ech, Mr. Graeme!" said the old man, with his grizzled old face tuned
+to befitting concern. "Her leddyship's awa' to Inverstrife at a
+moment's notice. She had a tailegram late last night saying the little
+leddy--the Countess, ye ken--was very bad, and would she go at once.
+And she and Jannet were off by the first train this morning. They aye
+send for us, ye ken, when anything by-ordinar's to the fore. It's the
+little leddy's first, ye understand, and ye'll mind that her own
+mother died two years ago."
+
+"Well, well! I'm sorry you've had such an upsetting, Hamish. And
+there's no knowing when Lady Elspeth will return, I suppose?"
+
+"It a' depends on the little leddy, Mr. Graeme. Her leddyship will
+stay till everything's all right, ye may depend upon that. She told me
+to give you her kindest regairds and beg you to excuse her not
+writing. They were all on their heads, so to speak, as ye can
+understand."
+
+"Yes, of course. Well, we must just hope the little lady will pull
+through all right. If I don't hear from Lady Elspeth I will call now
+and again for your latest news."
+
+"Surely, sir. Jannet'll be letting me know, if her leddyship's too
+busy. Miss Brandt was here about hauf an hour ago," he added, with
+unmoved face;--to think of any man, even so ancient a man as old
+Hamish, being able to state a fact so great as that with unmoved face!
+And there was actually no sign of reminiscent and lingering after-glow
+perceptible in him!--but Graeme was not at all sure that there was not
+a veiled twinkle away down in the depths of his little blue-gray eyes.
+
+"Ah! Miss Brandt has been here! She would be surprised too----"
+
+"She was that, sir,--and a bit disappointed, it seemed to me----"
+
+Yes, there _was_ a twinkle in the old fellow's eyes! Oh, he knew, he
+knew without a doubt. Trust old Hamish for not missing much that was
+to the fore. He and his old wife, Jannet Gordon, had been in Lady
+Elspeth's service for over forty years, ever since her leddyship
+married into the family, and Lady Elspeth trusted them both implicitly
+and discussed most matters very freely with them. The dilatations of
+those three shrewd old people, concerning things in general, and the
+men and women of their acquaintance in particular, would have been
+rare, rare hearing.
+
+"Well, I'll call again in a day or two, Hamish," and he went away
+along the gloomy streets, which were all ablaze with soft April
+sunshine, and yet to him had suddenly become darkened. For he saw at a
+glance all that this was like to do for him.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE SECOND
+
+
+I
+
+The rare delight of his meetings with Margaret was at an end. Bluff
+Fortune had slammed the door in his face, and White-handed Hope had
+folded her golden wings and sat moping with melancholy mien.
+
+He wandered into Kensington Gardens, but the daffodils swung their
+heads despondently, and the gorgeous masses of hyacinths made him
+think of funeral plumes on horses' heads.
+
+He went on into the Park. She might be driving there, and he might
+catch glimpse of her. But she was not, and all the rest were less than
+nothing to him.
+
+He found himself at Hyde Park Corner and back again at Kensington
+Gate. But the door was still closed in his face, and he longed for the
+sight of somebody else's as he had never longed before.
+
+The post was of course open to him, but, at this stage at all events,
+he felt that the written word would be eminently inadequate and
+unsatisfying.
+
+He wanted, when he approached that mighty question, to look into her
+eyes and see her answer in their pure depths before it reached her
+lips,--to watch the fluttering heart-signals in her sweet face and
+learn from them more than all the words in the world could tell.
+Letters were, at best, to actual speech but as actual speech would be
+to all that his heart-quickened eyes would discover if he could but
+ask her face to face.
+
+And besides--he would have wished to make his footing somewhat surer
+before putting everything to the test.
+
+But, since matters had gone thus far, it was quite out of the question
+to let them stop there unresolved. Either the precious cargo must be
+brought safely into port or the derelict must be sunk and the fairway
+cleared. The question was--how to proceed?
+
+The unwritten laws of social usage would hardly permit him to carry
+the Pixley mansion by assault and insist on seeing Miss Brandt.
+Besides, that might expose her to annoyance, and that he would not
+upon any consideration.
+
+And so, before he reached his rooms, his mind was groping clumsily
+after written phrases which should in some sort express that which was
+in him without saying too much too soon,--which should delicately hint
+his regrets at this sudden curtailment of their acquaintance, and
+leave it for her to say whether or no she regarded the matter in the
+same light.
+
+Lady Elspeth's sudden summons to the north furnished an acceptable
+text. Margaret was not to know that he knew of her call at Phillimore
+Gardens. It was surely but a friendly act on his part to inform her of
+a matter so nearly concerning one who was dear to them both.
+
+It took a considerable time, however, and the expenditure of much
+thought and ink and paper, before he succeeded in producing a letter
+in any degree to his liking. And even when it was written many
+perusals only served to deepen his doubts.
+
+In any case, it was the best he could do under the circumstances, and
+since he could not see her answer in her eyes or in her face, the
+words she would send him in reply would surely afford his quickened
+perceptions some indication of her feeling, though nothing to what her
+presence would have told him.
+
+So he wrote--
+
+ "Dear Miss Brandt,--When I called at Lady Elspeth Gordon's this
+ afternoon, I learned, to my very great regret, in which I dare
+ to hope you may participate, that our dear old friend had been
+ summoned to Inverstrife at almost a moment's notice, by the
+ sudden illness of her niece, the Countess of Assynt.
+
+ "I trust her visit may not need to be a very extended one, but
+ Lady Elspeth is such a tower of strength to all who seek her
+ help that she is not likely to return so long as she can be of
+ any possible assistance to her friends.
+
+ "For reasons which, perhaps, I need not particularise, her
+ sudden departure is to me a loss beyond its apparent magnitude.
+ The hours I have spent at her house have been among the
+ brightest of my life. You also have enjoyed her friendship. I
+ venture to hope that you also will miss her.
+
+ "Should I not have the pleasure of seeing you for some little
+ time, I would beg of you to bear me in your kindly
+ remembrance.--Sincerely yours,
+
+ "JOHN C. GRAEME."
+
+Did it say too much? Would she look upon it as an overstepping of the
+limits their acquaintance had reached?
+
+Did it say enough? Could she possibly overlook the things he would so
+dearly have liked to say but had left unsaid?
+
+Did it say too little? Could she possibly deem it an unnecessary
+liberty, and cold at that? He did not think she could by any
+possibility look at it in that light.
+
+But after it was at last surely lodged in the pillar-box, all these
+doubts came back upon him with tenfold force, and his sleep that night
+would have been short-commons for a nightingale.
+
+She would get his letter by the first post in the morning. Would she
+answer it at once? Or would she wait half a day considering it?
+
+Either course held hopeful possibilities. A prompt answer would
+surely suggest a concurrence of feeling. An answer delayed would
+without doubt mean that she was pondering his words and reading
+between the lines. So he possessed his soul in patience, of a somewhat
+attenuated texture, and waited in hope.
+
+But the whole day passed, and the night, and the next morning's post
+still brought him nothing,--nothing but an intimation from a publisher
+of excellent standing that he would not decline to look over the
+manuscript of his next book if he was open to an offer. And this
+important document he tossed on one side as lightly as if it were a
+begging letter or a tailor's advertisement.
+
+What were any other letters, or all the letters in the world, to him
+when the one letter he desired was not there?
+
+All that bright April day he waited indoors, in order to get
+Margaret's letter the moment it arrived. For how should he wander
+abroad, in gloomy-blazing streets or desolate-teeming parks with that
+anxiously-expected letter possibly awaiting him at home?
+
+The callous passage of the last post, after knocking cheerfully at
+every door but his own, left him wondering and desperate.
+
+Could he by any possibility have addressed his letter wrongly? It was
+not easy to make a mistake in No. 1 Melgrave Square.
+
+Could it have gone astray? The Post Office was abominably careless at
+times. One was constantly hearing of letters slipping down behind
+desks and monstrously delivered twenty years after date. What earthly
+good would that letter be delivered when he was forty-seven and
+Margaret Brandt somewhere in the neighbourhood of forty? Truly, it was
+monstrous, it was abominable that such carelessness should be
+permitted in the public departments!
+
+Could Margaret have taken umbrage at anything he had said? He conned
+his rough draft with solicitous care. It seemed new and strange and
+crude to him. He feared at each word to come upon the one that might
+have offended her. But no word, no phrase, nothing even of all that he
+had left unsaid sprang up before his horrified eyes to choke him with
+a sense of inadequacy, or inadvertency, or trespass.
+
+No sleep got he that night for cudgelling his tired brains for reasons
+why no answer had come from Margaret.
+
+Could she be ill? She was well enough, two days before, to call at
+Lady Elspeth's house. But, of course, even in a day one may take a
+chill and be prostrated.
+
+The possibility of that was brought home to him next morning by his
+landlady's surprised stare and exclamation at sight of his face.
+
+"Law, Mr. John!"--she had been handmaid to his mother for many years
+and he was still always Mr. John to her,--"Have you got the influenza
+too? Everyone seems to have it nowadays."
+
+He reassured her on the point. But every friend he met that day
+credited him with it, and suggested remedies and precautions
+sufficient to have made an end of any ordinary man.
+
+He was vexed to think his face so clear an index of his feelings, but,
+truly, his spirits were none of the best and the weather was
+enervatingly warm.
+
+It was quite inconceivable to him that Margaret Brandt should, of
+knowledge and intention, drop their pleasant acquaintance in this
+fashion. He believed he knew her well enough to know that, even if she
+had any fault to find with his letter, she would still have replied to
+it, and would have delicately conveyed her feeling in her answer.
+
+Then, either she had never received it, or, for some good reason or
+other, she was unable to reply.
+
+He went down to Melgrave Square to make sure that No. 1 was still
+there. Possibly he might come across Margaret in the neighbourhood. If
+he did he would know at a glance if she had received his letter.
+
+But No. 1 offered him no explanations. It stood as usual, large and
+prim and precise, the very acme of solid, sober wealth and assertive
+moral rectitude. He was strongly tempted to call and ask for Miss
+Brandt, but it was only ten o'clock in the morning, and the house
+looked so truly an embodiment in stucco of Mrs. Grundy and Jeremiah
+Pixley, that he forbore and went on his melancholy way.
+
+First, to his rooms again, to see if by chance the letter had come in
+his absence. Then, as it had not, to Lady Elspeth Gordon's for old
+Hamish's latest news, which, in a letter from his wife, was
+satisfactory as far as it went, but pointed to a protracted stay. And
+then, with stern resolution, up to Baker Street and away by train to
+Chesham, for a long day's tramp through the Buckingham hills and
+dales, by Chenies to Chorley Wood and Rickmansworth, so to weary the
+body that the wearier brain should get some rest that night.
+
+The sweet soft air and sunshine, the leisurely life of the villages,
+and the cheerful unfoldings of the spring, in wood and field and
+hedgerow, brought him to a more hopeful frame of mind. Every sparrow
+twittered hope. The thrushes and young blackbirds fluted it
+melodiously. It was impossible to remain unhopeful in such goodly
+company. Something unexpected, accidental, untoward, had prevented
+Margaret replying to his letter. Time would clear it up and set him
+wondering at his lapse from fullest faith.
+
+Also--he would risk even further rebuff. He would write again, and
+this time he would trust no precarious and problematical post-office.
+He would drop his letter into the Pixley letter-box himself, and so be
+sure that it got there.
+
+If then no answer,--to the winds with Mrs. Grundy and all her coils
+and conventions! He would call and see Margaret himself, and learn
+from her own eyes and face and lips how matters stood, and Mrs. Grundy
+might dance and scream on the step outside until she grew tired of the
+exercise.
+
+There was joy and hope in action once more. Patient waiting on
+slowly-dying Hope is surely the direst moral and mental torture to
+which poor humanity can be subjected. That is where woman
+pre-eminently overpasses man. Woman can wait unmurmuringly on dying
+Hope till the last breath is gone, then silently take up her burden
+and go on her way--or, if the strain has been too great, fold quiet
+hands on quiet heart and follow her dead hopes into the living hope
+beyond. Man must aye be doing--and as often as not, such natural
+judgment as he possesses being warped and jangled by the strain of
+waiting, he succeeds only in making matters worse and a more complete
+fool of himself.
+
+To be writing to Margaret again was to be living in hope once more.
+
+If nothing came of this, he would call at the Pixley house.
+
+If nothing came of that--he grew valiant in his new access of life--he
+would beard Jeremiah Pixley in his den in Lincoln's Inn, state clearly
+how matters stood, and request permission to approach his ward.
+
+After all, this is a free country, and all men are equal under the
+law, though he had his own doubts as to whether he would find himself
+quite equal to that gleaming pillar of light, Mr. Jeremiah Pixley.
+
+So he wrote--
+
+ "DEAR MISS BRANDT,--I wrote to you a few days ago, giving you
+ the information of our dear friend Lady Elspeth's sudden summons
+ to Inverstrife, to attend her niece, the Countess of Assynt.
+
+ "I hope you will not consider it presumption on my part to
+ express the fear that my letter has somehow miscarried--probably
+ through some oversight of my own, or carelessness on the part of
+ the postal authorities.
+
+ "You will, I know, be glad to hear that Lady Elspeth
+ accomplished her journey in safety and without undue discomfort.
+ But Lady Assynt's condition makes it probable that her stay may
+ be somewhat prolonged.
+
+ "I venture to hope that you may regret this as much as I do. All
+ who enjoyed Lady Elspeth's friendship and hospitality cannot but
+ miss her sorely.
+
+ "I hope, however, that I may still have the pleasure of meeting
+ you occasionally elsewhere. When one has not the habit of
+ readily making new friendships one clings the more firmly to
+ those already made.--Sincerely yours,
+
+ "JOHN C. GRAEME."
+
+That letter he dropped into the Pixley letterbox himself that night,
+and so was assured of its delivery. But two days passed in waning
+hope, and the afternoon of the third found him on the doorstep of No.
+1 Melgrave Square.
+
+
+II
+
+"Miss Brandt?"
+
+The solemn-faced man-servant eyed him suspiciously as a stranger. He
+looked, to Graeme, like a superannuated official of the Court of
+Chancery.
+
+"Miss Brandt is not at home, sir."
+
+"Mrs. Pixley?"
+
+"Mrs. Pixley is not at home, sir."
+
+Was he right or wrong, he wondered, in thinking he detected a gleam of
+satisfied anticipation, of gratified understanding, in the solemn
+one's otherwise rigid eye--as of one who had been told to expect this
+and was lugubriously contented that it had duly come to pass?
+
+However, there was nothing more to be done there at the moment. The
+polite conventions, to say nothing of the law, forbade him the
+pleasure of hurling the outcast of Chancery into the kennel and
+forcing his way in. Instead, he hailed a hansom and drove straight to
+Lincoln's Inn, boldly demanded audience of Mr. Pixley on pressing
+private business, and presently found himself in the presence.
+
+Mr. Pixley stood on the hearthrug with his back to the fire, and
+handled his gold pince-nez defensively.
+
+Here also Graeme had an intuition that he was expected, which was
+somewhat odd, you know, unless his letters had been handed to Mr.
+Pixley for perusal, which did not seem likely.
+
+Mr. Pixley bowed formally and he responded--the salute before the
+click of the foils.
+
+Mr. Pixley stood expectant, but by no means inviting of confidences
+such as his visitor was about to tender him. Rather he seemed fully
+armed for the defence, especially in the matter of the heavy gold
+pince-nez, which he held threateningly, after the manner of the
+headsman of old towards the victim on whom he was about to operate.
+
+"I have taken the liberty of calling, Mr. Pixley," said Graeme,--and
+Mr. Pixley's manner in subtle fashion conveyed his full recognition of
+the fact that liberty it undoubtedly was, and that he had no smallest
+shadow of a right to be there,--"to inquire after Miss Brandt."
+
+"Miss Brandt?" said Mr. Pixley vaguely, as though the name were new
+and strange to him. Or perhaps it was an endeavour on his part to
+express the impassable gulf which lay between his visitor and his
+ward, and the profound amazement he felt at any attempt on his
+visitor's part to abridge it. He also made a little involuntary
+preliminary cut at him with the pince-nez, as much as to say, "If this
+my weapon were of a size commensurate with my wishes and your
+colossal impudence, your head would lie upon the ground, young man."
+
+"I have had the pleasure of meeting Miss Brandt at Lady Elspeth
+Gordon's and elsewhere. I think I may claim that we were on terms of
+friendship. Lady Elspeth has been called from home very suddenly to
+the bedside of her niece, Lady Assynt, and I have written twice to
+Miss Brandt and have had no reply. It struck me that she might be ill
+and I have called to inquire."
+
+This was all lame enough no doubt, and so he felt it, but it was only
+in the nature of preliminary feinting. They were not yet at grips.
+
+"Ah!" with ponderous deliberation, "you have called to inquire if Miss
+Brandt is ill. I have pleasure in informing you that she is not."
+
+"I am glad to hear that, at all events. Might I ask if you are aware
+of any reason why she should not have received my letters--or replied
+to them?"
+
+"Two questions," said Mr. Pixley, cutting them in slices with his
+pince-nez, as though they were to be charged up to his visitor at so
+much per pound. "There is no reason whatever why Miss Brandt should
+not have received your letters. There may be the best possible reasons
+why she should not reply to them."
+
+"So far as I have been able to form an opinion of Miss Brandt it is
+quite unlike her not to have, at all events, acknowledged them."
+
+"Ah! Your opportunities have probably been limited, Mr.--er--"--with
+a glance at the card--"Graeme, and you may possibly be--from your
+calling upon me I judge you undoubtedly are--ignorant of the facts of
+the case," and the gold pince-nez hammered that into the stolid young
+man's head.
+
+"Perhaps you would be so good as to enlighten me."
+
+"It would perhaps be as well to do so. To be perfectly frank with you,
+Mr. Graeme, my ward had the very best of reasons for handing your
+letters to me and not replying to them herself."
+
+"Really! I would esteem it a favour, Mr. Pixley, if you would
+enlighten me further."
+
+"Certainly!" with an airy wave of the pince-nez. "I intend to do so.
+The simple fact of my ward's engagement to my son, and that they are
+looking forward to the celebration of their marriage in something less
+than three months, will probably suffice to explain Miss Brandt's
+disinclination to enter into correspondence with a comparative
+stranger,"--and the pince-nez shredded Graeme's hopes into little
+pieces and scattered them about the floor.
+
+"Miss Brandt is engaged to your son?" he jerked, feeling not a little
+foolish, and decidedly downhearted.
+
+"As I have informed you. It is a union to which we have been looking
+hopefully forward for some time past--a most excellent conjunction of
+hearts and fortunes. My ward possesses some means, as you are
+doubtless aware,"--with an insolent thrust of the pince-nez at the
+would-be suitor's honour,--"and my son is also well provided for in
+that respect."
+
+"Then--I am afraid my visit is something in the nature of an
+intrusion." Mr. Pixley bowed his fullest acquiescence in this very
+proper estimate of his position, and the pince-nez intimated that the
+way out lay just behind him and that the sooner he took advantage of
+it the better.
+
+"I can only say, by way of apology," added Graeme, "that I was wholly
+unaware of what you have just told me. I will wish you good-day, Mr.
+Pixley."
+
+Mr. Pixley and the pince-nez wafted him towards the door, and the
+lumpy cobbles of the courtyard outside seemed to him, for the moment,
+absolutely typical of life.
+
+He went back home numbed and sore at heart. It was hard to believe
+this of Margaret Brandt.
+
+And yet--he said to himself--it was wholly he who was to blame. He had
+deceived himself. He had wished to believe what he had so earnestly
+desired should be. Possibly he had closed his eyes to facts and
+indications which might have enlightened him if he had been on the
+look-out for them. Possibly--well, there!--he had played the fool
+unconsciously, and he was not the first. It only remained for him now
+to play the man.
+
+He felt sore, and bruised, and run down, and for the moment somewhat
+at odds with life. He would get away from it all to some remote
+corner, to rest for a time and recover tone, and then to work. For
+work, after all, is the mighty healer and tonic, and when it is to
+one's taste there are few wounds it cannot salve.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE THIRD
+
+
+I
+
+Six o'clock next morning found Graeme on the deck of the _Ibex_ as she
+threaded her way swiftly among the bristling black rocks that guard
+the coast of Guernsey.
+
+Herm and Jethou lay sleeping in the eye of the sun. Beyond them lay a
+filmy blue whaleback of an island which he was told was Sark, and it
+was to Sark he was bound.
+
+And wherefore Sark, when, within reasonable limits, all the wide world
+lay open to him?
+
+Truly, it might not be easy to say. But this I know,--having so far
+learned the lesson of life, though missing much else--that at times,
+perhaps at all times, when we think our choice of ways our very
+own,--when we stand in doubt at the crossroads of life, and then
+decide on this path or that, and pride ourselves on the exercise of
+our high prerogative as free agents,--the result, when we look back,
+bears in upon our hearts the mighty fact that a higher mind than our
+own has been quietly at work, shaping our ends and moulding and
+rounding our lives. We may doubt it at times. We may take all the
+credit to ourselves for dangers passed and tiny victories won, but in
+due time the eyes of our understanding are opened--and we know.
+
+Possibly it was the rapt eulogiums of his friend Black--who had spent
+the previous summer in Sark, and had ever since been seeking words
+strong enough in which to paint its charms--that forced its name to
+the front when he stood facing the wide world, that lacked, for him at
+all events, a Margaret Brandt, and was therefore void and desolate.
+
+"If ever you seek perfect peace, relief from your fellows, and the
+simple life, try Sark--and see that you live in a cottage!" he
+remembered Adam Black murmuring softly, as they sat smoking at the
+Travellers' one night, shortly after that memorable dinner of the
+Whitefriars'. And then he had heaved a sigh of regret at thought of
+being where he was when he might have been in Sark.
+
+Graeme knew nothing whatever of Sark save what his friend had let fall
+at times. "Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark," recalled his
+short-jacket and broad-collar days, and the last of the quartette had
+always somehow conjured up in his mind the image of a bleak,
+inaccessible rock set in a stormy sea, where no one lived if he could
+possibly find shelter elsewhere,--an Ultima Thule, difficult of access
+and still more difficult of exit, a weather-bound little spot into
+which you scrambled precariously by means of boats and ladders, and
+out of which you might not be able to get for weeks on end.
+
+But Sark was to hold a very different place in his mind henceforth.
+The name of Calais burnt itself into the heart of Queen Mary by reason
+of loss. Surely on John Graeme's heart the name of Sark may hope to
+find itself in living letters, for in Sark he was to find more than he
+had lost--new grace and charm in life, new hopes, new life itself.
+
+He had gone straight home from Lincoln's Inn, and packed his
+portmanteau, knowing only that he was going away somewhere out of
+things, caring little where, so long as it was remote and lonely.
+
+Fellow-man--and especially woman--was distasteful to him at the
+moment. He craved only Solitude the Soother, and Nature the Healer.
+
+He packed all he thought he might need for a couple of months' stay,
+and among other things the manuscript he had been at work upon until
+more pressing matters intervened. He felt, indeed, no slightest
+inclination towards it, or anything else, at present. But that might
+come, for Work and he were tried friends.
+
+He wrote briefly to Lady Elspeth telling her how things were with him,
+and that he was going away for a time. He did not tell her where, for
+the simple reason that at the moment of writing he did not know
+himself. Sark came into his mind later.
+
+He told his landlady that he was going away for a change, and she
+remarked in motherly fashion that she was glad to hear it, and it was
+high time too. He told her to keep all his letters till he sent for
+them. He had no importunate correspondents, his next book was as good
+as placed, and all he desired at the moment was to cut the painter,
+and drift into some quiet backwater where he could lie up till life
+should wear a more cheerful face.
+
+And so no single soul knew where he had gone, and he said to himself,
+somewhat bitterly, and quite untruthfully, that no single soul cared.
+
+He had paced the deck all night. The swift smooth motion of the boat,
+with a slight slow roll in it, was very soothing; and the first
+tremulous hints of the dawn, and the wonder of its slow unfolding, and
+the coming of the sun were things to be remembered.
+
+The cold gaunt aloofness, and weltering loneliness of the Casquets
+appealed to him strongly. Just the kind of place, he said to himself,
+for a heart-sick traveller to crawl into and grizzle until he found
+himself again.
+
+As they turned and swung in straight between the little lighthouse on
+White Rock and Castle Cornet, the bright early sunshine was bathing
+all the rising terraces of St. Peter Port in a golden haze. Such a
+quaint medley of gray weathered walls and mellowed red roofs, from
+which the thin blue smoke of early fires crept lazily up to mingle
+with the haze above! Such restful banks of greenery! Such a startling
+blaze of windows flashing back unconscious greetings to the sun! This
+too was a sight worth remembering. For a wounded soul he was somewhat
+surprised at the enjoyment these things afforded him.
+
+A further surprise was the pleasure he found in the reduction of a
+hearty appetite at an hotel on the front. Come! He was not as hard hit
+as he had thought! There was life in the young dog yet.
+
+But these encouraging symptoms were doubtless due to the temporary
+exhilaration of the journey. The workaday bustle of the quays renewed
+his desire for the solitary places, and he set out to find means of
+transport to the little whalebacked island out there in the golden
+shimmer of the sun.
+
+There was no steamer till the following day, he learned, and delay was
+not to his mind. So presently he came to an arrangement with an
+elderly party in blue, with a red-weathered face and grizzled hair, to
+put him and his two portmanteaux across to Sark for the sum of five
+shillings English.
+
+"To Havver Gosslin," said the aged mariner, with much emphasis, and a
+canny look which conveyed to Graeme nothing more than a simple and
+praiseworthy desire on his part to avoid any possibility of mistake.
+
+"To Sark," said Graeme, with equal emphasis.
+
+"Ay, ay!" said the other; and so it came that the new-comer's initial
+experience of the little island went far towards the confirmation of
+the vague ideas of his childhood as to its inaccessibility.
+
+The ancient called to a younger man, and they strolled away along the
+harbour wall to get the baggage.
+
+
+II
+
+"Ee see," said the old gentleman, as soon as they had pulled out past
+Castle Cornet, and had hoisted the masts and two rather dirty sprit
+sails, and had run out the bowsprit and a new clean jib with a view to
+putting the best possible face on matters, and were beginning to catch
+occasional puffs of a soft westerly breeze and to wallow slowly
+along,--"Ee see, time's o' consekens to me and my son. We got to arn
+our livin'. An' Havver Gosslin's this side the island an' th' Creux's
+t'other side, an' th' currents round them points is the very divvle."
+
+"That's all right, as long as you land me in Sark."
+
+"The very divvle," and the grizzled head wagged reminiscently. "I seen
+'em go right up to Casquets and haf-way to Jarsey trying to get across
+to Sark. An' when time's o' consekens an' you got to arn your livin',
+you don' want to be playin' 'bout Casquets an' Jarsey 'stid of gittin'
+'cross to Sark an' done wi' it."
+
+"Not a bit of it. You're quite right. Try some of this,"--as he began
+fumbling meaningly with a black stump of a pipe.
+
+He filled up, and passed on the pouch to his son, who was lying on the
+thwarts forward, and he also filled up and passed it back with a nod.
+
+"What's this?" asked Graeme.
+
+"Jetto. Mr. Lee--Sir Austin 'e is now--brother o' Passon Lee o' the
+Port," with a backward jerk of the head, "'e rents it."
+
+"Live there?"
+
+"Naw--rabbits."
+
+"And the bigger island yonder?"
+
+"'At's Harm. 'T's a Garman man has that--Prince Bloocher, they calls
+him. Keeps kangyroos there an' orstrichers an' things. Don't let
+annybody ashore there now 'cept just to Shell Beach, which he can't
+help."
+
+They struck straight across to the long high-ridged island in front,
+and Graeme's untutored eyes found no special beauty in it.
+
+There was about it, however, a vague gray aloofness which chimed with
+his spirit, a sober austerity as of a stricken whale,--a mother-whale
+surely, for was not her young one there at her nose,--fled here to
+heal her wound perchance, and desirous only of solitude.
+
+But, as they drew nearer, the vague blue-gray bloom of the whaleback
+resolved itself into a mantle of velvet green, which ran down every
+rib and spine until it broke off sharp at varying heights and let the
+bare bones through; and all below the break was clean naked
+rock--black, cream-yellow, gray, red, brown,--with everywhere a tawny
+fringe of seaweed, since the tide was at its lowest. Below the fringe
+the rocks were scoured almost white, and whiter still at their feet,
+like a tangled drapery of ragged lace, was the foam of the long slow
+seas.
+
+And the solid silhouette of the island broke suddenly into bosky
+valleys soft with trees and bracken, and cliff-ringed bays, with
+wide-spread arms of tumbled rock whose outer ends were tiny islets and
+hungry reefs.
+
+"Brecqhou," said the ancient mariner, as they swung past a long green
+island with beetling cliffs, and yawning caverns, and comet-like
+rushes of white foam among the chaos of rocks below.
+
+Then they swirled through a tumbling race, where the waters came up
+writhing and boiling from strife with hidden rocks below,--past the
+dark chasm between Brecqhou and the mainland of Sark, through which
+the race roared with the voice of many waters--and so into a quiet
+haven where hard-worked boats lay resting from their labours.
+
+There was a beach of tumbled rocks and seaweed at the head of the bay,
+and there the grim cliffs fell back into a steep green gully which
+suggested possibility of ascent. But instead of running in there, the
+sails were furled and the boat nosed slowly towards the overhanging
+side of the cliff, where a broad iron ladder fell precariously into
+the water with its top projecting out beyond its base, so that to
+climb it one had to lie on one's back, so to speak.
+
+The ancient one eyed his passenger whimsically as the boat stole up to
+the rungs, so Graeme permitted himself no more than a careless glance
+at the forbidding ladder and asked, "How about the baggage?"
+
+"We'll see to et," grinned the ancient, and stood, hands on hips and
+face twisted into a grim smile, while the stranger laid hold of the
+rusty iron and started upwards, with no slightest idea where the end
+of the venture might land him.
+
+With the after-assistance of a neighbour of somewhat more genial
+construction,--inasmuch as it at all events stood upright, and did not
+lean over the opposite way of ladders in general,--the top rung landed
+him on a little platform, whence a rope and some foot-holes in the
+rock, and finally a zigzag path, invited further ascent still.
+
+The portmanteaux were hauled up by a rope and shouldered by his
+guardian angels, and they toiled slowly up the steep.
+
+Each step developed new beauties behind and on either side. At the top
+he would fain have rested to drink it all in, but his guides went
+stolidly on,--towards drink of a more palpable description, he doubted
+not; and he remembered that time was of consekens, and tore himself
+away from that most wonderful view and panted after them.
+
+The zigzag path led round clumps of flaming gorse to a gap in a rough
+stone wall, and so to a tall granite pillar which crowned the cliff
+and commemorated a disaster. It was erected, he saw, to the memory of
+a Mr. Jeremiah Pilcher who had been drowned just below in attempting
+the passage to Guernsey. He had but one regret at the moment--that it
+was not instead to the memory of Mr. Jeremiah Pixley.
+
+
+III
+
+Down verdant lanes--past thatched cottages, past a windmill, past
+houses of more substantial mien, with a glimpse down a rolling green
+valley----
+
+"Hotel?" asked the ancient abruptly, from beneath his load.
+
+"No, I want rooms in some cottage. Can you----"
+
+"John Philip," said the ancient one didactically, and trudged on, and
+finally dumped his share of the burden at the door of what looked like
+a house but was a shop, in fact the shop.
+
+He went inside and Graeme followed him. A genial-faced elderly man,
+with gray hair and long gray beard and gray shirt-sleeves, leaned over
+the counter, talking in an unknown tongue to a blue-guernseyed
+fisherman, and a quiet-faced old lady in a black velvet hair-net stood
+listening.
+
+They all looked up and saluted the ancient one with ejaculations of
+surprise in the unknown tongue, and Graeme stared hard at the
+gray-bearded man, while they all discussed him to his face.
+
+"Mr. De Carteret," said the ancient at last, with a jerk of the head
+towards Gray-Beard. "He tell you where to find rooms."
+
+"Thanks! Do you speak any English, Mr. De Carteret?"
+
+The pleasant old face broke into a smile. "I am En-glish," he said,
+with a quaint soft intonation, and as one who speaks a foreign tongue,
+and beamed genially on his young compatriot.
+
+"That's all right then. Do you know you're very like Count Tolstoi?"
+
+"I haf been told so, but I do not know him. What is it you would like,
+if you please to tell me?"
+
+"I want a sitting-room and a bedroom for a month or so, perhaps
+more,--not at an hotel. I want to be quiet and all to myself."
+
+"Ah--you don' want an hotel. You want to be quiet," and he nodded
+understandingly. "But the hotels is quiet joost now--"
+
+"I'd sooner have rooms in a cottage if I can get them."
+
+Count Tolstoi turned to the fisherman to whom he had been speaking,
+and discussed the matter at length with him in the patois.
+
+Then, to Graeme, "If you please to go with him. His wife has roomss to
+let. You will be quite comfortable there."
+
+Graeme thanked him, and as soon as he had settled satisfactorily with
+his boatmen, his new keeper picked up both his bags, and led him along
+a stony way past the post-office, to a creeper-covered cottage, which
+turned a cold shoulder to the road and looked coyly into a little
+courtyard paved with cobble-stones and secluded from the outer world
+by a granite wall three feet high.
+
+And as they went, the young man asked his silent guide somewhat
+doubtfully, "And do you speak English?"
+
+"Oh yes. We all speak English," he said, with a quiet smile, "except a
+few of the older folks, maybe, and they mostly understand it though
+they're slow to talk."
+
+"And your name?"
+
+"John Carre,"--which he pronounced Caury.
+
+"Now that's very odd," laughed Graeme, and stood to enjoy it. "My name
+is Corrie too, and John Corrie at that."
+
+"So!" said the other quietly, with a glance from under his brows which
+might mean surprise or only gentle doubt as to the stranger's
+veracity. And, so odd was the coincidence, that the newcomer saw no
+necessity to spoil it by telling him that his forebears had left him
+also the family name of Graeme.
+
+A large brown dog, smooth of hair and of a fine and thoughtful
+countenance, got up from the doorstep and gave them courteous
+greeting, and a small, white, rough-coated terrier hurried out of the
+kitchen and twisted himself into kinks of delight at sound of their
+voices. And that decided it before ever Graeme looked at the rooms.
+For if there was one thing he liked when he wanted to be alone, it was
+the friendly companionship of a couple of cheerful dogs.
+
+And that is how he came,--without any special intent that way, but
+through, as one might say, a purely accidental combination of
+circumstances--to be living in that cottage in the Rue Lucas in the
+little isle of Sark, and under a name that was indeed his own but not
+the whole of his own. And herein the future was looking after itself
+and preparing the way for that which was to be.
+
+
+IV
+
+The cottage was apparently empty. His guide and namesake looked into
+the kitchen, and called up a stair which led out of it, but got no
+answer.
+
+"She will be up at the house," he said, and turned and went off up the
+garden behind, while the dogs raced on in front to show the way.
+
+Through a cleft in the high green bank topped by a thick hedge of
+hawthorn, they came out into a garden of less utilitarian aspect. Here
+were shrubs and flowers, palms and conifers and pale eucalyptus trees,
+clumps of purple iris and clove pinks, roses just coming to the bud,
+and beyond, a very charming bungalow, built solidly of gray granite
+and red tiles, with a wide verandah all round. A pleasant-faced woman
+in a large black sunbonnet came out of the open front door as they
+went up the path.
+
+"My wife," murmured Carre, and proceeded quietly to explain matters in
+an undertone of patois.
+
+"I hope you speak English also, Mrs. Carre," said Graeme.
+
+"Oh yess," with a quick smile. "We are all English here."
+
+"Surely you are Welsh," he said, for he had met just that same
+cheerful type of face in Wales.
+
+"Noh, I am Sark," she smiled again. "I can gif you a sitting-room and
+a bet-room"--and they proceeded to business, and then the dogs
+escorted them back to the cottage, to see the stranger fairly inducted
+to his new abode, and to let him understand that they rejoiced at his
+coming and would visit him often.
+
+He thought he would be very comfortable there, but why the
+sitting-room was not the bedroom he never could understand. For it was
+only a quarter the size of the other, and its single window looked
+into a field, and a rough granite wall clothed with tiny rock-weeds
+hid all view of the road and its infrequent traffic. While the bedroom
+was a room of size, and its two windows gave on to the covered well
+and the cobbled forecourt, and offered passers-by, if so inclined,
+oblique views of its occupant in the act of dressing if he forgot to
+pull down the blind.
+
+The windows of both rooms were set low in the massive granite walls,
+and being always wide open, they offered, and indeed invited, easy
+access to--say, a grave-faced gentlemanly brown dog and a spasmodic
+rough-coated terrier without a tail, whenever the spirit moved them to
+incursion, which it invariably did at meal-times and frequently in
+between.
+
+These two new friends of his--for they were never mere acquaintances,
+but adopted him into fullest brotherhood at sight--proved no small
+factors in Graeme's extrication from the depths.
+
+Human companionship, even of the loftiest, most philosophic, most
+gracious, would, for the time being, have jarred and ruffled his
+naturally equable spirit. Two only exceptions might have been
+conceivably possible--some humble, large-souled friend, anxious only
+to anticipate his slightest wish, desirous only of his company,
+and--dumb, and so unable to fret him with inane talk; or--Margaret
+Brandt.
+
+The first he could have endured. The latter--ah, God! How he would
+have rejoiced in her! The spirit groaned within him at times in
+agonised longing for her; and the glories of the sweet spring days, in
+a land where spring is joyous and radiant beyond most, turned gray and
+cheerless in the shadow of his loss. What Might Have Been stabbed What
+Was to the heart and let its life-blood run.
+
+But, since neither of these was available, a benignant Providence
+provided him with friends entirely to his taste. For the great brown
+hound, Punch, was surely, despite the name men had given him, a
+nobleman by birth and breeding. Powerful and beautifully made, the
+sight of his long lithe bounds, as he quartered the cliff-sides in
+silent chase of fowl and fur, was a thing to rejoice in; so exquisite
+in its tireless grace, so perfect in its unconscious exhibition of
+power and restraint. For the brown dog never gave tongue, and he never
+killed. He chased for the keen enjoyment of the chase, and no man had
+ever heard him speak.
+
+He was the first dumb dog Graeme had ever come across, and the
+pathetic yearning in his solemn brown eyes was full of infinite appeal
+to one who suffered also from an unforgettable loss. He answered to
+his name with a dignified appreciation of its incongruity, and the
+tail-less white terrier, more appropriately, to that of Scamp.
+
+
+V
+
+They were on the very best of terms, these two friends of his,
+possibly because of their absolute unlikeness,--Punch, large, solemn,
+imperturbable, with a beautifully-curved slow-waving tail and no
+voice; Scamp, a bundle of wriggling nerves moved by electricity, with
+a sharp excited bark and not even the stump of a tail. When he needed
+to wag he wagged the whole of his body behind his front legs.
+
+These two were sitting watching him expectantly as Mrs. Carre brought
+in his dinner that first day, and she instantly ordered them out.
+
+Punch rose at once, cast one look of grave appeal at Graeme, as who
+would say--"Sorry to leave you, but this is the kind of thing I have
+to put up with,"--and walked slowly away. Scamp grovelled flat and
+crawled to the door like a long hairy caterpillar.
+
+"Oh, let them stop," said Graeme. "I like them by me," and the
+culprits turned hopefully with pricked ears and anxious faces.
+
+"Mais non! They are troublesome beasts. Allez, Ponch! Allez, Scamp! A
+couche!"--and their heads and ears drooped and they slunk away.
+
+But, presently, there came a rustling at the wide-open window which
+gave on to the field at the back, and Graeme laughed out--and he had
+not smiled for days--at sight of two deprecatingly anxious faces
+looking in upon him,--a solemn brown one with black spots above the
+eloquent grave eyes, and a roguish white one with pink blemishes on a
+twisting black nose. And while the large brown face loomed steadily
+above two powerful front paws, the small white face only appeared at
+intervals as the nervous little body below flung it up to the sill in
+a series of spasmodic leaps.
+
+"We would esteem it a very great favour, if you are quite sure it
+would not inconvenience you," said Punch, as plain as speech.
+
+"Do, do, do, do, do give us leave!" signalled Scamp, with every twist
+of his quivering nose, and every gleam of his glancing eyes, and every
+hair on end.
+
+A click of the tongue, a noiseless graceful bound, and Punch was at
+his side. A wild scrambling rush, a wriggle on the sill, a patter over
+the window-seat, and Scamp was twisting himself into white
+figure-eights all over the room, with tremendous energy but not a
+sound save the soft pad of his tiny dancing feet.
+
+Then, as he ate, the great brown head pillowed itself softly on his
+knee, and the eloquent brown eyes looked up into his in a way that a
+stone image could hardly have resisted. The while Scamp, on his hind
+legs, beat the air frantically with his front paws to attract
+attention to his needs and danced noiselessly all over the floor.
+
+He gauged their characters with interest. When he gave them morsels
+turn about, Punch awaited his with gentlemanly patience, and even when
+purposely passed by in order to see what he would do, obtruded his
+claims by nothing more than a gentle movement of the head on his
+friend's knee; while Scamp, in like case, twisted himself into knots
+of anxiety and came perilously near to utterance.
+
+The difference between them when, through lack of intimate knowledge
+of their likes and dislikes, they got something not entirely to their
+taste, was also very typical. Punch would retire quietly into
+obscurity, and having disposed of the objectionable morsel
+somehow--either by a strenuous swallow or in some corner--would
+quietly reappear, lay his head on Graeme's knee again, and work it up
+to his lap with a series of propitiatory little jerks that never
+failed of their object. Scamp, on the other hand, would hold it in his
+mouth for a moment till he had savoured it, then place it meekly on
+the floor, bow his head to the ground, and grovel flat with
+deprecatory white-eyed up-glances, and as clearly as dog could say,
+would murmur,--"Oh, Man, Lord of all that go on four legs, forgive thy
+humble little servant in that he is unable with enjoyment to eat that
+thou hast of thy bounty tendered him! The fault is wholly his. Yet, of
+thy great clemency, punish him not beyond his capacity, for his very
+small body is merely a bundle of nerves, and they lie so very close to
+the skin that even a harsh word from thee will set them quivering for
+an hour." But, at a comforting word, he was up in a flash dancing and
+sparring away as gaily as ever.
+
+Then, when Mrs. Carre brought in the next course, they both retired
+discreetly below the tent of the tablecloth. But she, knowing them of
+old perhaps, found them out at once and cried, "Ah you! I see you
+there! You are just troublesome beasts!" But, seeing that her guest
+was in the conspiracy, she permitted them for that once; and in time,
+seeing that he really desired their company, she allowed them to
+remain as a matter of course and without any preliminary harrying.
+
+
+VI
+
+One other acquaintance he made during these dark days,--perhaps one
+ought to say an acquaintance and a half, if indeed the half in this
+case was not greater than the whole, a matter which Graeme never fully
+decided in his own mind,--a small person of grim and gloomy
+tendencies, whose sombre humours chimed at times with his own,--and
+that small person's familiar.
+
+His name was Johnnie Vautrin, and, as far as Graeme could make out, he
+was about eight years old in actual years, but aged beyond belief in
+black arts which made him a terror to his kind. And his familiar, in
+the person of an enormous black cat, which came and went, was named
+Marielihou.
+
+Johnnie, and presumably Marielihou, lived with an ancient dame who was
+held by some to be their great-grandmother, and by some to be
+Marielihou herself. This was a moot and much-discussed point among the
+neighbours. What was beyond dispute was that Johnnie was said to be
+grievously maltreated by her at times, and to lead her a deuce of a
+life, and she him. The family came originally from Guernsey and had
+married into Sark, and, for this and other reasons, was still looked
+askance at by the neighbours.
+
+Both Johnnie and his ancient relative were popularly--or
+unpopularly--credited with powers of mischief which secured them
+immunities and privileges beyond the common and not a little prudently
+concealed dislike.
+
+Old Mrs. Vautrin could put the evil eye on her neighbours' cows and
+stop their milk, on their churns and stop their butter, on their
+kettles and stop their boiling.
+
+Johnnie claimed equal powers, but excelled in forecasts of bad weather
+and ill luck and evil generally, and, since there was no end to his
+prognostications, they occasionally came true, and when they did he
+exulted greatly and let no one forget it.
+
+He had a long, humorously snaky, little face, a deep sepulchral voice,
+which broke into squeaks in moments of excitement, and curious black
+eyes with apparently no pupils--little glittering black wells of ill
+intent, with which he cowed dogs and set small children screaming and
+grown ones swearing. His little body was as malformed as his twisted
+little soul, and he generally sat in the hedge taking his pleasure off
+the passers-by, much to their discomfort.
+
+Johnnie also saw ghosts, or said he did, which came to much the same
+thing since none could prove to the contrary. He had even slept one
+night in an outhouse up at the Seigneurie, and had carefully locked
+the door, and so the little old lady in white, who only appears to
+those who lock their doors of a night, came to him, and, according to
+Johnnie, they carried on a long and edifying conversation to their
+mutual satisfaction.
+
+He had also a cheerful habit of visiting sick folks and telling them
+he had seen their spirits in the lanes at night, and so they might
+just as well give up all hopes of getting better. On payment of a
+small fee, however, he was at times, according to his humour, willing
+to admit that it might have been somebody else's ghost he had seen,
+but in either case his visitations tended to cheerfulness in none but
+himself. He was great on the meanings--dismal ones mostly--of flights
+of birds and falling stars and fallen twigs. And he had been known to
+throw a branch of hawthorn into a house which had incurred his
+displeasure.
+
+The men scoffed at him openly, and occasionally gave him surreptitious
+pennies. The women and children feared him; and the dogs, to the last
+one, detested him but gave him wide berth.
+
+Graeme had very soon run across the little misanthrope and, in his own
+black humour, found him amusing. They rarely met without a trial of
+wit, or parted without a transfer of coppers from the large pocket to
+the small. Wherefore Johnnie made a special nest in the hedge opposite
+the cottage, and waylaid his copper-mine systematically and greatly to
+his own satisfaction and emolument. But, like the dogs, though on a
+lower level, he too was not without his effect on Graeme's spirits,
+and if he did not lift him up he certainly at times helped him out of
+himself and his gloomy thoughts.
+
+
+VII
+
+"You're just an unmitigated little humbug, Johnnie," said Graeme, as
+he leaned over the wall smoking, to the small boy whose acquaintance
+he had made the previous day, and who had promptly foretold a storm
+which had not come.
+
+"Unmitigumbug! Guyablle! Qu'es' ce que c'es' que ca?" echoed the small
+boy, with very wide eyes.
+
+"You, my son. Your black magic's all humbug. It lacks the essential
+attribute of fulfilment. It doesn't work. Black magic that doesn't
+work is humbug."
+
+"Black-mack-chick! My Good! You do talk!"
+
+"What about that storm?"
+
+"Ah ouaie! Well, you wait. It come."
+
+"So will Christmas, and the summer after next, if we wait long enough.
+On the same terms I foretell thunders and lightnings, rain, hail,
+snow, and fiery vapours, followed by lunar rainbows and waterspouts."
+
+"Go'zamin!" said Johnnie, with a touch of reluctant admiration at such
+an outflow of eloquence; and then, by way of set-off, "I sec six black
+crows, 's mawn'n."
+
+"Ah--really? And what do you gather from such a procession as that
+now?"
+
+"Some un's gwain' to die," in a tone of vast satisfaction.
+
+"Of course, of course--if we wait long enough. It's perhaps you.
+You'll die yourself sometime, you know."
+
+"Noh, I wun't. No 'n'll ivver see me die. I'll just turn into
+sun'th'n--a gull maybe," as one floated by on moveless wing, the very
+poetry of motion; and the fathomless black eyes followed it with
+pathetic longing.
+
+"Cormorant more likely, I should say."
+
+"Noh, I wun't. I don' like corm'rants. They stink. Mebbe I'll be a
+hawk,"--as his eye fell on one, like a brown leaf nailed against the
+blue sky. "Did ee hear White Horse last night?"
+
+"I did hear a horse in the night, Johnnie, but I couldn't swear that
+he was a white one."
+
+"Didn' git up an' look out?" disappointedly.
+
+"No, I didn't. Why should I get up to look out at a horse? I can see
+horses any day without getting out of bed in the middle of the night."
+
+"'Twus the White Horse of the Coupee,"--in a weird whisper.--"I heerd
+him start in Little Sark, and come across Coupee, an' up by Colinette,
+an' past this house. An' if you'd ha' looked out an' seen him, you'd
+ha' died."
+
+"Good old White Horse! I'm glad I stopped in bed. Did you see him
+yourself now?"
+
+"I've rid him! Yes!--an' told him where to go," with a ghoulish nod.
+
+"Quite friendly with ghosts and things, eh?"
+
+"I don' mind 'em. I seen the ole lady up at the big house. Yes, an'
+talked to her too."
+
+"Clever boy! Put the evil eye on her?"
+
+"Noh, ee cann't."
+
+"Can't? Why, I thought you were a past master in all little matters of
+that kind."
+
+"Ee cann't put evil eye on a ghost," with infinite scorn.
+
+"Oh, she's a ghost, is she? And what did you talk about?"
+
+"You coul'n't understan'," grunted Johnnie, to whom his meeting with
+the White Lady was a treasured memory if a somewhat tender subject.
+
+
+VIII
+
+And Marielihou? Ah, Marielihou was a black mystery. Sometimes she was
+there, and sometimes she wasn't, and if at such times you asked
+Johnnie where she was, he would reply mysteriously, "Aw, she's busy."
+
+And busy Marielihou was, always and at all times. If Graeme found her
+in the hedge with Johnnie, she was busy licking her lips with vicious
+enjoyment as though she had just finished eating something that had
+screamed as it died. Or she was licking them snarlishly and
+surreptitiously, and sharpening her claws, as though just about
+starting out after something to eat--something which he knew would
+certainly scream as it died. For Marielihou was a mighty hunter, and
+her long black body could be seen about the cliffs at any time of
+night or day, creeping and worming along, then, of a sudden, pointing
+and stiffening, and flashing on to her prey like the black death she
+was.
+
+Six full-grown rabbits had Marielihou been known to bring home in a
+single day, to say nothing of all the others that had gone to the
+satisfaction of her own inappeasable lust for rabbit-flesh and
+slaughter.
+
+As to the strange tales the neighbours whispered about her, Graeme
+could make neither head nor tail of them. But when old Tom Hamon put
+it to him direct, he had to confess that he never had seen old Mother
+Vautrin and Marielihou together, nor both at the same time.
+
+"B'en!" said old Tom, as if that ended the matter. "An' I tell you, if
+I had a silver bullet I'd soon try what that Marrlyou's made of."
+
+"And why a silver bullet?" asked Graeme.
+
+"'Cause--Lead bullets an't no good 'gainst the likes o' Marrlyou.
+Many's the wan I've sent after her, ay, an' through her, and she none
+the worse. Guyablle!" and old Tom spat viciously.
+
+"Perhaps you missed her," suggested Graeme, not unreasonably as he
+thought.
+
+"Missed her!" with immense scorn. "I tell ee bullets goes clean
+through her, in one side an' out t'other, an' she never a bit the
+worse. I've foun' 'em myself spatted on rock just where she sat."
+
+"Well, why don't you get a silver bullet and try again?"
+
+"Ah! Teks some getting does silver bullets."
+
+"How much?"
+
+"A shill'n would mek a little wan," and Graeme gave him a shilling to
+try his luck, because Marielihou's unsportsmanlike behaviour did not
+commend itself to him.
+
+But it took many shillings to obtain anything definite in the way of
+results, and Graeme had his own humorous suspicions as to the billets
+some of them found, and gently chaffed old Tom on the subject whenever
+they met.
+
+"You wait," said Tom, with mysterious nods.
+
+
+IX
+
+Graeme's sober intention had been to put Margaret Brandt, and the
+agonising regrets that clung to every thought of her, strenuously out
+of his mind. But that he found more possible in the intention than in
+the accomplishment.
+
+The first shock of loss numbs one's mental susceptibilities, of
+course, much as a blow on the head affects the nervous system. The
+bands are off the wheels, the machinery is out of order, and the
+friction seems reduced. It is when the machine tries to work again
+that the full effects of the jar are felt.
+
+And so he found it now. As mind and body recovered tone in the whole
+vitalising atmosphere of the wondrous little isle,--the air, the sea,
+the sense of remoteness, the placid life of the place, the abounding
+beauties of cliff and crag and cave,--his heart awoke also to the
+aching sense of its loss.
+
+All outward things--all save Johnny Vautrin, and Marielihou, and old
+Tom Hamon, and several others--sang abundantly of the peace and
+fulness and joy of life, but his heart was still so sore from its
+bruising that at times these outward beauties seemed only to mock him
+with their brightness.
+
+In the first shock of his downcasting, wounded pride said, "I will
+show no sign. I will forget her. I will salve the bruise with work.
+Margaret Brandt is not the only woman in the world. In time some other
+shall take her place;"--and he tried his hardest to believe it.
+
+But body is one thing and mind another. The body you may compel to any
+mortal thing, but the mind is of a different order, and strongest will
+cannot whip it to heel at times. Forbid it thought of thing or person
+and the forbidden is just that which will persist in obtruding itself
+to the exclusion of all else.
+
+And so, in spite of him, the dull ache in his heart at every thought
+of Margaret murmured without ceasing, "There is none like her--none!"
+And crush and compel it as he might, the truth would out, and out the
+more the more he tried to crush it.
+
+And so at times, in spite of his surroundings, his spirits dragged in
+lowest deeps.
+
+Work he could not as yet, for the work of the writer demands absolute
+concentration and most complete surrender, and all his faculties were
+centred, in spite of himself, on Margaret Brandt and his own great
+loss in her.
+
+He rambled all over the island with his dog friends, risked skin and
+bones in precarious descents into apparently impossible depths,
+scrambled laboriously among the ragged bastions of the Coupee and
+Little Sark, explored endless caverns, loitered by day in bosky lanes,
+and roamed restlessly by night under the brightest stars he had ever
+seen.
+
+But, wherever he went--down underground in the Boutiques or the
+Gouliots; or lying on the Eperquerie among the flaming gorse and
+cloudlike stretches of primroses; or standing on Longue Pointe while
+the sun sank in unearthly splendours behind Herm and Guernsey; or
+watching from the windmill the throbbing life-lights all round the
+wide horizon;--wherever he was, and whatever he was doing, there with
+him always was the poignant remembrance of Margaret Brandt and his
+loss in her.
+
+His heart ached so, at thought of the emptiness and desolation of the
+years that lay before him, that at times his body ached also, and the
+spirit within him groaned in sympathy.
+
+Life without Margaret! What was it worth?
+
+Though it brought him riches and honours overpassing his hopes--and he
+doubted now at times if that were possible, lacking the inspiration of
+Margaret--what was it worth?
+
+Riches and honours, won at the true sword's point of earnest work,
+were good and worth the winning. But yet, without Margaret, they were
+as nothing to him. His whole heart cried aloud for Margaret. Without
+her all the full rich hues of life faded into dull gray ashes.
+
+With Margaret to strive for, he had felt himself capable of mighty
+things. Without her--!
+
+And that she should throw herself away on a Charles Pixley!--Charles
+the smiling, the imperturbable, the fount of irrepressible chatter and
+everlasting inanities! How could such a one as Charles Pixley possibly
+satisfy her nobler nature? Out of the question! Impossible! But then
+it is just possible that he was not exactly in the best state of mind
+for forming an unbiassed opinion on so large a question as that.
+
+Anyway he was out of it, and Margaret Brandt was henceforth nothing to
+him. If he said it once he said it hundreds of times, as if the simple
+reiteration of so obvious a truth would make it one whit the truer,
+when his whole heart was clamouring that Margaret was all the worlds
+to him and the only thing in the world that he wanted.
+
+With an eye, perhaps, to his obvious lack of cheerfulness, his
+namesake and host suggested various diversions,--fishing for congers
+and rock-fish, a voyage round the island, a trip across to Herm, a day
+among the rabbits on. Brecqhou. But he wanted none of them. His life
+was flapping on a broken wing and all he wanted was to be left alone.
+
+In time the wound would heal, and he would take up his work again and
+find his solace in it. But wounds such as this are not healed in a
+day. It was raw and sore yet, the new skin had not had time to form.
+
+He recalled Lady Elspeth's dissatisfaction with his love-scenes, and
+thought, grimly, that now he could at all events enter fully into the
+feelings of the man who had lost the prize, and would be able to
+depict them to the life. If the choice had been left to him he would
+gladly have dispensed with all such knowledge to its profoundest
+depths, if only the prize had remained to him. But the choice had been
+Margaret's, and the prize was Charles Pixley's.
+
+If there was one thing he could have imagined without actual
+experience, it was how a man may feel when he loses. What he could not
+at present by any possibility conceive was--how it might feel to be
+the accepted lover of such a girl as Margaret Brandt.
+
+Confound her money! If it were not for that, Pixley would probably
+never have wanted to marry her. Money was answerable for half the
+ills of life, and the contrariness of woman for the other half.
+Confound money! Confound--Well, truly, his state of mind was not a
+happy one.
+
+
+X
+
+But there was something in the crisp Sark air that, by degrees and all
+unconsciously, braced both mind and body;--something broadening and
+uplifting in the wide free outlook from every headland; something
+restorative of the grip of life in the rush and roar of the mighty
+waves and the silent endurance of the rocks; something so large and
+aloof and restful in the wide sweep of sea and sky; something so
+hopeful and regenerative in the glorious exuberance of the spring--the
+flaming gorse, the mystic stretches of bluebells, the sunny sweeps of
+primroses, the soft uncurlings of the bracken, the bursting life of
+the hedgerows, the joyous songs of the larks--that presently, and in
+due season, earthly worries began to fall back into their proper
+places below the horizon, and a new Graeme--a Graeme born of Sark and
+Trouble--looked out of the old Graeme eyes and began to contemplate
+life from new points of view.
+
+It took time, however. Love is a plant of most capricious and
+surprising growth. It may take years to root and blossom. It may
+spring up in a day, yet strike its roots right through the heart and
+hold it as firmly as the growth of the years. And, once the heart is
+enmeshed in the golden filaments, it is a most dolorous work to
+disentangle it.
+
+For the first two weeks his mind ran constantly on his loss.
+Momentarily it might be diverted by outward things, but always it came
+back with a sharp shock, and a bitter sense of deprivation, to the
+fact that Margaret Brandt had passed out of his life and left behind
+her an aching void.
+
+Did he sit precariously among the ragged scarps and pinnacles of
+Little Sark, while the western seas raged furiously at his feet and
+the Souffleur shot its rockets of snowy spray high into the gray
+sky--through the passing film of the spray, and the marbled coils of
+the tumbling waves, the face of Margaret Brandt looked out at him.
+
+Did he stride among the dew-drenched, gold-spangled gorse bushes on
+the Eperquerie, while the sun came up with ever fresh glories behind
+the distant hills of France--Margaret's face was there in the sunrise.
+
+Did he stand above Havre Gosselin in the gloaming, while the sun sank
+behind Herm and Guernsey in splendours such as he had never dreamed
+of--just so, he said to himself, Margaret had gone out of his life and
+left it gray and cheerless as the night side of Brecqhou.
+
+Wherever he was and whatever he did, it was always Margaret,
+Margaret,--and Margaret lost to him.
+
+By the end of the third week, however, the tonic effects of the strong
+sea air and water began to work inwards. Healthy body would no longer
+suffer sick heart. He had taken his morning plunge hitherto as a
+matter of course, now he began to enjoy it and to look forward to
+it--certain index of all-round recovery.
+
+His appetite grew till he felt it needed an apology, at which Mrs.
+Carre laughed enjoyably. He began to take more interest in his
+surroundings for their own sakes. His thoughts of Margaret, with their
+after-glow of tender memory, were like the soft sad haze which falls
+on Guernsey when the sun has sunk and left behind it, in the upper
+sky, its slowly dying fires of dull red amber and gold.
+
+Towards the end of the fourth week he tentatively fished out his
+manuscript and began to read it--with pauses. He grew interested in
+it. He saw new possibilities in the story.--His life was getting back
+on to the rails again.
+
+
+XI
+
+Greater bodily peace and comfort than he found in that thick-set,
+creeper-covered, little cottage in the Rue Lucas, man might scarcely
+hope for. Anything more would have tended to luxury and made for
+restraint.
+
+He was free as the wind to come and go as he listed, to roam the
+lonely lanes all night and watch the coming of the dawn--which he did;
+or to lie abed all day--which he did not; to do any mortal thing that
+pleased him, so long only as he gave his hostess full and fair warning
+of the state of his appetite and the times when it must be satisfied.
+
+His quarters were not perhaps palatial, but what man, king of himself
+alone, would live in a palace?
+
+He bumped his head with the utmost regularity against the lintel of
+the front door each time he entered, and only learned at last to bob
+by instinct. And the beams in the ceilings were so low that they
+claimed recognition somewhat after the manner of a boisterous
+acquaintance.
+
+But doors and windows were always open, night and day, and his good
+friends the dogs came in to greet him by way of the windows quite as
+often as by the doors.
+
+All through the black times those two were his close companions, and
+no better could he have had. They asked nothing of him--or almost
+nothing, and they gave him all they had. They were grateful from the
+bottom of their large hearts for any slightest sign of recognition.
+And they were proud of his company, which to others would have proved
+somewhat of a wet blanket. Without a doubt they assisted mightily in
+his cure, though neither he nor they knew it.
+
+Every morning when he jumped up to see the weather, the first things
+that met him when he reached the open window, were four eager eyes
+full of welcome, and a grave intelligent brown face and hopeful
+swinging tail, and a dancing white face and little wriggling body.
+
+Then he would pull up the blinds and they would enter with an easy
+bound and a scramble, and while he hastily flung on his things they
+would prowl about, now pushing investigating noses into an open
+drawer, and again taking a passing drink out of his water-jug by way
+of first breakfast.
+
+Then, away through the gaps in the jewelled hedges, with the larks at
+their matins overhead, and the tethered cows nuzzling out the dainty
+morning grasses, and watching the intruders speculatively till they
+passed out of sight into the next field.
+
+"Which way? Which way? Which way?" shrieked Scamp, as he tore to and
+fro down every possible road to show that all were absolutely alike to
+him. While Punch bounded lightly to the first dividing of the ways and
+waited there with slow-swinging tail to see which road Man would
+choose.
+
+The Harbour--or Les Laches--which? Every morning Scamp raced hopefully
+towards the sweet-smelling tunnel of hawthorn trees that led down to
+the other tunnel in the rock and the tiny harbour, because, for a very
+small dog, the granite slip was much easier to compass than the steep
+ledges of Les Laches. And every morning Punch waited quietly at
+Colinette to see how Man would go.
+
+And when the tide was low and the harbour empty, Punch knew it was Les
+Laches almost before Man's face had turned that way, and off he went
+at a gallop, and Scamp came tearing back with expostulatory yelps, and
+got in Punch's way and was rolled head over heels, but always came
+right side up at the fourth turn and rushed on without even a
+remonstrance, for that was a very small price to pay for the exalted
+companionship of Punch and Man.
+
+So, past La Peignerie and La Forge, with the thin blue smoke of gorse
+fires floating down from every dumpy chimney and adding a flavour to
+the sweetest air in the world,--with a morning greeting from everyone
+they met--over the heights and down the zigzag path to the sloping
+ledges, and in they went, all three, into the clearest and crispest
+water in the world, water that tingled and sparkled, full charged with
+life and energy.
+
+Then shivers and shakes, and hasty play with a towel, and they were
+racing back across the heights to breakfast and the passing of another
+day, of which the greatest charm had passed already with that plunge
+into the life-giving sea.
+
+If you are inclined to think that I enlarge too much on these two
+friends of his, let me remind you that a man is known by the company
+he keeps, and these two were Graeme's sole companions for many a
+day--those first dark days in the sunny little isle, when all human
+companionship would have been abhorrent to him.
+
+In their company he found himself again. Their friendship weaned him
+by degrees from the jaundiced view of life which Margaret's
+dereliction had induced. They drew him, in time, from his brooding
+melancholy, and through the upbuilding of the body restored him to a
+quieter mind.
+
+Let no man despise the help of a dog, for there are times when the
+friendship of a dog is more sufferable, and of more avail, and far
+more comforting, than that of any ordinary human being.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FOURTH
+
+
+I
+
+It was just two days before the end of Graeme's fourth week in Sark.
+His spirits were rising to the requirements of his work, and he was
+looking forward with quite novel enjoyment to a steady spell of
+writing, when his hostess startled him, as she cleared away his
+breakfast, by saying--
+
+"It iss the day after to-morrow you will be going?"
+
+"Eh? What? Going? No, I'm not going, Mrs. Carre. What made you think I
+was going? Why, I've only just come."
+
+His landlady put down the dishes on the table again as a concrete
+expression of surprise, put her hands on her hips by way of taking
+grip of herself, and stared at him.
+
+"You are not going? Noh? But it wass just for the month I thought you
+kem."
+
+"Not at all. I may stop two months, three months,--all my life
+perhaps. Won't you let me live and die here if I want to?"
+
+"Ach, then! It iss not to die we woult want you. But I thought my man
+said it wass just for the month you kem, and--my Good!--I haf let your
+roomss for the day after to-morrow," and her face had lost its usual
+smile and was full of distress and bewilderment.
+
+"You've let my rooms? Oh, come now!--But now I think of it, I believe
+I did say something about a month or so, when I spoke to John Philip.
+Well now, what will you do? Put me out into the road? Or can you find
+me somewhere else?--though I'm quite sure you'll not be able to find
+me any place as comfortable as this."
+
+"Whatt will we do?" she said, much disturbed, and gazed at him
+thoughtfully. Then, with sudden inspiration, "There iss the big house
+up the garden?" and looked at him hopefully.
+
+"But it's empty."
+
+"Everything iss there, and all ready for them to come any time they
+want to. It woult only mean making up a bed and you coult come here
+for your meals."
+
+"That would do first-rate if you can arrange it."
+
+"I will write to Mrs. Lee to-day and ask her to tell me by the
+telegraph. It will be all right."
+
+"That's all right then. Who's the wretched person who is turning me
+out of here?"
+
+"It is two leddies. They wrote to the Vicar, and he asked John Philip
+and he told my man."
+
+"Two ladies! Then I can't possibly have my meals in here. You'd better
+let me join you in the kitchen,"--a consummation he had been striving
+after for some time past, in fact ever since his literary instincts
+had shaken off the thrall and got their heads above the mists,--with a
+view, of course, of turning a more intimate knowledge of his
+surroundings to profitable account.
+
+But his hostess was jealous of her kitchen and would not hear of it.
+
+"There iss no need. I will arrange it, and you will tek your meals in
+here just as usual. Which room woult you like in the big house?"
+
+"I'll go up and have a look round. Does it make any difference to you
+which I choose? I'd like one with a balcony if it's all the same to
+you."
+
+"It iss all the sem, and I will get it ready for you as soon ass I
+hear from Mrs. Lee. You will not be afraid, all alone by yourself up
+there?"
+
+"Afraid? No. What is there to be afraid of?"
+
+"Och, I do not know. Only--all alone--sometimes one iss afraid--"
+
+"There aren't any ghosts about, are there?"
+
+"Ghosts? Noh!"--with a ghost of a laugh. "I do not believe in ghosts
+or any such things, though some people does. There are some
+people"--very scornfully--"will not go by the churchyard at night,
+and"--lest so sceptical a mind should provoke reprisal--"I do not know
+that I woult myself. And down by the Coupee--But the house there iss
+too new to have anything like that." "Well, if I see any I'll try and
+catch one and bring it down to breakfast."
+
+And so it was arranged that, if the permission of the owner of the Red
+House could be obtained, he should sleep there and come down to the
+cottage for his meals, Mrs. Carre undertaking that no inconvenience
+should thereby be caused to any of those concerned.
+
+He strolled up the garden, with the dogs racing in front, to choose
+his bedroom, and came across his host unwillingly busy with hoe and
+spade in the potato patch. His whole aspect betokened such undisguised
+sufferance that Graeme could not repress a smile.
+
+"Like it?" he asked.
+
+"Noh!"
+
+"Sooner be at the fishing?"
+
+A nod and a brief smile, and Graeme left him to his unwelcome labours,
+and passed through the gap in the tall hedge to his new abode.
+
+It was a well-built house, gray granite below and red tiles up above,
+with a wide verandah round the lower storey and white balconies to the
+upper one; the inside was all polished pitch pine, and the rooms were
+large and airy and suitably furnished for summer occupancy. It was
+left in Mrs. Carre's charge, and she and the sun and wind kept it
+always sweet and clean, and ready for use at an hour's notice.
+
+With the assistance of his two friends, who displayed an active and
+intelligent interest in the matter, he chose the room with the largest
+balcony, and said to himself that the coming of the ladies was, after
+all, a blessing in disguise. He believed he would be even more
+comfortable there than he had been at the cottage. He would have been
+quite willing to move in at once if that had been possible.
+
+Next morning, however, the permission duly arrived, and in many trips
+he gaily carried all his belongings up the garden and installed
+himself in the balcony room.
+
+It was a very delightful room, with fine wide outlook--over towards
+the church in its dark embowerment of evergreen oaks, which some of
+the folk would not pass by night; over the long sweep of the land
+towards Little Sark; then, over to the left, a glimpse of the sea and
+a dark blue film on the horizon which he knew was Jersey.
+
+This room and the balcony outside should be his workshop, he decided,
+and he looked forward, with an eagerness to which he had been stranger
+for weeks past, to burying himself in his work and finding in it
+solace and new strength.
+
+
+II
+
+Graeme possessed a lively imagination, else surely he had never taken
+to writing. But a lively imagination, sole occupant of a ten-roomed
+house in a strange land whose inhabitants believed firmly in ghosts
+and spirits and things that walked by night, and that house but a
+stone's-throw from the black churchyard where such discomforting
+things might naturally be supposed to congregate, was not nearly so
+enjoyable a possession at midnight as in the full light of day.
+
+He lay awake for hours, hearing what seemed to him uncanny sounds
+about the house, inside and out. The night wind sighed through the
+heavy pale leaves of the eucalyptus trees, and set the roses and
+honeysuckle on the verandah posts whispering and tapping. In the stark
+silence, sounds came out of the other nine empty rooms as though they
+chose that quiet time for passing confidences. The stairs creaked as
+though invisible feet passed up and down. And once he could have sworn
+to stealthy footsteps along the verandah below his window.
+
+He laughed at his own foolishness. Ghosts, he vowed, he did not
+believe in, and the Sark men were notably honest. All the same it was
+close on daylight before he slept.
+
+When he pushed through the dewy hedge and went down to the cottage
+for breakfast, his hostess's eyes twinkled as she asked, "You did not
+see any ghosts--Noh?"
+
+"Not a ghost, but all the same it did feel a bit lonesome. What would
+you say to my taking Punch with me to-night, just for company?"
+
+"Yess indeed, tek him. He iss quiet. The other iss too lively."
+
+"And when do your ladies arrive?"
+
+"With the boat. When will you be pleased to have your dinner?"
+
+"I'm off to Little Sark for the day. How would seven o'clock suit you
+and them?"
+
+"I will mek it suit. They will haf dinner before or after. It will be
+quite all right."
+
+He spent the day with the dogs, scrambling among the rugged bastions
+at the south end of the island, investigated the old silver mines,
+bathed, all three, in the great basin of Venus in the hollow under the
+southern cliffs, and came home after sunset, tired and ravenous.
+
+"Well, have your ladies come?" he asked, as he sat down to his dinner.
+
+"Oh yess, they are come. They are gone for a walk. One of them is Miss
+Hen and the other iss Miss Chum."
+
+"Good Lord, what names! Two old maids, I presume,--curls and
+spectacles and that kind of thing!"
+
+"They are not old, noh. And they are ferry nice to look at,
+especially Miss Chum."
+
+"Well, well, so she ought to be to make up for her name."
+
+"They were quite put out to think of having turned you out of your
+roomss--"
+
+"Not half as much as I was, but you can assure them that I am
+delighted they came. It's as nice a house as one could wish for, and
+if you can arrange the meals all right I'll not trouble them in the
+least. How long are they going to stay?"
+
+"They are like you. They do not know. It may be a month, it may be
+more."
+
+"Oh well, I'll keep out of their way as much as possible. People who
+come to Sark come to be quiet, I expect. Don't trouble about coffee
+tonight, Mrs. Carre. I shall just have a smoke and then turn in. I'm
+tired but and I want a good night's rest."
+
+"Ah yess. Well, you will tek Punch to-night, and then you will hear no
+ghosts."
+
+The sky was still softly suffused with the clear rose and amber of the
+sunset when he leaned over the wall, as he filled his pipe, and looked
+out into the darkening road.
+
+"Har-Heri! Que-hou-hou!" croaked a hoarse little voice in the hedge
+opposite.
+
+"Hello, Johnnie-boy! That you?"
+
+"Where you bin te-day?"
+
+"Where have I been? Down in Little Sark, prowling about the mines,
+stealing lumps of silver----"
+
+"Godzamin! They an't any silver now."
+
+"No? All right, my son. Then I'm telling you fibs."
+
+"Show me."
+
+"Ah, I don't carry it about with me."
+
+"An't got any." And presently, as Graeme lit up, without deigning any
+answer,--"I seen a ghost las' night."
+
+"Clever boy! What did you make out of it?"
+
+"'Twas the ghost of old Tom Hamon's father. Was all white and
+dead-like."
+
+"You're too previous, Johnnie. He's getting better."
+
+"He's a-goin' to die."
+
+"So are you sometime."
+
+"No, I a'n't. Show me 'at silver."
+
+"Sometime, perhaps, if you ask nicely. I'm going to bed now. Come
+along, Punch! Goodnight, Johnnie! Keep your eyes skinned for ghosts.
+Capital night for them, I should say," and he went off up the garden,
+with Punch stalking solemnly alongside.
+
+And Johnnie Vautrin erected himself on his hands and haunches to see
+where he was going, while the vivacious Scamp, shut up in the
+wood-house and bereft of his bedfellow, and doubtless fearful of
+ghosts in every nerve of his quivering little body, rent the still
+night with his expostulations, as he heard them go past.
+
+The scent of the pipe was lingering still in the forecourt when the
+ladies turned in out of the road, and they just caught a glimpse of
+the smoker disappearing through the gap in the hedge.
+
+"Ah-ha! There goes the Bogey-Man!" said Miss Hen. "Does this dear
+little dog carry on this way all through the night, Mrs. Carre?"
+
+"It iss becos the gentleman hass tekken Punch up to the house to kip
+away the ghosts," smiled Mrs. Carre.
+
+"I should say this one would have been of more use."
+
+"He will be quiet soon. Scamp, bad beast, be qui-et! A couche!"
+
+"To keep away ghosts! What a muff he must be!" said Miss Hen. "Chum,
+what do you say to putting on white sheets and giving him a scare? If
+we did a skirly-whirly a la Loie Fuller, below his window, he'd
+probably have blue fits. Ghosts, indeed!"
+
+"If that big brown Punch got out at you it's you would have the blue
+fits," said Miss Chum. "The Sark air is getting into your head,
+Hennie."
+
+"Of course it is. That's what we came for, isn't it? You'll feel it
+yourself before you're two days older, my child. You're looking better
+than I've seen you for a month past."
+
+"It's so delightful to feel free," said Miss Chum.
+
+
+III
+
+Thoroughly tired out, and with a guardian angel on the mat at his
+bedside, in the shape of a long brown body which sought fresh ease in
+an occasional sprawl, and flopped a responsive tail each time he
+dropped a friendly pat on to its head in the dark--Graeme looked
+confidently for a sound night's rest.
+
+He fell asleep indeed at once, but woke with a start sometime in the
+night, with the impression of a sound in his ears. Had he really heard
+something? Or was it only the tail-end of a dream? Wood-lined houses
+talk in the night. Was it only the pitch pine whispering of the old
+free days in the scented woods? He could not be sure, so he lay still
+and listened.
+
+And as he waited, it came again--a low, wailing cry, long-drawn and
+somewhat curdling to the blood.
+
+Outside or inside? He could not be sure.
+
+Cats? Cats can do wonders in the way of uncanny noises, but somehow
+this did not sound like cats. There was something human, or inhuman,
+in it, and his door suddenly shook as though something tried to get
+in.
+
+He bethought him to feel for Punch. But his hand fell on space, and as
+he struck a match to see the time and what had become of his
+companion, the church bell tolled one dismal stroke, and he saw Punch
+standing like a bronze statue at the door, with his nose down at the
+crack, his tail on the droop, and every hair apparently on the
+bristle.
+
+At the glow of the match the drooping tail gave one slow swing, but he
+did not look round.
+
+Graeme struck another match, and lit his candle, and jumped into his
+shoes.
+
+"What is it, old fellow?" And Punch scraped furiously at the door
+again, and so explained that part of the matter.
+
+There came a sudden scuffling fall against the door. Punch rasped at
+it with his front feet in strenuous silence. If he had been able to
+give voice it would have been a relief to both of them. His mute
+anxiety added to the weirdness of the proceedings, and Graeme
+experienced a novel creeping about the nape of the neck.
+
+Ghosts or no ghosts, however, it had to be looked into. He picked up a
+heavy boot, turned the key, and flung open the door. Punch went down
+the stairs in two long bounds, and a rush of cold air put out the
+candle. He laid it down and followed cautiously, ready to launch the
+boot at the first sign of uncanniness.
+
+The rush of night air came through a small pantry opening off the
+hall. The window in it was wide open, and there was no sign of Punch.
+He and the ghost had evidently gone through that way. Graeme and the
+boot followed.
+
+It was a dark night between moons. The velvet-black vault was
+brilliant with stars, but the earth was full of shadows. The fleshy
+leaves of the eucalyptus trees showed pale against the darkness. The
+night wind set them rustling eerily. From somewhere beyond them, past
+the dark hedge, there came a sound of subdued strife. Graeme clutched
+his boot and sped towards it, drenched with dew from every disturbed
+branch.
+
+The sounds led him into the potato patch in the lower garden, and in
+the dimness he became aware that Punch was standing on something that
+struggled to get up and was held down by the great brown paws and
+body.
+
+No ghost, evidently. Graeme dropped his boot and stooped and laid hold
+of the struggler, and knew in a moment, in spite of his own
+disturbance of mind, that this ghost at all events had materialised
+into the bodily form of Master Johnnie Vautrin, and he wondered how
+many more might have done the same if they had been followed up as
+closely.
+
+He lifted the squirming small boy who had not spoken a word.
+
+"So this is what Sark ghosts are made of, is it, Master Johnnie?" he
+asked, giving him a shake. "You little scamp! For once you shall have
+what you jolly well deserve," and he carried him, kicking and
+wriggling, back to the house, shoved him through the window, and held
+him with one hand while he got through himself. Punch followed with
+an easy bound, and they all went upstairs. Graeme found his candle,
+and lit it and looked at his prisoner.
+
+Johnnie was covered with mould from the potato patch, but his black
+eyes gleamed through it as brightly as ever, and, as far as Graeme
+could distinguish through its masking, his face showed no sign of
+confusion.
+
+"Do you know what we do with naughty little ghosts in England,
+Johnnie?"
+
+Johnnie's eyes glittered like a snake's.
+
+"We spank 'em, Johnnie. I'm going to spank you--hard."
+
+Then Johnnie spoke.
+
+"I'll put tha evil eye on you."
+
+"Two if you like, my son,--or twenty if you've got 'em handy. Evil
+eyes rather tickle me. We'll see which makes most impression--my hand
+or your eye," and he laid the black-magic man across his knee, and
+gave him such a genuine motherly quilting as he had never experienced
+in his life before. Hot blows he was accustomed to, but this cool,
+relentless, tingling flagellation, all on the one spot, and continued
+till every particle of blood in his body seemed to leap to meet each
+stroke, was new to him, and it made a great and lasting impression.
+
+He did not cry, but tried to bite and scratch the operator, and Punch
+stood looking on with a grave smile on his face and a slowly swinging
+tail expressive of the greatest satisfaction.
+
+Discipline over, Graeme handed him out through the pantry window, bade
+him to go home to bed, and fastened the window behind him. The night
+passed without further disturbance, and Graeme awoke as the dawn
+glimmered golden on his wide-open window.
+
+In ten minutes he was racing bareheaded past Colinette and La Forge
+towards Les Laches, a towel round his neck and Punch bounding silently
+by his side. They had stolen out the back way through the top of the
+post-office fields, and had left Scamp still prisoner in the
+woodhouse, lest the hysterical joy of his release should disturb the
+ladies.
+
+And presently they were racing back home, all aglow with the tingling
+kisses of the waves, and rough of hair with the salt and the wind.
+
+The sun was up but not yet stripped for the long day's race to the
+west. The eastern skies still gleamed through a faery haze with the
+soft iridescence of a young ormer shell, the tender pinks and greens
+and golds of the new day's birth-chamber mellowing upwards into the
+glorious blue of a day of days.
+
+ 'The year's at the spring,
+ The day's at the morn;
+ Morning's at seven;
+ The hillside's dew-pearled:
+ The lark's on the wing;
+ The snail's on the thorn;
+ God's in his heaven--
+ All's right with the world!'
+
+The lilt of the joyous words had often been with him as he sped
+through the sleeping fields to his morning plunge.
+
+This day of days, as though his soul forecasted what was coming, they
+sang in his heart and on his lips. His cure was surely near
+completion. The salt was regaining its savour. Life was worth living
+again.
+
+And it was then, when he had come through the valley and was ready to
+climb again, that the glory came to him.
+
+As the two friends sprang lightly over the turf wall into the garden
+of the Red House, they saw a sight which one of them will not forget
+as long as he lives.
+
+In the gap of the tall hedge, where the path led down to the
+cottage,--ringed in its darkness like a lovely picture in a sombre
+frame, with a pale eucalyptus rising stately on either side; and
+behind it all, and gleaming softly through and round it all, the
+tender glories of the new day,--stood a girl in a dove-coloured dress,
+bareheaded, holding the dew-pearled branches apart with her two hands,
+and gazing at him with wide eyes, and parted lips, and startled face.
+
+And the girl was Margaret Brandt.
+
+
+IV
+
+Graeme's first thought was that he was dreaming. He blinked his eyes
+to make sure they were not playing him false.
+
+If she had disappeared at that moment, he would have sworn to
+hallucinations and the visibility of spirits to the day of his death.
+
+But she did not disappear, and Punch proved her no spirit by stalking
+gravely up to give her welcome. Without taking her startled eyes off
+Graeme, she dropped one white hand on to the great brown head and the
+diamonds sprinkled her dove-coloured dress.
+
+"Mr. Graeme!" she said, in a voice which very fully expressed her own
+doubts as to his reality also.
+
+"Mar--Miss Brandt? ... Is it possible?"
+
+They had both drawn nearer, he along the broad gravel walk, she along
+the narrow path between the eucalyptus trees.
+
+"Are you quite sure you are real?" he asked breathlessly, and for
+answer she laughed and stretched a friendly hand towards him.
+
+He took it with shining eyes, and then bent suddenly and kissed it
+gently, and his eyes were shining still more brightly as she drew it
+hastily away.
+
+"But whatever brings you here?" she asked abruptly.
+
+"We're just out of the sea,"--and the joy of the sea and the morning,
+and this greatest thing of all, was in his face.
+
+"But _why_ are you here? What are you doing here?"
+
+"Doing? We're living here."
+
+"Did you know I was here? How----?" she began, with a puzzled wrinkle
+of the fair white brow, and stopped.
+
+"I did not know. I wish I had."
+
+"If you did not know, how--why----?"
+
+"If I had known perhaps I should not have dared to follow you. On the
+whole I'm glad I did not know."
+
+"I don't understand.... How long have you been here?"
+
+"Just four weeks," he said, with a smile at thought of the blackness
+of those four weeks now that he stood in the sunshine.
+
+"Four weeks! Then you mean--you mean that I--that we--followed----"
+
+"In the mere matter of time, yes!--and of place too," he laughed."
+For you turned me out of my rooms."
+
+"Do you mean to say you are the Bogey-Man?"
+
+"Well,--no one ever called me so to my face before, but I'm bound to
+say I've felt uncommonly like one for the past four or five weeks."
+
+"Come with me," she said hastily. "I must put this right at once, or
+Hennie----" and she turned and went through the gap in the hedge.
+
+"Put what right?" he asked, as he followed.
+
+"Oh--you," she said hastily.
+
+"I'm all right--now. And who is Hennie?"
+
+"My friend Miss Penny--"
+
+"I beg your pardon. I thought you said Hennie."
+
+"Henrietta Penny. She was at school with me. We are taking care of one
+another."
+
+They had come to the forecourt of the cottage.
+
+"Hen!" cried Margaret. The window was wide open, but the blind was
+discreetly down.
+
+"Hello, Chum!" came back in muffled tones. "What's up now? Been and
+got yourself lost again?"
+
+"Come out, dear. I want you."
+
+"Half a jiff, old girl. Give a fellow a chance with his back hair. You
+had first tub this morning, remember." At which Graeme's eyes twinkled
+in unison with Margaret's.
+
+"There's a gentleman waiting to see you, dear," said Margaret, to
+prevent any further revelations.
+
+"A _what_?"--and there followed a clatter of falling implements as
+though a sudden start had sent them flying. "Wretch!--to upset one
+like that! It's that big brown dog, I suppose. I know you, my child!"
+
+Then the blind whirled up and a merry face, in a cloud of dishevelled
+hair, looked out, a pair of horrified eyes rested momentarily on
+Graeme, and the blind rattled down again with something that sounded
+like a muffled feminine objurgation.
+
+And presently the inner door opened and Miss Penny came forth
+demurely, and bowed distantly in the direction of Margaret and Graeme.
+
+She was of average height but inclined to plumpness, and so looked
+smaller than Margaret; and she had no great pretensions to beauty,
+Graeme thought--but then he was biassed for life and incapable of free
+and impartial judgment--save such as might be found in a very frank
+face given to much laughter, a rather wide mouth and nice white teeth,
+abundant dark hair and a pair of challenging brown eyes which now,
+getting over their first confusion--and finding herself at all events
+fully dressed, wherein she had the advantage of him--rested with much
+appreciation on the young man in front of her.
+
+The salt water was still in his hair, and the discrepancies in his
+hasty attire were but partly hidden by the damp towel round his neck.
+Nevertheless he was very good to look upon. His moustache showed crisp
+against the healthy brown of his face; his hair, short as it was, had
+a natural ripple which sea-water could not reduce; and his eyes were
+brimming with the new joy of life and repressed laughter. Miss Penny
+liked the looks of him.
+
+"Margaret Brandt, I will never forgive you as long as I live," said
+she emphatically.
+
+"All right, dear! This is Mr. Bogey-man whose rooms we have
+appropriated. He wished to be introduced to the other malefactor. Miss
+Henrietta Penny--Mr. John Graeme! Mr. Graeme and I have met before."
+
+If Mr. John Graeme had had more experience of women, the flash that
+shot across from the brown eyes to the dark blue ones might have told
+him stories--for instance, that his name and would-have-been standing
+towards her friend were not entirely unknown to Miss Penny; that, for
+a brief half second, she wondered--doubted--and instantly chid herself
+for such a thought in connection with Margaret Brandt.
+
+But Margaret herself, being a woman, caught the momentary challenge
+and repelled it steadily.
+
+"I am very pleased to meet you, Miss Penny--in such a place, and in
+such company. I have heard of you from Miss Brandt," said Graeme.
+
+"Never till five minutes ago," laughed Margaret.
+
+"Yes, if you will pardon me--once before, at Lady Elspeth Gordon's.
+Unless I am mistaken, Miss Penny had just been across to Dublin to
+take a degree which Cambridge ungallantly declined to confer upon
+her."
+
+"Quite right!" said Miss Penny. "M.A. They're misogynists at
+Cambridge."
+
+"Will you oblige me by informing Miss Penny, Mr. Graeme, that this
+meeting is purely accidental? I caught a spark in her eye and I know
+what it means. Had you the very slightest idea that we were coming to
+Sark?"
+
+"Not the remotest. When I saw you standing in the hedge there, with
+the morning glories all about you, I first doubted my eyes, then I
+thought you a vision--"
+
+"And do you think it possible that I knew of you being here?"
+
+"I am certain you did not. Nobody knows. I left no address, and I told
+no one where I was going. I have not had a letter since I left London.
+I have been buried alive in this heavenly little place."
+
+"There now, Mademoiselle," said Margaret, with a bow. "Are you
+satisfied now?"
+
+"I was satisfied before you opened your mouth, my dear. The
+possibility inevitably suggested itself, but it was stillborn. Has not
+our friendship passed its seventh birthday?"
+
+"Thank you, dear. But the coincidence of our coming to bury ourselves
+in Sark, and Mr. Graeme's coming to bury himself in Sark, was almost
+unbelievable."
+
+"Not at all," said Miss Penny. "If you could both trace back you would
+probably find the same original spring of action--a chance word from
+some common friend, or some article you have both read. Then, when
+circumstances loosed the spring, you both shot in the same direction.
+What was it loosed your spring, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"Well,--I wanted to get away out of things. I'm busy on a book, you
+see, and I'd heard of Sark--"
+
+"Same here!" said Miss Penny--"less the book. We wanted to get away
+out of things--and people, and we'd heard of Sark, and here we are.
+Was it you suggested Sark, or I, Meg?"
+
+"I'm sure I don't know, dear. You, I should think."
+
+"I will take all the credit of it."
+
+Just then Mrs. Carre, who had been down to John Philip's for bread,
+turned in out of the road with a loaf under each arm. At sight of all
+her guests fraternising, her face lit up with a broad smile, and
+Scamp, who had whirled in after her, twisted himself into
+hieroglyphics of delight and rent the air with his expression of it,
+and then launched himself at Punch and taxed him with perfidy in going
+off to bathe without him.
+
+"Ah, you have med friends with the leddies," she said to Graeme.
+"Scamp! Bad beast, be qui-et! A couche!"
+
+"I'm doing my best, Mrs. Carre."
+
+"That iss very nice."
+
+"Very nice, indeed!" And Miss Penny asserted afterwards that he was
+looking at Margaret all the time.
+
+"I told them you were a nice quiet gentleman and wouldn't disturb them
+at all," said Mrs. Carre.
+
+"I'll do my very best not to. So far the disturbance has been all on
+their side, but I'm standing it very well, you see. You'll let me show
+you the sights, won't you?" he said to Miss Brandt. "I've been here a
+month, you see, and I know it all like a book. I've done nothing but
+moon about since I came--"
+
+"I thought you were busy on a book," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Er--well, you see, you have to do a lot of thinking before you start
+writing. I've been thinking," and perhaps more than one of them had a
+fairly shrewd suspicion as to the line his thoughts had taken.
+
+"Now, if I don't cut away and dress, and get my breakfast and clear
+out, I shall be in the way of the ladies, and Mrs. Carre will never
+forgive me," he said. "I do hope you will include me in your plans for
+the day."
+
+His bow included them both, and he sped off up the path through the
+high hedge, with the two dogs racing alongside.
+
+"Meg, my child, we will go for a little walk," said Miss Penny.
+
+
+V
+
+The salt Sark air is uplifting at all times. The sea-water has a crisp
+effervescence of its own which tones and braces mind and body alike.
+Add to these the wonder of Margaret's unexpected presence there and,
+if the gift of large imagination be yours, you may possibly
+arrive--within a hundred miles or so--of the state of John Graeme's
+feelings as he raced up that path and bounded up the stairs of the Red
+House four at a time.
+
+He looked out of the wide-open window across the fields, while the
+dogs, as usual, took the opportunity of appeasing their thirst at his
+water-jug,--for water lies at the bottom of deep cool wells in Sark,
+and sensible dogs take their chances when they offer.
+
+Was this the room he had left an hour ago in the fresh of the dawn--a
+man whose gray future was just beginning to lift its bruised head out
+of the shadows?
+
+Were those gleaming emerald fields the dim wastes he had sped across
+with his dumb companion, feeling as friendly towards him as towards
+anything on earth?
+
+Were those trees over there, with the glow of spring-gold in their
+tender green leaves, the gloomy guardians of the churchyard where
+ghosts walked of a night?
+
+Was that streak of blue away beyond the uplands, with the purple film
+along its rim, only the sea and a hint of Jersey, or was it a glimpse
+of heaven?
+
+Was he, in very truth, that John Graeme who, for thirty days past, had
+been striving with all his might to root the thought of Margaret
+Brandt out of his life--and succeeding not at all?
+
+It was the face of a stranger--a stranger with new joy of life in his
+sparkling eyes--that looked back at him out of the glass, as he plied
+his brushes, and tied his neck-tie with a careful assiduity to which
+the John Graeme of the past thirty days had been a stranger indeed.
+
+It was amazing. It was almost past belief. Yet this was himself, and
+there was the gap in the dark hedge--never dark again to him so long
+as one twig of it lived--the gap where he had come upon her standing
+like a goddess of the morning with the glories of the dawn all about
+her. And somewhere not far away, under this same heavenly blue sky,
+was Margaret. And there was no sign or hint of Jeremiah Pixley in her
+atmosphere--nor of Charles Svendt.
+
+What could it possibly all mean?
+
+Miss Penny--Hennie Penny! What a delightfully ludicrous name! And what
+a delightful creature she was!--Miss Penny, unless he had been
+dreaming, had said they had come to get away from things--and people!
+Now what did she mean by that--if she really had said it and he had
+not been dreaming?
+
+Was it possible Margaret had come to get away from Jeremiah Pixley and
+Charles Svendt? On the face of it, it seemed not impossible, for
+Graeme's only wonder was that she could ever have borne with them so
+long.
+
+His brain was in a whirl. The eyes of his understanding were as the
+eyes of one immured for thirty days in a dark cell and then dragged
+suddenly into the full blaze of the sun. If he had just drunk a magnum
+of champagne he could not have felt more elevated, and he would
+certainly have felt very different. For his eye was clear as a jewel,
+and his hand was steady as a rock, though his heart had not yet
+settled to its beat and the red blood danced in his veins like fire.
+
+"Jock, my lad," he said to himself, as he got the knot of his tie to
+his liking at last,--"keep a grip of yourself and go steady. Such a
+thing is enough to throw any man a bit off the rails. Ca' canny, my
+lad, ca' canny!"
+
+
+VI
+
+"Meg, I rather like young men with rippled hair," said Miss Hennie
+Penny, as they passed the Carrefour and strolled between the dewy
+hedges towards La Tour, with larks by the dozen bursting their hearts
+in the freshness of the morning above them.
+
+"Do you, dear? I thought you scorned young men?"
+
+"As a class, yes!--Especially the Cambridge variety. But not in
+particular. I make an exception in this case."
+
+"So good of you!" murmured Margaret in her best company manner.
+
+"Why did you never tell me how nice he was?"
+
+"Tell you how nice he was? I don't remember ever discussing him with
+you in any shape or form whatever."
+
+"Not to say discussed exactly, but you can't deny that you've
+mentioned him occasionally."
+
+"So I have William Shakespeare and Alfred Tennyson--"
+
+"And Charles Pixley!"
+
+"That's quite different--"
+
+"You're right, my dear. This is a horse of quite another colour. An
+awfully decent colour too. I'm glad you appreciate it. He's as brown
+as a gipsy and not an ounce of flab about him. Charles Pixley is
+mostly flab--"
+
+"Don't be rude, Hen. You don't know Charles. And do drop your school
+slang--"
+
+"Can't, my child. It's part of my holiday, so none of your pi-jaw! If
+you want me to enjoy myself you must let me have my head. You can't
+imagine how awfully good it tastes when you've been doing your best to
+choke girls off it for a year or two. It's one of the outward and
+visible signs of emancipation. This is another!" and she sprang up the
+high turf bank of the orchard of La Tour and danced a breakdown on it,
+and then jumped back into the road with ballooning skirts, to the
+intense amazement of old Mrs. Hamon of Le Fort, who had just come
+round the corner to draw sweet water from the La Tour well.
+
+"People will think you're crazy," remonstrated Margaret.
+
+"So I am, and you're my keeper, though it's supposed to be the other
+way about. The air of Sark has got into my head. What a quaint bonnet
+that old lady has! I wonder what colour it was in its infancy.
+Good-morning, ma'am! Isn't this a glorious day?" And old Madame Hamon
+murmured a word and passed hastily on lest worse should befall.
+
+"Hennie, be sensible for a minute or two. I want you to consider
+something seriously."
+
+"Sensible, if you like, Chummie, for 'tis my nature to.
+Serious?--Never! How could one, with those larks bursting themselves
+in a sky like that? And did you ever see hedges like these in all your
+life? What's it all about?--Ripply-Hair?"
+
+"Yes. Don't you see how awkward the whole matter is--"
+
+"Awkward for Charles Pixley maybe. I don't see that anybody else need
+worry themselves thin about it."
+
+"I'm not thinking of Mr. Pixley. It's--"
+
+"Ripply-Hair? Well, that's all right! Jolly sight nicer to think about
+him. I like his eyes too. There's something in them that seems to
+invite one's confidence. Perhaps you haven't noticed it? If I had a
+father-confessor--which, thank's-be, I haven't, and a jolly good thing
+for him!--I should stipulate for him having eyes just like that.
+Ripply hair too, I think. Yes. I should insist on his having hair just
+like Mr. Graeme's."
+
+They had strolled along past Le Fort till the road lost itself in a
+field above Banquette, and there they came to an involuntary stand and
+stood gazing.
+
+Before them, the long, broken slopes of the Eperquerie swept down from
+the heights to the sea, one vast blaze of flaming gorse--a tumultuous
+torrent of solid sunshine stayed suddenly in its course. And, in below
+the sunshine of the gorse, where rough Mother Earth should have been,
+there lay instead a soft sunset cloud, the tender cream-yellow and
+green of myriads of primroses and the just uncurling fronds of the
+bracken--primroses in such unbroken sheets and masses as to give a
+weird effect of remoteness and impalpability to that which was solid
+and close at hand.
+
+"Wonderful!" murmured Margaret.
+
+"Glorious!" murmured Miss Penny. "Is it really old Mother Earth we're
+looking at?"
+
+"No, dear! It's a bit of the sky fallen down there and the sun has
+rolled over it into the sea. See the bits of him in the wavelets! And
+did you ever in your life see a green like that water below the
+rocks?"
+
+"Sky and sun above, sun and sky below!--with trimmings of liquid
+emerald and sapphire, shot with white and gold. Meg, my child, this is
+a long way from No. 1 Melgrave Square."
+
+"A long, long way!" assented Margaret thoughtfully. And then, to take
+advantage of her companion's comparative soberness through the
+stirring of her feelings,--"Hennie, do you think we ought to stop?"
+
+"Stop?" and Miss Penny fronted her squarely. "Stop? Why, we've only
+just come. What's disgruntling you, Chummie?"
+
+"Can't you see how awkward it is?"
+
+"Well,--that depends--"
+
+"No one would believe it was all pure accident."
+
+"Perhaps it isn't," said Miss Penny oracularly.
+
+"Why, what do you mean?" said Margaret, bristling in her turn.
+
+"Oh, I'm imputing no guile, my child. I'm miles away up past that kind
+of thing. What I mean is this--perhaps it was meant to be, and you
+couldn't help yourselves. Now if that should be the case, it would be
+flying in the face of Providence to go and upset it all. What are your
+feelings towards him?"
+
+"Feelings? I have no feelings--"
+
+"Oh yes, you have, my child. You're not made of marble, though you can
+look it when you try. Why, I have myself. I like him--the little I've
+seen of him--and in spite of the fact that he caught me doing my hair,
+which is enough to turn anyone against anyone. I shall probably like
+him still more the better I get to know him. What have you against
+him?"
+
+"I've nothing whatever against him. I--"
+
+"Then, my dear, we'll sit tight. If anyone should go it's he, since
+he's been here a month, and we've only been one day. But if he goes it
+will only be because you make him. You've no ill-will towards him?"
+
+"I've no feeling at all about him, except that it's awkward his being
+here."
+
+"Then we'll just put the blame on Providence, and sit tight, as I said
+before. I'll see you come to no harm, my child. I could make that
+young man, or any young man, fly to the other end of the island by
+simply looking at him."
+
+"Think so, dear?" and Margaret, the issue being decided for her, came
+back to equanimity.
+
+"Sure!" said Miss Penny.
+
+
+VII
+
+He was sitting on the low stone wall that shut off the cobble-paved
+forecourt from the road, with his back towards them, when they
+sauntered through the open door after breakfast. He was smoking the
+choice after-breakfast pipe of peace, legs dangling, back bent, hands
+loosely clasped between his knees. He was very beautifully dressed as
+regards tie and collar--for the rest, light tweeds and cap of the
+same, and shoes which struck Miss Penny as flat. But these things she
+only noticed later. At present all she saw was a square light-tweed
+back, and a curl of fragrant smoke rising over its left shoulder.
+
+Below him in the dust were his two friends,--Punch, gravely observant
+of his every movement, and occasionally following the smoke with an
+interested eye; Scamp, no less watchful, but panting like a motor-car,
+and apparently exhausted with unrewarded scoutings up and down every
+possible route for the day's programme.
+
+In the hedge, on the opposite side of the road, sat a very small boy
+bunched up into an odd little heap, out of which looked a long sharp
+little face and a pair of black eyes as sharp as gimlets and as bright
+as a rat's, and beside him sat a big black cat busy on its toilet,
+which it interrupted in order to eye the ladies keenly when they
+appeared.
+
+"Now, see you here, my son," they heard from the other side of the
+broad tweed back, "if you don't make it fine for the next thirty days
+you and I will have words together. If you want it to rain, let it
+rain in the night. Not a drop after four A.M., you understand. If you
+turn it on after four in the morning there'll be another rupture of
+diplomatic relations between you and me, same as there was last
+night."
+
+The small boy's beady eyes twinkled, and he squeaked a few words in
+Sarkese.
+
+"You have the advantage of me, Johnnie. And I've told you before it's
+not polite to address a gentleman in a language he's not familiar
+with, when you're perfectly acquainted with his own. The only word I
+caught was 'Guyablle!' and that's not a word for young people like you
+and me, though it may suit Marielihou. I'm very much afraid I'll have
+to speak to the schoolmaster about you, after all, and to the Vicar
+too, maybe. What? A Wesleyan, are you? Very well then, it's Monsieur
+Bisson I must speak to."
+
+Here the small boy, with his face crumpled up into a grin, pointed a
+thin grimy finger past the young man, and he turned and saw the
+ladies. He doffed his cap and jumped down and tapped out his pipe, and
+the dogs sprang up expectant;--Punch, grave as ever but light on his
+feet for instant start; Scamp twisting himself into figure-eights, and
+rending the air with such yelps of delight that not a word could they
+pass.
+
+"Johnnie! Stop him!" shouted Graeme. The small boy in the hedge flung
+out his arm with a sudden threatening gesture, and the circling Scamp
+fled through the gateway and up the garden with a shriek of dismay,
+and remained there yelping as if he had been struck.
+
+"Odd that, isn't it?" said Graeme. "Johnnie's the only person that can
+stop that small dog talking; and, what's more, he can do it a hundred
+yards away. If the dog can see him that's enough, and yet they're good
+enough friends as a rule. Look at Punch!"
+
+The big brown fellow was standing eyeing the small boy with an odd
+expression, intent, expectant, doubtful, with just a touch of
+apprehension in it, and perhaps of latent anger.
+
+"Can you do it with Punch?" asked Miss Penny.
+
+The small boy shook his head. "Godzamin, he'd eat me if I tried," he
+said, and lifted his eyes from the dog's, and the dog walked quietly
+up to Margaret and pushed his great head under her hand.
+
+"He's a fine fellow," she said, caressing him.
+
+"A most gentlemanly dog," said Miss Penny. "His eyes are absolutely
+poetical,--charged with thoughts too deep for words."
+
+"Yes, he's dumb," said Graeme, stooping to pull a long brown ear.
+
+"Really?" asked Margaret, looking into his face to make sure he was
+not joking.
+
+"We've been close friends for a month now, and I've never heard his
+voice even in a whisper, nor has anyone else. I've an idea Johnnie
+here has put a spell on him."
+
+"Poor old fellow!" said Margaret, fondling the big brown head.
+
+"Oh, he's quite happy--bold as a lion and graceful as a panther, and
+Scamp talks more than enough for the two of them."
+
+"And what a fine big cat you have, Johnnie!" said Miss Penny, and
+stretched a friendly hand towards Marielihou. "What do you call it?"
+
+"Marrlyou," growled Johnnie; and Marielihou bristled and spat at the
+advancing white hand, which retired rapidly.
+
+"The nasty beast!" said Miss Penny, and Marielihou glared at her with
+eyes of scorching green fire.
+
+"Marielihou is not good company for anyone but herself," said Graeme.
+"Now, where would you like to go?"
+
+"We were up that way before breakfast," said Miss Penny, nodding due
+north.
+
+"Been to the Coupee yet?"
+
+"No, we've been nowhere except just along here. We were afraid of
+getting lost or tumbling over the edges."
+
+"Then you must see the Coupee at once. And we'll call at John Philip's
+as we pass, to get you some shoes."
+
+"Shoes?" and each stuck out a dainty brown boot and examined it
+critically for inadequacies, and then looked up at him enquiringly.
+
+"Yes, I know. They're delicious, but in Sark you must wear Sark
+shoes--this kind of thing"--sticking up his own--"or you may come to a
+sudden end. And, seeing that you're in my charge--"
+
+"Oh?" said Margaret.
+
+"Come along to John Philip's," said Miss Penny. And as they turned
+down the road with Punch, the hedge opened and Scamp came wriggling
+through, with white-eyed glances for Johnnie Vautrin and Marielihou
+sitting in the bushes farther up.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Miss Penny and Graeme did most of the talking. Margaret was unusually
+silent, pondering, perhaps, her friend's utterances of the early
+morning, and still wondering at the strange turn of events that had so
+unexpectedly thrown herself and John Graeme into such close
+companionship that he could actually claim to be in charge of her, and
+had proved it beyond question by making her buy a pair of shoes which
+she considered anything but shapely.
+
+Graeme understood and kept to his looking-glass promise.
+
+His heart was dancing within him. It was impossible to keep the lilt
+of it entirely out of his eyes. They were radiant with this
+unlooked-for happiness.
+
+It was Margaret's shadow that mingled with his own on the sunny
+road--when it wasn't Miss Penny's. It was Margaret's pleated blue
+skirt that swung beside him to a tune that set his pulses leaping.
+Miss Penny's skirt was there too, indeed, but a thousand of it
+flapping in a gale would not have quickened his pulse by half a beat.
+
+And Miss Penny probably understood--some things, or parts of
+things--or thought she did, and was extremely happy in that which was
+vouchsafed to her. Oh, she knew, did Miss Penny! She had not, indeed,
+had much--if put into a corner and made to confess to bare and
+literal truth, not any--experience, that is personal and practical
+experience, of such matters,--if, indeed, such matters are capable of
+being brought to the test of such a word as practical. But she had
+read much about them--in search of truth, and right and fitting books
+to be admitted to the school library--and she knew all about it. And
+here, unless she, Henrietta Penny, was very much mistaken, was a
+veritable live love-affair budding and blossoming--at least she hoped
+it would blossom--before her very eyes. Budding it undoubtedly was, on
+one side at all events, and blossom it certainly should if she could
+help it on; for he had ripply hair, and deep attractive eyes, and a
+frank open face, and she liked him.
+
+They were suddenly in the shade, threading a narrow cutting between
+high gorse-topped banks of crumbly yellow rock. Then, without any
+warning, the rock-walls fell away. They were out into the sunshine
+again, and in front stretched a wavering rock path, the narrow crown
+of a ridge whose sides sank sharply out of sight. From somewhere far
+away below came the surge and rush of many waters.
+
+"This is the Coupee," said Graeme, as the dogs raced across. "Over
+there is Little Sark."
+
+"It is grand!" said Margaret, gazing at the huge rock buttresses whose
+loins came up through the white foam three hundred feet below.
+
+"It's awful!" said Miss Penny. "You're never going across, Mr.
+Graeme?" as he strolled on along the narrow ridge.
+
+"Surely! Why not? It's perfectly safe. There was a wooden railing at
+this side, but it fell over about a fortnight ago, and at present the
+good folks of Little Sark and Big Sark are discussing who ought to put
+up a new one. I happened to be sitting over there when it fell. A
+party of visitors came down the cutting here, and one was just going
+to lean on the railing, to look down into the gulf there, when he had
+the sense to try it first with his foot and it went with a crash, and
+they got a scare and went back to the hotel to eat lobsters. It was
+really useless as protection, but it made one feel safer to have it
+there."
+
+"It's horrible," said Miss Penny emphatically.
+
+"Safe as London Bridge, if you'll only believe it. It's a good four
+feet wide. The school children used to trot over when it was not more
+than two and a half."
+
+"And none of them fell over?"
+
+"Never a one. Why should they?"
+
+"Meg, my dear," said Miss Penny, with a sudden flash of incongruity,"
+this is truly a _very_ great change from Melgrave Square."
+
+"It is," laughed Margaret. "Are you coming, Hennie?"
+
+"I'll--I'll risk it if Mr. Graeme will personally conduct me. He's in
+charge of us, you know."
+
+"Certainly!" and he held out his hand to her, and then looked at
+Margaret. "Will you please wait here till I come back for you?" And
+catching, as he thought, a sign of mutiny in her face,--"Although it's
+perfectly safe it's perhaps just as well to have company the first
+time you cross."
+
+"Very well," she said, and Miss Penny clung convulsively to the strong
+unwavering hand while she gingerly trod the narrow way, and the dogs
+raced half-way to meet them.
+
+"Go _away_!" she shrieked, and the dogs turned on their pivots and
+sped back.
+
+"Now, you see!" he said, when she stood safe on the rounded shoulder
+of Little Sark. "Where was the trouble?"
+
+"It's perfectly easy, Meg," cried Miss Penny, uplifted with her
+accomplishment.
+
+He wondered whether she would vouchsafe him her hand or attempt the
+passage alone. But she put her hand into his without hesitation, and
+thenceforth and for ever the Coupee held for him a touch of sacred
+glamour. For the soft hand throbbed in his, and every throb thrilled
+right up into his heart and set it dancing to some such tune as that
+which sang in David when he danced before the Ark. But his hand was
+firm, and his head was steady, for that which he held in charge was
+the dearest thing in life to him.
+
+Three hundred blessed feet was the span of the Coupee. How fervently
+he wished them three thousand--ay, three million! For every step
+accorded him a throb, and heart-throbs such as these are among the
+precious things of life.
+
+Neither of them spoke one word. Common-places were very much out of
+place, and the things that were in his heart he might not speak--yet.
+
+"Didn't I say so?" cried Miss Penny, as they stepped ashore on Little
+Sark. "It's as easy as winking."
+
+"I never said it wasn't," said Margaret, with a deep breath. "But I
+doubt if you'd have come across alone, my child."
+
+"It was certainly pleasanter to have something to hold on to," said
+Miss Penny.
+
+And Graeme thought so too.
+
+
+IX
+
+Little Sark provides ample opportunity for the adventurous scrambler,
+and Graeme, having tested the novel sensation of those delicious
+heart-thrills, was eager for more.
+
+They prowled round the old silver mines, and sat on the great rocks at
+Port Gorey which had in those olden times served for a jetty, while he
+told them how Peter Le Pelley had mortgaged the island to further his
+quest after the silver, and how a whole ship-load of it sank within a
+stone's throw of the place where they sat, and with it the Seigneur's
+hopes and fortunes.
+
+They peered into the old houses and down the disused shafts, lined now
+with matted growth of ivy and clinging ferns,--the bottomless pits
+into which the Le Pelley heritage had disappeared. Then he took them
+for mild refection to Mrs. Mollet's cottage; and after a rest,--and
+with their gracious permission, a pipe,--he led them across to the
+wild south walls of the island, with their great chasms and fissures
+and tumbled strata, their massive pinnacles, and deep narrow inlets
+and tunnels where the waves champed and roared in everlasting
+darkness.
+
+The dogs harried the rabbits untiringly, Punch in long lithe bounds
+that were a joy to behold; Scamp in panting hysterics which gave
+over-ample warning of his coming and precluded all possibilities of
+capture.
+
+Graeme led them down the face of the cliff fronting L'Etac, the great
+rock island that was once a part of Little Sark itself.
+
+"Once upon a time there was a Coupee across here," he said. "Some time
+our Coupee will disappear and Little Sark will be an island also."
+
+"Not before we get back, I hope," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Not before we get back, _I_ hope," said Graeme, for would he not hold
+Margaret's hand again on the homeward journey?
+
+Down the cliff, along white saw-teeth of upturned veins of quartz,
+with Margaret's hand in his, then back for Miss Penny, till they sat
+looking down into a deep dark basin, almost circular: lined with the
+most lovely pink and heliotrope corallines: studded with anemones,
+brown and red and green: every point and ledge decked with
+delicately-fronded sea-ferns and mosses: and the whole overhung with
+threatening masses of rock.
+
+"Venus's Bath," he told them. "Those round stones at the bottom have
+churned about in there for hundreds of years, I suppose. The tide
+fills it each time, as you will see presently, but the stones cannot
+get out and they've helped to make their own prison-house,--wherein I
+perceive a moral. It's a delicious plunge from that rock."
+
+"You bathe here?" asked Margaret.
+
+"I and the dogs bathe here at times. There's one other thing you must
+see, and I think you may see it to-day. The tide is right, and the
+wind is right, and there's a good sea on."
+
+They waited till the long waves came swirling up over the rocks and
+filled the basin and set the great round stones at the bottom grinding
+angrily. Then off again along the splintered face of the cliff, one by
+one, that is two by two over the difficult bits, till he had them
+seated among some ragged boulders with the waves foaming white below
+them, and swooking and plunking in hidden hollow places.
+
+The wind was rising, and the crash of the seas on the rocks made
+speech impossible. He pointed suddenly along the cliff face, and not
+twenty yards away, with a hiss and a roar, a furious spout of water
+shot up into the air a rocket of white foam, a hundred feet high, and
+fell with a crash over the rocks and into the sea.
+
+Twenty times they watched it roar up into the sky, and then they
+crawled back up the face of the cliff, wind-whipped and rosy-faced,
+and with the taste of salt in their mouths.
+
+"That is a fine sight," said Margaret, with sparkling eyes and diamond
+drops in her wind-blown hair. He thought he had never seen her so
+absolutely lovely before. He had certainly never seen anyone to
+compare with her.
+
+"That's the Souffleur--the blow-hole. There's a bigger one still in
+Saignie Bay, we'll look it up if the wind gets round to the
+north-west. I'm glad you've seen this one. It was just a chance."
+
+"I'm blow-holed all to rags, and, Meg, your hair is absolutely
+disgraceful," said Miss Penny. So differently may different eyes
+regard the same object, especially when the heart has a say in it. He
+would have given all he was worth for an offered lock of that
+wind-blown hair.
+
+As Margaret turned she caught his eye, perhaps caught something of
+what was in it.
+
+"Am I as bad as all that?" she laughed in rosy confusion.
+
+"You're"--he began impetuously, but caught himself in time.--"You're
+all right. When you go to see the Souffleur you must expect to get a
+bit blown."
+
+"It's worth it," she said. "And I'm sure we're much obliged to you for
+taking us. We could never have got there alone."
+
+"We'd never have got to Little Sark, to say nothing of the Souffleur,"
+said Miss Penny very emphatically.
+
+"And now perhaps you'll forgive me for making you buy those shoes."
+
+"My, yes! They're great," said Miss Penny, looking critically at her
+feet. "But decidedly they're not beautiful."
+
+
+X
+
+They loitered homewards, chatting discursively of many things, in a
+way that made for intimacy. Miss Penny and Graeme, indeed, still did
+most of the actual speaking, as he remembered afterwards, but Margaret
+was in no way outside their talk, and if she did not say much it is
+probable that she listened and thought none the less.
+
+The Coupee afforded Graeme another all-too-short span of delight,
+while Margaret's hand throbbed in his and she entrusted herself to his
+protection.
+
+He took them home by the Windmill, and through the fields and
+hedge-gaps into the grounds of the Red House, and in his heart's eye
+saw Margaret standing once more in the opening of the tall hedge with
+the morning glory all about her--just as he would remember her all his
+life.
+
+"Time?" demanded Miss Penny, as they passed along the verandah.
+
+"Half-past seven."
+
+"Then you are half an hour late for your dinner. I propose that we ask
+Mrs. Carre to serve us all together to-night," said Miss Penny, "or we
+may all fare the worse."
+
+"I shall be delighted," began Graeme exuberantly, "unless--" and he
+snapped a glance at Miss Brandt.
+
+"We shall be glad if you will join us," she said quickly.
+
+"I will be there in two minutes," he said, and sped up the Red House
+stairs to make ready.
+
+"I hope to goodness he won't," said Miss Penny, as they passed through
+the hedge. "Now don't you say a word to me, Margaret Brandt. It was
+you invited him"
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"'We shall be glad if you will join us.' If that isn't an invitation
+I'd like to know what it is. And I heard you say it with my own two
+ears,--moi qui vous parle, as we say here."
+
+"You know perfectly well that I could not possibly do anything else,
+Hennie. I believe you just did it on purpose. I don't know what's come
+over you."
+
+"John Graeme. I like him. And after all he'd done for us--that Coupee,
+and Venus's Bath, and the Souffleur, and he like to lose his dinner
+over it all! What could a kind motherly person like me do but
+suggest--simply suggest, in the vaguest manner possible--"
+
+"Yes?--" as she stopped in a challenging way.
+
+"I merely threw out the suggestion, I say, in the vaguest possible
+way, that as we were nearly dying of hunger he should allow us to ask
+Mrs. Carre to let us have our dinner half an hour earlier than
+usual--"
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"And then you struck in, in your usual lordly fashion, and begged him
+to join us. And I'm bound to say he took it very well, not to say
+jumped at it."
+
+"Hennie, you're a--"
+
+"Yes, I know. And if I live I'll be a be-a, and perhaps more
+besides,"--with a cryptic nod.
+
+"Now, what do you mean by that?"
+
+"Wait patiently, my child, and you'll see."
+
+"I believe the Sark air is affecting your--whatever you've got inside
+that giddy head of yours."
+
+"Of course it is. That's what I came for, and to keep you out of
+mischief, you infantile law-breaker."
+
+
+XI
+
+Graeme's two minutes were each set with considerably more than the
+regulation sixty seconds--diamond seconds of glowing anticipation,
+every one of them. And, to his credit, be it recorded that he allotted
+several of them to the invocation of most fervent blessings on Miss
+Penny, who, at the moment, was vigorously disclaiming any pretension
+thereto.
+
+But, quite soon enough for his hosts, as he considered them,--his
+guests, according to Miss Penny,--he appeared at the cottage, bodily
+and mentally prepared for the feast, and showing both in manner and
+attire due sense of the honour conferred upon him.
+
+It was a festive, and for one of them at all events, a
+never-to-be-forgotten meal. The strong Sark air had got into all their
+heads, and whatever prudish notions might have been working in
+Margaret, she had bidden them to heel and took her pleasure as it
+came.
+
+Her mood, however, for the moment was receptive rather than
+expressive. Miss Penny and Graeme still did most of the talking, and
+Margaret sat and listened and laughed, not a little astonished at
+finding herself in that galley.
+
+"What is the penalty for aiding and abetting a criminal in an evasion
+of the law, Mr. Graeme?" chirped Miss Penny one time, and took
+Margaret's energetic below-table expostulation without a wince.
+
+"It would depend, I should say, on the particular dye of criminal.
+What has your friend been up to, Miss Penny? Is he a particularly
+black specimen?"
+
+"In the first place he's a she, and in the next place her complexion
+has a decided tendency towards blonde. As to dye--I am in a position
+to state on oath that she does not."
+
+For a moment he was mystified, then his eye fell on Margaret's face,
+full of glorious confusion at this base betrayal by her bosom friend.
+
+"The Sark air does get into people's heads like that at times," he
+said diplomatically. "It's just in the first few days. But you soon
+get used to it. I felt just the same myself--losing faith in things
+and thinking ill of my friends, and so on. You'll be quite all right
+in a day or two, Miss Penny,"--with a touch of sympathetic
+commiseration in his voice.
+
+"Oh, I'm quite all right now," said Miss Penny enjoyably. "I thought
+it only right and proper to let you know where you stand. At the
+present moment you are as likely as not aiding and abetting a breaker
+of the British laws and her accomplice. You may become involved in
+serious complications, you see."
+
+"If that means that I can be of any service in the matter I shall be
+only too delighted,--if you will not look upon me as an intruder." He
+spoke to Miss Penny but looked at Margaret.
+
+"Ah-ha! Qualms of conscience----"
+
+"Hennie is a little raised, Mr. Graeme," broke in Margaret. "Please
+excuse her. A good night's rest will make her all right."
+
+"Never felt better in my life," sparkled Miss Penny. "But seriously,
+Mr. Graeme, it is only right you should understand, for we don't quite
+know where we are ourselves, and I'm going to tell you even though
+Margaret kicks all the skin off my leg in the process. In a
+word,--we've bolted."
+
+"Bolted?" he echoed, all aglow with hopeful interest.
+
+"Yes--from Mr. Pixley and all his works. And as he had been
+threatening to make us a Ward of Court, you see--well, there you are,
+don't you know."
+
+"I see," he said, and there was a new light in his eyes as he looked
+at Margaret, and his soul danced within him again as David's before
+the Ark.
+
+"For reasons which seemed adequate to myself, Mr. Graeme,"--began
+Margaret, in more sober explanation.
+
+"They were, they were. I am sure of it," sang his heart. And his brain
+asked eagerly, "Had Charles Svendt anything to do with it, I wonder?"
+
+"--I thought it well to remove myself from the care of my guardian
+Mr. Pixley----"
+
+"Splendid girl! Splendid girl!" sang his heart.
+
+"--And as I have still some of my time to serve----"
+
+"How long, O Lord, how long?" chaunted his heart, with no sense of
+impropriety, for it was sounding paeans of joyful hope.
+
+"--You see----" said Margaret.
+
+"I see."
+
+"Do you think they could make me go back to him?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"To Mr. Pixley? Certainly not--that is if your reasons for leaving him
+seemed adequate to the Court, as I am sure they would."
+
+She offered no explanation on this point. All that she left unsaid,
+and that he would have given much to hear, seemed dancing just inside
+Miss Penny's sparkling eyes, and as like as not to come dancing out at
+any moment.
+
+"You see," said Graeme, "I happen to have been making some enquiries
+from a legal friend on that very point----"
+
+"Oh!" said Margaret, and Miss Penny's eyes danced carmagnoles.
+
+"In connection with a story, you know. One likes to get one's legal
+points all right. In any case, as I was just about to tell Miss Penny
+for the benefit of her criminal friend, there would be lots of red
+tape to unwind before they could do anything, and this little isle of
+Sark is the quaintest place in the world in the matter of its own old
+observances and their integrity, and the rejection of new ideas. Mr.
+Pixley does not know you are here, of course?"
+
+"Not much, or he'd have been over by special boat long since," said
+Miss Penny. "We managed it splendidly."
+
+"And how long?" began Graeme, in pursuance of his train of thought,
+but stopped short at sound of the words, since they bore distant
+resemblance to a curiosity which seemed to himself impertinent.
+
+But Miss Penny knew no such compunctions. She did not want to miss one
+jot or tittle of her enjoyment of the situation.
+
+"About six months," said she quickly.
+
+"Well, I should think we"--how delightful to him that "we," and how
+Miss Penny rejoiced in it!--"could hold them at bay for that length of
+time. The machinery of the law is slow and cumbersome at best, and in
+this case, I imagine, it would not be difficult to put a few
+additional spokes in its wheels."
+
+If his face was anything to go by there were many more questions he
+would have liked to put--judicial questions, you understand, for a
+fuller comprehension of the case. But he would not venture them yet.
+He had got ample food for reflection for the moment, and his hopes
+stood high.
+
+Never for him had there been a dinner equal to that one. Better ones
+he had partaken of in plenty. But the full board and the quality of
+the faring are not the only things, nor by any means the chief things,
+that go to the making of a feast.
+
+The nearest approach to it had been that dinner with the Whitefriars,
+at which he first met Margaret Brandt, and that did not come within
+measurable distance of this one.
+
+
+
+XII
+
+"Will you be pleased to tek your dinner with the leddies again
+to-night?" asked Mrs. Carre, as she gave Graeme his breakfast next
+morning.
+
+"I would be delighted," he said doubtfully. "But are you quite sure
+they would wish it, Mrs. Carre."
+
+"But you did get on all right with them," she said, eyeing him
+wonderingly. "They are very nice leddies, I am sure."
+
+"Oh, we got on first rate. We didn't quarrel over the food or fall out
+in any way. But----"
+
+"Well then?"
+
+"Will it be any easier for you?" he asked thoughtfully.
+
+"Well, of course, it will be once setting instead of twice, and that
+iss easier----"
+
+"Then suppose you put it to them on that ground, Mrs. Carre, solely on
+that ground, you understand. And if they are agreeable, I--well, I
+shall not raise any objections."
+
+And so, presently, Mrs. Carre said to the ladies, "You did get on all
+right with the gentleman last night, yes?"
+
+"Oh, quite, Mrs. Carre," sparkled Miss Penny.
+
+"I wass wondering if it would please you to dine all at once together
+again each night. You see, it would save me the trouble of setting
+twice. I did ask him and he said he didn't mind if you didn't. He iss
+a very nice quiet gentleman, I am sure."
+
+"I'm sure it's very good of him," said Miss Penny. "By all means serve
+us all at once together, Mrs. Carre. I guess we can stand it if he
+can."
+
+"That iss all right then," said Mrs. Carre, and the common evening
+meal became an institution--to Graeme's vast enjoyment.
+
+
+XIII
+
+When the girls went into their room after breakfast to put on their
+hats and scrambling shoes, they saw Graeme sitting on the low stone
+wall, as usual, smoking his after-breakfast pipe, and they caught a
+part of the conversation in progress between him and Johnny Vautrin.
+
+"I see five crows 's mawnin'," they heard in Johnnie's sepulchral
+voice.
+
+"Really, now! Catch any?"
+
+"There wuss five crows."
+
+"Ah--five? That's an odd number! And what special ill-luck do you
+infer from five crows, Johnnie?"
+
+"Someone's goan to be sick," said Johnnie, with joyous anticipation.
+
+"Dear me! That's what five crows mean, is it?"
+
+"Ouaie!"
+
+"They didn't go into particulars, I suppose,--as to who it is likely
+to be, for instance, and the exact nature of the seizure?"
+
+"They flew over to church there and settled in black trees."
+
+"Vicar, maybe, since they went that way."
+
+"Mebbe!"--hopefully.
+
+"Well, well! Perhaps if we gave him a hint he might take some
+precautions."
+
+"Couldn' tek nauthen 'd be any use 'gainst crows. Go'zamin, they
+knows!"
+
+"You're just a confirmed old croaker, Johnnie."
+
+"A'n't!" said Johnnie.
+
+"Where's our old friend Marielihou?"
+
+"She's a-busy," said Johnnie, wriggling uncomfortably.
+
+"Ah,--killing something, I presume. Is it going to keep fine for the
+next three or four weeks?"
+
+"I don' think."
+
+"You don't, you little rascal?"
+
+"You might do your best for us, Johnnie," said Miss Penny, as they
+came through the gap in the wall. "And if it keeps fine all the time
+I'll give you--let me see, I'll give you a shilling when we go away."
+
+Johnnie's avidious little claw reached out eagerly.
+
+"Godzamin!" said he. "Gimme it now, an' I'll do my best."
+
+"Earn it, my child," said Miss Penny, and they went on up the road,
+leaving Johnnie scowling in the hedge.
+
+"Well, where would you like to go to-day?" asked Graeme. "Will you
+leave yourselves in my hands again?"
+
+"I'm sure we can't do better," said Miss Penny heartily. "Yesterday
+was a day of days. What do you say, Meg?"
+
+"It looks as though we were going to occupy a great deal of Mr.
+Graeme's time," said Meg non-committally.
+
+"It could not possibly be better occupied," he said exuberantly.
+
+"And how about your story, Mr. Graeme? Is it at a standstill?" asked
+Miss Penny.
+
+"Not at all. It's getting on capitally."
+
+"Why, when do you work at it?"
+
+"Oh,--between times, and when the spirit moves me and I've got
+nothing better to do."
+
+"Is that how one writes books?"
+
+"Sometimes. How do you feel about caves?"
+
+"Ripping! If there's one thing we revel in it's caves, principally
+because we know nothing about them."
+
+"Then we'll break you in on Greve de la Ville. They're comparatively
+easy, and another day we'll do the Boutiques and the Gouliots. Then we
+can get a whole day full of caves by going round the island in a
+boat--red caves and green caves and black caves and barking-dog
+caves--all sorts and conditions of caves--caves studded all round with
+anemones, and caves bristling with tiny jewelled sponges. Sark is just
+a honeycomb of caves."
+
+"Spiffing!" said Miss Penny. "If Mr. Pixley gets on our track we'll
+play hide-and-seek in them with him."
+
+"Then we ought to spend a day on Brecqhou--"
+
+"A day on Brecqhou without a doubt!"
+
+"And if we can get the boat from Guernsey to call for us at the
+Eperquerie, and can get a boat there to put us aboard, we might manage
+Alderney."
+
+"Sounds a bit if-fy, but tempting thereby. Margaret, my dear, our work
+is cut out for us."
+
+"And Mr. Graeme's cut out from him, I'm afraid."
+
+"Oh, not at all, I assure you. It's going ahead like steam," and they
+began to descend into Greve de la Ville, the dogs as usual ranging the
+cliff-sides after rabbits, disappearing altogether at times and then
+flashing suddenly into view half a mile away among the gorse and
+bracken.
+
+Sark scrambling requires caution and constant asistance from the
+practised to the unpractised hand, and Graeme omitted none of the
+necessary precautions. Whereby Margaret's throbbing hand was much in
+his,--so, indeed, was Miss Penny's, but that was quite another
+matter,--and every convulsive grip of the little hand, though it was
+caused by nothing more than the uncertainties of the way, set his
+heart dancing and riveted the golden chains still more firmly round
+it.
+
+There are difficult bits in those caves in the Greve de la
+Ville,--steep ascents, and black drops in sheer faith into unknown
+depths, and tight squeezes past sloping shelves which seem on the
+point of closing and cracking one like a nut; and when they crawled
+out at last into a boulder-strewn plateau, open to the sea on one side
+only, they sighed gratefully at the ample height and breadth of
+things, and sank down on the shingle to breathe the free air and
+sunshine.
+
+He amused them by telling them how, the last time he was there, he
+found an elderly gentleman sitting with his head in his hands, on that
+exact spot. And how, at sight of the new-comer, he had come running to
+him and fallen sobbing on his neck. He had been there for over an
+hour seeking the way out, and not being able to find it, had got into
+a panic.
+
+"I wonder if you could find the place we came in, now?" said Graeme.
+"Scamp, lie down, sir, and don't give me away!"
+
+"Why, certainly, it's just there," said Miss Penny, jumping up
+energetically and marching across, while the dogs grinned open-mouthed
+at her lack of perception. For it wasn't there at all, and she
+searched without avail, and at last sat down again saying, "Well, I
+sympathise with your old gentleman, Mr. Graeme. If I was all alone
+here, and unable to find that hole, I should go into hysterics, though
+it's not a thing I'm given to. I suppose we did get in somehow."
+
+"Obviously! And that's where the advantage of a guide comes in, you
+see."
+
+"I, for one, appreciate him highly, I can assure you. Where is that
+wretched hole?"
+
+"Here it is, you see. It's a tricky place. I shall never forget the
+look of relief on that old fellow's face at sight of me. I believe he
+thinks to this day that I saved his life. He stuck to me like a leech
+all the way through the further caves and till we got back to the
+entrance."
+
+"We're not through them yet then?"
+
+"Through? Bless me no, we're only just starting, but there's no use
+hurrying. Tide's right, and we have plenty of time."
+
+"I feel as if I'd been lost and found again," said Miss Penny. "If
+Mr. Pixley comes along we'll induce him in here and leave him to find
+his way out."
+
+"It would take more than you to get Mr. Pixley in here, Hennie," said
+Margaret quietly. "He'd never venture off the roads, even if he risked
+his life in reaching Sark. He's much too careful of himself."
+
+"He thinks a good deal more of himself than I do," said Miss Penny.
+"With all deference to you, Meg, since he's a relative, I consider him
+a jolly old humbug."
+
+
+XIV
+
+The days were packed with enjoyment for Graeme; not less for Miss
+Penny; nor--illuminated and titillated with a conposed expectancy as
+to whither all this might be leading her--for Margaret herself.
+
+Graeme took the joyful burden of their proper entertainment entirely
+on his own shoulders. He reaped in full now the harvest of his lonely
+wanderings, and compared those former gloomy days with these golden
+ones with a heart so jubilant that the light of it shone in his eyes
+and in his face, and made him fairly radiant.
+
+"That young man grows handsomer every day," was Miss Penny's
+appreciative comment, in the privacy of hair-brushing.
+
+Margaret expressed no opinion.
+
+"I thought him uncommonly good-looking as soon as I set eyes on him,
+but he's growing upon me. I do hope, for his sake, that I shan't fall
+in love with him."
+
+And at that a tiny gleam of a smile hovered for a moment in the curves
+of Margaret's lips, behind the silken screen of her hair.
+
+No trouble was too great for him if it added to their pleasure. He
+provisioned their expeditions with lavish discrimination. He forgot
+nothing,--not even the salt. He carried burdens and kindled fires for
+the boiling of kettles, and saw to their comfort and more, in every
+possible way. He assisted them up and down steep places, and
+Margaret's hand grew accustomed to the steady strength of his. She
+came to look for the helping hand whenever the ways grew difficult. At
+times she--yes, actually, she caught herself grudging Hennie-Penny
+what seemed to her too long an appropriation of it.
+
+Never surely were the beauties of Sark seen under happier auspices, or
+through eyes attuned to more lively appreciation. For love-lit eyes
+see all things lovely, and no more perfect loveliness of sea and rock
+and flower and sky may be found than such as go to the making of this
+little isle of Sark.
+
+He guided their more active energies through the anemone-studded and
+sponge-fringed caves under the Gouliots; through the long
+rough-polished, sea-scoured passages of the Boutiques; down the seamed
+cliffs at Les Fontaines and Grande Greve; along the precarious tracks
+and iron rings into Derrible; with the assistance of a rope, into Le
+Pot. And for rest-times they spent long delightful afternoons sitting
+among the blazing gorse cushions of the Eperquerie, and on that great
+rock that elbows Tintageu into the waves, and looks down on the one
+side on Port du Moulin and the Autelets, and on the other into Pegane
+Bay and Port a la Jument.
+
+This high perch had a peculiar fascination for Margaret. She could
+have sat there day after day with perfect enjoyment. She never tired
+of it all--the crisp green waters below, with their dazzling fringe of
+foam round every gray rock and headland; the gold-tipped pinnacles of
+the Autelets, with their fluttering halos of gulls and sea-pies and
+cormorants, and their ridi-fringe of tawny seaweed and foamy lace; the
+rounded slopes of the Eperquerie; the bold cliffs behind, with their
+sprawling gray feet in the emerald sea, and their green and gold
+shoulders humping up into the blue sky; beyond them the black Gouliot
+rocks and foaming Race, and the long soft bulk of Brecqhou with its
+seamy sides and black-mouthed caves.
+
+And here one day they had a novel experience, and Margaret learned
+something--got fullest proof, at all events, of something her heart
+had already told her.
+
+They were sitting in the sea-ward cleft of this great rock behind
+Tintageu, one afternoon, and Graeme had just succeeded in getting the
+kettle to boil by means of an armful of old gorse bushes, when,
+straightening up for a rest, he said suddenly,--"Hello! Look at that
+now!" and pointed out towards Guernsey.
+
+And there they saw a low white cloud, lying on the sea as though it
+had just dropped solidly out of the sky. Sea and sky were vivid vital
+blue, the sun shone brilliantly, Guernsey, Jethou, and Herm gleamed
+like jewels, and the white cloud lay between the upper and the nether
+blue like the white ghost of a new-born island not yet invested with
+the attributes of earth.
+
+And, as they watched, it crept quickly along the blue-enamelled plain.
+It swallowed up the southern cliffs of Guernsey. Its creeping nose was
+level with the tall Doyle column. It crept on and on, till Castle
+Cornet disappeared and Peter Port was lost to sight. On and on--Jethou
+was gone, and bit by bit the long green and gold slopes of Herm were
+conquered, and its long white spear of sand ran out of the low white
+cloud. And still on, till all the outlying rocks and islands vanished,
+and where had been the glow and colour of life was nothing now but
+that strange pall-like cloud.
+
+The blue of the sea in front had whitened, and suddenly the sentinel
+rocks at the tail of Brecqhou disappeared, and the white cloud came
+sweeping towards the watchers on the rock by Tintageu.
+
+"We're in for it too," said Graeme, hastily emptying his kettle and
+packing up the tea-things. "Seems to me we'd better get ashore."
+
+But the cloud was on them, soft films of gauzy mist with the sun still
+bright overhead. Then quickly-rolling folds of dense white cloud
+blotted out everything but the path on which they stood. The gorse and
+blue-bells and sea-pinks at their feet drooped suddenly wan and
+colourless, as though stricken with mortal sickness, and wept sad
+tears. They stood bewildered, while the pallid folds grew thicker and
+thicker, lit from above with a strange spectral glare, and coiling
+about them like the trailing garments of an army of ghosts. From the
+unseen abysses all round came the growl and wash of wave on rock and
+shingle, from the cliff above Pegane came the frightened bleat of a
+lamb, and an invisible gull went squawking over their heads on his way
+inland.
+
+With an instinct for safer quarters, Miss Penny had started off
+towards the path which led precariously across the narrow neck to the
+mainland. The neck itself, with white clouds of mist billowing on
+either side, and streaming raggedly across the path, looked fearsome
+enough. She gave a startled cry and stood still.
+
+"Stay here!" said Graeme to Margaret. "Don't move an inch!" and he
+felt his way, foot by foot, towards the causeway.
+
+And Margaret, who had been regarding it all simply as a curious
+experience, felt suddenly very lonely and not very safe.
+
+She heard him speak to Miss Penny, but she could not see two feet in
+front of her.
+
+Then, after what seemed a long time, she heard above her--
+
+"Miss Brandt? Margaret? Oh, good God!"--and there was in his voice a
+note that was new to her. Sharp and strident with keenest anxiety, it
+set a sudden fire in her heart, for it was for her.
+
+"I am here, Mr. Graeme," she cried, and he came plunging down to her
+through the dripping gorse and bracken.
+
+"Thank God!" he said fervently. "Why ever did you move?"
+
+"I have not stirred."
+
+"I must have got wrong. It is blinding. It will be safest to wait
+here, I think. Will you hold on to my arm?"
+
+And as she slipped her hand through it she felt it trembling--the arm
+that had always been so strong and steadfast in her service--and she
+knew that this too was for her.
+
+"Where is Hennie?" she asked.
+
+"She's all right. I made her sit down among the bushes and told her
+she'd surely get smashed if she moved."
+
+It was a good half-hour before the cloud drew off and they saw
+Guernsey, Herm, and Jethou sparkling in the sun once more.
+
+Then they crossed the narrow path over the neck, and Margaret was glad
+they had not attempted it in the fog.
+
+They picked up Miss Penny, damp but cheerful, and went home. For
+everything was dripping, and the pleasures of camping out were over
+for that day, but there were fires about that all the fogs that ever
+had been could not begin to extinguish.
+
+
+XV
+
+As the girls sat basking in the window-seat for a few minutes after
+breakfast one morning, they surprised a private conversation between
+their cavalier and Master Johnnie Vautrin. Graeme, with his back to
+them, sat smoking on the low stone wall. Johnnie was, as usual,
+bunched up in the hedge opposite.
+
+"Well, Johnnie?" they heard. "Seen any crows this morning?"
+
+"Ouaie!"
+
+"How many then, you wretched little croaker?"
+
+"J'anneveu deu et j'anneveu troy."
+
+"Ah now, it's not polite--as I've told you before--to talk to an
+uneducated foreigner, in a language he does not understand. How many,
+in such English as you have attained to, and what did they mean
+according to your wizardry?"
+
+"Pergui, you, too, are not polite! Your words are like
+this"--measuring off an expanding half yard in the air,--"they are all
+wind."
+
+"Smart boy! How many crows did you see this morning?"
+
+"First I saw two and then I saw three."
+
+"Two and three make five. Croaker! Five crows mean someone's going to
+be sick. And which way did they go this time?"
+
+"Noh, noh! First it wass two, and when they had gone then it wass
+three more."
+
+"I see. And two black crows--what might they mean now?"
+
+"Two crows they mean good luck."
+
+"Clever boy! Continue! Three black crows mean----?"
+
+"Three crows--they mean a marrying,--ouaie, Dame!"
+
+"Ah, a marrying! That's better! That is very much better. It strikes
+me, Johnnie, that two lucky crows are worth twopence, and three
+marrying crows are worth threepence. And as luck would have it I've
+got exactly five pennies in my pocket. Catch, bearer of good tidings!
+Here you are--one, two, three, four, five! Well caught! Is it going to
+keep fine?" and Marielihou stopped licking herself to look at Graeme,
+and then went on again with an air of,--"I could tell you things if I
+would, but it's not worth while,"--in her ugly green eyes.
+
+"I don' think," said Johnnie, jumping at the chance of ill news.
+
+"You don't, you little rascal? Here, give me back my hard-earned
+pence! You're a little humbug."
+
+"What's Johnnie been up to now?" asked Miss Penny, as she came out
+into the open.
+
+"He's giving me lessons in necromancy and the black art of crows. He
+declines to pledge his honour on the continued brightness of the day."
+
+"Oh, Johnnie! And we're going to Brecqhou!"
+
+"I cann'd help."
+
+"But you might send us on our way rejoicing."
+
+"Gimme six pennies an' I will say it will be fine."
+
+"I'm beginning to think you're of a grasping disposition, Johnnie. If
+you don't take care you'll die rich."
+
+"Go'zamin, I wu'n't mind."
+
+Then Graeme came out again, with the hamper he had had packed in the
+kitchen under his own supervision, and their cloaks, which, thanks to
+Johnnie, he had picked off the nails in the passage, and they set off
+for Havre Gosselin and Brecqhou.
+
+
+XVI
+
+"You'll not forget to come back for us about eight," Graeme shouted to
+the boatmen, as they pushed off from the fretted black rock on which
+their passengers had just made precarious landing.
+
+"Nossir!" and they pulled away to their fishing.
+
+"If it should be a fine sunset," he explained to the ladies, "the view
+of the Sark cliffs from Beleme there, opposite the Gouliots, is one of
+the finest sights in the island."
+
+The place they had landed was a rough ledge on the south side just
+under the Pente-a-Fouaille, some distance past the Pirates' Cave, and
+the ascent, though steep, was not so difficult as it looked. Graeme,
+however, in his capacity of chaperon, insisted on convoying them
+separately to the top--whereby he got holding Margaret's hand for the
+space of sixty pulse-beats--and then went down again for the cloaks
+and provisions.
+
+Brecqhou, at the moment, was uninhabited. Its late occupant had thrown
+up his post suddenly, and gone to live on Sark with his wife, and a
+new caretaker had not yet been appointed. So they went straight to the
+house, deposited their belongings in the sitting-room, and then
+started out for a long ramble round the island.
+
+First they struck west to Le Neste, and scrambled among the rough
+rocks of the Point, stepping cautiously over the gulls' nests which
+lay thick all about, some with eggs and some with young.
+
+The wonders of the sea-gardens in the rock-pools of Moie Batarde, and
+the entrancing views of Herm and Jethou and Guernsey, gleaming across
+the sapphire sea, with a magnificent range of snowy cloud-mountain
+breasting slowly up the deep blue of the sky behind, and looking solid
+enough to sit on, as Miss Penny said, absorbed them till midday.
+
+Then they returned to the house, lit a fire of dried gorse, filled
+their kettle at the well and set it to boil, and carried out a table
+and chairs, for eating indoors was out of the question with such
+beneficence of sunshine inviting them to the open.
+
+All the afternoon was occupied with the wonders of the Creux-a-Vaches,
+with its bold scarps and rounded slopes draped with ferns and
+enamelled with flowers, and the crannies and indentations of the
+northern side of the island. They sat for a time on Beleme cliff
+entranced with the wonderful view of the bold western headlands of
+Sark, unrolled before them like a gigantic panorama from Bec-du-Nez to
+the Moie de Bretagne,--a sight the like of which one might travel many
+thousand miles and still not equal. And they promised themselves a
+still finer view when the setting sun washed every cliff and crag and
+cranny with living gold.
+
+But as they turned to tramp through the ragwort and bracken towards
+the house, intent on cups of tea, the sight of the western sky gave
+them sudden start. The solid range of snow-white cloud-mountains had
+climbed the heavens half-way to the zenith, and was stretching thin
+white streamers still further afield. And its base in the west had
+grown dark and threatening, with pallid wisps of cloud scudding up it
+like flying scouts bearing ill tidings.
+
+"Wind, I'm afraid," said Graeme, "and maybe thunder--"
+
+And as he spoke a zigzag flash ripped open the dark screen, and a
+crackling peal came rattling over the lead-coloured sea and bellowed
+past them in long-drawn reverberations.
+
+"Johnnie was right after all, the little monkey."
+
+"I'm sorry now I didn't give him that sixpence," said Miss Penny.
+
+"I don't suppose it would have made much difference--except to
+Johnnie. However, I hope it will soon blow over. Good thing we've got
+a shelter, and we can enjoy our tea while the elements settle matters
+among themselves outside."
+
+The storm broke over them before the kettle boiled. The rain thrashed
+the house fiercely under the impulse of a wild south-west wind, which
+grew wilder every minute, and the thunder bellowed about them as
+though the very heavens were cracking.
+
+"This is a trifle rough on inoffensive pilgrims," said Graeme. "I'm
+really sorry to have got you into it."
+
+"You didn't do it on purpose, did you, Mr. Graeme?" asked Miss Penny,
+with pointed emphasis.
+
+"I did not. I devoutly wish you were both safe home in the Rue Lucas."
+
+"All in good time. Meanwhile, we might be worse off, and this tea is
+going to be excellent. Margaret, my child, do you know that tea under
+these conditions is infinitely preferable to tea in Melgrave Square,
+under any conditions whatsoever?"
+
+"It is certainly a change," said Margaret.
+
+"And a very decided improvement. It's what some of my young friends
+would call 'just awfully jolly decent,'" said Miss Penny.
+
+"We're not out of the wood--that is to say, the island--yet,"
+suggested Graeme.
+
+"Or we shouldn't be here enjoying ourselves like this. Brecqhou is
+sheer delight."
+
+"On a fine day," said Margaret quietly.
+
+"Or in a thunderstorm," asserted Miss Penny militantly. But Margaret
+would not fight lest it should seem like casting reflections on their
+present estate.
+
+The thunder rolled over the wide waters with a majesty of utterance
+novel to their unaccustomed city ears, the rain drew a storm-gray veil
+over everything past the well, the wind waxed into hysterical fury,
+tore at the roof and gables, and went shrieking on over Sark. And
+above the rush of wind and rain, in the short pauses between the
+thunder-peals, the hoarse roar of the waves along the black bastions
+of Brecqhou grew louder and louder in their ears.
+
+Graeme's face grew somewhat anxious, as he stood at the window and
+peered westward as far as he could see, and found nothing but fury and
+blackness there. He had a dim recollection of hearing of outer islands
+such as this being cut off from the mainland for days at a time. He
+could imagine what the sea must be like among the tumbled rocks below.
+And he had seen the Race of the Gouliot in storm time once before, and
+doubted much if any boat would face the whirl and rush of its piled-up
+waters.
+
+What on earth were they to do if the men could not get across for
+them?
+
+Suppose they had to pass the night there?
+
+Good Heavens! Suppose they could not get across for days? What were
+they to live on?--to come at once to the lowest but most pressing
+necessity of the situation?
+
+They had weather-proof shelter. Firing they could procure from the
+interior woodwork of the house and outbuildings. And they had a small
+amount of tea and sugar, and half a tin of condensed milk, and rather
+more than half of the day's provisions, since they had contemplated
+high tea before embarking again. He determined that, if the storm
+showed no signs of abating, the high tea must be a low one, since its
+constituents might possibly have to serve for to-morrow's breakfast
+as well.
+
+Both girls, their own perceptions strung tight by the electric state
+of matters outside, noticed the touch of anxiety in his face as he
+turned from the window, but both declined to show it.
+
+"How's her head, Captain?" asked Miss Penny jovially.
+
+"Dead on to a lee shore," he answered in her own humour. "But the
+anchorage is good and we're not likely to drift."
+
+"Come! That's something to be thankful for, under the circumstances.
+Brecqhou banging broadside on to that big black Gouliot rock would be
+a most unpleasant experience. How about the sunset cliffs of Sark?"
+
+"They're very much under a cloud. I'm afraid we must pass them for
+this time and choose a better. The cliffs indeed are there, but the
+sun is much a-wanting."
+
+"Hamlet without the ghost of a father or even a sun."
+
+"Truly!" And looking at Margaret, he said earnestly, "I can't tell you
+how sorry I am it has turned out this way."
+
+"But it is no fault of yours, Mr. Graeme. No one could possibly have
+foreseen such a breakdown in the weather, with such a glorious morning
+as we had."
+
+"After all, I'm not at all sure it isn't all Mr. Graeme's fault," said
+Miss Penny musingly.
+
+"As how?" he asked.
+
+"Didn't you stop me giving Johnnie Vautrin six demanded pennies to
+keep it fine all day?"
+
+"I discouraged the imposition, certainly. But I don't suppose Johnnie
+could have done much--except with your sixpence."
+
+"He's a queer clever boy, is Johnnie. He certainly said it wasn't
+going to keep fine."
+
+"Little humbug!"
+
+"Yet you gave him fivepence for seeing--or saying he saw--two crows
+and three crows, because two crows mean good luck and three crows
+mean----"
+
+"You talk as if you believed his nonsense, Hennie," broke in Margaret.
+
+"Perhaps I do--to some extent. He certainly declined to pledge himself
+to a fine day, and it remains to be seen if the rest of his--"
+
+"--Humbug," suggested Graeme.
+
+"We'll say predictions, since we're in a superstitious land,--come
+true. I shouldn't be a bit surprised. Thunderstorms are not, as a
+rule, deadly, and it is conceivable that they may, at times, even be
+means of grace. Would you mind piling some more gorse on that fire,
+Mr. Graeme? A counter-illumination is cheerful when the heavens
+without are all black and blazing. What a joke it would be if we had
+to stop here all night!"--she said it with intention, and Graeme
+understood and blessed her.
+
+"We'll hope it won't come to that," he said, as lightly as he could
+make it. "But, if it should, we could make ourselves fairly
+comfortable. Robinson Crusoes up to date!"
+
+"No--Swiss Family Robinsons!" was Margaret's quota to the lightening
+of gloom. "The way everything turned up just when that interesting
+family required it struck me as marvellous even when I was a child."
+
+"You always were of an acutely enquiring--not to say
+doubting--disposition, my dear, ever since I knew you," said Miss
+Penny.
+
+"I always liked to get at the true truth of things, and humbug always
+annoyed me."
+
+"No wonder you found Mr. Pixley a trial, dear," said Miss Penny.
+
+"You don't mean to cast stones of doubt at that shining pillar of the
+law and society, Miss Penny?" said Graeme, tempted to enlarge on so
+congenial a subject.
+
+"Mr. Pixley does not appeal to me--nor I to him. I like him just as
+much as he likes me. And that's just that much,"--with a snap of the
+fingers.
+
+"I'm afraid you and I are in the same boat," said Graeme enjoyably.
+
+"I shouldn't be a bit surprised,--and for the same reason. We both
+like--"
+
+"What shall we do for provisions, Mr. Graeme, if the storm continues?"
+asked Margaret, and Miss Penny smiled knowingly.
+
+"I suggest husbanding those we have. It can't surely last long."
+
+"Mrs. Carre was telling us the other night that once no steamer could
+get to Sark from Guernsey for three weeks," chirped Miss Penny. "If a
+steamer couldn't get to Sark, how should a small boat get to
+Brecqhou--Q.E.D.?"
+
+"Gracious!" cried Margaret in dismay.
+
+"Mr. Graeme would have to catch rabbits for us--and fish. And I
+believe there are potatoes growing outside there. Our clothing will be
+in rags, Meg. Mr. Graeme will be a wild man of the woods, and all our
+portraits will appear in the illustrated papers. The Outcasts of
+Brecqhou. Marooned on an Uninhabited Island. Three Weeks Alone."
+
+"I'm off for a look round," said Graeme. "If that boat should be
+waiting for us, somewhere down below, it would be too stupid for us to
+be waiting for it up here," and he turned up his coat collar and
+pulled his cap over his brows.
+
+"You'll get soaked," said Margaret. "Please take this, it will help a
+little," and she jumped up and thrust her golfing cloak into his
+hands. He seemed about to refuse, then thanked her hastily, and threw
+it over his shoulders and went out.
+
+The wind caught him and whirled him along towards Beleme cliffs. He
+tacked to the south and made a slant for the place where they had
+landed. As soon as he was out of sight of the house he drew the hood
+of the cloak over his head and rejoiced in it.
+
+To be wearing her cloak brought Margaret appreciably nearer. Possibly
+that hood had even been over her head, had touched her shining hair,
+her fair soft cheek. He pressed it to his face, to his lips, and the
+hot blood danced in his veins at his temerity. The gale bellowed
+outside and drove him staggering, but inside the hood was the
+uplifting warmth and glow of personal contact with the beloved. Her
+very mantle was sacred to him. He fancied he could detect in it a
+subtle intimation of herself. He hugged it close, and leaned back upon
+the gale, and drifted towards the southern cliffs.
+
+One glance at the black rocks below,--now hidden by the rushing fury
+of the surges, now outstanding gaunt and grim, with creamy cascades
+pouring back into the roaring welter below,--showed him how impossible
+it would have been for any boat to approach there.
+
+He plunged on through the masses of dripping ragwort towards the
+eastern cliff, and stood absorbed by the grim fury of the Gouliot
+Race. The driven waves split on the western point of Brecqhou and came
+rocketing along the ragged black rocks on either side in wild bursts
+of foam. The Gouliot Passage was roaring with the noise of many
+waters, and boiling and seething like a gigantic pot. The sea was
+white with beaten spume for half a mile each way, and up through the
+tumbling marbled surface great black coils of water came writhing and
+bubbling from their tribulation on the hidden rocks below. The black
+fangs of the Gouliots were grimmer than ever. The long line of scoured
+granite cliffs on either side looked like great bald-headed eagles
+peering out hungrily for their prey.
+
+There were no boats at the anchorage in Havre Gosselin. He learned
+afterwards that they had all run to the shelter of Creux Harbour on
+the other side of the island. He breasted the gale and headed for the
+house.
+
+"I'm very much afraid we're stuck for the night," he said, as they
+looked up enquiringly on his entrance. "There's not a sign of a boat,
+and I'm quite sure no boat could face that sea. Sark looks like an
+outcast island--the very end of the world."
+
+"Then we'll make ourselves comfortable here," said Miss Penny. "We
+began to fear you'd been blown over the cliffs. Is there plenty of
+wood in the house?"
+
+"I'll go and get some more," and he came back with a great armful of
+broken driftwood, and went again for as much gorse as he could carry
+in a rude wooden fork he found near the stack.
+
+"You must be soaked through and through," said Margaret.
+
+"Bit damp, but your cloak was a great help," and he piled gorse and
+chunks of wood on the fire till its roaring almost drowned the noise
+of the storm outside.
+
+
+XVII
+
+"Well, I call this absolutely ripping," said Miss Penny exuberantly,
+as they sat by the fire of many-coloured flames, after a slender cup
+of tea and as hearty a meal as Graeme would allow them in view of
+possible contingencies. "Do please smoke, Mr. Graeme. It just needs a
+whiff of tobacco to complete our enjoyment."
+
+"Sark," she added, leaning back with her hands clasped behind her
+head, "when no one knows you're there, is just heavenly. No letters,
+no telegrams, no intrusion of the commonplace outside world! Those are
+distinctly heavenly attributes, you know--"
+
+It was truly extraordinary how, with nothing more than a very general
+intention thereto, she played into his hands at times. Here now was a
+very simple question he had been wanting to put to Miss Brandt for
+days past. For the answer to it might shed light in several
+directions. But he had been loth to force matters, and had quietly
+waited such opportunity as might arise in a natural way without undue
+obtrusion of the doubt that was in his mind.
+
+"'Peace--perfect peace!' as Adam Black used to sigh," he said. "And
+by the way"--turning to Margaret--"speaking of letters, I have often
+wondered at times if you ever received two that I sent you concerning
+Lady Elspeth--just about the time she was called away to Scotland?"
+
+She looked back at him with surprise, and his question was answered
+and his doubt solved before ever she opened her lips.
+
+"About Lady Elspeth? No,--I certainly never got them."
+
+"H'm!" he nodded thoughtfully. "The first I feared might have gone
+astray through some stupidity of the post-office. But the second I
+dropped into your letter-box myself. Moreover--"
+
+"I never got them,"--with a charming touch of colour.
+
+"Moreover----?" said Miss Penny expectantly, with a dancing light in
+her eyes.
+
+"Well," he said, after a pause, "to tell you the whole story, Mr.
+Pixley assured me that you had had them and had handed them on to
+him."
+
+"Mr. Pixley said that?" and Margaret sat up, with very much more than
+a touch of colour in her face now. In fact it was militantly red and
+vastly indignant.
+
+"Yes. I--well, I called upon him at his office just to find out
+if--well, if you were ill or anything like that, you know. And among
+other interesting information he told me that, and cut off my head
+with his glasses and threw my remains out into the street;" at which
+Margaret smiled through her indignation.
+
+"Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny emphatically, "is a--a Johnnie Vautrin
+on a larger scale. Had he any other interesting items of information
+for you, Mr. Graeme?"
+
+"Well--yes, he had. But I can estimate them now at their proper value,
+and it can rest there."
+
+"It was Mr. Black's enthusiasm for Sark at that Whitefriars' dinner
+that put it into my head when--when we were wondering where to go. I
+remember now," said Margaret.
+
+"It was Black's enthusiasm for Sark that put it into _my_ head when
+_I_ was wondering where to go," said Graeme.
+
+"There you are, you see," said Miss Penny. "I knew you must have had
+some common inspiration."
+
+"I am greatly indebted to Black. He's one of the finest fellows I
+know. He's done me more than one good turn, but I shall always count
+Sark his chiefest achievement," said Graeme heartily.
+
+
+XVIII
+
+The wind howled round the house, and whuffled in the chimney, and sent
+spurts of sweet-scented smoke to mingle with the fuller flavour of
+Graeme's tobacco. The walls were bare plaster, discoloured with age
+and careless usage. The chairs were common kitchen chairs, and the
+table a plain deal one. But the driftwood burned with flames whose
+forked tongues sang silently but eloquently of wanderings under many
+skies, of rainbow isles in sunny seas, of vivid golden days and the
+black wonders of tropic nights, of storms and calms, and all the
+untold mysteries of the pitiless sea.
+
+But to two at least of the party--and perhaps even to three--that bare
+room was radiant beyond any they had ever known.
+
+Orange and amber lightening into sunshine, purple into heliotrope,
+tender greens and lucent blues, burning crimson and fiery red, were
+the flames of the driftwood, and in these surely the imagination may
+find its happiest auguries. For if the dancing flames, out of their
+chastened knowledge, sang only of the past, in the minds of their
+watchers they were singing of futures brighter and more glowing than
+anything the past had ever known. And so, to two at least of
+them,--and perhaps to three,--never surely was there room so radiant
+as that bare room in that empty house on Brecqhou.
+
+Miss Penny had the high endowment of a large heart, a wide
+imagination, and sentiment sufficient for a high-class girls'
+boarding-school.
+
+She found herself for the moment out of place, yet she could not
+remove herself without too obvious an intention. She did the next best
+thing. She settled herself on her chair in a corner, slipped off her
+shoes, sat on her feet, and went to sleep.
+
+Margaret, indeed, glanced at her suspiciously once or twice, without
+moving her head by so much as a hair's-breadth. But she seemed really
+and truly asleep, and for a moment Margaret was amazed that anyone
+could think of sleep in that enchanted room. But then she remembered
+that it was different--Hennie was Hennie, and she was she, and it was
+for her that the crystal ball of life had opened of a sudden and shown
+the radiance within.
+
+How long they sat in silence before the rainbow fire she never knew.
+
+Hennie was snoring gently--purring as one might say--in the most
+genuinely ingenuous fashion.
+
+Graeme, in the riot of happy possibilities evoked by the disclosure of
+Mr. Pixley's perfidy, would have been content to sit there for ever,
+since Margaret was at his side. It was enough to know that she was
+there. He did not need to turn his head to enjoy the sight of her with
+gross material vision. Every tight-strung fibre of his being told him
+of her nearness, in ways compared with which sight and sound and touch
+are gross and feeble travesties of communication. Their spirits surely
+reached out and touched in that silent communion before the rainbow
+fire.
+
+There were many things he wanted to ask her now. But they could wait,
+they could wait. The Doubting Castles he had built in his despair had
+had no foundations. He was building anew already, and now with rosy
+hope and golden faith, and the topstones of his building mingled with
+the stars.
+
+He woke of a sudden to a sense of lack of consideration for her in his
+own enjoyment. Doubtless she was tired out, and was only kept from
+following Miss Penny's example by his crass stupidity in sitting there
+in that stolid fashion.
+
+"Pray forgive me!" he said, as he rose quietly. "You must be tired,
+too. I will take the other room and you can join Miss Penny."
+
+"I'm not the least tired. I never felt more awake in my life. Surely
+the wind has fallen."
+
+He went to the door and opened it and looked out.
+
+"It is only a lull. It will probably blow up again stronger than
+ever," and as he turned he found her at his elbow.
+
+"Let us go outside," she said, and he could have taken her into his
+arms. Instead, he tiptoed across the room and got her cloak, and
+placed it on her shoulders with a new, vast sense of proprietorship.
+
+He knew just how she felt. Even that room of rare delights was not
+large enough just then for her and for him. The whole wide world, and
+the illimitable heights of the heavens, could scarce contain that
+which was in them. Their hearts were full, and that which was in them
+was that of which God is the ultimate perfection. And in their ears,
+in the gaps of the storm, was the roaring thunder of the great white
+waves as they tore along the black sides of Brecqhou.
+
+"Tell me more about those letters," she said briefly. "What did you
+write?"
+
+"I wrote, nominally, to inform you of Lady Elspeth's sudden call to
+Scotland, but actually to tell you how sorely I regretted the sudden
+break in our acquaintance which had become to me so very great a
+delight."
+
+"And when you got no answer?"
+
+"I waited and waited, and then I had a sudden fear that you might be
+ill. And to satisfy myself I called on Mr. Pixley at his office. He
+told me you were quite well, that you had had my letters, and had
+handed them to him."
+
+"Anything more?"
+
+"Yes,--he said you were shortly to marry his son."
+
+"That is what he wished,--and that is why I am here."
+
+"Thank God! Then I may tell you, Margaret. I had been building castles
+and you were mistress of them all and of my whole heart. When Mr.
+Pixley knocked them into dust I came here to fight it out by myself,
+and a black time I had. Then God, in His goodness, put it into your
+heart to come too. Will you marry me, Margaret?"
+
+"Yes, Jock."
+
+And there, in the lull of the gale, in the lee of the lonely house on
+Brecqhou, they plighted their troth with no more need of feeble words,
+for their hearts had gone out to one another.
+
+And all along the gaunt black rocks the great waves, which a moment
+before had been growling in dull agony, roared a mighty chorus of
+delight, and rolled it up the sloping seams of Longue Pointe, and
+flashed it on in thunderous bursts of foam from Bec-du-Nez to L'Etac.
+
+And Miss Henrietta Penny, awakening about this time, and finding
+herself alone, laughed happily to herself, and sighed just once, and
+said from her heart, "God bless them!"--and did not go to sleep again,
+though to look at her you would never have known it, save for the fact
+that she no longer purred in her sleep,--for the woman has yet to be
+born who ever pleaded guilty to actual snoring.
+
+
+XIX
+
+Graeme slept that night just as much as might have been expected under
+the circumstances, and that was not one wink. Nevertheless, when
+morning came, he felt as strong and joyous as a young god. New life
+had come to him in the night, and he felt equal to the conquering of
+worlds. For love is life, and the strength and the joy of it.
+
+He was out with the dawn, to a gray rushing morning full of the sounds
+of sea and wind. He drew a canful of water from the well, and had such
+a wash as no soap and a handkerchief would permit of. Then he drew
+another canful and left it outside the door of the ladies' room, and
+strode off to Beleme to see if the boats had got back to their
+anchorage. But the little bay was a scene of storm and strife, a wild
+confusion of raging seas and stubborn rocks, the fruits of the
+conflict flying up the cliffs in spongy gouts of spume, and dappling
+the waters far and wide with fantasies of troubled marbling,--and
+there was not a boat to be seen.
+
+But the sight of the great white seas roaring up the Sark headlands,
+as far as he could see on either hand, was one never to be forgotten.
+It was worth the price they had paid, even though it spelt a further
+term of captivity, and he turned back to his duties with that new glad
+glow in his heart which was no longer simply hope but the full and
+gracious assurance of loftiest attainment.
+
+He had seen potatoes growing in a plot near the house. So, after
+lighting a fire in the kitchen and setting the kettle to boil, he
+rooted about till he found the remains of a spade and set himself to
+unaccustomed labours.
+
+When Miss Penny came out of her room, freshfaced and comely
+coiffured, she found a ring of potatoes roasting in the ashes and the
+kettle boiling, and Graeme came in, bright-eyed and wind-whipped,
+wiping his hands on a very damp handkerchief.
+
+"I am so glad, Mr. Graeme," she said, with sparkling eyes and face,
+and hearty outstretched hand.
+
+"Margaret has told you?"
+
+"Of course Margaret has told me. Am I not her keeper, and haven't I
+been hoping for this since ever I saw you?"
+
+"That is very good of you. I thought, perhaps--"
+
+"Thought it might take me by surprise, I suppose--and perhaps that I
+might take it badly? Not a bit! It fulfils my very highest hopes. And
+I can assure you you have got a prize. There are not many girls like
+Margaret Brandt."
+
+"Don't I know it? I have known it from the very first time I met
+her--at that blessed Whitefriars' dinner."
+
+"I think you will make her very happy."
+
+"I promise you I will do my very best."
+
+And then Margaret came into the kitchen and knew what was toward.
+
+She looked like a queen and a princess and a goddess all in one, with
+a flood of happy colour in her face and a glad glow in her eyes, and
+no more hint of maidenly shyness about her than was right and natural.
+And Miss Penny's eyes were misty of a sudden, as Graeme went quickly
+up to her friend, and feasted his hungry eyes on her face for a
+moment, and then bent and gallantly kissed her hand. For in both their
+faces was the great glad light that is the very light of life, and
+Miss Penny was wondering if, in some distant future time, it might
+perchance be vouchsafed to her also to attain thereto.
+
+"I hope you both slept well," he said gaily. "I've done my best in the
+provisioning line. I know we've got plenty of salt, for one generally
+forgets it and so I always put in two packets."
+
+"You've done splendidly," said Miss Penny, tying up tea in a piece of
+muslin and dropping it into the kettle.
+
+"I'd have tried for a rabbit, but I wasn't sure if either of you could
+skin it--"
+
+"Ugh! Don't mention it!"
+
+"And I knew I couldn't, so we'll have to put up with roasted potatoes
+and imagine the rabbit. I've been told they do that in some parts of
+Ireland,--hang up a bit of bacon in a corner and point at it with the
+potato and so imagine the flavour."
+
+"Potatoes are excellent faring--when there's nothing better to be
+had," said Miss Penny, rooting in the basket. "However, here are three
+of yesterday's sandwiches, slightly faded, and some biscuits--in good
+condition, thanks to the tin. Come, we shan't absolutely starve!"
+
+And they enjoyed that meal--two of them, at all events, and perhaps
+three--as they had never enjoyed a meal before.
+
+"And the weather?" asked Margaret.
+
+"The blessed weather is just as it was; perhaps even a bit more
+so,--the most glorious weather that ever was on land or sea!"
+
+"But----" said Margaret, smiling at his effervescence.
+
+"No, I'm afraid it can't last very much longer, and potatoes and salt
+I know would begin to pall in time. After breakfast you shall see the
+grandest sight of your lives,--and for the rest, we will live in
+hope."
+
+
+
+XX
+
+And, after all, they saw what they had specially come to see--a sunset
+from Beleme cliff.
+
+For the day remained gray and boisterous until late in the afternoon.
+They had lunched--with less exuberance than they had breakfasted--on
+potatoes and salt and a thin medicinal-tasting decoction made from
+breakfast's tea-leaves; they were looking forward with no undue
+eagerness to potato dinner without even the palliative of medicinal
+tea; and even Miss Penny acknowledged that, choice being offered her,
+she would give the preference to some other vegetable for a week to
+come;--when, of a sudden, the gray veil of the west opened slowly,
+like the lifting of an iron curtain, and let the light behind shine
+through.
+
+And the light was as they could imagine the light of heaven--a pure
+lucent yellow as of the early primrose, but diaphanous and almost
+transparent, as though this, which seemed to them light, was itself in
+reality but an outer veil hiding the still greater glory behind. The
+curtain lifted but a span, and the lower rim of it curved in a gentle
+arch from the middle of Guernsey to the filmy line of Alderney. All
+below the sharp-cut rim was the sea of heavenly primrose, with here
+and there a floating purple island edged with gold. All above was
+sombre plum-colour flushed with rose, the edges fraying in the wind,
+and floating in thin rosy streamers up the dark sky above.
+
+The sun, larger than they had ever seen him in their lives, dropped
+gently like a great brass shield from behind the dark curtain into the
+sea of primrose light, and the primrose flushed with crimson over
+Guernsey and with tender green and blue over Alderney.
+
+They hastened away to Beleme cliff, and then they saw what they had
+hoped to see, and more;--the mighty granite frontlets of Sark all
+washed with living gold--- shining from their long conflict with the
+waves, and gleaming, every one, like a jewel,--from Bec-du-Nez to Moie
+de Bretagne. And, out in the dimness, behind which lay Jersey, there
+suddenly appeared the perfect circle of a rainbow such as none of them
+had ever dreamed of--a perfect orb of the living colours of the
+Promise--resting bodily on the dark sea like a gigantic iridescent
+soap-bubble, glowing and pulsing and throbbing under the level beams
+of the setting sun.
+
+"Wonderful!" murmured Margaret.
+
+"I never saw more than half a bow before," whispered Miss Penny.
+
+"Nor I," said Graeme. "But then, you see, nothing ever was as it is
+now. Things happened last night."
+
+At which Miss Penny smiled and murmured, "Of course! That accounts for
+everything. The whole world is changed."
+
+And they watched and watched, in breathless admiration, first the
+cliffs, and then the bow, and then the sun, and then the cliffs and
+bow again, till the last tiny rim of the sun sank behind the dark line
+of Herm, and the bow went out with a snap, and the cliffs in front
+grew gray and sank back into their sleep, as the shadows crept up out
+of the sea.
+
+And, presently, the primrose sea in the clouds lost its transparent
+softness and flushed with rose and carmine. The tender greens and
+blues in the north deepened, and the sky above glowed crimson right
+into the far east. And the sea below was like a ripe plum with a
+rippling bloom upon it, and then it answered to the glow "above and
+became like burnished copper. And over it, from the south end of Sark,
+came a dancing white sail, at sight of which Graeme leaped to his
+feet.
+
+"The show is over," he cried, "and here comes your highnesses'
+carriage."
+
+"I wouldn't have missed it for anything," said Margaret softly, with a
+rapt face still.
+
+"It was worth living on potatoes for a month for," said Miss Penny.
+"All the same, I hope Mrs. Carre will have some dinner for us when we
+get home."
+
+The boat was heading for the Pente-a-Fouaille where they had landed
+the day before, and they hurried to meet it, Graeme full of misgivings
+as to the embarkation, for the waves were still roaring up the rocks
+in bursts of foam, though the wind had fallen somewhat.
+
+But the boatmen knew their business, and had brought an extra hand for
+its safe accomplishment. They dropped the sail and pulled round a
+corner of the black rock. Then, while two of them kept the boat from
+destruction, the other stood and Graeme dropped the girls one by one
+into his arms, and was a very thankful man when he tumbled in himself,
+all in a heap, and wiped the big drops of sweat from his brow.
+
+A stroke or two with the oars and they were plunging back through the
+hissing white caps, but not, as he had expected, to Havre Gosselin.
+
+"Where to?" he shouted to the blue-guernseyed stalwart nearest him.
+
+"Grande Greve. We couldn' beach in Havre Gosselin, and mebbe the
+leddies wouldn' like to climb the ladders," with a grin at the
+leddies.
+
+"Not much!" said Miss Penny. "Margaret, my dear, prepare yourself! I'm
+going to be sick if this goes on much longer."
+
+But before she had time to be sick they had rounded the shoulder of
+Port-es-Saies, and their boat's nose ran up the soft sand of a low
+tide in Grande Greve, and the green waves came curling exultantly in
+over the stern. The men leaped out and hauled bravely, and in a moment
+the girls were ashore.
+
+"Couldn' get back nohow last night, sir. 'Twould a bin as much as our
+lives were worth. Hope ye didn' starve," said the spokesman with
+another genial grin.
+
+"No, we didn't expect you. We dug potatoes and cooked them. Here you
+are, and thanks for coming as soon as you could," and, from their
+smiling faces, their reward without doubt covered not only that which
+they had actually done but that also which they had unwittingly helped
+to do.
+
+The boat shoved off and made for its own anchorage, and Graeme led the
+girls up the toilsome path to the Coupee.
+
+It was after nine when they reached the cottage, and the first thing
+they saw was Johnnie Vautrin sitting in the hedge opposite, with
+Marielihou licking her lips alongside.
+
+"I just seen seven crows," cried Johnnie gleefully.
+
+"Little rascal! You dream crows," said Graeme, whose desires at the
+moment ran to something more palatable and satisfying.
+
+"And what do seven crows mean, Johnnie?" asked Margaret.
+
+"Seven crows means everything's oll right!"
+
+"Clever boy! You see just what you want to see," said Graeme, and then
+Mrs. Carre appeared at the door of the cottage.
+
+"Ah then, here you are!" she said, with a large welcoming smile. "And
+the dinner I haf been keeping for you for an hour an' more."
+
+"You're a good angel, Mrs. Carre," said Graeme gratefully. "We are a
+bit late, aren't we? I hope you've put yesterday's dinner and to-day's
+together. We've had nothing to eat to speak of for a month. What did
+you think when we never turned up last night?"
+
+"Oh, but I knew you would be all right. There iss a house on Brecqhou,
+and there iss watter, and you had things to eat, and it was better on
+Brecqhou last night than on the watter."
+
+"It was," said Graeme heartily, and sped off up the garden for a
+much-needed wash and brush-up.
+
+
+XXI
+
+"Now what would I like myself if I was in their place?" asked Miss
+Penny of herself, while she rectified the omissions of the last two
+days in the matter of Nature's cravings for a more varied diet than
+Brecqhou afforded.
+
+"Why, to be alone and free from the observation of Miss Hennie Penny,"
+she promptly answered herself, and as promptly acted on it.
+
+"Meg, my dear, I am aweary. I am not accustomed to playing Swiss
+Family Robinson. By your leave, Monsieur and Mademoiselle, I will wish
+you good-night and pleasant dreams," and she went off into the
+bedroom.
+
+"May she have as tactful a chaperone when her own time comes," said
+Graeme, with a smile. "Do you think you would sleep better if you went
+to bed at once or if you had a little walk first?"
+
+"I am not the least bit sleepy," said Margaret.
+
+"Then a stroll will do you good," and they went out into the night.
+And Miss Penny, as she heard their feet on the cobbles, smiled to
+herself a little wistfully.
+
+Such a night of stars! The gale had swept the heavens and thinned the
+upper air till the Milky Way was a wide white track strewn thick with
+jewels, and the greater lights shone large and close. As they
+sauntered in silence towards La Tour, their faces towards the stars
+among which their full hearts were ranging in glorious companionship,
+one of the lesser lights silently loosed its hold and dropped slowly
+from zenith to horizon, in a fiery groove that momentarily eclipsed
+all else.
+
+And while Graeme was still pressing to his heart the soft arm that lay
+in his, in silent enjoyment of the sight and at their sharing it,
+another star swung loose, and another, and another, till the
+glittering vault seemed laced with fiery trails and they stood in rapt
+admiration.
+
+"What a sight!" said Margaret softly. "I have never seen anything like
+that before."
+
+"Nor I. The very stars rejoice with us.... You have made me the
+happiest man in all the world this day, Margaret. I can hardly believe
+it is real ..."
+
+"I am real," she said, with a low warm little laugh. "And I am happy.
+Kiss me, Jock!" and he kissed her there under the falling stars, and
+she him, in a way that left no doubt as to what was in them, and the
+evening incense of the honeysuckle and hawthorn wafted fragrance all
+about them.
+
+There was still a tender touch of colour in the sky over the western
+sea as they came out on the Eperquerie.
+
+"When are you free, Margaret?" he asked,--the first word since they
+kissed in the lane.
+
+"I am twenty-one on New Year's Day."
+
+"Six whole months! How can we possibly wait all that time?"
+
+"Why should we?" she asked delightfully.
+
+"Undoubtedly--why should we?" he said, on fire with her charming
+readiness. "You are probably by this time ringed with legal pains and
+penalties, but they are all less than nothing."
+
+"What could they do?"
+
+"I believe they clap the male malefactor into prison----"
+
+"I will go with you."
+
+"I'm not sure if there are any married cells."
+
+"And how long would they keep us there?"
+
+"Till, in their opinion, I had purged my contempt, I believe."
+
+"And how long would that be?"
+
+"I've no idea. It probably depends on circumstances. Do you know that,
+until Lady Elspeth told me, I had rib idea that you had any money. It
+was rather a blow to me."
+
+"I don't see why."
+
+"But I told our old friend that if--well, if, you understand--I should
+insist on everything you had being settled on yourself."
+
+"You and Lady Elspeth seem to have discussed matters pretty freely,"
+she said, with a laugh.
+
+"She's the dearest old lady in the world, and delights in mothering
+me. She got me in a corner that afternoon, and taxed me with coming to
+her house for reasons other than simply to see herself----"
+
+"And you----?"
+
+"I had to own up, of course, and then she crushed me by telling me
+that you were an heiress, and that Mr. Pixley probably had views of
+his own concerning you."
+
+"Which he had, but they happened not to coincide with mine, and so I
+came to Sark."
+
+"Happy day! I see you yet, standing in the hedge by the Red House, and
+I believing you a vision."
+
+"I could hardly believe my eyes either. You seemed to come jumping
+right out of the sky."
+
+"I jumped right into heaven--the highest jump that ever was made."
+
+"I was a bit put out at first, you know----"
+
+"I know you were."
+
+"I thought you had learned we were coming, and had followed us here."
+
+"Whereas----" he laughed.
+
+"Exactly!"
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FIFTH
+
+
+I
+
+"But yes, I can marry you in the church," said the Vicar, blowing out
+smoke, and laughing enjoyably across at Graeme, who sat in another
+garden chair under the big trees in front of the Vicarage.
+
+"In spite of the fact that we are aliens?"
+
+"Oh, it is not so bad as that. We ab-sorbed you by conquest and so you
+are really a part of us. We are all one family now."
+
+"And such a marriage would be perfectly legal and unassailable?"
+
+"I shall marry you more firmly than if you were married in
+Cant-er-bury Cath-edral," laughed the Vicar.
+
+"That should suffice. But why more firmly? How improve on perfection?"
+
+"I will tell you," said the Vicar, with increased enjoyment, as he
+leaned forward and tapped Graeme's knee. "It is this way.--If you are
+married in Cant-er-bury Cath-edral you can be divorced,--n'est-ce pas?
+Oui! Eh bien!--If you are married in my church of Sark you can never
+be divorced. C'est ca! It is the old Norman law."
+
+"We will be married in your church of Sark," said Graeme, with
+conviction.
+
+"That is right. I shall marry you so that you shall never be able to
+get away from one another."
+
+"Please God, we'll never want to!"
+
+"Ah yes! Of course. C'est ca!"
+
+
+II
+
+"We have never had a case of the kind, as far as I know. Certainly not
+in my time," said the Seigneur, smiling quizzically across the
+tea-table at Graeme. "But you gentlemen of the pen are allowed a
+certain amount of license in such matters, are you not?"
+
+"We sometimes take it, anyhow. But one likes to stick as close to fact
+as possible."
+
+They were sitting in the shady corner in front of the Seigneurie, with
+four dogs basking in the sun beyond, and beyond them the shaven lawns
+and motionless trees, the leafy green tunnel that led to the lane, and
+a lovely glimpse into the enclosed gardens through the ancient gateway
+whose stones had known the saints of old.
+
+Graeme had put a certain proposition to the Lord of the Island,
+nominally in connection with the story he was busy upon, but in
+reality of vital concern to the larger story in which Margaret and he
+were writing the history of their lives.
+
+"Sark, you know, is a portion of the British Empire, or perhaps I
+should say the British Empire belongs to Sark, but we are not under
+British law. We are a law unto ourselves here," said the Seigneur.
+
+"And the authority of a British Court would carry no weight with you?
+In the case I have put to you, if the Court of Chancery ordered you to
+surrender the young lady, you would refuse to do so?"
+
+"I could refuse to do so. What I actually would do might depend on
+circumstances."
+
+"I see," said Graeme musingly, and decided that the Seigneur's
+goodwill was worthy of every possible cultivation both by himself and
+Margaret. For he did not look like one who would help a friend into
+trouble.
+
+
+III
+
+"I've been thinking a good deal about it, and I really don't see any
+reason why we should wait,"--said Graeme, looking at Margaret.
+
+And Miss Penny said "Hear! Hear!" so energetically that Margaret
+laughed merrily.
+
+"We are both of one mind in the matter, an life is all too short at
+its longest, and most especially when it offers you all its very best
+with both hands--"
+
+"Hear! _Hear_!" said Miss Penny.
+
+"And time is fleeting," concluded the orator.
+
+"And that kettle is boiling over again," and Miss Penny jumped up and
+ran to the rescue.
+
+They were spending a long day in Grande Greve--the spot that had
+special claims upon their liking since their landing there after that
+memorable trip to Brecqhou. They had brought a full day's rations,
+prepared with solicitous discrimination by Graeme himself, and a
+kettle, and a great round tin can of fresh water from the well at
+Dixcart, and a smaller one of milk.
+
+So high were their spirits that they had even scoffed at Johnnie
+Vautrin's intimation that he had seen a magpie that morning, and it
+had flown over their house. But magpie or no magpie they were bent on
+enjoyment, and they left Johnnie and Marielihou muttering black spells
+into the hawthorn hedge, and went off with the dogs down the scented
+lanes, through the valley where the blue-bells draped the hillsides in
+such masses that they walked as it were between a blue heaven and a
+blue earth, and so by the meadow-paths to the Coupee.
+
+Their descent of the rough path down the side of the Coupee with all
+this impedimenta had not been without incident, but eventually every
+thing and person had been got to the bottom in safety.
+
+Then, while the dogs raced in the lip of the tide and Scamp filled the
+bay with his barkings, the girls had disappeared among the tumbled
+rocks under the cliff, and Graeme had sought seclusion at the other
+end of the bay. And presently they had met again on the gleaming
+stretch of sand; he in orthodox tight-fitting dark-blue elastic web
+which set off his long limbs and broad shoulders to great advantage;
+Hennie Penny in pale blue, her somewhat plump figure redeemed by the
+merry face which recognised all its owner's deficiencies and more than
+made up for them all; Margaret, tall, slim, shapely, revealing fresh
+graces with every movement,--a sea-goddess in pale pink--a sight to
+set the heart of a marble statue plunging with delight.
+
+Hennie Penny persisted in wearing an unbecoming cap like a sponge-bag,
+which subjected her to comment.
+
+Margaret's crowning glory was coiled in thick plaits on top of her
+head, and if it got wet it got wet and she heeded it not.
+
+Both girls had draped themselves in long towels for the walk down to
+the water, and Graeme's heart sang with joy at the surpassing beauty
+of this radiant girl who had given her heart and herself and her life
+into his keeping.
+
+Dainty clothing counts for much in a girl's appearance. Not every
+girl shows to advantage in bathing costume. But when she does, she
+knows it, and the hearts of men are her stepping-stones.
+
+Hennie Penny was a cautious swimmer. She preferred depths soundable at
+any moment by the dropping of a foot, and if the foot did not
+instantly touch bottom she fell into a panic and screamed, which added
+not a little to the hilarity of their bathes.
+
+Margaret and Graeme, however, were both at home in the water. They
+delighted to set their faces to the open and breast steadily out to
+sea, rejoicing in the conquest of the waves. But he always watched
+over her with solicitous care, for there are currents, and
+cross-currents, and treacherous undertows round those coasts, and the
+wary swimmer is the wiser man.
+
+And the dogs always swam with them, Punch lunging boldly ahead with
+the ease and grace of a seal, looking round now and again to see if
+they were coming, and turning the moment they turned. While Scamp,
+away in the rear, thrashed along spasmodically, with a yelp for every
+stroke, but would not be left out of it. The sight of his anxious
+little face and twisting nose more than once set Margaret laughing, so
+that she had to turn on her back and float till she got over it,
+greatly to the small dog's satisfaction.
+
+Full of life and the mighty joy of it, they found the going unusually
+easy that day. The water was like the kiss of new life, crisp, tonic,
+vitalising. There was no more than a breath of wind, no more than a
+ruffle on the backs of the long blue rollers that came sweeping slowly
+in out of the West.
+
+Graeme, as he glanced round in his long side-strokes at the lovely
+eager face gemmed with sparkling water-jewels, took full deep breaths
+of delight and gratitude to the All-Goodness that had vouchsafed him
+such a prize.
+
+The kiss of the life-giving water had induced a tender flush of colour
+in the soft white neck, as though the pink of her bathing-suit had
+spread upwards. He could see the pulsing blue veins in neck and temple
+as she rose to her stroke. A tiny tendril of water-darkened hair
+lifted and fell on her neck like a filament of seaweed on a polished
+rock. Her eyes were very bright, and seemed larger than usual with the
+strenuous joy of it all. The wonder of her beauty absorbed him. He
+could hardly turn his face from it. He would have been content to go
+on swimming so for ever.
+
+But, glancing past the sweet face one time, he saw that they had gone
+farther than he knew, and Scamp had turned long since and was yelping
+towards the shore.
+
+"Better turn now," he said quietly, and she floated for a moment's
+rest, then turned and they headed for the shore, and Punch passed them
+noiselessly.
+
+They ploughed along in good cheer for a time, and then, of a sudden,
+it seemed to him that they were making but poor progress.
+
+He fixed his eyes on a rock on the shore and swam steadily on.
+
+They had been opposite it. Twenty strokes, and the rock, instead of
+facing them, had swung slowly to the north. They were making less than
+no progress. They were drifting. They were in the grip of a current
+that was carrying them towards the black fangs of Pointe la Joue.
+
+A cold sweat broke out among the sea-drops on his brow. Pointe la Joue
+is an ill place to land, even if they could make it, and the chances
+were that the current would carry them past.
+
+How to tell her without undue upsetting? A panic might bring disaster.
+
+He looked round at her. The bright face was high and resolute. She was
+not aware of the danger, but from that look on her face he did not
+think she would go to pieces when he told her.
+
+The rock he had been watching stood now at an angle to their course.
+
+"Are you tired, Meg?" he asked.
+
+"I'm all right."
+
+"Turn on your back and float for a minute or two," and he set the
+example, and Punch saw and came slipping back to them.
+
+"We're in a cross current," he said quietly. "And we're making no
+way--"
+
+"I know. I was watching a rock on the shore. What's the best thing to
+do?"
+
+"We'll rest for a few minutes and then go with the tide round Pointe
+la Joue. We can land in Vermandes. You're not cold, are you?"
+
+"Not a bit."
+
+When he lifted his head the Coupee was shortened to a span, and the
+southern headland folded over it as he looked. They were drifting as
+fast as a man could walk at his fastest. They were abreast the black
+rocks of La Joue.
+
+"Now, dearest, a little spurt and we shall be in the slack. If you get
+tired, tell me," and they struck out vigorously on a shoreward slant
+in the direction they were going.
+
+There should have been a backwater round the corner of Vermandes. He
+had counted on it. And there was one, but so swift was the rush of the
+tide round the out-jutting rocks of La Joue, that for some minutes, as
+they battled with the rough edge of it, it was touch and go with them.
+
+At a word from her his arm would be at her service. But she fought
+bravely on, and could admire Punch's graceful action even then. The
+waves smacked her rudely in the face. Great writhing coils came
+belching up from below and burst under her chin and almost swamped
+her. One, as strong as a snake, rose suddenly under her, flung her off
+her stroke, rolled her over, made her for a moment feel utterly
+helpless.
+
+"Jock!"
+
+He had been watching her closely. His arm flashed out in front of her.
+
+"Grip!" and she hung on to it and it felt like a bar of steel.
+
+"Now!"--when she had recovered herself somewhat. "Grip the top of my
+suit."--She hooked her fingers into it and he struck out through the
+turmoil.
+
+It was a tough little fight. She struck out vigorously behind to help
+him. And, though the losing of the fight might mean tragedy and two
+white bodies ragging forlornly along the black teeth of Little Sark,
+she still had time to notice the mighty play of muscles in his back
+and arms, and the swelling veins in his sunburnt neck, and the crisp
+rippled hair above, and she rejoiced mightily in him. And--while
+possible deaths lurked all about them--her soul grew large within her
+at thought of the brave heart in front, and the strenuous will, and
+the shapely body, and the powerful muscles--all battling for her--all
+hers--and she theirs. What matter if they were beaten, if they but
+went out together! What matter Death so long as he did not divide
+them! So uplifted was she with the joy of him.
+
+And then, with a final wrestle, they were in slack water, and she
+loosed her hold and struck out alongside him.
+
+And presently he was helping her carefully up a seamed black rock,
+and the hand she gripped was shaking now, and she knew it was not for
+himself.
+
+"Thank God!" said Graeme fervently, as he sank down heavily beside
+her, and panted while the water ran out of them, and Punch scrambled
+up and lay quietly alongside. "Meg,--we were in peril."
+
+"Jock," she said jerkily, for her heart was going now quicker than
+usual, "I do not believe I would have minded--if we'd gone together."
+
+"Ay--together, but, God be thanked, it did not come to that!"
+
+They sat in silence for a time, finding themselves, while the green
+seas swelled up to their feet, and sank out of sight below, and their
+rock was laced with cascades of creamy foam.
+
+"How shall we get back?" asked Margaret at last. "Hennie will be in
+desperation. She will think we are drowned."
+
+"We can climb the head and round into Grande Greve, but it would be
+pretty rough on the feet. Or we can wait till the tide turns and swim
+in again--"
+
+"When will it turn?"
+
+"It's full at noon," he said, studying the waters in front. "But how
+that affects matters here none but a Sarkman could say. Tides here are
+a law unto themselves, like the people."
+
+"How would that do?" asked Margaret, as a black boat came slowly
+round the rocks from Les Fontaines, sculled by an elderly fisherman.
+
+"It is old Billy Mollet after his lobster-pots," and he stood up and
+coo-eed to the new-comer, and waved his arms till Billy saw them and
+stared hard and then turned leisurely their way.
+
+"Guyablle!" said the old man, as he drew in. "What you doin' there
+now?"
+
+"Got carried out of Grande Greve by a current, Mr. Mollet. Will you
+take us back in your boat?"
+
+"Ay, ay!" and he brought the boat as near to the rock as he dared, and
+his weather-stained old eyes settled hypnotically on the fairest
+burden his old tub had ever carried, as Graeme handed her carefully
+down and helped her to spring into the dancing craft, and then sprang
+in himself with bleeding feet and shins, while Punch leaped lightly
+after him and crawled under a thwart.
+
+"Ye must ha' been well out for tide to catch ye," said Billy, with no
+eyes for anything but the vision in clinging pink.
+
+"Yes, we were too far out and couldn't get back."
+
+"Tide runs round them rocks."
+
+He dropped his oar into the rowlock and Graeme took the other, and in
+five minutes they were speeding across the sands of Grande
+Greve--Margaret to cover, Graeme to his pocket for Billy's reward.
+
+Miss Penny had a driftwood fire roaring among the rocks, and the
+kettle was boiling.
+
+"Where on earth have you two been?" she cried, at sight of Margaret
+skipping over the stones to her dressing-room, and got only the wave
+of a white arm in reply.
+
+And presently Graeme came along in easy piratical costume of shirt and
+trousers and red sash, and sat down and lit a pipe.
+
+"We went a bit farther than we intended," he explained, but did not
+tell her how nearly they had gone out of bounds altogether.
+
+"You'll enjoy a cup of tea. You look as if you'd been working hard."
+
+"There is a bit of a current round that point."
+
+"Ah, you should follow a good example and keep within touch of the
+bottom. Here you are, Meg--fresh made for every customer. Help
+yourself, Mr. Graeme. I've had mine, I couldn't wait. Tea never tastes
+so good as when you're half full of salt-water, and I got right out of
+my depth once and swallowed tons. I screamed to you two to come and
+save me, but you never paid the slightest attention, and for all you
+cared I might have been drowned five times over."
+
+"One would have been quite once too many," said Graeme, holding out
+his cup. "For then you couldn't have lighted that fire and made this
+tea. And I'm half inclined to think we wouldn't be enjoying it a
+quarter so much if a little blue corpse lay out there on the shining
+sand, and we'd had to turn to and make it ourselves."
+
+"Horrible!" said Miss Penny, with a little shiver. "With your little
+blue corpses! It's all very well to joke about it, but I assure you,
+for a minute or so, I thought I was done for. The bottom seemed to
+have sunk, and I was just going after it when my foot came on a rock
+and that helped me to kick ashore."
+
+"A narrow escape," said Graeme, with a sympathetic wag of the head.
+"You've no right to risk your life that way. We still need you. What
+do you say to being bridesmaid at a Sark wedding?"
+
+"It is the hope of my life," said Miss Penny, sparkling like Mars in a
+clear evening sky.
+
+"I really don't see any reason why we should wait"--said Graeme,
+looking very earnestly at Margaret, and behind the look was the
+thought, born of what they had just come through together, that life
+spills many a full cup before the thirsty lips have tasted it. "What
+do you say, Margaret?"
+
+And she, knowing well what was in him, and being of the same mind,
+said, "I am ready, Jock. When you will."
+
+"I'll call on the Vicar to-morrow," he said joyfully. "It would be
+such a pity to disappoint the hope of Miss Penny's life,"--as that
+young person came back with the merry kettle.
+
+"I am indebted to you," said Hennie Penny. "What about dresses, Meg?"
+
+
+IV
+
+It was that same night, as they were sauntering home from a starlight
+ramble, that they came on Johnnie Vautrin crouched in the hedge with
+Marielihou, and Marielihou had her hind leg bound up in a piece of
+white rag.
+
+"Hello, Johnnie! What's the matter with Marielihou?" asked Graeme. And
+Marielihou turned her malevolent yellow-green eyes on him and looked
+curses.
+
+"Goderabetin! She've got hurt."
+
+"Oh! How was that?"
+
+"I d'n know. Wisht I knowed who done it;" and just then, as luck would
+have it, old Tom Hamon came sauntering along in the gloaming, smoking
+a contemplative pipe with long slow puffs.
+
+And at sight of him Marielihou ruffled and swelled to twice her size,
+and raked up most horrible and blood-curdling oaths from away down in
+her inside into her black throat, and spat them out at him, as he came
+up, in a fusillade that sounded like ripraps, and her eyes flamed
+baleful fires.
+
+"Cuss away, y'ould witch!" said old Tom, with a grin through his
+pipe-stem. "How's the leg?" and Marielihou with a final volley
+disappeared among the bushes, and Johnnie crawled after her.
+
+"What on earth does he mean?" whispered Meg.
+
+"Mr. Hamon has an idea that Marielihou and old Mme. Vautrin have
+something in common. In fact I believe he goes so far as to say that
+they are one and the same. Black magic, you know,--witchcraft, and all
+that kind of thing."
+
+"How horrid!"
+
+"B'en!" chuckled old Tom again. "You find out how 'tis with th' old
+witch. We know how 'tis with Marrlyou. 'Twere the silver bullet did
+it. If sh' 'adn't jumped 'twould ha' gone through 'er 'ead," and he
+went off chuckling through his pipe-stem.
+
+And the next evening, as they were sauntering slowly through the
+darkening lanes to the windmill, to see the life-lights flash out all
+round the horizon, it happened that they met the doctor just turning
+out of his gate.
+
+"Hello, doctor! How's old Mme. Vautrin to-day?" asked Graeme.
+
+"She's going on all right," said the doctor, with a touch of surprise.
+"There seems a quite unusual amount of interest in that old lady all
+of a sudden. How is it?"
+
+"What is it's wrong with her?"
+
+And the doctor eyed him curiously for a moment, and then said, "Well,
+she says she hurt her leg ormering, slipped on a rock and got the hook
+in it. But--Well, it's a bad leg anyway, and she won't go ormering or
+anything else for a good long time to come."
+
+Which matter, in the light of old Tom Hamon's silver bullets and
+evident knowledge of Marielihou's injury, left them all very much
+puzzled, though, as Graeme acknowledged, there might be nothing in it
+after all.
+
+
+V
+
+It was just after the second lesson, the following Sunday, that the
+Vicar stood up, tall and stately, his youthful face below the gray
+hair all alight with the enjoyment of this unusual break in the even
+tenour of his way, and soared into unaccustomed and very carefully
+enunciated English.
+
+"I pub-lish thee Banns of Marrr-i-ache between John Cor-rie Graeme of
+Lonn-donn and Mar-garet Brandt of Lonn-donn. If any of you know cause,
+or just im-ped-i-ment, why these two pair-sons should not be joined
+to-gether in holy matri-mony, ye are to de-clare it. This is thee
+first time of as-king."
+
+Margaret and Miss Penny and Graeme heard it from their back seat
+among the school-children, and found it good.
+
+There were not very many visitors there. Such as there were felt a
+momentary surprise at two English people choosing to get married in
+Sark, though, if it had been put to them, they must have confessed
+that there was no lovelier place in the world to be married in. They
+also wondered what kind of people they were.
+
+Some few of the habitants knew them and turned and grinned
+encouragingly, though even they were not quite certain in their own
+minds as to which of the two ladies was the one who was to be married.
+The children all smiled as a matter of course and of nature.
+
+And Margaret felt no shadow of regret at thought of the gauds and
+fripperies of a fashionable wedding which would not be hers. In John
+Graeme's true love she had the kernel. The rest was of small account
+to her.
+
+And that little church of Sark, plain walled and bare of ornament,
+always exerted upon her a most profoundly deepening and uplifting
+influence. It epitomised the life of the remote little island. Here
+its people were baptized, confirmed, married, buried.
+
+And here and there, on the otherwise naked walls, was a white marble
+tablet to the memory of some who had gone down to the sea and never
+returned. And these she had studied and mused upon with emotion the
+first time she went there, for surely none could read them without
+being deeply touched.
+
+ "A la memoire de John William Falle, age de 37 ans, et de son
+ fils William Slowley Falle, age de 17 ans, Fils et petit fils de
+ William Falle, Ecr. de Beau Regard, Sercq. Qui furent noyes
+ 20'eme jour d'Avril 1903, durant la traversee de Guernsey a
+ Sercq. 'Ta voie a ete par la mer et tes sentiers dans les
+ grosses eaux.'"
+
+ "A la memoire de Pierre Le Pelley, Ecuyer, Seigneur de Serk,
+ noye pres la Pointe du Nez, dans une Tempete, le 13 Mars, 1839,
+ age de 40 ans. Son corps n'a pas ete retrouve; mais la mer
+ rendra ses morts."
+
+ "In memory of Eugene Grut Victor Cachemaille, second son of the
+ Revd. J.L.V. Cachemaille, Vicar of Sark. Born Jan. 14, 1840, and
+ lost at sea in command of the _Ariel_, which left London for
+ Sydney, Feby. 1872, and was heard of no more. 'He was not, for
+ God took him.'"
+
+Yes, she would sooner be married in that solemn little church than in
+Westminster Abbey, for there there would be mighty distractions, while
+here there would be nought to come between her and God and the true
+man to whom she was giving herself with a full heart.
+
+
+VI
+
+"This is the second time of asking."
+
+"This is the third time of asking."
+
+And so far none had discovered any just cause or impediment why John
+Corrie Graeme and Margaret Brandt should not in due course be joined
+together in holy matrimony.
+
+On the occasion of the third asking, however, one in the congregation,
+a casual visitor and in no way personally concerned in the matter,
+found it of sufficient interest to make mention of it in a letter
+home, and so unwittingly played his little part in the story.
+
+Meanwhile, the glorious summer days between the askings were golden
+days of ever-increasing delight to Graeme and Margaret, and of rich
+enjoyment to Miss Penny.
+
+Never was there more complaisant chaperone than Hennie Penny. For, you
+see, she took no little credit to herself for having helped to bring
+about their happiness, and the very least she could do was to further
+it in every way in her power.
+
+In her own quaint way she enjoyed their "lovering," as she called it,
+almost as much as they did themselves. And that being so, they would
+have felt it selfish on their part to deprive her of any portion of
+her rightful share in it.
+
+And that was how Miss Hennie Penny became so very knowing in such
+matters, and also why she lived in a state of perpetual amazement at
+the change that had come over her friend.
+
+For Margaret, affianced to the man who had her whole heart, was a very
+different being from Margaret harassed and worried by Mr. Pixley and
+his schemes for her possession and possessions.
+
+Charming and beautiful as she had always been, this new Margaret was
+to the old as a radiant butterfly to its chrysalis,--as the glory of
+the opening flower to the promise of the bud. And Hennie Penny's
+quickened intelligence, projecting itself into the future, could
+fathom heights and depths and greater glories still to come.
+
+But even now, when they went along the lanes festooned as for a
+wedding with honeysuckle and wild roses, the faces of those they met
+lighted up at sight of them, and few but turned to look after them
+when they had passed, and Miss Penny's truthful soul took none of the
+silent homage to herself.
+
+Margaret was supremely happy. She could not have hidden it if she had
+tried. She made no attempt to do so. She gave herself up to the
+rapturous enjoyment of their "lovering" with all the naive abandon of
+a delighted child. The little ties and tapes and conventions, which
+trammel more or less all but the very simplest lives, fell from her,
+snapped by the expansion of her love-exalted soul. She was back to the
+simple elementals. She loved Jock, Jock loved her. They were happy as
+the day was long. Why on earth should they not show it? If she had had
+her way she would have had every soul in all the world as happy as
+they two were.
+
+"I feel like an elderly nurse with two very young children," said Miss
+Penny to the pair of exuberants.
+
+"O Wise Nurse! We shall never be so young again," laughed Graeme.
+
+"But we are never going to grow any older inside," laughed Margaret.
+
+"Never!" said Graeme, with the conviction of absolute knowledge, and
+carolled softly--
+
+ "O it's good to be young in the days of one's youth!
+ Yes, in truth and in truth,
+ It's the very best thing in the world to be young,
+ To be young, to be young in one's youth."
+
+"Very apropos!" said Miss Penny. "Did you make it on the spot?"
+
+"In anticipation," he laughed. "It's the opening song in a very
+charming comic opera I once committed. But it was too good for the
+present frivolous age, and so I have to perform it myself."
+
+"I would like to give all the children on the island--" began
+Margaret.
+
+"All the other children--" corrected Graeme.
+
+"All the children--including Hennie and you and me--the jolliest feast
+they've ever had in their lives, the day we are married."
+
+"Of course we will, and the doctor shall get in an extra supply of
+palliatives. They shall look back in after years and say--'Do you
+remember that feast we had when the loveliest of all the angels came
+down from heaven and was married to that delightful
+Englishman?'--Briton, I ought to say! I do wish our dear old Lady
+Elspeth could be here. How she would enjoy it!--'That feast,' they
+will say, 'when we were all ill for a month after and the doctor died
+of overwork.' They will date back to it as ancient peoples did to the
+Flood. It will be a Great White Stone Day to generations to come. Let
+us hope there will be no new white stones over yonder"--nodding in the
+direction of the churchyard--"in commemoration of that great day."
+
+"We will draw the line short of that," said Margaret seriously.
+
+"We'll give them all the gache they can eat--home-made, and such as
+their constitutions are accustomed to,--and fruit and frivolities from
+Guernsey. I'll go across the Saturday before--"
+
+"_We_ will go across," said Margaret.
+
+"Of course we will. We older children will go, and we'll take Nurse
+with us,"--with a bow towards Hennie Penny,--"and we'll make a day of
+it, and have ices again at that place in the Arcade, and then we'll go
+round the shops and clear them out for the benefit of Sark."
+
+"Ripping!" said Miss Penny.
+
+
+VII
+
+They had already made one trip to Guernsey, crossing by the early
+Saturday boat and returning the same evening.
+
+But that was a strictly business affair.
+
+"We're feeling frightfully fossilised at having bought nothing, except
+what we absolutely needed, for nearly a month," said Miss Penny. "From
+that point of view I should imagine the Garden of Eden may have been
+just a trifle slow--"
+
+"Ah, you see, Mother Eve hadn't had the advantages of a superior
+education," said Graeme.
+
+"And there are some fripperies we simply _must_ have," said Miss
+Penny, "even for a runaway wedding like this. You see, when we decided
+to come here we had no idea how much farther we were going, and so we
+couldn't possibly provide. Of course if we had known you were here--"
+
+At which Margaret laughed.
+
+"You would have provided accordingly," said Graeme. "Well, you must
+put all the blame on to Mr. Pixley. I wonder what he would say if he
+knew all about it."
+
+"He would use language unadapted to prayer-meetings and public
+platforms," said Miss Penny. "He can, you know, when he tries hard."
+
+"I imagined so. It will be rather amusing to see what he'll do when he
+finds out."
+
+"He'll do the very nastiest thing that is open to him, whatever that
+is, and poor Mrs. Pixley will have an exceedingly bad time. And he'll
+probably have a fit on his own account."
+
+"Oh, we can hardly expect him to be so kind as all that--"
+
+"The only one I'm sorry for is Charles Svendt. He's really not half a
+bad sort, in his way, you know," said Miss Penny.
+
+"I'm sorry, but I'm afraid, under the circumstances, I can't squeeze
+out any sympathy even for Charles Svendt."
+
+Arrived at St. Peter Port, the ladies permitted him to attend them to
+the door of the largest drapery establishment they could find, and
+then told him he was at liberty to go and enjoy himself for a couple
+of hours.
+
+"Two hours? Good Heavens! What can you want in there for two hours?"
+
+"Usual thing!" sparkled Miss Penny. "Tablecloths!"--with which cryptic
+utterance he had to be satisfied.
+
+"And where do we meet again--if ever?"
+
+"Hauteville House--Victor Hugo's. It's part of your honeymoon--a bit
+on account."
+
+"And whereabouts is it?"
+
+"No idea. If we can find it, you can. Au revoir!"
+
+He went first to get his hair cut, since the practice of the tonsorial
+art in Sark is still in the bowl-and-scissors stage.
+
+Then he sought out a lawyer of repute, whose name he had got from the
+Vicar, and gave him instructions for the drawing of a brief but
+comprehensive deed of settlement of all Margaret's portion on herself
+absolutely and entirely. While this important document was being
+engrossed, he sought out the Rector of St. Peter Port, in George
+Place, and in a short but pleasant interview was accepted as tenant of
+the whole of the Red House in Sark for the month of July, with the
+option of a longer stay if he chose.
+
+Then back to the lawyer's, where he signed his deed, paid the fees,
+and took it away with him.
+
+After that, to fill in the time occupied elsewhere by the purchase of
+mythical tablecloths, he rambled up and down the quaint
+foreign-flavoured streets till he found a jeweller's shop of size, in
+the Arcade, and decided, after careful inspection from the outside,
+that it would answer all requirements.
+
+For he had a ring and half a ring to buy for Margaret, and he thought
+he would buy one also for Hennie Penny, as a pleasant reminder of
+their good days in Sark.
+
+So utterly unconventional had their proceedings been, so thoroughly
+had the spirit of the remote little island possessed them, and so
+all-sufficient had they been to one another, that the thought of an
+engagement ring had troubled his mind as little as the lack of it had
+troubled Margaret's. But the absolute necessity of a wedding ring had
+reminded him of his lapse, and now he would repair it on a scale
+remotely commensurate with his feelings. Remotely, because, if his
+pocket had borne any relation to his feelings, he would have bought up
+the whole shop and lavished its contents upon her, though he knew that
+the simple golden circlet would far outweigh all else in her mind.
+
+He was waiting placidly for them in the shade of the dark trees of
+Hauteville, when they came panting up the steep way, flushed with
+victory and the joys of purchase after long abstinence.
+
+"Well, has the proprietor of that big shop retired with a competence?"
+he asked, as he threw away the end of his cigar.
+
+"Can you lend us our boat-fares home?" gasped Miss Penny.
+
+"So bad as all that? I can't say yet. I've not begun my own purchases.
+We'll see when I'm through. If I'm cleaned out too we'll offer to work
+our passages."
+
+"You can pawn your watch. Meg and I haven't got one between us. We
+left them at home on purpose."
+
+"Thoughtful of you. Now let us into the treasure-house."
+
+They enjoyed the wonders of Hauteville immensely,--objectively, the
+wonderful carved work and the tapestries, the china and the
+furniture,--the odd little bedroom with the bed on the floor, so that
+the Master could roll out to his work at any moment of inspiration,
+and the huge balconies, and the glass eyrie on the roof whence he
+surveyed his wide horizons, and where, above the world, he
+worked;--and subjectively, the whole quaint flavour and austere
+literary atmosphere of the place.
+
+"No wonder he produced masterpieces," said Graeme, delighting in it
+all. "The view alone is an inspiration."
+
+Then he took them up to Old Government House for lunch and a rest in
+the garden, and then away to the Arcade to the jeweller's shop, which
+proved adequate to all his demands;--for Margaret, a half-hoop of
+diamonds which the jeweller, with an air of sincerity, assured them
+were as fine stones as he had ever seen in the course of a long and
+prosperous career. Which ring Margaret would thenceforth value before
+all her others, though in the simple matter of intrinsic worth her
+jewel-case could beat it hollow.--And a plain gold circlet which, when
+she got it, would be more precious to her than all the rest put
+together.--And for Miss Penny, in spite of her protestations, a
+handsome signet ring which, when cornered, she chose in preference to
+a more feminine jewel, and which was left to be engraved with her
+family crest and motto.
+
+"I have never adopted the habit of rings," she said, as they drifted
+towards the ice-shop. "Chiefly, perhaps, because I never had any worth
+wearing. But I've always thought I would like to wear a crest signet.
+I shall prize this, Mr. Graeme, as the very greatest treasure I
+have--"
+
+"Until someone gives you a plain gold one, Hennie, and that will put
+all the rest into the shade," said Margaret.
+
+"Ah!" said Miss Penny.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Their journey home--that is, to Sark--that day was not entirely
+without incident. For when they got down to the quay, Sark had
+disappeared completely, and Herm and Jethou were no more than wan
+ghosts of their natural selves, in a dense white mist.
+
+"Ah-ha! Here is our old friend of Tintageu," said Graeme jovially.
+"Well, I must confess to bearing him no ill-feeling--if he doesn't
+land us on a rock this time. Going, captain?"
+
+"Oh yess, we go. I think it will lift," said Captain Bichard.
+
+"Don't run us on a rock anyway."
+
+"I won'd run you on no rock. I coult smell my way across;" and they
+started, feeling their way cautiously past Castle Cornet, into the
+open, where black jaws lined with white teeth lie in wait for the
+unwary.
+
+And just as they got to the south of Jethou they saw a sight the like
+of which none of them had ever seen before, nor, from the exclamations
+about them, had any of the rest.
+
+The mist in front was like a soft white curtain, and upon it, straight
+ahead of their bows, appeared suddenly a mighty silver bow, not a
+rainbow, because there was no rain and so there were no colours. But,
+like the bow they had seen from Beleme Cliff, this also was a perfect
+circle, all but a tiny segment where it appeared to rest upon the sea,
+and its only colour was a dazzling silvery sheen which waxed as they
+watched it in breathless silence. Then it waned, bit by bit, till at
+last it was gone, and only the white mist curtain remained.
+
+"How very lovely!" murmured Margaret.
+
+"A good omen for certain," said Miss Penny. "Even Johnnie Vautrin
+couldn't make any ill news out of that. It was your wedding arch,
+Meg."
+
+"Well, that's the first time I ever saw a white rainbow," said Graeme
+to the captain.
+
+"First time I ever saw one myself, sir."
+
+"Not very common then."
+
+"Never heard of one before."
+
+"We're evidently in luck."
+
+"Mebbe, but we won't crow till we've made the Creux. Kip your eyes
+skinned, lads!"
+
+"Ay, ay, zur!" and the crew lined the bulwarks on their knees, with
+their chins on the rail, their eyes peering into the puzzling veil in
+front, and their ears alert for the wash of wave on rock.
+
+They were going slow, hardly moving in fact at times, waiting to pick
+up their course as any possible mark should come into view, with
+muttered comments from the puzzled lookouts, and an occasional growl
+of dissent from views propounded by the younger members, while the
+passengers all stood in silent discomfort as though ready for
+contingencies.
+
+For the tides and currents in those seas are strange and gruesome.
+Even as they lay, apparently motionless, with the sea as smooth as oil
+all round them, there came a sudden turmoil, and they were in a wild
+race of waters, with bubbling coils and swirls and frothing gouts of
+foam from rocks that lay fathoms deep below.
+
+"La Grune," growled one of the keen-eyed watchers, and was discounted
+at once by doubtful growls from the rest.
+
+Then a black ledge loomed through the mist and faded again before they
+had more than a glimpse of it.
+
+"Les Dents," ventured one.
+
+"Hautes Boues,"--so divergent were their views.
+
+A sound of waters and another dark loom of rock.
+
+"Sercul," said one.
+
+"L'Etac," said another.
+
+Then the engine bell tanged sharply, and they went ahead. The captain
+had seen more than the rest and knew where he was, and they all
+breathed more freely. And presently, with a wide berth to the dangers
+of the south-east coast, they nosed slowly in again, picked up La
+Conchee without dissentients, and so into Creux Harbour in a way that
+seemed to Graeme little short of marvellous.
+
+"Fogs at sea are beastly--there is no other word for it--but all the
+same I'm glad we saw the Wedding-Bow," said Miss Penny.
+
+
+IX
+
+They had fixed on the Wednesday following the last time of asking, for
+their wedding-day. But when they came to discuss the matter with Mrs.
+Carre, it was found that an alteration would be necessary.
+
+"Ah, but that will not do," said their landlady, who was in high
+feather at so unique an event taking place in her cottage, so to
+speak, though, as a matter of fact, the festivities were to be carried
+out within the ampler precincts of the Red House. "You see, old Mr.
+Hamon he iss died very sudden--"
+
+"Not old Tom surely?" asked Graeme.
+
+"He iss old Tom's father, and they will bury him on Wednesday, and you
+would not like to be married the sem day--"
+
+"No, indeed," said Margaret. "We will wait."
+
+"And, you see, all them that would be coming to the wedding would be
+at the funeral, for efferybody belongs to efferybody else here."
+
+"Must be a bit awkward at times," suggested Graeme.
+
+"Oh noh!" with a touch of airy aloofness. "I haf been at a wedding and
+a funeral and a baptism all in one week all among the sem people. And
+I was at one young man's wedding one day last year and at his funeral
+the same day the next week after."
+
+"That was dreadful," said Margaret. "Do you think it would be safe to
+fix it for the following Wednesday, Mrs. Carre?"
+
+"Oh yes, I think! There iss no one very sick. Mr. Hamon he wass a very
+old man and he died very sudden. He wass just knocking a nail in the
+pigsty and he drop down and died."
+
+"Poor old man!"
+
+"He wass very old and he wass a good man. No one ever said any harm of
+old Mr. Hamon."
+
+"Then if no one else dies we'll say the following Wednesday," said
+Graeme. "And if--well, if anything happens to prevent it, then we must
+go across to Guernsey and get Mr. Lee to marry us."
+
+"Oh, but that woult not do. We will keep them all alive till you are
+married. It woult neffer do to disappoint them all when we are all
+looking forward to it here."
+
+"Very well then, see you all keep alive."
+
+"And you will come to old Mr. Hamon's funeral?"
+
+"H'm! I don't know. We'll see, Mrs. Carre. We'd sooner be at our own
+wedding, you know, than at anybody else's funeral."
+
+"They woult like it iff you woult. And he was a goot old man. They
+tell me to ask if you woult be pleased to come."
+
+"If they would like us to come we will come, Mrs. Carre," said
+Margaret.
+
+And so it came about that instead of kneeling before the altar that
+Wednesday they stood by the graveside.
+
+
+X
+
+The Red House and the cottage were centres--nay, whirlpools--of mighty
+activities for days beforehand.
+
+Mrs. Carre insisted on cleaning down the Red House from top to bottom
+for the home-coming of the bride, though, to Graeme's masculine
+perceptions, its panelling of polished pitch pine from floor to
+ceiling, in which you could see yourself as in a mirror, had always
+appeared the very acme of cleanliness and comfort, with the additional
+merit of a tendency towards churchwardly thoughts.
+
+But when he ventured on a mild remonstrance anent the necessity for
+so gigantic an upsetting, Mrs. Carre laughingly said, "Ach, you are
+only a man. You woult neffer see"--and whirled her broom to the
+endangerment of his head.
+
+For Margaret's honeymoon--that, is, such of it as she had not enjoyed
+before her marriage--was to consist of a change of residence from the
+cottage, and a walk up the garden and through the hedge of gracious
+Memories, to the wider--ah, how much wider!--as much wider and larger
+and more beautiful as wifehood at its best is wider and larger and
+more beautiful than maidenhood at its best--to the wider accommodation
+of the Red House. And Mrs. Carre was determined that it should be
+speckless and sweet, and fit in every way for the coming of so
+beautiful a bride.
+
+She had found them a young girl, Betsy Lefevre, a niece of her own, to
+serve as handmaid during their occupancy of the house, but insisted
+herself on acting as cook and general housekeeper. Miss Penny was to
+reside at the cottage for a week after the wedding, but was to go up
+the garden to her meals, and at the end of that time she was to join
+them at the Red House as an honoured guest.
+
+And the kitchen at the cottage, and the kitchen at the House, and
+several other kitchens in the neighbourhood, were baking gache enough
+apparently to feed a regiment, and as the day approached, roasts of
+beef and mutton, and hams and other substantial fare, were much in
+evidence. And the kitchens were thronged with ladies in sun-bonnets,
+which had originally been black but were now somewhat off-colour with
+age and weather, and all the ladies' faces were as full of importance
+as if they had been Cabinet ministers in the throes of a crisis.
+
+Among these concentric energies, Margaret and Miss Penny completed
+their own simple preparations, and Graeme busied himself with the
+details of the children's feast which was to take place in an adjacent
+field.
+
+He went down to the harbour to meet the Tuesday morning's boat which
+was to bring over the fruit and frivolities ordered from
+Guernsey--strawberries enough to start a jam factory, grapes enough to
+stock a greengrocer's shop, chocolates, sweets, Christmas crackers and
+fancy biscuits, in what he hoped would prove sufficiency, but had his
+doubts at times when he saw the eager expectancy with which he was
+regarded by every youngster he met.
+
+He was just starting out when Johnnie Vautrin hailed him from his lair
+in the hedge.
+
+"Heh, Mist' Graeme! I seen--"
+
+"Better not, Johnnie!" he said, with a warning finger. "If it's
+anything uncomfortable I'll come right over and jump on you and
+Marrlyou."
+
+"Goderabetin, you dassen't!"
+
+"Oh, dassen't I? If you don't see everything good for this week, and
+fine weather too, you little imp, I'll--"
+
+"Que-hou-hou!" croaked Johnnie, and Marielihou yawned and made a
+futile attempt to wash behind her ears but found it discomforting to a
+sore hind-leg, so gave it up and spat at him instead.
+
+"And, moreover, I won't have you at my party."
+
+"Hou-hou! I'm coming. Ma'm'zelle she ask me."
+
+"I'll tell her to send you back-word."
+
+"She wun't, she wun't. Where you goin'?"
+
+"To the harbour, to see if all the good things have come for the other
+little boys and girls."
+
+"Oh la-la! Good things and bad things come by the boat. Sometime it'll
+sink and drown 'em all."
+
+"Little rascal!" and he waved his hand and went on.
+
+"Late, isn't she, Carre?" he asked, as he leaned over the sea-wall
+with the rest.
+
+"She's late, sir."
+
+"I hope nothing's happened to her. I'll never forgive her if she's
+made an end of my sweet things for the kiddies."
+
+"She'll come."
+
+And she came. With a shrill peal she came round the Burons and made
+for the harbour.
+
+And Graeme, wedged into the corner of the iron railing where it looks
+out to sea, to make sure at the earliest possible moment that that
+which he had come to meet was there, met of a sudden more than he had
+looked for.
+
+"Well ... I'll be hanged!" he jerked to himself, and then began to
+laugh internally.
+
+For, standing on the upper deck of the small steamer, and looking,
+somehow, very much out of place there, was a tall but portly young
+gentleman, in a bowler hat and travelling coat and a monocle, whose
+face showed none of the usual symptoms of the Sark lover. To judge
+from his expression, the little island impressed him anything but
+favourably. It offered him none of the relaxations and amusements to
+which he was accustomed. It looked, on the face of it, an uncivilised
+kind of a place, out of which a man might be ejected without ceremony
+if he chose to make himself objectionable.
+
+Graeme kept out of sight among the other crowders of the quay till the
+bowler hat came bobbing up the gangway. Then he smote its owner so
+jovially on the shoulder that his monocle shot the full length of its
+cord and the hat came within an ace of tumbling overboard.
+
+"Hello, Pixley! This _is_ good of you. You're just in time to give us
+your blessing."
+
+"Aw! Hello!" said Charles Svendt, agape at the too friendly greeting.
+"That you, Graeme?"
+
+"The worst half of me, my boy. Margaret's up at the house. You'll be
+quite a surprise to her."
+
+"Aw!" said Charles Svendt thoughtfully, as he readjusted his eyeglass.
+"Demned queer place, this!" and he gazed round lugubriously.
+
+"It is that, my boy. Queerer than you think, and queerer people."
+
+"Aw! Is there any--aw--place to stop at?"
+
+"Thinking of stopping over night? Oh yes, several very decent hotels."
+
+"Aw! Which are you at yourself now?"
+
+"I? Oh, I'm a resident. I've got a house here."
+
+"Dooce you have! Well, now, where would you stop if you were me?"
+
+"Well, if I were you I should stop at the Old Government House--"
+
+"Right! Whereabouts is it?"
+
+"It's over in Guernsey. Boat returns at five sharp."
+
+"Aw! Quite so! Very good! But I've got--er--business here, don't you
+know."
+
+"Oh? Thinking of opening a branch here? Well, there's Stock's--but I
+doubt if you'd fit in there--"
+
+"Fit? Why not fit? Stocks are my line."
+
+"I think I'd try the Bel-Air if I were you--"
+
+"Which is nearest?" asked Charles Svendt, looking round
+depreciatively.
+
+"Bel-Air. Just along the tunnel there--"
+
+"Good Lord! Along the tunnel--"
+
+"Excuse me for a moment. I've got some things coming by this boat. I
+must see to them," and Graeme sped away to attend to his frivolities.
+
+
+XI
+
+"And what special business brings you to Sark, Pixley?" asked Graeme,
+as they passed through the tunnel of rock and climbed the steep way of
+the Creux--its high banks masses of ferns, its hedges ablaze with
+honeysuckle and roses, its trees interwoven into a thick canopy
+overhead,--a living green tunnel shot with quivering sunbeams. All of
+which was lost on Charles Svendt, whose chest was going like a
+steam-pump and whose legs were quivering with the unusual strain.
+Graeme regretted that he had not been landed on the ladders at Havre
+Gosselin, where he himself came ashore. He would dearly have liked to
+follow the portly one up those ladders and heard his comments.
+
+In reply to Graeme's question he shook his head mutely and staggered
+on--past the upper reaches, where the corded roots of the overhanging
+trees came thrusting through the banks like twisting serpents; past
+the wells of sweet water that lay dark and still below, and ran over
+into the road, and trickled away down the sides in little streams; out
+into the sunshine and the quickening of the breeze;--till he dropped
+exhausted into a chair outside the door of the Bel-Air.
+
+He sat there panting for close on five minutes, with unaccustomed
+perspiration streaming down his red face, and then he said "Demn!"
+and proceeded to mop himself up with his handkerchief.
+
+Then he held up a finger to a distant waiter in the dining-room, and
+when he came, murmured, "Whisky--soda--two," and fanned himself
+vigorously till they came.
+
+"Better?" asked Graeme, as they nodded and drank.
+
+"Heap better! What a demnable place to get into!"
+
+"There are one or two other entrances--"
+
+"Better?"
+
+"No, worse."
+
+"Demn!"
+
+"Now," he said presently, when his heart had got back to normal and he
+had lit a cigarette. "Let's talk business. Am I in time?"
+
+"For the wedding? Just in time. It's tomorrow."
+
+"Aw--er--you know what I've come for, I suppose?"
+
+"I can imagine, but you may as well save yourself useless trouble. You
+can't do anything."
+
+"Think not?"
+
+"Sure. English--I should say, British--law doesn't run here, and
+you've no _locus standi_ if it did."
+
+"She's under age and her guardian objects. I represent him."
+
+"He can object all he wants to, and you can represent him all you
+want to. It won't make the slightest difference."
+
+"I can appear at the ceremony and show cause why it should not
+proceed."
+
+"What cause?"
+
+"Her guardian objects. The parson would hardly proceed in face of my
+objection."
+
+"I think you'll find he would. However, we'll go and ask him
+presently. We'll pay a visit to the Seigneur also."
+
+"Who's the Seigneur?"
+
+"Lord Paramount of the island. His word goes. If he chooses, as he
+probably will, to tell you to go also, you'll have to go."
+
+"Demn'd if I will!"
+
+"He'll see to that. He'll put the Senechal and the Greffier and the
+Prevot and the two constables and the Vingtenier on to you, and bundle
+you out like a sack of potatoes."
+
+"Oh, come, Graeme! This is the twentieth century!"
+
+"That's another of your little mistakes, my friend. I can't tell you
+just exactly what year it is here, but it's somewhere between 1066
+and, say, 1200 A.D."
+
+"Afraid I don't quite catch on."
+
+"Exactly! That's why you'll be off in this scene. We're under feudal
+law here, with a mixture of Home Rule. We don't care twopence for your
+English courts, and as for English lawyers, they're not much liked
+here, I believe."
+
+"Rum hole!" mused Charles Svendt.
+
+"Rum hole to make yourself a nuisance in. Jolly place to be happy in."
+
+"H'm!" And presently he asked, "Where are you stopping?"
+
+"I'll go along and tell the girls you're here--"
+
+"Girls?"
+
+"Miss Penny came with Margaret--"
+
+"Aw--Miss Penny!"
+
+"You'd better have your lunch here. They'll give you lobsters fresh
+from the kettle, and I'll stroll round later on and we'll get this
+matter settled up. So long!" and he went away up the Avenue and across
+the fields home.
+
+And he went thoughtfully. It was annoying this man cropping up like
+this at the eleventh hour. Nothing, he felt sure, would come of his
+interference, but it might disturb Margaret and the general harmony of
+to-morrow's proceedings.
+
+Her wedding-day is a somewhat nervous time for a girl, under the best
+of circumstances, he supposed. And though Margaret was as little given
+to nerves as anyone he had ever met, the possibility of a public
+attempt to stop her wedding might be fairly calculated to upset her.
+
+Feudal as were the laws of the island, he could hardly knock Pixley on
+the head, as would have happened in less anachronistic times. And so
+he went thoughtfully.
+
+
+XII
+
+Margaret and Miss Penny were lying in long chairs on the verandah when
+he came over the green wall into the Red House garden, by the same gap
+as he had used that first morning when he came upon Margaret standing
+in the hedge.
+
+They were resting from labours, joyful, but none the less tiring.
+
+"Jock, we were just wanting you!" said Margaret, sitting up. "Have all
+the things come all right?"
+
+"All come all right," and he wondered how she would take his next
+announcement. "In fact more came than we expected."
+
+"I guess we can use it all," said Miss Penny. "You've no idea of the
+capacity of children. I know something about it, and these children
+are more expansible even than school-girls."
+
+"I was surprised to meet a gentleman down there who says he has come
+across on purpose for the wedding."
+
+"A gentleman--come for the wedding?" and both girls eyed him as
+pictured terriers greet the word "Rats!"
+
+"I'll give you three guesses."
+
+"Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Bull's-eye first shot! Clever girl!"
+
+"Not really, Jock!" said Margaret, with a suspicion of dismay in her
+voice.
+
+"Well, Charles Svendt anyway--as representing the old man, he says."
+
+"But what has he come for, and how did he get to know?"
+
+"I didn't ask him. It was quite enough to see him there. He says he's
+going to stop it,"--and Margaret's cheeks flamed,--"but I've assured
+him that he can't, and I'll take jolly good care that he doesn't, if I
+have to knock him on the head and drop him off the Coupee."
+
+"It would be shameful of him if he tried," cried Miss Penny. "Just let
+me have a talk with him, Mr. Graeme, and I'll make him wish he'd never
+been born. He's really not such a bad sort, you know. Where is he?"
+
+"I left him at the Bel-Air about to tackle lobsters. My idea is to
+take him to the Vicar, then to the Seigneur. They both understand the
+whole matter. I explained it fully when I told them we intended
+getting married here. When they understand that this is the gentleman
+who would like to occupy my place, and that he has no legal grounds
+for interfering, I think they will open his eyes--"
+
+"I do hope he won't make any trouble in the church," said Margaret,
+with a little flutter.
+
+"I'll promise you he won't."
+
+"I'm sure he won't, if you can make it quite clear that it could not
+possibly accomplish what, I suppose, his father sent him to try to
+do," said Miss Penny. "Charles Pixley is no fool, though he has his
+little peculiarities."
+
+"It would be a wonder if he hadn't some, after his daddie," said
+Graeme lightly. "I'm sorry he's come, Meg, but I'm certain you don't
+need to worry about him. If I could have knocked him on the head and
+dropped him in the sea and said nothing to nobody--"
+
+"Don't be absurd, Jock," said Margaret, and her voice showed that the
+matter was troubling her in spite of his assurances.
+
+"After lunch I shall call for him and take him for a little walk. If
+you'd seen him when he got to the Bel-Air after toiling up the Creux
+Road! He was nearly in pieces. I'll trot him round to the Vicarage,
+and then to the Seigneurie, and then I'll bring him here and turn him
+over to you and Hennie Penny. He'll be as limp as a rag by that time,
+and as wax in your hands."
+
+Nevertheless, Margaret could not quite get rid of the feeling of
+discomfort which the news of Charles Pixley's arrival had cast over
+her, and Graeme anathematised that young man most fervently each time
+he glanced at her face.
+
+
+XIII
+
+After lunch Graeme went back to the hotel, and found Pixley lolling on
+the seat outside, in a much more contented frame of mind than on his
+first arrival.
+
+"You were right as to their lobsters, anyhow, Graeme," he said.
+"They're almost worth coming all the way for."
+
+"All right. Now if you're rested we'll go for a stroll, and I'll set
+your mind at rest as to to-morrow. Then you'll be able to enjoy your
+dinner in a proper frame of mind."
+
+"How far is it?"
+
+"Just up there and round the corner. We'll see the Vicar first and you
+can try your hand on him."
+
+The Vicar received them with jovial bonhomie.
+
+"Ah-ha! The bridegroom cometh out of his chamber! And your friend? He
+is the best man--no?"
+
+"He's not quite made up his mind yet, Vicar. Perhaps you can persuade
+him to it."
+
+"But it is an honour--n'est-ce pas? To attend so beautiful a bride to
+the altar--"
+
+"Well, you see, the fact is--Mr. Pixley would have preferred reversing
+the positions. He would like to have been bridegroom and me to be best
+man."
+
+"Ah--so! Well, it is not surprising--"
+
+"Moreover, he would like to stop the wedding now if he could--"
+
+"Ach, non! That is not possible," said the Vicar wrathfully, the
+southern blood blazing in his face. "What would you do, my good sir,
+and why?"
+
+"Miss Brandt is my father's ward," said Pixley sturdily. "My father
+objects to this marriage. He has sent me over to stop it."
+
+"I understand," said the Vicar. "He wished his ward to marry you, but
+Miss Brandt made her own choice, which she had a perfect right to do,
+and, ma foi--" leaning back in his chair and regarding the two faces
+in front of him, he did not finish his sentence in words, but
+contented himself with cryptic nods whose meaning, we may hope, was
+lost upon Charles Svendt's _amour propre_.
+
+"And what would you do?" asked the Vicar presently.
+
+"Well, if necessary, I can get up in the church and state that there
+is just cause for stopping the marriage--"
+
+"What just cause, I should ask you?"
+
+"I have told you. My father--"
+
+"I would not listen. I would order them to put you out--to carry you
+out, if necessary, for making dis-turb-ance in my church. I would tell
+them to sit on you in the churchyard till the wedding was over. What
+good would you do? Ach, non! Be advised, my good sir, and re-linquish
+any such in-tention. It will ac-complish nothing and only lead to your
+own con-fusion."
+
+"My father is applying to have Miss Brandt made a ward in Chancery--"
+
+"By that time she will be Mrs. Graeme, and I am sure very happy,"
+shrugged the Vicar. "Non--you can do nothing, and, if you will be
+guided, you will not try."
+
+And Charles Svendt lapsed into thoughtfulness.
+
+
+XIV
+
+"This is the Seigneurie," said Graeme, as they turned off the road,
+through the latched gate, into the deep-shaded avenue.
+
+The Seigneur came to them in the Long Drawing-Room, where once upon a
+time the peacocks danced on the Queen's luncheon.
+
+"Your time is getting short, Mr. Graeme," he said, with a quiet smile.
+"I hear of great doings in preparation at St. Magloire"--which was the
+official title of the Red House. "Have you given the doctor fair
+warning?"
+
+"Oh, we'll try to keep them within bounds, Seigneur. My friend, Mr.
+Pixley here,"--the Seigneur made Mr. Pixley a seigneurial bow,--"has
+it in his mind to stop the proceedings if he can--"
+
+"Oh?" said the Seigneur, with a glower of surprise. "And why?"
+
+"Well, you see," said Pixley, "Miss Brandt is under age. She is my
+father's ward and he has other views for her--"
+
+"Which obviously do not agree with Miss Brandt's."
+
+"That is as it may be. But she is acting absolutely in opposition to
+his expressed wishes in this matter, and until she is of age she is
+under his authority."
+
+"Just as far as he is in position to exert it, I presume."
+
+"He is now applying to have her made a ward in Chancery, when, of
+course, she will be under the jurisdiction of the court."
+
+"If you come to me, Mr. Pixley, when Miss Brandt is a ward of court, I
+will tell you now what my answer would be. I should tell you that your
+English court has no jurisdiction here. Miss Brandt is out of bounds
+and is quite free to do as she pleases. I have had the pleasure of
+making her acquaintance and Mr. Graeme's, and I should be sorry--for
+you--if you did anything to annoy them. In fact--" and he looked so
+fixedly at Charles Svendt, while evidently revolving some extreme idea
+in his mind, that that young gentleman's assurance fell several
+degrees, and he found himself thinking of dungeons and deportation.
+
+It was to Graeme, however, that the Seigneur turned.
+
+"If you have any reason to fear annoyance in this matter, Mr. Graeme,
+perhaps you will let me know as early as possible, and I will take
+measures--"
+
+"Thousand thanks, Seigneur! Mr. Pixley will, I hope, think better of
+it. If not--well, I will send you word."
+
+
+XV
+
+Pixley was very silent as they walked back along the road to the Red
+House.
+
+The ladies had tea ready on the verandah.
+
+"Well, Charles," said Margaret, as he bowed before them, and Graeme
+nodded and smiled reassuringly at her over his back, "I won't pretend
+that I'm glad to see you. Why did you undertake so foolish an errand?"
+
+"Perhaps Mr. Pixley could hardly help himself," said Miss Penny,
+sympathising somewhat with the awkwardness of his position.
+
+"That is so," he said, with a grateful glance at her. "You see, the
+governor is crazy wild over this matter. It was only Sunday night he
+heard of it. A friend of young Greatorex wrote him that he'd heard
+your banns put up, and Greatorex congratulated the governor after
+church, and the governor nearly had a fit. He came over to my place
+like a whirlwind and practically ordered me to come across instanter
+and stop it. I may say," he said, looking at Margaret, "I tried to
+reason with him. I told him he must know that if you'd gone that
+length I was out of it, and nothing he could do would alter matters.
+But he would not hear a word. He simply raved until I promised to come
+over by first boat and see what could be done."
+
+"You've only done your duty, Mr. Pixley," said Miss Penny. "But you
+simply can't stop it, so is it any good making any trouble? Put it on
+the highest grounds. You have had warmer feelings for Meg than she
+could reciprocate. You can possibly make some disturbance at her
+wedding, which would be painful to her and utterly useless to
+yourself. Is it worth while?"
+
+"No, I'm dem--er--hanged if it is! I see I can do no good, and I'll be
+hammered if I'll play dog in the manger, even to oblige the governor.
+It's a disappointment to me, you know,"--he was looking at Miss
+Penny's bright face, surcharged with deepest sympathy.
+
+"Of course it is," she said gently. "But a strong man bears his
+disappointments without wincing. I think you're acting nobly."
+
+"Say, Graeme, will you have me as best man?"
+
+"Delighted, my dear fellow. Miss Penny has been breaking her heart at
+thought of having no partner at the ceremony."
+
+"Right! Then we'll say no more about it. How did you all come to meet
+here? Put-up job?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said Graeme. "Pure coincidence--or Providence,
+we'll say. You remember that Whitefriars' dinner, when Adam Black sat
+opposite to us? He was just back from Sark, and he said, 'If ever you
+want relief from your fellows--try Sark.' Well, later on, I had no
+reason to believe there was anything between you and Margaret, and I
+called on your father at his office. He sliced me into scraps with his
+eye-glass and flung the bits out into Lincoln's Inn,"--at which
+Charles Svendt grinned amusedly, as though he were familiar with the
+process.--"I wanted to get away somewhere to piece up again. Sark came
+into my head, and I came. A month later my landlady told me she had
+let my rooms to two ladies, as she had understood I was only stopping
+for a month, and I had to turn out and come up here. And, to my vast
+amazement, the two ladies proved to be Margaret and Miss Penny. How is
+that for coincidence?"
+
+"I was standing in the hedge there," said Margaret, "early in the
+morning of the day after we got here, and Jock came leaping over the
+dyke there with a great brown dog, and stopped as if he'd been shot--"
+
+"I thought you were a ghost, you see."
+
+"And I couldn't believe my eyes. Then I asked him what he meant by
+following us here, and it turned out that it was we who had followed
+him, and turned him out of his cottage moreover."
+
+"Deuced odd!" said Charles Svendt, screwing in his eye-glass and
+regarding them comprehensively. "Almost makes one believe in--er--"
+
+"Telepathy and that kind of thing," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Er--exactly--just so, don't you know!" and his glance rested on her
+with appreciation as upon a kindred soul.
+
+
+XVI
+
+Charles Svendt dined with them that evening, and in the process
+developed heights and depths of genial common-sense which quite
+surprised some among them.
+
+They took him for a stroll up to the Eperquerie in the cool of the
+gloaming, and showed him more shooting stars than ever he had seen in
+his life, and a silver sickle of a moon, and a western sky still
+smouldering with the afterglow of a crimson and amber sunset, and he
+acknowledged that, from some points of view, Sark had advantages over
+Throgmorton Street.
+
+In the natural course of things, Margaret and Graeme walked together,
+and since they could not go four abreast among the gorse cushions,
+Charles Svendt and Miss Penny had to put up with one another, and
+seemed to get on remarkably well. More than once Graeme squeezed
+Margaret's arm within his own and chuckled, as he heard the animated
+talk and laughter from the pair behind.
+
+"I'm very glad he's taken a sensible view of the matter," said
+Margaret.
+
+"Oh, Charles Svendt is no fool, and he certainly would have been if
+he'd done anything but what he has done. He saw that he could do no
+good and might get into trouble. The Seigneur scowled dungeons and
+gibbets at him, and he looked decidedly uncomfortable."
+
+"I will tender the Seigneur my very best thanks the first time I see
+him."
+
+When the men had seen the ladies home, they strolled up the garden to
+the Red House for a final smoke.
+
+"Say, Graeme, I've been wondering what you'd have done if I'd played
+mule and persisted in kicking up my heels in church. I asked Miss
+Penny--and, by Jove, I tell you, that's about as sensible a girl as
+I've met for a long time--"
+
+"Miss Penny is an extremely clever girl and an exceptionally fine
+character. Good family too. Her father was the Brigadier-General Penny
+who was killed in Afghanistan."
+
+"So?"
+
+"She's an M.A., and she's worked like a slave to educate her brothers
+and sisters, and they're all turning out well. I don't know any girl,
+except Meg, of whom I think so highly as Hennie Penny."
+
+"Henrietta?"
+
+Graeme nodded.
+
+"Well now," said Pixley presently. "As a matter of information, what
+was in your mind to do if I'd gone on?"
+
+"You'd never have got as far as the church, my boy."
+
+"No? Why?"
+
+"If the Seigneur hadn't stopped you, I would. But I'm inclined to
+think he'd have seen to you all right."
+
+"By Jove, he looked it! What would he have done?"
+
+"Confined you as a harmless lunatic till the ceremony was over, I
+should say, and then sent you home with the proverbial insect in your
+ear."
+
+"And if he hadn't?"
+
+"Then I should have taken matters into my own hands and bottled you up
+till you couldn't do any mischief. You could have hauled me before the
+court here, and I'd probably have been fined one and eightpence. It
+would have been worth the money, and cheap at the price, simply to see
+the proceedings."
+
+"It's an extraordinary place this."
+
+"It's without exception the most delightful little place in the
+world."
+
+"Jolly nice house you've got here too. Think of stopping long?"
+
+"Some months probably. The curious thing about Sark is that the longer
+you stop the longer you want to stop. It grows on you. First week I
+was here it seemed to me very small--felt afraid of walking fast lest
+I should step over the edge, and all that kind of thing. Now that I've
+been here a couple of months it is growing bigger every day. I'm not
+sure that one could know Sark under a lifetime. We'll take you round
+in a boat and show it you from the outside."
+
+"I'll have to get back, I'm sorry to say. You see, I started at a
+moment's notice. Things are duller than a ditch in the City, but I'd
+no chance to make any arrangements for a stay. But I'll tell you what.
+If you're stopping on here and like to send me an invitation for a
+week or two, I'd come like a shot. I'll take a carriage up that road
+from the harbour, though, next time. Jove! I felt like a convict on
+the treadmill."
+
+"You have the invitation now, my boy, and we'll be delighted to see
+you whenever it suits you to come."
+
+"That's very good of you. Miss Penny be stopping on with you?"
+
+"As long as she will. She'd got a bit run down and it's done her a
+heap of good."
+
+"Well, if you'll show me how to go, I'll toddle off home now. I
+haven't the remotest idea where my digs are."
+
+And Graeme led him through the back fields among the tethered cows,
+who stopped their slow chewing as they passed, and lay gazing after
+them in blank astonishment, into the Avenue and so to the Bel-Air.
+
+"I'll come round then a bit before eleven and we'll all go along
+together," was Charles Svendt's parting word.
+
+"Right! Au revoir!" and Graeme went home across the fields smiling
+happily to himself.
+
+
+XVII
+
+When Graeme came swinging over the green dyke in the early morning,
+with his towel round his neck and his two dogs racing in front, he
+found the Seigneur sitting in a long chair in the verandah, with four
+aristocratic dogs wandering about, who proceeded to intimate to Punch
+and Scamp that they were rather low fisher-dogs and not of seigneurial
+rank.
+
+"Well, what about your would-be breaker of the peace?" asked the
+Seigneur, with a smile.
+
+"He's come to his senses. I was going to bring you word as soon as I
+thought you'd be up. He's promised to be best man, and I'm hoping to
+get him to play heavy father also and give the bride away."
+
+"Capital!"
+
+"He was very anxious last night to know what would have happened if,
+as he put it, he'd persisted in playing mule and kicking up his heels
+in church."
+
+"We'd have tied his heels so that he couldn't kick much," said the
+Seigneur, with his deep quizzical smile.
+
+"That's what I told him. He seemed to think Sark a decidedly odd kind
+of place. But he's getting to like it, and I've invited him to come
+and visit us later on."
+
+"That's all right as long as he behaves himself."
+
+"Oh, he's a very decent chap. The only thing I had against him was
+that he wanted to marry my wife."
+
+"Then all the ways are smooth now?"
+
+"All smooth now, thanks to your assistance!"
+
+"Well, all happiness to you both!" said the Seigneur as he rose. "My
+wife sends all good wishes"--for the Lady of the Manor lay sick in the
+great house among the trees and he would not leave her.
+
+
+XVIII
+
+As Graeme proposed, they talk still of that wedding in Sark.
+
+Everything went smoothly. The Vicar had coached himself, by wifely
+tuition and much private repetition, into a certain familiarity with
+the Wedding Service in English, but would still have been more at home
+with it in French.
+
+The church was more crowded than it had been within the memory of
+woman. Margaret looked charming, and Miss Penny absolutely pretty.
+Charles Svendt could hardly take his eyes off her, and caught himself
+wondering what the dooce she had done to herself since last night.
+For, by Jove! she's as pretty almost as Margaret herself--he said to
+himself.
+
+And if Jeremiah Pixley could have seen his son, in fatherly fashion
+give away the bride that should have been his, he would without doubt
+have had fits--if the first one had not been of such a character as to
+obviate the necessity for any additional ones.
+
+The habitants, old and young, had made holiday, donned their best as
+if it were Sunday, and crowded the church as if it were all the
+Sundays of the year rolled into one.
+
+The Vicar had serious thoughts of improving so unique an occasion, but
+wisely decided to confine himself to the intricacies of the English
+language as displayed in The Form of the Solemnisation of Matrimony.
+
+Mrs. Vicar presided at the harmonium, which had been specially tuned
+for the occasion, and the choir enjoyed to the full their privileges
+of position and observation and made ample use of them.
+
+And when his friends knelt before the chancel rail,--to the exceeding
+scandal of the Vicar and Mrs. Vicar and the choir and all who saw, and
+to the vast enjoyment of Miss Penny and Charles Svendt and all the
+other youngsters in the place,--Punch walked solemnly up the aisle and
+stood behind them, with slow-swinging tail and a look of anticipation
+on his gravely interested face, while outside, Scamp, in the hands of
+some enterprising stickler for forms and ceremonies, rent the air with
+sharp cries of disappointment.
+
+But John Graeme's soul, uplifted mightily within him at this glorious
+consummation of his hopes, and ranging high among the stars, saw none
+of these things. He held Margaret's hand in his, and looked into her
+radiant and blushing face, and vowed mighty vows for her happiness,
+and thanked God fervently for bringing this great thing to pass.
+
+And Margaret's eye caught the marble slab, placed in the side wall of
+the chancel by the late Seigneur who built it, and prayed in her heart
+that the temple of their two lives might equally be builded--"to the
+Glory of God and with much care."
+
+
+XIX
+
+The small girls from the school, all specially arrayed in fancy white
+pinafores with knots of pink ribbon, burst out of the church like a
+merry bombshell while the less picturesque final ceremonies were being
+completed. When Graeme and Margaret came smiling down the aisle, the
+busy little maids were still vociferously strewing the path outside
+with green rushes and wild iris, and as they passed, those who had
+emptied their baskets ran back and picked up hasty armfuls of the
+scattered flowers, and ran on in front and strewed them again, so that
+for quite a long way their progress was one of gradually diminishing
+splendour.
+
+But past the gap in the road, which led across country to the Red
+House, no flower-strewers came. For there the excited chatterers broke
+and whirled through like a flight of sea-pies, and made straight for
+the field of more substantial delights lest the boys should secure all
+the best places.
+
+The wedding-party, however, having disdained the use of carriages for
+so short a distance, strolled quietly along the scented lanes, past
+the Boys' School, and by the Carrefour, with no apprehension of the
+feast beginning until they arrived, or of being relegated to back
+seats if they were late.
+
+The cottage and the Red House had been buzzing hives since dawn, Mrs.
+Carre handling her forces and volunteers and supernumeraries with the
+skill of a veteran, and with encouragement so shrill and animated that
+it sounded like scolding, but was in reality only emphatic patois.
+
+She had, indeed, left matters in the hands of certain tried elders
+while she sped across the fields to the church for a few minutes, just
+to see that everything there was done properly and in order. But she
+was back in the thick of things before the wedding-party reached home,
+and everything was ready and in apple-pie order for a merry-making
+such as Sark had not seen for many a day.
+
+First, the children were settled at their long tables in the field
+behind the house, with good things enough in front of them, and active
+assistants enough behind them, to keep them quiet for a good long time
+to come.
+
+Graeme and Margaret went round bidding them all enjoy themselves to
+their fullest, which they cheerfully promised to do, and the eager
+youngsters gave them back wish for wish, with one eye for them and one
+for the unusual dainties on the tables.
+
+"Hello, Johnnie!" said Graeme to that young man, gorging stolidly,
+with a palpable interval between him and his neighbour on either hand,
+but with no other visible signs of wizardry about him. "Getting on all
+right?"
+
+But there was no room for speech in Johnnie's mouth just then. He
+winked one black eye solemnly and devoted himself to the business in
+hand.
+
+And Punch and Scamp, accepted favourites of the host and hostess, tore
+to and fro in vain attempt to keep pace with all the attentions
+lavished upon them by the guests as soon as their own desires had been
+satisfied. They devoured everything that was offered and attainable
+before it was withdrawn, and had no need to ask for more unless in the
+matter of storage-room.
+
+Everybody was very happy and very excited, for no such feast had been
+in Sark within the memory of the oldest child present. And if Charles
+Svendt's Stock-Exchange friends could have seen him--merrily circling
+the tables and exhorting already distent youngsters to still greater
+and greater exertions; poking them in the ribs to prove, against their
+own better judgment, but in accordance with their inclinations, that
+there was assuredly still room for more; bidding them "Mangez!
+Mangez!" in the one word of French he could recall as specially
+applicable at the moment--it is certain they would not have known him.
+
+And Miss Penny, too, looked as if she had never enjoyed herself so
+much in her life, and backed him up in all his endeavours right
+heartily. And now and again, when Charles Svendt looked at her, he
+said to himself, "By Jove, she's as good-looking a girl as I know, and
+as clever as they make 'em!"
+
+For there is no greater beautifier in the world than happiness, and
+Hennie Penny was completely and quite unusually happy.
+
+To the actual wedding-feast, Graeme had asked the Vicar and his wife,
+and such of the neighbours as he had come to know personally,
+especially not forgetting his very first friend in the island, whom he
+still always called Count Tolstoi, and Mrs. De Carteret. For the rest,
+he had given Mrs. Carre carte-blanche to invite whom she deemed well
+among her friends, and she had exercised her privilege with judgment
+and enjoyment.
+
+The Senechal was there, and the Greffier, and the Prevot and the
+members of the Court, _ex officio_, so to speak, and the Wesleyan
+minister who was on excellent terms with the Vicar, and the
+Post-Master and his jovial white-haired father, who built the boats
+and coffins for the community, and had supplied the tables for the
+feast; and many more--a right goodly company of stalwart,
+weather-browned men and pleasant-faced women, all vastly happy to be
+assisting at so unusual an event as an English wedding.
+
+They drank the health of the bride and bridegroom in the special
+mulled wine thereto ordained by custom and prepared according to the
+laws of the Medes and Persians. And Graeme, on behalf of himself and
+his wife, assured them that there was no place in the world like Sark,
+and that they had never enjoyed a wedding so much in all their lives,
+and that if they had to be married a hundred times they could wish no
+happier wedding than Sark had given them.
+
+And of all that company, none beamed more brightly, nor enjoyed
+himself more, than Charles Pixley, who, having come to curse, had, in
+most approved fashion, stayed to bless, and had even beaten the
+prophet's record by giving away to another the treasure he had desired
+for himself.
+
+In the usual course of things, after the feasting would have come
+games and songs until dark. But that had been adjudged too much of an
+ordeal by the ladies, and the onus of it was laid upon the youngsters
+outside. While Margaret and Miss Penny rested from their labours, and
+Mrs. Carre and her helpers cleared the rooms for the festivities of
+the evening, and prepared the milder and more intermittent refections
+necessary thereto, Graeme and Pixley and the Vicar and others set the
+children to games and races, for which indeed their previous exertions
+at the tables had not best fitted them, but which nevertheless, or
+perhaps on that very account, were provocative of much laughter and
+merriment.
+
+Then, when it grew dark, and the reluctant youngsters had been cajoled
+and dragged and packed off to bed, the hitherto-unprovided-for
+section--the young men and maidens, all in their best and a trifle shy
+to begin with--came flocking in for their share in the festivities,
+and Orpheus and Terpsichore held the floor for the rest of the night.
+
+And they did dance! Margaret and Miss Penny and Graeme and Pixley
+thought they had seen dancing before, but dancing such as this it had
+never been theirs to witness.
+
+If it lacked anything in grace--and far be it from me to say so--it
+more than made up for all by its inexhaustible energy and tireless
+enjoyment. The men had brought their own music in the shape of a
+concertina, which passed from hand to hand and with which they all
+seemed on equally friendly terms.
+
+Jokes, laughter, round dances, refreshments, interludes of smokings
+and gigglings in the darkness of the verandah, occasional more
+intellectual flights in the shape of songs and recitations,--mostly of
+a somewhat lugubrious tendency, to judge by the faces of the auditors,
+but being mostly in patois they were unintelligible to the British
+foreigners,--more dances,--coats off now, to reduce the temperature of
+the performers,--more refreshments, more dances,--dances with
+broomsticks held between the partners, over which they slipped and
+skipped to the tune of caustic comments by the onlookers,--dances
+between caps laid on the floor and which must on no account be touched
+by the dancers. And always the cry to the musician of the moment
+was,--"Faster! Faster!"--and the race between Orpheus and
+Terpsichore--between the music and the flying feet, grew still more
+fast and furious.
+
+Now Charles Svendt, as we know, did not look like a dancing man, but
+dancing was one of the superficial accomplishments in which he
+excelled.
+
+Miss Penny, also, through much experience with girls, was lighter of
+foot than she looked.
+
+They stood for a time watching, and presently both their feet were
+tapping to the quickstep of the rest.
+
+"Let's have a shot at it," said Charles. "Will you?" and he looked
+down at her.
+
+"I'd love to," and in a moment they were whirling in the circle with
+the rest, but with a grace that none there could rival,--gallant
+dancers as the Sark boys and girls are.
+
+"Delightful!" murmured Charles Svendt. "You dance like an angel, and
+we fit splendidly," and Hennie Penny found a man's arm about her
+decidedly and delightfully more inspiriting than all the arms of all
+the schoolgirls in the world, and danced as she had never danced
+before.
+
+So swift and light and smooth and graceful was their flight that
+before long the rest tailed off and all stood propped against the
+walls to watch them.
+
+"We've got the floor all to ourselves," murmured Miss Penny at last,
+as she woke to the fact.
+
+"We've licked them into fits on their own ground," he laughed in her
+ear. "You can dance and no mistake. It's a treat to dance with a
+really good dancer."
+
+"I think we ought to stop. We're stopping their fun," said Hennie
+Penny, and when he led her to a seat the rest of the room all clapped
+their enjoyment.
+
+Graeme and Margaret danced a round or two to endorse the festivities,
+but they were not in it with Pixley and Hennie Penny, and they soon
+dropped out and clapped heartily with the rest.
+
+When Charles Svendt, later on, suggested another dance, Miss Penny
+bade him go and dance with one of the Sark girls.
+
+"But I don't want to dance with any of them. Besides, I don't know any
+of 'em, and I couldn't talk to her if I did."
+
+"Oh yes, you can. They all speak English."
+
+"Do they now? It don't sound like it. Come on, Miss Penny. They
+wouldn't enjoy it and I wouldn't enjoy it, and I never enjoyed
+anything so much in my life as that last round."
+
+So Hennie took pity on him, and they danced many times amid great
+applause.
+
+"Awfully good of you!" said Charles Svendt, as the dawn came peeping
+in through the east windows and the open front door; and Mrs. Carre,
+as Mistress of the Ceremonies, and a very tired one at that, bluffly
+informed the company that it was time to go home.
+
+"I've enjoyed it immensely," said Hennie Penny, and if her face was
+any index to her feelings, there was no mistake about it.
+
+
+XX
+
+None of them will ever forget that great day.
+
+Still less is any of them likely to forget the day that followed.
+
+As dancing only ceased when the sun was about rising, before-breakfast
+bathing was declared off for that day, and they arranged to meet later
+on and stroll quietly down to Dixcart Bay during the morning and all
+bathe together there. Charles Svendt laughingly prepared them for an
+exhibition of incompetence by stating that his swimming wasn't a patch
+on his dancing, but that he could get along. Miss Penny gaily gave him
+points as to her own peculiar methods of swimming, which, as we know,
+demanded instant and easy touch of sand or stone at any moment of the
+halting progression. He confessed to a like prejudice in favour of
+something solid within reach of his sinking capacity, and they agreed
+to help one another.
+
+They called for him at the hotel about eleven o'clock, and went joking
+through the sunny lanes of Petit Dixcart, crossed the brook that runs
+out of Hart's-Tongue Valley, and followed it by the winding path along
+the side of the cliff, among the gorse and ferns, down into the bay.
+
+They had a right merry bathe with no grave casualties. Miss Penny,
+indeed, got out of her depth twice, to the extent of quite two inches,
+and shrieked for help, which Charles Svendt gallantly hastened to
+render; while Graeme and Margaret swam across from head to head,
+watched enviously by the paddlers in shallow waters.
+
+They went home by the climbing path up the hillside, rested on The
+Quarter-deck while Charles Svendt got his breath back, and so, by the
+old Dixcart hotel, and the new one nestling among its flowers and
+trees, and up the Valley, to the Vicarage.
+
+The Vicar was basking in the shade of the trees in front of the house.
+
+"Ah-ha--Mr. and Mrs. Graeme! Good-morning! You are none the worse for
+being married? Non?" as he shook hands joyously all round, with both
+hands at once.
+
+"Not a bit," laughed Graeme. "We're all as happy as sandboys."
+
+"Comment donc--sandboys? What is that?"
+
+"Happy little boys who dispense with clothes and paddle all day in the
+sand and water."
+
+"Ah--you have been bathing! What energie! And you danced till--?"
+
+"About four o'clock, I suppose. The sun was just thinking of rising as
+we were thinking of retiring."
+
+"But it is marvellous! And you are not tired?"
+
+"The bathe has freshened us all up," said Margaret.
+
+Then Mrs. Vicar came out at sound of their voices, and felicitated
+them, and begged them to rest a while in the shade. But they were all
+hungry, and Charles Svendt laughingly asserted that he had swallowed
+so much salt-water, in rescuing Miss Penny from a watery grave, that
+his constitution absolutely needed a tiny tot of whisky, or the
+consequences might be serious.
+
+So they went laughingly on their way, and Charles tried his best to
+get Miss Penny to go and show him the way to the Bel-Air, pleading
+absolute confusion still as to the points of the compass and the lie
+of the land.
+
+He was to lunch with them at the Red House, but insisted on going home
+first to straighten up and make himself presentable. So they led him
+to the Avenue, and set his face straight down it, and bade him follow
+his nose and turn neither to the right hand nor to the left, and then
+they turned off through the fields by their own short-cut, and went
+merrily home.
+
+
+
+
+PART THE SIXTH
+
+
+I
+
+Graeme was just finishing a beautiful knot in his tie, when he heard
+hasty feet crossing the verandah to the open front door. There was
+some unknown quantity in them that gave him sudden start.
+
+"Graeme!" sharp, hoarse,--a voice he did not recognise.
+
+He ran hastily out of the east bedroom, which he was using as a
+dressing-room.
+
+"Hello there!" as he sprang down the stairs, "Why--Pixley? What's
+wrong, man?"
+
+For Charles Pixley was standing there, leaning in at the doorway,
+looking as though he would fall headlong but for the supporting jamb.
+He had a brown envelope in his hand and a crumpled pink telegram. His
+face was white, and drawn, and haggard. His very figure seemed to have
+shrunk in these few minutes. Never had Graeme seen so ghastly a change
+in a man in so short a time.
+
+Before Pixley could speak Miss Penny came hurrying along the path with
+a face full of sympathetic anxiety.
+
+"What is it?" she asked. "I saw Mr. Pixley pass, and his face
+frightened me. Oh, what is wrong?"
+
+Pixley glanced at her out of his woeful eyes, and at Margaret, who had
+just come running down the stairs. He seemed to hesitate for a moment.
+Then he groaned--
+
+"You will have to know," and motioned them all into the dining-room
+and shut the door.
+
+"This "--jerking out the telegram--"was waiting for me," and he handed
+it to Graeme, who smoothed it out and read, while Pixley dropped into
+a chair.
+
+"Pixley. Bel-Air. Sark.
+
+"Zizel, Amadou, Zebu, Zeta. Eno."
+
+"Code," said Pixley briefly. "Meanings underneath," and dropped his
+head into his hands.
+
+"Zizel," read Graeme slowly--"There is bad news. Amadou--your father.
+Zebu--has bolted. Zeta--we fear the smash will be a bad one. Eno--?"
+
+"My partner's initials--they certify the wire," said Pixley hoarsely.
+
+And they looked soberly at one another and very pitifully at the
+broken man before them.
+
+"Don't take it too hard, Pixley," said Graeme quietly, laying a
+friendly hand on the other's shoulder. "It may not be as bad as this
+puts it. Codes are brutally bald things, you know"
+
+The bowed head shook pitifully. He raised his white face and looked
+round at them with a shocked shrinking in his eyes.
+
+"God forgive him!" he jerked. "And God forgive me, for I have doubted
+him at times! He was so--so--so demned good"--and Graeme's lips
+twitched in spite of himself, so closely was the expression in accord
+with his own feelings. But Pixley did not see the twitch, for he was
+looking at Margaret and Hennie Penny, and he was saying with
+vehemence--
+
+"Will you believe me that I knew absolutely nothing of this? He never
+discussed his affairs with me nor I mine with him, and we had no
+business together except on purely business lines. If he had to buy or
+sell he sent it my way, of course,--nothing more. You will believe me,
+Graeme--"
+
+"Every word, my boy--"
+
+"We all believe it, Mr. Pixley," said Hennie Penny warmly.
+
+"And I know it, Charles," said Margaret.
+
+"It is very good of you all," he groaned. "I must get back at once,
+Graeme. How soon is there a boat?"
+
+"Five o'clock. You'll have to stop a night in Guernsey, which is a
+nuisance."
+
+Charles Svendt shook his head in dumb misery. It was crushing to be so
+far away--thirty hours at least, and he gnashing within to be on the
+spot and at work, learning the worst, seeing what could be done.
+
+Then, with a preliminary knock on the door, Mrs. Carre came in with
+brilliant lobsters and crisp lettuces for lunch, and, hungry as they
+all were, their souls loathed the thought of eating.
+
+"They are just out of the pot," beamed she, "and the lettuces were
+growing not five min'ts ago. Ech!"--at sight of Pixley--"is he ill?"
+
+"Mr. Pixley has just had bad news from home, Mrs. Carre," said Graeme.
+"He will have to go by to-day's boat."
+
+"Ach, but I am sorry! And him so happy yesterday and dancing the best
+in the room," and her pleasant face clouded sympathetically.
+
+"Meg, I'll go up to your room for a minute and finish my hair," said
+Hennie Penny. "I ran out just as I was--"
+
+"It was very kind of you," said Charles Svendt, and the general
+sympathy seemed to comfort him somewhat.
+
+"No good feeling too bad about it, old man, till you know all the
+facts," said Graeme, when the girls had gone off upstairs.
+
+"It hits me, Graeme. Not financially, as I said. But in every other
+way it hits me hard.--Have you reached the point of seeing that it may
+hit her too?"--and he nodded towards upstairs.
+
+"I suppose there was a glimmering idea of the chance of that at the
+back of my head somewhere, but we won't trouble about it just now. How
+about your mother?"
+
+Pixley shook his head dismally again. "It will be a terrible blow to
+her. He was a bit hard and cold at home, you know, but she looked up
+to him as immaculate. Yes, it will hit her very hard. As to money, of
+course, she will be all right. I have plenty. But the talk and the
+scandal--" and he groaned again at thought of it all.
+
+"Send her over here for a time--or bring her yourself. We have heaps
+of room here. Miss Penny is coming to stop with us next week. Your
+mother was always fond of Margaret, I believe."
+
+"She was--very fond of her.... That's a good thought of yours, Graeme.
+Are you sure Margaret--?"
+
+
+"Of course she would. She and Miss Penny will just take care of her,
+and no word of the troubles will reach her. That's the thing to do,
+and maybe you'll find things not as bad as you expect when you get
+back."
+
+But, from the look of him, Charles Svendt had small hope of matters
+being anything but what he feared.
+
+When the girls came down they made an apology of a meal, for, in spite
+of their hunger, the stricken look of their friend took their
+appetites away.
+
+The thought that there might still lurk in their minds a suspicion
+that he had had some knowledge of his father's position, when he came
+across to stop their marriage, still troubled him.
+
+"I do hope you will all believe me when I say that I knew absolutely
+nothing of it all," he said, when they had finished an almost silent
+meal. "When I said I had doubted him at times, I simply meant that his
+everlasting and--and--well, very assertive philanthropies palled upon
+me. It was a little difficult at times to believe in the genuineness
+of it all, for we did not see very much of it at home, as you
+know,"--he looked at Margaret, who nodded. "In business matters he
+could be as hard as nails, and it was not easy to fit it all
+together."
+
+"Not one of us believes anything of the kind of you, old man. Just get
+that right out of your head, once for all. We're only sorry for your
+sake that the trouble has come, and I'm sure we all hope it will turn
+out not so bad as you fear," said Graeme heartily.
+
+"What about your mother, Charles?" said Margaret. "I'm afraid she will
+feel this dreadfully. Hennie and I were talking about it upstairs, and
+we were wondering if you could get her to come and stop with us for a
+time--"
+
+"You see!" said Graeme, with a smile at Pixley. And to Margaret--"I
+suggested exactly the same thing while you were up doing your hair."
+
+"It's awfully good of you all," said Charles. "If you're quite sure--"
+
+"We're quite sure. Send her to us at once as soon as you reach home,
+and Jock shall meet her in Guernsey."
+
+"I think I'd perhaps better bring her across myself. I don't suppose
+there will be much I can do when I've heard the worst--if they've got
+to it yet. Things may be all tangled up, and it may take time. And for
+ten days or so, until folks have had time to forget, the name of
+Pixley won't be one to be proud of."
+
+"Come if you can," said Graeme heartily. "You've seen nothing of Sark
+yet."
+
+
+II
+
+They all went down to the harbour to see him off--as is the custom
+when one's friends leave Sark. And when Charles Svendt had shaken
+hands with Margaret and Miss Penny--and had found a touch of comfort
+in the sympathetic droop of their faces--and had fancied Miss Penny's
+bright eyes were at once brighter and mistier than usual--and had
+thanked them again very humbly for all their kindness--he turned to
+say good-bye to Graeme.
+
+"Come away, man!" said Jock cheerfully. "I'm coming too. Meg's given
+me a holiday, and I'm going to shake a free leg again in Guernsey--"
+
+But Charles thought he saw through that.
+
+"Don't you come on my account, Graeme"
+
+"Not on your account at all, my boy, but the accounts of a good many
+shopkeepers over there which I've got to straighten out at once, while
+all the little differences are fresh in my mind. Something wrong in
+nearly all of them--some over, some under--and I'm still a bit of a
+business man though I do write books."
+
+For, when Pixley went off to pack his portmanteau, Graeme had said to
+his wife, "Meg dear, what do you think of my going across to Peter
+Port with that young man? He'll have a bad black time all by himself.
+He's holding himself in before us, but when he's alone it'll all come
+back on him in a heap and he'll feel it."
+
+And Margaret had said, "Yes, dear, go. You'll be a great comfort to
+him. I am very very sorry for him."
+
+The last flicker of the waving handkerchiefs above the sea-wall, and
+their responsive wavings from the boat, had been abruptly cut by the
+intervening bastion of Les Laches, but Charles Svendt still leaned
+with his arms on the rail and looked back as though he could pierce
+the granite cliff and see the girls still standing there, and Graeme
+stood patiently behind him.
+
+He straightened up at last with a sigh.
+
+"I'm glad I came," he said, "though if I'd had any idea what was going
+to happen I'd have drowned myself first. It's when one's in
+trouble"--as though this were a discovery of his own--"that one finds
+out how kind people can be."
+
+"Yes, trouble has its uses. I had a deuce of a time for the first few
+weeks after I got here. Your dad had told me you and Margaret were to
+be married very shortly, and it knocked life into a cocked-hat for
+me--"
+
+"That's what he would have liked. Do you know, Graeme, I've been
+thinking that it's just possible your marriage helped to precipitate
+matters with him. I don't know, of course; but if he has been juggling
+her money in any way, he may have been counting on a marriage between
+us to help straighten things. Then, when he heard nothing from me--"
+
+"It's possible. But if it acted as quickly as all that, I'm afraid the
+chances for Margaret's portion are pretty small."
+
+"Gad! That would hurt me more than anything. I shall do everything in
+my power--"
+
+"I'm sure of it, my dear fellow. And you must understand that her
+money--whatever it is--has never entered into our calculations in any
+way. I knew nothing of it till Lady Elspeth Gordon told me, and I had
+it all settled on her before the wedding took place. If it is gone we
+can do without it."
+
+And Charles Svendt, if he said nothing, thought all the more.
+
+
+III
+
+The two girls were standing in the outermost seaward corner of the
+breakwater, as though they had never moved, when the _Assistance_ came
+nosing round Les Laches next morning, and made for the harbour. And to
+Graeme, the sight of his wife, after a separation of eighteen hours,
+was like a life-giving stream to a pilgrim of the desert, or the
+blessing of light to a darkened soul. His heart swelled almost to
+paining-point for very joy of her. He took deep breaths of gratitude
+for this sweet crowning of his life. He wondered vaguely why he should
+be so blest above all other men. He vowed his vows again and his eyes
+were misty.
+
+They saw him standing by the captain, and waved glad welcomes, and
+presently, his glimpse into the depths of Margaret's eyes as he kissed
+her, told him that he had been missed even as he had missed.
+
+"I am glad I went with him," he said, as they climbed the steep Creux
+Road. "It did him good to talk. He's feeling it terribly."
+
+He did not tell them that they had got the previous day's papers in
+St. Peter Port, and that their scathing comments on a peculiarly bad
+failure, and on the remarkable contrast between the profession and the
+practice of Jeremiah Pixley's life, had driven Charles Svendt almost
+crazy. The wound was raw in their hearts. There was no need to turn
+the knife in it.
+
+"We shall see him back here with Mrs. Pixley before the middle of next
+week, unless I'm very much mistaken," he said. "He says there's
+nothing doing on the Stock Exchange, and he can fix things with his
+partner to get away for a time, and it seems the wisest thing to do."
+
+"I have liked Charles better this time than I ever did in my life
+before," said Margaret. "And I am very very sorry for him and Mrs.
+Pixley."
+
+"He's not half a bad fellow," said Graeme heartily.
+
+And perhaps, if it had been put to Miss Penny, she would have improved
+even upon that.
+
+"I hope you're not very set on being a rich woman, Meg," said Graeme,
+when they were alone together.
+
+"Oh, but I am," she said, with a smile which all the riches in the
+world could not have bought from her, or brought to her.
+
+"Yes, I know,"--and he gathered the smile with a kiss. "But in coarse
+material wealth, I mean."
+
+"I'm just as set on it as you are. I want just as much as will make
+you happy. You mean Mr. Pixley has made away with it all?"
+
+"I'm very much afraid so, but I guess we can get along all right
+without it."
+
+"Of course we can--splendidly. I'm a famous housekeeper and you'll be
+a famous author. There couldn't be a better team. It will bring out
+the very best that's in us."
+
+"We can never come to actual want anyway, for my little bit--which, by
+the way, Lady Elspeth once took the trouble to impress upon me was
+just about enough to pay Mr. Pixley's servants' wages--is in Consols,
+and they're not likely to crack up. And my last book brought me about
+fifty pounds--"
+
+"It ought to have brought you five thousand. I'm sure it was good
+enough."
+
+"Of course it was, but it takes time to work up to the five thousand
+point. Some get there, I suppose. But I should imagine more starve off
+at the fifty line."
+
+"We could live like princes on a couple of hundred a year in Sark
+here."
+
+"It would pall on you in time, I'm afraid."
+
+"You've been here twice as long as I have. Has it begun to pall on you
+yet?"
+
+"I don't think it would ever pall on me, if I lived here for a
+century. But then I've got my work, you see."
+
+"And I've got you, my dear. When you and Sark begin to pall I'll
+promise to let you know. It's heavenly."
+
+"Oh, I don't claim all that, you know. Don't expect _too_ much--"
+
+"Will Charles be involved at all, do you think, Jock?"
+
+"I don't think so. They had not much to do with one another in
+business matters."
+
+"I'm glad of that. Do you know"--with an introspective look in her
+eyes--"I've an idea--"
+
+"Hennie Penny?"
+
+Margaret nodded.
+
+"That would be capital. She'd make him an excellent wife."
+
+"I'm sure she would. She's just what he needs. She's as good as gold,
+and she has more genuine common-sense than anyone I know."
+
+"Thousand thanks!"
+
+"Oh, we're exceptions to all rules. But I do hope something--I mean
+everything--may come of it. And we would all have reason to bless this
+blessed little island all our days."
+
+"Some of us will, anyway. It certainly shall not go unblest."
+
+
+IV
+
+On the Tuesday afternoon Graeme received a brief telegram from Charles
+Pixley--"Crossing tonight." And Wednesday morning found them all on
+the sea-wall awaiting the arrival of the steamer from Guernsey.
+
+"There he is--in the front corner of the upper deck--keen to get here
+as soon as possible, I should say. I know just how he feels," said
+Graeme, with a laugh. "Looks a bit different from what he did the
+first time he came."
+
+"That's Mrs. Pixley on the side seat," said Margaret, and they waved
+their welcomes.
+
+There were two ladies on the side seat, and both stood up and waved
+vigorously in reply.
+
+"Why--who--?" began Margaret. And then--excitedly, "Jock--I believe
+it's Lady Elspeth. I'm certain it is. It is. It is."
+
+"Just like her! Hurrah for the Gordons!" and he sent them welcomes
+which a world full of Pixleys alone could not have excited in him.
+
+"Now this _is_ delightful," he said, as he sprang on board and rushed
+at Lady Elspeth.
+
+"All right, my boy! Don't shake my hand right off, if you can help it.
+Here, you may give me a kiss, though it's contrary to the usages of my
+country. We'll pretend I'm your mother again. Now say how do you do to
+Mrs. Pixley. How's Margaret? I've got crows to pick with you young
+people--"
+
+"Make it seven, or it's unlucky," laughed Graeme.
+
+"Eh? What?"
+
+"Tell you later. We're great believers in crows here. Mrs. Pixley, I
+am very glad indeed to see you here. Charles, old man, you've done
+splendidly."
+
+Charles wrung his hand in silence. His face was sober, with a latent
+glow of expectation in it. When he had seen to the luggage he joined
+the group on the quay, and it was Miss Penny who was the first to see
+him coming.
+
+"Welcome back to Sark!" she said cheerfully.
+
+"I'm uncommonly glad to be here. Everybody all right? How's Mrs.
+Carre?"
+
+"Everybody's first-rate, especially Meg and Jock. Their spirits are
+enough to inflate the island."
+
+"It's good to be young," and the sober mask lifted slightly and let
+the inner light shine through.
+
+
+V
+
+"Go to an hotel?" said Margaret indignantly, in reply to a suggestion
+from Lady Elspeth. "Indeed you'll do nothing of the kind,"--and, as
+the old lady hesitated still,--"If you do I'll never speak to you
+again as long as I live."
+
+"Oh well, I couldn't stand that--"
+
+"Of course you couldn't. Neither could I. An hotel indeed!"--with
+withering scorn--"And we with four empty bedrooms crying aloud at
+night because two of their fellows are occupied and they are left out
+in the cold! An hotel! I'd just like to see you!"
+
+"My guidness! Is she often like this, Jock?"
+
+"Oh, always! I thought you knew her. Why couldn't you warn me in
+time?--No!" as Lady Elspeth attempted to speak--"It's too late now.
+We're bound for life. There's no cutting the bond. The Vicar told us
+so."
+
+"You're both clean daft together," said the old lady, with dancing
+eyes. "Well, I'll stop in one of your crying bedrooms--on conditions.
+We'll talk about that later on. Where's the rest of the island, and
+how do you get to it?"
+
+"Old ladies and luggage ride. We youngsters walk. There's Charles
+waiting for you at the carriage. There you are! Au revoir!"
+
+As the young people breasted the steep, Pixley--forgetting entirely
+his vow never to do it on foot again--unfolded to them Lady Elspeth's
+idea, which simply was, that if the Red House could hold them all,--of
+which she had her doubts, in spite of his assertions,--they should all
+share expenses and such household duties as so large a party would
+involve.
+
+"You see--if you don't mind it, Mrs. Graeme,"--with an apologetic look
+at Margaret,--"it will give the two old ladies something to do and
+will leave us young folks freer to get about."
+
+"It's a capital arrangement if the old ladies don't mind. Mrs. Carre
+can get in another girl. It will keep them all busy seeing that we
+have enough to eat. But they'll soon get used to looking forward two
+or three days and ordering Friday's dinner on Tuesday."
+
+"How long can you stop, old man?" asked Graeme.
+
+"A fortnight--all being well," and there was a touch of soberness in
+it as he said that. "There's really nothing doing, and Ormerod's a
+good fellow and insisted on it."
+
+"We can do heaps in a fortnight," said Miss Penny jubilantly. "However
+did you manage to catch Lady Elspeth?"
+
+"She's a grand old lady. I found her with my mother when I got there.
+She'd been with her ever since--since the trouble. And when I proposed
+bringing my mother she said at once that she was coming too. She had
+crows to pick with you two, and so on. I expect she thought my mother
+would feel things less if she was with her."
+
+"She's an old dear," said Margaret. "They shall both have the very
+best time we can give them."
+
+"I shall take them conger-eeling," said Graeme,--"and to Venus's Bath"
+
+"And down the Boutiques and the Gouliots"--suggested Margaret.
+
+"And ormering in Grande Greve," laughed Miss Penny, who had spent a
+day there on that alluring pursuit and had come home bruised and wet
+and dirty.
+
+"Oh, there's lots of fun in store for them," said Graeme, laughing
+like a schoolboy out for a holiday. "And, as Hennie Penny says, we can
+do heaps in a fortnight."
+
+
+VI
+
+Having made up their minds that there was no earthly reason why
+Charles Pixley and Hennie Penny should not be as happy as they were
+themselves, Margaret and Graeme saw to it that nothing should be
+awanting in the way of opportunity.
+
+Miss Penny's natural goodness of heart impelled her to the most
+delicate consideration towards Mrs. Pixley. Hennie Penny, you see, had
+come bravely through dire troubles of her own, and tribulation softens
+the heart as it does the ormer. She anticipated the nervous old lady's
+every want, soothed her bruised susceptibilities in a thousand hidden
+ways, tended her as lovingly as an only daughter might have done,--and
+all out of the sheer necessity of her heart, and with never a thought
+of reward other than the satisfaction of her own desire for the
+happiness of all about her.
+
+Not that the others were one whit less considerate, but, in the
+natural course of things, Miss Penny's heart and time were, perhaps, a
+little more at liberty for outside service, and in Mrs. Pixley the
+opportunity met her half-way.
+
+It is safe to say that the old lady had never in her life been so much
+made of. Margaret had always been gentle and sweet with her; but the
+cold white light of Mr. Pixley's unco' guidness had always cast a
+shadow upon the household, and Margaret had got from under it
+whenever the chance offered.
+
+"You are very good to me, my dear," Charles heard his mother say to
+Hennie Penny, one day when they two were alone together and did not
+know anyone was near. "If I had ever had a daughter I would have liked
+her to be like you. How did you learn to be so thoughtful of other
+people?"
+
+"I think it must have been through having come through lots of
+troubles of my own," said Hennie Penny simply.
+
+"Troubles abound," said the tremulous old lady. "You have drawn the
+sting of yours and kept only the honey," which saying astonished
+Charles greatly. He had no idea his mother could say things like that.
+She had had time to think plenty of them, indeed, but there had never
+been room for more than one shining light in the household and that
+had cast strong shadows.
+
+Charles had gone quietly away smiling to himself, and had been in
+cheerful spirits for the rest of the day.
+
+The first night, when the ladies had gone chattering upstairs to make
+sure that all the arrangements were in order, Graeme and Pixley sat
+out on the verandah smoking a final pipe.
+
+The ladies' voices floated through the open windows as they passed
+from room to room, and Graeme laughed softly. "What's up?" asked
+Pixley, gazing at him soberly.
+
+"I was thinking of the changes here since the first night I slept in
+this house all by myself, and heard ghosts creeping about and all
+kinds of noises."
+
+"Much jollier to hear _them_," said Charles, as Miss Penny's and
+Margaret's laughter came floating down the softness of the night.
+
+"Ay, indeed! Very much jollier," and they smoked and listened.
+
+No word had so far passed between them as to the troubles that lay
+behind. There had, indeed, been no opportunity until now, and Graeme
+had no mind to broach the matter.
+
+But Pixley had only been waiting till they could discuss things alone,
+and the time had come.
+
+"It will take them months to get to the bottom of things over there,"
+he said quietly. "I saw the accountants, and they say everything's in
+a dreadful mess. He must have been involved for years. It makes me
+absolutely sick to think of it all, Graeme, and him--"
+
+"I'm sure it must, old chap. Why think of it? It's done, and it can't
+be undone, and everyone knows you had nothing to do with it."
+
+"I know. Everyone is very kind, but I can't get rid of it. It's with
+me all the time like a dirty shadow."
+
+"We'll chase it away. No place like Sark for getting rid of bogeys and
+worries."
+
+"How things will come out it's impossible to say. I made special
+enquiries into Margaret's affairs, and it's quite certain he's
+tampered with her money, but they could not say yet to what extent. On
+the other hand, certain of her securities are intact, so everything is
+not gone. But what I wanted to say was this. I am determined that
+Margaret shall not suffer, whatever may have happened. Any deficiency
+I shall make good myself."
+
+"My dear fellow, she would never hear of it."
+
+"That's why I'm talking to you."
+
+"Well, I won't hear of it either. As I told you before, it was a
+trouble to me when I heard she had any money. Whatever she had I
+settled on herself, and we can get on very well without it."
+
+"All the same I'm not going to have her lose anything through
+my--through him. Neither you nor she can stop me doing what I like
+with my own money."
+
+"We can refuse to touch it."
+
+"That would be nonsense."
+
+"Not half as bad as you crippling yourself for life to make good what
+you'd never made away with."
+
+"It wouldn't do that," said Charles quietly. "Ormerod's a long-headed
+fellow, and we made some pretty good hits before the bottom dropped
+out of things. You must let me have my own way in this matter, Graeme,
+if it's only for my own peace of mind. I'm going to ask Miss Penny to
+be my wife. Do you think--"
+
+"My dear fellow," said Graeme, jumping up and shaking him heartily by
+the hand, "that's the best bit of news I've heard since Meg said 'I
+will' in the church there. She's an absolutely splendid girl, is
+Hennie. Except Meg herself, I don't know any girl I admire so much.
+She's as good and sweet as they make 'em, and for sound common-sense
+she's a perfect gold mine."
+
+"And you don't think--?"
+
+"I've never heard a hint of anyone else. Like me to ask Meg? She'd be
+sure to know. Girls talk of these things, you know."
+
+"I don't know. Would it be quite--"
+
+"Everything's fair in love and war,--proverbial, my boy. But I'm
+pretty sure you've a clear field, and I congratulate you both with all
+my heart. Come to think of it, she's been as dull as a ditch since you
+went away"
+
+"Really?"
+
+"Fact! I was trying the other night to prove to her that she'd got
+influenza coming on, or hay-fever, or something of the kind. She's as
+different as chalk from cheese since eleven o'clock to-day. It's you,
+I'll bet you a sovereign."
+
+Charles did not respond to the offer. He sat smoking quietly and let
+his thoughts run along brighter paths than they had done for days.
+
+
+VII
+
+At breakfast next morning Graeme soberly suggested to Lady Elspeth
+that she should go conger-eeling with him that day. And the shrewd
+brown eyes looked into his, and twinkled in response to the deep blue
+and the brown ones opposite, and she said, "I mind I was just a wee
+bit feather-headed myself for a while after I was married. I caught
+congers before you were short-coated, my laddie, but I'm not going
+catching them now."
+
+"They are a bit rampageous when they're grown up," he admitted. "We
+got one the other day about as thick round as one's leg, and it barked
+like a dog and tried to bite."
+
+"And does he make you go congering, my dear?" she asked Margaret.
+
+"Make?" scoffed Graeme. "Make, forsooth? How little you know! I'd like
+to see the man who could make that young person do anything but just
+what she wishes. Why, she twists us all round her little finger
+and----"
+
+"Ay, ay! Well, discipline is good for the young, and you're just
+nothing but a laddie in some things."
+
+"I'm going to keep so all my life. So's Meg! Well, suppose we say
+ormering then, if congering's too lively. Hennie Penny's an awful dab
+at ormering. If you'd seen her the other night when she came home! A
+tangle of vraic was an old lady's best cap in comparison--"
+
+"And how many did I get, and how many did you get?" retorted Miss
+Penny.
+
+"I got six and you got seven--"
+
+"Seventeen, and you stole four of your six from Meg."
+
+"Oh well, I found the mushrooms, coming home, and they were worth a
+pailful of ormers."
+
+"You didn't beat them long enough. Ormers take a lot of beating," she
+explained to Lady Elspeth.
+
+"Thumping, she means. My mushrooms beat them hollow,--tender and
+delicate and fragrant"--and he sniffed appreciatively as though he
+could scent them still.--"Your ormers were like shoe-soles."
+
+"And as to the mushrooms," continued Hennie Penny, "you'd never have
+found them if I hadn't tumbled into them, and then you thought they
+were toadstools."
+
+"Oh well!--Who can't take a hook out of a whiting's mouth? Who was it
+screamed when the lobster looked at her?"
+
+"It nearly took a piece out of me."
+
+"Who nearly upset the boat when a baby devilfish came up in the pot?
+And it wasn't above that size!"
+
+"I draw the line at devil-fish. They're no' canny."
+
+"Do they generally go on like this?" asked Lady Elspeth of Margaret.
+
+"All the time," said Margaret, with a matronly air. "They're just a
+couple of children. I keep them out of mischief as well as I can, but
+it's hard work at times."
+
+"She's just every bit as bad, you know, when we're alone," said Miss
+Penny. "But she's got her company manners on just now. You should see
+her when she's bathing."
+
+"Ah--yes! You should see her when she's bathing," said Graeme, with a
+smack of the lips. "All the little waves and crabs and lobsters keep
+bobbing up to have another look at her. In Venus's Bath the other
+day--"
+
+"Now, children, stop your fooling. Where shall we go to-day?" laughed
+Margaret, and Lady Elspeth could hardly take her eyes off her, so
+winsomely, so radiantly happy was she.
+
+"We old folks will stay at home and talk to Mrs. Carre," said Lady
+Elspeth. "You young ones can go off and do what you like."
+
+"Oh no, you don't," said Graeme. "You didn't come here to loaf in a
+verandah. When you come to Sark you've got to enjoy yourselves,
+whether you want to or not. Suppose we take lunch along to the
+Eperquerie, and the elders can bask and snooze, and we'll bathe three
+times off that black ledge under Les Fontaines. And if the Seigneur's
+out fishing perhaps he'll take some of us with him, those who don't
+scream when the poor fish gets a hook in its throat. And you'll see
+Margaret out on the loose. She always goes it when she's swimming."
+
+"I hope you won't venture too far out, Charles," said Mrs. Pixley,
+with visions of his limp body being carried home.
+
+"Miss Penny and I are sensible people when we're bathing," said
+Charles. "We don't lose our heads--"
+
+"Nor any of the rest of you,--nor touch of the stones," laughed
+Graeme.
+
+"That's so," said Charles. "We like to know what's below us and that
+it's not too far away."
+
+"It's very wise," said Mrs. Pixley plaintively. "One hears of such
+dreadful accidents. I'm very glad you're so sensible, my dear," to
+Miss Penny.
+
+"Oh, I'm dreadfully sensible at times, especially when I'm bathing.
+But that's because I can only swim with one foot at the bottom."
+
+"Any beach about there?" enquired Charles forethoughtfully.
+
+"Nice little bit just round the corner, with a cave and all,--capital
+place for children. Paddle by the hour without going in above your
+ankles."
+
+And so they wandered slowly up the scented lanes past the Seigneurie,
+laden with the usual paraphernalia of a bathing-lunch, and came out on
+the Eperquerie.
+
+They established the old ladies in a gorsy nook, built a fireplace of
+loose stones, and collected fuel, and laid the fire ready for the
+match, which Lady Elspeth was to apply whenever they waved to her.
+
+"If She isn't fast asleep," said Graeme.
+
+Then they pointed out all the things that lay about, so that they
+might take an intelligent interest in their surroundings,--Guernsey,
+and Herm, and Jethou, and Alderney, and the Casquets, and the coast of
+France, and the Seigneur in his boat, and then they trooped off like a
+party of school-children.
+
+And presently the old ladies saw them scrambling down the black,
+scarped sides of the headland opposite, and then they disappeared
+behind rocks and into crannies. Then a pink meteor flashed from the
+black ledge, followed in an instant by a dark-blue one, and both went
+breasting out to sea. And in front of the cave two less venturesome
+figures beguiled the onlookers and themselves into the belief that
+they were swimming, though they never went out of their depth and
+sounded anxiously for it at every second stroke.
+
+And up above, the larks trilled joyously, and the air was soft and
+sweet as the air of heaven; and down below, the water was bluer than
+the sky and clear as crystal, so that they could see the great white
+rocks which lay away down in the depths, and they looked like
+sea-monsters crawling after their prey. And the shouts of the swimmers
+came mellowly up to them, and they could see their little limbs
+jerking like the limbs of frogs.
+
+"It is good to be here," said Lady Elspeth enjoyably.
+
+"It is very very good to be here. I am very glad we came," said Mrs.
+Pixley, with a sigh that was not all sadness.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Many such days of sheer delight they had, and kept the dark cloud
+resolutely below their horizon. They accommodated their activities to
+the limited powers of the elders, and took them wherever it was
+reasonably possible for them to go. They chartered a boat for the day,
+and took them and all the luncheon-things round from Creux Harbour to
+Grande Greve, subjecting Charles to long-unaccustomed labours at the
+oar. In the same way they introduced them to Dixcart Bay, and
+Derrible, and Greve de la Ville; and, choosing a fit day, they
+circumnavigated the island again in three boat-loads, landing for
+lunch on an even keel on Breniere, and penetrating into every
+accessible cave they came to,--Mrs. Pixley enjoying the wonders in
+fear and trembling, and breathing freely only when they were safely
+out in the open once more. And Graeme and Margaret watched the
+approximating of Hennie Penny and Charles with infinite delight. It
+needed only a full understanding between these two to complete their
+own great happiness.
+
+But the dark cloud was there, though they might refuse to look at it,
+and clouds below the horizon have a way of rising, especially dark
+ones.
+
+The post-office in Sark is a cottage, or the part of a cottage, turned
+from private to public use. In former times the service was of a very
+perfunctory character, Providence largely taking the place of
+post-master while that official attended first to his fishing and then
+to his duties, and any who had good and valid reason to expect a
+letter came down to the mail-bag where it lay on the beach and went
+through it for themselves.
+
+The advent of visitors accustomed to more exact and business-like
+methods, however, has done away with this Arcadian simplicity, and now
+each day when the boat is in, all who prefer not to wait for the tardy
+delivery at their own houses, collect gradually round the official
+cottage, and in due course, and after the exercise of virtues, receive
+their mail across the counter. And some tear their letters open at
+once, regardless of spectators, and devour them on the spot, but the
+wiser carry them home for private consumption. For one never knows for
+certain what of heartbreak and disaster the most innocent-looking
+envelope may contain.
+
+Graeme and Margaret and Miss Penny, however, being in retreat, and
+having cut the painter with the outside world, had not cultivated the
+post-office until Charles and Lady Elspeth arrived. But, as Charles
+had to keep more or less in touch with Throgmorton Street, they had
+now got into the habit of calling with him for his letters, except
+when the doing so interfered with the programme for the day. And many
+an amusing, and sometimes touching, insight did they get there into
+human nature. Graeme said it was worth while the trouble of going,
+just to sit in the hedge opposite and watch people's faces, especially
+the faces of those who tore open their letters and those who got none.
+
+They were sitting so in the hedge one morning, quietly watching and
+commenting silently, and by looks only, on the vagaries of the
+letter-scramblers, and Charles had pushed into the crowded little room
+to antedate the delivery by a few minutes if possible.
+
+As he came out, with his letters in his hand, they all saw at a glance
+that something had happened. His face, which had been gradually
+relaxing to its old look of jovial good-fellowship and satisfaction
+with the world, was tight and hard, and yet they saw that he had not
+opened a letter. He turned up the road with a mere jerk of the head,
+and they followed wondering, and all, as it came out afterwards, with
+the same dim idea as to the possible cause of his upsetting.
+
+He handed Margaret a couple of letters for Lady Elspeth, and made an
+attempt at conversation as they went along, but the cloud they had
+been keeping out of sight was visible now to all of them. Among the
+unopened letters in his hand was one which disturbed him even before
+he knew what was in it, and they could only wait, with troubled minds,
+for developments.
+
+Charles went straight to his room, as he usually did when business
+matters claimed his attention, and from the look on his face Graeme
+judged that the scramble, fixed for that day on account of a specially
+low tide, round the Autelets, whose rock-pools and phosphorescent
+seaweeds and beds of flourishing anemones were a perpetual delight,
+would be off for the time being at all events.
+
+But Pixley came down presently and intimated that he was ready, and
+they trooped away, leaving the elders at home for a day's rest, since
+rock-scrambling was outside their limits.
+
+Their progress, however, was not the usual light-hearted saunter
+enlivened by merry jokes and laughter. The lanes were fragrant as
+ever, the air was full of larks and sunshine, but the cloud had risen
+and overshadowed them, and Graeme guessed why Charles had come. There
+was something he wanted to discuss with them alone, out of the hearing
+of his mother and Lady Elspeth.
+
+He was not surprised--when they had scrambled down into Port du
+Moulin, and had passed through the arch, and were sitting on the rocks
+above the first of the sea-gardens,--when Charles said, "There's
+something I want to consult you about, and I couldn't do it at the
+house, as I want it kept to ourselves. I got this, this morning. Will
+you read it?" and he handed Graeme a letter. Graeme opened it and read
+it out.
+
+
+ "99A HIGH STREET, ALDERNEY.
+
+ "MY DEAR CHARLES,--I will not at the moment attempt any
+ explanation of the calamity which has befallen our house. If you
+ knew all, you would not blame me as I fear you must be doing. Let
+ me say, however, that I have every reason to hope that in course
+ of time I may be able to redeem the position by making good all
+ deficiencies and so clearing our name of reproach. To do so, I
+ must get away--to Spain in the first instance, and for that I
+ need your assistance. The end came unexpectedly and took me
+ unawares, and I am almost penniless here. In asking your help, I
+ do so the more confidently as, in the path I have indicated, lies
+ the only hope of redemption. In assisting me you will not only be
+ doing what a prosperous son might reasonably be expected to do
+ for his father in his day of misfortune, but you will be acting
+ for the general weal in putting me into a position to make good
+ what I have all unwittingly become responsible for, and to that
+ sacred end the remainder of my life shall be most solemnly
+ dedicated.
+
+ "I came here from Cherbourg, and am for the moment safe from
+ oversight. As soon as you place me in position to do so, I shall
+ get away and begin my new life-work, which I am earnestly
+ desirous of doing at the earliest possible moment.
+
+ "Address me as above--Revd. J. Peace.
+
+ "Your affectionate FATHER."
+
+Graeme kept the humorous wrinkles about his eyes and mouth in order
+with difficulty as he read this very characteristic effusion, but
+Margaret was the only one who saw it. Charles had kept his eyes
+intently on the pool below, and Miss Penny had been regarding him
+sympathetically.
+
+"What do you make of it?" said Charles. "It makes me sick."
+
+"He evidently needs your help," said Miss Penny.
+
+"Yes, but have I the right to give it him? That's the question."
+
+"He says----" began Graeme.
+
+"Oh, he says!" growled Charles. "Trouble is, he's been saying for the
+last twenty years, and it has all been a lie. This is probably all a
+lie too. Not all"--he added grimly. "As I read it, he has got funds
+stowed away somewhere and he's anxious to get to them."
+
+"So that he may make restitution," urged Miss Penny.
+
+"Yes, that's what he says," said Charles, in a tone that showed no
+slightest tincture of conviction. "What would you do," he asked,
+looking up at Graeme, "if you were in my place?"
+
+Graeme filled his pipe thoughtfully.
+
+"Let us look at it quietly all round," he said, and lit up and puffed
+away contemplatively.
+
+"From what he says,"--checking off his points on his fingers,--"if you
+don't assist him, he may be taken, and the--the unpleasantness of the
+situation be thereby increased.... I do not see that his punishment
+would help anyone--except maybe as a deterrent, and that is
+problematical.... I gather from this, as you do, that he has funds
+awaiting him somewhere.... You have no great faith in his promises--"
+
+"None," growled Charles.
+
+"And I presume, as a business man, you would count a bird in the hand
+worth several in the bush--in other words, you would sooner have what
+he has stowed away--somewhere, than what he hopes to make some time--"
+
+"Sight sooner!"
+
+"Then, I should say, offer him such assistance as he needs to get
+away, and, if you can see your way to it, a bit to live on afterwards,
+on condition of his placing in your hands everything he has got stowed
+away, so that you can pass it on to the receiver."
+
+Charles shook his head. "I couldn't trust him."
+
+"Then there's only one thing to do if he agrees, and that is to go
+with him and bring the property back with you."
+
+Charles groaned. "It may mean the Argentine. Spain's no place for
+investments these days."
+
+"It's rough on you, old man, but it's the best I can think of," said
+Graeme.
+
+"And supposing he tells me to go hang?"
+
+"Then," said Graeme, with a shrug, "I don't see that you can help him.
+I have no personal feeling against him whatever, but I cannot see how
+you can help him except on some such lines as I've indicated. How does
+it strike you, Meg?"
+
+But Margaret shook her head. "I feel very much as you do. If he is
+caught and punished it will only add to Mrs. Pixley's and Charles's
+trouble, and benefit nobody. But he is very obstinate. He has
+evidently planned out his future. I doubt if he'll turn from it."
+
+"And you, Hennie?" asked Graeme.
+
+"I think you should help him if you possibly can. It's horrible to
+think of him hiding there and in fear of being caught--"
+
+"Helping him in any case is against the law--"
+
+"Blood is thicker than water," said Hennie Penny earnestly.
+
+"--But if some present benefit was to come to his creditors I should
+consider it right to do it, not otherwise."
+
+"Suppose you go across, and see him, and talk it over with him, Mr.
+Pixley?" said Hennie Penny.
+
+"I suppose that's the only thing to be done," groaned Charles. "How do
+you get there?"
+
+"The _Courier_ would call here by arrangement--up at the Eperquerie,"
+said Graeme. "She can't come in, of course. It means lying out in a
+small boat and waiting for her. What do you say to us all going? In
+fact, unless we do, how are we going to explain Charles's going to
+Mrs. Pixley?"
+
+Charles nodded.
+
+"You could go and see him and we could talk it over again afterwards.
+I'm inclined to think that he won't accept, you know."
+
+"I don't believe he will, and it'll be a bit hard to refuse him any
+help, if he really is on his beam ends."
+
+"He wouldn't have written to you if he could have done without, you
+may count upon that."
+
+"Is he as safe there as he seems to think?" asked Charles.
+
+"Yes, I think so. Safer probably than in Cherbourg. It's an
+out-of-the-way place, from all accounts."
+
+Discuss it as they would, they could not get beyond Graeme's proposal,
+and so at last they went back home, decided on the visit to Alderney
+on the morrow, but all feeling doubtful, and some of them distinctly
+nervous, as to the outcome of it.
+
+
+IX
+
+The little party that lay in wait for the Alderney steamer in old Jack
+Guille's boat off the Eperquerie, next morning, was eminently lacking
+in the vivacity that usually distinguishes such parties when the sea
+is smooth and the sky is blue. In fact, when they got on board, the
+Captain decided in his own mind that they must all have quarrelled
+before starting. There was no sign of anything of the kind about them
+now, it is true, but that might just be their good manners. For
+English people are not like the Sark and Guernsey folk, who, when they
+do quarrel, let all the world know about it.
+
+These four had apparently little to say to one another and less to
+anyone else. If they had been going to a funeral they could hardly
+have been more reserved.
+
+And to something very like a funeral they were going, with the added
+anxiety of very grave doubts as to the result of their visit.
+
+They had had no difficulty in persuading the elder ladies that
+Alderney was not for them. The steep path down to the Eperquerie
+landing, and the tumbling about in a small boat until the steamer
+came, did not greatly appeal to them. Moreover, Lady Elspeth's clear
+eyes had noticed the signs of their clouding, in spite of their
+efforts after naturalness, for to experienced eyes there is nothing so
+unnatural as the attempt to be natural. If Mrs. Pixley noticed nothing
+it was probably because her faculties had not yet fully recovered from
+the shock to which they had been subjected. If she noticed she said
+nothing, having no desire, perhaps, to add to the weight of her
+already heavy burden.
+
+"Now, my boy, what is it?" Lady Elspeth asked, when she had persuaded
+Graeme to take her for a stroll in the evening, under plea of cramp
+through overmuch sitting.
+
+"Jeremiah Pixley is in Alderney and has written to Charles begging his
+help to get on his way."
+
+"Ah! And what are you going to do about it?".
+
+Graeme outlined their ideas on the matter.
+
+"He's an old rascal," said Lady Elspeth softly. "I doubt very much if
+you'll get anything out of him."
+
+"Can you suggest any better way of dealing with the matter?"
+
+"I don't know that I can at the moment, but I doubt if you'll get any
+satisfaction out of him. He'll stick to all he can, and his promise of
+restitution is all bunkum, I should fear."
+
+"And would you help him to get away in any case?"
+
+"Personally, I think a course of penal servitude would be of the
+greatest service to him. But, for Charles's sake and his mother's, the
+sooner the whole matter is buried the better, and so I should be sorry
+to hear of him being taken. It would only revive the scandal."
+
+"That's just what we all feel;" and he saw that the problem of
+Jeremiah Pixley was too much even for Lady Elspeth.
+
+And so the party of four on the _Courier_ lacked vivacity, and found
+no enjoyment in the lonely austerity of the Casquets or Ortach; and
+the frowning southern cliffs of Alderney itself, as the steamer raced
+up the Swinge to Braye Harbour, seemed to them but a poor copy of
+their own little isle of Sark, lacking its gem-like qualities. But
+then their minds were intent upon the business ahead and their outlook
+was darkened.
+
+
+X
+
+"Would you like me to come up with you, Charles?" Graeme asked, as the
+steamer rounded the breakwater.
+
+"Yes, I'd like it," said Charles gloomily. "But I think I'd better go
+alone. I don't believe anything's going to come of it."
+
+"I'm afraid not--as far as we're concerned. You'll just have to keep a
+stiff upper lip and stick to what you believe the right thing to do."
+To which Charles replied only with a grim nod, and they went ashore.
+
+"We'll walk up to the town with you," said Graeme, when they got
+outside the harbour precincts. "When you've got as far as you can with
+him, come down to the shore due West. You'll find us by that old fort
+we saw from the boat;" and presently they branched off towards the
+sea, while Charles went doggedly on into St. Anne on as miserable an
+errand as ever son had.
+
+He tramped on along the hot white road, till he found himself in the
+sleepy little town, where the grass grew between the granite sets in
+the roadways and a dreamy listlessness pervaded all things. He sought
+out No. 99A High Street and knocked on the door.
+
+It was opened by an elderly woman who seemed surprised at sight of a
+visitor.
+
+"Mr. Peace?" asked Charles, feeling thereby _particeps criminis_.
+
+"He's inside. Will you come in?"
+
+She opened a door off the passage, said, "A gentleman to see you;" and
+Charles went in and closed the door behind him.
+
+His father had started up from a couch where he had been lying. There
+was a startled look in his eyes and his face was pale and worn, but a
+touch of colour came back into his cheeks when he saw who his visitor
+was.
+
+He had shaved off his bit of side whisker. His face was grayer and
+thinner and his body somewhat shrunken, even in these few days. He
+wore a white tie, and his coat and waistcoat were of clerical cut. On
+the table was a pair of gold spectacles and on the sideboard a soft
+billycock hat. He looked the not-too-well-off country parson to the
+life. The only outward and visible sign of the old Jeremiah was the
+heavy gold pince-nez which lay between the top buttons of his
+waistcoat, which he hauled out and fingered as of old the moment he
+began to speak.
+
+"Ah, Charles! This is good of you. I hardly expected a personal visit.
+I was beginning to fear you had not got my letter, or that you had
+decided not to answer it."
+
+"It followed me to Sark."
+
+"Ah! you are back in Sark?"
+
+"I thought it well to take my mother there, to be out of things for a
+time."
+
+"Quite so, quite so! That was very thoughtful of you. This is a
+terrible calamity that has befallen us. But, as I said in my letter, I
+have every hope of being able to redeem matters if I can only get to
+where that is possible."
+
+"Where's that?"
+
+"Well, in the first place to Spain--"
+
+"And afterwards?"
+
+Mr. Pixley hesitated. "Perhaps--for your own sake--it would be as well
+you should not know--for the present, at all events. You may be asked
+questions. If you don't know, you can truthfully say so."
+
+"I gather that you have funds put away somewhere."
+
+"If I can get to where I want to go, I can at all events make a fresh
+start. And I am prepared to devote the rest of my life to the one
+object I have named.... The last few years have been very wearying. I
+have had trouble with my heart at times;" and he put his hand to his
+side to emphasise it. "But if I can get quietly away I shall soon pull
+round and be ready for work again, now that the strain is over."
+
+"You know you're asking me to do what I've no right to do?" said
+Charles gloomily.
+
+"I know, my boy, and it is very bitter for me to have to ask it. But I
+can't get away without your help, and the alternative is not pleasant
+to think of--for either of us.... I do not ask more than I would
+willingly have done for you if the positions were reversed.... On the
+whole, I do not think I have been a bad father to you. Circumstances,
+indeed, have been too strong for me at the end, but--"
+
+"I am willing to do what you want--and more, on one condition."
+
+"What is that? Anything in reason--"
+
+"I will provide you with funds to get away, and I will send you three
+hundred pounds each year--"
+
+"Good lad!"
+
+"On condition that you hand over to me all the property you've got
+stowed away--"
+
+"Damn!"
+
+"So that I may hand it over to your creditors."
+
+"Why not write at once to Scotland Yard and tell them where I am? But,
+after all, I'm not sure that even your world would applaud so filial
+an act as that."
+
+"I'm prepared to make sacrifices myself to help right some of this
+wrong--"
+
+"I had to make many for you, my boy, before you were old enough to
+understand it--before my own position was assured. Ay, and since too.
+I would have flung it all up years ago but for you. I wanted you to be
+set firmly on your feet before the crash came. It has been killing
+work. I'm glad it's over--whatever the end may be. If you can't see
+your way to help me, the end is obvious and close at hand. I have, I
+think, something under two pounds in my pocket. If I'd waited to get
+more I should not be here. The end came unexpectedly. Old Coxley
+called for some securities which I had--which I couldn't give him at
+the moment, and I had to go at once or not at all."
+
+Charles stood up. He would have liked to tell him all he felt about
+the matter. How the tampering with securities hit him more hardly than
+almost anything could have done, since straight dealing in such
+matters is the very first of Stock Exchange tenets. How, if he had
+come to him, he would have strained himself to the utmost to set
+things right.
+
+But, facile talker as he was on matters that were of no account, he
+found himself strangely tongue-tied here.
+
+"Well?" he asked. "Will you let me help you?"
+
+"As you will, my boy ... If you do, it offers me a chance--my only
+chance. If you don't----" he shrugged his heavy shoulders meaningly.
+
+"Do what I ask," urged Charles. "It is the only possible amends you
+can make."
+
+Mr. Pixley shook his head. "It is out of the question. I could do
+nothing with three hundred a year----"
+
+"You could live quietly on that in many places."
+
+"I don't want simply to live. I want to work and redeem myself."
+
+"You have worked hard enough and long enough," said Charles; and he
+might have added, as was in his mind, "And it has all ended in this."
+
+"I would like to help you," he said, as he moved slowly towards the
+door, striving hard to keep the stiff upper lip Graeme had enjoined on
+him. "But I don't think you should expect me to do what I know to be
+wrong. I'll do what I said----"
+
+Mr. Pixley shook his head. His face was gray, his lips pinched in.
+Charles went out and closed the door behind him.
+
+But he could not leave him so. He had known from the first that he
+would have to help him, right or wrong.
+
+He opened the door again quietly and went in. His father was sitting
+at the table with his head in his hands. Charles laid down the money
+he had, with Graeme's assistance, prepared, laid his hand on his
+shoulder for a moment, and went quietly out again, and out of the
+house.
+
+It was a miserable business altogether. He never forgot that last
+sight of him sitting at the mean little table in the mean little room
+with his head in his hands.
+
+
+XI
+
+Charles went soberly down the green slopes towards the sea, and
+presently discovered the dismantled fort they had seen from the
+steamer as they ran up the Swinge that morning. And sitting on the
+broken wall of a gun platform was a figure which he knew by the dress
+to be Miss Penny.
+
+She had evidently been on the look-out for him. She stood up and waved
+her hand, and he waved his in reply, and plunged down the slope. His
+heart was sore at what had just passed. It turned gratefully to one
+whom he knew to be full of sympathy for him.
+
+When he reached the foot of the hill, they were crossing the causeway
+which led from the fort to the shore.
+
+"Well, old man, you've got through with it?" said Graeme; and all
+their faces showed the anxiety that was in them to know how he had
+prospered.
+
+He nodded. "Let's go back and sit there for a few minutes. I feel
+like a whipped dog;" and they all went back to the fort, which, in its
+dismantlement and ruin, whispered soothingly of the rest and peace
+that sometimes lie beyond broken hopes and strenuous times.
+
+"Well, how did you find him?" asked Graeme, as they seated themselves
+on the broken wall again, with the fair blue plain of the sea dimpling
+and dancing in front.
+
+"Very broken, but as obstinate as ever," said Charles gloomily.
+"Wouldn't listen to my proposal, says he's set on redeeming himself,
+and so on. I offered him all I could, but it was no use. So I left
+him--"
+
+"You never did--" began Miss Penny, with a pained look on her face.
+
+"I did. But I couldn't leave it so. I went back, and he was sitting
+with his head in his hands.... I just gave him all I had brought and
+came away.... I know it was all wrong--"
+
+"It wasn't. You did quite right," said Miss Penny vehemently.
+
+"I don't suppose any of us would have done differently when it came to
+the point. I don't really see what else you could have done," said
+Graeme.
+
+"He reminded me of all he had done for me when I was a boy, and so on,
+and told me that if I didn't help him there was no hope for him. I did
+my best--"
+
+"You have done quite right, Charles," said Margaret. "I do hope he
+will get away all right."
+
+As he gave them the details of his interview, their quiet sympathy
+restored him by degrees to himself. The bruised, whipped soreness wore
+off, to some extent at all events, and there remained chiefly a
+feeling of thankfulness that the matter was over, and that, in doing
+the only thing possible to him, if he offended against the law, he had
+still done what commended itself to his own heart and to those whose
+good opinion he chiefly valued.
+
+If there were no signs of merriment about them as they wandered
+quietly about the strand, if they still bore something of the aspect
+of a funeral party, it was at all events the aspect of a party after
+the funeral. Their corpse was laid, so far as they were concerned, and
+their thoughts and hearts were more at liberty to turn to other
+matters.
+
+They have none of them ever cared greatly for Alderney, and they
+always speak of it as a remote, unfriendly, melancholy, and slow
+little place, lacking the gem-like beauty and joyous vitality of Sark.
+But then one's outlook is always coloured by one's inlook, and an
+overcast mind sees all things shadowed.
+
+They lunched at the Scott Hotel, in the garden, and felt better than
+they had done for two days when their feet once more trod the deck of
+the _Courier_.
+
+The southern cliffs were filmy blue in the distance, Ortach and the
+Casquets were dim against the horizon, and Charles and Miss Penny
+stood together in the stern looking back over the long straight track
+of the boat, and thinking both of the lonely one in the mean little
+house in St. Anne. Margaret and Graeme had stood watching for a time,
+and had then stolen away forward. Their outlook was ahead, where Sark
+was rising boldly out of the blue waters.
+
+"I doubt if we'll ever hear anything more of him," said Charles, with
+a sigh at thought of it all.
+
+"You will always remember that you have done your duty by him. You
+could not have done more."
+
+"You have been very kind to me all through, very kind, all of you. And
+you especially.... Hennie--will you marry me?"
+
+And she looked up at him with a happy face, and said quietly, "Yes, I
+will. I believe we can make one another very happy."
+
+"I'm sure we can. Come along and tell the others;" and they also
+turned from the past and went forward.
+
+
+
+
+WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+Hearts in Exile._
+
+With Photogravure Frontispiece by HAROLD COPPING. THIRD EDITION. Crown
+8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"Exceptionally powerful, vivid, and realistic.... Sketched with a
+generous hand and bold touches, the characters hold trie reader's
+sympathies throughout. The most graphic, vigorous, and lifelike
+presentment of Russian administrative barbarity which we recollect to
+have ever come across."--_Daily Telegraph_.
+
+
+
+A Princess of Vascovy.
+
+Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"Mr. Oxenham tells a good exciting story with great swing and zest. It
+seems almost unnecessary to recommend a story that is in every way
+worthy of the pen that produced 'Barbe of Grand Bayou.' 'A Princess of
+Vascovy' is just as picturesquely romantic and just as full of
+incident and adventure as Mr. Oxenham's most famous
+work."--_Athenaum_.
+
+
+
+White Fire.
+
+Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.
+
+"'White Fire' combines religion and adventure; but the date is modern,
+and the admirable missionary and his undaunted wife and comrades
+protect their converts in the South Seas from kidnappers and other
+pests with the aid of Maxims and Winchester rifles. Mr. John Oxenham
+has already proved his descriptive and analytic powers, and these
+strong-hearted champions of morality are not less original than their
+surroundings are romantic. A tidal wave is among the trials of the
+hero's constancy. The illustrations by Mr. Grenville Manton are
+good."--_Athenaum_.
+
+
+
+Barbe of Grand Bayou.
+
+Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.
+
+"There is a fascination about Mr. John Oxenham's books which grows
+upon one. Barbe is a clean-cut, fine drawn character, human, alive,
+womanly, real. Her history is so simply related, with such convincing
+straightforwardness that one is bound to admit it could not have
+happened otherwise. It had to be. The tribulations of the pair of
+lovers are delightfully set forth with the art of the true story
+teller. Quite one of the best books of the winter season; worth buying
+and reading; not merely ordering from the library."--_Academy_.
+
+
+
+Giant Circumstance.
+
+Illustrated by CHARLES HORRELL.
+
+THIRD EDITION. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"A hearty and manly book, written in telling style of which Mr.
+Oxenham has proved himself a master."--_Times_.
+
+"Told in Mr. Oxenham's usual spirited and vivid style. Those who
+relish a good story well told will welcome 'Giant Circumstance,' and
+will set it on a level with the best of Mr. Oxenham's
+books."--_British Weekly._
+
+"A good story--should prove popular."--_Athenaeum_.
+
+"Bright, healthy, and interesting, will strengthen his position in the
+regard of readers who like a good story of the doings of wholesome
+unexaggerated characters."--_Daily Telegraph_.
+
+
+
+Rising Fortunes.
+
+Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+
+
+Carette of Sark.
+
+Illustrated. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
+
+"All who either know the Channel Islands or love a full-blooded,
+exciting story, should speedily make the acquaintance of
+Carette."--_Pall Mall Gazette_.
+
+"No one who likes tales of adventure--and who does not--could wish for
+a better tale than this. It is of Sark, in the beginning of last
+century, when its people were peaceable and law-abiding, save on the
+question of 'free trade' and when privateering was a legitimate
+business; so naturally adventurers were more easily come by than in
+conventional days like these. The youth who tells the tale, one Philip
+Carre by name, comes by them all too easily for his liking. He is
+scarcely out of one peril before he is into another, and quite
+split-hairbreadth are his escapes from the Terrible Torode of Herm.
+And it is all on account of Carette, charming Carette, the pride of
+the island, and worth many dangers to win."--_Daily Chronicle_.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pearl of Pearl Island, by John Oxenham
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