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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of No Defense, Complete, by Gilbert Parker
+
+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: No Defense, Complete
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: October 18, 2006 [EBook #6295]
+Last Updated: August 27, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NO DEFENSE, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+NO DEFENSE
+
+By Gilbert Parker
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ BOOK I.
+ I. THE TWO MEET
+ II. THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+ III. THE QUARREL
+ IV. THE DUEL
+ V. THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+ VI. DYCK IN PRISON
+ VII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+ VIII. DYCK’S FATHER VISITS HIM
+ IX. A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+
+ BOOK II
+ X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+ XI. WHITHER NOW?
+ XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+ XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+ XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+ XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+ BOOK III
+ XVI. A LETTER
+ XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+ XVIII. AT SALEM
+ XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+ XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+ XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+ XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+ XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+ XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+ XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE TWO MEET
+
+“Well, good-bye, Dyck. I’ll meet you at the sessions, or before that at
+the assizes.”
+
+It was only the impulsive, cheery, warning exclamation of a wild young
+Irish spirit to his friend Dyck Calhoun, but it had behind it the humour
+and incongruity of Irish life.
+
+The man, Dyck Calhoun, after whom were sent the daring words about the
+sessions and the assizes, was a year or two older than his friend, and,
+as Michael Clones, his servant and friend, said, “the worst and best
+scamp of them all”--just up to any harmless deviltry.
+
+Influenced by no traditions or customs, under control of no stern
+records of society, Calhoun had caused some trouble in his time by the
+harmless deeds of a scapegrace, but morally--that is, in all relations
+of life affected by the ten commandments--he was above reproach. Yet he
+was of the sort who, in days of agitation, then common in Ireland, might
+possibly commit some act which would bring him to the sessions or
+the assizes. There never was in Ireland a cheerier, braver, handsomer
+fellow, nor one with such variety of mind and complexity of purpose.
+
+He was the only child of a high-placed gentleman; he spent all the money
+that came his way, and occasionally loaded himself with debt, which his
+angry father paid. Yet there never was a gayer heart, a more generous
+spirit, nor an easier-tempered man; though, after all, he was only
+twenty-five when the words with which the tale opens were said to him.
+
+He had been successful--yet none too successful--at school and Trinity
+College, Dublin. He had taken a pass degree, when he might have captured
+the highest honours. He had interested people of place in the country,
+but he never used promptly the interest he excited. A pretty face, a
+fishing or a shooting expedition, a carouse in some secluded tavern,
+were parts of his daily life.
+
+At the time the story opens he was a figure of note among those who
+spent their time in criticizing the government and damning the Irish
+Parliament. He even became a friend of some young hare-brained rebels of
+the time; yet no one suspected him of anything except irresponsibility.
+His record was clean; Dublin Castle was not after him.
+
+When his young friend made the remark about the sessions and assizes,
+Calhoun was making his way up the rocky hillside to take the homeward
+path to his father’s place, Playmore. With the challenge and the
+monstrous good-bye, a stone came flying up the hill after him and
+stopped almost at his feet. He made no reply, however, but waved a hand
+downhill, and in his heart said:
+
+“Well, maybe he’s right. I’m a damned dangerous fellow, there’s no doubt
+about that. Perhaps I’ll kill a rebel some day, and then they’ll take me
+to the sessions and the assizes. Well, well, there’s many a worse fate
+than that, so there is.”
+
+After a minute he added:
+
+“So there is, dear lad, so there is. But if I ever kill, I’d like it
+to be in open fight on the hills like this--like this, under the bright
+sun, in the soft morning, with all the moor and valleys still, and the
+larks singing--the larks singing! Hooray, but it’s a fine day, one of
+the best that ever was!”
+
+He laughed, and patted his gun gently.
+
+“Not a feather, not a bird killed, not a shot fired; but the looking was
+the thing--stalking the things that never turned up, the white heels we
+never saw, for I’m not killing larks, God love you!”
+
+He raised his head, looking up into the sky at some larks singing above
+him in the heavens.
+
+“Lord love you, little dears,” he added aloud. “I wish I might die with
+your singing in my ears, but do you know what makes Ireland what it
+is? Look at it now. Years ago, just when the cotton-mills and the
+linen-mills were doing well, they came over with their English
+legislation, and made it hard going. When we begin to get something,
+over the English come and take the something away. What have we done, we
+Irish people, that we shouldn’t have a chance in our own country? Lord
+knows, we deserve a chance, for it’s hard paying the duties these days.
+What with France in revolution and reaching out her hand to Ireland
+to coax her into rebellion; what with defeat in America and drink
+in Scotland; what with Fox and Pitt at each other’s throats, and the
+lord-lieutenant a danger to the peace; what with poverty, and the cow
+and children and father and mother living all in one room, with the
+chickens roosting in the rafters; what with pointing the potato at the
+dried fish and gulping it down as if it was fish itself; what with the
+smell and the dirt and the poverty of Dublin and Derry, Limerick and
+Cork--ah, well!” He threw his eyes up again.
+
+“Ah, well, my little love, sing on! You’re a blessing among a lot of
+curses; but never mind, it’s a fine world, and Ireland’s the best part
+of it. Heaven knows it--and on this hill, how beautiful it is!”
+
+He was now on the top of a hill where he could look out towards the bog
+and in towards the mellow, waving hills. He could drink in the yellowish
+green, with here and there in the distance a little house; and about
+two miles away smoke stealing up from the midst of the plantation where
+Playmore was--Playmore, his father’s house--to be his own one day.
+
+How good it was! There, within his sight, was the great escarpment of
+rock known as the Devil’s Ledge, and away to the east was the black spot
+in the combe known as the Cave of Mary. Still farther away, towards the
+south, was the great cattle-pasture, where, as he looked, a thousand
+cattle roamed. Here and there in the wide prospect were plantations
+where Irish landlords lived, and paid a heavy price for living. Men did
+not pay their rents. Crops were spoiled, markets were bad, money was
+scarce, yet--
+
+“Please God, it will be better next year!” Michael Clones said, and
+there never was a man with a more hopeful heart than Michael Clones.
+
+Dyck Calhoun had a soul of character, originality, and wayward
+distinction. He had all the impulses and enthusiasms of a poet, all the
+thirst for excitement of the adventurer, all the latent patriotism of
+the true Celt; but his life was undisciplined, and he had not ordered
+his spirit into compartments of faith and hope. He had gifts. They were
+gifts only to be borne by those who had ambitions.
+
+Now, as he looked out upon the scene where nature was showing herself
+at her best, some glimmer of a great future came to him. He did not know
+which way his feet were destined to travel in the business of life. It
+was too late to join the navy; but there was still time enough to be a
+soldier, or to learn to be a lawyer.
+
+As he gazed upon the scene, his wonderful deep blue eyes, his dark brown
+hair thick upon his head, waving and luxuriant like a fine mattress, his
+tall, slender, alert figure, his bony, capable hands, which neither sun
+nor wind ever browned, his nervous yet interesting mouth, and his long
+Roman nose, set in a complexion rich in its pink-and-cream hardness and
+health--all this made him a figure good to see.
+
+Suddenly, as he listened to the lark singing overhead, with his face
+lifted to the sky, he heard a human voice singing; and presently there
+ran up a little declivity to his left a girl--an Irish girl of about
+seventeen years of age.
+
+Her hat was hanging on her arm by a green ribbon. Her head was covered
+with the most wonderful brown, waving hair. She had a broad, low
+forehead, Greek in its proportions and lines. The eyes were bluer even
+than his own, and were shaded by lashes of great length, which slightly
+modified the firm lines of the face, with its admirable chin, and mouth
+somewhat large with a cupid’s bow.
+
+In spite of its ardent and luscious look, it was the mouth of one who
+knew her own mind and could sustain her own course. It was open when
+Dyck first saw it, because she was singing little bits of wild lyrics
+of the hills, little tragedies of Celtic life--just bursts of the Celtic
+soul, as it were, cheerful yet sad, buoyant and passionate, eager yet
+melancholy. She was singing in Irish too. They were the words of songs
+taught her by her mother’s maid.
+
+She had been tramping over the hills for a couple of hours, virile,
+beautiful, and alone. She wore a gown of dark gold, with little green
+ribbons here and there. The gown was short, and her ankles showed.
+In spite of the strong boots she wore they were alert, delicate, and
+shapely, and all her beauty had the slender fullness of a quail.
+
+When she saw Dyck, she stopped suddenly, her mouth slightly open. She
+gave him a sidelong glance of wonder, interest, and speculation. Then
+she threw her head slightly back, and all the curls gathered in a bunch
+and shook like bronze flowers. It was a head of grace and power, of
+charm and allurement--of danger.
+
+Dyck was lost in admiration. He looked at her as one might look at a
+beautiful thing in a dream. He did not speak; he only smiled as he gazed
+into her eyes. She was the first to speak.
+
+“Well, who are you?” she asked with a slightly southern accent in her
+voice, delicate and entrancing. Her head gave a little modest toss, her
+fine white teeth caught her lower lip with a little quirk of humour;
+for she could see that he was a gentleman, and that she was safe from
+anything that might trouble her.
+
+He replied to her question with the words:
+
+“My name? Why, it’s Dyck Calhoun. That’s all.”
+
+Her eyes brightened. “Isn’t that enough?” she asked gently.
+
+She knew of his family. She was only visiting in the district with her
+mother, but she had lately heard of old Miles Calhoun and his wayward
+boy, Dyck; and here was Dyck, with a humour in his eyes and a touch of
+melancholy at his lips. Somehow her heart went out to him.
+
+Presently he said to her: “And what’s your name?”
+
+“I’m only Sheila Llyn, the daughter of my mother, a widow, visiting at
+Loyland Towers. Yes, I’m only Sheila!”
+
+She laughed.
+
+“Well, just be ‘only Sheila,”’ he answered admiringly, and he held out a
+hand to her. “I wouldn’t have you be anything else, though it’s none of
+my business.”
+
+For one swift instant she hesitated; then she laid her hand in his.
+
+“There’s no reason why we should not,” she said. “Your father’s
+respectable.”
+
+She looked at him again with a sidelong glance, and with a whimsical,
+reserved smile at her lips.
+
+“Yes, he’s respectable, I agree, but he’s dull,” answered Dyck. “For an
+Irishman, he’s dull--and he’s a tyrant, too. I suppose I deserve that,
+for I’m a handful.”
+
+“I think you are, and a big handful too!”
+
+“Which way are you going?” he asked presently.
+
+“And you?”
+
+“Oh, I’m bound for home.” He pointed across the valley. “Do you see that
+smoke coming up from the plantation over there?”
+
+“Yes, I know,” she answered. “I know. That’s Playmore, your father’s
+place. Loyland Towers is between here and there. Which way were you
+going there?”
+
+“Round to the left,” he said, puzzled, but agreeable.
+
+“Then we must say good-bye, because I go to the right. That’s my nearest
+way.”
+
+“Well, if that’s your nearest way, I’m going with you,” he said,
+“because--well, because--because--”
+
+“If you won’t talk very much!” she rejoined with a little air of
+instinctive coquetry.
+
+“I don’t want to talk. I’d like to listen. Shall we start?”
+
+A half-hour later they suddenly came upon an incident of the road.
+
+It was, alas, no uncommon incident. An aged peasant, in a sudden fit of
+weakness, had stumbled on the road, and, in falling, had struck his
+head on a stone and had lost consciousness. He was an old peasant of the
+usual Irish type, coarsely but cleanly dressed. Lying beside him was
+a leather bag, within which were odds and ends of food and some small
+books of legend and ritual. He was a peasant of a superior class,
+however.
+
+In falling, he had thrown over on his back, and his haggard face was
+exposed to the sun and sky. At sight of him Dyck and Sheila ran forward.
+Dyck dropped on one knee and placed a hand on the stricken man’s heart.
+
+“He’s alive, all right,” Dyck said. “He’s a figure in these parts. His
+name’s Christopher Dogan.”
+
+“Where does he live?”
+
+“Live? Well, not three hundred yards from here, when he’s at home, but
+he’s generally on the go. He’s what the American Indians would call a
+medicine-man.”
+
+“He needs his own medicine now.”
+
+“He’s over eighty, and he must have gone dizzy, stumbled, fallen, and
+struck a stone. There’s the mark on his temple. He’s been lying here
+unconscious ever since; but his pulse is all right, and we’ll soon have
+him fit again.”
+
+So saying, Dyck whipped out a horn containing spirit, and, while Sheila
+lifted the injured head, he bathed the old man’s face with the spirit,
+then opened the mouth and let some liquor trickle down.
+
+“He’s the cleanest peasant I ever saw,” remarked Sheila; “and he’s
+coming to. Look at him!”
+
+Yes, he was coming to. There was a slight tremor of the eyelids, and
+presently they slowly opened. They were eyes of remarkable poignancy and
+brightness--black, deep-set, direct, full of native intelligence. For an
+instant they stared as if they had no knowledge, then understanding came
+to them.
+
+“Oh, it’s you, sir,” his voice said tremblingly, looking at Dyck. “And
+very kind it is of ye!” Then he looked at Sheila. “I don’t know ye,” he
+said whisperingly, for his voice seemed suddenly to fail. “I don’t know
+ye,” he repeated, “but you look all right.”
+
+“Well, I’m Sheila Llyn,” the girl said, taking her hand from the old
+man’s shoulder.
+
+“I’m Sheila Llyn, and I’m all right in a way, perhaps.”
+
+The troubled, piercing eyes glanced from one to the other.
+
+“No relation?”
+
+“No--never met till a half-hour ago,” remarked Dyck.
+
+The old man drew himself to a sitting posture, then swayed slightly. The
+hands of the girl and Dyck went out behind his back. As they touched his
+back, their fingers met, and Dyck’s covered the girl’s. Their eyes met,
+too, and the story told by Dyck in that moment was the beginning of a
+lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy.
+
+He thought her fingers were wonderfully soft, warm, and full of life;
+and she thought that his was the hand of a master-of a master in the
+field of human effort. That is, if she thought at all, for Dyck’s warm,
+powerful touch almost hypnotized her.
+
+The old peasant understood, however. He was standing on his feet now.
+He was pale and uncertain. He lifted up his bag, and threw it over his
+shoulder.
+
+“Well, I’m not needing you any more, thank God!” he said.
+
+“So Heaven’s blessing on ye, and I bid ye good-bye. You’ve been kind to
+me, and I won’t forget either of ye. If ever I can do ye a good turn,
+I’ll do it.”
+
+“No, we’re not going to leave you until you’re inside your home,” said
+Dyck.
+
+The old man looked at Sheila in meditation. He knew her name and her
+history. Behind the girl’s life was a long prospect of mystery. Llyn was
+her mother’s maiden name. Sheila had never known her father. Never to
+her knowledge had she seen him, because when she was yet an infant her
+mother had divorced him by Act of Parliament, against the wishes of her
+church, and had resumed her maiden name.
+
+Sheila’s father’s name was Erris Boyne, and he had been debauched,
+drunken, and faithless; so at a time of unendurable hurt his wife had
+freed herself. Then, under her maiden name, she had brought up her
+daughter without any knowledge of her father; had made her believe he
+was dead; had hidden her tragedy with a skilful hand.
+
+Only now, when Sheila was released from a governess, had she moved out
+of the little wild area of the County Limerick where she lived; only
+now had she come to visit an uncle whose hospitality she had for so
+many years denied herself. Sheila was two years old when her father
+disappeared, and fifteen years had gone since then.
+
+One on either side of the old man, they went with him up the hillside
+for about three hundred yards, to the door of his house, which was
+little more than a cave in a sudden lift of the hill. He swayed as he
+walked, but by the time they reached his cave-house he was alert again.
+
+The house had two windows, one on either side of the unlocked doorway;
+and when the old man slowly swung the door open, there was shown an
+interior of humble character, but neat and well-ordered. The floor was
+earth, dry and clean. There was a bed to the right, also wholesome and
+dry, with horse-blankets for cover. At the back, opposite the doorway,
+was a fireplace of some size, and in it stood a kettle, a pot, and a
+few small pans, together with a covered saucepan. On either side of
+the fireplace was a three-legged stool, and about the middle of the
+left-hand wall of the room was a chair which had been made out of a
+barrel, some of the staves having been sawn away to make a seat.
+
+Once inside the house, Christopher Dogan laid his bag on the bed and
+waved his hands in a formula of welcome.
+
+“Well, I’m honoured,” he said, “for no one has set foot inside this
+place that I’d rather have here than the two of ye; and it’s wonderful
+to me, Mr. Calhoun, that ye’ve never been inside it before, because
+there’s been times when I’ve had food and drink in plenty. I could have
+made ye comfortable then and stroked ye all down yer gullet. As for you,
+Miss Llyn, you’re as welcome as the shining of the stars of a night when
+there’s no moon. I’m glad you’re here, though I’ve nothing to give ye,
+not a bite nor sup. Ah, yes--but yes,” he suddenly cried, touching his
+head. “Faith, then, I have! I have a drap of somethin’ that’s as good
+as annything dhrunk by the ancient kings of Ireland. It’s a wee cordial
+that come from the cellars of the Bishop of Dunlany, when I cured his
+cook of the evil-stone that was killing her. Ah, thank God!”
+
+He went into a corner on the left of the fireplace, opened an old jar,
+thrust his arm down, and drew out a squat little bottle of cordial. The
+bottle was beautifully made. It was round and hunched, and of glass,
+with an old label from which the writing had faded.
+
+With eyes bright now, Christopher uncorked the bottle and smelled the
+contents. As he did so, a smile crinkled his face.
+
+“Thank the Lord! There’s enough for the two of ye--two fine
+tablespoonfuls of the cordial that’d do anny man good, no matter how bad
+he was, and turn an angel of a woman into an archangel. Bless yer Bowl!”
+
+When Christopher turned to lift down two pewter pots, Calhoun reached up
+swiftly and took them from the shelf. He placed them in the hands of the
+old man, who drew a clean towel of coarse linen from a small cupboard in
+the wall above his head.
+
+She and Dyck held the pots for the old man to pour the cordial into
+them. As he said, there was only a good porridge-spoon of liqueur for
+each. He divided it with anxious care.
+
+“There’s manny a man,” he said, “and manny and manny a lady, too, born
+in the purple, that’d be glad of a dhrink of this cordial from the
+cellar of the bishop.
+
+“Alpha, beta, gamma, delta is the code, and with the word delta,” he
+continued, “dhrink every drop of it, as if it was the last thing you
+were dhrinking on earth; as if the Lord stooped down to give ye a cup of
+blessing from His great flagon of eternal happiness. Ye’ve got two kind
+hearts, but there’s manny a day of throuble will come between ye and the
+end; and yet the end’ll be right, God love ye! Now-alpha, beta, gamma,
+delta!”
+
+With a merry laugh Dyck Calhoun turned up his cup and drained the liquid
+to the last drop. With a laugh not quite so merry, Sheila raised her mug
+and slowly drained the green happiness away.
+
+“Isn’t it good--isn’t it like the love of God?” asked the old man.
+“Ain’t I glad I had it for ye? Why I said I hadn’t annything for ye to
+dhrink or eat, Lord only knows. There’s nothing to eat, and there’s only
+this to dhrink, and I hide it away under the bedclothes of time, as one
+might say. Ah, ye know, it’s been there for three years, and I’d almost
+forgot it. It was a little angel from heaven whispered it to me whir
+ye stepped inside this house. I dunno why I kep’ the stuff. Manny’s the
+time I was tempted to dhrink it myself, and manny’s the time something
+said to me, ‘Not yet.’ The Lord be praised, for I’ve had out of it more
+than I deserve!”
+
+He took the mugs from their hands, and for a minute stood like some
+ancient priest who had performed a noble ritual. As Sheila looked at
+him, she kept saying to herself:
+
+“He’s a spirit; he isn’t a man!”
+
+Dyck’s eye met that of Sheila, and he saw with the same feeling what was
+working in her heart.
+
+“Well, we must be going,” he said to Christopher Dogan. “We must get
+homeward, and we’ve had a good drink--the best I ever tasted. We’re
+proud to pay our respects to you in your own house; and goodbye to you
+till we meet again.”
+
+His hand went out to the shoulder of the peasant and rested there for a
+second in friendly feeling. Then the girl stretched out her hand also.
+The old man took the two cups in one hand, and, reaching out the other,
+let Sheila’s fingers fall upon his own. He slowly crooked his neck, and
+kissed her fingers with that distinction mostly to be found among those
+few good people who live on the highest or the lowest social levels, or
+in native tents.
+
+“Ah, please God we meet again! and that I be let to serve you, Miss
+Sheila Llyn. I have no doubt you could do with a little help some time
+or another, the same as the rest of us. For all that’s come between
+us three, may it be given me, humble and poor, to help ye both that’s
+helped me so!”
+
+Dyck turned to go, and as he did so a thought came to him.
+
+“If you hadn’t food and drink for us, what have you for yourself,
+Christopher?” he asked. “Have you food to eat?”
+
+“Ah, well--well, do ye think I’m no provider? There was no food cooked
+was what I was thinking; but come and let me show you.”
+
+He took the cover off a jar standing in a corner. “Here’s good flour,
+and there’s water, and there’s manny a wild shrub and plant on the
+hillside to make soup, and what more does a man want? With the scone
+cooked and inside ye, don’t ye feel as well as though ye’d had a pound
+of beef or a rasher of bacon? Sure, ye do. I know where there’s clumps
+of wild radishes, and with a little salt they’re good--the best. God
+bless ye!”
+
+A few moments later, as he stood in his doorway and looked along the
+road, he saw two figures, the girl’s head hardly higher than the man’s
+shoulder. They walked as if they had much to get and were ready for it.
+
+“Well, I dunno,” he said to himself. “I dunno about you, Dyck Calhoun.
+You’re wild, and ye have too manny mad friends, but you’ll come all
+right in the end; and that pretty girl--God save her!--she’ll come with
+a smile into your arms by and by, dear lad. But ye have far to go and
+much to do before that.”
+
+His head fell, his eyes stared out into the shining distance.
+
+“I see for ye manny and manny a stroke of bad luck, and manny a wrong
+thing said of ye, and she not believing wan of them. But oh, my God, but
+oh!”--his clenched hands went to his eyes. “I wouldn’t like to travel
+the path that’s before ye--no!”
+
+Down the long road the two young people travelled, gossiping much, both
+of them touched by something sad and mysterious, neither knowing why;
+both of them happy, too, for somehow they had come nearer together than
+years of ordinary life might have made possible. They thought of the old
+man and his hut, and then broke away into talk of their own countryside,
+of the war with France, of the growing rebellious spirit in Ireland, of
+riots in Dublin town, of trouble at Limerick, Cork, and Sligo.
+
+At the gate of the mansion where Sheila was visiting, Dyck put into her
+hands the wild flowers he had picked as they passed, and said:
+
+“Well, it’s been a great day. I’ve never had a greater. Let’s meet
+again, and soon! I’m almost every day upon the hill with my gun, and
+it’d be worth a lot to see you very soon.”
+
+“Oh, you’ll be forgetting me by to-morrow,” the girl said with a little
+wistfulness at her lips, for she had a feeling they would not meet on
+the morrow. Suddenly she picked from the bunch of wild flowers he had
+given her a little sprig of heather.
+
+“Well, if we don’t meet--wear that,” she said, and, laughing over her
+shoulder, turned and ran into the grounds of Loyland Towers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+
+When Dyck entered the library of Playmore, the first words he heard were
+these:
+
+“Howe has downed the French at Brest. He’s smashed the French fleet and
+dealt a sharp blow to the revolution. Hurrah!”
+
+The words were used by Miles Calhoun, Dyck’s father, as a greeting to
+him on his return from the day’s sport.
+
+Now, if there was a man in Ireland who had a narrow view and kept his
+toes pointed to the front, it was Miles Calhoun. His people had lived in
+Connemara for hundreds of years; and he himself had only one passion in
+life, which was the Protestant passion of prejudice. He had ever been
+a follower of Burke--a passionate follower, one who believed the French
+Revolution was a crime against humanity, a danger to the future of
+civilization.
+
+He had resisted more vigorously than most men the progress of
+revolutionary sentiments in Ireland. He was aware that his son had far
+less rigid opinions than himself; that he even defended Wolfe Tone and
+Thomas Emmet against abuse and damnation. That was why he had delight in
+slapping his son in the face, whenever possible, with the hot pennant of
+victory for British power.
+
+He was a man of irascible temperament and stern views, given to fits
+of exasperation. He was small of stature, with a round face, eyes that
+suddenly went red with feeling, and with none of the handsomeness of his
+son, who resembled his mother’s family.
+
+The mother herself had been a beautiful and remarkable woman. Dyck was,
+in a sense, a reproduction of her in body and mind, for a more cheerful
+and impetuous person never made a household happier or more imperfect
+than she made hers.
+
+Her beauty and continual cheerfulness had always been the joy of Dyck’s
+life, and because his mother had married his father--she was a woman of
+sense, with all her lightsome ways--he tried to regard his father with
+profound respect. Since his wife’s death, however, Miles Calhoun had
+deteriorated; he had become unreasonable.
+
+As the elder Calhoun made his announcement about the battle of Brest and
+the English victory, a triumphant smile lighted his flushed face, and
+under his heavy grey brows his eyes danced with malicious joy.
+
+“Howe’s a wonder!” he said. “He’ll make those mad, red republicans hunt
+their holes. Eh, isn’t that your view, Ivy?” he asked of a naval captain
+who had evidently brought the news.
+
+Captain Ivy nodded.
+
+“Yes, it’s a heavy blow for the French bloodsuckers. If their ideas
+creep through Europe and get hold of England, God only knows what the
+end will be! In their view, to alter everything is the only way to
+put things right. No doubt they’ll invent a new way to be born before
+they’ve finished.”
+
+“Well, that wouldn’t be a bad idea,” remarked Dyck. “The present way has
+its demerits.”
+
+“Yes, it throws responsibility upon the man, and gives a heap of trouble
+to the woman,” said Captain Ivy with a laugh; “but they’ll change it
+all, you’ll see.”
+
+Dyck poured himself a glass of port, held it up, sniffed the aroma,
+and looked through the beautiful red tinge of the wine with a happy and
+critical eye.
+
+“Well, the world could be remade in a lot of ways,” he declared. “I
+shouldn’t mind seeing a bit of a revolution in Ireland--but in England
+first,” he hastened to add. “They’re a more outcast folk than the
+Irish.” His father scoffed.
+
+“Look out, Dyck, or they’ll drop you in jail if you talk like that!” he
+chided, his red face growing redder, his fingers nervously feeling
+the buttons on his picturesque silk waistcoat. “There’s conspiracy in
+Ireland, and you never truly know if the man that serves you at your
+table, or brings you your horse, or puts a spade into your ground, isn’t
+a traitor.”
+
+At that moment the door opened, and a servant entered the room. In his
+hand he carried a letter which, with marked excitement, he brought to
+Miles Calhoun.
+
+“Sure, he’s waiting, sir,” he said.
+
+“And who’s he?” asked his master, turning the letter over, as though to
+find out by looking at the seal.
+
+“Oh, a man of consequence, if we’re to judge by the way he’s clothed.”
+
+“Fit company, then?” his master asked, as he opened the heavily sealed
+letter.
+
+“Well, I’m not saying that, for there’s no company good enough for us,”
+ answered the higgledy-piggledy butler, with a quirk of the mouth; “but,
+as messengers go, I never seen one with more style and point.”
+
+“Well, bring him to me,” said Miles Calhoun. “Bring him to me, and I’ll
+form my own judgment--though I have some confidence in yours.”
+
+“You could go further and fare worse, as the Papists say about
+purgatory,” answered the old man with respectful familiarity.
+
+Captain Ivy and Dyck grinned, but the head of the house seemed none too
+pleased at the freedom of the old butler.
+
+“Bring him as he is,” said Miles Calhoun. “Good God!” he added, for
+he just realized that the stamp of the seal was that of the
+Attorney-General of Ireland.
+
+Then he read the letter and a flush swept over his face, making its red
+almost purple.
+
+“Eternal damnation--eternal damnation!” he declared, holding the paper
+at arm’s length a moment, inspecting it. He then handed it to Dyck.
+“Read that, lad. Then pack your bag, for we start for Dublin by daylight
+or before.”
+
+Dyck read the brief document and whistled softly to himself.
+
+“Well, well, you’ve got to obey orders like that, I suppose,” Dyck said.
+“They want to question us as to the state of the country here.”
+
+“I think we can tell them something. I wonder if they know how wide your
+travel is, how many people you see; and if they know, how did they come
+to know? There’s spies all over the place. How do I know but the man
+who’s just left this room isn’t a spy, isn’t the enemy of all of us
+here?”
+
+“I’d suspect Michael Clones,” remarked Dyck, “just as soon as Mulvaney.”
+
+“Michael Clones,” said his father, and he turned to Captain Ivy,
+“Michael Clones I’d trust as I’d trust His blessed Majesty, George III.
+He’s a rare scamp, is Michael Clones! He’s no thicker than a cardboard,
+but he draws the pain out of your hurt like a mustard plaster. A man
+of better sense and greater roguery I’ve never met. You must see him,
+Captain Ivy. He’s only about twelve years older than my son, but, like
+my son, there’s no holding him, there’s no control of him that’s any
+good. He does what he wants to do in his own way--talks when he wants
+to talk, fights when he wants to fight. He’s a man of men, is Michael
+Clones.”
+
+At that moment the door opened and the butler entered, followed by a
+tall, thin, Don Quixote sort of figure.
+
+“His excellency,” said Mulvaney, with a look slightly malevolent, for
+the visitor had refused his name. Then he turned and left the room.
+
+At Mulvaney’s words, an ironical smile crossed the face of the newcomer.
+Then he advanced to Miles Calhoun. Before speaking, however, he glanced
+sharply at Captain Ivy, threw an inquisitive look at Dyck, and said:
+
+“I seem to have hurt the feelings of your butler, sir, but that cannot
+be helped. I have come from the Attorney-General. My name is Leonard
+Mallow--I’m the eldest son of Lord Mallow. I’ve been doing business in
+Limerick, and I bring a message from the Attorney-General to ask you to
+attend his office at the earliest moment.”
+
+Dyck Calhoun, noting his glance at a bottle of port, poured out a glass
+of the good wine and handed it over, saying:
+
+“It’ll taste better to you because you’ve been travelling hard, but it’s
+good wine anyhow. It’s been in the cellar for forty years, and that’s
+something in a land like this.”
+
+Mallow accepted the glass of port, raised it with a little gesture of
+respect, and said:
+
+“Long life to the King, and cursed be his enemies!” So saying he flung
+the wine down his throat--which seemed to gulp it like a well--wiped his
+lips with a handkerchief, and turned to Miles Calhoun again.
+
+“Yes, it’s good wine,” he said; “as good as you’d get in the cellars of
+the Viceroy. I’ve seen strange things as I came. I’ve seen lights on the
+hills, and drunken rioters in the roads and behind hedges, and once a
+shot was fired at me; but here I am, safe and sound, carrying out my
+orders. What time will you start?” he added.
+
+He took it for granted that the summons did not admit of rejection, and
+he was right. The document contained these words:
+
+ Trouble is brewing; indeed, it is at hand. Come, please, at once to
+ Dublin, and give the Lord-Lieutenant and the Government a report
+ upon your district. We do not hear altogether well of it, but no
+ one has the knowledge you possess. In the name of His Majesty you
+ are to present yourself at once at these offices in Dublin, and be
+ assured that the Lord-Lieutenant will give you warm welcome through
+ me. Your own loyalty gives much satisfaction here. I am, sir,
+ Your obedient servant,
+ JOHN MCNOWELL.
+
+“You have confidence in the people’s loyalty here?” asked Mallow.
+
+“As great as in my own,” answered Dyck cheerily. “Well, you ought to
+know what that is. At the same time, I’ve heard you’re a friend of one
+or two dark spirits in the land.”
+
+“I hold no friendships that would do hurt to my country,” answered Dyck
+sharply.
+
+Mallow smiled satirically. “As we’re starting at daylight, I suppose, I
+think I’ll go to bed, if it may be you can put me up.”
+
+“Oh, Lord, yes! We can put you up, Mr. Mallow,” said the old man. “You
+shall have as good a bed as you can find outside the Viceregal Lodge--a
+fourposter, wide and long. It’s been slept in by many a man of place
+and power. But, Mr. Mallow, you haven’t said you’ve had no dinner, and
+you’ll not be going to bed in this house without your food. Did you
+shoot anything to-day, Dyck?” he asked his son.
+
+“I didn’t bring home a feather. There were no birds to-day, but there
+are the ducks I shot yesterday, and the quail.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said his father, “and there’s the little roast pig, too. This
+is a day when we celebrate the anniversary of Irish power and life.”
+
+“What’s that?” asked Mallow.
+
+“That’s the battle of the Boyne,” answered his host with a little
+ostentation.
+
+“Oh, you’re one of the Peep-o’-Day Boys, then,” remarked Mallow.
+
+“I’m not saying that,” answered the old man. “I’m not an Ulsterman, but
+I celebrate the coming of William to the Boyne. Things were done that
+day that’ll be remembered when Ireland is whisked away into the Kingdom
+of Heaven. So you’ll not go to bed till you’ve had dinner, Mr. Mallow!
+By me soul, I think I smell the little porker now. Dinner at five,
+to bed at eight, up before daylight, and off to Dublin when the light
+breaks. That’s the course!” He turned to Captain Ivy. “I’m sorry,
+captain, but there’s naught else to do, and you were going to-morrow at
+noon, anyhow, so it won’t make much difference to you.”
+
+“No difference whatever,” replied the sailorman. “I have to go to
+Dublin, too, and from there to Queenstown to join my ship, and from
+Queenstown to the coast of France to do some fighting.”
+
+“Please God!” remarked Miles Calhoun. “So be it!” declared Mallow.
+
+“Amen!” said Dyck.
+
+Once again Dyck looked the visitor straight in the eyes, and back in the
+horizon of Mallow’s life-sky there shone the light of an evil star.
+
+“There’s the call to dinner,” remarked Miles Calhoun, as a bell began
+ringing in the tower outside. “Come with me, Mr. Mallow, and I’ll show
+you your room. You’ve had your horse put up, I hope?”
+
+“Yes, and my bag brought in.”
+
+“Well, come along, then. There’s no time to lose. I can smell the porker
+crawling from the oven.”
+
+“You’re a master of tempting thoughts,” remarked Mallow
+enthusiastically.
+
+“Sheila--Sheila!” said Dyck Calhoun to himself where he stood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE QUARREL.
+
+The journey to Dublin was made by the Calhouns, their two guests, and
+Michael Clones, without incident of note. Arrived there, Miles Calhoun
+gave himself to examination by Government officials and to assisting
+the designs of the Peep-o’-Day Boys; and indeed he was present at the
+formation of the first Orange Lodge.
+
+His narrow nature, his petty craft and malevolence, were useful in a
+time of anxiety for the State. Yet he had not enough ability to develop
+his position by the chances offered him. He had not a touch of genius;
+he had only bursts of Celtic passion, which he had not mind enough to
+control.
+
+Indeed, as days, weeks and months went on, his position became less
+valuable to himself, and his financial affairs suffered from his own and
+his agent’s bad management. In his particular district he was a power;
+in Dublin he soon showed the weaker side of his nature. He had a bad
+habit of making foes where he could easily have made friends. In his
+personal habits he was sober, but erratic.
+
+Dyck had not his father’s abstention from the luxuries of life. He
+drank, he gamed, he went where temptation was, and fell into it. He
+steadily diminished his powers of resistance to self-indulgence until
+one day, at a tavern, he met a man who made a great impression upon him.
+
+This man was brilliant, ebullient, full of humour, character and life,
+knowing apparently all the lower world of Dublin, and moving with an
+assured step. It was Erris Boyne, the divorced husband of Mrs. Llyn and
+the father of Sheila Llyn; but this fact was not known to Dyck. There
+was also a chance of its not becoming known, because so many years had
+passed since Erris Boyne was divorced.
+
+One day Erris Boyne said to Dyck:
+
+“There’s a supper to-night at the Breakneck Club. Come along and have a
+skinful. You’ll meet people worth knowing. They’re a damned fine lot of
+fellows for you to meet, Calhoun!”
+
+“The Breakneck Club isn’t a good name for a first-class institution,”
+ remarked Dyck, with a pause and a laugh; “but I’ll come, if you’ll fetch
+me.”
+
+Erris Boyne, who was eighteen years older than Dyck, laughed, flicked a
+little pinch of snuff at his nose with his finger.
+
+“Dear lad, of course I’ll come and fetch you,” he said. “There’s many
+a man has done worse than lead a gay stripling like you into pleasant
+ways. Bring along any loose change you have, for it may be a night of
+nights.”
+
+“Oh, they play cards, do they, at the Breakneck Club?” said Dyck, alive
+with interest.
+
+“Well, call it what you like, but men must do something when they
+get together, and we can’t be talking all the time. So pocket your
+shillings.”
+
+“Are they all the right sort?” asked Dyck, with a little touch of
+malice. “I mean, are they loyal and true?”
+
+Erris Boyne laid a hand on Dyck’s arm.
+
+“Come and find out. Do you think I’d lead you into bad company? Of
+course Emmet and Wolfe Tone won’t be there, nor any of that lot; but
+there’ll be some men of the right stamp.” He watched Dyck carefully out
+of the corner of his eye. “It’s funny,” he added, “that in Ireland the
+word loyal always means being true to the Union Jack, standing by King
+George and his crowd.”
+
+“Well, what would you have?” said Dyck. “For this is a day and age when
+being loyal to the King is more than aught else in all the Irish world.
+We’re never two days alike, we Irish. There are the United Irishmen and
+the Defenders on one side, and the Peepo’-Day Boys, or Orangemen, on the
+other--Catholic and Protestant, at each other’s throats. Then there’s
+a hand thrust in, and up goes the sword, and the rifles, pikes, and
+bayonets; and those that were ready to mutilate or kill each other fall
+into each other’s arms.”
+
+Erris Boyne laughed. “Well, there’ll soon be an end to that. The Irish
+Parliament is slipping into disrepute. It wouldn’t surprise me if
+the astute English bribe them into a union, to the ruin of Irish
+Independence. Yet maybe, before that comes, the French will have a try
+for power here. And upon my word, if I have to live under foreign rule,
+I’d as leave have a French whip over me as an English!” He came a step
+nearer, his voice lowered a little. “Have you heard the latest news from
+France? They’re coming with a good-sized fleet down to the south coast.
+Have you heard it?”
+
+“Oh, there’s plenty one hears one doesn’t believe is gospel,” answered
+Dyck, his eyes half closing. “I’m not believing all I hear, as if it
+was a prayer-meeting. Anything may happen here; Ireland’s a woman--very
+uncertain.”
+
+Dyck flicked some dust from his waistcoat, and dropped his eyes, because
+he was thinking of two women he had known; one of them an angel now in
+company of her sister angels--his mother; the other a girl he had met
+on the hills of Connemara, a wonderfully pretty girl of seventeen. How
+should he know that the girl was Erris Boyne’s daughter?--although there
+were times when some gesture of Boyne, some quick look, some lifting of
+the eyebrows, brought back the memory of Sheila Llyn, as it did now.
+
+Since Dyck left his old home he had seen her twice; once at Loyland
+Towers, and once at her home in Limerick. The time he had spent with her
+had been very brief, but full of life, interest, and character. She was
+like some piquant child, bold, beautiful, uncertain, caressing in her
+manner one instant, and distant at another.
+
+She had said radiant things, had rallied him, had shown him where a
+twenty-nine-pound salmon had been caught in a stream, and had fired
+at and brought down a pheasant outside the covert at Loyland Towers.
+Whether at Loyland Towers, or at her mother’s house in Limerick, there
+was no touch of forwardness in her, or in anything she said or did. She
+was the most natural being, the freest from affectation, he had ever
+known.
+
+As Erris Boyne talked to him, the memory of Sheila flooded his mind,
+and on the flood his senses swam like swans. He had not her careful
+composure. He was just as real, but he had the wilfulness of man. She
+influenced him as no woman had ever yet done; but he saw no happy ending
+to the dream. He was too poor to marry; he had no trade or profession;
+his father’s affairs were in a bad way. He could not bring himself to
+join the army or the navy; and yet, as an Irishman moved by political
+ideals, with views at once critical and yet devoted to the crown, he was
+not in a state to settle down.
+
+He did not know that Erris Boyne was set to capture him for the rebel
+cause. How could he know that Boyne was an agent of the most evil forces
+in Ireland--an agent of skill and address, prepossessing, with the face
+of a Celtic poet and the eye of an assassin?
+
+Boyne’s object was to bring about the downfall of Dyck Calhoun--that
+is, his downfall as a patriot. At the Breakneck Club this bad business
+began. Dyck had seen many people, representing the gaiety and deviltry
+of life; but it was as though many doubtful people, many reckless ones,
+all those with purposes, fads, and fancies, were there. Here was an
+irresponsible member of a Government department; there an officer of
+His Majesty’s troops; beyond, a profligate bachelor whose reputation for
+traitorous diplomacy was known and feared. Yet everywhere were men known
+in the sporting, gaming, or political world, in sea life or land life,
+most of whom had a character untouched by criticism.
+
+It was at this club that Dyck again met that tall, ascetic messenger
+from the Attorney-General, who had brought the message to Miles Calhoun.
+It was with this man--Leonard Mallow, eldest son of Lord Mallow--that
+Dyck, with three others, played cards one afternoon.
+
+The instinctive antipathy which had marked their first introduction was
+carried on to this later meeting. Dyck distrusted Mallow, and allowed
+his distrust exercise. It was unfortunate that Mallow won from him
+three-fourths of the money he had brought to the club, and won it with a
+smile not easy to forgive.
+
+Dyck had at last secured sudden success in a scheme of his cards when
+Mallow asked with a sneer:
+
+“Did you learn that at your home in heaven?”
+
+“Don’t they teach it where you live in hell?” was Dyck’s reply.
+
+At this Mallow flicked Dyck across the face with his handkerchief.
+
+“That’s what they teach where I belong.”
+
+“Well, it’s easy to learn, and we’ll do the sum at any time or place you
+please.” After a moment Dyck continued: “I wouldn’t make a fuss over it.
+Let’s finish the game. There’s no good prancing till the sport’s ready;
+so I’ll sit and learn more of what they teach in hell!”
+
+Dyck had been drinking, or he would not have spoken so; and when he
+was drunk daring was strong in him. He hated profoundly this man-so
+self-satisfied and satanic.
+
+He kept a perfect coolness, however. Leonard Mallow should not see that
+he was upset. His wanton wordiness came to his rescue, and until the
+end of the game he played with sang-froid, daring, and skill. He loved
+cards; he loved the strife of skill against skill, of trick against
+trick, of hand against hand. He had never fought a duel in his life, but
+he had no fear of doing so.
+
+At length, having won back nearly all he had lost, he rose to his feet
+and looked round.
+
+“Is there any one here from whom I can ask a favour?”
+
+Several stepped forward. Dyck nodded. One of them he knew. It was Sir
+Almeric Foyle.
+
+“Thank you, Sir Almeric,” he said; “thank you. Shall it be swords or
+pistols?” he asked his enemy, coolly.
+
+“Swords, if you please,” remarked Mallow grimly, for he had a gift with
+the sword.
+
+Dyck nodded again.
+
+“As you will. As you will!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE DUEL
+
+It was a morning such as could only be brought into existence by the
+Maker of mornings in Ireland. It was a day such as Dublin placed away
+carefully into the pantechnicon of famous archives.
+
+The city of Dublin was not always clean, but in the bright, gorgeous sun
+her natural filth was no menace to the eye, no repulse to the senses.
+Above the Liffey, even at so early an hour, the heat shimmers like a
+silver mist. The bells of churches were ringing, and the great cathedral
+bells boomed in thrilling monotony over the peaceful city. Here and
+there in the shabby yet renowned streets, horsemen moved along; now
+and then the costermonger raised his cry of fresh fruit, flowers, and
+“distinguished vegetables.”
+
+People moved into church doorways on their way to mass or
+confession--some bright and rather gorgeous beings, some in deep
+mourning, shy, reserved, and obscure. Here and there, also, in certain
+streets--where officials lived or worked--were soldiers afoot; soldiers
+with carbines and long bayonets, with tall, slightly peaked hats, smart
+red coats, belts crossing their breasts, knee-breeches and leggings, and
+all with epaulets shining. They were in marked contrast to the peasant
+folk with the high-peaked soft hat, knee-breeches, rough tail-coat, and
+stockings, some with rifles, some with pikes, some with powder-horns
+slung under their arms or in the small of the back.
+
+Besides this show of foot-soldiers--that is, regulars and irregulars of
+the Cornwallis Regiment, and men of the Defenders and the Peep-o’-Day
+Boys--there were little groups of cavalry making their way to the
+parade-ground, the castle, the barracks, or the courts.
+
+Beyond these there was the jaunting-car trundling over the rough
+cobblestone street, or bumping in and out of dangerous holes. Whips
+cracked, and the loud voices of jarveys shouted blatant humour and Irish
+fun at horse and passenger. Here and there, also, some stately coach,
+bedizened with arms of the quality, made its way through the chief
+streets, or across the bridges of the Liffey.
+
+Then came the general population, moving cheerfully in the inspiriting
+sun; for Irishmen move so much in a moist atmosphere that on a sunshiny
+day all tristesse of life seems changed, as in a flash, into high
+spirits and much activity. Not that the country, at its worst, is
+slow-footed or depressed; for wit is always at the elbow of want.
+
+Never in all Ireland’s years had she a more beautiful day than that
+in which Dyck Calhoun and the Hon. Leonard Mallow met to settle their
+account in a secluded corner of Phoenix Park. It was not the usual
+place for duels. The seconds had taken care to keep the locale from the
+knowledge of the public; especially as many who had come to know of the
+event at the Breakneck Club were eager to be present.
+
+The affair began an hour after sunrise. Neither Dyck nor Leonard Mallow
+slept at home the night before, but in separate taverns near Phoenix
+Park. Mallow came almost jauntily to the obscure spot. Both men had
+sensitiveness, and both entered the grounds with a certain sense of
+pleasure.
+
+Dyck moved and spoke like a man charged with some fluid which had
+abstracted him from life’s monotonous routine. He had to consider the
+chance of never leaving the grounds alive; yet as he entered the place,
+where smooth grass between the trees made good footing for the work to
+be done, the thrill of the greenery, the sound of the birds, the flick
+of a lizard across the path, and the distant gay leap of a young deer,
+brought to his senses a gust of joyous feeling.
+
+“I never smelled such air!” he said to one of the seconds. “I never saw
+the sun so beautiful!” He sniffed the air and turned his face towards
+the sun. “Well, it’s a day for Ireland,” he added, in response to a
+gravely playful remark of Sir Almeric Foyle. “Ireland never was so
+sweet. Nature’s provoking us!”
+
+“Yes, it’s a pity,” said Sir Almeric. “But I’m not thinking of bad luck
+for you, Calhoun.”
+
+Dyck’s smile seemed to come from infinite distance. He was not normal;
+he was submerged. He was in the great, consuming atmosphere of the
+bigger world, and the greater life. He even did not hate Mallow at the
+moment. The thing about to be done was to him a test of manhood. It was
+a call upon the courage of the soul, a challenge of life, strength, and
+will.
+
+As Mallow entered the grounds, the thought of Sheila Llyn crossed Dyck’s
+mind, and the mental sight of her gladdened the eyes of his soul. For
+one brief instant he stood lost in the mind’s look; then he stepped
+forward, saluted, shook hands with Mallow, and doffed his coat and
+waistcoat.
+
+As he did so, he was conscious of a curious coldness, even of dampness,
+in the hand which had shaken that of Mallow. Mallow’s hand had a clammy
+touch--clammy, but firm and sure. There was no tremor in the long, thin
+fingers nor at the lips--the thin, ascetic lips, as of a secret-service
+man--but in his eyes was a dark fire of purpose. The morning had touched
+him, but not as it had thrown over Dyck its mantle of peace. Mallow
+also had enjoyed the smell and feeling of it all, but with this
+difference--it had filled him with such material joy that he could not
+bear the thought of leaving it. It gave him strength of will, which
+would add security to his arm and wrist. Yet, as he looked at Dyck, he
+saw that his work was cut out for him; for in all his days he had never
+seen a man so well-possessed, so surely in hand.
+
+Dyck had learned swordsmanship with as skilled a master as Ireland had
+known, and he had shown, in getting knowledge of the weapon, a natural
+instinct and a capacity worthy of the highest purpose. He had handled
+the sword since he was six, and his play was better than that of most
+men; but this was, in fact, his first real duel. In the troubled state
+of Ireland, with internal discord, challenge, and attack, he had more
+than once fought, and with success; but that was in the rough-and-tumble
+of life’s chances, as it were, with no deliberate plan to fight
+according to the rules. Many times, of course, in the process of
+his training, he had fought as men fight in duels, but with this
+difference--that now he was permitted to disable or kill his foe.
+
+It was clear that one or the other would not leave this ground--this
+verdant, beautiful piece of mother earth--exactly as he entered it. He
+would leave it wounded, incapable, or dead. Indeed, both might leave
+it wounded, and the chances of success were with the older man, Mallow,
+whose experience would give him an advantage.
+
+Physically, there was not a vast deal to choose between the two men.
+Mallow was lank and tall, nervously self-contained, finely concentrated,
+and vigorous. Dyck was broad of shoulder, well set up, muscular, and
+with a steadier eye than that of his foe. Also, as the combat developed,
+it was clear that he had a hand as steady as his eye. What was more, his
+wrist had superb strength and flexibility; it was as enduring and vital
+as the forefoot and ankle of a tiger. As a pair they were certainly
+notable, and would give a good account of themselves.
+
+No one of temperament who observed the scene could ever forget it. The
+light was perfect--evenly distributed, clear enough to permit accuracy
+of distance in a stroke. The air was still, gently bracing, and, like
+most Irish air, adorably sweet.
+
+The spot chosen for the fight was a sort of avenue between great trees,
+whose broad leaves warded off the direct sun, and whose shade had as
+yet no black shadows. The turf was as elastic to the foot as a firm
+mattress. In the trees, birds were singing with liveliness; in the
+distance, horned cattle browsed, and a pair of horses stood gazing at
+the combatants, startled, no doubt, by this invasion of their pasturage.
+From the distance came the faint, mellow booming of church-bells.
+
+The two men fighting had almost the air of gladiators. Their coats were
+off, and the white linen of their shirts looked gracious; while the
+upraised left hand of the fighters balancing the sword-thrust and the
+weight of the body had an almost singular beauty. Of the two, Dyck was
+the more graceful, the steadier, the quicker in his motions.
+
+Vigilant Dyck was, but not reckless. He had made the first attack, on
+the ground that the aggressor gains by boldness, if that boldness is
+joined to skill; and Dyck’s skill was of the best. His heart was warm.
+His momentary vision of Sheila Llyn remained with him--not as a vision,
+rather as a warmth in his inmost being, something which made him
+intensely alert, cheerful, defiant, exactly skilful.
+
+He had need of all his skill, for Mallow was set to win the fight. He
+felt instinctively what was working in Dyck’s mind. He had fought a
+number of duels, and with a certain trick or art he had given the end
+to the lives of several. He became conscious, however, that Dyck had a
+particular stroke in mind, which he himself was preventing by masterful
+methods. It might be one thing or another, but in view of Dyck’s
+training it would perhaps be the Enniscorthy touch.
+
+Again and again Dyck pressed his antagonist backward, seeking to muddle
+his defence and to clear an opening for his own deadly stroke; but the
+other man also was a master, and parried successfully.
+
+Presently, with a quick move, Mallow took the offensive, and tried to
+unsettle Dyck’s poise and disorganize his battle-plan. For an instant
+the tempestuous action, the brilliant, swift play of the sword,
+the quivering flippancy of the steel, gave Dyck that which almost
+disconcerted him. Yet he had a grip of himself, and preserved his
+defence intact; though once his enemy’s steel caught his left shoulder,
+making it bleed. The seconds, however, decided that the thrust was not
+serious, and made no attempt to interrupt the combat.
+
+Dyck kept singularly cool. As Mallow’s face grew flushed, his own grew
+paler, but it was the paleness of intensity and not of fear. Each man’s
+remarkable skill in defence was a good guarantee against disaster due to
+carelessness. Seldom have men fought so long and accomplished so little
+in the way of blood-letting. At length, however, Dyck’s tactics changed.
+Once again he became aggressive, and he drove his foe to a point where
+the skill of both men was tried to the uttermost. It was clear the time
+had come for something definite. Suddenly Dyck threw himself back with
+an agile step, lunged slightly to one side, and then in a gallant
+foray got the steel point into the sword-arm of his enemy. That was
+the Enniscorthy stroke, which had been taught him by William Tandy,
+the expert swordsman, and had been made famous by Lord Welling, of
+Enniscorthy. It succeeded, and it gave Dyck the victory, for Mallow’s
+sword dropped from his hand.
+
+A fatigued smile came to Mallow’s lips. He clasped the wounded arm with
+his left hand as the surgeon came forward.
+
+“Well, you got it home,” he said to Dyck; “and it’s deftly done.”
+
+“I did my best,” answered Dyck. “Give me your hand, if you will.”
+
+With a wry look Mallow, now seated on the old stump of a tree, held out
+his left hand. It was covered with blood.
+
+“I think we’ll have to forego that courtesy, Calhoun,” he said. “Look
+at the state of my hand! It’s good blood,” he added grimly. “It’s damned
+good blood, but--but it won’t do, you see.”
+
+“I’m glad it was no worse,” said Dyck, not touching the bloody hand.
+“It’s a clean thrust, and you’ll be better from it soon. These great
+men”--he smiled towards the surgeons--“will soon put you right. I got
+my chance with the stroke, and took it, because I knew if I didn’t you’d
+have me presently.”
+
+“You’ll have a great reputation in Dublin town now, and you’ll deserve
+it,” Mallow added adroitly, the great paleness of his features, however,
+made ghastly by the hatred in his eyes.
+
+Dyck did not see this look, but he felt a note of malice--a distant
+note--in Mallow’s voice. He saw that what Mallow had said was fresh
+evidence of the man’s arrogant character. It did not offend him,
+however, for he was victor, and could enter the Breakneck Club or Dublin
+society with a tranquil eye.
+
+Again Mallow’s voice was heard.
+
+“I’d have seen you damned to hell, Calhoun, before I’d have apologized
+at the Breakneck Club; but after a fight with one of the best swordsmen
+in Ireland I’ve learned a lot, and I’ll apologize now--completely.”
+
+The surgeon had bound up the slight wound in Dyck’s shoulder, had
+stopped the bleeding, and was now helping him on with his coat. The
+operation had not been without pain, but this demonstration from his
+foe was too much for him. It drove the look of pain from his face; it
+brought a smile to his lips. He came a step nearer.
+
+“I’m as obliged to you as if you’d paid for my board and lodging,
+Mallow,” he said; “and that’s saying a good deal in these days.
+I’ll never have a bigger fight. You’re a greater swordsman than
+your reputation. I must have provoked you beyond reason,” he went on
+gallantly. “I think we’d better forget the whole thing.”
+
+“I’m a Loyalist,” Mallow replied. “I’m a Loyalist, and if you’re one,
+too, what reason should there be for our not being friends?”
+
+A black cloud flooded Calhoun’s face.
+
+“If--if I’m a Loyalist, you say! Have you any doubt of it? If you
+have--”
+
+“You wish your sword had gone into my heart instead of my arm, eh?”
+ interrupted Mallow. “How easily I am misunderstood! I meant nothing by
+that ‘if.’” He smiled, and the smile had a touch of wickedness. “I
+meant nothing by it-nothing at all. As we are both Loyalists, we must be
+friends. Good-bye, Calhoun!”
+
+Dyck’s face cleared very slowly. Mallow was maddening, but the look of
+the face was not that of a foe. “Well, let us be friends,” Dyck answered
+with a cordial smile. “Good-bye,” he added. “I’m damned sorry we had to
+fight at all. Good-bye!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+
+“There’s many a government has made a mess of things in Ireland,” said
+Erris Boyne; “but since the day of Cromwell the Accursed this is the
+worst. Is there a man in Ireland that believes in it, or trusts it?
+There are men that support it, that are served by it, that fill their
+pockets out of it; but by Joseph and by Mary, there’s none thinks there
+couldn’t be a better! Have a little more marsala, Calhoun?”
+
+With these words, Boyne filled up the long glass out of which Dyck
+Calhoun had been drinking--drinking too much. Shortly before Dyck had
+lost all his cash at the card-table. He had turned from it penniless and
+discomfited to see Boyne, smiling, and gay with wine, in front of him.
+
+Boyne took him by the arm.
+
+“Come with me,” said he. “There’s no luck for you at the tables to-day.
+Let’s go where we can forget the world, where we can lift the banner of
+freedom and beat the drums of purpose. Come along, lad!”
+
+Boyne had ceased to have his earlier allurement for Dyck Calhoun, but
+his smile was friendly, his manner was hospitable, and he was on the
+spot. The time was critical for Dyck--critical and dangerous. He had
+lost money heavily; he had even exhausted his mother’s legacy.
+
+Of late he had seen little of his father, and the little he had seen
+was not fortunate. They had quarrelled over Dyck’s wayward doings. Miles
+Calhoun had said some hard things to him, and Dyck had replied that he
+would cut out his own course, trim his own path, walk his own way. He
+had angered his father terribly, and Miles, in a burst of temper, had
+disclosed the fact that his own property was in peril. They had been,
+estranged ever since; but the time had come when Dyck must at least
+secure the credit of his father’s name at his bank to find the means of
+living.
+
+It was with this staring him in the face that Erris Boyne’s company
+seemed to offer at least a recovery of his good spirits. Dissipated as
+Boyne’s look was, he had a natural handsomeness which, with good care of
+himself personally, well-appointed clothes, a cheerful manner, and witty
+talk, made him palatable to careless-living Dublin.
+
+This Dublin knew little of Boyne’s present domestic life. It did not
+know that he had injured his second wife as badly as he had wronged his
+first--with this difference, however, that his first wife was a lady,
+while his second wife, Noreen, was a beautiful, quick-tempered, lovable
+eighteen-year-old girl, a graduate of the kitchen and dairy, when he
+took her to himself. He had married her in a mad moment after his first
+wife--Mrs. Llyn, as she was now called--had divorced him; and after
+the first thrill of married life was over, nothing remained with Boyne
+except regret that he had sold his freedom for what he might, perhaps,
+have had without marriage.
+
+Then began a process of domestic torture which alienated Noreen from
+him, and roused in her the worst passions of human nature. She came to
+know of his infidelities, and they maddened her. They had no children,
+and in the end he had threatened her with desertion. When she had
+retorted in strong words, he slapped her face, and left her with an ugly
+smile.
+
+The house where they lived was outside Dublin, in a secluded spot,
+yet not far from stores and shops. There was this to be said for
+Noreen--that she kept her home spotlessly clean, even with two
+indifferent servants. She had a gift for housewifery, which, at its
+best, was as good as anything in the world, and far better than could be
+found in most parts of Ireland.
+
+Of visitors they had few, if any, and the young wife was left alone to
+brood upon her wrongs. Erris Boyne had slapped her face on the morning
+of the day when he met Dyck Calhoun in the hour of his bad luck. He did
+not see the look in her face as he left the house.
+
+Ruthless as he was, he realized the time had come when by bold effort he
+might get young Calhoun wholly into his power. He began by getting Dyck
+into the street. Then he took him by an indirect route to what was,
+reputedly, a tavern of consequence. There choice spirits met on
+occasion, and dark souls, like Boyne, planned adventures. Outwardly it
+was a tavern of the old class, superficially sedate, and called the Harp
+and Crown. None save a very few conspirators knew how great a part
+it played in the plan to break the government of Ireland and to ruin
+England’s position in the land.
+
+The entrance was by two doors--one the ordinary public entrance, the
+other at the side of the house, which was on a corner. This could be
+opened by a skeleton key owned by Erris Boyne.
+
+He and Dyck entered, however, by the general entrance, because Boyne had
+forgotten his key. They passed through the bar-parlour, nodding to one
+or two habitues, and presently were bestowed in a room, not large, but
+well furnished. It was quiet and alluring on this day when the world
+seemed disconcerting. So pleasantly did the place affect Dyck’s spirits
+that, as he sat down in the room which had often housed worse men than
+himself, he gave a sigh of relief.
+
+They played cards, and Dyck won. He won five times what he had lost at
+the club. This made him companionable.
+
+“It’s a poor business-cards,” he said at last. “It puts one up in the
+clouds and down in the ditch all at the same time. I tell you this,
+Boyne--I’m going to stop. No man ought to play cards who hasn’t a
+fortune; and my fortune, I’m sorry to say, is only my face!” He laughed
+bitterly.
+
+“And your sword--you’ve forgotten that, Calhoun. You’ve a lot of luck in
+your sword.”
+
+“Well, I’ve made no money out of it so far,” Dyck retorted cynically.
+
+“Yet you’ve put men with reputations out of the running, men like
+Mallow.”
+
+“Oh, that was a bit of luck and a few tricks I’ve learned. I can’t start
+a banking-account on that.”
+
+“But you can put yourself in the way of winning what can’t be bought.”
+
+“No--no English army for me, thank you--if that’s what you mean.”
+
+“It isn’t what I mean. In the English army a man’s a slave. He can
+neither eat, nor drink, nor sleep without being under command. He has to
+do a lot of dirty work without having voice in the policy. He’s a child
+of discipline and order.”
+
+“And a damned good thing that would be for most of us!” retorted Dyck.
+“But I’m not one of the most.”
+
+“I know that. Try a little more of this marsala, Calhoun. It’s the best
+in the place, and it’s got a lot of good stuff. I’ve been coming to the
+Harp and Crown for many years, and I’ve never had a bad drink all that
+time. The old landlord is a genius. He doesn’t put on airs. He’s a good
+man, is old Swinton, and there’s nothing good in the drink of France
+that you can’t get here.”
+
+“Well, if that’s true, how does it happen?” asked Dyck, with a little
+flash of interest. “Why should this little twopenny, one-horse place--I
+mean in size and furnishments--have such luck as to get the best there
+is in France? It means a lot of trouble, eh?”
+
+“It means some trouble. But let me tell you”--he leaned over the table
+and laid a hand on Dyck’s, which was a little nervous--“let me speak as
+an old friend to you, if I may. Here are the facts. For many a year, you
+know as well as I do, ships have been coming from France to Ireland
+with the very best wines and liquors, and taking back the very best
+wool--smuggled, of course. Well, our little landlord here is the
+damnedest rogue of all. The customs never touch him. From the coast
+the stuff comes up to Dublin without a check, and, as he’s a special
+favourite, he gets the best to be had in la belle France.”
+
+“Why is he such a favourite?” asked Dyck.
+
+Erris Boyne laughed, not loudly, but suggestively. “When a lady kisses a
+man on the lips, of her own free will, and puts her arm around his neck,
+is it done, do you think, because it’s her duty to do it or die? No,
+it’s because she likes the man; because the man is a good friend to
+her; because it’s money in her pocket. That’s the case with old Swinton.
+France kisses him, as it were, because”--he paused, as though debating
+what to say--“because France knows he’d rather be under her own
+revolutionary government than under the monarchy of England.”
+
+His voice had resonance, and, as he said these words, it had insistence.
+
+“Do you know, Calhoun, I think old Swinton is right. We suffer here
+because monarchy, with its cruel hand of iron, mistrusts us, brutalizes
+us.”
+
+He did not see enlightenment come into the half-drunken eyes of Dyck.
+He only realized that Dyck was very still, and strangely, deeply
+interested.
+
+“I tell you, Calhoun, we need in Ireland something of the spirit that’s
+alive in France to-day. They’ve cleaned out the kings--Louis’s and
+Marie’s heads have dropped into the basket. They’re sweeping the dirt
+out of France; they’re cleaning the dark places; they’re whitewashing
+Versailles and sawdusting the Tuileries; they’re purging the
+aristocratic guts of France; they’re starting for the world a
+reformation which will make it clean. Not America alone, but England,
+and all Europe, will become republics.”
+
+“England?” asked Dyck in a low, penetrating voice. “Aye, England,
+through Ireland. Ireland will come first, then Wales, Scotland, and
+England. Dear lad, the great day is come--the greatest the world has
+ever known. France, the spirit of it, is alive. It will purge and
+cleanse the universe!”
+
+The suspicious, alert look passed from Dyck’s eyes, but his face had
+become flushed. He reached out and poured himself another glass of wine.
+
+“What you say may be true, Boyne. It may be true, but I wouldn’t put
+faith in it--not for one icy minute. I don’t want to see here in Ireland
+the horrors and savagery of France. I don’t want to see the guillotine
+up on St. Stephen’s Green.”
+
+Boyne felt that he must march carefully. He was sure of his game; but
+there were difficulties, and he must not throw his chances away. Dyck
+was in a position where, with his inflammable nature, he could be
+captured.
+
+“Well, I’ll tell you, Calhoun. I don’t know which is worse--Ireland
+bloody with shootings and hangings, Ulster up in the north and Cork
+in the south, from the Giant’s Causeway to Tralee; no two sets of feet
+dancing alike, with the bloody hand of England stretching out over the
+Irish Parliament like death itself; or France ruling us. How does the
+English government live here? Only by bribery and purchases. It buys its
+way. Isn’t that true?”
+
+Dyck nodded. “Yes, it’s true in a way,” he replied. “It’s so, because
+we’re what we are. We’ve never been properly put in our places. The heel
+on our necks--that’s the way to do it.”
+
+Boyne looked at the flushed, angry face. In spite of Dyck’s words, he
+felt that his medicine was working well.
+
+“Listen to me, Calhoun,” he said softly. “You’ve got to do something.
+You’re living an idle life. You’re in debt. You’ve ruined your
+independent fortune at the tables. There are but two courses open to
+you. One is to join the British forces--to be a lieutenant, a captain,
+a major, a colonel, or a general, in time; to shoot and cut and hang and
+quarter, and rule with a heavy rod. That’s one way.”
+
+“So you think I’m fit for nothing but the sword, eh?” asked Dyck with
+irony. “You think I’ve got no brains for anything except the army.”
+
+Boyne laughed. “Have another drink, Calhoun.” He poured out more wine.
+“Oh, no, not the army alone; there’s the navy--and there’s the French
+navy! It’s the best navy in the world, the freest and the greatest, and
+with Bonaparte going at us, England will have enough to do--too
+much, I’m thinking. So there’s a career in the French navy open. And
+listen--before you and I are two months older, the French navy will
+be in the harbours of Ireland, and the French army will land here.” He
+reached out and grasped Dyck’s arm. “There’s no liberty of freedom under
+the Union Jack. What do you think of the tricolour? It’s a great flag,
+and under it the world is going to be ruled--England, Spain, Italy,
+Holland, Prussia, Austria, and Russia--all of them. The time is ripe.
+You’ve got your chance. Take it on, dear lad, take it on.”
+
+Dyck did not raise his head. He was leaning forward with both arms on
+the table, supporting himself firmly; his head was bowed as though
+with deep interest in what Boyne said. And, indeed, his interest was
+great--so great that all his manhood, vigour, all his citizenship, were
+vitally alive. Yet he did not lift his head.
+
+“What’s that you say about French ships in the harbours of Ireland?” he
+said in a tone that showed interest. “Of course, I know there’s been a
+lot of talk of a French raid on Ireland, but I didn’t know it was to be
+so soon.”
+
+“Oh, it’s near enough! It’s all been arranged,” replied Boyne. “There’ll
+be ships-war-ships, commanded by Hoche. They’ll have orders to land
+on the coast, to join the Irish patriots, to take control of the
+operations, and then to march on--”
+
+He was going to say “march on Dublin,” but he stopped. He was playing a
+daring game. If he had not been sure of his man, he would not have been
+so frank and fearless.
+
+He did not, however, mislead Dyck greatly. Dyck had been drinking a good
+deal, but this knowledge of a French invasion, and a sense of what Boyne
+was trying to do, steadied his shaken emotions; held him firmly in the
+grip of practical common sense. He laughed, hiccuped a little, as though
+he was very drunk, and said:
+
+“Of course the French would like to come to Ireland; they’d like to
+seize it and hold it. Why, of course they would! Don’t we know all
+that’s been and gone? Aren’t Irishmen in France grown rich in industry
+there after having lost every penny of their property here? Aren’t there
+Irishmen there, always conniving to put England at defiance here by
+breaking her laws, cheating her officers, seducing her patriots? Of
+course; but what astounds me is that a man of your standing should
+believe the French are coming here now to Ireland. No, no, Boyne; I’m
+not taking your word for any of these things. You’re a gossip; you’re a
+damned, pertinacious, preposterous gossip, and I’ll say it as often as
+you like.”
+
+“So it’s proof you want, is it? Well, then, here it is.”
+
+Boyne drew from his pocket a small leather-bound case and took from it a
+letter, which he laid on the table in front of Dyck.
+
+Dyck looked at the document, then said:
+
+“Ah, that’s what you are, eh?--a captain in the French artillery! Well,
+that’d be a surprise in Ireland if it were told.”
+
+“It isn’t going to be told unless you tell it, Calhoun, and you’re too
+much of a sportsman for that. Besides:
+
+“Why shouldn’t you have one of these if you want it--if you want it!”
+
+“What’d be the good of my wanting it? I could get a commission here in
+the army of George III, if I wanted it, but I don’t want it; and any
+man that offers it to me, I’ll hand it back with thanks and be damned to
+you!”
+
+“Listen to me, then, Calhoun,” remarked Boyne, reaching out a hand to
+lay it on Dyck’s arm.
+
+Dyck saw the motion, however, and carefully drew back in his chair. “I’m
+not an adventurer,” he said; “but if I were, what would there be in it
+for me?”
+
+Boyne misunderstood the look on Dyck’s face. He did not grasp the
+meaning behind the words, and he said to him:
+
+“Oh, a good salary--as good as that of a general, with a commission and
+the spoils of war! That’s the thing in the French army that counts for
+so much--spoils of war. When they’re out on a country like this, they
+let their officers loose--their officers and men. Did you ever hear tell
+of a French army being pinched for fodder, or going thirsty for drink,
+or losing its head for poverty or indigence?”
+
+“No, I never did.”
+
+“Well, then, take the advice of an officer of the French army resident
+now in Dublin,” continued Boyne, laughing, “who has the honour of being
+received as the friend of Mr. Dyck Calhoun of Playmore! Take your hand
+in the game that’s going on! For a man as young as you, with brains and
+ambition, there’s no height he mightn’t reach in this country. Think
+of it--Ireland free from English control; Ireland, with all her dreams,
+living her own life, fearless, independent, as it was in days of yore.
+Why, what’s to prevent you, Dyck Calhoun, from being president of the
+Irish Republic? You have brains, looks, skill, and a wonderful tongue.
+None but a young man could take on the job, for it will require
+boldness, skill, and the recklessness of perfect courage. Isn’t it good
+enough for you?”
+
+“What’s the way to do it?” asked Dyck, still holding on to his old self
+grimly. “How is it to be done?” He spoke a little thickly, for, in spite
+of himself, the wine was clogging his senses. It had been artistically
+drugged by Boyne.
+
+“Listen to me, Calhoun,” continued Boyne. “I’ve known you now some time.
+We’ve come in and gone out together. This day was inevitable. You were
+bound to come to it one way or another. Man, you have a heart of iron;
+you have the courage of Caesar or Alexander; you have the chance of
+doing what no Englishman could ever do--Cromwell, or any other. Well,
+then, don’t you see the fateful moment has come in Irish life and
+history? Strife everywhere! Alone, what can we do? Alone, if we try to
+shake off the yoke that binds us we shall be shattered, and our last
+end be worse than our first. But with French ships, French officers and
+soldiers, French guns and ammunition, with the trained men of the French
+army to take control here, what amelioration of our weakness, what
+confidence and skill on our side! Can you doubt what the end will be?
+Answer me, man, don’t you see it all? Isn’t it clear to you? Doesn’t
+such a cause enlist you?”
+
+With a sudden burst of primitive anger, Dyck got to his feet, staggering
+a little, but grasping the fatal meaning of the whole thing. He looked
+Erris Boyne in the eyes. His own were bloodshot and dissipated, but
+there was a look in them of which Boyne might well take heed.
+
+Boyne had not counted on Dyck’s refusal; or, if it had occurred to
+him, the remedy, an ancient one, was ready to his fingers. The wine was
+drugged. He had watched the decline of Dyck’s fortunes with an eye of
+appreciation; he had seen the clouds of poverty and anxiety closing
+in. He had known of old Miles Calhoun’s financial difficulties. He had
+observed Dyck’s wayside loitering with revolutionists, and he had taken
+it with too much seriousness. He knew the condition of Dyck’s purse.
+
+He was not prepared for Dyck’s indignant outburst.
+
+“I tell you this, Erris Boyne, there’s none has ever tried me as you
+have done! What do you think I am--a thing of the dirty street-corner,
+something to be swept up and cast into the furnace of treason? Look you,
+after to-day you and I will never break bread or drink wine together.
+No--by Heaven, no! I don’t know whether you’ve told me the truth or not,
+but I think you have. There’s this to say--I shall go from this place
+to Dublin Castle, and shall tell them there--without mentioning your
+name--what you’ve told about the French raid. Now, by God, you’re a
+traitor! You oughtn’t to live, and if you’ll send your seconds to me
+I’ll try and do with you as I did with Leonard Mallow. Only mark me,
+Erris Boyne, I’ll put my sword into your heart. You understand--into
+your filthy heart!”
+
+At that moment the door of the room opened, and a face looked in for
+an instant-the face of old Swinton, the landlord of the Harp and Crown.
+Suddenly Boyne’s look changed. He burst into a laugh, and brought his
+fists down on the table between them with a bang.
+
+“By Joseph and by Mary, but you’re a patriot, Calhoun! I was trying to
+test you. I was searching to find the innermost soul of you. The French
+fleet, my commission in the French army, and my story about the landlord
+are all bosh. If I meant what I told you, do you think I’d have been so
+mad as to tell you so much, damn it? Have you no sense, man? I wanted to
+find out exactly how you stood-faithful or unfaithful to the crown--and
+I’ve found out. Sit down, sit down, Calhoun, dear lad. Take your hand
+off your sword. Remember, these are terrible days. Everything I said
+about Ireland is true. What I said about France is false. Sit down, man,
+and if you’re going to join the king’s army--as I hope and trust you
+will--then here’s something to help you face the time between.” He threw
+on the table a packet of notes. “They’re good and healthy, and will buy
+you what you need. There’s not much. There’s only a hundred pounds, but
+I give it to you with all my heart, and you can pay it back when the
+king’s money comes to you, or when you marry a rich woman.”
+
+He said it all with a smile on his face. It was done so cleverly,
+with so much simulated sincerity, that Dyck, in his state of
+semi-drunkenness, could not, at the instant, place him in his true
+light. Besides, there was something handsome and virile in Boyne’s
+face--and untrue; but the untruth Dyck did not at the moment see.
+
+Never in his life had Boyne performed such prodigies of dissimulation.
+He was suddenly like a schoolboy disclosing the deeds of some
+adventurous knight. He realized to the full the dangers he had run in
+disclosing the truth; for it was the truth that he had told.
+
+So serious was the situation, to his mind, that one thing seemed
+inevitable. Dyck must be kidnapped at once and carried out of Ireland.
+It would be simple. A little more drugged wine, and he would be asleep
+and powerless--it had already tugged at him. With the help of his
+confreres in the tavern, Dyck could be carried out, put on a lugger, and
+sent away to France.
+
+There was nothing else to do. Boyne had said truly that the French fleet
+meant to come soon. Dyck must not be able to give the thing away before
+it happened. The chief thing now was to prime him with the drugged wine
+till he lost consciousness, and then carry him away to the land of the
+guillotine. Dyck’s tempestuous nature, the poetry and imagination of
+him, would quickly respond to French culture, to the new orders of the
+new day in France. Meanwhile, he must be soaked in drugged drink.
+
+Already the wine had played havoc with him; already stupefaction was
+coming over his senses. With a good-natured, ribald laugh, Boyne
+poured out another glass of marsala and pushed it gently over to Dyck’s
+fingers.
+
+“My gin to your marsala,” he said, and he raised his own glass of gin,
+looking playfully over the top to Dyck.
+
+With a sudden loosening of all the fibres of his nature, Dyck raised the
+glass of marsala to his lips and drained it off almost at a gulp.
+
+“You’re a prodigious liar, Boyne,” he said. “I didn’t think any one
+could lie so completely.”
+
+“I’ll teach you how, Calhoun. It’s not hard. I’ll teach you how.”
+
+He passed a long cigar over the table to Dyck, who, however, did not
+light it, but held it in his fingers. Boyne struck a light and held it
+out across the small table. Dyck leaned forward, but, as he did so, the
+wine took possession of his senses. His head fell forward in sleep, and
+the cigar dropped from his fingers.
+
+“Ah, well--ah, well, we must do some business now!” remarked Boyne. He
+leaned over Dyck for a moment. “Yes, sound asleep,” he said, and laughed
+scornfully to himself. “Well, when it’s dark we must get him away. He’ll
+sleep for four or five hours, and by that time he’ll be out on the way
+to France, and the rest is easy.”
+
+He was about to go to the door that led into the business part of the
+house, when the door leading into the street opened softly, and a woman
+stepped inside. She had used the key which Boyne had forgotten at his
+house.
+
+At first he did not hear her. Then, when he did turn round, it was too
+late. The knife she carried under her skirt flashed out and into Boyne’s
+heart. He collapsed on the floor without a sound, save only a deep sigh.
+
+Stooping over, Noreen drew the knife out with a little gurgling cry--a
+smothered exclamation. Then she opened the door again--the side-door
+leading into the street-closed it softly, and was gone.
+
+Two hours afterwards the landlord opened the door. Erris Boyne lay in
+his silence, stark and still. At the table, with his head sunk in his
+arms, sat Dyck Calhoun, snoring stertorously, his drawn sword by his
+side.
+
+With a cry the old man knelt on the floor beside the body of Erris
+Boyne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. DYCK IN PRISON
+
+When Dyck Calhoun waked, he was in the hands of the king’s constables,
+arrested for the murder of Erris Boyne. It was hard to protest his
+innocence, for the landlord was ready to swear concerning a quarrel
+he had seen when he opened the door for a moment. Dyck, with sudden
+caution, only said he would make all clear at the trial.
+
+Dublin and Ireland were shocked and thrilled; England imagined she had
+come upon one of the most violent episodes of Irish history. One journal
+protested that it was not possible to believe in Dyck Calhoun’s guilt;
+that his outward habits were known to all, and were above suspicion,
+although he had collogued--though never secretly, so far as the world
+knew--with some of the advanced revolutionary spirits. None of the loyal
+papers seemed aware of Erris Boyne’s treachery; and while none spoke of
+him with approval, all condemned his ugly death.
+
+Driven through the streets of Dublin in a jaunting-car between two of
+the king’s police, Dyck was a mark for abuse by tongue, but was here and
+there cheered by partizans of the ultra-loyal group to which his father
+adhered. The effect of his potations was still upon him, and his mind
+was bemused. He remembered the quarrel, Boyne’s explanation, and the
+subsequent drinking, but he could recall nothing further. He was sure
+the wine had been drugged, but he realized that Swinton, the landlord,
+would have made away with any signs of foul play, as he was himself an
+agent of active disloyalty and a friend of Erris Boyne. Dyck could not
+believe he had killed Boyne; yet Boyne had been found with a wound in
+his heart, and his own naked sword lying beside him on the table. The
+trouble was he could not absolutely swear innocence of the crime.
+
+The situation was not eased by his stay in jail. It began with a
+revelation terribly repugnant to him. He had not long been lodged in the
+cell when there came a visit from Michael Clones, who stretched out his
+hands in an agony of humiliation.
+
+“Ah, you didn’t do it--you didn’t do it, sir!” he cried. “I’m sure you
+never killed him. It wasn’t your way. He was for doing you harm if he
+could. An evil man he was, as all the world knows. But there’s one thing
+that’ll be worse than anything else to you. You never knew it, and I
+never knew it till an hour ago. Did you know who Erris Boyne was? Well,
+I’ll tell you. He was the father of Miss Sheila Llyn. He was divorced by
+Mrs. Llyn many years ago, for having to do with other women. She took to
+her maiden name, and he married again.
+
+“Good God! Good God!” Dyck Calhoun made a gesture of horror. “He Sheila
+Llyn’s father! Good God!”
+
+Suddenly a passion of remorse roused him out of his semi-stupefaction.
+
+“Michael, Michael!” he said, his voice hoarse, broken. “Don’t say such a
+thing! Are you sure?” Michael nodded.
+
+“I’m sure. I got it from one that’s known Erris Boyne and his first wife
+and girl--one that was a servant to them both in past days. He’s been
+down to Limerick to see Mrs. Llyn and the beautiful daughter. I met him
+an hour ago, and he told me. He told me more. He told me Mrs. Llyn spoke
+to him of your friendship with Erris Boyne, and how she meant to tell
+you who and what he was. She said her daughter didn’t even know her
+father’s name. She had been kept in ignorance.”
+
+Dyck seated himself on the rough bed of the cell, and stared at Michael,
+his hands between his knees, his eyes perturbed.
+
+“Michael,” he said at last, “if it’s true--what you’ve told me--I don’t
+see my way. Every step in front of me is black. To tell the whole truth
+is to bring fresh shame upon Mrs. Llyn and her daughter, and not to tell
+the whole truth is to take away my one chance of getting out of this
+trouble. I see that!”
+
+“I don’t know what you mean, sir, but I’ll tell you this--none that
+knows you would believe you’d murder Erris Boyne or anny other man.”
+
+Dyck wiped the sweat from his forehead.
+
+“I suppose you speak the truth, Michael, but it isn’t people who’ve
+known me that’ll try me; and I can’t tell all.”
+
+“Why not, if it’ll help you?”
+
+“I can’t--of course I can’t. It would be disgrace eternal.”
+
+“Why? Tell me why, sir!”
+
+Dyck looked closely, firmly, at the old servant and friend. Should he
+tell the truth--that Boyne had tried to induce him to sell himself to
+the French, to invoke his aid against the English government, to share
+in treason? If he could have told it to anybody, he would have done
+so to Michael; but if it was true that in his drunken blindness he had
+killed Boyne, he would not seek to escape by proving Boyne a traitor.
+
+He believed Boyne was a servant of the French; but unless the facts came
+out in the trial, they should not have sure origin in himself. He would
+not add to his crime in killing the father of the only girl who had ever
+touched his heart, the shame of proving that father to be one who should
+have been shot as a traitor.
+
+He had courage and daring, but not sufficient to carry him through that
+dark chapter. He would not try to save himself by turning public opinion
+against Erris Boyne. The man had been killed by some one, perhaps--and
+the thing ached in his heart--by himself; but that was no reason why the
+man’s death should not be full punishment for all the wrong he had done.
+
+Dyck had a foolish strain in him, after all. Romance was his deadly foe;
+it made him do a stupid, if chivalrous, thing. Meanwhile he would warn
+the government at once about the projected French naval raid.
+
+“Michael,” said Dyck, rising again, “see my father, but you’re not
+to say I didn’t kill Boyne, for, to tell the truth, I don’t know. My
+head”--he put his hand to it with a gesture of despair--“my head’s a
+mass of contradictions. It seems a thousand years since I entered that
+tavern! I can’t get myself level with all that’s happened. That Erris
+Boyne should be the father of the sweet girl at Limerick shakes
+me. Don’t you see what it means? If I killed him, it spoils
+everything--everything. If I didn’t kill him, I can only help myself by
+blackening still more the life of one who gave being to--”
+
+“Aye, to a young queen!” interrupted Michael.
+
+“God knows, there’s none like her in Ireland, or in any other country at
+all!”
+
+Suddenly Dyck regained his composure; and it was the composure of one
+who had opened the door of hell and had realized that in time--perhaps
+not far off--he also would dwell in the infernal place.
+
+“Michael, I have no money, but I’m my father’s heir. My father will not
+see me starve in prison, nor want for defence, though my attitude shall
+be ‘no defence.’ So bring me decent food and some clothes, and send to
+me here Will McCormick, the lawyer. He’s as able a man as there is in
+Dublin. Listen, Michael, you’re not to speak of Mrs. Llyn and Miss Llyn
+as related to Erris Boyne. What will come of what you and I know and
+don’t know, Heaven only has knowledge; but I’ll see it through. I’ve
+spoiled as good chances as ever a young man had that wants to make his
+way; but drink and cards, Michael, and the flare of this damned life at
+the centre--it got hold of me. It muddled, drowned the best that was in
+me. It’s the witch’s kitchen, is Dublin. Ireland’s the only place in the
+world where they make saints of criminals and pray to them; where they
+lose track of time and think they’re in eternity; where emotion is
+saturnine logic and death is the touchstone of life. Michael, I don’t
+see any way to safety. Those fellows down at the tavern were friends of
+Erris Boyne. They’re against me. They’ll hang me if they can!”
+
+“I don’t believe they can do it, master. Dublin and Ireland think more
+of you than they did of Erris Boyne. There’s nothing behind you except
+the wildness of youth--nothing at all. If anny one had said to me at
+Playmore that you’d do the things you’ve done with drink and cards since
+you come to Dublin, I’d have swore they were liars. Yet when all’s said
+and done, I’d give my last drop of blood as guarantee you didn’t kill
+Erris Boyne!”
+
+Dyck smiled. “You’ve a lot of faith in me, Michael--but I’ll tell you
+this--I never was so thirsty in my life. My mouth’s like a red-hot iron.
+Send me some water. Give the warder sixpence, if you’ve got it, and send
+me some water. Then go to Will McCormick, and after that to my father.”
+
+Michael shook his head dolefully.
+
+“Mr. McCormick’s aisy--oh, aisy enough,” he said. “He’ll lep up at the
+idea of defendin’ you, but I’m not takin’ pleasure in goin’ to Miles
+Calhoun, for he’s a hard man these days. Aw, Mr. Dyck, he’s had a lot of
+trouble. Things has been goin’ wrong with Playmore. ‘Pon honour, I don’t
+know whether anny of it’ll last as long as Miles Calhoun lasts. There’ll
+be little left for you, Mr. Dyck. That’s what troubles me. I tell you
+it’d break my heart if that place should be lost to your father and you.
+I was born on it. I’d give the best years of the life that’s left me to
+make sure the old house could stay in the hands of the Calhouns. I say
+to you that while I live all I am is yours, fair and foul, good and
+bad.” He touched his breast with his right hand. “In here is the soul
+of Ireland that leps up for the things that matter. There’s a
+song--but never mind about a song; this is no place for songs. It’s a
+prison-house, and you’re a prisoner charged--”
+
+“Not charged yet, not charged,” interrupted Dyck; “but suspected of and
+arrested for a crime. I’ll fight--before God, I’ll fight to the last!
+Good-bye, Michael; bring me food and clothes, and send me cold water at
+once.”
+
+When the door closed softly behind Michael Clones, Dyck sat down on the
+bed where many a criminal patriot had lain. He looked round the small
+room, bare, unfurnished, severe-terribly severe; he looked at the blank
+walls and the barred window, high up; he looked at the floor--it was
+discoloured and damp. He reached out and touched it with his hand. He
+looked at the solitary chair, the basin and pail, and he shuddered.
+
+“How awful--how awful!” he murmured. “But if it was her father, and if I
+killed him”--his head sank low--“if I killed her father!”
+
+“Water, sir.”
+
+He looked up. It was the guard with a tin of water and a dipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+“I don’t believe he’s guilty, mother.”
+
+The girl’s fine eyes shone with feeling--with protest, indignation,
+anguish. As she spoke, she thrust her head forward with the vigour of
+a passionate counsel. Sheila Llyn was a champion who would fight to the
+last gasp for any cause she loved.
+
+A few moments before, she had found her mother, horror-stricken, gazing
+at a newspaper paragraph sent from Dublin.
+
+Sheila at once thought this to be the cause of her mother’s agitation,
+and she reached out a hand for it. Her mother hesitated, then handed
+the clipping to her. Fortunately it contained no statement save the bare
+facts connected with the killing of Erris Boyne, and no reference to
+the earlier life of the dead man. It said no more than that Dyck Calhoun
+must take his trial at the sessions.
+
+It also stated that Dyck, though he pleaded “not guilty,” declared
+frankly, through Will McCormick, the lawyer, that he had no memory of
+aught that happened after he had drunk wine given him by Erris Boyne. He
+said that he and Boyne had quarrelled, but had become reconciled again,
+and that the drink was a pledge of their understanding. From the time
+he had taken the drink until he waked in the hands of the king’s
+constables, he had no memory; but he was sure he had not killed
+Boyne. The fact that there was no blood on his sword was evidence.
+Nevertheless, he had been committed for trial.
+
+Mrs. Llyn was sorely troubled. She knew of her daughter’s interest
+in Dyck Calhoun, and of Dyck’s regard for Sheila. She had even looked
+forward to marriage, and she wished for Sheila no better fate, because
+nearly all she knew of Dyck was to his credit. She was unaware that his
+life in Dublin had been dissipated.
+
+If Dyck was guilty--though she could not believe it--there would be
+an end of romance between him and Sheila, and their friendship must be
+severed for ever. Her daughter did not know that Erris Boyne was her
+father, and she must not know--in any case not yet; but if Dyck was
+condemned, it was almost sure he would be hanged.
+
+She wondered about Boyne’s widow, whose name did not appear in the
+paragraph she had seen. She knew that Noreen was beautiful, but that
+he had married far beneath him socially. She had imagined Erris Boyne
+living in suburban quiet, not drawing his wife into his social scheme.
+
+That is what had happened. The woman had lived apart from the daily
+experiences of her husband’s life in Dublin; and it had deepened her
+bitterness against him. When she had learned that Erris Boyne was no
+more faithful to her than he had been to his previous wife, she had gone
+mad; and Dyck Calhoun was paying the price of her madness.
+
+Mrs. Llyn did not know this. She was a woman of distinguished bearing,
+though small, with a wan, sad look in her eyes always, but with a
+cheerful smile. She was not poor, but well-to-do, and it was not
+necessary to deny herself or her daughter ordinary comforts, and even
+many of the luxuries of life.
+
+Her hair was darker than her daughter’s, black and wavy, with here and
+there streaks of grey. These, however, only added dignity to a head
+beautifully balanced, finely moulded, and, in the language of the day,
+most genteelly hung. She was slender, buoyant in movement yet composed,
+and her voice was like her daughter’s, clear, gentle, thrilling.
+
+Her mind and heart were given up to Sheila and Sheila’s future. That was
+why a knowledge of the tragedy that had come to Dyck Calhoun troubled
+her as she had not been troubled since the day she first learned of
+Erris Boyne’s infidelity to herself.
+
+“Let us go to Dublin, mother,” said Sheila with a determined air, after
+reading the clipping.
+
+“Why, my dear?”
+
+The woman’s eyes, with their long lashes, looked searchingly into her
+daughter’s face. She felt, as the years went on, that Sheila had gifts
+granted to few. She realized that the girl had resources which would
+make her a governing influence in whatever sphere of life she should be
+set. Quietly, Sheila was taking control of their movements, and indeed
+of her own daily life. The girl had a dominating skill which came
+in part from herself, and also to a degree from her father; but her
+disposition was not her father’s-it was her mother’s.
+
+Mrs. Llyn had never known Sheila to lie or twist the truth in all her
+days. No one was more obedient to wise argument; and her mother had a
+feeling that now, perhaps, the time had come when they two must have a
+struggle for mastery. There was every reason why they should not go to
+Dublin. There Sheila might discover that Erris Boyne was her father, and
+might learn the story of her mother’s life.
+
+Sheila had been told by her mother that her father had passed away
+abroad when she was a little child. She had never seen her father’s
+picture, and her mother had given her the impression that their last
+days together had not been happy. She had always felt that it was better
+not to inquire too closely into her father’s life.
+
+The years had gone on and then had come the happy visit to Loyland
+Towers, where she had met Dyck Calhoun. Her life at that moment had been
+free from troublesome emotions; but since the time she had met Dyck at
+the top of the hill, a new set of feelings worked in her.
+
+She was as bonny a lass as ever the old world produced--lithe, with a
+body like that of a boy, strong and pleasant of face, with a haunting
+beauty in the eyes, a majesty of the neck and chin, and a carriage which
+had made Michael Clones call her a queen.
+
+She saw Dyck only as, a happy, wild son of the hilltop. To her he was a
+man of mettle and worth, and irresponsible because he had been given
+no responsibility. He was a country gentleman of Ireland, with all the
+interest and peril of the life of a country gentleman.
+
+“Yes, we ought to go to Dublin, mother. We could help him, perhaps,”
+ Sheila insisted.
+
+The mother shook her head mournfully.
+
+“My child, we could do him no good at all--none whatever. Besides, I
+can’t afford to visit Dublin now. It’s an expensive journey, and the
+repairs we’ve been doing here have run me close.”
+
+A look of indignation, almost of scorn, came into the girl’s face.
+
+“Well, if I were being tried for my life, as Dyck Calhoun is going to
+be, and if I knew that friends of mine were standing off because of a
+few pounds, shillings, and pence, I think I’d be a real murderer!”
+
+The mother took her daughter’s hand. She found it cold.
+
+“My dear,” she said, clasping it gently, “you never saw him but three
+times, and I’ve never seen him but twice except in the distance; but I
+would do anything in my power to help him, if I could, for I like him.
+The thing for us to do--”
+
+“Yes, I know--sit here, twist our thumbs, and do nothing!”
+
+“What more could we do if we went to Dublin, except listen to gossip,
+read the papers and be jarred every moment? My dear, our best place is
+here. If the spending of money could be of any use to him, I’d spend
+it--indeed I would; but since it can’t be of any use, we must stay in
+our own home. Of one thing I’m sure--if Dyck Calhoun killed Erris Boyne,
+Boyne deserved it. Of one thing I’m certain beyond all else--it was
+no murder. Mr. Calhoun wasn’t a man to murder any one. I don’t
+believe”--her voice became passionate--“he murdered, and I don’t believe
+he will be hanged.”
+
+The girl looked at her mother with surprise. “Oh, dearest, dearest!” she
+said. “I believe you do care for him. Is it because he has no mother,
+and you have no son.”
+
+“It may be so, beloved.”
+
+Sheila swept her arms around her mother’s neck and drew the fine head to
+her breast.
+
+At that moment they heard the clatter of hoofs, and presently they saw a
+horse and rider pass the window.
+
+“It’s a government messenger, mother,” Sheila said.
+
+As Sheila said, it was a government messenger, bearing a packet to Mrs.
+Llyn--a letter from her brother in America, whom she had not seen for
+many years.
+
+The brother, Bryan Llyn, had gone out there as a young man before the
+Revolutionary War. He had prospered, taking sides against England in the
+war, and become a man of importance in the schemes of the new republican
+government. Only occasionally had letters come from him to his sister,
+and for nearly eleven years she had not had a single word from him.
+
+When she opened the packet now, she felt it would help to solve--she
+knew not how--the trouble between herself and her daughter. The letter
+had been sent to a firm in Dublin with which Bryan Llyn had done
+business, with instructions that it should be forwarded to his sister.
+It had reached the hands of a government official, who was a brother of
+a member of the firm, and he had used the government messenger, who was
+going upon other business to Limerick, to forward it with a friendly
+covering note, which ended with the words:
+
+ The recent tragedy you have no doubt seen in the papers must have
+ shocked you; but to those who know the inside the end was
+ inevitable, though there are many who do not think Calhoun is
+ guilty. I am one of them. Nevertheless, it will go hard with him,
+ as the evidence is strong against him. He comes from your part of
+ the country, and you will be concerned, of course.
+
+Sheila watched her mother reading, and saw that great emotion possessed
+her, though the girl could not know the cause. Presently, however,
+Mrs. Llyn, who had read the letter from her brother, made a joyful
+exclamation.
+
+“What is it, mother dear?” Sheila asked eagerly. “Tell me!”
+
+The mother made a passionate gesture of astonishment and joy; then she
+leaned back in her chair and closed her eyes, with the letter--which was
+closely written, in old-fashioned punctiliousness--in her hands.
+
+“Oh, my dear, my dear!” she said. “How strange it all is! Your Uncle
+Bryan is immensely rich. He has no children and no family; his health is
+failing.”
+
+She seemed able to get no further.
+
+“Well, what is it, mother?” asked Sheila again.
+
+For an instant Mrs. Llyn hesitated; then she put the letter into
+Sheila’s hands.
+
+“Read it, my child,” she said. “It’s for you as much as for me--indeed,
+more for you than for me.” Sheila took the letter. It ran as follows:
+
+ DEAREST SISTER:
+
+ It is eleven years since I wrote to you, and yet, though it may seem
+ strange, there have not been eleven days in all that time in which I
+ have not wished you and Sheila were here. Sheila--why, she is a
+ young woman! She’s about the age you were when I left Ireland, and
+ you were one of the most beautiful and charming creatures God ever
+ gave life to. The last picture I have of you was a drawing made
+ soon after your marriage--sad, bad, unhappy incident. I have kept
+ it by me always. It warms my heart in winter; it cools my eyes in
+ summer.
+
+ My estate is neither North nor South, but farther South than North.
+ In a sense it is always summer, but winter on my place would be like
+ summer in Norway--just bitingly fresh, happily alert. I’m writing
+ in the summer now. I look out of the window and see hundreds of
+ acres of cotton-fields, with hundreds upon hundreds of negroes at
+ work. I hear the songs they sing, faint echoes of them, even as I
+ write. Yes, my black folk do sing, because they are well treated.
+
+ Not that we haven’t our troubles here. You can’t administer
+ thousands of acres, control hundreds of slaves, and run an estate
+ like a piece of clockwork without creaks in the machinery. I’ve
+ built it all up out of next to nothing. I landed in this country
+ with my little fortune of two thousand pounds. This estate is worth
+ at least a quarter of a million now. I’ve an estate in Jamaica,
+ too. I took it for a debt. What it’ll be worth in another twenty
+ years I don’t know. I shan’t be here to see. I’m not the man I was
+ physically, and that’s one of the reasons why I’m writing to you
+ to-day. I’ve often wished to write and say what I’m going to say
+ now; but I’ve held back, because I wanted you to finish your girl’s
+ education before I said it
+
+ What I say is this: I want you and Sheila to come here to me, to
+ make my home your home, to take control of my household, and to let
+ me see faces I love about me as the shadows enfold me.
+
+ Like your married life, mine was unsuccessful, but not for the same
+ reason. The woman I married did not understand--probably could not
+ understand. She gave me no children. We are born this way, or
+ that. To understand is pain and joy in one; to misconceive is to
+ scatter broken glass for bare feet. Yet when I laid her away, a few
+ years ago, I had terrible pangs of regret, which must come to the
+ heart that has striven in vain. I did my best; I tried to make her
+ understand, but she never did. I used at first to feel angry; then
+ I became patient. But I waked up again, and went smiling along,
+ active, vigorous, getting pleasure out of the infinitely small
+ things, and happy in perfecting my organization.
+
+ This place, which I have called Moira, is to be yours--or, rather,
+ Sheila’s. So, in any case, you will want to come and see the home I
+ have made this old colonial mansion, with its Corinthian pillars and
+ verandah, high steps, hard-wood floors polished like a pan, every
+ room hung in dimity and chintz, and the smell of fruit and flowers
+ everywhere. You will want to see it all, and you’ll want to live
+ here.
+
+ There’s little rain here, so it’s not like Ireland, and the green is
+ not so green; but the flowers are marvellously bright, and the birds
+ sing almost as well as they sing in Ireland, though there’s no lark.
+ Strange it is, but true, the only things that draw me back to
+ Ireland in my soul are you, and Sheila, whom I’ve never seen, and
+ the lark singing as he rises until he becomes a grey-blue speck, and
+ then vanishing in the sky.
+
+ Well, you and the lark have sung in my heart these many days, and
+ now you must come to me, because I need you. I have placed to your
+ credit in the Bank of Ireland a thousand pounds. That will be the
+ means of bringing you here--you and Sheila--to my door, to Moira.
+ Let nothing save death prevent your coming. As far as Sheila’s eye
+ can see-north, south, east, and west--the land will be hers when I’m
+ gone. Dearest sister, sell all things that are yours, and come to
+ me. You’ll not forget Ireland here. Whoever has breathed her air
+ can never forget the hills and dells, the valleys and bogs, the
+ mountains, with their mists of rain, the wild girls, with their bare
+ ankles, their red petticoats, and their beautiful, reckless air.
+ None who has ever breathed the air of Ireland can breathe in another
+ land without memory of the ancient harp of Ireland. But it is as a
+ memory-deep, wonderful, and abiding, yet a memory. I sometimes
+ think I have forgotten, and then I hear coming through this Virginia
+ the notes of some old Irish melody, the song of some wayfarer of
+ Mayo or Connemara, and I know then that Ireland is persuasive and
+ perpetual; but only as a memory, because it speaks in every pulse
+ and beats in every nerve.
+
+ Oh, believe me, I speak of what I know! I have been away from
+ Ireland for a long time, and I’m never going back, but I’ll bring
+ Ireland to me. Come here, colleen, come to Virginia. Write to me,
+ on the day you get this letter, that you’re coming soon. Let it be
+ soon, because I feel the cords binding me to my beloved fields
+ growing thinner. They’ll soon crack, but, please God, they won’t
+ crack before you come here.
+
+ Now with my love to you and Sheila I stretch out my hand to you.
+ Take it. All that it is has worked for is yours; all that it wants
+ is you.
+
+ Your loving brother,
+
+ BRYAN.
+
+As Sheila read, the tears started from her eyes; and at last she could
+read no longer, so her mother took the letter and read the rest of it
+aloud. When she had finished, there was silence--a long warm silence;
+then, at last, Mrs. Llyn rose to her feet.
+
+“Sheila, when shall we go?”
+
+With frightened eyes Sheila sprang up.
+
+“I said we must go to Dublin!” she murmured.
+
+“Yes, we will go to Dublin, Sheila, but it will be on our way to Uncle
+Bryan’s home.”
+
+Sheila caught her mother’s hands.
+
+“Mother,” she said, after a moment of hesitation, “I must obey you.”
+
+“It is the one way, my child-the one thing to do. Some one in prison
+calls--perhaps; some one far away who loves you, and needs us,
+calls--that we know. Tell me, am I not right? I ask you, where shall we
+go?”
+
+“To Virginia, mother.”
+
+The girl’s head dropped, and her eyes filled with tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. DYCK’S FATHER VISITS HIM
+
+In vain Dyck’s lawyer, Will McCormick, urged him to deny absolutely
+the killing of Erris Boyne. Dyck would not do so. He had, however,
+immediately on being jailed, written to the government, telling of the
+projected invasion of Ireland by the French fleet, and saying that it
+had come to him from a sure source. The government had at once taken
+action.
+
+Regarding the death of Boyne, the only thing in his favour was that his
+own sword-point was free from stain. His lawyer made the utmost of this,
+but to no avail. The impression in the court was that both men had been
+drinking; that they had quarrelled, and that without a duel being fought
+Dyck had killed his enemy.
+
+That there had been no duel was clear from the fact that Erris Boyne’s
+sword was undrawn. The charge, however, on the instigation of the
+Attorney-General, who was grateful for the information about France, had
+been changed from murder to manslaughter; though it seemed clear that
+Boyne had been ruthlessly killed by a man whom he had befriended.
+
+On one of the days of the trial, Dyck’s father, bowed, morose, and
+obstinate, came to see him. That Dyck and Boyne had quarrelled had been
+stated in evidence by the landlord, Swinton, and Dyck had admitted it.
+Miles Calhoun was bent upon finding what the story of the quarrel was;
+for his own lawyer had told him that Dyck’s refusal to give the cause
+of the dispute would affect the jury adversely, and might bring him
+imprisonment for life. After the formalities of their meeting, Miles
+Calhoun said:
+
+“My son, things are black, but they’re not so black they can’t be
+brightened. If you killed Erris Boyne, he deserved it. He was a bad man,
+as the world knows. That isn’t the point. Now, there’s only one kind of
+quarrel that warrants non-disclosure.”
+
+“You mean about a woman?” remarked Dyck coldly.
+
+The old man took a pinch of snuff nervously. “That’s what I mean. Boyne
+was older than you, and perhaps you cut him out with a woman.”
+
+A wry smile wrinkled the corners of Dyck’s mouth. “You mean his wife?”
+ he asked with irony. “Wife--no!” retorted the old man. “Damn it, no! He
+wasn’t the man to remain true to his wife.”
+
+“So I understand,” remarked Dyck; “but I don’t know his wife. I never
+saw her, except at the trial, and I was so sorry for her I ceased to be
+sorry for my self. She had a beautiful, strange, isolated face.”
+
+“But that wouldn’t influence Boyne,” was the reply. “His first wife
+had a beautiful and interesting face, but it didn’t hold him. He went
+marauding elsewhere, and she divorced him by act of parliament. I
+don’t think you knew it, but his first wife was one of your
+acquaintances--Mrs. Llyn, whose daughter you saw just before we left
+Playmore. He wasn’t particular where he made love--a barmaid or a
+housekeeper, it was all the same to him.”
+
+“I hope the daughter doesn’t know that Erris Boyne was her father,” said
+Dyck.
+
+“There’s plenty can tell her, and she’ll hear it sooner or later.”
+
+Miles Calhoun looked at his son with dejection.
+
+His eyes wandered over the grimly furnished cell. His nose smelled the
+damp of it, and suddenly the whole soul of him burst forth.
+
+“You don’t give yourself a chance of escape, Dyck You know what Irish
+juries are. Why don’t you tell the truth about the quarrel? What’s the
+good of keeping your mouth shut, when there’s many that would profit by
+your telling it?”
+
+“Who would profit?” asked Dyck.
+
+“Who would profit!” snarled the old man. “Well, you would profit first,
+for it might break the dark chain of circumstantial evidence. Also, your
+father would profit. I’d be saved shame, perhaps; I’d get relief from
+this disgrace. Oh, man, think of others beside yourself!
+
+“Think of others!” said Dyck, and a queer smile lighted his haggard
+face. “I’d save myself if I honourably could.”
+
+“The law must prove you guilty,” the old man went on. “It’s not for you
+to prove yourself innocent. They haven’t proved you guilty yet.”
+
+The old man fumbled with a waistcoat button. His eyes blinked hard.
+
+“You don’t see,” he continued, “the one thing that’s plain to my eyes,
+and it’s this--that your only chance of escape is to tell the truth
+about the quarrel. If the truth were told, whatever it is, I believe
+it would be to your credit--I’ll say that for you. If it was to your
+credit, even if they believe you guilty of killing Erris Boyne, they’d
+touch you lightly. Ah, in the name of the mother you loved, I ask you to
+tell the truth about that quarrel! Give it into the hands of the jury,
+and let them decide. Haven’t you got a heart in you? In the name of
+God--”
+
+“Don’t speak to me like that,” interrupted Dyck, with emotion. “I’ve
+thought of all those things. I hold my peace because--because I hold my
+peace. To speak would be to hurt some one I love with all my soul.”
+
+“And you won’t speak to save me--your father--because you don’t love me
+with all your soul! Is that it?” asked Miles Calhoun.
+
+“It’s different--it’s different.”
+
+“Ah, it’s a woman!”
+
+“Never mind what it is. I will not tell. There are things more shameful
+than death.”
+
+“Yes,” snarled the other. “Rather than save yourself, you bring
+dishonour upon him who gave you birth.”
+
+Dyck’s face was submerged in colour.
+
+“Father,” said he, “on my honour I wouldn’t hurt you if I could help it,
+but I’ll not tell the world of the quarrel between that man and myself.
+My silence may hurt you, but some one else would be hurt far more if I
+told.”
+
+“By God, I think you’re some mad dreamer slipped out of the ancient
+fold! Do you know where you are? You’re in jail. If you’re found guilty,
+you’ll be sent to prison at least for the years that’ll spoil the making
+of your life; and you do it because you think you’ll spare somebody.
+Well, I ask you to spare me. I don’t want the man that’s going to
+inherit my name, when my time comes, to bring foulness on it. We’ve been
+a rough race, we Calhouns; we’ve done mad, bad things, perhaps, but none
+has shamed us before the world--none but you.”
+
+“I have never shamed you, Miles Calhoun,” replied his son sharply. “As
+the ancients said, ‘alis volat propriis’--I will fly with my own wings.
+Come weal, come woe, come dark, come light, I have fixed my mind, and
+nothing shall change it. You loved my mother better than the rest of the
+world. You would have thought it no shame to have said so to your own
+father. Well, I say it to you--I’ll stand by what my conscience and
+my soul have dictated to me. You call me a dreamer. Let it be so. I’m
+Irish; I’m a Celt. I’ve drunk deep of all that Ireland means. All that’s
+behind me is my own, back to the shadowy kings of Ireland, who lost life
+and gave it because they believed in what they did. So will I. If I’m to
+walk the hills no more on the estate where you are master, let it be so.
+I have no fear; I want no favour. If it is to be prison, then it shall
+be prison. If it is to be shame, then let it be shame. These are
+days when men must suffer if they make mistakes. Well, I will suffer,
+fearlessly if helplessly, but I will not break the oath which I have
+taken. And so I will not do it--never--never--never!”
+
+He picked up the cloak which the old man had dropped on the floor, and
+handed it to him.
+
+“There is no good in staying longer. I must go into court again
+to-morrow. I have to think how my lawyer shall answer the evidence
+given.”
+
+“But of one thing have you thought?” asked his father. “You will not
+tell the cause of the quarrel, for the reason that you might hurt
+somebody. If you don’t tell the cause, and you are condemned, won’t that
+hurt somebody even more?”
+
+For a moment Dyck stood silent, absorbed. His face looked pinched, his
+whole appearance shrivelled. Then, with deliberation, he said:
+
+“This is not a matter of expediency, but of principle. My heart tells me
+what to do, and my heart has always been right.”
+
+There was silence for a long time. At last the old man drew the cloak
+about his shoulders and turned towards the door.
+
+“Wait a minute, father,” said Dyck. “Don’t go like that. You’d better
+not come and see me again. If I’m condemned, go back to Playmore; if I’m
+set free, go back to Playmore. That’s the place for you to be. You’ve
+got your own troubles there.”
+
+“And you--if you’re acquitted?”
+
+“If I’m acquitted, I’ll take to the high seas--till I’m cured.”
+
+A moment later, without further words, Dyck was alone. He heard the door
+clang.
+
+He sat for some time on the edge of his bed, buried in dejection.
+Presently, however, the door opened. “A letter for you, sir,” said the
+jailer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+
+The light of the cell was dim, but Dyck managed to read the letter
+without great difficulty, for the writing was almost as precise as
+print. The sight of it caught his heart like a warm hand and pressed it.
+This was the substance of the letter:
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ I have wanted to visit you in prison, but my mother has forbidden
+ it, and so, even if I could be let to enter, I must not disobey her.
+ I have not read the papers giving an account of your trial. I only
+ know you are charged with killing a bad man, notorious in Dublin
+ life, and that many think he got his just deserts in being killed.
+
+ I saw Christopher Dogan only a week ago, before we came to Dublin.
+ His eyes, as he talked of you, shone like the secret hill-fires
+ where the peasants make illegal drink.
+
+ “Look you,” he said to me, “I care not what a jury decides. I know
+ my man; and I also know that if the fellow Boyne died by his hand,
+ it was in fair fight. I have read Dyck Calhoun’s story in the
+ stars; and I know what his end will be. It will be fair, not foul;
+ good, not bad; great, not low. Tell him that from me, miss,” was
+ what he said.
+
+ I also will not believe that your fate is an evil one, that the law
+ will grind you between the millstones of guilt and dishonour; but if
+ the law should call you guilty, I still will not believe. Far away
+ I will think of you, and believe in you, dear, masterful, madman
+ friend. Yes, you are a madman, for Michael Clones told me--faith,
+ he loves you well!--that you’ve been living a gay life in Dublin
+ since you came here, and that the man you are accused of killing
+ was in great part the cause of it.
+
+ I think I never saw my mother so troubled in spirit as she is at
+ this time. Of course, she could not feel as I do about you. It
+ isn’t that which makes her sad and haggard; it is that we are
+ leaving Ireland behind.
+
+ Yes, she and I are saying good-bye to Ireland. That’s why I think
+ she might have let me see you before we went; but since it must not
+ be, well, then, it must not. But we shall meet again. In my soul
+ I know that on the hills somewhere far off, as on the first day we
+ met, we shall meet each other once more. Where are we going? Oh,
+ very far! We are going to my Uncle Bryan--Bryan Llyn, in Virginia.
+ A letter has come from him urging us to make our home with him. You
+ see, my friend--
+
+Then followed the story which Bryan Llyn had told her mother and
+herself, and she wrote of her mother’s decision to go out to the new,
+great home which her uncle had made among the cotton-fields of the
+South. When she had finished that part of the tale, she went on as
+follows:
+
+ We shall know your fate only through the letters that will follow
+ us, but I will not believe in your bad luck. Listen to me--why
+ don’t you come to America also? Oh, think it over! Don’t believe
+ the worst will come. When they release you from prison, innocent
+ and acquitted, cross the ocean and set up your tent under the Stars
+ and Stripes. Think of it! Nearly all those men in America who
+ fought under Washington and won were born in these islands. They
+ took with them to that far land the memory and love of these old
+ homes. You and I would have fought for England and with the British
+ troops, because we detest revolution. Here, in Ireland, we have
+ seen its evils; and yet if we had fought for the Union Jack beyond
+ the mountains of Maine and in the lonely woods, we should, I
+ believe, in the end have said that the freedom fought for by the
+ American States was well won.
+
+ So keep this matter in your mind, for my mother and I will soon be
+ gone. She would not let me come to you,--I think I have never seen
+ her so disturbed as when I asked her, and she forbade me to write to
+ you; but I disobey her. Well, this is a sad business. I know my
+ mother has suffered. I know her married life was unhappy, and that
+ her husband--my father-died many a year ago, leaving a dark trail of
+ regret behind him; but, you see, I never knew my father. That was
+ all long ago, and it is a hundred times best forgotten.
+
+ Our ship sails for Virginia in three days, and I must go. I will
+ keep looking back to the prison where lies, charged with an evil
+ crime, of which he is not guilty, a young man for whom I shall
+ always carry the spirit of good friendship.
+
+ Do not believe all will not go well. Let us keep the courage of
+ our hearts and the faith of our souls--and I hope I always shall!
+ I believe in you, and, believing, I say good-bye. I say farewell in
+ the great hope that somehow, somewhere, we shall help each other on
+ the way of life. God be with you!
+ I am your friend,
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.--I beg you to remember that America is a good place for a
+ young man to live in and succeed.
+
+Dyck read the letter with a wonderful slowness. He realized that by
+happy accident--it could be nothing else--Mrs. Llyn had been able to
+keep from her daughter the fact that the man who had been killed in the
+tavern by the river was her father. It was clear that the girl was kept
+much to herself, read no newspapers, and saw few people, and that
+those whom she saw had been careful to hold their peace about her close
+relationship to Erris Boyne. None but the evil-minded would recall the
+fact to her.
+
+Sheila’s ignorance must not be broken by himself. He had done the right
+thing--he had held his peace for the girl’s sake, and he would hold it
+to the end. Slowly he folded up the letter, pressed it to his lips, and
+put it in the pocket over his heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+
+“Is it near the time?” asked Michael Clones of his friend, as they stood
+in front of the prison.
+
+His companion, who was seated on a stone, wrapped in dark-green
+coverings faded and worn, and looking pinched with cold in the dour
+November day, said, without lifting his head:
+
+“Seven minutes, an’ he’ll be out, God bless him!”
+
+“And save him and protect him!” said Michael. “He deserved punishment
+no more than I did, and it’s broke him. I’ve seen the grey gather at his
+temples, though he’s only been in prison four years. He was condemned
+to eight, but they’ve let him free, I don’t know why. Perhaps it was
+because of what he told the government about the French navy. I’ve seen
+the joy of life sob itself down to the sour earth. When I took him the
+news of his father’s death, and told him the creditors were swallowing
+what was left of Playmore, what do you think he did?”
+
+Old Christopher Dogan smiled; his eyes twinkled with a mirth which had
+more pain than gaiety. “God love you, I know what he did. He flung out
+his hands, and said: ‘Let it go! It’s nothing to me.’ Michael, have I
+said true?”
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+“Almost his very words you’ve used, and he flung out his hands, as you
+said.
+
+“Aye, he’ll be changed; but they’ve kept the clothes he had when he went
+to prison, and he’ll come out in them, I’m thinking--”
+
+“Ah, no!” interrupted Michael. “That can’t be, for his clothes was
+stole. Only a week ago he sent to me for a suit of my own. I wouldn’t
+have him wear my clothes--he a gentleman! It wasn’t fitting. So I sent
+him a suit I bought from a shop, but he wouldn’t have it. He would leave
+prison a poor man, as a peasant in peasant’s clothes. So he wrote to
+me. Here is the letter.” He drew from his pocket a sheet of paper, and
+spread it out. “See-read it. Ah, well, never mind,” he added, as old
+Christopher shook his head. “Never mind, I’ll read it to you!” Thereupon
+he read the note, and added: “We’ll see him of the Calhouns risin’ high
+beyant poverty and misfortune some day.”
+
+Old Christopher nodded.
+
+“I’m glad Miles Calhoun was buried on the hilltop above Playmore. He had
+his day; he lived his life. Things went wrong with him, and he paid the
+price we all must pay for work ill-done.”
+
+“There you’re right, Christopher Dogan, and I remember the day the
+downfall began. It was when him that’s now Lord Mallow, Governor of
+Jamaica, came to summon Miles Calhoun to Dublin. Things were never the
+same after that; but I well remember one talk I had with Miles Calhoun
+just before his death. ‘Michael,’ he said to me, ‘my family have had
+many ups and downs, and some that bear my name have been in prison
+before this, but never for killing a man out of fair fight.’ ‘One of
+your name may be in prison, sir,’ said I, ‘but not for killing a man out
+of fair fight. If you believe he did, there’s no death bad enough for
+you!’ He was silent for a while; then at last he whispered Mr. Dyck’s
+name, and said to me: ‘Tell him that as a Calhoun I love him, and as his
+father I love him ten times more. For look you, Michael, though we never
+ran together, but quarrelled and took our own paths, yet we are both
+Calhouns, and my heart is warm to him. If my son were a thousand times a
+criminal, nevertheless I would ache to take him by the hand.’”
+
+“Hush! Look at the prison gate,” said his companion, and stood up.
+
+As the gates of the prison opened, the sun broke through the clouds and
+gave a brilliant phase to the scene. Out of the gates there came slowly,
+yet firmly, dressed in peasant clothes, the stalwart but faded figure of
+Dyck Calhoun.
+
+Terribly changed he was. He had entered prison with the flush upon his
+cheek, the lilt of young manhood in his eyes, with hair black and hands
+slender and handsome. There was no look of youth in his face now. It was
+the face of a middle-aged man from which the dew of youth had vanished,
+into which life’s storms had come and gone. Though the body was held
+erect, yet the head was thrust slightly forward, and the heavy eyebrows
+were like a pent-house. The eyes were slightly feverish, and round
+the mouth there crept a smile, half-cynical but a little happy. All
+freshness was gone from his hands. One hung at his side, listless,
+corded; the other doffed his hat in reply to the salute of his two
+humble friends.
+
+As the gates closed behind him he looked gravely at the two men, who
+were standing not a foot apart. There swept slowly into his eyes,
+enlarging, brightening them, the glamour of the Celtic soul. Of all
+Ireland, or all who had ever known him, these two were the only ones
+welcoming him into the world again! Michael Clones, with his oval red
+face, big nose, steely eye, and steadfast bearing, had in him the soul
+of great kings. His hat was set firmly on his head. His knee-breeches
+were neat, if coarse; his stockings were clean. His feet were well shod,
+his coat worn, and he had still the look that belongs to the well-to-do
+peasant. He was a figure of courage and endurance. Dyck’s hand went out
+to him, and a warm smile crept to his lips.
+
+“Michael--ever--faithful Michael!”
+
+A moisture came to Michael’s eyes. He did not speak as he clasped the
+hand Dyck offered him. Presently Dyck turned to old Christopher with a
+kindly laugh.
+
+“Well, old friend! You, too, come to see the stag set loose again?
+You’re not many, that’s sure.” A grim, hard look came into his face, but
+both hands went out and caught the old man’s shoulders affectionately.
+“This is no day for you to be waiting at prison’s gates, Christopher;
+but there are two men who believe in me--two in all the world. It isn’t
+the killing,” he added after a moment’s silence--“it isn’t the killing
+that hurts so. If it’s true that I killed Erris Boyne, what hurts most
+is the reason why I killed him.”
+
+“One way or another--does it matter now?” asked Christopher gently.
+
+“Is it that you think nothing matters since I’ve paid the price, sunk
+myself in shame, lost my friends, and come out with not a penny left?”
+ asked Dyck. “But yes,” he added with a smile, wry and twisted, “yes, I
+have a little left!”
+
+He drew from his pocket four small pieces of gold, and gazed ironically
+at them in his palm.
+
+“Look at them!” He held out his hand, so that the two men could see the
+little coins. “Those were taken from me when I entered prison. They’ve
+been in the hands of the head of the jail ever since. They give them to
+me now--all that’s left of what I was.”
+
+“No, not all, sir,” declared Michael. “There’s something left from
+Playmore--there’s ninety pounds, and it’s in my pocket. It was got from
+the sale of your sporting-kit. There was the boat upon the lake, the
+gun, and all kinds of riffraff stuff not sold with Playmore.”
+
+Dyck nodded and smiled. “Good Michael!”
+
+Then he drew himself up stiffly, and blew in and out his breath as if
+with the joy of living. For four hard years he had been denied the free
+air of free men. Even when walking in the prison-yard, on cold or fair
+days, when the air was like a knife or when it had the sun of summer in
+it, it still had seemed to choke him.
+
+In prison he had read, thought, and worked much. They had at least done
+that for him. The Attorney-General had given him freedom to work with
+his hands, and to slave in the workshop like one whose living depended
+on it. Some philanthropic official had started the idea of a workshop,
+and the officials had given the best of the prisoners a chance to learn
+trades and make a little money before they went out into the world. All
+that Dyck had earned went to purchase things he needed, and to help his
+fellow prisoners or their families.
+
+Where was he now? The gap between the old life of nonchalance,
+frivolity, fantasy, and excitement was as great as that between heaven
+and hell. Here he was, after four years of prison, walking the highway
+with two of the humblest creatures of Ireland, and yet, as his soul
+said, two of the best.
+
+Stalking along in thought, he suddenly became conscious that Michael and
+Christopher had fallen behind. He turned round.
+
+“Come on. Come on with me.” But the two shook their heads.
+
+“It’s not fitting, you a Calhoun of Playmore!” Christopher answered.
+
+“Well, then, list to me,” said Dyck, for he saw the men could not bear
+his new democracy. “I’m hungry. In four years I haven’t had a meal
+that came from the right place or went to the right spot. Is the little
+tavern, the Hen and Chickens, on the Liffeyside, still going? I mean the
+place where the seamen and the merchant-ship officers visit.”
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+“Well, look you, Michael--get you both there, and order me as good a
+meal of fish and chops and baked pudding as can be bought for money.
+Aye, and I’ll have a bottle of red French wine, and you two will have
+what you like best. Mark me, we’ll sit together there, for we’re one of
+a kind. I’ve got to take to a life that fits me, an ex-jailbird, a man
+that’s been in prison for killing!”
+
+“There’s the king’s army,” said Michael. “They make good officers in
+it.”
+
+A strange, half-sore smile came to Dyck’s thin lips.
+
+“Michael,” said he, “give up these vain illusions. I was condemned for
+killing a man not in fair fight.
+
+“I can’t enter the army as an officer, and you should know it. The king
+himself could set me up again; but the distance between him and me is
+ten times round the world and back again!” But then Dyck nodded kindly.
+It was as if suddenly the martyr spirit had lifted him out of rigid,
+painful isolation, and he was speaking from a hilltop. “No, my friends,
+what is in my mind now is that I’m hungry. For four years I’ve eaten the
+bread of prison, and it’s soured my mouth and galled my belly. Go you to
+that inn and make ready a good meal.”
+
+The two men started to leave, but old Christopher turned and stretched a
+hand up and out.
+
+“Son of Ireland, bright and black and black and bright may be the
+picture of your life, but I see for you brightness and sweet faces, and
+music and song. It’s not Irish music, and it’s not Irish song, but the
+soul of the thing is Irish. Grim things await you, but you will conquer
+where the eagle sways to the shore, where the white mist flees from the
+hills, where heroes meet, where the hand of Moira stirs the blue and the
+witches flee from the voice of God. There is honour coming to you in the
+world.”
+
+Having said his say, with hand outstretched, having thrilled the air
+with the voice of one who had the soul of a prophet, the old man turned.
+Head bent forward, he shuffled away with Michael Clones along the stony
+street.
+
+Dyck watched them go, his heart beating hard, his spirit overwhelmed.
+
+It was not far to the Castle, yet every footstep had a history. Now and
+again he met people who knew him. Some bowed a little too profoundly,
+some nodded; but not one stopped to speak to him, though a few among
+them were people he had known well in days gone by. Was it the clothes
+he wore, or was it that his star had sunk so low that none could keep
+it company? He laughed to himself in scorn, and yet there kept ringing
+through his brain all the time the bells of St. Anselm’s, which he was
+hearing:
+
+ “Oh, God, who is the sinner’s friend,
+ Make clean my soul once more!”
+
+When he arrived at the Castle walls he stood and looked long at them.
+
+“No, I won’t go in. I won’t try to see him,” he said at last. “God, how
+strange Ireland is to me! The soil of it, the trees of it, the grass of
+it, are dearer than ever, but--I’ll have no more of Ireland. I’ll ask
+for nothing. I’ll get to England. What’s Ireland to me? I must make
+my way somewhere. There’s one in there”--he nodded towards the
+Castle--“that owes me money at cards. He should open his pockets to me,
+and see me safe on a ship for Australia; but I’ve had my fill of every
+one in Ireland. There’s nothing here for me but shame. Well, back I’ll
+go to the Hen and Chickens, to find a good dinner there.”
+
+He turned and went back slowly along the streets by which he had come,
+looking not to right nor left, thinking only of where he should go and
+what he should do outside of Ireland.
+
+At the door of the inn he sniffed the dinner Michael had ordered.
+
+“Man alive!” he said as he entered the place and saw the two men with
+their hands against the bright fire. “There’s only one way to live, and
+that’s the way I’m going to try.”
+
+“Well, you’ll not try it alone, sir, if you please,” said Michael. “I’ll
+be with you, if I may.”
+
+“And I’ll bless you as you go,” said Christopher Dogan.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. WHITHER NOW?
+
+England was in a state of unrest. She had, as yet, been none too
+successful in the war with France. From the king’s castle to the poorest
+slum in Seven Dials there was a temper bordering on despair. Ministries
+came and went; statesmen rose and fell. The army was indifferently
+recruited and badly paid. England’s battles were fought by men of whom
+many were only mercenaries, with no stake in England’s rise or fall.
+
+In the army and navy there were protests, many and powerful, against the
+smallness of the pay, while the cost of living had vastly increased. In
+more than one engagement on land England had had setbacks of a serious
+kind, and there were those who saw in the blind-eyed naval policy, in
+the general disregard of the seamen’s position, in the means used for
+recruiting, the omens of disaster. The police courts furnished the navy
+with the worst citizens of the country. Quota men, the output of the
+Irish prisons--seditious, conspiring, dangerous--were drafted for the
+king’s service.
+
+The admiralty pursued its course of seizing men of the mercantile
+marine, taking them aboard ships, keeping them away for months from the
+harbours of the kingdom, and then, when their ships returned, denying
+them the right of visiting their homes. The press-gangs did not confine
+their activities to the men of the mercantile marine. From the streets
+after dusk they caught and brought in, often after ill-treatment, torn
+from their wives and sweethearts, knocked on the head for resisting,
+tradesmen with businesses, young men studying for the professions,
+idlers, debtors, out-of-work men. The marvel is that the British fleets
+fought as well as they did.
+
+Poverty and sorrow, loss and bereavement, were in every street, peeped
+mournfully out of every window, lurked at street corners. From all parts
+of the world adventurers came to renew their fortunes in the turmoil
+of London, and every street was a kaleidoscope of faces and clothes and
+colours, not British, not patriot, not national.
+
+Among these outlanders were Dyck Calhoun and Michael Clones. They
+had left Ireland together in the late autumn, leaving behind them the
+stirrings of the coming revolution, and plunging into another revolt
+which was to prove the test and trial of English character.
+
+Dyck had left Ireland with ninety pounds in his pocket and many tons’
+weight of misery in his heart. In his bones he felt tragedies on foot in
+Ireland which concession and good government could not prevent. He had
+fled from it all. When he set his face to Holyhead, he felt that he
+would never live in Ireland again. Yet his courage was firm as he made
+his way to London, with Michael Clones--faithful, devoted, a friend
+and yet a servant, treated like a comrade, yet always with a little
+dominance.
+
+The journey to London had been without event, yet as the coach rolled
+through country where frost silvered the trees; where, in the early
+morning, the grass was shining with dew; where the everlasting green
+hedges and the red roofs of villages made a picture which pleased the
+eye and stirred the soul, Dyck Calhoun kept wondering what would be his
+future. He had no profession, no trade, no skill except with his sword;
+and as he neared London Town--when they left Hendon--he saw the smoke
+rising in the early winter morning and the business of life spread out
+before him, brave and buoyant.
+
+As from the heights of Hampstead he looked down on the multitudinous
+area called London, something throbbed at his heart which seemed like
+hope; for what he saw was indeed inspiring. When at last, in the Edgware
+Road, he drew near to living London, he turned to Michael Clones and
+said:
+
+“Michael, my lad, I think perhaps we’ll find a footing here.”
+
+So they reached London, and quartered themselves in simple lodgings in
+Soho. Dyck walked the streets, and now and then he paid a visit to the
+barracks where soldiers were, to satisfy the thought that perhaps in the
+life of the common soldier he might, after all, find his future. It was,
+however, borne in upon him by a chance remark of Michael one day--“I’m
+not young enough to be a recruit, and you wouldn’t go alone without me,
+would you?”--that this way to a livelihood was not open to him.
+
+His faithful companion’s remark had fixed Dyck’s mind against entering
+the army, and then, towards the end of the winter, a fateful
+thing happened. His purse containing what was left of the ninety
+pounds--two-fifths of it--disappeared. It had been stolen, and in all
+the bitter days to come, when poverty and misery ground them down, no
+hint of the thief, no sign of the robber, was ever revealed.
+
+Then, at last, a day when a letter came from Ireland. It was from the
+firm in which Bryan Llyn of Virginia had been interested, for the letter
+had been sent to their care, and Dyck had given them his address in
+London on this very chance. It reached Dyck’s hands on the day after
+the last penny had been paid out for their lodgings, and they faced
+the streets, penniless, foodless--one was going to say friendless. The
+handwriting was that of Sheila Llyn.
+
+At a street corner, by a chemist’s shop where a red light burned, Dyck
+opened and read the letter. This is what Sheila had written to him.
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ The time is near (I understand by a late letter to my mother from an
+ official) when you will be freed from prison and will face the world
+ again. I have not written you since your trial, but I have never
+ forgotten and never shall. I have been forbidden to write to you or
+ think of you, but I will take my own way about you. I have known
+ all that has happened since we left Ireland, through the letters my
+ mother has received. I know that Playmore has been sold, and I am
+ sorry.
+
+ Now that your day of release is near, and you are to be again a free
+ man, have you decided about your future? Is it to be in Ireland?
+ No, I think not. Ireland is no place for a sane and level man to
+ fight for honour, fame, and name. I hear that things are worse
+ there in every way than they have been in our lifetime.
+
+ After what has happened in any case, it is not a field that offers
+ you a chance. Listen to me. Ireland and England are not the only
+ places in the world. My uncle came here to Virginia a poor man.
+ He is now immensely rich. He had little to begin with, but he was
+ young like you--indeed, a little older than you--when he first came.
+ He invested wisely, worked bravely, and his wealth grew fast. No
+ man needs a fortune to start the business of life in this country.
+ He can get plenty of land for almost nothing; he can get credit for
+ planting and furnishing his land, and, if he has friends, the credit
+ is sure.
+
+ All America is ready for “the likes of you.” Think it over, and
+ meanwhile please know there has been placed with the firm in Dublin
+ money enough to bring you here with comfort. You must not refuse
+ it. Take it as a loan, for I know you will not take it as a gift.
+
+ I do not know the story of the killing, even as it was told in
+ court. Well, some one killed the man, but not you, and the truth
+ will out in time. If one should come to me out of the courts of
+ heaven, and say that there it was declared you were a rogue, I
+ should say heaven was no place for me. No, of one thing I am sure--
+ you never killed an undefended man. Wayward, wanton, reckless,
+ dissipated you may have been, but you were never depraved--never!
+
+ When you are free, lift up your shoulders to all the threats of
+ time, then go straight to the old firm where the money is, draw it,
+ take ship, and come here. If you let me know you are coming, I will
+ be there to meet you when you step ashore, to give you a firm hand-
+ clasp; to tell you that in this land there is a good place for you,
+ if you will win it.
+
+ Here there is little crime, though the perils of life are many.
+ There is Indian fighting; there are Indian depredations; and not a
+ dozen miles from where I sit men have been shot for crimes
+ committed. The woods are full of fighters, and pirates harry the
+ coast. On the wall of the room where I write there are carbines
+ that have done service in Indian wars and in the Revolutionary War;
+ and here out of the window I can see hundreds of black heads-slaves,
+ brought from Africa and the Indies, slaves whose devotion to my
+ uncle is very great. I hear them singing now; over the white-tipped
+ cotton-fields there flows the sound of it.
+
+ This plantation has none of the vices that belong to slavery. Here
+ life is complete. The plantation is one great workshop where trades
+ are learned and carried out-shoeing, blacksmithing, building,
+ working in wood and metal.
+
+ I am learning here--you see I am quite old, for I am twenty-one now
+ --the art of management. They tell me that when my uncle’s day is
+ done--I grieve to think it is not far off--I must take the rod of
+ control. I work very, very hard. I have to learn figures and
+ finance; I have to see how all the work is done, so that I shall
+ know it is done right. I have had to discipline the supervisors and
+ bookkeepers, inspect and check the output, superintend the packing,
+ and arrange for the sale of the crop-yes, I arranged for the sale of
+ this year’s crop myself. So I live the practical life, and when I
+ say that you could make your home here and win success, I do it with
+ some knowledge.
+
+ I beg you take ship for the Virginian coast. Enter upon the new
+ life here with faith and courage. Have no fear. Heaven that has
+ thus far helped you will guide you to the end.
+
+ I write without my mother’s permission, but my uncle knows, and
+ though he does not approve, he does not condemn.
+
+ Once more good-bye, my dear friend, and God be with you.
+
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.--I wonder where you will read this letter. I hope it will
+ find you before your release. Please remember that she who wrote it
+ summons you from the darkness where you are to light and freedom
+ here.
+
+Slowly Dyck folded up the letter, when he had read it, and put it in his
+pocket. Then he turned with pale face and gaunt look to Michael Clones.
+
+“Michael,” said he, “that letter is from a lady. It comes from her new
+home in Virginia.”
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+“Aye, aye, sir, I understand you,” he said. “Then she doesn’t know the
+truth about her father?” Dyck sighed heavily. “No, Michael, she doesn’t
+know the truth.”
+
+“I don’t believe it would make any difference to her if she did know.”
+
+“It would make all the difference to me, Michael. She says she wishes
+to help me. She tells me that money’s been sent to the big firm in
+Dublin-money to take me across the sea to Virginia.”
+
+Michael’s face clouded.
+
+“Yes, sir. To Virginia--and what then?”
+
+“Michael, we haven’t a penny in the world, you and I, but if I took
+one farthing of that money I should hope you would kill me. I’m hungry;
+we’ve had nothing to eat since yesterday; but if I could put my hands
+upon that money here and now I wouldn’t touch it. Michael, it looks as
+if we shall have to take to the trade of the footpad.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+
+In the days when Dyck Calhoun was on the verge of starvation in
+London, evil naval rumours were abroad. Newspapers reported, one with
+apprehension, another with tyrannous comment, mutinous troubles in the
+fleet.
+
+At first the only demand at Spithead and the Nore had been for an
+increase of pay, which had not been made since the days of Charles II.
+Then the sailors’ wages were enough for comfortable support; but in 1797
+through the rise in the cost of living, and with an advance of thirty
+per cent. on slops, their families could barely maintain themselves. It
+was said in the streets, and with truth, that seamen who had fought with
+unconquerable gallantry under Howe, Collingwood, Nelson, and the other
+big sea-captains, who had borne suffering and wounds, and had been in
+the shadow of death--that even these men damned a system which, in its
+stern withdrawal of their class for long spaces of time from their own
+womenfolk, brought evil results to the forecastle.
+
+The soldier was always in touch with his own social world, and he had
+leave sufficient to enable him to break the back of monotony. He drank,
+gambled, and orated; but his indulgences were little compared with the
+debauches of able-bodied seamen when, after months of sea-life, they
+reached port again. A ship in port at such a time was not a scene of
+evangelical habits. Women of loose class, flower-girls, fruit-sellers,
+and costermongers turned the forecastle into a pleasure-house where
+the pleasures were not always secret; where native modesty suffered no
+affright, and physical good cheer, with ribald paraphrase, was notable
+everywhere.
+
+“How did it happen, Michael?”
+
+As he spoke, Dyck looked round the forecastle of the Ariadne with a
+restless and inquisitive expression. Michael was seated a few feet away,
+his head bent forward, his hands clasped around his knees.
+
+“Well, it don’t matter one way or ‘nother,” he replied; “but it was like
+this. The night you got a letter from Virginia we was penniless; so at
+last I went with my watch to the pawnbroker’s. You said you’d wait till
+I got back, though you knew not where I was goin’. When I got back, you
+were still broodin’. You were seated on a horse-block by the chemist’s
+lamp where you had read the letter. It’s not for me to say of what you
+were thinkin’; but I could guess. You’d been struck hard, and there had
+come to you a letter from one who meant more to you than all the rest of
+the world; and you couldn’t answer it because things weren’t right. As
+I stood lookin’ at you, wonderin’ what to do, though, I had twelve
+shillin’s in my pocket from the watch I’d pawned, there came four men,
+and I knew from their looks they were recruitin’ officers of the navy. I
+saw what was in their eyes. They knew--as why shouldn’t they, when they
+saw a gentleman like you in peasant clothes?--that luck had been agin’
+us.
+
+“What the end would have been I don’t know. It was you that solved the
+problem, not them. You looked at the first man of them hard. Then you
+got to your feet.
+
+“‘Michael,’ says you quietly, ‘I’m goin’ to sea. England’s at war, and
+there’s work to do. So let’s make for a king’s ship, and have done with
+misery and poverty.’
+
+“Then you waved a hand to the man in command of the recruitin’ gang, and
+presently stepped up to him and his friends.
+
+“‘Sir,’ I said to you, ‘I’m not going to be pressed into the navy.’
+
+“‘There’s no pressin’, Michael,’ you answered. ‘We’ll be quota men.
+We’ll do it for cash--for forty pounds each, and no other. You let them
+have you as you are. But if you don’t want to come,’ you added, ‘it’s
+all the same to me.’
+
+“Faith, I knew that was only talk. I knew you wanted me. Also I knew the
+king’s navy needed me, for men are hard to get. So, when they’d paid
+us the cash--forty pounds apiece--I stepped in behind you, and here we
+are--here we are! Forty pounds apiece--equal to three years’ wages of
+an ordinary recruit of the army. It ain’t bad, but we’re here for three
+years, and no escape from it. Yes, here we are!”
+
+Dyck laughed.
+
+“Aye, here we’re likely to remain, Michael. There’s only this to be
+said--we’ll be fighting the French soon, and it’s easy to die in the
+midst of a great fight. If we don’t die, Michael, something else will
+turn up, maybe.”
+
+“That’s true, sir! They’ll make an officer of you, once they see you
+fight. This is no place for you, among the common herd. It’s the dregs
+o’ the world that comes to the ship’s bottom in time of peace or war.”
+
+“Well, I’m the dregs of the world, Michael. I’m the supreme dregs.”
+
+Somehow the letter from Virginia had decided Dyck Calhoun’s fate for
+him. Here he was--at sea, a common sailor in the navy. He and Michael
+Clones had eaten and drunk as sailors do, and they had realized that, as
+they ate and drank on the River Thames, they would not eat and drink
+on the watery fairway. They had seen the tank foul with age, from which
+water was drawn for men who could not live without it, and the smell of
+it had revolted Dyck’s senses. They had seen the kegs of pickled meat,
+and they had been told of the evil rations given to the sailors at sea.
+
+The Ariadne had been a flag-ship in her day, the home of an admiral and
+his staff. She carried seventy-four guns, was easily obedient to her
+swift sail, and had a reputation for gallantry. From the first hour
+on board, Dyck Calhoun had fitted in; with a discerning eye he had
+understood the seamen’s needs and the weaknesses of the system.
+
+The months he had spent between his exit from prison and his entrance
+into the Ariadne had roughened, though not coarsened, his outward
+appearance. From his first appearance among the seamen he had set
+himself to become their leader. His enlistment was for three years, and
+he meant that these three should prove the final success of this naval
+enterprise, or the stark period in a calendar of tragedy.
+
+The life of the sailor, with its coarseness and drudgery, its inadequate
+pay, its evil-smelling food, its maggoty bread, its beer drawn from
+casks that once had held oil or fish, its stinking salt-meat barrels,
+the hideous stench of the bilge-water--all this could in one sense be
+no worse than his sufferings in jail. In spite of self-control, jail
+had been to him the degradation of his hopes, the humiliation of his
+manhood.
+
+He had suffered cold, dampness, fever, and indigestion there, and it
+had sapped the fresh fibre of life in him. His days in London had been
+cruel. He had sought work in great commercial concerns, and had almost
+been grateful when rejected. When his money was stolen, there seemed
+nothing to do, as he said to Michael Clones, but to become a footpad or
+a pirate. Then the stormy doors of the navy had opened wide to him; and
+as many a man is tempted into folly or crime by tempestuous nature,
+so he, forlorn, spiritually unkempt, but physically and mentally
+well-composed, in a spirit of bravado, flung himself into the bowels of
+the fleet.
+
+From the moment Dyck arrived on board the Ariadne he was a marked
+man. Ferens, a disfranchised solicitor, who knew his story, spread the
+unwholesome truth about him among the ship’s people, and he received
+attentions at once offensive and flattering. The best-educated of the
+ship’s hands approached him on the grievances with which the whole navy
+was stirring.
+
+Something had put a new spirit into the life of his majesty’s ships; it
+was, in a sense, the reflection of the French Revolution and Tom Paine’s
+Age of Reason. What the Americans had done in establishing a republic,
+what France was doing by her revolution, got into the veins and minds of
+some men in England, but it got into the veins and minds of the sailor
+first; for, however low his origin, he had intercourse not given to the
+average landsman. He visited foreign ports, he came in touch with other
+elements than those of British life and character.
+
+Of all the ships in the navy the Ariadne was the best that Dyck Calhoun
+could have entered. Her officers were humane and friendly, yet firm; and
+it was quite certain that if mutiny came they would be treated well. The
+agitation on the Ariadne in support of the grievances of the sailors was
+so moderate that, from the first, Dyck threw in his lot with it. Ferens,
+the former solicitor, first came to him with a list of proposals, which
+only repeated the demands made by the agitators at Spithead.
+
+“You’re new among us,” said Ferens to Dyck. “You don’t quite know what
+we’ve been doing, I suppose. Some of us have been in the navy for two
+years, and some for ten. There are men on this ship who could tell
+you stories that would make your blood run cold--take my word for it.
+There’s a lot of things goin’ on that oughtn’t to be goin’ on. The time
+has come for reform. Have a look at this paper, and tell me what you
+think.”
+
+Dyck looked at the pockmarked face of Ferens, whose record in the courts
+was a bad one, and what he saw did not disgust him. It was as though
+Ferens had stumbled and been badly hit in his fall, but there were
+no signs of permanent evil in his countenance. He was square-headed,
+close-cropped, clear-eyed, though his face was yellow where it was not
+red, and his tongue was soft in his head.
+
+Dyck read the paper slowly and carefully. Then he handed it back without
+a word.
+
+“Well, what have you got to say?” asked Ferens. “Nothing? Don’t you
+think that’s a strong list of grievances and wrongs?”
+
+Dyck nodded. “Yes, it’s pretty strong,” he said, and he held up his
+hand. “Number One, wages and cost of living. I’m sure we’re right there.
+Cost of living was down in King Charles’s time, and wages were down
+accordingly. Everything’s gone up, and wages should go up. Number Two,
+the prize-money scandal. I’m with you there. I don’t see why an officer
+should get two thousand five hundred times as much as a seaman. There
+ought to be a difference, but not so much. Number Three, the food
+ought to be better; the water ought to be better. We can’t live on rum,
+maggoty bread, and foul water--that’s sure. The rum’s all right; it’s
+powerful natural stuff, but we ought to have meat that doesn’t stink,
+and bread that isn’t alive. What’s more, we ought to have lots of
+lime-juice, or there’s no protection for us when we’re out at sea with
+the best meat taken by the officers and the worst left to us; and with
+foul water and rotten food, there’s no hope or help. But, if we’re going
+in for this sort of thing, we ought to do it decently. We can’t slap
+a government in the mouth, and we can’t kick an admiral without paying
+heavy for it in the end. If it’s wholesome petitioning you’re up to, I’m
+with you; but I’m not if there’s to be knuckle-dusting.”
+
+Ferens shrugged a shoulder.
+
+“Things are movin’, and we’ve got to take our stand now when the time is
+ripe for it, or else lose it for ever. Over at Spithead they’re gettin’
+their own way. The government are goin’ to send the Admiralty Board down
+here, because our admiral say to them that it won’t be safe goin’ unless
+they do.”
+
+“And what are we going to do here?” asked Dyck. “What’s the game of the
+fleet at the Nore?”
+
+Ferens replied in a low voice:
+
+“Our men are goin’ to send out petitions--to the Admiralty and to the
+House of Commons.”
+
+“Why don’t you try Lord Howe?”
+
+“He’s not in command of a fleet now. Besides, petitions have been sent
+him, and he’s taken no notice.”
+
+“Howe? No notice--the best admiral we ever had! I don’t believe it,”
+ declared Dyck savagely. “Why, the whole navy believes in Howe. They
+haven’t forgotten what he did in ‘94. He’s as near to the seaman as the
+seaman is to his mother. Who sent the petitions to him?”
+
+“They weren’t signed by names--they were anonymous.”
+
+Dyck laughed.
+
+“Yes, and all written by the same hand, I suppose.” Ferens nodded.
+
+“I think that’s so.”
+
+“Can you wonder, then, that Lord Howe didn’t acknowledge them? But I’m
+still sure he acted promptly. He’s a big enough friend of the sailor to
+waste no time before doing his turn.”
+
+Ferens shook his head morosely.
+
+“That may be,” he said; “but the petitions were sent weeks ago, and
+there’s no sign from Lord Howe. He was at Bath for gout. My idea is he
+referred them to the admiral commanding at Portsmouth, and was told
+that behind the whole thing is conspiracy--French socialism and English
+politics. I give you my word there’s no French agent in the fleet, and
+if there were, it wouldn’t have any effect. Our men’s grievances are not
+new. They’re as old as Cromwell.”
+
+Suddenly a light of suspicion flashed into Ferens’s face.
+
+“You’re with us, aren’t you? You see the wrongs we’ve suffered, and how
+bad it all is! Yet you haven’t been on a voyage with us. You’ve only
+tasted the life in harbour. Good God, this life is heaven to what we
+have at sea! We don’t mind the fightin’. We’d rather fight than eat.”
+ An evil grin covered his face for a minute. “Yes, we’d rather fight than
+eat, for the stuff we get to eat is hell’s broil, God knows! Did you
+ever think what the life of the sailor is, that swings at the top of a
+mast with the frost freezin’ his very soul, and because he’s slow, owin’
+to the cold, gets twenty lashes for not bein’ quicker? Well, I’ve seen
+that, and a bad sight it is. Did you ever see a man flogged? It ain’t a
+pretty sight. First the back takes the click of the whip like a damned
+washboard, and you see the ridges rise and go purple and red, and the
+man has his breath knocked clean out of him with every blow. Nearly
+every stroke takes off the skin and draws the blood, and a dozen will
+make the back a ditch of murder. Then the whipper stops, looks at the
+lashes, feels them tender like, and out and down it comes again. When
+all the back is ridged and scarred, the flesh, that looked clean and
+beautiful, becomes a bloody mass. Some men get a hundred lashes, and
+that’s torture and death.
+
+“A man I knew was flogged told me once that the first blow made his
+flesh quiver in every nerve from his toe-nails to his finger-nails, and
+stung his heart as if a knife had gone through his body. There was agony
+in his lungs, and the time between each stroke was terrible, and yet the
+next came too soon. He choked with the blood from his tongue, lacerated
+with his teeth, and from his lungs, and went black in the face. I
+saw his back. It looked like roasted meat; yet he had only had eighty
+strokes.
+
+“The punishments are bad. Runnin’ the gauntlet is one of them. Each
+member of the crew is armed with three tarry rope-yarns, knotted at
+the ends. Then between the master-at-arms with a drawn sword and two
+corporals with drawn swords behind, the thief, stripped to the waist,
+is placed. The thing is started by a boatswain’s mate givin’ him a dozen
+lashes. Then he’s slowly marched down the double line of men, who flog
+him as he passes, and at the end of the line he receives another dose
+of the cat from the boatswain’s mate. The poor devil’s body and head
+are flayed, and he’s sent to hospital and rubbed with brine till he’s
+healed.
+
+“But the most horrible of all is flogging through the fleet. That’s
+given for strikin’ an officer, or tryin’ to escape. It’s a sickenin’
+thing. The victim is lashed by his wrists to a capstan-bar in the ship’s
+long-boat, and all the ship’s boats are lowered also, and each ship
+in harbour sends a boat manned by marines to attend. Then, with the
+master-at-arms and the ship’s surgeon, the boat is cast off. The
+boatswain’s mate begins the floggin’, and the boat rows away to the
+half-minute bell, the drummer beatin’ the rogue’s march. From ship to
+ship the long-boat goes, and the punishment of floggin’ is repeated. If
+he faints, he gets wine or rum, or is taken back to his ship to recover.
+When his back is healed he goes out to get the rest of his sentence.
+Very few ever live through it, or if they do it’s only for a short time.
+They’d better have taken the hangin’ that was the alternative. Even a
+corpse with its back bare of flesh to the bone has received the last
+lashes of a sentence, and was then buried in the mud of the shore with
+no religious ceremony.
+
+“Mind you, there’s many a man gets fifty lashes that don’t deserve them.
+There’s many men in the fleet that’s stirred to anger at ill-treatment,
+until now, in these days, the whole lot is ready to see the thing
+through--to see the thing through--by heaven and by hell!”
+
+The pockmarked face had taken on an almost ghastly fervour, until it
+looked like a distorted cartoon-vindictive, fanatical; but Dyck, on
+the edge of the river of tragedy, was not ready to lose himself in the
+stream of it.
+
+As he looked round the ship he felt a stir of excitement like nothing
+he had ever known, though he had been brought up in a country where men
+were by nature revolutionists, and where the sword was as often outside
+as inside the scabbard. There was something terrible in a shipboard
+agitation not to be found in a land-rising. On land there were a
+thousand miles of open country, with woods and houses, caves and cliffs,
+to which men could flee for hiding; and the danger of rebellion was
+less dominant. At sea, a rebellion was like some beastly struggle in one
+room, beyond the walls of which was everlasting nothingness. The thing
+had to be fought out, as it were, man to man within four walls, and God
+help the weaker!
+
+“How many ships in the fleet are sworn to this agitation?” Dyck asked
+presently.
+
+“Every one. It’s been like a spread of infection; it’s entered at every
+door, looked out of every window. All the ships are in it, from the
+twenty-six-hundred-tonners to the little five-hundred-and-fifty-tonners.
+Besides, there are the Delegates.”
+
+He lowered his voice as he used these last words. “Yes, I know,” Dyck
+answered, though he did not really know. “But who is at the head?”
+
+“Why, as bold a man as can be--Richard Parker, an Irishman. He was once
+a junior naval officer, and left the navy and went into business; now he
+is a quotaman, and leads the mutiny. Let me tell you that unless there’s
+a good round answer to what we demand, the Nore fleet’ll have it out
+with the government. He’s a man of character, is Richard Parker, and the
+fleet’ll stand by him.”
+
+“How long has he been at it?” asked Dyck.
+
+“Oh, weeks and weeks! It doesn’t all come at once, the grip of the
+thing. It began at Spithead, and it worked right there; and now it’s
+workin’ at the Nore, and it’ll work and work until there isn’t a ship
+and there isn’t a man that won’t be behind the Delegates. Look. Half the
+seamen on this ship have tasted the inside of a jail; and the rest come
+from the press-gang, and what’s left are just the ragged ends of street
+corners. But”--and here the man drew himself up with a flush--“but
+there’s none of us that wouldn’t fight to the last gasp of breath for
+the navy that since the days of Elizabeth has sailed at the head of all
+the world. Don’t think we mean harm to the fleet. We mean to do it good.
+All we want is that its masters shall remember we’re human flesh and
+blood; that we’re as much entitled to good food and drink on sea as on
+land; and that, if we risk our lives and shed our blood, we ought to
+have some share in the spoils. We’re a great country and we’re a great
+people, but, by God, we’re not good to our own! Look at them there.”
+
+He turned and waved a hand to the bowels of the ship where sailors
+traded with the slop-sellers, or chaffered with women, or sat in groups
+and sang, or played rough games which had no vital meaning; while here
+and there in groups, with hands gesticulating, some fanatics declared
+their principles. And the principles of every man in the Nore fleet so
+far were embraced in the four words--wages, food, drink, prize-money.
+
+Presently Ferens stopped short. “Listen!” he said.
+
+There was a cry from the ship’s side not far away, and then came little
+bursts of cheering.
+
+“By Heaven, it’s the Delegates comin’ here!” he said. He held up a
+warning palm, as though commanding silence, while he listened intently.
+“Yes, it’s the Delegates. Now look at that crowd of seamen!” He swung
+his hand towards the bowels of the ship. Scores of men were springing to
+their feet. Presently there came a great shouting and cheers, and then
+four new faces appeared on deck. They were faces of intelligence, but
+one of them had the enlightened look of leadership.
+
+“By Judas, it’s our leader, Richard Parker!” declared Ferens.
+
+What Dyck now saw was good evidence of the progress of the agitation.
+There were officers of the Ariadne to be seen, but they wisely took no
+notice of the breaches of regulation which followed the arrival of the
+Delegates. Dyck saw Ferens speak to Richard Parker after the men had
+been in conference with Parker and the Delegates, and then turn towards
+himself. Richard Parker came to him.
+
+“We are fellow countrymen,” he said genially. “I know your history.
+We are out to make the navy better--to get the men their rights. I
+understand you are with us?”
+
+Dyck bowed. “I will do all possible to get reforms in wages and food put
+through, sir.”
+
+“That’s good,” said Parker. “There are some petitions you can draft,
+and some letters also to the Admiralty and to the Houses of Lords and
+Commons.”
+
+“I am at your service,” said Dyck.
+
+He saw his chance to secure influence on the Ariadne, and also to do
+good to the service. Besides, he felt he might be able to check the
+worst excesses of the agitation, if he got power under Parker. He was
+free from any wish for mutiny, but he was the friend of an agitation
+which might end as successfully as the trouble at Spithead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+
+A fortnight later the mutiny at the Nore shook and bewildered the
+British Isles. In the public journals and in Parliament it was declared
+that this outbreak, like that at Spithead, was due partly to political
+strife, but more extensively to agents of revolution from France and
+Ireland.
+
+The day after Richard Parker visited the Ariadne the fleet had been put
+under the control of the seamen’s Delegates, who were men of standing
+in the ships, and of personal popularity. Their first act was to declare
+that the fleet should not leave port until the men’s demands were
+satisfied.
+
+The King, Prime Minister, and government had received a shock greater
+than that which had come with the announcement of American independence.
+The government had armed the forts at Sheerness, had sent troops and
+guns to Gravesend and Tilbury, and had declared war upon the rebellious
+fleet.
+
+At the head of the Delegates, Richard Parker, with an officer’s
+knowledge, became a kind of bogus admiral, who, in interview with the
+real admirals and the representatives of the Admiralty Board, talked
+like one who, having power, meant to use it ruthlessly. The government
+had yielded to the Spithead mutineers, giving pardon to all except the
+ringleaders, and granting demands for increased wages and better food,
+with a promise to consider the question of prize-money; but the Nore
+mutineers refused to accept that agreement, and enlarged the Spithead
+demands. Admiral Buckner arrived on board his flag-ship, the Sandwich,
+without the deference due to an admiral, and then had to wait three
+hours for Parker and the Delegates on the quarter-deck. At the interview
+that followed, while apologizing to the admiral for his discourtesy,
+Parker wore his hat as quasi-admiral of the fleet. The demands of the
+Delegates were met by reasoning on the part of Buckner, but without
+effect: for the seamen of the Nore believed that what Spithead could get
+by obstinacy the Nore could increase by contumacy; and it was their firm
+will to bring the Lords of the Admiralty to their knees.
+
+The demands of the Nore Delegates, however, were rejected by the
+Admiralty, and with the rejection two regiments of militia came from
+Canterbury to reinforce the Sheerness garrison. The mutineers were
+allowed to parade the town, so long as their conduct was decent, as
+Admiral Buckner admitted it to be; but Parker declared that the presence
+of the militia was an insult to the seamen in the Nore fleet.
+
+Then ensued the beginning of the terror. When Buckner presented the
+Admiralty’s refusal to deal with the Delegates, there came quick
+response. The reply of the mutineers was to row into Sheerness harbour
+and take away with them eight gunboats lying there, each of which fired
+a shot at the fort, as if to announce that the mutineers were now the
+avowed enemies of the government.
+
+Thereupon the rebels ordered all their ships together at the Great Nore,
+ranging them into two crescents, with the newly acquired gunboats at the
+flanks. The attitude of the authorities gave the violent mutineers their
+opportunity. Buckner’s flag was struck from the mainmast-head of the
+Sandwich, and the red flag was hoisted in its place.
+
+The Delegates would not accept an official pardon for their mutiny
+through Buckner. They demanded a deputation from the Admiralty, Parker
+saying that no accommodation could occur without the appearance of
+the Lords of the Admiralty at the Nore. Then followed threatening
+arrangements, and the Delegates decided to blockade the Thames and the
+Medway.
+
+It was at this time that Dyck Calhoun--who, by consent of Richard
+Parker, had taken control of the Ariadne--took action which was to alter
+the course of his own life and that of many others.
+
+Since the beginning of the mutiny he had acted with decision, judgment,
+and strength. He had agreed to the Ariadne joining the mutinous ships,
+and he had skilfully constructed petitions to the Admiralty, the House
+of Commons, and the King. His habit of thought, his knowledge of life,
+made him a power. He believed that the main demands of the seamen were
+just, and he made a useful organization to enforce them. It was only
+when he saw the mutineers would not accept the terms granted to the
+Spithead rebels that a new spirit influenced him.
+
+He had determined to get control of the Ariadne. His gift as a speaker
+had conquered his fellow-sailors, and the fact that he was an ex-convict
+gave them confidence that he was no friend of the government.
+
+One of the first things he did, after securing his own pre-eminence on
+the ship, was to get the captain and officers safely ashore. This he did
+with skill, and the crew of the ship even cheered them as they left.
+
+None of the regular officers of the Ariadne were left upon her,
+except Greenock, the master of the ship, whose rank was below that of
+lieutenant, and whose duties were many and varied under the orders of
+the captain. Greenock chose to stay, though Dyck said he could go if he
+wished. Greenock’s reply was that it was his duty to stay, if the ship
+was going to remain at sea, for no one else could perform his duties or
+do his work.
+
+Then, by vote, Dyck became captain of the ship. He did not, however,
+wear a captain’s uniform--blue coat, with white cuffs, flat
+gold buttons; with lace at the neck, a white-sleeved waistcoat,
+knee-breeches, white silk stockings, and a three-cornered black hat
+edged with gold lace and ornamented with a cockade; with a black cravat,
+a straight dress sword, a powdered cue tied with a black-silk ribbon,
+and epaulets of heavy gold stuff completing the equipment. Dyck, to the
+end of his career at sea, wore only the common seaman’s uniform.
+
+Dyck would not have accepted the doubtful honour had he not had long
+purposes in view. With Ferens, Michael Clones, and two others whom
+Ferens could trust, a plan was arranged which Dyck explained to his
+fellow-seamen on the Ariadne.
+
+“We’ve come to the parting of the ways, brothers,” he said. “We’ve all
+become liable to death for mutiny. The pardon offered by the King has
+been refused, and fresh demands are made. There, I think, a real wrong
+has been done by our people. The Ariadne is well supplied with food and
+water. It is the only ship with sufficiency. And why? Because at
+the beginning we got provisions from the shore in time; also we got
+permission from Richard Parker to fill our holds from two stopped
+merchant-ships. Well, the rest of the fleet know what our food and drink
+fitment is. They know how safe we are, and to-day orders have come to
+yield our provisions to the rest of the fleet. That is, we, who have
+taken time by the forelock, must yield up our good gettings to bad
+receivers. I am not prepared to do it.
+
+“On shore the Admiralty have stopped the supply of provisions to us and
+to all the fleet. Our men have been arrested at Gravesend, Tilbury, and
+Sheerness. The fleet could not sail now if it wished; but one ship can
+sail, and it is ours. The fleet hasn’t the food to sail. On Richard
+Parker’s ship, the Sandwich, there is food only for a week. The others
+are almost as bad. We are in danger of being attacked. Sir Erasmus
+Gower, of the Neptune, has a fleet of warships, gunboats, and amateur
+armed vessels getting ready to attack us. The North Sea fleet has come
+to help us, but that doesn’t save us. I’ll say this--we are loyal men
+in this fleet, otherwise our ships would have joined the enemy in the
+waters of France or Holland. They can’t go now, in any case. The men
+have lost heart. Confidence in our cause has declined. The government
+sent Lords of the Admiralty here, and they offered pardon if we accepted
+the terms of the Spithead settlement. We declined the terms. That was a
+bad day for us, and put every one of our heads in a noose.
+
+“For the moment we have a majority in men and ships; but we can’t
+renew our food or drink, or ammunition. The end is sure against us. Our
+original agitation was just; our present obduracy is madness. This ship
+is suspected. It is believed by the rest of the fleet--by ships like the
+Invincible--that we’re weak-kneed, selfish, and lacking in fidelity to
+the cause. That’s not true; but we have either to fight or to run, and
+perhaps to do both.
+
+“Make no mistake. The government are not cowards; the Admiralty are
+gentlemen of determination. If men like Admiral Howe support the
+Admiralty--Howe, one of the best friends the seaman ever had--what do
+you think the end will be? Have you heard what happened at Spithead? The
+seamen chivvied Admiral Alan Gardner and his colleagues aboard a ship.
+He caught hold of a seaman Delegate by the collar and shook him.
+They closed in on him. They handled him roughly. He sprang on the
+hammock-nettings, put the noose of the hanging-rope round his neck, and
+said to the men who advanced menacingly:
+
+“‘If you will return to your duty, you may hang me at the yard-arm!’
+
+“That’s the kind of stuff our admirals are made of. We have no quarrel
+with the majority of our officers. They’re straight, they’re honest,
+and they’re true to their game. Our quarrel is with Parliament and the
+Admiralty; our struggle is with the people of the kingdom, who have
+not seen to it that our wrongs are put right, that we have food to eat,
+water to drink, and money to spend.”
+
+He waved a hand, as though to sweep away the criticisms he felt must be
+rising against him.
+
+“Don’t think because I’ve spent four years in prison under the sternest
+discipline the world offers, and have never been a seaman before, that
+I’m not fitted to espouse your cause. By heaven, I am--I am--I am--I
+know the wrongs you’ve suffered. I’ve smelled the water you drink. I’ve
+tasted the rotten meat. I’ve seen the honest seaman who has been for
+years upon the main--I’ve seen the scars upon his back got from a brutal
+officer who gave him too big a job to do, and flogged him for not doing
+it. I know of men who, fevered with bad food, have fallen, from the
+mainmast-head, or have slipped overboard, glad to go, because of the
+wrongs they’d suffered.
+
+“I’ll tell you what our fate will be, and then I’ll put a question
+to you. We must either give up our stock of provisions or run for it.
+Parker and the other Delegates proclaim their comradeship; yet they have
+hidden from us the king’s proclamation and the friendly resolutions of
+the London merchants. I say our only hope is to escape from the Thames.
+I know that skill will be needed, but if we escape, what then? I say if
+we escape, because, as we sail out, orders will be given for the other
+mutiny ships to attack us. We shall be fired on; we shall risk our
+lives. You’ve done that before, however, and will do it again.
+
+“We have to work out our own problem and fight our own fight. Well, what
+I want to know is this--are we to give in to the government, or do we
+stand to be hammered by Sir Erasmus Gower? Remember what that means.
+It means that if we fight the government ships, we must either die in
+battle, or die with the ropes round our necks. There is another way.
+I’m not inclined to surrender, or to stand by men who have botched our
+business for us. I’m for making for the sea, and, when I get there, I’m
+for striking for the West Indies, where there’s a British fleet fighting
+Britain’s enemies, and for joining in and fighting with them. I’m for
+getting out of this river and away from England. It’s a bold plan, but
+it’s a good one. I want to know if you’re with me. Remember, there’s
+danger getting out, and there’s danger when and if we get out. The other
+ships may pursue us. The Portsmouth fleet may nab us. We may be caught,
+and, if we are, we must take the dose prepared for us; but I’m for
+making a strong rush, going without fear, and asking no favour. I won’t
+surrender here; it’s too cowardly. I want to know, will you come to the
+open sea with me?”
+
+There were many shouts of assent from the crowd, though here and there
+came a growl of dissent.
+
+“Not all of you are willing to come with me,” Dyck continued vigorously.
+“Tell me, what is it you expect to get by staying here? You’re famished
+when you’re not poisoned; you’re badly clothed and badly fed; you’re
+kept together by flogging; you’re treated worse than a convict in
+jail or a victim in a plague hospital. You’re not paid as well as your
+grandfathers were, and you’re punished worse. Here, on the Ariadne,
+we’re not skulkers. We don’t fear our duty; we are loyal men. Many of
+you, on past voyages, fighting the enemy, lived on burgoo and molasses
+only, with rum and foul water to drink. On the other ships there
+have been terrible cruelty and offence. Surgeons have neglected and
+ill-treated sick men and embezzled provisions and drinks intended for
+the invalids. Many a man has died because of the neglect of the ship’s
+surgeons; many have been kicked about the head and beaten, and haven’t
+dared to go on the sick list for fear of their officers. The Victualling
+Board gets money to supply us with food and drink according to measure.
+They get the money for a full pound and a full gallon, and we get
+fourteen ounces of food and seven pints of liquor, or less. Well, what
+do you say, friends, to being our own Victualling Board out in the open
+sea, if we can get there?
+
+“We may have to fight when we get out; but I’m for taking the Ariadne
+into the great world battle when we can find it. This I want to
+ask--isn’t it worth while making a great fight in our own way, and
+showing that British seamen can at once be mutineers and patriots? We
+have a pilot who knows the river. We can go to the West Indian Islands,
+to the British fleet there. It’s doom and death to stay here; and it may
+be doom and death to go. If we try to break free, and are fired on, the
+Admiralty may approve of us, because we’ve broken away from the rest.
+See now, isn’t that the thing to do? I’m for getting out. Who’s coming
+with me?”
+
+Suddenly a burly sailor pushed forward. He had the head of a viking. His
+eyes were strong with enterprise. He had a hand like a ham, with long,
+hairy fingers.
+
+“Captain,” said he, “you’ve put the thing so there can be only one
+answer to it. As for me, I’m sick of the way this mutiny has been
+bungled from first to last. There’s been one good thing about
+it only--we’ve got order without cruelty, we’ve rebelled without
+ravagement; but we’ve missed the way, and we didn’t deal with the
+Admiralty commissioners as we ought. So I’m for joining up with the
+captain here”--he waved a hand towards Dyck--“and making for open sea.
+As sure as God’s above, they’ll try to hammer us; but it’s the only
+way.”
+
+He held a handkerchief-a dirty, red silk thing. “See,” he continued,
+“the wind is right to take us out. The other ships won’t know what we’re
+going to do until we start. I’m for getting off. I’m a pressed man. I
+haven’t seen my girl for five years, and they won’t let me free in port
+to go and see her. Nothing can be worse than what we have to suffer now,
+so let’s make a break for it. That’s what I say. Come, now, lads, three
+cheers for Captain Calhoun!”
+
+A half-hour later, on the captain’s deck, Dyck gave the order to pass
+eastward. It was sunset when they started, and they had not gone a
+thousand yards before some of the mutineering ships opened fire on the
+Ariadne. The breeze was good, however, and she sailed bravely through
+the leaden storm. Once twice--thrice she was hit, but she sped on. Two
+men were killed and several were wounded. Sails were torn, and the high
+bulkheads were broken; but, without firing a shot in reply, the Ariadne
+swung clear at last of the hostile ships and reached safe water.
+
+On the edge of the open sea Dyck took stock of the position. The Ariadne
+had been hit several times, and the injury done her was marked. Before
+morning the dead seamen were sunk in watery graves, and the wounded were
+started back to health again. By daylight the Ariadne was well away from
+the land.
+
+The first thing Dyck had done, after escaping from the river, was to
+study the wants of the Ariadne and make an estimate for the future with
+Greenock, the master. He calculated they had food and water enough to
+last for three months, even with liberal provisioning. Going among the
+crew, he realized there was no depression among them; that they seemed
+to care little where they were going. It was, however, quite clear they
+wished to fight--to fight the foes of England.
+
+He knew his task was a hard one, and that all efforts at discipline
+would have dangers. He knew, also, that he could have no authority,
+save personality and success. He set himself, therefore, to win the
+confidence of Greenock and the crew, and he began discipline at once.
+He knew that a reaction must come; that the crew, loose upon their own
+trail, would come to regret the absence of official command. He realized
+that many of them would wish to return to the fleet at the Nore, but
+while the weather was good he did not fear serious trouble. The danger
+would come in rough weather or on a becalmed sea.
+
+They had passed Beachy Head in the mist. They had seen no battle-ship,
+and had sighted no danger, as they made their way westward through the
+Channel. There had been one moment of anxiety. That was when they passed
+Portsmouth, and had seen in the far distance, to the right of them, the
+mastheads of Admiral Gardner’s fleet.
+
+It was here that Dyck’s orderly, Michael Clones, was useful. He brought
+word of murmuring among the more brutish of the crew, that some of them
+wished to join Gardner’s fleet. At this news, Dyck went down among the
+men. It was an unusual thing to do, but it brought matters to an issue.
+
+Among the few dissatisfied sailors was one Nick Swaine, who had been
+the cause of more trouble on the Ariadne than any other. He had a
+quarrelsome mind; he had been influenced by the writings of Wolfe Tone,
+the Irish rebel. One of the secrets of Dyck’s control of the crew was
+the fact that he was a gentleman, and was born in the ruling class, and
+this was anathema to Nick Swaine. His view of democracy was ignorance
+controlling ignorance.
+
+By nature he was insolent, but under the system of control pursued by
+the officers of the Ariadne, previous to the mutiny, he had not been
+able to do much. The system had bound him down. He had been the slave of
+habit, custom, and daily duty. His record, therefore, was fairly clean
+until two days after the escape from the Thames and the sighting of the
+Portsmouth fleet. Then all his revolutionary spirit ran riot in him.
+Besides, the woman to whom he had become attached at the Nore had been
+put ashore on the day Dyck gained control. It roused his enmity now.
+
+When Dyck came down, he had the gunners called to him, admonishing them
+that drill must go on steadily, and promising them good work to do. Then
+he turned to the ordinary seamen.
+
+At this moment Nick Swaine strode forward within a dozen feet of Dyck.
+
+“Look there!” he said, and he jerked a finger towards the distant
+Portsmouth fleet. “Look there! You’ve passed that.”
+
+Dyck shrugged a shoulder.
+
+“I meant to pass it,” he said quietly.
+
+“Give orders to make for it,” said Nick with a sullen eye.
+
+“I shall not. And look you, my man, keep a civil tongue to me, who
+command this ship, or I’ll have you put in irons.”
+
+“Have me put in irons!” Swaine cried hotly. “This isn’t Dublin jail. You
+can’t do what you like here. Who made you captain of this ship?”
+
+“Those who made me captain will see my orders carried out. Now, get you
+back with the rest, or I’ll see if they still hold good.” Dyck waved a
+hand. “Get back when I tell you, Swaine!”
+
+“When you’ve turned the ship to the Portsmouth fleet I’ll get back, and
+not till then.”
+
+Dyck made a motion of the hand to some boatswains standing by. Before
+they could arrest him, Swaine flung himself towards Dyck with a knife in
+his hand.
+
+Dyck’s hand was quicker, however. His pistol flung out, a shot was
+fired, and the knife dropped from the battered fingers of Nick Swaine.
+
+“Have his wounds dressed, then put him in irons,” Dyck commanded.
+
+From that moment, in good order and in good weather, the Ariadne sped on
+her way westward and southward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+
+Perhaps no mutineer in the history of the world ever succeeded, as did
+Dyck Calhoun, in holding control over fellow-mutineers on the journey
+from the English Channel to the Caribbean Sea. As a boy, Dyck had been
+an expert sailor, had studied the machinery of a man-of-war, and his
+love of the sea was innate and deep-seated; but his present success
+was based upon more than experience. Quite apart from the honour of his
+nature, prison had deepened in him the hatred of injustice. In soul he
+was bitter; in body he was healthy, powerful, and sane.
+
+Slowly, sternly, yet tactfully, he had broken down the many customs
+of ship life injurious to the welfare of the men. Under his system the
+sailors had good coffee for breakfast, instead of a horrible mixture
+made of burnt biscuits cooked in foul water. He gave the men pea-soup
+and rice instead of burgoo and the wretched oatmeal mess which was the
+staple thing for breakfast. He saw to it that the meat was no longer a
+hateful, repulsive mass, two-thirds bone and gristle, and before it
+came into the cook’s hands capable of being polished like mahogany. He
+threatened the cook with punishment if he found the meals ill-cooked.
+
+In all the journey to the West Indian seas there had been only three
+formal floggings. His attitude was not that of the commander who
+declared:
+
+“I will see the man’s backbone, by God!”
+
+He wished to secure discipline without cruelty. His greatest difficulty,
+at the start, was in making lieutenants. That he overcame by appointing
+senior midshipmen before the Ariadne was out of the Channel. He offered
+a lieutenancy to Ferens, who had the courage to decline it.
+
+“Make me purser,” remarked Ferens. “Make me purser, and I’ll do the job
+justly.”
+
+As the purser of the Ariadne had been sent to the sick-bay and was
+likely to die (and did die subsequently), Ferens was put into his
+uniform-three-cornered cocked hat, white knee-breeches, and white
+stockings. The purser of a man-of-war was generally a friend of the
+captain, going with him from ship to ship.
+
+Of the common sailors, on the whole, Dyck had little doubt. He had
+informed them that, whatever happened, they should not be in danger;
+that the ship should not join the West Indian fleet unless every man
+except himself received amnesty. If the amnesty was not granted, then
+one of two things should happen--the ship must make for a South American
+port, or she must fight. Fighting would not frighten these men.
+
+It was rather among the midshipmen that Dyck looked for trouble.
+Sometimes, with only two years’ training at Gosport, a youngster became
+a midshipman on first going to sea, and he could begin as early as
+eleven years of age. A second-rate ship like the Ariadne carried
+eighteen midshipmen; and as six lieutenants were appointed from them,
+only twelve remained. From these twelve, in the dingy after-cockpit,
+where the superficial area was not more than twelve square feet; where
+the air was foul, and the bilges reeked with a pestilential stench;
+where the purser’s store-room near gave out the smell of rancid butter
+and poisonous cheese; where the musty taint of old ropes came to them,
+there was a spirit of danger.
+
+Dyck was right in thinking that in the midshipmen’s dismal berth the
+first flowers of revolt to his rule would bloom.
+
+Sailors, even as low as the pig-sty men, had some idea of fair play; and
+as the weeks that had passed since they left the Thames had given them
+better food and drink, and lessened the severity of those above them,
+real obedience had come.
+
+It was not strange that the ship ran well, for all the officers under
+the new conditions, except Dyck himself, had had previous experience.
+The old lieutenants had gone, but midshipmen, who in any case were
+trained, had taken their places. The rest of the ship’s staff were the
+same, except the captain; and as Dyck had made a friend of Greenock
+the master, a man of glumness, the days were peaceful enough during the
+voyage to the Caribbean Sea.
+
+The majority saw that every act of Dyck had proved him just and capable.
+He had rigidly insisted on gun practice; he had keyed up the marines to
+a better spirit, and churlishness had been promptly punished. He was,
+in effect, what the sailors called a “rogue,” or a “taut one”--seldom
+smiling, gaunt of face but fearless of eye, and with a body free from
+fatigue.
+
+As the weather grew warmer and the days longer, and they drew near to
+the coast of Jamaica, a stir of excitement was shown.
+
+“You’d like to know what I’m going to do, Michael, I suppose?” said Dyck
+one morning, as he drank his coffee and watched the sun creeping up the
+sky.
+
+“Well, in three days we shall know what’s to become of us, and I have
+no doubt or fear. This ship’s a rebel, but it’s returning to duty.
+We’ve shown them how a ship can be run with good food and drink and fair
+dealing, and, please God, we’ll have some work to do now that belongs to
+a man-of-war!”
+
+“Sir, I know what you mean to do,” replied Michael. “You mean to get all
+of us off by giving yourself up.”
+
+“Well, some one has to pay for what we’ve done, Michael.” A dark,
+ruthless light came into Dyck’s eyes. “Some one’s got to pay.” A grim
+smile crossed his face. “We’ve done the forbidden thing; we’ve mutinied
+and taken to the open sea. We were fired on by the other mutiny ships,
+and that will help our sailors, but it won’t help me. I’m the leader. We
+ought, of course, to have taken refuge with the nearest squadron of the
+king’s ships. Well, I’ve run my luck, and I’ll have to pay.”
+
+He scratched his chin with a thumb-nail-a permanent physical trait. “You
+see, the government has pardoned all the sailors, and will hang only the
+leaders. I expect Parker is hung already. Well, I’m the leader on the
+Ariadne. I’m taking this ship straight to his majesty’s West Indian
+fleet, in thorough discipline, and I’ll hand it over well-found,
+well-manned, well-officered, on condition that all go free except
+myself. I came aboard a common sailor, a quota man, a prison-bird,
+penniless. Well, have I shown that I can run a ship? Have I learned the
+game of control? During the weeks we’ve been at sea, bursting along,
+have I proved myself?”
+
+Michael smiled. “What did I say to you the first night on board, sir?
+Didn’t I say they’d make an officer of you when they found out what
+brains you had? By St. Patrick, you’ve made yourself captain with the
+good-will of all, and your iron hand has held the thing together. You’ve
+got a great head, too, sir.”
+
+Dyck looked at him with a face in which the far future showed.
+
+“Michael, I’ve been lucky. I’ve had good men about me. God only knows
+what would have happened to me if the master hadn’t been what he is--a
+gentleman who knows his job-aye, a gentleman through and through! If he
+had gone against me, Michael”--he flicked a finger to the sky--“well,
+that much for my chances! I’d have been dropped overboard, or stabbed in
+my cabin, as was that famous Captain Pigot, son of an admiral, who had
+as much soul as you’d find in a stone-quarry. When two men had dropped
+from the masts, hurrying to get down because of his threat that the last
+man should be thrashed--when the two men lay smashed to pieces at his
+feet, Pigot said: ‘Heave the lubbers overboard.’ That night, Michael,
+the seamen rose, crept to his cabin, stabbed him to death, pitched his
+body overboard, put his lieutenants to sea in open boats, and then ran
+away to South America. Well, I’ve escaped that fate, because this was a
+good ship, and all the officers knew their business, and did it without
+cruelty. I’ve been well served. It was a great thing making the new
+lieutenants from the midshipmen. There never was a better lot on board a
+ship.”
+
+Michael’s face clouded. “Sir, that’s true. The new lieutenants have
+done their work well, but them that’s left behind in the midshipmen’s
+berth--do you think they’re content? No, sir. The only spot on board
+this ship where there lurks an active spirit against you is in the
+midshipmen’s berth. Mischief’s there, and that’s what’s brought me to
+you now.”
+
+Dyck smiled. “I know that. I’ve had my eye on the midshipmen. I’ve never
+trusted them. They’re a hard lot; but if the rest of the ship is with
+me, I’ll deal with them promptly. They’re not clever or bold enough
+to do their job skilfully. They’ve got some old hands down
+there--hammock-men, old stagers of the sea that act as servants to them.
+What line do they take?”
+
+Michael laughed softly.
+
+“What I know I’ve got from two of them, and it is this--the young
+gentlemen’ll try to get control of the ship.”
+
+The cynicism deepened in Dyck’s face.
+
+“Get control of the ship, eh? Well, it’ll be a new situation on a king’s
+ship if midshipmen succeed where the rest dare not try. Now, mark what
+I’m going to do.”
+
+He called, and a marine showed himself.
+
+“The captain’s compliments to the master, and his presence here at once.
+Michael,” he continued presently, “what fools they are! They’re scarcely
+a baker’s dozen, and none of them has skill to lead. Why, the humblest
+sailor would have more sense than to start a revolt, the success of
+which depends upon his personal influence, and the failure of which
+must end in his own ruin. Does any one think they’re the kind to lead a
+mutiny within a mutiny? Listen to me I’m not cruel, but I’ll put an end
+to this plot. We’re seven hundred on this ship, and she’s a first-class
+sailer. I warrant no ship ever swam the seas that looks better going
+than she does. So we’ve got to see that her, record is kept clean as a
+mutineer.”
+
+At that moment the master appeared. He saluted. “Greenock,” said
+Dyck, “I wonder if you’ve noticed the wind blowing chilly from the
+midshipmen’s berth.” A lurking devilish humour shot from Greenock’s
+eyes.
+
+“Aye, I’ve smelled that wind.”
+
+“Greenock, we’re near the West Indian Islands. Before we eat many meals
+we’ll see land. We may pass French ships, and we may have to fight.
+Well, we’ve had a good running, master; so I’ll tell you what I mean to
+do.”
+
+He then briefly repeated what he had said to Michael, and added
+
+“Greenock, in this last to-do, I shall be the only man in danger. The
+king’s amnesty covers every one except the leaders--that lets you off.
+The Delegate of the Ariadne is aboard the Invincible, if he’s not been
+hanged. I’m the only one left on the Ariadne. I’ve had a good time,
+Greenock--thanks to you, chiefly. I think the men are ready for anything
+that’ll come; but I also think we should guard against a revolt of
+the midshipmen by healthy discipline now. Therefore I’ll instruct the
+lieutenants to spread-eagle every midshipman for twelve hours. There’s
+a stiff wind; there’s a good stout spray, and the wind and spray should
+cool their hot souls. Meanwhile, though without food, they shall have
+water as they need it. If at the end of the twelve hours any still seems
+to be difficult, give him another twelve. Look!”
+
+He stretched out a hand to the porthole on his right. “Far away in front
+are islands. You cannot see them yet, but those little thickening
+mists in the distance mean land. Those are the islands in front of
+the Windward Passage. I think it would be a good lesson for the young
+gentlemen to be spread-eagled against the mists of their future. It
+shall be’ done at once; and pass the word why it’s done.”
+
+An hour later there was laughter in every portion of the ship, for the
+least popular members of the whole personnel were being dragooned into
+discipline. The sailors had seen individual midshipmen spread-eagled
+and mastheaded, while all save those they could bribe were forbidden to
+bring them drink or food; but here was a whole body of junior officers,
+punished en masse, as it were, lashed to the rigging and taking the wind
+and the spray in their teeth.
+
+Before the day was over, the whole ship was alive with anticipation,
+for, in the far distance, could be seen the dark blue and purplish
+shadows which told of land; and this brought the minds of all to the end
+of their journey, with thoughts of the crisis near.
+
+Word had been passed that all on board were considered safe--all except
+the captain who had manoeuvred them to the entrance of the Caribbean
+Sea. Had he been of their own origin, they would not have placed so much
+credence in the rumour; but coming as he did of an ancient Irish family,
+although he had been in jail for killing, the traditional respect for
+the word of a gentleman influenced them. When a man like Ferens, on the
+one hand, and the mutineer whose fingers had been mutilated by Dyck in
+the Channel, on the other--when these agreed to bend themselves to the
+rule of a usurper, some idea of Calhoun’s power may be got.
+
+On this day, with the glimmer of land in the far distance, the charges
+of all the guns were renewed. Also word was passed that at any moment
+the ship must be cleared for action. Down in the cockpit the tables
+were got ready by the surgeon and the loblolly-boys; the magazines were
+opened, and the guards were put on duty.
+
+Orders were issued that none should be allowed to escape active share
+in the coming battle; that none should retreat to the orlop deck or the
+lower deck; that the boys should carry the cartridge-cases handed to
+them from the magazine under the cover of their coats, running hard
+to the guns. The twenty-four-pounders-the largest guns in use at the
+time-the eighteen-pounders, and the twelve-pounder guns were all in good
+order.
+
+The bags of iron balls called grape-shot-the worst of all--varying
+in size from sixteen to nine balls in a bag, were prepared. Then the
+canister, which produced ghastly murder, chain-shot to bring down masts
+and spars, langrel to fire at masts and rigging, and the dismantling
+shot to tear off sails, were all made ready. The muskets for the
+marines, the musketoons, the pistols, the cutlasses, the boarding-pikes,
+the axes or tomahawks, the bayonets and sailors’ knives, were placed
+conveniently for use. A bevy of men were kept busy cleaning the round
+shot of rust, and there was not a man on the ship who did not look with
+pride at the guns, in their paint of grey-blue steel, with a scarlet
+band round the muzzle.
+
+To the right of the Ariadne was the coast of Cuba; to the left was the
+coast of Haiti, both invisible to the eye. Although the knowledge that
+they were nearing land had already given the officers and men a feeling
+of elation, the feeling was greatly intensified as they came through the
+Turk Island Passage, which is a kind of gateway to the Windward Passage
+between Cuba and Haiti. The glory of the sunny, tropical world was upon
+the ship and upon the sea; it crept into the blood of every man, and the
+sweet summer weather gave confidence to their minds. It was a day which
+only those who know tropical and semitropical seas can understand. It
+had the sense of soaking luxury.
+
+In his cabin, with the ship’s chart on the table before him, Dyck
+Calhoun studied the course of the Ariadne. The wind was fair and good,
+the sea-birds hovered overhead. From a distant part of the ship came the
+sound of men’s voices in song. They were singing “Spanish Ladies”:
+
+ “We hove our ship to when the wind was sou’west, boys,
+ We hove our ship to for to strike soundings clear;
+ Then we filled our main tops’l and bore right away, boys,
+ And right up the Channel our course did we steer.
+
+ “We’ll rant and we’ll roar like true British sailors,
+ We’ll range and we’ll roam over all the salt seas,
+ Until we strike soundings in the Channel of old England
+ From Ushant to Scilly ‘tis thirty-five leagues.”
+
+Dyck raised his head, and a smile came to his lips.
+
+“Yes, you sing of a Channel, my lads, but it’s a long way there, as
+you’ll find. I hope to God they give us some fighting!... Well, what is
+it?” he asked of a marine who appeared in his doorway.
+
+“The master of the ship begs to see you, sir,” was the reply.
+
+A moment afterwards Greenock entered. He asked Dyck several questions
+concerning the possible fighting, the disposition of ammunition and all
+that, and said at last:
+
+“I think we shall be of use, sir. The ship’s all right now.”
+
+“As right as anything human can be. I’ve got faith in my star, master.”
+
+A light came into the other man’s dour face. “I wish you’d get into
+uniform, sir.”
+
+“Uniform? No, Greenock! No, I use the borrowed power, but not the
+borrowed clothes. I’m a common sailor, and I wear the common sailor’s
+clothes. You’ve earned your uniform, and it suits you. Stick to it; and
+when I’ve earned a captain’s uniform I’ll wear it. I owe you the success
+of this voyage so far, and my heart is full of it, up to the brim. Hark,
+what’s that?”
+
+“By God, it’s guns, sir! There’s fighting on!”
+
+“Fighting!”
+
+Dyck stood for a minute with head thrust forward, eyes fixed upon the
+distant mists ahead. The rumble of the guns came faintly through the
+air. An exultant look came into his face.
+
+“Master, the game’s with us--it is fighting! I know the difference
+between the two sets of guns, English and French. Listen--that quick,
+spasmodic firing is French; the steady-as-thunder is English. Well,
+we’ve got all sail on. Now, make ready the ship for fighting.”
+
+“She’s almost ready, sir.”
+
+An hour later the light mist had risen, and almost suddenly the Ariadne
+seemed to come into the field of battle. Dyck Calhoun could see the
+struggle going on. The two sets of enemy ships had come to close
+quarters, and some were locked in deadly conflict. Other ships, still
+apart, fired at point-blank range, and all the horrors of slaughter
+were in full swing. From the square blue flag at the mizzen top
+gallant masthead of one of the British ships engaged, Dyck saw that the
+admiral’s own craft was in some peril. The way lay open for the Ariadne
+to bear down upon the French ship, engaged with the admiral’s smaller
+ship, and help to end the struggle successfully for the British cause.
+
+While still too far away for point-blank range, the Ariadne’s guns began
+upon the French ships distinguishable by their shape and their colours.
+Before the first shot was fired, however, Dyck made a tour of the decks
+and gave some word of cheer to the men, The Ariadne lost no time in
+getting into the thick of the fight. The seamen were stripped to the
+waist, and black silk handkerchiefs were tightly bound round their heads
+and over their ears.
+
+What the French thought of the coming of the Ariadne was shown by the
+reply they made presently to her firing. The number of French ships in
+action was greater than the British by six, and the Ariadne arrived just
+when she could be of greatest service. The boldness of her seamanship,
+and the favour of the wind, gave her an advantage which good fortune
+helped to justify.
+
+As she drew in upon the action, she gave herself up to great danger;
+she was coming in upon the rear of the French ships, and was subject
+to fierce attack. To the French she seemed like a fugitive warrior
+returning to his camp just when he was most needed, as was indeed the
+case. Two of her shots settled one of the enemy’s vessels; and before
+the others could converge upon her, she had crawled slowly up against
+the off side of the French admiral’s ship, which was closely engaged
+with the Beatitude, the British flagship, on the other side.
+
+The canister, chain-shot, and langrel of the French foe had caused much
+injury to the Ariadne, and her canvas was in a sore plight. Fifty of her
+seamen had been killed, and a hundred and fifty were wounded by the time
+she reached the starboard side of the Aquitaine. She would have lost
+many more were it not that her onset demoralized the French gunners,
+while the cheers of the British sailors aboard the Beatitude gave
+confidence to their mutineer comrades.
+
+On his own deck, Dyck watched the progress of the battle with the joy
+of a natural fighter. He had carried the thing to an almost impossible
+success. There had only been this in his favour, that his was an
+unexpected entrance--a fact which had been worth another ship at least.
+He saw his boarders struggle for the Aquitaine. He saw them discharge
+their pistols, and then resort to the cutlass and the dagger; and
+the marines bringing down their victims from the masts of the French
+flag-ship.
+
+Presently he heard the savagely buoyant shouts of the Beatitude men,
+and he realized that, by his coming, the admiral of the French fleet had
+been obliged to yield up his sword, and to signal to his ships--such as
+could--to get away. That half of them succeeded in doing so was because
+the British fleet had been heavily handled in the fight, and would have
+been defeated had it not been for the arrival of the Ariadne.
+
+Never, perhaps, in the history of the navy had British ships clamped
+the enemy as the Aquitaine was clamped by the Beatitude and the Ariadne.
+Certain it is that no admiral of the British fleet had ever to perform
+two such acts in one day as receiving the submission of a French admiral
+and offering thanks to the captain of a British man-of-war whom, while
+thanking, he must at once place under arrest as a mutineer. What might
+have chanced further to Dyck’s disadvantage can never be known, because
+there appeared on the deck of the Beatitude, as its captain under the
+rear-admiral, Captain Ivy, who, five years before, had visited Dyck and
+his father at Playmore, and had gone with them to Dublin.
+
+The admiral had sent word to the Ariadne for its captain to come to the
+Beatitude. When the captain’s gig arrived, and a man in seaman’s clothes
+essayed to climb the side of the flag-ship, he was at first prevented.
+Captain Ivy, however, immediately gave orders for Dyck to be admitted,
+but without honours.
+
+On the deck of the Beatitude, Dyck looked into the eyes of Captain Ivy.
+He saluted; but the captain held out a friendly hand.
+
+“You’re a mutineer, Calhoun, but your ship has given us victory. I’d
+like to shake hands with one that’s done so good a stroke for England.”
+
+A queer smile played about Calhoun’s lips.
+
+“I’ve brought the Ariadne back to the fleet, Captain Ivy. The men have
+fought as well as men ever did since Britain had a navy. I’ve brought
+her back to the king’s fleet to be pardoned.”
+
+“But you must be placed under arrest, Calhoun. Those are the
+orders--that wherever the Ariadne should be found she should be seized,
+and that you should be tried by court-martial.”
+
+Dyck nodded. “I understand. When did you get word?”
+
+“About forty-eight hours ago. The king’s mail came by a fast frigate.”
+
+“We took our time, but we came straight from the Channel to find this
+fleet. At the mouth of the Thames we willed to find it, and to fight
+with it--and by good luck so we have done.”
+
+“Let me take you to the admiral,” said Captain Ivy.
+
+He walked beside Dyck to the admiral’s cabin. “You’ve made a terrible
+mess of things, Calhoun, but you’ve put a lot right to-day,” he said at
+the entrance to the cabin. “Tell me one thing honestly before we part
+now--did you kill Erris Boyne?” Dyck looked at him long and hard.
+
+“I don’t know--on my honour I don’t know! I don’t remember--I was drunk
+and drugged.”
+
+“Calhoun, I don’t believe you did; but if you did, you’ve paid the
+price--and the price of mutiny, too.” In the clear blue eyes of Captain
+Ivy there was a look of friendliness. “I notice you don’t wear uniform,
+Calhoun,” he added. “I mean a captain’s uniform.” Dyck smiled. “I never
+have.”
+
+The next moment the door of the admiral’s cabin was opened.
+
+“Mr. Dyck Calhoun of the Ariadne, sir,” said Captain Ivy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+The admiral’s face was naturally vigorous and cheerful, but, as he
+looked at Dyck Calhoun, a steely hardness came into it, and gave a
+cynical twist to the lips. He was a short man, and spare, but his
+bearing had dignity and every motion significance.
+
+He had had his high moment with the French admiral, had given his
+commands to the fleet and had arranged the disposition of the captured
+French ships. He was in good spirits, and the wreckage in the fleet
+seemed not to shake his nerve, for he had lost in men far less than the
+enemy, and had captured many ships--a good day’s work, due finally to
+the man in sailor’s clothes standing there with Captain Ivy. The admiral
+took in the dress of Calhoun at a glance--the trousers of blue cloth,
+the sheath-knife belt, the stockings of white silk, the white shirt with
+the horizontal stripes, the loose, unstarched, collar, the fine black
+silk handkerchief at the throat, the waistcoat of red kerseymere, the
+shoes like dancing-pumps, and the short, round blue jacket, with the
+flat gold buttons--a seaman complete. He smiled broadly; he liked this
+mutineer and ex-convict.
+
+“Captain Calhoun, eh!” he remarked mockingly, and bowed satirically.
+“Well, you’ve played a strong game, and you’ve plunged us into great
+difficulty.”
+
+Dyck did not lose his opportunity. “Happily, I’ve done what I planned
+to do when we left the Thames, admiral,” he said. “We came to get the
+chance of doing what, by favour of fate, we have accomplished. Now,
+sir, as I’m under arrest, and the ship which I controlled has done good
+service, may I beg that the Ariadne’s personnel shall have amnesty,
+and that I alone be made to pay--if that must be--for the mutiny at the
+Nore.”
+
+The admiral nodded. “We know of your breaking away from the mutinous
+fleet, and of their firing on you as you passed, and that is in your
+favour. I can also say this: that bringing the ship here was masterly
+work, for I understand there were no officers on the Ariadne. She always
+had the reputation of being one of the best-trained ships in the navy,
+and she has splendidly upheld that reputation. How did you manage it,
+Mr. Calhoun?”
+
+Dyck briefly told how the lieutenants were made, and how he himself had
+been enormously indebted to Greenock, the master of the ship, and all
+the subordinate officers.
+
+The admiral smiled sourly. “I have little power until I get instructions
+from the Admiralty, and that will take some time. Meanwhile, the Ariadne
+shall go on as she is, and as if she were--and had been from the first,
+a member of my own squadron.”
+
+Dyck bowed, explained what reforms he had created in the food and
+provisions of the Ariadne, and expressed a hope that nothing should be
+altered. He said the ship had proved herself, chiefly because of his
+reforms.
+
+“Besides, she’s been badly hammered. She’s got great numbers of wounded
+and dead, and for many a day the men will be busy with repairs.”
+
+“For a man without naval experience, for a mutineer, an ex-convict and a
+usurper, you’ve done quite well, Mr. Calhoun; but my instructions were,
+if I captured your ship, and you fell into my hands, to try you, and
+hang you.”
+
+At this point Captain Ivy intervened.
+
+“Sir,” he said, “the instructions you received were general. They could
+not anticipate the special service which the Ariadne has rendered to the
+king’s fleet. I have known Mr. Calhoun; I have visited at his father’s
+house; I was with him on his journey to Dublin, which was the beginning
+of his bad luck. I would beg of you, sir, to give Mr. Calhoun his parole
+on sea and land until word comes from the Admiralty as to what, in the
+circumstances, his fate shall be.”
+
+“To be kept on the Beatitude on parole!” exclaimed the admiral.
+
+“Land or sea, Captain Ivy said. I’m as well-born as any man in the
+king’s fleet,” declared Dyck. “I’ve as clean a record as any officer in
+his majesty’s navy, save for the dark fact that I was put in prison
+for killing a man; and I will say here, in the secrecy of an admiral’s
+cabin, that the man I killed--or was supposed to kill--was a traitor. If
+I did kill him, he deserved death by whatever hand it came. I care not
+what you do with me”--his hands clenched, his shoulders drew up, his
+eyes blackened with the dark fire of his soul--“whether you put me on
+parole, or try me by court-martial, or hang me from the yard-arm. I’ve
+done a piece of work of which I’m not ashamed. I’ve brought a mutinous
+ship out of mutiny, sailed her down the seas for many weeks, disciplined
+her, drilled her, trained her, fought her; helped to give the admiral of
+the West Indian squadron his victory. I enlisted; I was a quota man. I
+became a common sailor--I and my servant and friend, Michael Clones. I
+shared the feelings of the sailors who mutinied. I wrote petitions and
+appeals for them. I mutinied with them. Then at last, having been made
+leader of the ship, with the captain and the lieutenants sent safely
+ashore, and disagreeing with the policy of the Delegates in not
+accepting the terms offered, I brought the ship out, commanding it from
+the captain’s cabin, and have so continued until to-day. If I’m put
+ashore at Jamaica, I’ll keep my parole; if I stay a prisoner here, I’ll
+keep my parole. If I’ve done you service, admiral, be sure of this, it
+was done with clear intent. My object was to save the men who, having
+mutinied and fled from Admiralty control, are subject to capital
+punishment.”
+
+“Your thinking came late. You should have thought before you mutinied,”
+ was the sharp reply.
+
+“As a common sailor I acted on my conscience, and what we asked for the
+Admiralty has granted. Only by mutiny did the Admiralty yield to our
+demands. What I did I would do again! We took our risks in the Thames
+against the guns that were levelled at us; we’ve taken our risks down
+here against the French to help save your squadron, and we’ve done it.
+The men have done it, because they’ve been loyal to the flag, and from
+first to last set to make the Admiralty and the people know they have
+rights which must be cherished. If all your men were as faithful to the
+Crown as are the men on the Ariadne, then they deserve well of the King.
+But will you put for me on paper the written word that every man now
+aboard the Ariadne shall be held guiltless in the eyes of the admiral
+of this fleet; that the present officers shall remain officers, that the
+reforms I have made shall become permanent? For myself, I care not; but
+for the men who have fought under me, I want their amnesty. And I want
+Michael Clones to be kept with me, and Greenock, the master, and Ferens,
+the purser, to be kept where they are. Admiral, I think you know my
+demands are just. Over there on the Ariadne are a hundred and fifty
+wounded at least, and fifty have been killed. Let the living not
+suffer.”
+
+“You want it all on the nail, don’t you?”
+
+“I want it at this moment when the men who have fought under me have
+helped to win your battle, sir.” There was something so set in Dyck’s
+voice that the admiral had a sudden revulsion against him, yet, after a
+moment of thought, he made a sign to Captain Ivy. Then he dictated the
+terms which Dyck had asked, except as to the reforms he had made, which
+was not in his power to do, save for the present.
+
+When the document had been signed by the admiral, Dyck read the contents
+aloud. It embodied nearly all he had asked.
+
+“Now I ask permission for one more thing only, sir--for the new captain
+of the Ariadne to go with me to her, and there I will read this paper
+to the crew. I will give a copy of it to the new captain, whoever he may
+be.”
+
+The admiral stood for a moment in thought. Then he said:
+
+“Ivy, I transfer you to the Ariadne. It’s better that some one who
+understands, as you do, should be in control after Calhoun has gone.
+Go with him now, and have your belongings sent to you. I appoint you
+temporary captain of the Ariadne, because I think no one could deal
+with the situation there so wisely. Ivy, every ship in the squadron must
+treat the Ariadne respectfully. Within two days, Mr. Calhoun, you shall
+be landed at Jamaica, there to await the Admiralty decree. I will say
+this: that as the sure victory of our fleet has come through you, you
+shall not suffer in my report. Fighting is not an easy trade, and to
+fight according to the rules is a very hard trade. Let me ask you to
+conduct yourself as a prisoner of war on parole.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. A LETTER
+
+With a deep sigh, the planter raised his head from the table where he
+was writing, and looked out upon the lands he had made his own. They
+lay on the Thomas River, a few hours’ horseback travelling from Spanish
+Town, the capital, and they had the advantage of a plateau formation,
+with mountains in the far distance and ravines everywhere.
+
+It was Christmas Day, and he had done his duty to his slaves and the
+folk on his plantation. He had given presents, had attended a seven
+o’clock breakfast of his people, had seen festivities of his negroes,
+and the feast given by his manager in Creole style to all who
+came--planting attorneys, buccras, overseers, bookkeepers, the
+subordinates of the local provost-marshal, small planters, and a few
+junior officers of the army and navy.
+
+He had turned away with cynicism from the overladen table, with its
+shoulder of stewed wild boar in the centre; with its chocolate, coffee,
+tea, spruce-beer, cassava-cakes, pigeon-pies, tongues, round of beef,
+barbecued hog, fried conchs, black crab pepper-pod, mountain mullet,
+and acid fruits. It was so unlike what his past had known, so “damnable
+luxurious!” Now his eyes wandered over the space where were the
+grandilla, with its blossom like a passion-flower, the black Tahiti
+plum, with its bright pink tassel-blossom, and the fine mango trees,
+loaded half with fruit and half with bud. In the distance were the
+guinea cornfields of brownish hue, the cotton-fields, the long ranges
+of negro houses like thatched cottages, the penguin hedges, with their
+beautiful red, blue, and white convolvuluses; the lime, logwood,
+and breadfruit trees, the avocado-pear, the feathery bamboo, and the
+jack-fruit tree; and between the mountains and his own sugar-estates,
+negro settlements and pens. He heard the flight of parrots chattering,
+he watched the floating humming-bird, and at last he fixed his eyes upon
+the cabbage tree down in the garden, and he had an instant desire for
+it. It was a natural and human taste--the cabbage from the tree-top
+boiled for a simple yet sumptuous meal.
+
+He liked simplicity. He did not, as so many did in Jamaica, drink claret
+or punch at breakfast soon after sunrise. In a land where all were
+bon-vivants, where the lowest tradesmen drank wine after dinner, and
+rum, brandy and water, or sangaree in the forenoon, a somewhat lightsome
+view of table-virtues might have been expected of the young unmarried
+planter. For such was he who, from the windows of his “castle,” saw his
+domain shimmering in the sun of a hot December day.
+
+It was Dyck Calhoun.
+
+With an impatient air he took up the sheets that he had been reading.
+Christmas Day was on his nerves. The whole town of Kingston, with its
+twenty to thirty thousand inhabitants, had but one church. If he entered
+it, even to-day, he would have seen no more than a hundred and fifty to
+two hundred people; mostly mulattoes--“bronze ornaments”--and peasants
+in shag trousers, jackets of coarse blue cloth, and no waistcoats, with
+one or two magistrates, a dozen gentlemen or so, and probably twice
+that number of ladies. It was not an island given over to piety, or to
+religious habits.
+
+Not that this troubled Dyck Calhoun; nor, indeed, was he shocked by
+the fact that nearly every unmarried white man in the island, and many
+married white men, had black mistresses and families born to the black
+women, and that the girls had no married future. They would become the
+temporary wives of white men, to whom they were on the whole faithful
+and devoted. It did not even vex him that a wretched mulatto might be
+whipped in the market-square for laying his hands upon a white man, and
+that if he was a negro-slave he could be shot for the same liberty.
+
+It all belonged to the abnormal conditions of an island where black and
+white were in relations impossible in the countries from which the white
+man had come. It did not even startle Dyck that all the planters, and
+the people generally in the island, from the chief justice and custos
+rotulorum down to the deckswabber, cultivated amplitude of living.
+
+But let Dyck tell his own story. The papers he held were sheets of a
+letter he was writing to one from whom he had heard nothing since the
+night he enlisted in the navy, and that was nearly three years before.
+This was the letter:
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ You will see I address you as you have done me in the two letters I
+ have had from you in the past. You will never read this letter, but
+ I write it as if you would. For you must know I may never hope for
+ personal intercourse with you. I was imprisoned for killing your
+ father, Erris Boyne, and that separates us like an abysss. It
+ matters little whether I killed him or not; the law says I did, and
+ the law has taken its toll of me. I was in prison for four years,
+ and when freed I enlisted in the king’s navy, a quota man, with my
+ servant-friend, Michael Clones. That was the beginning of painful
+ and wonderful days for me. I was one of the mutineers of the Nore,
+ and--
+
+Here followed a description of the days he had spent on the Ariadne and
+before, and of all that happened down to the time when he was arrested
+by the admiral in the West Indian Sea. He told how he was sent over to
+the Ariadne with Captain Ivy to read the admiral’s letter to the seamen,
+and then, by consent of the admiral, to leave again with Michael
+Clones for Jamaica, where he was set ashore with twenty pounds in his
+pocket--and not on parole, by the admiral’s command. Here the letter
+shall again take up the story, and be a narrative of Dyck Calhoun’s life
+from that time until this Christmas Day.
+
+ What to do was the question. I knew no one in Jamaica--no one at
+ all except the governor, Lord Mallow, and him I had fought with
+ swords in Phoenix Park five years before. I had not known he was
+ governor here. I came to know it when I first saw him riding over
+ the unpaved street into Kingston from Spanish Town with his suite,
+ ornate with his governorship. He was a startling figure in scarlet,
+ with huge epaulets on his lieutenant-general’s uniform, as big a pot
+ as ever boiled on any fire-chancellor, head of the government and of
+ the army, master of the legislature, judging like one o’clock in the
+ court of chancery, controller of the affairs of civil life, and
+ maker of a policy of which he alone can judge who knows what
+ interests clash in the West Indies.
+
+ English, French, Spanish, and Dutch are all hereabout. All struggle
+ for place above the other in the world of commerce and society,
+ though chiefly it is the English versus the French in these days;
+ and the policy of the governor is the policy of the country. He
+ never knows whether there will be a French naval descent or whether
+ the blacks in his own island will do as the blacks in St. Domingo
+ did--massacre the white people in thousands. Or whether the free
+ blacks, the Maroons, who got their freedom by treaty with Governor
+ Trelawney, when the British commander changed hats with Cudjoe, the
+ Maroon chief, as the sealing of the bargain--whether they will rise
+ again, as they before have risen, and bring terror into the white
+ settlement; and whether, in that case, all negro-slaves will join
+ them, and Jamaica become a land of revolution.
+
+ Of what good, then, will be the laws lately passed regulating the
+ control of slaves, securing them rights never given before, even
+ forbidding lashes beyond forty-nine! Of what use, then, the
+ punishment of owners who have ill-used the slaves? The local
+ councils who have power to punish never proceed against white men
+ with rigour; and to preserve a fair balance between the white man up
+ above and the black down below is the responsibility of the fair-
+ minded governor. If, like Mallow, he is not fair-minded, then is
+ the lash the heavier, and the governor has burdens greater than
+ could easily be borne in lands where the climate is more friendly.
+
+ Lord Mallow did not see me when I passed him in the street, but he
+ soon came to know of me from the admiral and Captain Ivy, who told
+ him all my story since I was freed from jail. Then he said I should
+ be confined in a narrow space near to Kingston, and should have no
+ freedom; but the admiral had his way, and I was given freedom of the
+ whole island till word should come from the Admiralty what should be
+ done with me. To the governor’s mind it was dangerous allowing me
+ freedom, a man convicted of crime, who had been imprisoned, had been
+ a mutineer, had stolen one of his majesty’s ships, and had fled to
+ the Caribbean Sea. He thought I should well be at the bottom of the
+ ocean, where he would soon have put me, I make no doubt, if it had
+ not been for the admiral, and Captain Ivy--you do not know him, I
+ think--who played a good part to me, when men once close friends
+ have deserted me.
+
+ Well, we had, Michael and I, but twenty pounds between us; and if
+ there was not plenty of free food in the island, God knows what
+ would have become of us! But there it was, fresh in every field, by
+ every wayside, at every doorway. We could not starve, or die of
+ thirst, or faint for lack of sleep, since every bush was a bed in
+ spite of the garapatos or wood-ticks, the snore of the tree-toad,
+ the hoarse shriek of the macaw, and the shrill gird of the guinea-
+ fowl. Every bed was thus free, and there was land to be got for a
+ song, enough to grow what would suffice for two men’s daily wants.
+ But we did not rest long upon the land--I have it still, land which
+ cost me five pounds out of the twenty, and for the rest there was an
+ old but on the little place--five acres it was, and good land too,
+ where you could grow anything at all. Heaven knows what we might
+ have become in that tiny plantation, for I was sick of life, and the
+ mosquitos and flying ants, and the chattering parroquets, the grim
+ gallinazo, and the quatre, or native bed--a wooden frame and canvas;
+ but one day at Kingston I met a man, one Cassandro Biatt, who had an
+ obsession for adventure, and he spoke to me privately. He said he
+ knew me from people’s talk, and would I listen to him? What was
+ there to do? He was a clean-cut rogue, if ever there was one, but
+ a rogue of parts, as he proved; and I lent an ear.
+
+ Now, what think you was his story? Well, but this--that off the
+ coast of Haiti, there was a ship which had been sunk with every man
+ on board, and with the ship was treasure without counting-jewels
+ belonging once to a Spaniard of high place, who was taking them to
+ Paris. His box had been kept in the captain’s cabin, and it could
+ be found, no doubt, and brought to the surface. Even if that were
+ not possible, there was plenty of gold on the ship, and every piece
+ of it was good money. There had been searching for the ship, but
+ none had found it; but he, Cassandro Biatt, had sure knowledge, got
+ from an obi-man, of the place where it lay. It would not be an
+ expensive business, but, cheap as it was, he had no means of raising
+ cash for the purpose; while I could, no doubt, raise the needed
+ money if I set about it. That was how he put it to me. Would I do
+ it? It was not with me a case of “no shots left in the locker, no
+ copper to tinkle on a tombstone.” I was not down to my last
+ macaroni, or quarter-dollar; but I drank some sangaree and set about
+ to do it. I got my courage from a look towards Rodney’s statue in
+ its temple--Rodney did a great work for Jamaica against Admiral de
+ Grasse.
+
+ Why should I tell Biatt the truth about myself? He knew it.
+ Cassandro was an accomplished liar, and a man of merit of his kind.
+ This obi-man’s story I have never believed; yet how Biatt came to
+ know where that treasure-ship was I do not know now.
+
+ Yes, out we went through the harbour of Kingston, beyond the
+ splendid defences of Port Royal and the men-of-war there, past the
+ Palisadoes and Rock Fort, and away to the place of treasure-trove.
+ We found it--that lost galleon; and we found the treasure-box of the
+ captain’s cabin. We found gold too; but the treasure-box was the
+ chief thing; and we made it ours after many a hard day. Three
+ months it was from the day Biatt first spoke to me to the day when,
+ with an expert diver, we brought the box to the surface and opened
+ it.
+
+ How I induced one of the big men of Jamaica to be banker and skipper
+ for us need not be told; but he is one of whom men have dark
+ sayings--chiefly, I take it, because he does bold, incomprehensible
+ things. That business paid him well, for when the rent of the ship
+ was met, and the few men on it paid--slaves they were chiefly--he
+ pocketed ten thousand pounds, while Biatt and I each pouched forty
+ thousand, and Michael two thousand. Aye, to be sure, Michael was in
+ it! He is in all I do, and is as good as men of ten times his birth
+ and history. Michael will be a rich man one day. In two years his
+ two thousand have grown to four, and he misses no chance.
+
+ But those days when Biatt and I went treasure-ship hunting were not
+ without their trials. If we had failed, then no more could this
+ land have been home or resting-place for us. We should only have
+ been sojourners with no name, in debt, in disgrace, a pair of
+ braggart adventurers, who had worked a master-man of the island for
+ a ship, and money and men, and had lost all except the ship! Though
+ to be sure, the money was not a big thing--a few hundred pounds;
+ but the ship was no flea-bite. It was a biggish thing, for it could
+ be rented to carry sugar--it was, in truth, a sugar-ship of four
+ hundred tons--but it never carried so big a cargo of sugar as it did
+ on the day when that treasure-box was brought to the surface of the
+ sea.
+
+ I’m bound to say this--one of the straightest men I ever met, liar
+ withal, was Cassandro Biatt. He took his jewels and vanished up the
+ seas in a flourish. He would not even have another try at the gold
+ in the bowels of the ship.
+
+ “I’ve got plenty to fill my paunch, and I’ll go while I’ve enough.
+ It’s the men not going in time that get left in the end”--that’s
+ what he said.
+
+ And he was right; for other men went after the gold and got some of
+ it, and were caught by French and South American pirates and lost
+ all they had gained. Still another group went and brought away ten
+ thousand pounds, and lost it in fighting with Spanish buccaneers.
+ So Biatt was right, and went away content, while I stayed here--
+ because I must--and bought the land and house where I have my great
+ sugar-plantation. It is an enterprise of volume, and all would be
+ well if I were normal in mind and body; but I am not. I have a past
+ that stinks to heaven, as Shakespeare says, and I am an outlaw of
+ the one land which has all my soul and name and heritage. Yes, that
+ is what they have done to me--made a convict, an outlaw of me. I
+ may live--but not in the British Isles; and if any man kills me, he
+ is not liable to the law.
+
+ Men do not treat me badly here, for I have property and money, and
+ this is a land where these two things mean more than anywhere else,
+ even more than in a republic like that where you live. Here men
+ live according to the law of the knife, fork, and bottle, yet
+ nowhere in the world is there deeper national morality or wider
+ faith or endurance. It is a land where the sea is master, where
+ naval might is the chief factor, and weighs down all else.
+
+ Here the navies of the great powers meet and settle their disputes,
+ and every being in the island knows that life is only worth what a
+ hundred-ton brig-of-war permits. I have seen here in Jamaica the
+ off-scourings of the French and Spanish fleets on parole; have seen
+ them entering King’s House like loyal citizens; have even known of
+ French prisoners being used as guards at the entrance of King’s
+ House, and I have informed the chief justice of dismal facts which
+ ought to have moved him. But what can you expect of a chief justice
+ who need not be a lawyer, as this one is not, and has other means of
+ earning income which, though not disloyal, are lowering to the
+ status of a chief justice? And not the chief justice alone. I have
+ seen French officers entertained at Government House who were guilty
+ of shocking inhumanities and cruelties. The governor, Lord Mallow,
+ is much to blame. On him lies the responsibility; to him must go
+ the discredit. For myself, I feel his enmity on every hand. I
+ suffer from his suggestions; I am the victim of his dark moods.
+
+ If I want a concession from a local council, his hand is at work
+ against me; if I see him in the street, I get a courtesy tossed, as
+ you would toss a bone to a dog. If I appear at the king’s ball,
+ which is open to all on the island who are respectable, I am treated
+ with such disdain by the viceroy of the king that all the island is
+ agog. I went one day to the king’s ball the same as the rest of the
+ world, and I went purposely in dress contrary to the regulations.
+ Here was the announcement of the affair in the Royal Gazette, which
+ was reproduced in the Chronicle, the one important newspaper in the
+ island:
+
+ KING’S HOUSE,
+ October 27th, 1797.
+
+ KING’S BALL.
+
+ There will be a Ball given by His Honour the Lieutenant-
+ Governor, on Tuesday evening, the 6th day of December next,
+ in honour of
+
+ HIS MAJESTY’S BIRTHDAY.
+
+ To prevent confusion, Ladies and Gentlemen are requested to
+ order their carriages to come by the Old Court House, and go
+ off by the Long Room.
+
+ N.B.--No gentlemen can possibly be admitted in boots, or
+ otherwise improperly dressed.
+
+ Well, in a spirit of mutiny--in which I am, in a sense, an expert--
+ I went in boots and otherwise “improperly dressed,” for I wore my
+ hair in a queue, like a peasant. What is more, I danced with a
+ negress in the great quadrille, and thereby offended the governor
+ and his lady aunt, who presides at his palace. It matters naught to
+ me. On my own estate it was popular enough, and that meant more to
+ me than this goodwill of Lord Mallow.
+
+ He does not spare me in his recitals to his friends, who carry his
+ speech abroad. His rancour against me is the greater, I know,
+ because of the wealth I got in the treasure-ship, to prevent which
+ he tried to prohibit my leaving the island, through the withholding
+ of a leave-ticket to me. His argument to the local authorities was
+ that I had no rights, that I am a murderer and a mutineer, and
+ confined to the island, though not on parole. He almost succeeded;
+ but the man to whom I went, the big rich man intervened,
+ successfully--how I know not--and I was let go with my permit-
+ ticket.
+
+ What big things hang on small issues! If my Lord Mallow had
+ prevented me leaving the island, I shouldn’t now own a great
+ plantation and three hundred negroes. I shouldn’t be able to pay
+ my creditors in good gold Portuguese half-johannes and Spanish
+ doubloons, and be free of Spanish silver, and give no heed to the
+ bitt, which, as you perhaps know, is equal to fivepence in British
+ money, such as you and I used to spend when you were Queen of
+ Ireland and I was your slave.
+
+ Then I worshipped you as few women have been worshipped in all the
+ days of the world--oh, cursed spite of life and time that I should
+ have been jailed for killing your bad father! Aye, he was a bad
+ man, and he is better in his grave than out of it, but it puts a
+ gulf between you and me which nothing will ever bridge--unless it
+ should some day be known I did not kill him, and then, no doubt, it
+ will be too late.
+
+ On my soul, I don’t believe I put my sword into him; but if I did,
+ he well deserved it, for he was worse than faithless to your mother,
+ he was faithless to his country--he was a traitor! I did not tell
+ that story of his treachery in court--I did not tell it because of
+ you. You did not deserve such infamy, and the truth came not out at
+ the trial. I, in my view, dared not, lest it might injure you, and
+ you had suffered enough--nay, more than enough--through him.
+
+ I wonder how you are, and if you have changed--I mean in appearance.
+ I am sure you are not married; I should have felt it in my bones,
+ if you were. No, no, my sweet lass, you are not married. But
+ think--it is more than seven long years since we met on the hills
+ above Playmore, and you put your hand in mine and said we should be
+ friends for all time. It is near three years since a letter came to
+ me from you, and in the time I have made progress.
+
+ I did not go to the United States, as you asked me to do. Is it not
+ plain I could not? My only course was to avoid you. You see, your
+ mother knows the truth--knows that I was jailed for killing your
+ father and her divorced husband. Therefore, the only way to do was
+ as I did. I could not go where you were. There should be hid from
+ you the fact that Erris Boyne was a traitor. This is your right, in
+ my mind. Looking back, I feel sure I could have escaped jail if I
+ had told what I knew of Erris Boyne; and perhaps it would have been
+ better, for I should, no doubt, have been acquitted. Yet I could
+ not have gone to you, for I am not sure I did not kill him.
+
+ So it is best as it is. We are as we are, and nothing can make all
+ different for us. I am a dissolute planter of Jamaica who has
+ snatched from destiny a living and some riches. I have a bad name
+ in the world. Yet by saving the king’s navy from defeat out here I
+ did a good turn for my country and the empire.
+
+ So much to the good. It brought me freedom from the rope and pardon
+ for my chief offence. Then, in company with a rogue, I got wealth
+ from the depths of the sea, and here I am in the bottom of my
+ luxury, drunken and obscene--yes, obscene, for I permit my overseers
+ and my manager to keep black women and have children by them. That
+ I do not do so myself is no virtue on my part, but the virtue of a
+ girl whom I knew in Connemara. I fill myself with drink. I have a
+ bottle of madeira or port every night, and pints of beer or claret.
+ I am a creature of low habits, a man sodden with self-indulgence.
+ And when I am in drink, no slaver can be more cruel and ruthless.
+
+ Yet I am moderate in eating. The meals that people devour here
+ almost revolt me. They eat like cormorants and drink like dry
+ ground; but at my table I am careful, save with the bottle. This
+ is a land of wonderful fruits, and I eat in quantities pineapple,
+ tamarind, papaw, guava, sweet-sop, star-apple, granadilla, hog-plum,
+ Spanish-gooseberry, and pindal-nut. These are native, but there are
+ also the orange, lemon, lime, shaddock, melon, fig, pomegranate,
+ cinnamon, and mango, brought chiefly from the Spanish lands of South
+ America. The fruit-market here is good, Heaven knows, and I have my
+ run of it. Perhaps that is why my drink does not fatten me greatly.
+ Yes, I am thin--thinner even than when you saw me last. How
+ wonderful a day it was! You remember it, I’m sure.
+
+ We stood on the high hills, you and I, looking to the west. It was
+ a true Irish day. A little in front of us, in the sky, were great
+ clusters of clouds, and beyond them, as far as eye could see, were
+ hills so delicately green, so spotted with settlements, so misty and
+ full of glamour, and so cheerful with the western light. And the
+ storm broke--do you remember it? It broke, but not on us. It fell
+ on the middle of the prospect before us, and we saw beyond it the
+ bright area of sunny country where men work and prophesy and slave,
+ and pray to the ancient gods and acclaim the saints, and die and
+ fructify the mould; where such as Christopher Dogan live, and men a
+ thousand times lower than he. Christopher came to the jail the day
+ I was released--with Michael Clones he came. He read me my bill of
+ life’s health--what was to become of me--the black and the white of
+ it, the good and the bad, the fair and the foul. Even the good
+ fortune of the treasure from the sea he foresaw, and much else that
+ has not come to me, and, as I think, will never come; for it is too
+ full a cup for me so little worthy of it.
+
+ It seems strange to me that I am as near to the United States here
+ in Jamaica, or almost as near, as one in London is to one in Dublin;
+ and yet one might as well be ten thousand leagues distant for all it
+ means to her one loves in the United States. Yes, dear Sheila, I
+ love you, and I would tear out the heart of the world for you. I
+ bathe my whole being in your beauty and your charm. I hunger for
+ you--to stand beside you, to listen to your voice, to dip my prison
+ fingers into the pure cauldron of your soul and feel my own soul
+ expand. I wonder why it is that to-day I feel more than I ever felt
+ before the rare splendour of your person.
+
+ I have always admired you and loved you, always heard you calling
+ me, as if from some sacred corner of a perfect world. Is it that
+ yesterday’s dissipation--yes, I was drunk yesternight, drunk in a
+ new way. I was drunk with the thought of you, the longing for you.
+ I picked a big handful of roses, and in my mind gave them into your
+ hands. And I thought you smiled and said:
+
+ “Well done, good and faithful servant. Enter Paradise.” So I
+ followed you to your home there in the Virginian country. It was a
+ dream, all except the roses, and those I laid in front of the box
+ where I keep your letters and a sketch I made of you when we were
+ young and glad--when I was young and glad. For I am an old man,
+ Sheila, in all that makes men old. My step is quick still, my eye
+ is sharp, and my brain beats fast, but my heart is ancient. I am an
+ ancient of days, without hope or pleasure, save what pleasure comes
+ in thinking of one whom I worship, yet must ever worship from afar.
+
+ I wonder why I seem to feel you very near to-day! Perhaps it’s
+ because ‘tis Christmas Day. I am not a religious man but Christmas
+ is a day of memories.
+
+ Is it because of the past in Ireland? Am I only--God, am I only to
+ be what I am for the rest of my days, a planter denied the pleasure
+ of home by his own acts! Am I only a helpless fragment of a world
+ of lost things?
+
+ I have no friends--but yes, I have. I have Michael Clones and
+ Captain Ivy, though he’s far away-aye, he’s a friend of friends, is
+ Captain Ivy. These naval folk have had so much of the world, have
+ got the bearings of so many seas, that they lose all littleness, and
+ form their own minds. They are not like the people who knew me in
+ Ireland--the governor here is one of them--and who believe the worst
+ of me. The governor--faugh, he was made for bigger and better
+ things! He is one of the best swordsmen in the world, and he is
+ out against me here as if I was a man of importance, and not a
+ commonplace planter on an obscure river. I have no social home
+ life, and yet I live in what is called a castle. A Jamaica castle
+ has none of the marks of antiquity, chivalry, and distinction which
+ castles that you and I know in the old land possess.
+
+ What is my castle like? Well, it is a squarish building, of
+ bungalow type, set on a hill. It has stories and an attic, with a
+ jutting dormer-window in the front of the roof; and above the lowest
+ story there is a great verandah, on which the livingrooms and
+ bedrooms open. It is commodious, and yet from a broad standpoint it
+ is without style or distinction. It has none of those Corinthian
+ pillars which your homesteads in America have. Yet there is in it a
+ simple elegance. It has no carpets, but a shining mahogany floor,
+ for there are few carpets in this land of heat. It is a place where
+ music and mirth and family voices would be fitting; but there are no
+ family voices here, save such as speak with a negro lisp and
+ oracularly.
+
+ I can hear music at this moment, and inside my castle. It comes
+ from the irrepressible throats of my cook and my housemaid, who have
+ more joy in the language of the plantation than you could have in
+ the songs of St. Angelus. The only person in this castle out of
+ spirits is its owner.
+
+ My castle is embowered in a loose grove of palms and acacias,
+ pimento shrubs, splendid star-apples, and bully-trees, with wild
+ lemon, mahogany, dogwood, Jerusalem-thorn, and the waving plumes of
+ bamboo canes. There is nothing British in it--nothing at all. It
+ stands on brick pillars, is reached by a stair of marble slabs, and
+ has a great piazza on the front. You enter a fine, big hall, dark-
+ you will understand that, though it is not so hot in Virginia, for
+ the darkness makes for coolness. From the hall the bedrooms open
+ all round. We are not so barbaric here as you might think, for my
+ dining-room, which lies beyond the hall, with jalousies or movable
+ blinds, exposed to all the winds, is comfortable, even ornate.
+ There you shall see waxlights on the table, and finger-glasses with
+ green leaves, and fine linen and napkins, and plenty of silver--even
+ silver wine-coolers, and beakers of fame and beauty, and flowers,
+ flowers everywhere, and fruit of exquisite charm. I have to live
+ in outward seeming as do my neighbours, even to keeping a black
+ footman, gorgeously dressed, with bare legs.
+
+ Here at my window grows a wild aloe, and it is in flower. Once only
+ in fifty years does this aloe flower, and I pick its sweet verdure
+ now and offer it to you. There it lies, beside this letter that I
+ am writing. It is typical of myself, for only once has my heart
+ flowered, and it will be only once in fifty years. The perfume of
+ the flower is like an everlasting bud from the last tree of Time.
+ See, my Sheila, your drunken, reckless lover pulls this sweet
+ offering from his garden and offers it to you. He has no virtues;
+ and yet he would have been a thousand times worse, if you had not
+ come into his life. He had in him the seeds of trouble, the
+ sproutings of shame, for even in the first days of his love there in
+ Dublin he would not restrain himself. He drank, he played cards, he
+ fought and went with bad company--not women, never that; but he kept
+ the company of those through whom he came at last to punishment for
+ manslaughter.
+
+ Yet, without you, who can tell what he might have been? He might
+ have fallen so low that not the wealth of ten thousand treasure-
+ boxes could give him even the appearance of honesty. And now he
+ offers you what you cannot accept--can never accept--a love as deep
+ as the life from which he came; a love that would throttle the world
+ for you, that would force the doors of hell to bring you what you
+ want.
+
+ What do you want? I know not. Perhaps you have inherited the vast
+ property to which you were the heir. If you have, what can you want
+ that you have not means to procure? Ah, I have learned one thing,
+ my friend ‘one can get nearly everything with money. It is the
+ hidden machinery which makes the world of success go round. With
+ brains, you say? Yes, money and brains, but without the money
+ brains seldom win alone. Do not I know? When I was in prison, with
+ estate vanished and home gone and my father in his grave, who was
+ concerned about me?
+
+ Only the humblest of all God’s Irish people; but with them I have
+ somehow managed to win back lost ground. I am a stronger man than I
+ was in all that men count of value in the world. I have an estate
+ where I work like any youth who has everything before him. I have
+ nothing before me, yet I shall go on working to the end. Why?
+ Because I have some faculties which are more than bread and butter,
+ and I must give them opportunity.
+
+ Yet I am not always sane. Sometimes I feel I could march out and
+ sweep into the sea one of the towns that dot the coast of this
+ island. I have the bloody thirst, as said the great Spanish
+ conquistador. I would like--yes, sometimes I would like to sweep
+ to a watery grave one of the towns that are a glory to this island,
+ as Savanna la Mar was swept to oblivion in the year 1780 by a
+ hurricane. You can still see the ruins of the town at the bottom of
+ the sea--I have sailed over it in what is now the harbour, and there
+ beneath, on the deep sands, lost to time and trouble, is the slain
+ and tortured town of Savanna la Mar. Was the Master of the World
+ angry that day when, with a besom of wind and a tidal wave, He swept
+ the place into the sea? Or was it some devil’s work while the Lord
+ of All slept? As the Spanish say, Quien sabe?
+
+ Then there was that other enormous incident which made a man to be
+ swallowed by an earthquake, then belched out again into the sea and
+ picked up and restored to life again, and to live for many years.
+ Indeed, yes, it is so. His tombstone may be seen even at this day
+ at Green Bay, Kingston. His name was Lewis Galdy, and he is held in
+ high repute in this land.
+
+ I feel sometimes as Beelzebub may feel, and I long to do what
+ Beelzebub might do as part of his mission. Sometimes a madness
+ of revolt comes over me, and I long to ravage all the places I see,
+ all the people I know--or nearly all. Why I do not have negroes
+ thrashed and mutilated, as some do, I know not. Over against the
+ southern shore in the parish of St. Elizabeth is an estate called
+ Salem, owned, it is said, by an American, where the manager does
+ such things. I am told that savageries are found there. There
+ are too many absentee owners of land in this island, and the wrongs
+ done by agents who have no personal honour at stake are all too
+ plentiful. If I could, I would have no slavery, would set all the
+ blacks free, making full compensation to the owners, and less to the
+ absentee owners.
+
+ I look out on a world of summer beauty and of heat. I see the sheep
+ in hundreds on the far hills of pasturage--sheep with short hair,
+ small and sweet as any that ever came from the South Downs. I see
+ the natives in their Madras handkerchiefs. I see upon the road some
+ planter in his ketureen--a sort of sedan chair; I see a negro
+ funeral, with its strange ceremony and its gumbies of African drums.
+ I see yam-fed planters, on their horses, making for the burning,
+ sandy streets of the capital. I see the Scots grass growing five
+ and six feet high, food unsurpassed for horses--all the foliage too
+ --beautiful tropical trees and shrubs, and here and there a huge
+ breeding-farm. Yet I know that out beyond my sight there is the
+ region known as Trelawney, and Trelawney Town, the headquarters of
+ the Maroons, the free negroes--they who fled after the Spanish had
+ been conquered and the British came, and who were later freed and
+ secured by the Trelawney Treaty. I know that now they are ready to
+ rise, that they are working among the slaves; and if they rise the
+ danger is great to the white population of the island, who are
+ outnumbered ten to one.
+
+ The governor has been warned, but he gives no heed, or treats it all
+ lightly, pointing out how few the Maroons are. He forgets that a
+ few determined men can demoralize a whole state, can fight and
+ murder and fly to dark coverts in the tropical woods, where they
+ cannot be tracked down and destroyed; and, if they have made
+ supporters of the slaves, what consequences may not follow!
+
+ What do the Maroons look like? They are ferocious and isolated,
+ they are proud and overbearing, they are horribly cruel, but they
+ are potent, and are difficult to reach. They are not small and
+ meagre, but are big, brawny fellows, clothed in wide duck trousers
+ and shirts, and they are well-armed--cutlass, powder-horn,
+ haversack, sling, shot-gun, and pouch for ball. They dress as the
+ country requires, and they are strong fighters against our soldiers
+ who are burdened with heavy muskets, and who defy the climate, with
+ their stuffed coats, their weighty caps, and their tight cross-
+ belts. The Maroons are not to be despised. They have brains, the
+ insolence of freedom among natives who are not free, and vast
+ cruelty. They can be mastered and kept in subjection, can be made
+ allies, if properly handled; but Lord Mallow goes the wrong way
+ about it all. He permits things that inflame the Maroons.
+
+ One thing is clear to me--only by hounds can these people be
+ defeated. So sure am I upon this point, that I have sent to Cuba
+ for sixty hounds, with which, when the trouble comes--and it is not
+ far off--we shall be able to hunt the Maroons with the only weapon
+ they really fear--the dog’s sharp tooth. It may be the governor may
+ intervene on the arrival of the dogs; but I have made friends with
+ the provost-marshal-general and some members of the Jamaica
+ legislature; also I have a friend in the deputy of the provost-
+ marshal-general in my parish of Clarendon here, and I will make a
+ good bet that the dogs will be let come into the island, governor
+ or no governor.
+
+ When one sets oneself against the Crown one must be sure of one’s
+ ground, and fear no foe, however great and high. Well, I have won
+ so far, and I shall win in the end. Mallow should have some respect
+ for one that beat him at Phoenix Park with the sword; that beat him
+ when he would have me imprisoned here; that beat him in the matter
+ of the ship for Haiti, and that will beat him on every hazard he
+ sets, unless he stoops to underhand acts, which he will not do.
+ That much must be said for him. He plays his part in no small way,
+ and he is more a bigot and a fanatic loyalist than a rogue.
+ Suppose--but no, I will not suppose. I will lay my plans, I will
+ keep faith with people here who trust me, and who know that if I am
+ stern I am also just, and I will play according to the rules made by
+ better men than myself.
+
+But what is this I see? Michael Clones--in his white jean waistcoat,
+white neckcloth and trousers, and blue coat--is coming up the drive in
+hot haste, bearing a letter. He rides too hard. He has never carried
+himself easily in this climate. He treats it as if it was Ireland. He
+will not protect himself, and, if penalty followed folly, should now be
+in his grave. I like you, Michael. You are a boon, but--
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+
+Dyck Calhoun’s letter was never ended. It was only a relic of the years
+spent in Jamaica, only a sign of his well-being, though it gave no real
+picture of himself. He did not know how like a tyrant he had become in
+some small ways, while in the large things he remained generous, urbane,
+and resourceful. He was in appearance thin, dark-favoured, buoyant in
+manner, and stern of face, with splendid eyes. Had he dwelt on Olympus,
+he might have been summoned to judge and chastise the sons of men.
+
+When Michael Clones came to the doorway, Dyck laid down his quill-pen
+and eyed the flushed servant in disapproval.
+
+“What is it, Michael? Wherefore this starkness? Is some one come from
+heaven?”
+
+“Not precisely from heaven, y’r honour, but--”
+
+“But--yes, Michael! Have done with but-ing, and come to the real
+matter.”
+
+“Well, sir, they’ve come from Virginia.”
+
+Dyck Calhoun slowly got to his feet, his face paling, his body
+stiffening. From Virginia! Who should be come from Virginia, save she to
+whom he had just been writing?
+
+“Who has come from Virginia?” He knew, but he wanted it said.
+
+“Sure, you knew a vessel came from America last night. Well, in her was
+one that was called the Queen of Ireland long ago.”
+
+“Queen of Ireland--well, what then?” Dyck’s voice was tuneless, his
+manner rigid, his eyes burning. “Well, she--Miss Sheila Llyn and her
+mother are going to the Salem Plantation, down by the Essex Valley
+Mountain. It is her plantation now. It belonged to her uncle, Bryan
+Llyn. He got it in payment of a debt. He’s dead now, and all his lands
+and wealth have come to her. Her mother, Mrs. Llyn, is with her, and
+they start to-morrow or the next day for Salem. There’ll be different
+doings at Salem henceforward, y’r honour. She’s not the woman to see
+slaves treated as the manager at Salem treated ‘em.”
+
+Dyck Calhoun made an impatient gesture at this last remark.
+
+“Yes, yes, Michael. Where are they now?”
+
+“They’re at Charlotte Bedford’s lodgings in Spanish Town. The governor
+waited on them this morning. The governor sent them flowers and--”
+
+“Flowers--Lord Mallow sent them flowers! Hell’s fiend, man, suppose he
+did?”
+
+“There are better flowers here than in any Spanish Town.”
+
+“Well, take them, Michael; but if you do, come here again no more while
+you live, for I’ll have none of you. Do you think I’m entering the lists
+against the king’s governor?”
+
+“You’ve done it before, sir, and there’s no harm in doing it again. One
+good turn deserves another. I’ve also to tell you, sir, that Lord Mallow
+has asked them to stay at King’s House.”
+
+“Lord Mallow has asked Americans to stay at King’s House!”
+
+“But they’re Irish, and he knew them in Ireland, y ‘r honour.”
+
+“Well, he knew me in Ireland, and I’m proscribed!”
+
+“Ah, that’s different, as you know. There’s no war on now, and they’re
+only good American citizens who own land in this dominion of the king;
+so why shouldn’t he give them courtesy?”
+
+“From whom do you get your information?” asked Dyck Calhoun with an air
+of suspicion.
+
+“From Darius Boland, y’r honour,” answered Michael, with a smile. “Who
+is Darius Boland, you’re askin’ in y’r mind? Well, he’s the new manager
+come from the Llyn plantations in Virginia; and right good stuff he is,
+with a tongue that’s as dry as cut-wheat in August. And there’s humour
+in him, plenty-aye, plenty. When did I see him, and how? Well, I saw him
+this mornin’, on the quay at Kingston. He was orderin’ the porters about
+with an air--oh, bedad, an air! I saw the name upon the parcels--Miss
+Sheila Llyn, of Moira, Virginia, and so I spoke to him. The rest was
+aisy. He looked me up and down in a flash, like a searchlight playin’ on
+an enemy ship, and then he smiled. ‘Well,’ said he, ‘who might you be?
+For there’s queer folks in Jamaica, I’m told.’ So I said I was Michael
+Clones, and at that he doffed his hat and held out a hand. ‘Well, here’s
+luck,’ said he. ‘Luck at the very start! I’ve heard of you from my
+mistress. You’re servant to Mr. Dyck Calhoun--ain’t that it?’ And I
+nodded, and he smiled again--a smile that’d cost money anywhere else
+than in Jamaica. He smiled again, and give a slow hitch to his breeches
+as though they was fallin’ down. Why, sir, he’s the longest bit of
+man you ever saw, with a pointed beard, and a nose that’s as long as a
+midshipman’s tongue-dry, lean, and elastic. He’s quick and slow all at
+once. His small eyes twinkle like stars beatin’ up against bad weather,
+and his skin’s the colour of Scots grass in the dead of summer-yaller,
+he’d call it if he called it anything, and yaller was what he called the
+look of the sky above the hills. Queer way of talk he has, that man, as
+queer as--”
+
+“I understand, Michael. But what else? How did you come to talk about
+the affairs of Mrs. and Miss Llyn? He didn’t just spit it out, did he?”
+
+“Sure, not so quick and free as spittin’, y’r honour; but when he’d
+sorted me out, as it were, he said Miss Llyn had come out here to take
+charge of Salem; her own estate in Virginia bein’ in such good runnin’
+order, and her mind bein’ active. Word had come of the trouble with
+the manager here, and one of the provost-marshal’s deputies had written
+accounts of the flogging and ill-treatment of slaves, and that’s why she
+come--to put things right at Salem!”
+
+“To put things wrong in Jamaica, Michael, that’s why she’s come. To
+loose the ball of confusion and free the flood of tragedy--that’s why
+she’s come! Man, Michael, you know her history--who she was and what
+happened to her father. Well, do you think there’s no tragedy in her
+coming here? I killed her father, they say, Michael. I was punished for
+it. I came here to be free of all those things--lifted out and away from
+them all. I longed to forget the past, which is only shame and torture;
+and here it is all spread out at my door again like a mat, which I must
+see as I go in and out. Essex Valley--why, it’s less than a day’s ride
+from here, far less than a day’s ride! It can be ridden in four or five
+hours at a trot. Michael, it’s all a damnable business. And here she is
+in Jamaica with her Darius Boland! There was no talk on Boland’s part of
+their coming here, was there Michael?”
+
+“None at all, sir, but there was that in the man’s eye, and that in his
+tone, which made me sure he thought Miss Llyn and you would meet.”
+
+“That would be strange, wouldn’t it, in this immense continent!” Dyck
+remarked cynically.
+
+“She knew I was here before she came?”
+
+“Aye, she knew. She had seen your name in the papers--English and
+Jamaican. She knew you had regained your life and place, and was a man
+of mark here.”
+
+“A marked man, you mean, Michael--a man whom the king has had to pardon
+of a crime because of an act done that served the State. I am forbidden
+to return to the British Isles or to the land of my birth, forbidden
+free traffic as a citizen, hammered out of recognition by the strokes of
+enmity. A man of mark, indeed! Aye, with the broad arrow on me, with the
+shame of prison and mutiny on my name!”
+
+“But if she don’t believe?”
+
+“If she don’t believe! Well, she must be told the truth at last. I
+wonder her mother let her come here. Her mother knew part of the truth.
+She hid it all from the girl--and now they are here! I must see it
+through, but it’s a wretched fate, Michael.”
+
+“Perhaps her mother didn’t know you were here, sir.”
+
+Dyck laughed grimly. “Michael, you’ve a lawyer’s mind. Perhaps you’re
+right. The girl may have hid from her mother all newspapers referring
+to me. That may well be; but it’s not the way that will bring
+understanding.”
+
+“I think it’s the truth, sir, for Darius Boland spoke naught of the
+mother--indeed, he said only what would make me think the girl came with
+her own ends in view. Faith, I’m sure the mother did not know.”
+
+“She will know now. Your Darius Boland will tell her.”
+
+“By St. Peter, it doesn’t matter who tells her, sir. The business must
+be faced.”
+
+“Michael, order my horse, and I will go to Spanish Town. This matter
+must be brought to a head. The truth must be told. Order my horse!”
+
+“It is the very heat of the day, sir.”
+
+“Then at five o’clock, after dinner, have my horse here.”
+
+“Am I to ride with you, sir?”
+
+Dyck nodded. “Yes, Michael. There’s only one thing to do--face all the
+facts with all the evidence, and you are fact and evidence too. You know
+more of the truth than any one else.”
+
+Several hours later, when the sun was abating its force a little, after
+travelling the burning roads through yams and cocoa, grenadillas and
+all kinds of herbs and roots and vagrant trees, Dyck Calhoun and Michael
+Clones came into Spanish Town. Dyck rode the unpaved streets on his
+horse with its high demipicque Spanish saddle, with its silver stirrups
+and heavy bit, and made his way towards Charlotte Bedford’s lodgings.
+
+Dyck looked round upon the town with new eyes. He saw it like one for
+the first time visiting it. He saw the people passing through the wide
+verandahs of the houses, like a vast colonnade, down the street, to
+be happily sheltered from the fierce sun. As he had come down from the
+hills he thought he had never seen the houses look more beautiful in
+their gardens of wild tamarinds, kennips, cocoa-nuts, pimentos, and
+palms, backed by negro huts. He had seen all sorts of people at the
+draw-wells of the houses-British, Spanish, French, South American,
+Creoles, and here and there a Maroon, and the everlasting negro who sang
+as he worked:
+
+ “Come along o’ me, my buccra brave,
+ You see de shild de Lord he gave:
+ You drink de sangaree,
+ I make de frichassee--”
+
+Here a face peeped out from the glazed sash of the jalousies of the
+balconies above--a face that could never be said to be white, though it
+had only a tinge of black in its coaxing beauty. There a workman with
+long hair and shag trousers painted the prevailing two-storied house the
+prevailing colour, white and green. There was a young naval officer in
+full dress, gold-buckled shoes, white trousers, short jacket with gold
+swab on shoulders, dress-sword and smart gait making for supper at
+King’s House.
+
+A long-legged “son of a gun” of a Yankee had a “clapper-claw,” or
+handshake, with a planting attorney in a kind of four-posted gig,
+canopied in leather and curtained clumsily. The Yankee laughed at the
+heavy straight shafts and the mule that drew the volante, as the gig was
+called, and the vehicle creaked and cried as it rolled along over the
+road, which was like a dry river-bed. There a French officer in Hessian
+boots, white trousers, blue uniform, and much-embroidered scarlet cuffs
+watched with amusement a slave carrying a goglet, or earthen jar, upon
+his head like an Egyptian, untouched by the hand, so adding dignity to
+carriage. He was holding a “round-aboutation” with an old hag who was
+telling his fortune.
+
+As they passed King’s House, they saw troops of the viceroy’s guests
+issuing from the palace-officers of the king’s navy and army, officers
+and men of the Jamaica militia, pale-faced, big-eyed men of the Creole
+class, mulattoes, quadroons and octoroons, Samboes with their wives in
+loose skirts, white stockings, and pinnacle hats. There also passed, in
+the streets, black servants with tin cases on their heads, or carrying
+parcels in their arms, and here and there processions of servants, each
+with something that belonged to their mistresses, who would presently be
+attending the king’s ball.
+
+Snatches of song were heard, and voices of men who had had a full meal
+and had “taken observations”--as looking through the bottom of a glass
+of liquor was called by people with naval spirit--were mixed in careless
+carousal.
+
+All this jarred on Dyck Calhoun and gave revolt to his senses. Yet he
+was only half-conscious of the great sensuousness of the scene as he
+passed through it. Now and then some one doffed a hat to him, and very
+occasionally some half-drunken citizen tossed at him a remark meant to
+wound; but he took no notice, and let things pleasant and provocative
+pass down the long ranges of indifference.
+
+All was brought to focus at last, however, by their arrival at Charlotte
+Bedford’s lodgings, which, like most houses in the town, had a
+lookout or belfry fitted with green blinds and a telescope, and had a
+green-painted wooden railing round it.
+
+At the very entrance, inside the gate, in the garden, they saw Sheila
+Llyn, her mother, and Darius Boland, who seemed to be enduring from the
+mother some sharp reprimand, to the amusement of the daughter. As the
+gate closed behind Dyck and Michael, the three from Virginia turned
+round and faced them. As Dyck came forward, Sheila flushed and trembled.
+She was no longer a young girl, but her slim straightness and the soft
+lines of her figure, gave her a dignity and charm which made her young
+womanhood distinguished--for she was now twenty-five, and had a carriage
+of which a princess might have been proud. Yet it was plain that the
+entrance of Dyck at this moment was disturbing. It was not what she had
+foreseen.
+
+She showed no hesitation, however, but came forward to meet her visitor,
+while Michael fell back, as also did Darius Boland. Both these seemed to
+realize that the less they saw and heard the better; and they presently
+got together in another part of the garden, as Dyck Calhoun came near
+enough almost to touch Sheila.
+
+Surely, he thought, she was supreme in appearance and design. She was
+like some rare flower of the field, alert, gentle, strong, intrepid,
+with buoyant face, brown hair, blue eyes and cream-like skin. She
+was touched by a rose on each cheek and made womanly by firm and yet
+generous breasts, tenderly imprisoned by the white chiffon of her blouse
+in which was one bright sprig of the buds of a cherry-tree-a touch of
+modest luxuriance on a person sparsely ornamented. It was not tropical,
+this picture of Sheila Llyn; it was a flick of northern life in a summer
+sky. It was at once cheerful and apart. It had no August in it; no oil
+and wine. It was the little twig that grew by a running spring. It
+was fresh, dominant and serene. It was Connemara on the Amazon! It was
+Sheila herself, whom time had enriched with far more than years and
+experience. It was a personality which would anywhere have taken place
+and held it. It was undefeatable, persistent and permanent; it was the
+spirit of Ireland loose in a world that was as far apart from Ireland as
+she was from her dead, dishonoured father.
+
+And Dyck? At first she felt she must fly to him--yes, in spite of the
+fact that he had suffered prison for manslaughter. But a nearer look at
+him stopped the impulse at its birth. Here was the Dyck Calhoun she had
+known in days gone by, but not the Dyck she had looked to see; for this
+man was like one who had come from a hanging, who had seen his dearest
+swinging at the end of a rope. His face was set in coldness; his hair
+was streaked with grey; his forehead had a line in the middle; his
+manner was rigid, almost frigid, indeed. Only in his eyes was there that
+which denied all that his face and manner said--a hungry, absorbing,
+hopeless look, the look of one who searches for a friend in the denying
+desert.
+
+Somehow, when he bowed low to her, and looked her in the eyes as no one
+in all her life had ever done, she had an almost agonized understanding
+of what a man feels who has been imprisoned--that is, never the same
+again. He was an ex-convict, and yet she did not feel repelled by him.
+She did not believe he had killed Erris Boyne. As for the later crime
+of mutiny, that did not concern her much. She was Irish; but, more than
+that, she was in sympathy with the mutineers. She understood why Dyck
+Calhoun, enlisting as a common sailor, should take up their cause and
+run risk to advance it. That he had advanced it was known to all the
+world; that he had paid the price of his mutiny by saving the king’s
+navy with a stolen ship had brought him pardon for his theft of a ship
+and mutiny; and that he had won wealth was but another proof of the
+man’s power.
+
+“You would not come to America, so I came here, and--” She paused,
+her voice trembling slightly. “There is much to do at Salem,” he added
+calmly, and yet with his heart beating, as it had not beaten since the
+day he had first met her at Playmore.
+
+“You would not take the money I sent to Dublin for you--the gift of a
+believing friend, and you would not come to America!”
+
+“I shall have to tell you why one day,” he answered slowly, “but I’ll
+pay my respects to your mother now.” So saying he went forward and bowed
+low to Mrs. Llyn. Unlike her daughter, Mrs. Llyn did not offer her hand.
+She was pale, distraught, troubled--and vexed. She, however, murmured
+his name and bowed. “You did not expect to see me here in Jamaica,” he
+said boldly.
+
+“Frankly, I did not, Mr. Calhoun,” she said.
+
+“You resent my coming here to see you? You think it bold, at least.”
+
+She looked at him closely and firmly. “You know why I cannot welcome
+you.”
+
+“Yet I have paid the account demanded by the law. And you had no regard
+for him. You divorced him.”
+
+Sheila had drawn near, and Dyck made a gesture in her direction. “She
+does not know,” he said, “and she should not hear what we say now?”
+
+Mrs. Llyn nodded, and in a low tone told Sheila that she wished to be
+alone with Dyck for a little while. In Dyck’s eyes, as he watched Sheila
+go, was a thing deeper than he had ever known or shown before. In her
+white gown, and with her light step, Sheila seemed to float away--a
+picture graceful, stately, buoyant, “keen and small.” As she was about
+to pass beyond a clump of pimento bushes, she turned her head towards
+the two, and there was that in her eyes which few ever see and seeing
+are afterwards the same. It was a look of inquiry, or revelation, of
+emotion which went to Dyck’s heart.
+
+“No, she does not know the truth,” Mrs. Llyn said. “But it has been
+hard hiding it from her. One never knew whether some chance remark, some
+allusion in the papers, would tell her you had killed her father.”
+
+“Did I kill her father?” asked Dyck helplessly. “Did I? I was found
+guilty of it, but on my honour, Mrs. Llyn, I do not know, and I do not
+think I did. I have no memory of it. We quarrelled. I drew my sword on
+him, then he made an explanation and I madly, stupidly drank
+drugged wine in reconciliation with him, and then I remember nothing
+more--nothing at all.”
+
+“What was the cause of your quarrel?”
+
+Dyck looked at her long before answering. “I hid that from my father
+even, and hid it from the world--did not even mention it in court at
+the trial. If I had, perhaps I should not have gone to jail. If I had,
+perhaps I should not be here in Jamaica. If I had--” He paused, a
+flood of reflection drowning his face, making his eyes shine with black
+sorrow.
+
+“Well, if you had!... Why did you not? Wasn’t it your duty to save
+yourself and save your friends, if you could? Wasn’t that your plain
+duty?”
+
+“Yes, and that was why I did not tell what the quarrel was. If I had,
+even had I killed Erris Boyne, the jury would not have convicted me. Of
+that I am sure. It was a loyalist jury.”
+
+“Then why did you not?”
+
+“Isn’t it strange that now after all these years, when I have settled
+the account with judge and jury, with state and law--that now I feel
+I must tell you the truth. Madam, your ex-husband, Erris Boyne, was a
+traitor. He was an officer in the French army, and he offered to make me
+an officer also and pay me well in French Government money, if I would
+break my allegiance and serve the French cause--Ah, don’t start! He knew
+I was on my last legs financially. He knew I had acquaintance with young
+rebel leaders like Emmet, and he felt I could be won. So he made his
+proposal. Because of your daughter I held my peace, for she could bear
+it less than you. I did not tell the cause of the quarrel. If I had,
+there would have been for her the double shame. That was why I held my
+peace--a fool, but so it was!”
+
+The woman seemed almost robbed of understanding. His story overwhelmed
+her. Yet what the man had done was so quixotic, so Celtic, that her
+senses were almost paralysed.
+
+“So mad--so mad and bad and wild you were,” she said. “Could you not see
+it was your duty to tell all, no matter what the consequences. The man
+was a villain. But what madness you were guilty of, what cruel madness!
+Only you could have done a thing like that. Erris Boyne deserved
+death--I care not who killed him--you or another. He deserved death, and
+it was right he should die. But that you should kill him, apart from
+all else--why, indeed, oh, indeed, it is a tragedy, for you loved my
+daughter, and the killing made a gulf between you! There could be no
+marriage in such a case. She could not bear it, nor could you. But
+please know this, Mr. Calhoun, that she never believed you killed Erris
+Boyne. She has said so again and again. You are the only man who has
+ever touched her mind or her senses, though many have sought her.
+Wherever she goes men try to win her, but she has no thought for
+any. Her mind goes back to you. Just when you entered the garden I
+learned--and only then-that you were here. She hid it from me, but
+Darius Boland knew, and he had seen your man, Michael Clones, and she
+had then made him tell me. I was incensed. I was her mother, and yet
+she had hid the thing from me. I thought she came to this island for the
+sake of Salem, and I found that she came not for Salem, but for you....
+Ah, Mr. Calhoun, she deserves what you did to save her, but you should
+not have done it.”
+
+“She deserves all that any better man might do. Why don’t you marry her
+to some great man in your Republic? It would settle my trouble for me
+and free her mind from anxiety. Mrs. Llyn, we are not children, you and
+I. You know life, and so do I, and--”
+
+She interrupted him. “Be sure of this, Mr. Calhoun, she knows life even
+better than either of us. She is, and has always been, a girl of sense
+and judgment. When she was a child she was my master, even in Ireland.
+Yet she was obedient and faithful, and kept her head in all vexed
+things. She will have her way, and she will have it as she wants it,
+and in no other manner. She is one of the world’s great women. She is
+unique. Child as she is, she still understands all that men do, and does
+it. Under her hands the estates in Virginia have developed even more
+than under the hands of my brother. She controls like another Elizabeth.
+She has made those estates run like a spool of thread, and she will do
+the same here with Salem. Be sure of that.”
+
+“Why does she not marry? Is there no man she can bear? She could have
+the highest, that’s sure.” He spoke with passion and insistence. If she
+were married his trouble would be over. The worst would have come to
+him--like death. His eyes were only two dark fires in a face that was
+as near to tragic pain crystallized as any the world has seen. Yet there
+was in it some big commanding thing, that gave it a ghastly handsomeness
+almost; that bathed his look in dignity and power, albeit a reckless
+power, a thing that would not be stayed by any blandishments. He had the
+look of a lost angel, one who fell with Belial in the first days of sin.
+
+“There is no man she can bear--except here in Jamaica. It is no use.
+Your governor, Lord Mallow, whom she knew in Ireland, who is distant
+kin of mine, he has already made advances here to her, as he did in
+Ireland--you did not know that. Even before we left for Virginia he came
+to see us, and brought her books and flowers, and here, on our arrival,
+he brought her choicest blooms of his garden. She is rich, and he
+would be glad of an estate that brings in scores of thousands of pounds
+yearly. He has asked us to stay at King’s House, but we have declined.
+We start for Salem in a few hours. She wants her hand on the wheel.”
+
+“Lord Mallow--he courts her, does he?” His face grew grimmer. “Well, she
+might do worse, though if she were one of my family I would rather see
+her in her grave than wedded to him. For he is selfish--aye, as few men
+are! He would eat and keep his apple too. His theory is that life is but
+a game, and it must be played with steel. He would squeeze the life out
+of a flower, and give the flower to his dog to eat. He thinks first and
+always of himself. He would--but there, he would make a good husband as
+husbands go for some women, but not for this woman! It is not because he
+is my enemy I say this. It is because there is only one woman like your
+daughter, and that is herself; and I would rather see her married to
+a hedger that really loved her than to Lord Mallow, who loves only one
+being on earth--himself. But see, Mrs. Llyn, now that you know all, now
+that we three have met again, and this island is small and tragedy is
+at our doors, don’t you think your daughter should be told the truth.
+It will end everything for me. But it would be better so. It is now only
+cruelty to hide the truth, harsh to continue a friendship which will
+only appal her in the end. If we had not met again like this, then
+silence might have been best; but as she is not cured of her tender
+friendship made upon the hills at Playmore, isn’t it well to end it all?
+Your conscience will be clearer, and so will mine. We shall have done
+the right thing at last. Why did you not tell her who her father was?
+Then why blame me! You held your peace to save your daughter, as you
+thought. I held my tongue for the same reason; but she is so much a
+woman now, that she will understand, as she could not have understood
+years ago in Limerick. In God’s name, let us speak. One of us should
+tell her, and I think it should be you. And see, though I know I did
+right in withholding the facts about the quarrel with Erris Boyne, yet
+I favour telling her that he was a traitor. The whole truth now, or
+nothing. That is my view.”
+
+He saw how lined and sunken was her face, he noted the weakness of her
+carriage, he realized the task he was putting on her, and his heart
+relented. “No, I will do it,” he added, with sudden will, “and I will do
+it now, if I may.”
+
+“Oh, not to-day-not to-day!” she said with a piteous look. “Let it not
+be to-day. It is our first day here, and we are due at King’s House
+to-night, even in an hour from now.”
+
+“You want her at her glorious best, is that it?” It seemed too strange
+that the pure feminine should show at a time of crisis like this, but
+there it was. It was this woman’s way. But he added presently: “When she
+asks you what we have talked about, what will you say?”
+
+“Is it not easy? I am a mother,” she said meaningly.
+
+“And I am an ex-convict, and a mutineer--is that it?”
+
+She inclined her head. “It should not be difficult to explain. When you
+came I was speaking as I felt, and she will not think it strange if I
+give that as my reason.”
+
+“But is it wise? Isn’t it better to end it all now? Suppose Lord Mallow
+tells her.”
+
+“He did not before. He is not likely now,” was the vexed reply. “Is it a
+thing a gentleman will speak of to a lady?”
+
+“But you do not know Mallow. If he thought she had seen me to-day, he
+would not hesitate. What would you do if you were Lord Mallow?”
+
+“No, not to-day,” she persisted. “It is all so many years ago. It can
+hurt naught to wait a little longer.”
+
+“When and where shall it be?” he asked gloomily. “At Salem--at Salem. We
+shall be settled then--and steady. There is every reason why you should
+consider me. I have suffered as few women have suffered, and I do not
+hate you. I am only sorry.”
+
+Far down at the other end of the garden he saw Sheila. Her face was in
+profile--an exquisite silhouette. She moved slowly among the pimento
+bushes.
+
+“As you wish,” he said with a heavy sigh. The sight of the girl
+anguished his soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. AT SALEM
+
+The plantation of Salem was in a region below the Pedro Plains in the
+parish of St. Elizabeth, where grow the aloe, and torch-thistle, and
+clumps of wood which alter the appearance of the plain from the South
+Downs of England, but where thousands of cattle and horses even in those
+days were maintained. The air of the district was dry and elastic, and
+it filtered down to the valleys near like that where Salem was with its
+clusters of negro huts and offices, its mills and distilleries where
+sugar and rum were made. Salem was situated on the Black River,
+accessible by boats and canoes. The huts of negro slaves were near
+the sugar mills, without regard to order, but in clusters of banana,
+avocado-pear, limes and oranges, and with the cultivated land round
+their huts made an effective picture.
+
+One day every fortnight was allowed the negroes to cultivate their
+crops, and give them a chance to manufacture mats for beds, bark-ropes,
+wicker-chairs and baskets, earthen jars, pans, and that kind of thing.
+The huts themselves were primitive to a degree, the floor being earth,
+the roof, of palm-thatch or the leaves of the cocoa-nut tree, the sides
+hard-posts driven in the ground and interlaced with wattle and plaster,
+and inside scarcely high enough for its owner to walk upright. The
+furniture was scant--a quatre, or bed, made of a platform of boards,
+with a mat and a blanket, some low stools, a small table, an earthen
+water-jar, and some smaller ones, a pail and an iron pot, and calabashes
+which did duty for plates, dishes and bowls. In one of the two rooms
+making the hut, there were always the ashes of the night-fire, without
+which negroes could not sleep in comfort.
+
+These were the huts of the lowest grade of negro-slaves of the fields.
+The small merchants and the domestics had larger houses with boarded
+floors, some even with linen sheets and mosquito nets, and shelves with
+plates and dishes of good ware. Every negro received a yearly allowance
+of Osnaburgh linen, woollen, baize and checks for clothes, and some
+planters also gave them hats and handkerchiefs, knives, needles and
+thread, and so on.
+
+Every plantation had a surgeon who received a small sum for attendance
+on every slave, while special cases of midwifery, inoculation, etc., had
+a particular allowance. The surgeon had to attend to about four hundred
+to five hundred negroes, on an income of L150 per annum, and board and
+lodging and washing, besides what he made from his practice with the
+whites.
+
+Salem was no worse than some other plantations on the island, but it was
+far behind such plantations as that owned by Dyck Calhoun, and had been
+notorious for the cruelties committed on it. To such an estate a lady
+like Sheila Llyn would be a boon. She was not on the place a day before
+she started reforms which would turn the plantation into a model scheme.
+Houses, food, treatment of the negroes, became at once a study to her,
+and her experience in Virginia was invaluable. She had learned there
+not to work the slaves too hard in the warm period of the day; and she
+showed her interest by having served at her own table the favourite olio
+the slaves made of plantains, bananas, yams, calalue, eddoes, cassavi,
+and sweet potatoes boiled with salt fish and flavoured with cayenne
+pepper. This, with the unripe roasted plantain as bread, was a native
+relish and health-giving food.
+
+Ever since the day when she had seen Dyck Calhoun at Spanish Town she
+had been disturbed in mind. Dyck had shown a reserve which she felt was
+not wholly due to his having been imprisoned for manslaughter. In one
+way he looked little older. His physique was as good, or better than
+when she first saw him on the hills of Playmore. It was athletic,
+strenuous, elastic. Yet there was about it the abandonment of
+despair--at least of recklessness. The face was older, the head more
+powerful, the hair slightly touched with grey-rather there was one spot
+in the hair almost pure white; a strand of winter in the foliage of
+summer. It gave a touch of the bizarre to a distinguished head, it lent
+an air of the singular to a personality which had flare and force--an
+almost devilish force. That much was to be said for him, that he had not
+sought to influence her to his own advantage. She was so surrounded in
+America by men who knew her wealth and prized her beauty, she was so
+much a figure in Virginia, that any reserve with regard to herself was
+noticeable. She was enough feminine to have pleasure in the fact that
+she was thought desirable by men; yet it played an insignificant part in
+her life.
+
+It did not give her conceit. It was only like a frill on the skirts of
+life. It did not play any part in her character. Certainly Dyck Calhoun
+had not flattered her. That one to whom she had written, as she had
+done, should remove himself so from the place of the deserving friend,
+one whom she had not deserted while he was in jail as a criminal--that
+he should treat her so, gave every nerve a thrill of protest. Sometimes
+she trembled in indignation, and then afterwards gave herself to
+the work on the estate or in the household--its reform and its
+rearrangement; though the house was like most in Jamaica, had adequate
+plate, linen, glass and furniture. At the lodgings in Spanish Town,
+after Dyck Calhoun had left, her mother had briefly said that she had
+told Dyck he could not expect the conditions of the Playmore friendship
+should be renewed; that, in effect, she had warned him off. To this
+Sheila had said that the killing of a man whose life was bad might
+be punishable. In any case, that was in another land, under abnormal
+conditions; and, with lack of logic, she saw no reason why he should be
+socially punished in Jamaica for what he had been legally punished for
+in Ireland. As for the mutiny, he had done what any honest man of spirit
+would do; also, he had by great bravery and skill brought victory to the
+king’s fleet in West Indian waters.
+
+Then it was she told her mother how she had always disobeyed her
+commands where Dyck was concerned, that she had written to him while he
+was in jail; that she had come to Jamaica more to see him than to reform
+Salem; that she had the old Celtic spirit of brotherhood, and she would
+not be driven from it. In a sudden burst of anger her mother had charged
+her with deceit; but the girl said she had followed her conscience, and
+she dismissed it all with a gesture as emphatic as her mother’s anger.
+
+That night they had dined with Lord Mallow, and she saw that his
+attentions had behind them the deep purpose of marriage. She had not
+been overcome by the splendour of his retinue and table, or by the
+magnificence of his guests; though the military commander-in-chief and
+the temporary admiral on the station did their utmost to entertain her,
+and some of the local big-wigs were pompous. Lord Mallow had ability and
+knew how to use it; and he was never so brilliant as on this afternoon,
+for they dined while it was still daylight and hardly evening. He
+told her of the customs of the country, of the people; and slyly and
+effectively he satirized some of his grandiloquent guests. Not unduly,
+for one of them, the most renowned in the island, came to him after
+dinner as he sat talking to Sheila, and said: “I’m very sorry, your
+honour, but good Almighty God, I must go home and cool coppers.” Then he
+gave Sheila a hot yet clammy hand, and bade her welcome as a citizen
+to the island, “alien but respected, beautiful but capable!” Sheila
+had seen a few of the Creole ladies present at their best-large-eyed,
+simple, not to say primitive in speech, and very unaffected in manner.
+She had learned also that the way to the Jamaican heart was by a full
+table and a little flattery.
+
+One incident at dinner had impressed her greatly. Not far away from
+her was a young lady, beautiful in face and person, and she had seen a
+scorpion suddenly shoot into her sleeve and ruthlessly strike and strike
+the arm of the girl, who gave one cry only and then was still. Sheila
+saw the man next to the girl--he was a native officer--secure the
+scorpion, and then whip from his pocket a little bag of indigo, dip it
+in water, and apply the bag to the wounded arm, immediately easing the
+wound. This had all been done so quickly that it was over before the
+table had been upset, almost.
+
+“That is the kind of thing we have here,” said Lord Mallow. “There is a
+lady present who has seen in one day a favourite black child bitten by
+a congereel, a large centipede in her nursery, a snake crawl from under
+her child’s pillow, and her son nearly die from a bite of the black
+spider with the red spot on its tail. It is a life that has its
+trials--and its compensations.”
+
+“I saw a man’s head on a pole on my way to King’s House. You have to use
+firm methods here,” Sheila said in reply. “It is not all a rose-garden.
+You have to apply force.”
+
+Lord Mallow smiled grimly. “C’est la force morale toujours.”
+
+“Ah, I should not have thought it was moral force always,” was the
+ironical reply.
+
+“We have criminals here,” declared the governor with aplomb, “and they
+need some handling, I assure you. We have in this island one of the
+worst criminals in the British Empire.”
+
+“Ah, I thought he was in the United States!” answered the girl sedately.
+
+“You mean General George Washington,” remarked the governor. “No, it is
+one who was a friend and fellow-countryman of yours before he took to
+killing unarmed men.”
+
+“You refer to Mr. Dyck Calhoun, I doubt not, sir? Well, he is still a
+friend of mine, and I saw him today--this afternoon, before I came here.
+I understood that the Crown had pardoned his mutiny.”
+
+The governor started. He was plainly annoyed.
+
+“The crime is there just the same,” he replied. “He mutinied, and he
+stole a king’s ship, and took command of it, and brought it out here.”
+
+“And saved you and your island, I understand.”
+
+“Ah, he said that, did he?”
+
+“He said nothing at all to me about it. I have been reading the Jamaica
+Cornwall Chronicle the last three years.”
+
+“He is ever a source of anxiety to me,” declared the governor.
+
+“I knew he was once in Phoenix Park years ago,” was the demure yet sharp
+reply, “but I thought he was a good citizen here--a good and well-to-do
+citizen.”
+
+Lord Mallow flushed slightly. “Phoenix Park--ah, he was a capable
+fellow with the sword! I said so always, and I’d back him now against a
+champion; but many a bad man has been a good swordsman.”
+
+“So, that’s what good swordsmanship does, is it? I wondered what it was
+that did it. I hear you fight him still--but with a bludgeon, and he
+dodges it.”
+
+“I do not understand,” declared Lord Mallow tartly. “Ah, wasn’t there
+some difference over his going for the treasure to Haiti? Some one
+told me, I think, that you were not in favour of his getting his
+ticket-of-leave, or whatever it is called, and that the provost-marshal
+gave it to him, as he had the right to do.”
+
+“You have wide sources of information in this case. I wonder--”
+
+“No, your honour need not wonder. I was told that by a gentleman on the
+steamer coming here. He was a native of the island, I think--or perhaps
+it was the captain, or the mate, or the boatswain. I can’t recall. Or
+maybe it came to me from my manager, Darius Boland, who hears things
+wherever he is, one doesn’t know how; but he hears them. He is to me
+what your aide-de-camp is to you,” she nodded towards a young man near
+by at the table.
+
+“And do you dress your Darius Boland as I dress my aide in scarlet, with
+blue facings and golden embroidery, and put a stiff hat with a feather
+on his head?”
+
+“But no, he does not need such things. I am a Republican now. I am a
+citizen of the United States, where men have no need of uniform to tell
+the world what they are. You shall see my Darius Boland--indeed, you
+have seen him. He was there to-day when you gave me the distinction of
+your presence.”
+
+“That dry, lean, cartridge of a fellow, that pair of pincers with a
+face!”
+
+“And a tongue, your honour. If you did not hear it yet, you will hear
+it. He is to be my manager here. So he will be under your control--if I
+permit him.”
+
+“If you permit him, mistress?”
+
+“If I permit him, yes. You are a power, but you are not stronger than
+the laws and rules you make. For instance, there was the case of Mr.
+Dyck Calhoun. When he came, you were for tying him up in one little
+corner of this island--the hottest part, I know, near to Kingston, where
+it averages ninety degrees in the shade at any time of the year. But the
+King you represent had not restricted his liberties so, and you
+being the King, that is, yourself, were forced to abide by your own
+regulations. So it may be the same with Darius Boland. He may want
+something, and you, high up, looking down, will say, ‘What devilry
+is here!’ and decline. He will then turn to your chief-justice or
+provost-marshal-general, or a deputy of the provost-marshal, and they
+will say that Darius Boland shall have what he wants, because it is the
+will of the will you represent.”
+
+Almost the last words the governor used to her were these: “Those only
+live at peace here who are at peace with me”; and her reply had been:
+“But Mr. Dyck Calhoun lives at peace, does he not, your honour?”
+
+To that he had replied: “No man is at peace while he has yet desires.”
+ He paused a minute and then added: “That Erris Boyne killed by Dyck
+Calhoun--did you ever see him that you remember?”
+
+“Not that I remember,” she replied quickly. “I never lived in Dublin.”
+
+“That may be. But did you never know his history?” She shook her head
+in negation. His eyes searched her face carefully, and he was astonished
+when he saw no sign of confusion there. “Good God, she doesn’t know.
+She’s never been told!” he said to himself. “This is too startling. I’ll
+speak to the mother.”
+
+A little later he turned from the mother with astonishment. “It’s
+madness,” he remarked to himself. “She will find out. Some one will
+tell her.... By heaven, I’ll tell her first,” he hastily said. “When she
+knows the truth, Calhoun will have no chance on earth. Yes, I’ll tell
+her myself. But I’ll tell no one else,” he added; for he felt that
+Sheila, once she knew the truth, would resent his having told abroad the
+true story of the Erris Boyne affair.
+
+So Sheila and her mother had gone to their lodgings with depression, but
+each with a clear purpose in her mind. Mrs. Llyn was determined to tell
+her daughter what she ought to have known long before; and Sheila was
+firm to make the one man who had ever interested her understand that he
+was losing much that was worth while keeping.
+
+Then had followed the journey to Salem. Yet all the while for Sheila
+one dark thought kept hovering over everything. Why should life be so
+complicated? Why should this one man who seemed capable and had the
+temperament of the Irish hills and vales be the victim of punishment and
+shame--why should he shame her?
+
+Suddenly, without her mother’s knowledge, she sent Darius Boland through
+the hills in the early morning to Enniskillen, Dyck Calhoun’s place,
+with a letter which said only this: “Is it not time that you came to
+wish us well in our new home? We shall expect you to-morrow.”
+
+When Dyck read this note he thought it was written by Sheila, but
+inspired by the mother; and he lost no time in making his way down
+across the country to Salem, which he reached a few hours after sunrise.
+At the doorway of the house he met Mrs. Llyn.
+
+“Have you told her?” he asked in anxiety. Astonished at his presence
+she could make no reply for a moment. “I have told her nothing,” she
+answered. “I meant to do so this morning. I meant to do it--I must.”
+
+“She sent me a letter asking if it was not time I came to wish you well
+in your house, and you and she would expect me to-day.”
+
+“I knew naught of her writing you,” was the reply--“naught at all. But
+now that you are here, will you not tell her all?”
+
+Dyck smiled grimly. “Where is she?” he asked. “I will tell her.”
+
+The mother pointed down the garden. “Yonder by the clump of palms I saw
+her a moment ago. If you go that way you will find her.”
+
+In another moment Dyck Calhoun was on his way to the clump of palms, and
+before he reached it, the girl came out into the path. She was dressed
+in a black silk skirt with a white bodice and lace, as he had seen her
+on her arrival in Kingston, and at her throat was a sprig of the wild
+pear-tree. When she saw him, she gave a slight start, then stood still,
+and he came to her.
+
+“I have your letter,” he said, “and I came to say what I ought to say
+about your living here: you will bring blessings to the place.”
+
+She looked at him steadfastly. “Shall we talk here,” she said, “or
+inside the house? There is a little shelter here in the trees”--pointing
+to the right--“a shelter built by the late manager. It has the covering
+of a hut, but it is open at two sides. Will you come?” As she went
+on ahead, he could not fail to notice how slim and trim she was, how
+perfectly her figure seemed to fit her gown-as though she had been
+poured into it; and yet the folds of her skirt waved and floated like
+silky clouds around her! Under cover of the shelter, she turned and
+smiled at him.
+
+“You have seen my mother?”
+
+“I have just come from her,” he answered. “She bade me tell you what
+ought to have been told long ago, and you were not, for there seemed no
+reason that you should. You were young and ignorant and happy. You had
+no cares, no sorrows. The sorrows that had come to your mother belonged
+to days when you were scarce out of the cradle. But you did not know.
+You were not aware that your mother had divorced your father for crime
+against marital fidelity and great cruelty. You did not know even who
+that father was. Well, I must tell you. Your father was a handsome man,
+a friend of mine until I knew the truth about him, and then he died--I
+killed him, so the court said.”
+
+Her face became ghastly pale. After a moment of anguished bewilderment,
+she said: “You mean that Erris Boyne was my father?”
+
+“Yes, I mean that. They say I killed him. They say that he was found
+with no sword drawn, but that my open sword lay on the table beside me
+while I was asleep, and that it had let out his life-blood.”
+
+“Why was he killed?” she asked, horror-stricken and with pale lips.
+
+“I do not know, but if I killed him, it was because I revolted from the
+proposals he made to me. I--” He paused, for the look on her face was
+painful to see, and her body was as that of one who had been struck by
+lightning. It had a crumpled, stricken look, and all force seemed to be
+driven from it. It had the look of crushed vitality. Her face was set in
+paleness, her eyes were frightened, her whole person was, as it were, in
+ghastly captivity. His heart smote him, and he pulled himself together
+to tell her all.
+
+“Go on,” she said. “I want to hear. I want--to know all. I ought to have
+known--long ago; but that can’t be helped now. Continue--please.”
+
+Her words had come slowly, in gasps almost, and her voice was so frayed
+he could scarcely recognize it. All the pride of her nature seemed
+shattered.
+
+“If I killed him,” he said presently, “it was because he tried to tempt
+me from my allegiance to the Crown to become a servant of France, to--”
+
+He stopped short, for a cry came from her lips which appalled him.
+
+“My God--my God!” she said with bloodless lips, her eyes fastened on his
+face, her every look and motion the inflection of despair. “Go on--tell
+all,” she added presently with more composure.
+
+Swiftly he described what happened in the little room at the traitor’s
+tavern, of the momentary reconciliation and the wine that he drank,
+drugged wine poured out but not drunk by Erris Boyne, and of his later
+unconsciousness. At last he paused.
+
+“Why did these things not come out at the trial?” she asked in hushed
+tones.
+
+He made a helpless gesture. “I did not speak of them because I thought
+of you. I hid it--I did not want you to know what your father was.”
+
+Something like a smile gathered at her pale lips. “You saved me for
+the moment, and condemned yourself for ever,” she said in a voice of
+torture. “If you had told what he was--if you had told that, the jury
+would not have condemned you, they would not have sent you to prison.”
+
+“I believe I did the right thing,” he said. “If I killed your father,
+prison was my proper punishment. But I can’t remember. There was no
+other clue, no other guide to judgment. So the law said I killed him,
+and--he had evidently not drawn his sword. It was clear he was killed
+defenceless.”
+
+“You killed a defenceless man!” Her voice was sharp with agony. “That
+was mentioned at the trial--but I did not believe it then--in that long
+ago.” She trembled to her feet from the bench where she was sitting.
+“And I do not believe it now--no, on my soul, I do not.”
+
+“But it makes no difference, you see. I was condemned for killing your
+father, and the world knows that Erris Boyne was your father, and
+here Lord Mallow, the governor, knows it; and there is no chance of
+friendship between you and me. Since the day he was found dead in the
+room, there was no hope for our friendship, for anything at all between
+us that I had wished to be there. You dare not be friends with me--”
+
+Her face suddenly suffused and she held herself upright with an effort.
+She was about to say, “I dare, Dyck--I do dare!” but he stopped her with
+a reproving gesture.
+
+“No, no, you dare not, and I would not let you if you would. I am an
+ex-convict. They say I killed your father, and the way to understanding
+between us is closed.”
+
+She made a protesting gesture. “Closed! Closed!--But is it closed? No,
+no, some one else killed him, not you. You couldn’t have done it.
+You would have fought him--fought him as you did Lord Mallow, and in
+fighting you might have killed him, but your sword never let out his
+life when he was defenceless--never.”
+
+A look of intense relief, almost of happiness, came to Dyck’s face.
+“That is like you, Sheila, but it does not cure the trouble. You and I
+are as far apart as noon and midnight. The law has said the only thing
+that can be said upon it.”
+
+She sank down again upon the wooden bench. “Oh, how mad you were, not
+to tell the whole truth long ago! You would not have been condemned, and
+then--”
+
+She paused overcome, and his self-control almost deserted him. With
+strong feeling he burst out: “And then, we might have come together?
+No, your mother--your friends, myself, could not have let that be. See,
+Sheila, I will tell you the whole truth now--aye, the whole absolute
+truth. I have loved you since the first day I saw you on the hills when
+you and I rescued Christopher Dogan. Not a day has passed since then
+when you were not more to me than any other woman in all the world.”
+
+A new light came into her face, the shadows left her eyes, and the
+pallor fled from her lips. “You loved me?” she said in a voice grown
+soft-husky still, but soft as the light in a summer heaven. “You loved
+me--and have always loved me since we first met?”
+
+Her look was so appealing, so passionate and so womanly, that he longed
+to reach out his arms to her, and say, “Come--come home, Sheila,” but
+the situation did not permit that, and only his eyes told the story of
+what was in his mind.
+
+“I have always loved you, Sheila, and shall do so while I have breath
+and life. I have always given you the best that is in me, tried to do
+what was good for us both, since my misfortune--crime, Lord Mallow calls
+it, as does the world. Never a sunrise that does not find you in the
+forefront of all the lighted world; never a flower have I seen that does
+not seem sweeter--it brings thoughts of you; never a crime that does not
+deepen its shame because you are in the world. In prison, when I used
+to mop my floor and clean down the walls; when I swept the dust from the
+corners; when I folded up my convict clothes; when I ate the prison food
+and sang the prison hymns; when I placed myself beside the bench in the
+workshop to make things that would bring cash to my fellow-prisoners in
+their need; when I saw a minister of religion or heard the Litany; when
+I counted up the days, first that I had spent in jail and then the days
+I had still to spend in jail; when I read the books from the prison
+library of the land where you had gone, and of the struggle there; when
+I saw you, in my mind’s eye, in the cotton-fields or on the verandah of
+your house in Virginia--I had but one thought, and that was the look in
+your face at Playmore and Limerick, the sound of your voice as you came
+singing up the hill just before I first met you, the joyous beauty of
+your body.”
+
+“And at sea?” she whispered with a gesture at once beautiful and
+pathetic, for it had the motion of helplessness and hopelessness. What
+she had heard had stirred her soul, and she wanted to hear more--or
+was it that she wished to drain the cup now that it was held to her
+lips?-drain it to the last drop of feeling.
+
+“At sea,” he answered, with his eyes full of intense feeling--“at sea, I
+was free at last, doomed as I thought, anguished in spirit, and yet with
+a wild hope that out of it would come deliverance. I expected to lose
+my life, and I lived each day as though it would be my last. I was chief
+rogue in a shipful of rogues, chief sinner in a hell of sinners, and yet
+I had no remorse and no regret. I had done all with an honest purpose,
+with the good of the sailors in my mind; and so I lived in daily touch
+with death, honour, and dishonour. Yet I never saw a sailor in the
+shrouds, or heard the night watch call ‘All’s well!’ in the midst of
+night and mutiny, that I did not long for a word from you that would
+take away the sting of death. Those days at sea for ten long weeks were
+never free from anxiety, not anxiety for myself, only for the men who
+had put me where I was, had given me captain’s rank, had--”
+
+Suddenly he stopped, and took from his pocket the letter he was writing
+on the very day she landed in Jamaica. He opened it and studied it for a
+moment with a dark look in his face.
+
+“This I wrote even as you were landing in Jamaica, and I knew naught of
+your coming. It was an outbreak of my soul. It was the truth written to
+you and for you, and yet with the feeling that you would never see it.
+I was still writing it when Michael Clones came up the drive to tell me
+you and your mother were here. Now, I know not what Christopher Dogan
+would say of it, but I say it is amazing that in the hour you were first
+come to this land I should be moved to tell you the story of my
+life since I left prison; since, on receiving your letter in London,
+forwarded from Dublin, I joined the navy. But here it is with all the
+truth and terror in it.--Aye, there was terror, for it gave the soul of
+my life to one I never thought to see again; and, if seeing, should be
+compelled to do what I have done--tell her the whole truth at once and
+so have it over.
+
+“But do not think that in telling it now I repent of my secrecy. I
+repent of nothing; I would not alter anything. What was to be is, and
+what is has its place in the book of destiny. No, I repent nothing, yet
+here now I give you this to read while still my story of the days of
+which you know is in your ears. Here it is. It will tell the whole
+story; for when you have read it and do understand, then we part to meet
+no more as friends. You will go back to Virginia, and I will stay here.
+You will forgive the unwilling wrong I have done you, but you will make
+your place in life without thought of me. You will marry some one--not
+worthy of you, for that could not be; but you will take to yourself some
+man from among the men of this world. You will set him apart from all
+other men as yours, and he will be happy, having been blessed beyond
+deserving. You will not regret coming here; but you will desire our
+friendship to cease; and what has been to be no more, while the tincture
+of life is in your veins. Sheila, read this thing, for it is the rest of
+the story until now.”
+
+He handed her the papers, and she took them with an inclination of the
+head which said: “Give it to me. I will read it now while my eyes can
+still bear to read it. I have laid on my heart the nettle of shame, and
+while it is still burning there I will read all that you have to teach
+me.”
+
+“I will go out in the garden while you read it,” he said. “In a
+half-hour I will come back, and then we can say good-bye,” he added,
+with pain in his voice, but firmly.
+
+“No, do not go,” she urged. “Sit here on the bench--at the end of it
+here,” she said, motioning with her hand.
+
+He shook his head in negation. “No, I will go and say to your mother
+that I have told you, and ease her mind, for I know she herself meant to
+tell you.”
+
+As he went he looked at her face closely. It was so young, so pathetic,
+so pale, yet so strangely beautiful, and her forehead was serene. That
+was one of her characteristics. In all her life, her forehead remained
+untroubled and unlined. Only at her mouth and in her eyes did misery or
+sorrow show. He looked into her eyes now, and he was pleased with what
+he saw; for they had in them the glow of understanding and the note of
+will which said: “You and I are parted, but I believe in you, and I will
+not show I am a weak woman by futile horror. We shall meet no more, but
+I shall remember you.”
+
+That was what he saw, and it was what he wished to see. He knew her
+character would stand the test of any trial, and it had done so. Horror
+had struck her, but had not overwhelmed her. She had cried out in
+her agony, but she had not been swept out into chaos. She had no weak
+passions and no futilities. But as he turned away now, it was with the
+sharp conviction that he had dealt a blow from which the girl would
+recover, but would never be the same again. She was rich “beyond the
+dreams of avarice,” but that would not console her. She had resources
+within herself, had what would keep her steady. Her real power and
+force, her real hope, were in her regnant soul which was not to be
+cajoled by life’s subterfuges. Her lips opened now, as though she would
+say something, but nothing came from them. She only shook her head
+sadly, as if to say: “You understand. Go, and when you come again, it
+will be for us to part in peace--at least in peace.”
+
+Out in the garden he found her mother. After the first agitated
+greeting-agitated on her part, he said: “The story has been told, and
+she is now reading--”
+
+He told her the story of the manuscript, and added that Sheila had
+carried herself with courage. Presently the woman said to him: “She
+never believed you killed Erris Boyne. Well, it may not help the
+situation, but I say too, that I do not believe you did. I cannot
+understand why you did not deny having killed him.”
+
+“I could not deny. In any case, the law punished me for it, and the book
+is closed for ever.”
+
+“Have you never thought that some one--”
+
+“Yes, I have thought, but who is there? The crowd at the Dublin hotel
+where the thing was done were secret, and they would lie the apron off a
+bishop. No, there is no light, and, to tell the truth, I care not now.”
+
+“But if you are not guilty--it is not too late; there is my girl! If the
+real criminal should appear--can you not see?”
+
+The poor woman, distressedly pale, her hair still abundant, her eyes
+still bright, her pulses aglow, as they had ever been, made a gesture of
+appeal with hands that were worn and thin. She had charm still, in a way
+as great as her daughter’s.
+
+“I can see--but, Mrs. Llyn, I have no hope. I am a man whom some men
+fear--”
+
+“Lord Mallow!” she interjected.
+
+“He does not fear me. Why do you say that?”
+
+“I speak with a woman’s intuition. I don’t know what he fears, but he
+does fear you. You are a son of history; you had a duel with him,
+and beat him; you have always beaten him, even here where he has been
+supreme as governor--from first to last, you have beaten him.”
+
+“I hope I shall be even with him at the last--at the very last,” was
+Dyck Calhoun’s reply. “We were made to be foes. We were from the first.
+I felt it when I saw him at Playmore. Nothing has changed since then. He
+will try to destroy me here, but I will see it through. I will try and
+turn his rapier-points. I will not be the target of his arrows without
+making some play against him. The man is a fool. I could help him here,
+but he will have none of it, and he is running great risks. He has been
+warned that the Maroons are restive, that the black slaves will rise if
+the Maroons have any initial success, and he will listen to no advice.
+He would not listen to me, but, knowing that, I got the provost-marshal
+to approach him, and when he knew my hand was in it, he stiffened. He
+would have naught to do with it, and so no preparations are made. And
+up there”--he turned and pointed--“up there in Trelawney the Maroons are
+plotting and planning, and any day an explosion may occur. If it occurs
+no one will be safe, especially if the blacks rise too--I mean the black
+slaves. There will be no safety then for any one.”
+
+“For us as well, you mean?”
+
+“For you as well as all others, and you are nearer to Trelawney than
+most others. You are in their path. So be wise, Mrs. Llyn, and get back
+to Virginia as soon as may be. It is a better place than this.”
+
+“My daughter is mistress here,” was the sorrowful reply. “She will have
+her own way.”
+
+“Your daughter will not care to stay here now,” he answered firmly.
+
+“She will do what she thinks her duty in spite of her own feelings, or
+yours, or mine. It is her way, and it has always been her way.”
+
+“I will tell her what I fear, and she may change her mind.”
+
+“But the governor may want her to stay,” answered Mrs. Llyn none too
+sagely, but with that in her mind which seemed to justify her.
+
+“Lord Mallow--oh, if you think there is any influence in him to keep
+her, that is another question,” said Dyck with a grim smile. “But,
+nevertheless, I think you should leave here and go back to Virginia.
+It is no safe place for two ladies, in all senses. Whatever Lord Mallow
+thinks or does, this is no place for you. This place is your daughter’s
+for her to do what she chooses with it, and I think she ought to sell
+it. There would be no trouble in getting a purchaser. It is a fine
+property.”
+
+“But the governor might not think as you do; he might not wish it sold.”
+
+Mrs. Llyn was playing a bold, indeed a reckless game. She wanted to show
+Dyck there were others who would interest themselves in Sheila even if
+he, Dyck, were blotted from the equation; that the girl could look high,
+if her mind turned towards marriage. Also she felt that Dyck should know
+the facts before any one else, so that he would not be shocked in the
+future, if anything happened. Yet in her deepest heart she wished him
+well. She liked him as she had never liked any of Sheila’s admirers,
+and if the problem of Erris Boyne had been solved, she would gladly have
+seen him wedded to Sheila.
+
+“What has the governor to do with it!” he declared. “It is your
+daughter’s own property, and she is free to hold or to part with it.
+There is no Crown consent to ask, no vice-regal approval needed.”
+
+Suddenly he became angry, almost excited. His blood pounded in his
+veins. Was this man, Mallow, to come between his and her fate always,
+come into his problem at the most critical moment? “God in heaven!” he
+said in a burst of passion, “is this a land of the British Empire or is
+it not? Why should that man break in on every crisis? Why should he
+do this or that--say yea or nay, give or take away! He is the king’s
+representative, but he is bound by laws as rigid as any that bind you or
+me. What has he to do with your daughter or what concerns her? Is there
+not enough trouble in the world without bringing in Lord Mallow? If
+he--”
+
+He stopped short, for he saw coming from the summerhouse, Sheila with
+his paper in her hand. She walked slowly and with dignity. She carried
+her head high and firmly, and the skin of her face was shining with
+light as she came on. Dyck noticed how her wide skirts flicked against
+the flowers that bordered the path, and how her feet seemed scarcely to
+touch the ground as she walked--a spirit, a regnant spirit of summer she
+seemed. But in her face there was no summer, there was only autumn and
+winter, only the bright frost of purpose. As she came, her mother turned
+as though to leave Dyck Calhoun. She called to her to wait, and Mrs.
+Llyn stood still, anxious. As Sheila came near she kept her eyes fixed
+on Dyck. When she reached them, she held out the paper to him.
+
+“It is wonderful,” she said quietly, “that which you have written, but
+it does not tell all; it does not say that you did not kill my father.
+You are punished for the crime, and we must abide by it, even though you
+did not kill Erris Boyne. It is the law that has done it, and we cannot
+abash the law.”
+
+“We shall meet no more then!” said Dyck with decision.
+
+Her lips tightened, her face paled. “There are some things one may not
+do, and one of them is to be openly your friend--at present.”
+
+He put the letter carefully away in his pocket, his hand shaking, then
+flicking an insect from the collar of his coat, he said gently, yet with
+an air of warning: “I have been telling Mrs. Llyn about the Maroons up
+there”--he pointed towards Trelawney--“and I have advised your going
+back to Virginia. The Maroons may rise at any moment, and no care is
+being taken by Lord Mallow to meet the danger. If they rise, you, here,
+would be in their way, and I could not guarantee your safety. Besides,
+Virginia is a better place--a safer place than this,” he added with
+meaning.
+
+“You wish to frighten me out of Jamaica,” she replied with pain in her
+voice. “Well, I will not go till I have put this place in order and
+brought discipline and good living here. I shall stay here in Jamaica
+till I have done my task. There is no reason why we should meet. This
+place is not so large as Ireland or America, but it is large enough to
+give assurance we shall not meet. And if we meet, there is no reason why
+we should talk. As for the Maroons, when the trouble comes, I shall
+not be unprepared.” She smiled sadly. “The governor may not take your
+advice, but I shall. And remember that I come from a land not without
+its dangers. We have Red Indians and black men there, and I can shoot.”
+
+He waved a hand abruptly and then made a gesture--such as an ascetic
+might make-of reflection, of submission. “I shall remember every word
+you have said, and every note of your voice will be with me in all the
+lonely years to come. Good-bye--but no, let me say this before I go: I
+did not know that Erris Boyne was your father until after he was dead.
+So, if I killed him, it was in complete ignorance. I did not know. But
+we have outlived our friendship, and we must put strangeness in its
+place. Good-bye--God protect you!” he added, looking into Sheila’s eyes.
+
+She looked at him with sorrow. Her lips opened but no words came forth.
+He passed on out of the garden, and presently they heard his horse’s
+hoofs on the sand.
+
+“He is a great gentleman,” said Mrs. Llyn.
+
+Her daughter’s eyes were dry and fevered. Her lips were drawn. “We must
+begin the world again,” she said brokenly. Then suddenly she sank upon
+the ground. “My God--oh, my God!” she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+
+Two months went by. In that time Sheila and Dyck did not meet, though
+Dyck saw her more than once in the distance at Kingston. Yet they had
+never met since that wonderful day at Salem, when they had parted, as
+it might seem, for ever. Dyck had had news of her, however, for Darius
+Boland had come and gone between the two plantations, and had won
+Michael Clones’ confidence. He knew more perhaps than he ever conveyed
+to Dyck, who saw him and talked with him, gave him advice as to the
+customs of Jamaica, and let him see the details in the management of
+Enniskillen.
+
+Yet Dyck made no inquiries as to how Mrs. Llyn and Sheila were; first
+because he chose not to do so, and also because Darius Boland, at one
+time or another, would of his own accord tell what Mrs. Llyn and Sheila
+were doing. One day Boland brought word that the governor had, more than
+once, visited Salem with his suite; that he had sat in judgment on a
+case in Kingston concerning the estate of Salem, and had given decision
+in its favour; and that Mrs. Llyn and Sheila visited him at Spanish Town
+and were entertained at King’s House at second breakfast and dinner--in
+short, that Lord Mallow was making hay in Salem Plantation. This was no
+surprise to Dyck. He had full intuition of the foray the governor would
+make on Sheila, her estate and wealth.
+
+Lord Mallow had acted with discretion, and yet with sufficient passion
+to warrant some success. He was trying to make for himself a future
+which might mean the control of a greater colony even. If he had wealth,
+that would be almost a certainty, and he counted Sheila’s gold as a
+guarantee of power. He knew well how great effect could be produced at
+Westminster and at the Royal Palace by a discreet display of wealth. He
+was also aware that no scandal could be made through an alliance with
+Sheila, for she had inherited long after the revolutionary war and with
+her skirts free from responsibility. England certainly would welcome
+wealth got through an Irish girl inheriting her American uncle’s
+estates. So, steadily and happily, he pressed his suit. At his
+dinner-parties he gave her first place nearly always, and even broke the
+code controlling precedence when his secretary could be overruled. Thus
+Sheila was given honour when she did not covet it, and so it was that
+one day at Salem when the governor came to court her she was able to
+help Dyck Calhoun.
+
+“Then you go to Enniskillen?” Lord Mallow said to Darius Boland, as he
+entered the plantation, being met by the astute American.
+
+“Sometimes, your honour,” was the careful reply. “I suppose you know
+what Mr. Calhoun’s career has been, eh?”
+
+“Oh, in a way, your honour. They tell me he is a good swordsman.”
+
+The governor flushed. “He told you that, did he?”
+
+“No, no, your honour, never. He told me naught. He does not boast. He’s
+as modest as a man from Virginia. He does not brag at all.”
+
+“Who told you, then?”
+
+“Ah, well, I heard it in the town! They speak of him there. They all
+know that Kingston and Spanish Town, and all the other places, would
+have been French by now, if it hadn’t been for him. Oh, they talk a lot
+about him in Kingston and thereabouts!”
+
+“What swordsmanship do they speak of that was remarkable?”
+
+“Has your honour forgotten, then? Sure, seven years is a poor limit for
+a good memory.” The blow was a shrewd one, for Darius Boland knew that
+Phoenix Park must be a galling memory to his honour. But Darius did not
+care. He guessed why the governor was coming to Salem, and he could not
+shirk having his hand in it. He had no fear of the results.
+
+“Aye, seven years is a poor limit,” he repeated.
+
+The governor showed no feeling. He had been hit, and he took it as part
+of the game. “Ah, you mean the affair in Phoenix Park?” he said with no
+apparent feeling.
+
+Darius tossed his head a little. “Wasn’t it a clever bit of work? Didn’t
+he get fame there by defeating one of the best swordsmen--in Ireland?”
+
+Lord Mallow nodded. “He got fame, which he lost in time,” he answered.
+
+“You mean he put the sword that had done such good work against a
+champion into a man’s bowels, without ‘by your leave,’ or ‘will you draw
+and fight’?”
+
+“Something like that,” answered the governor sagely.
+
+“Is it true you believed he’d strike a man that wasn’t armed, sir?”
+
+The governor winced, but showed nothing. “He’d been drinking--he is a
+heavy drinker. Do you never drink with him?”
+
+Darius Boland’s face took on a strange look. Here was an intended insult
+to Dyck Calhoun. Right well the governor knew their relative social
+positions. Darius pulled at the hair on his chin reflectively. “Yes,
+I’ve drunk his liquor, but not as you mean, your honour. He’d drink with
+any man at all: he has no nasty pride. But he doesn’t drink with me.”
+
+“Modest enough he is to be a good republican, eh, Boland?”
+
+“Since your honour puts it so, it must stand. I’ll not dispute it, me
+being what I am and employed by whom I am.”
+
+Darius Boland had a gift of saying the right thing in the right way,
+and he had said it now. The governor was not so dense as to put this man
+against him, for women were curious folk. They often attach importance
+to the opinion of a faithful servant and let it weigh against great men.
+He had once lost a possible fortune by spurning a little terrier of the
+daughter of the Earl of Shallow, and the lesson had sunk deep into his
+mind. He was high-placed, but not so high as to be sure of success where
+a woman was concerned, and he had made up his mind to capture Sheila
+Llyn, if so be she could be caught flying, or settled, or sleeping.
+
+“Ah, well, he has drunk with worse men than republicans. Boland. He was
+a common sailor. He drank what was given him with whom it chanced in the
+fo’castle.”
+
+Darius sniffed a little, and kept his head. “But he changed all that,
+your honour, and gave sailormen better drink than they ever had, I
+hear. In Jamaica he treats his slaves as though they were men and not
+Mohicans.”
+
+“Well, he’ll have less freedom in future, Boland, for word has come from
+London that he’s to keep to his estate and never leave it.”
+
+Darius looked concerned, and his dry face wrinkled still more. “Ah, and
+when was this word come, your honour?”
+
+“But yesterday, Boland, and he’ll do well to obey, for I have no choice
+but to take him in hand if he goes gallivanting.”
+
+“Gallivanting--here, in Jamaica! Does your honour remember where we
+are?”
+
+“Not in a bishop’s close, Boland.”
+
+“No, not in a bishop’s close, nor in an archdeacon’s garden. For of
+all places on earth where they defy religion, this is the worst, your
+honour. There’s as much religion here as you’ll find in a last year’s
+bird’s-nest. Gallivanting--where should he gallivant?”
+
+The governor waved a contemptuous hand. “It doesn’t need ingenuity to
+find a place, for some do it on their own estate. I have seen it.”
+
+Darius spoke sharply. “Your honour, there’s naught on Mr. Calhoun’s
+estate that’s got the taint, and he’s not the man to go hunting for it.
+Drink--well, suppose a gentleman does take his quartern, is it a crime?
+I ask your honour, is that a crime in Jamaica?”
+
+“It’s no crime, Boland; nevertheless, your Mr. Calhoun will have to
+take his fill on his own land from the day I send him the command of the
+London Government.”
+
+“And what day will that be, your honour?”
+
+To be questioned by one who had been a revolutionary was distasteful to
+the governor. “That day will be when I find the occasion opportune, my
+brave Boland,” he said sourly.
+
+“Why ‘brave,’ your honour?” There was an ominous light in Darius’ eye.
+
+“Did you not fight with George Washington against the King of
+England--against King George? And if you did, was that not brave?”
+
+“It was true, your honour,” came the firm reply. “It was the one right
+good thing to do, as we proved it by the victory we had. We did what we
+set out to do. But see, if you will let a poor man speak his mind, if I
+were you I’d not impose the command on Mr. Calhoun.”
+
+“Why, Boland?”
+
+Darius spoke courageously. “Your honour, he has many friends in Jamaica,
+and they won’t stand it. Besides, he won’t stand it. And if he contests
+your honour, the island will be with him.”
+
+“Is he popular here as all that?” asked the governor with a shrug of the
+shoulders.
+
+“They don’t give their faith and confidence to order, your honour,”
+ answered Darius with a dry inflection.
+
+The burr in the voice did not escape the other’s attentive ear. He swung
+a glance sharply at Darius. “What is the secret of his popularity--how
+has it been made?” he asked morosely.
+
+Darius’ face took on a caustic look. “He’s only been in the island a
+short time, your honour, and I don’t know that I’m a good judge, but
+I’ll say the people here have great respect for bravery and character.”
+
+“Character! Character!” sniffed the governor. “Where did he get that?”
+
+“Well, I don’t know his age, but it’s as old as he is--his character.
+Say, I’m afraid I’m talking too much, your honour. We speak our minds in
+Virginia; we never count the cost.”
+
+The governor waved a deprecating hand. “You’ll find the measure of your
+speech in good time, Boland, I’ve no doubt. Meanwhile, you’ve got the
+pleasure of hunting it. Character, you say. Well, that isn’t what the
+judge and jury said.”
+
+Darius took courage again. Couldn’t Lord Mallow have any decency?
+
+“Judge and jury be damned, your honour,” he answered boldly. “It was an
+Irish verdict. It had no sense. It was a bit of ballyhack. He did not
+kill an unarmed man. It isn’t his way. Why, he didn’t kill you when he
+had you at his mercy in Phoenix Park, now, did he, governor?”
+
+A flush stole up the governor’s face from his chin. Then he turned to
+Boland and looked him straight in the eyes. “That’s true. He had me at
+his mercy, and he did not take my life.”
+
+“Then, why do you head the cabal against him? Why do you take joy in
+commanding him to stay on his estate? Is that grateful, your honour?”
+
+The governor winced, but he said: “It’s what I am ordered to do, my man.
+I’m a servant of the Crown, and the Crown has ordained it.”
+
+Again Darius grew stronger in speech. “But why do you have pleasure in
+it? Is nothing left to your judgment? Do you say to me that if he keeps
+the freedom such as he has enjoyed, you’d punish him? Must the governor
+be as ruthless as his master? Look, your honour, I wouldn’t impose that
+command--not till I’d taken his advice about the Maroons anyway. There’s
+trouble brewing, and Mr. Calhoun knows it. He has warned you through
+the provost-marshal. I’d heed his warning, your honour, or it may injure
+your reputation as a ruler. No, I’d see myself in nethermost hell before
+I’d meddle with Mr. Calhoun. He’s a dangerous man, when he’s moved.”
+
+“Boland, you’ll succeed as a schoolmaster, when all else fails. You
+teach persistently.”
+
+“Your honour is clever enough to know what’s what, but I’d like to see
+the Maroons dealt with. This is not my country, but I’ve got interests
+here, or my mistress has, and that’s the same to me.... Does your honour
+travel often without a suite?”
+
+The governor waved a hand behind him. “I left them at the last
+plantation, and rode on alone. I felt safe enough till I saw you,
+Boland.”
+
+He smiled grimly, and a grimmer smile stole to the lean lips of the
+manager of Salem. “Fear is a good thing for forward minds, your honour,”
+ he said with respect in the tone of his voice and challenge in the
+words.
+
+“I’ll say this, Boland, your mistress has been fortunate in her staff.
+You have a ready tongue.”
+
+“Oh, I’m readier in other things, your honour, as you’d find on
+occasion. But I thank you for the compliment in a land where compliments
+are few. For a planter’s country it has few who speak as well as they
+entertain. I’ll say this for the land you govern, the hospitality is
+rich and rare.”
+
+“In what way, Boland?”
+
+“Why, your honour, it is the custom for a man and his whole family to
+go on a visit to a neighbour, perhaps twenty or forty miles away, bring
+their servants--maybe a dozen or more--and sit down on their neighbour’s
+hearthstone. There they eat his food, drink his wine, exhaust his
+fowl-yard and debilitate his cook--till all the resources of the place
+are played out; then with both hands round his friend’s neck the man and
+his people will say adieu, and go back to their own accumulated larder
+and await the return visit. The wonder is Jamaica is so rich, for truly
+the waste is harmful. We have the door open in Virginia, but not in that
+way. We welcome, but we don’t debauch.”
+
+The governor smiled. “As you haven’t old friends here, you should
+make your life a success--ah, there is the open door, Boland, and your
+mistress standing in it. But I come without my family, and with no
+fell purposes. I will not debilitate the cook; I will not exhaust the
+fowl-yard. A roasted plantain is good enough for me.”
+
+Darius’ looks quickened, and he jerked his chin up. “So, your honour,
+so. But might I ask that you weigh carefully the warning of Mr. Calhoun.
+There’s trouble at Trelawny. I have it from good sources, and Mr.
+Calhoun has made preparations against the sure risings. I’d take heed
+of what he says. He knows. Your honour, it is not my mistress in the
+doorway, it is Mrs. Llyn; she is shorter than my mistress.”
+
+The governor shaded his brow with his hands. Then he touched up his
+horse. “Yes, you are right, Boland. It is Mrs. Llyn. And look you,
+Boland, I’ll think over what you’ve said about the Maroons and Mr.
+Calhoun. He’s doing no harm as he is, that’s sure. So why shouldn’t he
+go on as he is? That’s your argument, isn’t it?”
+
+Boland nodded. “It’s part of my argument, not all of it. Of course he’s
+doing no harm; he’s doing good every day. He’s got a stiff hand for the
+shirker and the wanton, but he’s a man that knows his mind, and that’s a
+good thing in Jamaica.”
+
+“Does he come here-ever?”
+
+“He has been here only once since our arrival. There are reasons why he
+does not come, as your honour kens, knowing the history of Erris Boyne.”
+
+A quarter of an hour later Darius Boland said to Sheila: “He’s got an
+order from England to keep Mr. Calhoun to his estate and to punish him,
+if he infringes the order.”
+
+Sheila started. “He will infringe the order if it’s made, Boland. But
+the governor will be unwise to try and impose it. I will tell him so.”
+
+“But, mistress, he should not be told that this news comes from me.”
+
+“No, he should not, Boland. I can tempt him to speak of it, I think. He
+hates Mr. Calhoun, and will not need much prompting.”
+
+Sheila had changed since she saw Dyck Calhoun last. Her face was
+thinner, but her form was even fuller than it was when she had bade him
+good-bye, as it seemed to him for ever, and as it at first seemed
+to her. Through anxious days and nights she had fought with the old
+passion; and at last it seemed the only way to escape from the torture
+was by making all thought of him impossible. How could this be done?
+Well, Lord Mallow would offer a way. Lord Mallow was a man of ancient
+Irish family, was a governor, had ability, was distinguished-looking
+in a curious lean way; and he had a real gift with his tongue. He stood
+high in the opinion of the big folk at Westminster, and had a future. He
+had a winning way with women--a subtle, perniciously attractive way with
+her sex, and to herself he had been delicately persuasive. He had the
+ancient gift of picturesqueness without ornamentation. He had a strong
+will and a healthy imagination. He was a man of mettle and decision.
+
+Of all who had entered her field outside of Dyck Calhoun he was the most
+attractive; he was the nearest to the possible husband which she must
+one day take. And if at any day at all, why not now when she needed
+a man as she had never done--when she needed to forget? The sardonic
+critic might ask why she did not seek forgetfulness in flight; why she
+remained in Jamaica where was what she wished to forget. There was no
+valid reason, save a business one, why she should remain in Jamaica, and
+she was in a quandary when she put the question. There were, however,
+other reasons which she used when all else failed to satisfy her
+exigeant mind. There was the question of vessels to Virginia or New
+York. They were few and not good, and in any case they could have no
+comfortable journey to the United States for several weeks at least,
+for, since the revolutionary war, commerce with the United States was
+sparse.
+
+Also, there was the question of Salem. She did not feel she ought to
+waste the property which her Uncle Bryan had nurtured with care. In
+justice to his memory, and in fairness to Darius Boland, she felt she
+ought to stay--for a time. It did not occur to her that these reasons
+would vanish like mist--that a wilful woman would sweep them into the
+basket of forgetfulness, and do what she wished in spite of reason: that
+all else would be sacrificed, if the spirit so possessed her. Truth was
+that, far back in her consciousness, there was a vision of better days
+and things. It was as though some angel touched the elbow of her spirit
+and said: “Stay on, for things will be better than they seem. You will
+find your destiny here. Stay on.”
+
+So she had stayed. She was deluding herself to believe that what she was
+doing was all for the best; that the clouds were rising; that her fate
+had fairer aspects than had seemed possible when Dyck Calhoun told her
+the terrible tale of the death of her father, Erris Boyne. Yet memory
+gave a touch of misery and bitterness to all she thought and did. For
+twenty-five years she had lived in ignorance as to her paternity. It
+surely was futile that her mother should have suffered all those years,
+with little to cheer her, while her daughter should be radiant in health
+and with a mind free from care or sadness. Yet the bitterest thing
+of all was the thought that her father was a traitor, and had died
+sacrificing another man. When Dyck had told her first, she had shivered
+with anger and shame--but anger and shame had gone. Only one thing gave
+her any comfort--the man who knew Erris Boyne was a traitor, and could
+profit by telling it, held his tongue for her own sake, kept his own
+counsel, and went to prison for four years as the price of his silence.
+He was now her neighbour and he loved her, and, if the shadow of a grave
+was not between them, would offer himself in marriage to her. This she
+knew beyond all doubt. He had given all a man can give--had saved her
+and killed her father--in ignorance had killed her father; in love had
+saved herself. What was to be done?
+
+In a strange spirit Sheila entered the room where the governor sat with
+her mother. She had reached the limit of her powers of suffering. Soon
+after her mother had left the room, the governor said:
+
+“Why do you think I have come here to-day?”
+
+He added to the words a note of sympathy, even of passion in his voice.
+
+“It was to visit my mother and myself, and to see how Salem looks after
+our stay on it, was it not?”
+
+“Yes, to see your mother and yourself, but chiefly the latter. As for
+Salem, it looks as though a mastermind had been at work, I see it in
+everything. The slaves are singing. Listen!”
+
+He held up a finger as though to indicate attention and direction.
+
+ “One, two, three,
+ All de same;
+ Black, white, brown,
+ All de same;
+ All de same.
+ One, two, three--”
+
+They could hear the words indistinctly.
+
+“What do the words mean?” asked Sheila. “I don’t understand them.”
+
+“No more do I, but I think they refer to the march of pestilence or
+plague. Numbers, colour, race, nothing matters, the plague sweeps all
+away. Ah, then, I was right,” he added. “There is the story in other
+words. Listen again.”
+
+To clapping of hands in unison, the following words were sung:
+
+ “New-come buckra,
+ He get sick,
+ He tak fever,
+ He be die;
+ He be die.
+ New-come buckra--”
+
+“Well, it may be a chant of the plague, but it’s lacking in poetry,” she
+remarked. “Doesn’t it seem so to you?”
+
+“No, I certainly shouldn’t go so far as that. Think of how much of a
+story is crowded into those few words. No waste, nothing thrown away.
+It’s all epic, or that’s my view, anyhow,” said the governor. “If you
+look out on those who are singing it, you’d see they are resting from
+their labours; that they are fighting the ennui which most of us feel
+when we rest from our labours. Let us look at them.”
+
+The governor stood up and came to the open French windows that faced the
+fields of sugar-cane. In the near distance were clumps of fruit trees,
+of hedges of lime and flowering shrubs, rows of orange trees, mangoes,
+red and purple, forbidden-fruit and grapefruit, the large scarlet
+fruit of the acqui, the avocado-pear, the feathering bamboo, and the
+Jack-fruit tree, with its enormous fruit like pumpkins. Parrots were
+chattering in the acacia and in the Otaheite plum tree, with its bright
+pink blossoms like tassels, and flanking the negro huts by the river
+were bowers of grenadilla fruit. Around the negro huts were small
+individual plantations kept by the slaves, for which they had one day a
+fortnight, besides Sundays, free to work on their own account. Here and
+there also were patches of “ground-fruit,” as the underground vegetables
+were called, while there passed by on their way to the open road leading
+to Kingston wains loaded with sugar-casks, drawn by oxen, and in two
+cases by sumpter mules.
+
+“Is there anything finer than that in Virginia?” asked the governor.
+“I have never been in Virginia, but I take this to be in some ways like
+that state. Is it?”
+
+“In some ways only. We have not the same profusion of wild fruits and
+trees, but we have our share--and it is not so hot as here. It is a
+better country, though.”
+
+“In what way is it better?” the governor asked almost acidly.
+
+“It is better governed.”
+
+“What do you mean by that? Isn’t Jamaica well governed?”
+
+“Not so well that it couldn’t be improved,” was Sheila’s reply.
+
+“What improvements would you suggest?” Lord Mallow asked urbanely, for
+he was set to play his cards carefully to-day.
+
+“More wisdom in the governor,” was the cheerful and bright reply.
+
+“Is he lacking in wisdom?”
+
+“In some ways, yes.”
+
+“Will you mind specifying some of the things?”
+
+“I think he is careless.”
+
+“Careless--as to what?”
+
+Sheila smiled. “He is indifferent to good advice. He has been told of
+trouble among the Maroons, that they mean to rise; he has been advised
+to make preparations, and he makes none, and he is deceived by a show
+of loyalty on the part of the slaves. Lord Mallow, if the free Maroons
+rise, why should not the black slaves rise at the same time? Why do you
+not act?”
+
+“Is everybody whose good opinion is worth having mad?” answered the
+governor. “I have sent my inspectors to Trelawney. I have had reports
+from them. I have used every care--what would you have me do?”
+
+“Used every care? Why don’t you ensure the Maroons peaceableness by
+advancing on them? Why don’t you take them prisoners? They are enraged
+that two of their herdsmen should be whipped by a negro-slave under the
+order of one of your captains. They are angry and disturbed and have
+ambushed the roads to Trelawney, so I’m told.”
+
+“Did Mr. Calhoun tell you that when he was here?”
+
+“It was not that which Mr. Calhoun told me the only time he came here.
+But who Erris Boyne was. I never knew till, in his honour, he told me,
+coming here for that purpose. I never knew who my father was till he
+told me. My mother had kept it from me all my life.”
+
+The governor looked alert. “And you have not seen him since that day?”
+
+“I have seen him, but I have not spoken to him. It was in the distance
+only.”
+
+“I understand your manager, Mr. Boland, sees him.”
+
+“My manager does not share my private interests--or troubles. He is free
+to go where he will, to speak to whom he chooses. He visits Enniskillen,
+I suppose--it is a well-managed plantation on Jamaican lines, and its
+owner is a man of mark.”
+
+Sheila spoke without agitation of any kind; her face was firm and calm,
+her manner composed, her voice even. As she talked, she seemed to be
+probing the centre of a flower which she had caught from a basket at
+the window, and her whole personality was alight and vivifying, her good
+temper and spirit complete. As he looked at her, he had an overmastering
+desire to make her his own--his wife. She was worth hundreds of
+thousands of pounds; she had beauty, ability and authority. She was
+the acme of charm and good bearing. With her he could climb high on
+the ladder of life. He might be a really great figure in the British
+world-if she gave her will to help him, to hold up his hands. It had
+never occurred to him that Dyck Calhoun could be a rival, till he had
+heard of Dyck’s visit to Sheila and her mother, till he had heard
+Sheila praise him at the first dinner he had given to the two ladies on
+Christmas Day.
+
+On that day it was clear Sheila did not know who her father was; but
+stranger things had happened than that she should take up with, and
+even marry, a man imprisoned for killing another, even one who had been
+condemned as a mutineer, and had won freedom by saving the king’s
+navy. But now that Sheila knew the truth there could be no danger! Dyck
+Calhoun would be relegated to his proper place in the scheme of things.
+Who was there to stand between him and his desire? What was there to
+stay the great event? He himself was a peer and high-placed, for it
+was a time when the West Indian Islands were a centre of the world’s
+fighting, where men like Rodney had made everlasting fame; where the
+currents of world-controversy challenged, met and fought for control.
+
+The West Indies was as much a cock-pit of the fighting powers as ever
+Belgium was; and in those islands there was wealth and the power which
+wealth buys; the clash of white and black and coloured peoples; the
+naval contests on the sea; the horrible massacres and enslavement
+of free white peoples, as in St. Domingo and Grenada; the dominating
+attacks of people fighting for control--peoples of old empires like
+France and Spain, and new empires like that of Britain. These were a
+centre of colonial life as important as had been the life in Virginia
+and New York and the New England States and Canada--indeed, more
+important than Canada in one sense, for the West Indies brought wealth
+to the British Isles, and had a big export trade. He lost no time in
+bringing matters to an issue.
+
+He got to his feet and came near to her. His eyes were inflamed with
+passion, his manner was impressive. He had a distinguished face, become
+more distinguished since his assumption of governorship, and authority
+had increased his personality.
+
+“A man of mark!” he said. “You mean a marked man. Let me tell you I have
+an order from the British Government to confine him to his estate; not
+to permit him to leave it; and, if he does, to arrest him. That is my
+commanded duty. You approve, do you not? Or are you like most women,
+soft at heart to bold criminals?”
+
+Sheila did not reply at once. The news was no news to her, for Darius
+Boland had told her; but she thought it well to let the governor think
+he had made a new, sensational statement.
+
+“No,” she said at last, looking him calmly in the eyes. “I have no soft
+feelings for criminals as criminals, none at all. And there is every
+reason why I should be adamant to this man, Dyck Calhoun. But, Lord
+Mallow, I would go carefully about this, if I were you. He is a man who
+takes no heed of people, high or low, and has no fear of consequences.
+Have you thought of the consequences to yourself? Suppose he resists,
+what will you do?”
+
+“If he resists I will attack him with due force.”
+
+“You mean you will send your military and police to attack him?” The
+gibe was covered, but it found the governor’s breast. He knew what she
+was meaning.
+
+“You would not expect me to do police work, would you? Is that what your
+president does? What your great George Washington does? Does he make the
+state arrests with his own hand?”
+
+“I have no doubt he would if the circumstances were such as to warrant
+it. He has no small vices, and no false feelings. He has proved
+himself,” she answered boldly.
+
+“Well, in that case,” responded Lord Mallow irritably, “the event will
+be as is due. The man is condemned by my masters, and he must submit to
+my authority. He is twice a criminal, and--”
+
+“And yet a hero and a good swordsman, and as honest as men are made in
+a dishonest world. Your Admiralty and your government first pardoned the
+man, and then gave him freedom on the island which you tried to prevent;
+and now they turn round and confine him to his acres. Is that pardon in
+a real sense? Did you write to the government and say he ought not to
+be free to roam, lest he should discover more treasure-chests and buy
+another estate? Was it you?”
+
+The governor shook his head. “No, not I. I told the government in
+careful and unrhetorical language the incident of his coming here, and
+what I did, and my reasons for doing it--that was all.”
+
+“And you being governor they took your advice. See, my lord, if this
+thing is done to him it will be to your own discomfiture. It will hurt
+you in the public service.”
+
+“Why, to hear you speak, mistress, it would almost seem you had a
+fondness for the man who killed your father, who went to jail for it,
+and--”
+
+“And became a mutineer,” intervened the girl flushing. “Why not say
+all? Why not catalogue his offences? Fondness for the man who killed
+my father, you say! Yes, I had a deep and sincere fondness for him ever
+since I met him at Playmore over seven years ago. Yes, a fondness which
+only his crime makes impossible. But in all that really matters I am
+still his friend. He did not know he was killing my father, who had no
+claims upon me, none at all, except that through him I have life and
+being; but it is enough to separate us for ever in the eyes of the
+world, and in my eyes. Not morally, of course, but legally and actually.
+He and I are as far apart as winter and summer; we are parted for ever
+and ever and ever.”
+
+Now at last she was inflamed. Every nerve in her was alive. All she
+had ever felt for Dyck Calhoun came rushing to the surface, demanding
+recognition, reasserting itself. As she used the words, “ever and ever
+and ever,” it was like a Cordelia bidding farewell to Lear, her father,
+for ever, for there was that in her voice which said: “It is final
+separation, it is the judgment of Jehovah, and I must submit. It is the
+last word.”
+
+Lord Mallow saw his opportunity, and did not hesitate. “No, you are
+wrong, wholly wrong,” he said. “I did not bias what I said in my
+report--a report I was bound to make--by any covert prejudice against
+Mr. Calhoun. I guarded myself especially”--there he lied, but he was an
+incomparable liar--“lest it should be used against him. It would appear,
+however, that the new admiral’s report with mine were laid together, and
+the government came to its conclusion accordingly. So I am bound to do
+my duty.”
+
+“If you--oh, if you did your duty, you would not obey the command of the
+government. Are there not times when to obey is a crime, and is not this
+one of them? Lord Mallow, you would be doing as great a crime as Mr.
+Dyck Calhoun ever committed, or could commit, if you put this order
+into actual fact. You are governor here, and your judgment would be
+accepted--remember it is an eight weeks’ journey to London at the least,
+and what might not happen in that time! Are you not given discretion?”
+
+The governor nodded. “Yes, I am given discretion, but this is an order.”
+
+“An order!” she commented. “Then if it should not be fulfilled, break
+it and take the consequences. The principle should be--Do what is right,
+and have no fear.”
+
+“I will think it over,” answered the governor. “What you say has immense
+weight with me--more even than I have words to say. Yes, I will think it
+over--I promise you. You are a genius--you prevail.”
+
+Her face softened, a new something came into her manner. “You do truly
+mean it?” she asked with lips that almost trembled.
+
+It seemed to her that to do this thing for Dyck Calhoun was the least
+that was possible, and it was perhaps the last thing she might ever be
+able to do. She realized how terrible it would be for him to be shorn of
+the liberty he had always had; how dangerous it might be in many
+ways; and how the people of the island might become excited by it--and
+troublesome.
+
+“Yes, I mean it,” answered Lord Mallow. “I mean it exactly as I say it.”
+
+She smiled. “Well, that should recommend you for promotion,” she said
+happily. “I am sure you will decide not to enforce the order, if you
+think about it. You shall be promoted, your honour, to a better place,”
+ she repeated, half-satirically.
+
+“Shall I then?” he asked with a warm smile and drawing close to her.
+“Shall I? Then it can only be by your recommendation. Ah, my dear,
+my beautiful dear one,” he hastened to add, “my life is possible
+henceforward only through you. You have taught me by your life and
+person, by your beauty and truth, by your nobility of mind and character
+how life should be lived. I have not always deserved your good opinion
+nor that of others. I have fought duels and killed men; I have aspired
+to place; I have connived at appointment; I have been vain, overbearing
+and insistent on my rights or privileges; I have played the dictator
+here in Jamaica; I have not been satisfied save to get my own way; but
+you have altered all that. Your coming here has given me a new outlook.
+Sheila, you have changed me, and you can change me infinitely more. I
+who have been a master wish to become your slave. I want you--beloved, I
+want you for my wife.”
+
+He reached out as though to take her hand, but she drew back from him.
+His thrilling words had touched her, as she had seldom been touched, as
+she had never been touched by any one save the man that must never be
+hers; she was submerged for the moment in the flood of his eloquence,
+and his yielding to her on the point of Dyck’s imprisonment gave fresh
+accent to his words. Yet she could not, she dared not yet say yes to his
+demand.
+
+“My lord,” she said, “oh, you have stirred me! Yet I dare not reply to
+you as you wish. Life is hard as it is, and you have suddenly made it
+harder. What is more, I do not, I cannot, believe you. You have loved
+many. Your life has been a covert menace. Oh, I know what they said
+of you in Ireland. I know not of your life here. I suppose it is
+circumspect now; but in Ireland it was declared you were notorious with
+women.”
+
+“It is a lie,” he answered. “I was not notorious. I was no better and no
+worse than many another man. I played, I danced attendance, I said soft
+nothings, but I was tied to no woman in all Ireland. I was frolicsome
+and adventurous, but no more. There is no woman who can say I used her
+ill or took from her what I did not--”
+
+“Atone for, Lord Mallow?”
+
+“Atone--no. What I did not give return for, was what I was going to
+say.”
+
+The situation was intense. She was in a place from which there was no
+escape except by flight or refusal. She did not really wish to refuse.
+Somehow, there had come upon her the desire to put all thought of Dyck
+Calhoun out of her mind by making it impossible for her to think of him;
+and marriage was the one sure and complete way--marriage with this man,
+was it possible? He held high position, he was her fellow countryman and
+an Irish peer, and she was the daughter of an evil man, who was, above
+all else, a traitor to his country, though Lord Mallow did not know
+that. The only one she knew possessed of the facts was the man she
+desired to save herself from in final way--Dyck Calhoun. Her heart
+was for the moment soft to Lord Mallow, in spite of his hatred of Dyck
+Calhoun. The governor was a man of charm in conversation. He was born
+with rare faculties. Besides, he had knowledge of humanity and of women.
+He knew how women could be touched. He had appealed to Sheila more by
+ability than by aught else. His concessions to her were discretion in
+a way. They opened the route to her affections, as his place and title
+could not do.
+
+“No, no, no, believe me, Sheila, I was a man who had too many
+temptations--that was all. But I did not spoil my life by them, and I
+am here a trusted servant of the government. I am a better governor than
+your first words to me would make you seem to think.”
+
+Her eyes were shining, her face was troubled, her tongue was silent. She
+knew not what to say. She felt she could not say yes--yet she wanted to
+escape from him. Her good fortune did not desert her. Suddenly the door
+of the room opened and her mother entered.
+
+“There is a member of your suite here, your honour, asking for you. It
+is of most grave importance. It is urgent. What shall I say?”
+
+“Say nothing. I am coming,” said the governor. “I am coming now.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+
+That night the Maroons broke loose upon Jamaica, and began murder and
+depredation against which the governor’s activities were no check.
+Estates were invaded, and men, women and children killed, or carried
+into the mountains and held as hostages. In the middle and western
+part of the island the ruinous movements went on without being stayed;
+planters and people generally railed at the governor, and said that
+through his neglect these dark things were happening. It was said he
+had failed to punish offences by the Maroons, and this had given them
+confidence, filling them with defiance. They had one advantage not
+possessed by the government troops and militia--they were masters of
+every square rod of land in the middle and west of the island. Their
+plan was to raid, to ambush, to kill and to excite the slaves to rebel.
+
+The first assault and repulse took place not far from Enniskillen,
+Dyck Calhoun’s plantation, and Michael Clones captured a Maroon who was
+slightly wounded.
+
+Michael challenged him thus: “Come now, my blitherin’ friend, tell
+us your trouble--why are you risin’? You don’t do this without
+cause--what’s the cause?”
+
+The black man, naked except for a cloth about his loins, and with a
+small bag at his hip, slung from a cord over his shoulder, showed his
+teeth in a stark grimace.
+
+“You’re a newcomer here, massa, or you’d know we’re treated bad,” he
+answered. “We’re robbed and trod on and there’s no word kept with us.
+We asked the governor for more land and he moved us off. We warned
+him against having one of our head young men flogged by a slave in the
+presence of slaves--for we are free men, and he laughs. So, knowing a
+few strong men can bring many weak men to their knees, we rose. I say
+this--there’s plenty weak men in Jamaica, men who don’t know right when
+they see it. So we rose, massa, and we’ll make Jamaica sick before we’ve
+done. They can’t beat us, for we can ambush here, and shoot those that
+come after us. We hide, one behind this rock and one behind that, two or
+three together, and we’re safe. But the white soldiers come all together
+and beat drums and blow horns, and we know where they are, and so we
+catch ‘em and kill ‘em. You’ll see, we’ll capture captains and generals,
+and we’ll cut their heads off and bury them in their own guts.”
+
+He made an ugly grimace, and a loathsome gesture, and Michael Clones
+felt the man ought to die. He half drew his sword, but, thinking better
+of it, he took the Maroon to the Castle and locked him up in a slave’s
+hut, having first bound him and put him in the charge of one he could
+trust. But as he put the man away, he said:
+
+“You talk of your people hiding, and men not being able to find you; but
+did you never hear of bloodhounds, that can hunt you down, and chew you
+up? Did you never hear of them?”
+
+The man’s face wrinkled like a rag, for there is one thing the native
+fears more than all else, and that is the tooth of the hound. But he
+gathered courage, and said: “The governor has no hounds. There ain’t
+none in Jamaica. We know dat--all of us know dat--all of us know dat,
+massa.”
+
+Michael Clones laughed, and it was not pleasant to hear. “It may be the
+governor has no bloodhounds, and would not permit their being brought
+into the island, but my master is bringing them in himself--a lot with
+their drivers from Cuba, and you Maroons will have all you can do to
+hide. Sure, d’ye think every wan in the island is as foolish as the
+governor? If you do, y’are mistaken, and that’s all there is to say.”
+
+“The hounds not here--in de island, massa!” declared the Maroon
+questioningly.
+
+“They’ll be here within the next few hours, and then where will you and
+your pals be? You’ll be caught between sharp teeth--nice, red, sharp,
+bloody teeth; and you’ll make good steak-better than your best olio.”
+
+The native gave a moan--it was the lament of one whose crime was come
+tete-a-tete with its own punishment.
+
+“That’s the game to play,” said Michael to himself as he fastened the
+door tight. “The hounds will settle this fool-rebellion quicker than
+aught else. Mr. Calhoun’s a wise man, and he ought to be governor
+here. Criminal? As much as the angel Gabriel! He must put down this
+rebellion--no wan else can. They’re stronger, the Maroons, than ever
+they’ve been. They’ve planned this with skill, and they’ll need a lot
+of handlin’. We’re safe enough here, but down there at Salem--well, they
+may be caught in the bloody net. Bedad, that’s sure.”
+
+A few moments afterwards he met Dyck Calhoun. “Michael,” said Dyck,
+“things are safe enough here, but we’ve prepared! The overseers,
+bookkeepers and drivers are loyal enough. But there are others not so
+safe. I’m going to Salem-riding as hard as I can, with six of our best
+men. They’re not so daft at Salem as we are, Michael. They won’t know
+how to act or what to do. Darius Boland is a good man, but he’s only had
+Virginian experience, and this is different. A hundred Maroons are as
+good as a thousand white soldiers in the way the Maroons fight. There
+are a thousand of them, and they can lay waste this island, if they get
+going. So I shall stop them. The hounds are outside the harbour now,
+Michael. The ship Vincent, bringing them, was sighted by a sloop two
+days ago, making slowly for Kingston. She should be here before we’ve
+time to turn round. Michael, the game is in our hands, if we play it
+well. Do you go down to Kingston and--”
+
+He detailed what Michael was to do on landing the hounds, and laid out
+plans for the immediate future. “They’re in danger at Salem, Michael, so
+we must help them. The hounds will settle this whole wretched business.”
+
+Michael told him of his prisoner, and what effect the threat about the
+hounds had had. A look of purpose came into Dyck’s face.
+
+“A hound is as fair as a gun, and hounds shall be used here in Jamaica.
+The governor can’t refuse their landing now. The people would kill him
+if he did. It was I proposed it all.”
+
+“Look, sir--who’s that?” asked Michael, as they saw a figure riding
+under the palms not far away.
+
+It was very early morning, and the light was dim yet, but there was
+sufficient to make even far sight easy. Dyck shaded his forehead with
+his hand.
+
+“It’s not one of our people, Michael. It’s a stranger.”
+
+As the rider came on he was stopped by two of the drivers of the estate.
+Dyck and Michael saw him hold up a letter, and a moment later he was on
+his way to Dyck, galloping hard. Arrived, he dropped to the ground, and
+saluted Dyck.
+
+“A letter from Salem, sir,” he said, and handed it over to Dyck.
+
+Dyck nodded, broke the seal of the letter and read it quickly. Then he
+nodded again and bade the man eat a hearty breakfast and return with him
+on one of the Enniskillen horses, as his own would be exhausted. “We’ll
+help protect Salem, my man,” said Dyck.
+
+The man grinned. “That’s good,” he answered. “They knew naught of the
+rising when I left. But the governor was there yesterday, and he’d
+protect us.”
+
+“Nonsense, fellow, the governor would go straight to Spanish Town where
+he belongs, when there is trouble.”
+
+When the man had gone, Dyck turned to his servant. “Michael,” he said,
+“the news in the letter came from Darius Boland. He says the governor
+told him he had orders from England to confine me here at Enniskillen,
+and he meant to do it. We’ll see how he does it. If he sends his
+marshals, we’ll make Gadarene swine of them.”
+
+There was a smile at his lips, and it was contemptuous, and the lines
+of his forehead told of resolve. “Michael,” he added, “we’ll hunt Lord
+Mallow with the hounds of our good fortune, for this war is our war.
+They can’t win it without me, and they shan’t. Without the hounds it may
+be a two years’ war--with the hounds it can’t go beyond a week or so.”
+
+“If the hounds get here, sir! But if they don’t?”
+
+Dyck laid his hand upon the sword at his side. “If they don’t get here,
+Michael, still the war will be ours, for we understand fighting, and
+the governor does not. Confine me here, will he? If he does, he’ll be a
+better man than I have ever known him, Michael. In a few hours I shall
+be at Salem, to do what he could not, and would not, do if he could.
+His love is as deep as water on a roof, no deeper. He’ll think first of
+himself, and afterwards of the owner of Salem or any other. Let me show
+you what I mean to do once we’ve Salem free from danger. Come and have a
+look at my chart.”
+
+Some hours later Dyck Calhoun, with his six horsemen, was within a mile
+or so of Salem. They had ridden hard in the heat and were tired,
+but there was high spirit in the men, for they were behind a trusted
+leader--a man who ate little, but who did not disdain a bottle of
+Madeira or a glass of brandy, and who made good every step of the way he
+went--watchful, alert, careful, determined. They cared little what his
+past had been. Jamaica was not a heaven for the good, but it was a haven
+for many who had been ill-used elsewhere; where each man, as though he
+were really in a new world, was judged by his daily actions and not by
+any history of a hidden or an open past. As they came across country,
+Dyck always ahead, they saw how he responded to every sign of life
+in the bush, how he moved always with discretion where ambush seemed
+possible. They knew how on his own estate he never made mistakes of
+judgment; that he held the balance carefully, and that his violences,
+rare and tremendous, were not outbursts of an unregulated nature. “You
+can’t fool Calhoun,” was a common phrase in the language of Enniskillen,
+and there were few in the surrounding country who would not have upheld
+its truth.
+
+Now, to-day, he was almost moodily silent, reserved and watchful. None
+knew the eddies of life which struggled for mastery in him, nor of his
+horrible disappointments. None knew of his love for Sheila. Yet all knew
+that he had killed--or was punished for killing--Erris Boyne. None
+of them had seen Sheila, but all had heard of her, and the governor’s
+courtship of her, and all wondered why Dyck Calhoun should be doing what
+clearly the governor should do.
+
+Somehow, in spite of the criminal record with which Calhoun’s life was
+stained, they had a respect for him they did not have for Lord Mallow.
+Dyck’s life in Jamaica was clean; and his progress as a planter had been
+free from black spots. He even kept no mistress, and none had ever known
+him to have to do with women, black, brown, or white. He had never gone
+a-Maying, as the saying was, and his only weakness or fault--if it was a
+fault--was a fondness for the bottle of good wine which was ever open
+on his table, and for tobacco in the smoking-leaf. To-day he smoked
+incessantly and carefully. He threw no loose ends of burning tobacco
+from cigar or pipe into the loose dry leaves and stiff-cut ground. Yet
+they knew the small clouds floating away from his head did not check his
+observation. That was proved beyond peradventure when they were within
+sight of the homestead of Salem on an upland well-wooded. It was in
+apparently happy circumstances, for they could see no commotion about
+the homestead; they saw men with muskets, evidently keeping guard--yet
+too openly keeping guard, and so some said to each other.
+
+Presently Dyck reined his horse. Each man listened attentively, and eyed
+the wood ahead of them, for it was clear Dyck suspected danger there.
+For a moment there seemed doubt in Dyck’s mind what to do, but presently
+he had decided.
+
+“Ride slow for Salem,” he said. “It’s Maroons there in the bush. They
+are waiting for night. They won’t attack us now. They’re in ambush--of
+that I’m sure. If they want to capture Salem, they’ll not give alarm by
+firing on us, so if we ride on they’ll think we haven’t sensed them. If
+they do attack us, we’ll know they are in good numbers, for they’ll be
+facing us as well as the garrison of Salem. But keep your muskets ready.
+Have a drink,” he added, and handed his horn of liquor. “If they see us
+drink, and they will, they’ll think we’ve only stopped to refresh, and
+we’ll be safe. In any case, if they attack, fire your muskets at them
+and ride like the devil. Don’t dismount and don’t try to find them in
+the rocks. They’ll catch us that way, as they’ve caught others. It’s
+a poor game fighting hidden men. I want to get them into the open down
+below, and that’s where they’ll be before we’re many hours older.”
+
+With this he rode on slightly ahead, and presently put his horse at a
+gentle canter which he did not increase as they neared the place where
+the black men ambushed. Every man of the group behaved well. None showed
+nervousness, even when one of the horses, conscious of hidden Maroons in
+the wood, gave a snort and made a sharp movement out of the track, in an
+attempt to get greater speed.
+
+That was only for an instant, however. Yet every man’s heart beat faster
+as they came to the place where the ambush was. Indeed, Dyck saw a
+bush move, and had a glimpse of a black, hideous face which quickly
+disappeared. Dyck’s imperturbable coolness kept them steady. They even
+gossiped of idle things loud enough for the hidden Maroons to hear.
+No face showed suspicion or alarm, as they passed, while all felt the
+presence of many men in the underbrush. Only when they had passed the
+place, did they realize the fulness of the danger through which they
+had gone. Dyck talked to them presently without turning round, for that
+might have roused suspicion, and while they were out of danger now,
+there was the future and Dyck’s plan which he now unfolded.
+
+“They’ll come down into the open before it’s dark,” he said quietly,
+“and when they do that, we’ll have ‘em. They’ve no chance to ambush
+in the cane-fields now. We’ll get them in the open, and wipe them out.
+Don’t look round. Keep steady, and we’ll ride a little more quickly
+soon.”
+
+A little later they cantered to the front door of the Salem homestead.
+
+The first face they saw there was that of Darius Boland. It had a look
+of trouble. Dyck explained. “We thought you might not have heard of the
+rise of the Maroons. We have no ladies at Enniskillen. We prepared, and
+we’re safe enough there, as things are. Your ladies must go at once to
+Spanish Town, unless--”
+
+“Unless they stay here! Well, they would not be unwise, for though the
+slaves under the old management might have joined the Maroons, they will
+not do so now. We have got them that far. But, Mr. Calhoun, the ladies
+aren’t here. They rode away into the hills this morning, and they’ve not
+come back.
+
+“I was just sending a search party for them. I did not know of the rise
+of the Maroons.”
+
+“In what direction did they go?” asked Dyck with anxiety, though his
+tone was even.
+
+Darius Boland pointed. “They went slightly northwest, and if they go as
+I think they meant to do, they would come back the way you came in.”
+
+“They were armed?” Dyck asked sharply.
+
+“Yes, they were armed,” was the reply. “Miss Llyn had a small pistol.
+She learned to carry one in Virginia, and she has done so ever since we
+came here.”
+
+“Listen, Boland,” said Dyck with anxiety. “Up there in the hills by
+which we came are Maroons hidden, and they will invade this place
+to-night. We were ready to fight them, of course, as we came, but it’s
+a risky business, and we wanted to get them all if possible. We couldn’t
+if we had charged them there, for they were well-ambushed. My idea was
+to let them get into the open between there and here, and catch them as
+they came. It would save our own men, and it would probably do for them.
+If Mrs. and Miss Llyn come back that way, they will be in greater danger
+than were we, for the Maroons were coming here to capture the ladies and
+hold them as hostages; and they would not let them pass. In any case,
+the risk is immense. The ladies must be got to Spanish Town, for the
+Maroons are desperate. They know we have no ships of the navy here now,
+and they rely on their raiding powers and the governor’s weakness. They
+have placed their men in every part of the middle and western country,
+and they came upon my place last evening and were defeated. Several were
+killed and one taken prisoner. They can’t be marched upon like an
+army. Their powers of ambush are too great. They must be run down by
+bloodhounds. It’s the only way.”
+
+“Bloodhounds--there are no bloodhounds here!” said Darius Boland. “And
+if there were, wouldn’t pious England make a fuss?”
+
+Dyck Calhoun was about to speak sharply, but he caught sarcasm in Darius
+Boland’s face, and he said: “I have the bloodhounds. They’re outside the
+harbour now, and I intend to use them.”
+
+“If the governor allows you!” remarked Darius Boland ironically. “He
+does not like you or your bloodhounds. He has his orders, so he says.”
+
+Dyck made an impatient gesture. “I will not submit to his orders. I
+have earned my place in this is land, and he shall not have his way. The
+ladies must be brought to Spanish Town, and placed where the governor’s
+men can protect them.”
+
+“The governor’s men! Indeed. They might as well stay here; we can surely
+protect them.”
+
+“Perhaps, for you have skill, Boland, and you are cautious, but is it
+fair for ladies to stay in this isolated spot with murderers about? When
+the ladies come back, they must be sent at once to Spanish Town. Can’t
+you see?”
+
+Darius Boland bowed. “What you say goes always,” he remarked, “but tell
+me, sir, who will take the ladies to Spanish Town?”
+
+Dyck Calhoun read the inner meaning of Darius Boland’s words. They did
+not put him out of self-control. It was not a time to dwell on such
+things. It was his primary duty to save the ladies.
+
+“Come, Boland,” he said sharply, “I shall start now. We must find
+the ladies. What sort of a country is it through which they pass?” He
+pointed.
+
+“Bad enough in some ways. There’s an old monastery of the days of
+the Spaniards up there”--he pointed or the ruins of one, “and it is a
+pleasant place to rest. I doubt not they rested there, if--”
+
+“If they reached it!” remarked Dyck with crisp inflection. “Yes,
+they would rest there--and it would be a good place for ambush by the
+Maroons, eh?”
+
+“Good enough from the standpoint of the Maroons,” was the reply, the
+voice slightly choked.
+
+“Then we must go there. It’s a damnable predicament--no, you must not
+come with me! You must keep command here.”
+
+He hastily described the course to be followed by those of his own men
+who stayed to defend, and then said: “Our horses are fagged. If you loan
+us four I’ll see they are well cared for, and returned in kind or cash.
+I’ll take three of my men only, and loan you three of the best. We’ll
+fill our knapsacks and get away, Boland.”
+
+A few moments later, Calhoun and his three men, with a guide added by
+Boland, had started away up the road which had been ridden by Mrs. Llyn
+and Sheila. One thing was clear, the Maroons on the hill did not know of
+the absence of Sheila and her mother, or they would not be waiting. He
+did not like the long absence of the ladies. It was ominous at such a
+time.
+
+Dyck and his small escort got away by a road unseen from where the
+Maroons were, and when well away put their horses to a canter and got
+into the hills. Once in the woods, however, they rode alertly, and
+Dyck’s eyes were everywhere. He was quick to see a bush move, to observe
+the flick of a branch, to catch the faintest sound of an animal origin.
+He was obsessed with anxiety, for he had a dark fear that some ill had
+happened to the two. His blood almost dried in his veins when he thought
+of the fate which had followed the capture of ladies in other islands
+like Haiti or Grenada.
+
+It did not seem possible that these beautiful women should have fallen
+into the outrageous hands of savages. He knew the girl was armed, and
+that before harm might come to her she would end her own life and her
+mother’s also; but if she was caught from behind, and the opportunity of
+suicide should not be hers--what then?
+
+Yet he showed no agitation to his followers. His eyes were, however,
+intensely busy, and every nerve was keen to feel. Life in the open had
+developed in him the physical astuteness of the wild man, and he had all
+the gifts that make a supreme open-air fighter. He sensed things; but
+with him it was feeling, and not scent or hearing; his senses were such
+perfect listeners. He had the intense perception of a delicate plant,
+those wonderful warnings which only come to those who live close to
+nature, who study from feeling the thousand moods and tenses of living
+vegetables and animal life. He was a born hunter, and it was not easy
+to surprise him when every nerve was sharp with premonition. He saw
+the marks of the hoofs of Sheila’s and her mother’s horses in the road,
+knowing them by the freshness of the indentations. An hour, two hours
+passed, and they then approached the monasterial ruin of which Boland
+had spoken. Here, suddenly, Dyck dropped to the ground, for he saw
+unmistakable signs of fright or flurry in the hoofmarks.
+
+He quickly made examination, and there were signs of women’s feet and
+also a bare native foot, but no signs of struggle or disturbance. The
+footprints, both native and white, were firmly placed, but the horses’
+hoof-prints showed agitation. Presently the hoofmarks became more
+composed again. Suddenly one of Dyck’s supporters exclaimed he had
+picked up a small piece of ribbon, evidently dropped to guide those who
+might come searching. Presently another token was found in a loose bit
+of buckle from a shoe. Then, suddenly, upon the middle of the road was a
+little pool of blood and signs that a body had lain in the dust.
+
+“She shot a native here,” said Dyck to his men coolly. “There are no
+signs of a struggle,” remarked the most observant.
+
+“We must go carefully here, for they may have been imprisoned in the
+ruin. You stay here, and I’ll go forward,” he added, with a hand on
+his sword. “I’ve an idea they’re here. We have one chance, my lads,
+and let’s keep our heads. If anything should happen to me, have a
+try yourselves, and see what you can do. The ladies must be freed, if
+they’re there. There’s not one of you that won’t stand by to the last,
+but I want your oath upon it. By the heads or graves of your mothers,
+lads, you’ll see it through? Up with your hands!”
+
+Their hands went up. “By our mothers’ heads or graves!” they said in low
+tones.
+
+“Good!” he replied. “I’ll go on ahead. If you hear a call, or a shot
+fired, forward swiftly.”
+
+An instant later he plunged into the woods to the right of the road, by
+which he would come upon the ruins from the rear. He held a pistol as he
+stole carefully yet quickly forward. He was anxious there should be no
+delay, but he must not be rash. Without meeting anyone he came near the
+ruins. They showed serene in the shade of the trees.
+
+Then suddenly came from the ruin a Maroon of fierce, yet not cruel
+appearance, who laid a hand behind his ear, and looked steadfastly
+towards that part of the wood where Dyck was. It was clear he had heard
+something. Dyck did not know how many Maroons there might be in the
+ruins, or near it, and he did not attack. It was essential he should
+know the strength of his foe; and he remained quiet. Presently the
+native turned as though to go back into the ruins, but changed his mind,
+and began to tour the stony, ruined building. Dyck waited, and presently
+saw more natives come from the ruins, and after a moment another three.
+These last were having an argument of some stress, for they pulled
+at each other’s arms and even caught at the long cloths of their
+headdresses.
+
+“They’ve got the ladies there,” thought Dyck, “but they’ve done them no
+harm yet.” He waited moments longer to see if more natives were coming
+out, then said to himself: “I’ll make a try for it now. It won’t do to
+run the risk of going back to bring my fellows up. It’s a fair risk, but
+it’s worth taking.”
+
+With that he ran softly to the entrance from which he had seen the men
+emerge. Looking in he saw only darkness. Then suddenly he gave a soft
+call, the call of an Irish bird-note which all people in Ireland--in the
+west and south of Ireland--know. If Sheila was alive and in the place
+she would answer it, he was sure. He waited a moment, and there was no
+answer. Then he called again, and in an instant, as though from a
+great distance, there came the reply of the same note, clearer and more
+bell-like than his own.
+
+“She’s there!” he said, and boldly entered the place. It was dark and
+damp, but ahead was a break in the solid monotony of ruined wall, and he
+saw a clear stream of light beyond. He stole ahead, got over the stone
+obstructions, and came on to a biggish room which once had been a
+refectory. Looking round it he saw three doors--one evidently led into
+the kitchen, one into a pantry, and one into a hall. It was clear the
+women were alone, or some one would have come in answer to his call. Who
+could tell when they would come? There was no time to be lost. With an
+instinct, which proved correct, he opened the door leading into the old
+kitchen, and there, tied, and with pale faces, but in no other sense
+disordered, were Sheila and her mother. He put his fingers to his lips,
+then hastily cut them loose from the ropes of bamboo, and helped them to
+their feet.
+
+“Can you walk?” he whispered to Mrs. Llyn. She nodded assent, and braced
+herself. “Then here,” he said, “is a pistol. Come quickly. We may have
+to fight our way out. Don’t be afraid to fire, but take good aim first.
+I have some men in the wood beyond where you shot the native,” he added
+to Sheila. “They’ll come at once if I call, or a shot is fired. Keep
+your heads, and we shall be all right. They’re a dangerous crew, but
+we’ll beat them this time. Come quickly.”
+
+Presently they were in the refectory, and a moment after that they were
+over the stones, and near the entrance, and then a native appeared,
+armed. Without an instant’s hesitation Dyck ran forward, and as he
+entered, put his sword into the man’s vitals, and he fell, calling out
+as he fell.
+
+“The rest will be on us now,” said Dyck, “and we must keep going.”
+
+Three more natives appeared, and he shot two.
+
+Catching a pistol from Sheila he aimed at the third native and wounded
+him, but did not kill him. The man ran into the wood. Presently more
+Maroons came--a dozen or more, and rushed for the entrance. They were
+met by Dyck’s fire, and now also Sheila fired and brought down her
+man. Dyck wounded another, and in great skill loaded again, but at that
+moment three of the Maroons rushed down into the ruins.
+
+They were astonished to see Dyck there, and more astonished to
+receive--first one and then another--his iron in their bowels. The third
+man made a stroke at Dyck with his lance, and only gashed Dyck’s
+left arm. Then he turned and fled out into the open, and was met by
+a half-dozen others. They all were about to rush the entrance when
+suddenly four shots behind them brought three of them down, and the rest
+fled into the wood shouting. In another moment Dyck and the ladies
+were in the open, and making for the woods, the women in front, the men
+behind, loading their muskets as they ran, and alive to the risks of the
+moment.
+
+The dresses of the ladies were stained and soiled with dust and damp,
+but otherwise they seemed little the worse for the adventure, save that
+Mrs. Llyn was shaken, and her face was pale.
+
+“How did you know where we were, and why did you come?” she said, after
+they had got under way, having secured the horses which Sheila and her
+mother had ridden.
+
+Briefly Dyck explained how as soon as he had dealt with the revolt of
+the Maroons at his own place he came straight to Salem.
+
+“I knew you were unused to the ways of the country and to our sort of
+native here, and I felt sure you would not refuse to take help--even
+mine at a pinch. But what happened to you?” he added, turning to Sheila.
+
+It was only yesterday Sheila had determined to cut him wholly out of her
+life by assenting to marry Lord Mallow. Yet here he was, and she could
+scarcely bear to look into his face. He was shut off from her by every
+fact of human reason. These were days when the traditions of family life
+were more intense than now; when to kill one’s own father was not so bad
+as to embrace, as it were, him or her who had killed that father. Sheila
+felt if she were normal she ought to feel abhorrence against Dyck; yet
+she felt none at all, and his saving them had given a new colour to
+their relations. If he had killed her father, the traitor, he had saved
+themselves from death or freed them from a shameful captivity which
+might have ended in black disaster. She kept herself in hand, and did
+not show confusion.
+
+“We had not heard of the rising of the Maroons,” she said. “The governor
+was at Salem yesterday and a message came from his staff to say would
+he come at once. His staff were not at Salem, but at the next plantation
+nearer to Spanish Town. Lord Mallow went. If he suspected the real
+trouble he said naught, but was gone before you could realize it.
+The hours went by, night came and passed, then my mother and I, this
+morning, resolved to ride to the monastery, and then round by the road
+you travelled back to Salem.”
+
+“There are Maroons now on that hill above your place. They were in
+ambush when we passed, but we took no notice. It was not wise to invite
+trouble. Some of us would have been killed, but--”
+
+He then told what had been in his mind, and what might be the
+outcome--the killing or capture of the whole group, and safety for all
+at Salem.
+
+When he had finished, she continued her story. “We rode for an hour
+unchallenged, and then came the Maroons. At first I knew not what to do.
+We were surrounded before we could act. I had my pistol ready, and there
+was the chance of escape--the faint chance--if we drove our horses on;
+but there was also the danger of being fired at from behind! So we
+sat still on our horses, and I asked them how they dared attack white
+ladies. I asked them if they had never thought what vengeance the
+governor would take. They did not understand my words, but they grasped
+the meaning, and one of them, the leader, who understood English, was
+inclined to have reason. As it was, we stopped what might have been our
+murder by saying it would be wiser to hold us as hostages, and that we
+were Americans. That man was killed--by you. A shot from your pistol
+brought him down as he rushed forward to enter the ruins. But he took
+care of us as we went forward, and when I shot one of his followers for
+laying his hand upon me in the saddle--he caught me by the leg under my
+skirt--he would allow no retaliation. I knew boldness was the safe part
+to play.
+
+“But in the end we were bound with ropes as you found us, while they
+waited for more of their people to come, those, no doubt, you found
+ambushed on the hill. As we lay, bound as you saw us, the leader said
+to us we should be safe if he could have his way, but there were bad
+elements among the Maroons, and he could not guarantee it. Yet he knew
+the government would pay for our release, would perhaps give the land
+for which they had asked with no avail. We must, therefore, remain
+prisoners. If we made no efforts to escape, it would be better in the
+end. ‘Keep your head steady, missy, try no tricks, and all may go well;
+but I have bad lot, and they may fly at you.’ That was the way he spoke.
+It made our blood run cold, for he was one man, with fair mind, and he
+had around him men, savage and irresponsible. Black and ruthless, they
+would stop at nothing except the sword at their throats or the teeth in
+their flesh.”
+
+“The teeth in their flesh!” said Dyck with a grim smile. “Yes, that is
+the only way with them. Naught can put the fear of God into them except
+bloodhounds, and that Lord Mallow will not have. He has been set against
+it until now. But this business will teach him. He may change his mind
+now, since what he cares for is in danger--his place and his ladies!”
+
+Mrs. Llyn roused herself to say: “No, no, Mr. Calhoun, you must not say
+that of him. His place may be in danger, but not his ladies. He has no
+promise of that.... And see, Mr. Calhoun, I want to say that, in any
+case, you have paid your debt, if you owe one to us. For a life taken
+you have given two lives--to me and my girl. I speak as one who has
+a right to say it! Erris Boyne was naught to me at all, but he was my
+daughter’s father, and that made everything difficult. I could make him
+cease to be my husband, and I did; but I could not make him cease to be
+her father.”
+
+“I had no love for Erris Boyne,” said Sheila. Misery was heavy on her.
+“None at all, but he was my father.”
+
+“See, all’s well still at Salem,” said Dyck waving a hand as though to
+change the talk. “All’s as we left it.”
+
+There in the near distance lay Salem, serene. All tropical life about
+seemed throbbing with life and soaking with leisure.
+
+“We were in time,” he added. “The Maroons are still in ambush. The sun
+is beginning to set though, and the trouble may begin. We shall get
+there about sundown--safe, thank God!”
+
+“Safe, thank God--and you,” said Sheila’s mother.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+
+In the King’s House at Spanish Town the governor was troubled. All his
+plans and prophecies had come to naught. He had been sure there would
+be no rebellion of the Maroons, and he was equally sure that his career
+would be made hugely successful by marriage with Sheila Llyn--but the
+Maroons had revolted, and the marriage was not settled!
+
+Messages had been coming from the provost-marshal-general of reports
+from the counties of Middlesex and Cornwall, that the Maroons were
+ravaging everywhere and that bands of slaves had joined them with
+serious disasters to the plantation people. Planters, their wives and
+children had been murdered, and in some districts the natives were in
+full possession and had destroyed, robbed and ravaged. He had summoned
+his commander of the militia forces, had created special constables, and
+armed them, and had sent a ship to the Bahamas to summon a small British
+fleet there. He had also mapped out a campaign against the Maroons,
+which had one grave demerit--it was planned on a basis of ordinary
+warfare and not with Jamaica conditions in mind. The provost-marshal
+warned him of the futility of these plans, but he had persisted in
+them. He had later been shocked, however, by news that the best of his
+colonels had been ambushed and killed, and that others had been made
+prisoners and treated with barbarity. From everywhere, except one, had
+come either news of defeat or set-back.
+
+One good thing he immediately did: he threw open King’s House to the
+wounded, and set the surgeons to work, thereby checking bitter criticism
+and blocking the movement rising against him. For it was well known he
+had rejected all warnings, had persisted in his view that trust in the
+Maroons and fair treatment of themselves and the slaves were all that
+was needed.
+
+As he walked in the great salon or hall of audience where the wounded
+lay--over seventy feet long and thirty wide, with great height, to which
+beds and conveniences had been hastily brought--it seemed to him that he
+was saving, if barely saving, his name and career. Standing beside one
+of the Doric pillars which divided the salon from an upper and lower
+gallery of communications, he received the Custos of Kingston. As the
+Custos told his news the governor’s eyes were running along the line of
+busts of ancient and modern philosophers on the gilt brackets between
+the Doric pilasters. They were all in bronze, and his mind had the
+doleful imagination of brown slave heroes placed there in honour for
+services given to the country. The doors at the south end of the great
+salon opened now and then into the council chambers beyond, and he could
+see the surgeons operating on the cases returned from the plantations.
+
+“Your honour,” said the Custos, “things have suddenly improved. The
+hounds have come from Cuba and in the charge of ten men--ten men with
+sixty hounds. That is the situation at the moment. All the people at
+Kingston are overjoyed. They see the end of the revolt.”
+
+“The hounds!” exclaimed the governor. “What hounds?”
+
+“The hounds sent for by Dyck Calhoun--surely your honour remembers!”
+
+Surely his honour did, and recalled also that he forbade the importation
+of the hounds; but he could not press that prohibition now. “The
+mutineer and murderer, Dyck Calhoun!” he exclaimed. “And they have
+come!”
+
+“Yes, your honour, and gone with Calhoun’s man, Michael Clones, to
+Salem.”
+
+“To Salem--why Salem?”
+
+“Because Calhoun is there fighting the Maroons in that district. The
+Maroons first captured the ladies of Salem as they rode in the woods.
+They were beaten at that game by Calhoun and four men; the ladies
+then were freed and taken back to Salem. Then the storm burst on
+Salem--burst, but did not overwhelm. Calhoun saved the situation
+there; and when his hounds arrive at Salem he will range over the whole
+country. It is against the ideas of the people of England, but it does
+our work in Jamaica as nothing else could. It was a stroke of genius,
+the hounds, your honour!”
+
+Lord Mallow was at once relieved and nonplussed. No doubt the policy of
+the hounds was useful, and it might save his own goose, but it was, in
+a sense, un-English to hunt the wild man with hounds. Yet was it
+un-English? What was the difference between a sword and a good sharp
+tooth save that the sword struck and let go and the tooth struck and
+held on? It had been said in England that to hunt negroes with hounds
+was barbarous and cowardly; but criminals were hunted with bloodhounds
+in all civilized countries; and as for cowardice, the man who had sent
+for these hounds was as brave as any old crusader! No, Dyck Calhoun
+could not be charged with cowardice, and his policy of the hounds might
+save the island and the administration in the end. They had arrived in
+the very hour of Jamaica’s and Lord Mallow’s greatest peril. They had
+gone on to the man who had been sane enough to send for them.
+
+“Tell me about the landing of the hounds,” said Lord Mallow.
+
+“It was last night about dusk that word came from the pilot’s station
+at Port Royal that the vessel Vincent was making for port, and that she.
+came from Cuba. Presently Michael Clones, the servant of Dyck Calhoun,
+came also to say that the Vincent was the ship bringing Calhoun’s
+hounds from Cuba, and asking permit for delivery. This he did because
+he thought you were opposed to the landing. In the light of our position
+here, we granted the delivery.
+
+“When the vessel came to anchor, the hounds with their drivers were
+landed. The landing was the signal for a great display on the part of
+the people and the militia--yes, the militia shared in the applause,
+your honour! They had had a taste of war with the Maroons and the
+slaves, and they were well inclined to let the hounds have their chance.
+Resolutions were then passed to approach your honour and ask that full
+powers be given to Calhoun to pursue the war without thought of military
+precedent or of Calhoun’s position. He has no official place in the
+public life here, but he is powerful with the masses. It is rumoured you
+have an order to confine him to his plantation; but to apply it would
+bring revolution in Jamaica. There are great numbers of people who love
+his courage, what he did for the King’s navy, and for his commercial
+success here, and they would resent harsh treatment of him. They are
+aware, your honour, that he and you knew each other in Ireland, and they
+think you are hard on him. People judge not from all the facts, but from
+what they see and hear.”
+
+During the Custos’ narrative, Lord Mallow was perturbed. He had the
+common sense to know that Dyck Calhoun, ex-convict and mutineer as he
+was, had personal power in the island, which he as governor had not been
+able to get, and Dyck had not abused that power. He realized that Dyck’s
+premonition of an outbreak and sending for the hounds was a stroke
+of genius. He recalled with anger Dyck’s appearance, in spite of
+regulations, in trousers at the King’s ball and his dancing with a black
+woman, and he also realized that it was a cool insult to himself. It was
+then he had given the home authorities information which would poison
+their mind against Dyck, and from that had come the order to confine him
+to his plantation.
+
+Yet he felt the time had come when he might use Dyck for his own
+purposes. That Dyck should be at Salem was a bitter dose, but that could
+amount to nothing, for Sheila could never marry the man who had killed
+her father, however bad and mad her father was. Yet it gravelled his
+soul that Dyck should be doing service for the lady to whom he had
+offered his own hand and heart, and from whom he had had no word of
+assent. It angered him against himself that he had not at once sent
+soldiers to Salem to protect it. He wished to set himself right with
+Sheila and with the island people, and how to do so was the question.
+
+First, clearly, he must not apply the order to confine Dyck to his
+plantation; also he must give Dyck authority to use the hounds in
+hunting down the Maroons and slaves who were committing awful crimes.
+He forthwith decided to write, asking Dyck to send him outline of his
+scheme against the rebels. That he must do, for the game was with Dyck.
+
+“How long will it take the hounds to get to Salem?” he asked the Custos
+presently in his office, with deepset lines in his face and a determined
+look in his eyes. He was an arrogant man, but he was not insane, and he
+wished to succeed. It could only be success if he dragged Jamaica out of
+this rebellion with flying colours, and his one possible weapon was the
+man whom he detested.
+
+“Why, your honour, as we sent them by wagons and good horses they should
+be in Dyck Calhoun’s hands this evening. They should be there by now
+almost, for they’ve been going for hours, and the distance is not
+great.”
+
+The governor nodded, and began to write. A halfhour later he handed to
+the Custos what he had written.
+
+“See what you think of that, Custos,” he said. “Does it, in your mind,
+cover the ground as it should?”
+
+The Custos read it all over slowly and carefully, weighing every word.
+Presently he handed back the paper. “Your honour, it is complete and
+masterly,” he said. “It puts the crushing of the revolt into the hands
+of Mr. Calhoun, and nothing could be wiser. He has the gifts of a
+leader, and he will do the job with no mistake, and in a time of crisis
+like this, that is essential. You have given him the right to order the
+militia to obey him, and nothing could be better. He will organize like
+a master. We haven’t forgotten his fight on the Ariadne. Didn’t the
+admiral tell the story at the dinner we gave him of how this ex-convict
+and mutineer, by sheer genius, broke the power of the French at the
+critical moment and saved our fleet, though it was only three-fourths
+that of the French?”
+
+“You don’t think the French will get us some day?” asked the governor
+with a smile.
+
+“I certainly don’t since our defences have been improved. Look at the
+sixty big cannon on Fort Augusta! They’d be knocked to smithereens
+before they could get into the quiet waters of the harbour. Don’t forget
+the narrows, your honour. Then there’s the Apostle’s Battery with its
+huge shot, and the guns of Fort Royal would give them a cross-fire that
+would make them sick. Besides, we could stop them within the shoals
+and reefs and narrow channels before they got near the inner circle.
+It would only be the hand of God that would get them in, and it doesn’t
+work for Frenchmen these days, I observe. No, this place is safe, and
+King’s House will be the home of British governors for many a century.”
+
+“Ah, that’s your gallant faith, and no doubt you are right, but go on
+with your tale of the hounds,” said Lord Mallow.
+
+“Your honour, as the hounds went away with Michael Clones there was
+greater applause than I have ever seen in the island except when Rodney
+defeated De Grasse. Imagine a little sloop in the wash of the seas and
+the buccaneers piling down on him, and no chance of escape, and then a
+great British battleship appearing, and the situation saved--that was
+how we were placed here till the hounds arrived.
+
+“Your honour, this morning’s--this early morning’s exit of the hounds
+was like a procession of veterans to Walhalla. There was the sun
+breaking over the tops of the hills, a crimsonish, greyish, opaline
+touch of soft sprays or mists breaking away from the onset of the
+sunrise; and all the trees with night-lips wet sucking in the sun and
+drinking up the light like an overseer at a Christmas breakfast; and you
+know what that is. And all the shore, rocky and sandy, rough and smooth,
+happy and homely, shimmering in the radiance. And hundreds of Creoles
+and coloured folk beating the ground in agitation, and slaves a-plenty
+carrying boxes to the ships that are leaving, and white folk crowding
+the streets, and bugles blowing, and the tramp of the militia, and the
+rattle of carts on the cobble-stones, and the voices of the officers
+giving orders, and turmoil everywhere.
+
+“Then, suddenly, the sharp sound of a long whip and a voice calling, and
+there rises out of the landing place the procession--the sixty dogs in
+three wagons, their ten drivers with their whips, but keeping order by
+the sound of their voices, low, soft, and peculiar, and then the horses
+starting into a quick trot which presently would become a canter--and
+the hounds were off to Salem! There could be no fear with the hounds
+loose to do the hunting.”
+
+“But suppose when they get to Salem their owner is no more.”
+
+The Custos laughed. “Him, your honour--him no more! Isn’t he the man of
+whom the black folk say: ‘Lucky buckra--morning, lucky new-comer!’ If
+that’s his reputation, and the coming of his hounds just when the island
+most needed them is good proof of it, do you think he’ll be killed by
+a lot of dirty Maroons! Ah, Calhoun’s a man with the luck of the devil,
+your honour! He has the pull--as sure as heaven’s above he’ll make
+success. If you command your staff to have this posted as a proclamation
+throughout the island, it will do as much good as a thousand soldiers.
+The military officers will not object, they know how big a man he is,
+and they have had enough. The news is not good from all over the island,
+for there are bad planters and bad overseers, and they’ve poisoned large
+fields of men in many quarters of the island, and things are wrong.
+
+“But this proclamation will put things right. It will stop the slaves
+from revolting; it will squelch the Maroons, and I’m certain sure
+Calhoun will have Maroons ready to fight for us, not against us,
+before this thing is over. I tell you, your honour, it means the way
+out--that’s what it means. So, if you’ll give me your order, keeping
+a copy of it for the provost-marshal, I’ll see it’s delivered to Dyck
+Calhoun before morning--perhaps by midnight. It’s not more than a six
+hours’ journey in the ordinary way.”
+
+At that moment an aide-de-camp entered, and with grave face presented to
+the governor the last report from the provost-marshal-general. Then he
+watched the governor read the report.
+
+“Ten more killed and twenty wounded!” said the governor. “It must be
+stopped.”
+
+He gave the Custos the letter to Dyck Calhoun, and a few moments later
+handed the proclamation to his aide-de-camp.
+
+“That will settle the business, your honour,” said the aide-de-camp as
+he read the proclamation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+
+“Then, tell me please, what you know of the story,” said the governor to
+Sheila at King’s House one afternoon two weeks later. “I only get meagre
+reports from the general commanding. But you close to the intimate
+source of the events must know all.”
+
+Sheila shrank at the suggestion in the governor’s voice, but she did not
+resent it. She had purposes which she must carry out, and she steeled
+herself. She wanted to get from Lord Mallow a pledge concerning Dyck
+Calhoun, and she must be patient.
+
+“I know nothing direct from Mr. Calhoun, your honour!” she said, “but
+only through his servant, Michael Clones, who is a friend of my Darius
+Boland, and they have met often since the first outbreak. You know,
+of course, what happened at Port Louise--how the Maroons seized and
+murdered the garrison, how families were butchered when they armed
+first, how barbarism broke loose and made all men combine to fight the
+rebels. Even before Mr. Calhoun came they had had record of a sack of
+human ears, cut from the dead rebel-slaves, when they had been killed
+by faithful slaves, and good progress was made. But the revolters fixed
+their camps on high rocks, and by blowing of shells brought many fresh
+recruits to the struggle. It was only when Mr. Calhoun came with his
+hounds that anything decisive was done. For the rebels--Maroons and
+slaves--were hid, well entrenched and cautious, and the danger was
+becoming greater every day. On Mr. Calhoun’s arrival, he was almost
+caught in ambush, being misled, and saved himself only by splendid
+markmanship. He was attacked by six rebels of whom he killed four, and
+riding his wounded horse over the other two he escaped. Then he set the
+hounds to work and the rebellion in that district was soon over.”
+
+“It was gathering strength with increasing tragedy elsewhere,” remarked
+the governor. “Some took refuge in hidden places, and came out only to
+steal, rob, and murder--and worse. In one place, after a noted slave,
+well known for his treachery, had been killed--Khoftet was his name--his
+head was cut off by slaves friendly to us and his heart roasted and
+eaten. There is but one way to deal with these people. No gaming or
+drinking must be allowed, blowing of shells or beating of drums must
+be forbidden, and every free negro or mulatto must wear on his arm a
+sign--perhaps a cross in blue or red.”
+
+“Slavery is doomed,” said Sheila firmly. “Its end is not far off.”
+
+“Well, they still keep slaves in the land of Washington and Alexander
+Hamilton. They are better off here at any rate than in their own
+country, where they were like animals among whom they lived. Here they
+are safe from poverty, cared for in sickness, and have no fear of
+being handed over to the keepers of carrion, or being the food of the
+gallinaso. They can feed their fill on fricasees of macaca worms and
+steal without punishment teal or ring-tailed pigeons and black crabs
+from the massa.”
+
+“But they are not free. They are atoms in heaps of dust. They have no
+rights--no liberties.”
+
+Sheila was agitated, but she showed no excitement.
+
+She seemed to Lord Mallow like one who had perfect control of herself,
+and was not the victim of anticipation. She seemed, save for her dark
+searching eyes, like one who had gone through experience which had
+disciplined her to control. Only her hands were demonstrative--yet
+quietly so. Any one watching her closely would have seen that her hands
+were sensitive, expressed even more markedly than her eyes or lips what
+were her feelings. Her tragedy had altered her in one sense. She was
+paler and thinner than ever she had been, but there was enough of her,
+and that delicately made, which gave the governor a thrill of desire
+to make her his own for the rest of his life or hers. He had also gone
+through much since they had last met, and he had seen his own position
+in the balance--uncertain, troubled, insecure. He realized that he had
+lost reputation, which had scarcely been regained by his consent to the
+use of the hounds and giving Dyck Calhoun a free hand, as temporary head
+of the militia. He could not put him over the regular troops, but as the
+general commanding was, in effect, the slave of Dyck Calhoun, there was
+no need for anxiety.
+
+Dyck Calhoun had smashed the rebellion, had quieted the island, had
+risen above all the dark disturbances of revolt like a master. He had
+established barracks and forts at many points in the island, and had
+stationed troops in them; he had subdued Maroons and slaves by the
+hounds. Yet he had punished only the chief of those who had been in
+actual rebellion, and had repressed the violent punishments of the
+earlier part of the conflict. He had forbidden any one to be burned
+alive, and had ordered that no one should be executed without his first
+judging--with the consent of the governor!--the facts of the case.
+
+Dyck had built up for himself a reputation as no one in all the history
+of the island had been able to do. He commanded by more than official
+authority--by personality and achievement. There was no one in the
+island but knew they had been saved by his prudence, foresight and
+skill. It was to their minds stupendous and romantic. Fortunately they
+showed no strong feeling against Lord Mallow. By placing King’s House
+at disposal as a hospital, and by gifts of food and money to wives and
+children of soldiers and civilians, the governor had a little eradicated
+his record of neglect.
+
+Lord Mallow had a way with him when he chose to use it. He was not
+without the gift for popularity, and he saw now that he could best
+attain it by treating Dyck Calhoun well. He saw troops come and go, he
+listened to grievances, he corrected abuses, he devised a scheme for
+nursing, he planned security for the future, he gave permission for
+buccaneer trading with the United States, he had by legislative order
+given the Creoles a better place in the civic organism. This was a time
+for broad policy--for distribution of cassavi bread, yams and papaws,
+for big, and maybe rough, display of power and generosity. He was not
+blind to the fact that he might by discreet courses impress favourably
+his visitor. All he did was affected by that thought. He could not but
+think that Sheila would judge of him by what he did as much as by what
+he said.
+
+He looked at her now with interest and longing. He loved to hear her
+talk, and she had information which was no doubt truer than most he
+received--was closer to the brine, as it were.
+
+“What more can you tell me of Mr. Calhoun and his doings?” he asked
+presently. “He is lucky in having so perfect a narrator of his
+histories--yet so unexpected a narrator.”
+
+A flush stole slowly up Sheila’s face, and gave a glow even to the roots
+of her hair. She could not endure these references to the dark gulf
+between her and Dyck Calhoun.
+
+“My lord,” she said sharply, “it is not meet that you should say such
+things. Mr. Calhoun was jailed for killing my father--let it be at that.
+The last time you saw me you offered me your hand and heart. Well, do
+you know I had almost made up my mind to accept your hand, when the news
+of this trouble was brought to you, and you left us--to ourselves and
+our dangers!”
+
+The governor started. “You are as unfriendly as a ‘terral garamighty,’
+you make me draw my breath thick as the blackamoors, as they say. I
+did what I thought best,” he said. “I did not think you would be in any
+danger. I had not heard of the Maroons being so far south as Salem.”
+
+“Yet it is the man who foresees chances that succeeds, as you should
+know by now, your honour. I was greatly touched by the offer you made
+me--indeed, yes,” she added, seeing the rapt eager look in his face. “I
+had been told what had upset me, that Dyck Calhoun was guilty of killing
+my father, and all the world seemed dreadful. Yes, in the reaction, it
+was almost on my tongue to say yes to you, for you are a good talker,
+you had skill in much that you did, and with honest advice from a wife
+might do much more. So I was in a mind to say yes. I had had much to
+try me, indeed, so very much. Ever since I first saw Dyck Calhoun he had
+been the one man who had ever influenced me. He was for ever in my mind
+even when he was in prison--oh, what is prison, what is guilt even to a
+girl when she loves! Yes, I loved him. There it was. He was ever in
+my mind, and I came here to Jamaica--he was here--for what else? Salem
+could have been restored by Darius Boland or others, or I could have
+sold it. I came to Jamaica to find him here--unwomanly, perhaps, you
+will say.”
+
+“Unusual only with a genius--like you.”
+
+“Then you do not speak what is in your mind, your honour. You say what
+you feel is the right thing to say--the slave of circumstances. I will
+be wholly frank with you. I came here to see Dyck Calhoun, for I knew he
+would not come to see me. Yes, there it was, a real thing in his heart.
+If he had been a lesser man than he is, he would have come to America
+when he was freed from prison. But he did not, would not, come. He knew
+he had been found guilty of killing my father, and that for him and me
+there could be no marriage--indeed he never asked me to marry him.
+
+“Yet I know he would have done so if he could. When I came to know
+what he was jailed for doing, I felt there was no place for him and me
+together in the world. Yet my heart kept crying out to him, and I felt
+there was but one thing left for me to do, and that was to make it
+impossible for me to think of him even, or for him to think of me. Then
+you came and offered me your hand. It was a hand most women might have
+been glad to accept from the standpoint of material things. And you were
+Irish like myself, and like the boy I loved. I was sick of the robberies
+of life and time, and I wanted to be out of it all in some secure place.
+What place so secure from the sorrow that was eating at my heart as
+marriage! It said no to every stir of feeling that was vexing me, to
+every show of love or remembrance. So I listened to you. It was not
+because you were a governor or a peer--no, not that! For even in
+Virginia I had offers from one higher than yourself--and younger, and a
+peer also. No, it was not material things that influenced me, but your
+own intellectual eminence; for you have more brains than most men, as
+you know so well.”
+
+The governor interrupted her with a gesture. “No, no, I am not so vain
+as you think. If I were I should have seen at Salem that you meant to
+say yes.”
+
+“Yet you know well you have gifts, though you have made sad mistakes
+here. Do not think it was your personality, your looks that induced me
+to think of you, to listen to you. When Mr. Calhoun told me the truth,
+and gave me a letter he had written to me--”
+
+“A letter--to you?”
+
+There was surprise in the governor’s voice--surprise and chagrin, for
+the thing had moved him powerfully. “Yes, a letter to me which he
+never meant me to have. It was a kind of diary of his heart, and it was
+written even while I was landing on the island on Christmas Day. It was
+the most terribly truthful thing, opening his whole soul to the girl
+whom he had always loved, but from whom he was separated by a thing
+not the less tragical because it was merely technical. He gave it me to
+read, and when I read it I saw there was no place for me in the world
+except a convent or marriage. The convent could not be, for I was no
+Catholic, and marriage seemed the only thing possible. That day you came
+I saw only one thing to do--one mad, hopeless thing to do.”
+
+“Mad and hopeless!” burst out Lord Mallow. “How so? Your very reason
+shows that it was sane, well founded in the philosophy of the heart.”
+
+He was eager to win her yet, and he did not see the end at which she
+aimed. He felt he must tell her all the passion and love he felt. But
+her look gave no encouragement, her eyes were uninviting.
+
+Sheila smiled painfully. “Yes, mad and hopeless, for be sure of this: we
+cannot kill in one day the growth of years. I could not cure myself of
+loving him by marrying you. There had to be some other cure for that. I
+never knew and never loved my father. But he was my father, and if Mr.
+Calhoun killed him, I could not marry him. But at last I came to know
+that your love and affection could not make me forget him--no, never.
+I realize that now. He and I can never come together, but I owe him so
+much--I owe him my life, for he saved it; he must ever have a place
+in my heart, be to me more than any one else can be. I want you to do
+something for him.”
+
+“What do you wish?”
+
+“I want you to have removed from him the sentence of the British
+Government. I want him to be free to come and go anywhere in the
+world--to return to England if he wishes it, to be a free man, and not a
+victim Off Outlawry. I want that, and you ought to give it to him.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+Indignation filled her eyes. “You ask why. He has saved your
+administration and the island from defeat and horrible loss. He has
+prevented most of the slaves from revolting, and he conquered the
+Maroons. The empire is his debtor. Will you do this for one who has done
+so much for you?”
+
+Lord Mallow was disconcerted, but he did not show it. “I can do no
+more than I have done. I have not confined him to his plantation as the
+Government commanded; I cannot go beyond that.”
+
+“You can put his case from the standpoint of a patriot.”
+
+For a moment the governor hesitated, then he said: “Because you ask
+me--”
+
+“I want it done for his sake, not for mine,” she returned with decision.
+“You owe it to yourself to see that it is done. Gratitude is not dead in
+you, is it?”
+
+Lord Mallow flushed. “You press his case too hard. You forget what he
+is--a mutineer and a murderer, and no one should remember that as you
+should.”
+
+“He has atoned for both, and you know it well. Besides, he was not a
+murderer. Even the courts did not say he was. They only said he was
+guilty of manslaughter. Oh, your honour, be as gallant as your name and
+place warrant.”
+
+He looked at her for a moment with strange feelings in his heart. Then
+he said: “I will give you an answer in twenty-four hours. Will that do,
+sweet persuader?”
+
+“It might do,” she answered, and, strange to say, she had a sure feeling
+that he would say yes, in spite of her knowledge that, in his heart of
+hearts, he hated Calhoun.
+
+As she left the room, Lord Mallow stood for a moment looking after her.
+
+“She loves the rogue in spite of all!” he said bitterly. “But she must
+come with me. They are apart as the poles. Yet I shall do as she wishes
+if I am to win her.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+
+The next day came a new element in the situation: a ship arrived from
+England. On it was one who had come to Jamaica to act as governess to
+two children of the officer commanding the regular troops in the island.
+She had been ill for a week before nearing Kingston, and when the
+Regent reached the harbour she was in a bad way. The ship’s doctor
+was despondent about her; but he was a second-rate man, and felt that
+perhaps an island doctor might give her some hope. When she was carried
+ashore she was at once removed to the home of the general commanding at
+Spanish Town, and there a local doctor saw her.
+
+“What is her history?” he asked, after he had seen the haggard face of
+the woman.
+
+The ship’s doctor did not know; and the general commanding was in the
+interior at the head of his troops. There was no wife in the general’s
+house, as he was a widower; and his daughters, of twelve and fourteen,
+under a faithful old housekeeper, had no knowledge of the woman’s life.
+
+When she was taken to the general’s house she was in great dejection,
+and her face had a look of ennui and despair. She was thin and worn, and
+her eyes only told of the struggle going on between life and death.
+
+“What is her name?” asked the resident doctor. “Noreen Balfe,” was the
+reply of the ship’s doctor.
+
+“A good old Irish name, though you can see she comes of the lower ranks
+of life.”
+
+“Married?”
+
+The ship’s doctor pointed to her hand which had a wedding-ring. “Ah,
+yes, certainly... what hope have you of her?”
+
+“I don’t know what to say. The fever is high. She isn’t trying to live;
+she’s got some mental trouble, I believe. But you and I would be of no
+use in that kind of thing.”
+
+“I don’t take to new-fangled ideas of mental cure,” said the ship’s
+doctor. “Cure the body and the mind will cure itself.”
+
+A cold smile stole to the lips of the resident doctor. Those were
+days of little scientific medical skill, and no West Indian doctor had
+knowledge enough to control a discussion of the kind. “But I’d like to
+see some one with brains take an interest in her,” he remarked.
+
+“I leave her in your hands,” was the reply. “I’m a ship’s medico, and
+she’s now ashore.”
+
+“It’s a pity,” said the resident doctor reflectively, as he watched a
+servant doing necessary work at the bedside. “She hasn’t long to go as
+she is, yet I’ve seen such cases recover.”
+
+As they left the room together they met Sheila and one of the daughters
+of the house. “I’ve come to see the sick woman from the ship, if I may,”
+ Sheila said. “I’ve just heard about her, and I’d like to be of use.”
+
+The resident doctor looked at her with admiration. She was the most
+conspicuous figure in the island, and her beauty was a fine support to
+her wealth and reputation. It was like her to be kind in this frank way.
+
+“You can be of great use if you will,” he said. “The fever is not
+infectious, I’m glad to say. So you need have no fear of being with
+her--on account of others.”
+
+“I have no fear,” responded Sheila with a friendly smile, “and I will go
+to her now--no, if you don’t mind, I’d prefer to go alone,” she added as
+she saw the doctor was coming with her.
+
+The other bowed and nodded approvingly. “The fewer the better,” he said.
+“I think you ought to go in alone--quite alone,” he said with gentle
+firmness, for he saw the girl with Sheila was also going with her.
+
+So it was that Sheila entered alone, and came to the bed and looked at
+the woman in the extreme depression of fever. “Prepare some lime-juice,
+please,” she said to the servant on the other side of the bed. “Keep it
+always beside the bed--I know what these cases are.”
+
+The servant disappeared, and the eyes of the sick woman opened and
+looked at Sheila. There shot into them a look of horror and relief in
+one, if such a thing might be. A sudden energy inspired her, and she
+drew herself up in bed, her face gone ghastly.
+
+“You are Sheila Boyne, aren’t you?” she asked in a low half-guttural
+note.
+
+“I am Sheila Llyn,” was the astonished reply. “It’s the same thing,”
+ came the response. “You are the daughter of Erris Boyne.”
+
+Sheila turned pale. Who was this woman that knew her and her history?
+
+“What is your name?” she asked--“your real name--what is it?”
+
+“My name is Noreen Balfe; it was Noreen Boyne.” For a moment Sheila
+could not get her bearings. The heavy scent of the flowers coming in at
+the window almost suffocated her. She seemed to lose a grip of herself.
+Presently she made an effort at composure. “Noreen Boyne! You were then
+the second wife of Erris Boyne?”
+
+“I was his second wife. His first wife was your mother--you are like
+your mother!” Noreen said in agitation.
+
+The meaning was clear. Sheila laid a sharp hand on herself. “Don’t get
+excited,” she urged with kindly feeling. “He is dead and gone.”
+
+“Yes, he is dead and gone.”
+
+For a moment Noreen seemed to fight for mastery of her emotion, and
+Sheila said: “Lie still. It is all over. He cannot hurt us now.”
+
+The other shook her head in protest. “I came here to forget, and I find
+you--his daughter.”
+
+“You find more than his daughter; you find his first wife, and you find
+the one that killed him.”
+
+“The one that killed him!” said the woman greatly troubled. “How did you
+know that?”
+
+“All the world knows it. He was in prison four years, and since then
+he has been a mutineer, a treasure-hunter, a planter, and a saviour of
+these islands!”
+
+The sick woman fell back in exhaustion. At that moment the servant
+entered with a pitcher of lime-juice. Sheila took it from her and
+motioned her out of the room; then she held a glass of the liquid to the
+stark lips.
+
+“Drink,” she said in a low, kind voice, and she poured slowly into
+the patient’s mouth the cooling draught. A moment later Noreen raised
+herself up again.
+
+“Mr. Dyck Calhoun is here?” she asked.
+
+“He is here, and none to-day holds so high a place in the minds of all
+who live here. He has saved the island.”
+
+“All are here that matter,” said Noreen. “And I came to forget!”
+
+“What do you remember?” asked Sheila. “I remember all--how he died!”
+
+Suddenly Sheila had a desire to shriek aloud. This woman--did this woman
+then see Erris Boyne die? Was she present when the deed was done? If so,
+why was she not called to give evidence at the trial. But yes, she was
+called to give evidence. She remembered it now, and the evidence had
+been that she was in her own home when the killing took place.
+
+“How did he die?” she asked in a whisper.
+
+“One stroke did it--only one, and he fell like a log.” She made a motion
+as of striking, and shuddered, covering her eyes with trembling hands.
+
+“You tell me you saw Dyck Calhoun do this to an undefended man--you tell
+me this!”
+
+Sheila’s anger was justified in her mind. That Dyck Calhoun should
+
+“I did not see Dyck Calhoun strike him,” gasped the woman. “I did not
+say that. Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne!”
+
+“My God!--oh, my God!” said Sheila with ashen lips, but a great light
+breaking in her eyes. “Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne! Then who
+killed him?”
+
+There was a moment’s pause, then--“I killed him,” said the woman in
+agony. “I killed him.”
+
+A terrible repugnance seized Sheila. After a moment she said in
+agitation: “You killed him--you struck him down! Yet you let an innocent
+man go to prison, and be kept there for years, and his father go to his
+grave with shame, with estates ruined and home lost--and you were the
+guilty one--you--all the time.”
+
+“It was part of my madness. I was a coward and I thought then there were
+reasons why I should feel no pity for Dyck Calhoun. His father injured
+mine--oh, badly! But I was a coward, and I’ve paid the price.”
+
+A kinder feeling now took hold of Sheila. After all, what this woman had
+done gave happiness into her--Sheila’s-hands. It relieved Dyck Calhoun
+of shame and disgrace. A jail-bird he was still, but an innocent
+jail-bird. He had not killed Erris Boyne. Besides, it wiped out forever
+the barrier between them. All her blind devotion to the man was now
+justified. His name and fame were clear. Her repugnance of the woman was
+as nothing beside her splendid feeling of relief. It was as though the
+gates of hell had been closed and the curtains of heaven drawn for the
+eyes to see. Six years of horrible shame wiped out, and a new world was
+before her eyes.
+
+This woman who had killed Erris Boyne must now suffer. She must bear the
+ignominy which had been heaped upon Dyck Calhoun’s head. Yet all at once
+there came to her mind a softening feeling. Erris Boyne had been rightly
+killed by a woman he had wronged, for he was a traitor as well as an
+adulterer--one who could use no woman well, who broke faith with all
+civilized tradition, and reverted to the savage. Surely the woman’s
+crime was not a dark one; it was injured innocence smiting depravity,
+tyranny and lust.
+
+Suddenly, as she looked at the woman who had done this thing, she, whose
+hand had rid the world of a traitor and a beast, fell back on the pillow
+in a faint. With an exclamation Sheila lifted up the head. If the
+woman was dead, then there was no hope for Dyck Calhoun; any story
+that she--Sheila--might tell would be of no use. Yet she was no longer
+agitated in her body. Hands and fingers were steady, and she felt for
+the heart with firm fingers. Yes, the heart was still beating, and the
+pulse was slightly drumming. Thank God, the woman was alive! She rang a
+bell and lifted up the head of the sick woman.
+
+A moment later the servant was in the room. Sheila gave her orders
+quickly, and snatched up a pencil from the table. Then, on a piece of
+paper, she wrote the words: “I, not Dyck Calhoun, killed Erris Boyne.”
+
+A few moments later, Noreen’s eyes opened, and Sheila spoke to her. “I
+have written these words. Here they are--see them. Sign them.”
+
+She read the words, and put a pencil in the trembling fingers, and, on
+the cover of a book Noreen’s fingers traced her name slowly but clearly.
+Then Sheila thrust the paper in her bosom, and an instant later a nurse,
+sent by the resident doctor, entered.
+
+“They cannot hang me or banish me, for my end has come,” whispered
+Noreen before Sheila left.
+
+In the street of Spanish Town almost the first person Sheila saw was
+Dyck Calhoun. With pale, radiant look she went to him. He gazed at her
+strangely, for there was that in her face he could not understand. There
+was in it all the faith of years, all the truth of womanhood, all the
+splendour of discovery, all that which a man can see but once in a human
+face and be himself.
+
+“Come with me,” she said, and she moved towards King’s House. He obeyed.
+For some moments they walked in silence, then all at once under a
+magnolia tree she stopped.
+
+“I want you to read what a woman wrote who has just arrived in the
+island from England. She is ill at the house of the general commanding.”
+
+Taking from her breast the slip of paper, she handed it to him. He read
+it with eyes and senses that at first could hardly understand.
+
+“God in heaven--oh, merciful God!” he said in great emotion, yet with a
+strange physical quiet.
+
+“This woman was his wife,” Sheila said.
+
+He handed the paper back. He conquered his agitation. The years of
+suffering rolled away. “They’ll put her in jail,” he said with a strange
+regret. He had a great heart.
+
+“No, I think not,” was the reply. Yet she was touched by his compassion
+and thoughtfulness.
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because she is going to die--and there is no time to lose. Come, we
+will go to Lord Mallow.”
+
+“Mallow!” A look of bitter triumph came into Dyck’s face. “Mallow--at
+last!” he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+
+Lord Mallow frowned on his secretary. “Mr. Calhoun to see me! What’s his
+business?”
+
+“One can guess, your honour. He’s been fighting for the island.”
+
+“Why should he see me? There is the general commanding.”
+
+The secretary did not reply, he knew his chief; and, after a moment,
+Lord Mallow said: “Show him in.” When Dyck Calhoun entered the governor
+gave him a wintry smile of welcome, but did not offer to shake hands.
+“Will you sit down?” he said, with a slow gesture.
+
+Calhoun made a dissenting motion. “I prefer to stand, your honour.”
+
+This was the first time the two men had met alone since Dyck had
+arrived in Jamaica, or since his trial. Calhoun was dressed in planter’s
+costume, and the governor was in an officer’s uniform. They were in
+striking contrast in face and figure--the governor long, lanky, ascetic
+in appearance, very intellectual save for the riotous mouth, and very
+spick and span--as though he had just stepped out of Almack’s; while
+Calhoun was tough and virile, and with the air of a thorough outdoor
+man. There was in his face the firm fighting look of one who had done
+things and could tackle big affairs--and something more; there was in
+it quiet exultation. Here he was now at last alone with the man who had
+done him great harm, and for whom he had done so much; who had sought to
+wipe him off the slate of life and being; who had tried to win the girl
+from whom he himself had been parted.
+
+In spite of it all--of his life in jail, of his stark mutiny, of
+the oppression of the governor, he had not been beaten down, but had
+prospered in spite of all. He had by his will, wisdom and military
+skill, saved the island in its hour of peril, saved its governor from
+condemnation; and here he was facing the worst enemy of his life with
+the cards of success in his hands.
+
+“You have done the island and England great service, Mr. Calhoun,” said
+the governor at last.
+
+“It is the least I could do for the land where I have made my home,
+where I have reaped more than I have sown.”
+
+“We know your merit, sir.”
+
+A sharp satirical look came into Calhoun’s face and his voice rang out
+with vigour. “And because you knew my merit you advised the crown to
+confine me to my estate, and you would have had me shot if you could.
+I am what I am because there was a juster man than yourself in Jamaica.
+Through him I got away and found treasure, and I bought land and have
+helped to save this island and your place. What do I owe you, your
+honour? Nothing that I can see--nothing at all.”
+
+“You are a mutineer, and but that you showed your courage would have
+been hung at the yard-arm, as many of your comrades in England were.”
+
+A cold smile played at Calhoun’s lips. “My luck was as great as my
+courage, I know. I have the luck of Enniscorthy!”
+
+At the last words the governor winced, for it was by that touch Calhoun
+had defeated him in the duel long ago. It galled him that this man whom
+he detested could say such things to him with truth. Yet in his heart of
+hearts he had for Calhoun a great respect. Calhoun’s invincible will
+had conquered the worst in Mallow’s nature, had, in spite of himself,
+created a new feeling in him. There was in Mallow the glimmer of
+greatness, and only his supreme selfishness had made him what he was. He
+laid a hand on himself now, though it was not easy to do so.
+
+“It was not the luck of Enniscorthy that sent Erris Boyne to his doom,”
+ he said, however, with anger in his mind, for Dyck’s calm boldness
+stirred the worst in him. He thought he saw in him an exultancy which
+could only come from his late experiences in the field. It was as though
+he had come to triumph over the governor. Mallow said what he had said
+with malice. He looked to see rage in the face of Dyck Calhoun, and was
+nonplussed to find that it had only a stern sort of pleasure. The eyes
+of Calhoun met his with no trace of gloom, but with a valour worthy of a
+high cause--their clear blue facing his own with a constant penetration.
+Their intense sincerity gave him a feeling which did not belong to
+authority. It was not the look of a criminal, whatever the man might
+be--mutineer and murderer. As for mutineer, all that Calhoun had fought
+for had been at last admitted by the British Government, and reforms had
+been made that were due to the mutiny at the Nore. Only the technical
+crime had been done by Calhoun, and he had won pardon by his bravery in
+the battle at sea. Yes, he was a man of mark, even though a murderer.
+
+Calhoun spoke slowly. “Your honour, you have said what you have a right
+to say to a man who killed Erris Boyne. But this man you accuse did
+not do it.” The governor smiled, for the assumption was ridiculous. He
+shrugged a shoulder and a sardonic curl came to his lip.
+
+“Who did it then?”
+
+“If you will come to the house of the general commanding you will see.”
+
+The governor was in a great quandary. He gasped. “The general
+commanding--did he kill Erris Boyne, then?”
+
+“Not he, yet the person that did it is in this house. Listen, your
+honour. I have borne the name of killing Erris Boyne, and I ought to
+have killed him, for he was a traitor. I had proofs of it; but I did
+not kill him, and I did not betray him, for he had alive a wife and
+daughter, and something was due to them. He was a traitor, and was in
+league with the French. It does not matter that I tell you now, for his
+daughter knows the truth. I ought to have told it long ago, and if I had
+I should not have been imprisoned.”
+
+“You were a brave man, but a fool--always a fool,” said the governor
+sharply.
+
+“Not so great a fool that I can’t recover from it,” was the calm reply.
+“Perhaps it was the best thing that ever happened to me, for now I can
+look the world in the face. It’s made a man of me. It was a woman killed
+him,” was Calhoun’s added comment. “Will your honour come with me and
+see her?”
+
+The governor was thunderstruck. “Where is she?”
+
+“As I have told you-in the house of the general commanding.”
+
+The governor rose abashed. “Well, I can go there now. Come.”
+
+“Perhaps you would prefer I should not go with you in the street. The
+world knows me as a mutineer, thinks of me as a murderer! Is it fair to
+your honour?”
+
+Something in Calhoun’s voice roused the rage of Lord Mallow, but he
+controlled it, and said calmly: “Don’t talk nonsense, sir; we shall walk
+together, if you will.”
+
+At the entrance to the house of the general, the man to whom this visit
+meant so much stopped and took a piece of paper from his pocket. “Your
+honour, here is the name of the slayer of Erris Boyne. I give it to you
+now to see, so you may not be astonished when you see her.”
+
+The governor stared at the paper. “Boyne’s wife, eh?” he said in a
+strange mood. “Boyne’s wife--what is she doing here?”
+
+Calhoun told him briefly as he took the paper back, and added: “It was
+accident that brought us all together here, your honour, but the hand of
+God is in it.”
+
+“Is she very ill?”
+
+“She will not live, I think.”
+
+“To whom did she tell her story?”
+
+“To Miss Sheila Llyn.”
+
+The governor was nettled.
+
+“Oh, to Miss Llyn When did you see her?”
+
+“Just before I came to you.”
+
+“What did the woman look like--this Noreen Boyne?”
+
+“I do not know; I have not seen her.”
+
+“Then how came you by the paper with her signature?”
+
+“Miss Llyn gave it to me.”
+
+Anger filled Lord Mallow’s mind. Sheila--why now the way would be open
+to Calhoun to win--to marry her! It angered him, but he held himself
+steadily.
+
+“Where is Miss Llyn?”
+
+“She is here, I think. She came back when she left me at your door.”
+
+“Oh, she left you at my door, did she?... But let me see the woman
+that’s come so far to put the world right.”
+
+A few moments later they stood in the bedroom of Noreen Boyne, they two
+and Sheila Llyn, the nurse having been sent out.
+
+Lord Mallow looked down on the haggard, dying woman with no emotion.
+Only a sense of duty moved him.
+
+“What is it you wished to say to me?” he asked the patient.
+
+“Who are you?” came the response in a frayed tone.
+
+“I am the governor of the island--Lord Mallow.”
+
+“Then I want to tell you that I killed Erris Boyne--with this hand I
+killed him.” She raised her skinny hand up, and her eyes became glazed.
+“He had used me vilely and I struck him down. He was a bad man.”
+
+“You let an innocent man bear punishment, you struck at one who did you
+no harm, and you spoiled his life for him. You can see that, can’t you?”
+
+The woman’s eyes sought the face of Dyck Calhoun, and Calhoun said: “No,
+you did not spoil my life, Noreen Boyne. You have made it. Not that I
+should have chosen the way of making it, but there it is, as God’s in
+heaven, I forgive you.”
+
+Noreen’s face lost some of its gloom. “That makes it easier,” she said
+brokenly. “I can’t atone by any word or act, but I’m sorry. I’ve kept
+you from being happy, and you were born to be happy. Your father had
+hurt mine, had turned him out of our house for debt, and I tried to pay
+it all back. When they suspected you I held my peace. I was a coward;
+I could not say you were innocent without telling the truth, and that
+I could not do then. But now I’ll tell it--I think I’d have told it
+whether I was dying or not, though. Yes, if I’d seen you here I’d have
+told it, I’m sure. I’m not all bad.”
+
+Sheila leaned over the bed. “Never mind about the past. You can help a
+man back to the good opinion of the world now.”
+
+“I hurt you too,” said Noreen with hopeless pain. “You were his friend.”
+
+“I believed in him always--even when he did not deny the crime,” was the
+quiet reply.
+
+“There’s no good going on with that,” said the governor sharply. “We
+must take down her statement in writing, and then--”
+
+“Look, she is sinking!” said Calhoun sharply. The woman’s head had
+dropped forward, her chin was on her breast, and her hands became
+clenched.
+
+“The doctor at once-bring in the nurse,” said Calhoun. “She’s dying.”
+
+An instant later, the nurse entered with Sheila, and in a short time the
+doctor came.
+
+When later the doctor saw Lord Mallow alone he said: “She can’t live
+more than two days.”
+
+“That’s good for her in a way,” answered the governor, and in reply to
+the doctor’s question why, he said: “Because she’d be in prison.”
+
+“In prison--has she broken the law?”
+
+“She is now under arrest, though she doesn’t know it.
+
+“What was her crime, your honour?”
+
+“She killed a man.”
+
+“What man?”
+
+“Him for whom Dyck Calhoun was sent to prison--Erris Boyne.”
+
+“Mr. Calhoun was not guilty, then?”
+
+“No. As soon as the woman is dead, I mean to announce the truth.”
+
+“Not till then, your honour?”
+
+“Not till then.”
+
+“It’s hard on Calhoun.”
+
+“Is it? It’s years since he was tried and condemned. Two days cannot
+matter now.”
+
+“Perhaps not. Last night the woman said to me: ‘I’m glad I’m going to
+die.’” Then he added: “Calhoun will be more popular than ever now.”
+
+The governor winced.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+An hour after Noreen Boyne had been laid in her grave, there was a
+special issue of the principal paper telling all the true facts of the
+death of Erris Boyne. Thus the people of Jamaica came to know that Dyck
+Calhoun was innocent of the crime of killing Erris Boyne, and he was
+made the object of splashing admiration, and was almost mobbed by
+admirers in the street. It all vexed Lord Mallow; but he steeled himself
+to urbanity, and he played his part well. He was clever enough to see it
+would pay him to be outwardly gracious to Calhoun. So it was he made a
+speech in the capital on the return of the general commanding and the
+troops from subduing the Maroons, in which he said: “No one in all the
+King’s dominions had showed greater patriotism and military skill
+than their friend Mr. Dyck Calhoun, who had been harshly treated by a
+mistaken Government.”
+
+A few hours later, in the sweet garden of the house where Sheila and
+her mother lodged, Calhoun came upon the girl whose gentle dignity and
+beauty seemed to glow.
+
+At first all she said to him was, “Welcome, old friend,” and at last she
+said, “Now you can come to the United States, Dyck, and make a new life
+there.”
+
+Presently he said: “I ought to go where you wish me to go, for you came
+to me here when I was rejected of men. I owe you whatever I am that’s
+worth while, if anything I am is worth while. Your faith kept me alive
+in my darkest days--even when I thought I had wronged you.”
+
+“Then you will come to Virginia with me--as my husband, Dyck?” She
+blushed and laughed. “You see I have to propose to you, for you’ve
+never asked me to marry you. I’m throwing myself at your head, sir, you
+observe!”
+
+He gave an honest smile of adoration. “I came to-day to ask you to be
+my wife--for that reason only. I could not do it till the governor had
+declared my innocence. The earth is sweeter to-day than it has been
+since time began.”
+
+He held out his arms, and an instant later the flowers she carried were
+crushed to her breast, with her lips given to his.
+
+A little later she drew from her pocket a letter. “You must read that,”
+ she said. “It is from the great Alexander Hamilton--yes, he will be
+great, he will play a wondrous part in the life of my new country. Read
+it Dyck.”
+
+After he had read it, he said: “He was born a British subject here in
+these islands, and he goes to help Americans live according to British
+principles. With all my sane fellow-countrymen I am glad the Americans
+succeeded. Do you go to your Virginia, and I will come as soon as I have
+put my affairs in order.”
+
+“I will not go without you--no, I will not go,” she persisted.
+
+“Then we shall be married at once,” he declared. And so it was, and all
+the island was en fete, and when Sheila came to Dyck’s plantation the
+very earth seemed to rejoice. The slaves went wild with joy, and ate and
+drank their fill, and from every field there came the song:
+
+ “Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey!
+ De big bees is a singin’,
+ My heart is held up and de bells is a ringin’;
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands!”
+
+And sweetly solitary the two lived their lives, till one day, three
+months later, there came to the plantation the governor and his suite.
+
+When they had dismounted, Lord Mallow said: “I bring you the pay of the
+British Government for something of what you have suffered, sir, and
+what will give your lady pleasure too, I hope. I come with a baronetcy
+given by the King. News of it came to me only this morning.”
+
+Calhoun smiled. “Your honour, I can take no title, receive no honour. I
+have ended my life under the British flag. I go to live under the Stars
+and Stripes.”
+
+The governor was astounded. “Your lady, sir, do you forget your lady?”
+
+But Sheila answered: “The life of the new world has honours which have
+naught to do with titles.”
+
+“I sail for Virginia by the first ship that goes,” said Calhoun. “It is
+good here, but I shall go to a place where things are better, and where
+I shall have work to do. I must decline the baronetcy, your honour. I go
+to a land where the field of life is larger, where Britain shall remake
+herself.”
+
+“It will take some time,” said the governor tartly. “They’ll be long
+apart.”
+
+“But they will come together at last--for the world’s sake.”
+
+There was silence for a moment, and through it came the joy-chant from
+the fields:
+
+ “Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey.”
+
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR’S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Beginning of a lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy
+ Wit is always at the elbow of want
+ Without the money brains seldom win alone
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of No Defense, Complete, by Gilbert Parker
+
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ No Defense, by Gilbert Parker
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd7; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of No Defense, Complete, by Gilbert Parker
+
+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: No Defense, Complete
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: October 18, 2006 [EBook #6295]
+Last Updated: August 27, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NO DEFENSE, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>
+ NO DEFENSE
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Gilbert Parker
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE TWO MEET
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ COMING OF A MESSENGER <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE QUARREL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER
+ IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE DUEL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER
+ V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;DYCK IN PRISON <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTHER AND
+ DAUGHTER <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;DYCK&rsquo;S
+ FATHER VISITS HIM <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ LETTER FROM SHEILA <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;DYCK
+ CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011">
+ CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHITHER NOW? <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE HOUR BEFORE THE
+ MUTINY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TO
+ THE WEST INDIES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IN
+ THE NICK OF TIME <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A LETTER <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER
+ XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STRANGERS ARRIVE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0018">
+ CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AT SALEM <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LORD MALLOW
+ INTERVENES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OUT
+ OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0021">
+ CHAPTER XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE CLASH OF RACE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ COMING OF NOREEN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WITH
+ THE GOVERNOR <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEN
+ WHAT HAPPENED <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. THE TWO MEET
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, good-bye, Dyck. I&rsquo;ll meet you at the sessions, or before that at
+ the assizes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only the impulsive, cheery, warning exclamation of a wild young
+ Irish spirit to his friend Dyck Calhoun, but it had behind it the humour
+ and incongruity of Irish life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man, Dyck Calhoun, after whom were sent the daring words about the
+ sessions and the assizes, was a year or two older than his friend, and, as
+ Michael Clones, his servant and friend, said, &ldquo;the worst and best scamp of
+ them all&rdquo;&mdash;just up to any harmless deviltry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Influenced by no traditions or customs, under control of no stern records
+ of society, Calhoun had caused some trouble in his time by the harmless
+ deeds of a scapegrace, but morally&mdash;that is, in all relations of life
+ affected by the ten commandments&mdash;he was above reproach. Yet he was
+ of the sort who, in days of agitation, then common in Ireland, might
+ possibly commit some act which would bring him to the sessions or the
+ assizes. There never was in Ireland a cheerier, braver, handsomer fellow,
+ nor one with such variety of mind and complexity of purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was the only child of a high-placed gentleman; he spent all the money
+ that came his way, and occasionally loaded himself with debt, which his
+ angry father paid. Yet there never was a gayer heart, a more generous
+ spirit, nor an easier-tempered man; though, after all, he was only
+ twenty-five when the words with which the tale opens were said to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been successful&mdash;yet none too successful&mdash;at school and
+ Trinity College, Dublin. He had taken a pass degree, when he might have
+ captured the highest honours. He had interested people of place in the
+ country, but he never used promptly the interest he excited. A pretty
+ face, a fishing or a shooting expedition, a carouse in some secluded
+ tavern, were parts of his daily life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time the story opens he was a figure of note among those who spent
+ their time in criticizing the government and damning the Irish Parliament.
+ He even became a friend of some young hare-brained rebels of the time; yet
+ no one suspected him of anything except irresponsibility. His record was
+ clean; Dublin Castle was not after him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When his young friend made the remark about the sessions and assizes,
+ Calhoun was making his way up the rocky hillside to take the homeward path
+ to his father&rsquo;s place, Playmore. With the challenge and the monstrous
+ good-bye, a stone came flying up the hill after him and stopped almost at
+ his feet. He made no reply, however, but waved a hand downhill, and in his
+ heart said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, maybe he&rsquo;s right. I&rsquo;m a damned dangerous fellow, there&rsquo;s no doubt
+ about that. Perhaps I&rsquo;ll kill a rebel some day, and then they&rsquo;ll take me
+ to the sessions and the assizes. Well, well, there&rsquo;s many a worse fate
+ than that, so there is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a minute he added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So there is, dear lad, so there is. But if I ever kill, I&rsquo;d like it to be
+ in open fight on the hills like this&mdash;like this, under the bright
+ sun, in the soft morning, with all the moor and valleys still, and the
+ larks singing&mdash;the larks singing! Hooray, but it&rsquo;s a fine day, one of
+ the best that ever was!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed, and patted his gun gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a feather, not a bird killed, not a shot fired; but the looking was
+ the thing&mdash;stalking the things that never turned up, the white heels
+ we never saw, for I&rsquo;m not killing larks, God love you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He raised his head, looking up into the sky at some larks singing above
+ him in the heavens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord love you, little dears,&rdquo; he added aloud. &ldquo;I wish I might die with
+ your singing in my ears, but do you know what makes Ireland what it is?
+ Look at it now. Years ago, just when the cotton-mills and the linen-mills
+ were doing well, they came over with their English legislation, and made
+ it hard going. When we begin to get something, over the English come and
+ take the something away. What have we done, we Irish people, that we
+ shouldn&rsquo;t have a chance in our own country? Lord knows, we deserve a
+ chance, for it&rsquo;s hard paying the duties these days. What with France in
+ revolution and reaching out her hand to Ireland to coax her into
+ rebellion; what with defeat in America and drink in Scotland; what with
+ Fox and Pitt at each other&rsquo;s throats, and the lord-lieutenant a danger to
+ the peace; what with poverty, and the cow and children and father and
+ mother living all in one room, with the chickens roosting in the rafters;
+ what with pointing the potato at the dried fish and gulping it down as if
+ it was fish itself; what with the smell and the dirt and the poverty of
+ Dublin and Derry, Limerick and Cork&mdash;ah, well!&rdquo; He threw his eyes up
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well, my little love, sing on! You&rsquo;re a blessing among a lot of
+ curses; but never mind, it&rsquo;s a fine world, and Ireland&rsquo;s the best part of
+ it. Heaven knows it&mdash;and on this hill, how beautiful it is!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was now on the top of a hill where he could look out towards the bog
+ and in towards the mellow, waving hills. He could drink in the yellowish
+ green, with here and there in the distance a little house; and about two
+ miles away smoke stealing up from the midst of the plantation where
+ Playmore was&mdash;Playmore, his father&rsquo;s house&mdash;to be his own one
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How good it was! There, within his sight, was the great escarpment of rock
+ known as the Devil&rsquo;s Ledge, and away to the east was the black spot in the
+ combe known as the Cave of Mary. Still farther away, towards the south,
+ was the great cattle-pasture, where, as he looked, a thousand cattle
+ roamed. Here and there in the wide prospect were plantations where Irish
+ landlords lived, and paid a heavy price for living. Men did not pay their
+ rents. Crops were spoiled, markets were bad, money was scarce, yet&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please God, it will be better next year!&rdquo; Michael Clones said, and there
+ never was a man with a more hopeful heart than Michael Clones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun had a soul of character, originality, and wayward
+ distinction. He had all the impulses and enthusiasms of a poet, all the
+ thirst for excitement of the adventurer, all the latent patriotism of the
+ true Celt; but his life was undisciplined, and he had not ordered his
+ spirit into compartments of faith and hope. He had gifts. They were gifts
+ only to be borne by those who had ambitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as he looked out upon the scene where nature was showing herself at
+ her best, some glimmer of a great future came to him. He did not know
+ which way his feet were destined to travel in the business of life. It was
+ too late to join the navy; but there was still time enough to be a
+ soldier, or to learn to be a lawyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he gazed upon the scene, his wonderful deep blue eyes, his dark brown
+ hair thick upon his head, waving and luxuriant like a fine mattress, his
+ tall, slender, alert figure, his bony, capable hands, which neither sun
+ nor wind ever browned, his nervous yet interesting mouth, and his long
+ Roman nose, set in a complexion rich in its pink-and-cream hardness and
+ health&mdash;all this made him a figure good to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, as he listened to the lark singing overhead, with his face
+ lifted to the sky, he heard a human voice singing; and presently there ran
+ up a little declivity to his left a girl&mdash;an Irish girl of about
+ seventeen years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her hat was hanging on her arm by a green ribbon. Her head was covered
+ with the most wonderful brown, waving hair. She had a broad, low forehead,
+ Greek in its proportions and lines. The eyes were bluer even than his own,
+ and were shaded by lashes of great length, which slightly modified the
+ firm lines of the face, with its admirable chin, and mouth somewhat large
+ with a cupid&rsquo;s bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of its ardent and luscious look, it was the mouth of one who knew
+ her own mind and could sustain her own course. It was open when Dyck first
+ saw it, because she was singing little bits of wild lyrics of the hills,
+ little tragedies of Celtic life&mdash;just bursts of the Celtic soul, as
+ it were, cheerful yet sad, buoyant and passionate, eager yet melancholy.
+ She was singing in Irish too. They were the words of songs taught her by
+ her mother&rsquo;s maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had been tramping over the hills for a couple of hours, virile,
+ beautiful, and alone. She wore a gown of dark gold, with little green
+ ribbons here and there. The gown was short, and her ankles showed. In
+ spite of the strong boots she wore they were alert, delicate, and shapely,
+ and all her beauty had the slender fullness of a quail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she saw Dyck, she stopped suddenly, her mouth slightly open. She gave
+ him a sidelong glance of wonder, interest, and speculation. Then she threw
+ her head slightly back, and all the curls gathered in a bunch and shook
+ like bronze flowers. It was a head of grace and power, of charm and
+ allurement&mdash;of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck was lost in admiration. He looked at her as one might look at a
+ beautiful thing in a dream. He did not speak; he only smiled as he gazed
+ into her eyes. She was the first to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, who are you?&rdquo; she asked with a slightly southern accent in her
+ voice, delicate and entrancing. Her head gave a little modest toss, her
+ fine white teeth caught her lower lip with a little quirk of humour; for
+ she could see that he was a gentleman, and that she was safe from anything
+ that might trouble her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied to her question with the words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name? Why, it&rsquo;s Dyck Calhoun. That&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes brightened. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that enough?&rdquo; she asked gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She knew of his family. She was only visiting in the district with her
+ mother, but she had lately heard of old Miles Calhoun and his wayward boy,
+ Dyck; and here was Dyck, with a humour in his eyes and a touch of
+ melancholy at his lips. Somehow her heart went out to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he said to her: &ldquo;And what&rsquo;s your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m only Sheila Llyn, the daughter of my mother, a widow, visiting at
+ Loyland Towers. Yes, I&rsquo;m only Sheila!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, just be &lsquo;only Sheila,&rdquo;&rsquo; he answered admiringly, and he held out a
+ hand to her. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t have you be anything else, though it&rsquo;s none of my
+ business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For one swift instant she hesitated; then she laid her hand in his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no reason why we should not,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Your father&rsquo;s
+ respectable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him again with a sidelong glance, and with a whimsical,
+ reserved smile at her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he&rsquo;s respectable, I agree, but he&rsquo;s dull,&rdquo; answered Dyck. &ldquo;For an
+ Irishman, he&rsquo;s dull&mdash;and he&rsquo;s a tyrant, too. I suppose I deserve
+ that, for I&rsquo;m a handful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you are, and a big handful too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which way are you going?&rdquo; he asked presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m bound for home.&rdquo; He pointed across the valley. &ldquo;Do you see that
+ smoke coming up from the plantation over there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I know. That&rsquo;s Playmore, your father&rsquo;s
+ place. Loyland Towers is between here and there. Which way were you going
+ there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Round to the left,&rdquo; he said, puzzled, but agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we must say good-bye, because I go to the right. That&rsquo;s my nearest
+ way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if that&rsquo;s your nearest way, I&rsquo;m going with you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;because&mdash;well,
+ because&mdash;because&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you won&rsquo;t talk very much!&rdquo; she rejoined with a little air of
+ instinctive coquetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to talk. I&rsquo;d like to listen. Shall we start?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A half-hour later they suddenly came upon an incident of the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, alas, no uncommon incident. An aged peasant, in a sudden fit of
+ weakness, had stumbled on the road, and, in falling, had struck his head
+ on a stone and had lost consciousness. He was an old peasant of the usual
+ Irish type, coarsely but cleanly dressed. Lying beside him was a leather
+ bag, within which were odds and ends of food and some small books of
+ legend and ritual. He was a peasant of a superior class, however.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In falling, he had thrown over on his back, and his haggard face was
+ exposed to the sun and sky. At sight of him Dyck and Sheila ran forward.
+ Dyck dropped on one knee and placed a hand on the stricken man&rsquo;s heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s alive, all right,&rdquo; Dyck said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a figure in these parts. His
+ name&rsquo;s Christopher Dogan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where does he live?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Live? Well, not three hundred yards from here, when he&rsquo;s at home, but
+ he&rsquo;s generally on the go. He&rsquo;s what the American Indians would call a
+ medicine-man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He needs his own medicine now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s over eighty, and he must have gone dizzy, stumbled, fallen, and
+ struck a stone. There&rsquo;s the mark on his temple. He&rsquo;s been lying here
+ unconscious ever since; but his pulse is all right, and we&rsquo;ll soon have
+ him fit again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Dyck whipped out a horn containing spirit, and, while Sheila
+ lifted the injured head, he bathed the old man&rsquo;s face with the spirit,
+ then opened the mouth and let some liquor trickle down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s the cleanest peasant I ever saw,&rdquo; remarked Sheila; &ldquo;and he&rsquo;s coming
+ to. Look at him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, he was coming to. There was a slight tremor of the eyelids, and
+ presently they slowly opened. They were eyes of remarkable poignancy and
+ brightness&mdash;black, deep-set, direct, full of native intelligence. For
+ an instant they stared as if they had no knowledge, then understanding
+ came to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s you, sir,&rdquo; his voice said tremblingly, looking at Dyck. &ldquo;And
+ very kind it is of ye!&rdquo; Then he looked at Sheila. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know ye,&rdquo; he
+ said whisperingly, for his voice seemed suddenly to fail. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know
+ ye,&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;but you look all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m Sheila Llyn,&rdquo; the girl said, taking her hand from the old man&rsquo;s
+ shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m Sheila Llyn, and I&rsquo;m all right in a way, perhaps.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troubled, piercing eyes glanced from one to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No relation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;never met till a half-hour ago,&rdquo; remarked Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man drew himself to a sitting posture, then swayed slightly. The
+ hands of the girl and Dyck went out behind his back. As they touched his
+ back, their fingers met, and Dyck&rsquo;s covered the girl&rsquo;s. Their eyes met,
+ too, and the story told by Dyck in that moment was the beginning of a
+ lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thought her fingers were wonderfully soft, warm, and full of life; and
+ she thought that his was the hand of a master-of a master in the field of
+ human effort. That is, if she thought at all, for Dyck&rsquo;s warm, powerful
+ touch almost hypnotized her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old peasant understood, however. He was standing on his feet now. He
+ was pale and uncertain. He lifted up his bag, and threw it over his
+ shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not needing you any more, thank God!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So Heaven&rsquo;s blessing on ye, and I bid ye good-bye. You&rsquo;ve been kind to
+ me, and I won&rsquo;t forget either of ye. If ever I can do ye a good turn, I&rsquo;ll
+ do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, we&rsquo;re not going to leave you until you&rsquo;re inside your home,&rdquo; said
+ Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man looked at Sheila in meditation. He knew her name and her
+ history. Behind the girl&rsquo;s life was a long prospect of mystery. Llyn was
+ her mother&rsquo;s maiden name. Sheila had never known her father. Never to her
+ knowledge had she seen him, because when she was yet an infant her mother
+ had divorced him by Act of Parliament, against the wishes of her church,
+ and had resumed her maiden name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila&rsquo;s father&rsquo;s name was Erris Boyne, and he had been debauched,
+ drunken, and faithless; so at a time of unendurable hurt his wife had
+ freed herself. Then, under her maiden name, she had brought up her
+ daughter without any knowledge of her father; had made her believe he was
+ dead; had hidden her tragedy with a skilful hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only now, when Sheila was released from a governess, had she moved out of
+ the little wild area of the County Limerick where she lived; only now had
+ she come to visit an uncle whose hospitality she had for so many years
+ denied herself. Sheila was two years old when her father disappeared, and
+ fifteen years had gone since then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One on either side of the old man, they went with him up the hillside for
+ about three hundred yards, to the door of his house, which was little more
+ than a cave in a sudden lift of the hill. He swayed as he walked, but by
+ the time they reached his cave-house he was alert again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house had two windows, one on either side of the unlocked doorway; and
+ when the old man slowly swung the door open, there was shown an interior
+ of humble character, but neat and well-ordered. The floor was earth, dry
+ and clean. There was a bed to the right, also wholesome and dry, with
+ horse-blankets for cover. At the back, opposite the doorway, was a
+ fireplace of some size, and in it stood a kettle, a pot, and a few small
+ pans, together with a covered saucepan. On either side of the fireplace
+ was a three-legged stool, and about the middle of the left-hand wall of
+ the room was a chair which had been made out of a barrel, some of the
+ staves having been sawn away to make a seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once inside the house, Christopher Dogan laid his bag on the bed and waved
+ his hands in a formula of welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m honoured,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for no one has set foot inside this place
+ that I&rsquo;d rather have here than the two of ye; and it&rsquo;s wonderful to me,
+ Mr. Calhoun, that ye&rsquo;ve never been inside it before, because there&rsquo;s been
+ times when I&rsquo;ve had food and drink in plenty. I could have made ye
+ comfortable then and stroked ye all down yer gullet. As for you, Miss
+ Llyn, you&rsquo;re as welcome as the shining of the stars of a night when
+ there&rsquo;s no moon. I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re here, though I&rsquo;ve nothing to give ye, not
+ a bite nor sup. Ah, yes&mdash;but yes,&rdquo; he suddenly cried, touching his
+ head. &ldquo;Faith, then, I have! I have a drap of somethin&rsquo; that&rsquo;s as good as
+ annything dhrunk by the ancient kings of Ireland. It&rsquo;s a wee cordial that
+ come from the cellars of the Bishop of Dunlany, when I cured his cook of
+ the evil-stone that was killing her. Ah, thank God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went into a corner on the left of the fireplace, opened an old jar,
+ thrust his arm down, and drew out a squat little bottle of cordial. The
+ bottle was beautifully made. It was round and hunched, and of glass, with
+ an old label from which the writing had faded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With eyes bright now, Christopher uncorked the bottle and smelled the
+ contents. As he did so, a smile crinkled his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank the Lord! There&rsquo;s enough for the two of ye&mdash;two fine
+ tablespoonfuls of the cordial that&rsquo;d do anny man good, no matter how bad
+ he was, and turn an angel of a woman into an archangel. Bless yer Bowl!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Christopher turned to lift down two pewter pots, Calhoun reached up
+ swiftly and took them from the shelf. He placed them in the hands of the
+ old man, who drew a clean towel of coarse linen from a small cupboard in
+ the wall above his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She and Dyck held the pots for the old man to pour the cordial into them.
+ As he said, there was only a good porridge-spoon of liqueur for each. He
+ divided it with anxious care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s manny a man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and manny and manny a lady, too, born in
+ the purple, that&rsquo;d be glad of a dhrink of this cordial from the cellar of
+ the bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alpha, beta, gamma, delta is the code, and with the word delta,&rdquo; he
+ continued, &ldquo;dhrink every drop of it, as if it was the last thing you were
+ dhrinking on earth; as if the Lord stooped down to give ye a cup of
+ blessing from His great flagon of eternal happiness. Ye&rsquo;ve got two kind
+ hearts, but there&rsquo;s manny a day of throuble will come between ye and the
+ end; and yet the end&rsquo;ll be right, God love ye! Now-alpha, beta, gamma,
+ delta!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a merry laugh Dyck Calhoun turned up his cup and drained the liquid
+ to the last drop. With a laugh not quite so merry, Sheila raised her mug
+ and slowly drained the green happiness away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it good&mdash;isn&rsquo;t it like the love of God?&rdquo; asked the old man.
+ &ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t I glad I had it for ye? Why I said I hadn&rsquo;t annything for ye to
+ dhrink or eat, Lord only knows. There&rsquo;s nothing to eat, and there&rsquo;s only
+ this to dhrink, and I hide it away under the bedclothes of time, as one
+ might say. Ah, ye know, it&rsquo;s been there for three years, and I&rsquo;d almost
+ forgot it. It was a little angel from heaven whispered it to me whir ye
+ stepped inside this house. I dunno why I kep&rsquo; the stuff. Manny&rsquo;s the time
+ I was tempted to dhrink it myself, and manny&rsquo;s the time something said to
+ me, &lsquo;Not yet.&rsquo; The Lord be praised, for I&rsquo;ve had out of it more than I
+ deserve!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took the mugs from their hands, and for a minute stood like some
+ ancient priest who had performed a noble ritual. As Sheila looked at him,
+ she kept saying to herself:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a spirit; he isn&rsquo;t a man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck&rsquo;s eye met that of Sheila, and he saw with the same feeling what was
+ working in her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we must be going,&rdquo; he said to Christopher Dogan. &ldquo;We must get
+ homeward, and we&rsquo;ve had a good drink&mdash;the best I ever tasted. We&rsquo;re
+ proud to pay our respects to you in your own house; and goodbye to you
+ till we meet again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His hand went out to the shoulder of the peasant and rested there for a
+ second in friendly feeling. Then the girl stretched out her hand also. The
+ old man took the two cups in one hand, and, reaching out the other, let
+ Sheila&rsquo;s fingers fall upon his own. He slowly crooked his neck, and kissed
+ her fingers with that distinction mostly to be found among those few good
+ people who live on the highest or the lowest social levels, or in native
+ tents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, please God we meet again! and that I be let to serve you, Miss Sheila
+ Llyn. I have no doubt you could do with a little help some time or
+ another, the same as the rest of us. For all that&rsquo;s come between us three,
+ may it be given me, humble and poor, to help ye both that&rsquo;s helped me so!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck turned to go, and as he did so a thought came to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you hadn&rsquo;t food and drink for us, what have you for yourself,
+ Christopher?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Have you food to eat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well&mdash;well, do ye think I&rsquo;m no provider? There was no food
+ cooked was what I was thinking; but come and let me show you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took the cover off a jar standing in a corner. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s good flour, and
+ there&rsquo;s water, and there&rsquo;s manny a wild shrub and plant on the hillside to
+ make soup, and what more does a man want? With the scone cooked and inside
+ ye, don&rsquo;t ye feel as well as though ye&rsquo;d had a pound of beef or a rasher
+ of bacon? Sure, ye do. I know where there&rsquo;s clumps of wild radishes, and
+ with a little salt they&rsquo;re good&mdash;the best. God bless ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments later, as he stood in his doorway and looked along the road,
+ he saw two figures, the girl&rsquo;s head hardly higher than the man&rsquo;s shoulder.
+ They walked as if they had much to get and were ready for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I dunno,&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;I dunno about you, Dyck Calhoun.
+ You&rsquo;re wild, and ye have too manny mad friends, but you&rsquo;ll come all right
+ in the end; and that pretty girl&mdash;God save her!&mdash;she&rsquo;ll come
+ with a smile into your arms by and by, dear lad. But ye have far to go and
+ much to do before that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His head fell, his eyes stared out into the shining distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see for ye manny and manny a stroke of bad luck, and manny a wrong
+ thing said of ye, and she not believing wan of them. But oh, my God, but
+ oh!&rdquo;&mdash;his clenched hands went to his eyes. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t like to travel
+ the path that&rsquo;s before ye&mdash;no!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down the long road the two young people travelled, gossiping much, both of
+ them touched by something sad and mysterious, neither knowing why; both of
+ them happy, too, for somehow they had come nearer together than years of
+ ordinary life might have made possible. They thought of the old man and
+ his hut, and then broke away into talk of their own countryside, of the
+ war with France, of the growing rebellious spirit in Ireland, of riots in
+ Dublin town, of trouble at Limerick, Cork, and Sligo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the gate of the mansion where Sheila was visiting, Dyck put into her
+ hands the wild flowers he had picked as they passed, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s been a great day. I&rsquo;ve never had a greater. Let&rsquo;s meet again,
+ and soon! I&rsquo;m almost every day upon the hill with my gun, and it&rsquo;d be
+ worth a lot to see you very soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you&rsquo;ll be forgetting me by to-morrow,&rdquo; the girl said with a little
+ wistfulness at her lips, for she had a feeling they would not meet on the
+ morrow. Suddenly she picked from the bunch of wild flowers he had given
+ her a little sprig of heather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if we don&rsquo;t meet&mdash;wear that,&rdquo; she said, and, laughing over her
+ shoulder, turned and ran into the grounds of Loyland Towers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Dyck entered the library of Playmore, the first words he heard were
+ these:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howe has downed the French at Brest. He&rsquo;s smashed the French fleet and
+ dealt a sharp blow to the revolution. Hurrah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words were used by Miles Calhoun, Dyck&rsquo;s father, as a greeting to him
+ on his return from the day&rsquo;s sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, if there was a man in Ireland who had a narrow view and kept his toes
+ pointed to the front, it was Miles Calhoun. His people had lived in
+ Connemara for hundreds of years; and he himself had only one passion in
+ life, which was the Protestant passion of prejudice. He had ever been a
+ follower of Burke&mdash;a passionate follower, one who believed the French
+ Revolution was a crime against humanity, a danger to the future of
+ civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had resisted more vigorously than most men the progress of
+ revolutionary sentiments in Ireland. He was aware that his son had far
+ less rigid opinions than himself; that he even defended Wolfe Tone and
+ Thomas Emmet against abuse and damnation. That was why he had delight in
+ slapping his son in the face, whenever possible, with the hot pennant of
+ victory for British power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a man of irascible temperament and stern views, given to fits of
+ exasperation. He was small of stature, with a round face, eyes that
+ suddenly went red with feeling, and with none of the handsomeness of his
+ son, who resembled his mother&rsquo;s family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother herself had been a beautiful and remarkable woman. Dyck was, in
+ a sense, a reproduction of her in body and mind, for a more cheerful and
+ impetuous person never made a household happier or more imperfect than she
+ made hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her beauty and continual cheerfulness had always been the joy of Dyck&rsquo;s
+ life, and because his mother had married his father&mdash;she was a woman
+ of sense, with all her lightsome ways&mdash;he tried to regard his father
+ with profound respect. Since his wife&rsquo;s death, however, Miles Calhoun had
+ deteriorated; he had become unreasonable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the elder Calhoun made his announcement about the battle of Brest and
+ the English victory, a triumphant smile lighted his flushed face, and
+ under his heavy grey brows his eyes danced with malicious joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howe&rsquo;s a wonder!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll make those mad, red republicans hunt
+ their holes. Eh, isn&rsquo;t that your view, Ivy?&rdquo; he asked of a naval captain
+ who had evidently brought the news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Ivy nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s a heavy blow for the French bloodsuckers. If their ideas creep
+ through Europe and get hold of England, God only knows what the end will
+ be! In their view, to alter everything is the only way to put things
+ right. No doubt they&rsquo;ll invent a new way to be born before they&rsquo;ve
+ finished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that wouldn&rsquo;t be a bad idea,&rdquo; remarked Dyck. &ldquo;The present way has
+ its demerits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it throws responsibility upon the man, and gives a heap of trouble
+ to the woman,&rdquo; said Captain Ivy with a laugh; &ldquo;but they&rsquo;ll change it all,
+ you&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck poured himself a glass of port, held it up, sniffed the aroma, and
+ looked through the beautiful red tinge of the wine with a happy and
+ critical eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, the world could be remade in a lot of ways,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;I
+ shouldn&rsquo;t mind seeing a bit of a revolution in Ireland&mdash;but in
+ England first,&rdquo; he hastened to add. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re a more outcast folk than the
+ Irish.&rdquo; His father scoffed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look out, Dyck, or they&rsquo;ll drop you in jail if you talk like that!&rdquo; he
+ chided, his red face growing redder, his fingers nervously feeling the
+ buttons on his picturesque silk waistcoat. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s conspiracy in Ireland,
+ and you never truly know if the man that serves you at your table, or
+ brings you your horse, or puts a spade into your ground, isn&rsquo;t a traitor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the door opened, and a servant entered the room. In his
+ hand he carried a letter which, with marked excitement, he brought to
+ Miles Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure, he&rsquo;s waiting, sir,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who&rsquo;s he?&rdquo; asked his master, turning the letter over, as though to
+ find out by looking at the seal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, a man of consequence, if we&rsquo;re to judge by the way he&rsquo;s clothed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fit company, then?&rdquo; his master asked, as he opened the heavily sealed
+ letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not saying that, for there&rsquo;s no company good enough for us,&rdquo;
+ answered the higgledy-piggledy butler, with a quirk of the mouth; &ldquo;but, as
+ messengers go, I never seen one with more style and point.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, bring him to me,&rdquo; said Miles Calhoun. &ldquo;Bring him to me, and I&rsquo;ll
+ form my own judgment&mdash;though I have some confidence in yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You could go further and fare worse, as the Papists say about purgatory,&rdquo;
+ answered the old man with respectful familiarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Ivy and Dyck grinned, but the head of the house seemed none too
+ pleased at the freedom of the old butler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bring him as he is,&rdquo; said Miles Calhoun. &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; he added, for he
+ just realized that the stamp of the seal was that of the Attorney-General
+ of Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he read the letter and a flush swept over his face, making its red
+ almost purple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eternal damnation&mdash;eternal damnation!&rdquo; he declared, holding the
+ paper at arm&rsquo;s length a moment, inspecting it. He then handed it to Dyck.
+ &ldquo;Read that, lad. Then pack your bag, for we start for Dublin by daylight
+ or before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck read the brief document and whistled softly to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well, you&rsquo;ve got to obey orders like that, I suppose,&rdquo; Dyck said.
+ &ldquo;They want to question us as to the state of the country here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think we can tell them something. I wonder if they know how wide your
+ travel is, how many people you see; and if they know, how did they come to
+ know? There&rsquo;s spies all over the place. How do I know but the man who&rsquo;s
+ just left this room isn&rsquo;t a spy, isn&rsquo;t the enemy of all of us here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d suspect Michael Clones,&rdquo; remarked Dyck, &ldquo;just as soon as Mulvaney.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael Clones,&rdquo; said his father, and he turned to Captain Ivy, &ldquo;Michael
+ Clones I&rsquo;d trust as I&rsquo;d trust His blessed Majesty, George III. He&rsquo;s a rare
+ scamp, is Michael Clones! He&rsquo;s no thicker than a cardboard, but he draws
+ the pain out of your hurt like a mustard plaster. A man of better sense
+ and greater roguery I&rsquo;ve never met. You must see him, Captain Ivy. He&rsquo;s
+ only about twelve years older than my son, but, like my son, there&rsquo;s no
+ holding him, there&rsquo;s no control of him that&rsquo;s any good. He does what he
+ wants to do in his own way&mdash;talks when he wants to talk, fights when
+ he wants to fight. He&rsquo;s a man of men, is Michael Clones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the door opened and the butler entered, followed by a tall,
+ thin, Don Quixote sort of figure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His excellency,&rdquo; said Mulvaney, with a look slightly malevolent, for the
+ visitor had refused his name. Then he turned and left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Mulvaney&rsquo;s words, an ironical smile crossed the face of the newcomer.
+ Then he advanced to Miles Calhoun. Before speaking, however, he glanced
+ sharply at Captain Ivy, threw an inquisitive look at Dyck, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I seem to have hurt the feelings of your butler, sir, but that cannot be
+ helped. I have come from the Attorney-General. My name is Leonard Mallow&mdash;I&rsquo;m
+ the eldest son of Lord Mallow. I&rsquo;ve been doing business in Limerick, and I
+ bring a message from the Attorney-General to ask you to attend his office
+ at the earliest moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun, noting his glance at a bottle of port, poured out a glass of
+ the good wine and handed it over, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;ll taste better to you because you&rsquo;ve been travelling hard, but it&rsquo;s
+ good wine anyhow. It&rsquo;s been in the cellar for forty years, and that&rsquo;s
+ something in a land like this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mallow accepted the glass of port, raised it with a little gesture of
+ respect, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long life to the King, and cursed be his enemies!&rdquo; So saying he flung the
+ wine down his throat&mdash;which seemed to gulp it like a well&mdash;wiped
+ his lips with a handkerchief, and turned to Miles Calhoun again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s good wine,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;as good as you&rsquo;d get in the cellars of
+ the Viceroy. I&rsquo;ve seen strange things as I came. I&rsquo;ve seen lights on the
+ hills, and drunken rioters in the roads and behind hedges, and once a shot
+ was fired at me; but here I am, safe and sound, carrying out my orders.
+ What time will you start?&rdquo; he added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took it for granted that the summons did not admit of rejection, and he
+ was right. The document contained these words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Trouble is brewing; indeed, it is at hand. Come, please, at once to
+ Dublin, and give the Lord-Lieutenant and the Government a report
+ upon your district. We do not hear altogether well of it, but no
+ one has the knowledge you possess. In the name of His Majesty you
+ are to present yourself at once at these offices in Dublin, and be
+ assured that the Lord-Lieutenant will give you warm welcome through
+ me. Your own loyalty gives much satisfaction here. I am, sir,
+ Your obedient servant,
+ JOHN MCNOWELL.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have confidence in the people&rsquo;s loyalty here?&rdquo; asked Mallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As great as in my own,&rdquo; answered Dyck cheerily. &ldquo;Well, you ought to know
+ what that is. At the same time, I&rsquo;ve heard you&rsquo;re a friend of one or two
+ dark spirits in the land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hold no friendships that would do hurt to my country,&rdquo; answered Dyck
+ sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mallow smiled satirically. &ldquo;As we&rsquo;re starting at daylight, I suppose, I
+ think I&rsquo;ll go to bed, if it may be you can put me up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Lord, yes! We can put you up, Mr. Mallow,&rdquo; said the old man. &ldquo;You
+ shall have as good a bed as you can find outside the Viceregal Lodge&mdash;a
+ fourposter, wide and long. It&rsquo;s been slept in by many a man of place and
+ power. But, Mr. Mallow, you haven&rsquo;t said you&rsquo;ve had no dinner, and you&rsquo;ll
+ not be going to bed in this house without your food. Did you shoot
+ anything to-day, Dyck?&rdquo; he asked his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t bring home a feather. There were no birds to-day, but there are
+ the ducks I shot yesterday, and the quail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; said his father, &ldquo;and there&rsquo;s the little roast pig, too. This
+ is a day when we celebrate the anniversary of Irish power and life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; asked Mallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the battle of the Boyne,&rdquo; answered his host with a little
+ ostentation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you&rsquo;re one of the Peep-o&rsquo;-Day Boys, then,&rdquo; remarked Mallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not saying that,&rdquo; answered the old man. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not an Ulsterman, but I
+ celebrate the coming of William to the Boyne. Things were done that day
+ that&rsquo;ll be remembered when Ireland is whisked away into the Kingdom of
+ Heaven. So you&rsquo;ll not go to bed till you&rsquo;ve had dinner, Mr. Mallow! By me
+ soul, I think I smell the little porker now. Dinner at five, to bed at
+ eight, up before daylight, and off to Dublin when the light breaks. That&rsquo;s
+ the course!&rdquo; He turned to Captain Ivy. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry, captain, but there&rsquo;s
+ naught else to do, and you were going to-morrow at noon, anyhow, so it
+ won&rsquo;t make much difference to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No difference whatever,&rdquo; replied the sailorman. &ldquo;I have to go to Dublin,
+ too, and from there to Queenstown to join my ship, and from Queenstown to
+ the coast of France to do some fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please God!&rdquo; remarked Miles Calhoun. &ldquo;So be it!&rdquo; declared Mallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen!&rdquo; said Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again Dyck looked the visitor straight in the eyes, and back in the
+ horizon of Mallow&rsquo;s life-sky there shone the light of an evil star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the call to dinner,&rdquo; remarked Miles Calhoun, as a bell began
+ ringing in the tower outside. &ldquo;Come with me, Mr. Mallow, and I&rsquo;ll show you
+ your room. You&rsquo;ve had your horse put up, I hope?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and my bag brought in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, come along, then. There&rsquo;s no time to lose. I can smell the porker
+ crawling from the oven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a master of tempting thoughts,&rdquo; remarked Mallow enthusiastically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sheila&mdash;Sheila!&rdquo; said Dyck Calhoun to himself where he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. THE QUARREL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The journey to Dublin was made by the Calhouns, their two guests, and
+ Michael Clones, without incident of note. Arrived there, Miles Calhoun
+ gave himself to examination by Government officials and to assisting the
+ designs of the Peep-o&rsquo;-Day Boys; and indeed he was present at the
+ formation of the first Orange Lodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His narrow nature, his petty craft and malevolence, were useful in a time
+ of anxiety for the State. Yet he had not enough ability to develop his
+ position by the chances offered him. He had not a touch of genius; he had
+ only bursts of Celtic passion, which he had not mind enough to control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, as days, weeks and months went on, his position became less
+ valuable to himself, and his financial affairs suffered from his own and
+ his agent&rsquo;s bad management. In his particular district he was a power; in
+ Dublin he soon showed the weaker side of his nature. He had a bad habit of
+ making foes where he could easily have made friends. In his personal
+ habits he was sober, but erratic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had not his father&rsquo;s abstention from the luxuries of life. He drank,
+ he gamed, he went where temptation was, and fell into it. He steadily
+ diminished his powers of resistance to self-indulgence until one day, at a
+ tavern, he met a man who made a great impression upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This man was brilliant, ebullient, full of humour, character and life,
+ knowing apparently all the lower world of Dublin, and moving with an
+ assured step. It was Erris Boyne, the divorced husband of Mrs. Llyn and
+ the father of Sheila Llyn; but this fact was not known to Dyck. There was
+ also a chance of its not becoming known, because so many years had passed
+ since Erris Boyne was divorced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day Erris Boyne said to Dyck:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a supper to-night at the Breakneck Club. Come along and have a
+ skinful. You&rsquo;ll meet people worth knowing. They&rsquo;re a damned fine lot of
+ fellows for you to meet, Calhoun!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Breakneck Club isn&rsquo;t a good name for a first-class institution,&rdquo;
+ remarked Dyck, with a pause and a laugh; &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll come, if you&rsquo;ll fetch
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Erris Boyne, who was eighteen years older than Dyck, laughed, flicked a
+ little pinch of snuff at his nose with his finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear lad, of course I&rsquo;ll come and fetch you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s many a
+ man has done worse than lead a gay stripling like you into pleasant ways.
+ Bring along any loose change you have, for it may be a night of nights.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, they play cards, do they, at the Breakneck Club?&rdquo; said Dyck, alive
+ with interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, call it what you like, but men must do something when they get
+ together, and we can&rsquo;t be talking all the time. So pocket your shillings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are they all the right sort?&rdquo; asked Dyck, with a little touch of malice.
+ &ldquo;I mean, are they loyal and true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Erris Boyne laid a hand on Dyck&rsquo;s arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come and find out. Do you think I&rsquo;d lead you into bad company? Of course
+ Emmet and Wolfe Tone won&rsquo;t be there, nor any of that lot; but there&rsquo;ll be
+ some men of the right stamp.&rdquo; He watched Dyck carefully out of the corner
+ of his eye. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s funny,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that in Ireland the word loyal always
+ means being true to the Union Jack, standing by King George and his
+ crowd.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what would you have?&rdquo; said Dyck. &ldquo;For this is a day and age when
+ being loyal to the King is more than aught else in all the Irish world.
+ We&rsquo;re never two days alike, we Irish. There are the United Irishmen and
+ the Defenders on one side, and the Peepo&rsquo;-Day Boys, or Orangemen, on the
+ other&mdash;Catholic and Protestant, at each other&rsquo;s throats. Then there&rsquo;s
+ a hand thrust in, and up goes the sword, and the rifles, pikes, and
+ bayonets; and those that were ready to mutilate or kill each other fall
+ into each other&rsquo;s arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Erris Boyne laughed. &ldquo;Well, there&rsquo;ll soon be an end to that. The Irish
+ Parliament is slipping into disrepute. It wouldn&rsquo;t surprise me if the
+ astute English bribe them into a union, to the ruin of Irish Independence.
+ Yet maybe, before that comes, the French will have a try for power here.
+ And upon my word, if I have to live under foreign rule, I&rsquo;d as leave have
+ a French whip over me as an English!&rdquo; He came a step nearer, his voice
+ lowered a little. &ldquo;Have you heard the latest news from France? They&rsquo;re
+ coming with a good-sized fleet down to the south coast. Have you heard
+ it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, there&rsquo;s plenty one hears one doesn&rsquo;t believe is gospel,&rdquo; answered
+ Dyck, his eyes half closing. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not believing all I hear, as if it was a
+ prayer-meeting. Anything may happen here; Ireland&rsquo;s a woman&mdash;very
+ uncertain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck flicked some dust from his waistcoat, and dropped his eyes, because
+ he was thinking of two women he had known; one of them an angel now in
+ company of her sister angels&mdash;his mother; the other a girl he had met
+ on the hills of Connemara, a wonderfully pretty girl of seventeen. How
+ should he know that the girl was Erris Boyne&rsquo;s daughter?&mdash;although
+ there were times when some gesture of Boyne, some quick look, some lifting
+ of the eyebrows, brought back the memory of Sheila Llyn, as it did now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Dyck left his old home he had seen her twice; once at Loyland
+ Towers, and once at her home in Limerick. The time he had spent with her
+ had been very brief, but full of life, interest, and character. She was
+ like some piquant child, bold, beautiful, uncertain, caressing in her
+ manner one instant, and distant at another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had said radiant things, had rallied him, had shown him where a
+ twenty-nine-pound salmon had been caught in a stream, and had fired at and
+ brought down a pheasant outside the covert at Loyland Towers. Whether at
+ Loyland Towers, or at her mother&rsquo;s house in Limerick, there was no touch
+ of forwardness in her, or in anything she said or did. She was the most
+ natural being, the freest from affectation, he had ever known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Erris Boyne talked to him, the memory of Sheila flooded his mind, and
+ on the flood his senses swam like swans. He had not her careful composure.
+ He was just as real, but he had the wilfulness of man. She influenced him
+ as no woman had ever yet done; but he saw no happy ending to the dream. He
+ was too poor to marry; he had no trade or profession; his father&rsquo;s affairs
+ were in a bad way. He could not bring himself to join the army or the
+ navy; and yet, as an Irishman moved by political ideals, with views at
+ once critical and yet devoted to the crown, he was not in a state to
+ settle down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not know that Erris Boyne was set to capture him for the rebel
+ cause. How could he know that Boyne was an agent of the most evil forces
+ in Ireland&mdash;an agent of skill and address, prepossessing, with the
+ face of a Celtic poet and the eye of an assassin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne&rsquo;s object was to bring about the downfall of Dyck Calhoun&mdash;that
+ is, his downfall as a patriot. At the Breakneck Club this bad business
+ began. Dyck had seen many people, representing the gaiety and deviltry of
+ life; but it was as though many doubtful people, many reckless ones, all
+ those with purposes, fads, and fancies, were there. Here was an
+ irresponsible member of a Government department; there an officer of His
+ Majesty&rsquo;s troops; beyond, a profligate bachelor whose reputation for
+ traitorous diplomacy was known and feared. Yet everywhere were men known
+ in the sporting, gaming, or political world, in sea life or land life,
+ most of whom had a character untouched by criticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this club that Dyck again met that tall, ascetic messenger from
+ the Attorney-General, who had brought the message to Miles Calhoun. It was
+ with this man&mdash;Leonard Mallow, eldest son of Lord Mallow&mdash;that
+ Dyck, with three others, played cards one afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The instinctive antipathy which had marked their first introduction was
+ carried on to this later meeting. Dyck distrusted Mallow, and allowed his
+ distrust exercise. It was unfortunate that Mallow won from him
+ three-fourths of the money he had brought to the club, and won it with a
+ smile not easy to forgive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had at last secured sudden success in a scheme of his cards when
+ Mallow asked with a sneer:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you learn that at your home in heaven?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t they teach it where you live in hell?&rdquo; was Dyck&rsquo;s reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Mallow flicked Dyck across the face with his handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what they teach where I belong.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s easy to learn, and we&rsquo;ll do the sum at any time or place you
+ please.&rdquo; After a moment Dyck continued: &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t make a fuss over it.
+ Let&rsquo;s finish the game. There&rsquo;s no good prancing till the sport&rsquo;s ready; so
+ I&rsquo;ll sit and learn more of what they teach in hell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had been drinking, or he would not have spoken so; and when he was
+ drunk daring was strong in him. He hated profoundly this man-so
+ self-satisfied and satanic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kept a perfect coolness, however. Leonard Mallow should not see that he
+ was upset. His wanton wordiness came to his rescue, and until the end of
+ the game he played with sang-froid, daring, and skill. He loved cards; he
+ loved the strife of skill against skill, of trick against trick, of hand
+ against hand. He had never fought a duel in his life, but he had no fear
+ of doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, having won back nearly all he had lost, he rose to his feet and
+ looked round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there any one here from whom I can ask a favour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several stepped forward. Dyck nodded. One of them he knew. It was Sir
+ Almeric Foyle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, Sir Almeric,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;thank you. Shall it be swords or
+ pistols?&rdquo; he asked his enemy, coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Swords, if you please,&rdquo; remarked Mallow grimly, for he had a gift with
+ the sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you will. As you will!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. THE DUEL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was a morning such as could only be brought into existence by the Maker
+ of mornings in Ireland. It was a day such as Dublin placed away carefully
+ into the pantechnicon of famous archives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city of Dublin was not always clean, but in the bright, gorgeous sun
+ her natural filth was no menace to the eye, no repulse to the senses.
+ Above the Liffey, even at so early an hour, the heat shimmers like a
+ silver mist. The bells of churches were ringing, and the great cathedral
+ bells boomed in thrilling monotony over the peaceful city. Here and there
+ in the shabby yet renowned streets, horsemen moved along; now and then the
+ costermonger raised his cry of fresh fruit, flowers, and &ldquo;distinguished
+ vegetables.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People moved into church doorways on their way to mass or confession&mdash;some
+ bright and rather gorgeous beings, some in deep mourning, shy, reserved,
+ and obscure. Here and there, also, in certain streets&mdash;where
+ officials lived or worked&mdash;were soldiers afoot; soldiers with
+ carbines and long bayonets, with tall, slightly peaked hats, smart red
+ coats, belts crossing their breasts, knee-breeches and leggings, and all
+ with epaulets shining. They were in marked contrast to the peasant folk
+ with the high-peaked soft hat, knee-breeches, rough tail-coat, and
+ stockings, some with rifles, some with pikes, some with powder-horns slung
+ under their arms or in the small of the back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this show of foot-soldiers&mdash;that is, regulars and irregulars
+ of the Cornwallis Regiment, and men of the Defenders and the Peep-o&rsquo;-Day
+ Boys&mdash;there were little groups of cavalry making their way to the
+ parade-ground, the castle, the barracks, or the courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond these there was the jaunting-car trundling over the rough
+ cobblestone street, or bumping in and out of dangerous holes. Whips
+ cracked, and the loud voices of jarveys shouted blatant humour and Irish
+ fun at horse and passenger. Here and there, also, some stately coach,
+ bedizened with arms of the quality, made its way through the chief
+ streets, or across the bridges of the Liffey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the general population, moving cheerfully in the inspiriting
+ sun; for Irishmen move so much in a moist atmosphere that on a sunshiny
+ day all tristesse of life seems changed, as in a flash, into high spirits
+ and much activity. Not that the country, at its worst, is slow-footed or
+ depressed; for wit is always at the elbow of want.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never in all Ireland&rsquo;s years had she a more beautiful day than that in
+ which Dyck Calhoun and the Hon. Leonard Mallow met to settle their account
+ in a secluded corner of Phoenix Park. It was not the usual place for
+ duels. The seconds had taken care to keep the locale from the knowledge of
+ the public; especially as many who had come to know of the event at the
+ Breakneck Club were eager to be present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The affair began an hour after sunrise. Neither Dyck nor Leonard Mallow
+ slept at home the night before, but in separate taverns near Phoenix Park.
+ Mallow came almost jauntily to the obscure spot. Both men had
+ sensitiveness, and both entered the grounds with a certain sense of
+ pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck moved and spoke like a man charged with some fluid which had
+ abstracted him from life&rsquo;s monotonous routine. He had to consider the
+ chance of never leaving the grounds alive; yet as he entered the place,
+ where smooth grass between the trees made good footing for the work to be
+ done, the thrill of the greenery, the sound of the birds, the flick of a
+ lizard across the path, and the distant gay leap of a young deer, brought
+ to his senses a gust of joyous feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never smelled such air!&rdquo; he said to one of the seconds. &ldquo;I never saw
+ the sun so beautiful!&rdquo; He sniffed the air and turned his face towards the
+ sun. &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s a day for Ireland,&rdquo; he added, in response to a gravely
+ playful remark of Sir Almeric Foyle. &ldquo;Ireland never was so sweet. Nature&rsquo;s
+ provoking us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s a pity,&rdquo; said Sir Almeric. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m not thinking of bad luck
+ for you, Calhoun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck&rsquo;s smile seemed to come from infinite distance. He was not normal; he
+ was submerged. He was in the great, consuming atmosphere of the bigger
+ world, and the greater life. He even did not hate Mallow at the moment.
+ The thing about to be done was to him a test of manhood. It was a call
+ upon the courage of the soul, a challenge of life, strength, and will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Mallow entered the grounds, the thought of Sheila Llyn crossed Dyck&rsquo;s
+ mind, and the mental sight of her gladdened the eyes of his soul. For one
+ brief instant he stood lost in the mind&rsquo;s look; then he stepped forward,
+ saluted, shook hands with Mallow, and doffed his coat and waistcoat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he did so, he was conscious of a curious coldness, even of dampness, in
+ the hand which had shaken that of Mallow. Mallow&rsquo;s hand had a clammy touch&mdash;clammy,
+ but firm and sure. There was no tremor in the long, thin fingers nor at
+ the lips&mdash;the thin, ascetic lips, as of a secret-service man&mdash;but
+ in his eyes was a dark fire of purpose. The morning had touched him, but
+ not as it had thrown over Dyck its mantle of peace. Mallow also had
+ enjoyed the smell and feeling of it all, but with this difference&mdash;it
+ had filled him with such material joy that he could not bear the thought
+ of leaving it. It gave him strength of will, which would add security to
+ his arm and wrist. Yet, as he looked at Dyck, he saw that his work was cut
+ out for him; for in all his days he had never seen a man so
+ well-possessed, so surely in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had learned swordsmanship with as skilled a master as Ireland had
+ known, and he had shown, in getting knowledge of the weapon, a natural
+ instinct and a capacity worthy of the highest purpose. He had handled the
+ sword since he was six, and his play was better than that of most men; but
+ this was, in fact, his first real duel. In the troubled state of Ireland,
+ with internal discord, challenge, and attack, he had more than once
+ fought, and with success; but that was in the rough-and-tumble of life&rsquo;s
+ chances, as it were, with no deliberate plan to fight according to the
+ rules. Many times, of course, in the process of his training, he had
+ fought as men fight in duels, but with this difference&mdash;that now he
+ was permitted to disable or kill his foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was clear that one or the other would not leave this ground&mdash;this
+ verdant, beautiful piece of mother earth&mdash;exactly as he entered it.
+ He would leave it wounded, incapable, or dead. Indeed, both might leave it
+ wounded, and the chances of success were with the older man, Mallow, whose
+ experience would give him an advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Physically, there was not a vast deal to choose between the two men.
+ Mallow was lank and tall, nervously self-contained, finely concentrated,
+ and vigorous. Dyck was broad of shoulder, well set up, muscular, and with
+ a steadier eye than that of his foe. Also, as the combat developed, it was
+ clear that he had a hand as steady as his eye. What was more, his wrist
+ had superb strength and flexibility; it was as enduring and vital as the
+ forefoot and ankle of a tiger. As a pair they were certainly notable, and
+ would give a good account of themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one of temperament who observed the scene could ever forget it. The
+ light was perfect&mdash;evenly distributed, clear enough to permit
+ accuracy of distance in a stroke. The air was still, gently bracing, and,
+ like most Irish air, adorably sweet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spot chosen for the fight was a sort of avenue between great trees,
+ whose broad leaves warded off the direct sun, and whose shade had as yet
+ no black shadows. The turf was as elastic to the foot as a firm mattress.
+ In the trees, birds were singing with liveliness; in the distance, horned
+ cattle browsed, and a pair of horses stood gazing at the combatants,
+ startled, no doubt, by this invasion of their pasturage. From the distance
+ came the faint, mellow booming of church-bells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men fighting had almost the air of gladiators. Their coats were
+ off, and the white linen of their shirts looked gracious; while the
+ upraised left hand of the fighters balancing the sword-thrust and the
+ weight of the body had an almost singular beauty. Of the two, Dyck was the
+ more graceful, the steadier, the quicker in his motions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vigilant Dyck was, but not reckless. He had made the first attack, on the
+ ground that the aggressor gains by boldness, if that boldness is joined to
+ skill; and Dyck&rsquo;s skill was of the best. His heart was warm. His momentary
+ vision of Sheila Llyn remained with him&mdash;not as a vision, rather as a
+ warmth in his inmost being, something which made him intensely alert,
+ cheerful, defiant, exactly skilful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had need of all his skill, for Mallow was set to win the fight. He felt
+ instinctively what was working in Dyck&rsquo;s mind. He had fought a number of
+ duels, and with a certain trick or art he had given the end to the lives
+ of several. He became conscious, however, that Dyck had a particular
+ stroke in mind, which he himself was preventing by masterful methods. It
+ might be one thing or another, but in view of Dyck&rsquo;s training it would
+ perhaps be the Enniscorthy touch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again and again Dyck pressed his antagonist backward, seeking to muddle
+ his defence and to clear an opening for his own deadly stroke; but the
+ other man also was a master, and parried successfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, with a quick move, Mallow took the offensive, and tried to
+ unsettle Dyck&rsquo;s poise and disorganize his battle-plan. For an instant the
+ tempestuous action, the brilliant, swift play of the sword, the quivering
+ flippancy of the steel, gave Dyck that which almost disconcerted him. Yet
+ he had a grip of himself, and preserved his defence intact; though once
+ his enemy&rsquo;s steel caught his left shoulder, making it bleed. The seconds,
+ however, decided that the thrust was not serious, and made no attempt to
+ interrupt the combat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck kept singularly cool. As Mallow&rsquo;s face grew flushed, his own grew
+ paler, but it was the paleness of intensity and not of fear. Each man&rsquo;s
+ remarkable skill in defence was a good guarantee against disaster due to
+ carelessness. Seldom have men fought so long and accomplished so little in
+ the way of blood-letting. At length, however, Dyck&rsquo;s tactics changed. Once
+ again he became aggressive, and he drove his foe to a point where the
+ skill of both men was tried to the uttermost. It was clear the time had
+ come for something definite. Suddenly Dyck threw himself back with an
+ agile step, lunged slightly to one side, and then in a gallant foray got
+ the steel point into the sword-arm of his enemy. That was the Enniscorthy
+ stroke, which had been taught him by William Tandy, the expert swordsman,
+ and had been made famous by Lord Welling, of Enniscorthy. It succeeded,
+ and it gave Dyck the victory, for Mallow&rsquo;s sword dropped from his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fatigued smile came to Mallow&rsquo;s lips. He clasped the wounded arm with
+ his left hand as the surgeon came forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you got it home,&rdquo; he said to Dyck; &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s deftly done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did my best,&rdquo; answered Dyck. &ldquo;Give me your hand, if you will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a wry look Mallow, now seated on the old stump of a tree, held out
+ his left hand. It was covered with blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think we&rsquo;ll have to forego that courtesy, Calhoun,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Look at
+ the state of my hand! It&rsquo;s good blood,&rdquo; he added grimly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s damned good
+ blood, but&mdash;but it won&rsquo;t do, you see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad it was no worse,&rdquo; said Dyck, not touching the bloody hand. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ a clean thrust, and you&rsquo;ll be better from it soon. These great men&rdquo;&mdash;he
+ smiled towards the surgeons&mdash;&ldquo;will soon put you right. I got my
+ chance with the stroke, and took it, because I knew if I didn&rsquo;t you&rsquo;d have
+ me presently.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have a great reputation in Dublin town now, and you&rsquo;ll deserve
+ it,&rdquo; Mallow added adroitly, the great paleness of his features, however,
+ made ghastly by the hatred in his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck did not see this look, but he felt a note of malice&mdash;a distant
+ note&mdash;in Mallow&rsquo;s voice. He saw that what Mallow had said was fresh
+ evidence of the man&rsquo;s arrogant character. It did not offend him, however,
+ for he was victor, and could enter the Breakneck Club or Dublin society
+ with a tranquil eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Mallow&rsquo;s voice was heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d have seen you damned to hell, Calhoun, before I&rsquo;d have apologized at
+ the Breakneck Club; but after a fight with one of the best swordsmen in
+ Ireland I&rsquo;ve learned a lot, and I&rsquo;ll apologize now&mdash;completely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surgeon had bound up the slight wound in Dyck&rsquo;s shoulder, had stopped
+ the bleeding, and was now helping him on with his coat. The operation had
+ not been without pain, but this demonstration from his foe was too much
+ for him. It drove the look of pain from his face; it brought a smile to
+ his lips. He came a step nearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m as obliged to you as if you&rsquo;d paid for my board and lodging, Mallow,&rdquo;
+ he said; &ldquo;and that&rsquo;s saying a good deal in these days. I&rsquo;ll never have a
+ bigger fight. You&rsquo;re a greater swordsman than your reputation. I must have
+ provoked you beyond reason,&rdquo; he went on gallantly. &ldquo;I think we&rsquo;d better
+ forget the whole thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a Loyalist,&rdquo; Mallow replied. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a Loyalist, and if you&rsquo;re one, too,
+ what reason should there be for our not being friends?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A black cloud flooded Calhoun&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If&mdash;if I&rsquo;m a Loyalist, you say! Have you any doubt of it? If you
+ have&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wish your sword had gone into my heart instead of my arm, eh?&rdquo;
+ interrupted Mallow. &ldquo;How easily I am misunderstood! I meant nothing by
+ that &lsquo;if.&rsquo;&rdquo; He smiled, and the smile had a touch of wickedness. &ldquo;I meant
+ nothing by it-nothing at all. As we are both Loyalists, we must be
+ friends. Good-bye, Calhoun!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck&rsquo;s face cleared very slowly. Mallow was maddening, but the look of the
+ face was not that of a foe. &ldquo;Well, let us be friends,&rdquo; Dyck answered with
+ a cordial smile. &ldquo;Good-bye,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m damned sorry we had to fight
+ at all. Good-bye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s many a government has made a mess of things in Ireland,&rdquo; said
+ Erris Boyne; &ldquo;but since the day of Cromwell the Accursed this is the
+ worst. Is there a man in Ireland that believes in it, or trusts it? There
+ are men that support it, that are served by it, that fill their pockets
+ out of it; but by Joseph and by Mary, there&rsquo;s none thinks there couldn&rsquo;t
+ be a better! Have a little more marsala, Calhoun?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words, Boyne filled up the long glass out of which Dyck Calhoun
+ had been drinking&mdash;drinking too much. Shortly before Dyck had lost
+ all his cash at the card-table. He had turned from it penniless and
+ discomfited to see Boyne, smiling, and gay with wine, in front of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne took him by the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no luck for you at the tables to-day.
+ Let&rsquo;s go where we can forget the world, where we can lift the banner of
+ freedom and beat the drums of purpose. Come along, lad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne had ceased to have his earlier allurement for Dyck Calhoun, but his
+ smile was friendly, his manner was hospitable, and he was on the spot. The
+ time was critical for Dyck&mdash;critical and dangerous. He had lost money
+ heavily; he had even exhausted his mother&rsquo;s legacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of late he had seen little of his father, and the little he had seen was
+ not fortunate. They had quarrelled over Dyck&rsquo;s wayward doings. Miles
+ Calhoun had said some hard things to him, and Dyck had replied that he
+ would cut out his own course, trim his own path, walk his own way. He had
+ angered his father terribly, and Miles, in a burst of temper, had
+ disclosed the fact that his own property was in peril. They had been,
+ estranged ever since; but the time had come when Dyck must at least secure
+ the credit of his father&rsquo;s name at his bank to find the means of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with this staring him in the face that Erris Boyne&rsquo;s company seemed
+ to offer at least a recovery of his good spirits. Dissipated as Boyne&rsquo;s
+ look was, he had a natural handsomeness which, with good care of himself
+ personally, well-appointed clothes, a cheerful manner, and witty talk,
+ made him palatable to careless-living Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Dublin knew little of Boyne&rsquo;s present domestic life. It did not know
+ that he had injured his second wife as badly as he had wronged his first&mdash;with
+ this difference, however, that his first wife was a lady, while his second
+ wife, Noreen, was a beautiful, quick-tempered, lovable eighteen-year-old
+ girl, a graduate of the kitchen and dairy, when he took her to himself. He
+ had married her in a mad moment after his first wife&mdash;Mrs. Llyn, as
+ she was now called&mdash;had divorced him; and after the first thrill of
+ married life was over, nothing remained with Boyne except regret that he
+ had sold his freedom for what he might, perhaps, have had without
+ marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then began a process of domestic torture which alienated Noreen from him,
+ and roused in her the worst passions of human nature. She came to know of
+ his infidelities, and they maddened her. They had no children, and in the
+ end he had threatened her with desertion. When she had retorted in strong
+ words, he slapped her face, and left her with an ugly smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house where they lived was outside Dublin, in a secluded spot, yet not
+ far from stores and shops. There was this to be said for Noreen&mdash;that
+ she kept her home spotlessly clean, even with two indifferent servants.
+ She had a gift for housewifery, which, at its best, was as good as
+ anything in the world, and far better than could be found in most parts of
+ Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of visitors they had few, if any, and the young wife was left alone to
+ brood upon her wrongs. Erris Boyne had slapped her face on the morning of
+ the day when he met Dyck Calhoun in the hour of his bad luck. He did not
+ see the look in her face as he left the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ruthless as he was, he realized the time had come when by bold effort he
+ might get young Calhoun wholly into his power. He began by getting Dyck
+ into the street. Then he took him by an indirect route to what was,
+ reputedly, a tavern of consequence. There choice spirits met on occasion,
+ and dark souls, like Boyne, planned adventures. Outwardly it was a tavern
+ of the old class, superficially sedate, and called the Harp and Crown.
+ None save a very few conspirators knew how great a part it played in the
+ plan to break the government of Ireland and to ruin England&rsquo;s position in
+ the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The entrance was by two doors&mdash;one the ordinary public entrance, the
+ other at the side of the house, which was on a corner. This could be
+ opened by a skeleton key owned by Erris Boyne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He and Dyck entered, however, by the general entrance, because Boyne had
+ forgotten his key. They passed through the bar-parlour, nodding to one or
+ two habitues, and presently were bestowed in a room, not large, but well
+ furnished. It was quiet and alluring on this day when the world seemed
+ disconcerting. So pleasantly did the place affect Dyck&rsquo;s spirits that, as
+ he sat down in the room which had often housed worse men than himself, he
+ gave a sigh of relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They played cards, and Dyck won. He won five times what he had lost at the
+ club. This made him companionable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a poor business-cards,&rdquo; he said at last. &ldquo;It puts one up in the
+ clouds and down in the ditch all at the same time. I tell you this, Boyne&mdash;I&rsquo;m
+ going to stop. No man ought to play cards who hasn&rsquo;t a fortune; and my
+ fortune, I&rsquo;m sorry to say, is only my face!&rdquo; He laughed bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your sword&mdash;you&rsquo;ve forgotten that, Calhoun. You&rsquo;ve a lot of luck
+ in your sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve made no money out of it so far,&rdquo; Dyck retorted cynically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet you&rsquo;ve put men with reputations out of the running, men like Mallow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that was a bit of luck and a few tricks I&rsquo;ve learned. I can&rsquo;t start a
+ banking-account on that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you can put yourself in the way of winning what can&rsquo;t be bought.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;no English army for me, thank you&mdash;if that&rsquo;s what you
+ mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t what I mean. In the English army a man&rsquo;s a slave. He can neither
+ eat, nor drink, nor sleep without being under command. He has to do a lot
+ of dirty work without having voice in the policy. He&rsquo;s a child of
+ discipline and order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a damned good thing that would be for most of us!&rdquo; retorted Dyck.
+ &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m not one of the most.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know that. Try a little more of this marsala, Calhoun. It&rsquo;s the best in
+ the place, and it&rsquo;s got a lot of good stuff. I&rsquo;ve been coming to the Harp
+ and Crown for many years, and I&rsquo;ve never had a bad drink all that time.
+ The old landlord is a genius. He doesn&rsquo;t put on airs. He&rsquo;s a good man, is
+ old Swinton, and there&rsquo;s nothing good in the drink of France that you
+ can&rsquo;t get here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if that&rsquo;s true, how does it happen?&rdquo; asked Dyck, with a little
+ flash of interest. &ldquo;Why should this little twopenny, one-horse place&mdash;I
+ mean in size and furnishments&mdash;have such luck as to get the best
+ there is in France? It means a lot of trouble, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It means some trouble. But let me tell you&rdquo;&mdash;he leaned over the
+ table and laid a hand on Dyck&rsquo;s, which was a little nervous&mdash;&ldquo;let me
+ speak as an old friend to you, if I may. Here are the facts. For many a
+ year, you know as well as I do, ships have been coming from France to
+ Ireland with the very best wines and liquors, and taking back the very
+ best wool&mdash;smuggled, of course. Well, our little landlord here is the
+ damnedest rogue of all. The customs never touch him. From the coast the
+ stuff comes up to Dublin without a check, and, as he&rsquo;s a special
+ favourite, he gets the best to be had in la belle France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why is he such a favourite?&rdquo; asked Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Erris Boyne laughed, not loudly, but suggestively. &ldquo;When a lady kisses a
+ man on the lips, of her own free will, and puts her arm around his neck,
+ is it done, do you think, because it&rsquo;s her duty to do it or die? No, it&rsquo;s
+ because she likes the man; because the man is a good friend to her;
+ because it&rsquo;s money in her pocket. That&rsquo;s the case with old Swinton. France
+ kisses him, as it were, because&rdquo;&mdash;he paused, as though debating what
+ to say&mdash;&ldquo;because France knows he&rsquo;d rather be under her own
+ revolutionary government than under the monarchy of England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice had resonance, and, as he said these words, it had insistence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know, Calhoun, I think old Swinton is right. We suffer here
+ because monarchy, with its cruel hand of iron, mistrusts us, brutalizes
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not see enlightenment come into the half-drunken eyes of Dyck. He
+ only realized that Dyck was very still, and strangely, deeply interested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you, Calhoun, we need in Ireland something of the spirit that&rsquo;s
+ alive in France to-day. They&rsquo;ve cleaned out the kings&mdash;Louis&rsquo;s and
+ Marie&rsquo;s heads have dropped into the basket. They&rsquo;re sweeping the dirt out
+ of France; they&rsquo;re cleaning the dark places; they&rsquo;re whitewashing
+ Versailles and sawdusting the Tuileries; they&rsquo;re purging the aristocratic
+ guts of France; they&rsquo;re starting for the world a reformation which will
+ make it clean. Not America alone, but England, and all Europe, will become
+ republics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;England?&rdquo; asked Dyck in a low, penetrating voice. &ldquo;Aye, England, through
+ Ireland. Ireland will come first, then Wales, Scotland, and England. Dear
+ lad, the great day is come&mdash;the greatest the world has ever known.
+ France, the spirit of it, is alive. It will purge and cleanse the
+ universe!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The suspicious, alert look passed from Dyck&rsquo;s eyes, but his face had
+ become flushed. He reached out and poured himself another glass of wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you say may be true, Boyne. It may be true, but I wouldn&rsquo;t put faith
+ in it&mdash;not for one icy minute. I don&rsquo;t want to see here in Ireland
+ the horrors and savagery of France. I don&rsquo;t want to see the guillotine up
+ on St. Stephen&rsquo;s Green.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne felt that he must march carefully. He was sure of his game; but
+ there were difficulties, and he must not throw his chances away. Dyck was
+ in a position where, with his inflammable nature, he could be captured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll tell you, Calhoun. I don&rsquo;t know which is worse&mdash;Ireland
+ bloody with shootings and hangings, Ulster up in the north and Cork in the
+ south, from the Giant&rsquo;s Causeway to Tralee; no two sets of feet dancing
+ alike, with the bloody hand of England stretching out over the Irish
+ Parliament like death itself; or France ruling us. How does the English
+ government live here? Only by bribery and purchases. It buys its way.
+ Isn&rsquo;t that true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded. &ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s true in a way,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s so, because
+ we&rsquo;re what we are. We&rsquo;ve never been properly put in our places. The heel
+ on our necks&mdash;that&rsquo;s the way to do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne looked at the flushed, angry face. In spite of Dyck&rsquo;s words, he felt
+ that his medicine was working well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen to me, Calhoun,&rdquo; he said softly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to do something.
+ You&rsquo;re living an idle life. You&rsquo;re in debt. You&rsquo;ve ruined your independent
+ fortune at the tables. There are but two courses open to you. One is to
+ join the British forces&mdash;to be a lieutenant, a captain, a major, a
+ colonel, or a general, in time; to shoot and cut and hang and quarter, and
+ rule with a heavy rod. That&rsquo;s one way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you think I&rsquo;m fit for nothing but the sword, eh?&rdquo; asked Dyck with
+ irony. &ldquo;You think I&rsquo;ve got no brains for anything except the army.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne laughed. &ldquo;Have another drink, Calhoun.&rdquo; He poured out more wine.
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, not the army alone; there&rsquo;s the navy&mdash;and there&rsquo;s the French
+ navy! It&rsquo;s the best navy in the world, the freest and the greatest, and
+ with Bonaparte going at us, England will have enough to do&mdash;too much,
+ I&rsquo;m thinking. So there&rsquo;s a career in the French navy open. And listen&mdash;before
+ you and I are two months older, the French navy will be in the harbours of
+ Ireland, and the French army will land here.&rdquo; He reached out and grasped
+ Dyck&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no liberty of freedom under the Union Jack. What do
+ you think of the tricolour? It&rsquo;s a great flag, and under it the world is
+ going to be ruled&mdash;England, Spain, Italy, Holland, Prussia, Austria,
+ and Russia&mdash;all of them. The time is ripe. You&rsquo;ve got your chance.
+ Take it on, dear lad, take it on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck did not raise his head. He was leaning forward with both arms on the
+ table, supporting himself firmly; his head was bowed as though with deep
+ interest in what Boyne said. And, indeed, his interest was great&mdash;so
+ great that all his manhood, vigour, all his citizenship, were vitally
+ alive. Yet he did not lift his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s that you say about French ships in the harbours of Ireland?&rdquo; he
+ said in a tone that showed interest. &ldquo;Of course, I know there&rsquo;s been a lot
+ of talk of a French raid on Ireland, but I didn&rsquo;t know it was to be so
+ soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s near enough! It&rsquo;s all been arranged,&rdquo; replied Boyne. &ldquo;There&rsquo;ll
+ be ships-war-ships, commanded by Hoche. They&rsquo;ll have orders to land on the
+ coast, to join the Irish patriots, to take control of the operations, and
+ then to march on&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was going to say &ldquo;march on Dublin,&rdquo; but he stopped. He was playing a
+ daring game. If he had not been sure of his man, he would not have been so
+ frank and fearless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not, however, mislead Dyck greatly. Dyck had been drinking a good
+ deal, but this knowledge of a French invasion, and a sense of what Boyne
+ was trying to do, steadied his shaken emotions; held him firmly in the
+ grip of practical common sense. He laughed, hiccuped a little, as though
+ he was very drunk, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course the French would like to come to Ireland; they&rsquo;d like to seize
+ it and hold it. Why, of course they would! Don&rsquo;t we know all that&rsquo;s been
+ and gone? Aren&rsquo;t Irishmen in France grown rich in industry there after
+ having lost every penny of their property here? Aren&rsquo;t there Irishmen
+ there, always conniving to put England at defiance here by breaking her
+ laws, cheating her officers, seducing her patriots? Of course; but what
+ astounds me is that a man of your standing should believe the French are
+ coming here now to Ireland. No, no, Boyne; I&rsquo;m not taking your word for
+ any of these things. You&rsquo;re a gossip; you&rsquo;re a damned, pertinacious,
+ preposterous gossip, and I&rsquo;ll say it as often as you like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it&rsquo;s proof you want, is it? Well, then, here it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne drew from his pocket a small leather-bound case and took from it a
+ letter, which he laid on the table in front of Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck looked at the document, then said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s what you are, eh?&mdash;a captain in the French artillery!
+ Well, that&rsquo;d be a surprise in Ireland if it were told.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t going to be told unless you tell it, Calhoun, and you&rsquo;re too
+ much of a sportsman for that. Besides:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t you have one of these if you want it&mdash;if you want it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;d be the good of my wanting it? I could get a commission here in the
+ army of George III, if I wanted it, but I don&rsquo;t want it; and any man that
+ offers it to me, I&rsquo;ll hand it back with thanks and be damned to you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen to me, then, Calhoun,&rdquo; remarked Boyne, reaching out a hand to lay
+ it on Dyck&rsquo;s arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck saw the motion, however, and carefully drew back in his chair. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+ not an adventurer,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but if I were, what would there be in it for
+ me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne misunderstood the look on Dyck&rsquo;s face. He did not grasp the meaning
+ behind the words, and he said to him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, a good salary&mdash;as good as that of a general, with a commission
+ and the spoils of war! That&rsquo;s the thing in the French army that counts for
+ so much&mdash;spoils of war. When they&rsquo;re out on a country like this, they
+ let their officers loose&mdash;their officers and men. Did you ever hear
+ tell of a French army being pinched for fodder, or going thirsty for
+ drink, or losing its head for poverty or indigence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I never did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, take the advice of an officer of the French army resident now
+ in Dublin,&rdquo; continued Boyne, laughing, &ldquo;who has the honour of being
+ received as the friend of Mr. Dyck Calhoun of Playmore! Take your hand in
+ the game that&rsquo;s going on! For a man as young as you, with brains and
+ ambition, there&rsquo;s no height he mightn&rsquo;t reach in this country. Think of it&mdash;Ireland
+ free from English control; Ireland, with all her dreams, living her own
+ life, fearless, independent, as it was in days of yore. Why, what&rsquo;s to
+ prevent you, Dyck Calhoun, from being president of the Irish Republic? You
+ have brains, looks, skill, and a wonderful tongue. None but a young man
+ could take on the job, for it will require boldness, skill, and the
+ recklessness of perfect courage. Isn&rsquo;t it good enough for you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the way to do it?&rdquo; asked Dyck, still holding on to his old self
+ grimly. &ldquo;How is it to be done?&rdquo; He spoke a little thickly, for, in spite
+ of himself, the wine was clogging his senses. It had been artistically
+ drugged by Boyne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen to me, Calhoun,&rdquo; continued Boyne. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve known you now some time.
+ We&rsquo;ve come in and gone out together. This day was inevitable. You were
+ bound to come to it one way or another. Man, you have a heart of iron; you
+ have the courage of Caesar or Alexander; you have the chance of doing what
+ no Englishman could ever do&mdash;Cromwell, or any other. Well, then,
+ don&rsquo;t you see the fateful moment has come in Irish life and history?
+ Strife everywhere! Alone, what can we do? Alone, if we try to shake off
+ the yoke that binds us we shall be shattered, and our last end be worse
+ than our first. But with French ships, French officers and soldiers,
+ French guns and ammunition, with the trained men of the French army to
+ take control here, what amelioration of our weakness, what confidence and
+ skill on our side! Can you doubt what the end will be? Answer me, man,
+ don&rsquo;t you see it all? Isn&rsquo;t it clear to you? Doesn&rsquo;t such a cause enlist
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sudden burst of primitive anger, Dyck got to his feet, staggering a
+ little, but grasping the fatal meaning of the whole thing. He looked Erris
+ Boyne in the eyes. His own were bloodshot and dissipated, but there was a
+ look in them of which Boyne might well take heed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyne had not counted on Dyck&rsquo;s refusal; or, if it had occurred to him,
+ the remedy, an ancient one, was ready to his fingers. The wine was
+ drugged. He had watched the decline of Dyck&rsquo;s fortunes with an eye of
+ appreciation; he had seen the clouds of poverty and anxiety closing in. He
+ had known of old Miles Calhoun&rsquo;s financial difficulties. He had observed
+ Dyck&rsquo;s wayside loitering with revolutionists, and he had taken it with too
+ much seriousness. He knew the condition of Dyck&rsquo;s purse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not prepared for Dyck&rsquo;s indignant outburst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you this, Erris Boyne, there&rsquo;s none has ever tried me as you have
+ done! What do you think I am&mdash;a thing of the dirty street-corner,
+ something to be swept up and cast into the furnace of treason? Look you,
+ after to-day you and I will never break bread or drink wine together. No&mdash;by
+ Heaven, no! I don&rsquo;t know whether you&rsquo;ve told me the truth or not, but I
+ think you have. There&rsquo;s this to say&mdash;I shall go from this place to
+ Dublin Castle, and shall tell them there&mdash;without mentioning your
+ name&mdash;what you&rsquo;ve told about the French raid. Now, by God, you&rsquo;re a
+ traitor! You oughtn&rsquo;t to live, and if you&rsquo;ll send your seconds to me I&rsquo;ll
+ try and do with you as I did with Leonard Mallow. Only mark me, Erris
+ Boyne, I&rsquo;ll put my sword into your heart. You understand&mdash;into your
+ filthy heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the door of the room opened, and a face looked in for an
+ instant-the face of old Swinton, the landlord of the Harp and Crown.
+ Suddenly Boyne&rsquo;s look changed. He burst into a laugh, and brought his
+ fists down on the table between them with a bang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Joseph and by Mary, but you&rsquo;re a patriot, Calhoun! I was trying to
+ test you. I was searching to find the innermost soul of you. The French
+ fleet, my commission in the French army, and my story about the landlord
+ are all bosh. If I meant what I told you, do you think I&rsquo;d have been so
+ mad as to tell you so much, damn it? Have you no sense, man? I wanted to
+ find out exactly how you stood-faithful or unfaithful to the crown&mdash;and
+ I&rsquo;ve found out. Sit down, sit down, Calhoun, dear lad. Take your hand off
+ your sword. Remember, these are terrible days. Everything I said about
+ Ireland is true. What I said about France is false. Sit down, man, and if
+ you&rsquo;re going to join the king&rsquo;s army&mdash;as I hope and trust you will&mdash;then
+ here&rsquo;s something to help you face the time between.&rdquo; He threw on the table
+ a packet of notes. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re good and healthy, and will buy you what you
+ need. There&rsquo;s not much. There&rsquo;s only a hundred pounds, but I give it to
+ you with all my heart, and you can pay it back when the king&rsquo;s money comes
+ to you, or when you marry a rich woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said it all with a smile on his face. It was done so cleverly, with so
+ much simulated sincerity, that Dyck, in his state of semi-drunkenness,
+ could not, at the instant, place him in his true light. Besides, there was
+ something handsome and virile in Boyne&rsquo;s face&mdash;and untrue; but the
+ untruth Dyck did not at the moment see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never in his life had Boyne performed such prodigies of dissimulation. He
+ was suddenly like a schoolboy disclosing the deeds of some adventurous
+ knight. He realized to the full the dangers he had run in disclosing the
+ truth; for it was the truth that he had told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So serious was the situation, to his mind, that one thing seemed
+ inevitable. Dyck must be kidnapped at once and carried out of Ireland. It
+ would be simple. A little more drugged wine, and he would be asleep and
+ powerless&mdash;it had already tugged at him. With the help of his
+ confreres in the tavern, Dyck could be carried out, put on a lugger, and
+ sent away to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing else to do. Boyne had said truly that the French fleet
+ meant to come soon. Dyck must not be able to give the thing away before it
+ happened. The chief thing now was to prime him with the drugged wine till
+ he lost consciousness, and then carry him away to the land of the
+ guillotine. Dyck&rsquo;s tempestuous nature, the poetry and imagination of him,
+ would quickly respond to French culture, to the new orders of the new day
+ in France. Meanwhile, he must be soaked in drugged drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already the wine had played havoc with him; already stupefaction was
+ coming over his senses. With a good-natured, ribald laugh, Boyne poured
+ out another glass of marsala and pushed it gently over to Dyck&rsquo;s fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My gin to your marsala,&rdquo; he said, and he raised his own glass of gin,
+ looking playfully over the top to Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sudden loosening of all the fibres of his nature, Dyck raised the
+ glass of marsala to his lips and drained it off almost at a gulp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a prodigious liar, Boyne,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think any one could
+ lie so completely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll teach you how, Calhoun. It&rsquo;s not hard. I&rsquo;ll teach you how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed a long cigar over the table to Dyck, who, however, did not light
+ it, but held it in his fingers. Boyne struck a light and held it out
+ across the small table. Dyck leaned forward, but, as he did so, the wine
+ took possession of his senses. His head fell forward in sleep, and the
+ cigar dropped from his fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well&mdash;ah, well, we must do some business now!&rdquo; remarked Boyne.
+ He leaned over Dyck for a moment. &ldquo;Yes, sound asleep,&rdquo; he said, and
+ laughed scornfully to himself. &ldquo;Well, when it&rsquo;s dark we must get him away.
+ He&rsquo;ll sleep for four or five hours, and by that time he&rsquo;ll be out on the
+ way to France, and the rest is easy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was about to go to the door that led into the business part of the
+ house, when the door leading into the street opened softly, and a woman
+ stepped inside. She had used the key which Boyne had forgotten at his
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first he did not hear her. Then, when he did turn round, it was too
+ late. The knife she carried under her skirt flashed out and into Boyne&rsquo;s
+ heart. He collapsed on the floor without a sound, save only a deep sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stooping over, Noreen drew the knife out with a little gurgling cry&mdash;a
+ smothered exclamation. Then she opened the door again&mdash;the side-door
+ leading into the street-closed it softly, and was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two hours afterwards the landlord opened the door. Erris Boyne lay in his
+ silence, stark and still. At the table, with his head sunk in his arms,
+ sat Dyck Calhoun, snoring stertorously, his drawn sword by his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a cry the old man knelt on the floor beside the body of Erris Boyne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. DYCK IN PRISON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Dyck Calhoun waked, he was in the hands of the king&rsquo;s constables,
+ arrested for the murder of Erris Boyne. It was hard to protest his
+ innocence, for the landlord was ready to swear concerning a quarrel he had
+ seen when he opened the door for a moment. Dyck, with sudden caution, only
+ said he would make all clear at the trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dublin and Ireland were shocked and thrilled; England imagined she had
+ come upon one of the most violent episodes of Irish history. One journal
+ protested that it was not possible to believe in Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s guilt;
+ that his outward habits were known to all, and were above suspicion,
+ although he had collogued&mdash;though never secretly, so far as the world
+ knew&mdash;with some of the advanced revolutionary spirits. None of the
+ loyal papers seemed aware of Erris Boyne&rsquo;s treachery; and while none spoke
+ of him with approval, all condemned his ugly death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Driven through the streets of Dublin in a jaunting-car between two of the
+ king&rsquo;s police, Dyck was a mark for abuse by tongue, but was here and there
+ cheered by partizans of the ultra-loyal group to which his father adhered.
+ The effect of his potations was still upon him, and his mind was bemused.
+ He remembered the quarrel, Boyne&rsquo;s explanation, and the subsequent
+ drinking, but he could recall nothing further. He was sure the wine had
+ been drugged, but he realized that Swinton, the landlord, would have made
+ away with any signs of foul play, as he was himself an agent of active
+ disloyalty and a friend of Erris Boyne. Dyck could not believe he had
+ killed Boyne; yet Boyne had been found with a wound in his heart, and his
+ own naked sword lying beside him on the table. The trouble was he could
+ not absolutely swear innocence of the crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was not eased by his stay in jail. It began with a
+ revelation terribly repugnant to him. He had not long been lodged in the
+ cell when there came a visit from Michael Clones, who stretched out his
+ hands in an agony of humiliation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you didn&rsquo;t do it&mdash;you didn&rsquo;t do it, sir!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure
+ you never killed him. It wasn&rsquo;t your way. He was for doing you harm if he
+ could. An evil man he was, as all the world knows. But there&rsquo;s one thing
+ that&rsquo;ll be worse than anything else to you. You never knew it, and I never
+ knew it till an hour ago. Did you know who Erris Boyne was? Well, I&rsquo;ll
+ tell you. He was the father of Miss Sheila Llyn. He was divorced by Mrs.
+ Llyn many years ago, for having to do with other women. She took to her
+ maiden name, and he married again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good God! Good God!&rdquo; Dyck Calhoun made a gesture of horror. &ldquo;He Sheila
+ Llyn&rsquo;s father! Good God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a passion of remorse roused him out of his semi-stupefaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael, Michael!&rdquo; he said, his voice hoarse, broken. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say such a
+ thing! Are you sure?&rdquo; Michael nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure. I got it from one that&rsquo;s known Erris Boyne and his first wife
+ and girl&mdash;one that was a servant to them both in past days. He&rsquo;s been
+ down to Limerick to see Mrs. Llyn and the beautiful daughter. I met him an
+ hour ago, and he told me. He told me more. He told me Mrs. Llyn spoke to
+ him of your friendship with Erris Boyne, and how she meant to tell you who
+ and what he was. She said her daughter didn&rsquo;t even know her father&rsquo;s name.
+ She had been kept in ignorance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck seated himself on the rough bed of the cell, and stared at Michael,
+ his hands between his knees, his eyes perturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;if it&rsquo;s true&mdash;what you&rsquo;ve told me&mdash;I
+ don&rsquo;t see my way. Every step in front of me is black. To tell the whole
+ truth is to bring fresh shame upon Mrs. Llyn and her daughter, and not to
+ tell the whole truth is to take away my one chance of getting out of this
+ trouble. I see that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what you mean, sir, but I&rsquo;ll tell you this&mdash;none that
+ knows you would believe you&rsquo;d murder Erris Boyne or anny other man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck wiped the sweat from his forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose you speak the truth, Michael, but it isn&rsquo;t people who&rsquo;ve known
+ me that&rsquo;ll try me; and I can&rsquo;t tell all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not, if it&rsquo;ll help you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t&mdash;of course I can&rsquo;t. It would be disgrace eternal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why? Tell me why, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck looked closely, firmly, at the old servant and friend. Should he tell
+ the truth&mdash;that Boyne had tried to induce him to sell himself to the
+ French, to invoke his aid against the English government, to share in
+ treason? If he could have told it to anybody, he would have done so to
+ Michael; but if it was true that in his drunken blindness he had killed
+ Boyne, he would not seek to escape by proving Boyne a traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believed Boyne was a servant of the French; but unless the facts came
+ out in the trial, they should not have sure origin in himself. He would
+ not add to his crime in killing the father of the only girl who had ever
+ touched his heart, the shame of proving that father to be one who should
+ have been shot as a traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had courage and daring, but not sufficient to carry him through that
+ dark chapter. He would not try to save himself by turning public opinion
+ against Erris Boyne. The man had been killed by some one, perhaps&mdash;and
+ the thing ached in his heart&mdash;by himself; but that was no reason why
+ the man&rsquo;s death should not be full punishment for all the wrong he had
+ done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had a foolish strain in him, after all. Romance was his deadly foe;
+ it made him do a stupid, if chivalrous, thing. Meanwhile he would warn the
+ government at once about the projected French naval raid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; said Dyck, rising again, &ldquo;see my father, but you&rsquo;re not to say
+ I didn&rsquo;t kill Boyne, for, to tell the truth, I don&rsquo;t know. My head&rdquo;&mdash;he
+ put his hand to it with a gesture of despair&mdash;&ldquo;my head&rsquo;s a mass of
+ contradictions. It seems a thousand years since I entered that tavern! I
+ can&rsquo;t get myself level with all that&rsquo;s happened. That Erris Boyne should
+ be the father of the sweet girl at Limerick shakes me. Don&rsquo;t you see what
+ it means? If I killed him, it spoils everything&mdash;everything. If I
+ didn&rsquo;t kill him, I can only help myself by blackening still more the life
+ of one who gave being to&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, to a young queen!&rdquo; interrupted Michael.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God knows, there&rsquo;s none like her in Ireland, or in any other country at
+ all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Dyck regained his composure; and it was the composure of one who
+ had opened the door of hell and had realized that in time&mdash;perhaps
+ not far off&mdash;he also would dwell in the infernal place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael, I have no money, but I&rsquo;m my father&rsquo;s heir. My father will not
+ see me starve in prison, nor want for defence, though my attitude shall be
+ &lsquo;no defence.&rsquo; So bring me decent food and some clothes, and send to me
+ here Will McCormick, the lawyer. He&rsquo;s as able a man as there is in Dublin.
+ Listen, Michael, you&rsquo;re not to speak of Mrs. Llyn and Miss Llyn as related
+ to Erris Boyne. What will come of what you and I know and don&rsquo;t know,
+ Heaven only has knowledge; but I&rsquo;ll see it through. I&rsquo;ve spoiled as good
+ chances as ever a young man had that wants to make his way; but drink and
+ cards, Michael, and the flare of this damned life at the centre&mdash;it
+ got hold of me. It muddled, drowned the best that was in me. It&rsquo;s the
+ witch&rsquo;s kitchen, is Dublin. Ireland&rsquo;s the only place in the world where
+ they make saints of criminals and pray to them; where they lose track of
+ time and think they&rsquo;re in eternity; where emotion is saturnine logic and
+ death is the touchstone of life. Michael, I don&rsquo;t see any way to safety.
+ Those fellows down at the tavern were friends of Erris Boyne. They&rsquo;re
+ against me. They&rsquo;ll hang me if they can!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe they can do it, master. Dublin and Ireland think more of
+ you than they did of Erris Boyne. There&rsquo;s nothing behind you except the
+ wildness of youth&mdash;nothing at all. If anny one had said to me at
+ Playmore that you&rsquo;d do the things you&rsquo;ve done with drink and cards since
+ you come to Dublin, I&rsquo;d have swore they were liars. Yet when all&rsquo;s said
+ and done, I&rsquo;d give my last drop of blood as guarantee you didn&rsquo;t kill
+ Erris Boyne!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck smiled. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve a lot of faith in me, Michael&mdash;but I&rsquo;ll tell you
+ this&mdash;I never was so thirsty in my life. My mouth&rsquo;s like a red-hot
+ iron. Send me some water. Give the warder sixpence, if you&rsquo;ve got it, and
+ send me some water. Then go to Will McCormick, and after that to my
+ father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael shook his head dolefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. McCormick&rsquo;s aisy&mdash;oh, aisy enough,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll lep up at
+ the idea of defendin&rsquo; you, but I&rsquo;m not takin&rsquo; pleasure in goin&rsquo; to Miles
+ Calhoun, for he&rsquo;s a hard man these days. Aw, Mr. Dyck, he&rsquo;s had a lot of
+ trouble. Things has been goin&rsquo; wrong with Playmore. &lsquo;Pon honour, I don&rsquo;t
+ know whether anny of it&rsquo;ll last as long as Miles Calhoun lasts. There&rsquo;ll
+ be little left for you, Mr. Dyck. That&rsquo;s what troubles me. I tell you it&rsquo;d
+ break my heart if that place should be lost to your father and you. I was
+ born on it. I&rsquo;d give the best years of the life that&rsquo;s left me to make
+ sure the old house could stay in the hands of the Calhouns. I say to you
+ that while I live all I am is yours, fair and foul, good and bad.&rdquo; He
+ touched his breast with his right hand. &ldquo;In here is the soul of Ireland
+ that leps up for the things that matter. There&rsquo;s a song&mdash;but never
+ mind about a song; this is no place for songs. It&rsquo;s a prison-house, and
+ you&rsquo;re a prisoner charged&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not charged yet, not charged,&rdquo; interrupted Dyck; &ldquo;but suspected of and
+ arrested for a crime. I&rsquo;ll fight&mdash;before God, I&rsquo;ll fight to the last!
+ Good-bye, Michael; bring me food and clothes, and send me cold water at
+ once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the door closed softly behind Michael Clones, Dyck sat down on the
+ bed where many a criminal patriot had lain. He looked round the small
+ room, bare, unfurnished, severe-terribly severe; he looked at the blank
+ walls and the barred window, high up; he looked at the floor&mdash;it was
+ discoloured and damp. He reached out and touched it with his hand. He
+ looked at the solitary chair, the basin and pail, and he shuddered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How awful&mdash;how awful!&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;But if it was her father, and
+ if I killed him&rdquo;&mdash;his head sank low&mdash;&ldquo;if I killed her father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Water, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked up. It was the guard with a tin of water and a dipper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe he&rsquo;s guilty, mother.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The girl&rsquo;s fine eyes shone with feeling&mdash;with protest, indignation,
+ anguish. As she spoke, she thrust her head forward with the vigour of a
+ passionate counsel. Sheila Llyn was a champion who would fight to the last
+ gasp for any cause she loved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments before, she had found her mother, horror-stricken, gazing at
+ a newspaper paragraph sent from Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila at once thought this to be the cause of her mother&rsquo;s agitation, and
+ she reached out a hand for it. Her mother hesitated, then handed the
+ clipping to her. Fortunately it contained no statement save the bare facts
+ connected with the killing of Erris Boyne, and no reference to the earlier
+ life of the dead man. It said no more than that Dyck Calhoun must take his
+ trial at the sessions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It also stated that Dyck, though he pleaded &ldquo;not guilty,&rdquo; declared
+ frankly, through Will McCormick, the lawyer, that he had no memory of
+ aught that happened after he had drunk wine given him by Erris Boyne. He
+ said that he and Boyne had quarrelled, but had become reconciled again,
+ and that the drink was a pledge of their understanding. From the time he
+ had taken the drink until he waked in the hands of the king&rsquo;s constables,
+ he had no memory; but he was sure he had not killed Boyne. The fact that
+ there was no blood on his sword was evidence. Nevertheless, he had been
+ committed for trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Llyn was sorely troubled. She knew of her daughter&rsquo;s interest in Dyck
+ Calhoun, and of Dyck&rsquo;s regard for Sheila. She had even looked forward to
+ marriage, and she wished for Sheila no better fate, because nearly all she
+ knew of Dyck was to his credit. She was unaware that his life in Dublin
+ had been dissipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Dyck was guilty&mdash;though she could not believe it&mdash;there would
+ be an end of romance between him and Sheila, and their friendship must be
+ severed for ever. Her daughter did not know that Erris Boyne was her
+ father, and she must not know&mdash;in any case not yet; but if Dyck was
+ condemned, it was almost sure he would be hanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She wondered about Boyne&rsquo;s widow, whose name did not appear in the
+ paragraph she had seen. She knew that Noreen was beautiful, but that he
+ had married far beneath him socially. She had imagined Erris Boyne living
+ in suburban quiet, not drawing his wife into his social scheme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is what had happened. The woman had lived apart from the daily
+ experiences of her husband&rsquo;s life in Dublin; and it had deepened her
+ bitterness against him. When she had learned that Erris Boyne was no more
+ faithful to her than he had been to his previous wife, she had gone mad;
+ and Dyck Calhoun was paying the price of her madness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Llyn did not know this. She was a woman of distinguished bearing,
+ though small, with a wan, sad look in her eyes always, but with a cheerful
+ smile. She was not poor, but well-to-do, and it was not necessary to deny
+ herself or her daughter ordinary comforts, and even many of the luxuries
+ of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her hair was darker than her daughter&rsquo;s, black and wavy, with here and
+ there streaks of grey. These, however, only added dignity to a head
+ beautifully balanced, finely moulded, and, in the language of the day,
+ most genteelly hung. She was slender, buoyant in movement yet composed,
+ and her voice was like her daughter&rsquo;s, clear, gentle, thrilling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mind and heart were given up to Sheila and Sheila&rsquo;s future. That was
+ why a knowledge of the tragedy that had come to Dyck Calhoun troubled her
+ as she had not been troubled since the day she first learned of Erris
+ Boyne&rsquo;s infidelity to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us go to Dublin, mother,&rdquo; said Sheila with a determined air, after
+ reading the clipping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, my dear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman&rsquo;s eyes, with their long lashes, looked searchingly into her
+ daughter&rsquo;s face. She felt, as the years went on, that Sheila had gifts
+ granted to few. She realized that the girl had resources which would make
+ her a governing influence in whatever sphere of life she should be set.
+ Quietly, Sheila was taking control of their movements, and indeed of her
+ own daily life. The girl had a dominating skill which came in part from
+ herself, and also to a degree from her father; but her disposition was not
+ her father&rsquo;s-it was her mother&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Llyn had never known Sheila to lie or twist the truth in all her
+ days. No one was more obedient to wise argument; and her mother had a
+ feeling that now, perhaps, the time had come when they two must have a
+ struggle for mastery. There was every reason why they should not go to
+ Dublin. There Sheila might discover that Erris Boyne was her father, and
+ might learn the story of her mother&rsquo;s life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila had been told by her mother that her father had passed away abroad
+ when she was a little child. She had never seen her father&rsquo;s picture, and
+ her mother had given her the impression that their last days together had
+ not been happy. She had always felt that it was better not to inquire too
+ closely into her father&rsquo;s life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The years had gone on and then had come the happy visit to Loyland Towers,
+ where she had met Dyck Calhoun. Her life at that moment had been free from
+ troublesome emotions; but since the time she had met Dyck at the top of
+ the hill, a new set of feelings worked in her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was as bonny a lass as ever the old world produced&mdash;lithe, with a
+ body like that of a boy, strong and pleasant of face, with a haunting
+ beauty in the eyes, a majesty of the neck and chin, and a carriage which
+ had made Michael Clones call her a queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She saw Dyck only as, a happy, wild son of the hilltop. To her he was a
+ man of mettle and worth, and irresponsible because he had been given no
+ responsibility. He was a country gentleman of Ireland, with all the
+ interest and peril of the life of a country gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, we ought to go to Dublin, mother. We could help him, perhaps,&rdquo;
+ Sheila insisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother shook her head mournfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My child, we could do him no good at all&mdash;none whatever. Besides, I
+ can&rsquo;t afford to visit Dublin now. It&rsquo;s an expensive journey, and the
+ repairs we&rsquo;ve been doing here have run me close.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A look of indignation, almost of scorn, came into the girl&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if I were being tried for my life, as Dyck Calhoun is going to be,
+ and if I knew that friends of mine were standing off because of a few
+ pounds, shillings, and pence, I think I&rsquo;d be a real murderer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother took her daughter&rsquo;s hand. She found it cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; she said, clasping it gently, &ldquo;you never saw him but three
+ times, and I&rsquo;ve never seen him but twice except in the distance; but I
+ would do anything in my power to help him, if I could, for I like him. The
+ thing for us to do&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know&mdash;sit here, twist our thumbs, and do nothing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What more could we do if we went to Dublin, except listen to gossip, read
+ the papers and be jarred every moment? My dear, our best place is here. If
+ the spending of money could be of any use to him, I&rsquo;d spend it&mdash;indeed
+ I would; but since it can&rsquo;t be of any use, we must stay in our own home.
+ Of one thing I&rsquo;m sure&mdash;if Dyck Calhoun killed Erris Boyne, Boyne
+ deserved it. Of one thing I&rsquo;m certain beyond all else&mdash;it was no
+ murder. Mr. Calhoun wasn&rsquo;t a man to murder any one. I don&rsquo;t believe&rdquo;&mdash;her
+ voice became passionate&mdash;&ldquo;he murdered, and I don&rsquo;t believe he will be
+ hanged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl looked at her mother with surprise. &ldquo;Oh, dearest, dearest!&rdquo; she
+ said. &ldquo;I believe you do care for him. Is it because he has no mother, and
+ you have no son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be so, beloved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila swept her arms around her mother&rsquo;s neck and drew the fine head to
+ her breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment they heard the clatter of hoofs, and presently they saw a
+ horse and rider pass the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a government messenger, mother,&rdquo; Sheila said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Sheila said, it was a government messenger, bearing a packet to Mrs.
+ Llyn&mdash;a letter from her brother in America, whom she had not seen for
+ many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brother, Bryan Llyn, had gone out there as a young man before the
+ Revolutionary War. He had prospered, taking sides against England in the
+ war, and become a man of importance in the schemes of the new republican
+ government. Only occasionally had letters come from him to his sister, and
+ for nearly eleven years she had not had a single word from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she opened the packet now, she felt it would help to solve&mdash;she
+ knew not how&mdash;the trouble between herself and her daughter. The
+ letter had been sent to a firm in Dublin with which Bryan Llyn had done
+ business, with instructions that it should be forwarded to his sister. It
+ had reached the hands of a government official, who was a brother of a
+ member of the firm, and he had used the government messenger, who was
+ going upon other business to Limerick, to forward it with a friendly
+ covering note, which ended with the words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The recent tragedy you have no doubt seen in the papers must have
+ shocked you; but to those who know the inside the end was
+ inevitable, though there are many who do not think Calhoun is
+ guilty. I am one of them. Nevertheless, it will go hard with him,
+ as the evidence is strong against him. He comes from your part of
+ the country, and you will be concerned, of course.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sheila watched her mother reading, and saw that great emotion possessed
+ her, though the girl could not know the cause. Presently, however, Mrs.
+ Llyn, who had read the letter from her brother, made a joyful exclamation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it, mother dear?&rdquo; Sheila asked eagerly. &ldquo;Tell me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother made a passionate gesture of astonishment and joy; then she
+ leaned back in her chair and closed her eyes, with the letter&mdash;which
+ was closely written, in old-fashioned punctiliousness&mdash;in her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my dear, my dear!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;How strange it all is! Your Uncle Bryan
+ is immensely rich. He has no children and no family; his health is
+ failing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She seemed able to get no further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what is it, mother?&rdquo; asked Sheila again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an instant Mrs. Llyn hesitated; then she put the letter into Sheila&rsquo;s
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Read it, my child,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s for you as much as for me&mdash;indeed,
+ more for you than for me.&rdquo; Sheila took the letter. It ran as follows:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ DEAREST SISTER:
+
+ It is eleven years since I wrote to you, and yet, though it may seem
+ strange, there have not been eleven days in all that time in which I
+ have not wished you and Sheila were here. Sheila&mdash;why, she is a
+ young woman! She&rsquo;s about the age you were when I left Ireland, and
+ you were one of the most beautiful and charming creatures God ever
+ gave life to. The last picture I have of you was a drawing made
+ soon after your marriage&mdash;sad, bad, unhappy incident. I have kept
+ it by me always. It warms my heart in winter; it cools my eyes in
+ summer.
+
+ My estate is neither North nor South, but farther South than North.
+ In a sense it is always summer, but winter on my place would be like
+ summer in Norway&mdash;just bitingly fresh, happily alert. I&rsquo;m writing
+ in the summer now. I look out of the window and see hundreds of
+ acres of cotton-fields, with hundreds upon hundreds of negroes at
+ work. I hear the songs they sing, faint echoes of them, even as I
+ write. Yes, my black folk do sing, because they are well treated.
+
+ Not that we haven&rsquo;t our troubles here. You can&rsquo;t administer
+ thousands of acres, control hundreds of slaves, and run an estate
+ like a piece of clockwork without creaks in the machinery. I&rsquo;ve
+ built it all up out of next to nothing. I landed in this country
+ with my little fortune of two thousand pounds. This estate is worth
+ at least a quarter of a million now. I&rsquo;ve an estate in Jamaica,
+ too. I took it for a debt. What it&rsquo;ll be worth in another twenty
+ years I don&rsquo;t know. I shan&rsquo;t be here to see. I&rsquo;m not the man I was
+ physically, and that&rsquo;s one of the reasons why I&rsquo;m writing to you
+ to-day. I&rsquo;ve often wished to write and say what I&rsquo;m going to say
+ now; but I&rsquo;ve held back, because I wanted you to finish your girl&rsquo;s
+ education before I said it
+
+ What I say is this: I want you and Sheila to come here to me, to
+ make my home your home, to take control of my household, and to let
+ me see faces I love about me as the shadows enfold me.
+
+ Like your married life, mine was unsuccessful, but not for the same
+ reason. The woman I married did not understand&mdash;probably could not
+ understand. She gave me no children. We are born this way, or
+ that. To understand is pain and joy in one; to misconceive is to
+ scatter broken glass for bare feet. Yet when I laid her away, a few
+ years ago, I had terrible pangs of regret, which must come to the
+ heart that has striven in vain. I did my best; I tried to make her
+ understand, but she never did. I used at first to feel angry; then
+ I became patient. But I waked up again, and went smiling along,
+ active, vigorous, getting pleasure out of the infinitely small
+ things, and happy in perfecting my organization.
+
+ This place, which I have called Moira, is to be yours&mdash;or, rather,
+ Sheila&rsquo;s. So, in any case, you will want to come and see the home I
+ have made this old colonial mansion, with its Corinthian pillars and
+ verandah, high steps, hard-wood floors polished like a pan, every
+ room hung in dimity and chintz, and the smell of fruit and flowers
+ everywhere. You will want to see it all, and you&rsquo;ll want to live
+ here.
+
+ There&rsquo;s little rain here, so it&rsquo;s not like Ireland, and the green is
+ not so green; but the flowers are marvellously bright, and the birds
+ sing almost as well as they sing in Ireland, though there&rsquo;s no lark.
+ Strange it is, but true, the only things that draw me back to
+ Ireland in my soul are you, and Sheila, whom I&rsquo;ve never seen, and
+ the lark singing as he rises until he becomes a grey-blue speck, and
+ then vanishing in the sky.
+
+ Well, you and the lark have sung in my heart these many days, and
+ now you must come to me, because I need you. I have placed to your
+ credit in the Bank of Ireland a thousand pounds. That will be the
+ means of bringing you here&mdash;you and Sheila&mdash;to my door, to Moira.
+ Let nothing save death prevent your coming. As far as Sheila&rsquo;s eye
+ can see-north, south, east, and west&mdash;the land will be hers when I&rsquo;m
+ gone. Dearest sister, sell all things that are yours, and come to
+ me. You&rsquo;ll not forget Ireland here. Whoever has breathed her air
+ can never forget the hills and dells, the valleys and bogs, the
+ mountains, with their mists of rain, the wild girls, with their bare
+ ankles, their red petticoats, and their beautiful, reckless air.
+ None who has ever breathed the air of Ireland can breathe in another
+ land without memory of the ancient harp of Ireland. But it is as a
+ memory-deep, wonderful, and abiding, yet a memory. I sometimes
+ think I have forgotten, and then I hear coming through this Virginia
+ the notes of some old Irish melody, the song of some wayfarer of
+ Mayo or Connemara, and I know then that Ireland is persuasive and
+ perpetual; but only as a memory, because it speaks in every pulse
+ and beats in every nerve.
+
+ Oh, believe me, I speak of what I know! I have been away from
+ Ireland for a long time, and I&rsquo;m never going back, but I&rsquo;ll bring
+ Ireland to me. Come here, colleen, come to Virginia. Write to me,
+ on the day you get this letter, that you&rsquo;re coming soon. Let it be
+ soon, because I feel the cords binding me to my beloved fields
+ growing thinner. They&rsquo;ll soon crack, but, please God, they won&rsquo;t
+ crack before you come here.
+
+ Now with my love to you and Sheila I stretch out my hand to you.
+ Take it. All that it is has worked for is yours; all that it wants
+ is you.
+
+ Your loving brother,
+
+ BRYAN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As Sheila read, the tears started from her eyes; and at last she could
+ read no longer, so her mother took the letter and read the rest of it
+ aloud. When she had finished, there was silence&mdash;a long warm silence;
+ then, at last, Mrs. Llyn rose to her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sheila, when shall we go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With frightened eyes Sheila sprang up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said we must go to Dublin!&rdquo; she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, we will go to Dublin, Sheila, but it will be on our way to Uncle
+ Bryan&rsquo;s home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila caught her mother&rsquo;s hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; she said, after a moment of hesitation, &ldquo;I must obey you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the one way, my child-the one thing to do. Some one in prison calls&mdash;perhaps;
+ some one far away who loves you, and needs us, calls&mdash;that we know.
+ Tell me, am I not right? I ask you, where shall we go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Virginia, mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl&rsquo;s head dropped, and her eyes filled with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. DYCK&rsquo;S FATHER VISITS HIM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In vain Dyck&rsquo;s lawyer, Will McCormick, urged him to deny absolutely the
+ killing of Erris Boyne. Dyck would not do so. He had, however, immediately
+ on being jailed, written to the government, telling of the projected
+ invasion of Ireland by the French fleet, and saying that it had come to
+ him from a sure source. The government had at once taken action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarding the death of Boyne, the only thing in his favour was that his
+ own sword-point was free from stain. His lawyer made the utmost of this,
+ but to no avail. The impression in the court was that both men had been
+ drinking; that they had quarrelled, and that without a duel being fought
+ Dyck had killed his enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That there had been no duel was clear from the fact that Erris Boyne&rsquo;s
+ sword was undrawn. The charge, however, on the instigation of the
+ Attorney-General, who was grateful for the information about France, had
+ been changed from murder to manslaughter; though it seemed clear that
+ Boyne had been ruthlessly killed by a man whom he had befriended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one of the days of the trial, Dyck&rsquo;s father, bowed, morose, and
+ obstinate, came to see him. That Dyck and Boyne had quarrelled had been
+ stated in evidence by the landlord, Swinton, and Dyck had admitted it.
+ Miles Calhoun was bent upon finding what the story of the quarrel was; for
+ his own lawyer had told him that Dyck&rsquo;s refusal to give the cause of the
+ dispute would affect the jury adversely, and might bring him imprisonment
+ for life. After the formalities of their meeting, Miles Calhoun said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son, things are black, but they&rsquo;re not so black they can&rsquo;t be
+ brightened. If you killed Erris Boyne, he deserved it. He was a bad man,
+ as the world knows. That isn&rsquo;t the point. Now, there&rsquo;s only one kind of
+ quarrel that warrants non-disclosure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean about a woman?&rdquo; remarked Dyck coldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man took a pinch of snuff nervously. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I mean. Boyne
+ was older than you, and perhaps you cut him out with a woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wry smile wrinkled the corners of Dyck&rsquo;s mouth. &ldquo;You mean his wife?&rdquo; he
+ asked with irony. &ldquo;Wife&mdash;no!&rdquo; retorted the old man. &ldquo;Damn it, no! He
+ wasn&rsquo;t the man to remain true to his wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So I understand,&rdquo; remarked Dyck; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t know his wife. I never saw
+ her, except at the trial, and I was so sorry for her I ceased to be sorry
+ for my self. She had a beautiful, strange, isolated face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that wouldn&rsquo;t influence Boyne,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;His first wife had a
+ beautiful and interesting face, but it didn&rsquo;t hold him. He went marauding
+ elsewhere, and she divorced him by act of parliament. I don&rsquo;t think you
+ knew it, but his first wife was one of your acquaintances&mdash;Mrs. Llyn,
+ whose daughter you saw just before we left Playmore. He wasn&rsquo;t particular
+ where he made love&mdash;a barmaid or a housekeeper, it was all the same
+ to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope the daughter doesn&rsquo;t know that Erris Boyne was her father,&rdquo; said
+ Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s plenty can tell her, and she&rsquo;ll hear it sooner or later.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miles Calhoun looked at his son with dejection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eyes wandered over the grimly furnished cell. His nose smelled the
+ damp of it, and suddenly the whole soul of him burst forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t give yourself a chance of escape, Dyck You know what Irish
+ juries are. Why don&rsquo;t you tell the truth about the quarrel? What&rsquo;s the
+ good of keeping your mouth shut, when there&rsquo;s many that would profit by
+ your telling it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who would profit?&rdquo; asked Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who would profit!&rdquo; snarled the old man. &ldquo;Well, you would profit first,
+ for it might break the dark chain of circumstantial evidence. Also, your
+ father would profit. I&rsquo;d be saved shame, perhaps; I&rsquo;d get relief from this
+ disgrace. Oh, man, think of others beside yourself!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think of others!&rdquo; said Dyck, and a queer smile lighted his haggard face.
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d save myself if I honourably could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The law must prove you guilty,&rdquo; the old man went on. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not for you to
+ prove yourself innocent. They haven&rsquo;t proved you guilty yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man fumbled with a waistcoat button. His eyes blinked hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;the one thing that&rsquo;s plain to my eyes, and
+ it&rsquo;s this&mdash;that your only chance of escape is to tell the truth about
+ the quarrel. If the truth were told, whatever it is, I believe it would be
+ to your credit&mdash;I&rsquo;ll say that for you. If it was to your credit, even
+ if they believe you guilty of killing Erris Boyne, they&rsquo;d touch you
+ lightly. Ah, in the name of the mother you loved, I ask you to tell the
+ truth about that quarrel! Give it into the hands of the jury, and let them
+ decide. Haven&rsquo;t you got a heart in you? In the name of God&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t speak to me like that,&rdquo; interrupted Dyck, with emotion. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+ thought of all those things. I hold my peace because&mdash;because I hold
+ my peace. To speak would be to hurt some one I love with all my soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you won&rsquo;t speak to save me&mdash;your father&mdash;because you don&rsquo;t
+ love me with all your soul! Is that it?&rdquo; asked Miles Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s different&mdash;it&rsquo;s different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, it&rsquo;s a woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind what it is. I will not tell. There are things more shameful
+ than death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; snarled the other. &ldquo;Rather than save yourself, you bring dishonour
+ upon him who gave you birth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck&rsquo;s face was submerged in colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;on my honour I wouldn&rsquo;t hurt you if I could help it,
+ but I&rsquo;ll not tell the world of the quarrel between that man and myself. My
+ silence may hurt you, but some one else would be hurt far more if I told.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By God, I think you&rsquo;re some mad dreamer slipped out of the ancient fold!
+ Do you know where you are? You&rsquo;re in jail. If you&rsquo;re found guilty, you&rsquo;ll
+ be sent to prison at least for the years that&rsquo;ll spoil the making of your
+ life; and you do it because you think you&rsquo;ll spare somebody. Well, I ask
+ you to spare me. I don&rsquo;t want the man that&rsquo;s going to inherit my name,
+ when my time comes, to bring foulness on it. We&rsquo;ve been a rough race, we
+ Calhouns; we&rsquo;ve done mad, bad things, perhaps, but none has shamed us
+ before the world&mdash;none but you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have never shamed you, Miles Calhoun,&rdquo; replied his son sharply. &ldquo;As the
+ ancients said, &lsquo;alis volat propriis&rsquo;&mdash;I will fly with my own wings.
+ Come weal, come woe, come dark, come light, I have fixed my mind, and
+ nothing shall change it. You loved my mother better than the rest of the
+ world. You would have thought it no shame to have said so to your own
+ father. Well, I say it to you&mdash;I&rsquo;ll stand by what my conscience and
+ my soul have dictated to me. You call me a dreamer. Let it be so. I&rsquo;m
+ Irish; I&rsquo;m a Celt. I&rsquo;ve drunk deep of all that Ireland means. All that&rsquo;s
+ behind me is my own, back to the shadowy kings of Ireland, who lost life
+ and gave it because they believed in what they did. So will I. If I&rsquo;m to
+ walk the hills no more on the estate where you are master, let it be so. I
+ have no fear; I want no favour. If it is to be prison, then it shall be
+ prison. If it is to be shame, then let it be shame. These are days when
+ men must suffer if they make mistakes. Well, I will suffer, fearlessly if
+ helplessly, but I will not break the oath which I have taken. And so I
+ will not do it&mdash;never&mdash;never&mdash;never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He picked up the cloak which the old man had dropped on the floor, and
+ handed it to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no good in staying longer. I must go into court again to-morrow.
+ I have to think how my lawyer shall answer the evidence given.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But of one thing have you thought?&rdquo; asked his father. &ldquo;You will not tell
+ the cause of the quarrel, for the reason that you might hurt somebody. If
+ you don&rsquo;t tell the cause, and you are condemned, won&rsquo;t that hurt somebody
+ even more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Dyck stood silent, absorbed. His face looked pinched, his
+ whole appearance shrivelled. Then, with deliberation, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is not a matter of expediency, but of principle. My heart tells me
+ what to do, and my heart has always been right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was silence for a long time. At last the old man drew the cloak
+ about his shoulders and turned towards the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait a minute, father,&rdquo; said Dyck. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go like that. You&rsquo;d better not
+ come and see me again. If I&rsquo;m condemned, go back to Playmore; if I&rsquo;m set
+ free, go back to Playmore. That&rsquo;s the place for you to be. You&rsquo;ve got your
+ own troubles there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you&mdash;if you&rsquo;re acquitted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I&rsquo;m acquitted, I&rsquo;ll take to the high seas&mdash;till I&rsquo;m cured.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later, without further words, Dyck was alone. He heard the door
+ clang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat for some time on the edge of his bed, buried in dejection.
+ Presently, however, the door opened. &ldquo;A letter for you, sir,&rdquo; said the
+ jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The light of the cell was dim, but Dyck managed to read the letter without
+ great difficulty, for the writing was almost as precise as print. The
+ sight of it caught his heart like a warm hand and pressed it. This was the
+ substance of the letter:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ I have wanted to visit you in prison, but my mother has forbidden
+ it, and so, even if I could be let to enter, I must not disobey her.
+ I have not read the papers giving an account of your trial. I only
+ know you are charged with killing a bad man, notorious in Dublin
+ life, and that many think he got his just deserts in being killed.
+
+ I saw Christopher Dogan only a week ago, before we came to Dublin.
+ His eyes, as he talked of you, shone like the secret hill-fires
+ where the peasants make illegal drink.
+
+ &ldquo;Look you,&rdquo; he said to me, &ldquo;I care not what a jury decides. I know
+ my man; and I also know that if the fellow Boyne died by his hand,
+ it was in fair fight. I have read Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s story in the
+ stars; and I know what his end will be. It will be fair, not foul;
+ good, not bad; great, not low. Tell him that from me, miss,&rdquo; was
+ what he said.
+
+ I also will not believe that your fate is an evil one, that the law
+ will grind you between the millstones of guilt and dishonour; but if
+ the law should call you guilty, I still will not believe. Far away
+ I will think of you, and believe in you, dear, masterful, madman
+ friend. Yes, you are a madman, for Michael Clones told me&mdash;faith,
+ he loves you well!&mdash;that you&rsquo;ve been living a gay life in Dublin
+ since you came here, and that the man you are accused of killing
+ was in great part the cause of it.
+
+ I think I never saw my mother so troubled in spirit as she is at
+ this time. Of course, she could not feel as I do about you. It
+ isn&rsquo;t that which makes her sad and haggard; it is that we are
+ leaving Ireland behind.
+
+ Yes, she and I are saying good-bye to Ireland. That&rsquo;s why I think
+ she might have let me see you before we went; but since it must not
+ be, well, then, it must not. But we shall meet again. In my soul
+ I know that on the hills somewhere far off, as on the first day we
+ met, we shall meet each other once more. Where are we going? Oh,
+ very far! We are going to my Uncle Bryan&mdash;Bryan Llyn, in Virginia.
+ A letter has come from him urging us to make our home with him. You
+ see, my friend&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then followed the story which Bryan Llyn had told her mother and herself,
+ and she wrote of her mother&rsquo;s decision to go out to the new, great home
+ which her uncle had made among the cotton-fields of the South. When she
+ had finished that part of the tale, she went on as follows:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ We shall know your fate only through the letters that will follow
+ us, but I will not believe in your bad luck. Listen to me&mdash;why
+ don&rsquo;t you come to America also? Oh, think it over! Don&rsquo;t believe
+ the worst will come. When they release you from prison, innocent
+ and acquitted, cross the ocean and set up your tent under the Stars
+ and Stripes. Think of it! Nearly all those men in America who
+ fought under Washington and won were born in these islands. They
+ took with them to that far land the memory and love of these old
+ homes. You and I would have fought for England and with the British
+ troops, because we detest revolution. Here, in Ireland, we have
+ seen its evils; and yet if we had fought for the Union Jack beyond
+ the mountains of Maine and in the lonely woods, we should, I
+ believe, in the end have said that the freedom fought for by the
+ American States was well won.
+
+ So keep this matter in your mind, for my mother and I will soon be
+ gone. She would not let me come to you,&mdash;I think I have never seen
+ her so disturbed as when I asked her, and she forbade me to write to
+ you; but I disobey her. Well, this is a sad business. I know my
+ mother has suffered. I know her married life was unhappy, and that
+ her husband&mdash;my father-died many a year ago, leaving a dark trail of
+ regret behind him; but, you see, I never knew my father. That was
+ all long ago, and it is a hundred times best forgotten.
+
+ Our ship sails for Virginia in three days, and I must go. I will
+ keep looking back to the prison where lies, charged with an evil
+ crime, of which he is not guilty, a young man for whom I shall
+ always carry the spirit of good friendship.
+
+ Do not believe all will not go well. Let us keep the courage of
+ our hearts and the faith of our souls&mdash;and I hope I always shall!
+ I believe in you, and, believing, I say good-bye. I say farewell in
+ the great hope that somehow, somewhere, we shall help each other on
+ the way of life. God be with you!
+ I am your friend,
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.&mdash;I beg you to remember that America is a good place for a
+ young man to live in and succeed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Dyck read the letter with a wonderful slowness. He realized that by happy
+ accident&mdash;it could be nothing else&mdash;Mrs. Llyn had been able to
+ keep from her daughter the fact that the man who had been killed in the
+ tavern by the river was her father. It was clear that the girl was kept
+ much to herself, read no newspapers, and saw few people, and that those
+ whom she saw had been careful to hold their peace about her close
+ relationship to Erris Boyne. None but the evil-minded would recall the
+ fact to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila&rsquo;s ignorance must not be broken by himself. He had done the right
+ thing&mdash;he had held his peace for the girl&rsquo;s sake, and he would hold
+ it to the end. Slowly he folded up the letter, pressed it to his lips, and
+ put it in the pocket over his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it near the time?&rdquo; asked Michael Clones of his friend, as they stood
+ in front of the prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His companion, who was seated on a stone, wrapped in dark-green coverings
+ faded and worn, and looking pinched with cold in the dour November day,
+ said, without lifting his head:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seven minutes, an&rsquo; he&rsquo;ll be out, God bless him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And save him and protect him!&rdquo; said Michael. &ldquo;He deserved punishment no
+ more than I did, and it&rsquo;s broke him. I&rsquo;ve seen the grey gather at his
+ temples, though he&rsquo;s only been in prison four years. He was condemned to
+ eight, but they&rsquo;ve let him free, I don&rsquo;t know why. Perhaps it was because
+ of what he told the government about the French navy. I&rsquo;ve seen the joy of
+ life sob itself down to the sour earth. When I took him the news of his
+ father&rsquo;s death, and told him the creditors were swallowing what was left
+ of Playmore, what do you think he did?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Christopher Dogan smiled; his eyes twinkled with a mirth which had
+ more pain than gaiety. &ldquo;God love you, I know what he did. He flung out his
+ hands, and said: &lsquo;Let it go! It&rsquo;s nothing to me.&rsquo; Michael, have I said
+ true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Almost his very words you&rsquo;ve used, and he flung out his hands, as you
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, he&rsquo;ll be changed; but they&rsquo;ve kept the clothes he had when he went
+ to prison, and he&rsquo;ll come out in them, I&rsquo;m thinking&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, no!&rdquo; interrupted Michael. &ldquo;That can&rsquo;t be, for his clothes was stole.
+ Only a week ago he sent to me for a suit of my own. I wouldn&rsquo;t have him
+ wear my clothes&mdash;he a gentleman! It wasn&rsquo;t fitting. So I sent him a
+ suit I bought from a shop, but he wouldn&rsquo;t have it. He would leave prison
+ a poor man, as a peasant in peasant&rsquo;s clothes. So he wrote to me. Here is
+ the letter.&rdquo; He drew from his pocket a sheet of paper, and spread it out.
+ &ldquo;See-read it. Ah, well, never mind,&rdquo; he added, as old Christopher shook
+ his head. &ldquo;Never mind, I&rsquo;ll read it to you!&rdquo; Thereupon he read the note,
+ and added: &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see him of the Calhouns risin&rsquo; high beyant poverty and
+ misfortune some day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Christopher nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad Miles Calhoun was buried on the hilltop above Playmore. He had
+ his day; he lived his life. Things went wrong with him, and he paid the
+ price we all must pay for work ill-done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There you&rsquo;re right, Christopher Dogan, and I remember the day the
+ downfall began. It was when him that&rsquo;s now Lord Mallow, Governor of
+ Jamaica, came to summon Miles Calhoun to Dublin. Things were never the
+ same after that; but I well remember one talk I had with Miles Calhoun
+ just before his death. &lsquo;Michael,&rsquo; he said to me, &lsquo;my family have had many
+ ups and downs, and some that bear my name have been in prison before this,
+ but never for killing a man out of fair fight.&rsquo; &lsquo;One of your name may be
+ in prison, sir,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;but not for killing a man out of fair fight. If
+ you believe he did, there&rsquo;s no death bad enough for you!&rsquo; He was silent
+ for a while; then at last he whispered Mr. Dyck&rsquo;s name, and said to me:
+ &lsquo;Tell him that as a Calhoun I love him, and as his father I love him ten
+ times more. For look you, Michael, though we never ran together, but
+ quarrelled and took our own paths, yet we are both Calhouns, and my heart
+ is warm to him. If my son were a thousand times a criminal, nevertheless I
+ would ache to take him by the hand.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! Look at the prison gate,&rdquo; said his companion, and stood up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the gates of the prison opened, the sun broke through the clouds and
+ gave a brilliant phase to the scene. Out of the gates there came slowly,
+ yet firmly, dressed in peasant clothes, the stalwart but faded figure of
+ Dyck Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terribly changed he was. He had entered prison with the flush upon his
+ cheek, the lilt of young manhood in his eyes, with hair black and hands
+ slender and handsome. There was no look of youth in his face now. It was
+ the face of a middle-aged man from which the dew of youth had vanished,
+ into which life&rsquo;s storms had come and gone. Though the body was held
+ erect, yet the head was thrust slightly forward, and the heavy eyebrows
+ were like a pent-house. The eyes were slightly feverish, and round the
+ mouth there crept a smile, half-cynical but a little happy. All freshness
+ was gone from his hands. One hung at his side, listless, corded; the other
+ doffed his hat in reply to the salute of his two humble friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the gates closed behind him he looked gravely at the two men, who were
+ standing not a foot apart. There swept slowly into his eyes, enlarging,
+ brightening them, the glamour of the Celtic soul. Of all Ireland, or all
+ who had ever known him, these two were the only ones welcoming him into
+ the world again! Michael Clones, with his oval red face, big nose, steely
+ eye, and steadfast bearing, had in him the soul of great kings. His hat
+ was set firmly on his head. His knee-breeches were neat, if coarse; his
+ stockings were clean. His feet were well shod, his coat worn, and he had
+ still the look that belongs to the well-to-do peasant. He was a figure of
+ courage and endurance. Dyck&rsquo;s hand went out to him, and a warm smile crept
+ to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael&mdash;ever&mdash;faithful Michael!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moisture came to Michael&rsquo;s eyes. He did not speak as he clasped the hand
+ Dyck offered him. Presently Dyck turned to old Christopher with a kindly
+ laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, old friend! You, too, come to see the stag set loose again? You&rsquo;re
+ not many, that&rsquo;s sure.&rdquo; A grim, hard look came into his face, but both
+ hands went out and caught the old man&rsquo;s shoulders affectionately. &ldquo;This is
+ no day for you to be waiting at prison&rsquo;s gates, Christopher; but there are
+ two men who believe in me&mdash;two in all the world. It isn&rsquo;t the
+ killing,&rdquo; he added after a moment&rsquo;s silence&mdash;&ldquo;it isn&rsquo;t the killing
+ that hurts so. If it&rsquo;s true that I killed Erris Boyne, what hurts most is
+ the reason why I killed him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One way or another&mdash;does it matter now?&rdquo; asked Christopher gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it that you think nothing matters since I&rsquo;ve paid the price, sunk
+ myself in shame, lost my friends, and come out with not a penny left?&rdquo;
+ asked Dyck. &ldquo;But yes,&rdquo; he added with a smile, wry and twisted, &ldquo;yes, I
+ have a little left!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew from his pocket four small pieces of gold, and gazed ironically at
+ them in his palm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look at them!&rdquo; He held out his hand, so that the two men could see the
+ little coins. &ldquo;Those were taken from me when I entered prison. They&rsquo;ve
+ been in the hands of the head of the jail ever since. They give them to me
+ now&mdash;all that&rsquo;s left of what I was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not all, sir,&rdquo; declared Michael. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s something left from
+ Playmore&mdash;there&rsquo;s ninety pounds, and it&rsquo;s in my pocket. It was got
+ from the sale of your sporting-kit. There was the boat upon the lake, the
+ gun, and all kinds of riffraff stuff not sold with Playmore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded and smiled. &ldquo;Good Michael!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he drew himself up stiffly, and blew in and out his breath as if with
+ the joy of living. For four hard years he had been denied the free air of
+ free men. Even when walking in the prison-yard, on cold or fair days, when
+ the air was like a knife or when it had the sun of summer in it, it still
+ had seemed to choke him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In prison he had read, thought, and worked much. They had at least done
+ that for him. The Attorney-General had given him freedom to work with his
+ hands, and to slave in the workshop like one whose living depended on it.
+ Some philanthropic official had started the idea of a workshop, and the
+ officials had given the best of the prisoners a chance to learn trades and
+ make a little money before they went out into the world. All that Dyck had
+ earned went to purchase things he needed, and to help his fellow prisoners
+ or their families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where was he now? The gap between the old life of nonchalance, frivolity,
+ fantasy, and excitement was as great as that between heaven and hell. Here
+ he was, after four years of prison, walking the highway with two of the
+ humblest creatures of Ireland, and yet, as his soul said, two of the best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stalking along in thought, he suddenly became conscious that Michael and
+ Christopher had fallen behind. He turned round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come on. Come on with me.&rdquo; But the two shook their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not fitting, you a Calhoun of Playmore!&rdquo; Christopher answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, list to me,&rdquo; said Dyck, for he saw the men could not bear his
+ new democracy. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m hungry. In four years I haven&rsquo;t had a meal that came
+ from the right place or went to the right spot. Is the little tavern, the
+ Hen and Chickens, on the Liffeyside, still going? I mean the place where
+ the seamen and the merchant-ship officers visit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, look you, Michael&mdash;get you both there, and order me as good a
+ meal of fish and chops and baked pudding as can be bought for money. Aye,
+ and I&rsquo;ll have a bottle of red French wine, and you two will have what you
+ like best. Mark me, we&rsquo;ll sit together there, for we&rsquo;re one of a kind.
+ I&rsquo;ve got to take to a life that fits me, an ex-jailbird, a man that&rsquo;s been
+ in prison for killing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the king&rsquo;s army,&rdquo; said Michael. &ldquo;They make good officers in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strange, half-sore smile came to Dyck&rsquo;s thin lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;give up these vain illusions. I was condemned for
+ killing a man not in fair fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t enter the army as an officer, and you should know it. The king
+ himself could set me up again; but the distance between him and me is ten
+ times round the world and back again!&rdquo; But then Dyck nodded kindly. It was
+ as if suddenly the martyr spirit had lifted him out of rigid, painful
+ isolation, and he was speaking from a hilltop. &ldquo;No, my friends, what is in
+ my mind now is that I&rsquo;m hungry. For four years I&rsquo;ve eaten the bread of
+ prison, and it&rsquo;s soured my mouth and galled my belly. Go you to that inn
+ and make ready a good meal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men started to leave, but old Christopher turned and stretched a
+ hand up and out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Son of Ireland, bright and black and black and bright may be the picture
+ of your life, but I see for you brightness and sweet faces, and music and
+ song. It&rsquo;s not Irish music, and it&rsquo;s not Irish song, but the soul of the
+ thing is Irish. Grim things await you, but you will conquer where the
+ eagle sways to the shore, where the white mist flees from the hills, where
+ heroes meet, where the hand of Moira stirs the blue and the witches flee
+ from the voice of God. There is honour coming to you in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having said his say, with hand outstretched, having thrilled the air with
+ the voice of one who had the soul of a prophet, the old man turned. Head
+ bent forward, he shuffled away with Michael Clones along the stony street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck watched them go, his heart beating hard, his spirit overwhelmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not far to the Castle, yet every footstep had a history. Now and
+ again he met people who knew him. Some bowed a little too profoundly, some
+ nodded; but not one stopped to speak to him, though a few among them were
+ people he had known well in days gone by. Was it the clothes he wore, or
+ was it that his star had sunk so low that none could keep it company? He
+ laughed to himself in scorn, and yet there kept ringing through his brain
+ all the time the bells of St. Anselm&rsquo;s, which he was hearing:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Oh, God, who is the sinner&rsquo;s friend,
+ Make clean my soul once more!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ When he arrived at the Castle walls he stood and looked long at them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I won&rsquo;t go in. I won&rsquo;t try to see him,&rdquo; he said at last. &ldquo;God, how
+ strange Ireland is to me! The soil of it, the trees of it, the grass of
+ it, are dearer than ever, but&mdash;I&rsquo;ll have no more of Ireland. I&rsquo;ll ask
+ for nothing. I&rsquo;ll get to England. What&rsquo;s Ireland to me? I must make my way
+ somewhere. There&rsquo;s one in there&rdquo;&mdash;he nodded towards the Castle&mdash;&ldquo;that
+ owes me money at cards. He should open his pockets to me, and see me safe
+ on a ship for Australia; but I&rsquo;ve had my fill of every one in Ireland.
+ There&rsquo;s nothing here for me but shame. Well, back I&rsquo;ll go to the Hen and
+ Chickens, to find a good dinner there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned and went back slowly along the streets by which he had come,
+ looking not to right nor left, thinking only of where he should go and
+ what he should do outside of Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door of the inn he sniffed the dinner Michael had ordered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man alive!&rdquo; he said as he entered the place and saw the two men with
+ their hands against the bright fire. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s only one way to live, and
+ that&rsquo;s the way I&rsquo;m going to try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;ll not try it alone, sir, if you please,&rdquo; said Michael. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+ be with you, if I may.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I&rsquo;ll bless you as you go,&rdquo; said Christopher Dogan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. WHITHER NOW?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ England was in a state of unrest. She had, as yet, been none too
+ successful in the war with France. From the king&rsquo;s castle to the poorest
+ slum in Seven Dials there was a temper bordering on despair. Ministries
+ came and went; statesmen rose and fell. The army was indifferently
+ recruited and badly paid. England&rsquo;s battles were fought by men of whom
+ many were only mercenaries, with no stake in England&rsquo;s rise or fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the army and navy there were protests, many and powerful, against the
+ smallness of the pay, while the cost of living had vastly increased. In
+ more than one engagement on land England had had setbacks of a serious
+ kind, and there were those who saw in the blind-eyed naval policy, in the
+ general disregard of the seamen&rsquo;s position, in the means used for
+ recruiting, the omens of disaster. The police courts furnished the navy
+ with the worst citizens of the country. Quota men, the output of the Irish
+ prisons&mdash;seditious, conspiring, dangerous&mdash;were drafted for the
+ king&rsquo;s service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The admiralty pursued its course of seizing men of the mercantile marine,
+ taking them aboard ships, keeping them away for months from the harbours
+ of the kingdom, and then, when their ships returned, denying them the
+ right of visiting their homes. The press-gangs did not confine their
+ activities to the men of the mercantile marine. From the streets after
+ dusk they caught and brought in, often after ill-treatment, torn from
+ their wives and sweethearts, knocked on the head for resisting, tradesmen
+ with businesses, young men studying for the professions, idlers, debtors,
+ out-of-work men. The marvel is that the British fleets fought as well as
+ they did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poverty and sorrow, loss and bereavement, were in every street, peeped
+ mournfully out of every window, lurked at street corners. From all parts
+ of the world adventurers came to renew their fortunes in the turmoil of
+ London, and every street was a kaleidoscope of faces and clothes and
+ colours, not British, not patriot, not national.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among these outlanders were Dyck Calhoun and Michael Clones. They had left
+ Ireland together in the late autumn, leaving behind them the stirrings of
+ the coming revolution, and plunging into another revolt which was to prove
+ the test and trial of English character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had left Ireland with ninety pounds in his pocket and many tons&rsquo;
+ weight of misery in his heart. In his bones he felt tragedies on foot in
+ Ireland which concession and good government could not prevent. He had
+ fled from it all. When he set his face to Holyhead, he felt that he would
+ never live in Ireland again. Yet his courage was firm as he made his way
+ to London, with Michael Clones&mdash;faithful, devoted, a friend and yet a
+ servant, treated like a comrade, yet always with a little dominance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The journey to London had been without event, yet as the coach rolled
+ through country where frost silvered the trees; where, in the early
+ morning, the grass was shining with dew; where the everlasting green
+ hedges and the red roofs of villages made a picture which pleased the eye
+ and stirred the soul, Dyck Calhoun kept wondering what would be his
+ future. He had no profession, no trade, no skill except with his sword;
+ and as he neared London Town&mdash;when they left Hendon&mdash;he saw the
+ smoke rising in the early winter morning and the business of life spread
+ out before him, brave and buoyant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As from the heights of Hampstead he looked down on the multitudinous area
+ called London, something throbbed at his heart which seemed like hope; for
+ what he saw was indeed inspiring. When at last, in the Edgware Road, he
+ drew near to living London, he turned to Michael Clones and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael, my lad, I think perhaps we&rsquo;ll find a footing here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they reached London, and quartered themselves in simple lodgings in
+ Soho. Dyck walked the streets, and now and then he paid a visit to the
+ barracks where soldiers were, to satisfy the thought that perhaps in the
+ life of the common soldier he might, after all, find his future. It was,
+ however, borne in upon him by a chance remark of Michael one day&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+ not young enough to be a recruit, and you wouldn&rsquo;t go alone without me,
+ would you?&rdquo;&mdash;that this way to a livelihood was not open to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His faithful companion&rsquo;s remark had fixed Dyck&rsquo;s mind against entering the
+ army, and then, towards the end of the winter, a fateful thing happened.
+ His purse containing what was left of the ninety pounds&mdash;two-fifths
+ of it&mdash;disappeared. It had been stolen, and in all the bitter days to
+ come, when poverty and misery ground them down, no hint of the thief, no
+ sign of the robber, was ever revealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, at last, a day when a letter came from Ireland. It was from the firm
+ in which Bryan Llyn of Virginia had been interested, for the letter had
+ been sent to their care, and Dyck had given them his address in London on
+ this very chance. It reached Dyck&rsquo;s hands on the day after the last penny
+ had been paid out for their lodgings, and they faced the streets,
+ penniless, foodless&mdash;one was going to say friendless. The handwriting
+ was that of Sheila Llyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a street corner, by a chemist&rsquo;s shop where a red light burned, Dyck
+ opened and read the letter. This is what Sheila had written to him.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ The time is near (I understand by a late letter to my mother from an
+ official) when you will be freed from prison and will face the world
+ again. I have not written you since your trial, but I have never
+ forgotten and never shall. I have been forbidden to write to you or
+ think of you, but I will take my own way about you. I have known
+ all that has happened since we left Ireland, through the letters my
+ mother has received. I know that Playmore has been sold, and I am
+ sorry.
+
+ Now that your day of release is near, and you are to be again a free
+ man, have you decided about your future? Is it to be in Ireland?
+ No, I think not. Ireland is no place for a sane and level man to
+ fight for honour, fame, and name. I hear that things are worse
+ there in every way than they have been in our lifetime.
+
+ After what has happened in any case, it is not a field that offers
+ you a chance. Listen to me. Ireland and England are not the only
+ places in the world. My uncle came here to Virginia a poor man.
+ He is now immensely rich. He had little to begin with, but he was
+ young like you&mdash;indeed, a little older than you&mdash;when he first came.
+ He invested wisely, worked bravely, and his wealth grew fast. No
+ man needs a fortune to start the business of life in this country.
+ He can get plenty of land for almost nothing; he can get credit for
+ planting and furnishing his land, and, if he has friends, the credit
+ is sure.
+
+ All America is ready for &ldquo;the likes of you.&rdquo; Think it over, and
+ meanwhile please know there has been placed with the firm in Dublin
+ money enough to bring you here with comfort. You must not refuse
+ it. Take it as a loan, for I know you will not take it as a gift.
+
+ I do not know the story of the killing, even as it was told in
+ court. Well, some one killed the man, but not you, and the truth
+ will out in time. If one should come to me out of the courts of
+ heaven, and say that there it was declared you were a rogue, I
+ should say heaven was no place for me. No, of one thing I am sure&mdash;
+ you never killed an undefended man. Wayward, wanton, reckless,
+ dissipated you may have been, but you were never depraved&mdash;never!
+
+ When you are free, lift up your shoulders to all the threats of
+ time, then go straight to the old firm where the money is, draw it,
+ take ship, and come here. If you let me know you are coming, I will
+ be there to meet you when you step ashore, to give you a firm hand-
+ clasp; to tell you that in this land there is a good place for you,
+ if you will win it.
+
+ Here there is little crime, though the perils of life are many.
+ There is Indian fighting; there are Indian depredations; and not a
+ dozen miles from where I sit men have been shot for crimes
+ committed. The woods are full of fighters, and pirates harry the
+ coast. On the wall of the room where I write there are carbines
+ that have done service in Indian wars and in the Revolutionary War;
+ and here out of the window I can see hundreds of black heads-slaves,
+ brought from Africa and the Indies, slaves whose devotion to my
+ uncle is very great. I hear them singing now; over the white-tipped
+ cotton-fields there flows the sound of it.
+
+ This plantation has none of the vices that belong to slavery. Here
+ life is complete. The plantation is one great workshop where trades
+ are learned and carried out-shoeing, blacksmithing, building,
+ working in wood and metal.
+
+ I am learning here&mdash;you see I am quite old, for I am twenty-one now
+ &mdash;the art of management. They tell me that when my uncle&rsquo;s day is
+ done&mdash;I grieve to think it is not far off&mdash;I must take the rod of
+ control. I work very, very hard. I have to learn figures and
+ finance; I have to see how all the work is done, so that I shall
+ know it is done right. I have had to discipline the supervisors and
+ bookkeepers, inspect and check the output, superintend the packing,
+ and arrange for the sale of the crop-yes, I arranged for the sale of
+ this year&rsquo;s crop myself. So I live the practical life, and when I
+ say that you could make your home here and win success, I do it with
+ some knowledge.
+
+ I beg you take ship for the Virginian coast. Enter upon the new
+ life here with faith and courage. Have no fear. Heaven that has
+ thus far helped you will guide you to the end.
+
+ I write without my mother&rsquo;s permission, but my uncle knows, and
+ though he does not approve, he does not condemn.
+
+ Once more good-bye, my dear friend, and God be with you.
+
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.&mdash;I wonder where you will read this letter. I hope it will
+ find you before your release. Please remember that she who wrote it
+ summons you from the darkness where you are to light and freedom
+ here.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Slowly Dyck folded up the letter, when he had read it, and put it in his
+ pocket. Then he turned with pale face and gaunt look to Michael Clones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that letter is from a lady. It comes from her new
+ home in Virginia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, aye, sir, I understand you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Then she doesn&rsquo;t know the
+ truth about her father?&rdquo; Dyck sighed heavily. &ldquo;No, Michael, she doesn&rsquo;t
+ know the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it would make any difference to her if she did know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would make all the difference to me, Michael. She says she wishes to
+ help me. She tells me that money&rsquo;s been sent to the big firm in
+ Dublin-money to take me across the sea to Virginia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael&rsquo;s face clouded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir. To Virginia&mdash;and what then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael, we haven&rsquo;t a penny in the world, you and I, but if I took one
+ farthing of that money I should hope you would kill me. I&rsquo;m hungry; we&rsquo;ve
+ had nothing to eat since yesterday; but if I could put my hands upon that
+ money here and now I wouldn&rsquo;t touch it. Michael, it looks as if we shall
+ have to take to the trade of the footpad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the days when Dyck Calhoun was on the verge of starvation in London,
+ evil naval rumours were abroad. Newspapers reported, one with
+ apprehension, another with tyrannous comment, mutinous troubles in the
+ fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the only demand at Spithead and the Nore had been for an increase
+ of pay, which had not been made since the days of Charles II. Then the
+ sailors&rsquo; wages were enough for comfortable support; but in 1797 through
+ the rise in the cost of living, and with an advance of thirty per cent. on
+ slops, their families could barely maintain themselves. It was said in the
+ streets, and with truth, that seamen who had fought with unconquerable
+ gallantry under Howe, Collingwood, Nelson, and the other big sea-captains,
+ who had borne suffering and wounds, and had been in the shadow of death&mdash;that
+ even these men damned a system which, in its stern withdrawal of their
+ class for long spaces of time from their own womenfolk, brought evil
+ results to the forecastle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldier was always in touch with his own social world, and he had
+ leave sufficient to enable him to break the back of monotony. He drank,
+ gambled, and orated; but his indulgences were little compared with the
+ debauches of able-bodied seamen when, after months of sea-life, they
+ reached port again. A ship in port at such a time was not a scene of
+ evangelical habits. Women of loose class, flower-girls, fruit-sellers, and
+ costermongers turned the forecastle into a pleasure-house where the
+ pleasures were not always secret; where native modesty suffered no
+ affright, and physical good cheer, with ribald paraphrase, was notable
+ everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did it happen, Michael?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, Dyck looked round the forecastle of the Ariadne with a
+ restless and inquisitive expression. Michael was seated a few feet away,
+ his head bent forward, his hands clasped around his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it don&rsquo;t matter one way or &lsquo;nother,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;but it was like
+ this. The night you got a letter from Virginia we was penniless; so at
+ last I went with my watch to the pawnbroker&rsquo;s. You said you&rsquo;d wait till I
+ got back, though you knew not where I was goin&rsquo;. When I got back, you were
+ still broodin&rsquo;. You were seated on a horse-block by the chemist&rsquo;s lamp
+ where you had read the letter. It&rsquo;s not for me to say of what you were
+ thinkin&rsquo;; but I could guess. You&rsquo;d been struck hard, and there had come to
+ you a letter from one who meant more to you than all the rest of the
+ world; and you couldn&rsquo;t answer it because things weren&rsquo;t right. As I stood
+ lookin&rsquo; at you, wonderin&rsquo; what to do, though, I had twelve shillin&rsquo;s in my
+ pocket from the watch I&rsquo;d pawned, there came four men, and I knew from
+ their looks they were recruitin&rsquo; officers of the navy. I saw what was in
+ their eyes. They knew&mdash;as why shouldn&rsquo;t they, when they saw a
+ gentleman like you in peasant clothes?&mdash;that luck had been agin&rsquo; us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the end would have been I don&rsquo;t know. It was you that solved the
+ problem, not them. You looked at the first man of them hard. Then you got
+ to your feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Michael,&rsquo; says you quietly, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m goin&rsquo; to sea. England&rsquo;s at war, and
+ there&rsquo;s work to do. So let&rsquo;s make for a king&rsquo;s ship, and have done with
+ misery and poverty.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you waved a hand to the man in command of the recruitin&rsquo; gang, and
+ presently stepped up to him and his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Sir,&rsquo; I said to you, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m not going to be pressed into the navy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;There&rsquo;s no pressin&rsquo;, Michael,&rsquo; you answered. &lsquo;We&rsquo;ll be quota men. We&rsquo;ll
+ do it for cash&mdash;for forty pounds each, and no other. You let them
+ have you as you are. But if you don&rsquo;t want to come,&rsquo; you added, &lsquo;it&rsquo;s all
+ the same to me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, I knew that was only talk. I knew you wanted me. Also I knew the
+ king&rsquo;s navy needed me, for men are hard to get. So, when they&rsquo;d paid us
+ the cash&mdash;forty pounds apiece&mdash;I stepped in behind you, and here
+ we are&mdash;here we are! Forty pounds apiece&mdash;equal to three years&rsquo;
+ wages of an ordinary recruit of the army. It ain&rsquo;t bad, but we&rsquo;re here for
+ three years, and no escape from it. Yes, here we are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, here we&rsquo;re likely to remain, Michael. There&rsquo;s only this to be said&mdash;we&rsquo;ll
+ be fighting the French soon, and it&rsquo;s easy to die in the midst of a great
+ fight. If we don&rsquo;t die, Michael, something else will turn up, maybe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s true, sir! They&rsquo;ll make an officer of you, once they see you
+ fight. This is no place for you, among the common herd. It&rsquo;s the dregs o&rsquo;
+ the world that comes to the ship&rsquo;s bottom in time of peace or war.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m the dregs of the world, Michael. I&rsquo;m the supreme dregs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow the letter from Virginia had decided Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s fate for him.
+ Here he was&mdash;at sea, a common sailor in the navy. He and Michael
+ Clones had eaten and drunk as sailors do, and they had realized that, as
+ they ate and drank on the River Thames, they would not eat and drink on
+ the watery fairway. They had seen the tank foul with age, from which water
+ was drawn for men who could not live without it, and the smell of it had
+ revolted Dyck&rsquo;s senses. They had seen the kegs of pickled meat, and they
+ had been told of the evil rations given to the sailors at sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ariadne had been a flag-ship in her day, the home of an admiral and
+ his staff. She carried seventy-four guns, was easily obedient to her swift
+ sail, and had a reputation for gallantry. From the first hour on board,
+ Dyck Calhoun had fitted in; with a discerning eye he had understood the
+ seamen&rsquo;s needs and the weaknesses of the system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The months he had spent between his exit from prison and his entrance into
+ the Ariadne had roughened, though not coarsened, his outward appearance.
+ From his first appearance among the seamen he had set himself to become
+ their leader. His enlistment was for three years, and he meant that these
+ three should prove the final success of this naval enterprise, or the
+ stark period in a calendar of tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life of the sailor, with its coarseness and drudgery, its inadequate
+ pay, its evil-smelling food, its maggoty bread, its beer drawn from casks
+ that once had held oil or fish, its stinking salt-meat barrels, the
+ hideous stench of the bilge-water&mdash;all this could in one sense be no
+ worse than his sufferings in jail. In spite of self-control, jail had been
+ to him the degradation of his hopes, the humiliation of his manhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had suffered cold, dampness, fever, and indigestion there, and it had
+ sapped the fresh fibre of life in him. His days in London had been cruel.
+ He had sought work in great commercial concerns, and had almost been
+ grateful when rejected. When his money was stolen, there seemed nothing to
+ do, as he said to Michael Clones, but to become a footpad or a pirate.
+ Then the stormy doors of the navy had opened wide to him; and as many a
+ man is tempted into folly or crime by tempestuous nature, so he, forlorn,
+ spiritually unkempt, but physically and mentally well-composed, in a
+ spirit of bravado, flung himself into the bowels of the fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the moment Dyck arrived on board the Ariadne he was a marked man.
+ Ferens, a disfranchised solicitor, who knew his story, spread the
+ unwholesome truth about him among the ship&rsquo;s people, and he received
+ attentions at once offensive and flattering. The best-educated of the
+ ship&rsquo;s hands approached him on the grievances with which the whole navy
+ was stirring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something had put a new spirit into the life of his majesty&rsquo;s ships; it
+ was, in a sense, the reflection of the French Revolution and Tom Paine&rsquo;s
+ Age of Reason. What the Americans had done in establishing a republic,
+ what France was doing by her revolution, got into the veins and minds of
+ some men in England, but it got into the veins and minds of the sailor
+ first; for, however low his origin, he had intercourse not given to the
+ average landsman. He visited foreign ports, he came in touch with other
+ elements than those of British life and character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the ships in the navy the Ariadne was the best that Dyck Calhoun
+ could have entered. Her officers were humane and friendly, yet firm; and
+ it was quite certain that if mutiny came they would be treated well. The
+ agitation on the Ariadne in support of the grievances of the sailors was
+ so moderate that, from the first, Dyck threw in his lot with it. Ferens,
+ the former solicitor, first came to him with a list of proposals, which
+ only repeated the demands made by the agitators at Spithead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re new among us,&rdquo; said Ferens to Dyck. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t quite know what
+ we&rsquo;ve been doing, I suppose. Some of us have been in the navy for two
+ years, and some for ten. There are men on this ship who could tell you
+ stories that would make your blood run cold&mdash;take my word for it.
+ There&rsquo;s a lot of things goin&rsquo; on that oughtn&rsquo;t to be goin&rsquo; on. The time
+ has come for reform. Have a look at this paper, and tell me what you
+ think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck looked at the pockmarked face of Ferens, whose record in the courts
+ was a bad one, and what he saw did not disgust him. It was as though
+ Ferens had stumbled and been badly hit in his fall, but there were no
+ signs of permanent evil in his countenance. He was square-headed,
+ close-cropped, clear-eyed, though his face was yellow where it was not
+ red, and his tongue was soft in his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck read the paper slowly and carefully. Then he handed it back without a
+ word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what have you got to say?&rdquo; asked Ferens. &ldquo;Nothing? Don&rsquo;t you think
+ that&rsquo;s a strong list of grievances and wrongs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded. &ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s pretty strong,&rdquo; he said, and he held up his hand.
+ &ldquo;Number One, wages and cost of living. I&rsquo;m sure we&rsquo;re right there. Cost of
+ living was down in King Charles&rsquo;s time, and wages were down accordingly.
+ Everything&rsquo;s gone up, and wages should go up. Number Two, the prize-money
+ scandal. I&rsquo;m with you there. I don&rsquo;t see why an officer should get two
+ thousand five hundred times as much as a seaman. There ought to be a
+ difference, but not so much. Number Three, the food ought to be better;
+ the water ought to be better. We can&rsquo;t live on rum, maggoty bread, and
+ foul water&mdash;that&rsquo;s sure. The rum&rsquo;s all right; it&rsquo;s powerful natural
+ stuff, but we ought to have meat that doesn&rsquo;t stink, and bread that isn&rsquo;t
+ alive. What&rsquo;s more, we ought to have lots of lime-juice, or there&rsquo;s no
+ protection for us when we&rsquo;re out at sea with the best meat taken by the
+ officers and the worst left to us; and with foul water and rotten food,
+ there&rsquo;s no hope or help. But, if we&rsquo;re going in for this sort of thing, we
+ ought to do it decently. We can&rsquo;t slap a government in the mouth, and we
+ can&rsquo;t kick an admiral without paying heavy for it in the end. If it&rsquo;s
+ wholesome petitioning you&rsquo;re up to, I&rsquo;m with you; but I&rsquo;m not if there&rsquo;s
+ to be knuckle-dusting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferens shrugged a shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Things are movin&rsquo;, and we&rsquo;ve got to take our stand now when the time is
+ ripe for it, or else lose it for ever. Over at Spithead they&rsquo;re gettin&rsquo;
+ their own way. The government are goin&rsquo; to send the Admiralty Board down
+ here, because our admiral say to them that it won&rsquo;t be safe goin&rsquo; unless
+ they do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what are we going to do here?&rdquo; asked Dyck. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the game of the
+ fleet at the Nore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferens replied in a low voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our men are goin&rsquo; to send out petitions&mdash;to the Admiralty and to the
+ House of Commons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you try Lord Howe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s not in command of a fleet now. Besides, petitions have been sent
+ him, and he&rsquo;s taken no notice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howe? No notice&mdash;the best admiral we ever had! I don&rsquo;t believe it,&rdquo;
+ declared Dyck savagely. &ldquo;Why, the whole navy believes in Howe. They
+ haven&rsquo;t forgotten what he did in &lsquo;94. He&rsquo;s as near to the seaman as the
+ seaman is to his mother. Who sent the petitions to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They weren&rsquo;t signed by names&mdash;they were anonymous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and all written by the same hand, I suppose.&rdquo; Ferens nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think that&rsquo;s so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you wonder, then, that Lord Howe didn&rsquo;t acknowledge them? But I&rsquo;m
+ still sure he acted promptly. He&rsquo;s a big enough friend of the sailor to
+ waste no time before doing his turn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferens shook his head morosely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may be,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but the petitions were sent weeks ago, and
+ there&rsquo;s no sign from Lord Howe. He was at Bath for gout. My idea is he
+ referred them to the admiral commanding at Portsmouth, and was told that
+ behind the whole thing is conspiracy&mdash;French socialism and English
+ politics. I give you my word there&rsquo;s no French agent in the fleet, and if
+ there were, it wouldn&rsquo;t have any effect. Our men&rsquo;s grievances are not new.
+ They&rsquo;re as old as Cromwell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a light of suspicion flashed into Ferens&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re with us, aren&rsquo;t you? You see the wrongs we&rsquo;ve suffered, and how
+ bad it all is! Yet you haven&rsquo;t been on a voyage with us. You&rsquo;ve only
+ tasted the life in harbour. Good God, this life is heaven to what we have
+ at sea! We don&rsquo;t mind the fightin&rsquo;. We&rsquo;d rather fight than eat.&rdquo; An evil
+ grin covered his face for a minute. &ldquo;Yes, we&rsquo;d rather fight than eat, for
+ the stuff we get to eat is hell&rsquo;s broil, God knows! Did you ever think
+ what the life of the sailor is, that swings at the top of a mast with the
+ frost freezin&rsquo; his very soul, and because he&rsquo;s slow, owin&rsquo; to the cold,
+ gets twenty lashes for not bein&rsquo; quicker? Well, I&rsquo;ve seen that, and a bad
+ sight it is. Did you ever see a man flogged? It ain&rsquo;t a pretty sight.
+ First the back takes the click of the whip like a damned washboard, and
+ you see the ridges rise and go purple and red, and the man has his breath
+ knocked clean out of him with every blow. Nearly every stroke takes off
+ the skin and draws the blood, and a dozen will make the back a ditch of
+ murder. Then the whipper stops, looks at the lashes, feels them tender
+ like, and out and down it comes again. When all the back is ridged and
+ scarred, the flesh, that looked clean and beautiful, becomes a bloody
+ mass. Some men get a hundred lashes, and that&rsquo;s torture and death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man I knew was flogged told me once that the first blow made his flesh
+ quiver in every nerve from his toe-nails to his finger-nails, and stung
+ his heart as if a knife had gone through his body. There was agony in his
+ lungs, and the time between each stroke was terrible, and yet the next
+ came too soon. He choked with the blood from his tongue, lacerated with
+ his teeth, and from his lungs, and went black in the face. I saw his back.
+ It looked like roasted meat; yet he had only had eighty strokes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The punishments are bad. Runnin&rsquo; the gauntlet is one of them. Each member
+ of the crew is armed with three tarry rope-yarns, knotted at the ends.
+ Then between the master-at-arms with a drawn sword and two corporals with
+ drawn swords behind, the thief, stripped to the waist, is placed. The
+ thing is started by a boatswain&rsquo;s mate givin&rsquo; him a dozen lashes. Then
+ he&rsquo;s slowly marched down the double line of men, who flog him as he
+ passes, and at the end of the line he receives another dose of the cat
+ from the boatswain&rsquo;s mate. The poor devil&rsquo;s body and head are flayed, and
+ he&rsquo;s sent to hospital and rubbed with brine till he&rsquo;s healed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the most horrible of all is flogging through the fleet. That&rsquo;s given
+ for strikin&rsquo; an officer, or tryin&rsquo; to escape. It&rsquo;s a sickenin&rsquo; thing. The
+ victim is lashed by his wrists to a capstan-bar in the ship&rsquo;s long-boat,
+ and all the ship&rsquo;s boats are lowered also, and each ship in harbour sends
+ a boat manned by marines to attend. Then, with the master-at-arms and the
+ ship&rsquo;s surgeon, the boat is cast off. The boatswain&rsquo;s mate begins the
+ floggin&rsquo;, and the boat rows away to the half-minute bell, the drummer
+ beatin&rsquo; the rogue&rsquo;s march. From ship to ship the long-boat goes, and the
+ punishment of floggin&rsquo; is repeated. If he faints, he gets wine or rum, or
+ is taken back to his ship to recover. When his back is healed he goes out
+ to get the rest of his sentence. Very few ever live through it, or if they
+ do it&rsquo;s only for a short time. They&rsquo;d better have taken the hangin&rsquo; that
+ was the alternative. Even a corpse with its back bare of flesh to the bone
+ has received the last lashes of a sentence, and was then buried in the mud
+ of the shore with no religious ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mind you, there&rsquo;s many a man gets fifty lashes that don&rsquo;t deserve them.
+ There&rsquo;s many men in the fleet that&rsquo;s stirred to anger at ill-treatment,
+ until now, in these days, the whole lot is ready to see the thing through&mdash;to
+ see the thing through&mdash;by heaven and by hell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pockmarked face had taken on an almost ghastly fervour, until it
+ looked like a distorted cartoon-vindictive, fanatical; but Dyck, on the
+ edge of the river of tragedy, was not ready to lose himself in the stream
+ of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he looked round the ship he felt a stir of excitement like nothing he
+ had ever known, though he had been brought up in a country where men were
+ by nature revolutionists, and where the sword was as often outside as
+ inside the scabbard. There was something terrible in a shipboard agitation
+ not to be found in a land-rising. On land there were a thousand miles of
+ open country, with woods and houses, caves and cliffs, to which men could
+ flee for hiding; and the danger of rebellion was less dominant. At sea, a
+ rebellion was like some beastly struggle in one room, beyond the walls of
+ which was everlasting nothingness. The thing had to be fought out, as it
+ were, man to man within four walls, and God help the weaker!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How many ships in the fleet are sworn to this agitation?&rdquo; Dyck asked
+ presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every one. It&rsquo;s been like a spread of infection; it&rsquo;s entered at every
+ door, looked out of every window. All the ships are in it, from the
+ twenty-six-hundred-tonners to the little five-hundred-and-fifty-tonners.
+ Besides, there are the Delegates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lowered his voice as he used these last words. &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; Dyck
+ answered, though he did not really know. &ldquo;But who is at the head?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, as bold a man as can be&mdash;Richard Parker, an Irishman. He was
+ once a junior naval officer, and left the navy and went into business; now
+ he is a quotaman, and leads the mutiny. Let me tell you that unless
+ there&rsquo;s a good round answer to what we demand, the Nore fleet&rsquo;ll have it
+ out with the government. He&rsquo;s a man of character, is Richard Parker, and
+ the fleet&rsquo;ll stand by him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long has he been at it?&rdquo; asked Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, weeks and weeks! It doesn&rsquo;t all come at once, the grip of the thing.
+ It began at Spithead, and it worked right there; and now it&rsquo;s workin&rsquo; at
+ the Nore, and it&rsquo;ll work and work until there isn&rsquo;t a ship and there isn&rsquo;t
+ a man that won&rsquo;t be behind the Delegates. Look. Half the seamen on this
+ ship have tasted the inside of a jail; and the rest come from the
+ press-gang, and what&rsquo;s left are just the ragged ends of street corners.
+ But&rdquo;&mdash;and here the man drew himself up with a flush&mdash;&ldquo;but
+ there&rsquo;s none of us that wouldn&rsquo;t fight to the last gasp of breath for the
+ navy that since the days of Elizabeth has sailed at the head of all the
+ world. Don&rsquo;t think we mean harm to the fleet. We mean to do it good. All
+ we want is that its masters shall remember we&rsquo;re human flesh and blood;
+ that we&rsquo;re as much entitled to good food and drink on sea as on land; and
+ that, if we risk our lives and shed our blood, we ought to have some share
+ in the spoils. We&rsquo;re a great country and we&rsquo;re a great people, but, by
+ God, we&rsquo;re not good to our own! Look at them there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned and waved a hand to the bowels of the ship where sailors traded
+ with the slop-sellers, or chaffered with women, or sat in groups and sang,
+ or played rough games which had no vital meaning; while here and there in
+ groups, with hands gesticulating, some fanatics declared their principles.
+ And the principles of every man in the Nore fleet so far were embraced in
+ the four words&mdash;wages, food, drink, prize-money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Ferens stopped short. &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a cry from the ship&rsquo;s side not far away, and then came little
+ bursts of cheering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Heaven, it&rsquo;s the Delegates comin&rsquo; here!&rdquo; he said. He held up a warning
+ palm, as though commanding silence, while he listened intently. &ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s
+ the Delegates. Now look at that crowd of seamen!&rdquo; He swung his hand
+ towards the bowels of the ship. Scores of men were springing to their
+ feet. Presently there came a great shouting and cheers, and then four new
+ faces appeared on deck. They were faces of intelligence, but one of them
+ had the enlightened look of leadership.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Judas, it&rsquo;s our leader, Richard Parker!&rdquo; declared Ferens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Dyck now saw was good evidence of the progress of the agitation.
+ There were officers of the Ariadne to be seen, but they wisely took no
+ notice of the breaches of regulation which followed the arrival of the
+ Delegates. Dyck saw Ferens speak to Richard Parker after the men had been
+ in conference with Parker and the Delegates, and then turn towards
+ himself. Richard Parker came to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are fellow countrymen,&rdquo; he said genially. &ldquo;I know your history. We are
+ out to make the navy better&mdash;to get the men their rights. I
+ understand you are with us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck bowed. &ldquo;I will do all possible to get reforms in wages and food put
+ through, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s good,&rdquo; said Parker. &ldquo;There are some petitions you can draft, and
+ some letters also to the Admiralty and to the Houses of Lords and
+ Commons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am at your service,&rdquo; said Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw his chance to secure influence on the Ariadne, and also to do good
+ to the service. Besides, he felt he might be able to check the worst
+ excesses of the agitation, if he got power under Parker. He was free from
+ any wish for mutiny, but he was the friend of an agitation which might end
+ as successfully as the trouble at Spithead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A fortnight later the mutiny at the Nore shook and bewildered the British
+ Isles. In the public journals and in Parliament it was declared that this
+ outbreak, like that at Spithead, was due partly to political strife, but
+ more extensively to agents of revolution from France and Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day after Richard Parker visited the Ariadne the fleet had been put
+ under the control of the seamen&rsquo;s Delegates, who were men of standing in
+ the ships, and of personal popularity. Their first act was to declare that
+ the fleet should not leave port until the men&rsquo;s demands were satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, Prime Minister, and government had received a shock greater than
+ that which had come with the announcement of American independence. The
+ government had armed the forts at Sheerness, had sent troops and guns to
+ Gravesend and Tilbury, and had declared war upon the rebellious fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the head of the Delegates, Richard Parker, with an officer&rsquo;s knowledge,
+ became a kind of bogus admiral, who, in interview with the real admirals
+ and the representatives of the Admiralty Board, talked like one who,
+ having power, meant to use it ruthlessly. The government had yielded to
+ the Spithead mutineers, giving pardon to all except the ringleaders, and
+ granting demands for increased wages and better food, with a promise to
+ consider the question of prize-money; but the Nore mutineers refused to
+ accept that agreement, and enlarged the Spithead demands. Admiral Buckner
+ arrived on board his flag-ship, the Sandwich, without the deference due to
+ an admiral, and then had to wait three hours for Parker and the Delegates
+ on the quarter-deck. At the interview that followed, while apologizing to
+ the admiral for his discourtesy, Parker wore his hat as quasi-admiral of
+ the fleet. The demands of the Delegates were met by reasoning on the part
+ of Buckner, but without effect: for the seamen of the Nore believed that
+ what Spithead could get by obstinacy the Nore could increase by contumacy;
+ and it was their firm will to bring the Lords of the Admiralty to their
+ knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The demands of the Nore Delegates, however, were rejected by the
+ Admiralty, and with the rejection two regiments of militia came from
+ Canterbury to reinforce the Sheerness garrison. The mutineers were allowed
+ to parade the town, so long as their conduct was decent, as Admiral
+ Buckner admitted it to be; but Parker declared that the presence of the
+ militia was an insult to the seamen in the Nore fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then ensued the beginning of the terror. When Buckner presented the
+ Admiralty&rsquo;s refusal to deal with the Delegates, there came quick response.
+ The reply of the mutineers was to row into Sheerness harbour and take away
+ with them eight gunboats lying there, each of which fired a shot at the
+ fort, as if to announce that the mutineers were now the avowed enemies of
+ the government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon the rebels ordered all their ships together at the Great Nore,
+ ranging them into two crescents, with the newly acquired gunboats at the
+ flanks. The attitude of the authorities gave the violent mutineers their
+ opportunity. Buckner&rsquo;s flag was struck from the mainmast-head of the
+ Sandwich, and the red flag was hoisted in its place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Delegates would not accept an official pardon for their mutiny through
+ Buckner. They demanded a deputation from the Admiralty, Parker saying that
+ no accommodation could occur without the appearance of the Lords of the
+ Admiralty at the Nore. Then followed threatening arrangements, and the
+ Delegates decided to blockade the Thames and the Medway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time that Dyck Calhoun&mdash;who, by consent of Richard
+ Parker, had taken control of the Ariadne&mdash;took action which was to
+ alter the course of his own life and that of many others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the beginning of the mutiny he had acted with decision, judgment,
+ and strength. He had agreed to the Ariadne joining the mutinous ships, and
+ he had skilfully constructed petitions to the Admiralty, the House of
+ Commons, and the King. His habit of thought, his knowledge of life, made
+ him a power. He believed that the main demands of the seamen were just,
+ and he made a useful organization to enforce them. It was only when he saw
+ the mutineers would not accept the terms granted to the Spithead rebels
+ that a new spirit influenced him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had determined to get control of the Ariadne. His gift as a speaker had
+ conquered his fellow-sailors, and the fact that he was an ex-convict gave
+ them confidence that he was no friend of the government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the first things he did, after securing his own pre-eminence on the
+ ship, was to get the captain and officers safely ashore. This he did with
+ skill, and the crew of the ship even cheered them as they left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of the regular officers of the Ariadne were left upon her, except
+ Greenock, the master of the ship, whose rank was below that of lieutenant,
+ and whose duties were many and varied under the orders of the captain.
+ Greenock chose to stay, though Dyck said he could go if he wished.
+ Greenock&rsquo;s reply was that it was his duty to stay, if the ship was going
+ to remain at sea, for no one else could perform his duties or do his work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, by vote, Dyck became captain of the ship. He did not, however, wear
+ a captain&rsquo;s uniform&mdash;blue coat, with white cuffs, flat gold buttons;
+ with lace at the neck, a white-sleeved waistcoat, knee-breeches, white
+ silk stockings, and a three-cornered black hat edged with gold lace and
+ ornamented with a cockade; with a black cravat, a straight dress sword, a
+ powdered cue tied with a black-silk ribbon, and epaulets of heavy gold
+ stuff completing the equipment. Dyck, to the end of his career at sea,
+ wore only the common seaman&rsquo;s uniform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck would not have accepted the doubtful honour had he not had long
+ purposes in view. With Ferens, Michael Clones, and two others whom Ferens
+ could trust, a plan was arranged which Dyck explained to his fellow-seamen
+ on the Ariadne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve come to the parting of the ways, brothers,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve all
+ become liable to death for mutiny. The pardon offered by the King has been
+ refused, and fresh demands are made. There, I think, a real wrong has been
+ done by our people. The Ariadne is well supplied with food and water. It
+ is the only ship with sufficiency. And why? Because at the beginning we
+ got provisions from the shore in time; also we got permission from Richard
+ Parker to fill our holds from two stopped merchant-ships. Well, the rest
+ of the fleet know what our food and drink fitment is. They know how safe
+ we are, and to-day orders have come to yield our provisions to the rest of
+ the fleet. That is, we, who have taken time by the forelock, must yield up
+ our good gettings to bad receivers. I am not prepared to do it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On shore the Admiralty have stopped the supply of provisions to us and to
+ all the fleet. Our men have been arrested at Gravesend, Tilbury, and
+ Sheerness. The fleet could not sail now if it wished; but one ship can
+ sail, and it is ours. The fleet hasn&rsquo;t the food to sail. On Richard
+ Parker&rsquo;s ship, the Sandwich, there is food only for a week. The others are
+ almost as bad. We are in danger of being attacked. Sir Erasmus Gower, of
+ the Neptune, has a fleet of warships, gunboats, and amateur armed vessels
+ getting ready to attack us. The North Sea fleet has come to help us, but
+ that doesn&rsquo;t save us. I&rsquo;ll say this&mdash;we are loyal men in this fleet,
+ otherwise our ships would have joined the enemy in the waters of France or
+ Holland. They can&rsquo;t go now, in any case. The men have lost heart.
+ Confidence in our cause has declined. The government sent Lords of the
+ Admiralty here, and they offered pardon if we accepted the terms of the
+ Spithead settlement. We declined the terms. That was a bad day for us, and
+ put every one of our heads in a noose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the moment we have a majority in men and ships; but we can&rsquo;t renew
+ our food or drink, or ammunition. The end is sure against us. Our original
+ agitation was just; our present obduracy is madness. This ship is
+ suspected. It is believed by the rest of the fleet&mdash;by ships like the
+ Invincible&mdash;that we&rsquo;re weak-kneed, selfish, and lacking in fidelity
+ to the cause. That&rsquo;s not true; but we have either to fight or to run, and
+ perhaps to do both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make no mistake. The government are not cowards; the Admiralty are
+ gentlemen of determination. If men like Admiral Howe support the Admiralty&mdash;Howe,
+ one of the best friends the seaman ever had&mdash;what do you think the
+ end will be? Have you heard what happened at Spithead? The seamen chivvied
+ Admiral Alan Gardner and his colleagues aboard a ship. He caught hold of a
+ seaman Delegate by the collar and shook him. They closed in on him. They
+ handled him roughly. He sprang on the hammock-nettings, put the noose of
+ the hanging-rope round his neck, and said to the men who advanced
+ menacingly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;If you will return to your duty, you may hang me at the yard-arm!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the kind of stuff our admirals are made of. We have no quarrel
+ with the majority of our officers. They&rsquo;re straight, they&rsquo;re honest, and
+ they&rsquo;re true to their game. Our quarrel is with Parliament and the
+ Admiralty; our struggle is with the people of the kingdom, who have not
+ seen to it that our wrongs are put right, that we have food to eat, water
+ to drink, and money to spend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He waved a hand, as though to sweep away the criticisms he felt must be
+ rising against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think because I&rsquo;ve spent four years in prison under the sternest
+ discipline the world offers, and have never been a seaman before, that I&rsquo;m
+ not fitted to espouse your cause. By heaven, I am&mdash;I am&mdash;I am&mdash;I
+ know the wrongs you&rsquo;ve suffered. I&rsquo;ve smelled the water you drink. I&rsquo;ve
+ tasted the rotten meat. I&rsquo;ve seen the honest seaman who has been for years
+ upon the main&mdash;I&rsquo;ve seen the scars upon his back got from a brutal
+ officer who gave him too big a job to do, and flogged him for not doing
+ it. I know of men who, fevered with bad food, have fallen, from the
+ mainmast-head, or have slipped overboard, glad to go, because of the
+ wrongs they&rsquo;d suffered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what our fate will be, and then I&rsquo;ll put a question to you.
+ We must either give up our stock of provisions or run for it. Parker and
+ the other Delegates proclaim their comradeship; yet they have hidden from
+ us the king&rsquo;s proclamation and the friendly resolutions of the London
+ merchants. I say our only hope is to escape from the Thames. I know that
+ skill will be needed, but if we escape, what then? I say if we escape,
+ because, as we sail out, orders will be given for the other mutiny ships
+ to attack us. We shall be fired on; we shall risk our lives. You&rsquo;ve done
+ that before, however, and will do it again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have to work out our own problem and fight our own fight. Well, what I
+ want to know is this&mdash;are we to give in to the government, or do we
+ stand to be hammered by Sir Erasmus Gower? Remember what that means. It
+ means that if we fight the government ships, we must either die in battle,
+ or die with the ropes round our necks. There is another way. I&rsquo;m not
+ inclined to surrender, or to stand by men who have botched our business
+ for us. I&rsquo;m for making for the sea, and, when I get there, I&rsquo;m for
+ striking for the West Indies, where there&rsquo;s a British fleet fighting
+ Britain&rsquo;s enemies, and for joining in and fighting with them. I&rsquo;m for
+ getting out of this river and away from England. It&rsquo;s a bold plan, but
+ it&rsquo;s a good one. I want to know if you&rsquo;re with me. Remember, there&rsquo;s
+ danger getting out, and there&rsquo;s danger when and if we get out. The other
+ ships may pursue us. The Portsmouth fleet may nab us. We may be caught,
+ and, if we are, we must take the dose prepared for us; but I&rsquo;m for making
+ a strong rush, going without fear, and asking no favour. I won&rsquo;t surrender
+ here; it&rsquo;s too cowardly. I want to know, will you come to the open sea
+ with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were many shouts of assent from the crowd, though here and there
+ came a growl of dissent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not all of you are willing to come with me,&rdquo; Dyck continued vigorously.
+ &ldquo;Tell me, what is it you expect to get by staying here? You&rsquo;re famished
+ when you&rsquo;re not poisoned; you&rsquo;re badly clothed and badly fed; you&rsquo;re kept
+ together by flogging; you&rsquo;re treated worse than a convict in jail or a
+ victim in a plague hospital. You&rsquo;re not paid as well as your grandfathers
+ were, and you&rsquo;re punished worse. Here, on the Ariadne, we&rsquo;re not skulkers.
+ We don&rsquo;t fear our duty; we are loyal men. Many of you, on past voyages,
+ fighting the enemy, lived on burgoo and molasses only, with rum and foul
+ water to drink. On the other ships there have been terrible cruelty and
+ offence. Surgeons have neglected and ill-treated sick men and embezzled
+ provisions and drinks intended for the invalids. Many a man has died
+ because of the neglect of the ship&rsquo;s surgeons; many have been kicked about
+ the head and beaten, and haven&rsquo;t dared to go on the sick list for fear of
+ their officers. The Victualling Board gets money to supply us with food
+ and drink according to measure. They get the money for a full pound and a
+ full gallon, and we get fourteen ounces of food and seven pints of liquor,
+ or less. Well, what do you say, friends, to being our own Victualling
+ Board out in the open sea, if we can get there?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We may have to fight when we get out; but I&rsquo;m for taking the Ariadne into
+ the great world battle when we can find it. This I want to ask&mdash;isn&rsquo;t
+ it worth while making a great fight in our own way, and showing that
+ British seamen can at once be mutineers and patriots? We have a pilot who
+ knows the river. We can go to the West Indian Islands, to the British
+ fleet there. It&rsquo;s doom and death to stay here; and it may be doom and
+ death to go. If we try to break free, and are fired on, the Admiralty may
+ approve of us, because we&rsquo;ve broken away from the rest. See now, isn&rsquo;t
+ that the thing to do? I&rsquo;m for getting out. Who&rsquo;s coming with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a burly sailor pushed forward. He had the head of a viking. His
+ eyes were strong with enterprise. He had a hand like a ham, with long,
+ hairy fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ve put the thing so there can be only one answer
+ to it. As for me, I&rsquo;m sick of the way this mutiny has been bungled from
+ first to last. There&rsquo;s been one good thing about it only&mdash;we&rsquo;ve got
+ order without cruelty, we&rsquo;ve rebelled without ravagement; but we&rsquo;ve missed
+ the way, and we didn&rsquo;t deal with the Admiralty commissioners as we ought.
+ So I&rsquo;m for joining up with the captain here&rdquo;&mdash;he waved a hand towards
+ Dyck&mdash;&ldquo;and making for open sea. As sure as God&rsquo;s above, they&rsquo;ll try
+ to hammer us; but it&rsquo;s the only way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held a handkerchief-a dirty, red silk thing. &ldquo;See,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;the
+ wind is right to take us out. The other ships won&rsquo;t know what we&rsquo;re going
+ to do until we start. I&rsquo;m for getting off. I&rsquo;m a pressed man. I haven&rsquo;t
+ seen my girl for five years, and they won&rsquo;t let me free in port to go and
+ see her. Nothing can be worse than what we have to suffer now, so let&rsquo;s
+ make a break for it. That&rsquo;s what I say. Come, now, lads, three cheers for
+ Captain Calhoun!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A half-hour later, on the captain&rsquo;s deck, Dyck gave the order to pass
+ eastward. It was sunset when they started, and they had not gone a
+ thousand yards before some of the mutineering ships opened fire on the
+ Ariadne. The breeze was good, however, and she sailed bravely through the
+ leaden storm. Once twice&mdash;thrice she was hit, but she sped on. Two
+ men were killed and several were wounded. Sails were torn, and the high
+ bulkheads were broken; but, without firing a shot in reply, the Ariadne
+ swung clear at last of the hostile ships and reached safe water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the edge of the open sea Dyck took stock of the position. The Ariadne
+ had been hit several times, and the injury done her was marked. Before
+ morning the dead seamen were sunk in watery graves, and the wounded were
+ started back to health again. By daylight the Ariadne was well away from
+ the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing Dyck had done, after escaping from the river, was to study
+ the wants of the Ariadne and make an estimate for the future with
+ Greenock, the master. He calculated they had food and water enough to last
+ for three months, even with liberal provisioning. Going among the crew, he
+ realized there was no depression among them; that they seemed to care
+ little where they were going. It was, however, quite clear they wished to
+ fight&mdash;to fight the foes of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew his task was a hard one, and that all efforts at discipline would
+ have dangers. He knew, also, that he could have no authority, save
+ personality and success. He set himself, therefore, to win the confidence
+ of Greenock and the crew, and he began discipline at once. He knew that a
+ reaction must come; that the crew, loose upon their own trail, would come
+ to regret the absence of official command. He realized that many of them
+ would wish to return to the fleet at the Nore, but while the weather was
+ good he did not fear serious trouble. The danger would come in rough
+ weather or on a becalmed sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had passed Beachy Head in the mist. They had seen no battle-ship, and
+ had sighted no danger, as they made their way westward through the
+ Channel. There had been one moment of anxiety. That was when they passed
+ Portsmouth, and had seen in the far distance, to the right of them, the
+ mastheads of Admiral Gardner&rsquo;s fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was here that Dyck&rsquo;s orderly, Michael Clones, was useful. He brought
+ word of murmuring among the more brutish of the crew, that some of them
+ wished to join Gardner&rsquo;s fleet. At this news, Dyck went down among the
+ men. It was an unusual thing to do, but it brought matters to an issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the few dissatisfied sailors was one Nick Swaine, who had been the
+ cause of more trouble on the Ariadne than any other. He had a quarrelsome
+ mind; he had been influenced by the writings of Wolfe Tone, the Irish
+ rebel. One of the secrets of Dyck&rsquo;s control of the crew was the fact that
+ he was a gentleman, and was born in the ruling class, and this was
+ anathema to Nick Swaine. His view of democracy was ignorance controlling
+ ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By nature he was insolent, but under the system of control pursued by the
+ officers of the Ariadne, previous to the mutiny, he had not been able to
+ do much. The system had bound him down. He had been the slave of habit,
+ custom, and daily duty. His record, therefore, was fairly clean until two
+ days after the escape from the Thames and the sighting of the Portsmouth
+ fleet. Then all his revolutionary spirit ran riot in him. Besides, the
+ woman to whom he had become attached at the Nore had been put ashore on
+ the day Dyck gained control. It roused his enmity now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Dyck came down, he had the gunners called to him, admonishing them
+ that drill must go on steadily, and promising them good work to do. Then
+ he turned to the ordinary seamen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment Nick Swaine strode forward within a dozen feet of Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look there!&rdquo; he said, and he jerked a finger towards the distant
+ Portsmouth fleet. &ldquo;Look there! You&rsquo;ve passed that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck shrugged a shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I meant to pass it,&rdquo; he said quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give orders to make for it,&rdquo; said Nick with a sullen eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall not. And look you, my man, keep a civil tongue to me, who command
+ this ship, or I&rsquo;ll have you put in irons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have me put in irons!&rdquo; Swaine cried hotly. &ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t Dublin jail. You
+ can&rsquo;t do what you like here. Who made you captain of this ship?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those who made me captain will see my orders carried out. Now, get you
+ back with the rest, or I&rsquo;ll see if they still hold good.&rdquo; Dyck waved a
+ hand. &ldquo;Get back when I tell you, Swaine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you&rsquo;ve turned the ship to the Portsmouth fleet I&rsquo;ll get back, and
+ not till then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck made a motion of the hand to some boatswains standing by. Before they
+ could arrest him, Swaine flung himself towards Dyck with a knife in his
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck&rsquo;s hand was quicker, however. His pistol flung out, a shot was fired,
+ and the knife dropped from the battered fingers of Nick Swaine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have his wounds dressed, then put him in irons,&rdquo; Dyck commanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that moment, in good order and in good weather, the Ariadne sped on
+ her way westward and southward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps no mutineer in the history of the world ever succeeded, as did
+ Dyck Calhoun, in holding control over fellow-mutineers on the journey from
+ the English Channel to the Caribbean Sea. As a boy, Dyck had been an
+ expert sailor, had studied the machinery of a man-of-war, and his love of
+ the sea was innate and deep-seated; but his present success was based upon
+ more than experience. Quite apart from the honour of his nature, prison
+ had deepened in him the hatred of injustice. In soul he was bitter; in
+ body he was healthy, powerful, and sane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly, sternly, yet tactfully, he had broken down the many customs of
+ ship life injurious to the welfare of the men. Under his system the
+ sailors had good coffee for breakfast, instead of a horrible mixture made
+ of burnt biscuits cooked in foul water. He gave the men pea-soup and rice
+ instead of burgoo and the wretched oatmeal mess which was the staple thing
+ for breakfast. He saw to it that the meat was no longer a hateful,
+ repulsive mass, two-thirds bone and gristle, and before it came into the
+ cook&rsquo;s hands capable of being polished like mahogany. He threatened the
+ cook with punishment if he found the meals ill-cooked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the journey to the West Indian seas there had been only three
+ formal floggings. His attitude was not that of the commander who declared:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will see the man&rsquo;s backbone, by God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wished to secure discipline without cruelty. His greatest difficulty,
+ at the start, was in making lieutenants. That he overcame by appointing
+ senior midshipmen before the Ariadne was out of the Channel. He offered a
+ lieutenancy to Ferens, who had the courage to decline it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make me purser,&rdquo; remarked Ferens. &ldquo;Make me purser, and I&rsquo;ll do the job
+ justly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the purser of the Ariadne had been sent to the sick-bay and was likely
+ to die (and did die subsequently), Ferens was put into his
+ uniform-three-cornered cocked hat, white knee-breeches, and white
+ stockings. The purser of a man-of-war was generally a friend of the
+ captain, going with him from ship to ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the common sailors, on the whole, Dyck had little doubt. He had
+ informed them that, whatever happened, they should not be in danger; that
+ the ship should not join the West Indian fleet unless every man except
+ himself received amnesty. If the amnesty was not granted, then one of two
+ things should happen&mdash;the ship must make for a South American port,
+ or she must fight. Fighting would not frighten these men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was rather among the midshipmen that Dyck looked for trouble.
+ Sometimes, with only two years&rsquo; training at Gosport, a youngster became a
+ midshipman on first going to sea, and he could begin as early as eleven
+ years of age. A second-rate ship like the Ariadne carried eighteen
+ midshipmen; and as six lieutenants were appointed from them, only twelve
+ remained. From these twelve, in the dingy after-cockpit, where the
+ superficial area was not more than twelve square feet; where the air was
+ foul, and the bilges reeked with a pestilential stench; where the purser&rsquo;s
+ store-room near gave out the smell of rancid butter and poisonous cheese;
+ where the musty taint of old ropes came to them, there was a spirit of
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck was right in thinking that in the midshipmen&rsquo;s dismal berth the first
+ flowers of revolt to his rule would bloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sailors, even as low as the pig-sty men, had some idea of fair play; and
+ as the weeks that had passed since they left the Thames had given them
+ better food and drink, and lessened the severity of those above them, real
+ obedience had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not strange that the ship ran well, for all the officers under the
+ new conditions, except Dyck himself, had had previous experience. The old
+ lieutenants had gone, but midshipmen, who in any case were trained, had
+ taken their places. The rest of the ship&rsquo;s staff were the same, except the
+ captain; and as Dyck had made a friend of Greenock the master, a man of
+ glumness, the days were peaceful enough during the voyage to the Caribbean
+ Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The majority saw that every act of Dyck had proved him just and capable.
+ He had rigidly insisted on gun practice; he had keyed up the marines to a
+ better spirit, and churlishness had been promptly punished. He was, in
+ effect, what the sailors called a &ldquo;rogue,&rdquo; or a &ldquo;taut one&rdquo;&mdash;seldom
+ smiling, gaunt of face but fearless of eye, and with a body free from
+ fatigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the weather grew warmer and the days longer, and they drew near to the
+ coast of Jamaica, a stir of excitement was shown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;d like to know what I&rsquo;m going to do, Michael, I suppose?&rdquo; said Dyck
+ one morning, as he drank his coffee and watched the sun creeping up the
+ sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, in three days we shall know what&rsquo;s to become of us, and I have no
+ doubt or fear. This ship&rsquo;s a rebel, but it&rsquo;s returning to duty. We&rsquo;ve
+ shown them how a ship can be run with good food and drink and fair
+ dealing, and, please God, we&rsquo;ll have some work to do now that belongs to a
+ man-of-war!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I know what you mean to do,&rdquo; replied Michael. &ldquo;You mean to get all
+ of us off by giving yourself up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, some one has to pay for what we&rsquo;ve done, Michael.&rdquo; A dark, ruthless
+ light came into Dyck&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;Some one&rsquo;s got to pay.&rdquo; A grim smile crossed
+ his face. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve done the forbidden thing; we&rsquo;ve mutinied and taken to the
+ open sea. We were fired on by the other mutiny ships, and that will help
+ our sailors, but it won&rsquo;t help me. I&rsquo;m the leader. We ought, of course, to
+ have taken refuge with the nearest squadron of the king&rsquo;s ships. Well,
+ I&rsquo;ve run my luck, and I&rsquo;ll have to pay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He scratched his chin with a thumb-nail-a permanent physical trait. &ldquo;You
+ see, the government has pardoned all the sailors, and will hang only the
+ leaders. I expect Parker is hung already. Well, I&rsquo;m the leader on the
+ Ariadne. I&rsquo;m taking this ship straight to his majesty&rsquo;s West Indian fleet,
+ in thorough discipline, and I&rsquo;ll hand it over well-found, well-manned,
+ well-officered, on condition that all go free except myself. I came aboard
+ a common sailor, a quota man, a prison-bird, penniless. Well, have I shown
+ that I can run a ship? Have I learned the game of control? During the
+ weeks we&rsquo;ve been at sea, bursting along, have I proved myself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael smiled. &ldquo;What did I say to you the first night on board, sir?
+ Didn&rsquo;t I say they&rsquo;d make an officer of you when they found out what brains
+ you had? By St. Patrick, you&rsquo;ve made yourself captain with the good-will
+ of all, and your iron hand has held the thing together. You&rsquo;ve got a great
+ head, too, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck looked at him with a face in which the far future showed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael, I&rsquo;ve been lucky. I&rsquo;ve had good men about me. God only knows what
+ would have happened to me if the master hadn&rsquo;t been what he is&mdash;a
+ gentleman who knows his job-aye, a gentleman through and through! If he
+ had gone against me, Michael&rdquo;&mdash;he flicked a finger to the sky&mdash;&ldquo;well,
+ that much for my chances! I&rsquo;d have been dropped overboard, or stabbed in
+ my cabin, as was that famous Captain Pigot, son of an admiral, who had as
+ much soul as you&rsquo;d find in a stone-quarry. When two men had dropped from
+ the masts, hurrying to get down because of his threat that the last man
+ should be thrashed&mdash;when the two men lay smashed to pieces at his
+ feet, Pigot said: &lsquo;Heave the lubbers overboard.&rsquo; That night, Michael, the
+ seamen rose, crept to his cabin, stabbed him to death, pitched his body
+ overboard, put his lieutenants to sea in open boats, and then ran away to
+ South America. Well, I&rsquo;ve escaped that fate, because this was a good ship,
+ and all the officers knew their business, and did it without cruelty. I&rsquo;ve
+ been well served. It was a great thing making the new lieutenants from the
+ midshipmen. There never was a better lot on board a ship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael&rsquo;s face clouded. &ldquo;Sir, that&rsquo;s true. The new lieutenants have done
+ their work well, but them that&rsquo;s left behind in the midshipmen&rsquo;s berth&mdash;do
+ you think they&rsquo;re content? No, sir. The only spot on board this ship where
+ there lurks an active spirit against you is in the midshipmen&rsquo;s berth.
+ Mischief&rsquo;s there, and that&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s brought me to you now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck smiled. &ldquo;I know that. I&rsquo;ve had my eye on the midshipmen. I&rsquo;ve never
+ trusted them. They&rsquo;re a hard lot; but if the rest of the ship is with me,
+ I&rsquo;ll deal with them promptly. They&rsquo;re not clever or bold enough to do
+ their job skilfully. They&rsquo;ve got some old hands down there&mdash;hammock-men,
+ old stagers of the sea that act as servants to them. What line do they
+ take?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael laughed softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What I know I&rsquo;ve got from two of them, and it is this&mdash;the young
+ gentlemen&rsquo;ll try to get control of the ship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cynicism deepened in Dyck&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get control of the ship, eh? Well, it&rsquo;ll be a new situation on a king&rsquo;s
+ ship if midshipmen succeed where the rest dare not try. Now, mark what I&rsquo;m
+ going to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He called, and a marine showed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The captain&rsquo;s compliments to the master, and his presence here at once.
+ Michael,&rdquo; he continued presently, &ldquo;what fools they are! They&rsquo;re scarcely a
+ baker&rsquo;s dozen, and none of them has skill to lead. Why, the humblest
+ sailor would have more sense than to start a revolt, the success of which
+ depends upon his personal influence, and the failure of which must end in
+ his own ruin. Does any one think they&rsquo;re the kind to lead a mutiny within
+ a mutiny? Listen to me I&rsquo;m not cruel, but I&rsquo;ll put an end to this plot.
+ We&rsquo;re seven hundred on this ship, and she&rsquo;s a first-class sailer. I
+ warrant no ship ever swam the seas that looks better going than she does.
+ So we&rsquo;ve got to see that her, record is kept clean as a mutineer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the master appeared. He saluted. &ldquo;Greenock,&rdquo; said Dyck, &ldquo;I
+ wonder if you&rsquo;ve noticed the wind blowing chilly from the midshipmen&rsquo;s
+ berth.&rdquo; A lurking devilish humour shot from Greenock&rsquo;s eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, I&rsquo;ve smelled that wind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greenock, we&rsquo;re near the West Indian Islands. Before we eat many meals
+ we&rsquo;ll see land. We may pass French ships, and we may have to fight. Well,
+ we&rsquo;ve had a good running, master; so I&rsquo;ll tell you what I mean to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then briefly repeated what he had said to Michael, and added
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greenock, in this last to-do, I shall be the only man in danger. The
+ king&rsquo;s amnesty covers every one except the leaders&mdash;that lets you
+ off. The Delegate of the Ariadne is aboard the Invincible, if he&rsquo;s not
+ been hanged. I&rsquo;m the only one left on the Ariadne. I&rsquo;ve had a good time,
+ Greenock&mdash;thanks to you, chiefly. I think the men are ready for
+ anything that&rsquo;ll come; but I also think we should guard against a revolt
+ of the midshipmen by healthy discipline now. Therefore I&rsquo;ll instruct the
+ lieutenants to spread-eagle every midshipman for twelve hours. There&rsquo;s a
+ stiff wind; there&rsquo;s a good stout spray, and the wind and spray should cool
+ their hot souls. Meanwhile, though without food, they shall have water as
+ they need it. If at the end of the twelve hours any still seems to be
+ difficult, give him another twelve. Look!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stretched out a hand to the porthole on his right. &ldquo;Far away in front
+ are islands. You cannot see them yet, but those little thickening mists in
+ the distance mean land. Those are the islands in front of the Windward
+ Passage. I think it would be a good lesson for the young gentlemen to be
+ spread-eagled against the mists of their future. It shall be&rsquo; done at
+ once; and pass the word why it&rsquo;s done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour later there was laughter in every portion of the ship, for the
+ least popular members of the whole personnel were being dragooned into
+ discipline. The sailors had seen individual midshipmen spread-eagled and
+ mastheaded, while all save those they could bribe were forbidden to bring
+ them drink or food; but here was a whole body of junior officers, punished
+ en masse, as it were, lashed to the rigging and taking the wind and the
+ spray in their teeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the day was over, the whole ship was alive with anticipation, for,
+ in the far distance, could be seen the dark blue and purplish shadows
+ which told of land; and this brought the minds of all to the end of their
+ journey, with thoughts of the crisis near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Word had been passed that all on board were considered safe&mdash;all
+ except the captain who had manoeuvred them to the entrance of the
+ Caribbean Sea. Had he been of their own origin, they would not have placed
+ so much credence in the rumour; but coming as he did of an ancient Irish
+ family, although he had been in jail for killing, the traditional respect
+ for the word of a gentleman influenced them. When a man like Ferens, on
+ the one hand, and the mutineer whose fingers had been mutilated by Dyck in
+ the Channel, on the other&mdash;when these agreed to bend themselves to
+ the rule of a usurper, some idea of Calhoun&rsquo;s power may be got.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this day, with the glimmer of land in the far distance, the charges of
+ all the guns were renewed. Also word was passed that at any moment the
+ ship must be cleared for action. Down in the cockpit the tables were got
+ ready by the surgeon and the loblolly-boys; the magazines were opened, and
+ the guards were put on duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orders were issued that none should be allowed to escape active share in
+ the coming battle; that none should retreat to the orlop deck or the lower
+ deck; that the boys should carry the cartridge-cases handed to them from
+ the magazine under the cover of their coats, running hard to the guns. The
+ twenty-four-pounders-the largest guns in use at the time-the
+ eighteen-pounders, and the twelve-pounder guns were all in good order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bags of iron balls called grape-shot-the worst of all&mdash;varying in
+ size from sixteen to nine balls in a bag, were prepared. Then the
+ canister, which produced ghastly murder, chain-shot to bring down masts
+ and spars, langrel to fire at masts and rigging, and the dismantling shot
+ to tear off sails, were all made ready. The muskets for the marines, the
+ musketoons, the pistols, the cutlasses, the boarding-pikes, the axes or
+ tomahawks, the bayonets and sailors&rsquo; knives, were placed conveniently for
+ use. A bevy of men were kept busy cleaning the round shot of rust, and
+ there was not a man on the ship who did not look with pride at the guns,
+ in their paint of grey-blue steel, with a scarlet band round the muzzle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the right of the Ariadne was the coast of Cuba; to the left was the
+ coast of Haiti, both invisible to the eye. Although the knowledge that
+ they were nearing land had already given the officers and men a feeling of
+ elation, the feeling was greatly intensified as they came through the Turk
+ Island Passage, which is a kind of gateway to the Windward Passage between
+ Cuba and Haiti. The glory of the sunny, tropical world was upon the ship
+ and upon the sea; it crept into the blood of every man, and the sweet
+ summer weather gave confidence to their minds. It was a day which only
+ those who know tropical and semitropical seas can understand. It had the
+ sense of soaking luxury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his cabin, with the ship&rsquo;s chart on the table before him, Dyck Calhoun
+ studied the course of the Ariadne. The wind was fair and good, the
+ sea-birds hovered overhead. From a distant part of the ship came the sound
+ of men&rsquo;s voices in song. They were singing &ldquo;Spanish Ladies&rdquo;:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;We hove our ship to when the wind was sou&rsquo;west, boys,
+ We hove our ship to for to strike soundings clear;
+ Then we filled our main tops&rsquo;l and bore right away, boys,
+ And right up the Channel our course did we steer.
+
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll rant and we&rsquo;ll roar like true British sailors,
+ We&rsquo;ll range and we&rsquo;ll roam over all the salt seas,
+ Until we strike soundings in the Channel of old England
+ From Ushant to Scilly &lsquo;tis thirty-five leagues.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Dyck raised his head, and a smile came to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you sing of a Channel, my lads, but it&rsquo;s a long way there, as you&rsquo;ll
+ find. I hope to God they give us some fighting!... Well, what is it?&rdquo; he
+ asked of a marine who appeared in his doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The master of the ship begs to see you, sir,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment afterwards Greenock entered. He asked Dyck several questions
+ concerning the possible fighting, the disposition of ammunition and all
+ that, and said at last:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think we shall be of use, sir. The ship&rsquo;s all right now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As right as anything human can be. I&rsquo;ve got faith in my star, master.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A light came into the other man&rsquo;s dour face. &ldquo;I wish you&rsquo;d get into
+ uniform, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uniform? No, Greenock! No, I use the borrowed power, but not the borrowed
+ clothes. I&rsquo;m a common sailor, and I wear the common sailor&rsquo;s clothes.
+ You&rsquo;ve earned your uniform, and it suits you. Stick to it; and when I&rsquo;ve
+ earned a captain&rsquo;s uniform I&rsquo;ll wear it. I owe you the success of this
+ voyage so far, and my heart is full of it, up to the brim. Hark, what&rsquo;s
+ that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By God, it&rsquo;s guns, sir! There&rsquo;s fighting on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fighting!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck stood for a minute with head thrust forward, eyes fixed upon the
+ distant mists ahead. The rumble of the guns came faintly through the air.
+ An exultant look came into his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master, the game&rsquo;s with us&mdash;it is fighting! I know the difference
+ between the two sets of guns, English and French. Listen&mdash;that quick,
+ spasmodic firing is French; the steady-as-thunder is English. Well, we&rsquo;ve
+ got all sail on. Now, make ready the ship for fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s almost ready, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour later the light mist had risen, and almost suddenly the Ariadne
+ seemed to come into the field of battle. Dyck Calhoun could see the
+ struggle going on. The two sets of enemy ships had come to close quarters,
+ and some were locked in deadly conflict. Other ships, still apart, fired
+ at point-blank range, and all the horrors of slaughter were in full swing.
+ From the square blue flag at the mizzen top gallant masthead of one of the
+ British ships engaged, Dyck saw that the admiral&rsquo;s own craft was in some
+ peril. The way lay open for the Ariadne to bear down upon the French ship,
+ engaged with the admiral&rsquo;s smaller ship, and help to end the struggle
+ successfully for the British cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While still too far away for point-blank range, the Ariadne&rsquo;s guns began
+ upon the French ships distinguishable by their shape and their colours.
+ Before the first shot was fired, however, Dyck made a tour of the decks
+ and gave some word of cheer to the men, The Ariadne lost no time in
+ getting into the thick of the fight. The seamen were stripped to the
+ waist, and black silk handkerchiefs were tightly bound round their heads
+ and over their ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the French thought of the coming of the Ariadne was shown by the
+ reply they made presently to her firing. The number of French ships in
+ action was greater than the British by six, and the Ariadne arrived just
+ when she could be of greatest service. The boldness of her seamanship, and
+ the favour of the wind, gave her an advantage which good fortune helped to
+ justify.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she drew in upon the action, she gave herself up to great danger; she
+ was coming in upon the rear of the French ships, and was subject to fierce
+ attack. To the French she seemed like a fugitive warrior returning to his
+ camp just when he was most needed, as was indeed the case. Two of her
+ shots settled one of the enemy&rsquo;s vessels; and before the others could
+ converge upon her, she had crawled slowly up against the off side of the
+ French admiral&rsquo;s ship, which was closely engaged with the Beatitude, the
+ British flagship, on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canister, chain-shot, and langrel of the French foe had caused much
+ injury to the Ariadne, and her canvas was in a sore plight. Fifty of her
+ seamen had been killed, and a hundred and fifty were wounded by the time
+ she reached the starboard side of the Aquitaine. She would have lost many
+ more were it not that her onset demoralized the French gunners, while the
+ cheers of the British sailors aboard the Beatitude gave confidence to
+ their mutineer comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his own deck, Dyck watched the progress of the battle with the joy of a
+ natural fighter. He had carried the thing to an almost impossible success.
+ There had only been this in his favour, that his was an unexpected
+ entrance&mdash;a fact which had been worth another ship at least. He saw
+ his boarders struggle for the Aquitaine. He saw them discharge their
+ pistols, and then resort to the cutlass and the dagger; and the marines
+ bringing down their victims from the masts of the French flag-ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he heard the savagely buoyant shouts of the Beatitude men, and
+ he realized that, by his coming, the admiral of the French fleet had been
+ obliged to yield up his sword, and to signal to his ships&mdash;such as
+ could&mdash;to get away. That half of them succeeded in doing so was
+ because the British fleet had been heavily handled in the fight, and would
+ have been defeated had it not been for the arrival of the Ariadne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never, perhaps, in the history of the navy had British ships clamped the
+ enemy as the Aquitaine was clamped by the Beatitude and the Ariadne.
+ Certain it is that no admiral of the British fleet had ever to perform two
+ such acts in one day as receiving the submission of a French admiral and
+ offering thanks to the captain of a British man-of-war whom, while
+ thanking, he must at once place under arrest as a mutineer. What might
+ have chanced further to Dyck&rsquo;s disadvantage can never be known, because
+ there appeared on the deck of the Beatitude, as its captain under the
+ rear-admiral, Captain Ivy, who, five years before, had visited Dyck and
+ his father at Playmore, and had gone with them to Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The admiral had sent word to the Ariadne for its captain to come to the
+ Beatitude. When the captain&rsquo;s gig arrived, and a man in seaman&rsquo;s clothes
+ essayed to climb the side of the flag-ship, he was at first prevented.
+ Captain Ivy, however, immediately gave orders for Dyck to be admitted, but
+ without honours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the deck of the Beatitude, Dyck looked into the eyes of Captain Ivy. He
+ saluted; but the captain held out a friendly hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a mutineer, Calhoun, but your ship has given us victory. I&rsquo;d like
+ to shake hands with one that&rsquo;s done so good a stroke for England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A queer smile played about Calhoun&rsquo;s lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve brought the Ariadne back to the fleet, Captain Ivy. The men have
+ fought as well as men ever did since Britain had a navy. I&rsquo;ve brought her
+ back to the king&rsquo;s fleet to be pardoned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you must be placed under arrest, Calhoun. Those are the orders&mdash;that
+ wherever the Ariadne should be found she should be seized, and that you
+ should be tried by court-martial.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded. &ldquo;I understand. When did you get word?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About forty-eight hours ago. The king&rsquo;s mail came by a fast frigate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We took our time, but we came straight from the Channel to find this
+ fleet. At the mouth of the Thames we willed to find it, and to fight with
+ it&mdash;and by good luck so we have done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me take you to the admiral,&rdquo; said Captain Ivy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He walked beside Dyck to the admiral&rsquo;s cabin. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve made a terrible mess
+ of things, Calhoun, but you&rsquo;ve put a lot right to-day,&rdquo; he said at the
+ entrance to the cabin. &ldquo;Tell me one thing honestly before we part now&mdash;did
+ you kill Erris Boyne?&rdquo; Dyck looked at him long and hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know&mdash;on my honour I don&rsquo;t know! I don&rsquo;t remember&mdash;I
+ was drunk and drugged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Calhoun, I don&rsquo;t believe you did; but if you did, you&rsquo;ve paid the price&mdash;and
+ the price of mutiny, too.&rdquo; In the clear blue eyes of Captain Ivy there was
+ a look of friendliness. &ldquo;I notice you don&rsquo;t wear uniform, Calhoun,&rdquo; he
+ added. &ldquo;I mean a captain&rsquo;s uniform.&rdquo; Dyck smiled. &ldquo;I never have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next moment the door of the admiral&rsquo;s cabin was opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Dyck Calhoun of the Ariadne, sir,&rdquo; said Captain Ivy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The admiral&rsquo;s face was naturally vigorous and cheerful, but, as he looked
+ at Dyck Calhoun, a steely hardness came into it, and gave a cynical twist
+ to the lips. He was a short man, and spare, but his bearing had dignity
+ and every motion significance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had had his high moment with the French admiral, had given his commands
+ to the fleet and had arranged the disposition of the captured French
+ ships. He was in good spirits, and the wreckage in the fleet seemed not to
+ shake his nerve, for he had lost in men far less than the enemy, and had
+ captured many ships&mdash;a good day&rsquo;s work, due finally to the man in
+ sailor&rsquo;s clothes standing there with Captain Ivy. The admiral took in the
+ dress of Calhoun at a glance&mdash;the trousers of blue cloth, the
+ sheath-knife belt, the stockings of white silk, the white shirt with the
+ horizontal stripes, the loose, unstarched, collar, the fine black silk
+ handkerchief at the throat, the waistcoat of red kerseymere, the shoes
+ like dancing-pumps, and the short, round blue jacket, with the flat gold
+ buttons&mdash;a seaman complete. He smiled broadly; he liked this mutineer
+ and ex-convict.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain Calhoun, eh!&rdquo; he remarked mockingly, and bowed satirically.
+ &ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;ve played a strong game, and you&rsquo;ve plunged us into great
+ difficulty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck did not lose his opportunity. &ldquo;Happily, I&rsquo;ve done what I planned to
+ do when we left the Thames, admiral,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We came to get the chance
+ of doing what, by favour of fate, we have accomplished. Now, sir, as I&rsquo;m
+ under arrest, and the ship which I controlled has done good service, may I
+ beg that the Ariadne&rsquo;s personnel shall have amnesty, and that I alone be
+ made to pay&mdash;if that must be&mdash;for the mutiny at the Nore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The admiral nodded. &ldquo;We know of your breaking away from the mutinous
+ fleet, and of their firing on you as you passed, and that is in your
+ favour. I can also say this: that bringing the ship here was masterly
+ work, for I understand there were no officers on the Ariadne. She always
+ had the reputation of being one of the best-trained ships in the navy, and
+ she has splendidly upheld that reputation. How did you manage it, Mr.
+ Calhoun?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck briefly told how the lieutenants were made, and how he himself had
+ been enormously indebted to Greenock, the master of the ship, and all the
+ subordinate officers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The admiral smiled sourly. &ldquo;I have little power until I get instructions
+ from the Admiralty, and that will take some time. Meanwhile, the Ariadne
+ shall go on as she is, and as if she were&mdash;and had been from the
+ first, a member of my own squadron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck bowed, explained what reforms he had created in the food and
+ provisions of the Ariadne, and expressed a hope that nothing should be
+ altered. He said the ship had proved herself, chiefly because of his
+ reforms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Besides, she&rsquo;s been badly hammered. She&rsquo;s got great numbers of wounded
+ and dead, and for many a day the men will be busy with repairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For a man without naval experience, for a mutineer, an ex-convict and a
+ usurper, you&rsquo;ve done quite well, Mr. Calhoun; but my instructions were, if
+ I captured your ship, and you fell into my hands, to try you, and hang
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point Captain Ivy intervened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the instructions you received were general. They could
+ not anticipate the special service which the Ariadne has rendered to the
+ king&rsquo;s fleet. I have known Mr. Calhoun; I have visited at his father&rsquo;s
+ house; I was with him on his journey to Dublin, which was the beginning of
+ his bad luck. I would beg of you, sir, to give Mr. Calhoun his parole on
+ sea and land until word comes from the Admiralty as to what, in the
+ circumstances, his fate shall be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be kept on the Beatitude on parole!&rdquo; exclaimed the admiral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Land or sea, Captain Ivy said. I&rsquo;m as well-born as any man in the king&rsquo;s
+ fleet,&rdquo; declared Dyck. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve as clean a record as any officer in his
+ majesty&rsquo;s navy, save for the dark fact that I was put in prison for
+ killing a man; and I will say here, in the secrecy of an admiral&rsquo;s cabin,
+ that the man I killed&mdash;or was supposed to kill&mdash;was a traitor.
+ If I did kill him, he deserved death by whatever hand it came. I care not
+ what you do with me&rdquo;&mdash;his hands clenched, his shoulders drew up, his
+ eyes blackened with the dark fire of his soul&mdash;&ldquo;whether you put me on
+ parole, or try me by court-martial, or hang me from the yard-arm. I&rsquo;ve
+ done a piece of work of which I&rsquo;m not ashamed. I&rsquo;ve brought a mutinous
+ ship out of mutiny, sailed her down the seas for many weeks, disciplined
+ her, drilled her, trained her, fought her; helped to give the admiral of
+ the West Indian squadron his victory. I enlisted; I was a quota man. I
+ became a common sailor&mdash;I and my servant and friend, Michael Clones.
+ I shared the feelings of the sailors who mutinied. I wrote petitions and
+ appeals for them. I mutinied with them. Then at last, having been made
+ leader of the ship, with the captain and the lieutenants sent safely
+ ashore, and disagreeing with the policy of the Delegates in not accepting
+ the terms offered, I brought the ship out, commanding it from the
+ captain&rsquo;s cabin, and have so continued until to-day. If I&rsquo;m put ashore at
+ Jamaica, I&rsquo;ll keep my parole; if I stay a prisoner here, I&rsquo;ll keep my
+ parole. If I&rsquo;ve done you service, admiral, be sure of this, it was done
+ with clear intent. My object was to save the men who, having mutinied and
+ fled from Admiralty control, are subject to capital punishment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your thinking came late. You should have thought before you mutinied,&rdquo;
+ was the sharp reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a common sailor I acted on my conscience, and what we asked for the
+ Admiralty has granted. Only by mutiny did the Admiralty yield to our
+ demands. What I did I would do again! We took our risks in the Thames
+ against the guns that were levelled at us; we&rsquo;ve taken our risks down here
+ against the French to help save your squadron, and we&rsquo;ve done it. The men
+ have done it, because they&rsquo;ve been loyal to the flag, and from first to
+ last set to make the Admiralty and the people know they have rights which
+ must be cherished. If all your men were as faithful to the Crown as are
+ the men on the Ariadne, then they deserve well of the King. But will you
+ put for me on paper the written word that every man now aboard the Ariadne
+ shall be held guiltless in the eyes of the admiral of this fleet; that the
+ present officers shall remain officers, that the reforms I have made shall
+ become permanent? For myself, I care not; but for the men who have fought
+ under me, I want their amnesty. And I want Michael Clones to be kept with
+ me, and Greenock, the master, and Ferens, the purser, to be kept where
+ they are. Admiral, I think you know my demands are just. Over there on the
+ Ariadne are a hundred and fifty wounded at least, and fifty have been
+ killed. Let the living not suffer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You want it all on the nail, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want it at this moment when the men who have fought under me have
+ helped to win your battle, sir.&rdquo; There was something so set in Dyck&rsquo;s
+ voice that the admiral had a sudden revulsion against him, yet, after a
+ moment of thought, he made a sign to Captain Ivy. Then he dictated the
+ terms which Dyck had asked, except as to the reforms he had made, which
+ was not in his power to do, save for the present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the document had been signed by the admiral, Dyck read the contents
+ aloud. It embodied nearly all he had asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I ask permission for one more thing only, sir&mdash;for the new
+ captain of the Ariadne to go with me to her, and there I will read this
+ paper to the crew. I will give a copy of it to the new captain, whoever he
+ may be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The admiral stood for a moment in thought. Then he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ivy, I transfer you to the Ariadne. It&rsquo;s better that some one who
+ understands, as you do, should be in control after Calhoun has gone. Go
+ with him now, and have your belongings sent to you. I appoint you
+ temporary captain of the Ariadne, because I think no one could deal with
+ the situation there so wisely. Ivy, every ship in the squadron must treat
+ the Ariadne respectfully. Within two days, Mr. Calhoun, you shall be
+ landed at Jamaica, there to await the Admiralty decree. I will say this:
+ that as the sure victory of our fleet has come through you, you shall not
+ suffer in my report. Fighting is not an easy trade, and to fight according
+ to the rules is a very hard trade. Let me ask you to conduct yourself as a
+ prisoner of war on parole.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. A LETTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ With a deep sigh, the planter raised his head from the table where he was
+ writing, and looked out upon the lands he had made his own. They lay on
+ the Thomas River, a few hours&rsquo; horseback travelling from Spanish Town, the
+ capital, and they had the advantage of a plateau formation, with mountains
+ in the far distance and ravines everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Christmas Day, and he had done his duty to his slaves and the folk
+ on his plantation. He had given presents, had attended a seven o&rsquo;clock
+ breakfast of his people, had seen festivities of his negroes, and the
+ feast given by his manager in Creole style to all who came&mdash;planting
+ attorneys, buccras, overseers, bookkeepers, the subordinates of the local
+ provost-marshal, small planters, and a few junior officers of the army and
+ navy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had turned away with cynicism from the overladen table, with its
+ shoulder of stewed wild boar in the centre; with its chocolate, coffee,
+ tea, spruce-beer, cassava-cakes, pigeon-pies, tongues, round of beef,
+ barbecued hog, fried conchs, black crab pepper-pod, mountain mullet, and
+ acid fruits. It was so unlike what his past had known, so &ldquo;damnable
+ luxurious!&rdquo; Now his eyes wandered over the space where were the grandilla,
+ with its blossom like a passion-flower, the black Tahiti plum, with its
+ bright pink tassel-blossom, and the fine mango trees, loaded half with
+ fruit and half with bud. In the distance were the guinea cornfields of
+ brownish hue, the cotton-fields, the long ranges of negro houses like
+ thatched cottages, the penguin hedges, with their beautiful red, blue, and
+ white convolvuluses; the lime, logwood, and breadfruit trees, the
+ avocado-pear, the feathery bamboo, and the jack-fruit tree; and between
+ the mountains and his own sugar-estates, negro settlements and pens. He
+ heard the flight of parrots chattering, he watched the floating
+ humming-bird, and at last he fixed his eyes upon the cabbage tree down in
+ the garden, and he had an instant desire for it. It was a natural and
+ human taste&mdash;the cabbage from the tree-top boiled for a simple yet
+ sumptuous meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He liked simplicity. He did not, as so many did in Jamaica, drink claret
+ or punch at breakfast soon after sunrise. In a land where all were
+ bon-vivants, where the lowest tradesmen drank wine after dinner, and rum,
+ brandy and water, or sangaree in the forenoon, a somewhat lightsome view
+ of table-virtues might have been expected of the young unmarried planter.
+ For such was he who, from the windows of his &ldquo;castle,&rdquo; saw his domain
+ shimmering in the sun of a hot December day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Dyck Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an impatient air he took up the sheets that he had been reading.
+ Christmas Day was on his nerves. The whole town of Kingston, with its
+ twenty to thirty thousand inhabitants, had but one church. If he entered
+ it, even to-day, he would have seen no more than a hundred and fifty to
+ two hundred people; mostly mulattoes&mdash;&ldquo;bronze ornaments&rdquo;&mdash;and
+ peasants in shag trousers, jackets of coarse blue cloth, and no
+ waistcoats, with one or two magistrates, a dozen gentlemen or so, and
+ probably twice that number of ladies. It was not an island given over to
+ piety, or to religious habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that this troubled Dyck Calhoun; nor, indeed, was he shocked by the
+ fact that nearly every unmarried white man in the island, and many married
+ white men, had black mistresses and families born to the black women, and
+ that the girls had no married future. They would become the temporary
+ wives of white men, to whom they were on the whole faithful and devoted.
+ It did not even vex him that a wretched mulatto might be whipped in the
+ market-square for laying his hands upon a white man, and that if he was a
+ negro-slave he could be shot for the same liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It all belonged to the abnormal conditions of an island where black and
+ white were in relations impossible in the countries from which the white
+ man had come. It did not even startle Dyck that all the planters, and the
+ people generally in the island, from the chief justice and custos
+ rotulorum down to the deckswabber, cultivated amplitude of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let Dyck tell his own story. The papers he held were sheets of a
+ letter he was writing to one from whom he had heard nothing since the
+ night he enlisted in the navy, and that was nearly three years before.
+ This was the letter:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ You will see I address you as you have done me in the two letters I
+ have had from you in the past. You will never read this letter, but
+ I write it as if you would. For you must know I may never hope for
+ personal intercourse with you. I was imprisoned for killing your
+ father, Erris Boyne, and that separates us like an abysss. It
+ matters little whether I killed him or not; the law says I did, and
+ the law has taken its toll of me. I was in prison for four years,
+ and when freed I enlisted in the king&rsquo;s navy, a quota man, with my
+ servant-friend, Michael Clones. That was the beginning of painful
+ and wonderful days for me. I was one of the mutineers of the Nore,
+ and&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Here followed a description of the days he had spent on the Ariadne and
+ before, and of all that happened down to the time when he was arrested by
+ the admiral in the West Indian Sea. He told how he was sent over to the
+ Ariadne with Captain Ivy to read the admiral&rsquo;s letter to the seamen, and
+ then, by consent of the admiral, to leave again with Michael Clones for
+ Jamaica, where he was set ashore with twenty pounds in his pocket&mdash;and
+ not on parole, by the admiral&rsquo;s command. Here the letter shall again take
+ up the story, and be a narrative of Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s life from that time
+ until this Christmas Day.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ What to do was the question. I knew no one in Jamaica&mdash;no one at
+ all except the governor, Lord Mallow, and him I had fought with
+ swords in Phoenix Park five years before. I had not known he was
+ governor here. I came to know it when I first saw him riding over
+ the unpaved street into Kingston from Spanish Town with his suite,
+ ornate with his governorship. He was a startling figure in scarlet,
+ with huge epaulets on his lieutenant-general&rsquo;s uniform, as big a pot
+ as ever boiled on any fire-chancellor, head of the government and of
+ the army, master of the legislature, judging like one o&rsquo;clock in the
+ court of chancery, controller of the affairs of civil life, and
+ maker of a policy of which he alone can judge who knows what
+ interests clash in the West Indies.
+
+ English, French, Spanish, and Dutch are all hereabout. All struggle
+ for place above the other in the world of commerce and society,
+ though chiefly it is the English versus the French in these days;
+ and the policy of the governor is the policy of the country. He
+ never knows whether there will be a French naval descent or whether
+ the blacks in his own island will do as the blacks in St. Domingo
+ did&mdash;massacre the white people in thousands. Or whether the free
+ blacks, the Maroons, who got their freedom by treaty with Governor
+ Trelawney, when the British commander changed hats with Cudjoe, the
+ Maroon chief, as the sealing of the bargain&mdash;whether they will rise
+ again, as they before have risen, and bring terror into the white
+ settlement; and whether, in that case, all negro-slaves will join
+ them, and Jamaica become a land of revolution.
+
+ Of what good, then, will be the laws lately passed regulating the
+ control of slaves, securing them rights never given before, even
+ forbidding lashes beyond forty-nine! Of what use, then, the
+ punishment of owners who have ill-used the slaves? The local
+ councils who have power to punish never proceed against white men
+ with rigour; and to preserve a fair balance between the white man up
+ above and the black down below is the responsibility of the fair-
+ minded governor. If, like Mallow, he is not fair-minded, then is
+ the lash the heavier, and the governor has burdens greater than
+ could easily be borne in lands where the climate is more friendly.
+
+ Lord Mallow did not see me when I passed him in the street, but he
+ soon came to know of me from the admiral and Captain Ivy, who told
+ him all my story since I was freed from jail. Then he said I should
+ be confined in a narrow space near to Kingston, and should have no
+ freedom; but the admiral had his way, and I was given freedom of the
+ whole island till word should come from the Admiralty what should be
+ done with me. To the governor&rsquo;s mind it was dangerous allowing me
+ freedom, a man convicted of crime, who had been imprisoned, had been
+ a mutineer, had stolen one of his majesty&rsquo;s ships, and had fled to
+ the Caribbean Sea. He thought I should well be at the bottom of the
+ ocean, where he would soon have put me, I make no doubt, if it had
+ not been for the admiral, and Captain Ivy&mdash;you do not know him, I
+ think&mdash;who played a good part to me, when men once close friends
+ have deserted me.
+
+ Well, we had, Michael and I, but twenty pounds between us; and if
+ there was not plenty of free food in the island, God knows what
+ would have become of us! But there it was, fresh in every field, by
+ every wayside, at every doorway. We could not starve, or die of
+ thirst, or faint for lack of sleep, since every bush was a bed in
+ spite of the garapatos or wood-ticks, the snore of the tree-toad,
+ the hoarse shriek of the macaw, and the shrill gird of the guinea-
+ fowl. Every bed was thus free, and there was land to be got for a
+ song, enough to grow what would suffice for two men&rsquo;s daily wants.
+ But we did not rest long upon the land&mdash;I have it still, land which
+ cost me five pounds out of the twenty, and for the rest there was an
+ old but on the little place&mdash;five acres it was, and good land too,
+ where you could grow anything at all. Heaven knows what we might
+ have become in that tiny plantation, for I was sick of life, and the
+ mosquitos and flying ants, and the chattering parroquets, the grim
+ gallinazo, and the quatre, or native bed&mdash;a wooden frame and canvas;
+ but one day at Kingston I met a man, one Cassandro Biatt, who had an
+ obsession for adventure, and he spoke to me privately. He said he
+ knew me from people&rsquo;s talk, and would I listen to him? What was
+ there to do? He was a clean-cut rogue, if ever there was one, but
+ a rogue of parts, as he proved; and I lent an ear.
+
+ Now, what think you was his story? Well, but this&mdash;that off the
+ coast of Haiti, there was a ship which had been sunk with every man
+ on board, and with the ship was treasure without counting-jewels
+ belonging once to a Spaniard of high place, who was taking them to
+ Paris. His box had been kept in the captain&rsquo;s cabin, and it could
+ be found, no doubt, and brought to the surface. Even if that were
+ not possible, there was plenty of gold on the ship, and every piece
+ of it was good money. There had been searching for the ship, but
+ none had found it; but he, Cassandro Biatt, had sure knowledge, got
+ from an obi-man, of the place where it lay. It would not be an
+ expensive business, but, cheap as it was, he had no means of raising
+ cash for the purpose; while I could, no doubt, raise the needed
+ money if I set about it. That was how he put it to me. Would I do
+ it? It was not with me a case of &ldquo;no shots left in the locker, no
+ copper to tinkle on a tombstone.&rdquo; I was not down to my last
+ macaroni, or quarter-dollar; but I drank some sangaree and set about
+ to do it. I got my courage from a look towards Rodney&rsquo;s statue in
+ its temple&mdash;Rodney did a great work for Jamaica against Admiral de
+ Grasse.
+
+ Why should I tell Biatt the truth about myself? He knew it.
+ Cassandro was an accomplished liar, and a man of merit of his kind.
+ This obi-man&rsquo;s story I have never believed; yet how Biatt came to
+ know where that treasure-ship was I do not know now.
+
+ Yes, out we went through the harbour of Kingston, beyond the
+ splendid defences of Port Royal and the men-of-war there, past the
+ Palisadoes and Rock Fort, and away to the place of treasure-trove.
+ We found it&mdash;that lost galleon; and we found the treasure-box of the
+ captain&rsquo;s cabin. We found gold too; but the treasure-box was the
+ chief thing; and we made it ours after many a hard day. Three
+ months it was from the day Biatt first spoke to me to the day when,
+ with an expert diver, we brought the box to the surface and opened
+ it.
+
+ How I induced one of the big men of Jamaica to be banker and skipper
+ for us need not be told; but he is one of whom men have dark
+ sayings&mdash;chiefly, I take it, because he does bold, incomprehensible
+ things. That business paid him well, for when the rent of the ship
+ was met, and the few men on it paid&mdash;slaves they were chiefly&mdash;he
+ pocketed ten thousand pounds, while Biatt and I each pouched forty
+ thousand, and Michael two thousand. Aye, to be sure, Michael was in
+ it! He is in all I do, and is as good as men of ten times his birth
+ and history. Michael will be a rich man one day. In two years his
+ two thousand have grown to four, and he misses no chance.
+
+ But those days when Biatt and I went treasure-ship hunting were not
+ without their trials. If we had failed, then no more could this
+ land have been home or resting-place for us. We should only have
+ been sojourners with no name, in debt, in disgrace, a pair of
+ braggart adventurers, who had worked a master-man of the island for
+ a ship, and money and men, and had lost all except the ship! Though
+ to be sure, the money was not a big thing&mdash;a few hundred pounds;
+ but the ship was no flea-bite. It was a biggish thing, for it could
+ be rented to carry sugar&mdash;it was, in truth, a sugar-ship of four
+ hundred tons&mdash;but it never carried so big a cargo of sugar as it did
+ on the day when that treasure-box was brought to the surface of the
+ sea.
+
+ I&rsquo;m bound to say this&mdash;one of the straightest men I ever met, liar
+ withal, was Cassandro Biatt. He took his jewels and vanished up the
+ seas in a flourish. He would not even have another try at the gold
+ in the bowels of the ship.
+
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got plenty to fill my paunch, and I&rsquo;ll go while I&rsquo;ve enough.
+ It&rsquo;s the men not going in time that get left in the end&rdquo;&mdash;that&rsquo;s
+ what he said.
+
+ And he was right; for other men went after the gold and got some of
+ it, and were caught by French and South American pirates and lost
+ all they had gained. Still another group went and brought away ten
+ thousand pounds, and lost it in fighting with Spanish buccaneers.
+ So Biatt was right, and went away content, while I stayed here&mdash;
+ because I must&mdash;and bought the land and house where I have my great
+ sugar-plantation. It is an enterprise of volume, and all would be
+ well if I were normal in mind and body; but I am not. I have a past
+ that stinks to heaven, as Shakespeare says, and I am an outlaw of
+ the one land which has all my soul and name and heritage. Yes, that
+ is what they have done to me&mdash;made a convict, an outlaw of me. I
+ may live&mdash;but not in the British Isles; and if any man kills me, he
+ is not liable to the law.
+
+ Men do not treat me badly here, for I have property and money, and
+ this is a land where these two things mean more than anywhere else,
+ even more than in a republic like that where you live. Here men
+ live according to the law of the knife, fork, and bottle, yet
+ nowhere in the world is there deeper national morality or wider
+ faith or endurance. It is a land where the sea is master, where
+ naval might is the chief factor, and weighs down all else.
+
+ Here the navies of the great powers meet and settle their disputes,
+ and every being in the island knows that life is only worth what a
+ hundred-ton brig-of-war permits. I have seen here in Jamaica the
+ off-scourings of the French and Spanish fleets on parole; have seen
+ them entering King&rsquo;s House like loyal citizens; have even known of
+ French prisoners being used as guards at the entrance of King&rsquo;s
+ House, and I have informed the chief justice of dismal facts which
+ ought to have moved him. But what can you expect of a chief justice
+ who need not be a lawyer, as this one is not, and has other means of
+ earning income which, though not disloyal, are lowering to the
+ status of a chief justice? And not the chief justice alone. I have
+ seen French officers entertained at Government House who were guilty
+ of shocking inhumanities and cruelties. The governor, Lord Mallow,
+ is much to blame. On him lies the responsibility; to him must go
+ the discredit. For myself, I feel his enmity on every hand. I
+ suffer from his suggestions; I am the victim of his dark moods.
+
+ If I want a concession from a local council, his hand is at work
+ against me; if I see him in the street, I get a courtesy tossed, as
+ you would toss a bone to a dog. If I appear at the king&rsquo;s ball,
+ which is open to all on the island who are respectable, I am treated
+ with such disdain by the viceroy of the king that all the island is
+ agog. I went one day to the king&rsquo;s ball the same as the rest of the
+ world, and I went purposely in dress contrary to the regulations.
+ Here was the announcement of the affair in the Royal Gazette, which
+ was reproduced in the Chronicle, the one important newspaper in the
+ island:
+
+ KING&rsquo;S HOUSE,
+ October 27th, 1797.
+
+ KING&rsquo;S BALL.
+
+ There will be a Ball given by His Honour the Lieutenant-
+ Governor, on Tuesday evening, the 6th day of December next,
+ in honour of
+
+ HIS MAJESTY&rsquo;S BIRTHDAY.
+
+ To prevent confusion, Ladies and Gentlemen are requested to
+ order their carriages to come by the Old Court House, and go
+ off by the Long Room.
+
+ N.B.&mdash;No gentlemen can possibly be admitted in boots, or
+ otherwise improperly dressed.
+
+ Well, in a spirit of mutiny&mdash;in which I am, in a sense, an expert&mdash;
+ I went in boots and otherwise &ldquo;improperly dressed,&rdquo; for I wore my
+ hair in a queue, like a peasant. What is more, I danced with a
+ negress in the great quadrille, and thereby offended the governor
+ and his lady aunt, who presides at his palace. It matters naught to
+ me. On my own estate it was popular enough, and that meant more to
+ me than this goodwill of Lord Mallow.
+
+ He does not spare me in his recitals to his friends, who carry his
+ speech abroad. His rancour against me is the greater, I know,
+ because of the wealth I got in the treasure-ship, to prevent which
+ he tried to prohibit my leaving the island, through the withholding
+ of a leave-ticket to me. His argument to the local authorities was
+ that I had no rights, that I am a murderer and a mutineer, and
+ confined to the island, though not on parole. He almost succeeded;
+ but the man to whom I went, the big rich man intervened,
+ successfully&mdash;how I know not&mdash;and I was let go with my permit-
+ ticket.
+
+ What big things hang on small issues! If my Lord Mallow had
+ prevented me leaving the island, I shouldn&rsquo;t now own a great
+ plantation and three hundred negroes. I shouldn&rsquo;t be able to pay
+ my creditors in good gold Portuguese half-johannes and Spanish
+ doubloons, and be free of Spanish silver, and give no heed to the
+ bitt, which, as you perhaps know, is equal to fivepence in British
+ money, such as you and I used to spend when you were Queen of
+ Ireland and I was your slave.
+
+ Then I worshipped you as few women have been worshipped in all the
+ days of the world&mdash;oh, cursed spite of life and time that I should
+ have been jailed for killing your bad father! Aye, he was a bad
+ man, and he is better in his grave than out of it, but it puts a
+ gulf between you and me which nothing will ever bridge&mdash;unless it
+ should some day be known I did not kill him, and then, no doubt, it
+ will be too late.
+
+ On my soul, I don&rsquo;t believe I put my sword into him; but if I did,
+ he well deserved it, for he was worse than faithless to your mother,
+ he was faithless to his country&mdash;he was a traitor! I did not tell
+ that story of his treachery in court&mdash;I did not tell it because of
+ you. You did not deserve such infamy, and the truth came not out at
+ the trial. I, in my view, dared not, lest it might injure you, and
+ you had suffered enough&mdash;nay, more than enough&mdash;through him.
+
+ I wonder how you are, and if you have changed&mdash;I mean in appearance.
+ I am sure you are not married; I should have felt it in my bones,
+ if you were. No, no, my sweet lass, you are not married. But
+ think&mdash;it is more than seven long years since we met on the hills
+ above Playmore, and you put your hand in mine and said we should be
+ friends for all time. It is near three years since a letter came to
+ me from you, and in the time I have made progress.
+
+ I did not go to the United States, as you asked me to do. Is it not
+ plain I could not? My only course was to avoid you. You see, your
+ mother knows the truth&mdash;knows that I was jailed for killing your
+ father and her divorced husband. Therefore, the only way to do was
+ as I did. I could not go where you were. There should be hid from
+ you the fact that Erris Boyne was a traitor. This is your right, in
+ my mind. Looking back, I feel sure I could have escaped jail if I
+ had told what I knew of Erris Boyne; and perhaps it would have been
+ better, for I should, no doubt, have been acquitted. Yet I could
+ not have gone to you, for I am not sure I did not kill him.
+
+ So it is best as it is. We are as we are, and nothing can make all
+ different for us. I am a dissolute planter of Jamaica who has
+ snatched from destiny a living and some riches. I have a bad name
+ in the world. Yet by saving the king&rsquo;s navy from defeat out here I
+ did a good turn for my country and the empire.
+
+ So much to the good. It brought me freedom from the rope and pardon
+ for my chief offence. Then, in company with a rogue, I got wealth
+ from the depths of the sea, and here I am in the bottom of my
+ luxury, drunken and obscene&mdash;yes, obscene, for I permit my overseers
+ and my manager to keep black women and have children by them. That
+ I do not do so myself is no virtue on my part, but the virtue of a
+ girl whom I knew in Connemara. I fill myself with drink. I have a
+ bottle of madeira or port every night, and pints of beer or claret.
+ I am a creature of low habits, a man sodden with self-indulgence.
+ And when I am in drink, no slaver can be more cruel and ruthless.
+
+ Yet I am moderate in eating. The meals that people devour here
+ almost revolt me. They eat like cormorants and drink like dry
+ ground; but at my table I am careful, save with the bottle. This
+ is a land of wonderful fruits, and I eat in quantities pineapple,
+ tamarind, papaw, guava, sweet-sop, star-apple, granadilla, hog-plum,
+ Spanish-gooseberry, and pindal-nut. These are native, but there are
+ also the orange, lemon, lime, shaddock, melon, fig, pomegranate,
+ cinnamon, and mango, brought chiefly from the Spanish lands of South
+ America. The fruit-market here is good, Heaven knows, and I have my
+ run of it. Perhaps that is why my drink does not fatten me greatly.
+ Yes, I am thin&mdash;thinner even than when you saw me last. How
+ wonderful a day it was! You remember it, I&rsquo;m sure.
+
+ We stood on the high hills, you and I, looking to the west. It was
+ a true Irish day. A little in front of us, in the sky, were great
+ clusters of clouds, and beyond them, as far as eye could see, were
+ hills so delicately green, so spotted with settlements, so misty and
+ full of glamour, and so cheerful with the western light. And the
+ storm broke&mdash;do you remember it? It broke, but not on us. It fell
+ on the middle of the prospect before us, and we saw beyond it the
+ bright area of sunny country where men work and prophesy and slave,
+ and pray to the ancient gods and acclaim the saints, and die and
+ fructify the mould; where such as Christopher Dogan live, and men a
+ thousand times lower than he. Christopher came to the jail the day
+ I was released&mdash;with Michael Clones he came. He read me my bill of
+ life&rsquo;s health&mdash;what was to become of me&mdash;the black and the white of
+ it, the good and the bad, the fair and the foul. Even the good
+ fortune of the treasure from the sea he foresaw, and much else that
+ has not come to me, and, as I think, will never come; for it is too
+ full a cup for me so little worthy of it.
+
+ It seems strange to me that I am as near to the United States here
+ in Jamaica, or almost as near, as one in London is to one in Dublin;
+ and yet one might as well be ten thousand leagues distant for all it
+ means to her one loves in the United States. Yes, dear Sheila, I
+ love you, and I would tear out the heart of the world for you. I
+ bathe my whole being in your beauty and your charm. I hunger for
+ you&mdash;to stand beside you, to listen to your voice, to dip my prison
+ fingers into the pure cauldron of your soul and feel my own soul
+ expand. I wonder why it is that to-day I feel more than I ever felt
+ before the rare splendour of your person.
+
+ I have always admired you and loved you, always heard you calling
+ me, as if from some sacred corner of a perfect world. Is it that
+ yesterday&rsquo;s dissipation&mdash;yes, I was drunk yesternight, drunk in a
+ new way. I was drunk with the thought of you, the longing for you.
+ I picked a big handful of roses, and in my mind gave them into your
+ hands. And I thought you smiled and said:
+
+ &ldquo;Well done, good and faithful servant. Enter Paradise.&rdquo; So I
+ followed you to your home there in the Virginian country. It was a
+ dream, all except the roses, and those I laid in front of the box
+ where I keep your letters and a sketch I made of you when we were
+ young and glad&mdash;when I was young and glad. For I am an old man,
+ Sheila, in all that makes men old. My step is quick still, my eye
+ is sharp, and my brain beats fast, but my heart is ancient. I am an
+ ancient of days, without hope or pleasure, save what pleasure comes
+ in thinking of one whom I worship, yet must ever worship from afar.
+
+ I wonder why I seem to feel you very near to-day! Perhaps it&rsquo;s
+ because &lsquo;tis Christmas Day. I am not a religious man but Christmas
+ is a day of memories.
+
+ Is it because of the past in Ireland? Am I only&mdash;God, am I only to
+ be what I am for the rest of my days, a planter denied the pleasure
+ of home by his own acts! Am I only a helpless fragment of a world
+ of lost things?
+
+ I have no friends&mdash;but yes, I have. I have Michael Clones and
+ Captain Ivy, though he&rsquo;s far away-aye, he&rsquo;s a friend of friends, is
+ Captain Ivy. These naval folk have had so much of the world, have
+ got the bearings of so many seas, that they lose all littleness, and
+ form their own minds. They are not like the people who knew me in
+ Ireland&mdash;the governor here is one of them&mdash;and who believe the worst
+ of me. The governor&mdash;faugh, he was made for bigger and better
+ things! He is one of the best swordsmen in the world, and he is
+ out against me here as if I was a man of importance, and not a
+ commonplace planter on an obscure river. I have no social home
+ life, and yet I live in what is called a castle. A Jamaica castle
+ has none of the marks of antiquity, chivalry, and distinction which
+ castles that you and I know in the old land possess.
+
+ What is my castle like? Well, it is a squarish building, of
+ bungalow type, set on a hill. It has stories and an attic, with a
+ jutting dormer-window in the front of the roof; and above the lowest
+ story there is a great verandah, on which the livingrooms and
+ bedrooms open. It is commodious, and yet from a broad standpoint it
+ is without style or distinction. It has none of those Corinthian
+ pillars which your homesteads in America have. Yet there is in it a
+ simple elegance. It has no carpets, but a shining mahogany floor,
+ for there are few carpets in this land of heat. It is a place where
+ music and mirth and family voices would be fitting; but there are no
+ family voices here, save such as speak with a negro lisp and
+ oracularly.
+
+ I can hear music at this moment, and inside my castle. It comes
+ from the irrepressible throats of my cook and my housemaid, who have
+ more joy in the language of the plantation than you could have in
+ the songs of St. Angelus. The only person in this castle out of
+ spirits is its owner.
+
+ My castle is embowered in a loose grove of palms and acacias,
+ pimento shrubs, splendid star-apples, and bully-trees, with wild
+ lemon, mahogany, dogwood, Jerusalem-thorn, and the waving plumes of
+ bamboo canes. There is nothing British in it&mdash;nothing at all. It
+ stands on brick pillars, is reached by a stair of marble slabs, and
+ has a great piazza on the front. You enter a fine, big hall, dark-
+ you will understand that, though it is not so hot in Virginia, for
+ the darkness makes for coolness. From the hall the bedrooms open
+ all round. We are not so barbaric here as you might think, for my
+ dining-room, which lies beyond the hall, with jalousies or movable
+ blinds, exposed to all the winds, is comfortable, even ornate.
+ There you shall see waxlights on the table, and finger-glasses with
+ green leaves, and fine linen and napkins, and plenty of silver&mdash;even
+ silver wine-coolers, and beakers of fame and beauty, and flowers,
+ flowers everywhere, and fruit of exquisite charm. I have to live
+ in outward seeming as do my neighbours, even to keeping a black
+ footman, gorgeously dressed, with bare legs.
+
+ Here at my window grows a wild aloe, and it is in flower. Once only
+ in fifty years does this aloe flower, and I pick its sweet verdure
+ now and offer it to you. There it lies, beside this letter that I
+ am writing. It is typical of myself, for only once has my heart
+ flowered, and it will be only once in fifty years. The perfume of
+ the flower is like an everlasting bud from the last tree of Time.
+ See, my Sheila, your drunken, reckless lover pulls this sweet
+ offering from his garden and offers it to you. He has no virtues;
+ and yet he would have been a thousand times worse, if you had not
+ come into his life. He had in him the seeds of trouble, the
+ sproutings of shame, for even in the first days of his love there in
+ Dublin he would not restrain himself. He drank, he played cards, he
+ fought and went with bad company&mdash;not women, never that; but he kept
+ the company of those through whom he came at last to punishment for
+ manslaughter.
+
+ Yet, without you, who can tell what he might have been? He might
+ have fallen so low that not the wealth of ten thousand treasure-
+ boxes could give him even the appearance of honesty. And now he
+ offers you what you cannot accept&mdash;can never accept&mdash;a love as deep
+ as the life from which he came; a love that would throttle the world
+ for you, that would force the doors of hell to bring you what you
+ want.
+
+ What do you want? I know not. Perhaps you have inherited the vast
+ property to which you were the heir. If you have, what can you want
+ that you have not means to procure? Ah, I have learned one thing,
+ my friend &lsquo;one can get nearly everything with money. It is the
+ hidden machinery which makes the world of success go round. With
+ brains, you say? Yes, money and brains, but without the money
+ brains seldom win alone. Do not I know? When I was in prison, with
+ estate vanished and home gone and my father in his grave, who was
+ concerned about me?
+
+ Only the humblest of all God&rsquo;s Irish people; but with them I have
+ somehow managed to win back lost ground. I am a stronger man than I
+ was in all that men count of value in the world. I have an estate
+ where I work like any youth who has everything before him. I have
+ nothing before me, yet I shall go on working to the end. Why?
+ Because I have some faculties which are more than bread and butter,
+ and I must give them opportunity.
+
+ Yet I am not always sane. Sometimes I feel I could march out and
+ sweep into the sea one of the towns that dot the coast of this
+ island. I have the bloody thirst, as said the great Spanish
+ conquistador. I would like&mdash;yes, sometimes I would like to sweep
+ to a watery grave one of the towns that are a glory to this island,
+ as Savanna la Mar was swept to oblivion in the year 1780 by a
+ hurricane. You can still see the ruins of the town at the bottom of
+ the sea&mdash;I have sailed over it in what is now the harbour, and there
+ beneath, on the deep sands, lost to time and trouble, is the slain
+ and tortured town of Savanna la Mar. Was the Master of the World
+ angry that day when, with a besom of wind and a tidal wave, He swept
+ the place into the sea? Or was it some devil&rsquo;s work while the Lord
+ of All slept? As the Spanish say, Quien sabe?
+
+ Then there was that other enormous incident which made a man to be
+ swallowed by an earthquake, then belched out again into the sea and
+ picked up and restored to life again, and to live for many years.
+ Indeed, yes, it is so. His tombstone may be seen even at this day
+ at Green Bay, Kingston. His name was Lewis Galdy, and he is held in
+ high repute in this land.
+
+ I feel sometimes as Beelzebub may feel, and I long to do what
+ Beelzebub might do as part of his mission. Sometimes a madness
+ of revolt comes over me, and I long to ravage all the places I see,
+ all the people I know&mdash;or nearly all. Why I do not have negroes
+ thrashed and mutilated, as some do, I know not. Over against the
+ southern shore in the parish of St. Elizabeth is an estate called
+ Salem, owned, it is said, by an American, where the manager does
+ such things. I am told that savageries are found there. There
+ are too many absentee owners of land in this island, and the wrongs
+ done by agents who have no personal honour at stake are all too
+ plentiful. If I could, I would have no slavery, would set all the
+ blacks free, making full compensation to the owners, and less to the
+ absentee owners.
+
+ I look out on a world of summer beauty and of heat. I see the sheep
+ in hundreds on the far hills of pasturage&mdash;sheep with short hair,
+ small and sweet as any that ever came from the South Downs. I see
+ the natives in their Madras handkerchiefs. I see upon the road some
+ planter in his ketureen&mdash;a sort of sedan chair; I see a negro
+ funeral, with its strange ceremony and its gumbies of African drums.
+ I see yam-fed planters, on their horses, making for the burning,
+ sandy streets of the capital. I see the Scots grass growing five
+ and six feet high, food unsurpassed for horses&mdash;all the foliage too
+ &mdash;beautiful tropical trees and shrubs, and here and there a huge
+ breeding-farm. Yet I know that out beyond my sight there is the
+ region known as Trelawney, and Trelawney Town, the headquarters of
+ the Maroons, the free negroes&mdash;they who fled after the Spanish had
+ been conquered and the British came, and who were later freed and
+ secured by the Trelawney Treaty. I know that now they are ready to
+ rise, that they are working among the slaves; and if they rise the
+ danger is great to the white population of the island, who are
+ outnumbered ten to one.
+
+ The governor has been warned, but he gives no heed, or treats it all
+ lightly, pointing out how few the Maroons are. He forgets that a
+ few determined men can demoralize a whole state, can fight and
+ murder and fly to dark coverts in the tropical woods, where they
+ cannot be tracked down and destroyed; and, if they have made
+ supporters of the slaves, what consequences may not follow!
+
+ What do the Maroons look like? They are ferocious and isolated,
+ they are proud and overbearing, they are horribly cruel, but they
+ are potent, and are difficult to reach. They are not small and
+ meagre, but are big, brawny fellows, clothed in wide duck trousers
+ and shirts, and they are well-armed&mdash;cutlass, powder-horn,
+ haversack, sling, shot-gun, and pouch for ball. They dress as the
+ country requires, and they are strong fighters against our soldiers
+ who are burdened with heavy muskets, and who defy the climate, with
+ their stuffed coats, their weighty caps, and their tight cross-
+ belts. The Maroons are not to be despised. They have brains, the
+ insolence of freedom among natives who are not free, and vast
+ cruelty. They can be mastered and kept in subjection, can be made
+ allies, if properly handled; but Lord Mallow goes the wrong way
+ about it all. He permits things that inflame the Maroons.
+
+ One thing is clear to me&mdash;only by hounds can these people be
+ defeated. So sure am I upon this point, that I have sent to Cuba
+ for sixty hounds, with which, when the trouble comes&mdash;and it is not
+ far off&mdash;we shall be able to hunt the Maroons with the only weapon
+ they really fear&mdash;the dog&rsquo;s sharp tooth. It may be the governor may
+ intervene on the arrival of the dogs; but I have made friends with
+ the provost-marshal-general and some members of the Jamaica
+ legislature; also I have a friend in the deputy of the provost-
+ marshal-general in my parish of Clarendon here, and I will make a
+ good bet that the dogs will be let come into the island, governor
+ or no governor.
+
+ When one sets oneself against the Crown one must be sure of one&rsquo;s
+ ground, and fear no foe, however great and high. Well, I have won
+ so far, and I shall win in the end. Mallow should have some respect
+ for one that beat him at Phoenix Park with the sword; that beat him
+ when he would have me imprisoned here; that beat him in the matter
+ of the ship for Haiti, and that will beat him on every hazard he
+ sets, unless he stoops to underhand acts, which he will not do.
+ That much must be said for him. He plays his part in no small way,
+ and he is more a bigot and a fanatic loyalist than a rogue.
+ Suppose&mdash;but no, I will not suppose. I will lay my plans, I will
+ keep faith with people here who trust me, and who know that if I am
+ stern I am also just, and I will play according to the rules made by
+ better men than myself.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But what is this I see? Michael Clones&mdash;in his white jean waistcoat,
+ white neckcloth and trousers, and blue coat&mdash;is coming up the drive
+ in hot haste, bearing a letter. He rides too hard. He has never carried
+ himself easily in this climate. He treats it as if it was Ireland. He will
+ not protect himself, and, if penalty followed folly, should now be in his
+ grave. I like you, Michael. You are a boon, but&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s letter was never ended. It was only a relic of the years
+ spent in Jamaica, only a sign of his well-being, though it gave no real
+ picture of himself. He did not know how like a tyrant he had become in
+ some small ways, while in the large things he remained generous, urbane,
+ and resourceful. He was in appearance thin, dark-favoured, buoyant in
+ manner, and stern of face, with splendid eyes. Had he dwelt on Olympus, he
+ might have been summoned to judge and chastise the sons of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Michael Clones came to the doorway, Dyck laid down his quill-pen and
+ eyed the flushed servant in disapproval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it, Michael? Wherefore this starkness? Is some one come from
+ heaven?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not precisely from heaven, y&rsquo;r honour, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;yes, Michael! Have done with but-ing, and come to the real
+ matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, they&rsquo;ve come from Virginia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun slowly got to his feet, his face paling, his body stiffening.
+ From Virginia! Who should be come from Virginia, save she to whom he had
+ just been writing?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who has come from Virginia?&rdquo; He knew, but he wanted it said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure, you knew a vessel came from America last night. Well, in her was
+ one that was called the Queen of Ireland long ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Queen of Ireland&mdash;well, what then?&rdquo; Dyck&rsquo;s voice was tuneless, his
+ manner rigid, his eyes burning. &ldquo;Well, she&mdash;Miss Sheila Llyn and her
+ mother are going to the Salem Plantation, down by the Essex Valley
+ Mountain. It is her plantation now. It belonged to her uncle, Bryan Llyn.
+ He got it in payment of a debt. He&rsquo;s dead now, and all his lands and
+ wealth have come to her. Her mother, Mrs. Llyn, is with her, and they
+ start to-morrow or the next day for Salem. There&rsquo;ll be different doings at
+ Salem henceforward, y&rsquo;r honour. She&rsquo;s not the woman to see slaves treated
+ as the manager at Salem treated &lsquo;em.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun made an impatient gesture at this last remark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, Michael. Where are they now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;re at Charlotte Bedford&rsquo;s lodgings in Spanish Town. The governor
+ waited on them this morning. The governor sent them flowers and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Flowers&mdash;Lord Mallow sent them flowers! Hell&rsquo;s fiend, man, suppose
+ he did?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are better flowers here than in any Spanish Town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, take them, Michael; but if you do, come here again no more while
+ you live, for I&rsquo;ll have none of you. Do you think I&rsquo;m entering the lists
+ against the king&rsquo;s governor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve done it before, sir, and there&rsquo;s no harm in doing it again. One
+ good turn deserves another. I&rsquo;ve also to tell you, sir, that Lord Mallow
+ has asked them to stay at King&rsquo;s House.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Mallow has asked Americans to stay at King&rsquo;s House!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they&rsquo;re Irish, and he knew them in Ireland, y &lsquo;r honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he knew me in Ireland, and I&rsquo;m proscribed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s different, as you know. There&rsquo;s no war on now, and they&rsquo;re
+ only good American citizens who own land in this dominion of the king; so
+ why shouldn&rsquo;t he give them courtesy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From whom do you get your information?&rdquo; asked Dyck Calhoun with an air of
+ suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From Darius Boland, y&rsquo;r honour,&rdquo; answered Michael, with a smile. &ldquo;Who is
+ Darius Boland, you&rsquo;re askin&rsquo; in y&rsquo;r mind? Well, he&rsquo;s the new manager come
+ from the Llyn plantations in Virginia; and right good stuff he is, with a
+ tongue that&rsquo;s as dry as cut-wheat in August. And there&rsquo;s humour in him,
+ plenty-aye, plenty. When did I see him, and how? Well, I saw him this
+ mornin&rsquo;, on the quay at Kingston. He was orderin&rsquo; the porters about with
+ an air&mdash;oh, bedad, an air! I saw the name upon the parcels&mdash;Miss
+ Sheila Llyn, of Moira, Virginia, and so I spoke to him. The rest was aisy.
+ He looked me up and down in a flash, like a searchlight playin&rsquo; on an
+ enemy ship, and then he smiled. &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;who might you be? For
+ there&rsquo;s queer folks in Jamaica, I&rsquo;m told.&rsquo; So I said I was Michael Clones,
+ and at that he doffed his hat and held out a hand. &lsquo;Well, here&rsquo;s luck,&rsquo;
+ said he. &lsquo;Luck at the very start! I&rsquo;ve heard of you from my mistress.
+ You&rsquo;re servant to Mr. Dyck Calhoun&mdash;ain&rsquo;t that it?&rsquo; And I nodded, and
+ he smiled again&mdash;a smile that&rsquo;d cost money anywhere else than in
+ Jamaica. He smiled again, and give a slow hitch to his breeches as though
+ they was fallin&rsquo; down. Why, sir, he&rsquo;s the longest bit of man you ever saw,
+ with a pointed beard, and a nose that&rsquo;s as long as a midshipman&rsquo;s
+ tongue-dry, lean, and elastic. He&rsquo;s quick and slow all at once. His small
+ eyes twinkle like stars beatin&rsquo; up against bad weather, and his skin&rsquo;s the
+ colour of Scots grass in the dead of summer-yaller, he&rsquo;d call it if he
+ called it anything, and yaller was what he called the look of the sky
+ above the hills. Queer way of talk he has, that man, as queer as&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand, Michael. But what else? How did you come to talk about the
+ affairs of Mrs. and Miss Llyn? He didn&rsquo;t just spit it out, did he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure, not so quick and free as spittin&rsquo;, y&rsquo;r honour; but when he&rsquo;d sorted
+ me out, as it were, he said Miss Llyn had come out here to take charge of
+ Salem; her own estate in Virginia bein&rsquo; in such good runnin&rsquo; order, and
+ her mind bein&rsquo; active. Word had come of the trouble with the manager here,
+ and one of the provost-marshal&rsquo;s deputies had written accounts of the
+ flogging and ill-treatment of slaves, and that&rsquo;s why she come&mdash;to put
+ things right at Salem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To put things wrong in Jamaica, Michael, that&rsquo;s why she&rsquo;s come. To loose
+ the ball of confusion and free the flood of tragedy&mdash;that&rsquo;s why she&rsquo;s
+ come! Man, Michael, you know her history&mdash;who she was and what
+ happened to her father. Well, do you think there&rsquo;s no tragedy in her
+ coming here? I killed her father, they say, Michael. I was punished for
+ it. I came here to be free of all those things&mdash;lifted out and away
+ from them all. I longed to forget the past, which is only shame and
+ torture; and here it is all spread out at my door again like a mat, which
+ I must see as I go in and out. Essex Valley&mdash;why, it&rsquo;s less than a
+ day&rsquo;s ride from here, far less than a day&rsquo;s ride! It can be ridden in four
+ or five hours at a trot. Michael, it&rsquo;s all a damnable business. And here
+ she is in Jamaica with her Darius Boland! There was no talk on Boland&rsquo;s
+ part of their coming here, was there Michael?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None at all, sir, but there was that in the man&rsquo;s eye, and that in his
+ tone, which made me sure he thought Miss Llyn and you would meet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That would be strange, wouldn&rsquo;t it, in this immense continent!&rdquo; Dyck
+ remarked cynically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She knew I was here before she came?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, she knew. She had seen your name in the papers&mdash;English and
+ Jamaican. She knew you had regained your life and place, and was a man of
+ mark here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A marked man, you mean, Michael&mdash;a man whom the king has had to
+ pardon of a crime because of an act done that served the State. I am
+ forbidden to return to the British Isles or to the land of my birth,
+ forbidden free traffic as a citizen, hammered out of recognition by the
+ strokes of enmity. A man of mark, indeed! Aye, with the broad arrow on me,
+ with the shame of prison and mutiny on my name!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if she don&rsquo;t believe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If she don&rsquo;t believe! Well, she must be told the truth at last. I wonder
+ her mother let her come here. Her mother knew part of the truth. She hid
+ it all from the girl&mdash;and now they are here! I must see it through,
+ but it&rsquo;s a wretched fate, Michael.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps her mother didn&rsquo;t know you were here, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck laughed grimly. &ldquo;Michael, you&rsquo;ve a lawyer&rsquo;s mind. Perhaps you&rsquo;re
+ right. The girl may have hid from her mother all newspapers referring to
+ me. That may well be; but it&rsquo;s not the way that will bring understanding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s the truth, sir, for Darius Boland spoke naught of the mother&mdash;indeed,
+ he said only what would make me think the girl came with her own ends in
+ view. Faith, I&rsquo;m sure the mother did not know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will know now. Your Darius Boland will tell her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By St. Peter, it doesn&rsquo;t matter who tells her, sir. The business must be
+ faced.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Michael, order my horse, and I will go to Spanish Town. This matter must
+ be brought to a head. The truth must be told. Order my horse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the very heat of the day, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then at five o&rsquo;clock, after dinner, have my horse here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I to ride with you, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded. &ldquo;Yes, Michael. There&rsquo;s only one thing to do&mdash;face all
+ the facts with all the evidence, and you are fact and evidence too. You
+ know more of the truth than any one else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several hours later, when the sun was abating its force a little, after
+ travelling the burning roads through yams and cocoa, grenadillas and all
+ kinds of herbs and roots and vagrant trees, Dyck Calhoun and Michael
+ Clones came into Spanish Town. Dyck rode the unpaved streets on his horse
+ with its high demipicque Spanish saddle, with its silver stirrups and
+ heavy bit, and made his way towards Charlotte Bedford&rsquo;s lodgings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck looked round upon the town with new eyes. He saw it like one for the
+ first time visiting it. He saw the people passing through the wide
+ verandahs of the houses, like a vast colonnade, down the street, to be
+ happily sheltered from the fierce sun. As he had come down from the hills
+ he thought he had never seen the houses look more beautiful in their
+ gardens of wild tamarinds, kennips, cocoa-nuts, pimentos, and palms,
+ backed by negro huts. He had seen all sorts of people at the draw-wells of
+ the houses-British, Spanish, French, South American, Creoles, and here and
+ there a Maroon, and the everlasting negro who sang as he worked:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Come along o&rsquo; me, my buccra brave,
+ You see de shild de Lord he gave:
+ You drink de sangaree,
+ I make de frichassee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Here a face peeped out from the glazed sash of the jalousies of the
+ balconies above&mdash;a face that could never be said to be white, though
+ it had only a tinge of black in its coaxing beauty. There a workman with
+ long hair and shag trousers painted the prevailing two-storied house the
+ prevailing colour, white and green. There was a young naval officer in
+ full dress, gold-buckled shoes, white trousers, short jacket with gold
+ swab on shoulders, dress-sword and smart gait making for supper at King&rsquo;s
+ House.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A long-legged &ldquo;son of a gun&rdquo; of a Yankee had a &ldquo;clapper-claw,&rdquo; or
+ handshake, with a planting attorney in a kind of four-posted gig, canopied
+ in leather and curtained clumsily. The Yankee laughed at the heavy
+ straight shafts and the mule that drew the volante, as the gig was called,
+ and the vehicle creaked and cried as it rolled along over the road, which
+ was like a dry river-bed. There a French officer in Hessian boots, white
+ trousers, blue uniform, and much-embroidered scarlet cuffs watched with
+ amusement a slave carrying a goglet, or earthen jar, upon his head like an
+ Egyptian, untouched by the hand, so adding dignity to carriage. He was
+ holding a &ldquo;round-aboutation&rdquo; with an old hag who was telling his fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they passed King&rsquo;s House, they saw troops of the viceroy&rsquo;s guests
+ issuing from the palace-officers of the king&rsquo;s navy and army, officers and
+ men of the Jamaica militia, pale-faced, big-eyed men of the Creole class,
+ mulattoes, quadroons and octoroons, Samboes with their wives in loose
+ skirts, white stockings, and pinnacle hats. There also passed, in the
+ streets, black servants with tin cases on their heads, or carrying parcels
+ in their arms, and here and there processions of servants, each with
+ something that belonged to their mistresses, who would presently be
+ attending the king&rsquo;s ball.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Snatches of song were heard, and voices of men who had had a full meal and
+ had &ldquo;taken observations&rdquo;&mdash;as looking through the bottom of a glass of
+ liquor was called by people with naval spirit&mdash;were mixed in careless
+ carousal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this jarred on Dyck Calhoun and gave revolt to his senses. Yet he was
+ only half-conscious of the great sensuousness of the scene as he passed
+ through it. Now and then some one doffed a hat to him, and very
+ occasionally some half-drunken citizen tossed at him a remark meant to
+ wound; but he took no notice, and let things pleasant and provocative pass
+ down the long ranges of indifference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was brought to focus at last, however, by their arrival at Charlotte
+ Bedford&rsquo;s lodgings, which, like most houses in the town, had a lookout or
+ belfry fitted with green blinds and a telescope, and had a green-painted
+ wooden railing round it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the very entrance, inside the gate, in the garden, they saw Sheila
+ Llyn, her mother, and Darius Boland, who seemed to be enduring from the
+ mother some sharp reprimand, to the amusement of the daughter. As the gate
+ closed behind Dyck and Michael, the three from Virginia turned round and
+ faced them. As Dyck came forward, Sheila flushed and trembled. She was no
+ longer a young girl, but her slim straightness and the soft lines of her
+ figure, gave her a dignity and charm which made her young womanhood
+ distinguished&mdash;for she was now twenty-five, and had a carriage of
+ which a princess might have been proud. Yet it was plain that the entrance
+ of Dyck at this moment was disturbing. It was not what she had foreseen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She showed no hesitation, however, but came forward to meet her visitor,
+ while Michael fell back, as also did Darius Boland. Both these seemed to
+ realize that the less they saw and heard the better; and they presently
+ got together in another part of the garden, as Dyck Calhoun came near
+ enough almost to touch Sheila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely, he thought, she was supreme in appearance and design. She was like
+ some rare flower of the field, alert, gentle, strong, intrepid, with
+ buoyant face, brown hair, blue eyes and cream-like skin. She was touched
+ by a rose on each cheek and made womanly by firm and yet generous breasts,
+ tenderly imprisoned by the white chiffon of her blouse in which was one
+ bright sprig of the buds of a cherry-tree-a touch of modest luxuriance on
+ a person sparsely ornamented. It was not tropical, this picture of Sheila
+ Llyn; it was a flick of northern life in a summer sky. It was at once
+ cheerful and apart. It had no August in it; no oil and wine. It was the
+ little twig that grew by a running spring. It was fresh, dominant and
+ serene. It was Connemara on the Amazon! It was Sheila herself, whom time
+ had enriched with far more than years and experience. It was a personality
+ which would anywhere have taken place and held it. It was undefeatable,
+ persistent and permanent; it was the spirit of Ireland loose in a world
+ that was as far apart from Ireland as she was from her dead, dishonoured
+ father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Dyck? At first she felt she must fly to him&mdash;yes, in spite of the
+ fact that he had suffered prison for manslaughter. But a nearer look at
+ him stopped the impulse at its birth. Here was the Dyck Calhoun she had
+ known in days gone by, but not the Dyck she had looked to see; for this
+ man was like one who had come from a hanging, who had seen his dearest
+ swinging at the end of a rope. His face was set in coldness; his hair was
+ streaked with grey; his forehead had a line in the middle; his manner was
+ rigid, almost frigid, indeed. Only in his eyes was there that which denied
+ all that his face and manner said&mdash;a hungry, absorbing, hopeless
+ look, the look of one who searches for a friend in the denying desert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow, when he bowed low to her, and looked her in the eyes as no one in
+ all her life had ever done, she had an almost agonized understanding of
+ what a man feels who has been imprisoned&mdash;that is, never the same
+ again. He was an ex-convict, and yet she did not feel repelled by him. She
+ did not believe he had killed Erris Boyne. As for the later crime of
+ mutiny, that did not concern her much. She was Irish; but, more than that,
+ she was in sympathy with the mutineers. She understood why Dyck Calhoun,
+ enlisting as a common sailor, should take up their cause and run risk to
+ advance it. That he had advanced it was known to all the world; that he
+ had paid the price of his mutiny by saving the king&rsquo;s navy with a stolen
+ ship had brought him pardon for his theft of a ship and mutiny; and that
+ he had won wealth was but another proof of the man&rsquo;s power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not come to America, so I came here, and&mdash;&rdquo; She paused,
+ her voice trembling slightly. &ldquo;There is much to do at Salem,&rdquo; he added
+ calmly, and yet with his heart beating, as it had not beaten since the day
+ he had first met her at Playmore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not take the money I sent to Dublin for you&mdash;the gift of a
+ believing friend, and you would not come to America!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall have to tell you why one day,&rdquo; he answered slowly, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll pay
+ my respects to your mother now.&rdquo; So saying he went forward and bowed low
+ to Mrs. Llyn. Unlike her daughter, Mrs. Llyn did not offer her hand. She
+ was pale, distraught, troubled&mdash;and vexed. She, however, murmured his
+ name and bowed. &ldquo;You did not expect to see me here in Jamaica,&rdquo; he said
+ boldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frankly, I did not, Mr. Calhoun,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You resent my coming here to see you? You think it bold, at least.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him closely and firmly. &ldquo;You know why I cannot welcome you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet I have paid the account demanded by the law. And you had no regard
+ for him. You divorced him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila had drawn near, and Dyck made a gesture in her direction. &ldquo;She does
+ not know,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and she should not hear what we say now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Llyn nodded, and in a low tone told Sheila that she wished to be
+ alone with Dyck for a little while. In Dyck&rsquo;s eyes, as he watched Sheila
+ go, was a thing deeper than he had ever known or shown before. In her
+ white gown, and with her light step, Sheila seemed to float away&mdash;a
+ picture graceful, stately, buoyant, &ldquo;keen and small.&rdquo; As she was about to
+ pass beyond a clump of pimento bushes, she turned her head towards the
+ two, and there was that in her eyes which few ever see and seeing are
+ afterwards the same. It was a look of inquiry, or revelation, of emotion
+ which went to Dyck&rsquo;s heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, she does not know the truth,&rdquo; Mrs. Llyn said. &ldquo;But it has been hard
+ hiding it from her. One never knew whether some chance remark, some
+ allusion in the papers, would tell her you had killed her father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I kill her father?&rdquo; asked Dyck helplessly. &ldquo;Did I? I was found guilty
+ of it, but on my honour, Mrs. Llyn, I do not know, and I do not think I
+ did. I have no memory of it. We quarrelled. I drew my sword on him, then
+ he made an explanation and I madly, stupidly drank drugged wine in
+ reconciliation with him, and then I remember nothing more&mdash;nothing at
+ all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was the cause of your quarrel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck looked at her long before answering. &ldquo;I hid that from my father even,
+ and hid it from the world&mdash;did not even mention it in court at the
+ trial. If I had, perhaps I should not have gone to jail. If I had, perhaps
+ I should not be here in Jamaica. If I had&mdash;&rdquo; He paused, a flood of
+ reflection drowning his face, making his eyes shine with black sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if you had!... Why did you not? Wasn&rsquo;t it your duty to save
+ yourself and save your friends, if you could? Wasn&rsquo;t that your plain
+ duty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and that was why I did not tell what the quarrel was. If I had, even
+ had I killed Erris Boyne, the jury would not have convicted me. Of that I
+ am sure. It was a loyalist jury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why did you not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it strange that now after all these years, when I have settled the
+ account with judge and jury, with state and law&mdash;that now I feel I
+ must tell you the truth. Madam, your ex-husband, Erris Boyne, was a
+ traitor. He was an officer in the French army, and he offered to make me
+ an officer also and pay me well in French Government money, if I would
+ break my allegiance and serve the French cause&mdash;Ah, don&rsquo;t start! He
+ knew I was on my last legs financially. He knew I had acquaintance with
+ young rebel leaders like Emmet, and he felt I could be won. So he made his
+ proposal. Because of your daughter I held my peace, for she could bear it
+ less than you. I did not tell the cause of the quarrel. If I had, there
+ would have been for her the double shame. That was why I held my peace&mdash;a
+ fool, but so it was!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman seemed almost robbed of understanding. His story overwhelmed
+ her. Yet what the man had done was so quixotic, so Celtic, that her senses
+ were almost paralysed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So mad&mdash;so mad and bad and wild you were,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Could you not
+ see it was your duty to tell all, no matter what the consequences. The man
+ was a villain. But what madness you were guilty of, what cruel madness!
+ Only you could have done a thing like that. Erris Boyne deserved death&mdash;I
+ care not who killed him&mdash;you or another. He deserved death, and it
+ was right he should die. But that you should kill him, apart from all else&mdash;why,
+ indeed, oh, indeed, it is a tragedy, for you loved my daughter, and the
+ killing made a gulf between you! There could be no marriage in such a
+ case. She could not bear it, nor could you. But please know this, Mr.
+ Calhoun, that she never believed you killed Erris Boyne. She has said so
+ again and again. You are the only man who has ever touched her mind or her
+ senses, though many have sought her. Wherever she goes men try to win her,
+ but she has no thought for any. Her mind goes back to you. Just when you
+ entered the garden I learned&mdash;and only then-that you were here. She
+ hid it from me, but Darius Boland knew, and he had seen your man, Michael
+ Clones, and she had then made him tell me. I was incensed. I was her
+ mother, and yet she had hid the thing from me. I thought she came to this
+ island for the sake of Salem, and I found that she came not for Salem, but
+ for you.... Ah, Mr. Calhoun, she deserves what you did to save her, but
+ you should not have done it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She deserves all that any better man might do. Why don&rsquo;t you marry her to
+ some great man in your Republic? It would settle my trouble for me and
+ free her mind from anxiety. Mrs. Llyn, we are not children, you and I. You
+ know life, and so do I, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She interrupted him. &ldquo;Be sure of this, Mr. Calhoun, she knows life even
+ better than either of us. She is, and has always been, a girl of sense and
+ judgment. When she was a child she was my master, even in Ireland. Yet she
+ was obedient and faithful, and kept her head in all vexed things. She will
+ have her way, and she will have it as she wants it, and in no other
+ manner. She is one of the world&rsquo;s great women. She is unique. Child as she
+ is, she still understands all that men do, and does it. Under her hands
+ the estates in Virginia have developed even more than under the hands of
+ my brother. She controls like another Elizabeth. She has made those
+ estates run like a spool of thread, and she will do the same here with
+ Salem. Be sure of that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why does she not marry? Is there no man she can bear? She could have the
+ highest, that&rsquo;s sure.&rdquo; He spoke with passion and insistence. If she were
+ married his trouble would be over. The worst would have come to him&mdash;like
+ death. His eyes were only two dark fires in a face that was as near to
+ tragic pain crystallized as any the world has seen. Yet there was in it
+ some big commanding thing, that gave it a ghastly handsomeness almost;
+ that bathed his look in dignity and power, albeit a reckless power, a
+ thing that would not be stayed by any blandishments. He had the look of a
+ lost angel, one who fell with Belial in the first days of sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no man she can bear&mdash;except here in Jamaica. It is no use.
+ Your governor, Lord Mallow, whom she knew in Ireland, who is distant kin
+ of mine, he has already made advances here to her, as he did in Ireland&mdash;you
+ did not know that. Even before we left for Virginia he came to see us, and
+ brought her books and flowers, and here, on our arrival, he brought her
+ choicest blooms of his garden. She is rich, and he would be glad of an
+ estate that brings in scores of thousands of pounds yearly. He has asked
+ us to stay at King&rsquo;s House, but we have declined. We start for Salem in a
+ few hours. She wants her hand on the wheel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Mallow&mdash;he courts her, does he?&rdquo; His face grew grimmer. &ldquo;Well,
+ she might do worse, though if she were one of my family I would rather see
+ her in her grave than wedded to him. For he is selfish&mdash;aye, as few
+ men are! He would eat and keep his apple too. His theory is that life is
+ but a game, and it must be played with steel. He would squeeze the life
+ out of a flower, and give the flower to his dog to eat. He thinks first
+ and always of himself. He would&mdash;but there, he would make a good
+ husband as husbands go for some women, but not for this woman! It is not
+ because he is my enemy I say this. It is because there is only one woman
+ like your daughter, and that is herself; and I would rather see her
+ married to a hedger that really loved her than to Lord Mallow, who loves
+ only one being on earth&mdash;himself. But see, Mrs. Llyn, now that you
+ know all, now that we three have met again, and this island is small and
+ tragedy is at our doors, don&rsquo;t you think your daughter should be told the
+ truth. It will end everything for me. But it would be better so. It is now
+ only cruelty to hide the truth, harsh to continue a friendship which will
+ only appal her in the end. If we had not met again like this, then silence
+ might have been best; but as she is not cured of her tender friendship
+ made upon the hills at Playmore, isn&rsquo;t it well to end it all? Your
+ conscience will be clearer, and so will mine. We shall have done the right
+ thing at last. Why did you not tell her who her father was? Then why blame
+ me! You held your peace to save your daughter, as you thought. I held my
+ tongue for the same reason; but she is so much a woman now, that she will
+ understand, as she could not have understood years ago in Limerick. In
+ God&rsquo;s name, let us speak. One of us should tell her, and I think it should
+ be you. And see, though I know I did right in withholding the facts about
+ the quarrel with Erris Boyne, yet I favour telling her that he was a
+ traitor. The whole truth now, or nothing. That is my view.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw how lined and sunken was her face, he noted the weakness of her
+ carriage, he realized the task he was putting on her, and his heart
+ relented. &ldquo;No, I will do it,&rdquo; he added, with sudden will, &ldquo;and I will do
+ it now, if I may.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, not to-day-not to-day!&rdquo; she said with a piteous look. &ldquo;Let it not be
+ to-day. It is our first day here, and we are due at King&rsquo;s House to-night,
+ even in an hour from now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You want her at her glorious best, is that it?&rdquo; It seemed too strange
+ that the pure feminine should show at a time of crisis like this, but
+ there it was. It was this woman&rsquo;s way. But he added presently: &ldquo;When she
+ asks you what we have talked about, what will you say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it not easy? I am a mother,&rdquo; she said meaningly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am an ex-convict, and a mutineer&mdash;is that it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She inclined her head. &ldquo;It should not be difficult to explain. When you
+ came I was speaking as I felt, and she will not think it strange if I give
+ that as my reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is it wise? Isn&rsquo;t it better to end it all now? Suppose Lord Mallow
+ tells her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He did not before. He is not likely now,&rdquo; was the vexed reply. &ldquo;Is it a
+ thing a gentleman will speak of to a lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you do not know Mallow. If he thought she had seen me to-day, he
+ would not hesitate. What would you do if you were Lord Mallow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not to-day,&rdquo; she persisted. &ldquo;It is all so many years ago. It can hurt
+ naught to wait a little longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When and where shall it be?&rdquo; he asked gloomily. &ldquo;At Salem&mdash;at Salem.
+ We shall be settled then&mdash;and steady. There is every reason why you
+ should consider me. I have suffered as few women have suffered, and I do
+ not hate you. I am only sorry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far down at the other end of the garden he saw Sheila. Her face was in
+ profile&mdash;an exquisite silhouette. She moved slowly among the pimento
+ bushes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you wish,&rdquo; he said with a heavy sigh. The sight of the girl anguished
+ his soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. AT SALEM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The plantation of Salem was in a region below the Pedro Plains in the
+ parish of St. Elizabeth, where grow the aloe, and torch-thistle, and
+ clumps of wood which alter the appearance of the plain from the South
+ Downs of England, but where thousands of cattle and horses even in those
+ days were maintained. The air of the district was dry and elastic, and it
+ filtered down to the valleys near like that where Salem was with its
+ clusters of negro huts and offices, its mills and distilleries where sugar
+ and rum were made. Salem was situated on the Black River, accessible by
+ boats and canoes. The huts of negro slaves were near the sugar mills,
+ without regard to order, but in clusters of banana, avocado-pear, limes
+ and oranges, and with the cultivated land round their huts made an
+ effective picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day every fortnight was allowed the negroes to cultivate their crops,
+ and give them a chance to manufacture mats for beds, bark-ropes,
+ wicker-chairs and baskets, earthen jars, pans, and that kind of thing. The
+ huts themselves were primitive to a degree, the floor being earth, the
+ roof, of palm-thatch or the leaves of the cocoa-nut tree, the sides
+ hard-posts driven in the ground and interlaced with wattle and plaster,
+ and inside scarcely high enough for its owner to walk upright. The
+ furniture was scant&mdash;a quatre, or bed, made of a platform of boards,
+ with a mat and a blanket, some low stools, a small table, an earthen
+ water-jar, and some smaller ones, a pail and an iron pot, and calabashes
+ which did duty for plates, dishes and bowls. In one of the two rooms
+ making the hut, there were always the ashes of the night-fire, without
+ which negroes could not sleep in comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were the huts of the lowest grade of negro-slaves of the fields. The
+ small merchants and the domestics had larger houses with boarded floors,
+ some even with linen sheets and mosquito nets, and shelves with plates and
+ dishes of good ware. Every negro received a yearly allowance of Osnaburgh
+ linen, woollen, baize and checks for clothes, and some planters also gave
+ them hats and handkerchiefs, knives, needles and thread, and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every plantation had a surgeon who received a small sum for attendance on
+ every slave, while special cases of midwifery, inoculation, etc., had a
+ particular allowance. The surgeon had to attend to about four hundred to
+ five hundred negroes, on an income of L150 per annum, and board and
+ lodging and washing, besides what he made from his practice with the
+ whites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Salem was no worse than some other plantations on the island, but it was
+ far behind such plantations as that owned by Dyck Calhoun, and had been
+ notorious for the cruelties committed on it. To such an estate a lady like
+ Sheila Llyn would be a boon. She was not on the place a day before she
+ started reforms which would turn the plantation into a model scheme.
+ Houses, food, treatment of the negroes, became at once a study to her, and
+ her experience in Virginia was invaluable. She had learned there not to
+ work the slaves too hard in the warm period of the day; and she showed her
+ interest by having served at her own table the favourite olio the slaves
+ made of plantains, bananas, yams, calalue, eddoes, cassavi, and sweet
+ potatoes boiled with salt fish and flavoured with cayenne pepper. This,
+ with the unripe roasted plantain as bread, was a native relish and
+ health-giving food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ever since the day when she had seen Dyck Calhoun at Spanish Town she had
+ been disturbed in mind. Dyck had shown a reserve which she felt was not
+ wholly due to his having been imprisoned for manslaughter. In one way he
+ looked little older. His physique was as good, or better than when she
+ first saw him on the hills of Playmore. It was athletic, strenuous,
+ elastic. Yet there was about it the abandonment of despair&mdash;at least
+ of recklessness. The face was older, the head more powerful, the hair
+ slightly touched with grey-rather there was one spot in the hair almost
+ pure white; a strand of winter in the foliage of summer. It gave a touch
+ of the bizarre to a distinguished head, it lent an air of the singular to
+ a personality which had flare and force&mdash;an almost devilish force.
+ That much was to be said for him, that he had not sought to influence her
+ to his own advantage. She was so surrounded in America by men who knew her
+ wealth and prized her beauty, she was so much a figure in Virginia, that
+ any reserve with regard to herself was noticeable. She was enough feminine
+ to have pleasure in the fact that she was thought desirable by men; yet it
+ played an insignificant part in her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not give her conceit. It was only like a frill on the skirts of
+ life. It did not play any part in her character. Certainly Dyck Calhoun
+ had not flattered her. That one to whom she had written, as she had done,
+ should remove himself so from the place of the deserving friend, one whom
+ she had not deserted while he was in jail as a criminal&mdash;that he
+ should treat her so, gave every nerve a thrill of protest. Sometimes she
+ trembled in indignation, and then afterwards gave herself to the work on
+ the estate or in the household&mdash;its reform and its rearrangement;
+ though the house was like most in Jamaica, had adequate plate, linen,
+ glass and furniture. At the lodgings in Spanish Town, after Dyck Calhoun
+ had left, her mother had briefly said that she had told Dyck he could not
+ expect the conditions of the Playmore friendship should be renewed; that,
+ in effect, she had warned him off. To this Sheila had said that the
+ killing of a man whose life was bad might be punishable. In any case, that
+ was in another land, under abnormal conditions; and, with lack of logic,
+ she saw no reason why he should be socially punished in Jamaica for what
+ he had been legally punished for in Ireland. As for the mutiny, he had
+ done what any honest man of spirit would do; also, he had by great bravery
+ and skill brought victory to the king&rsquo;s fleet in West Indian waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then it was she told her mother how she had always disobeyed her commands
+ where Dyck was concerned, that she had written to him while he was in
+ jail; that she had come to Jamaica more to see him than to reform Salem;
+ that she had the old Celtic spirit of brotherhood, and she would not be
+ driven from it. In a sudden burst of anger her mother had charged her with
+ deceit; but the girl said she had followed her conscience, and she
+ dismissed it all with a gesture as emphatic as her mother&rsquo;s anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night they had dined with Lord Mallow, and she saw that his
+ attentions had behind them the deep purpose of marriage. She had not been
+ overcome by the splendour of his retinue and table, or by the magnificence
+ of his guests; though the military commander-in-chief and the temporary
+ admiral on the station did their utmost to entertain her, and some of the
+ local big-wigs were pompous. Lord Mallow had ability and knew how to use
+ it; and he was never so brilliant as on this afternoon, for they dined
+ while it was still daylight and hardly evening. He told her of the customs
+ of the country, of the people; and slyly and effectively he satirized some
+ of his grandiloquent guests. Not unduly, for one of them, the most
+ renowned in the island, came to him after dinner as he sat talking to
+ Sheila, and said: &ldquo;I&rsquo;m very sorry, your honour, but good Almighty God, I
+ must go home and cool coppers.&rdquo; Then he gave Sheila a hot yet clammy hand,
+ and bade her welcome as a citizen to the island, &ldquo;alien but respected,
+ beautiful but capable!&rdquo; Sheila had seen a few of the Creole ladies present
+ at their best-large-eyed, simple, not to say primitive in speech, and very
+ unaffected in manner. She had learned also that the way to the Jamaican
+ heart was by a full table and a little flattery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One incident at dinner had impressed her greatly. Not far away from her
+ was a young lady, beautiful in face and person, and she had seen a
+ scorpion suddenly shoot into her sleeve and ruthlessly strike and strike
+ the arm of the girl, who gave one cry only and then was still. Sheila saw
+ the man next to the girl&mdash;he was a native officer&mdash;secure the
+ scorpion, and then whip from his pocket a little bag of indigo, dip it in
+ water, and apply the bag to the wounded arm, immediately easing the wound.
+ This had all been done so quickly that it was over before the table had
+ been upset, almost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the kind of thing we have here,&rdquo; said Lord Mallow. &ldquo;There is a
+ lady present who has seen in one day a favourite black child bitten by a
+ congereel, a large centipede in her nursery, a snake crawl from under her
+ child&rsquo;s pillow, and her son nearly die from a bite of the black spider
+ with the red spot on its tail. It is a life that has its trials&mdash;and
+ its compensations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw a man&rsquo;s head on a pole on my way to King&rsquo;s House. You have to use
+ firm methods here,&rdquo; Sheila said in reply. &ldquo;It is not all a rose-garden.
+ You have to apply force.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow smiled grimly. &ldquo;C&rsquo;est la force morale toujours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, I should not have thought it was moral force always,&rdquo; was the
+ ironical reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have criminals here,&rdquo; declared the governor with aplomb, &ldquo;and they
+ need some handling, I assure you. We have in this island one of the worst
+ criminals in the British Empire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, I thought he was in the United States!&rdquo; answered the girl sedately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean General George Washington,&rdquo; remarked the governor. &ldquo;No, it is
+ one who was a friend and fellow-countryman of yours before he took to
+ killing unarmed men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You refer to Mr. Dyck Calhoun, I doubt not, sir? Well, he is still a
+ friend of mine, and I saw him today&mdash;this afternoon, before I came
+ here. I understood that the Crown had pardoned his mutiny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor started. He was plainly annoyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The crime is there just the same,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;He mutinied, and he stole
+ a king&rsquo;s ship, and took command of it, and brought it out here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And saved you and your island, I understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, he said that, did he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He said nothing at all to me about it. I have been reading the Jamaica
+ Cornwall Chronicle the last three years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is ever a source of anxiety to me,&rdquo; declared the governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew he was once in Phoenix Park years ago,&rdquo; was the demure yet sharp
+ reply, &ldquo;but I thought he was a good citizen here&mdash;a good and
+ well-to-do citizen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow flushed slightly. &ldquo;Phoenix Park&mdash;ah, he was a capable
+ fellow with the sword! I said so always, and I&rsquo;d back him now against a
+ champion; but many a bad man has been a good swordsman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, that&rsquo;s what good swordsmanship does, is it? I wondered what it was
+ that did it. I hear you fight him still&mdash;but with a bludgeon, and he
+ dodges it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not understand,&rdquo; declared Lord Mallow tartly. &ldquo;Ah, wasn&rsquo;t there some
+ difference over his going for the treasure to Haiti? Some one told me, I
+ think, that you were not in favour of his getting his ticket-of-leave, or
+ whatever it is called, and that the provost-marshal gave it to him, as he
+ had the right to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have wide sources of information in this case. I wonder&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, your honour need not wonder. I was told that by a gentleman on the
+ steamer coming here. He was a native of the island, I think&mdash;or
+ perhaps it was the captain, or the mate, or the boatswain. I can&rsquo;t recall.
+ Or maybe it came to me from my manager, Darius Boland, who hears things
+ wherever he is, one doesn&rsquo;t know how; but he hears them. He is to me what
+ your aide-de-camp is to you,&rdquo; she nodded towards a young man near by at
+ the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you dress your Darius Boland as I dress my aide in scarlet, with
+ blue facings and golden embroidery, and put a stiff hat with a feather on
+ his head?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But no, he does not need such things. I am a Republican now. I am a
+ citizen of the United States, where men have no need of uniform to tell
+ the world what they are. You shall see my Darius Boland&mdash;indeed, you
+ have seen him. He was there to-day when you gave me the distinction of
+ your presence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That dry, lean, cartridge of a fellow, that pair of pincers with a face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a tongue, your honour. If you did not hear it yet, you will hear it.
+ He is to be my manager here. So he will be under your control&mdash;if I
+ permit him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you permit him, mistress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I permit him, yes. You are a power, but you are not stronger than the
+ laws and rules you make. For instance, there was the case of Mr. Dyck
+ Calhoun. When he came, you were for tying him up in one little corner of
+ this island&mdash;the hottest part, I know, near to Kingston, where it
+ averages ninety degrees in the shade at any time of the year. But the King
+ you represent had not restricted his liberties so, and you being the King,
+ that is, yourself, were forced to abide by your own regulations. So it may
+ be the same with Darius Boland. He may want something, and you, high up,
+ looking down, will say, &lsquo;What devilry is here!&rsquo; and decline. He will then
+ turn to your chief-justice or provost-marshal-general, or a deputy of the
+ provost-marshal, and they will say that Darius Boland shall have what he
+ wants, because it is the will of the will you represent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost the last words the governor used to her were these: &ldquo;Those only
+ live at peace here who are at peace with me&rdquo;; and her reply had been: &ldquo;But
+ Mr. Dyck Calhoun lives at peace, does he not, your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To that he had replied: &ldquo;No man is at peace while he has yet desires.&rdquo; He
+ paused a minute and then added: &ldquo;That Erris Boyne killed by Dyck Calhoun&mdash;did
+ you ever see him that you remember?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I remember,&rdquo; she replied quickly. &ldquo;I never lived in Dublin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may be. But did you never know his history?&rdquo; She shook her head in
+ negation. His eyes searched her face carefully, and he was astonished when
+ he saw no sign of confusion there. &ldquo;Good God, she doesn&rsquo;t know. She&rsquo;s
+ never been told!&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;This is too startling. I&rsquo;ll speak
+ to the mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later he turned from the mother with astonishment. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ madness,&rdquo; he remarked to himself. &ldquo;She will find out. Some one will tell
+ her.... By heaven, I&rsquo;ll tell her first,&rdquo; he hastily said. &ldquo;When she knows
+ the truth, Calhoun will have no chance on earth. Yes, I&rsquo;ll tell her
+ myself. But I&rsquo;ll tell no one else,&rdquo; he added; for he felt that Sheila,
+ once she knew the truth, would resent his having told abroad the true
+ story of the Erris Boyne affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Sheila and her mother had gone to their lodgings with depression, but
+ each with a clear purpose in her mind. Mrs. Llyn was determined to tell
+ her daughter what she ought to have known long before; and Sheila was firm
+ to make the one man who had ever interested her understand that he was
+ losing much that was worth while keeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then had followed the journey to Salem. Yet all the while for Sheila one
+ dark thought kept hovering over everything. Why should life be so
+ complicated? Why should this one man who seemed capable and had the
+ temperament of the Irish hills and vales be the victim of punishment and
+ shame&mdash;why should he shame her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, without her mother&rsquo;s knowledge, she sent Darius Boland through
+ the hills in the early morning to Enniskillen, Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s place, with
+ a letter which said only this: &ldquo;Is it not time that you came to wish us
+ well in our new home? We shall expect you to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Dyck read this note he thought it was written by Sheila, but inspired
+ by the mother; and he lost no time in making his way down across the
+ country to Salem, which he reached a few hours after sunrise. At the
+ doorway of the house he met Mrs. Llyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you told her?&rdquo; he asked in anxiety. Astonished at his presence she
+ could make no reply for a moment. &ldquo;I have told her nothing,&rdquo; she answered.
+ &ldquo;I meant to do so this morning. I meant to do it&mdash;I must.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She sent me a letter asking if it was not time I came to wish you well in
+ your house, and you and she would expect me to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew naught of her writing you,&rdquo; was the reply&mdash;&ldquo;naught at all.
+ But now that you are here, will you not tell her all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck smiled grimly. &ldquo;Where is she?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I will tell her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother pointed down the garden. &ldquo;Yonder by the clump of palms I saw
+ her a moment ago. If you go that way you will find her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another moment Dyck Calhoun was on his way to the clump of palms, and
+ before he reached it, the girl came out into the path. She was dressed in
+ a black silk skirt with a white bodice and lace, as he had seen her on her
+ arrival in Kingston, and at her throat was a sprig of the wild pear-tree.
+ When she saw him, she gave a slight start, then stood still, and he came
+ to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have your letter,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I came to say what I ought to say
+ about your living here: you will bring blessings to the place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him steadfastly. &ldquo;Shall we talk here,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;or inside
+ the house? There is a little shelter here in the trees&rdquo;&mdash;pointing to
+ the right&mdash;&ldquo;a shelter built by the late manager. It has the covering
+ of a hut, but it is open at two sides. Will you come?&rdquo; As she went on
+ ahead, he could not fail to notice how slim and trim she was, how
+ perfectly her figure seemed to fit her gown-as though she had been poured
+ into it; and yet the folds of her skirt waved and floated like silky
+ clouds around her! Under cover of the shelter, she turned and smiled at
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have seen my mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have just come from her,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;She bade me tell you what ought
+ to have been told long ago, and you were not, for there seemed no reason
+ that you should. You were young and ignorant and happy. You had no cares,
+ no sorrows. The sorrows that had come to your mother belonged to days when
+ you were scarce out of the cradle. But you did not know. You were not
+ aware that your mother had divorced your father for crime against marital
+ fidelity and great cruelty. You did not know even who that father was.
+ Well, I must tell you. Your father was a handsome man, a friend of mine
+ until I knew the truth about him, and then he died&mdash;I killed him, so
+ the court said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face became ghastly pale. After a moment of anguished bewilderment,
+ she said: &ldquo;You mean that Erris Boyne was my father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I mean that. They say I killed him. They say that he was found with
+ no sword drawn, but that my open sword lay on the table beside me while I
+ was asleep, and that it had let out his life-blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why was he killed?&rdquo; she asked, horror-stricken and with pale lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not know, but if I killed him, it was because I revolted from the
+ proposals he made to me. I&mdash;&rdquo; He paused, for the look on her face was
+ painful to see, and her body was as that of one who had been struck by
+ lightning. It had a crumpled, stricken look, and all force seemed to be
+ driven from it. It had the look of crushed vitality. Her face was set in
+ paleness, her eyes were frightened, her whole person was, as it were, in
+ ghastly captivity. His heart smote him, and he pulled himself together to
+ tell her all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I want to hear. I want&mdash;to know all. I ought to
+ have known&mdash;long ago; but that can&rsquo;t be helped now. Continue&mdash;please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her words had come slowly, in gasps almost, and her voice was so frayed he
+ could scarcely recognize it. All the pride of her nature seemed shattered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I killed him,&rdquo; he said presently, &ldquo;it was because he tried to tempt me
+ from my allegiance to the Crown to become a servant of France, to&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stopped short, for a cry came from her lips which appalled him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My God&mdash;my God!&rdquo; she said with bloodless lips, her eyes fastened on
+ his face, her every look and motion the inflection of despair. &ldquo;Go on&mdash;tell
+ all,&rdquo; she added presently with more composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swiftly he described what happened in the little room at the traitor&rsquo;s
+ tavern, of the momentary reconciliation and the wine that he drank,
+ drugged wine poured out but not drunk by Erris Boyne, and of his later
+ unconsciousness. At last he paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did these things not come out at the trial?&rdquo; she asked in hushed
+ tones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made a helpless gesture. &ldquo;I did not speak of them because I thought of
+ you. I hid it&mdash;I did not want you to know what your father was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something like a smile gathered at her pale lips. &ldquo;You saved me for the
+ moment, and condemned yourself for ever,&rdquo; she said in a voice of torture.
+ &ldquo;If you had told what he was&mdash;if you had told that, the jury would
+ not have condemned you, they would not have sent you to prison.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe I did the right thing,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If I killed your father,
+ prison was my proper punishment. But I can&rsquo;t remember. There was no other
+ clue, no other guide to judgment. So the law said I killed him, and&mdash;he
+ had evidently not drawn his sword. It was clear he was killed
+ defenceless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You killed a defenceless man!&rdquo; Her voice was sharp with agony. &ldquo;That was
+ mentioned at the trial&mdash;but I did not believe it then&mdash;in that
+ long ago.&rdquo; She trembled to her feet from the bench where she was sitting.
+ &ldquo;And I do not believe it now&mdash;no, on my soul, I do not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it makes no difference, you see. I was condemned for killing your
+ father, and the world knows that Erris Boyne was your father, and here
+ Lord Mallow, the governor, knows it; and there is no chance of friendship
+ between you and me. Since the day he was found dead in the room, there was
+ no hope for our friendship, for anything at all between us that I had
+ wished to be there. You dare not be friends with me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face suddenly suffused and she held herself upright with an effort.
+ She was about to say, &ldquo;I dare, Dyck&mdash;I do dare!&rdquo; but he stopped her
+ with a reproving gesture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, you dare not, and I would not let you if you would. I am an
+ ex-convict. They say I killed your father, and the way to understanding
+ between us is closed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She made a protesting gesture. &ldquo;Closed! Closed!&mdash;But is it closed?
+ No, no, some one else killed him, not you. You couldn&rsquo;t have done it. You
+ would have fought him&mdash;fought him as you did Lord Mallow, and in
+ fighting you might have killed him, but your sword never let out his life
+ when he was defenceless&mdash;never.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A look of intense relief, almost of happiness, came to Dyck&rsquo;s face. &ldquo;That
+ is like you, Sheila, but it does not cure the trouble. You and I are as
+ far apart as noon and midnight. The law has said the only thing that can
+ be said upon it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sank down again upon the wooden bench. &ldquo;Oh, how mad you were, not to
+ tell the whole truth long ago! You would not have been condemned, and then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused overcome, and his self-control almost deserted him. With strong
+ feeling he burst out: &ldquo;And then, we might have come together? No, your
+ mother&mdash;your friends, myself, could not have let that be. See,
+ Sheila, I will tell you the whole truth now&mdash;aye, the whole absolute
+ truth. I have loved you since the first day I saw you on the hills when
+ you and I rescued Christopher Dogan. Not a day has passed since then when
+ you were not more to me than any other woman in all the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new light came into her face, the shadows left her eyes, and the pallor
+ fled from her lips. &ldquo;You loved me?&rdquo; she said in a voice grown soft-husky
+ still, but soft as the light in a summer heaven. &ldquo;You loved me&mdash;and
+ have always loved me since we first met?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her look was so appealing, so passionate and so womanly, that he longed to
+ reach out his arms to her, and say, &ldquo;Come&mdash;come home, Sheila,&rdquo; but
+ the situation did not permit that, and only his eyes told the story of
+ what was in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have always loved you, Sheila, and shall do so while I have breath and
+ life. I have always given you the best that is in me, tried to do what was
+ good for us both, since my misfortune&mdash;crime, Lord Mallow calls it,
+ as does the world. Never a sunrise that does not find you in the forefront
+ of all the lighted world; never a flower have I seen that does not seem
+ sweeter&mdash;it brings thoughts of you; never a crime that does not
+ deepen its shame because you are in the world. In prison, when I used to
+ mop my floor and clean down the walls; when I swept the dust from the
+ corners; when I folded up my convict clothes; when I ate the prison food
+ and sang the prison hymns; when I placed myself beside the bench in the
+ workshop to make things that would bring cash to my fellow-prisoners in
+ their need; when I saw a minister of religion or heard the Litany; when I
+ counted up the days, first that I had spent in jail and then the days I
+ had still to spend in jail; when I read the books from the prison library
+ of the land where you had gone, and of the struggle there; when I saw you,
+ in my mind&rsquo;s eye, in the cotton-fields or on the verandah of your house in
+ Virginia&mdash;I had but one thought, and that was the look in your face
+ at Playmore and Limerick, the sound of your voice as you came singing up
+ the hill just before I first met you, the joyous beauty of your body.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And at sea?&rdquo; she whispered with a gesture at once beautiful and pathetic,
+ for it had the motion of helplessness and hopelessness. What she had heard
+ had stirred her soul, and she wanted to hear more&mdash;or was it that she
+ wished to drain the cup now that it was held to her lips?-drain it to the
+ last drop of feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At sea,&rdquo; he answered, with his eyes full of intense feeling&mdash;&ldquo;at
+ sea, I was free at last, doomed as I thought, anguished in spirit, and yet
+ with a wild hope that out of it would come deliverance. I expected to lose
+ my life, and I lived each day as though it would be my last. I was chief
+ rogue in a shipful of rogues, chief sinner in a hell of sinners, and yet I
+ had no remorse and no regret. I had done all with an honest purpose, with
+ the good of the sailors in my mind; and so I lived in daily touch with
+ death, honour, and dishonour. Yet I never saw a sailor in the shrouds, or
+ heard the night watch call &lsquo;All&rsquo;s well!&rsquo; in the midst of night and mutiny,
+ that I did not long for a word from you that would take away the sting of
+ death. Those days at sea for ten long weeks were never free from anxiety,
+ not anxiety for myself, only for the men who had put me where I was, had
+ given me captain&rsquo;s rank, had&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he stopped, and took from his pocket the letter he was writing on
+ the very day she landed in Jamaica. He opened it and studied it for a
+ moment with a dark look in his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This I wrote even as you were landing in Jamaica, and I knew naught of
+ your coming. It was an outbreak of my soul. It was the truth written to
+ you and for you, and yet with the feeling that you would never see it. I
+ was still writing it when Michael Clones came up the drive to tell me you
+ and your mother were here. Now, I know not what Christopher Dogan would
+ say of it, but I say it is amazing that in the hour you were first come to
+ this land I should be moved to tell you the story of my life since I left
+ prison; since, on receiving your letter in London, forwarded from Dublin,
+ I joined the navy. But here it is with all the truth and terror in it.&mdash;Aye,
+ there was terror, for it gave the soul of my life to one I never thought
+ to see again; and, if seeing, should be compelled to do what I have done&mdash;tell
+ her the whole truth at once and so have it over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do not think that in telling it now I repent of my secrecy. I repent
+ of nothing; I would not alter anything. What was to be is, and what is has
+ its place in the book of destiny. No, I repent nothing, yet here now I
+ give you this to read while still my story of the days of which you know
+ is in your ears. Here it is. It will tell the whole story; for when you
+ have read it and do understand, then we part to meet no more as friends.
+ You will go back to Virginia, and I will stay here. You will forgive the
+ unwilling wrong I have done you, but you will make your place in life
+ without thought of me. You will marry some one&mdash;not worthy of you,
+ for that could not be; but you will take to yourself some man from among
+ the men of this world. You will set him apart from all other men as yours,
+ and he will be happy, having been blessed beyond deserving. You will not
+ regret coming here; but you will desire our friendship to cease; and what
+ has been to be no more, while the tincture of life is in your veins.
+ Sheila, read this thing, for it is the rest of the story until now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He handed her the papers, and she took them with an inclination of the
+ head which said: &ldquo;Give it to me. I will read it now while my eyes can
+ still bear to read it. I have laid on my heart the nettle of shame, and
+ while it is still burning there I will read all that you have to teach
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go out in the garden while you read it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;In a half-hour
+ I will come back, and then we can say good-bye,&rdquo; he added, with pain in
+ his voice, but firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, do not go,&rdquo; she urged. &ldquo;Sit here on the bench&mdash;at the end of it
+ here,&rdquo; she said, motioning with her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook his head in negation. &ldquo;No, I will go and say to your mother that
+ I have told you, and ease her mind, for I know she herself meant to tell
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he went he looked at her face closely. It was so young, so pathetic, so
+ pale, yet so strangely beautiful, and her forehead was serene. That was
+ one of her characteristics. In all her life, her forehead remained
+ untroubled and unlined. Only at her mouth and in her eyes did misery or
+ sorrow show. He looked into her eyes now, and he was pleased with what he
+ saw; for they had in them the glow of understanding and the note of will
+ which said: &ldquo;You and I are parted, but I believe in you, and I will not
+ show I am a weak woman by futile horror. We shall meet no more, but I
+ shall remember you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was what he saw, and it was what he wished to see. He knew her
+ character would stand the test of any trial, and it had done so. Horror
+ had struck her, but had not overwhelmed her. She had cried out in her
+ agony, but she had not been swept out into chaos. She had no weak passions
+ and no futilities. But as he turned away now, it was with the sharp
+ conviction that he had dealt a blow from which the girl would recover, but
+ would never be the same again. She was rich &ldquo;beyond the dreams of
+ avarice,&rdquo; but that would not console her. She had resources within
+ herself, had what would keep her steady. Her real power and force, her
+ real hope, were in her regnant soul which was not to be cajoled by life&rsquo;s
+ subterfuges. Her lips opened now, as though she would say something, but
+ nothing came from them. She only shook her head sadly, as if to say: &ldquo;You
+ understand. Go, and when you come again, it will be for us to part in
+ peace&mdash;at least in peace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out in the garden he found her mother. After the first agitated
+ greeting-agitated on her part, he said: &ldquo;The story has been told, and she
+ is now reading&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told her the story of the manuscript, and added that Sheila had carried
+ herself with courage. Presently the woman said to him: &ldquo;She never believed
+ you killed Erris Boyne. Well, it may not help the situation, but I say
+ too, that I do not believe you did. I cannot understand why you did not
+ deny having killed him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could not deny. In any case, the law punished me for it, and the book
+ is closed for ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you never thought that some one&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I have thought, but who is there? The crowd at the Dublin hotel
+ where the thing was done were secret, and they would lie the apron off a
+ bishop. No, there is no light, and, to tell the truth, I care not now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if you are not guilty&mdash;it is not too late; there is my girl! If
+ the real criminal should appear&mdash;can you not see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor woman, distressedly pale, her hair still abundant, her eyes still
+ bright, her pulses aglow, as they had ever been, made a gesture of appeal
+ with hands that were worn and thin. She had charm still, in a way as great
+ as her daughter&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can see&mdash;but, Mrs. Llyn, I have no hope. I am a man whom some men
+ fear&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Mallow!&rdquo; she interjected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He does not fear me. Why do you say that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I speak with a woman&rsquo;s intuition. I don&rsquo;t know what he fears, but he does
+ fear you. You are a son of history; you had a duel with him, and beat him;
+ you have always beaten him, even here where he has been supreme as
+ governor&mdash;from first to last, you have beaten him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope I shall be even with him at the last&mdash;at the very last,&rdquo; was
+ Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s reply. &ldquo;We were made to be foes. We were from the first. I
+ felt it when I saw him at Playmore. Nothing has changed since then. He
+ will try to destroy me here, but I will see it through. I will try and
+ turn his rapier-points. I will not be the target of his arrows without
+ making some play against him. The man is a fool. I could help him here,
+ but he will have none of it, and he is running great risks. He has been
+ warned that the Maroons are restive, that the black slaves will rise if
+ the Maroons have any initial success, and he will listen to no advice. He
+ would not listen to me, but, knowing that, I got the provost-marshal to
+ approach him, and when he knew my hand was in it, he stiffened. He would
+ have naught to do with it, and so no preparations are made. And up there&rdquo;&mdash;he
+ turned and pointed&mdash;&ldquo;up there in Trelawney the Maroons are plotting
+ and planning, and any day an explosion may occur. If it occurs no one will
+ be safe, especially if the blacks rise too&mdash;I mean the black slaves.
+ There will be no safety then for any one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For us as well, you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For you as well as all others, and you are nearer to Trelawney than most
+ others. You are in their path. So be wise, Mrs. Llyn, and get back to
+ Virginia as soon as may be. It is a better place than this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My daughter is mistress here,&rdquo; was the sorrowful reply. &ldquo;She will have
+ her own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your daughter will not care to stay here now,&rdquo; he answered firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will do what she thinks her duty in spite of her own feelings, or
+ yours, or mine. It is her way, and it has always been her way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell her what I fear, and she may change her mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the governor may want her to stay,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Llyn none too
+ sagely, but with that in her mind which seemed to justify her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Mallow&mdash;oh, if you think there is any influence in him to keep
+ her, that is another question,&rdquo; said Dyck with a grim smile. &ldquo;But,
+ nevertheless, I think you should leave here and go back to Virginia. It is
+ no safe place for two ladies, in all senses. Whatever Lord Mallow thinks
+ or does, this is no place for you. This place is your daughter&rsquo;s for her
+ to do what she chooses with it, and I think she ought to sell it. There
+ would be no trouble in getting a purchaser. It is a fine property.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the governor might not think as you do; he might not wish it sold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Llyn was playing a bold, indeed a reckless game. She wanted to show
+ Dyck there were others who would interest themselves in Sheila even if he,
+ Dyck, were blotted from the equation; that the girl could look high, if
+ her mind turned towards marriage. Also she felt that Dyck should know the
+ facts before any one else, so that he would not be shocked in the future,
+ if anything happened. Yet in her deepest heart she wished him well. She
+ liked him as she had never liked any of Sheila&rsquo;s admirers, and if the
+ problem of Erris Boyne had been solved, she would gladly have seen him
+ wedded to Sheila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has the governor to do with it!&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;It is your daughter&rsquo;s
+ own property, and she is free to hold or to part with it. There is no
+ Crown consent to ask, no vice-regal approval needed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he became angry, almost excited. His blood pounded in his veins.
+ Was this man, Mallow, to come between his and her fate always, come into
+ his problem at the most critical moment? &ldquo;God in heaven!&rdquo; he said in a
+ burst of passion, &ldquo;is this a land of the British Empire or is it not? Why
+ should that man break in on every crisis? Why should he do this or that&mdash;say
+ yea or nay, give or take away! He is the king&rsquo;s representative, but he is
+ bound by laws as rigid as any that bind you or me. What has he to do with
+ your daughter or what concerns her? Is there not enough trouble in the
+ world without bringing in Lord Mallow? If he&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stopped short, for he saw coming from the summerhouse, Sheila with his
+ paper in her hand. She walked slowly and with dignity. She carried her
+ head high and firmly, and the skin of her face was shining with light as
+ she came on. Dyck noticed how her wide skirts flicked against the flowers
+ that bordered the path, and how her feet seemed scarcely to touch the
+ ground as she walked&mdash;a spirit, a regnant spirit of summer she
+ seemed. But in her face there was no summer, there was only autumn and
+ winter, only the bright frost of purpose. As she came, her mother turned
+ as though to leave Dyck Calhoun. She called to her to wait, and Mrs. Llyn
+ stood still, anxious. As Sheila came near she kept her eyes fixed on Dyck.
+ When she reached them, she held out the paper to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is wonderful,&rdquo; she said quietly, &ldquo;that which you have written, but it
+ does not tell all; it does not say that you did not kill my father. You
+ are punished for the crime, and we must abide by it, even though you did
+ not kill Erris Boyne. It is the law that has done it, and we cannot abash
+ the law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall meet no more then!&rdquo; said Dyck with decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her lips tightened, her face paled. &ldquo;There are some things one may not do,
+ and one of them is to be openly your friend&mdash;at present.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He put the letter carefully away in his pocket, his hand shaking, then
+ flicking an insect from the collar of his coat, he said gently, yet with
+ an air of warning: &ldquo;I have been telling Mrs. Llyn about the Maroons up
+ there&rdquo;&mdash;he pointed towards Trelawney&mdash;&ldquo;and I have advised your
+ going back to Virginia. The Maroons may rise at any moment, and no care is
+ being taken by Lord Mallow to meet the danger. If they rise, you, here,
+ would be in their way, and I could not guarantee your safety. Besides,
+ Virginia is a better place&mdash;a safer place than this,&rdquo; he added with
+ meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wish to frighten me out of Jamaica,&rdquo; she replied with pain in her
+ voice. &ldquo;Well, I will not go till I have put this place in order and
+ brought discipline and good living here. I shall stay here in Jamaica till
+ I have done my task. There is no reason why we should meet. This place is
+ not so large as Ireland or America, but it is large enough to give
+ assurance we shall not meet. And if we meet, there is no reason why we
+ should talk. As for the Maroons, when the trouble comes, I shall not be
+ unprepared.&rdquo; She smiled sadly. &ldquo;The governor may not take your advice, but
+ I shall. And remember that I come from a land not without its dangers. We
+ have Red Indians and black men there, and I can shoot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He waved a hand abruptly and then made a gesture&mdash;such as an ascetic
+ might make-of reflection, of submission. &ldquo;I shall remember every word you
+ have said, and every note of your voice will be with me in all the lonely
+ years to come. Good-bye&mdash;but no, let me say this before I go: I did
+ not know that Erris Boyne was your father until after he was dead. So, if
+ I killed him, it was in complete ignorance. I did not know. But we have
+ outlived our friendship, and we must put strangeness in its place.
+ Good-bye&mdash;God protect you!&rdquo; he added, looking into Sheila&rsquo;s eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him with sorrow. Her lips opened but no words came forth. He
+ passed on out of the garden, and presently they heard his horse&rsquo;s hoofs on
+ the sand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a great gentleman,&rdquo; said Mrs. Llyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her daughter&rsquo;s eyes were dry and fevered. Her lips were drawn. &ldquo;We must
+ begin the world again,&rdquo; she said brokenly. Then suddenly she sank upon the
+ ground. &ldquo;My God&mdash;oh, my God!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two months went by. In that time Sheila and Dyck did not meet, though Dyck
+ saw her more than once in the distance at Kingston. Yet they had never met
+ since that wonderful day at Salem, when they had parted, as it might seem,
+ for ever. Dyck had had news of her, however, for Darius Boland had come
+ and gone between the two plantations, and had won Michael Clones&rsquo;
+ confidence. He knew more perhaps than he ever conveyed to Dyck, who saw
+ him and talked with him, gave him advice as to the customs of Jamaica, and
+ let him see the details in the management of Enniskillen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Dyck made no inquiries as to how Mrs. Llyn and Sheila were; first
+ because he chose not to do so, and also because Darius Boland, at one time
+ or another, would of his own accord tell what Mrs. Llyn and Sheila were
+ doing. One day Boland brought word that the governor had, more than once,
+ visited Salem with his suite; that he had sat in judgment on a case in
+ Kingston concerning the estate of Salem, and had given decision in its
+ favour; and that Mrs. Llyn and Sheila visited him at Spanish Town and were
+ entertained at King&rsquo;s House at second breakfast and dinner&mdash;in short,
+ that Lord Mallow was making hay in Salem Plantation. This was no surprise
+ to Dyck. He had full intuition of the foray the governor would make on
+ Sheila, her estate and wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow had acted with discretion, and yet with sufficient passion to
+ warrant some success. He was trying to make for himself a future which
+ might mean the control of a greater colony even. If he had wealth, that
+ would be almost a certainty, and he counted Sheila&rsquo;s gold as a guarantee
+ of power. He knew well how great effect could be produced at Westminster
+ and at the Royal Palace by a discreet display of wealth. He was also aware
+ that no scandal could be made through an alliance with Sheila, for she had
+ inherited long after the revolutionary war and with her skirts free from
+ responsibility. England certainly would welcome wealth got through an
+ Irish girl inheriting her American uncle&rsquo;s estates. So, steadily and
+ happily, he pressed his suit. At his dinner-parties he gave her first
+ place nearly always, and even broke the code controlling precedence when
+ his secretary could be overruled. Thus Sheila was given honour when she
+ did not covet it, and so it was that one day at Salem when the governor
+ came to court her she was able to help Dyck Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you go to Enniskillen?&rdquo; Lord Mallow said to Darius Boland, as he
+ entered the plantation, being met by the astute American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sometimes, your honour,&rdquo; was the careful reply. &ldquo;I suppose you know what
+ Mr. Calhoun&rsquo;s career has been, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, in a way, your honour. They tell me he is a good swordsman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor flushed. &ldquo;He told you that, did he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, your honour, never. He told me naught. He does not boast. He&rsquo;s as
+ modest as a man from Virginia. He does not brag at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who told you, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well, I heard it in the town! They speak of him there. They all know
+ that Kingston and Spanish Town, and all the other places, would have been
+ French by now, if it hadn&rsquo;t been for him. Oh, they talk a lot about him in
+ Kingston and thereabouts!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What swordsmanship do they speak of that was remarkable?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has your honour forgotten, then? Sure, seven years is a poor limit for a
+ good memory.&rdquo; The blow was a shrewd one, for Darius Boland knew that
+ Phoenix Park must be a galling memory to his honour. But Darius did not
+ care. He guessed why the governor was coming to Salem, and he could not
+ shirk having his hand in it. He had no fear of the results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, seven years is a poor limit,&rdquo; he repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor showed no feeling. He had been hit, and he took it as part of
+ the game. &ldquo;Ah, you mean the affair in Phoenix Park?&rdquo; he said with no
+ apparent feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius tossed his head a little. &ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t it a clever bit of work? Didn&rsquo;t
+ he get fame there by defeating one of the best swordsmen&mdash;in
+ Ireland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow nodded. &ldquo;He got fame, which he lost in time,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean he put the sword that had done such good work against a champion
+ into a man&rsquo;s bowels, without &lsquo;by your leave,&rsquo; or &lsquo;will you draw and
+ fight&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something like that,&rdquo; answered the governor sagely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it true you believed he&rsquo;d strike a man that wasn&rsquo;t armed, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor winced, but showed nothing. &ldquo;He&rsquo;d been drinking&mdash;he is a
+ heavy drinker. Do you never drink with him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius Boland&rsquo;s face took on a strange look. Here was an intended insult
+ to Dyck Calhoun. Right well the governor knew their relative social
+ positions. Darius pulled at the hair on his chin reflectively. &ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ve
+ drunk his liquor, but not as you mean, your honour. He&rsquo;d drink with any
+ man at all: he has no nasty pride. But he doesn&rsquo;t drink with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Modest enough he is to be a good republican, eh, Boland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since your honour puts it so, it must stand. I&rsquo;ll not dispute it, me
+ being what I am and employed by whom I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius Boland had a gift of saying the right thing in the right way, and
+ he had said it now. The governor was not so dense as to put this man
+ against him, for women were curious folk. They often attach importance to
+ the opinion of a faithful servant and let it weigh against great men. He
+ had once lost a possible fortune by spurning a little terrier of the
+ daughter of the Earl of Shallow, and the lesson had sunk deep into his
+ mind. He was high-placed, but not so high as to be sure of success where a
+ woman was concerned, and he had made up his mind to capture Sheila Llyn,
+ if so be she could be caught flying, or settled, or sleeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well, he has drunk with worse men than republicans. Boland. He was a
+ common sailor. He drank what was given him with whom it chanced in the
+ fo&rsquo;castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius sniffed a little, and kept his head. &ldquo;But he changed all that, your
+ honour, and gave sailormen better drink than they ever had, I hear. In
+ Jamaica he treats his slaves as though they were men and not Mohicans.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;ll have less freedom in future, Boland, for word has come from
+ London that he&rsquo;s to keep to his estate and never leave it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius looked concerned, and his dry face wrinkled still more. &ldquo;Ah, and
+ when was this word come, your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But yesterday, Boland, and he&rsquo;ll do well to obey, for I have no choice
+ but to take him in hand if he goes gallivanting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gallivanting&mdash;here, in Jamaica! Does your honour remember where we
+ are?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in a bishop&rsquo;s close, Boland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not in a bishop&rsquo;s close, nor in an archdeacon&rsquo;s garden. For of all
+ places on earth where they defy religion, this is the worst, your honour.
+ There&rsquo;s as much religion here as you&rsquo;ll find in a last year&rsquo;s bird&rsquo;s-nest.
+ Gallivanting&mdash;where should he gallivant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor waved a contemptuous hand. &ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t need ingenuity to find
+ a place, for some do it on their own estate. I have seen it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius spoke sharply. &ldquo;Your honour, there&rsquo;s naught on Mr. Calhoun&rsquo;s estate
+ that&rsquo;s got the taint, and he&rsquo;s not the man to go hunting for it. Drink&mdash;well,
+ suppose a gentleman does take his quartern, is it a crime? I ask your
+ honour, is that a crime in Jamaica?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s no crime, Boland; nevertheless, your Mr. Calhoun will have to take
+ his fill on his own land from the day I send him the command of the London
+ Government.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what day will that be, your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be questioned by one who had been a revolutionary was distasteful to
+ the governor. &ldquo;That day will be when I find the occasion opportune, my
+ brave Boland,&rdquo; he said sourly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why &lsquo;brave,&rsquo; your honour?&rdquo; There was an ominous light in Darius&rsquo; eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you not fight with George Washington against the King of England&mdash;against
+ King George? And if you did, was that not brave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was true, your honour,&rdquo; came the firm reply. &ldquo;It was the one right
+ good thing to do, as we proved it by the victory we had. We did what we
+ set out to do. But see, if you will let a poor man speak his mind, if I
+ were you I&rsquo;d not impose the command on Mr. Calhoun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Boland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius spoke courageously. &ldquo;Your honour, he has many friends in Jamaica,
+ and they won&rsquo;t stand it. Besides, he won&rsquo;t stand it. And if he contests
+ your honour, the island will be with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he popular here as all that?&rdquo; asked the governor with a shrug of the
+ shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They don&rsquo;t give their faith and confidence to order, your honour,&rdquo;
+ answered Darius with a dry inflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burr in the voice did not escape the other&rsquo;s attentive ear. He swung a
+ glance sharply at Darius. &ldquo;What is the secret of his popularity&mdash;how
+ has it been made?&rdquo; he asked morosely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius&rsquo; face took on a caustic look. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s only been in the island a short
+ time, your honour, and I don&rsquo;t know that I&rsquo;m a good judge, but I&rsquo;ll say
+ the people here have great respect for bravery and character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Character! Character!&rdquo; sniffed the governor. &ldquo;Where did he get that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know his age, but it&rsquo;s as old as he is&mdash;his character.
+ Say, I&rsquo;m afraid I&rsquo;m talking too much, your honour. We speak our minds in
+ Virginia; we never count the cost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor waved a deprecating hand. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find the measure of your
+ speech in good time, Boland, I&rsquo;ve no doubt. Meanwhile, you&rsquo;ve got the
+ pleasure of hunting it. Character, you say. Well, that isn&rsquo;t what the
+ judge and jury said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius took courage again. Couldn&rsquo;t Lord Mallow have any decency?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Judge and jury be damned, your honour,&rdquo; he answered boldly. &ldquo;It was an
+ Irish verdict. It had no sense. It was a bit of ballyhack. He did not kill
+ an unarmed man. It isn&rsquo;t his way. Why, he didn&rsquo;t kill you when he had you
+ at his mercy in Phoenix Park, now, did he, governor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A flush stole up the governor&rsquo;s face from his chin. Then he turned to
+ Boland and looked him straight in the eyes. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s true. He had me at his
+ mercy, and he did not take my life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, why do you head the cabal against him? Why do you take joy in
+ commanding him to stay on his estate? Is that grateful, your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor winced, but he said: &ldquo;It&rsquo;s what I am ordered to do, my man.
+ I&rsquo;m a servant of the Crown, and the Crown has ordained it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Darius grew stronger in speech. &ldquo;But why do you have pleasure in it?
+ Is nothing left to your judgment? Do you say to me that if he keeps the
+ freedom such as he has enjoyed, you&rsquo;d punish him? Must the governor be as
+ ruthless as his master? Look, your honour, I wouldn&rsquo;t impose that command&mdash;not
+ till I&rsquo;d taken his advice about the Maroons anyway. There&rsquo;s trouble
+ brewing, and Mr. Calhoun knows it. He has warned you through the
+ provost-marshal. I&rsquo;d heed his warning, your honour, or it may injure your
+ reputation as a ruler. No, I&rsquo;d see myself in nethermost hell before I&rsquo;d
+ meddle with Mr. Calhoun. He&rsquo;s a dangerous man, when he&rsquo;s moved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boland, you&rsquo;ll succeed as a schoolmaster, when all else fails. You teach
+ persistently.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour is clever enough to know what&rsquo;s what, but I&rsquo;d like to see the
+ Maroons dealt with. This is not my country, but I&rsquo;ve got interests here,
+ or my mistress has, and that&rsquo;s the same to me.... Does your honour travel
+ often without a suite?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor waved a hand behind him. &ldquo;I left them at the last plantation,
+ and rode on alone. I felt safe enough till I saw you, Boland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled grimly, and a grimmer smile stole to the lean lips of the
+ manager of Salem. &ldquo;Fear is a good thing for forward minds, your honour,&rdquo;
+ he said with respect in the tone of his voice and challenge in the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll say this, Boland, your mistress has been fortunate in her staff. You
+ have a ready tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m readier in other things, your honour, as you&rsquo;d find on occasion.
+ But I thank you for the compliment in a land where compliments are few.
+ For a planter&rsquo;s country it has few who speak as well as they entertain.
+ I&rsquo;ll say this for the land you govern, the hospitality is rich and rare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In what way, Boland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, your honour, it is the custom for a man and his whole family to go
+ on a visit to a neighbour, perhaps twenty or forty miles away, bring their
+ servants&mdash;maybe a dozen or more&mdash;and sit down on their
+ neighbour&rsquo;s hearthstone. There they eat his food, drink his wine, exhaust
+ his fowl-yard and debilitate his cook&mdash;till all the resources of the
+ place are played out; then with both hands round his friend&rsquo;s neck the man
+ and his people will say adieu, and go back to their own accumulated larder
+ and await the return visit. The wonder is Jamaica is so rich, for truly
+ the waste is harmful. We have the door open in Virginia, but not in that
+ way. We welcome, but we don&rsquo;t debauch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor smiled. &ldquo;As you haven&rsquo;t old friends here, you should make
+ your life a success&mdash;ah, there is the open door, Boland, and your
+ mistress standing in it. But I come without my family, and with no fell
+ purposes. I will not debilitate the cook; I will not exhaust the
+ fowl-yard. A roasted plantain is good enough for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius&rsquo; looks quickened, and he jerked his chin up. &ldquo;So, your honour, so.
+ But might I ask that you weigh carefully the warning of Mr. Calhoun.
+ There&rsquo;s trouble at Trelawny. I have it from good sources, and Mr. Calhoun
+ has made preparations against the sure risings. I&rsquo;d take heed of what he
+ says. He knows. Your honour, it is not my mistress in the doorway, it is
+ Mrs. Llyn; she is shorter than my mistress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor shaded his brow with his hands. Then he touched up his horse.
+ &ldquo;Yes, you are right, Boland. It is Mrs. Llyn. And look you, Boland, I&rsquo;ll
+ think over what you&rsquo;ve said about the Maroons and Mr. Calhoun. He&rsquo;s doing
+ no harm as he is, that&rsquo;s sure. So why shouldn&rsquo;t he go on as he is? That&rsquo;s
+ your argument, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boland nodded. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s part of my argument, not all of it. Of course he&rsquo;s
+ doing no harm; he&rsquo;s doing good every day. He&rsquo;s got a stiff hand for the
+ shirker and the wanton, but he&rsquo;s a man that knows his mind, and that&rsquo;s a
+ good thing in Jamaica.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does he come here-ever?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has been here only once since our arrival. There are reasons why he
+ does not come, as your honour kens, knowing the history of Erris Boyne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A quarter of an hour later Darius Boland said to Sheila: &ldquo;He&rsquo;s got an
+ order from England to keep Mr. Calhoun to his estate and to punish him, if
+ he infringes the order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila started. &ldquo;He will infringe the order if it&rsquo;s made, Boland. But the
+ governor will be unwise to try and impose it. I will tell him so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, mistress, he should not be told that this news comes from me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, he should not, Boland. I can tempt him to speak of it, I think. He
+ hates Mr. Calhoun, and will not need much prompting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila had changed since she saw Dyck Calhoun last. Her face was thinner,
+ but her form was even fuller than it was when she had bade him good-bye,
+ as it seemed to him for ever, and as it at first seemed to her. Through
+ anxious days and nights she had fought with the old passion; and at last
+ it seemed the only way to escape from the torture was by making all
+ thought of him impossible. How could this be done? Well, Lord Mallow would
+ offer a way. Lord Mallow was a man of ancient Irish family, was a
+ governor, had ability, was distinguished-looking in a curious lean way;
+ and he had a real gift with his tongue. He stood high in the opinion of
+ the big folk at Westminster, and had a future. He had a winning way with
+ women&mdash;a subtle, perniciously attractive way with her sex, and to
+ herself he had been delicately persuasive. He had the ancient gift of
+ picturesqueness without ornamentation. He had a strong will and a healthy
+ imagination. He was a man of mettle and decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all who had entered her field outside of Dyck Calhoun he was the most
+ attractive; he was the nearest to the possible husband which she must one
+ day take. And if at any day at all, why not now when she needed a man as
+ she had never done&mdash;when she needed to forget? The sardonic critic
+ might ask why she did not seek forgetfulness in flight; why she remained
+ in Jamaica where was what she wished to forget. There was no valid reason,
+ save a business one, why she should remain in Jamaica, and she was in a
+ quandary when she put the question. There were, however, other reasons
+ which she used when all else failed to satisfy her exigeant mind. There
+ was the question of vessels to Virginia or New York. They were few and not
+ good, and in any case they could have no comfortable journey to the United
+ States for several weeks at least, for, since the revolutionary war,
+ commerce with the United States was sparse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Also, there was the question of Salem. She did not feel she ought to waste
+ the property which her Uncle Bryan had nurtured with care. In justice to
+ his memory, and in fairness to Darius Boland, she felt she ought to stay&mdash;for
+ a time. It did not occur to her that these reasons would vanish like mist&mdash;that
+ a wilful woman would sweep them into the basket of forgetfulness, and do
+ what she wished in spite of reason: that all else would be sacrificed, if
+ the spirit so possessed her. Truth was that, far back in her
+ consciousness, there was a vision of better days and things. It was as
+ though some angel touched the elbow of her spirit and said: &ldquo;Stay on, for
+ things will be better than they seem. You will find your destiny here.
+ Stay on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she had stayed. She was deluding herself to believe that what she was
+ doing was all for the best; that the clouds were rising; that her fate had
+ fairer aspects than had seemed possible when Dyck Calhoun told her the
+ terrible tale of the death of her father, Erris Boyne. Yet memory gave a
+ touch of misery and bitterness to all she thought and did. For twenty-five
+ years she had lived in ignorance as to her paternity. It surely was futile
+ that her mother should have suffered all those years, with little to cheer
+ her, while her daughter should be radiant in health and with a mind free
+ from care or sadness. Yet the bitterest thing of all was the thought that
+ her father was a traitor, and had died sacrificing another man. When Dyck
+ had told her first, she had shivered with anger and shame&mdash;but anger
+ and shame had gone. Only one thing gave her any comfort&mdash;the man who
+ knew Erris Boyne was a traitor, and could profit by telling it, held his
+ tongue for her own sake, kept his own counsel, and went to prison for four
+ years as the price of his silence. He was now her neighbour and he loved
+ her, and, if the shadow of a grave was not between them, would offer
+ himself in marriage to her. This she knew beyond all doubt. He had given
+ all a man can give&mdash;had saved her and killed her father&mdash;in
+ ignorance had killed her father; in love had saved herself. What was to be
+ done?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a strange spirit Sheila entered the room where the governor sat with
+ her mother. She had reached the limit of her powers of suffering. Soon
+ after her mother had left the room, the governor said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do you think I have come here to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He added to the words a note of sympathy, even of passion in his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was to visit my mother and myself, and to see how Salem looks after
+ our stay on it, was it not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, to see your mother and yourself, but chiefly the latter. As for
+ Salem, it looks as though a mastermind had been at work, I see it in
+ everything. The slaves are singing. Listen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held up a finger as though to indicate attention and direction.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;One, two, three,
+ All de same;
+ Black, white, brown,
+ All de same;
+ All de same.
+ One, two, three&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ They could hear the words indistinctly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do the words mean?&rdquo; asked Sheila. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more do I, but I think they refer to the march of pestilence or
+ plague. Numbers, colour, race, nothing matters, the plague sweeps all
+ away. Ah, then, I was right,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;There is the story in other
+ words. Listen again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To clapping of hands in unison, the following words were sung:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;New-come buckra,
+ He get sick,
+ He tak fever,
+ He be die;
+ He be die.
+ New-come buckra&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it may be a chant of the plague, but it&rsquo;s lacking in poetry,&rdquo; she
+ remarked. &ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t it seem so to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I certainly shouldn&rsquo;t go so far as that. Think of how much of a story
+ is crowded into those few words. No waste, nothing thrown away. It&rsquo;s all
+ epic, or that&rsquo;s my view, anyhow,&rdquo; said the governor. &ldquo;If you look out on
+ those who are singing it, you&rsquo;d see they are resting from their labours;
+ that they are fighting the ennui which most of us feel when we rest from
+ our labours. Let us look at them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor stood up and came to the open French windows that faced the
+ fields of sugar-cane. In the near distance were clumps of fruit trees, of
+ hedges of lime and flowering shrubs, rows of orange trees, mangoes, red
+ and purple, forbidden-fruit and grapefruit, the large scarlet fruit of the
+ acqui, the avocado-pear, the feathering bamboo, and the Jack-fruit tree,
+ with its enormous fruit like pumpkins. Parrots were chattering in the
+ acacia and in the Otaheite plum tree, with its bright pink blossoms like
+ tassels, and flanking the negro huts by the river were bowers of
+ grenadilla fruit. Around the negro huts were small individual plantations
+ kept by the slaves, for which they had one day a fortnight, besides
+ Sundays, free to work on their own account. Here and there also were
+ patches of &ldquo;ground-fruit,&rdquo; as the underground vegetables were called,
+ while there passed by on their way to the open road leading to Kingston
+ wains loaded with sugar-casks, drawn by oxen, and in two cases by sumpter
+ mules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there anything finer than that in Virginia?&rdquo; asked the governor. &ldquo;I
+ have never been in Virginia, but I take this to be in some ways like that
+ state. Is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In some ways only. We have not the same profusion of wild fruits and
+ trees, but we have our share&mdash;and it is not so hot as here. It is a
+ better country, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In what way is it better?&rdquo; the governor asked almost acidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is better governed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you mean by that? Isn&rsquo;t Jamaica well governed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so well that it couldn&rsquo;t be improved,&rdquo; was Sheila&rsquo;s reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What improvements would you suggest?&rdquo; Lord Mallow asked urbanely, for he
+ was set to play his cards carefully to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More wisdom in the governor,&rdquo; was the cheerful and bright reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he lacking in wisdom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In some ways, yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you mind specifying some of the things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think he is careless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Careless&mdash;as to what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila smiled. &ldquo;He is indifferent to good advice. He has been told of
+ trouble among the Maroons, that they mean to rise; he has been advised to
+ make preparations, and he makes none, and he is deceived by a show of
+ loyalty on the part of the slaves. Lord Mallow, if the free Maroons rise,
+ why should not the black slaves rise at the same time? Why do you not
+ act?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is everybody whose good opinion is worth having mad?&rdquo; answered the
+ governor. &ldquo;I have sent my inspectors to Trelawney. I have had reports from
+ them. I have used every care&mdash;what would you have me do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Used every care? Why don&rsquo;t you ensure the Maroons peaceableness by
+ advancing on them? Why don&rsquo;t you take them prisoners? They are enraged
+ that two of their herdsmen should be whipped by a negro-slave under the
+ order of one of your captains. They are angry and disturbed and have
+ ambushed the roads to Trelawney, so I&rsquo;m told.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Mr. Calhoun tell you that when he was here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not that which Mr. Calhoun told me the only time he came here. But
+ who Erris Boyne was. I never knew till, in his honour, he told me, coming
+ here for that purpose. I never knew who my father was till he told me. My
+ mother had kept it from me all my life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor looked alert. &ldquo;And you have not seen him since that day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have seen him, but I have not spoken to him. It was in the distance
+ only.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand your manager, Mr. Boland, sees him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My manager does not share my private interests&mdash;or troubles. He is
+ free to go where he will, to speak to whom he chooses. He visits
+ Enniskillen, I suppose&mdash;it is a well-managed plantation on Jamaican
+ lines, and its owner is a man of mark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila spoke without agitation of any kind; her face was firm and calm,
+ her manner composed, her voice even. As she talked, she seemed to be
+ probing the centre of a flower which she had caught from a basket at the
+ window, and her whole personality was alight and vivifying, her good
+ temper and spirit complete. As he looked at her, he had an overmastering
+ desire to make her his own&mdash;his wife. She was worth hundreds of
+ thousands of pounds; she had beauty, ability and authority. She was the
+ acme of charm and good bearing. With her he could climb high on the ladder
+ of life. He might be a really great figure in the British world-if she
+ gave her will to help him, to hold up his hands. It had never occurred to
+ him that Dyck Calhoun could be a rival, till he had heard of Dyck&rsquo;s visit
+ to Sheila and her mother, till he had heard Sheila praise him at the first
+ dinner he had given to the two ladies on Christmas Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On that day it was clear Sheila did not know who her father was; but
+ stranger things had happened than that she should take up with, and even
+ marry, a man imprisoned for killing another, even one who had been
+ condemned as a mutineer, and had won freedom by saving the king&rsquo;s navy.
+ But now that Sheila knew the truth there could be no danger! Dyck Calhoun
+ would be relegated to his proper place in the scheme of things. Who was
+ there to stand between him and his desire? What was there to stay the
+ great event? He himself was a peer and high-placed, for it was a time when
+ the West Indian Islands were a centre of the world&rsquo;s fighting, where men
+ like Rodney had made everlasting fame; where the currents of
+ world-controversy challenged, met and fought for control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The West Indies was as much a cock-pit of the fighting powers as ever
+ Belgium was; and in those islands there was wealth and the power which
+ wealth buys; the clash of white and black and coloured peoples; the naval
+ contests on the sea; the horrible massacres and enslavement of free white
+ peoples, as in St. Domingo and Grenada; the dominating attacks of people
+ fighting for control&mdash;peoples of old empires like France and Spain,
+ and new empires like that of Britain. These were a centre of colonial life
+ as important as had been the life in Virginia and New York and the New
+ England States and Canada&mdash;indeed, more important than Canada in one
+ sense, for the West Indies brought wealth to the British Isles, and had a
+ big export trade. He lost no time in bringing matters to an issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He got to his feet and came near to her. His eyes were inflamed with
+ passion, his manner was impressive. He had a distinguished face, become
+ more distinguished since his assumption of governorship, and authority had
+ increased his personality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man of mark!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You mean a marked man. Let me tell you I have
+ an order from the British Government to confine him to his estate; not to
+ permit him to leave it; and, if he does, to arrest him. That is my
+ commanded duty. You approve, do you not? Or are you like most women, soft
+ at heart to bold criminals?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila did not reply at once. The news was no news to her, for Darius
+ Boland had told her; but she thought it well to let the governor think he
+ had made a new, sensational statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said at last, looking him calmly in the eyes. &ldquo;I have no soft
+ feelings for criminals as criminals, none at all. And there is every
+ reason why I should be adamant to this man, Dyck Calhoun. But, Lord
+ Mallow, I would go carefully about this, if I were you. He is a man who
+ takes no heed of people, high or low, and has no fear of consequences.
+ Have you thought of the consequences to yourself? Suppose he resists, what
+ will you do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he resists I will attack him with due force.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean you will send your military and police to attack him?&rdquo; The gibe
+ was covered, but it found the governor&rsquo;s breast. He knew what she was
+ meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not expect me to do police work, would you? Is that what your
+ president does? What your great George Washington does? Does he make the
+ state arrests with his own hand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no doubt he would if the circumstances were such as to warrant it.
+ He has no small vices, and no false feelings. He has proved himself,&rdquo; she
+ answered boldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, in that case,&rdquo; responded Lord Mallow irritably, &ldquo;the event will be
+ as is due. The man is condemned by my masters, and he must submit to my
+ authority. He is twice a criminal, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet a hero and a good swordsman, and as honest as men are made in a
+ dishonest world. Your Admiralty and your government first pardoned the
+ man, and then gave him freedom on the island which you tried to prevent;
+ and now they turn round and confine him to his acres. Is that pardon in a
+ real sense? Did you write to the government and say he ought not to be
+ free to roam, lest he should discover more treasure-chests and buy another
+ estate? Was it you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor shook his head. &ldquo;No, not I. I told the government in careful
+ and unrhetorical language the incident of his coming here, and what I did,
+ and my reasons for doing it&mdash;that was all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you being governor they took your advice. See, my lord, if this thing
+ is done to him it will be to your own discomfiture. It will hurt you in
+ the public service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, to hear you speak, mistress, it would almost seem you had a fondness
+ for the man who killed your father, who went to jail for it, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And became a mutineer,&rdquo; intervened the girl flushing. &ldquo;Why not say all?
+ Why not catalogue his offences? Fondness for the man who killed my father,
+ you say! Yes, I had a deep and sincere fondness for him ever since I met
+ him at Playmore over seven years ago. Yes, a fondness which only his crime
+ makes impossible. But in all that really matters I am still his friend. He
+ did not know he was killing my father, who had no claims upon me, none at
+ all, except that through him I have life and being; but it is enough to
+ separate us for ever in the eyes of the world, and in my eyes. Not
+ morally, of course, but legally and actually. He and I are as far apart as
+ winter and summer; we are parted for ever and ever and ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now at last she was inflamed. Every nerve in her was alive. All she had
+ ever felt for Dyck Calhoun came rushing to the surface, demanding
+ recognition, reasserting itself. As she used the words, &ldquo;ever and ever and
+ ever,&rdquo; it was like a Cordelia bidding farewell to Lear, her father, for
+ ever, for there was that in her voice which said: &ldquo;It is final separation,
+ it is the judgment of Jehovah, and I must submit. It is the last word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow saw his opportunity, and did not hesitate. &ldquo;No, you are wrong,
+ wholly wrong,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I did not bias what I said in my report&mdash;a
+ report I was bound to make&mdash;by any covert prejudice against Mr.
+ Calhoun. I guarded myself especially&rdquo;&mdash;there he lied, but he was an
+ incomparable liar&mdash;&ldquo;lest it should be used against him. It would
+ appear, however, that the new admiral&rsquo;s report with mine were laid
+ together, and the government came to its conclusion accordingly. So I am
+ bound to do my duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you&mdash;oh, if you did your duty, you would not obey the command of
+ the government. Are there not times when to obey is a crime, and is not
+ this one of them? Lord Mallow, you would be doing as great a crime as Mr.
+ Dyck Calhoun ever committed, or could commit, if you put this order into
+ actual fact. You are governor here, and your judgment would be accepted&mdash;remember
+ it is an eight weeks&rsquo; journey to London at the least, and what might not
+ happen in that time! Are you not given discretion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor nodded. &ldquo;Yes, I am given discretion, but this is an order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An order!&rdquo; she commented. &ldquo;Then if it should not be fulfilled, break it
+ and take the consequences. The principle should be&mdash;Do what is right,
+ and have no fear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will think it over,&rdquo; answered the governor. &ldquo;What you say has immense
+ weight with me&mdash;more even than I have words to say. Yes, I will think
+ it over&mdash;I promise you. You are a genius&mdash;you prevail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face softened, a new something came into her manner. &ldquo;You do truly
+ mean it?&rdquo; she asked with lips that almost trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to her that to do this thing for Dyck Calhoun was the least that
+ was possible, and it was perhaps the last thing she might ever be able to
+ do. She realized how terrible it would be for him to be shorn of the
+ liberty he had always had; how dangerous it might be in many ways; and how
+ the people of the island might become excited by it&mdash;and troublesome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I mean it,&rdquo; answered Lord Mallow. &ldquo;I mean it exactly as I say it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled. &ldquo;Well, that should recommend you for promotion,&rdquo; she said
+ happily. &ldquo;I am sure you will decide not to enforce the order, if you think
+ about it. You shall be promoted, your honour, to a better place,&rdquo; she
+ repeated, half-satirically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I then?&rdquo; he asked with a warm smile and drawing close to her.
+ &ldquo;Shall I? Then it can only be by your recommendation. Ah, my dear, my
+ beautiful dear one,&rdquo; he hastened to add, &ldquo;my life is possible henceforward
+ only through you. You have taught me by your life and person, by your
+ beauty and truth, by your nobility of mind and character how life should
+ be lived. I have not always deserved your good opinion nor that of others.
+ I have fought duels and killed men; I have aspired to place; I have
+ connived at appointment; I have been vain, overbearing and insistent on my
+ rights or privileges; I have played the dictator here in Jamaica; I have
+ not been satisfied save to get my own way; but you have altered all that.
+ Your coming here has given me a new outlook. Sheila, you have changed me,
+ and you can change me infinitely more. I who have been a master wish to
+ become your slave. I want you&mdash;beloved, I want you for my wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He reached out as though to take her hand, but she drew back from him. His
+ thrilling words had touched her, as she had seldom been touched, as she
+ had never been touched by any one save the man that must never be hers;
+ she was submerged for the moment in the flood of his eloquence, and his
+ yielding to her on the point of Dyck&rsquo;s imprisonment gave fresh accent to
+ his words. Yet she could not, she dared not yet say yes to his demand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;oh, you have stirred me! Yet I dare not reply to you
+ as you wish. Life is hard as it is, and you have suddenly made it harder.
+ What is more, I do not, I cannot, believe you. You have loved many. Your
+ life has been a covert menace. Oh, I know what they said of you in
+ Ireland. I know not of your life here. I suppose it is circumspect now;
+ but in Ireland it was declared you were notorious with women.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a lie,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I was not notorious. I was no better and no
+ worse than many another man. I played, I danced attendance, I said soft
+ nothings, but I was tied to no woman in all Ireland. I was frolicsome and
+ adventurous, but no more. There is no woman who can say I used her ill or
+ took from her what I did not&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Atone for, Lord Mallow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Atone&mdash;no. What I did not give return for, was what I was going to
+ say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was intense. She was in a place from which there was no
+ escape except by flight or refusal. She did not really wish to refuse.
+ Somehow, there had come upon her the desire to put all thought of Dyck
+ Calhoun out of her mind by making it impossible for her to think of him;
+ and marriage was the one sure and complete way&mdash;marriage with this
+ man, was it possible? He held high position, he was her fellow countryman
+ and an Irish peer, and she was the daughter of an evil man, who was, above
+ all else, a traitor to his country, though Lord Mallow did not know that.
+ The only one she knew possessed of the facts was the man she desired to
+ save herself from in final way&mdash;Dyck Calhoun. Her heart was for the
+ moment soft to Lord Mallow, in spite of his hatred of Dyck Calhoun. The
+ governor was a man of charm in conversation. He was born with rare
+ faculties. Besides, he had knowledge of humanity and of women. He knew how
+ women could be touched. He had appealed to Sheila more by ability than by
+ aught else. His concessions to her were discretion in a way. They opened
+ the route to her affections, as his place and title could not do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, no, believe me, Sheila, I was a man who had too many temptations&mdash;that
+ was all. But I did not spoil my life by them, and I am here a trusted
+ servant of the government. I am a better governor than your first words to
+ me would make you seem to think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes were shining, her face was troubled, her tongue was silent. She
+ knew not what to say. She felt she could not say yes&mdash;yet she wanted
+ to escape from him. Her good fortune did not desert her. Suddenly the door
+ of the room opened and her mother entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a member of your suite here, your honour, asking for you. It is
+ of most grave importance. It is urgent. What shall I say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say nothing. I am coming,&rdquo; said the governor. &ldquo;I am coming now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That night the Maroons broke loose upon Jamaica, and began murder and
+ depredation against which the governor&rsquo;s activities were no check. Estates
+ were invaded, and men, women and children killed, or carried into the
+ mountains and held as hostages. In the middle and western part of the
+ island the ruinous movements went on without being stayed; planters and
+ people generally railed at the governor, and said that through his neglect
+ these dark things were happening. It was said he had failed to punish
+ offences by the Maroons, and this had given them confidence, filling them
+ with defiance. They had one advantage not possessed by the government
+ troops and militia&mdash;they were masters of every square rod of land in
+ the middle and west of the island. Their plan was to raid, to ambush, to
+ kill and to excite the slaves to rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first assault and repulse took place not far from Enniskillen, Dyck
+ Calhoun&rsquo;s plantation, and Michael Clones captured a Maroon who was
+ slightly wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael challenged him thus: &ldquo;Come now, my blitherin&rsquo; friend, tell us your
+ trouble&mdash;why are you risin&rsquo;? You don&rsquo;t do this without cause&mdash;what&rsquo;s
+ the cause?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The black man, naked except for a cloth about his loins, and with a small
+ bag at his hip, slung from a cord over his shoulder, showed his teeth in a
+ stark grimace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a newcomer here, massa, or you&rsquo;d know we&rsquo;re treated bad,&rdquo; he
+ answered. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re robbed and trod on and there&rsquo;s no word kept with us. We
+ asked the governor for more land and he moved us off. We warned him
+ against having one of our head young men flogged by a slave in the
+ presence of slaves&mdash;for we are free men, and he laughs. So, knowing a
+ few strong men can bring many weak men to their knees, we rose. I say this&mdash;there&rsquo;s
+ plenty weak men in Jamaica, men who don&rsquo;t know right when they see it. So
+ we rose, massa, and we&rsquo;ll make Jamaica sick before we&rsquo;ve done. They can&rsquo;t
+ beat us, for we can ambush here, and shoot those that come after us. We
+ hide, one behind this rock and one behind that, two or three together, and
+ we&rsquo;re safe. But the white soldiers come all together and beat drums and
+ blow horns, and we know where they are, and so we catch &lsquo;em and kill &lsquo;em.
+ You&rsquo;ll see, we&rsquo;ll capture captains and generals, and we&rsquo;ll cut their heads
+ off and bury them in their own guts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made an ugly grimace, and a loathsome gesture, and Michael Clones felt
+ the man ought to die. He half drew his sword, but, thinking better of it,
+ he took the Maroon to the Castle and locked him up in a slave&rsquo;s hut,
+ having first bound him and put him in the charge of one he could trust.
+ But as he put the man away, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You talk of your people hiding, and men not being able to find you; but
+ did you never hear of bloodhounds, that can hunt you down, and chew you
+ up? Did you never hear of them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man&rsquo;s face wrinkled like a rag, for there is one thing the native
+ fears more than all else, and that is the tooth of the hound. But he
+ gathered courage, and said: &ldquo;The governor has no hounds. There ain&rsquo;t none
+ in Jamaica. We know dat&mdash;all of us know dat&mdash;all of us know dat,
+ massa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael Clones laughed, and it was not pleasant to hear. &ldquo;It may be the
+ governor has no bloodhounds, and would not permit their being brought into
+ the island, but my master is bringing them in himself&mdash;a lot with
+ their drivers from Cuba, and you Maroons will have all you can do to hide.
+ Sure, d&rsquo;ye think every wan in the island is as foolish as the governor? If
+ you do, y&rsquo;are mistaken, and that&rsquo;s all there is to say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The hounds not here&mdash;in de island, massa!&rdquo; declared the Maroon
+ questioningly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be here within the next few hours, and then where will you and
+ your pals be? You&rsquo;ll be caught between sharp teeth&mdash;nice, red, sharp,
+ bloody teeth; and you&rsquo;ll make good steak-better than your best olio.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The native gave a moan&mdash;it was the lament of one whose crime was come
+ tete-a-tete with its own punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the game to play,&rdquo; said Michael to himself as he fastened the door
+ tight. &ldquo;The hounds will settle this fool-rebellion quicker than aught
+ else. Mr. Calhoun&rsquo;s a wise man, and he ought to be governor here.
+ Criminal? As much as the angel Gabriel! He must put down this rebellion&mdash;no
+ wan else can. They&rsquo;re stronger, the Maroons, than ever they&rsquo;ve been.
+ They&rsquo;ve planned this with skill, and they&rsquo;ll need a lot of handlin&rsquo;. We&rsquo;re
+ safe enough here, but down there at Salem&mdash;well, they may be caught
+ in the bloody net. Bedad, that&rsquo;s sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments afterwards he met Dyck Calhoun. &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; said Dyck,
+ &ldquo;things are safe enough here, but we&rsquo;ve prepared! The overseers,
+ bookkeepers and drivers are loyal enough. But there are others not so
+ safe. I&rsquo;m going to Salem-riding as hard as I can, with six of our best
+ men. They&rsquo;re not so daft at Salem as we are, Michael. They won&rsquo;t know how
+ to act or what to do. Darius Boland is a good man, but he&rsquo;s only had
+ Virginian experience, and this is different. A hundred Maroons are as good
+ as a thousand white soldiers in the way the Maroons fight. There are a
+ thousand of them, and they can lay waste this island, if they get going.
+ So I shall stop them. The hounds are outside the harbour now, Michael. The
+ ship Vincent, bringing them, was sighted by a sloop two days ago, making
+ slowly for Kingston. She should be here before we&rsquo;ve time to turn round.
+ Michael, the game is in our hands, if we play it well. Do you go down to
+ Kingston and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He detailed what Michael was to do on landing the hounds, and laid out
+ plans for the immediate future. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re in danger at Salem, Michael, so
+ we must help them. The hounds will settle this whole wretched business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael told him of his prisoner, and what effect the threat about the
+ hounds had had. A look of purpose came into Dyck&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A hound is as fair as a gun, and hounds shall be used here in Jamaica.
+ The governor can&rsquo;t refuse their landing now. The people would kill him if
+ he did. It was I proposed it all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look, sir&mdash;who&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; asked Michael, as they saw a figure riding
+ under the palms not far away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very early morning, and the light was dim yet, but there was
+ sufficient to make even far sight easy. Dyck shaded his forehead with his
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not one of our people, Michael. It&rsquo;s a stranger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the rider came on he was stopped by two of the drivers of the estate.
+ Dyck and Michael saw him hold up a letter, and a moment later he was on
+ his way to Dyck, galloping hard. Arrived, he dropped to the ground, and
+ saluted Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A letter from Salem, sir,&rdquo; he said, and handed it over to Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck nodded, broke the seal of the letter and read it quickly. Then he
+ nodded again and bade the man eat a hearty breakfast and return with him
+ on one of the Enniskillen horses, as his own would be exhausted. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+ help protect Salem, my man,&rdquo; said Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man grinned. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s good,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;They knew naught of the
+ rising when I left. But the governor was there yesterday, and he&rsquo;d protect
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense, fellow, the governor would go straight to Spanish Town where he
+ belongs, when there is trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the man had gone, Dyck turned to his servant. &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;the news in the letter came from Darius Boland. He says the governor told
+ him he had orders from England to confine me here at Enniskillen, and he
+ meant to do it. We&rsquo;ll see how he does it. If he sends his marshals, we&rsquo;ll
+ make Gadarene swine of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a smile at his lips, and it was contemptuous, and the lines of
+ his forehead told of resolve. &ldquo;Michael,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll hunt Lord Mallow
+ with the hounds of our good fortune, for this war is our war. They can&rsquo;t
+ win it without me, and they shan&rsquo;t. Without the hounds it may be a two
+ years&rsquo; war&mdash;with the hounds it can&rsquo;t go beyond a week or so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If the hounds get here, sir! But if they don&rsquo;t?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck laid his hand upon the sword at his side. &ldquo;If they don&rsquo;t get here,
+ Michael, still the war will be ours, for we understand fighting, and the
+ governor does not. Confine me here, will he? If he does, he&rsquo;ll be a better
+ man than I have ever known him, Michael. In a few hours I shall be at
+ Salem, to do what he could not, and would not, do if he could. His love is
+ as deep as water on a roof, no deeper. He&rsquo;ll think first of himself, and
+ afterwards of the owner of Salem or any other. Let me show you what I mean
+ to do once we&rsquo;ve Salem free from danger. Come and have a look at my
+ chart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some hours later Dyck Calhoun, with his six horsemen, was within a mile or
+ so of Salem. They had ridden hard in the heat and were tired, but there
+ was high spirit in the men, for they were behind a trusted leader&mdash;a
+ man who ate little, but who did not disdain a bottle of Madeira or a glass
+ of brandy, and who made good every step of the way he went&mdash;watchful,
+ alert, careful, determined. They cared little what his past had been.
+ Jamaica was not a heaven for the good, but it was a haven for many who had
+ been ill-used elsewhere; where each man, as though he were really in a new
+ world, was judged by his daily actions and not by any history of a hidden
+ or an open past. As they came across country, Dyck always ahead, they saw
+ how he responded to every sign of life in the bush, how he moved always
+ with discretion where ambush seemed possible. They knew how on his own
+ estate he never made mistakes of judgment; that he held the balance
+ carefully, and that his violences, rare and tremendous, were not outbursts
+ of an unregulated nature. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t fool Calhoun,&rdquo; was a common phrase in
+ the language of Enniskillen, and there were few in the surrounding country
+ who would not have upheld its truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, to-day, he was almost moodily silent, reserved and watchful. None
+ knew the eddies of life which struggled for mastery in him, nor of his
+ horrible disappointments. None knew of his love for Sheila. Yet all knew
+ that he had killed&mdash;or was punished for killing&mdash;Erris Boyne.
+ None of them had seen Sheila, but all had heard of her, and the governor&rsquo;s
+ courtship of her, and all wondered why Dyck Calhoun should be doing what
+ clearly the governor should do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow, in spite of the criminal record with which Calhoun&rsquo;s life was
+ stained, they had a respect for him they did not have for Lord Mallow.
+ Dyck&rsquo;s life in Jamaica was clean; and his progress as a planter had been
+ free from black spots. He even kept no mistress, and none had ever known
+ him to have to do with women, black, brown, or white. He had never gone
+ a-Maying, as the saying was, and his only weakness or fault&mdash;if it
+ was a fault&mdash;was a fondness for the bottle of good wine which was
+ ever open on his table, and for tobacco in the smoking-leaf. To-day he
+ smoked incessantly and carefully. He threw no loose ends of burning
+ tobacco from cigar or pipe into the loose dry leaves and stiff-cut ground.
+ Yet they knew the small clouds floating away from his head did not check
+ his observation. That was proved beyond peradventure when they were within
+ sight of the homestead of Salem on an upland well-wooded. It was in
+ apparently happy circumstances, for they could see no commotion about the
+ homestead; they saw men with muskets, evidently keeping guard&mdash;yet
+ too openly keeping guard, and so some said to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Dyck reined his horse. Each man listened attentively, and eyed
+ the wood ahead of them, for it was clear Dyck suspected danger there. For
+ a moment there seemed doubt in Dyck&rsquo;s mind what to do, but presently he
+ had decided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ride slow for Salem,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s Maroons there in the bush. They are
+ waiting for night. They won&rsquo;t attack us now. They&rsquo;re in ambush&mdash;of
+ that I&rsquo;m sure. If they want to capture Salem, they&rsquo;ll not give alarm by
+ firing on us, so if we ride on they&rsquo;ll think we haven&rsquo;t sensed them. If
+ they do attack us, we&rsquo;ll know they are in good numbers, for they&rsquo;ll be
+ facing us as well as the garrison of Salem. But keep your muskets ready.
+ Have a drink,&rdquo; he added, and handed his horn of liquor. &ldquo;If they see us
+ drink, and they will, they&rsquo;ll think we&rsquo;ve only stopped to refresh, and
+ we&rsquo;ll be safe. In any case, if they attack, fire your muskets at them and
+ ride like the devil. Don&rsquo;t dismount and don&rsquo;t try to find them in the
+ rocks. They&rsquo;ll catch us that way, as they&rsquo;ve caught others. It&rsquo;s a poor
+ game fighting hidden men. I want to get them into the open down below, and
+ that&rsquo;s where they&rsquo;ll be before we&rsquo;re many hours older.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this he rode on slightly ahead, and presently put his horse at a
+ gentle canter which he did not increase as they neared the place where the
+ black men ambushed. Every man of the group behaved well. None showed
+ nervousness, even when one of the horses, conscious of hidden Maroons in
+ the wood, gave a snort and made a sharp movement out of the track, in an
+ attempt to get greater speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was only for an instant, however. Yet every man&rsquo;s heart beat faster
+ as they came to the place where the ambush was. Indeed, Dyck saw a bush
+ move, and had a glimpse of a black, hideous face which quickly
+ disappeared. Dyck&rsquo;s imperturbable coolness kept them steady. They even
+ gossiped of idle things loud enough for the hidden Maroons to hear. No
+ face showed suspicion or alarm, as they passed, while all felt the
+ presence of many men in the underbrush. Only when they had passed the
+ place, did they realize the fulness of the danger through which they had
+ gone. Dyck talked to them presently without turning round, for that might
+ have roused suspicion, and while they were out of danger now, there was
+ the future and Dyck&rsquo;s plan which he now unfolded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll come down into the open before it&rsquo;s dark,&rdquo; he said quietly, &ldquo;and
+ when they do that, we&rsquo;ll have &lsquo;em. They&rsquo;ve no chance to ambush in the
+ cane-fields now. We&rsquo;ll get them in the open, and wipe them out. Don&rsquo;t look
+ round. Keep steady, and we&rsquo;ll ride a little more quickly soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later they cantered to the front door of the Salem homestead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first face they saw there was that of Darius Boland. It had a look of
+ trouble. Dyck explained. &ldquo;We thought you might not have heard of the rise
+ of the Maroons. We have no ladies at Enniskillen. We prepared, and we&rsquo;re
+ safe enough there, as things are. Your ladies must go at once to Spanish
+ Town, unless&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless they stay here! Well, they would not be unwise, for though the
+ slaves under the old management might have joined the Maroons, they will
+ not do so now. We have got them that far. But, Mr. Calhoun, the ladies
+ aren&rsquo;t here. They rode away into the hills this morning, and they&rsquo;ve not
+ come back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was just sending a search party for them. I did not know of the rise of
+ the Maroons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In what direction did they go?&rdquo; asked Dyck with anxiety, though his tone
+ was even.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius Boland pointed. &ldquo;They went slightly northwest, and if they go as I
+ think they meant to do, they would come back the way you came in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They were armed?&rdquo; Dyck asked sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, they were armed,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;Miss Llyn had a small pistol. She
+ learned to carry one in Virginia, and she has done so ever since we came
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen, Boland,&rdquo; said Dyck with anxiety. &ldquo;Up there in the hills by which
+ we came are Maroons hidden, and they will invade this place to-night. We
+ were ready to fight them, of course, as we came, but it&rsquo;s a risky
+ business, and we wanted to get them all if possible. We couldn&rsquo;t if we had
+ charged them there, for they were well-ambushed. My idea was to let them
+ get into the open between there and here, and catch them as they came. It
+ would save our own men, and it would probably do for them. If Mrs. and
+ Miss Llyn come back that way, they will be in greater danger than were we,
+ for the Maroons were coming here to capture the ladies and hold them as
+ hostages; and they would not let them pass. In any case, the risk is
+ immense. The ladies must be got to Spanish Town, for the Maroons are
+ desperate. They know we have no ships of the navy here now, and they rely
+ on their raiding powers and the governor&rsquo;s weakness. They have placed
+ their men in every part of the middle and western country, and they came
+ upon my place last evening and were defeated. Several were killed and one
+ taken prisoner. They can&rsquo;t be marched upon like an army. Their powers of
+ ambush are too great. They must be run down by bloodhounds. It&rsquo;s the only
+ way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bloodhounds&mdash;there are no bloodhounds here!&rdquo; said Darius Boland.
+ &ldquo;And if there were, wouldn&rsquo;t pious England make a fuss?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun was about to speak sharply, but he caught sarcasm in Darius
+ Boland&rsquo;s face, and he said: &ldquo;I have the bloodhounds. They&rsquo;re outside the
+ harbour now, and I intend to use them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If the governor allows you!&rdquo; remarked Darius Boland ironically. &ldquo;He does
+ not like you or your bloodhounds. He has his orders, so he says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck made an impatient gesture. &ldquo;I will not submit to his orders. I have
+ earned my place in this is land, and he shall not have his way. The ladies
+ must be brought to Spanish Town, and placed where the governor&rsquo;s men can
+ protect them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The governor&rsquo;s men! Indeed. They might as well stay here; we can surely
+ protect them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps, for you have skill, Boland, and you are cautious, but is it fair
+ for ladies to stay in this isolated spot with murderers about? When the
+ ladies come back, they must be sent at once to Spanish Town. Can&rsquo;t you
+ see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius Boland bowed. &ldquo;What you say goes always,&rdquo; he remarked, &ldquo;but tell
+ me, sir, who will take the ladies to Spanish Town?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun read the inner meaning of Darius Boland&rsquo;s words. They did not
+ put him out of self-control. It was not a time to dwell on such things. It
+ was his primary duty to save the ladies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Boland,&rdquo; he said sharply, &ldquo;I shall start now. We must find the
+ ladies. What sort of a country is it through which they pass?&rdquo; He pointed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad enough in some ways. There&rsquo;s an old monastery of the days of the
+ Spaniards up there&rdquo;&mdash;he pointed or the ruins of one, &ldquo;and it is a
+ pleasant place to rest. I doubt not they rested there, if&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If they reached it!&rdquo; remarked Dyck with crisp inflection. &ldquo;Yes, they
+ would rest there&mdash;and it would be a good place for ambush by the
+ Maroons, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good enough from the standpoint of the Maroons,&rdquo; was the reply, the voice
+ slightly choked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we must go there. It&rsquo;s a damnable predicament&mdash;no, you must not
+ come with me! You must keep command here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hastily described the course to be followed by those of his own men who
+ stayed to defend, and then said: &ldquo;Our horses are fagged. If you loan us
+ four I&rsquo;ll see they are well cared for, and returned in kind or cash. I&rsquo;ll
+ take three of my men only, and loan you three of the best. We&rsquo;ll fill our
+ knapsacks and get away, Boland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments later, Calhoun and his three men, with a guide added by
+ Boland, had started away up the road which had been ridden by Mrs. Llyn
+ and Sheila. One thing was clear, the Maroons on the hill did not know of
+ the absence of Sheila and her mother, or they would not be waiting. He did
+ not like the long absence of the ladies. It was ominous at such a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck and his small escort got away by a road unseen from where the Maroons
+ were, and when well away put their horses to a canter and got into the
+ hills. Once in the woods, however, they rode alertly, and Dyck&rsquo;s eyes were
+ everywhere. He was quick to see a bush move, to observe the flick of a
+ branch, to catch the faintest sound of an animal origin. He was obsessed
+ with anxiety, for he had a dark fear that some ill had happened to the
+ two. His blood almost dried in his veins when he thought of the fate which
+ had followed the capture of ladies in other islands like Haiti or Grenada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not seem possible that these beautiful women should have fallen
+ into the outrageous hands of savages. He knew the girl was armed, and that
+ before harm might come to her she would end her own life and her mother&rsquo;s
+ also; but if she was caught from behind, and the opportunity of suicide
+ should not be hers&mdash;what then?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he showed no agitation to his followers. His eyes were, however,
+ intensely busy, and every nerve was keen to feel. Life in the open had
+ developed in him the physical astuteness of the wild man, and he had all
+ the gifts that make a supreme open-air fighter. He sensed things; but with
+ him it was feeling, and not scent or hearing; his senses were such perfect
+ listeners. He had the intense perception of a delicate plant, those
+ wonderful warnings which only come to those who live close to nature, who
+ study from feeling the thousand moods and tenses of living vegetables and
+ animal life. He was a born hunter, and it was not easy to surprise him
+ when every nerve was sharp with premonition. He saw the marks of the hoofs
+ of Sheila&rsquo;s and her mother&rsquo;s horses in the road, knowing them by the
+ freshness of the indentations. An hour, two hours passed, and they then
+ approached the monasterial ruin of which Boland had spoken. Here,
+ suddenly, Dyck dropped to the ground, for he saw unmistakable signs of
+ fright or flurry in the hoofmarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He quickly made examination, and there were signs of women&rsquo;s feet and also
+ a bare native foot, but no signs of struggle or disturbance. The
+ footprints, both native and white, were firmly placed, but the horses&rsquo;
+ hoof-prints showed agitation. Presently the hoofmarks became more composed
+ again. Suddenly one of Dyck&rsquo;s supporters exclaimed he had picked up a
+ small piece of ribbon, evidently dropped to guide those who might come
+ searching. Presently another token was found in a loose bit of buckle from
+ a shoe. Then, suddenly, upon the middle of the road was a little pool of
+ blood and signs that a body had lain in the dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She shot a native here,&rdquo; said Dyck to his men coolly. &ldquo;There are no signs
+ of a struggle,&rdquo; remarked the most observant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must go carefully here, for they may have been imprisoned in the ruin.
+ You stay here, and I&rsquo;ll go forward,&rdquo; he added, with a hand on his sword.
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve an idea they&rsquo;re here. We have one chance, my lads, and let&rsquo;s keep
+ our heads. If anything should happen to me, have a try yourselves, and see
+ what you can do. The ladies must be freed, if they&rsquo;re there. There&rsquo;s not
+ one of you that won&rsquo;t stand by to the last, but I want your oath upon it.
+ By the heads or graves of your mothers, lads, you&rsquo;ll see it through? Up
+ with your hands!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their hands went up. &ldquo;By our mothers&rsquo; heads or graves!&rdquo; they said in low
+ tones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go on ahead. If you hear a call, or a shot
+ fired, forward swiftly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An instant later he plunged into the woods to the right of the road, by
+ which he would come upon the ruins from the rear. He held a pistol as he
+ stole carefully yet quickly forward. He was anxious there should be no
+ delay, but he must not be rash. Without meeting anyone he came near the
+ ruins. They showed serene in the shade of the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly came from the ruin a Maroon of fierce, yet not cruel
+ appearance, who laid a hand behind his ear, and looked steadfastly towards
+ that part of the wood where Dyck was. It was clear he had heard something.
+ Dyck did not know how many Maroons there might be in the ruins, or near
+ it, and he did not attack. It was essential he should know the strength of
+ his foe; and he remained quiet. Presently the native turned as though to
+ go back into the ruins, but changed his mind, and began to tour the stony,
+ ruined building. Dyck waited, and presently saw more natives come from the
+ ruins, and after a moment another three. These last were having an
+ argument of some stress, for they pulled at each other&rsquo;s arms and even
+ caught at the long cloths of their headdresses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve got the ladies there,&rdquo; thought Dyck, &ldquo;but they&rsquo;ve done them no
+ harm yet.&rdquo; He waited moments longer to see if more natives were coming
+ out, then said to himself: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll make a try for it now. It won&rsquo;t do to run
+ the risk of going back to bring my fellows up. It&rsquo;s a fair risk, but it&rsquo;s
+ worth taking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that he ran softly to the entrance from which he had seen the men
+ emerge. Looking in he saw only darkness. Then suddenly he gave a soft
+ call, the call of an Irish bird-note which all people in Ireland&mdash;in
+ the west and south of Ireland&mdash;know. If Sheila was alive and in the
+ place she would answer it, he was sure. He waited a moment, and there was
+ no answer. Then he called again, and in an instant, as though from a great
+ distance, there came the reply of the same note, clearer and more
+ bell-like than his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s there!&rdquo; he said, and boldly entered the place. It was dark and
+ damp, but ahead was a break in the solid monotony of ruined wall, and he
+ saw a clear stream of light beyond. He stole ahead, got over the stone
+ obstructions, and came on to a biggish room which once had been a
+ refectory. Looking round it he saw three doors&mdash;one evidently led
+ into the kitchen, one into a pantry, and one into a hall. It was clear the
+ women were alone, or some one would have come in answer to his call. Who
+ could tell when they would come? There was no time to be lost. With an
+ instinct, which proved correct, he opened the door leading into the old
+ kitchen, and there, tied, and with pale faces, but in no other sense
+ disordered, were Sheila and her mother. He put his fingers to his lips,
+ then hastily cut them loose from the ropes of bamboo, and helped them to
+ their feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you walk?&rdquo; he whispered to Mrs. Llyn. She nodded assent, and braced
+ herself. &ldquo;Then here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is a pistol. Come quickly. We may have to
+ fight our way out. Don&rsquo;t be afraid to fire, but take good aim first. I
+ have some men in the wood beyond where you shot the native,&rdquo; he added to
+ Sheila. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll come at once if I call, or a shot is fired. Keep your
+ heads, and we shall be all right. They&rsquo;re a dangerous crew, but we&rsquo;ll beat
+ them this time. Come quickly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently they were in the refectory, and a moment after that they were
+ over the stones, and near the entrance, and then a native appeared, armed.
+ Without an instant&rsquo;s hesitation Dyck ran forward, and as he entered, put
+ his sword into the man&rsquo;s vitals, and he fell, calling out as he fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The rest will be on us now,&rdquo; said Dyck, &ldquo;and we must keep going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three more natives appeared, and he shot two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Catching a pistol from Sheila he aimed at the third native and wounded
+ him, but did not kill him. The man ran into the wood. Presently more
+ Maroons came&mdash;a dozen or more, and rushed for the entrance. They were
+ met by Dyck&rsquo;s fire, and now also Sheila fired and brought down her man.
+ Dyck wounded another, and in great skill loaded again, but at that moment
+ three of the Maroons rushed down into the ruins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were astonished to see Dyck there, and more astonished to receive&mdash;first
+ one and then another&mdash;his iron in their bowels. The third man made a
+ stroke at Dyck with his lance, and only gashed Dyck&rsquo;s left arm. Then he
+ turned and fled out into the open, and was met by a half-dozen others.
+ They all were about to rush the entrance when suddenly four shots behind
+ them brought three of them down, and the rest fled into the wood shouting.
+ In another moment Dyck and the ladies were in the open, and making for the
+ woods, the women in front, the men behind, loading their muskets as they
+ ran, and alive to the risks of the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dresses of the ladies were stained and soiled with dust and damp, but
+ otherwise they seemed little the worse for the adventure, save that Mrs.
+ Llyn was shaken, and her face was pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you know where we were, and why did you come?&rdquo; she said, after
+ they had got under way, having secured the horses which Sheila and her
+ mother had ridden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Briefly Dyck explained how as soon as he had dealt with the revolt of the
+ Maroons at his own place he came straight to Salem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew you were unused to the ways of the country and to our sort of
+ native here, and I felt sure you would not refuse to take help&mdash;even
+ mine at a pinch. But what happened to you?&rdquo; he added, turning to Sheila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only yesterday Sheila had determined to cut him wholly out of her
+ life by assenting to marry Lord Mallow. Yet here he was, and she could
+ scarcely bear to look into his face. He was shut off from her by every
+ fact of human reason. These were days when the traditions of family life
+ were more intense than now; when to kill one&rsquo;s own father was not so bad
+ as to embrace, as it were, him or her who had killed that father. Sheila
+ felt if she were normal she ought to feel abhorrence against Dyck; yet she
+ felt none at all, and his saving them had given a new colour to their
+ relations. If he had killed her father, the traitor, he had saved
+ themselves from death or freed them from a shameful captivity which might
+ have ended in black disaster. She kept herself in hand, and did not show
+ confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We had not heard of the rising of the Maroons,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The governor
+ was at Salem yesterday and a message came from his staff to say would he
+ come at once. His staff were not at Salem, but at the next plantation
+ nearer to Spanish Town. Lord Mallow went. If he suspected the real trouble
+ he said naught, but was gone before you could realize it. The hours went
+ by, night came and passed, then my mother and I, this morning, resolved to
+ ride to the monastery, and then round by the road you travelled back to
+ Salem.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are Maroons now on that hill above your place. They were in ambush
+ when we passed, but we took no notice. It was not wise to invite trouble.
+ Some of us would have been killed, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then told what had been in his mind, and what might be the outcome&mdash;the
+ killing or capture of the whole group, and safety for all at Salem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had finished, she continued her story. &ldquo;We rode for an hour
+ unchallenged, and then came the Maroons. At first I knew not what to do.
+ We were surrounded before we could act. I had my pistol ready, and there
+ was the chance of escape&mdash;the faint chance&mdash;if we drove our
+ horses on; but there was also the danger of being fired at from behind! So
+ we sat still on our horses, and I asked them how they dared attack white
+ ladies. I asked them if they had never thought what vengeance the governor
+ would take. They did not understand my words, but they grasped the
+ meaning, and one of them, the leader, who understood English, was inclined
+ to have reason. As it was, we stopped what might have been our murder by
+ saying it would be wiser to hold us as hostages, and that we were
+ Americans. That man was killed&mdash;by you. A shot from your pistol
+ brought him down as he rushed forward to enter the ruins. But he took care
+ of us as we went forward, and when I shot one of his followers for laying
+ his hand upon me in the saddle&mdash;he caught me by the leg under my
+ skirt&mdash;he would allow no retaliation. I knew boldness was the safe
+ part to play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But in the end we were bound with ropes as you found us, while they
+ waited for more of their people to come, those, no doubt, you found
+ ambushed on the hill. As we lay, bound as you saw us, the leader said to
+ us we should be safe if he could have his way, but there were bad elements
+ among the Maroons, and he could not guarantee it. Yet he knew the
+ government would pay for our release, would perhaps give the land for
+ which they had asked with no avail. We must, therefore, remain prisoners.
+ If we made no efforts to escape, it would be better in the end. &lsquo;Keep your
+ head steady, missy, try no tricks, and all may go well; but I have bad
+ lot, and they may fly at you.&rsquo; That was the way he spoke. It made our
+ blood run cold, for he was one man, with fair mind, and he had around him
+ men, savage and irresponsible. Black and ruthless, they would stop at
+ nothing except the sword at their throats or the teeth in their flesh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The teeth in their flesh!&rdquo; said Dyck with a grim smile. &ldquo;Yes, that is the
+ only way with them. Naught can put the fear of God into them except
+ bloodhounds, and that Lord Mallow will not have. He has been set against
+ it until now. But this business will teach him. He may change his mind
+ now, since what he cares for is in danger&mdash;his place and his ladies!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Llyn roused herself to say: &ldquo;No, no, Mr. Calhoun, you must not say
+ that of him. His place may be in danger, but not his ladies. He has no
+ promise of that.... And see, Mr. Calhoun, I want to say that, in any case,
+ you have paid your debt, if you owe one to us. For a life taken you have
+ given two lives&mdash;to me and my girl. I speak as one who has a right to
+ say it! Erris Boyne was naught to me at all, but he was my daughter&rsquo;s
+ father, and that made everything difficult. I could make him cease to be
+ my husband, and I did; but I could not make him cease to be her father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had no love for Erris Boyne,&rdquo; said Sheila. Misery was heavy on her.
+ &ldquo;None at all, but he was my father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See, all&rsquo;s well still at Salem,&rdquo; said Dyck waving a hand as though to
+ change the talk. &ldquo;All&rsquo;s as we left it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There in the near distance lay Salem, serene. All tropical life about
+ seemed throbbing with life and soaking with leisure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were in time,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;The Maroons are still in ambush. The sun is
+ beginning to set though, and the trouble may begin. We shall get there
+ about sundown&mdash;safe, thank God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Safe, thank God&mdash;and you,&rdquo; said Sheila&rsquo;s mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the King&rsquo;s House at Spanish Town the governor was troubled. All his
+ plans and prophecies had come to naught. He had been sure there would be
+ no rebellion of the Maroons, and he was equally sure that his career would
+ be made hugely successful by marriage with Sheila Llyn&mdash;but the
+ Maroons had revolted, and the marriage was not settled!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Messages had been coming from the provost-marshal-general of reports from
+ the counties of Middlesex and Cornwall, that the Maroons were ravaging
+ everywhere and that bands of slaves had joined them with serious disasters
+ to the plantation people. Planters, their wives and children had been
+ murdered, and in some districts the natives were in full possession and
+ had destroyed, robbed and ravaged. He had summoned his commander of the
+ militia forces, had created special constables, and armed them, and had
+ sent a ship to the Bahamas to summon a small British fleet there. He had
+ also mapped out a campaign against the Maroons, which had one grave
+ demerit&mdash;it was planned on a basis of ordinary warfare and not with
+ Jamaica conditions in mind. The provost-marshal warned him of the futility
+ of these plans, but he had persisted in them. He had later been shocked,
+ however, by news that the best of his colonels had been ambushed and
+ killed, and that others had been made prisoners and treated with
+ barbarity. From everywhere, except one, had come either news of defeat or
+ set-back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One good thing he immediately did: he threw open King&rsquo;s House to the
+ wounded, and set the surgeons to work, thereby checking bitter criticism
+ and blocking the movement rising against him. For it was well known he had
+ rejected all warnings, had persisted in his view that trust in the Maroons
+ and fair treatment of themselves and the slaves were all that was needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he walked in the great salon or hall of audience where the wounded lay&mdash;over
+ seventy feet long and thirty wide, with great height, to which beds and
+ conveniences had been hastily brought&mdash;it seemed to him that he was
+ saving, if barely saving, his name and career. Standing beside one of the
+ Doric pillars which divided the salon from an upper and lower gallery of
+ communications, he received the Custos of Kingston. As the Custos told his
+ news the governor&rsquo;s eyes were running along the line of busts of ancient
+ and modern philosophers on the gilt brackets between the Doric pilasters.
+ They were all in bronze, and his mind had the doleful imagination of brown
+ slave heroes placed there in honour for services given to the country. The
+ doors at the south end of the great salon opened now and then into the
+ council chambers beyond, and he could see the surgeons operating on the
+ cases returned from the plantations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour,&rdquo; said the Custos, &ldquo;things have suddenly improved. The hounds
+ have come from Cuba and in the charge of ten men&mdash;ten men with sixty
+ hounds. That is the situation at the moment. All the people at Kingston
+ are overjoyed. They see the end of the revolt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The hounds!&rdquo; exclaimed the governor. &ldquo;What hounds?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The hounds sent for by Dyck Calhoun&mdash;surely your honour remembers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely his honour did, and recalled also that he forbade the importation
+ of the hounds; but he could not press that prohibition now. &ldquo;The mutineer
+ and murderer, Dyck Calhoun!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;And they have come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, your honour, and gone with Calhoun&rsquo;s man, Michael Clones, to Salem.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Salem&mdash;why Salem?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because Calhoun is there fighting the Maroons in that district. The
+ Maroons first captured the ladies of Salem as they rode in the woods. They
+ were beaten at that game by Calhoun and four men; the ladies then were
+ freed and taken back to Salem. Then the storm burst on Salem&mdash;burst,
+ but did not overwhelm. Calhoun saved the situation there; and when his
+ hounds arrive at Salem he will range over the whole country. It is against
+ the ideas of the people of England, but it does our work in Jamaica as
+ nothing else could. It was a stroke of genius, the hounds, your honour!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow was at once relieved and nonplussed. No doubt the policy of
+ the hounds was useful, and it might save his own goose, but it was, in a
+ sense, un-English to hunt the wild man with hounds. Yet was it un-English?
+ What was the difference between a sword and a good sharp tooth save that
+ the sword struck and let go and the tooth struck and held on? It had been
+ said in England that to hunt negroes with hounds was barbarous and
+ cowardly; but criminals were hunted with bloodhounds in all civilized
+ countries; and as for cowardice, the man who had sent for these hounds was
+ as brave as any old crusader! No, Dyck Calhoun could not be charged with
+ cowardice, and his policy of the hounds might save the island and the
+ administration in the end. They had arrived in the very hour of Jamaica&rsquo;s
+ and Lord Mallow&rsquo;s greatest peril. They had gone on to the man who had been
+ sane enough to send for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me about the landing of the hounds,&rdquo; said Lord Mallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was last night about dusk that word came from the pilot&rsquo;s station at
+ Port Royal that the vessel Vincent was making for port, and that she. came
+ from Cuba. Presently Michael Clones, the servant of Dyck Calhoun, came
+ also to say that the Vincent was the ship bringing Calhoun&rsquo;s hounds from
+ Cuba, and asking permit for delivery. This he did because he thought you
+ were opposed to the landing. In the light of our position here, we granted
+ the delivery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the vessel came to anchor, the hounds with their drivers were
+ landed. The landing was the signal for a great display on the part of the
+ people and the militia&mdash;yes, the militia shared in the applause, your
+ honour! They had had a taste of war with the Maroons and the slaves, and
+ they were well inclined to let the hounds have their chance. Resolutions
+ were then passed to approach your honour and ask that full powers be given
+ to Calhoun to pursue the war without thought of military precedent or of
+ Calhoun&rsquo;s position. He has no official place in the public life here, but
+ he is powerful with the masses. It is rumoured you have an order to
+ confine him to his plantation; but to apply it would bring revolution in
+ Jamaica. There are great numbers of people who love his courage, what he
+ did for the King&rsquo;s navy, and for his commercial success here, and they
+ would resent harsh treatment of him. They are aware, your honour, that he
+ and you knew each other in Ireland, and they think you are hard on him.
+ People judge not from all the facts, but from what they see and hear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the Custos&rsquo; narrative, Lord Mallow was perturbed. He had the common
+ sense to know that Dyck Calhoun, ex-convict and mutineer as he was, had
+ personal power in the island, which he as governor had not been able to
+ get, and Dyck had not abused that power. He realized that Dyck&rsquo;s
+ premonition of an outbreak and sending for the hounds was a stroke of
+ genius. He recalled with anger Dyck&rsquo;s appearance, in spite of regulations,
+ in trousers at the King&rsquo;s ball and his dancing with a black woman, and he
+ also realized that it was a cool insult to himself. It was then he had
+ given the home authorities information which would poison their mind
+ against Dyck, and from that had come the order to confine him to his
+ plantation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he felt the time had come when he might use Dyck for his own purposes.
+ That Dyck should be at Salem was a bitter dose, but that could amount to
+ nothing, for Sheila could never marry the man who had killed her father,
+ however bad and mad her father was. Yet it gravelled his soul that Dyck
+ should be doing service for the lady to whom he had offered his own hand
+ and heart, and from whom he had had no word of assent. It angered him
+ against himself that he had not at once sent soldiers to Salem to protect
+ it. He wished to set himself right with Sheila and with the island people,
+ and how to do so was the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First, clearly, he must not apply the order to confine Dyck to his
+ plantation; also he must give Dyck authority to use the hounds in hunting
+ down the Maroons and slaves who were committing awful crimes. He forthwith
+ decided to write, asking Dyck to send him outline of his scheme against
+ the rebels. That he must do, for the game was with Dyck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long will it take the hounds to get to Salem?&rdquo; he asked the Custos
+ presently in his office, with deepset lines in his face and a determined
+ look in his eyes. He was an arrogant man, but he was not insane, and he
+ wished to succeed. It could only be success if he dragged Jamaica out of
+ this rebellion with flying colours, and his one possible weapon was the
+ man whom he detested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, your honour, as we sent them by wagons and good horses they should
+ be in Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s hands this evening. They should be there by now
+ almost, for they&rsquo;ve been going for hours, and the distance is not great.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor nodded, and began to write. A halfhour later he handed to the
+ Custos what he had written.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See what you think of that, Custos,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Does it, in your mind,
+ cover the ground as it should?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Custos read it all over slowly and carefully, weighing every word.
+ Presently he handed back the paper. &ldquo;Your honour, it is complete and
+ masterly,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It puts the crushing of the revolt into the hands of
+ Mr. Calhoun, and nothing could be wiser. He has the gifts of a leader, and
+ he will do the job with no mistake, and in a time of crisis like this,
+ that is essential. You have given him the right to order the militia to
+ obey him, and nothing could be better. He will organize like a master. We
+ haven&rsquo;t forgotten his fight on the Ariadne. Didn&rsquo;t the admiral tell the
+ story at the dinner we gave him of how this ex-convict and mutineer, by
+ sheer genius, broke the power of the French at the critical moment and
+ saved our fleet, though it was only three-fourths that of the French?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t think the French will get us some day?&rdquo; asked the governor with
+ a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I certainly don&rsquo;t since our defences have been improved. Look at the
+ sixty big cannon on Fort Augusta! They&rsquo;d be knocked to smithereens before
+ they could get into the quiet waters of the harbour. Don&rsquo;t forget the
+ narrows, your honour. Then there&rsquo;s the Apostle&rsquo;s Battery with its huge
+ shot, and the guns of Fort Royal would give them a cross-fire that would
+ make them sick. Besides, we could stop them within the shoals and reefs
+ and narrow channels before they got near the inner circle. It would only
+ be the hand of God that would get them in, and it doesn&rsquo;t work for
+ Frenchmen these days, I observe. No, this place is safe, and King&rsquo;s House
+ will be the home of British governors for many a century.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s your gallant faith, and no doubt you are right, but go on with
+ your tale of the hounds,&rdquo; said Lord Mallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour, as the hounds went away with Michael Clones there was
+ greater applause than I have ever seen in the island except when Rodney
+ defeated De Grasse. Imagine a little sloop in the wash of the seas and the
+ buccaneers piling down on him, and no chance of escape, and then a great
+ British battleship appearing, and the situation saved&mdash;that was how
+ we were placed here till the hounds arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour, this morning&rsquo;s&mdash;this early morning&rsquo;s exit of the hounds
+ was like a procession of veterans to Walhalla. There was the sun breaking
+ over the tops of the hills, a crimsonish, greyish, opaline touch of soft
+ sprays or mists breaking away from the onset of the sunrise; and all the
+ trees with night-lips wet sucking in the sun and drinking up the light
+ like an overseer at a Christmas breakfast; and you know what that is. And
+ all the shore, rocky and sandy, rough and smooth, happy and homely,
+ shimmering in the radiance. And hundreds of Creoles and coloured folk
+ beating the ground in agitation, and slaves a-plenty carrying boxes to the
+ ships that are leaving, and white folk crowding the streets, and bugles
+ blowing, and the tramp of the militia, and the rattle of carts on the
+ cobble-stones, and the voices of the officers giving orders, and turmoil
+ everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, suddenly, the sharp sound of a long whip and a voice calling, and
+ there rises out of the landing place the procession&mdash;the sixty dogs
+ in three wagons, their ten drivers with their whips, but keeping order by
+ the sound of their voices, low, soft, and peculiar, and then the horses
+ starting into a quick trot which presently would become a canter&mdash;and
+ the hounds were off to Salem! There could be no fear with the hounds loose
+ to do the hunting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose when they get to Salem their owner is no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Custos laughed. &ldquo;Him, your honour&mdash;him no more! Isn&rsquo;t he the man
+ of whom the black folk say: &lsquo;Lucky buckra&mdash;morning, lucky new-comer!&rsquo;
+ If that&rsquo;s his reputation, and the coming of his hounds just when the
+ island most needed them is good proof of it, do you think he&rsquo;ll be killed
+ by a lot of dirty Maroons! Ah, Calhoun&rsquo;s a man with the luck of the devil,
+ your honour! He has the pull&mdash;as sure as heaven&rsquo;s above he&rsquo;ll make
+ success. If you command your staff to have this posted as a proclamation
+ throughout the island, it will do as much good as a thousand soldiers. The
+ military officers will not object, they know how big a man he is, and they
+ have had enough. The news is not good from all over the island, for there
+ are bad planters and bad overseers, and they&rsquo;ve poisoned large fields of
+ men in many quarters of the island, and things are wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this proclamation will put things right. It will stop the slaves from
+ revolting; it will squelch the Maroons, and I&rsquo;m certain sure Calhoun will
+ have Maroons ready to fight for us, not against us, before this thing is
+ over. I tell you, your honour, it means the way out&mdash;that&rsquo;s what it
+ means. So, if you&rsquo;ll give me your order, keeping a copy of it for the
+ provost-marshal, I&rsquo;ll see it&rsquo;s delivered to Dyck Calhoun before morning&mdash;perhaps
+ by midnight. It&rsquo;s not more than a six hours&rsquo; journey in the ordinary way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment an aide-de-camp entered, and with grave face presented to
+ the governor the last report from the provost-marshal-general. Then he
+ watched the governor read the report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ten more killed and twenty wounded!&rdquo; said the governor. &ldquo;It must be
+ stopped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave the Custos the letter to Dyck Calhoun, and a few moments later
+ handed the proclamation to his aide-de-camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will settle the business, your honour,&rdquo; said the aide-de-camp as he
+ read the proclamation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, tell me please, what you know of the story,&rdquo; said the governor to
+ Sheila at King&rsquo;s House one afternoon two weeks later. &ldquo;I only get meagre
+ reports from the general commanding. But you close to the intimate source
+ of the events must know all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila shrank at the suggestion in the governor&rsquo;s voice, but she did not
+ resent it. She had purposes which she must carry out, and she steeled
+ herself. She wanted to get from Lord Mallow a pledge concerning Dyck
+ Calhoun, and she must be patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know nothing direct from Mr. Calhoun, your honour!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but only
+ through his servant, Michael Clones, who is a friend of my Darius Boland,
+ and they have met often since the first outbreak. You know, of course,
+ what happened at Port Louise&mdash;how the Maroons seized and murdered the
+ garrison, how families were butchered when they armed first, how barbarism
+ broke loose and made all men combine to fight the rebels. Even before Mr.
+ Calhoun came they had had record of a sack of human ears, cut from the
+ dead rebel-slaves, when they had been killed by faithful slaves, and good
+ progress was made. But the revolters fixed their camps on high rocks, and
+ by blowing of shells brought many fresh recruits to the struggle. It was
+ only when Mr. Calhoun came with his hounds that anything decisive was
+ done. For the rebels&mdash;Maroons and slaves&mdash;were hid, well
+ entrenched and cautious, and the danger was becoming greater every day. On
+ Mr. Calhoun&rsquo;s arrival, he was almost caught in ambush, being misled, and
+ saved himself only by splendid markmanship. He was attacked by six rebels
+ of whom he killed four, and riding his wounded horse over the other two he
+ escaped. Then he set the hounds to work and the rebellion in that district
+ was soon over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was gathering strength with increasing tragedy elsewhere,&rdquo; remarked
+ the governor. &ldquo;Some took refuge in hidden places, and came out only to
+ steal, rob, and murder&mdash;and worse. In one place, after a noted slave,
+ well known for his treachery, had been killed&mdash;Khoftet was his name&mdash;his
+ head was cut off by slaves friendly to us and his heart roasted and eaten.
+ There is but one way to deal with these people. No gaming or drinking must
+ be allowed, blowing of shells or beating of drums must be forbidden, and
+ every free negro or mulatto must wear on his arm a sign&mdash;perhaps a
+ cross in blue or red.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Slavery is doomed,&rdquo; said Sheila firmly. &ldquo;Its end is not far off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, they still keep slaves in the land of Washington and Alexander
+ Hamilton. They are better off here at any rate than in their own country,
+ where they were like animals among whom they lived. Here they are safe
+ from poverty, cared for in sickness, and have no fear of being handed over
+ to the keepers of carrion, or being the food of the gallinaso. They can
+ feed their fill on fricasees of macaca worms and steal without punishment
+ teal or ring-tailed pigeons and black crabs from the massa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they are not free. They are atoms in heaps of dust. They have no
+ rights&mdash;no liberties.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila was agitated, but she showed no excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She seemed to Lord Mallow like one who had perfect control of herself, and
+ was not the victim of anticipation. She seemed, save for her dark
+ searching eyes, like one who had gone through experience which had
+ disciplined her to control. Only her hands were demonstrative&mdash;yet
+ quietly so. Any one watching her closely would have seen that her hands
+ were sensitive, expressed even more markedly than her eyes or lips what
+ were her feelings. Her tragedy had altered her in one sense. She was paler
+ and thinner than ever she had been, but there was enough of her, and that
+ delicately made, which gave the governor a thrill of desire to make her
+ his own for the rest of his life or hers. He had also gone through much
+ since they had last met, and he had seen his own position in the balance&mdash;uncertain,
+ troubled, insecure. He realized that he had lost reputation, which had
+ scarcely been regained by his consent to the use of the hounds and giving
+ Dyck Calhoun a free hand, as temporary head of the militia. He could not
+ put him over the regular troops, but as the general commanding was, in
+ effect, the slave of Dyck Calhoun, there was no need for anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck Calhoun had smashed the rebellion, had quieted the island, had risen
+ above all the dark disturbances of revolt like a master. He had
+ established barracks and forts at many points in the island, and had
+ stationed troops in them; he had subdued Maroons and slaves by the hounds.
+ Yet he had punished only the chief of those who had been in actual
+ rebellion, and had repressed the violent punishments of the earlier part
+ of the conflict. He had forbidden any one to be burned alive, and had
+ ordered that no one should be executed without his first judging&mdash;with
+ the consent of the governor!&mdash;the facts of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dyck had built up for himself a reputation as no one in all the history of
+ the island had been able to do. He commanded by more than official
+ authority&mdash;by personality and achievement. There was no one in the
+ island but knew they had been saved by his prudence, foresight and skill.
+ It was to their minds stupendous and romantic. Fortunately they showed no
+ strong feeling against Lord Mallow. By placing King&rsquo;s House at disposal as
+ a hospital, and by gifts of food and money to wives and children of
+ soldiers and civilians, the governor had a little eradicated his record of
+ neglect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow had a way with him when he chose to use it. He was not without
+ the gift for popularity, and he saw now that he could best attain it by
+ treating Dyck Calhoun well. He saw troops come and go, he listened to
+ grievances, he corrected abuses, he devised a scheme for nursing, he
+ planned security for the future, he gave permission for buccaneer trading
+ with the United States, he had by legislative order given the Creoles a
+ better place in the civic organism. This was a time for broad policy&mdash;for
+ distribution of cassavi bread, yams and papaws, for big, and maybe rough,
+ display of power and generosity. He was not blind to the fact that he
+ might by discreet courses impress favourably his visitor. All he did was
+ affected by that thought. He could not but think that Sheila would judge
+ of him by what he did as much as by what he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her now with interest and longing. He loved to hear her talk,
+ and she had information which was no doubt truer than most he received&mdash;was
+ closer to the brine, as it were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What more can you tell me of Mr. Calhoun and his doings?&rdquo; he asked
+ presently. &ldquo;He is lucky in having so perfect a narrator of his histories&mdash;yet
+ so unexpected a narrator.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A flush stole slowly up Sheila&rsquo;s face, and gave a glow even to the roots
+ of her hair. She could not endure these references to the dark gulf
+ between her and Dyck Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; she said sharply, &ldquo;it is not meet that you should say such
+ things. Mr. Calhoun was jailed for killing my father&mdash;let it be at
+ that. The last time you saw me you offered me your hand and heart. Well,
+ do you know I had almost made up my mind to accept your hand, when the
+ news of this trouble was brought to you, and you left us&mdash;to
+ ourselves and our dangers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor started. &ldquo;You are as unfriendly as a &lsquo;terral garamighty,&rsquo; you
+ make me draw my breath thick as the blackamoors, as they say. I did what I
+ thought best,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I did not think you would be in any danger. I had
+ not heard of the Maroons being so far south as Salem.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet it is the man who foresees chances that succeeds, as you should know
+ by now, your honour. I was greatly touched by the offer you made me&mdash;indeed,
+ yes,&rdquo; she added, seeing the rapt eager look in his face. &ldquo;I had been told
+ what had upset me, that Dyck Calhoun was guilty of killing my father, and
+ all the world seemed dreadful. Yes, in the reaction, it was almost on my
+ tongue to say yes to you, for you are a good talker, you had skill in much
+ that you did, and with honest advice from a wife might do much more. So I
+ was in a mind to say yes. I had had much to try me, indeed, so very much.
+ Ever since I first saw Dyck Calhoun he had been the one man who had ever
+ influenced me. He was for ever in my mind even when he was in prison&mdash;oh,
+ what is prison, what is guilt even to a girl when she loves! Yes, I loved
+ him. There it was. He was ever in my mind, and I came here to Jamaica&mdash;he
+ was here&mdash;for what else? Salem could have been restored by Darius
+ Boland or others, or I could have sold it. I came to Jamaica to find him
+ here&mdash;unwomanly, perhaps, you will say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unusual only with a genius&mdash;like you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you do not speak what is in your mind, your honour. You say what you
+ feel is the right thing to say&mdash;the slave of circumstances. I will be
+ wholly frank with you. I came here to see Dyck Calhoun, for I knew he
+ would not come to see me. Yes, there it was, a real thing in his heart. If
+ he had been a lesser man than he is, he would have come to America when he
+ was freed from prison. But he did not, would not, come. He knew he had
+ been found guilty of killing my father, and that for him and me there
+ could be no marriage&mdash;indeed he never asked me to marry him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet I know he would have done so if he could. When I came to know what he
+ was jailed for doing, I felt there was no place for him and me together in
+ the world. Yet my heart kept crying out to him, and I felt there was but
+ one thing left for me to do, and that was to make it impossible for me to
+ think of him even, or for him to think of me. Then you came and offered me
+ your hand. It was a hand most women might have been glad to accept from
+ the standpoint of material things. And you were Irish like myself, and
+ like the boy I loved. I was sick of the robberies of life and time, and I
+ wanted to be out of it all in some secure place. What place so secure from
+ the sorrow that was eating at my heart as marriage! It said no to every
+ stir of feeling that was vexing me, to every show of love or remembrance.
+ So I listened to you. It was not because you were a governor or a peer&mdash;no,
+ not that! For even in Virginia I had offers from one higher than yourself&mdash;and
+ younger, and a peer also. No, it was not material things that influenced
+ me, but your own intellectual eminence; for you have more brains than most
+ men, as you know so well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor interrupted her with a gesture. &ldquo;No, no, I am not so vain as
+ you think. If I were I should have seen at Salem that you meant to say
+ yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet you know well you have gifts, though you have made sad mistakes here.
+ Do not think it was your personality, your looks that induced me to think
+ of you, to listen to you. When Mr. Calhoun told me the truth, and gave me
+ a letter he had written to me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A letter&mdash;to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was surprise in the governor&rsquo;s voice&mdash;surprise and chagrin, for
+ the thing had moved him powerfully. &ldquo;Yes, a letter to me which he never
+ meant me to have. It was a kind of diary of his heart, and it was written
+ even while I was landing on the island on Christmas Day. It was the most
+ terribly truthful thing, opening his whole soul to the girl whom he had
+ always loved, but from whom he was separated by a thing not the less
+ tragical because it was merely technical. He gave it me to read, and when
+ I read it I saw there was no place for me in the world except a convent or
+ marriage. The convent could not be, for I was no Catholic, and marriage
+ seemed the only thing possible. That day you came I saw only one thing to
+ do&mdash;one mad, hopeless thing to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mad and hopeless!&rdquo; burst out Lord Mallow. &ldquo;How so? Your very reason shows
+ that it was sane, well founded in the philosophy of the heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was eager to win her yet, and he did not see the end at which she
+ aimed. He felt he must tell her all the passion and love he felt. But her
+ look gave no encouragement, her eyes were uninviting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila smiled painfully. &ldquo;Yes, mad and hopeless, for be sure of this: we
+ cannot kill in one day the growth of years. I could not cure myself of
+ loving him by marrying you. There had to be some other cure for that. I
+ never knew and never loved my father. But he was my father, and if Mr.
+ Calhoun killed him, I could not marry him. But at last I came to know that
+ your love and affection could not make me forget him&mdash;no, never. I
+ realize that now. He and I can never come together, but I owe him so much&mdash;I
+ owe him my life, for he saved it; he must ever have a place in my heart,
+ be to me more than any one else can be. I want you to do something for
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you wish?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want you to have removed from him the sentence of the British
+ Government. I want him to be free to come and go anywhere in the world&mdash;to
+ return to England if he wishes it, to be a free man, and not a victim Off
+ Outlawry. I want that, and you ought to give it to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indignation filled her eyes. &ldquo;You ask why. He has saved your
+ administration and the island from defeat and horrible loss. He has
+ prevented most of the slaves from revolting, and he conquered the Maroons.
+ The empire is his debtor. Will you do this for one who has done so much
+ for you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow was disconcerted, but he did not show it. &ldquo;I can do no more
+ than I have done. I have not confined him to his plantation as the
+ Government commanded; I cannot go beyond that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can put his case from the standpoint of a patriot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment the governor hesitated, then he said: &ldquo;Because you ask me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want it done for his sake, not for mine,&rdquo; she returned with decision.
+ &ldquo;You owe it to yourself to see that it is done. Gratitude is not dead in
+ you, is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow flushed. &ldquo;You press his case too hard. You forget what he is&mdash;a
+ mutineer and a murderer, and no one should remember that as you should.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has atoned for both, and you know it well. Besides, he was not a
+ murderer. Even the courts did not say he was. They only said he was guilty
+ of manslaughter. Oh, your honour, be as gallant as your name and place
+ warrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her for a moment with strange feelings in his heart. Then he
+ said: &ldquo;I will give you an answer in twenty-four hours. Will that do, sweet
+ persuader?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It might do,&rdquo; she answered, and, strange to say, she had a sure feeling
+ that he would say yes, in spite of her knowledge that, in his heart of
+ hearts, he hated Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she left the room, Lord Mallow stood for a moment looking after her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She loves the rogue in spite of all!&rdquo; he said bitterly. &ldquo;But she must
+ come with me. They are apart as the poles. Yet I shall do as she wishes if
+ I am to win her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The next day came a new element in the situation: a ship arrived from
+ England. On it was one who had come to Jamaica to act as governess to two
+ children of the officer commanding the regular troops in the island. She
+ had been ill for a week before nearing Kingston, and when the Regent
+ reached the harbour she was in a bad way. The ship&rsquo;s doctor was despondent
+ about her; but he was a second-rate man, and felt that perhaps an island
+ doctor might give her some hope. When she was carried ashore she was at
+ once removed to the home of the general commanding at Spanish Town, and
+ there a local doctor saw her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is her history?&rdquo; he asked, after he had seen the haggard face of the
+ woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ship&rsquo;s doctor did not know; and the general commanding was in the
+ interior at the head of his troops. There was no wife in the general&rsquo;s
+ house, as he was a widower; and his daughters, of twelve and fourteen,
+ under a faithful old housekeeper, had no knowledge of the woman&rsquo;s life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she was taken to the general&rsquo;s house she was in great dejection, and
+ her face had a look of ennui and despair. She was thin and worn, and her
+ eyes only told of the struggle going on between life and death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is her name?&rdquo; asked the resident doctor. &ldquo;Noreen Balfe,&rdquo; was the
+ reply of the ship&rsquo;s doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good old Irish name, though you can see she comes of the lower ranks of
+ life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ship&rsquo;s doctor pointed to her hand which had a wedding-ring. &ldquo;Ah, yes,
+ certainly... what hope have you of her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what to say. The fever is high. She isn&rsquo;t trying to live;
+ she&rsquo;s got some mental trouble, I believe. But you and I would be of no use
+ in that kind of thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t take to new-fangled ideas of mental cure,&rdquo; said the ship&rsquo;s
+ doctor. &ldquo;Cure the body and the mind will cure itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold smile stole to the lips of the resident doctor. Those were days of
+ little scientific medical skill, and no West Indian doctor had knowledge
+ enough to control a discussion of the kind. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;d like to see some one
+ with brains take an interest in her,&rdquo; he remarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I leave her in your hands,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a ship&rsquo;s medico, and
+ she&rsquo;s now ashore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a pity,&rdquo; said the resident doctor reflectively, as he watched a
+ servant doing necessary work at the bedside. &ldquo;She hasn&rsquo;t long to go as she
+ is, yet I&rsquo;ve seen such cases recover.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they left the room together they met Sheila and one of the daughters of
+ the house. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to see the sick woman from the ship, if I may,&rdquo;
+ Sheila said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just heard about her, and I&rsquo;d like to be of use.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The resident doctor looked at her with admiration. She was the most
+ conspicuous figure in the island, and her beauty was a fine support to her
+ wealth and reputation. It was like her to be kind in this frank way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can be of great use if you will,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The fever is not
+ infectious, I&rsquo;m glad to say. So you need have no fear of being with her&mdash;on
+ account of others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no fear,&rdquo; responded Sheila with a friendly smile, &ldquo;and I will go
+ to her now&mdash;no, if you don&rsquo;t mind, I&rsquo;d prefer to go alone,&rdquo; she added
+ as she saw the doctor was coming with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other bowed and nodded approvingly. &ldquo;The fewer the better,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;I think you ought to go in alone&mdash;quite alone,&rdquo; he said with gentle
+ firmness, for he saw the girl with Sheila was also going with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was that Sheila entered alone, and came to the bed and looked at the
+ woman in the extreme depression of fever. &ldquo;Prepare some lime-juice,
+ please,&rdquo; she said to the servant on the other side of the bed. &ldquo;Keep it
+ always beside the bed&mdash;I know what these cases are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant disappeared, and the eyes of the sick woman opened and looked
+ at Sheila. There shot into them a look of horror and relief in one, if
+ such a thing might be. A sudden energy inspired her, and she drew herself
+ up in bed, her face gone ghastly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are Sheila Boyne, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; she asked in a low half-guttural note.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am Sheila Llyn,&rdquo; was the astonished reply. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the same thing,&rdquo; came
+ the response. &ldquo;You are the daughter of Erris Boyne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila turned pale. Who was this woman that knew her and her history?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo; she asked&mdash;&ldquo;your real name&mdash;what is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name is Noreen Balfe; it was Noreen Boyne.&rdquo; For a moment Sheila could
+ not get her bearings. The heavy scent of the flowers coming in at the
+ window almost suffocated her. She seemed to lose a grip of herself.
+ Presently she made an effort at composure. &ldquo;Noreen Boyne! You were then
+ the second wife of Erris Boyne?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was his second wife. His first wife was your mother&mdash;you are like
+ your mother!&rdquo; Noreen said in agitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meaning was clear. Sheila laid a sharp hand on herself. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t get
+ excited,&rdquo; she urged with kindly feeling. &ldquo;He is dead and gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he is dead and gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Noreen seemed to fight for mastery of her emotion, and Sheila
+ said: &ldquo;Lie still. It is all over. He cannot hurt us now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other shook her head in protest. &ldquo;I came here to forget, and I find
+ you&mdash;his daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You find more than his daughter; you find his first wife, and you find
+ the one that killed him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The one that killed him!&rdquo; said the woman greatly troubled. &ldquo;How did you
+ know that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All the world knows it. He was in prison four years, and since then he
+ has been a mutineer, a treasure-hunter, a planter, and a saviour of these
+ islands!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick woman fell back in exhaustion. At that moment the servant entered
+ with a pitcher of lime-juice. Sheila took it from her and motioned her out
+ of the room; then she held a glass of the liquid to the stark lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drink,&rdquo; she said in a low, kind voice, and she poured slowly into the
+ patient&rsquo;s mouth the cooling draught. A moment later Noreen raised herself
+ up again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Dyck Calhoun is here?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is here, and none to-day holds so high a place in the minds of all who
+ live here. He has saved the island.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All are here that matter,&rdquo; said Noreen. &ldquo;And I came to forget!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you remember?&rdquo; asked Sheila. &ldquo;I remember all&mdash;how he died!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Sheila had a desire to shriek aloud. This woman&mdash;did this
+ woman then see Erris Boyne die? Was she present when the deed was done? If
+ so, why was she not called to give evidence at the trial. But yes, she was
+ called to give evidence. She remembered it now, and the evidence had been
+ that she was in her own home when the killing took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did he die?&rdquo; she asked in a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One stroke did it&mdash;only one, and he fell like a log.&rdquo; She made a
+ motion as of striking, and shuddered, covering her eyes with trembling
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You tell me you saw Dyck Calhoun do this to an undefended man&mdash;you
+ tell me this!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila&rsquo;s anger was justified in her mind. That Dyck Calhoun should
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not see Dyck Calhoun strike him,&rdquo; gasped the woman. &ldquo;I did not say
+ that. Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My God!&mdash;oh, my God!&rdquo; said Sheila with ashen lips, but a great light
+ breaking in her eyes. &ldquo;Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne! Then who
+ killed him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a moment&rsquo;s pause, then&mdash;&ldquo;I killed him,&rdquo; said the woman in
+ agony. &ldquo;I killed him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A terrible repugnance seized Sheila. After a moment she said in agitation:
+ &ldquo;You killed him&mdash;you struck him down! Yet you let an innocent man go
+ to prison, and be kept there for years, and his father go to his grave
+ with shame, with estates ruined and home lost&mdash;and you were the
+ guilty one&mdash;you&mdash;all the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was part of my madness. I was a coward and I thought then there were
+ reasons why I should feel no pity for Dyck Calhoun. His father injured
+ mine&mdash;oh, badly! But I was a coward, and I&rsquo;ve paid the price.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A kinder feeling now took hold of Sheila. After all, what this woman had
+ done gave happiness into her&mdash;Sheila&rsquo;s-hands. It relieved Dyck
+ Calhoun of shame and disgrace. A jail-bird he was still, but an innocent
+ jail-bird. He had not killed Erris Boyne. Besides, it wiped out forever
+ the barrier between them. All her blind devotion to the man was now
+ justified. His name and fame were clear. Her repugnance of the woman was
+ as nothing beside her splendid feeling of relief. It was as though the
+ gates of hell had been closed and the curtains of heaven drawn for the
+ eyes to see. Six years of horrible shame wiped out, and a new world was
+ before her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This woman who had killed Erris Boyne must now suffer. She must bear the
+ ignominy which had been heaped upon Dyck Calhoun&rsquo;s head. Yet all at once
+ there came to her mind a softening feeling. Erris Boyne had been rightly
+ killed by a woman he had wronged, for he was a traitor as well as an
+ adulterer&mdash;one who could use no woman well, who broke faith with all
+ civilized tradition, and reverted to the savage. Surely the woman&rsquo;s crime
+ was not a dark one; it was injured innocence smiting depravity, tyranny
+ and lust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, as she looked at the woman who had done this thing, she, whose
+ hand had rid the world of a traitor and a beast, fell back on the pillow
+ in a faint. With an exclamation Sheila lifted up the head. If the woman
+ was dead, then there was no hope for Dyck Calhoun; any story that she&mdash;Sheila&mdash;might
+ tell would be of no use. Yet she was no longer agitated in her body. Hands
+ and fingers were steady, and she felt for the heart with firm fingers.
+ Yes, the heart was still beating, and the pulse was slightly drumming.
+ Thank God, the woman was alive! She rang a bell and lifted up the head of
+ the sick woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later the servant was in the room. Sheila gave her orders
+ quickly, and snatched up a pencil from the table. Then, on a piece of
+ paper, she wrote the words: &ldquo;I, not Dyck Calhoun, killed Erris Boyne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments later, Noreen&rsquo;s eyes opened, and Sheila spoke to her. &ldquo;I
+ have written these words. Here they are&mdash;see them. Sign them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She read the words, and put a pencil in the trembling fingers, and, on the
+ cover of a book Noreen&rsquo;s fingers traced her name slowly but clearly. Then
+ Sheila thrust the paper in her bosom, and an instant later a nurse, sent
+ by the resident doctor, entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They cannot hang me or banish me, for my end has come,&rdquo; whispered Noreen
+ before Sheila left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the street of Spanish Town almost the first person Sheila saw was Dyck
+ Calhoun. With pale, radiant look she went to him. He gazed at her
+ strangely, for there was that in her face he could not understand. There
+ was in it all the faith of years, all the truth of womanhood, all the
+ splendour of discovery, all that which a man can see but once in a human
+ face and be himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; she said, and she moved towards King&rsquo;s House. He obeyed.
+ For some moments they walked in silence, then all at once under a magnolia
+ tree she stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want you to read what a woman wrote who has just arrived in the island
+ from England. She is ill at the house of the general commanding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking from her breast the slip of paper, she handed it to him. He read it
+ with eyes and senses that at first could hardly understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God in heaven&mdash;oh, merciful God!&rdquo; he said in great emotion, yet with
+ a strange physical quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This woman was his wife,&rdquo; Sheila said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He handed the paper back. He conquered his agitation. The years of
+ suffering rolled away. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll put her in jail,&rdquo; he said with a strange
+ regret. He had a great heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I think not,&rdquo; was the reply. Yet she was touched by his compassion
+ and thoughtfulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because she is going to die&mdash;and there is no time to lose. Come, we
+ will go to Lord Mallow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mallow!&rdquo; A look of bitter triumph came into Dyck&rsquo;s face. &ldquo;Mallow&mdash;at
+ last!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow frowned on his secretary. &ldquo;Mr. Calhoun to see me! What&rsquo;s his
+ business?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One can guess, your honour. He&rsquo;s been fighting for the island.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why should he see me? There is the general commanding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary did not reply, he knew his chief; and, after a moment, Lord
+ Mallow said: &ldquo;Show him in.&rdquo; When Dyck Calhoun entered the governor gave
+ him a wintry smile of welcome, but did not offer to shake hands. &ldquo;Will you
+ sit down?&rdquo; he said, with a slow gesture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calhoun made a dissenting motion. &ldquo;I prefer to stand, your honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the first time the two men had met alone since Dyck had arrived
+ in Jamaica, or since his trial. Calhoun was dressed in planter&rsquo;s costume,
+ and the governor was in an officer&rsquo;s uniform. They were in striking
+ contrast in face and figure&mdash;the governor long, lanky, ascetic in
+ appearance, very intellectual save for the riotous mouth, and very spick
+ and span&mdash;as though he had just stepped out of Almack&rsquo;s; while
+ Calhoun was tough and virile, and with the air of a thorough outdoor man.
+ There was in his face the firm fighting look of one who had done things
+ and could tackle big affairs&mdash;and something more; there was in it
+ quiet exultation. Here he was now at last alone with the man who had done
+ him great harm, and for whom he had done so much; who had sought to wipe
+ him off the slate of life and being; who had tried to win the girl from
+ whom he himself had been parted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of it all&mdash;of his life in jail, of his stark mutiny, of the
+ oppression of the governor, he had not been beaten down, but had prospered
+ in spite of all. He had by his will, wisdom and military skill, saved the
+ island in its hour of peril, saved its governor from condemnation; and
+ here he was facing the worst enemy of his life with the cards of success
+ in his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have done the island and England great service, Mr. Calhoun,&rdquo; said
+ the governor at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the least I could do for the land where I have made my home, where
+ I have reaped more than I have sown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We know your merit, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sharp satirical look came into Calhoun&rsquo;s face and his voice rang out
+ with vigour. &ldquo;And because you knew my merit you advised the crown to
+ confine me to my estate, and you would have had me shot if you could. I am
+ what I am because there was a juster man than yourself in Jamaica. Through
+ him I got away and found treasure, and I bought land and have helped to
+ save this island and your place. What do I owe you, your honour? Nothing
+ that I can see&mdash;nothing at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a mutineer, and but that you showed your courage would have been
+ hung at the yard-arm, as many of your comrades in England were.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold smile played at Calhoun&rsquo;s lips. &ldquo;My luck was as great as my
+ courage, I know. I have the luck of Enniscorthy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the last words the governor winced, for it was by that touch Calhoun
+ had defeated him in the duel long ago. It galled him that this man whom he
+ detested could say such things to him with truth. Yet in his heart of
+ hearts he had for Calhoun a great respect. Calhoun&rsquo;s invincible will had
+ conquered the worst in Mallow&rsquo;s nature, had, in spite of himself, created
+ a new feeling in him. There was in Mallow the glimmer of greatness, and
+ only his supreme selfishness had made him what he was. He laid a hand on
+ himself now, though it was not easy to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not the luck of Enniscorthy that sent Erris Boyne to his doom,&rdquo; he
+ said, however, with anger in his mind, for Dyck&rsquo;s calm boldness stirred
+ the worst in him. He thought he saw in him an exultancy which could only
+ come from his late experiences in the field. It was as though he had come
+ to triumph over the governor. Mallow said what he had said with malice. He
+ looked to see rage in the face of Dyck Calhoun, and was nonplussed to find
+ that it had only a stern sort of pleasure. The eyes of Calhoun met his
+ with no trace of gloom, but with a valour worthy of a high cause&mdash;their
+ clear blue facing his own with a constant penetration. Their intense
+ sincerity gave him a feeling which did not belong to authority. It was not
+ the look of a criminal, whatever the man might be&mdash;mutineer and
+ murderer. As for mutineer, all that Calhoun had fought for had been at
+ last admitted by the British Government, and reforms had been made that
+ were due to the mutiny at the Nore. Only the technical crime had been done
+ by Calhoun, and he had won pardon by his bravery in the battle at sea.
+ Yes, he was a man of mark, even though a murderer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calhoun spoke slowly. &ldquo;Your honour, you have said what you have a right to
+ say to a man who killed Erris Boyne. But this man you accuse did not do
+ it.&rdquo; The governor smiled, for the assumption was ridiculous. He shrugged a
+ shoulder and a sardonic curl came to his lip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who did it then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you will come to the house of the general commanding you will see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor was in a great quandary. He gasped. &ldquo;The general commanding&mdash;did
+ he kill Erris Boyne, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not he, yet the person that did it is in this house. Listen, your honour.
+ I have borne the name of killing Erris Boyne, and I ought to have killed
+ him, for he was a traitor. I had proofs of it; but I did not kill him, and
+ I did not betray him, for he had alive a wife and daughter, and something
+ was due to them. He was a traitor, and was in league with the French. It
+ does not matter that I tell you now, for his daughter knows the truth. I
+ ought to have told it long ago, and if I had I should not have been
+ imprisoned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were a brave man, but a fool&mdash;always a fool,&rdquo; said the governor
+ sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so great a fool that I can&rsquo;t recover from it,&rdquo; was the calm reply.
+ &ldquo;Perhaps it was the best thing that ever happened to me, for now I can
+ look the world in the face. It&rsquo;s made a man of me. It was a woman killed
+ him,&rdquo; was Calhoun&rsquo;s added comment. &ldquo;Will your honour come with me and see
+ her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor was thunderstruck. &ldquo;Where is she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I have told you-in the house of the general commanding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor rose abashed. &ldquo;Well, I can go there now. Come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you would prefer I should not go with you in the street. The
+ world knows me as a mutineer, thinks of me as a murderer! Is it fair to
+ your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something in Calhoun&rsquo;s voice roused the rage of Lord Mallow, but he
+ controlled it, and said calmly: &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk nonsense, sir; we shall walk
+ together, if you will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the entrance to the house of the general, the man to whom this visit
+ meant so much stopped and took a piece of paper from his pocket. &ldquo;Your
+ honour, here is the name of the slayer of Erris Boyne. I give it to you
+ now to see, so you may not be astonished when you see her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor stared at the paper. &ldquo;Boyne&rsquo;s wife, eh?&rdquo; he said in a strange
+ mood. &ldquo;Boyne&rsquo;s wife&mdash;what is she doing here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calhoun told him briefly as he took the paper back, and added: &ldquo;It was
+ accident that brought us all together here, your honour, but the hand of
+ God is in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is she very ill?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will not live, I think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To whom did she tell her story?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Miss Sheila Llyn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor was nettled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, to Miss Llyn When did you see her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just before I came to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did the woman look like&mdash;this Noreen Boyne?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not know; I have not seen her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then how came you by the paper with her signature?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Llyn gave it to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anger filled Lord Mallow&rsquo;s mind. Sheila&mdash;why now the way would be
+ open to Calhoun to win&mdash;to marry her! It angered him, but he held
+ himself steadily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is Miss Llyn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is here, I think. She came back when she left me at your door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, she left you at my door, did she?... But let me see the woman that&rsquo;s
+ come so far to put the world right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments later they stood in the bedroom of Noreen Boyne, they two
+ and Sheila Llyn, the nurse having been sent out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Mallow looked down on the haggard, dying woman with no emotion. Only
+ a sense of duty moved him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it you wished to say to me?&rdquo; he asked the patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you?&rdquo; came the response in a frayed tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am the governor of the island&mdash;Lord Mallow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I want to tell you that I killed Erris Boyne&mdash;with this hand I
+ killed him.&rdquo; She raised her skinny hand up, and her eyes became glazed.
+ &ldquo;He had used me vilely and I struck him down. He was a bad man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You let an innocent man bear punishment, you struck at one who did you no
+ harm, and you spoiled his life for him. You can see that, can&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman&rsquo;s eyes sought the face of Dyck Calhoun, and Calhoun said: &ldquo;No,
+ you did not spoil my life, Noreen Boyne. You have made it. Not that I
+ should have chosen the way of making it, but there it is, as God&rsquo;s in
+ heaven, I forgive you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noreen&rsquo;s face lost some of its gloom. &ldquo;That makes it easier,&rdquo; she said
+ brokenly. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t atone by any word or act, but I&rsquo;m sorry. I&rsquo;ve kept you
+ from being happy, and you were born to be happy. Your father had hurt
+ mine, had turned him out of our house for debt, and I tried to pay it all
+ back. When they suspected you I held my peace. I was a coward; I could not
+ say you were innocent without telling the truth, and that I could not do
+ then. But now I&rsquo;ll tell it&mdash;I think I&rsquo;d have told it whether I was
+ dying or not, though. Yes, if I&rsquo;d seen you here I&rsquo;d have told it, I&rsquo;m
+ sure. I&rsquo;m not all bad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheila leaned over the bed. &ldquo;Never mind about the past. You can help a man
+ back to the good opinion of the world now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hurt you too,&rdquo; said Noreen with hopeless pain. &ldquo;You were his friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believed in him always&mdash;even when he did not deny the crime,&rdquo; was
+ the quiet reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no good going on with that,&rdquo; said the governor sharply. &ldquo;We must
+ take down her statement in writing, and then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look, she is sinking!&rdquo; said Calhoun sharply. The woman&rsquo;s head had dropped
+ forward, her chin was on her breast, and her hands became clenched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The doctor at once-bring in the nurse,&rdquo; said Calhoun. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s dying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An instant later, the nurse entered with Sheila, and in a short time the
+ doctor came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When later the doctor saw Lord Mallow alone he said: &ldquo;She can&rsquo;t live more
+ than two days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s good for her in a way,&rdquo; answered the governor, and in reply to the
+ doctor&rsquo;s question why, he said: &ldquo;Because she&rsquo;d be in prison.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In prison&mdash;has she broken the law?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is now under arrest, though she doesn&rsquo;t know it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was her crime, your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She killed a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Him for whom Dyck Calhoun was sent to prison&mdash;Erris Boyne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Calhoun was not guilty, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. As soon as the woman is dead, I mean to announce the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not till then, your honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not till then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s hard on Calhoun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it? It&rsquo;s years since he was tried and condemned. Two days cannot
+ matter now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps not. Last night the woman said to me: &lsquo;I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;m going to
+ die.&rsquo;&rdquo; Then he added: &ldquo;Calhoun will be more popular than ever now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor winced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An hour after Noreen Boyne had been laid in her grave, there was a special
+ issue of the principal paper telling all the true facts of the death of
+ Erris Boyne. Thus the people of Jamaica came to know that Dyck Calhoun was
+ innocent of the crime of killing Erris Boyne, and he was made the object
+ of splashing admiration, and was almost mobbed by admirers in the street.
+ It all vexed Lord Mallow; but he steeled himself to urbanity, and he
+ played his part well. He was clever enough to see it would pay him to be
+ outwardly gracious to Calhoun. So it was he made a speech in the capital
+ on the return of the general commanding and the troops from subduing the
+ Maroons, in which he said: &ldquo;No one in all the King&rsquo;s dominions had showed
+ greater patriotism and military skill than their friend Mr. Dyck Calhoun,
+ who had been harshly treated by a mistaken Government.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few hours later, in the sweet garden of the house where Sheila and her
+ mother lodged, Calhoun came upon the girl whose gentle dignity and beauty
+ seemed to glow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first all she said to him was, &ldquo;Welcome, old friend,&rdquo; and at last she
+ said, &ldquo;Now you can come to the United States, Dyck, and make a new life
+ there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he said: &ldquo;I ought to go where you wish me to go, for you came to
+ me here when I was rejected of men. I owe you whatever I am that&rsquo;s worth
+ while, if anything I am is worth while. Your faith kept me alive in my
+ darkest days&mdash;even when I thought I had wronged you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you will come to Virginia with me&mdash;as my husband, Dyck?&rdquo; She
+ blushed and laughed. &ldquo;You see I have to propose to you, for you&rsquo;ve never
+ asked me to marry you. I&rsquo;m throwing myself at your head, sir, you
+ observe!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave an honest smile of adoration. &ldquo;I came to-day to ask you to be my
+ wife&mdash;for that reason only. I could not do it till the governor had
+ declared my innocence. The earth is sweeter to-day than it has been since
+ time began.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held out his arms, and an instant later the flowers she carried were
+ crushed to her breast, with her lips given to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later she drew from her pocket a letter. &ldquo;You must read that,&rdquo;
+ she said. &ldquo;It is from the great Alexander Hamilton&mdash;yes, he will be
+ great, he will play a wondrous part in the life of my new country. Read it
+ Dyck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he had read it, he said: &ldquo;He was born a British subject here in
+ these islands, and he goes to help Americans live according to British
+ principles. With all my sane fellow-countrymen I am glad the Americans
+ succeeded. Do you go to your Virginia, and I will come as soon as I have
+ put my affairs in order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not go without you&mdash;no, I will not go,&rdquo; she persisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we shall be married at once,&rdquo; he declared. And so it was, and all
+ the island was en fete, and when Sheila came to Dyck&rsquo;s plantation the very
+ earth seemed to rejoice. The slaves went wild with joy, and ate and drank
+ their fill, and from every field there came the song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey!
+ De big bees is a singin&rsquo;,
+ My heart is held up and de bells is a ringin&rsquo;;
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And sweetly solitary the two lived their lives, till one day, three months
+ later, there came to the plantation the governor and his suite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had dismounted, Lord Mallow said: &ldquo;I bring you the pay of the
+ British Government for something of what you have suffered, sir, and what
+ will give your lady pleasure too, I hope. I come with a baronetcy given by
+ the King. News of it came to me only this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calhoun smiled. &ldquo;Your honour, I can take no title, receive no honour. I
+ have ended my life under the British flag. I go to live under the Stars
+ and Stripes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governor was astounded. &ldquo;Your lady, sir, do you forget your lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sheila answered: &ldquo;The life of the new world has honours which have
+ naught to do with titles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I sail for Virginia by the first ship that goes,&rdquo; said Calhoun. &ldquo;It is
+ good here, but I shall go to a place where things are better, and where I
+ shall have work to do. I must decline the baronetcy, your honour. I go to
+ a land where the field of life is larger, where Britain shall remake
+ herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will take some time,&rdquo; said the governor tartly. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be long
+ apart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they will come together at last&mdash;for the world&rsquo;s sake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was silence for a moment, and through it came the joy-chant from the
+ fields:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR&rsquo;S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Beginning of a lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy
+ Wit is always at the elbow of want
+ Without the money brains seldom win alone
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of No Defense, Complete, by Gilbert Parker
+
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diff --git a/6295.txt b/6295.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of No Defense, Complete, by Gilbert Parker
+
+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: No Defense, Complete
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Last Updated: March 14, 2009
+Release Date: October 18, 2006 [EBook #6295]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NO DEFENSE, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+NO DEFENSE
+
+By Gilbert Parker
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ BOOK I.
+ I. THE TWO MEET
+ II. THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+ III. THE QUARREL
+ IV. THE DUEL
+ V. THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+ VI. DYCK IN PRISON
+ VII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+ VIII. DYCK'S FATHER VISITS HIM
+ IX. A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+
+ BOOK II
+ X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+ XI. WHITHER NOW?
+ XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+ XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+ XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+ XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+ BOOK III
+ XVI. A LETTER
+ XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+ XVIII. AT SALEM
+ XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+ XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+ XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+ XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+ XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+ XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+ XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE TWO MEET
+
+"Well, good-bye, Dyck. I'll meet you at the sessions, or before that at
+the assizes."
+
+It was only the impulsive, cheery, warning exclamation of a wild young
+Irish spirit to his friend Dyck Calhoun, but it had behind it the humour
+and incongruity of Irish life.
+
+The man, Dyck Calhoun, after whom were sent the daring words about the
+sessions and the assizes, was a year or two older than his friend, and,
+as Michael Clones, his servant and friend, said, "the worst and best
+scamp of them all"--just up to any harmless deviltry.
+
+Influenced by no traditions or customs, under control of no stern
+records of society, Calhoun had caused some trouble in his time by the
+harmless deeds of a scapegrace, but morally--that is, in all relations
+of life affected by the ten commandments--he was above reproach. Yet he
+was of the sort who, in days of agitation, then common in Ireland, might
+possibly commit some act which would bring him to the sessions or
+the assizes. There never was in Ireland a cheerier, braver, handsomer
+fellow, nor one with such variety of mind and complexity of purpose.
+
+He was the only child of a high-placed gentleman; he spent all the money
+that came his way, and occasionally loaded himself with debt, which his
+angry father paid. Yet there never was a gayer heart, a more generous
+spirit, nor an easier-tempered man; though, after all, he was only
+twenty-five when the words with which the tale opens were said to him.
+
+He had been successful--yet none too successful--at school and Trinity
+College, Dublin. He had taken a pass degree, when he might have captured
+the highest honours. He had interested people of place in the country,
+but he never used promptly the interest he excited. A pretty face, a
+fishing or a shooting expedition, a carouse in some secluded tavern,
+were parts of his daily life.
+
+At the time the story opens he was a figure of note among those who
+spent their time in criticizing the government and damning the Irish
+Parliament. He even became a friend of some young hare-brained rebels of
+the time; yet no one suspected him of anything except irresponsibility.
+His record was clean; Dublin Castle was not after him.
+
+When his young friend made the remark about the sessions and assizes,
+Calhoun was making his way up the rocky hillside to take the homeward
+path to his father's place, Playmore. With the challenge and the
+monstrous good-bye, a stone came flying up the hill after him and
+stopped almost at his feet. He made no reply, however, but waved a hand
+downhill, and in his heart said:
+
+"Well, maybe he's right. I'm a damned dangerous fellow, there's no doubt
+about that. Perhaps I'll kill a rebel some day, and then they'll take me
+to the sessions and the assizes. Well, well, there's many a worse fate
+than that, so there is."
+
+After a minute he added:
+
+"So there is, dear lad, so there is. But if I ever kill, I'd like it
+to be in open fight on the hills like this--like this, under the bright
+sun, in the soft morning, with all the moor and valleys still, and the
+larks singing--the larks singing! Hooray, but it's a fine day, one of
+the best that ever was!"
+
+He laughed, and patted his gun gently.
+
+"Not a feather, not a bird killed, not a shot fired; but the looking was
+the thing--stalking the things that never turned up, the white heels we
+never saw, for I'm not killing larks, God love you!"
+
+He raised his head, looking up into the sky at some larks singing above
+him in the heavens.
+
+"Lord love you, little dears," he added aloud. "I wish I might die with
+your singing in my ears, but do you know what makes Ireland what it
+is? Look at it now. Years ago, just when the cotton-mills and the
+linen-mills were doing well, they came over with their English
+legislation, and made it hard going. When we begin to get something,
+over the English come and take the something away. What have we done, we
+Irish people, that we shouldn't have a chance in our own country? Lord
+knows, we deserve a chance, for it's hard paying the duties these days.
+What with France in revolution and reaching out her hand to Ireland
+to coax her into rebellion; what with defeat in America and drink
+in Scotland; what with Fox and Pitt at each other's throats, and the
+lord-lieutenant a danger to the peace; what with poverty, and the cow
+and children and father and mother living all in one room, with the
+chickens roosting in the rafters; what with pointing the potato at the
+dried fish and gulping it down as if it was fish itself; what with the
+smell and the dirt and the poverty of Dublin and Derry, Limerick and
+Cork--ah, well!" He threw his eyes up again.
+
+"Ah, well, my little love, sing on! You're a blessing among a lot of
+curses; but never mind, it's a fine world, and Ireland's the best part
+of it. Heaven knows it--and on this hill, how beautiful it is!"
+
+He was now on the top of a hill where he could look out towards the bog
+and in towards the mellow, waving hills. He could drink in the yellowish
+green, with here and there in the distance a little house; and about
+two miles away smoke stealing up from the midst of the plantation where
+Playmore was--Playmore, his father's house--to be his own one day.
+
+How good it was! There, within his sight, was the great escarpment of
+rock known as the Devil's Ledge, and away to the east was the black spot
+in the combe known as the Cave of Mary. Still farther away, towards the
+south, was the great cattle-pasture, where, as he looked, a thousand
+cattle roamed. Here and there in the wide prospect were plantations
+where Irish landlords lived, and paid a heavy price for living. Men did
+not pay their rents. Crops were spoiled, markets were bad, money was
+scarce, yet--
+
+"Please God, it will be better next year!" Michael Clones said, and
+there never was a man with a more hopeful heart than Michael Clones.
+
+Dyck Calhoun had a soul of character, originality, and wayward
+distinction. He had all the impulses and enthusiasms of a poet, all the
+thirst for excitement of the adventurer, all the latent patriotism of
+the true Celt; but his life was undisciplined, and he had not ordered
+his spirit into compartments of faith and hope. He had gifts. They were
+gifts only to be borne by those who had ambitions.
+
+Now, as he looked out upon the scene where nature was showing herself
+at her best, some glimmer of a great future came to him. He did not know
+which way his feet were destined to travel in the business of life. It
+was too late to join the navy; but there was still time enough to be a
+soldier, or to learn to be a lawyer.
+
+As he gazed upon the scene, his wonderful deep blue eyes, his dark brown
+hair thick upon his head, waving and luxuriant like a fine mattress, his
+tall, slender, alert figure, his bony, capable hands, which neither sun
+nor wind ever browned, his nervous yet interesting mouth, and his long
+Roman nose, set in a complexion rich in its pink-and-cream hardness and
+health--all this made him a figure good to see.
+
+Suddenly, as he listened to the lark singing overhead, with his face
+lifted to the sky, he heard a human voice singing; and presently there
+ran up a little declivity to his left a girl--an Irish girl of about
+seventeen years of age.
+
+Her hat was hanging on her arm by a green ribbon. Her head was covered
+with the most wonderful brown, waving hair. She had a broad, low
+forehead, Greek in its proportions and lines. The eyes were bluer even
+than his own, and were shaded by lashes of great length, which slightly
+modified the firm lines of the face, with its admirable chin, and mouth
+somewhat large with a cupid's bow.
+
+In spite of its ardent and luscious look, it was the mouth of one who
+knew her own mind and could sustain her own course. It was open when
+Dyck first saw it, because she was singing little bits of wild lyrics
+of the hills, little tragedies of Celtic life--just bursts of the Celtic
+soul, as it were, cheerful yet sad, buoyant and passionate, eager yet
+melancholy. She was singing in Irish too. They were the words of songs
+taught her by her mother's maid.
+
+She had been tramping over the hills for a couple of hours, virile,
+beautiful, and alone. She wore a gown of dark gold, with little green
+ribbons here and there. The gown was short, and her ankles showed.
+In spite of the strong boots she wore they were alert, delicate, and
+shapely, and all her beauty had the slender fullness of a quail.
+
+When she saw Dyck, she stopped suddenly, her mouth slightly open. She
+gave him a sidelong glance of wonder, interest, and speculation. Then
+she threw her head slightly back, and all the curls gathered in a bunch
+and shook like bronze flowers. It was a head of grace and power, of
+charm and allurement--of danger.
+
+Dyck was lost in admiration. He looked at her as one might look at a
+beautiful thing in a dream. He did not speak; he only smiled as he gazed
+into her eyes. She was the first to speak.
+
+"Well, who are you?" she asked with a slightly southern accent in her
+voice, delicate and entrancing. Her head gave a little modest toss, her
+fine white teeth caught her lower lip with a little quirk of humour;
+for she could see that he was a gentleman, and that she was safe from
+anything that might trouble her.
+
+He replied to her question with the words:
+
+"My name? Why, it's Dyck Calhoun. That's all."
+
+Her eyes brightened. "Isn't that enough?" she asked gently.
+
+She knew of his family. She was only visiting in the district with her
+mother, but she had lately heard of old Miles Calhoun and his wayward
+boy, Dyck; and here was Dyck, with a humour in his eyes and a touch of
+melancholy at his lips. Somehow her heart went out to him.
+
+Presently he said to her: "And what's your name?"
+
+"I'm only Sheila Llyn, the daughter of my mother, a widow, visiting at
+Loyland Towers. Yes, I'm only Sheila!"
+
+She laughed.
+
+"Well, just be 'only Sheila,"' he answered admiringly, and he held out a
+hand to her. "I wouldn't have you be anything else, though it's none of
+my business."
+
+For one swift instant she hesitated; then she laid her hand in his.
+
+"There's no reason why we should not," she said. "Your father's
+respectable."
+
+She looked at him again with a sidelong glance, and with a whimsical,
+reserved smile at her lips.
+
+"Yes, he's respectable, I agree, but he's dull," answered Dyck. "For an
+Irishman, he's dull--and he's a tyrant, too. I suppose I deserve that,
+for I'm a handful."
+
+"I think you are, and a big handful too!"
+
+"Which way are you going?" he asked presently.
+
+"And you?"
+
+"Oh, I'm bound for home." He pointed across the valley. "Do you see that
+smoke coming up from the plantation over there?"
+
+"Yes, I know," she answered. "I know. That's Playmore, your father's
+place. Loyland Towers is between here and there. Which way were you
+going there?"
+
+"Round to the left," he said, puzzled, but agreeable.
+
+"Then we must say good-bye, because I go to the right. That's my nearest
+way."
+
+"Well, if that's your nearest way, I'm going with you," he said,
+"because--well, because--because--"
+
+"If you won't talk very much!" she rejoined with a little air of
+instinctive coquetry.
+
+"I don't want to talk. I'd like to listen. Shall we start?"
+
+A half-hour later they suddenly came upon an incident of the road.
+
+It was, alas, no uncommon incident. An aged peasant, in a sudden fit of
+weakness, had stumbled on the road, and, in falling, had struck his
+head on a stone and had lost consciousness. He was an old peasant of the
+usual Irish type, coarsely but cleanly dressed. Lying beside him was
+a leather bag, within which were odds and ends of food and some small
+books of legend and ritual. He was a peasant of a superior class,
+however.
+
+In falling, he had thrown over on his back, and his haggard face was
+exposed to the sun and sky. At sight of him Dyck and Sheila ran forward.
+Dyck dropped on one knee and placed a hand on the stricken man's heart.
+
+"He's alive, all right," Dyck said. "He's a figure in these parts. His
+name's Christopher Dogan."
+
+"Where does he live?"
+
+"Live? Well, not three hundred yards from here, when he's at home, but
+he's generally on the go. He's what the American Indians would call a
+medicine-man."
+
+"He needs his own medicine now."
+
+"He's over eighty, and he must have gone dizzy, stumbled, fallen, and
+struck a stone. There's the mark on his temple. He's been lying here
+unconscious ever since; but his pulse is all right, and we'll soon have
+him fit again."
+
+So saying, Dyck whipped out a horn containing spirit, and, while Sheila
+lifted the injured head, he bathed the old man's face with the spirit,
+then opened the mouth and let some liquor trickle down.
+
+"He's the cleanest peasant I ever saw," remarked Sheila; "and he's
+coming to. Look at him!"
+
+Yes, he was coming to. There was a slight tremor of the eyelids, and
+presently they slowly opened. They were eyes of remarkable poignancy and
+brightness--black, deep-set, direct, full of native intelligence. For an
+instant they stared as if they had no knowledge, then understanding came
+to them.
+
+"Oh, it's you, sir," his voice said tremblingly, looking at Dyck. "And
+very kind it is of ye!" Then he looked at Sheila. "I don't know ye," he
+said whisperingly, for his voice seemed suddenly to fail. "I don't know
+ye," he repeated, "but you look all right."
+
+"Well, I'm Sheila Llyn," the girl said, taking her hand from the old
+man's shoulder.
+
+"I'm Sheila Llyn, and I'm all right in a way, perhaps."
+
+The troubled, piercing eyes glanced from one to the other.
+
+"No relation?"
+
+"No--never met till a half-hour ago," remarked Dyck.
+
+The old man drew himself to a sitting posture, then swayed slightly. The
+hands of the girl and Dyck went out behind his back. As they touched his
+back, their fingers met, and Dyck's covered the girl's. Their eyes met,
+too, and the story told by Dyck in that moment was the beginning of a
+lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy.
+
+He thought her fingers were wonderfully soft, warm, and full of life;
+and she thought that his was the hand of a master-of a master in the
+field of human effort. That is, if she thought at all, for Dyck's warm,
+powerful touch almost hypnotized her.
+
+The old peasant understood, however. He was standing on his feet now.
+He was pale and uncertain. He lifted up his bag, and threw it over his
+shoulder.
+
+"Well, I'm not needing you any more, thank God!" he said.
+
+"So Heaven's blessing on ye, and I bid ye good-bye. You've been kind to
+me, and I won't forget either of ye. If ever I can do ye a good turn,
+I'll do it."
+
+"No, we're not going to leave you until you're inside your home," said
+Dyck.
+
+The old man looked at Sheila in meditation. He knew her name and her
+history. Behind the girl's life was a long prospect of mystery. Llyn was
+her mother's maiden name. Sheila had never known her father. Never to
+her knowledge had she seen him, because when she was yet an infant her
+mother had divorced him by Act of Parliament, against the wishes of her
+church, and had resumed her maiden name.
+
+Sheila's father's name was Erris Boyne, and he had been debauched,
+drunken, and faithless; so at a time of unendurable hurt his wife had
+freed herself. Then, under her maiden name, she had brought up her
+daughter without any knowledge of her father; had made her believe he
+was dead; had hidden her tragedy with a skilful hand.
+
+Only now, when Sheila was released from a governess, had she moved out
+of the little wild area of the County Limerick where she lived; only
+now had she come to visit an uncle whose hospitality she had for so
+many years denied herself. Sheila was two years old when her father
+disappeared, and fifteen years had gone since then.
+
+One on either side of the old man, they went with him up the hillside
+for about three hundred yards, to the door of his house, which was
+little more than a cave in a sudden lift of the hill. He swayed as he
+walked, but by the time they reached his cave-house he was alert again.
+
+The house had two windows, one on either side of the unlocked doorway;
+and when the old man slowly swung the door open, there was shown an
+interior of humble character, but neat and well-ordered. The floor was
+earth, dry and clean. There was a bed to the right, also wholesome and
+dry, with horse-blankets for cover. At the back, opposite the doorway,
+was a fireplace of some size, and in it stood a kettle, a pot, and a
+few small pans, together with a covered saucepan. On either side of
+the fireplace was a three-legged stool, and about the middle of the
+left-hand wall of the room was a chair which had been made out of a
+barrel, some of the staves having been sawn away to make a seat.
+
+Once inside the house, Christopher Dogan laid his bag on the bed and
+waved his hands in a formula of welcome.
+
+"Well, I'm honoured," he said, "for no one has set foot inside this
+place that I'd rather have here than the two of ye; and it's wonderful
+to me, Mr. Calhoun, that ye've never been inside it before, because
+there's been times when I've had food and drink in plenty. I could have
+made ye comfortable then and stroked ye all down yer gullet. As for you,
+Miss Llyn, you're as welcome as the shining of the stars of a night when
+there's no moon. I'm glad you're here, though I've nothing to give ye,
+not a bite nor sup. Ah, yes--but yes," he suddenly cried, touching his
+head. "Faith, then, I have! I have a drap of somethin' that's as good
+as annything dhrunk by the ancient kings of Ireland. It's a wee cordial
+that come from the cellars of the Bishop of Dunlany, when I cured his
+cook of the evil-stone that was killing her. Ah, thank God!"
+
+He went into a corner on the left of the fireplace, opened an old jar,
+thrust his arm down, and drew out a squat little bottle of cordial. The
+bottle was beautifully made. It was round and hunched, and of glass,
+with an old label from which the writing had faded.
+
+With eyes bright now, Christopher uncorked the bottle and smelled the
+contents. As he did so, a smile crinkled his face.
+
+"Thank the Lord! There's enough for the two of ye--two fine
+tablespoonfuls of the cordial that'd do anny man good, no matter how bad
+he was, and turn an angel of a woman into an archangel. Bless yer Bowl!"
+
+When Christopher turned to lift down two pewter pots, Calhoun reached up
+swiftly and took them from the shelf. He placed them in the hands of the
+old man, who drew a clean towel of coarse linen from a small cupboard in
+the wall above his head.
+
+She and Dyck held the pots for the old man to pour the cordial into
+them. As he said, there was only a good porridge-spoon of liqueur for
+each. He divided it with anxious care.
+
+"There's manny a man," he said, "and manny and manny a lady, too, born
+in the purple, that'd be glad of a dhrink of this cordial from the
+cellar of the bishop.
+
+"Alpha, beta, gamma, delta is the code, and with the word delta," he
+continued, "dhrink every drop of it, as if it was the last thing you
+were dhrinking on earth; as if the Lord stooped down to give ye a cup of
+blessing from His great flagon of eternal happiness. Ye've got two kind
+hearts, but there's manny a day of throuble will come between ye and the
+end; and yet the end'll be right, God love ye! Now-alpha, beta, gamma,
+delta!"
+
+With a merry laugh Dyck Calhoun turned up his cup and drained the liquid
+to the last drop. With a laugh not quite so merry, Sheila raised her mug
+and slowly drained the green happiness away.
+
+"Isn't it good--isn't it like the love of God?" asked the old man.
+"Ain't I glad I had it for ye? Why I said I hadn't annything for ye to
+dhrink or eat, Lord only knows. There's nothing to eat, and there's only
+this to dhrink, and I hide it away under the bedclothes of time, as one
+might say. Ah, ye know, it's been there for three years, and I'd almost
+forgot it. It was a little angel from heaven whispered it to me whir
+ye stepped inside this house. I dunno why I kep' the stuff. Manny's the
+time I was tempted to dhrink it myself, and manny's the time something
+said to me, 'Not yet.' The Lord be praised, for I've had out of it more
+than I deserve!"
+
+He took the mugs from their hands, and for a minute stood like some
+ancient priest who had performed a noble ritual. As Sheila looked at
+him, she kept saying to herself:
+
+"He's a spirit; he isn't a man!"
+
+Dyck's eye met that of Sheila, and he saw with the same feeling what was
+working in her heart.
+
+"Well, we must be going," he said to Christopher Dogan. "We must get
+homeward, and we've had a good drink--the best I ever tasted. We're
+proud to pay our respects to you in your own house; and goodbye to you
+till we meet again."
+
+His hand went out to the shoulder of the peasant and rested there for a
+second in friendly feeling. Then the girl stretched out her hand also.
+The old man took the two cups in one hand, and, reaching out the other,
+let Sheila's fingers fall upon his own. He slowly crooked his neck, and
+kissed her fingers with that distinction mostly to be found among those
+few good people who live on the highest or the lowest social levels, or
+in native tents.
+
+"Ah, please God we meet again! and that I be let to serve you, Miss
+Sheila Llyn. I have no doubt you could do with a little help some time
+or another, the same as the rest of us. For all that's come between
+us three, may it be given me, humble and poor, to help ye both that's
+helped me so!"
+
+Dyck turned to go, and as he did so a thought came to him.
+
+"If you hadn't food and drink for us, what have you for yourself,
+Christopher?" he asked. "Have you food to eat?"
+
+"Ah, well--well, do ye think I'm no provider? There was no food cooked
+was what I was thinking; but come and let me show you."
+
+He took the cover off a jar standing in a corner. "Here's good flour,
+and there's water, and there's manny a wild shrub and plant on the
+hillside to make soup, and what more does a man want? With the scone
+cooked and inside ye, don't ye feel as well as though ye'd had a pound
+of beef or a rasher of bacon? Sure, ye do. I know where there's clumps
+of wild radishes, and with a little salt they're good--the best. God
+bless ye!"
+
+A few moments later, as he stood in his doorway and looked along the
+road, he saw two figures, the girl's head hardly higher than the man's
+shoulder. They walked as if they had much to get and were ready for it.
+
+"Well, I dunno," he said to himself. "I dunno about you, Dyck Calhoun.
+You're wild, and ye have too manny mad friends, but you'll come all
+right in the end; and that pretty girl--God save her!--she'll come with
+a smile into your arms by and by, dear lad. But ye have far to go and
+much to do before that."
+
+His head fell, his eyes stared out into the shining distance.
+
+"I see for ye manny and manny a stroke of bad luck, and manny a wrong
+thing said of ye, and she not believing wan of them. But oh, my God, but
+oh!"--his clenched hands went to his eyes. "I wouldn't like to travel
+the path that's before ye--no!"
+
+Down the long road the two young people travelled, gossiping much, both
+of them touched by something sad and mysterious, neither knowing why;
+both of them happy, too, for somehow they had come nearer together than
+years of ordinary life might have made possible. They thought of the old
+man and his hut, and then broke away into talk of their own countryside,
+of the war with France, of the growing rebellious spirit in Ireland, of
+riots in Dublin town, of trouble at Limerick, Cork, and Sligo.
+
+At the gate of the mansion where Sheila was visiting, Dyck put into her
+hands the wild flowers he had picked as they passed, and said:
+
+"Well, it's been a great day. I've never had a greater. Let's meet
+again, and soon! I'm almost every day upon the hill with my gun, and
+it'd be worth a lot to see you very soon."
+
+"Oh, you'll be forgetting me by to-morrow," the girl said with a little
+wistfulness at her lips, for she had a feeling they would not meet on
+the morrow. Suddenly she picked from the bunch of wild flowers he had
+given her a little sprig of heather.
+
+"Well, if we don't meet--wear that," she said, and, laughing over her
+shoulder, turned and ran into the grounds of Loyland Towers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+
+When Dyck entered the library of Playmore, the first words he heard were
+these:
+
+"Howe has downed the French at Brest. He's smashed the French fleet and
+dealt a sharp blow to the revolution. Hurrah!"
+
+The words were used by Miles Calhoun, Dyck's father, as a greeting to
+him on his return from the day's sport.
+
+Now, if there was a man in Ireland who had a narrow view and kept his
+toes pointed to the front, it was Miles Calhoun. His people had lived in
+Connemara for hundreds of years; and he himself had only one passion in
+life, which was the Protestant passion of prejudice. He had ever been
+a follower of Burke--a passionate follower, one who believed the French
+Revolution was a crime against humanity, a danger to the future of
+civilization.
+
+He had resisted more vigorously than most men the progress of
+revolutionary sentiments in Ireland. He was aware that his son had far
+less rigid opinions than himself; that he even defended Wolfe Tone and
+Thomas Emmet against abuse and damnation. That was why he had delight in
+slapping his son in the face, whenever possible, with the hot pennant of
+victory for British power.
+
+He was a man of irascible temperament and stern views, given to fits
+of exasperation. He was small of stature, with a round face, eyes that
+suddenly went red with feeling, and with none of the handsomeness of his
+son, who resembled his mother's family.
+
+The mother herself had been a beautiful and remarkable woman. Dyck was,
+in a sense, a reproduction of her in body and mind, for a more cheerful
+and impetuous person never made a household happier or more imperfect
+than she made hers.
+
+Her beauty and continual cheerfulness had always been the joy of Dyck's
+life, and because his mother had married his father--she was a woman of
+sense, with all her lightsome ways--he tried to regard his father with
+profound respect. Since his wife's death, however, Miles Calhoun had
+deteriorated; he had become unreasonable.
+
+As the elder Calhoun made his announcement about the battle of Brest and
+the English victory, a triumphant smile lighted his flushed face, and
+under his heavy grey brows his eyes danced with malicious joy.
+
+"Howe's a wonder!" he said. "He'll make those mad, red republicans hunt
+their holes. Eh, isn't that your view, Ivy?" he asked of a naval captain
+who had evidently brought the news.
+
+Captain Ivy nodded.
+
+"Yes, it's a heavy blow for the French bloodsuckers. If their ideas
+creep through Europe and get hold of England, God only knows what the
+end will be! In their view, to alter everything is the only way to
+put things right. No doubt they'll invent a new way to be born before
+they've finished."
+
+"Well, that wouldn't be a bad idea," remarked Dyck. "The present way has
+its demerits."
+
+"Yes, it throws responsibility upon the man, and gives a heap of trouble
+to the woman," said Captain Ivy with a laugh; "but they'll change it
+all, you'll see."
+
+Dyck poured himself a glass of port, held it up, sniffed the aroma,
+and looked through the beautiful red tinge of the wine with a happy and
+critical eye.
+
+"Well, the world could be remade in a lot of ways," he declared. "I
+shouldn't mind seeing a bit of a revolution in Ireland--but in England
+first," he hastened to add. "They're a more outcast folk than the
+Irish." His father scoffed.
+
+"Look out, Dyck, or they'll drop you in jail if you talk like that!" he
+chided, his red face growing redder, his fingers nervously feeling
+the buttons on his picturesque silk waistcoat. "There's conspiracy in
+Ireland, and you never truly know if the man that serves you at your
+table, or brings you your horse, or puts a spade into your ground, isn't
+a traitor."
+
+At that moment the door opened, and a servant entered the room. In his
+hand he carried a letter which, with marked excitement, he brought to
+Miles Calhoun.
+
+"Sure, he's waiting, sir," he said.
+
+"And who's he?" asked his master, turning the letter over, as though to
+find out by looking at the seal.
+
+"Oh, a man of consequence, if we're to judge by the way he's clothed."
+
+"Fit company, then?" his master asked, as he opened the heavily sealed
+letter.
+
+"Well, I'm not saying that, for there's no company good enough for us,"
+answered the higgledy-piggledy butler, with a quirk of the mouth; "but,
+as messengers go, I never seen one with more style and point."
+
+"Well, bring him to me," said Miles Calhoun. "Bring him to me, and I'll
+form my own judgment--though I have some confidence in yours."
+
+"You could go further and fare worse, as the Papists say about
+purgatory," answered the old man with respectful familiarity.
+
+Captain Ivy and Dyck grinned, but the head of the house seemed none too
+pleased at the freedom of the old butler.
+
+"Bring him as he is," said Miles Calhoun. "Good God!" he added, for
+he just realized that the stamp of the seal was that of the
+Attorney-General of Ireland.
+
+Then he read the letter and a flush swept over his face, making its red
+almost purple.
+
+"Eternal damnation--eternal damnation!" he declared, holding the paper
+at arm's length a moment, inspecting it. He then handed it to Dyck.
+"Read that, lad. Then pack your bag, for we start for Dublin by daylight
+or before."
+
+Dyck read the brief document and whistled softly to himself.
+
+"Well, well, you've got to obey orders like that, I suppose," Dyck said.
+"They want to question us as to the state of the country here."
+
+"I think we can tell them something. I wonder if they know how wide your
+travel is, how many people you see; and if they know, how did they come
+to know? There's spies all over the place. How do I know but the man
+who's just left this room isn't a spy, isn't the enemy of all of us
+here?"
+
+"I'd suspect Michael Clones," remarked Dyck, "just as soon as Mulvaney."
+
+"Michael Clones," said his father, and he turned to Captain Ivy,
+"Michael Clones I'd trust as I'd trust His blessed Majesty, George III.
+He's a rare scamp, is Michael Clones! He's no thicker than a cardboard,
+but he draws the pain out of your hurt like a mustard plaster. A man
+of better sense and greater roguery I've never met. You must see him,
+Captain Ivy. He's only about twelve years older than my son, but, like
+my son, there's no holding him, there's no control of him that's any
+good. He does what he wants to do in his own way--talks when he wants
+to talk, fights when he wants to fight. He's a man of men, is Michael
+Clones."
+
+At that moment the door opened and the butler entered, followed by a
+tall, thin, Don Quixote sort of figure.
+
+"His excellency," said Mulvaney, with a look slightly malevolent, for
+the visitor had refused his name. Then he turned and left the room.
+
+At Mulvaney's words, an ironical smile crossed the face of the newcomer.
+Then he advanced to Miles Calhoun. Before speaking, however, he glanced
+sharply at Captain Ivy, threw an inquisitive look at Dyck, and said:
+
+"I seem to have hurt the feelings of your butler, sir, but that cannot
+be helped. I have come from the Attorney-General. My name is Leonard
+Mallow--I'm the eldest son of Lord Mallow. I've been doing business in
+Limerick, and I bring a message from the Attorney-General to ask you to
+attend his office at the earliest moment."
+
+Dyck Calhoun, noting his glance at a bottle of port, poured out a glass
+of the good wine and handed it over, saying:
+
+"It'll taste better to you because you've been travelling hard, but it's
+good wine anyhow. It's been in the cellar for forty years, and that's
+something in a land like this."
+
+Mallow accepted the glass of port, raised it with a little gesture of
+respect, and said:
+
+"Long life to the King, and cursed be his enemies!" So saying he flung
+the wine down his throat--which seemed to gulp it like a well--wiped his
+lips with a handkerchief, and turned to Miles Calhoun again.
+
+"Yes, it's good wine," he said; "as good as you'd get in the cellars of
+the Viceroy. I've seen strange things as I came. I've seen lights on the
+hills, and drunken rioters in the roads and behind hedges, and once a
+shot was fired at me; but here I am, safe and sound, carrying out my
+orders. What time will you start?" he added.
+
+He took it for granted that the summons did not admit of rejection, and
+he was right. The document contained these words:
+
+ Trouble is brewing; indeed, it is at hand. Come, please, at once to
+ Dublin, and give the Lord-Lieutenant and the Government a report
+ upon your district. We do not hear altogether well of it, but no
+ one has the knowledge you possess. In the name of His Majesty you
+ are to present yourself at once at these offices in Dublin, and be
+ assured that the Lord-Lieutenant will give you warm welcome through
+ me. Your own loyalty gives much satisfaction here. I am, sir,
+ Your obedient servant,
+ JOHN MCNOWELL.
+
+"You have confidence in the people's loyalty here?" asked Mallow.
+
+"As great as in my own," answered Dyck cheerily. "Well, you ought to
+know what that is. At the same time, I've heard you're a friend of one
+or two dark spirits in the land."
+
+"I hold no friendships that would do hurt to my country," answered Dyck
+sharply.
+
+Mallow smiled satirically. "As we're starting at daylight, I suppose, I
+think I'll go to bed, if it may be you can put me up."
+
+"Oh, Lord, yes! We can put you up, Mr. Mallow," said the old man. "You
+shall have as good a bed as you can find outside the Viceregal Lodge--a
+fourposter, wide and long. It's been slept in by many a man of place
+and power. But, Mr. Mallow, you haven't said you've had no dinner, and
+you'll not be going to bed in this house without your food. Did you
+shoot anything to-day, Dyck?" he asked his son.
+
+"I didn't bring home a feather. There were no birds to-day, but there
+are the ducks I shot yesterday, and the quail."
+
+"Oh, yes," said his father, "and there's the little roast pig, too. This
+is a day when we celebrate the anniversary of Irish power and life."
+
+"What's that?" asked Mallow.
+
+"That's the battle of the Boyne," answered his host with a little
+ostentation.
+
+"Oh, you're one of the Peep-o'-Day Boys, then," remarked Mallow.
+
+"I'm not saying that," answered the old man. "I'm not an Ulsterman, but
+I celebrate the coming of William to the Boyne. Things were done that
+day that'll be remembered when Ireland is whisked away into the Kingdom
+of Heaven. So you'll not go to bed till you've had dinner, Mr. Mallow!
+By me soul, I think I smell the little porker now. Dinner at five,
+to bed at eight, up before daylight, and off to Dublin when the light
+breaks. That's the course!" He turned to Captain Ivy. "I'm sorry,
+captain, but there's naught else to do, and you were going to-morrow at
+noon, anyhow, so it won't make much difference to you."
+
+"No difference whatever," replied the sailorman. "I have to go to
+Dublin, too, and from there to Queenstown to join my ship, and from
+Queenstown to the coast of France to do some fighting."
+
+"Please God!" remarked Miles Calhoun. "So be it!" declared Mallow.
+
+"Amen!" said Dyck.
+
+Once again Dyck looked the visitor straight in the eyes, and back in the
+horizon of Mallow's life-sky there shone the light of an evil star.
+
+"There's the call to dinner," remarked Miles Calhoun, as a bell began
+ringing in the tower outside. "Come with me, Mr. Mallow, and I'll show
+you your room. You've had your horse put up, I hope?"
+
+"Yes, and my bag brought in."
+
+"Well, come along, then. There's no time to lose. I can smell the porker
+crawling from the oven."
+
+"You're a master of tempting thoughts," remarked Mallow
+enthusiastically.
+
+"Sheila--Sheila!" said Dyck Calhoun to himself where he stood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE QUARREL.
+
+The journey to Dublin was made by the Calhouns, their two guests, and
+Michael Clones, without incident of note. Arrived there, Miles Calhoun
+gave himself to examination by Government officials and to assisting
+the designs of the Peep-o'-Day Boys; and indeed he was present at the
+formation of the first Orange Lodge.
+
+His narrow nature, his petty craft and malevolence, were useful in a
+time of anxiety for the State. Yet he had not enough ability to develop
+his position by the chances offered him. He had not a touch of genius;
+he had only bursts of Celtic passion, which he had not mind enough to
+control.
+
+Indeed, as days, weeks and months went on, his position became less
+valuable to himself, and his financial affairs suffered from his own and
+his agent's bad management. In his particular district he was a power;
+in Dublin he soon showed the weaker side of his nature. He had a bad
+habit of making foes where he could easily have made friends. In his
+personal habits he was sober, but erratic.
+
+Dyck had not his father's abstention from the luxuries of life. He
+drank, he gamed, he went where temptation was, and fell into it. He
+steadily diminished his powers of resistance to self-indulgence until
+one day, at a tavern, he met a man who made a great impression upon him.
+
+This man was brilliant, ebullient, full of humour, character and life,
+knowing apparently all the lower world of Dublin, and moving with an
+assured step. It was Erris Boyne, the divorced husband of Mrs. Llyn and
+the father of Sheila Llyn; but this fact was not known to Dyck. There
+was also a chance of its not becoming known, because so many years had
+passed since Erris Boyne was divorced.
+
+One day Erris Boyne said to Dyck:
+
+"There's a supper to-night at the Breakneck Club. Come along and have a
+skinful. You'll meet people worth knowing. They're a damned fine lot of
+fellows for you to meet, Calhoun!"
+
+"The Breakneck Club isn't a good name for a first-class institution,"
+remarked Dyck, with a pause and a laugh; "but I'll come, if you'll fetch
+me."
+
+Erris Boyne, who was eighteen years older than Dyck, laughed, flicked a
+little pinch of snuff at his nose with his finger.
+
+"Dear lad, of course I'll come and fetch you," he said. "There's many
+a man has done worse than lead a gay stripling like you into pleasant
+ways. Bring along any loose change you have, for it may be a night of
+nights."
+
+"Oh, they play cards, do they, at the Breakneck Club?" said Dyck, alive
+with interest.
+
+"Well, call it what you like, but men must do something when they
+get together, and we can't be talking all the time. So pocket your
+shillings."
+
+"Are they all the right sort?" asked Dyck, with a little touch of
+malice. "I mean, are they loyal and true?"
+
+Erris Boyne laid a hand on Dyck's arm.
+
+"Come and find out. Do you think I'd lead you into bad company? Of
+course Emmet and Wolfe Tone won't be there, nor any of that lot; but
+there'll be some men of the right stamp." He watched Dyck carefully out
+of the corner of his eye. "It's funny," he added, "that in Ireland the
+word loyal always means being true to the Union Jack, standing by King
+George and his crowd."
+
+"Well, what would you have?" said Dyck. "For this is a day and age when
+being loyal to the King is more than aught else in all the Irish world.
+We're never two days alike, we Irish. There are the United Irishmen and
+the Defenders on one side, and the Peepo'-Day Boys, or Orangemen, on the
+other--Catholic and Protestant, at each other's throats. Then there's
+a hand thrust in, and up goes the sword, and the rifles, pikes, and
+bayonets; and those that were ready to mutilate or kill each other fall
+into each other's arms."
+
+Erris Boyne laughed. "Well, there'll soon be an end to that. The Irish
+Parliament is slipping into disrepute. It wouldn't surprise me if
+the astute English bribe them into a union, to the ruin of Irish
+Independence. Yet maybe, before that comes, the French will have a try
+for power here. And upon my word, if I have to live under foreign rule,
+I'd as leave have a French whip over me as an English!" He came a step
+nearer, his voice lowered a little. "Have you heard the latest news from
+France? They're coming with a good-sized fleet down to the south coast.
+Have you heard it?"
+
+"Oh, there's plenty one hears one doesn't believe is gospel," answered
+Dyck, his eyes half closing. "I'm not believing all I hear, as if it
+was a prayer-meeting. Anything may happen here; Ireland's a woman--very
+uncertain."
+
+Dyck flicked some dust from his waistcoat, and dropped his eyes, because
+he was thinking of two women he had known; one of them an angel now in
+company of her sister angels--his mother; the other a girl he had met
+on the hills of Connemara, a wonderfully pretty girl of seventeen. How
+should he know that the girl was Erris Boyne's daughter?--although there
+were times when some gesture of Boyne, some quick look, some lifting of
+the eyebrows, brought back the memory of Sheila Llyn, as it did now.
+
+Since Dyck left his old home he had seen her twice; once at Loyland
+Towers, and once at her home in Limerick. The time he had spent with her
+had been very brief, but full of life, interest, and character. She was
+like some piquant child, bold, beautiful, uncertain, caressing in her
+manner one instant, and distant at another.
+
+She had said radiant things, had rallied him, had shown him where a
+twenty-nine-pound salmon had been caught in a stream, and had fired
+at and brought down a pheasant outside the covert at Loyland Towers.
+Whether at Loyland Towers, or at her mother's house in Limerick, there
+was no touch of forwardness in her, or in anything she said or did. She
+was the most natural being, the freest from affectation, he had ever
+known.
+
+As Erris Boyne talked to him, the memory of Sheila flooded his mind,
+and on the flood his senses swam like swans. He had not her careful
+composure. He was just as real, but he had the wilfulness of man. She
+influenced him as no woman had ever yet done; but he saw no happy ending
+to the dream. He was too poor to marry; he had no trade or profession;
+his father's affairs were in a bad way. He could not bring himself to
+join the army or the navy; and yet, as an Irishman moved by political
+ideals, with views at once critical and yet devoted to the crown, he was
+not in a state to settle down.
+
+He did not know that Erris Boyne was set to capture him for the rebel
+cause. How could he know that Boyne was an agent of the most evil forces
+in Ireland--an agent of skill and address, prepossessing, with the face
+of a Celtic poet and the eye of an assassin?
+
+Boyne's object was to bring about the downfall of Dyck Calhoun--that
+is, his downfall as a patriot. At the Breakneck Club this bad business
+began. Dyck had seen many people, representing the gaiety and deviltry
+of life; but it was as though many doubtful people, many reckless ones,
+all those with purposes, fads, and fancies, were there. Here was an
+irresponsible member of a Government department; there an officer of
+His Majesty's troops; beyond, a profligate bachelor whose reputation for
+traitorous diplomacy was known and feared. Yet everywhere were men known
+in the sporting, gaming, or political world, in sea life or land life,
+most of whom had a character untouched by criticism.
+
+It was at this club that Dyck again met that tall, ascetic messenger
+from the Attorney-General, who had brought the message to Miles Calhoun.
+It was with this man--Leonard Mallow, eldest son of Lord Mallow--that
+Dyck, with three others, played cards one afternoon.
+
+The instinctive antipathy which had marked their first introduction was
+carried on to this later meeting. Dyck distrusted Mallow, and allowed
+his distrust exercise. It was unfortunate that Mallow won from him
+three-fourths of the money he had brought to the club, and won it with a
+smile not easy to forgive.
+
+Dyck had at last secured sudden success in a scheme of his cards when
+Mallow asked with a sneer:
+
+"Did you learn that at your home in heaven?"
+
+"Don't they teach it where you live in hell?" was Dyck's reply.
+
+At this Mallow flicked Dyck across the face with his handkerchief.
+
+"That's what they teach where I belong."
+
+"Well, it's easy to learn, and we'll do the sum at any time or place you
+please." After a moment Dyck continued: "I wouldn't make a fuss over it.
+Let's finish the game. There's no good prancing till the sport's ready;
+so I'll sit and learn more of what they teach in hell!"
+
+Dyck had been drinking, or he would not have spoken so; and when he
+was drunk daring was strong in him. He hated profoundly this man-so
+self-satisfied and satanic.
+
+He kept a perfect coolness, however. Leonard Mallow should not see that
+he was upset. His wanton wordiness came to his rescue, and until the
+end of the game he played with sang-froid, daring, and skill. He loved
+cards; he loved the strife of skill against skill, of trick against
+trick, of hand against hand. He had never fought a duel in his life, but
+he had no fear of doing so.
+
+At length, having won back nearly all he had lost, he rose to his feet
+and looked round.
+
+"Is there any one here from whom I can ask a favour?"
+
+Several stepped forward. Dyck nodded. One of them he knew. It was Sir
+Almeric Foyle.
+
+"Thank you, Sir Almeric," he said; "thank you. Shall it be swords or
+pistols?" he asked his enemy, coolly.
+
+"Swords, if you please," remarked Mallow grimly, for he had a gift with
+the sword.
+
+Dyck nodded again.
+
+"As you will. As you will!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE DUEL
+
+It was a morning such as could only be brought into existence by the
+Maker of mornings in Ireland. It was a day such as Dublin placed away
+carefully into the pantechnicon of famous archives.
+
+The city of Dublin was not always clean, but in the bright, gorgeous sun
+her natural filth was no menace to the eye, no repulse to the senses.
+Above the Liffey, even at so early an hour, the heat shimmers like a
+silver mist. The bells of churches were ringing, and the great cathedral
+bells boomed in thrilling monotony over the peaceful city. Here and
+there in the shabby yet renowned streets, horsemen moved along; now
+and then the costermonger raised his cry of fresh fruit, flowers, and
+"distinguished vegetables."
+
+People moved into church doorways on their way to mass or
+confession--some bright and rather gorgeous beings, some in deep
+mourning, shy, reserved, and obscure. Here and there, also, in certain
+streets--where officials lived or worked--were soldiers afoot; soldiers
+with carbines and long bayonets, with tall, slightly peaked hats, smart
+red coats, belts crossing their breasts, knee-breeches and leggings, and
+all with epaulets shining. They were in marked contrast to the peasant
+folk with the high-peaked soft hat, knee-breeches, rough tail-coat, and
+stockings, some with rifles, some with pikes, some with powder-horns
+slung under their arms or in the small of the back.
+
+Besides this show of foot-soldiers--that is, regulars and irregulars of
+the Cornwallis Regiment, and men of the Defenders and the Peep-o'-Day
+Boys--there were little groups of cavalry making their way to the
+parade-ground, the castle, the barracks, or the courts.
+
+Beyond these there was the jaunting-car trundling over the rough
+cobblestone street, or bumping in and out of dangerous holes. Whips
+cracked, and the loud voices of jarveys shouted blatant humour and Irish
+fun at horse and passenger. Here and there, also, some stately coach,
+bedizened with arms of the quality, made its way through the chief
+streets, or across the bridges of the Liffey.
+
+Then came the general population, moving cheerfully in the inspiriting
+sun; for Irishmen move so much in a moist atmosphere that on a sunshiny
+day all tristesse of life seems changed, as in a flash, into high
+spirits and much activity. Not that the country, at its worst, is
+slow-footed or depressed; for wit is always at the elbow of want.
+
+Never in all Ireland's years had she a more beautiful day than that
+in which Dyck Calhoun and the Hon. Leonard Mallow met to settle their
+account in a secluded corner of Phoenix Park. It was not the usual
+place for duels. The seconds had taken care to keep the locale from the
+knowledge of the public; especially as many who had come to know of the
+event at the Breakneck Club were eager to be present.
+
+The affair began an hour after sunrise. Neither Dyck nor Leonard Mallow
+slept at home the night before, but in separate taverns near Phoenix
+Park. Mallow came almost jauntily to the obscure spot. Both men had
+sensitiveness, and both entered the grounds with a certain sense of
+pleasure.
+
+Dyck moved and spoke like a man charged with some fluid which had
+abstracted him from life's monotonous routine. He had to consider the
+chance of never leaving the grounds alive; yet as he entered the place,
+where smooth grass between the trees made good footing for the work to
+be done, the thrill of the greenery, the sound of the birds, the flick
+of a lizard across the path, and the distant gay leap of a young deer,
+brought to his senses a gust of joyous feeling.
+
+"I never smelled such air!" he said to one of the seconds. "I never saw
+the sun so beautiful!" He sniffed the air and turned his face towards
+the sun. "Well, it's a day for Ireland," he added, in response to a
+gravely playful remark of Sir Almeric Foyle. "Ireland never was so
+sweet. Nature's provoking us!"
+
+"Yes, it's a pity," said Sir Almeric. "But I'm not thinking of bad luck
+for you, Calhoun."
+
+Dyck's smile seemed to come from infinite distance. He was not normal;
+he was submerged. He was in the great, consuming atmosphere of the
+bigger world, and the greater life. He even did not hate Mallow at the
+moment. The thing about to be done was to him a test of manhood. It was
+a call upon the courage of the soul, a challenge of life, strength, and
+will.
+
+As Mallow entered the grounds, the thought of Sheila Llyn crossed Dyck's
+mind, and the mental sight of her gladdened the eyes of his soul. For
+one brief instant he stood lost in the mind's look; then he stepped
+forward, saluted, shook hands with Mallow, and doffed his coat and
+waistcoat.
+
+As he did so, he was conscious of a curious coldness, even of dampness,
+in the hand which had shaken that of Mallow. Mallow's hand had a clammy
+touch--clammy, but firm and sure. There was no tremor in the long, thin
+fingers nor at the lips--the thin, ascetic lips, as of a secret-service
+man--but in his eyes was a dark fire of purpose. The morning had touched
+him, but not as it had thrown over Dyck its mantle of peace. Mallow
+also had enjoyed the smell and feeling of it all, but with this
+difference--it had filled him with such material joy that he could not
+bear the thought of leaving it. It gave him strength of will, which
+would add security to his arm and wrist. Yet, as he looked at Dyck, he
+saw that his work was cut out for him; for in all his days he had never
+seen a man so well-possessed, so surely in hand.
+
+Dyck had learned swordsmanship with as skilled a master as Ireland had
+known, and he had shown, in getting knowledge of the weapon, a natural
+instinct and a capacity worthy of the highest purpose. He had handled
+the sword since he was six, and his play was better than that of most
+men; but this was, in fact, his first real duel. In the troubled state
+of Ireland, with internal discord, challenge, and attack, he had more
+than once fought, and with success; but that was in the rough-and-tumble
+of life's chances, as it were, with no deliberate plan to fight
+according to the rules. Many times, of course, in the process of
+his training, he had fought as men fight in duels, but with this
+difference--that now he was permitted to disable or kill his foe.
+
+It was clear that one or the other would not leave this ground--this
+verdant, beautiful piece of mother earth--exactly as he entered it. He
+would leave it wounded, incapable, or dead. Indeed, both might leave
+it wounded, and the chances of success were with the older man, Mallow,
+whose experience would give him an advantage.
+
+Physically, there was not a vast deal to choose between the two men.
+Mallow was lank and tall, nervously self-contained, finely concentrated,
+and vigorous. Dyck was broad of shoulder, well set up, muscular, and
+with a steadier eye than that of his foe. Also, as the combat developed,
+it was clear that he had a hand as steady as his eye. What was more, his
+wrist had superb strength and flexibility; it was as enduring and vital
+as the forefoot and ankle of a tiger. As a pair they were certainly
+notable, and would give a good account of themselves.
+
+No one of temperament who observed the scene could ever forget it. The
+light was perfect--evenly distributed, clear enough to permit accuracy
+of distance in a stroke. The air was still, gently bracing, and, like
+most Irish air, adorably sweet.
+
+The spot chosen for the fight was a sort of avenue between great trees,
+whose broad leaves warded off the direct sun, and whose shade had as
+yet no black shadows. The turf was as elastic to the foot as a firm
+mattress. In the trees, birds were singing with liveliness; in the
+distance, horned cattle browsed, and a pair of horses stood gazing at
+the combatants, startled, no doubt, by this invasion of their pasturage.
+From the distance came the faint, mellow booming of church-bells.
+
+The two men fighting had almost the air of gladiators. Their coats were
+off, and the white linen of their shirts looked gracious; while the
+upraised left hand of the fighters balancing the sword-thrust and the
+weight of the body had an almost singular beauty. Of the two, Dyck was
+the more graceful, the steadier, the quicker in his motions.
+
+Vigilant Dyck was, but not reckless. He had made the first attack, on
+the ground that the aggressor gains by boldness, if that boldness is
+joined to skill; and Dyck's skill was of the best. His heart was warm.
+His momentary vision of Sheila Llyn remained with him--not as a vision,
+rather as a warmth in his inmost being, something which made him
+intensely alert, cheerful, defiant, exactly skilful.
+
+He had need of all his skill, for Mallow was set to win the fight. He
+felt instinctively what was working in Dyck's mind. He had fought a
+number of duels, and with a certain trick or art he had given the end
+to the lives of several. He became conscious, however, that Dyck had a
+particular stroke in mind, which he himself was preventing by masterful
+methods. It might be one thing or another, but in view of Dyck's
+training it would perhaps be the Enniscorthy touch.
+
+Again and again Dyck pressed his antagonist backward, seeking to muddle
+his defence and to clear an opening for his own deadly stroke; but the
+other man also was a master, and parried successfully.
+
+Presently, with a quick move, Mallow took the offensive, and tried to
+unsettle Dyck's poise and disorganize his battle-plan. For an instant
+the tempestuous action, the brilliant, swift play of the sword,
+the quivering flippancy of the steel, gave Dyck that which almost
+disconcerted him. Yet he had a grip of himself, and preserved his
+defence intact; though once his enemy's steel caught his left shoulder,
+making it bleed. The seconds, however, decided that the thrust was not
+serious, and made no attempt to interrupt the combat.
+
+Dyck kept singularly cool. As Mallow's face grew flushed, his own grew
+paler, but it was the paleness of intensity and not of fear. Each man's
+remarkable skill in defence was a good guarantee against disaster due to
+carelessness. Seldom have men fought so long and accomplished so little
+in the way of blood-letting. At length, however, Dyck's tactics changed.
+Once again he became aggressive, and he drove his foe to a point where
+the skill of both men was tried to the uttermost. It was clear the time
+had come for something definite. Suddenly Dyck threw himself back with
+an agile step, lunged slightly to one side, and then in a gallant
+foray got the steel point into the sword-arm of his enemy. That was
+the Enniscorthy stroke, which had been taught him by William Tandy,
+the expert swordsman, and had been made famous by Lord Welling, of
+Enniscorthy. It succeeded, and it gave Dyck the victory, for Mallow's
+sword dropped from his hand.
+
+A fatigued smile came to Mallow's lips. He clasped the wounded arm with
+his left hand as the surgeon came forward.
+
+"Well, you got it home," he said to Dyck; "and it's deftly done."
+
+"I did my best," answered Dyck. "Give me your hand, if you will."
+
+With a wry look Mallow, now seated on the old stump of a tree, held out
+his left hand. It was covered with blood.
+
+"I think we'll have to forego that courtesy, Calhoun," he said. "Look
+at the state of my hand! It's good blood," he added grimly. "It's damned
+good blood, but--but it won't do, you see."
+
+"I'm glad it was no worse," said Dyck, not touching the bloody hand.
+"It's a clean thrust, and you'll be better from it soon. These great
+men"--he smiled towards the surgeons--"will soon put you right. I got
+my chance with the stroke, and took it, because I knew if I didn't you'd
+have me presently."
+
+"You'll have a great reputation in Dublin town now, and you'll deserve
+it," Mallow added adroitly, the great paleness of his features, however,
+made ghastly by the hatred in his eyes.
+
+Dyck did not see this look, but he felt a note of malice--a distant
+note--in Mallow's voice. He saw that what Mallow had said was fresh
+evidence of the man's arrogant character. It did not offend him,
+however, for he was victor, and could enter the Breakneck Club or Dublin
+society with a tranquil eye.
+
+Again Mallow's voice was heard.
+
+"I'd have seen you damned to hell, Calhoun, before I'd have apologized
+at the Breakneck Club; but after a fight with one of the best swordsmen
+in Ireland I've learned a lot, and I'll apologize now--completely."
+
+The surgeon had bound up the slight wound in Dyck's shoulder, had
+stopped the bleeding, and was now helping him on with his coat. The
+operation had not been without pain, but this demonstration from his
+foe was too much for him. It drove the look of pain from his face; it
+brought a smile to his lips. He came a step nearer.
+
+"I'm as obliged to you as if you'd paid for my board and lodging,
+Mallow," he said; "and that's saying a good deal in these days.
+I'll never have a bigger fight. You're a greater swordsman than
+your reputation. I must have provoked you beyond reason," he went on
+gallantly. "I think we'd better forget the whole thing."
+
+"I'm a Loyalist," Mallow replied. "I'm a Loyalist, and if you're one,
+too, what reason should there be for our not being friends?"
+
+A black cloud flooded Calhoun's face.
+
+"If--if I'm a Loyalist, you say! Have you any doubt of it? If you
+have--"
+
+"You wish your sword had gone into my heart instead of my arm, eh?"
+interrupted Mallow. "How easily I am misunderstood! I meant nothing by
+that 'if.'" He smiled, and the smile had a touch of wickedness. "I
+meant nothing by it-nothing at all. As we are both Loyalists, we must be
+friends. Good-bye, Calhoun!"
+
+Dyck's face cleared very slowly. Mallow was maddening, but the look of
+the face was not that of a foe. "Well, let us be friends," Dyck answered
+with a cordial smile. "Good-bye," he added. "I'm damned sorry we had to
+fight at all. Good-bye!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+
+"There's many a government has made a mess of things in Ireland," said
+Erris Boyne; "but since the day of Cromwell the Accursed this is the
+worst. Is there a man in Ireland that believes in it, or trusts it?
+There are men that support it, that are served by it, that fill their
+pockets out of it; but by Joseph and by Mary, there's none thinks there
+couldn't be a better! Have a little more marsala, Calhoun?"
+
+With these words, Boyne filled up the long glass out of which Dyck
+Calhoun had been drinking--drinking too much. Shortly before Dyck had
+lost all his cash at the card-table. He had turned from it penniless and
+discomfited to see Boyne, smiling, and gay with wine, in front of him.
+
+Boyne took him by the arm.
+
+"Come with me," said he. "There's no luck for you at the tables to-day.
+Let's go where we can forget the world, where we can lift the banner of
+freedom and beat the drums of purpose. Come along, lad!"
+
+Boyne had ceased to have his earlier allurement for Dyck Calhoun, but
+his smile was friendly, his manner was hospitable, and he was on the
+spot. The time was critical for Dyck--critical and dangerous. He had
+lost money heavily; he had even exhausted his mother's legacy.
+
+Of late he had seen little of his father, and the little he had seen
+was not fortunate. They had quarrelled over Dyck's wayward doings. Miles
+Calhoun had said some hard things to him, and Dyck had replied that he
+would cut out his own course, trim his own path, walk his own way. He
+had angered his father terribly, and Miles, in a burst of temper, had
+disclosed the fact that his own property was in peril. They had been,
+estranged ever since; but the time had come when Dyck must at least
+secure the credit of his father's name at his bank to find the means of
+living.
+
+It was with this staring him in the face that Erris Boyne's company
+seemed to offer at least a recovery of his good spirits. Dissipated as
+Boyne's look was, he had a natural handsomeness which, with good care of
+himself personally, well-appointed clothes, a cheerful manner, and witty
+talk, made him palatable to careless-living Dublin.
+
+This Dublin knew little of Boyne's present domestic life. It did not
+know that he had injured his second wife as badly as he had wronged his
+first--with this difference, however, that his first wife was a lady,
+while his second wife, Noreen, was a beautiful, quick-tempered, lovable
+eighteen-year-old girl, a graduate of the kitchen and dairy, when he
+took her to himself. He had married her in a mad moment after his first
+wife--Mrs. Llyn, as she was now called--had divorced him; and after
+the first thrill of married life was over, nothing remained with Boyne
+except regret that he had sold his freedom for what he might, perhaps,
+have had without marriage.
+
+Then began a process of domestic torture which alienated Noreen from
+him, and roused in her the worst passions of human nature. She came to
+know of his infidelities, and they maddened her. They had no children,
+and in the end he had threatened her with desertion. When she had
+retorted in strong words, he slapped her face, and left her with an ugly
+smile.
+
+The house where they lived was outside Dublin, in a secluded spot,
+yet not far from stores and shops. There was this to be said for
+Noreen--that she kept her home spotlessly clean, even with two
+indifferent servants. She had a gift for housewifery, which, at its
+best, was as good as anything in the world, and far better than could be
+found in most parts of Ireland.
+
+Of visitors they had few, if any, and the young wife was left alone to
+brood upon her wrongs. Erris Boyne had slapped her face on the morning
+of the day when he met Dyck Calhoun in the hour of his bad luck. He did
+not see the look in her face as he left the house.
+
+Ruthless as he was, he realized the time had come when by bold effort he
+might get young Calhoun wholly into his power. He began by getting Dyck
+into the street. Then he took him by an indirect route to what was,
+reputedly, a tavern of consequence. There choice spirits met on
+occasion, and dark souls, like Boyne, planned adventures. Outwardly it
+was a tavern of the old class, superficially sedate, and called the Harp
+and Crown. None save a very few conspirators knew how great a part
+it played in the plan to break the government of Ireland and to ruin
+England's position in the land.
+
+The entrance was by two doors--one the ordinary public entrance, the
+other at the side of the house, which was on a corner. This could be
+opened by a skeleton key owned by Erris Boyne.
+
+He and Dyck entered, however, by the general entrance, because Boyne had
+forgotten his key. They passed through the bar-parlour, nodding to one
+or two habitues, and presently were bestowed in a room, not large, but
+well furnished. It was quiet and alluring on this day when the world
+seemed disconcerting. So pleasantly did the place affect Dyck's spirits
+that, as he sat down in the room which had often housed worse men than
+himself, he gave a sigh of relief.
+
+They played cards, and Dyck won. He won five times what he had lost at
+the club. This made him companionable.
+
+"It's a poor business-cards," he said at last. "It puts one up in the
+clouds and down in the ditch all at the same time. I tell you this,
+Boyne--I'm going to stop. No man ought to play cards who hasn't a
+fortune; and my fortune, I'm sorry to say, is only my face!" He laughed
+bitterly.
+
+"And your sword--you've forgotten that, Calhoun. You've a lot of luck in
+your sword."
+
+"Well, I've made no money out of it so far," Dyck retorted cynically.
+
+"Yet you've put men with reputations out of the running, men like
+Mallow."
+
+"Oh, that was a bit of luck and a few tricks I've learned. I can't start
+a banking-account on that."
+
+"But you can put yourself in the way of winning what can't be bought."
+
+"No--no English army for me, thank you--if that's what you mean."
+
+"It isn't what I mean. In the English army a man's a slave. He can
+neither eat, nor drink, nor sleep without being under command. He has to
+do a lot of dirty work without having voice in the policy. He's a child
+of discipline and order."
+
+"And a damned good thing that would be for most of us!" retorted Dyck.
+"But I'm not one of the most."
+
+"I know that. Try a little more of this marsala, Calhoun. It's the best
+in the place, and it's got a lot of good stuff. I've been coming to the
+Harp and Crown for many years, and I've never had a bad drink all that
+time. The old landlord is a genius. He doesn't put on airs. He's a good
+man, is old Swinton, and there's nothing good in the drink of France
+that you can't get here."
+
+"Well, if that's true, how does it happen?" asked Dyck, with a little
+flash of interest. "Why should this little twopenny, one-horse place--I
+mean in size and furnishments--have such luck as to get the best there
+is in France? It means a lot of trouble, eh?"
+
+"It means some trouble. But let me tell you"--he leaned over the table
+and laid a hand on Dyck's, which was a little nervous--"let me speak as
+an old friend to you, if I may. Here are the facts. For many a year, you
+know as well as I do, ships have been coming from France to Ireland
+with the very best wines and liquors, and taking back the very best
+wool--smuggled, of course. Well, our little landlord here is the
+damnedest rogue of all. The customs never touch him. From the coast
+the stuff comes up to Dublin without a check, and, as he's a special
+favourite, he gets the best to be had in la belle France."
+
+"Why is he such a favourite?" asked Dyck.
+
+Erris Boyne laughed, not loudly, but suggestively. "When a lady kisses a
+man on the lips, of her own free will, and puts her arm around his neck,
+is it done, do you think, because it's her duty to do it or die? No,
+it's because she likes the man; because the man is a good friend to
+her; because it's money in her pocket. That's the case with old Swinton.
+France kisses him, as it were, because"--he paused, as though debating
+what to say--"because France knows he'd rather be under her own
+revolutionary government than under the monarchy of England."
+
+His voice had resonance, and, as he said these words, it had insistence.
+
+"Do you know, Calhoun, I think old Swinton is right. We suffer here
+because monarchy, with its cruel hand of iron, mistrusts us, brutalizes
+us."
+
+He did not see enlightenment come into the half-drunken eyes of Dyck.
+He only realized that Dyck was very still, and strangely, deeply
+interested.
+
+"I tell you, Calhoun, we need in Ireland something of the spirit that's
+alive in France to-day. They've cleaned out the kings--Louis's and
+Marie's heads have dropped into the basket. They're sweeping the dirt
+out of France; they're cleaning the dark places; they're whitewashing
+Versailles and sawdusting the Tuileries; they're purging the
+aristocratic guts of France; they're starting for the world a
+reformation which will make it clean. Not America alone, but England,
+and all Europe, will become republics."
+
+"England?" asked Dyck in a low, penetrating voice. "Aye, England,
+through Ireland. Ireland will come first, then Wales, Scotland, and
+England. Dear lad, the great day is come--the greatest the world has
+ever known. France, the spirit of it, is alive. It will purge and
+cleanse the universe!"
+
+The suspicious, alert look passed from Dyck's eyes, but his face had
+become flushed. He reached out and poured himself another glass of wine.
+
+"What you say may be true, Boyne. It may be true, but I wouldn't put
+faith in it--not for one icy minute. I don't want to see here in Ireland
+the horrors and savagery of France. I don't want to see the guillotine
+up on St. Stephen's Green."
+
+Boyne felt that he must march carefully. He was sure of his game; but
+there were difficulties, and he must not throw his chances away. Dyck
+was in a position where, with his inflammable nature, he could be
+captured.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you, Calhoun. I don't know which is worse--Ireland
+bloody with shootings and hangings, Ulster up in the north and Cork
+in the south, from the Giant's Causeway to Tralee; no two sets of feet
+dancing alike, with the bloody hand of England stretching out over the
+Irish Parliament like death itself; or France ruling us. How does the
+English government live here? Only by bribery and purchases. It buys its
+way. Isn't that true?"
+
+Dyck nodded. "Yes, it's true in a way," he replied. "It's so, because
+we're what we are. We've never been properly put in our places. The heel
+on our necks--that's the way to do it."
+
+Boyne looked at the flushed, angry face. In spite of Dyck's words, he
+felt that his medicine was working well.
+
+"Listen to me, Calhoun," he said softly. "You've got to do something.
+You're living an idle life. You're in debt. You've ruined your
+independent fortune at the tables. There are but two courses open to
+you. One is to join the British forces--to be a lieutenant, a captain,
+a major, a colonel, or a general, in time; to shoot and cut and hang and
+quarter, and rule with a heavy rod. That's one way."
+
+"So you think I'm fit for nothing but the sword, eh?" asked Dyck with
+irony. "You think I've got no brains for anything except the army."
+
+Boyne laughed. "Have another drink, Calhoun." He poured out more wine.
+"Oh, no, not the army alone; there's the navy--and there's the French
+navy! It's the best navy in the world, the freest and the greatest, and
+with Bonaparte going at us, England will have enough to do--too
+much, I'm thinking. So there's a career in the French navy open. And
+listen--before you and I are two months older, the French navy will
+be in the harbours of Ireland, and the French army will land here." He
+reached out and grasped Dyck's arm. "There's no liberty of freedom under
+the Union Jack. What do you think of the tricolour? It's a great flag,
+and under it the world is going to be ruled--England, Spain, Italy,
+Holland, Prussia, Austria, and Russia--all of them. The time is ripe.
+You've got your chance. Take it on, dear lad, take it on."
+
+Dyck did not raise his head. He was leaning forward with both arms on
+the table, supporting himself firmly; his head was bowed as though
+with deep interest in what Boyne said. And, indeed, his interest was
+great--so great that all his manhood, vigour, all his citizenship, were
+vitally alive. Yet he did not lift his head.
+
+"What's that you say about French ships in the harbours of Ireland?" he
+said in a tone that showed interest. "Of course, I know there's been a
+lot of talk of a French raid on Ireland, but I didn't know it was to be
+so soon."
+
+"Oh, it's near enough! It's all been arranged," replied Boyne. "There'll
+be ships-war-ships, commanded by Hoche. They'll have orders to land
+on the coast, to join the Irish patriots, to take control of the
+operations, and then to march on--"
+
+He was going to say "march on Dublin," but he stopped. He was playing a
+daring game. If he had not been sure of his man, he would not have been
+so frank and fearless.
+
+He did not, however, mislead Dyck greatly. Dyck had been drinking a good
+deal, but this knowledge of a French invasion, and a sense of what Boyne
+was trying to do, steadied his shaken emotions; held him firmly in the
+grip of practical common sense. He laughed, hiccuped a little, as though
+he was very drunk, and said:
+
+"Of course the French would like to come to Ireland; they'd like to
+seize it and hold it. Why, of course they would! Don't we know all
+that's been and gone? Aren't Irishmen in France grown rich in industry
+there after having lost every penny of their property here? Aren't there
+Irishmen there, always conniving to put England at defiance here by
+breaking her laws, cheating her officers, seducing her patriots? Of
+course; but what astounds me is that a man of your standing should
+believe the French are coming here now to Ireland. No, no, Boyne; I'm
+not taking your word for any of these things. You're a gossip; you're a
+damned, pertinacious, preposterous gossip, and I'll say it as often as
+you like."
+
+"So it's proof you want, is it? Well, then, here it is."
+
+Boyne drew from his pocket a small leather-bound case and took from it a
+letter, which he laid on the table in front of Dyck.
+
+Dyck looked at the document, then said:
+
+"Ah, that's what you are, eh?--a captain in the French artillery! Well,
+that'd be a surprise in Ireland if it were told."
+
+"It isn't going to be told unless you tell it, Calhoun, and you're too
+much of a sportsman for that. Besides:
+
+"Why shouldn't you have one of these if you want it--if you want it!"
+
+"What'd be the good of my wanting it? I could get a commission here in
+the army of George III, if I wanted it, but I don't want it; and any
+man that offers it to me, I'll hand it back with thanks and be damned to
+you!"
+
+"Listen to me, then, Calhoun," remarked Boyne, reaching out a hand to
+lay it on Dyck's arm.
+
+Dyck saw the motion, however, and carefully drew back in his chair. "I'm
+not an adventurer," he said; "but if I were, what would there be in it
+for me?"
+
+Boyne misunderstood the look on Dyck's face. He did not grasp the
+meaning behind the words, and he said to him:
+
+"Oh, a good salary--as good as that of a general, with a commission and
+the spoils of war! That's the thing in the French army that counts for
+so much--spoils of war. When they're out on a country like this, they
+let their officers loose--their officers and men. Did you ever hear tell
+of a French army being pinched for fodder, or going thirsty for drink,
+or losing its head for poverty or indigence?"
+
+"No, I never did."
+
+"Well, then, take the advice of an officer of the French army resident
+now in Dublin," continued Boyne, laughing, "who has the honour of being
+received as the friend of Mr. Dyck Calhoun of Playmore! Take your hand
+in the game that's going on! For a man as young as you, with brains and
+ambition, there's no height he mightn't reach in this country. Think
+of it--Ireland free from English control; Ireland, with all her dreams,
+living her own life, fearless, independent, as it was in days of yore.
+Why, what's to prevent you, Dyck Calhoun, from being president of the
+Irish Republic? You have brains, looks, skill, and a wonderful tongue.
+None but a young man could take on the job, for it will require
+boldness, skill, and the recklessness of perfect courage. Isn't it good
+enough for you?"
+
+"What's the way to do it?" asked Dyck, still holding on to his old self
+grimly. "How is it to be done?" He spoke a little thickly, for, in spite
+of himself, the wine was clogging his senses. It had been artistically
+drugged by Boyne.
+
+"Listen to me, Calhoun," continued Boyne. "I've known you now some time.
+We've come in and gone out together. This day was inevitable. You were
+bound to come to it one way or another. Man, you have a heart of iron;
+you have the courage of Caesar or Alexander; you have the chance of
+doing what no Englishman could ever do--Cromwell, or any other. Well,
+then, don't you see the fateful moment has come in Irish life and
+history? Strife everywhere! Alone, what can we do? Alone, if we try to
+shake off the yoke that binds us we shall be shattered, and our last
+end be worse than our first. But with French ships, French officers and
+soldiers, French guns and ammunition, with the trained men of the French
+army to take control here, what amelioration of our weakness, what
+confidence and skill on our side! Can you doubt what the end will be?
+Answer me, man, don't you see it all? Isn't it clear to you? Doesn't
+such a cause enlist you?"
+
+With a sudden burst of primitive anger, Dyck got to his feet, staggering
+a little, but grasping the fatal meaning of the whole thing. He looked
+Erris Boyne in the eyes. His own were bloodshot and dissipated, but
+there was a look in them of which Boyne might well take heed.
+
+Boyne had not counted on Dyck's refusal; or, if it had occurred to
+him, the remedy, an ancient one, was ready to his fingers. The wine was
+drugged. He had watched the decline of Dyck's fortunes with an eye of
+appreciation; he had seen the clouds of poverty and anxiety closing
+in. He had known of old Miles Calhoun's financial difficulties. He had
+observed Dyck's wayside loitering with revolutionists, and he had taken
+it with too much seriousness. He knew the condition of Dyck's purse.
+
+He was not prepared for Dyck's indignant outburst.
+
+"I tell you this, Erris Boyne, there's none has ever tried me as you
+have done! What do you think I am--a thing of the dirty street-corner,
+something to be swept up and cast into the furnace of treason? Look you,
+after to-day you and I will never break bread or drink wine together.
+No--by Heaven, no! I don't know whether you've told me the truth or not,
+but I think you have. There's this to say--I shall go from this place
+to Dublin Castle, and shall tell them there--without mentioning your
+name--what you've told about the French raid. Now, by God, you're a
+traitor! You oughtn't to live, and if you'll send your seconds to me
+I'll try and do with you as I did with Leonard Mallow. Only mark me,
+Erris Boyne, I'll put my sword into your heart. You understand--into
+your filthy heart!"
+
+At that moment the door of the room opened, and a face looked in for
+an instant-the face of old Swinton, the landlord of the Harp and Crown.
+Suddenly Boyne's look changed. He burst into a laugh, and brought his
+fists down on the table between them with a bang.
+
+"By Joseph and by Mary, but you're a patriot, Calhoun! I was trying to
+test you. I was searching to find the innermost soul of you. The French
+fleet, my commission in the French army, and my story about the landlord
+are all bosh. If I meant what I told you, do you think I'd have been so
+mad as to tell you so much, damn it? Have you no sense, man? I wanted to
+find out exactly how you stood-faithful or unfaithful to the crown--and
+I've found out. Sit down, sit down, Calhoun, dear lad. Take your hand
+off your sword. Remember, these are terrible days. Everything I said
+about Ireland is true. What I said about France is false. Sit down, man,
+and if you're going to join the king's army--as I hope and trust you
+will--then here's something to help you face the time between." He threw
+on the table a packet of notes. "They're good and healthy, and will buy
+you what you need. There's not much. There's only a hundred pounds, but
+I give it to you with all my heart, and you can pay it back when the
+king's money comes to you, or when you marry a rich woman."
+
+He said it all with a smile on his face. It was done so cleverly,
+with so much simulated sincerity, that Dyck, in his state of
+semi-drunkenness, could not, at the instant, place him in his true
+light. Besides, there was something handsome and virile in Boyne's
+face--and untrue; but the untruth Dyck did not at the moment see.
+
+Never in his life had Boyne performed such prodigies of dissimulation.
+He was suddenly like a schoolboy disclosing the deeds of some
+adventurous knight. He realized to the full the dangers he had run in
+disclosing the truth; for it was the truth that he had told.
+
+So serious was the situation, to his mind, that one thing seemed
+inevitable. Dyck must be kidnapped at once and carried out of Ireland.
+It would be simple. A little more drugged wine, and he would be asleep
+and powerless--it had already tugged at him. With the help of his
+confreres in the tavern, Dyck could be carried out, put on a lugger, and
+sent away to France.
+
+There was nothing else to do. Boyne had said truly that the French fleet
+meant to come soon. Dyck must not be able to give the thing away before
+it happened. The chief thing now was to prime him with the drugged wine
+till he lost consciousness, and then carry him away to the land of the
+guillotine. Dyck's tempestuous nature, the poetry and imagination of
+him, would quickly respond to French culture, to the new orders of the
+new day in France. Meanwhile, he must be soaked in drugged drink.
+
+Already the wine had played havoc with him; already stupefaction was
+coming over his senses. With a good-natured, ribald laugh, Boyne
+poured out another glass of marsala and pushed it gently over to Dyck's
+fingers.
+
+"My gin to your marsala," he said, and he raised his own glass of gin,
+looking playfully over the top to Dyck.
+
+With a sudden loosening of all the fibres of his nature, Dyck raised the
+glass of marsala to his lips and drained it off almost at a gulp.
+
+"You're a prodigious liar, Boyne," he said. "I didn't think any one
+could lie so completely."
+
+"I'll teach you how, Calhoun. It's not hard. I'll teach you how."
+
+He passed a long cigar over the table to Dyck, who, however, did not
+light it, but held it in his fingers. Boyne struck a light and held it
+out across the small table. Dyck leaned forward, but, as he did so, the
+wine took possession of his senses. His head fell forward in sleep, and
+the cigar dropped from his fingers.
+
+"Ah, well--ah, well, we must do some business now!" remarked Boyne. He
+leaned over Dyck for a moment. "Yes, sound asleep," he said, and laughed
+scornfully to himself. "Well, when it's dark we must get him away. He'll
+sleep for four or five hours, and by that time he'll be out on the way
+to France, and the rest is easy."
+
+He was about to go to the door that led into the business part of the
+house, when the door leading into the street opened softly, and a woman
+stepped inside. She had used the key which Boyne had forgotten at his
+house.
+
+At first he did not hear her. Then, when he did turn round, it was too
+late. The knife she carried under her skirt flashed out and into Boyne's
+heart. He collapsed on the floor without a sound, save only a deep sigh.
+
+Stooping over, Noreen drew the knife out with a little gurgling cry--a
+smothered exclamation. Then she opened the door again--the side-door
+leading into the street-closed it softly, and was gone.
+
+Two hours afterwards the landlord opened the door. Erris Boyne lay in
+his silence, stark and still. At the table, with his head sunk in his
+arms, sat Dyck Calhoun, snoring stertorously, his drawn sword by his
+side.
+
+With a cry the old man knelt on the floor beside the body of Erris
+Boyne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. DYCK IN PRISON
+
+When Dyck Calhoun waked, he was in the hands of the king's constables,
+arrested for the murder of Erris Boyne. It was hard to protest his
+innocence, for the landlord was ready to swear concerning a quarrel
+he had seen when he opened the door for a moment. Dyck, with sudden
+caution, only said he would make all clear at the trial.
+
+Dublin and Ireland were shocked and thrilled; England imagined she had
+come upon one of the most violent episodes of Irish history. One journal
+protested that it was not possible to believe in Dyck Calhoun's guilt;
+that his outward habits were known to all, and were above suspicion,
+although he had collogued--though never secretly, so far as the world
+knew--with some of the advanced revolutionary spirits. None of the loyal
+papers seemed aware of Erris Boyne's treachery; and while none spoke of
+him with approval, all condemned his ugly death.
+
+Driven through the streets of Dublin in a jaunting-car between two of
+the king's police, Dyck was a mark for abuse by tongue, but was here and
+there cheered by partizans of the ultra-loyal group to which his father
+adhered. The effect of his potations was still upon him, and his mind
+was bemused. He remembered the quarrel, Boyne's explanation, and the
+subsequent drinking, but he could recall nothing further. He was sure
+the wine had been drugged, but he realized that Swinton, the landlord,
+would have made away with any signs of foul play, as he was himself an
+agent of active disloyalty and a friend of Erris Boyne. Dyck could not
+believe he had killed Boyne; yet Boyne had been found with a wound in
+his heart, and his own naked sword lying beside him on the table. The
+trouble was he could not absolutely swear innocence of the crime.
+
+The situation was not eased by his stay in jail. It began with a
+revelation terribly repugnant to him. He had not long been lodged in the
+cell when there came a visit from Michael Clones, who stretched out his
+hands in an agony of humiliation.
+
+"Ah, you didn't do it--you didn't do it, sir!" he cried. "I'm sure you
+never killed him. It wasn't your way. He was for doing you harm if he
+could. An evil man he was, as all the world knows. But there's one thing
+that'll be worse than anything else to you. You never knew it, and I
+never knew it till an hour ago. Did you know who Erris Boyne was? Well,
+I'll tell you. He was the father of Miss Sheila Llyn. He was divorced by
+Mrs. Llyn many years ago, for having to do with other women. She took to
+her maiden name, and he married again.
+
+"Good God! Good God!" Dyck Calhoun made a gesture of horror. "He Sheila
+Llyn's father! Good God!"
+
+Suddenly a passion of remorse roused him out of his semi-stupefaction.
+
+"Michael, Michael!" he said, his voice hoarse, broken. "Don't say such a
+thing! Are you sure?" Michael nodded.
+
+"I'm sure. I got it from one that's known Erris Boyne and his first wife
+and girl--one that was a servant to them both in past days. He's been
+down to Limerick to see Mrs. Llyn and the beautiful daughter. I met him
+an hour ago, and he told me. He told me more. He told me Mrs. Llyn spoke
+to him of your friendship with Erris Boyne, and how she meant to tell
+you who and what he was. She said her daughter didn't even know her
+father's name. She had been kept in ignorance."
+
+Dyck seated himself on the rough bed of the cell, and stared at Michael,
+his hands between his knees, his eyes perturbed.
+
+"Michael," he said at last, "if it's true--what you've told me--I don't
+see my way. Every step in front of me is black. To tell the whole truth
+is to bring fresh shame upon Mrs. Llyn and her daughter, and not to tell
+the whole truth is to take away my one chance of getting out of this
+trouble. I see that!"
+
+"I don't know what you mean, sir, but I'll tell you this--none that
+knows you would believe you'd murder Erris Boyne or anny other man."
+
+Dyck wiped the sweat from his forehead.
+
+"I suppose you speak the truth, Michael, but it isn't people who've
+known me that'll try me; and I can't tell all."
+
+"Why not, if it'll help you?"
+
+"I can't--of course I can't. It would be disgrace eternal."
+
+"Why? Tell me why, sir!"
+
+Dyck looked closely, firmly, at the old servant and friend. Should he
+tell the truth--that Boyne had tried to induce him to sell himself to
+the French, to invoke his aid against the English government, to share
+in treason? If he could have told it to anybody, he would have done
+so to Michael; but if it was true that in his drunken blindness he had
+killed Boyne, he would not seek to escape by proving Boyne a traitor.
+
+He believed Boyne was a servant of the French; but unless the facts came
+out in the trial, they should not have sure origin in himself. He would
+not add to his crime in killing the father of the only girl who had ever
+touched his heart, the shame of proving that father to be one who should
+have been shot as a traitor.
+
+He had courage and daring, but not sufficient to carry him through that
+dark chapter. He would not try to save himself by turning public opinion
+against Erris Boyne. The man had been killed by some one, perhaps--and
+the thing ached in his heart--by himself; but that was no reason why the
+man's death should not be full punishment for all the wrong he had done.
+
+Dyck had a foolish strain in him, after all. Romance was his deadly foe;
+it made him do a stupid, if chivalrous, thing. Meanwhile he would warn
+the government at once about the projected French naval raid.
+
+"Michael," said Dyck, rising again, "see my father, but you're not
+to say I didn't kill Boyne, for, to tell the truth, I don't know. My
+head"--he put his hand to it with a gesture of despair--"my head's a
+mass of contradictions. It seems a thousand years since I entered that
+tavern! I can't get myself level with all that's happened. That Erris
+Boyne should be the father of the sweet girl at Limerick shakes
+me. Don't you see what it means? If I killed him, it spoils
+everything--everything. If I didn't kill him, I can only help myself by
+blackening still more the life of one who gave being to--"
+
+"Aye, to a young queen!" interrupted Michael.
+
+"God knows, there's none like her in Ireland, or in any other country at
+all!"
+
+Suddenly Dyck regained his composure; and it was the composure of one
+who had opened the door of hell and had realized that in time--perhaps
+not far off--he also would dwell in the infernal place.
+
+"Michael, I have no money, but I'm my father's heir. My father will not
+see me starve in prison, nor want for defence, though my attitude shall
+be 'no defence.' So bring me decent food and some clothes, and send to
+me here Will McCormick, the lawyer. He's as able a man as there is in
+Dublin. Listen, Michael, you're not to speak of Mrs. Llyn and Miss Llyn
+as related to Erris Boyne. What will come of what you and I know and
+don't know, Heaven only has knowledge; but I'll see it through. I've
+spoiled as good chances as ever a young man had that wants to make his
+way; but drink and cards, Michael, and the flare of this damned life at
+the centre--it got hold of me. It muddled, drowned the best that was in
+me. It's the witch's kitchen, is Dublin. Ireland's the only place in the
+world where they make saints of criminals and pray to them; where they
+lose track of time and think they're in eternity; where emotion is
+saturnine logic and death is the touchstone of life. Michael, I don't
+see any way to safety. Those fellows down at the tavern were friends of
+Erris Boyne. They're against me. They'll hang me if they can!"
+
+"I don't believe they can do it, master. Dublin and Ireland think more
+of you than they did of Erris Boyne. There's nothing behind you except
+the wildness of youth--nothing at all. If anny one had said to me at
+Playmore that you'd do the things you've done with drink and cards since
+you come to Dublin, I'd have swore they were liars. Yet when all's said
+and done, I'd give my last drop of blood as guarantee you didn't kill
+Erris Boyne!"
+
+Dyck smiled. "You've a lot of faith in me, Michael--but I'll tell you
+this--I never was so thirsty in my life. My mouth's like a red-hot iron.
+Send me some water. Give the warder sixpence, if you've got it, and send
+me some water. Then go to Will McCormick, and after that to my father."
+
+Michael shook his head dolefully.
+
+"Mr. McCormick's aisy--oh, aisy enough," he said. "He'll lep up at the
+idea of defendin' you, but I'm not takin' pleasure in goin' to Miles
+Calhoun, for he's a hard man these days. Aw, Mr. Dyck, he's had a lot of
+trouble. Things has been goin' wrong with Playmore. 'Pon honour, I don't
+know whether anny of it'll last as long as Miles Calhoun lasts. There'll
+be little left for you, Mr. Dyck. That's what troubles me. I tell you
+it'd break my heart if that place should be lost to your father and you.
+I was born on it. I'd give the best years of the life that's left me to
+make sure the old house could stay in the hands of the Calhouns. I say
+to you that while I live all I am is yours, fair and foul, good and
+bad." He touched his breast with his right hand. "In here is the soul
+of Ireland that leps up for the things that matter. There's a
+song--but never mind about a song; this is no place for songs. It's a
+prison-house, and you're a prisoner charged--"
+
+"Not charged yet, not charged," interrupted Dyck; "but suspected of and
+arrested for a crime. I'll fight--before God, I'll fight to the last!
+Good-bye, Michael; bring me food and clothes, and send me cold water at
+once."
+
+When the door closed softly behind Michael Clones, Dyck sat down on the
+bed where many a criminal patriot had lain. He looked round the small
+room, bare, unfurnished, severe-terribly severe; he looked at the blank
+walls and the barred window, high up; he looked at the floor--it was
+discoloured and damp. He reached out and touched it with his hand. He
+looked at the solitary chair, the basin and pail, and he shuddered.
+
+"How awful--how awful!" he murmured. "But if it was her father, and if I
+killed him"--his head sank low--"if I killed her father!"
+
+"Water, sir."
+
+He looked up. It was the guard with a tin of water and a dipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+"I don't believe he's guilty, mother."
+
+The girl's fine eyes shone with feeling--with protest, indignation,
+anguish. As she spoke, she thrust her head forward with the vigour of
+a passionate counsel. Sheila Llyn was a champion who would fight to the
+last gasp for any cause she loved.
+
+A few moments before, she had found her mother, horror-stricken, gazing
+at a newspaper paragraph sent from Dublin.
+
+Sheila at once thought this to be the cause of her mother's agitation,
+and she reached out a hand for it. Her mother hesitated, then handed
+the clipping to her. Fortunately it contained no statement save the bare
+facts connected with the killing of Erris Boyne, and no reference to
+the earlier life of the dead man. It said no more than that Dyck Calhoun
+must take his trial at the sessions.
+
+It also stated that Dyck, though he pleaded "not guilty," declared
+frankly, through Will McCormick, the lawyer, that he had no memory of
+aught that happened after he had drunk wine given him by Erris Boyne. He
+said that he and Boyne had quarrelled, but had become reconciled again,
+and that the drink was a pledge of their understanding. From the time
+he had taken the drink until he waked in the hands of the king's
+constables, he had no memory; but he was sure he had not killed
+Boyne. The fact that there was no blood on his sword was evidence.
+Nevertheless, he had been committed for trial.
+
+Mrs. Llyn was sorely troubled. She knew of her daughter's interest
+in Dyck Calhoun, and of Dyck's regard for Sheila. She had even looked
+forward to marriage, and she wished for Sheila no better fate, because
+nearly all she knew of Dyck was to his credit. She was unaware that his
+life in Dublin had been dissipated.
+
+If Dyck was guilty--though she could not believe it--there would be
+an end of romance between him and Sheila, and their friendship must be
+severed for ever. Her daughter did not know that Erris Boyne was her
+father, and she must not know--in any case not yet; but if Dyck was
+condemned, it was almost sure he would be hanged.
+
+She wondered about Boyne's widow, whose name did not appear in the
+paragraph she had seen. She knew that Noreen was beautiful, but that
+he had married far beneath him socially. She had imagined Erris Boyne
+living in suburban quiet, not drawing his wife into his social scheme.
+
+That is what had happened. The woman had lived apart from the daily
+experiences of her husband's life in Dublin; and it had deepened her
+bitterness against him. When she had learned that Erris Boyne was no
+more faithful to her than he had been to his previous wife, she had gone
+mad; and Dyck Calhoun was paying the price of her madness.
+
+Mrs. Llyn did not know this. She was a woman of distinguished bearing,
+though small, with a wan, sad look in her eyes always, but with a
+cheerful smile. She was not poor, but well-to-do, and it was not
+necessary to deny herself or her daughter ordinary comforts, and even
+many of the luxuries of life.
+
+Her hair was darker than her daughter's, black and wavy, with here and
+there streaks of grey. These, however, only added dignity to a head
+beautifully balanced, finely moulded, and, in the language of the day,
+most genteelly hung. She was slender, buoyant in movement yet composed,
+and her voice was like her daughter's, clear, gentle, thrilling.
+
+Her mind and heart were given up to Sheila and Sheila's future. That was
+why a knowledge of the tragedy that had come to Dyck Calhoun troubled
+her as she had not been troubled since the day she first learned of
+Erris Boyne's infidelity to herself.
+
+"Let us go to Dublin, mother," said Sheila with a determined air, after
+reading the clipping.
+
+"Why, my dear?"
+
+The woman's eyes, with their long lashes, looked searchingly into her
+daughter's face. She felt, as the years went on, that Sheila had gifts
+granted to few. She realized that the girl had resources which would
+make her a governing influence in whatever sphere of life she should be
+set. Quietly, Sheila was taking control of their movements, and indeed
+of her own daily life. The girl had a dominating skill which came
+in part from herself, and also to a degree from her father; but her
+disposition was not her father's-it was her mother's.
+
+Mrs. Llyn had never known Sheila to lie or twist the truth in all her
+days. No one was more obedient to wise argument; and her mother had a
+feeling that now, perhaps, the time had come when they two must have a
+struggle for mastery. There was every reason why they should not go to
+Dublin. There Sheila might discover that Erris Boyne was her father, and
+might learn the story of her mother's life.
+
+Sheila had been told by her mother that her father had passed away
+abroad when she was a little child. She had never seen her father's
+picture, and her mother had given her the impression that their last
+days together had not been happy. She had always felt that it was better
+not to inquire too closely into her father's life.
+
+The years had gone on and then had come the happy visit to Loyland
+Towers, where she had met Dyck Calhoun. Her life at that moment had been
+free from troublesome emotions; but since the time she had met Dyck at
+the top of the hill, a new set of feelings worked in her.
+
+She was as bonny a lass as ever the old world produced--lithe, with a
+body like that of a boy, strong and pleasant of face, with a haunting
+beauty in the eyes, a majesty of the neck and chin, and a carriage which
+had made Michael Clones call her a queen.
+
+She saw Dyck only as, a happy, wild son of the hilltop. To her he was a
+man of mettle and worth, and irresponsible because he had been given
+no responsibility. He was a country gentleman of Ireland, with all the
+interest and peril of the life of a country gentleman.
+
+"Yes, we ought to go to Dublin, mother. We could help him, perhaps,"
+Sheila insisted.
+
+The mother shook her head mournfully.
+
+"My child, we could do him no good at all--none whatever. Besides, I
+can't afford to visit Dublin now. It's an expensive journey, and the
+repairs we've been doing here have run me close."
+
+A look of indignation, almost of scorn, came into the girl's face.
+
+"Well, if I were being tried for my life, as Dyck Calhoun is going to
+be, and if I knew that friends of mine were standing off because of a
+few pounds, shillings, and pence, I think I'd be a real murderer!"
+
+The mother took her daughter's hand. She found it cold.
+
+"My dear," she said, clasping it gently, "you never saw him but three
+times, and I've never seen him but twice except in the distance; but I
+would do anything in my power to help him, if I could, for I like him.
+The thing for us to do--"
+
+"Yes, I know--sit here, twist our thumbs, and do nothing!"
+
+"What more could we do if we went to Dublin, except listen to gossip,
+read the papers and be jarred every moment? My dear, our best place is
+here. If the spending of money could be of any use to him, I'd spend
+it--indeed I would; but since it can't be of any use, we must stay in
+our own home. Of one thing I'm sure--if Dyck Calhoun killed Erris Boyne,
+Boyne deserved it. Of one thing I'm certain beyond all else--it was
+no murder. Mr. Calhoun wasn't a man to murder any one. I don't
+believe"--her voice became passionate--"he murdered, and I don't believe
+he will be hanged."
+
+The girl looked at her mother with surprise. "Oh, dearest, dearest!" she
+said. "I believe you do care for him. Is it because he has no mother,
+and you have no son."
+
+"It may be so, beloved."
+
+Sheila swept her arms around her mother's neck and drew the fine head to
+her breast.
+
+At that moment they heard the clatter of hoofs, and presently they saw a
+horse and rider pass the window.
+
+"It's a government messenger, mother," Sheila said.
+
+As Sheila said, it was a government messenger, bearing a packet to Mrs.
+Llyn--a letter from her brother in America, whom she had not seen for
+many years.
+
+The brother, Bryan Llyn, had gone out there as a young man before the
+Revolutionary War. He had prospered, taking sides against England in the
+war, and become a man of importance in the schemes of the new republican
+government. Only occasionally had letters come from him to his sister,
+and for nearly eleven years she had not had a single word from him.
+
+When she opened the packet now, she felt it would help to solve--she
+knew not how--the trouble between herself and her daughter. The letter
+had been sent to a firm in Dublin with which Bryan Llyn had done
+business, with instructions that it should be forwarded to his sister.
+It had reached the hands of a government official, who was a brother of
+a member of the firm, and he had used the government messenger, who was
+going upon other business to Limerick, to forward it with a friendly
+covering note, which ended with the words:
+
+ The recent tragedy you have no doubt seen in the papers must have
+ shocked you; but to those who know the inside the end was
+ inevitable, though there are many who do not think Calhoun is
+ guilty. I am one of them. Nevertheless, it will go hard with him,
+ as the evidence is strong against him. He comes from your part of
+ the country, and you will be concerned, of course.
+
+Sheila watched her mother reading, and saw that great emotion possessed
+her, though the girl could not know the cause. Presently, however,
+Mrs. Llyn, who had read the letter from her brother, made a joyful
+exclamation.
+
+"What is it, mother dear?" Sheila asked eagerly. "Tell me!"
+
+The mother made a passionate gesture of astonishment and joy; then she
+leaned back in her chair and closed her eyes, with the letter--which was
+closely written, in old-fashioned punctiliousness--in her hands.
+
+"Oh, my dear, my dear!" she said. "How strange it all is! Your Uncle
+Bryan is immensely rich. He has no children and no family; his health is
+failing."
+
+She seemed able to get no further.
+
+"Well, what is it, mother?" asked Sheila again.
+
+For an instant Mrs. Llyn hesitated; then she put the letter into
+Sheila's hands.
+
+"Read it, my child," she said. "It's for you as much as for me--indeed,
+more for you than for me." Sheila took the letter. It ran as follows:
+
+ DEAREST SISTER:
+
+ It is eleven years since I wrote to you, and yet, though it may seem
+ strange, there have not been eleven days in all that time in which I
+ have not wished you and Sheila were here. Sheila--why, she is a
+ young woman! She's about the age you were when I left Ireland, and
+ you were one of the most beautiful and charming creatures God ever
+ gave life to. The last picture I have of you was a drawing made
+ soon after your marriage--sad, bad, unhappy incident. I have kept
+ it by me always. It warms my heart in winter; it cools my eyes in
+ summer.
+
+ My estate is neither North nor South, but farther South than North.
+ In a sense it is always summer, but winter on my place would be like
+ summer in Norway--just bitingly fresh, happily alert. I'm writing
+ in the summer now. I look out of the window and see hundreds of
+ acres of cotton-fields, with hundreds upon hundreds of negroes at
+ work. I hear the songs they sing, faint echoes of them, even as I
+ write. Yes, my black folk do sing, because they are well treated.
+
+ Not that we haven't our troubles here. You can't administer
+ thousands of acres, control hundreds of slaves, and run an estate
+ like a piece of clockwork without creaks in the machinery. I've
+ built it all up out of next to nothing. I landed in this country
+ with my little fortune of two thousand pounds. This estate is worth
+ at least a quarter of a million now. I've an estate in Jamaica,
+ too. I took it for a debt. What it'll be worth in another twenty
+ years I don't know. I shan't be here to see. I'm not the man I was
+ physically, and that's one of the reasons why I'm writing to you
+ to-day. I've often wished to write and say what I'm going to say
+ now; but I've held back, because I wanted you to finish your girl's
+ education before I said it
+
+ What I say is this: I want you and Sheila to come here to me, to
+ make my home your home, to take control of my household, and to let
+ me see faces I love about me as the shadows enfold me.
+
+ Like your married life, mine was unsuccessful, but not for the same
+ reason. The woman I married did not understand--probably could not
+ understand. She gave me no children. We are born this way, or
+ that. To understand is pain and joy in one; to misconceive is to
+ scatter broken glass for bare feet. Yet when I laid her away, a few
+ years ago, I had terrible pangs of regret, which must come to the
+ heart that has striven in vain. I did my best; I tried to make her
+ understand, but she never did. I used at first to feel angry; then
+ I became patient. But I waked up again, and went smiling along,
+ active, vigorous, getting pleasure out of the infinitely small
+ things, and happy in perfecting my organization.
+
+ This place, which I have called Moira, is to be yours--or, rather,
+ Sheila's. So, in any case, you will want to come and see the home I
+ have made this old colonial mansion, with its Corinthian pillars and
+ verandah, high steps, hard-wood floors polished like a pan, every
+ room hung in dimity and chintz, and the smell of fruit and flowers
+ everywhere. You will want to see it all, and you'll want to live
+ here.
+
+ There's little rain here, so it's not like Ireland, and the green is
+ not so green; but the flowers are marvellously bright, and the birds
+ sing almost as well as they sing in Ireland, though there's no lark.
+ Strange it is, but true, the only things that draw me back to
+ Ireland in my soul are you, and Sheila, whom I've never seen, and
+ the lark singing as he rises until he becomes a grey-blue speck, and
+ then vanishing in the sky.
+
+ Well, you and the lark have sung in my heart these many days, and
+ now you must come to me, because I need you. I have placed to your
+ credit in the Bank of Ireland a thousand pounds. That will be the
+ means of bringing you here--you and Sheila--to my door, to Moira.
+ Let nothing save death prevent your coming. As far as Sheila's eye
+ can see-north, south, east, and west--the land will be hers when I'm
+ gone. Dearest sister, sell all things that are yours, and come to
+ me. You'll not forget Ireland here. Whoever has breathed her air
+ can never forget the hills and dells, the valleys and bogs, the
+ mountains, with their mists of rain, the wild girls, with their bare
+ ankles, their red petticoats, and their beautiful, reckless air.
+ None who has ever breathed the air of Ireland can breathe in another
+ land without memory of the ancient harp of Ireland. But it is as a
+ memory-deep, wonderful, and abiding, yet a memory. I sometimes
+ think I have forgotten, and then I hear coming through this Virginia
+ the notes of some old Irish melody, the song of some wayfarer of
+ Mayo or Connemara, and I know then that Ireland is persuasive and
+ perpetual; but only as a memory, because it speaks in every pulse
+ and beats in every nerve.
+
+ Oh, believe me, I speak of what I know! I have been away from
+ Ireland for a long time, and I'm never going back, but I'll bring
+ Ireland to me. Come here, colleen, come to Virginia. Write to me,
+ on the day you get this letter, that you're coming soon. Let it be
+ soon, because I feel the cords binding me to my beloved fields
+ growing thinner. They'll soon crack, but, please God, they won't
+ crack before you come here.
+
+ Now with my love to you and Sheila I stretch out my hand to you.
+ Take it. All that it is has worked for is yours; all that it wants
+ is you.
+
+ Your loving brother,
+
+ BRYAN.
+
+As Sheila read, the tears started from her eyes; and at last she could
+read no longer, so her mother took the letter and read the rest of it
+aloud. When she had finished, there was silence--a long warm silence;
+then, at last, Mrs. Llyn rose to her feet.
+
+"Sheila, when shall we go?"
+
+With frightened eyes Sheila sprang up.
+
+"I said we must go to Dublin!" she murmured.
+
+"Yes, we will go to Dublin, Sheila, but it will be on our way to Uncle
+Bryan's home."
+
+Sheila caught her mother's hands.
+
+"Mother," she said, after a moment of hesitation, "I must obey you."
+
+"It is the one way, my child-the one thing to do. Some one in prison
+calls--perhaps; some one far away who loves you, and needs us,
+calls--that we know. Tell me, am I not right? I ask you, where shall we
+go?"
+
+"To Virginia, mother."
+
+The girl's head dropped, and her eyes filled with tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. DYCK'S FATHER VISITS HIM
+
+In vain Dyck's lawyer, Will McCormick, urged him to deny absolutely
+the killing of Erris Boyne. Dyck would not do so. He had, however,
+immediately on being jailed, written to the government, telling of the
+projected invasion of Ireland by the French fleet, and saying that it
+had come to him from a sure source. The government had at once taken
+action.
+
+Regarding the death of Boyne, the only thing in his favour was that his
+own sword-point was free from stain. His lawyer made the utmost of this,
+but to no avail. The impression in the court was that both men had been
+drinking; that they had quarrelled, and that without a duel being fought
+Dyck had killed his enemy.
+
+That there had been no duel was clear from the fact that Erris Boyne's
+sword was undrawn. The charge, however, on the instigation of the
+Attorney-General, who was grateful for the information about France, had
+been changed from murder to manslaughter; though it seemed clear that
+Boyne had been ruthlessly killed by a man whom he had befriended.
+
+On one of the days of the trial, Dyck's father, bowed, morose, and
+obstinate, came to see him. That Dyck and Boyne had quarrelled had been
+stated in evidence by the landlord, Swinton, and Dyck had admitted it.
+Miles Calhoun was bent upon finding what the story of the quarrel was;
+for his own lawyer had told him that Dyck's refusal to give the cause
+of the dispute would affect the jury adversely, and might bring him
+imprisonment for life. After the formalities of their meeting, Miles
+Calhoun said:
+
+"My son, things are black, but they're not so black they can't be
+brightened. If you killed Erris Boyne, he deserved it. He was a bad man,
+as the world knows. That isn't the point. Now, there's only one kind of
+quarrel that warrants non-disclosure."
+
+"You mean about a woman?" remarked Dyck coldly.
+
+The old man took a pinch of snuff nervously. "That's what I mean. Boyne
+was older than you, and perhaps you cut him out with a woman."
+
+A wry smile wrinkled the corners of Dyck's mouth. "You mean his wife?"
+he asked with irony. "Wife--no!" retorted the old man. "Damn it, no! He
+wasn't the man to remain true to his wife."
+
+"So I understand," remarked Dyck; "but I don't know his wife. I never
+saw her, except at the trial, and I was so sorry for her I ceased to be
+sorry for my self. She had a beautiful, strange, isolated face."
+
+"But that wouldn't influence Boyne," was the reply. "His first wife
+had a beautiful and interesting face, but it didn't hold him. He went
+marauding elsewhere, and she divorced him by act of parliament. I
+don't think you knew it, but his first wife was one of your
+acquaintances--Mrs. Llyn, whose daughter you saw just before we left
+Playmore. He wasn't particular where he made love--a barmaid or a
+housekeeper, it was all the same to him."
+
+"I hope the daughter doesn't know that Erris Boyne was her father," said
+Dyck.
+
+"There's plenty can tell her, and she'll hear it sooner or later."
+
+Miles Calhoun looked at his son with dejection.
+
+His eyes wandered over the grimly furnished cell. His nose smelled the
+damp of it, and suddenly the whole soul of him burst forth.
+
+"You don't give yourself a chance of escape, Dyck You know what Irish
+juries are. Why don't you tell the truth about the quarrel? What's the
+good of keeping your mouth shut, when there's many that would profit by
+your telling it?"
+
+"Who would profit?" asked Dyck.
+
+"Who would profit!" snarled the old man. "Well, you would profit first,
+for it might break the dark chain of circumstantial evidence. Also, your
+father would profit. I'd be saved shame, perhaps; I'd get relief from
+this disgrace. Oh, man, think of others beside yourself!
+
+"Think of others!" said Dyck, and a queer smile lighted his haggard
+face. "I'd save myself if I honourably could."
+
+"The law must prove you guilty," the old man went on. "It's not for you
+to prove yourself innocent. They haven't proved you guilty yet."
+
+The old man fumbled with a waistcoat button. His eyes blinked hard.
+
+"You don't see," he continued, "the one thing that's plain to my eyes,
+and it's this--that your only chance of escape is to tell the truth
+about the quarrel. If the truth were told, whatever it is, I believe
+it would be to your credit--I'll say that for you. If it was to your
+credit, even if they believe you guilty of killing Erris Boyne, they'd
+touch you lightly. Ah, in the name of the mother you loved, I ask you to
+tell the truth about that quarrel! Give it into the hands of the jury,
+and let them decide. Haven't you got a heart in you? In the name of
+God--"
+
+"Don't speak to me like that," interrupted Dyck, with emotion. "I've
+thought of all those things. I hold my peace because--because I hold my
+peace. To speak would be to hurt some one I love with all my soul."
+
+"And you won't speak to save me--your father--because you don't love me
+with all your soul! Is that it?" asked Miles Calhoun.
+
+"It's different--it's different."
+
+"Ah, it's a woman!"
+
+"Never mind what it is. I will not tell. There are things more shameful
+than death."
+
+"Yes," snarled the other. "Rather than save yourself, you bring
+dishonour upon him who gave you birth."
+
+Dyck's face was submerged in colour.
+
+"Father," said he, "on my honour I wouldn't hurt you if I could help it,
+but I'll not tell the world of the quarrel between that man and myself.
+My silence may hurt you, but some one else would be hurt far more if I
+told."
+
+"By God, I think you're some mad dreamer slipped out of the ancient
+fold! Do you know where you are? You're in jail. If you're found guilty,
+you'll be sent to prison at least for the years that'll spoil the making
+of your life; and you do it because you think you'll spare somebody.
+Well, I ask you to spare me. I don't want the man that's going to
+inherit my name, when my time comes, to bring foulness on it. We've been
+a rough race, we Calhouns; we've done mad, bad things, perhaps, but none
+has shamed us before the world--none but you."
+
+"I have never shamed you, Miles Calhoun," replied his son sharply. "As
+the ancients said, 'alis volat propriis'--I will fly with my own wings.
+Come weal, come woe, come dark, come light, I have fixed my mind, and
+nothing shall change it. You loved my mother better than the rest of the
+world. You would have thought it no shame to have said so to your own
+father. Well, I say it to you--I'll stand by what my conscience and
+my soul have dictated to me. You call me a dreamer. Let it be so. I'm
+Irish; I'm a Celt. I've drunk deep of all that Ireland means. All that's
+behind me is my own, back to the shadowy kings of Ireland, who lost life
+and gave it because they believed in what they did. So will I. If I'm to
+walk the hills no more on the estate where you are master, let it be so.
+I have no fear; I want no favour. If it is to be prison, then it shall
+be prison. If it is to be shame, then let it be shame. These are
+days when men must suffer if they make mistakes. Well, I will suffer,
+fearlessly if helplessly, but I will not break the oath which I have
+taken. And so I will not do it--never--never--never!"
+
+He picked up the cloak which the old man had dropped on the floor, and
+handed it to him.
+
+"There is no good in staying longer. I must go into court again
+to-morrow. I have to think how my lawyer shall answer the evidence
+given."
+
+"But of one thing have you thought?" asked his father. "You will not
+tell the cause of the quarrel, for the reason that you might hurt
+somebody. If you don't tell the cause, and you are condemned, won't that
+hurt somebody even more?"
+
+For a moment Dyck stood silent, absorbed. His face looked pinched, his
+whole appearance shrivelled. Then, with deliberation, he said:
+
+"This is not a matter of expediency, but of principle. My heart tells me
+what to do, and my heart has always been right."
+
+There was silence for a long time. At last the old man drew the cloak
+about his shoulders and turned towards the door.
+
+"Wait a minute, father," said Dyck. "Don't go like that. You'd better
+not come and see me again. If I'm condemned, go back to Playmore; if I'm
+set free, go back to Playmore. That's the place for you to be. You've
+got your own troubles there."
+
+"And you--if you're acquitted?"
+
+"If I'm acquitted, I'll take to the high seas--till I'm cured."
+
+A moment later, without further words, Dyck was alone. He heard the door
+clang.
+
+He sat for some time on the edge of his bed, buried in dejection.
+Presently, however, the door opened. "A letter for you, sir," said the
+jailer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+
+The light of the cell was dim, but Dyck managed to read the letter
+without great difficulty, for the writing was almost as precise as
+print. The sight of it caught his heart like a warm hand and pressed it.
+This was the substance of the letter:
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ I have wanted to visit you in prison, but my mother has forbidden
+ it, and so, even if I could be let to enter, I must not disobey her.
+ I have not read the papers giving an account of your trial. I only
+ know you are charged with killing a bad man, notorious in Dublin
+ life, and that many think he got his just deserts in being killed.
+
+ I saw Christopher Dogan only a week ago, before we came to Dublin.
+ His eyes, as he talked of you, shone like the secret hill-fires
+ where the peasants make illegal drink.
+
+ "Look you," he said to me, "I care not what a jury decides. I know
+ my man; and I also know that if the fellow Boyne died by his hand,
+ it was in fair fight. I have read Dyck Calhoun's story in the
+ stars; and I know what his end will be. It will be fair, not foul;
+ good, not bad; great, not low. Tell him that from me, miss," was
+ what he said.
+
+ I also will not believe that your fate is an evil one, that the law
+ will grind you between the millstones of guilt and dishonour; but if
+ the law should call you guilty, I still will not believe. Far away
+ I will think of you, and believe in you, dear, masterful, madman
+ friend. Yes, you are a madman, for Michael Clones told me--faith,
+ he loves you well!--that you've been living a gay life in Dublin
+ since you came here, and that the man you are accused of killing
+ was in great part the cause of it.
+
+ I think I never saw my mother so troubled in spirit as she is at
+ this time. Of course, she could not feel as I do about you. It
+ isn't that which makes her sad and haggard; it is that we are
+ leaving Ireland behind.
+
+ Yes, she and I are saying good-bye to Ireland. That's why I think
+ she might have let me see you before we went; but since it must not
+ be, well, then, it must not. But we shall meet again. In my soul
+ I know that on the hills somewhere far off, as on the first day we
+ met, we shall meet each other once more. Where are we going? Oh,
+ very far! We are going to my Uncle Bryan--Bryan Llyn, in Virginia.
+ A letter has come from him urging us to make our home with him. You
+ see, my friend--
+
+Then followed the story which Bryan Llyn had told her mother and
+herself, and she wrote of her mother's decision to go out to the new,
+great home which her uncle had made among the cotton-fields of the
+South. When she had finished that part of the tale, she went on as
+follows:
+
+ We shall know your fate only through the letters that will follow
+ us, but I will not believe in your bad luck. Listen to me--why
+ don't you come to America also? Oh, think it over! Don't believe
+ the worst will come. When they release you from prison, innocent
+ and acquitted, cross the ocean and set up your tent under the Stars
+ and Stripes. Think of it! Nearly all those men in America who
+ fought under Washington and won were born in these islands. They
+ took with them to that far land the memory and love of these old
+ homes. You and I would have fought for England and with the British
+ troops, because we detest revolution. Here, in Ireland, we have
+ seen its evils; and yet if we had fought for the Union Jack beyond
+ the mountains of Maine and in the lonely woods, we should, I
+ believe, in the end have said that the freedom fought for by the
+ American States was well won.
+
+ So keep this matter in your mind, for my mother and I will soon be
+ gone. She would not let me come to you,--I think I have never seen
+ her so disturbed as when I asked her, and she forbade me to write to
+ you; but I disobey her. Well, this is a sad business. I know my
+ mother has suffered. I know her married life was unhappy, and that
+ her husband--my father-died many a year ago, leaving a dark trail of
+ regret behind him; but, you see, I never knew my father. That was
+ all long ago, and it is a hundred times best forgotten.
+
+ Our ship sails for Virginia in three days, and I must go. I will
+ keep looking back to the prison where lies, charged with an evil
+ crime, of which he is not guilty, a young man for whom I shall
+ always carry the spirit of good friendship.
+
+ Do not believe all will not go well. Let us keep the courage of
+ our hearts and the faith of our souls--and I hope I always shall!
+ I believe in you, and, believing, I say good-bye. I say farewell in
+ the great hope that somehow, somewhere, we shall help each other on
+ the way of life. God be with you!
+ I am your friend,
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.--I beg you to remember that America is a good place for a
+ young man to live in and succeed.
+
+Dyck read the letter with a wonderful slowness. He realized that by
+happy accident--it could be nothing else--Mrs. Llyn had been able to
+keep from her daughter the fact that the man who had been killed in the
+tavern by the river was her father. It was clear that the girl was kept
+much to herself, read no newspapers, and saw few people, and that
+those whom she saw had been careful to hold their peace about her close
+relationship to Erris Boyne. None but the evil-minded would recall the
+fact to her.
+
+Sheila's ignorance must not be broken by himself. He had done the right
+thing--he had held his peace for the girl's sake, and he would hold it
+to the end. Slowly he folded up the letter, pressed it to his lips, and
+put it in the pocket over his heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+
+"Is it near the time?" asked Michael Clones of his friend, as they stood
+in front of the prison.
+
+His companion, who was seated on a stone, wrapped in dark-green
+coverings faded and worn, and looking pinched with cold in the dour
+November day, said, without lifting his head:
+
+"Seven minutes, an' he'll be out, God bless him!"
+
+"And save him and protect him!" said Michael. "He deserved punishment
+no more than I did, and it's broke him. I've seen the grey gather at his
+temples, though he's only been in prison four years. He was condemned
+to eight, but they've let him free, I don't know why. Perhaps it was
+because of what he told the government about the French navy. I've seen
+the joy of life sob itself down to the sour earth. When I took him the
+news of his father's death, and told him the creditors were swallowing
+what was left of Playmore, what do you think he did?"
+
+Old Christopher Dogan smiled; his eyes twinkled with a mirth which had
+more pain than gaiety. "God love you, I know what he did. He flung out
+his hands, and said: 'Let it go! It's nothing to me.' Michael, have I
+said true?"
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+"Almost his very words you've used, and he flung out his hands, as you
+said.
+
+"Aye, he'll be changed; but they've kept the clothes he had when he went
+to prison, and he'll come out in them, I'm thinking--"
+
+"Ah, no!" interrupted Michael. "That can't be, for his clothes was
+stole. Only a week ago he sent to me for a suit of my own. I wouldn't
+have him wear my clothes--he a gentleman! It wasn't fitting. So I sent
+him a suit I bought from a shop, but he wouldn't have it. He would leave
+prison a poor man, as a peasant in peasant's clothes. So he wrote to
+me. Here is the letter." He drew from his pocket a sheet of paper, and
+spread it out. "See-read it. Ah, well, never mind," he added, as old
+Christopher shook his head. "Never mind, I'll read it to you!" Thereupon
+he read the note, and added: "We'll see him of the Calhouns risin' high
+beyant poverty and misfortune some day."
+
+Old Christopher nodded.
+
+"I'm glad Miles Calhoun was buried on the hilltop above Playmore. He had
+his day; he lived his life. Things went wrong with him, and he paid the
+price we all must pay for work ill-done."
+
+"There you're right, Christopher Dogan, and I remember the day the
+downfall began. It was when him that's now Lord Mallow, Governor of
+Jamaica, came to summon Miles Calhoun to Dublin. Things were never the
+same after that; but I well remember one talk I had with Miles Calhoun
+just before his death. 'Michael,' he said to me, 'my family have had
+many ups and downs, and some that bear my name have been in prison
+before this, but never for killing a man out of fair fight.' 'One of
+your name may be in prison, sir,' said I, 'but not for killing a man out
+of fair fight. If you believe he did, there's no death bad enough for
+you!' He was silent for a while; then at last he whispered Mr. Dyck's
+name, and said to me: 'Tell him that as a Calhoun I love him, and as his
+father I love him ten times more. For look you, Michael, though we never
+ran together, but quarrelled and took our own paths, yet we are both
+Calhouns, and my heart is warm to him. If my son were a thousand times a
+criminal, nevertheless I would ache to take him by the hand.'"
+
+"Hush! Look at the prison gate," said his companion, and stood up.
+
+As the gates of the prison opened, the sun broke through the clouds and
+gave a brilliant phase to the scene. Out of the gates there came slowly,
+yet firmly, dressed in peasant clothes, the stalwart but faded figure of
+Dyck Calhoun.
+
+Terribly changed he was. He had entered prison with the flush upon his
+cheek, the lilt of young manhood in his eyes, with hair black and hands
+slender and handsome. There was no look of youth in his face now. It was
+the face of a middle-aged man from which the dew of youth had vanished,
+into which life's storms had come and gone. Though the body was held
+erect, yet the head was thrust slightly forward, and the heavy eyebrows
+were like a pent-house. The eyes were slightly feverish, and round
+the mouth there crept a smile, half-cynical but a little happy. All
+freshness was gone from his hands. One hung at his side, listless,
+corded; the other doffed his hat in reply to the salute of his two
+humble friends.
+
+As the gates closed behind him he looked gravely at the two men, who
+were standing not a foot apart. There swept slowly into his eyes,
+enlarging, brightening them, the glamour of the Celtic soul. Of all
+Ireland, or all who had ever known him, these two were the only ones
+welcoming him into the world again! Michael Clones, with his oval red
+face, big nose, steely eye, and steadfast bearing, had in him the soul
+of great kings. His hat was set firmly on his head. His knee-breeches
+were neat, if coarse; his stockings were clean. His feet were well shod,
+his coat worn, and he had still the look that belongs to the well-to-do
+peasant. He was a figure of courage and endurance. Dyck's hand went out
+to him, and a warm smile crept to his lips.
+
+"Michael--ever--faithful Michael!"
+
+A moisture came to Michael's eyes. He did not speak as he clasped the
+hand Dyck offered him. Presently Dyck turned to old Christopher with a
+kindly laugh.
+
+"Well, old friend! You, too, come to see the stag set loose again?
+You're not many, that's sure." A grim, hard look came into his face, but
+both hands went out and caught the old man's shoulders affectionately.
+"This is no day for you to be waiting at prison's gates, Christopher;
+but there are two men who believe in me--two in all the world. It isn't
+the killing," he added after a moment's silence--"it isn't the killing
+that hurts so. If it's true that I killed Erris Boyne, what hurts most
+is the reason why I killed him."
+
+"One way or another--does it matter now?" asked Christopher gently.
+
+"Is it that you think nothing matters since I've paid the price, sunk
+myself in shame, lost my friends, and come out with not a penny left?"
+asked Dyck. "But yes," he added with a smile, wry and twisted, "yes, I
+have a little left!"
+
+He drew from his pocket four small pieces of gold, and gazed ironically
+at them in his palm.
+
+"Look at them!" He held out his hand, so that the two men could see the
+little coins. "Those were taken from me when I entered prison. They've
+been in the hands of the head of the jail ever since. They give them to
+me now--all that's left of what I was."
+
+"No, not all, sir," declared Michael. "There's something left from
+Playmore--there's ninety pounds, and it's in my pocket. It was got from
+the sale of your sporting-kit. There was the boat upon the lake, the
+gun, and all kinds of riffraff stuff not sold with Playmore."
+
+Dyck nodded and smiled. "Good Michael!"
+
+Then he drew himself up stiffly, and blew in and out his breath as if
+with the joy of living. For four hard years he had been denied the free
+air of free men. Even when walking in the prison-yard, on cold or fair
+days, when the air was like a knife or when it had the sun of summer in
+it, it still had seemed to choke him.
+
+In prison he had read, thought, and worked much. They had at least done
+that for him. The Attorney-General had given him freedom to work with
+his hands, and to slave in the workshop like one whose living depended
+on it. Some philanthropic official had started the idea of a workshop,
+and the officials had given the best of the prisoners a chance to learn
+trades and make a little money before they went out into the world. All
+that Dyck had earned went to purchase things he needed, and to help his
+fellow prisoners or their families.
+
+Where was he now? The gap between the old life of nonchalance,
+frivolity, fantasy, and excitement was as great as that between heaven
+and hell. Here he was, after four years of prison, walking the highway
+with two of the humblest creatures of Ireland, and yet, as his soul
+said, two of the best.
+
+Stalking along in thought, he suddenly became conscious that Michael and
+Christopher had fallen behind. He turned round.
+
+"Come on. Come on with me." But the two shook their heads.
+
+"It's not fitting, you a Calhoun of Playmore!" Christopher answered.
+
+"Well, then, list to me," said Dyck, for he saw the men could not bear
+his new democracy. "I'm hungry. In four years I haven't had a meal
+that came from the right place or went to the right spot. Is the little
+tavern, the Hen and Chickens, on the Liffeyside, still going? I mean the
+place where the seamen and the merchant-ship officers visit."
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+"Well, look you, Michael--get you both there, and order me as good a
+meal of fish and chops and baked pudding as can be bought for money.
+Aye, and I'll have a bottle of red French wine, and you two will have
+what you like best. Mark me, we'll sit together there, for we're one of
+a kind. I've got to take to a life that fits me, an ex-jailbird, a man
+that's been in prison for killing!"
+
+"There's the king's army," said Michael. "They make good officers in
+it."
+
+A strange, half-sore smile came to Dyck's thin lips.
+
+"Michael," said he, "give up these vain illusions. I was condemned for
+killing a man not in fair fight.
+
+"I can't enter the army as an officer, and you should know it. The king
+himself could set me up again; but the distance between him and me is
+ten times round the world and back again!" But then Dyck nodded kindly.
+It was as if suddenly the martyr spirit had lifted him out of rigid,
+painful isolation, and he was speaking from a hilltop. "No, my friends,
+what is in my mind now is that I'm hungry. For four years I've eaten the
+bread of prison, and it's soured my mouth and galled my belly. Go you to
+that inn and make ready a good meal."
+
+The two men started to leave, but old Christopher turned and stretched a
+hand up and out.
+
+"Son of Ireland, bright and black and black and bright may be the
+picture of your life, but I see for you brightness and sweet faces, and
+music and song. It's not Irish music, and it's not Irish song, but the
+soul of the thing is Irish. Grim things await you, but you will conquer
+where the eagle sways to the shore, where the white mist flees from the
+hills, where heroes meet, where the hand of Moira stirs the blue and the
+witches flee from the voice of God. There is honour coming to you in the
+world."
+
+Having said his say, with hand outstretched, having thrilled the air
+with the voice of one who had the soul of a prophet, the old man turned.
+Head bent forward, he shuffled away with Michael Clones along the stony
+street.
+
+Dyck watched them go, his heart beating hard, his spirit overwhelmed.
+
+It was not far to the Castle, yet every footstep had a history. Now and
+again he met people who knew him. Some bowed a little too profoundly,
+some nodded; but not one stopped to speak to him, though a few among
+them were people he had known well in days gone by. Was it the clothes
+he wore, or was it that his star had sunk so low that none could keep
+it company? He laughed to himself in scorn, and yet there kept ringing
+through his brain all the time the bells of St. Anselm's, which he was
+hearing:
+
+ "Oh, God, who is the sinner's friend,
+ Make clean my soul once more!"
+
+When he arrived at the Castle walls he stood and looked long at them.
+
+"No, I won't go in. I won't try to see him," he said at last. "God, how
+strange Ireland is to me! The soil of it, the trees of it, the grass of
+it, are dearer than ever, but--I'll have no more of Ireland. I'll ask
+for nothing. I'll get to England. What's Ireland to me? I must make
+my way somewhere. There's one in there"--he nodded towards the
+Castle--"that owes me money at cards. He should open his pockets to me,
+and see me safe on a ship for Australia; but I've had my fill of every
+one in Ireland. There's nothing here for me but shame. Well, back I'll
+go to the Hen and Chickens, to find a good dinner there."
+
+He turned and went back slowly along the streets by which he had come,
+looking not to right nor left, thinking only of where he should go and
+what he should do outside of Ireland.
+
+At the door of the inn he sniffed the dinner Michael had ordered.
+
+"Man alive!" he said as he entered the place and saw the two men with
+their hands against the bright fire. "There's only one way to live, and
+that's the way I'm going to try."
+
+"Well, you'll not try it alone, sir, if you please," said Michael. "I'll
+be with you, if I may."
+
+"And I'll bless you as you go," said Christopher Dogan.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. WHITHER NOW?
+
+England was in a state of unrest. She had, as yet, been none too
+successful in the war with France. From the king's castle to the poorest
+slum in Seven Dials there was a temper bordering on despair. Ministries
+came and went; statesmen rose and fell. The army was indifferently
+recruited and badly paid. England's battles were fought by men of whom
+many were only mercenaries, with no stake in England's rise or fall.
+
+In the army and navy there were protests, many and powerful, against the
+smallness of the pay, while the cost of living had vastly increased. In
+more than one engagement on land England had had setbacks of a serious
+kind, and there were those who saw in the blind-eyed naval policy, in
+the general disregard of the seamen's position, in the means used for
+recruiting, the omens of disaster. The police courts furnished the navy
+with the worst citizens of the country. Quota men, the output of the
+Irish prisons--seditious, conspiring, dangerous--were drafted for the
+king's service.
+
+The admiralty pursued its course of seizing men of the mercantile
+marine, taking them aboard ships, keeping them away for months from the
+harbours of the kingdom, and then, when their ships returned, denying
+them the right of visiting their homes. The press-gangs did not confine
+their activities to the men of the mercantile marine. From the streets
+after dusk they caught and brought in, often after ill-treatment, torn
+from their wives and sweethearts, knocked on the head for resisting,
+tradesmen with businesses, young men studying for the professions,
+idlers, debtors, out-of-work men. The marvel is that the British fleets
+fought as well as they did.
+
+Poverty and sorrow, loss and bereavement, were in every street, peeped
+mournfully out of every window, lurked at street corners. From all parts
+of the world adventurers came to renew their fortunes in the turmoil
+of London, and every street was a kaleidoscope of faces and clothes and
+colours, not British, not patriot, not national.
+
+Among these outlanders were Dyck Calhoun and Michael Clones. They
+had left Ireland together in the late autumn, leaving behind them the
+stirrings of the coming revolution, and plunging into another revolt
+which was to prove the test and trial of English character.
+
+Dyck had left Ireland with ninety pounds in his pocket and many tons'
+weight of misery in his heart. In his bones he felt tragedies on foot in
+Ireland which concession and good government could not prevent. He had
+fled from it all. When he set his face to Holyhead, he felt that he
+would never live in Ireland again. Yet his courage was firm as he made
+his way to London, with Michael Clones--faithful, devoted, a friend
+and yet a servant, treated like a comrade, yet always with a little
+dominance.
+
+The journey to London had been without event, yet as the coach rolled
+through country where frost silvered the trees; where, in the early
+morning, the grass was shining with dew; where the everlasting green
+hedges and the red roofs of villages made a picture which pleased the
+eye and stirred the soul, Dyck Calhoun kept wondering what would be his
+future. He had no profession, no trade, no skill except with his sword;
+and as he neared London Town--when they left Hendon--he saw the smoke
+rising in the early winter morning and the business of life spread out
+before him, brave and buoyant.
+
+As from the heights of Hampstead he looked down on the multitudinous
+area called London, something throbbed at his heart which seemed like
+hope; for what he saw was indeed inspiring. When at last, in the Edgware
+Road, he drew near to living London, he turned to Michael Clones and
+said:
+
+"Michael, my lad, I think perhaps we'll find a footing here."
+
+So they reached London, and quartered themselves in simple lodgings in
+Soho. Dyck walked the streets, and now and then he paid a visit to the
+barracks where soldiers were, to satisfy the thought that perhaps in the
+life of the common soldier he might, after all, find his future. It was,
+however, borne in upon him by a chance remark of Michael one day--"I'm
+not young enough to be a recruit, and you wouldn't go alone without me,
+would you?"--that this way to a livelihood was not open to him.
+
+His faithful companion's remark had fixed Dyck's mind against entering
+the army, and then, towards the end of the winter, a fateful
+thing happened. His purse containing what was left of the ninety
+pounds--two-fifths of it--disappeared. It had been stolen, and in all
+the bitter days to come, when poverty and misery ground them down, no
+hint of the thief, no sign of the robber, was ever revealed.
+
+Then, at last, a day when a letter came from Ireland. It was from the
+firm in which Bryan Llyn of Virginia had been interested, for the letter
+had been sent to their care, and Dyck had given them his address in
+London on this very chance. It reached Dyck's hands on the day after
+the last penny had been paid out for their lodgings, and they faced
+the streets, penniless, foodless--one was going to say friendless. The
+handwriting was that of Sheila Llyn.
+
+At a street corner, by a chemist's shop where a red light burned, Dyck
+opened and read the letter. This is what Sheila had written to him.
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ The time is near (I understand by a late letter to my mother from an
+ official) when you will be freed from prison and will face the world
+ again. I have not written you since your trial, but I have never
+ forgotten and never shall. I have been forbidden to write to you or
+ think of you, but I will take my own way about you. I have known
+ all that has happened since we left Ireland, through the letters my
+ mother has received. I know that Playmore has been sold, and I am
+ sorry.
+
+ Now that your day of release is near, and you are to be again a free
+ man, have you decided about your future? Is it to be in Ireland?
+ No, I think not. Ireland is no place for a sane and level man to
+ fight for honour, fame, and name. I hear that things are worse
+ there in every way than they have been in our lifetime.
+
+ After what has happened in any case, it is not a field that offers
+ you a chance. Listen to me. Ireland and England are not the only
+ places in the world. My uncle came here to Virginia a poor man.
+ He is now immensely rich. He had little to begin with, but he was
+ young like you--indeed, a little older than you--when he first came.
+ He invested wisely, worked bravely, and his wealth grew fast. No
+ man needs a fortune to start the business of life in this country.
+ He can get plenty of land for almost nothing; he can get credit for
+ planting and furnishing his land, and, if he has friends, the credit
+ is sure.
+
+ All America is ready for "the likes of you." Think it over, and
+ meanwhile please know there has been placed with the firm in Dublin
+ money enough to bring you here with comfort. You must not refuse
+ it. Take it as a loan, for I know you will not take it as a gift.
+
+ I do not know the story of the killing, even as it was told in
+ court. Well, some one killed the man, but not you, and the truth
+ will out in time. If one should come to me out of the courts of
+ heaven, and say that there it was declared you were a rogue, I
+ should say heaven was no place for me. No, of one thing I am sure--
+ you never killed an undefended man. Wayward, wanton, reckless,
+ dissipated you may have been, but you were never depraved--never!
+
+ When you are free, lift up your shoulders to all the threats of
+ time, then go straight to the old firm where the money is, draw it,
+ take ship, and come here. If you let me know you are coming, I will
+ be there to meet you when you step ashore, to give you a firm hand-
+ clasp; to tell you that in this land there is a good place for you,
+ if you will win it.
+
+ Here there is little crime, though the perils of life are many.
+ There is Indian fighting; there are Indian depredations; and not a
+ dozen miles from where I sit men have been shot for crimes
+ committed. The woods are full of fighters, and pirates harry the
+ coast. On the wall of the room where I write there are carbines
+ that have done service in Indian wars and in the Revolutionary War;
+ and here out of the window I can see hundreds of black heads-slaves,
+ brought from Africa and the Indies, slaves whose devotion to my
+ uncle is very great. I hear them singing now; over the white-tipped
+ cotton-fields there flows the sound of it.
+
+ This plantation has none of the vices that belong to slavery. Here
+ life is complete. The plantation is one great workshop where trades
+ are learned and carried out-shoeing, blacksmithing, building,
+ working in wood and metal.
+
+ I am learning here--you see I am quite old, for I am twenty-one now
+ --the art of management. They tell me that when my uncle's day is
+ done--I grieve to think it is not far off--I must take the rod of
+ control. I work very, very hard. I have to learn figures and
+ finance; I have to see how all the work is done, so that I shall
+ know it is done right. I have had to discipline the supervisors and
+ bookkeepers, inspect and check the output, superintend the packing,
+ and arrange for the sale of the crop-yes, I arranged for the sale of
+ this year's crop myself. So I live the practical life, and when I
+ say that you could make your home here and win success, I do it with
+ some knowledge.
+
+ I beg you take ship for the Virginian coast. Enter upon the new
+ life here with faith and courage. Have no fear. Heaven that has
+ thus far helped you will guide you to the end.
+
+ I write without my mother's permission, but my uncle knows, and
+ though he does not approve, he does not condemn.
+
+ Once more good-bye, my dear friend, and God be with you.
+
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.--I wonder where you will read this letter. I hope it will
+ find you before your release. Please remember that she who wrote it
+ summons you from the darkness where you are to light and freedom
+ here.
+
+Slowly Dyck folded up the letter, when he had read it, and put it in his
+pocket. Then he turned with pale face and gaunt look to Michael Clones.
+
+"Michael," said he, "that letter is from a lady. It comes from her new
+home in Virginia."
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+"Aye, aye, sir, I understand you," he said. "Then she doesn't know the
+truth about her father?" Dyck sighed heavily. "No, Michael, she doesn't
+know the truth."
+
+"I don't believe it would make any difference to her if she did know."
+
+"It would make all the difference to me, Michael. She says she wishes
+to help me. She tells me that money's been sent to the big firm in
+Dublin-money to take me across the sea to Virginia."
+
+Michael's face clouded.
+
+"Yes, sir. To Virginia--and what then?"
+
+"Michael, we haven't a penny in the world, you and I, but if I took
+one farthing of that money I should hope you would kill me. I'm hungry;
+we've had nothing to eat since yesterday; but if I could put my hands
+upon that money here and now I wouldn't touch it. Michael, it looks as
+if we shall have to take to the trade of the footpad."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+
+In the days when Dyck Calhoun was on the verge of starvation in
+London, evil naval rumours were abroad. Newspapers reported, one with
+apprehension, another with tyrannous comment, mutinous troubles in the
+fleet.
+
+At first the only demand at Spithead and the Nore had been for an
+increase of pay, which had not been made since the days of Charles II.
+Then the sailors' wages were enough for comfortable support; but in 1797
+through the rise in the cost of living, and with an advance of thirty
+per cent. on slops, their families could barely maintain themselves. It
+was said in the streets, and with truth, that seamen who had fought with
+unconquerable gallantry under Howe, Collingwood, Nelson, and the other
+big sea-captains, who had borne suffering and wounds, and had been in
+the shadow of death--that even these men damned a system which, in its
+stern withdrawal of their class for long spaces of time from their own
+womenfolk, brought evil results to the forecastle.
+
+The soldier was always in touch with his own social world, and he had
+leave sufficient to enable him to break the back of monotony. He drank,
+gambled, and orated; but his indulgences were little compared with the
+debauches of able-bodied seamen when, after months of sea-life, they
+reached port again. A ship in port at such a time was not a scene of
+evangelical habits. Women of loose class, flower-girls, fruit-sellers,
+and costermongers turned the forecastle into a pleasure-house where
+the pleasures were not always secret; where native modesty suffered no
+affright, and physical good cheer, with ribald paraphrase, was notable
+everywhere.
+
+"How did it happen, Michael?"
+
+As he spoke, Dyck looked round the forecastle of the Ariadne with a
+restless and inquisitive expression. Michael was seated a few feet away,
+his head bent forward, his hands clasped around his knees.
+
+"Well, it don't matter one way or 'nother," he replied; "but it was like
+this. The night you got a letter from Virginia we was penniless; so at
+last I went with my watch to the pawnbroker's. You said you'd wait till
+I got back, though you knew not where I was goin'. When I got back, you
+were still broodin'. You were seated on a horse-block by the chemist's
+lamp where you had read the letter. It's not for me to say of what you
+were thinkin'; but I could guess. You'd been struck hard, and there had
+come to you a letter from one who meant more to you than all the rest of
+the world; and you couldn't answer it because things weren't right. As
+I stood lookin' at you, wonderin' what to do, though, I had twelve
+shillin's in my pocket from the watch I'd pawned, there came four men,
+and I knew from their looks they were recruitin' officers of the navy. I
+saw what was in their eyes. They knew--as why shouldn't they, when they
+saw a gentleman like you in peasant clothes?--that luck had been agin'
+us.
+
+"What the end would have been I don't know. It was you that solved the
+problem, not them. You looked at the first man of them hard. Then you
+got to your feet.
+
+"'Michael,' says you quietly, 'I'm goin' to sea. England's at war, and
+there's work to do. So let's make for a king's ship, and have done with
+misery and poverty.'
+
+"Then you waved a hand to the man in command of the recruitin' gang, and
+presently stepped up to him and his friends.
+
+"'Sir,' I said to you, 'I'm not going to be pressed into the navy.'
+
+"'There's no pressin', Michael,' you answered. 'We'll be quota men.
+We'll do it for cash--for forty pounds each, and no other. You let them
+have you as you are. But if you don't want to come,' you added, 'it's
+all the same to me.'
+
+"Faith, I knew that was only talk. I knew you wanted me. Also I knew the
+king's navy needed me, for men are hard to get. So, when they'd paid
+us the cash--forty pounds apiece--I stepped in behind you, and here we
+are--here we are! Forty pounds apiece--equal to three years' wages of
+an ordinary recruit of the army. It ain't bad, but we're here for three
+years, and no escape from it. Yes, here we are!"
+
+Dyck laughed.
+
+"Aye, here we're likely to remain, Michael. There's only this to be
+said--we'll be fighting the French soon, and it's easy to die in the
+midst of a great fight. If we don't die, Michael, something else will
+turn up, maybe."
+
+"That's true, sir! They'll make an officer of you, once they see you
+fight. This is no place for you, among the common herd. It's the dregs
+o' the world that comes to the ship's bottom in time of peace or war."
+
+"Well, I'm the dregs of the world, Michael. I'm the supreme dregs."
+
+Somehow the letter from Virginia had decided Dyck Calhoun's fate for
+him. Here he was--at sea, a common sailor in the navy. He and Michael
+Clones had eaten and drunk as sailors do, and they had realized that, as
+they ate and drank on the River Thames, they would not eat and drink
+on the watery fairway. They had seen the tank foul with age, from which
+water was drawn for men who could not live without it, and the smell of
+it had revolted Dyck's senses. They had seen the kegs of pickled meat,
+and they had been told of the evil rations given to the sailors at sea.
+
+The Ariadne had been a flag-ship in her day, the home of an admiral and
+his staff. She carried seventy-four guns, was easily obedient to her
+swift sail, and had a reputation for gallantry. From the first hour
+on board, Dyck Calhoun had fitted in; with a discerning eye he had
+understood the seamen's needs and the weaknesses of the system.
+
+The months he had spent between his exit from prison and his entrance
+into the Ariadne had roughened, though not coarsened, his outward
+appearance. From his first appearance among the seamen he had set
+himself to become their leader. His enlistment was for three years, and
+he meant that these three should prove the final success of this naval
+enterprise, or the stark period in a calendar of tragedy.
+
+The life of the sailor, with its coarseness and drudgery, its inadequate
+pay, its evil-smelling food, its maggoty bread, its beer drawn from
+casks that once had held oil or fish, its stinking salt-meat barrels,
+the hideous stench of the bilge-water--all this could in one sense be
+no worse than his sufferings in jail. In spite of self-control, jail
+had been to him the degradation of his hopes, the humiliation of his
+manhood.
+
+He had suffered cold, dampness, fever, and indigestion there, and it
+had sapped the fresh fibre of life in him. His days in London had been
+cruel. He had sought work in great commercial concerns, and had almost
+been grateful when rejected. When his money was stolen, there seemed
+nothing to do, as he said to Michael Clones, but to become a footpad or
+a pirate. Then the stormy doors of the navy had opened wide to him; and
+as many a man is tempted into folly or crime by tempestuous nature,
+so he, forlorn, spiritually unkempt, but physically and mentally
+well-composed, in a spirit of bravado, flung himself into the bowels of
+the fleet.
+
+From the moment Dyck arrived on board the Ariadne he was a marked
+man. Ferens, a disfranchised solicitor, who knew his story, spread the
+unwholesome truth about him among the ship's people, and he received
+attentions at once offensive and flattering. The best-educated of the
+ship's hands approached him on the grievances with which the whole navy
+was stirring.
+
+Something had put a new spirit into the life of his majesty's ships; it
+was, in a sense, the reflection of the French Revolution and Tom Paine's
+Age of Reason. What the Americans had done in establishing a republic,
+what France was doing by her revolution, got into the veins and minds of
+some men in England, but it got into the veins and minds of the sailor
+first; for, however low his origin, he had intercourse not given to the
+average landsman. He visited foreign ports, he came in touch with other
+elements than those of British life and character.
+
+Of all the ships in the navy the Ariadne was the best that Dyck Calhoun
+could have entered. Her officers were humane and friendly, yet firm; and
+it was quite certain that if mutiny came they would be treated well. The
+agitation on the Ariadne in support of the grievances of the sailors was
+so moderate that, from the first, Dyck threw in his lot with it. Ferens,
+the former solicitor, first came to him with a list of proposals, which
+only repeated the demands made by the agitators at Spithead.
+
+"You're new among us," said Ferens to Dyck. "You don't quite know what
+we've been doing, I suppose. Some of us have been in the navy for two
+years, and some for ten. There are men on this ship who could tell
+you stories that would make your blood run cold--take my word for it.
+There's a lot of things goin' on that oughtn't to be goin' on. The time
+has come for reform. Have a look at this paper, and tell me what you
+think."
+
+Dyck looked at the pockmarked face of Ferens, whose record in the courts
+was a bad one, and what he saw did not disgust him. It was as though
+Ferens had stumbled and been badly hit in his fall, but there were
+no signs of permanent evil in his countenance. He was square-headed,
+close-cropped, clear-eyed, though his face was yellow where it was not
+red, and his tongue was soft in his head.
+
+Dyck read the paper slowly and carefully. Then he handed it back without
+a word.
+
+"Well, what have you got to say?" asked Ferens. "Nothing? Don't you
+think that's a strong list of grievances and wrongs?"
+
+Dyck nodded. "Yes, it's pretty strong," he said, and he held up his
+hand. "Number One, wages and cost of living. I'm sure we're right there.
+Cost of living was down in King Charles's time, and wages were down
+accordingly. Everything's gone up, and wages should go up. Number Two,
+the prize-money scandal. I'm with you there. I don't see why an officer
+should get two thousand five hundred times as much as a seaman. There
+ought to be a difference, but not so much. Number Three, the food
+ought to be better; the water ought to be better. We can't live on rum,
+maggoty bread, and foul water--that's sure. The rum's all right; it's
+powerful natural stuff, but we ought to have meat that doesn't stink,
+and bread that isn't alive. What's more, we ought to have lots of
+lime-juice, or there's no protection for us when we're out at sea with
+the best meat taken by the officers and the worst left to us; and with
+foul water and rotten food, there's no hope or help. But, if we're going
+in for this sort of thing, we ought to do it decently. We can't slap
+a government in the mouth, and we can't kick an admiral without paying
+heavy for it in the end. If it's wholesome petitioning you're up to, I'm
+with you; but I'm not if there's to be knuckle-dusting."
+
+Ferens shrugged a shoulder.
+
+"Things are movin', and we've got to take our stand now when the time is
+ripe for it, or else lose it for ever. Over at Spithead they're gettin'
+their own way. The government are goin' to send the Admiralty Board down
+here, because our admiral say to them that it won't be safe goin' unless
+they do."
+
+"And what are we going to do here?" asked Dyck. "What's the game of the
+fleet at the Nore?"
+
+Ferens replied in a low voice:
+
+"Our men are goin' to send out petitions--to the Admiralty and to the
+House of Commons."
+
+"Why don't you try Lord Howe?"
+
+"He's not in command of a fleet now. Besides, petitions have been sent
+him, and he's taken no notice."
+
+"Howe? No notice--the best admiral we ever had! I don't believe it,"
+declared Dyck savagely. "Why, the whole navy believes in Howe. They
+haven't forgotten what he did in '94. He's as near to the seaman as the
+seaman is to his mother. Who sent the petitions to him?"
+
+"They weren't signed by names--they were anonymous."
+
+Dyck laughed.
+
+"Yes, and all written by the same hand, I suppose." Ferens nodded.
+
+"I think that's so."
+
+"Can you wonder, then, that Lord Howe didn't acknowledge them? But I'm
+still sure he acted promptly. He's a big enough friend of the sailor to
+waste no time before doing his turn."
+
+Ferens shook his head morosely.
+
+"That may be," he said; "but the petitions were sent weeks ago, and
+there's no sign from Lord Howe. He was at Bath for gout. My idea is he
+referred them to the admiral commanding at Portsmouth, and was told
+that behind the whole thing is conspiracy--French socialism and English
+politics. I give you my word there's no French agent in the fleet, and
+if there were, it wouldn't have any effect. Our men's grievances are not
+new. They're as old as Cromwell."
+
+Suddenly a light of suspicion flashed into Ferens's face.
+
+"You're with us, aren't you? You see the wrongs we've suffered, and how
+bad it all is! Yet you haven't been on a voyage with us. You've only
+tasted the life in harbour. Good God, this life is heaven to what we
+have at sea! We don't mind the fightin'. We'd rather fight than eat."
+An evil grin covered his face for a minute. "Yes, we'd rather fight than
+eat, for the stuff we get to eat is hell's broil, God knows! Did you
+ever think what the life of the sailor is, that swings at the top of a
+mast with the frost freezin' his very soul, and because he's slow, owin'
+to the cold, gets twenty lashes for not bein' quicker? Well, I've seen
+that, and a bad sight it is. Did you ever see a man flogged? It ain't a
+pretty sight. First the back takes the click of the whip like a damned
+washboard, and you see the ridges rise and go purple and red, and the
+man has his breath knocked clean out of him with every blow. Nearly
+every stroke takes off the skin and draws the blood, and a dozen will
+make the back a ditch of murder. Then the whipper stops, looks at the
+lashes, feels them tender like, and out and down it comes again. When
+all the back is ridged and scarred, the flesh, that looked clean and
+beautiful, becomes a bloody mass. Some men get a hundred lashes, and
+that's torture and death.
+
+"A man I knew was flogged told me once that the first blow made his
+flesh quiver in every nerve from his toe-nails to his finger-nails, and
+stung his heart as if a knife had gone through his body. There was agony
+in his lungs, and the time between each stroke was terrible, and yet the
+next came too soon. He choked with the blood from his tongue, lacerated
+with his teeth, and from his lungs, and went black in the face. I
+saw his back. It looked like roasted meat; yet he had only had eighty
+strokes.
+
+"The punishments are bad. Runnin' the gauntlet is one of them. Each
+member of the crew is armed with three tarry rope-yarns, knotted at
+the ends. Then between the master-at-arms with a drawn sword and two
+corporals with drawn swords behind, the thief, stripped to the waist,
+is placed. The thing is started by a boatswain's mate givin' him a dozen
+lashes. Then he's slowly marched down the double line of men, who flog
+him as he passes, and at the end of the line he receives another dose
+of the cat from the boatswain's mate. The poor devil's body and head
+are flayed, and he's sent to hospital and rubbed with brine till he's
+healed.
+
+"But the most horrible of all is flogging through the fleet. That's
+given for strikin' an officer, or tryin' to escape. It's a sickenin'
+thing. The victim is lashed by his wrists to a capstan-bar in the ship's
+long-boat, and all the ship's boats are lowered also, and each ship
+in harbour sends a boat manned by marines to attend. Then, with the
+master-at-arms and the ship's surgeon, the boat is cast off. The
+boatswain's mate begins the floggin', and the boat rows away to the
+half-minute bell, the drummer beatin' the rogue's march. From ship to
+ship the long-boat goes, and the punishment of floggin' is repeated. If
+he faints, he gets wine or rum, or is taken back to his ship to recover.
+When his back is healed he goes out to get the rest of his sentence.
+Very few ever live through it, or if they do it's only for a short time.
+They'd better have taken the hangin' that was the alternative. Even a
+corpse with its back bare of flesh to the bone has received the last
+lashes of a sentence, and was then buried in the mud of the shore with
+no religious ceremony.
+
+"Mind you, there's many a man gets fifty lashes that don't deserve them.
+There's many men in the fleet that's stirred to anger at ill-treatment,
+until now, in these days, the whole lot is ready to see the thing
+through--to see the thing through--by heaven and by hell!"
+
+The pockmarked face had taken on an almost ghastly fervour, until it
+looked like a distorted cartoon-vindictive, fanatical; but Dyck, on
+the edge of the river of tragedy, was not ready to lose himself in the
+stream of it.
+
+As he looked round the ship he felt a stir of excitement like nothing
+he had ever known, though he had been brought up in a country where men
+were by nature revolutionists, and where the sword was as often outside
+as inside the scabbard. There was something terrible in a shipboard
+agitation not to be found in a land-rising. On land there were a
+thousand miles of open country, with woods and houses, caves and cliffs,
+to which men could flee for hiding; and the danger of rebellion was
+less dominant. At sea, a rebellion was like some beastly struggle in one
+room, beyond the walls of which was everlasting nothingness. The thing
+had to be fought out, as it were, man to man within four walls, and God
+help the weaker!
+
+"How many ships in the fleet are sworn to this agitation?" Dyck asked
+presently.
+
+"Every one. It's been like a spread of infection; it's entered at every
+door, looked out of every window. All the ships are in it, from the
+twenty-six-hundred-tonners to the little five-hundred-and-fifty-tonners.
+Besides, there are the Delegates."
+
+He lowered his voice as he used these last words. "Yes, I know," Dyck
+answered, though he did not really know. "But who is at the head?"
+
+"Why, as bold a man as can be--Richard Parker, an Irishman. He was once
+a junior naval officer, and left the navy and went into business; now he
+is a quotaman, and leads the mutiny. Let me tell you that unless there's
+a good round answer to what we demand, the Nore fleet'll have it out
+with the government. He's a man of character, is Richard Parker, and the
+fleet'll stand by him."
+
+"How long has he been at it?" asked Dyck.
+
+"Oh, weeks and weeks! It doesn't all come at once, the grip of the
+thing. It began at Spithead, and it worked right there; and now it's
+workin' at the Nore, and it'll work and work until there isn't a ship
+and there isn't a man that won't be behind the Delegates. Look. Half the
+seamen on this ship have tasted the inside of a jail; and the rest come
+from the press-gang, and what's left are just the ragged ends of street
+corners. But"--and here the man drew himself up with a flush--"but
+there's none of us that wouldn't fight to the last gasp of breath for
+the navy that since the days of Elizabeth has sailed at the head of all
+the world. Don't think we mean harm to the fleet. We mean to do it good.
+All we want is that its masters shall remember we're human flesh and
+blood; that we're as much entitled to good food and drink on sea as on
+land; and that, if we risk our lives and shed our blood, we ought to
+have some share in the spoils. We're a great country and we're a great
+people, but, by God, we're not good to our own! Look at them there."
+
+He turned and waved a hand to the bowels of the ship where sailors
+traded with the slop-sellers, or chaffered with women, or sat in groups
+and sang, or played rough games which had no vital meaning; while here
+and there in groups, with hands gesticulating, some fanatics declared
+their principles. And the principles of every man in the Nore fleet so
+far were embraced in the four words--wages, food, drink, prize-money.
+
+Presently Ferens stopped short. "Listen!" he said.
+
+There was a cry from the ship's side not far away, and then came little
+bursts of cheering.
+
+"By Heaven, it's the Delegates comin' here!" he said. He held up a
+warning palm, as though commanding silence, while he listened intently.
+"Yes, it's the Delegates. Now look at that crowd of seamen!" He swung
+his hand towards the bowels of the ship. Scores of men were springing to
+their feet. Presently there came a great shouting and cheers, and then
+four new faces appeared on deck. They were faces of intelligence, but
+one of them had the enlightened look of leadership.
+
+"By Judas, it's our leader, Richard Parker!" declared Ferens.
+
+What Dyck now saw was good evidence of the progress of the agitation.
+There were officers of the Ariadne to be seen, but they wisely took no
+notice of the breaches of regulation which followed the arrival of the
+Delegates. Dyck saw Ferens speak to Richard Parker after the men had
+been in conference with Parker and the Delegates, and then turn towards
+himself. Richard Parker came to him.
+
+"We are fellow countrymen," he said genially. "I know your history.
+We are out to make the navy better--to get the men their rights. I
+understand you are with us?"
+
+Dyck bowed. "I will do all possible to get reforms in wages and food put
+through, sir."
+
+"That's good," said Parker. "There are some petitions you can draft,
+and some letters also to the Admiralty and to the Houses of Lords and
+Commons."
+
+"I am at your service," said Dyck.
+
+He saw his chance to secure influence on the Ariadne, and also to do
+good to the service. Besides, he felt he might be able to check the
+worst excesses of the agitation, if he got power under Parker. He was
+free from any wish for mutiny, but he was the friend of an agitation
+which might end as successfully as the trouble at Spithead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+
+A fortnight later the mutiny at the Nore shook and bewildered the
+British Isles. In the public journals and in Parliament it was declared
+that this outbreak, like that at Spithead, was due partly to political
+strife, but more extensively to agents of revolution from France and
+Ireland.
+
+The day after Richard Parker visited the Ariadne the fleet had been put
+under the control of the seamen's Delegates, who were men of standing
+in the ships, and of personal popularity. Their first act was to declare
+that the fleet should not leave port until the men's demands were
+satisfied.
+
+The King, Prime Minister, and government had received a shock greater
+than that which had come with the announcement of American independence.
+The government had armed the forts at Sheerness, had sent troops and
+guns to Gravesend and Tilbury, and had declared war upon the rebellious
+fleet.
+
+At the head of the Delegates, Richard Parker, with an officer's
+knowledge, became a kind of bogus admiral, who, in interview with the
+real admirals and the representatives of the Admiralty Board, talked
+like one who, having power, meant to use it ruthlessly. The government
+had yielded to the Spithead mutineers, giving pardon to all except the
+ringleaders, and granting demands for increased wages and better food,
+with a promise to consider the question of prize-money; but the Nore
+mutineers refused to accept that agreement, and enlarged the Spithead
+demands. Admiral Buckner arrived on board his flag-ship, the Sandwich,
+without the deference due to an admiral, and then had to wait three
+hours for Parker and the Delegates on the quarter-deck. At the interview
+that followed, while apologizing to the admiral for his discourtesy,
+Parker wore his hat as quasi-admiral of the fleet. The demands of the
+Delegates were met by reasoning on the part of Buckner, but without
+effect: for the seamen of the Nore believed that what Spithead could get
+by obstinacy the Nore could increase by contumacy; and it was their firm
+will to bring the Lords of the Admiralty to their knees.
+
+The demands of the Nore Delegates, however, were rejected by the
+Admiralty, and with the rejection two regiments of militia came from
+Canterbury to reinforce the Sheerness garrison. The mutineers were
+allowed to parade the town, so long as their conduct was decent, as
+Admiral Buckner admitted it to be; but Parker declared that the presence
+of the militia was an insult to the seamen in the Nore fleet.
+
+Then ensued the beginning of the terror. When Buckner presented the
+Admiralty's refusal to deal with the Delegates, there came quick
+response. The reply of the mutineers was to row into Sheerness harbour
+and take away with them eight gunboats lying there, each of which fired
+a shot at the fort, as if to announce that the mutineers were now the
+avowed enemies of the government.
+
+Thereupon the rebels ordered all their ships together at the Great Nore,
+ranging them into two crescents, with the newly acquired gunboats at the
+flanks. The attitude of the authorities gave the violent mutineers their
+opportunity. Buckner's flag was struck from the mainmast-head of the
+Sandwich, and the red flag was hoisted in its place.
+
+The Delegates would not accept an official pardon for their mutiny
+through Buckner. They demanded a deputation from the Admiralty, Parker
+saying that no accommodation could occur without the appearance of
+the Lords of the Admiralty at the Nore. Then followed threatening
+arrangements, and the Delegates decided to blockade the Thames and the
+Medway.
+
+It was at this time that Dyck Calhoun--who, by consent of Richard
+Parker, had taken control of the Ariadne--took action which was to alter
+the course of his own life and that of many others.
+
+Since the beginning of the mutiny he had acted with decision, judgment,
+and strength. He had agreed to the Ariadne joining the mutinous ships,
+and he had skilfully constructed petitions to the Admiralty, the House
+of Commons, and the King. His habit of thought, his knowledge of life,
+made him a power. He believed that the main demands of the seamen were
+just, and he made a useful organization to enforce them. It was only
+when he saw the mutineers would not accept the terms granted to the
+Spithead rebels that a new spirit influenced him.
+
+He had determined to get control of the Ariadne. His gift as a speaker
+had conquered his fellow-sailors, and the fact that he was an ex-convict
+gave them confidence that he was no friend of the government.
+
+One of the first things he did, after securing his own pre-eminence on
+the ship, was to get the captain and officers safely ashore. This he did
+with skill, and the crew of the ship even cheered them as they left.
+
+None of the regular officers of the Ariadne were left upon her,
+except Greenock, the master of the ship, whose rank was below that of
+lieutenant, and whose duties were many and varied under the orders of
+the captain. Greenock chose to stay, though Dyck said he could go if he
+wished. Greenock's reply was that it was his duty to stay, if the ship
+was going to remain at sea, for no one else could perform his duties or
+do his work.
+
+Then, by vote, Dyck became captain of the ship. He did not, however,
+wear a captain's uniform--blue coat, with white cuffs, flat
+gold buttons; with lace at the neck, a white-sleeved waistcoat,
+knee-breeches, white silk stockings, and a three-cornered black hat
+edged with gold lace and ornamented with a cockade; with a black cravat,
+a straight dress sword, a powdered cue tied with a black-silk ribbon,
+and epaulets of heavy gold stuff completing the equipment. Dyck, to the
+end of his career at sea, wore only the common seaman's uniform.
+
+Dyck would not have accepted the doubtful honour had he not had long
+purposes in view. With Ferens, Michael Clones, and two others whom
+Ferens could trust, a plan was arranged which Dyck explained to his
+fellow-seamen on the Ariadne.
+
+"We've come to the parting of the ways, brothers," he said. "We've all
+become liable to death for mutiny. The pardon offered by the King has
+been refused, and fresh demands are made. There, I think, a real wrong
+has been done by our people. The Ariadne is well supplied with food and
+water. It is the only ship with sufficiency. And why? Because at
+the beginning we got provisions from the shore in time; also we got
+permission from Richard Parker to fill our holds from two stopped
+merchant-ships. Well, the rest of the fleet know what our food and drink
+fitment is. They know how safe we are, and to-day orders have come to
+yield our provisions to the rest of the fleet. That is, we, who have
+taken time by the forelock, must yield up our good gettings to bad
+receivers. I am not prepared to do it.
+
+"On shore the Admiralty have stopped the supply of provisions to us and
+to all the fleet. Our men have been arrested at Gravesend, Tilbury, and
+Sheerness. The fleet could not sail now if it wished; but one ship can
+sail, and it is ours. The fleet hasn't the food to sail. On Richard
+Parker's ship, the Sandwich, there is food only for a week. The others
+are almost as bad. We are in danger of being attacked. Sir Erasmus
+Gower, of the Neptune, has a fleet of warships, gunboats, and amateur
+armed vessels getting ready to attack us. The North Sea fleet has come
+to help us, but that doesn't save us. I'll say this--we are loyal men
+in this fleet, otherwise our ships would have joined the enemy in the
+waters of France or Holland. They can't go now, in any case. The men
+have lost heart. Confidence in our cause has declined. The government
+sent Lords of the Admiralty here, and they offered pardon if we accepted
+the terms of the Spithead settlement. We declined the terms. That was a
+bad day for us, and put every one of our heads in a noose.
+
+"For the moment we have a majority in men and ships; but we can't
+renew our food or drink, or ammunition. The end is sure against us. Our
+original agitation was just; our present obduracy is madness. This ship
+is suspected. It is believed by the rest of the fleet--by ships like the
+Invincible--that we're weak-kneed, selfish, and lacking in fidelity to
+the cause. That's not true; but we have either to fight or to run, and
+perhaps to do both.
+
+"Make no mistake. The government are not cowards; the Admiralty are
+gentlemen of determination. If men like Admiral Howe support the
+Admiralty--Howe, one of the best friends the seaman ever had--what do
+you think the end will be? Have you heard what happened at Spithead? The
+seamen chivvied Admiral Alan Gardner and his colleagues aboard a ship.
+He caught hold of a seaman Delegate by the collar and shook him.
+They closed in on him. They handled him roughly. He sprang on the
+hammock-nettings, put the noose of the hanging-rope round his neck, and
+said to the men who advanced menacingly:
+
+"'If you will return to your duty, you may hang me at the yard-arm!'
+
+"That's the kind of stuff our admirals are made of. We have no quarrel
+with the majority of our officers. They're straight, they're honest,
+and they're true to their game. Our quarrel is with Parliament and the
+Admiralty; our struggle is with the people of the kingdom, who have
+not seen to it that our wrongs are put right, that we have food to eat,
+water to drink, and money to spend."
+
+He waved a hand, as though to sweep away the criticisms he felt must be
+rising against him.
+
+"Don't think because I've spent four years in prison under the sternest
+discipline the world offers, and have never been a seaman before, that
+I'm not fitted to espouse your cause. By heaven, I am--I am--I am--I
+know the wrongs you've suffered. I've smelled the water you drink. I've
+tasted the rotten meat. I've seen the honest seaman who has been for
+years upon the main--I've seen the scars upon his back got from a brutal
+officer who gave him too big a job to do, and flogged him for not doing
+it. I know of men who, fevered with bad food, have fallen, from the
+mainmast-head, or have slipped overboard, glad to go, because of the
+wrongs they'd suffered.
+
+"I'll tell you what our fate will be, and then I'll put a question
+to you. We must either give up our stock of provisions or run for it.
+Parker and the other Delegates proclaim their comradeship; yet they have
+hidden from us the king's proclamation and the friendly resolutions of
+the London merchants. I say our only hope is to escape from the Thames.
+I know that skill will be needed, but if we escape, what then? I say if
+we escape, because, as we sail out, orders will be given for the other
+mutiny ships to attack us. We shall be fired on; we shall risk our
+lives. You've done that before, however, and will do it again.
+
+"We have to work out our own problem and fight our own fight. Well, what
+I want to know is this--are we to give in to the government, or do we
+stand to be hammered by Sir Erasmus Gower? Remember what that means.
+It means that if we fight the government ships, we must either die in
+battle, or die with the ropes round our necks. There is another way.
+I'm not inclined to surrender, or to stand by men who have botched our
+business for us. I'm for making for the sea, and, when I get there, I'm
+for striking for the West Indies, where there's a British fleet fighting
+Britain's enemies, and for joining in and fighting with them. I'm for
+getting out of this river and away from England. It's a bold plan, but
+it's a good one. I want to know if you're with me. Remember, there's
+danger getting out, and there's danger when and if we get out. The other
+ships may pursue us. The Portsmouth fleet may nab us. We may be caught,
+and, if we are, we must take the dose prepared for us; but I'm for
+making a strong rush, going without fear, and asking no favour. I won't
+surrender here; it's too cowardly. I want to know, will you come to the
+open sea with me?"
+
+There were many shouts of assent from the crowd, though here and there
+came a growl of dissent.
+
+"Not all of you are willing to come with me," Dyck continued vigorously.
+"Tell me, what is it you expect to get by staying here? You're famished
+when you're not poisoned; you're badly clothed and badly fed; you're
+kept together by flogging; you're treated worse than a convict in
+jail or a victim in a plague hospital. You're not paid as well as your
+grandfathers were, and you're punished worse. Here, on the Ariadne,
+we're not skulkers. We don't fear our duty; we are loyal men. Many of
+you, on past voyages, fighting the enemy, lived on burgoo and molasses
+only, with rum and foul water to drink. On the other ships there
+have been terrible cruelty and offence. Surgeons have neglected and
+ill-treated sick men and embezzled provisions and drinks intended for
+the invalids. Many a man has died because of the neglect of the ship's
+surgeons; many have been kicked about the head and beaten, and haven't
+dared to go on the sick list for fear of their officers. The Victualling
+Board gets money to supply us with food and drink according to measure.
+They get the money for a full pound and a full gallon, and we get
+fourteen ounces of food and seven pints of liquor, or less. Well, what
+do you say, friends, to being our own Victualling Board out in the open
+sea, if we can get there?
+
+"We may have to fight when we get out; but I'm for taking the Ariadne
+into the great world battle when we can find it. This I want to
+ask--isn't it worth while making a great fight in our own way, and
+showing that British seamen can at once be mutineers and patriots? We
+have a pilot who knows the river. We can go to the West Indian Islands,
+to the British fleet there. It's doom and death to stay here; and it may
+be doom and death to go. If we try to break free, and are fired on, the
+Admiralty may approve of us, because we've broken away from the rest.
+See now, isn't that the thing to do? I'm for getting out. Who's coming
+with me?"
+
+Suddenly a burly sailor pushed forward. He had the head of a viking. His
+eyes were strong with enterprise. He had a hand like a ham, with long,
+hairy fingers.
+
+"Captain," said he, "you've put the thing so there can be only one
+answer to it. As for me, I'm sick of the way this mutiny has been
+bungled from first to last. There's been one good thing about
+it only--we've got order without cruelty, we've rebelled without
+ravagement; but we've missed the way, and we didn't deal with the
+Admiralty commissioners as we ought. So I'm for joining up with the
+captain here"--he waved a hand towards Dyck--"and making for open sea.
+As sure as God's above, they'll try to hammer us; but it's the only
+way."
+
+He held a handkerchief-a dirty, red silk thing. "See," he continued,
+"the wind is right to take us out. The other ships won't know what we're
+going to do until we start. I'm for getting off. I'm a pressed man. I
+haven't seen my girl for five years, and they won't let me free in port
+to go and see her. Nothing can be worse than what we have to suffer now,
+so let's make a break for it. That's what I say. Come, now, lads, three
+cheers for Captain Calhoun!"
+
+A half-hour later, on the captain's deck, Dyck gave the order to pass
+eastward. It was sunset when they started, and they had not gone a
+thousand yards before some of the mutineering ships opened fire on the
+Ariadne. The breeze was good, however, and she sailed bravely through
+the leaden storm. Once twice--thrice she was hit, but she sped on. Two
+men were killed and several were wounded. Sails were torn, and the high
+bulkheads were broken; but, without firing a shot in reply, the Ariadne
+swung clear at last of the hostile ships and reached safe water.
+
+On the edge of the open sea Dyck took stock of the position. The Ariadne
+had been hit several times, and the injury done her was marked. Before
+morning the dead seamen were sunk in watery graves, and the wounded were
+started back to health again. By daylight the Ariadne was well away from
+the land.
+
+The first thing Dyck had done, after escaping from the river, was to
+study the wants of the Ariadne and make an estimate for the future with
+Greenock, the master. He calculated they had food and water enough to
+last for three months, even with liberal provisioning. Going among the
+crew, he realized there was no depression among them; that they seemed
+to care little where they were going. It was, however, quite clear they
+wished to fight--to fight the foes of England.
+
+He knew his task was a hard one, and that all efforts at discipline
+would have dangers. He knew, also, that he could have no authority,
+save personality and success. He set himself, therefore, to win the
+confidence of Greenock and the crew, and he began discipline at once.
+He knew that a reaction must come; that the crew, loose upon their own
+trail, would come to regret the absence of official command. He realized
+that many of them would wish to return to the fleet at the Nore, but
+while the weather was good he did not fear serious trouble. The danger
+would come in rough weather or on a becalmed sea.
+
+They had passed Beachy Head in the mist. They had seen no battle-ship,
+and had sighted no danger, as they made their way westward through the
+Channel. There had been one moment of anxiety. That was when they passed
+Portsmouth, and had seen in the far distance, to the right of them, the
+mastheads of Admiral Gardner's fleet.
+
+It was here that Dyck's orderly, Michael Clones, was useful. He brought
+word of murmuring among the more brutish of the crew, that some of them
+wished to join Gardner's fleet. At this news, Dyck went down among the
+men. It was an unusual thing to do, but it brought matters to an issue.
+
+Among the few dissatisfied sailors was one Nick Swaine, who had been
+the cause of more trouble on the Ariadne than any other. He had a
+quarrelsome mind; he had been influenced by the writings of Wolfe Tone,
+the Irish rebel. One of the secrets of Dyck's control of the crew was
+the fact that he was a gentleman, and was born in the ruling class, and
+this was anathema to Nick Swaine. His view of democracy was ignorance
+controlling ignorance.
+
+By nature he was insolent, but under the system of control pursued by
+the officers of the Ariadne, previous to the mutiny, he had not been
+able to do much. The system had bound him down. He had been the slave of
+habit, custom, and daily duty. His record, therefore, was fairly clean
+until two days after the escape from the Thames and the sighting of the
+Portsmouth fleet. Then all his revolutionary spirit ran riot in him.
+Besides, the woman to whom he had become attached at the Nore had been
+put ashore on the day Dyck gained control. It roused his enmity now.
+
+When Dyck came down, he had the gunners called to him, admonishing them
+that drill must go on steadily, and promising them good work to do. Then
+he turned to the ordinary seamen.
+
+At this moment Nick Swaine strode forward within a dozen feet of Dyck.
+
+"Look there!" he said, and he jerked a finger towards the distant
+Portsmouth fleet. "Look there! You've passed that."
+
+Dyck shrugged a shoulder.
+
+"I meant to pass it," he said quietly.
+
+"Give orders to make for it," said Nick with a sullen eye.
+
+"I shall not. And look you, my man, keep a civil tongue to me, who
+command this ship, or I'll have you put in irons."
+
+"Have me put in irons!" Swaine cried hotly. "This isn't Dublin jail. You
+can't do what you like here. Who made you captain of this ship?"
+
+"Those who made me captain will see my orders carried out. Now, get you
+back with the rest, or I'll see if they still hold good." Dyck waved a
+hand. "Get back when I tell you, Swaine!"
+
+"When you've turned the ship to the Portsmouth fleet I'll get back, and
+not till then."
+
+Dyck made a motion of the hand to some boatswains standing by. Before
+they could arrest him, Swaine flung himself towards Dyck with a knife in
+his hand.
+
+Dyck's hand was quicker, however. His pistol flung out, a shot was
+fired, and the knife dropped from the battered fingers of Nick Swaine.
+
+"Have his wounds dressed, then put him in irons," Dyck commanded.
+
+From that moment, in good order and in good weather, the Ariadne sped on
+her way westward and southward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+
+Perhaps no mutineer in the history of the world ever succeeded, as did
+Dyck Calhoun, in holding control over fellow-mutineers on the journey
+from the English Channel to the Caribbean Sea. As a boy, Dyck had been
+an expert sailor, had studied the machinery of a man-of-war, and his
+love of the sea was innate and deep-seated; but his present success
+was based upon more than experience. Quite apart from the honour of his
+nature, prison had deepened in him the hatred of injustice. In soul he
+was bitter; in body he was healthy, powerful, and sane.
+
+Slowly, sternly, yet tactfully, he had broken down the many customs
+of ship life injurious to the welfare of the men. Under his system the
+sailors had good coffee for breakfast, instead of a horrible mixture
+made of burnt biscuits cooked in foul water. He gave the men pea-soup
+and rice instead of burgoo and the wretched oatmeal mess which was the
+staple thing for breakfast. He saw to it that the meat was no longer a
+hateful, repulsive mass, two-thirds bone and gristle, and before it
+came into the cook's hands capable of being polished like mahogany. He
+threatened the cook with punishment if he found the meals ill-cooked.
+
+In all the journey to the West Indian seas there had been only three
+formal floggings. His attitude was not that of the commander who
+declared:
+
+"I will see the man's backbone, by God!"
+
+He wished to secure discipline without cruelty. His greatest difficulty,
+at the start, was in making lieutenants. That he overcame by appointing
+senior midshipmen before the Ariadne was out of the Channel. He offered
+a lieutenancy to Ferens, who had the courage to decline it.
+
+"Make me purser," remarked Ferens. "Make me purser, and I'll do the job
+justly."
+
+As the purser of the Ariadne had been sent to the sick-bay and was
+likely to die (and did die subsequently), Ferens was put into his
+uniform-three-cornered cocked hat, white knee-breeches, and white
+stockings. The purser of a man-of-war was generally a friend of the
+captain, going with him from ship to ship.
+
+Of the common sailors, on the whole, Dyck had little doubt. He had
+informed them that, whatever happened, they should not be in danger;
+that the ship should not join the West Indian fleet unless every man
+except himself received amnesty. If the amnesty was not granted, then
+one of two things should happen--the ship must make for a South American
+port, or she must fight. Fighting would not frighten these men.
+
+It was rather among the midshipmen that Dyck looked for trouble.
+Sometimes, with only two years' training at Gosport, a youngster became
+a midshipman on first going to sea, and he could begin as early as
+eleven years of age. A second-rate ship like the Ariadne carried
+eighteen midshipmen; and as six lieutenants were appointed from them,
+only twelve remained. From these twelve, in the dingy after-cockpit,
+where the superficial area was not more than twelve square feet; where
+the air was foul, and the bilges reeked with a pestilential stench;
+where the purser's store-room near gave out the smell of rancid butter
+and poisonous cheese; where the musty taint of old ropes came to them,
+there was a spirit of danger.
+
+Dyck was right in thinking that in the midshipmen's dismal berth the
+first flowers of revolt to his rule would bloom.
+
+Sailors, even as low as the pig-sty men, had some idea of fair play; and
+as the weeks that had passed since they left the Thames had given them
+better food and drink, and lessened the severity of those above them,
+real obedience had come.
+
+It was not strange that the ship ran well, for all the officers under
+the new conditions, except Dyck himself, had had previous experience.
+The old lieutenants had gone, but midshipmen, who in any case were
+trained, had taken their places. The rest of the ship's staff were the
+same, except the captain; and as Dyck had made a friend of Greenock
+the master, a man of glumness, the days were peaceful enough during the
+voyage to the Caribbean Sea.
+
+The majority saw that every act of Dyck had proved him just and capable.
+He had rigidly insisted on gun practice; he had keyed up the marines to
+a better spirit, and churlishness had been promptly punished. He was,
+in effect, what the sailors called a "rogue," or a "taut one"--seldom
+smiling, gaunt of face but fearless of eye, and with a body free from
+fatigue.
+
+As the weather grew warmer and the days longer, and they drew near to
+the coast of Jamaica, a stir of excitement was shown.
+
+"You'd like to know what I'm going to do, Michael, I suppose?" said Dyck
+one morning, as he drank his coffee and watched the sun creeping up the
+sky.
+
+"Well, in three days we shall know what's to become of us, and I have
+no doubt or fear. This ship's a rebel, but it's returning to duty.
+We've shown them how a ship can be run with good food and drink and fair
+dealing, and, please God, we'll have some work to do now that belongs to
+a man-of-war!"
+
+"Sir, I know what you mean to do," replied Michael. "You mean to get all
+of us off by giving yourself up."
+
+"Well, some one has to pay for what we've done, Michael." A dark,
+ruthless light came into Dyck's eyes. "Some one's got to pay." A grim
+smile crossed his face. "We've done the forbidden thing; we've mutinied
+and taken to the open sea. We were fired on by the other mutiny ships,
+and that will help our sailors, but it won't help me. I'm the leader. We
+ought, of course, to have taken refuge with the nearest squadron of the
+king's ships. Well, I've run my luck, and I'll have to pay."
+
+He scratched his chin with a thumb-nail-a permanent physical trait. "You
+see, the government has pardoned all the sailors, and will hang only the
+leaders. I expect Parker is hung already. Well, I'm the leader on the
+Ariadne. I'm taking this ship straight to his majesty's West Indian
+fleet, in thorough discipline, and I'll hand it over well-found,
+well-manned, well-officered, on condition that all go free except
+myself. I came aboard a common sailor, a quota man, a prison-bird,
+penniless. Well, have I shown that I can run a ship? Have I learned the
+game of control? During the weeks we've been at sea, bursting along,
+have I proved myself?"
+
+Michael smiled. "What did I say to you the first night on board, sir?
+Didn't I say they'd make an officer of you when they found out what
+brains you had? By St. Patrick, you've made yourself captain with the
+good-will of all, and your iron hand has held the thing together. You've
+got a great head, too, sir."
+
+Dyck looked at him with a face in which the far future showed.
+
+"Michael, I've been lucky. I've had good men about me. God only knows
+what would have happened to me if the master hadn't been what he is--a
+gentleman who knows his job-aye, a gentleman through and through! If he
+had gone against me, Michael"--he flicked a finger to the sky--"well,
+that much for my chances! I'd have been dropped overboard, or stabbed in
+my cabin, as was that famous Captain Pigot, son of an admiral, who had
+as much soul as you'd find in a stone-quarry. When two men had dropped
+from the masts, hurrying to get down because of his threat that the last
+man should be thrashed--when the two men lay smashed to pieces at his
+feet, Pigot said: 'Heave the lubbers overboard.' That night, Michael,
+the seamen rose, crept to his cabin, stabbed him to death, pitched his
+body overboard, put his lieutenants to sea in open boats, and then ran
+away to South America. Well, I've escaped that fate, because this was a
+good ship, and all the officers knew their business, and did it without
+cruelty. I've been well served. It was a great thing making the new
+lieutenants from the midshipmen. There never was a better lot on board a
+ship."
+
+Michael's face clouded. "Sir, that's true. The new lieutenants have
+done their work well, but them that's left behind in the midshipmen's
+berth--do you think they're content? No, sir. The only spot on board
+this ship where there lurks an active spirit against you is in the
+midshipmen's berth. Mischief's there, and that's what's brought me to
+you now."
+
+Dyck smiled. "I know that. I've had my eye on the midshipmen. I've never
+trusted them. They're a hard lot; but if the rest of the ship is with
+me, I'll deal with them promptly. They're not clever or bold enough
+to do their job skilfully. They've got some old hands down
+there--hammock-men, old stagers of the sea that act as servants to them.
+What line do they take?"
+
+Michael laughed softly.
+
+"What I know I've got from two of them, and it is this--the young
+gentlemen'll try to get control of the ship."
+
+The cynicism deepened in Dyck's face.
+
+"Get control of the ship, eh? Well, it'll be a new situation on a king's
+ship if midshipmen succeed where the rest dare not try. Now, mark what
+I'm going to do."
+
+He called, and a marine showed himself.
+
+"The captain's compliments to the master, and his presence here at once.
+Michael," he continued presently, "what fools they are! They're scarcely
+a baker's dozen, and none of them has skill to lead. Why, the humblest
+sailor would have more sense than to start a revolt, the success of
+which depends upon his personal influence, and the failure of which
+must end in his own ruin. Does any one think they're the kind to lead a
+mutiny within a mutiny? Listen to me I'm not cruel, but I'll put an end
+to this plot. We're seven hundred on this ship, and she's a first-class
+sailer. I warrant no ship ever swam the seas that looks better going
+than she does. So we've got to see that her, record is kept clean as a
+mutineer."
+
+At that moment the master appeared. He saluted. "Greenock," said
+Dyck, "I wonder if you've noticed the wind blowing chilly from the
+midshipmen's berth." A lurking devilish humour shot from Greenock's
+eyes.
+
+"Aye, I've smelled that wind."
+
+"Greenock, we're near the West Indian Islands. Before we eat many meals
+we'll see land. We may pass French ships, and we may have to fight.
+Well, we've had a good running, master; so I'll tell you what I mean to
+do."
+
+He then briefly repeated what he had said to Michael, and added
+
+"Greenock, in this last to-do, I shall be the only man in danger. The
+king's amnesty covers every one except the leaders--that lets you off.
+The Delegate of the Ariadne is aboard the Invincible, if he's not been
+hanged. I'm the only one left on the Ariadne. I've had a good time,
+Greenock--thanks to you, chiefly. I think the men are ready for anything
+that'll come; but I also think we should guard against a revolt of
+the midshipmen by healthy discipline now. Therefore I'll instruct the
+lieutenants to spread-eagle every midshipman for twelve hours. There's
+a stiff wind; there's a good stout spray, and the wind and spray should
+cool their hot souls. Meanwhile, though without food, they shall have
+water as they need it. If at the end of the twelve hours any still seems
+to be difficult, give him another twelve. Look!"
+
+He stretched out a hand to the porthole on his right. "Far away in front
+are islands. You cannot see them yet, but those little thickening
+mists in the distance mean land. Those are the islands in front of
+the Windward Passage. I think it would be a good lesson for the young
+gentlemen to be spread-eagled against the mists of their future. It
+shall be' done at once; and pass the word why it's done."
+
+An hour later there was laughter in every portion of the ship, for the
+least popular members of the whole personnel were being dragooned into
+discipline. The sailors had seen individual midshipmen spread-eagled
+and mastheaded, while all save those they could bribe were forbidden to
+bring them drink or food; but here was a whole body of junior officers,
+punished en masse, as it were, lashed to the rigging and taking the wind
+and the spray in their teeth.
+
+Before the day was over, the whole ship was alive with anticipation,
+for, in the far distance, could be seen the dark blue and purplish
+shadows which told of land; and this brought the minds of all to the end
+of their journey, with thoughts of the crisis near.
+
+Word had been passed that all on board were considered safe--all except
+the captain who had manoeuvred them to the entrance of the Caribbean
+Sea. Had he been of their own origin, they would not have placed so much
+credence in the rumour; but coming as he did of an ancient Irish family,
+although he had been in jail for killing, the traditional respect for
+the word of a gentleman influenced them. When a man like Ferens, on the
+one hand, and the mutineer whose fingers had been mutilated by Dyck in
+the Channel, on the other--when these agreed to bend themselves to the
+rule of a usurper, some idea of Calhoun's power may be got.
+
+On this day, with the glimmer of land in the far distance, the charges
+of all the guns were renewed. Also word was passed that at any moment
+the ship must be cleared for action. Down in the cockpit the tables
+were got ready by the surgeon and the loblolly-boys; the magazines were
+opened, and the guards were put on duty.
+
+Orders were issued that none should be allowed to escape active share
+in the coming battle; that none should retreat to the orlop deck or the
+lower deck; that the boys should carry the cartridge-cases handed to
+them from the magazine under the cover of their coats, running hard
+to the guns. The twenty-four-pounders-the largest guns in use at the
+time-the eighteen-pounders, and the twelve-pounder guns were all in good
+order.
+
+The bags of iron balls called grape-shot-the worst of all--varying
+in size from sixteen to nine balls in a bag, were prepared. Then the
+canister, which produced ghastly murder, chain-shot to bring down masts
+and spars, langrel to fire at masts and rigging, and the dismantling
+shot to tear off sails, were all made ready. The muskets for the
+marines, the musketoons, the pistols, the cutlasses, the boarding-pikes,
+the axes or tomahawks, the bayonets and sailors' knives, were placed
+conveniently for use. A bevy of men were kept busy cleaning the round
+shot of rust, and there was not a man on the ship who did not look with
+pride at the guns, in their paint of grey-blue steel, with a scarlet
+band round the muzzle.
+
+To the right of the Ariadne was the coast of Cuba; to the left was the
+coast of Haiti, both invisible to the eye. Although the knowledge that
+they were nearing land had already given the officers and men a feeling
+of elation, the feeling was greatly intensified as they came through the
+Turk Island Passage, which is a kind of gateway to the Windward Passage
+between Cuba and Haiti. The glory of the sunny, tropical world was upon
+the ship and upon the sea; it crept into the blood of every man, and the
+sweet summer weather gave confidence to their minds. It was a day which
+only those who know tropical and semitropical seas can understand. It
+had the sense of soaking luxury.
+
+In his cabin, with the ship's chart on the table before him, Dyck
+Calhoun studied the course of the Ariadne. The wind was fair and good,
+the sea-birds hovered overhead. From a distant part of the ship came the
+sound of men's voices in song. They were singing "Spanish Ladies":
+
+ "We hove our ship to when the wind was sou'west, boys,
+ We hove our ship to for to strike soundings clear;
+ Then we filled our main tops'l and bore right away, boys,
+ And right up the Channel our course did we steer.
+
+ "We'll rant and we'll roar like true British sailors,
+ We'll range and we'll roam over all the salt seas,
+ Until we strike soundings in the Channel of old England
+ From Ushant to Scilly 'tis thirty-five leagues."
+
+Dyck raised his head, and a smile came to his lips.
+
+"Yes, you sing of a Channel, my lads, but it's a long way there, as
+you'll find. I hope to God they give us some fighting!... Well, what is
+it?" he asked of a marine who appeared in his doorway.
+
+"The master of the ship begs to see you, sir," was the reply.
+
+A moment afterwards Greenock entered. He asked Dyck several questions
+concerning the possible fighting, the disposition of ammunition and all
+that, and said at last:
+
+"I think we shall be of use, sir. The ship's all right now."
+
+"As right as anything human can be. I've got faith in my star, master."
+
+A light came into the other man's dour face. "I wish you'd get into
+uniform, sir."
+
+"Uniform? No, Greenock! No, I use the borrowed power, but not the
+borrowed clothes. I'm a common sailor, and I wear the common sailor's
+clothes. You've earned your uniform, and it suits you. Stick to it; and
+when I've earned a captain's uniform I'll wear it. I owe you the success
+of this voyage so far, and my heart is full of it, up to the brim. Hark,
+what's that?"
+
+"By God, it's guns, sir! There's fighting on!"
+
+"Fighting!"
+
+Dyck stood for a minute with head thrust forward, eyes fixed upon the
+distant mists ahead. The rumble of the guns came faintly through the
+air. An exultant look came into his face.
+
+"Master, the game's with us--it is fighting! I know the difference
+between the two sets of guns, English and French. Listen--that quick,
+spasmodic firing is French; the steady-as-thunder is English. Well,
+we've got all sail on. Now, make ready the ship for fighting."
+
+"She's almost ready, sir."
+
+An hour later the light mist had risen, and almost suddenly the Ariadne
+seemed to come into the field of battle. Dyck Calhoun could see the
+struggle going on. The two sets of enemy ships had come to close
+quarters, and some were locked in deadly conflict. Other ships, still
+apart, fired at point-blank range, and all the horrors of slaughter
+were in full swing. From the square blue flag at the mizzen top
+gallant masthead of one of the British ships engaged, Dyck saw that the
+admiral's own craft was in some peril. The way lay open for the Ariadne
+to bear down upon the French ship, engaged with the admiral's smaller
+ship, and help to end the struggle successfully for the British cause.
+
+While still too far away for point-blank range, the Ariadne's guns began
+upon the French ships distinguishable by their shape and their colours.
+Before the first shot was fired, however, Dyck made a tour of the decks
+and gave some word of cheer to the men, The Ariadne lost no time in
+getting into the thick of the fight. The seamen were stripped to the
+waist, and black silk handkerchiefs were tightly bound round their heads
+and over their ears.
+
+What the French thought of the coming of the Ariadne was shown by the
+reply they made presently to her firing. The number of French ships in
+action was greater than the British by six, and the Ariadne arrived just
+when she could be of greatest service. The boldness of her seamanship,
+and the favour of the wind, gave her an advantage which good fortune
+helped to justify.
+
+As she drew in upon the action, she gave herself up to great danger;
+she was coming in upon the rear of the French ships, and was subject
+to fierce attack. To the French she seemed like a fugitive warrior
+returning to his camp just when he was most needed, as was indeed the
+case. Two of her shots settled one of the enemy's vessels; and before
+the others could converge upon her, she had crawled slowly up against
+the off side of the French admiral's ship, which was closely engaged
+with the Beatitude, the British flagship, on the other side.
+
+The canister, chain-shot, and langrel of the French foe had caused much
+injury to the Ariadne, and her canvas was in a sore plight. Fifty of her
+seamen had been killed, and a hundred and fifty were wounded by the time
+she reached the starboard side of the Aquitaine. She would have lost
+many more were it not that her onset demoralized the French gunners,
+while the cheers of the British sailors aboard the Beatitude gave
+confidence to their mutineer comrades.
+
+On his own deck, Dyck watched the progress of the battle with the joy
+of a natural fighter. He had carried the thing to an almost impossible
+success. There had only been this in his favour, that his was an
+unexpected entrance--a fact which had been worth another ship at least.
+He saw his boarders struggle for the Aquitaine. He saw them discharge
+their pistols, and then resort to the cutlass and the dagger; and
+the marines bringing down their victims from the masts of the French
+flag-ship.
+
+Presently he heard the savagely buoyant shouts of the Beatitude men,
+and he realized that, by his coming, the admiral of the French fleet had
+been obliged to yield up his sword, and to signal to his ships--such as
+could--to get away. That half of them succeeded in doing so was because
+the British fleet had been heavily handled in the fight, and would have
+been defeated had it not been for the arrival of the Ariadne.
+
+Never, perhaps, in the history of the navy had British ships clamped
+the enemy as the Aquitaine was clamped by the Beatitude and the Ariadne.
+Certain it is that no admiral of the British fleet had ever to perform
+two such acts in one day as receiving the submission of a French admiral
+and offering thanks to the captain of a British man-of-war whom, while
+thanking, he must at once place under arrest as a mutineer. What might
+have chanced further to Dyck's disadvantage can never be known, because
+there appeared on the deck of the Beatitude, as its captain under the
+rear-admiral, Captain Ivy, who, five years before, had visited Dyck and
+his father at Playmore, and had gone with them to Dublin.
+
+The admiral had sent word to the Ariadne for its captain to come to the
+Beatitude. When the captain's gig arrived, and a man in seaman's clothes
+essayed to climb the side of the flag-ship, he was at first prevented.
+Captain Ivy, however, immediately gave orders for Dyck to be admitted,
+but without honours.
+
+On the deck of the Beatitude, Dyck looked into the eyes of Captain Ivy.
+He saluted; but the captain held out a friendly hand.
+
+"You're a mutineer, Calhoun, but your ship has given us victory. I'd
+like to shake hands with one that's done so good a stroke for England."
+
+A queer smile played about Calhoun's lips.
+
+"I've brought the Ariadne back to the fleet, Captain Ivy. The men have
+fought as well as men ever did since Britain had a navy. I've brought
+her back to the king's fleet to be pardoned."
+
+"But you must be placed under arrest, Calhoun. Those are the
+orders--that wherever the Ariadne should be found she should be seized,
+and that you should be tried by court-martial."
+
+Dyck nodded. "I understand. When did you get word?"
+
+"About forty-eight hours ago. The king's mail came by a fast frigate."
+
+"We took our time, but we came straight from the Channel to find this
+fleet. At the mouth of the Thames we willed to find it, and to fight
+with it--and by good luck so we have done."
+
+"Let me take you to the admiral," said Captain Ivy.
+
+He walked beside Dyck to the admiral's cabin. "You've made a terrible
+mess of things, Calhoun, but you've put a lot right to-day," he said at
+the entrance to the cabin. "Tell me one thing honestly before we part
+now--did you kill Erris Boyne?" Dyck looked at him long and hard.
+
+"I don't know--on my honour I don't know! I don't remember--I was drunk
+and drugged."
+
+"Calhoun, I don't believe you did; but if you did, you've paid the
+price--and the price of mutiny, too." In the clear blue eyes of Captain
+Ivy there was a look of friendliness. "I notice you don't wear uniform,
+Calhoun," he added. "I mean a captain's uniform." Dyck smiled. "I never
+have."
+
+The next moment the door of the admiral's cabin was opened.
+
+"Mr. Dyck Calhoun of the Ariadne, sir," said Captain Ivy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+The admiral's face was naturally vigorous and cheerful, but, as he
+looked at Dyck Calhoun, a steely hardness came into it, and gave a
+cynical twist to the lips. He was a short man, and spare, but his
+bearing had dignity and every motion significance.
+
+He had had his high moment with the French admiral, had given his
+commands to the fleet and had arranged the disposition of the captured
+French ships. He was in good spirits, and the wreckage in the fleet
+seemed not to shake his nerve, for he had lost in men far less than the
+enemy, and had captured many ships--a good day's work, due finally to
+the man in sailor's clothes standing there with Captain Ivy. The admiral
+took in the dress of Calhoun at a glance--the trousers of blue cloth,
+the sheath-knife belt, the stockings of white silk, the white shirt with
+the horizontal stripes, the loose, unstarched, collar, the fine black
+silk handkerchief at the throat, the waistcoat of red kerseymere, the
+shoes like dancing-pumps, and the short, round blue jacket, with the
+flat gold buttons--a seaman complete. He smiled broadly; he liked this
+mutineer and ex-convict.
+
+"Captain Calhoun, eh!" he remarked mockingly, and bowed satirically.
+"Well, you've played a strong game, and you've plunged us into great
+difficulty."
+
+Dyck did not lose his opportunity. "Happily, I've done what I planned
+to do when we left the Thames, admiral," he said. "We came to get the
+chance of doing what, by favour of fate, we have accomplished. Now,
+sir, as I'm under arrest, and the ship which I controlled has done good
+service, may I beg that the Ariadne's personnel shall have amnesty,
+and that I alone be made to pay--if that must be--for the mutiny at the
+Nore."
+
+The admiral nodded. "We know of your breaking away from the mutinous
+fleet, and of their firing on you as you passed, and that is in your
+favour. I can also say this: that bringing the ship here was masterly
+work, for I understand there were no officers on the Ariadne. She always
+had the reputation of being one of the best-trained ships in the navy,
+and she has splendidly upheld that reputation. How did you manage it,
+Mr. Calhoun?"
+
+Dyck briefly told how the lieutenants were made, and how he himself had
+been enormously indebted to Greenock, the master of the ship, and all
+the subordinate officers.
+
+The admiral smiled sourly. "I have little power until I get instructions
+from the Admiralty, and that will take some time. Meanwhile, the Ariadne
+shall go on as she is, and as if she were--and had been from the first,
+a member of my own squadron."
+
+Dyck bowed, explained what reforms he had created in the food and
+provisions of the Ariadne, and expressed a hope that nothing should be
+altered. He said the ship had proved herself, chiefly because of his
+reforms.
+
+"Besides, she's been badly hammered. She's got great numbers of wounded
+and dead, and for many a day the men will be busy with repairs."
+
+"For a man without naval experience, for a mutineer, an ex-convict and a
+usurper, you've done quite well, Mr. Calhoun; but my instructions were,
+if I captured your ship, and you fell into my hands, to try you, and
+hang you."
+
+At this point Captain Ivy intervened.
+
+"Sir," he said, "the instructions you received were general. They could
+not anticipate the special service which the Ariadne has rendered to the
+king's fleet. I have known Mr. Calhoun; I have visited at his father's
+house; I was with him on his journey to Dublin, which was the beginning
+of his bad luck. I would beg of you, sir, to give Mr. Calhoun his parole
+on sea and land until word comes from the Admiralty as to what, in the
+circumstances, his fate shall be."
+
+"To be kept on the Beatitude on parole!" exclaimed the admiral.
+
+"Land or sea, Captain Ivy said. I'm as well-born as any man in the
+king's fleet," declared Dyck. "I've as clean a record as any officer in
+his majesty's navy, save for the dark fact that I was put in prison
+for killing a man; and I will say here, in the secrecy of an admiral's
+cabin, that the man I killed--or was supposed to kill--was a traitor. If
+I did kill him, he deserved death by whatever hand it came. I care not
+what you do with me"--his hands clenched, his shoulders drew up, his
+eyes blackened with the dark fire of his soul--"whether you put me on
+parole, or try me by court-martial, or hang me from the yard-arm. I've
+done a piece of work of which I'm not ashamed. I've brought a mutinous
+ship out of mutiny, sailed her down the seas for many weeks, disciplined
+her, drilled her, trained her, fought her; helped to give the admiral of
+the West Indian squadron his victory. I enlisted; I was a quota man. I
+became a common sailor--I and my servant and friend, Michael Clones. I
+shared the feelings of the sailors who mutinied. I wrote petitions and
+appeals for them. I mutinied with them. Then at last, having been made
+leader of the ship, with the captain and the lieutenants sent safely
+ashore, and disagreeing with the policy of the Delegates in not
+accepting the terms offered, I brought the ship out, commanding it from
+the captain's cabin, and have so continued until to-day. If I'm put
+ashore at Jamaica, I'll keep my parole; if I stay a prisoner here, I'll
+keep my parole. If I've done you service, admiral, be sure of this, it
+was done with clear intent. My object was to save the men who, having
+mutinied and fled from Admiralty control, are subject to capital
+punishment."
+
+"Your thinking came late. You should have thought before you mutinied,"
+was the sharp reply.
+
+"As a common sailor I acted on my conscience, and what we asked for the
+Admiralty has granted. Only by mutiny did the Admiralty yield to our
+demands. What I did I would do again! We took our risks in the Thames
+against the guns that were levelled at us; we've taken our risks down
+here against the French to help save your squadron, and we've done it.
+The men have done it, because they've been loyal to the flag, and from
+first to last set to make the Admiralty and the people know they have
+rights which must be cherished. If all your men were as faithful to the
+Crown as are the men on the Ariadne, then they deserve well of the King.
+But will you put for me on paper the written word that every man now
+aboard the Ariadne shall be held guiltless in the eyes of the admiral
+of this fleet; that the present officers shall remain officers, that the
+reforms I have made shall become permanent? For myself, I care not; but
+for the men who have fought under me, I want their amnesty. And I want
+Michael Clones to be kept with me, and Greenock, the master, and Ferens,
+the purser, to be kept where they are. Admiral, I think you know my
+demands are just. Over there on the Ariadne are a hundred and fifty
+wounded at least, and fifty have been killed. Let the living not
+suffer."
+
+"You want it all on the nail, don't you?"
+
+"I want it at this moment when the men who have fought under me have
+helped to win your battle, sir." There was something so set in Dyck's
+voice that the admiral had a sudden revulsion against him, yet, after a
+moment of thought, he made a sign to Captain Ivy. Then he dictated the
+terms which Dyck had asked, except as to the reforms he had made, which
+was not in his power to do, save for the present.
+
+When the document had been signed by the admiral, Dyck read the contents
+aloud. It embodied nearly all he had asked.
+
+"Now I ask permission for one more thing only, sir--for the new captain
+of the Ariadne to go with me to her, and there I will read this paper
+to the crew. I will give a copy of it to the new captain, whoever he may
+be."
+
+The admiral stood for a moment in thought. Then he said:
+
+"Ivy, I transfer you to the Ariadne. It's better that some one who
+understands, as you do, should be in control after Calhoun has gone.
+Go with him now, and have your belongings sent to you. I appoint you
+temporary captain of the Ariadne, because I think no one could deal
+with the situation there so wisely. Ivy, every ship in the squadron must
+treat the Ariadne respectfully. Within two days, Mr. Calhoun, you shall
+be landed at Jamaica, there to await the Admiralty decree. I will say
+this: that as the sure victory of our fleet has come through you, you
+shall not suffer in my report. Fighting is not an easy trade, and to
+fight according to the rules is a very hard trade. Let me ask you to
+conduct yourself as a prisoner of war on parole."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. A LETTER
+
+With a deep sigh, the planter raised his head from the table where he
+was writing, and looked out upon the lands he had made his own. They
+lay on the Thomas River, a few hours' horseback travelling from Spanish
+Town, the capital, and they had the advantage of a plateau formation,
+with mountains in the far distance and ravines everywhere.
+
+It was Christmas Day, and he had done his duty to his slaves and the
+folk on his plantation. He had given presents, had attended a seven
+o'clock breakfast of his people, had seen festivities of his negroes,
+and the feast given by his manager in Creole style to all who
+came--planting attorneys, buccras, overseers, bookkeepers, the
+subordinates of the local provost-marshal, small planters, and a few
+junior officers of the army and navy.
+
+He had turned away with cynicism from the overladen table, with its
+shoulder of stewed wild boar in the centre; with its chocolate, coffee,
+tea, spruce-beer, cassava-cakes, pigeon-pies, tongues, round of beef,
+barbecued hog, fried conchs, black crab pepper-pod, mountain mullet,
+and acid fruits. It was so unlike what his past had known, so "damnable
+luxurious!" Now his eyes wandered over the space where were the
+grandilla, with its blossom like a passion-flower, the black Tahiti
+plum, with its bright pink tassel-blossom, and the fine mango trees,
+loaded half with fruit and half with bud. In the distance were the
+guinea cornfields of brownish hue, the cotton-fields, the long ranges
+of negro houses like thatched cottages, the penguin hedges, with their
+beautiful red, blue, and white convolvuluses; the lime, logwood,
+and breadfruit trees, the avocado-pear, the feathery bamboo, and the
+jack-fruit tree; and between the mountains and his own sugar-estates,
+negro settlements and pens. He heard the flight of parrots chattering,
+he watched the floating humming-bird, and at last he fixed his eyes upon
+the cabbage tree down in the garden, and he had an instant desire for
+it. It was a natural and human taste--the cabbage from the tree-top
+boiled for a simple yet sumptuous meal.
+
+He liked simplicity. He did not, as so many did in Jamaica, drink claret
+or punch at breakfast soon after sunrise. In a land where all were
+bon-vivants, where the lowest tradesmen drank wine after dinner, and
+rum, brandy and water, or sangaree in the forenoon, a somewhat lightsome
+view of table-virtues might have been expected of the young unmarried
+planter. For such was he who, from the windows of his "castle," saw his
+domain shimmering in the sun of a hot December day.
+
+It was Dyck Calhoun.
+
+With an impatient air he took up the sheets that he had been reading.
+Christmas Day was on his nerves. The whole town of Kingston, with its
+twenty to thirty thousand inhabitants, had but one church. If he entered
+it, even to-day, he would have seen no more than a hundred and fifty to
+two hundred people; mostly mulattoes--"bronze ornaments"--and peasants
+in shag trousers, jackets of coarse blue cloth, and no waistcoats, with
+one or two magistrates, a dozen gentlemen or so, and probably twice
+that number of ladies. It was not an island given over to piety, or to
+religious habits.
+
+Not that this troubled Dyck Calhoun; nor, indeed, was he shocked by
+the fact that nearly every unmarried white man in the island, and many
+married white men, had black mistresses and families born to the black
+women, and that the girls had no married future. They would become the
+temporary wives of white men, to whom they were on the whole faithful
+and devoted. It did not even vex him that a wretched mulatto might be
+whipped in the market-square for laying his hands upon a white man, and
+that if he was a negro-slave he could be shot for the same liberty.
+
+It all belonged to the abnormal conditions of an island where black and
+white were in relations impossible in the countries from which the white
+man had come. It did not even startle Dyck that all the planters, and
+the people generally in the island, from the chief justice and custos
+rotulorum down to the deckswabber, cultivated amplitude of living.
+
+But let Dyck tell his own story. The papers he held were sheets of a
+letter he was writing to one from whom he had heard nothing since the
+night he enlisted in the navy, and that was nearly three years before.
+This was the letter:
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ You will see I address you as you have done me in the two letters I
+ have had from you in the past. You will never read this letter, but
+ I write it as if you would. For you must know I may never hope for
+ personal intercourse with you. I was imprisoned for killing your
+ father, Erris Boyne, and that separates us like an abysss. It
+ matters little whether I killed him or not; the law says I did, and
+ the law has taken its toll of me. I was in prison for four years,
+ and when freed I enlisted in the king's navy, a quota man, with my
+ servant-friend, Michael Clones. That was the beginning of painful
+ and wonderful days for me. I was one of the mutineers of the Nore,
+ and--
+
+Here followed a description of the days he had spent on the Ariadne and
+before, and of all that happened down to the time when he was arrested
+by the admiral in the West Indian Sea. He told how he was sent over to
+the Ariadne with Captain Ivy to read the admiral's letter to the seamen,
+and then, by consent of the admiral, to leave again with Michael
+Clones for Jamaica, where he was set ashore with twenty pounds in his
+pocket--and not on parole, by the admiral's command. Here the letter
+shall again take up the story, and be a narrative of Dyck Calhoun's life
+from that time until this Christmas Day.
+
+ What to do was the question. I knew no one in Jamaica--no one at
+ all except the governor, Lord Mallow, and him I had fought with
+ swords in Phoenix Park five years before. I had not known he was
+ governor here. I came to know it when I first saw him riding over
+ the unpaved street into Kingston from Spanish Town with his suite,
+ ornate with his governorship. He was a startling figure in scarlet,
+ with huge epaulets on his lieutenant-general's uniform, as big a pot
+ as ever boiled on any fire-chancellor, head of the government and of
+ the army, master of the legislature, judging like one o'clock in the
+ court of chancery, controller of the affairs of civil life, and
+ maker of a policy of which he alone can judge who knows what
+ interests clash in the West Indies.
+
+ English, French, Spanish, and Dutch are all hereabout. All struggle
+ for place above the other in the world of commerce and society,
+ though chiefly it is the English versus the French in these days;
+ and the policy of the governor is the policy of the country. He
+ never knows whether there will be a French naval descent or whether
+ the blacks in his own island will do as the blacks in St. Domingo
+ did--massacre the white people in thousands. Or whether the free
+ blacks, the Maroons, who got their freedom by treaty with Governor
+ Trelawney, when the British commander changed hats with Cudjoe, the
+ Maroon chief, as the sealing of the bargain--whether they will rise
+ again, as they before have risen, and bring terror into the white
+ settlement; and whether, in that case, all negro-slaves will join
+ them, and Jamaica become a land of revolution.
+
+ Of what good, then, will be the laws lately passed regulating the
+ control of slaves, securing them rights never given before, even
+ forbidding lashes beyond forty-nine! Of what use, then, the
+ punishment of owners who have ill-used the slaves? The local
+ councils who have power to punish never proceed against white men
+ with rigour; and to preserve a fair balance between the white man up
+ above and the black down below is the responsibility of the fair-
+ minded governor. If, like Mallow, he is not fair-minded, then is
+ the lash the heavier, and the governor has burdens greater than
+ could easily be borne in lands where the climate is more friendly.
+
+ Lord Mallow did not see me when I passed him in the street, but he
+ soon came to know of me from the admiral and Captain Ivy, who told
+ him all my story since I was freed from jail. Then he said I should
+ be confined in a narrow space near to Kingston, and should have no
+ freedom; but the admiral had his way, and I was given freedom of the
+ whole island till word should come from the Admiralty what should be
+ done with me. To the governor's mind it was dangerous allowing me
+ freedom, a man convicted of crime, who had been imprisoned, had been
+ a mutineer, had stolen one of his majesty's ships, and had fled to
+ the Caribbean Sea. He thought I should well be at the bottom of the
+ ocean, where he would soon have put me, I make no doubt, if it had
+ not been for the admiral, and Captain Ivy--you do not know him, I
+ think--who played a good part to me, when men once close friends
+ have deserted me.
+
+ Well, we had, Michael and I, but twenty pounds between us; and if
+ there was not plenty of free food in the island, God knows what
+ would have become of us! But there it was, fresh in every field, by
+ every wayside, at every doorway. We could not starve, or die of
+ thirst, or faint for lack of sleep, since every bush was a bed in
+ spite of the garapatos or wood-ticks, the snore of the tree-toad,
+ the hoarse shriek of the macaw, and the shrill gird of the guinea-
+ fowl. Every bed was thus free, and there was land to be got for a
+ song, enough to grow what would suffice for two men's daily wants.
+ But we did not rest long upon the land--I have it still, land which
+ cost me five pounds out of the twenty, and for the rest there was an
+ old but on the little place--five acres it was, and good land too,
+ where you could grow anything at all. Heaven knows what we might
+ have become in that tiny plantation, for I was sick of life, and the
+ mosquitos and flying ants, and the chattering parroquets, the grim
+ gallinazo, and the quatre, or native bed--a wooden frame and canvas;
+ but one day at Kingston I met a man, one Cassandro Biatt, who had an
+ obsession for adventure, and he spoke to me privately. He said he
+ knew me from people's talk, and would I listen to him? What was
+ there to do? He was a clean-cut rogue, if ever there was one, but
+ a rogue of parts, as he proved; and I lent an ear.
+
+ Now, what think you was his story? Well, but this--that off the
+ coast of Haiti, there was a ship which had been sunk with every man
+ on board, and with the ship was treasure without counting-jewels
+ belonging once to a Spaniard of high place, who was taking them to
+ Paris. His box had been kept in the captain's cabin, and it could
+ be found, no doubt, and brought to the surface. Even if that were
+ not possible, there was plenty of gold on the ship, and every piece
+ of it was good money. There had been searching for the ship, but
+ none had found it; but he, Cassandro Biatt, had sure knowledge, got
+ from an obi-man, of the place where it lay. It would not be an
+ expensive business, but, cheap as it was, he had no means of raising
+ cash for the purpose; while I could, no doubt, raise the needed
+ money if I set about it. That was how he put it to me. Would I do
+ it? It was not with me a case of "no shots left in the locker, no
+ copper to tinkle on a tombstone." I was not down to my last
+ macaroni, or quarter-dollar; but I drank some sangaree and set about
+ to do it. I got my courage from a look towards Rodney's statue in
+ its temple--Rodney did a great work for Jamaica against Admiral de
+ Grasse.
+
+ Why should I tell Biatt the truth about myself? He knew it.
+ Cassandro was an accomplished liar, and a man of merit of his kind.
+ This obi-man's story I have never believed; yet how Biatt came to
+ know where that treasure-ship was I do not know now.
+
+ Yes, out we went through the harbour of Kingston, beyond the
+ splendid defences of Port Royal and the men-of-war there, past the
+ Palisadoes and Rock Fort, and away to the place of treasure-trove.
+ We found it--that lost galleon; and we found the treasure-box of the
+ captain's cabin. We found gold too; but the treasure-box was the
+ chief thing; and we made it ours after many a hard day. Three
+ months it was from the day Biatt first spoke to me to the day when,
+ with an expert diver, we brought the box to the surface and opened
+ it.
+
+ How I induced one of the big men of Jamaica to be banker and skipper
+ for us need not be told; but he is one of whom men have dark
+ sayings--chiefly, I take it, because he does bold, incomprehensible
+ things. That business paid him well, for when the rent of the ship
+ was met, and the few men on it paid--slaves they were chiefly--he
+ pocketed ten thousand pounds, while Biatt and I each pouched forty
+ thousand, and Michael two thousand. Aye, to be sure, Michael was in
+ it! He is in all I do, and is as good as men of ten times his birth
+ and history. Michael will be a rich man one day. In two years his
+ two thousand have grown to four, and he misses no chance.
+
+ But those days when Biatt and I went treasure-ship hunting were not
+ without their trials. If we had failed, then no more could this
+ land have been home or resting-place for us. We should only have
+ been sojourners with no name, in debt, in disgrace, a pair of
+ braggart adventurers, who had worked a master-man of the island for
+ a ship, and money and men, and had lost all except the ship! Though
+ to be sure, the money was not a big thing--a few hundred pounds;
+ but the ship was no flea-bite. It was a biggish thing, for it could
+ be rented to carry sugar--it was, in truth, a sugar-ship of four
+ hundred tons--but it never carried so big a cargo of sugar as it did
+ on the day when that treasure-box was brought to the surface of the
+ sea.
+
+ I'm bound to say this--one of the straightest men I ever met, liar
+ withal, was Cassandro Biatt. He took his jewels and vanished up the
+ seas in a flourish. He would not even have another try at the gold
+ in the bowels of the ship.
+
+ "I've got plenty to fill my paunch, and I'll go while I've enough.
+ It's the men not going in time that get left in the end"--that's
+ what he said.
+
+ And he was right; for other men went after the gold and got some of
+ it, and were caught by French and South American pirates and lost
+ all they had gained. Still another group went and brought away ten
+ thousand pounds, and lost it in fighting with Spanish buccaneers.
+ So Biatt was right, and went away content, while I stayed here--
+ because I must--and bought the land and house where I have my great
+ sugar-plantation. It is an enterprise of volume, and all would be
+ well if I were normal in mind and body; but I am not. I have a past
+ that stinks to heaven, as Shakespeare says, and I am an outlaw of
+ the one land which has all my soul and name and heritage. Yes, that
+ is what they have done to me--made a convict, an outlaw of me. I
+ may live--but not in the British Isles; and if any man kills me, he
+ is not liable to the law.
+
+ Men do not treat me badly here, for I have property and money, and
+ this is a land where these two things mean more than anywhere else,
+ even more than in a republic like that where you live. Here men
+ live according to the law of the knife, fork, and bottle, yet
+ nowhere in the world is there deeper national morality or wider
+ faith or endurance. It is a land where the sea is master, where
+ naval might is the chief factor, and weighs down all else.
+
+ Here the navies of the great powers meet and settle their disputes,
+ and every being in the island knows that life is only worth what a
+ hundred-ton brig-of-war permits. I have seen here in Jamaica the
+ off-scourings of the French and Spanish fleets on parole; have seen
+ them entering King's House like loyal citizens; have even known of
+ French prisoners being used as guards at the entrance of King's
+ House, and I have informed the chief justice of dismal facts which
+ ought to have moved him. But what can you expect of a chief justice
+ who need not be a lawyer, as this one is not, and has other means of
+ earning income which, though not disloyal, are lowering to the
+ status of a chief justice? And not the chief justice alone. I have
+ seen French officers entertained at Government House who were guilty
+ of shocking inhumanities and cruelties. The governor, Lord Mallow,
+ is much to blame. On him lies the responsibility; to him must go
+ the discredit. For myself, I feel his enmity on every hand. I
+ suffer from his suggestions; I am the victim of his dark moods.
+
+ If I want a concession from a local council, his hand is at work
+ against me; if I see him in the street, I get a courtesy tossed, as
+ you would toss a bone to a dog. If I appear at the king's ball,
+ which is open to all on the island who are respectable, I am treated
+ with such disdain by the viceroy of the king that all the island is
+ agog. I went one day to the king's ball the same as the rest of the
+ world, and I went purposely in dress contrary to the regulations.
+ Here was the announcement of the affair in the Royal Gazette, which
+ was reproduced in the Chronicle, the one important newspaper in the
+ island:
+
+ KING'S HOUSE,
+ October 27th, 1797.
+
+ KING'S BALL.
+
+ There will be a Ball given by His Honour the Lieutenant-
+ Governor, on Tuesday evening, the 6th day of December next,
+ in honour of
+
+ HIS MAJESTY'S BIRTHDAY.
+
+ To prevent confusion, Ladies and Gentlemen are requested to
+ order their carriages to come by the Old Court House, and go
+ off by the Long Room.
+
+ N.B.--No gentlemen can possibly be admitted in boots, or
+ otherwise improperly dressed.
+
+ Well, in a spirit of mutiny--in which I am, in a sense, an expert--
+ I went in boots and otherwise "improperly dressed," for I wore my
+ hair in a queue, like a peasant. What is more, I danced with a
+ negress in the great quadrille, and thereby offended the governor
+ and his lady aunt, who presides at his palace. It matters naught to
+ me. On my own estate it was popular enough, and that meant more to
+ me than this goodwill of Lord Mallow.
+
+ He does not spare me in his recitals to his friends, who carry his
+ speech abroad. His rancour against me is the greater, I know,
+ because of the wealth I got in the treasure-ship, to prevent which
+ he tried to prohibit my leaving the island, through the withholding
+ of a leave-ticket to me. His argument to the local authorities was
+ that I had no rights, that I am a murderer and a mutineer, and
+ confined to the island, though not on parole. He almost succeeded;
+ but the man to whom I went, the big rich man intervened,
+ successfully--how I know not--and I was let go with my permit-
+ ticket.
+
+ What big things hang on small issues! If my Lord Mallow had
+ prevented me leaving the island, I shouldn't now own a great
+ plantation and three hundred negroes. I shouldn't be able to pay
+ my creditors in good gold Portuguese half-johannes and Spanish
+ doubloons, and be free of Spanish silver, and give no heed to the
+ bitt, which, as you perhaps know, is equal to fivepence in British
+ money, such as you and I used to spend when you were Queen of
+ Ireland and I was your slave.
+
+ Then I worshipped you as few women have been worshipped in all the
+ days of the world--oh, cursed spite of life and time that I should
+ have been jailed for killing your bad father! Aye, he was a bad
+ man, and he is better in his grave than out of it, but it puts a
+ gulf between you and me which nothing will ever bridge--unless it
+ should some day be known I did not kill him, and then, no doubt, it
+ will be too late.
+
+ On my soul, I don't believe I put my sword into him; but if I did,
+ he well deserved it, for he was worse than faithless to your mother,
+ he was faithless to his country--he was a traitor! I did not tell
+ that story of his treachery in court--I did not tell it because of
+ you. You did not deserve such infamy, and the truth came not out at
+ the trial. I, in my view, dared not, lest it might injure you, and
+ you had suffered enough--nay, more than enough--through him.
+
+ I wonder how you are, and if you have changed--I mean in appearance.
+ I am sure you are not married; I should have felt it in my bones,
+ if you were. No, no, my sweet lass, you are not married. But
+ think--it is more than seven long years since we met on the hills
+ above Playmore, and you put your hand in mine and said we should be
+ friends for all time. It is near three years since a letter came to
+ me from you, and in the time I have made progress.
+
+ I did not go to the United States, as you asked me to do. Is it not
+ plain I could not? My only course was to avoid you. You see, your
+ mother knows the truth--knows that I was jailed for killing your
+ father and her divorced husband. Therefore, the only way to do was
+ as I did. I could not go where you were. There should be hid from
+ you the fact that Erris Boyne was a traitor. This is your right, in
+ my mind. Looking back, I feel sure I could have escaped jail if I
+ had told what I knew of Erris Boyne; and perhaps it would have been
+ better, for I should, no doubt, have been acquitted. Yet I could
+ not have gone to you, for I am not sure I did not kill him.
+
+ So it is best as it is. We are as we are, and nothing can make all
+ different for us. I am a dissolute planter of Jamaica who has
+ snatched from destiny a living and some riches. I have a bad name
+ in the world. Yet by saving the king's navy from defeat out here I
+ did a good turn for my country and the empire.
+
+ So much to the good. It brought me freedom from the rope and pardon
+ for my chief offence. Then, in company with a rogue, I got wealth
+ from the depths of the sea, and here I am in the bottom of my
+ luxury, drunken and obscene--yes, obscene, for I permit my overseers
+ and my manager to keep black women and have children by them. That
+ I do not do so myself is no virtue on my part, but the virtue of a
+ girl whom I knew in Connemara. I fill myself with drink. I have a
+ bottle of madeira or port every night, and pints of beer or claret.
+ I am a creature of low habits, a man sodden with self-indulgence.
+ And when I am in drink, no slaver can be more cruel and ruthless.
+
+ Yet I am moderate in eating. The meals that people devour here
+ almost revolt me. They eat like cormorants and drink like dry
+ ground; but at my table I am careful, save with the bottle. This
+ is a land of wonderful fruits, and I eat in quantities pineapple,
+ tamarind, papaw, guava, sweet-sop, star-apple, granadilla, hog-plum,
+ Spanish-gooseberry, and pindal-nut. These are native, but there are
+ also the orange, lemon, lime, shaddock, melon, fig, pomegranate,
+ cinnamon, and mango, brought chiefly from the Spanish lands of South
+ America. The fruit-market here is good, Heaven knows, and I have my
+ run of it. Perhaps that is why my drink does not fatten me greatly.
+ Yes, I am thin--thinner even than when you saw me last. How
+ wonderful a day it was! You remember it, I'm sure.
+
+ We stood on the high hills, you and I, looking to the west. It was
+ a true Irish day. A little in front of us, in the sky, were great
+ clusters of clouds, and beyond them, as far as eye could see, were
+ hills so delicately green, so spotted with settlements, so misty and
+ full of glamour, and so cheerful with the western light. And the
+ storm broke--do you remember it? It broke, but not on us. It fell
+ on the middle of the prospect before us, and we saw beyond it the
+ bright area of sunny country where men work and prophesy and slave,
+ and pray to the ancient gods and acclaim the saints, and die and
+ fructify the mould; where such as Christopher Dogan live, and men a
+ thousand times lower than he. Christopher came to the jail the day
+ I was released--with Michael Clones he came. He read me my bill of
+ life's health--what was to become of me--the black and the white of
+ it, the good and the bad, the fair and the foul. Even the good
+ fortune of the treasure from the sea he foresaw, and much else that
+ has not come to me, and, as I think, will never come; for it is too
+ full a cup for me so little worthy of it.
+
+ It seems strange to me that I am as near to the United States here
+ in Jamaica, or almost as near, as one in London is to one in Dublin;
+ and yet one might as well be ten thousand leagues distant for all it
+ means to her one loves in the United States. Yes, dear Sheila, I
+ love you, and I would tear out the heart of the world for you. I
+ bathe my whole being in your beauty and your charm. I hunger for
+ you--to stand beside you, to listen to your voice, to dip my prison
+ fingers into the pure cauldron of your soul and feel my own soul
+ expand. I wonder why it is that to-day I feel more than I ever felt
+ before the rare splendour of your person.
+
+ I have always admired you and loved you, always heard you calling
+ me, as if from some sacred corner of a perfect world. Is it that
+ yesterday's dissipation--yes, I was drunk yesternight, drunk in a
+ new way. I was drunk with the thought of you, the longing for you.
+ I picked a big handful of roses, and in my mind gave them into your
+ hands. And I thought you smiled and said:
+
+ "Well done, good and faithful servant. Enter Paradise." So I
+ followed you to your home there in the Virginian country. It was a
+ dream, all except the roses, and those I laid in front of the box
+ where I keep your letters and a sketch I made of you when we were
+ young and glad--when I was young and glad. For I am an old man,
+ Sheila, in all that makes men old. My step is quick still, my eye
+ is sharp, and my brain beats fast, but my heart is ancient. I am an
+ ancient of days, without hope or pleasure, save what pleasure comes
+ in thinking of one whom I worship, yet must ever worship from afar.
+
+ I wonder why I seem to feel you very near to-day! Perhaps it's
+ because 'tis Christmas Day. I am not a religious man but Christmas
+ is a day of memories.
+
+ Is it because of the past in Ireland? Am I only--God, am I only to
+ be what I am for the rest of my days, a planter denied the pleasure
+ of home by his own acts! Am I only a helpless fragment of a world
+ of lost things?
+
+ I have no friends--but yes, I have. I have Michael Clones and
+ Captain Ivy, though he's far away-aye, he's a friend of friends, is
+ Captain Ivy. These naval folk have had so much of the world, have
+ got the bearings of so many seas, that they lose all littleness, and
+ form their own minds. They are not like the people who knew me in
+ Ireland--the governor here is one of them--and who believe the worst
+ of me. The governor--faugh, he was made for bigger and better
+ things! He is one of the best swordsmen in the world, and he is
+ out against me here as if I was a man of importance, and not a
+ commonplace planter on an obscure river. I have no social home
+ life, and yet I live in what is called a castle. A Jamaica castle
+ has none of the marks of antiquity, chivalry, and distinction which
+ castles that you and I know in the old land possess.
+
+ What is my castle like? Well, it is a squarish building, of
+ bungalow type, set on a hill. It has stories and an attic, with a
+ jutting dormer-window in the front of the roof; and above the lowest
+ story there is a great verandah, on which the livingrooms and
+ bedrooms open. It is commodious, and yet from a broad standpoint it
+ is without style or distinction. It has none of those Corinthian
+ pillars which your homesteads in America have. Yet there is in it a
+ simple elegance. It has no carpets, but a shining mahogany floor,
+ for there are few carpets in this land of heat. It is a place where
+ music and mirth and family voices would be fitting; but there are no
+ family voices here, save such as speak with a negro lisp and
+ oracularly.
+
+ I can hear music at this moment, and inside my castle. It comes
+ from the irrepressible throats of my cook and my housemaid, who have
+ more joy in the language of the plantation than you could have in
+ the songs of St. Angelus. The only person in this castle out of
+ spirits is its owner.
+
+ My castle is embowered in a loose grove of palms and acacias,
+ pimento shrubs, splendid star-apples, and bully-trees, with wild
+ lemon, mahogany, dogwood, Jerusalem-thorn, and the waving plumes of
+ bamboo canes. There is nothing British in it--nothing at all. It
+ stands on brick pillars, is reached by a stair of marble slabs, and
+ has a great piazza on the front. You enter a fine, big hall, dark-
+ you will understand that, though it is not so hot in Virginia, for
+ the darkness makes for coolness. From the hall the bedrooms open
+ all round. We are not so barbaric here as you might think, for my
+ dining-room, which lies beyond the hall, with jalousies or movable
+ blinds, exposed to all the winds, is comfortable, even ornate.
+ There you shall see waxlights on the table, and finger-glasses with
+ green leaves, and fine linen and napkins, and plenty of silver--even
+ silver wine-coolers, and beakers of fame and beauty, and flowers,
+ flowers everywhere, and fruit of exquisite charm. I have to live
+ in outward seeming as do my neighbours, even to keeping a black
+ footman, gorgeously dressed, with bare legs.
+
+ Here at my window grows a wild aloe, and it is in flower. Once only
+ in fifty years does this aloe flower, and I pick its sweet verdure
+ now and offer it to you. There it lies, beside this letter that I
+ am writing. It is typical of myself, for only once has my heart
+ flowered, and it will be only once in fifty years. The perfume of
+ the flower is like an everlasting bud from the last tree of Time.
+ See, my Sheila, your drunken, reckless lover pulls this sweet
+ offering from his garden and offers it to you. He has no virtues;
+ and yet he would have been a thousand times worse, if you had not
+ come into his life. He had in him the seeds of trouble, the
+ sproutings of shame, for even in the first days of his love there in
+ Dublin he would not restrain himself. He drank, he played cards, he
+ fought and went with bad company--not women, never that; but he kept
+ the company of those through whom he came at last to punishment for
+ manslaughter.
+
+ Yet, without you, who can tell what he might have been? He might
+ have fallen so low that not the wealth of ten thousand treasure-
+ boxes could give him even the appearance of honesty. And now he
+ offers you what you cannot accept--can never accept--a love as deep
+ as the life from which he came; a love that would throttle the world
+ for you, that would force the doors of hell to bring you what you
+ want.
+
+ What do you want? I know not. Perhaps you have inherited the vast
+ property to which you were the heir. If you have, what can you want
+ that you have not means to procure? Ah, I have learned one thing,
+ my friend 'one can get nearly everything with money. It is the
+ hidden machinery which makes the world of success go round. With
+ brains, you say? Yes, money and brains, but without the money
+ brains seldom win alone. Do not I know? When I was in prison, with
+ estate vanished and home gone and my father in his grave, who was
+ concerned about me?
+
+ Only the humblest of all God's Irish people; but with them I have
+ somehow managed to win back lost ground. I am a stronger man than I
+ was in all that men count of value in the world. I have an estate
+ where I work like any youth who has everything before him. I have
+ nothing before me, yet I shall go on working to the end. Why?
+ Because I have some faculties which are more than bread and butter,
+ and I must give them opportunity.
+
+ Yet I am not always sane. Sometimes I feel I could march out and
+ sweep into the sea one of the towns that dot the coast of this
+ island. I have the bloody thirst, as said the great Spanish
+ conquistador. I would like--yes, sometimes I would like to sweep
+ to a watery grave one of the towns that are a glory to this island,
+ as Savanna la Mar was swept to oblivion in the year 1780 by a
+ hurricane. You can still see the ruins of the town at the bottom of
+ the sea--I have sailed over it in what is now the harbour, and there
+ beneath, on the deep sands, lost to time and trouble, is the slain
+ and tortured town of Savanna la Mar. Was the Master of the World
+ angry that day when, with a besom of wind and a tidal wave, He swept
+ the place into the sea? Or was it some devil's work while the Lord
+ of All slept? As the Spanish say, Quien sabe?
+
+ Then there was that other enormous incident which made a man to be
+ swallowed by an earthquake, then belched out again into the sea and
+ picked up and restored to life again, and to live for many years.
+ Indeed, yes, it is so. His tombstone may be seen even at this day
+ at Green Bay, Kingston. His name was Lewis Galdy, and he is held in
+ high repute in this land.
+
+ I feel sometimes as Beelzebub may feel, and I long to do what
+ Beelzebub might do as part of his mission. Sometimes a madness
+ of revolt comes over me, and I long to ravage all the places I see,
+ all the people I know--or nearly all. Why I do not have negroes
+ thrashed and mutilated, as some do, I know not. Over against the
+ southern shore in the parish of St. Elizabeth is an estate called
+ Salem, owned, it is said, by an American, where the manager does
+ such things. I am told that savageries are found there. There
+ are too many absentee owners of land in this island, and the wrongs
+ done by agents who have no personal honour at stake are all too
+ plentiful. If I could, I would have no slavery, would set all the
+ blacks free, making full compensation to the owners, and less to the
+ absentee owners.
+
+ I look out on a world of summer beauty and of heat. I see the sheep
+ in hundreds on the far hills of pasturage--sheep with short hair,
+ small and sweet as any that ever came from the South Downs. I see
+ the natives in their Madras handkerchiefs. I see upon the road some
+ planter in his ketureen--a sort of sedan chair; I see a negro
+ funeral, with its strange ceremony and its gumbies of African drums.
+ I see yam-fed planters, on their horses, making for the burning,
+ sandy streets of the capital. I see the Scots grass growing five
+ and six feet high, food unsurpassed for horses--all the foliage too
+ --beautiful tropical trees and shrubs, and here and there a huge
+ breeding-farm. Yet I know that out beyond my sight there is the
+ region known as Trelawney, and Trelawney Town, the headquarters of
+ the Maroons, the free negroes--they who fled after the Spanish had
+ been conquered and the British came, and who were later freed and
+ secured by the Trelawney Treaty. I know that now they are ready to
+ rise, that they are working among the slaves; and if they rise the
+ danger is great to the white population of the island, who are
+ outnumbered ten to one.
+
+ The governor has been warned, but he gives no heed, or treats it all
+ lightly, pointing out how few the Maroons are. He forgets that a
+ few determined men can demoralize a whole state, can fight and
+ murder and fly to dark coverts in the tropical woods, where they
+ cannot be tracked down and destroyed; and, if they have made
+ supporters of the slaves, what consequences may not follow!
+
+ What do the Maroons look like? They are ferocious and isolated,
+ they are proud and overbearing, they are horribly cruel, but they
+ are potent, and are difficult to reach. They are not small and
+ meagre, but are big, brawny fellows, clothed in wide duck trousers
+ and shirts, and they are well-armed--cutlass, powder-horn,
+ haversack, sling, shot-gun, and pouch for ball. They dress as the
+ country requires, and they are strong fighters against our soldiers
+ who are burdened with heavy muskets, and who defy the climate, with
+ their stuffed coats, their weighty caps, and their tight cross-
+ belts. The Maroons are not to be despised. They have brains, the
+ insolence of freedom among natives who are not free, and vast
+ cruelty. They can be mastered and kept in subjection, can be made
+ allies, if properly handled; but Lord Mallow goes the wrong way
+ about it all. He permits things that inflame the Maroons.
+
+ One thing is clear to me--only by hounds can these people be
+ defeated. So sure am I upon this point, that I have sent to Cuba
+ for sixty hounds, with which, when the trouble comes--and it is not
+ far off--we shall be able to hunt the Maroons with the only weapon
+ they really fear--the dog's sharp tooth. It may be the governor may
+ intervene on the arrival of the dogs; but I have made friends with
+ the provost-marshal-general and some members of the Jamaica
+ legislature; also I have a friend in the deputy of the provost-
+ marshal-general in my parish of Clarendon here, and I will make a
+ good bet that the dogs will be let come into the island, governor
+ or no governor.
+
+ When one sets oneself against the Crown one must be sure of one's
+ ground, and fear no foe, however great and high. Well, I have won
+ so far, and I shall win in the end. Mallow should have some respect
+ for one that beat him at Phoenix Park with the sword; that beat him
+ when he would have me imprisoned here; that beat him in the matter
+ of the ship for Haiti, and that will beat him on every hazard he
+ sets, unless he stoops to underhand acts, which he will not do.
+ That much must be said for him. He plays his part in no small way,
+ and he is more a bigot and a fanatic loyalist than a rogue.
+ Suppose--but no, I will not suppose. I will lay my plans, I will
+ keep faith with people here who trust me, and who know that if I am
+ stern I am also just, and I will play according to the rules made by
+ better men than myself.
+
+But what is this I see? Michael Clones--in his white jean waistcoat,
+white neckcloth and trousers, and blue coat--is coming up the drive in
+hot haste, bearing a letter. He rides too hard. He has never carried
+himself easily in this climate. He treats it as if it was Ireland. He
+will not protect himself, and, if penalty followed folly, should now be
+in his grave. I like you, Michael. You are a boon, but--
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+
+Dyck Calhoun's letter was never ended. It was only a relic of the years
+spent in Jamaica, only a sign of his well-being, though it gave no real
+picture of himself. He did not know how like a tyrant he had become in
+some small ways, while in the large things he remained generous, urbane,
+and resourceful. He was in appearance thin, dark-favoured, buoyant in
+manner, and stern of face, with splendid eyes. Had he dwelt on Olympus,
+he might have been summoned to judge and chastise the sons of men.
+
+When Michael Clones came to the doorway, Dyck laid down his quill-pen
+and eyed the flushed servant in disapproval.
+
+"What is it, Michael? Wherefore this starkness? Is some one come from
+heaven?"
+
+"Not precisely from heaven, y'r honour, but--"
+
+"But--yes, Michael! Have done with but-ing, and come to the real
+matter."
+
+"Well, sir, they've come from Virginia."
+
+Dyck Calhoun slowly got to his feet, his face paling, his body
+stiffening. From Virginia! Who should be come from Virginia, save she to
+whom he had just been writing?
+
+"Who has come from Virginia?" He knew, but he wanted it said.
+
+"Sure, you knew a vessel came from America last night. Well, in her was
+one that was called the Queen of Ireland long ago."
+
+"Queen of Ireland--well, what then?" Dyck's voice was tuneless, his
+manner rigid, his eyes burning. "Well, she--Miss Sheila Llyn and her
+mother are going to the Salem Plantation, down by the Essex Valley
+Mountain. It is her plantation now. It belonged to her uncle, Bryan
+Llyn. He got it in payment of a debt. He's dead now, and all his lands
+and wealth have come to her. Her mother, Mrs. Llyn, is with her, and
+they start to-morrow or the next day for Salem. There'll be different
+doings at Salem henceforward, y'r honour. She's not the woman to see
+slaves treated as the manager at Salem treated 'em."
+
+Dyck Calhoun made an impatient gesture at this last remark.
+
+"Yes, yes, Michael. Where are they now?"
+
+"They're at Charlotte Bedford's lodgings in Spanish Town. The governor
+waited on them this morning. The governor sent them flowers and--"
+
+"Flowers--Lord Mallow sent them flowers! Hell's fiend, man, suppose he
+did?"
+
+"There are better flowers here than in any Spanish Town."
+
+"Well, take them, Michael; but if you do, come here again no more while
+you live, for I'll have none of you. Do you think I'm entering the lists
+against the king's governor?"
+
+"You've done it before, sir, and there's no harm in doing it again. One
+good turn deserves another. I've also to tell you, sir, that Lord Mallow
+has asked them to stay at King's House."
+
+"Lord Mallow has asked Americans to stay at King's House!"
+
+"But they're Irish, and he knew them in Ireland, y 'r honour."
+
+"Well, he knew me in Ireland, and I'm proscribed!"
+
+"Ah, that's different, as you know. There's no war on now, and they're
+only good American citizens who own land in this dominion of the king;
+so why shouldn't he give them courtesy?"
+
+"From whom do you get your information?" asked Dyck Calhoun with an air
+of suspicion.
+
+"From Darius Boland, y'r honour," answered Michael, with a smile. "Who
+is Darius Boland, you're askin' in y'r mind? Well, he's the new manager
+come from the Llyn plantations in Virginia; and right good stuff he is,
+with a tongue that's as dry as cut-wheat in August. And there's humour
+in him, plenty-aye, plenty. When did I see him, and how? Well, I saw him
+this mornin', on the quay at Kingston. He was orderin' the porters about
+with an air--oh, bedad, an air! I saw the name upon the parcels--Miss
+Sheila Llyn, of Moira, Virginia, and so I spoke to him. The rest was
+aisy. He looked me up and down in a flash, like a searchlight playin' on
+an enemy ship, and then he smiled. 'Well,' said he, 'who might you be?
+For there's queer folks in Jamaica, I'm told.' So I said I was Michael
+Clones, and at that he doffed his hat and held out a hand. 'Well, here's
+luck,' said he. 'Luck at the very start! I've heard of you from my
+mistress. You're servant to Mr. Dyck Calhoun--ain't that it?' And I
+nodded, and he smiled again--a smile that'd cost money anywhere else
+than in Jamaica. He smiled again, and give a slow hitch to his breeches
+as though they was fallin' down. Why, sir, he's the longest bit of
+man you ever saw, with a pointed beard, and a nose that's as long as a
+midshipman's tongue-dry, lean, and elastic. He's quick and slow all at
+once. His small eyes twinkle like stars beatin' up against bad weather,
+and his skin's the colour of Scots grass in the dead of summer-yaller,
+he'd call it if he called it anything, and yaller was what he called the
+look of the sky above the hills. Queer way of talk he has, that man, as
+queer as--"
+
+"I understand, Michael. But what else? How did you come to talk about
+the affairs of Mrs. and Miss Llyn? He didn't just spit it out, did he?"
+
+"Sure, not so quick and free as spittin', y'r honour; but when he'd
+sorted me out, as it were, he said Miss Llyn had come out here to take
+charge of Salem; her own estate in Virginia bein' in such good runnin'
+order, and her mind bein' active. Word had come of the trouble with
+the manager here, and one of the provost-marshal's deputies had written
+accounts of the flogging and ill-treatment of slaves, and that's why she
+come--to put things right at Salem!"
+
+"To put things wrong in Jamaica, Michael, that's why she's come. To
+loose the ball of confusion and free the flood of tragedy--that's why
+she's come! Man, Michael, you know her history--who she was and what
+happened to her father. Well, do you think there's no tragedy in her
+coming here? I killed her father, they say, Michael. I was punished for
+it. I came here to be free of all those things--lifted out and away from
+them all. I longed to forget the past, which is only shame and torture;
+and here it is all spread out at my door again like a mat, which I must
+see as I go in and out. Essex Valley--why, it's less than a day's ride
+from here, far less than a day's ride! It can be ridden in four or five
+hours at a trot. Michael, it's all a damnable business. And here she is
+in Jamaica with her Darius Boland! There was no talk on Boland's part of
+their coming here, was there Michael?"
+
+"None at all, sir, but there was that in the man's eye, and that in his
+tone, which made me sure he thought Miss Llyn and you would meet."
+
+"That would be strange, wouldn't it, in this immense continent!" Dyck
+remarked cynically.
+
+"She knew I was here before she came?"
+
+"Aye, she knew. She had seen your name in the papers--English and
+Jamaican. She knew you had regained your life and place, and was a man
+of mark here."
+
+"A marked man, you mean, Michael--a man whom the king has had to pardon
+of a crime because of an act done that served the State. I am forbidden
+to return to the British Isles or to the land of my birth, forbidden
+free traffic as a citizen, hammered out of recognition by the strokes of
+enmity. A man of mark, indeed! Aye, with the broad arrow on me, with the
+shame of prison and mutiny on my name!"
+
+"But if she don't believe?"
+
+"If she don't believe! Well, she must be told the truth at last. I
+wonder her mother let her come here. Her mother knew part of the truth.
+She hid it all from the girl--and now they are here! I must see it
+through, but it's a wretched fate, Michael."
+
+"Perhaps her mother didn't know you were here, sir."
+
+Dyck laughed grimly. "Michael, you've a lawyer's mind. Perhaps you're
+right. The girl may have hid from her mother all newspapers referring
+to me. That may well be; but it's not the way that will bring
+understanding."
+
+"I think it's the truth, sir, for Darius Boland spoke naught of the
+mother--indeed, he said only what would make me think the girl came with
+her own ends in view. Faith, I'm sure the mother did not know."
+
+"She will know now. Your Darius Boland will tell her."
+
+"By St. Peter, it doesn't matter who tells her, sir. The business must
+be faced."
+
+"Michael, order my horse, and I will go to Spanish Town. This matter
+must be brought to a head. The truth must be told. Order my horse!"
+
+"It is the very heat of the day, sir."
+
+"Then at five o'clock, after dinner, have my horse here."
+
+"Am I to ride with you, sir?"
+
+Dyck nodded. "Yes, Michael. There's only one thing to do--face all the
+facts with all the evidence, and you are fact and evidence too. You know
+more of the truth than any one else."
+
+Several hours later, when the sun was abating its force a little, after
+travelling the burning roads through yams and cocoa, grenadillas and
+all kinds of herbs and roots and vagrant trees, Dyck Calhoun and Michael
+Clones came into Spanish Town. Dyck rode the unpaved streets on his
+horse with its high demipicque Spanish saddle, with its silver stirrups
+and heavy bit, and made his way towards Charlotte Bedford's lodgings.
+
+Dyck looked round upon the town with new eyes. He saw it like one for
+the first time visiting it. He saw the people passing through the wide
+verandahs of the houses, like a vast colonnade, down the street, to
+be happily sheltered from the fierce sun. As he had come down from the
+hills he thought he had never seen the houses look more beautiful in
+their gardens of wild tamarinds, kennips, cocoa-nuts, pimentos, and
+palms, backed by negro huts. He had seen all sorts of people at the
+draw-wells of the houses-British, Spanish, French, South American,
+Creoles, and here and there a Maroon, and the everlasting negro who sang
+as he worked:
+
+ "Come along o' me, my buccra brave,
+ You see de shild de Lord he gave:
+ You drink de sangaree,
+ I make de frichassee--"
+
+Here a face peeped out from the glazed sash of the jalousies of the
+balconies above--a face that could never be said to be white, though it
+had only a tinge of black in its coaxing beauty. There a workman with
+long hair and shag trousers painted the prevailing two-storied house the
+prevailing colour, white and green. There was a young naval officer in
+full dress, gold-buckled shoes, white trousers, short jacket with gold
+swab on shoulders, dress-sword and smart gait making for supper at
+King's House.
+
+A long-legged "son of a gun" of a Yankee had a "clapper-claw," or
+handshake, with a planting attorney in a kind of four-posted gig,
+canopied in leather and curtained clumsily. The Yankee laughed at the
+heavy straight shafts and the mule that drew the volante, as the gig was
+called, and the vehicle creaked and cried as it rolled along over the
+road, which was like a dry river-bed. There a French officer in Hessian
+boots, white trousers, blue uniform, and much-embroidered scarlet cuffs
+watched with amusement a slave carrying a goglet, or earthen jar, upon
+his head like an Egyptian, untouched by the hand, so adding dignity to
+carriage. He was holding a "round-aboutation" with an old hag who was
+telling his fortune.
+
+As they passed King's House, they saw troops of the viceroy's guests
+issuing from the palace-officers of the king's navy and army, officers
+and men of the Jamaica militia, pale-faced, big-eyed men of the Creole
+class, mulattoes, quadroons and octoroons, Samboes with their wives in
+loose skirts, white stockings, and pinnacle hats. There also passed, in
+the streets, black servants with tin cases on their heads, or carrying
+parcels in their arms, and here and there processions of servants, each
+with something that belonged to their mistresses, who would presently be
+attending the king's ball.
+
+Snatches of song were heard, and voices of men who had had a full meal
+and had "taken observations"--as looking through the bottom of a glass
+of liquor was called by people with naval spirit--were mixed in careless
+carousal.
+
+All this jarred on Dyck Calhoun and gave revolt to his senses. Yet he
+was only half-conscious of the great sensuousness of the scene as he
+passed through it. Now and then some one doffed a hat to him, and very
+occasionally some half-drunken citizen tossed at him a remark meant to
+wound; but he took no notice, and let things pleasant and provocative
+pass down the long ranges of indifference.
+
+All was brought to focus at last, however, by their arrival at Charlotte
+Bedford's lodgings, which, like most houses in the town, had a
+lookout or belfry fitted with green blinds and a telescope, and had a
+green-painted wooden railing round it.
+
+At the very entrance, inside the gate, in the garden, they saw Sheila
+Llyn, her mother, and Darius Boland, who seemed to be enduring from the
+mother some sharp reprimand, to the amusement of the daughter. As the
+gate closed behind Dyck and Michael, the three from Virginia turned
+round and faced them. As Dyck came forward, Sheila flushed and trembled.
+She was no longer a young girl, but her slim straightness and the soft
+lines of her figure, gave her a dignity and charm which made her young
+womanhood distinguished--for she was now twenty-five, and had a carriage
+of which a princess might have been proud. Yet it was plain that the
+entrance of Dyck at this moment was disturbing. It was not what she had
+foreseen.
+
+She showed no hesitation, however, but came forward to meet her visitor,
+while Michael fell back, as also did Darius Boland. Both these seemed to
+realize that the less they saw and heard the better; and they presently
+got together in another part of the garden, as Dyck Calhoun came near
+enough almost to touch Sheila.
+
+Surely, he thought, she was supreme in appearance and design. She was
+like some rare flower of the field, alert, gentle, strong, intrepid,
+with buoyant face, brown hair, blue eyes and cream-like skin. She
+was touched by a rose on each cheek and made womanly by firm and yet
+generous breasts, tenderly imprisoned by the white chiffon of her blouse
+in which was one bright sprig of the buds of a cherry-tree-a touch of
+modest luxuriance on a person sparsely ornamented. It was not tropical,
+this picture of Sheila Llyn; it was a flick of northern life in a summer
+sky. It was at once cheerful and apart. It had no August in it; no oil
+and wine. It was the little twig that grew by a running spring. It
+was fresh, dominant and serene. It was Connemara on the Amazon! It was
+Sheila herself, whom time had enriched with far more than years and
+experience. It was a personality which would anywhere have taken place
+and held it. It was undefeatable, persistent and permanent; it was the
+spirit of Ireland loose in a world that was as far apart from Ireland as
+she was from her dead, dishonoured father.
+
+And Dyck? At first she felt she must fly to him--yes, in spite of the
+fact that he had suffered prison for manslaughter. But a nearer look at
+him stopped the impulse at its birth. Here was the Dyck Calhoun she had
+known in days gone by, but not the Dyck she had looked to see; for this
+man was like one who had come from a hanging, who had seen his dearest
+swinging at the end of a rope. His face was set in coldness; his hair
+was streaked with grey; his forehead had a line in the middle; his
+manner was rigid, almost frigid, indeed. Only in his eyes was there that
+which denied all that his face and manner said--a hungry, absorbing,
+hopeless look, the look of one who searches for a friend in the denying
+desert.
+
+Somehow, when he bowed low to her, and looked her in the eyes as no one
+in all her life had ever done, she had an almost agonized understanding
+of what a man feels who has been imprisoned--that is, never the same
+again. He was an ex-convict, and yet she did not feel repelled by him.
+She did not believe he had killed Erris Boyne. As for the later crime
+of mutiny, that did not concern her much. She was Irish; but, more than
+that, she was in sympathy with the mutineers. She understood why Dyck
+Calhoun, enlisting as a common sailor, should take up their cause and
+run risk to advance it. That he had advanced it was known to all the
+world; that he had paid the price of his mutiny by saving the king's
+navy with a stolen ship had brought him pardon for his theft of a ship
+and mutiny; and that he had won wealth was but another proof of the
+man's power.
+
+"You would not come to America, so I came here, and--" She paused,
+her voice trembling slightly. "There is much to do at Salem," he added
+calmly, and yet with his heart beating, as it had not beaten since the
+day he had first met her at Playmore.
+
+"You would not take the money I sent to Dublin for you--the gift of a
+believing friend, and you would not come to America!"
+
+"I shall have to tell you why one day," he answered slowly, "but I'll
+pay my respects to your mother now." So saying he went forward and bowed
+low to Mrs. Llyn. Unlike her daughter, Mrs. Llyn did not offer her hand.
+She was pale, distraught, troubled--and vexed. She, however, murmured
+his name and bowed. "You did not expect to see me here in Jamaica," he
+said boldly.
+
+"Frankly, I did not, Mr. Calhoun," she said.
+
+"You resent my coming here to see you? You think it bold, at least."
+
+She looked at him closely and firmly. "You know why I cannot welcome
+you."
+
+"Yet I have paid the account demanded by the law. And you had no regard
+for him. You divorced him."
+
+Sheila had drawn near, and Dyck made a gesture in her direction. "She
+does not know," he said, "and she should not hear what we say now?"
+
+Mrs. Llyn nodded, and in a low tone told Sheila that she wished to be
+alone with Dyck for a little while. In Dyck's eyes, as he watched Sheila
+go, was a thing deeper than he had ever known or shown before. In her
+white gown, and with her light step, Sheila seemed to float away--a
+picture graceful, stately, buoyant, "keen and small." As she was about
+to pass beyond a clump of pimento bushes, she turned her head towards
+the two, and there was that in her eyes which few ever see and seeing
+are afterwards the same. It was a look of inquiry, or revelation, of
+emotion which went to Dyck's heart.
+
+"No, she does not know the truth," Mrs. Llyn said. "But it has been
+hard hiding it from her. One never knew whether some chance remark, some
+allusion in the papers, would tell her you had killed her father."
+
+"Did I kill her father?" asked Dyck helplessly. "Did I? I was found
+guilty of it, but on my honour, Mrs. Llyn, I do not know, and I do not
+think I did. I have no memory of it. We quarrelled. I drew my sword on
+him, then he made an explanation and I madly, stupidly drank
+drugged wine in reconciliation with him, and then I remember nothing
+more--nothing at all."
+
+"What was the cause of your quarrel?"
+
+Dyck looked at her long before answering. "I hid that from my father
+even, and hid it from the world--did not even mention it in court at
+the trial. If I had, perhaps I should not have gone to jail. If I had,
+perhaps I should not be here in Jamaica. If I had--" He paused, a
+flood of reflection drowning his face, making his eyes shine with black
+sorrow.
+
+"Well, if you had!... Why did you not? Wasn't it your duty to save
+yourself and save your friends, if you could? Wasn't that your plain
+duty?"
+
+"Yes, and that was why I did not tell what the quarrel was. If I had,
+even had I killed Erris Boyne, the jury would not have convicted me. Of
+that I am sure. It was a loyalist jury."
+
+"Then why did you not?"
+
+"Isn't it strange that now after all these years, when I have settled
+the account with judge and jury, with state and law--that now I feel
+I must tell you the truth. Madam, your ex-husband, Erris Boyne, was a
+traitor. He was an officer in the French army, and he offered to make me
+an officer also and pay me well in French Government money, if I would
+break my allegiance and serve the French cause--Ah, don't start! He knew
+I was on my last legs financially. He knew I had acquaintance with young
+rebel leaders like Emmet, and he felt I could be won. So he made his
+proposal. Because of your daughter I held my peace, for she could bear
+it less than you. I did not tell the cause of the quarrel. If I had,
+there would have been for her the double shame. That was why I held my
+peace--a fool, but so it was!"
+
+The woman seemed almost robbed of understanding. His story overwhelmed
+her. Yet what the man had done was so quixotic, so Celtic, that her
+senses were almost paralysed.
+
+"So mad--so mad and bad and wild you were," she said. "Could you not see
+it was your duty to tell all, no matter what the consequences. The man
+was a villain. But what madness you were guilty of, what cruel madness!
+Only you could have done a thing like that. Erris Boyne deserved
+death--I care not who killed him--you or another. He deserved death, and
+it was right he should die. But that you should kill him, apart from
+all else--why, indeed, oh, indeed, it is a tragedy, for you loved my
+daughter, and the killing made a gulf between you! There could be no
+marriage in such a case. She could not bear it, nor could you. But
+please know this, Mr. Calhoun, that she never believed you killed Erris
+Boyne. She has said so again and again. You are the only man who has
+ever touched her mind or her senses, though many have sought her.
+Wherever she goes men try to win her, but she has no thought for
+any. Her mind goes back to you. Just when you entered the garden I
+learned--and only then-that you were here. She hid it from me, but
+Darius Boland knew, and he had seen your man, Michael Clones, and she
+had then made him tell me. I was incensed. I was her mother, and yet
+she had hid the thing from me. I thought she came to this island for the
+sake of Salem, and I found that she came not for Salem, but for you....
+Ah, Mr. Calhoun, she deserves what you did to save her, but you should
+not have done it."
+
+"She deserves all that any better man might do. Why don't you marry her
+to some great man in your Republic? It would settle my trouble for me
+and free her mind from anxiety. Mrs. Llyn, we are not children, you and
+I. You know life, and so do I, and--"
+
+She interrupted him. "Be sure of this, Mr. Calhoun, she knows life even
+better than either of us. She is, and has always been, a girl of sense
+and judgment. When she was a child she was my master, even in Ireland.
+Yet she was obedient and faithful, and kept her head in all vexed
+things. She will have her way, and she will have it as she wants it,
+and in no other manner. She is one of the world's great women. She is
+unique. Child as she is, she still understands all that men do, and does
+it. Under her hands the estates in Virginia have developed even more
+than under the hands of my brother. She controls like another Elizabeth.
+She has made those estates run like a spool of thread, and she will do
+the same here with Salem. Be sure of that."
+
+"Why does she not marry? Is there no man she can bear? She could have
+the highest, that's sure." He spoke with passion and insistence. If she
+were married his trouble would be over. The worst would have come to
+him--like death. His eyes were only two dark fires in a face that was
+as near to tragic pain crystallized as any the world has seen. Yet there
+was in it some big commanding thing, that gave it a ghastly handsomeness
+almost; that bathed his look in dignity and power, albeit a reckless
+power, a thing that would not be stayed by any blandishments. He had the
+look of a lost angel, one who fell with Belial in the first days of sin.
+
+"There is no man she can bear--except here in Jamaica. It is no use.
+Your governor, Lord Mallow, whom she knew in Ireland, who is distant
+kin of mine, he has already made advances here to her, as he did in
+Ireland--you did not know that. Even before we left for Virginia he came
+to see us, and brought her books and flowers, and here, on our arrival,
+he brought her choicest blooms of his garden. She is rich, and he
+would be glad of an estate that brings in scores of thousands of pounds
+yearly. He has asked us to stay at King's House, but we have declined.
+We start for Salem in a few hours. She wants her hand on the wheel."
+
+"Lord Mallow--he courts her, does he?" His face grew grimmer. "Well, she
+might do worse, though if she were one of my family I would rather see
+her in her grave than wedded to him. For he is selfish--aye, as few men
+are! He would eat and keep his apple too. His theory is that life is but
+a game, and it must be played with steel. He would squeeze the life out
+of a flower, and give the flower to his dog to eat. He thinks first and
+always of himself. He would--but there, he would make a good husband as
+husbands go for some women, but not for this woman! It is not because he
+is my enemy I say this. It is because there is only one woman like your
+daughter, and that is herself; and I would rather see her married to
+a hedger that really loved her than to Lord Mallow, who loves only one
+being on earth--himself. But see, Mrs. Llyn, now that you know all, now
+that we three have met again, and this island is small and tragedy is
+at our doors, don't you think your daughter should be told the truth.
+It will end everything for me. But it would be better so. It is now only
+cruelty to hide the truth, harsh to continue a friendship which will
+only appal her in the end. If we had not met again like this, then
+silence might have been best; but as she is not cured of her tender
+friendship made upon the hills at Playmore, isn't it well to end it all?
+Your conscience will be clearer, and so will mine. We shall have done
+the right thing at last. Why did you not tell her who her father was?
+Then why blame me! You held your peace to save your daughter, as you
+thought. I held my tongue for the same reason; but she is so much a
+woman now, that she will understand, as she could not have understood
+years ago in Limerick. In God's name, let us speak. One of us should
+tell her, and I think it should be you. And see, though I know I did
+right in withholding the facts about the quarrel with Erris Boyne, yet
+I favour telling her that he was a traitor. The whole truth now, or
+nothing. That is my view."
+
+He saw how lined and sunken was her face, he noted the weakness of her
+carriage, he realized the task he was putting on her, and his heart
+relented. "No, I will do it," he added, with sudden will, "and I will do
+it now, if I may."
+
+"Oh, not to-day-not to-day!" she said with a piteous look. "Let it not
+be to-day. It is our first day here, and we are due at King's House
+to-night, even in an hour from now."
+
+"You want her at her glorious best, is that it?" It seemed too strange
+that the pure feminine should show at a time of crisis like this, but
+there it was. It was this woman's way. But he added presently: "When she
+asks you what we have talked about, what will you say?"
+
+"Is it not easy? I am a mother," she said meaningly.
+
+"And I am an ex-convict, and a mutineer--is that it?"
+
+She inclined her head. "It should not be difficult to explain. When you
+came I was speaking as I felt, and she will not think it strange if I
+give that as my reason."
+
+"But is it wise? Isn't it better to end it all now? Suppose Lord Mallow
+tells her."
+
+"He did not before. He is not likely now," was the vexed reply. "Is it a
+thing a gentleman will speak of to a lady?"
+
+"But you do not know Mallow. If he thought she had seen me to-day, he
+would not hesitate. What would you do if you were Lord Mallow?"
+
+"No, not to-day," she persisted. "It is all so many years ago. It can
+hurt naught to wait a little longer."
+
+"When and where shall it be?" he asked gloomily. "At Salem--at Salem. We
+shall be settled then--and steady. There is every reason why you should
+consider me. I have suffered as few women have suffered, and I do not
+hate you. I am only sorry."
+
+Far down at the other end of the garden he saw Sheila. Her face was in
+profile--an exquisite silhouette. She moved slowly among the pimento
+bushes.
+
+"As you wish," he said with a heavy sigh. The sight of the girl
+anguished his soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. AT SALEM
+
+The plantation of Salem was in a region below the Pedro Plains in the
+parish of St. Elizabeth, where grow the aloe, and torch-thistle, and
+clumps of wood which alter the appearance of the plain from the South
+Downs of England, but where thousands of cattle and horses even in those
+days were maintained. The air of the district was dry and elastic, and
+it filtered down to the valleys near like that where Salem was with its
+clusters of negro huts and offices, its mills and distilleries where
+sugar and rum were made. Salem was situated on the Black River,
+accessible by boats and canoes. The huts of negro slaves were near
+the sugar mills, without regard to order, but in clusters of banana,
+avocado-pear, limes and oranges, and with the cultivated land round
+their huts made an effective picture.
+
+One day every fortnight was allowed the negroes to cultivate their
+crops, and give them a chance to manufacture mats for beds, bark-ropes,
+wicker-chairs and baskets, earthen jars, pans, and that kind of thing.
+The huts themselves were primitive to a degree, the floor being earth,
+the roof, of palm-thatch or the leaves of the cocoa-nut tree, the sides
+hard-posts driven in the ground and interlaced with wattle and plaster,
+and inside scarcely high enough for its owner to walk upright. The
+furniture was scant--a quatre, or bed, made of a platform of boards,
+with a mat and a blanket, some low stools, a small table, an earthen
+water-jar, and some smaller ones, a pail and an iron pot, and calabashes
+which did duty for plates, dishes and bowls. In one of the two rooms
+making the hut, there were always the ashes of the night-fire, without
+which negroes could not sleep in comfort.
+
+These were the huts of the lowest grade of negro-slaves of the fields.
+The small merchants and the domestics had larger houses with boarded
+floors, some even with linen sheets and mosquito nets, and shelves with
+plates and dishes of good ware. Every negro received a yearly allowance
+of Osnaburgh linen, woollen, baize and checks for clothes, and some
+planters also gave them hats and handkerchiefs, knives, needles and
+thread, and so on.
+
+Every plantation had a surgeon who received a small sum for attendance
+on every slave, while special cases of midwifery, inoculation, etc., had
+a particular allowance. The surgeon had to attend to about four hundred
+to five hundred negroes, on an income of L150 per annum, and board and
+lodging and washing, besides what he made from his practice with the
+whites.
+
+Salem was no worse than some other plantations on the island, but it was
+far behind such plantations as that owned by Dyck Calhoun, and had been
+notorious for the cruelties committed on it. To such an estate a lady
+like Sheila Llyn would be a boon. She was not on the place a day before
+she started reforms which would turn the plantation into a model scheme.
+Houses, food, treatment of the negroes, became at once a study to her,
+and her experience in Virginia was invaluable. She had learned there
+not to work the slaves too hard in the warm period of the day; and she
+showed her interest by having served at her own table the favourite olio
+the slaves made of plantains, bananas, yams, calalue, eddoes, cassavi,
+and sweet potatoes boiled with salt fish and flavoured with cayenne
+pepper. This, with the unripe roasted plantain as bread, was a native
+relish and health-giving food.
+
+Ever since the day when she had seen Dyck Calhoun at Spanish Town she
+had been disturbed in mind. Dyck had shown a reserve which she felt was
+not wholly due to his having been imprisoned for manslaughter. In one
+way he looked little older. His physique was as good, or better than
+when she first saw him on the hills of Playmore. It was athletic,
+strenuous, elastic. Yet there was about it the abandonment of
+despair--at least of recklessness. The face was older, the head more
+powerful, the hair slightly touched with grey-rather there was one spot
+in the hair almost pure white; a strand of winter in the foliage of
+summer. It gave a touch of the bizarre to a distinguished head, it lent
+an air of the singular to a personality which had flare and force--an
+almost devilish force. That much was to be said for him, that he had not
+sought to influence her to his own advantage. She was so surrounded in
+America by men who knew her wealth and prized her beauty, she was so
+much a figure in Virginia, that any reserve with regard to herself was
+noticeable. She was enough feminine to have pleasure in the fact that
+she was thought desirable by men; yet it played an insignificant part in
+her life.
+
+It did not give her conceit. It was only like a frill on the skirts of
+life. It did not play any part in her character. Certainly Dyck Calhoun
+had not flattered her. That one to whom she had written, as she had
+done, should remove himself so from the place of the deserving friend,
+one whom she had not deserted while he was in jail as a criminal--that
+he should treat her so, gave every nerve a thrill of protest. Sometimes
+she trembled in indignation, and then afterwards gave herself to
+the work on the estate or in the household--its reform and its
+rearrangement; though the house was like most in Jamaica, had adequate
+plate, linen, glass and furniture. At the lodgings in Spanish Town,
+after Dyck Calhoun had left, her mother had briefly said that she had
+told Dyck he could not expect the conditions of the Playmore friendship
+should be renewed; that, in effect, she had warned him off. To this
+Sheila had said that the killing of a man whose life was bad might
+be punishable. In any case, that was in another land, under abnormal
+conditions; and, with lack of logic, she saw no reason why he should be
+socially punished in Jamaica for what he had been legally punished for
+in Ireland. As for the mutiny, he had done what any honest man of spirit
+would do; also, he had by great bravery and skill brought victory to the
+king's fleet in West Indian waters.
+
+Then it was she told her mother how she had always disobeyed her
+commands where Dyck was concerned, that she had written to him while he
+was in jail; that she had come to Jamaica more to see him than to reform
+Salem; that she had the old Celtic spirit of brotherhood, and she would
+not be driven from it. In a sudden burst of anger her mother had charged
+her with deceit; but the girl said she had followed her conscience, and
+she dismissed it all with a gesture as emphatic as her mother's anger.
+
+That night they had dined with Lord Mallow, and she saw that his
+attentions had behind them the deep purpose of marriage. She had not
+been overcome by the splendour of his retinue and table, or by the
+magnificence of his guests; though the military commander-in-chief and
+the temporary admiral on the station did their utmost to entertain her,
+and some of the local big-wigs were pompous. Lord Mallow had ability and
+knew how to use it; and he was never so brilliant as on this afternoon,
+for they dined while it was still daylight and hardly evening. He
+told her of the customs of the country, of the people; and slyly and
+effectively he satirized some of his grandiloquent guests. Not unduly,
+for one of them, the most renowned in the island, came to him after
+dinner as he sat talking to Sheila, and said: "I'm very sorry, your
+honour, but good Almighty God, I must go home and cool coppers." Then he
+gave Sheila a hot yet clammy hand, and bade her welcome as a citizen
+to the island, "alien but respected, beautiful but capable!" Sheila
+had seen a few of the Creole ladies present at their best-large-eyed,
+simple, not to say primitive in speech, and very unaffected in manner.
+She had learned also that the way to the Jamaican heart was by a full
+table and a little flattery.
+
+One incident at dinner had impressed her greatly. Not far away from
+her was a young lady, beautiful in face and person, and she had seen a
+scorpion suddenly shoot into her sleeve and ruthlessly strike and strike
+the arm of the girl, who gave one cry only and then was still. Sheila
+saw the man next to the girl--he was a native officer--secure the
+scorpion, and then whip from his pocket a little bag of indigo, dip it
+in water, and apply the bag to the wounded arm, immediately easing the
+wound. This had all been done so quickly that it was over before the
+table had been upset, almost.
+
+"That is the kind of thing we have here," said Lord Mallow. "There is a
+lady present who has seen in one day a favourite black child bitten by
+a congereel, a large centipede in her nursery, a snake crawl from under
+her child's pillow, and her son nearly die from a bite of the black
+spider with the red spot on its tail. It is a life that has its
+trials--and its compensations."
+
+"I saw a man's head on a pole on my way to King's House. You have to use
+firm methods here," Sheila said in reply. "It is not all a rose-garden.
+You have to apply force."
+
+Lord Mallow smiled grimly. "C'est la force morale toujours."
+
+"Ah, I should not have thought it was moral force always," was the
+ironical reply.
+
+"We have criminals here," declared the governor with aplomb, "and they
+need some handling, I assure you. We have in this island one of the
+worst criminals in the British Empire."
+
+"Ah, I thought he was in the United States!" answered the girl sedately.
+
+"You mean General George Washington," remarked the governor. "No, it is
+one who was a friend and fellow-countryman of yours before he took to
+killing unarmed men."
+
+"You refer to Mr. Dyck Calhoun, I doubt not, sir? Well, he is still a
+friend of mine, and I saw him today--this afternoon, before I came here.
+I understood that the Crown had pardoned his mutiny."
+
+The governor started. He was plainly annoyed.
+
+"The crime is there just the same," he replied. "He mutinied, and he
+stole a king's ship, and took command of it, and brought it out here."
+
+"And saved you and your island, I understand."
+
+"Ah, he said that, did he?"
+
+"He said nothing at all to me about it. I have been reading the Jamaica
+Cornwall Chronicle the last three years."
+
+"He is ever a source of anxiety to me," declared the governor.
+
+"I knew he was once in Phoenix Park years ago," was the demure yet sharp
+reply, "but I thought he was a good citizen here--a good and well-to-do
+citizen."
+
+Lord Mallow flushed slightly. "Phoenix Park--ah, he was a capable
+fellow with the sword! I said so always, and I'd back him now against a
+champion; but many a bad man has been a good swordsman."
+
+"So, that's what good swordsmanship does, is it? I wondered what it was
+that did it. I hear you fight him still--but with a bludgeon, and he
+dodges it."
+
+"I do not understand," declared Lord Mallow tartly. "Ah, wasn't there
+some difference over his going for the treasure to Haiti? Some one
+told me, I think, that you were not in favour of his getting his
+ticket-of-leave, or whatever it is called, and that the provost-marshal
+gave it to him, as he had the right to do."
+
+"You have wide sources of information in this case. I wonder--"
+
+"No, your honour need not wonder. I was told that by a gentleman on the
+steamer coming here. He was a native of the island, I think--or perhaps
+it was the captain, or the mate, or the boatswain. I can't recall. Or
+maybe it came to me from my manager, Darius Boland, who hears things
+wherever he is, one doesn't know how; but he hears them. He is to me
+what your aide-de-camp is to you," she nodded towards a young man near
+by at the table.
+
+"And do you dress your Darius Boland as I dress my aide in scarlet, with
+blue facings and golden embroidery, and put a stiff hat with a feather
+on his head?"
+
+"But no, he does not need such things. I am a Republican now. I am a
+citizen of the United States, where men have no need of uniform to tell
+the world what they are. You shall see my Darius Boland--indeed, you
+have seen him. He was there to-day when you gave me the distinction of
+your presence."
+
+"That dry, lean, cartridge of a fellow, that pair of pincers with a
+face!"
+
+"And a tongue, your honour. If you did not hear it yet, you will hear
+it. He is to be my manager here. So he will be under your control--if I
+permit him."
+
+"If you permit him, mistress?"
+
+"If I permit him, yes. You are a power, but you are not stronger than
+the laws and rules you make. For instance, there was the case of Mr.
+Dyck Calhoun. When he came, you were for tying him up in one little
+corner of this island--the hottest part, I know, near to Kingston, where
+it averages ninety degrees in the shade at any time of the year. But the
+King you represent had not restricted his liberties so, and you
+being the King, that is, yourself, were forced to abide by your own
+regulations. So it may be the same with Darius Boland. He may want
+something, and you, high up, looking down, will say, 'What devilry
+is here!' and decline. He will then turn to your chief-justice or
+provost-marshal-general, or a deputy of the provost-marshal, and they
+will say that Darius Boland shall have what he wants, because it is the
+will of the will you represent."
+
+Almost the last words the governor used to her were these: "Those only
+live at peace here who are at peace with me"; and her reply had been:
+"But Mr. Dyck Calhoun lives at peace, does he not, your honour?"
+
+To that he had replied: "No man is at peace while he has yet desires."
+He paused a minute and then added: "That Erris Boyne killed by Dyck
+Calhoun--did you ever see him that you remember?"
+
+"Not that I remember," she replied quickly. "I never lived in Dublin."
+
+"That may be. But did you never know his history?" She shook her head
+in negation. His eyes searched her face carefully, and he was astonished
+when he saw no sign of confusion there. "Good God, she doesn't know.
+She's never been told!" he said to himself. "This is too startling. I'll
+speak to the mother."
+
+A little later he turned from the mother with astonishment. "It's
+madness," he remarked to himself. "She will find out. Some one will
+tell her.... By heaven, I'll tell her first," he hastily said. "When she
+knows the truth, Calhoun will have no chance on earth. Yes, I'll tell
+her myself. But I'll tell no one else," he added; for he felt that
+Sheila, once she knew the truth, would resent his having told abroad the
+true story of the Erris Boyne affair.
+
+So Sheila and her mother had gone to their lodgings with depression, but
+each with a clear purpose in her mind. Mrs. Llyn was determined to tell
+her daughter what she ought to have known long before; and Sheila was
+firm to make the one man who had ever interested her understand that he
+was losing much that was worth while keeping.
+
+Then had followed the journey to Salem. Yet all the while for Sheila
+one dark thought kept hovering over everything. Why should life be so
+complicated? Why should this one man who seemed capable and had the
+temperament of the Irish hills and vales be the victim of punishment and
+shame--why should he shame her?
+
+Suddenly, without her mother's knowledge, she sent Darius Boland through
+the hills in the early morning to Enniskillen, Dyck Calhoun's place,
+with a letter which said only this: "Is it not time that you came to
+wish us well in our new home? We shall expect you to-morrow."
+
+When Dyck read this note he thought it was written by Sheila, but
+inspired by the mother; and he lost no time in making his way down
+across the country to Salem, which he reached a few hours after sunrise.
+At the doorway of the house he met Mrs. Llyn.
+
+"Have you told her?" he asked in anxiety. Astonished at his presence
+she could make no reply for a moment. "I have told her nothing," she
+answered. "I meant to do so this morning. I meant to do it--I must."
+
+"She sent me a letter asking if it was not time I came to wish you well
+in your house, and you and she would expect me to-day."
+
+"I knew naught of her writing you," was the reply--"naught at all. But
+now that you are here, will you not tell her all?"
+
+Dyck smiled grimly. "Where is she?" he asked. "I will tell her."
+
+The mother pointed down the garden. "Yonder by the clump of palms I saw
+her a moment ago. If you go that way you will find her."
+
+In another moment Dyck Calhoun was on his way to the clump of palms, and
+before he reached it, the girl came out into the path. She was dressed
+in a black silk skirt with a white bodice and lace, as he had seen her
+on her arrival in Kingston, and at her throat was a sprig of the wild
+pear-tree. When she saw him, she gave a slight start, then stood still,
+and he came to her.
+
+"I have your letter," he said, "and I came to say what I ought to say
+about your living here: you will bring blessings to the place."
+
+She looked at him steadfastly. "Shall we talk here," she said, "or
+inside the house? There is a little shelter here in the trees"--pointing
+to the right--"a shelter built by the late manager. It has the covering
+of a hut, but it is open at two sides. Will you come?" As she went
+on ahead, he could not fail to notice how slim and trim she was, how
+perfectly her figure seemed to fit her gown-as though she had been
+poured into it; and yet the folds of her skirt waved and floated like
+silky clouds around her! Under cover of the shelter, she turned and
+smiled at him.
+
+"You have seen my mother?"
+
+"I have just come from her," he answered. "She bade me tell you what
+ought to have been told long ago, and you were not, for there seemed no
+reason that you should. You were young and ignorant and happy. You had
+no cares, no sorrows. The sorrows that had come to your mother belonged
+to days when you were scarce out of the cradle. But you did not know.
+You were not aware that your mother had divorced your father for crime
+against marital fidelity and great cruelty. You did not know even who
+that father was. Well, I must tell you. Your father was a handsome man,
+a friend of mine until I knew the truth about him, and then he died--I
+killed him, so the court said."
+
+Her face became ghastly pale. After a moment of anguished bewilderment,
+she said: "You mean that Erris Boyne was my father?"
+
+"Yes, I mean that. They say I killed him. They say that he was found
+with no sword drawn, but that my open sword lay on the table beside me
+while I was asleep, and that it had let out his life-blood."
+
+"Why was he killed?" she asked, horror-stricken and with pale lips.
+
+"I do not know, but if I killed him, it was because I revolted from the
+proposals he made to me. I--" He paused, for the look on her face was
+painful to see, and her body was as that of one who had been struck by
+lightning. It had a crumpled, stricken look, and all force seemed to be
+driven from it. It had the look of crushed vitality. Her face was set in
+paleness, her eyes were frightened, her whole person was, as it were, in
+ghastly captivity. His heart smote him, and he pulled himself together
+to tell her all.
+
+"Go on," she said. "I want to hear. I want--to know all. I ought to have
+known--long ago; but that can't be helped now. Continue--please."
+
+Her words had come slowly, in gasps almost, and her voice was so frayed
+he could scarcely recognize it. All the pride of her nature seemed
+shattered.
+
+"If I killed him," he said presently, "it was because he tried to tempt
+me from my allegiance to the Crown to become a servant of France, to--"
+
+He stopped short, for a cry came from her lips which appalled him.
+
+"My God--my God!" she said with bloodless lips, her eyes fastened on his
+face, her every look and motion the inflection of despair. "Go on--tell
+all," she added presently with more composure.
+
+Swiftly he described what happened in the little room at the traitor's
+tavern, of the momentary reconciliation and the wine that he drank,
+drugged wine poured out but not drunk by Erris Boyne, and of his later
+unconsciousness. At last he paused.
+
+"Why did these things not come out at the trial?" she asked in hushed
+tones.
+
+He made a helpless gesture. "I did not speak of them because I thought
+of you. I hid it--I did not want you to know what your father was."
+
+Something like a smile gathered at her pale lips. "You saved me for
+the moment, and condemned yourself for ever," she said in a voice of
+torture. "If you had told what he was--if you had told that, the jury
+would not have condemned you, they would not have sent you to prison."
+
+"I believe I did the right thing," he said. "If I killed your father,
+prison was my proper punishment. But I can't remember. There was no
+other clue, no other guide to judgment. So the law said I killed him,
+and--he had evidently not drawn his sword. It was clear he was killed
+defenceless."
+
+"You killed a defenceless man!" Her voice was sharp with agony. "That
+was mentioned at the trial--but I did not believe it then--in that long
+ago." She trembled to her feet from the bench where she was sitting.
+"And I do not believe it now--no, on my soul, I do not."
+
+"But it makes no difference, you see. I was condemned for killing your
+father, and the world knows that Erris Boyne was your father, and
+here Lord Mallow, the governor, knows it; and there is no chance of
+friendship between you and me. Since the day he was found dead in the
+room, there was no hope for our friendship, for anything at all between
+us that I had wished to be there. You dare not be friends with me--"
+
+Her face suddenly suffused and she held herself upright with an effort.
+She was about to say, "I dare, Dyck--I do dare!" but he stopped her with
+a reproving gesture.
+
+"No, no, you dare not, and I would not let you if you would. I am an
+ex-convict. They say I killed your father, and the way to understanding
+between us is closed."
+
+She made a protesting gesture. "Closed! Closed!--But is it closed? No,
+no, some one else killed him, not you. You couldn't have done it.
+You would have fought him--fought him as you did Lord Mallow, and in
+fighting you might have killed him, but your sword never let out his
+life when he was defenceless--never."
+
+A look of intense relief, almost of happiness, came to Dyck's face.
+"That is like you, Sheila, but it does not cure the trouble. You and I
+are as far apart as noon and midnight. The law has said the only thing
+that can be said upon it."
+
+She sank down again upon the wooden bench. "Oh, how mad you were, not
+to tell the whole truth long ago! You would not have been condemned, and
+then--"
+
+She paused overcome, and his self-control almost deserted him. With
+strong feeling he burst out: "And then, we might have come together?
+No, your mother--your friends, myself, could not have let that be. See,
+Sheila, I will tell you the whole truth now--aye, the whole absolute
+truth. I have loved you since the first day I saw you on the hills when
+you and I rescued Christopher Dogan. Not a day has passed since then
+when you were not more to me than any other woman in all the world."
+
+A new light came into her face, the shadows left her eyes, and the
+pallor fled from her lips. "You loved me?" she said in a voice grown
+soft-husky still, but soft as the light in a summer heaven. "You loved
+me--and have always loved me since we first met?"
+
+Her look was so appealing, so passionate and so womanly, that he longed
+to reach out his arms to her, and say, "Come--come home, Sheila," but
+the situation did not permit that, and only his eyes told the story of
+what was in his mind.
+
+"I have always loved you, Sheila, and shall do so while I have breath
+and life. I have always given you the best that is in me, tried to do
+what was good for us both, since my misfortune--crime, Lord Mallow calls
+it, as does the world. Never a sunrise that does not find you in the
+forefront of all the lighted world; never a flower have I seen that does
+not seem sweeter--it brings thoughts of you; never a crime that does not
+deepen its shame because you are in the world. In prison, when I used
+to mop my floor and clean down the walls; when I swept the dust from the
+corners; when I folded up my convict clothes; when I ate the prison food
+and sang the prison hymns; when I placed myself beside the bench in the
+workshop to make things that would bring cash to my fellow-prisoners in
+their need; when I saw a minister of religion or heard the Litany; when
+I counted up the days, first that I had spent in jail and then the days
+I had still to spend in jail; when I read the books from the prison
+library of the land where you had gone, and of the struggle there; when
+I saw you, in my mind's eye, in the cotton-fields or on the verandah of
+your house in Virginia--I had but one thought, and that was the look in
+your face at Playmore and Limerick, the sound of your voice as you came
+singing up the hill just before I first met you, the joyous beauty of
+your body."
+
+"And at sea?" she whispered with a gesture at once beautiful and
+pathetic, for it had the motion of helplessness and hopelessness. What
+she had heard had stirred her soul, and she wanted to hear more--or
+was it that she wished to drain the cup now that it was held to her
+lips?-drain it to the last drop of feeling.
+
+"At sea," he answered, with his eyes full of intense feeling--"at sea, I
+was free at last, doomed as I thought, anguished in spirit, and yet with
+a wild hope that out of it would come deliverance. I expected to lose
+my life, and I lived each day as though it would be my last. I was chief
+rogue in a shipful of rogues, chief sinner in a hell of sinners, and yet
+I had no remorse and no regret. I had done all with an honest purpose,
+with the good of the sailors in my mind; and so I lived in daily touch
+with death, honour, and dishonour. Yet I never saw a sailor in the
+shrouds, or heard the night watch call 'All's well!' in the midst of
+night and mutiny, that I did not long for a word from you that would
+take away the sting of death. Those days at sea for ten long weeks were
+never free from anxiety, not anxiety for myself, only for the men who
+had put me where I was, had given me captain's rank, had--"
+
+Suddenly he stopped, and took from his pocket the letter he was writing
+on the very day she landed in Jamaica. He opened it and studied it for a
+moment with a dark look in his face.
+
+"This I wrote even as you were landing in Jamaica, and I knew naught of
+your coming. It was an outbreak of my soul. It was the truth written to
+you and for you, and yet with the feeling that you would never see it.
+I was still writing it when Michael Clones came up the drive to tell me
+you and your mother were here. Now, I know not what Christopher Dogan
+would say of it, but I say it is amazing that in the hour you were first
+come to this land I should be moved to tell you the story of my
+life since I left prison; since, on receiving your letter in London,
+forwarded from Dublin, I joined the navy. But here it is with all the
+truth and terror in it.--Aye, there was terror, for it gave the soul of
+my life to one I never thought to see again; and, if seeing, should be
+compelled to do what I have done--tell her the whole truth at once and
+so have it over.
+
+"But do not think that in telling it now I repent of my secrecy. I
+repent of nothing; I would not alter anything. What was to be is, and
+what is has its place in the book of destiny. No, I repent nothing, yet
+here now I give you this to read while still my story of the days of
+which you know is in your ears. Here it is. It will tell the whole
+story; for when you have read it and do understand, then we part to meet
+no more as friends. You will go back to Virginia, and I will stay here.
+You will forgive the unwilling wrong I have done you, but you will make
+your place in life without thought of me. You will marry some one--not
+worthy of you, for that could not be; but you will take to yourself some
+man from among the men of this world. You will set him apart from all
+other men as yours, and he will be happy, having been blessed beyond
+deserving. You will not regret coming here; but you will desire our
+friendship to cease; and what has been to be no more, while the tincture
+of life is in your veins. Sheila, read this thing, for it is the rest of
+the story until now."
+
+He handed her the papers, and she took them with an inclination of the
+head which said: "Give it to me. I will read it now while my eyes can
+still bear to read it. I have laid on my heart the nettle of shame, and
+while it is still burning there I will read all that you have to teach
+me."
+
+"I will go out in the garden while you read it," he said. "In a
+half-hour I will come back, and then we can say good-bye," he added,
+with pain in his voice, but firmly.
+
+"No, do not go," she urged. "Sit here on the bench--at the end of it
+here," she said, motioning with her hand.
+
+He shook his head in negation. "No, I will go and say to your mother
+that I have told you, and ease her mind, for I know she herself meant to
+tell you."
+
+As he went he looked at her face closely. It was so young, so pathetic,
+so pale, yet so strangely beautiful, and her forehead was serene. That
+was one of her characteristics. In all her life, her forehead remained
+untroubled and unlined. Only at her mouth and in her eyes did misery or
+sorrow show. He looked into her eyes now, and he was pleased with what
+he saw; for they had in them the glow of understanding and the note of
+will which said: "You and I are parted, but I believe in you, and I will
+not show I am a weak woman by futile horror. We shall meet no more, but
+I shall remember you."
+
+That was what he saw, and it was what he wished to see. He knew her
+character would stand the test of any trial, and it had done so. Horror
+had struck her, but had not overwhelmed her. She had cried out in
+her agony, but she had not been swept out into chaos. She had no weak
+passions and no futilities. But as he turned away now, it was with the
+sharp conviction that he had dealt a blow from which the girl would
+recover, but would never be the same again. She was rich "beyond the
+dreams of avarice," but that would not console her. She had resources
+within herself, had what would keep her steady. Her real power and
+force, her real hope, were in her regnant soul which was not to be
+cajoled by life's subterfuges. Her lips opened now, as though she would
+say something, but nothing came from them. She only shook her head
+sadly, as if to say: "You understand. Go, and when you come again, it
+will be for us to part in peace--at least in peace."
+
+Out in the garden he found her mother. After the first agitated
+greeting-agitated on her part, he said: "The story has been told, and
+she is now reading--"
+
+He told her the story of the manuscript, and added that Sheila had
+carried herself with courage. Presently the woman said to him: "She
+never believed you killed Erris Boyne. Well, it may not help the
+situation, but I say too, that I do not believe you did. I cannot
+understand why you did not deny having killed him."
+
+"I could not deny. In any case, the law punished me for it, and the book
+is closed for ever."
+
+"Have you never thought that some one--"
+
+"Yes, I have thought, but who is there? The crowd at the Dublin hotel
+where the thing was done were secret, and they would lie the apron off a
+bishop. No, there is no light, and, to tell the truth, I care not now."
+
+"But if you are not guilty--it is not too late; there is my girl! If the
+real criminal should appear--can you not see?"
+
+The poor woman, distressedly pale, her hair still abundant, her eyes
+still bright, her pulses aglow, as they had ever been, made a gesture of
+appeal with hands that were worn and thin. She had charm still, in a way
+as great as her daughter's.
+
+"I can see--but, Mrs. Llyn, I have no hope. I am a man whom some men
+fear--"
+
+"Lord Mallow!" she interjected.
+
+"He does not fear me. Why do you say that?"
+
+"I speak with a woman's intuition. I don't know what he fears, but he
+does fear you. You are a son of history; you had a duel with him,
+and beat him; you have always beaten him, even here where he has been
+supreme as governor--from first to last, you have beaten him."
+
+"I hope I shall be even with him at the last--at the very last," was
+Dyck Calhoun's reply. "We were made to be foes. We were from the first.
+I felt it when I saw him at Playmore. Nothing has changed since then. He
+will try to destroy me here, but I will see it through. I will try and
+turn his rapier-points. I will not be the target of his arrows without
+making some play against him. The man is a fool. I could help him here,
+but he will have none of it, and he is running great risks. He has been
+warned that the Maroons are restive, that the black slaves will rise if
+the Maroons have any initial success, and he will listen to no advice.
+He would not listen to me, but, knowing that, I got the provost-marshal
+to approach him, and when he knew my hand was in it, he stiffened. He
+would have naught to do with it, and so no preparations are made. And
+up there"--he turned and pointed--"up there in Trelawney the Maroons are
+plotting and planning, and any day an explosion may occur. If it occurs
+no one will be safe, especially if the blacks rise too--I mean the black
+slaves. There will be no safety then for any one."
+
+"For us as well, you mean?"
+
+"For you as well as all others, and you are nearer to Trelawney than
+most others. You are in their path. So be wise, Mrs. Llyn, and get back
+to Virginia as soon as may be. It is a better place than this."
+
+"My daughter is mistress here," was the sorrowful reply. "She will have
+her own way."
+
+"Your daughter will not care to stay here now," he answered firmly.
+
+"She will do what she thinks her duty in spite of her own feelings, or
+yours, or mine. It is her way, and it has always been her way."
+
+"I will tell her what I fear, and she may change her mind."
+
+"But the governor may want her to stay," answered Mrs. Llyn none too
+sagely, but with that in her mind which seemed to justify her.
+
+"Lord Mallow--oh, if you think there is any influence in him to keep
+her, that is another question," said Dyck with a grim smile. "But,
+nevertheless, I think you should leave here and go back to Virginia.
+It is no safe place for two ladies, in all senses. Whatever Lord Mallow
+thinks or does, this is no place for you. This place is your daughter's
+for her to do what she chooses with it, and I think she ought to sell
+it. There would be no trouble in getting a purchaser. It is a fine
+property."
+
+"But the governor might not think as you do; he might not wish it sold."
+
+Mrs. Llyn was playing a bold, indeed a reckless game. She wanted to show
+Dyck there were others who would interest themselves in Sheila even if
+he, Dyck, were blotted from the equation; that the girl could look high,
+if her mind turned towards marriage. Also she felt that Dyck should know
+the facts before any one else, so that he would not be shocked in the
+future, if anything happened. Yet in her deepest heart she wished him
+well. She liked him as she had never liked any of Sheila's admirers,
+and if the problem of Erris Boyne had been solved, she would gladly have
+seen him wedded to Sheila.
+
+"What has the governor to do with it!" he declared. "It is your
+daughter's own property, and she is free to hold or to part with it.
+There is no Crown consent to ask, no vice-regal approval needed."
+
+Suddenly he became angry, almost excited. His blood pounded in his
+veins. Was this man, Mallow, to come between his and her fate always,
+come into his problem at the most critical moment? "God in heaven!" he
+said in a burst of passion, "is this a land of the British Empire or is
+it not? Why should that man break in on every crisis? Why should he
+do this or that--say yea or nay, give or take away! He is the king's
+representative, but he is bound by laws as rigid as any that bind you or
+me. What has he to do with your daughter or what concerns her? Is there
+not enough trouble in the world without bringing in Lord Mallow? If
+he--"
+
+He stopped short, for he saw coming from the summerhouse, Sheila with
+his paper in her hand. She walked slowly and with dignity. She carried
+her head high and firmly, and the skin of her face was shining with
+light as she came on. Dyck noticed how her wide skirts flicked against
+the flowers that bordered the path, and how her feet seemed scarcely to
+touch the ground as she walked--a spirit, a regnant spirit of summer she
+seemed. But in her face there was no summer, there was only autumn and
+winter, only the bright frost of purpose. As she came, her mother turned
+as though to leave Dyck Calhoun. She called to her to wait, and Mrs.
+Llyn stood still, anxious. As Sheila came near she kept her eyes fixed
+on Dyck. When she reached them, she held out the paper to him.
+
+"It is wonderful," she said quietly, "that which you have written, but
+it does not tell all; it does not say that you did not kill my father.
+You are punished for the crime, and we must abide by it, even though you
+did not kill Erris Boyne. It is the law that has done it, and we cannot
+abash the law."
+
+"We shall meet no more then!" said Dyck with decision.
+
+Her lips tightened, her face paled. "There are some things one may not
+do, and one of them is to be openly your friend--at present."
+
+He put the letter carefully away in his pocket, his hand shaking, then
+flicking an insect from the collar of his coat, he said gently, yet with
+an air of warning: "I have been telling Mrs. Llyn about the Maroons up
+there"--he pointed towards Trelawney--"and I have advised your going
+back to Virginia. The Maroons may rise at any moment, and no care is
+being taken by Lord Mallow to meet the danger. If they rise, you, here,
+would be in their way, and I could not guarantee your safety. Besides,
+Virginia is a better place--a safer place than this," he added with
+meaning.
+
+"You wish to frighten me out of Jamaica," she replied with pain in her
+voice. "Well, I will not go till I have put this place in order and
+brought discipline and good living here. I shall stay here in Jamaica
+till I have done my task. There is no reason why we should meet. This
+place is not so large as Ireland or America, but it is large enough to
+give assurance we shall not meet. And if we meet, there is no reason why
+we should talk. As for the Maroons, when the trouble comes, I shall
+not be unprepared." She smiled sadly. "The governor may not take your
+advice, but I shall. And remember that I come from a land not without
+its dangers. We have Red Indians and black men there, and I can shoot."
+
+He waved a hand abruptly and then made a gesture--such as an ascetic
+might make-of reflection, of submission. "I shall remember every word
+you have said, and every note of your voice will be with me in all the
+lonely years to come. Good-bye--but no, let me say this before I go: I
+did not know that Erris Boyne was your father until after he was dead.
+So, if I killed him, it was in complete ignorance. I did not know. But
+we have outlived our friendship, and we must put strangeness in its
+place. Good-bye--God protect you!" he added, looking into Sheila's eyes.
+
+She looked at him with sorrow. Her lips opened but no words came forth.
+He passed on out of the garden, and presently they heard his horse's
+hoofs on the sand.
+
+"He is a great gentleman," said Mrs. Llyn.
+
+Her daughter's eyes were dry and fevered. Her lips were drawn. "We must
+begin the world again," she said brokenly. Then suddenly she sank upon
+the ground. "My God--oh, my God!" she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+
+Two months went by. In that time Sheila and Dyck did not meet, though
+Dyck saw her more than once in the distance at Kingston. Yet they had
+never met since that wonderful day at Salem, when they had parted, as
+it might seem, for ever. Dyck had had news of her, however, for Darius
+Boland had come and gone between the two plantations, and had won
+Michael Clones' confidence. He knew more perhaps than he ever conveyed
+to Dyck, who saw him and talked with him, gave him advice as to the
+customs of Jamaica, and let him see the details in the management of
+Enniskillen.
+
+Yet Dyck made no inquiries as to how Mrs. Llyn and Sheila were; first
+because he chose not to do so, and also because Darius Boland, at one
+time or another, would of his own accord tell what Mrs. Llyn and Sheila
+were doing. One day Boland brought word that the governor had, more than
+once, visited Salem with his suite; that he had sat in judgment on a
+case in Kingston concerning the estate of Salem, and had given decision
+in its favour; and that Mrs. Llyn and Sheila visited him at Spanish Town
+and were entertained at King's House at second breakfast and dinner--in
+short, that Lord Mallow was making hay in Salem Plantation. This was no
+surprise to Dyck. He had full intuition of the foray the governor would
+make on Sheila, her estate and wealth.
+
+Lord Mallow had acted with discretion, and yet with sufficient passion
+to warrant some success. He was trying to make for himself a future
+which might mean the control of a greater colony even. If he had wealth,
+that would be almost a certainty, and he counted Sheila's gold as a
+guarantee of power. He knew well how great effect could be produced at
+Westminster and at the Royal Palace by a discreet display of wealth. He
+was also aware that no scandal could be made through an alliance with
+Sheila, for she had inherited long after the revolutionary war and with
+her skirts free from responsibility. England certainly would welcome
+wealth got through an Irish girl inheriting her American uncle's
+estates. So, steadily and happily, he pressed his suit. At his
+dinner-parties he gave her first place nearly always, and even broke the
+code controlling precedence when his secretary could be overruled. Thus
+Sheila was given honour when she did not covet it, and so it was that
+one day at Salem when the governor came to court her she was able to
+help Dyck Calhoun.
+
+"Then you go to Enniskillen?" Lord Mallow said to Darius Boland, as he
+entered the plantation, being met by the astute American.
+
+"Sometimes, your honour," was the careful reply. "I suppose you know
+what Mr. Calhoun's career has been, eh?"
+
+"Oh, in a way, your honour. They tell me he is a good swordsman."
+
+The governor flushed. "He told you that, did he?"
+
+"No, no, your honour, never. He told me naught. He does not boast. He's
+as modest as a man from Virginia. He does not brag at all."
+
+"Who told you, then?"
+
+"Ah, well, I heard it in the town! They speak of him there. They all
+know that Kingston and Spanish Town, and all the other places, would
+have been French by now, if it hadn't been for him. Oh, they talk a lot
+about him in Kingston and thereabouts!"
+
+"What swordsmanship do they speak of that was remarkable?"
+
+"Has your honour forgotten, then? Sure, seven years is a poor limit for
+a good memory." The blow was a shrewd one, for Darius Boland knew that
+Phoenix Park must be a galling memory to his honour. But Darius did not
+care. He guessed why the governor was coming to Salem, and he could not
+shirk having his hand in it. He had no fear of the results.
+
+"Aye, seven years is a poor limit," he repeated.
+
+The governor showed no feeling. He had been hit, and he took it as part
+of the game. "Ah, you mean the affair in Phoenix Park?" he said with no
+apparent feeling.
+
+Darius tossed his head a little. "Wasn't it a clever bit of work? Didn't
+he get fame there by defeating one of the best swordsmen--in Ireland?"
+
+Lord Mallow nodded. "He got fame, which he lost in time," he answered.
+
+"You mean he put the sword that had done such good work against a
+champion into a man's bowels, without 'by your leave,' or 'will you draw
+and fight'?"
+
+"Something like that," answered the governor sagely.
+
+"Is it true you believed he'd strike a man that wasn't armed, sir?"
+
+The governor winced, but showed nothing. "He'd been drinking--he is a
+heavy drinker. Do you never drink with him?"
+
+Darius Boland's face took on a strange look. Here was an intended insult
+to Dyck Calhoun. Right well the governor knew their relative social
+positions. Darius pulled at the hair on his chin reflectively. "Yes,
+I've drunk his liquor, but not as you mean, your honour. He'd drink with
+any man at all: he has no nasty pride. But he doesn't drink with me."
+
+"Modest enough he is to be a good republican, eh, Boland?"
+
+"Since your honour puts it so, it must stand. I'll not dispute it, me
+being what I am and employed by whom I am."
+
+Darius Boland had a gift of saying the right thing in the right way,
+and he had said it now. The governor was not so dense as to put this man
+against him, for women were curious folk. They often attach importance
+to the opinion of a faithful servant and let it weigh against great men.
+He had once lost a possible fortune by spurning a little terrier of the
+daughter of the Earl of Shallow, and the lesson had sunk deep into his
+mind. He was high-placed, but not so high as to be sure of success where
+a woman was concerned, and he had made up his mind to capture Sheila
+Llyn, if so be she could be caught flying, or settled, or sleeping.
+
+"Ah, well, he has drunk with worse men than republicans. Boland. He was
+a common sailor. He drank what was given him with whom it chanced in the
+fo'castle."
+
+Darius sniffed a little, and kept his head. "But he changed all that,
+your honour, and gave sailormen better drink than they ever had, I
+hear. In Jamaica he treats his slaves as though they were men and not
+Mohicans."
+
+"Well, he'll have less freedom in future, Boland, for word has come from
+London that he's to keep to his estate and never leave it."
+
+Darius looked concerned, and his dry face wrinkled still more. "Ah, and
+when was this word come, your honour?"
+
+"But yesterday, Boland, and he'll do well to obey, for I have no choice
+but to take him in hand if he goes gallivanting."
+
+"Gallivanting--here, in Jamaica! Does your honour remember where we
+are?"
+
+"Not in a bishop's close, Boland."
+
+"No, not in a bishop's close, nor in an archdeacon's garden. For of
+all places on earth where they defy religion, this is the worst, your
+honour. There's as much religion here as you'll find in a last year's
+bird's-nest. Gallivanting--where should he gallivant?"
+
+The governor waved a contemptuous hand. "It doesn't need ingenuity to
+find a place, for some do it on their own estate. I have seen it."
+
+Darius spoke sharply. "Your honour, there's naught on Mr. Calhoun's
+estate that's got the taint, and he's not the man to go hunting for it.
+Drink--well, suppose a gentleman does take his quartern, is it a crime?
+I ask your honour, is that a crime in Jamaica?"
+
+"It's no crime, Boland; nevertheless, your Mr. Calhoun will have to
+take his fill on his own land from the day I send him the command of the
+London Government."
+
+"And what day will that be, your honour?"
+
+To be questioned by one who had been a revolutionary was distasteful to
+the governor. "That day will be when I find the occasion opportune, my
+brave Boland," he said sourly.
+
+"Why 'brave,' your honour?" There was an ominous light in Darius' eye.
+
+"Did you not fight with George Washington against the King of
+England--against King George? And if you did, was that not brave?"
+
+"It was true, your honour," came the firm reply. "It was the one right
+good thing to do, as we proved it by the victory we had. We did what we
+set out to do. But see, if you will let a poor man speak his mind, if I
+were you I'd not impose the command on Mr. Calhoun."
+
+"Why, Boland?"
+
+Darius spoke courageously. "Your honour, he has many friends in Jamaica,
+and they won't stand it. Besides, he won't stand it. And if he contests
+your honour, the island will be with him."
+
+"Is he popular here as all that?" asked the governor with a shrug of the
+shoulders.
+
+"They don't give their faith and confidence to order, your honour,"
+answered Darius with a dry inflection.
+
+The burr in the voice did not escape the other's attentive ear. He swung
+a glance sharply at Darius. "What is the secret of his popularity--how
+has it been made?" he asked morosely.
+
+Darius' face took on a caustic look. "He's only been in the island a
+short time, your honour, and I don't know that I'm a good judge, but
+I'll say the people here have great respect for bravery and character."
+
+"Character! Character!" sniffed the governor. "Where did he get that?"
+
+"Well, I don't know his age, but it's as old as he is--his character.
+Say, I'm afraid I'm talking too much, your honour. We speak our minds in
+Virginia; we never count the cost."
+
+The governor waved a deprecating hand. "You'll find the measure of your
+speech in good time, Boland, I've no doubt. Meanwhile, you've got the
+pleasure of hunting it. Character, you say. Well, that isn't what the
+judge and jury said."
+
+Darius took courage again. Couldn't Lord Mallow have any decency?
+
+"Judge and jury be damned, your honour," he answered boldly. "It was an
+Irish verdict. It had no sense. It was a bit of ballyhack. He did not
+kill an unarmed man. It isn't his way. Why, he didn't kill you when he
+had you at his mercy in Phoenix Park, now, did he, governor?"
+
+A flush stole up the governor's face from his chin. Then he turned to
+Boland and looked him straight in the eyes. "That's true. He had me at
+his mercy, and he did not take my life."
+
+"Then, why do you head the cabal against him? Why do you take joy in
+commanding him to stay on his estate? Is that grateful, your honour?"
+
+The governor winced, but he said: "It's what I am ordered to do, my man.
+I'm a servant of the Crown, and the Crown has ordained it."
+
+Again Darius grew stronger in speech. "But why do you have pleasure in
+it? Is nothing left to your judgment? Do you say to me that if he keeps
+the freedom such as he has enjoyed, you'd punish him? Must the governor
+be as ruthless as his master? Look, your honour, I wouldn't impose that
+command--not till I'd taken his advice about the Maroons anyway. There's
+trouble brewing, and Mr. Calhoun knows it. He has warned you through
+the provost-marshal. I'd heed his warning, your honour, or it may injure
+your reputation as a ruler. No, I'd see myself in nethermost hell before
+I'd meddle with Mr. Calhoun. He's a dangerous man, when he's moved."
+
+"Boland, you'll succeed as a schoolmaster, when all else fails. You
+teach persistently."
+
+"Your honour is clever enough to know what's what, but I'd like to see
+the Maroons dealt with. This is not my country, but I've got interests
+here, or my mistress has, and that's the same to me.... Does your honour
+travel often without a suite?"
+
+The governor waved a hand behind him. "I left them at the last
+plantation, and rode on alone. I felt safe enough till I saw you,
+Boland."
+
+He smiled grimly, and a grimmer smile stole to the lean lips of the
+manager of Salem. "Fear is a good thing for forward minds, your honour,"
+he said with respect in the tone of his voice and challenge in the
+words.
+
+"I'll say this, Boland, your mistress has been fortunate in her staff.
+You have a ready tongue."
+
+"Oh, I'm readier in other things, your honour, as you'd find on
+occasion. But I thank you for the compliment in a land where compliments
+are few. For a planter's country it has few who speak as well as they
+entertain. I'll say this for the land you govern, the hospitality is
+rich and rare."
+
+"In what way, Boland?"
+
+"Why, your honour, it is the custom for a man and his whole family to
+go on a visit to a neighbour, perhaps twenty or forty miles away, bring
+their servants--maybe a dozen or more--and sit down on their neighbour's
+hearthstone. There they eat his food, drink his wine, exhaust his
+fowl-yard and debilitate his cook--till all the resources of the place
+are played out; then with both hands round his friend's neck the man and
+his people will say adieu, and go back to their own accumulated larder
+and await the return visit. The wonder is Jamaica is so rich, for truly
+the waste is harmful. We have the door open in Virginia, but not in that
+way. We welcome, but we don't debauch."
+
+The governor smiled. "As you haven't old friends here, you should
+make your life a success--ah, there is the open door, Boland, and your
+mistress standing in it. But I come without my family, and with no
+fell purposes. I will not debilitate the cook; I will not exhaust the
+fowl-yard. A roasted plantain is good enough for me."
+
+Darius' looks quickened, and he jerked his chin up. "So, your honour,
+so. But might I ask that you weigh carefully the warning of Mr. Calhoun.
+There's trouble at Trelawny. I have it from good sources, and Mr.
+Calhoun has made preparations against the sure risings. I'd take heed
+of what he says. He knows. Your honour, it is not my mistress in the
+doorway, it is Mrs. Llyn; she is shorter than my mistress."
+
+The governor shaded his brow with his hands. Then he touched up his
+horse. "Yes, you are right, Boland. It is Mrs. Llyn. And look you,
+Boland, I'll think over what you've said about the Maroons and Mr.
+Calhoun. He's doing no harm as he is, that's sure. So why shouldn't he
+go on as he is? That's your argument, isn't it?"
+
+Boland nodded. "It's part of my argument, not all of it. Of course he's
+doing no harm; he's doing good every day. He's got a stiff hand for the
+shirker and the wanton, but he's a man that knows his mind, and that's a
+good thing in Jamaica."
+
+"Does he come here-ever?"
+
+"He has been here only once since our arrival. There are reasons why he
+does not come, as your honour kens, knowing the history of Erris Boyne."
+
+A quarter of an hour later Darius Boland said to Sheila: "He's got an
+order from England to keep Mr. Calhoun to his estate and to punish him,
+if he infringes the order."
+
+Sheila started. "He will infringe the order if it's made, Boland. But
+the governor will be unwise to try and impose it. I will tell him so."
+
+"But, mistress, he should not be told that this news comes from me."
+
+"No, he should not, Boland. I can tempt him to speak of it, I think. He
+hates Mr. Calhoun, and will not need much prompting."
+
+Sheila had changed since she saw Dyck Calhoun last. Her face was
+thinner, but her form was even fuller than it was when she had bade him
+good-bye, as it seemed to him for ever, and as it at first seemed
+to her. Through anxious days and nights she had fought with the old
+passion; and at last it seemed the only way to escape from the torture
+was by making all thought of him impossible. How could this be done?
+Well, Lord Mallow would offer a way. Lord Mallow was a man of ancient
+Irish family, was a governor, had ability, was distinguished-looking
+in a curious lean way; and he had a real gift with his tongue. He stood
+high in the opinion of the big folk at Westminster, and had a future. He
+had a winning way with women--a subtle, perniciously attractive way with
+her sex, and to herself he had been delicately persuasive. He had the
+ancient gift of picturesqueness without ornamentation. He had a strong
+will and a healthy imagination. He was a man of mettle and decision.
+
+Of all who had entered her field outside of Dyck Calhoun he was the most
+attractive; he was the nearest to the possible husband which she must
+one day take. And if at any day at all, why not now when she needed
+a man as she had never done--when she needed to forget? The sardonic
+critic might ask why she did not seek forgetfulness in flight; why she
+remained in Jamaica where was what she wished to forget. There was no
+valid reason, save a business one, why she should remain in Jamaica, and
+she was in a quandary when she put the question. There were, however,
+other reasons which she used when all else failed to satisfy her
+exigeant mind. There was the question of vessels to Virginia or New
+York. They were few and not good, and in any case they could have no
+comfortable journey to the United States for several weeks at least,
+for, since the revolutionary war, commerce with the United States was
+sparse.
+
+Also, there was the question of Salem. She did not feel she ought to
+waste the property which her Uncle Bryan had nurtured with care. In
+justice to his memory, and in fairness to Darius Boland, she felt she
+ought to stay--for a time. It did not occur to her that these reasons
+would vanish like mist--that a wilful woman would sweep them into the
+basket of forgetfulness, and do what she wished in spite of reason: that
+all else would be sacrificed, if the spirit so possessed her. Truth was
+that, far back in her consciousness, there was a vision of better days
+and things. It was as though some angel touched the elbow of her spirit
+and said: "Stay on, for things will be better than they seem. You will
+find your destiny here. Stay on."
+
+So she had stayed. She was deluding herself to believe that what she was
+doing was all for the best; that the clouds were rising; that her fate
+had fairer aspects than had seemed possible when Dyck Calhoun told her
+the terrible tale of the death of her father, Erris Boyne. Yet memory
+gave a touch of misery and bitterness to all she thought and did. For
+twenty-five years she had lived in ignorance as to her paternity. It
+surely was futile that her mother should have suffered all those years,
+with little to cheer her, while her daughter should be radiant in health
+and with a mind free from care or sadness. Yet the bitterest thing
+of all was the thought that her father was a traitor, and had died
+sacrificing another man. When Dyck had told her first, she had shivered
+with anger and shame--but anger and shame had gone. Only one thing gave
+her any comfort--the man who knew Erris Boyne was a traitor, and could
+profit by telling it, held his tongue for her own sake, kept his own
+counsel, and went to prison for four years as the price of his silence.
+He was now her neighbour and he loved her, and, if the shadow of a grave
+was not between them, would offer himself in marriage to her. This she
+knew beyond all doubt. He had given all a man can give--had saved her
+and killed her father--in ignorance had killed her father; in love had
+saved herself. What was to be done?
+
+In a strange spirit Sheila entered the room where the governor sat with
+her mother. She had reached the limit of her powers of suffering. Soon
+after her mother had left the room, the governor said:
+
+"Why do you think I have come here to-day?"
+
+He added to the words a note of sympathy, even of passion in his voice.
+
+"It was to visit my mother and myself, and to see how Salem looks after
+our stay on it, was it not?"
+
+"Yes, to see your mother and yourself, but chiefly the latter. As for
+Salem, it looks as though a mastermind had been at work, I see it in
+everything. The slaves are singing. Listen!"
+
+He held up a finger as though to indicate attention and direction.
+
+ "One, two, three,
+ All de same;
+ Black, white, brown,
+ All de same;
+ All de same.
+ One, two, three--"
+
+They could hear the words indistinctly.
+
+"What do the words mean?" asked Sheila. "I don't understand them."
+
+"No more do I, but I think they refer to the march of pestilence or
+plague. Numbers, colour, race, nothing matters, the plague sweeps all
+away. Ah, then, I was right," he added. "There is the story in other
+words. Listen again."
+
+To clapping of hands in unison, the following words were sung:
+
+ "New-come buckra,
+ He get sick,
+ He tak fever,
+ He be die;
+ He be die.
+ New-come buckra--"
+
+"Well, it may be a chant of the plague, but it's lacking in poetry," she
+remarked. "Doesn't it seem so to you?"
+
+"No, I certainly shouldn't go so far as that. Think of how much of a
+story is crowded into those few words. No waste, nothing thrown away.
+It's all epic, or that's my view, anyhow," said the governor. "If you
+look out on those who are singing it, you'd see they are resting from
+their labours; that they are fighting the ennui which most of us feel
+when we rest from our labours. Let us look at them."
+
+The governor stood up and came to the open French windows that faced the
+fields of sugar-cane. In the near distance were clumps of fruit trees,
+of hedges of lime and flowering shrubs, rows of orange trees, mangoes,
+red and purple, forbidden-fruit and grapefruit, the large scarlet
+fruit of the acqui, the avocado-pear, the feathering bamboo, and the
+Jack-fruit tree, with its enormous fruit like pumpkins. Parrots were
+chattering in the acacia and in the Otaheite plum tree, with its bright
+pink blossoms like tassels, and flanking the negro huts by the river
+were bowers of grenadilla fruit. Around the negro huts were small
+individual plantations kept by the slaves, for which they had one day a
+fortnight, besides Sundays, free to work on their own account. Here and
+there also were patches of "ground-fruit," as the underground vegetables
+were called, while there passed by on their way to the open road leading
+to Kingston wains loaded with sugar-casks, drawn by oxen, and in two
+cases by sumpter mules.
+
+"Is there anything finer than that in Virginia?" asked the governor.
+"I have never been in Virginia, but I take this to be in some ways like
+that state. Is it?"
+
+"In some ways only. We have not the same profusion of wild fruits and
+trees, but we have our share--and it is not so hot as here. It is a
+better country, though."
+
+"In what way is it better?" the governor asked almost acidly.
+
+"It is better governed."
+
+"What do you mean by that? Isn't Jamaica well governed?"
+
+"Not so well that it couldn't be improved," was Sheila's reply.
+
+"What improvements would you suggest?" Lord Mallow asked urbanely, for
+he was set to play his cards carefully to-day.
+
+"More wisdom in the governor," was the cheerful and bright reply.
+
+"Is he lacking in wisdom?"
+
+"In some ways, yes."
+
+"Will you mind specifying some of the things?"
+
+"I think he is careless."
+
+"Careless--as to what?"
+
+Sheila smiled. "He is indifferent to good advice. He has been told of
+trouble among the Maroons, that they mean to rise; he has been advised
+to make preparations, and he makes none, and he is deceived by a show
+of loyalty on the part of the slaves. Lord Mallow, if the free Maroons
+rise, why should not the black slaves rise at the same time? Why do you
+not act?"
+
+"Is everybody whose good opinion is worth having mad?" answered the
+governor. "I have sent my inspectors to Trelawney. I have had reports
+from them. I have used every care--what would you have me do?"
+
+"Used every care? Why don't you ensure the Maroons peaceableness by
+advancing on them? Why don't you take them prisoners? They are enraged
+that two of their herdsmen should be whipped by a negro-slave under the
+order of one of your captains. They are angry and disturbed and have
+ambushed the roads to Trelawney, so I'm told."
+
+"Did Mr. Calhoun tell you that when he was here?"
+
+"It was not that which Mr. Calhoun told me the only time he came here.
+But who Erris Boyne was. I never knew till, in his honour, he told me,
+coming here for that purpose. I never knew who my father was till he
+told me. My mother had kept it from me all my life."
+
+The governor looked alert. "And you have not seen him since that day?"
+
+"I have seen him, but I have not spoken to him. It was in the distance
+only."
+
+"I understand your manager, Mr. Boland, sees him."
+
+"My manager does not share my private interests--or troubles. He is free
+to go where he will, to speak to whom he chooses. He visits Enniskillen,
+I suppose--it is a well-managed plantation on Jamaican lines, and its
+owner is a man of mark."
+
+Sheila spoke without agitation of any kind; her face was firm and calm,
+her manner composed, her voice even. As she talked, she seemed to be
+probing the centre of a flower which she had caught from a basket at
+the window, and her whole personality was alight and vivifying, her good
+temper and spirit complete. As he looked at her, he had an overmastering
+desire to make her his own--his wife. She was worth hundreds of
+thousands of pounds; she had beauty, ability and authority. She was
+the acme of charm and good bearing. With her he could climb high on
+the ladder of life. He might be a really great figure in the British
+world-if she gave her will to help him, to hold up his hands. It had
+never occurred to him that Dyck Calhoun could be a rival, till he had
+heard of Dyck's visit to Sheila and her mother, till he had heard
+Sheila praise him at the first dinner he had given to the two ladies on
+Christmas Day.
+
+On that day it was clear Sheila did not know who her father was; but
+stranger things had happened than that she should take up with, and
+even marry, a man imprisoned for killing another, even one who had been
+condemned as a mutineer, and had won freedom by saving the king's
+navy. But now that Sheila knew the truth there could be no danger! Dyck
+Calhoun would be relegated to his proper place in the scheme of things.
+Who was there to stand between him and his desire? What was there to
+stay the great event? He himself was a peer and high-placed, for it
+was a time when the West Indian Islands were a centre of the world's
+fighting, where men like Rodney had made everlasting fame; where the
+currents of world-controversy challenged, met and fought for control.
+
+The West Indies was as much a cock-pit of the fighting powers as ever
+Belgium was; and in those islands there was wealth and the power which
+wealth buys; the clash of white and black and coloured peoples; the
+naval contests on the sea; the horrible massacres and enslavement
+of free white peoples, as in St. Domingo and Grenada; the dominating
+attacks of people fighting for control--peoples of old empires like
+France and Spain, and new empires like that of Britain. These were a
+centre of colonial life as important as had been the life in Virginia
+and New York and the New England States and Canada--indeed, more
+important than Canada in one sense, for the West Indies brought wealth
+to the British Isles, and had a big export trade. He lost no time in
+bringing matters to an issue.
+
+He got to his feet and came near to her. His eyes were inflamed with
+passion, his manner was impressive. He had a distinguished face, become
+more distinguished since his assumption of governorship, and authority
+had increased his personality.
+
+"A man of mark!" he said. "You mean a marked man. Let me tell you I have
+an order from the British Government to confine him to his estate; not
+to permit him to leave it; and, if he does, to arrest him. That is my
+commanded duty. You approve, do you not? Or are you like most women,
+soft at heart to bold criminals?"
+
+Sheila did not reply at once. The news was no news to her, for Darius
+Boland had told her; but she thought it well to let the governor think
+he had made a new, sensational statement.
+
+"No," she said at last, looking him calmly in the eyes. "I have no soft
+feelings for criminals as criminals, none at all. And there is every
+reason why I should be adamant to this man, Dyck Calhoun. But, Lord
+Mallow, I would go carefully about this, if I were you. He is a man who
+takes no heed of people, high or low, and has no fear of consequences.
+Have you thought of the consequences to yourself? Suppose he resists,
+what will you do?"
+
+"If he resists I will attack him with due force."
+
+"You mean you will send your military and police to attack him?" The
+gibe was covered, but it found the governor's breast. He knew what she
+was meaning.
+
+"You would not expect me to do police work, would you? Is that what your
+president does? What your great George Washington does? Does he make the
+state arrests with his own hand?"
+
+"I have no doubt he would if the circumstances were such as to warrant
+it. He has no small vices, and no false feelings. He has proved
+himself," she answered boldly.
+
+"Well, in that case," responded Lord Mallow irritably, "the event will
+be as is due. The man is condemned by my masters, and he must submit to
+my authority. He is twice a criminal, and--"
+
+"And yet a hero and a good swordsman, and as honest as men are made in
+a dishonest world. Your Admiralty and your government first pardoned the
+man, and then gave him freedom on the island which you tried to prevent;
+and now they turn round and confine him to his acres. Is that pardon in
+a real sense? Did you write to the government and say he ought not to
+be free to roam, lest he should discover more treasure-chests and buy
+another estate? Was it you?"
+
+The governor shook his head. "No, not I. I told the government in
+careful and unrhetorical language the incident of his coming here, and
+what I did, and my reasons for doing it--that was all."
+
+"And you being governor they took your advice. See, my lord, if this
+thing is done to him it will be to your own discomfiture. It will hurt
+you in the public service."
+
+"Why, to hear you speak, mistress, it would almost seem you had a
+fondness for the man who killed your father, who went to jail for it,
+and--"
+
+"And became a mutineer," intervened the girl flushing. "Why not say
+all? Why not catalogue his offences? Fondness for the man who killed
+my father, you say! Yes, I had a deep and sincere fondness for him ever
+since I met him at Playmore over seven years ago. Yes, a fondness which
+only his crime makes impossible. But in all that really matters I am
+still his friend. He did not know he was killing my father, who had no
+claims upon me, none at all, except that through him I have life and
+being; but it is enough to separate us for ever in the eyes of the
+world, and in my eyes. Not morally, of course, but legally and actually.
+He and I are as far apart as winter and summer; we are parted for ever
+and ever and ever."
+
+Now at last she was inflamed. Every nerve in her was alive. All she
+had ever felt for Dyck Calhoun came rushing to the surface, demanding
+recognition, reasserting itself. As she used the words, "ever and ever
+and ever," it was like a Cordelia bidding farewell to Lear, her father,
+for ever, for there was that in her voice which said: "It is final
+separation, it is the judgment of Jehovah, and I must submit. It is the
+last word."
+
+Lord Mallow saw his opportunity, and did not hesitate. "No, you are
+wrong, wholly wrong," he said. "I did not bias what I said in my
+report--a report I was bound to make--by any covert prejudice against
+Mr. Calhoun. I guarded myself especially"--there he lied, but he was an
+incomparable liar--"lest it should be used against him. It would appear,
+however, that the new admiral's report with mine were laid together, and
+the government came to its conclusion accordingly. So I am bound to do
+my duty."
+
+"If you--oh, if you did your duty, you would not obey the command of the
+government. Are there not times when to obey is a crime, and is not this
+one of them? Lord Mallow, you would be doing as great a crime as Mr.
+Dyck Calhoun ever committed, or could commit, if you put this order
+into actual fact. You are governor here, and your judgment would be
+accepted--remember it is an eight weeks' journey to London at the least,
+and what might not happen in that time! Are you not given discretion?"
+
+The governor nodded. "Yes, I am given discretion, but this is an order."
+
+"An order!" she commented. "Then if it should not be fulfilled, break
+it and take the consequences. The principle should be--Do what is right,
+and have no fear."
+
+"I will think it over," answered the governor. "What you say has immense
+weight with me--more even than I have words to say. Yes, I will think it
+over--I promise you. You are a genius--you prevail."
+
+Her face softened, a new something came into her manner. "You do truly
+mean it?" she asked with lips that almost trembled.
+
+It seemed to her that to do this thing for Dyck Calhoun was the least
+that was possible, and it was perhaps the last thing she might ever be
+able to do. She realized how terrible it would be for him to be shorn of
+the liberty he had always had; how dangerous it might be in many
+ways; and how the people of the island might become excited by it--and
+troublesome.
+
+"Yes, I mean it," answered Lord Mallow. "I mean it exactly as I say it."
+
+She smiled. "Well, that should recommend you for promotion," she said
+happily. "I am sure you will decide not to enforce the order, if you
+think about it. You shall be promoted, your honour, to a better place,"
+she repeated, half-satirically.
+
+"Shall I then?" he asked with a warm smile and drawing close to her.
+"Shall I? Then it can only be by your recommendation. Ah, my dear,
+my beautiful dear one," he hastened to add, "my life is possible
+henceforward only through you. You have taught me by your life and
+person, by your beauty and truth, by your nobility of mind and character
+how life should be lived. I have not always deserved your good opinion
+nor that of others. I have fought duels and killed men; I have aspired
+to place; I have connived at appointment; I have been vain, overbearing
+and insistent on my rights or privileges; I have played the dictator
+here in Jamaica; I have not been satisfied save to get my own way; but
+you have altered all that. Your coming here has given me a new outlook.
+Sheila, you have changed me, and you can change me infinitely more. I
+who have been a master wish to become your slave. I want you--beloved, I
+want you for my wife."
+
+He reached out as though to take her hand, but she drew back from him.
+His thrilling words had touched her, as she had seldom been touched, as
+she had never been touched by any one save the man that must never be
+hers; she was submerged for the moment in the flood of his eloquence,
+and his yielding to her on the point of Dyck's imprisonment gave fresh
+accent to his words. Yet she could not, she dared not yet say yes to his
+demand.
+
+"My lord," she said, "oh, you have stirred me! Yet I dare not reply to
+you as you wish. Life is hard as it is, and you have suddenly made it
+harder. What is more, I do not, I cannot, believe you. You have loved
+many. Your life has been a covert menace. Oh, I know what they said
+of you in Ireland. I know not of your life here. I suppose it is
+circumspect now; but in Ireland it was declared you were notorious with
+women."
+
+"It is a lie," he answered. "I was not notorious. I was no better and no
+worse than many another man. I played, I danced attendance, I said soft
+nothings, but I was tied to no woman in all Ireland. I was frolicsome
+and adventurous, but no more. There is no woman who can say I used her
+ill or took from her what I did not--"
+
+"Atone for, Lord Mallow?"
+
+"Atone--no. What I did not give return for, was what I was going to
+say."
+
+The situation was intense. She was in a place from which there was no
+escape except by flight or refusal. She did not really wish to refuse.
+Somehow, there had come upon her the desire to put all thought of Dyck
+Calhoun out of her mind by making it impossible for her to think of him;
+and marriage was the one sure and complete way--marriage with this man,
+was it possible? He held high position, he was her fellow countryman and
+an Irish peer, and she was the daughter of an evil man, who was, above
+all else, a traitor to his country, though Lord Mallow did not know
+that. The only one she knew possessed of the facts was the man she
+desired to save herself from in final way--Dyck Calhoun. Her heart
+was for the moment soft to Lord Mallow, in spite of his hatred of Dyck
+Calhoun. The governor was a man of charm in conversation. He was born
+with rare faculties. Besides, he had knowledge of humanity and of women.
+He knew how women could be touched. He had appealed to Sheila more by
+ability than by aught else. His concessions to her were discretion in
+a way. They opened the route to her affections, as his place and title
+could not do.
+
+"No, no, no, believe me, Sheila, I was a man who had too many
+temptations--that was all. But I did not spoil my life by them, and I
+am here a trusted servant of the government. I am a better governor than
+your first words to me would make you seem to think."
+
+Her eyes were shining, her face was troubled, her tongue was silent. She
+knew not what to say. She felt she could not say yes--yet she wanted to
+escape from him. Her good fortune did not desert her. Suddenly the door
+of the room opened and her mother entered.
+
+"There is a member of your suite here, your honour, asking for you. It
+is of most grave importance. It is urgent. What shall I say?"
+
+"Say nothing. I am coming," said the governor. "I am coming now."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+
+That night the Maroons broke loose upon Jamaica, and began murder and
+depredation against which the governor's activities were no check.
+Estates were invaded, and men, women and children killed, or carried
+into the mountains and held as hostages. In the middle and western
+part of the island the ruinous movements went on without being stayed;
+planters and people generally railed at the governor, and said that
+through his neglect these dark things were happening. It was said he
+had failed to punish offences by the Maroons, and this had given them
+confidence, filling them with defiance. They had one advantage not
+possessed by the government troops and militia--they were masters of
+every square rod of land in the middle and west of the island. Their
+plan was to raid, to ambush, to kill and to excite the slaves to rebel.
+
+The first assault and repulse took place not far from Enniskillen,
+Dyck Calhoun's plantation, and Michael Clones captured a Maroon who was
+slightly wounded.
+
+Michael challenged him thus: "Come now, my blitherin' friend, tell
+us your trouble--why are you risin'? You don't do this without
+cause--what's the cause?"
+
+The black man, naked except for a cloth about his loins, and with a
+small bag at his hip, slung from a cord over his shoulder, showed his
+teeth in a stark grimace.
+
+"You're a newcomer here, massa, or you'd know we're treated bad," he
+answered. "We're robbed and trod on and there's no word kept with us.
+We asked the governor for more land and he moved us off. We warned
+him against having one of our head young men flogged by a slave in the
+presence of slaves--for we are free men, and he laughs. So, knowing a
+few strong men can bring many weak men to their knees, we rose. I say
+this--there's plenty weak men in Jamaica, men who don't know right when
+they see it. So we rose, massa, and we'll make Jamaica sick before we've
+done. They can't beat us, for we can ambush here, and shoot those that
+come after us. We hide, one behind this rock and one behind that, two or
+three together, and we're safe. But the white soldiers come all together
+and beat drums and blow horns, and we know where they are, and so we
+catch 'em and kill 'em. You'll see, we'll capture captains and generals,
+and we'll cut their heads off and bury them in their own guts."
+
+He made an ugly grimace, and a loathsome gesture, and Michael Clones
+felt the man ought to die. He half drew his sword, but, thinking better
+of it, he took the Maroon to the Castle and locked him up in a slave's
+hut, having first bound him and put him in the charge of one he could
+trust. But as he put the man away, he said:
+
+"You talk of your people hiding, and men not being able to find you; but
+did you never hear of bloodhounds, that can hunt you down, and chew you
+up? Did you never hear of them?"
+
+The man's face wrinkled like a rag, for there is one thing the native
+fears more than all else, and that is the tooth of the hound. But he
+gathered courage, and said: "The governor has no hounds. There ain't
+none in Jamaica. We know dat--all of us know dat--all of us know dat,
+massa."
+
+Michael Clones laughed, and it was not pleasant to hear. "It may be the
+governor has no bloodhounds, and would not permit their being brought
+into the island, but my master is bringing them in himself--a lot with
+their drivers from Cuba, and you Maroons will have all you can do to
+hide. Sure, d'ye think every wan in the island is as foolish as the
+governor? If you do, y'are mistaken, and that's all there is to say."
+
+"The hounds not here--in de island, massa!" declared the Maroon
+questioningly.
+
+"They'll be here within the next few hours, and then where will you and
+your pals be? You'll be caught between sharp teeth--nice, red, sharp,
+bloody teeth; and you'll make good steak-better than your best olio."
+
+The native gave a moan--it was the lament of one whose crime was come
+tete-a-tete with its own punishment.
+
+"That's the game to play," said Michael to himself as he fastened the
+door tight. "The hounds will settle this fool-rebellion quicker than
+aught else. Mr. Calhoun's a wise man, and he ought to be governor
+here. Criminal? As much as the angel Gabriel! He must put down this
+rebellion--no wan else can. They're stronger, the Maroons, than ever
+they've been. They've planned this with skill, and they'll need a lot
+of handlin'. We're safe enough here, but down there at Salem--well, they
+may be caught in the bloody net. Bedad, that's sure."
+
+A few moments afterwards he met Dyck Calhoun. "Michael," said Dyck,
+"things are safe enough here, but we've prepared! The overseers,
+bookkeepers and drivers are loyal enough. But there are others not so
+safe. I'm going to Salem-riding as hard as I can, with six of our best
+men. They're not so daft at Salem as we are, Michael. They won't know
+how to act or what to do. Darius Boland is a good man, but he's only had
+Virginian experience, and this is different. A hundred Maroons are as
+good as a thousand white soldiers in the way the Maroons fight. There
+are a thousand of them, and they can lay waste this island, if they get
+going. So I shall stop them. The hounds are outside the harbour now,
+Michael. The ship Vincent, bringing them, was sighted by a sloop two
+days ago, making slowly for Kingston. She should be here before we've
+time to turn round. Michael, the game is in our hands, if we play it
+well. Do you go down to Kingston and--"
+
+He detailed what Michael was to do on landing the hounds, and laid out
+plans for the immediate future. "They're in danger at Salem, Michael, so
+we must help them. The hounds will settle this whole wretched business."
+
+Michael told him of his prisoner, and what effect the threat about the
+hounds had had. A look of purpose came into Dyck's face.
+
+"A hound is as fair as a gun, and hounds shall be used here in Jamaica.
+The governor can't refuse their landing now. The people would kill him
+if he did. It was I proposed it all."
+
+"Look, sir--who's that?" asked Michael, as they saw a figure riding
+under the palms not far away.
+
+It was very early morning, and the light was dim yet, but there was
+sufficient to make even far sight easy. Dyck shaded his forehead with
+his hand.
+
+"It's not one of our people, Michael. It's a stranger."
+
+As the rider came on he was stopped by two of the drivers of the estate.
+Dyck and Michael saw him hold up a letter, and a moment later he was on
+his way to Dyck, galloping hard. Arrived, he dropped to the ground, and
+saluted Dyck.
+
+"A letter from Salem, sir," he said, and handed it over to Dyck.
+
+Dyck nodded, broke the seal of the letter and read it quickly. Then he
+nodded again and bade the man eat a hearty breakfast and return with him
+on one of the Enniskillen horses, as his own would be exhausted. "We'll
+help protect Salem, my man," said Dyck.
+
+The man grinned. "That's good," he answered. "They knew naught of the
+rising when I left. But the governor was there yesterday, and he'd
+protect us."
+
+"Nonsense, fellow, the governor would go straight to Spanish Town where
+he belongs, when there is trouble."
+
+When the man had gone, Dyck turned to his servant. "Michael," he said,
+"the news in the letter came from Darius Boland. He says the governor
+told him he had orders from England to confine me here at Enniskillen,
+and he meant to do it. We'll see how he does it. If he sends his
+marshals, we'll make Gadarene swine of them."
+
+There was a smile at his lips, and it was contemptuous, and the lines
+of his forehead told of resolve. "Michael," he added, "we'll hunt Lord
+Mallow with the hounds of our good fortune, for this war is our war.
+They can't win it without me, and they shan't. Without the hounds it may
+be a two years' war--with the hounds it can't go beyond a week or so."
+
+"If the hounds get here, sir! But if they don't?"
+
+Dyck laid his hand upon the sword at his side. "If they don't get here,
+Michael, still the war will be ours, for we understand fighting, and
+the governor does not. Confine me here, will he? If he does, he'll be a
+better man than I have ever known him, Michael. In a few hours I shall
+be at Salem, to do what he could not, and would not, do if he could.
+His love is as deep as water on a roof, no deeper. He'll think first of
+himself, and afterwards of the owner of Salem or any other. Let me show
+you what I mean to do once we've Salem free from danger. Come and have a
+look at my chart."
+
+Some hours later Dyck Calhoun, with his six horsemen, was within a mile
+or so of Salem. They had ridden hard in the heat and were tired,
+but there was high spirit in the men, for they were behind a trusted
+leader--a man who ate little, but who did not disdain a bottle of
+Madeira or a glass of brandy, and who made good every step of the way he
+went--watchful, alert, careful, determined. They cared little what his
+past had been. Jamaica was not a heaven for the good, but it was a haven
+for many who had been ill-used elsewhere; where each man, as though he
+were really in a new world, was judged by his daily actions and not by
+any history of a hidden or an open past. As they came across country,
+Dyck always ahead, they saw how he responded to every sign of life
+in the bush, how he moved always with discretion where ambush seemed
+possible. They knew how on his own estate he never made mistakes of
+judgment; that he held the balance carefully, and that his violences,
+rare and tremendous, were not outbursts of an unregulated nature. "You
+can't fool Calhoun," was a common phrase in the language of Enniskillen,
+and there were few in the surrounding country who would not have upheld
+its truth.
+
+Now, to-day, he was almost moodily silent, reserved and watchful. None
+knew the eddies of life which struggled for mastery in him, nor of his
+horrible disappointments. None knew of his love for Sheila. Yet all knew
+that he had killed--or was punished for killing--Erris Boyne. None
+of them had seen Sheila, but all had heard of her, and the governor's
+courtship of her, and all wondered why Dyck Calhoun should be doing what
+clearly the governor should do.
+
+Somehow, in spite of the criminal record with which Calhoun's life was
+stained, they had a respect for him they did not have for Lord Mallow.
+Dyck's life in Jamaica was clean; and his progress as a planter had been
+free from black spots. He even kept no mistress, and none had ever known
+him to have to do with women, black, brown, or white. He had never gone
+a-Maying, as the saying was, and his only weakness or fault--if it was a
+fault--was a fondness for the bottle of good wine which was ever open
+on his table, and for tobacco in the smoking-leaf. To-day he smoked
+incessantly and carefully. He threw no loose ends of burning tobacco
+from cigar or pipe into the loose dry leaves and stiff-cut ground. Yet
+they knew the small clouds floating away from his head did not check his
+observation. That was proved beyond peradventure when they were within
+sight of the homestead of Salem on an upland well-wooded. It was in
+apparently happy circumstances, for they could see no commotion about
+the homestead; they saw men with muskets, evidently keeping guard--yet
+too openly keeping guard, and so some said to each other.
+
+Presently Dyck reined his horse. Each man listened attentively, and eyed
+the wood ahead of them, for it was clear Dyck suspected danger there.
+For a moment there seemed doubt in Dyck's mind what to do, but presently
+he had decided.
+
+"Ride slow for Salem," he said. "It's Maroons there in the bush. They
+are waiting for night. They won't attack us now. They're in ambush--of
+that I'm sure. If they want to capture Salem, they'll not give alarm by
+firing on us, so if we ride on they'll think we haven't sensed them. If
+they do attack us, we'll know they are in good numbers, for they'll be
+facing us as well as the garrison of Salem. But keep your muskets ready.
+Have a drink," he added, and handed his horn of liquor. "If they see us
+drink, and they will, they'll think we've only stopped to refresh, and
+we'll be safe. In any case, if they attack, fire your muskets at them
+and ride like the devil. Don't dismount and don't try to find them in
+the rocks. They'll catch us that way, as they've caught others. It's
+a poor game fighting hidden men. I want to get them into the open down
+below, and that's where they'll be before we're many hours older."
+
+With this he rode on slightly ahead, and presently put his horse at a
+gentle canter which he did not increase as they neared the place where
+the black men ambushed. Every man of the group behaved well. None showed
+nervousness, even when one of the horses, conscious of hidden Maroons in
+the wood, gave a snort and made a sharp movement out of the track, in an
+attempt to get greater speed.
+
+That was only for an instant, however. Yet every man's heart beat faster
+as they came to the place where the ambush was. Indeed, Dyck saw a
+bush move, and had a glimpse of a black, hideous face which quickly
+disappeared. Dyck's imperturbable coolness kept them steady. They even
+gossiped of idle things loud enough for the hidden Maroons to hear.
+No face showed suspicion or alarm, as they passed, while all felt the
+presence of many men in the underbrush. Only when they had passed the
+place, did they realize the fulness of the danger through which they
+had gone. Dyck talked to them presently without turning round, for that
+might have roused suspicion, and while they were out of danger now,
+there was the future and Dyck's plan which he now unfolded.
+
+"They'll come down into the open before it's dark," he said quietly,
+"and when they do that, we'll have 'em. They've no chance to ambush
+in the cane-fields now. We'll get them in the open, and wipe them out.
+Don't look round. Keep steady, and we'll ride a little more quickly
+soon."
+
+A little later they cantered to the front door of the Salem homestead.
+
+The first face they saw there was that of Darius Boland. It had a look
+of trouble. Dyck explained. "We thought you might not have heard of the
+rise of the Maroons. We have no ladies at Enniskillen. We prepared, and
+we're safe enough there, as things are. Your ladies must go at once to
+Spanish Town, unless--"
+
+"Unless they stay here! Well, they would not be unwise, for though the
+slaves under the old management might have joined the Maroons, they will
+not do so now. We have got them that far. But, Mr. Calhoun, the ladies
+aren't here. They rode away into the hills this morning, and they've not
+come back.
+
+"I was just sending a search party for them. I did not know of the rise
+of the Maroons."
+
+"In what direction did they go?" asked Dyck with anxiety, though his
+tone was even.
+
+Darius Boland pointed. "They went slightly northwest, and if they go as
+I think they meant to do, they would come back the way you came in."
+
+"They were armed?" Dyck asked sharply.
+
+"Yes, they were armed," was the reply. "Miss Llyn had a small pistol.
+She learned to carry one in Virginia, and she has done so ever since we
+came here."
+
+"Listen, Boland," said Dyck with anxiety. "Up there in the hills by
+which we came are Maroons hidden, and they will invade this place
+to-night. We were ready to fight them, of course, as we came, but it's
+a risky business, and we wanted to get them all if possible. We couldn't
+if we had charged them there, for they were well-ambushed. My idea was
+to let them get into the open between there and here, and catch them as
+they came. It would save our own men, and it would probably do for them.
+If Mrs. and Miss Llyn come back that way, they will be in greater danger
+than were we, for the Maroons were coming here to capture the ladies and
+hold them as hostages; and they would not let them pass. In any case,
+the risk is immense. The ladies must be got to Spanish Town, for the
+Maroons are desperate. They know we have no ships of the navy here now,
+and they rely on their raiding powers and the governor's weakness. They
+have placed their men in every part of the middle and western country,
+and they came upon my place last evening and were defeated. Several were
+killed and one taken prisoner. They can't be marched upon like an
+army. Their powers of ambush are too great. They must be run down by
+bloodhounds. It's the only way."
+
+"Bloodhounds--there are no bloodhounds here!" said Darius Boland. "And
+if there were, wouldn't pious England make a fuss?"
+
+Dyck Calhoun was about to speak sharply, but he caught sarcasm in Darius
+Boland's face, and he said: "I have the bloodhounds. They're outside the
+harbour now, and I intend to use them."
+
+"If the governor allows you!" remarked Darius Boland ironically. "He
+does not like you or your bloodhounds. He has his orders, so he says."
+
+Dyck made an impatient gesture. "I will not submit to his orders. I
+have earned my place in this is land, and he shall not have his way. The
+ladies must be brought to Spanish Town, and placed where the governor's
+men can protect them."
+
+"The governor's men! Indeed. They might as well stay here; we can surely
+protect them."
+
+"Perhaps, for you have skill, Boland, and you are cautious, but is it
+fair for ladies to stay in this isolated spot with murderers about? When
+the ladies come back, they must be sent at once to Spanish Town. Can't
+you see?"
+
+Darius Boland bowed. "What you say goes always," he remarked, "but tell
+me, sir, who will take the ladies to Spanish Town?"
+
+Dyck Calhoun read the inner meaning of Darius Boland's words. They did
+not put him out of self-control. It was not a time to dwell on such
+things. It was his primary duty to save the ladies.
+
+"Come, Boland," he said sharply, "I shall start now. We must find
+the ladies. What sort of a country is it through which they pass?" He
+pointed.
+
+"Bad enough in some ways. There's an old monastery of the days of
+the Spaniards up there"--he pointed or the ruins of one, "and it is a
+pleasant place to rest. I doubt not they rested there, if--"
+
+"If they reached it!" remarked Dyck with crisp inflection. "Yes,
+they would rest there--and it would be a good place for ambush by the
+Maroons, eh?"
+
+"Good enough from the standpoint of the Maroons," was the reply, the
+voice slightly choked.
+
+"Then we must go there. It's a damnable predicament--no, you must not
+come with me! You must keep command here."
+
+He hastily described the course to be followed by those of his own men
+who stayed to defend, and then said: "Our horses are fagged. If you loan
+us four I'll see they are well cared for, and returned in kind or cash.
+I'll take three of my men only, and loan you three of the best. We'll
+fill our knapsacks and get away, Boland."
+
+A few moments later, Calhoun and his three men, with a guide added by
+Boland, had started away up the road which had been ridden by Mrs. Llyn
+and Sheila. One thing was clear, the Maroons on the hill did not know of
+the absence of Sheila and her mother, or they would not be waiting. He
+did not like the long absence of the ladies. It was ominous at such a
+time.
+
+Dyck and his small escort got away by a road unseen from where the
+Maroons were, and when well away put their horses to a canter and got
+into the hills. Once in the woods, however, they rode alertly, and
+Dyck's eyes were everywhere. He was quick to see a bush move, to observe
+the flick of a branch, to catch the faintest sound of an animal origin.
+He was obsessed with anxiety, for he had a dark fear that some ill had
+happened to the two. His blood almost dried in his veins when he thought
+of the fate which had followed the capture of ladies in other islands
+like Haiti or Grenada.
+
+It did not seem possible that these beautiful women should have fallen
+into the outrageous hands of savages. He knew the girl was armed, and
+that before harm might come to her she would end her own life and her
+mother's also; but if she was caught from behind, and the opportunity of
+suicide should not be hers--what then?
+
+Yet he showed no agitation to his followers. His eyes were, however,
+intensely busy, and every nerve was keen to feel. Life in the open had
+developed in him the physical astuteness of the wild man, and he had all
+the gifts that make a supreme open-air fighter. He sensed things; but
+with him it was feeling, and not scent or hearing; his senses were such
+perfect listeners. He had the intense perception of a delicate plant,
+those wonderful warnings which only come to those who live close to
+nature, who study from feeling the thousand moods and tenses of living
+vegetables and animal life. He was a born hunter, and it was not easy
+to surprise him when every nerve was sharp with premonition. He saw
+the marks of the hoofs of Sheila's and her mother's horses in the road,
+knowing them by the freshness of the indentations. An hour, two hours
+passed, and they then approached the monasterial ruin of which Boland
+had spoken. Here, suddenly, Dyck dropped to the ground, for he saw
+unmistakable signs of fright or flurry in the hoofmarks.
+
+He quickly made examination, and there were signs of women's feet and
+also a bare native foot, but no signs of struggle or disturbance. The
+footprints, both native and white, were firmly placed, but the horses'
+hoof-prints showed agitation. Presently the hoofmarks became more
+composed again. Suddenly one of Dyck's supporters exclaimed he had
+picked up a small piece of ribbon, evidently dropped to guide those who
+might come searching. Presently another token was found in a loose bit
+of buckle from a shoe. Then, suddenly, upon the middle of the road was a
+little pool of blood and signs that a body had lain in the dust.
+
+"She shot a native here," said Dyck to his men coolly. "There are no
+signs of a struggle," remarked the most observant.
+
+"We must go carefully here, for they may have been imprisoned in the
+ruin. You stay here, and I'll go forward," he added, with a hand on
+his sword. "I've an idea they're here. We have one chance, my lads,
+and let's keep our heads. If anything should happen to me, have a
+try yourselves, and see what you can do. The ladies must be freed, if
+they're there. There's not one of you that won't stand by to the last,
+but I want your oath upon it. By the heads or graves of your mothers,
+lads, you'll see it through? Up with your hands!"
+
+Their hands went up. "By our mothers' heads or graves!" they said in low
+tones.
+
+"Good!" he replied. "I'll go on ahead. If you hear a call, or a shot
+fired, forward swiftly."
+
+An instant later he plunged into the woods to the right of the road, by
+which he would come upon the ruins from the rear. He held a pistol as he
+stole carefully yet quickly forward. He was anxious there should be no
+delay, but he must not be rash. Without meeting anyone he came near the
+ruins. They showed serene in the shade of the trees.
+
+Then suddenly came from the ruin a Maroon of fierce, yet not cruel
+appearance, who laid a hand behind his ear, and looked steadfastly
+towards that part of the wood where Dyck was. It was clear he had heard
+something. Dyck did not know how many Maroons there might be in the
+ruins, or near it, and he did not attack. It was essential he should
+know the strength of his foe; and he remained quiet. Presently the
+native turned as though to go back into the ruins, but changed his mind,
+and began to tour the stony, ruined building. Dyck waited, and presently
+saw more natives come from the ruins, and after a moment another three.
+These last were having an argument of some stress, for they pulled
+at each other's arms and even caught at the long cloths of their
+headdresses.
+
+"They've got the ladies there," thought Dyck, "but they've done them no
+harm yet." He waited moments longer to see if more natives were coming
+out, then said to himself: "I'll make a try for it now. It won't do to
+run the risk of going back to bring my fellows up. It's a fair risk, but
+it's worth taking."
+
+With that he ran softly to the entrance from which he had seen the men
+emerge. Looking in he saw only darkness. Then suddenly he gave a soft
+call, the call of an Irish bird-note which all people in Ireland--in the
+west and south of Ireland--know. If Sheila was alive and in the place
+she would answer it, he was sure. He waited a moment, and there was no
+answer. Then he called again, and in an instant, as though from a
+great distance, there came the reply of the same note, clearer and more
+bell-like than his own.
+
+"She's there!" he said, and boldly entered the place. It was dark and
+damp, but ahead was a break in the solid monotony of ruined wall, and he
+saw a clear stream of light beyond. He stole ahead, got over the stone
+obstructions, and came on to a biggish room which once had been a
+refectory. Looking round it he saw three doors--one evidently led into
+the kitchen, one into a pantry, and one into a hall. It was clear the
+women were alone, or some one would have come in answer to his call. Who
+could tell when they would come? There was no time to be lost. With an
+instinct, which proved correct, he opened the door leading into the old
+kitchen, and there, tied, and with pale faces, but in no other sense
+disordered, were Sheila and her mother. He put his fingers to his lips,
+then hastily cut them loose from the ropes of bamboo, and helped them to
+their feet.
+
+"Can you walk?" he whispered to Mrs. Llyn. She nodded assent, and braced
+herself. "Then here," he said, "is a pistol. Come quickly. We may have
+to fight our way out. Don't be afraid to fire, but take good aim first.
+I have some men in the wood beyond where you shot the native," he added
+to Sheila. "They'll come at once if I call, or a shot is fired. Keep
+your heads, and we shall be all right. They're a dangerous crew, but
+we'll beat them this time. Come quickly."
+
+Presently they were in the refectory, and a moment after that they were
+over the stones, and near the entrance, and then a native appeared,
+armed. Without an instant's hesitation Dyck ran forward, and as he
+entered, put his sword into the man's vitals, and he fell, calling out
+as he fell.
+
+"The rest will be on us now," said Dyck, "and we must keep going."
+
+Three more natives appeared, and he shot two.
+
+Catching a pistol from Sheila he aimed at the third native and wounded
+him, but did not kill him. The man ran into the wood. Presently more
+Maroons came--a dozen or more, and rushed for the entrance. They were
+met by Dyck's fire, and now also Sheila fired and brought down her
+man. Dyck wounded another, and in great skill loaded again, but at that
+moment three of the Maroons rushed down into the ruins.
+
+They were astonished to see Dyck there, and more astonished to
+receive--first one and then another--his iron in their bowels. The third
+man made a stroke at Dyck with his lance, and only gashed Dyck's
+left arm. Then he turned and fled out into the open, and was met by
+a half-dozen others. They all were about to rush the entrance when
+suddenly four shots behind them brought three of them down, and the rest
+fled into the wood shouting. In another moment Dyck and the ladies
+were in the open, and making for the woods, the women in front, the men
+behind, loading their muskets as they ran, and alive to the risks of the
+moment.
+
+The dresses of the ladies were stained and soiled with dust and damp,
+but otherwise they seemed little the worse for the adventure, save that
+Mrs. Llyn was shaken, and her face was pale.
+
+"How did you know where we were, and why did you come?" she said, after
+they had got under way, having secured the horses which Sheila and her
+mother had ridden.
+
+Briefly Dyck explained how as soon as he had dealt with the revolt of
+the Maroons at his own place he came straight to Salem.
+
+"I knew you were unused to the ways of the country and to our sort of
+native here, and I felt sure you would not refuse to take help--even
+mine at a pinch. But what happened to you?" he added, turning to Sheila.
+
+It was only yesterday Sheila had determined to cut him wholly out of her
+life by assenting to marry Lord Mallow. Yet here he was, and she could
+scarcely bear to look into his face. He was shut off from her by every
+fact of human reason. These were days when the traditions of family life
+were more intense than now; when to kill one's own father was not so bad
+as to embrace, as it were, him or her who had killed that father. Sheila
+felt if she were normal she ought to feel abhorrence against Dyck; yet
+she felt none at all, and his saving them had given a new colour to
+their relations. If he had killed her father, the traitor, he had saved
+themselves from death or freed them from a shameful captivity which
+might have ended in black disaster. She kept herself in hand, and did
+not show confusion.
+
+"We had not heard of the rising of the Maroons," she said. "The governor
+was at Salem yesterday and a message came from his staff to say would
+he come at once. His staff were not at Salem, but at the next plantation
+nearer to Spanish Town. Lord Mallow went. If he suspected the real
+trouble he said naught, but was gone before you could realize it.
+The hours went by, night came and passed, then my mother and I, this
+morning, resolved to ride to the monastery, and then round by the road
+you travelled back to Salem."
+
+"There are Maroons now on that hill above your place. They were in
+ambush when we passed, but we took no notice. It was not wise to invite
+trouble. Some of us would have been killed, but--"
+
+He then told what had been in his mind, and what might be the
+outcome--the killing or capture of the whole group, and safety for all
+at Salem.
+
+When he had finished, she continued her story. "We rode for an hour
+unchallenged, and then came the Maroons. At first I knew not what to do.
+We were surrounded before we could act. I had my pistol ready, and there
+was the chance of escape--the faint chance--if we drove our horses on;
+but there was also the danger of being fired at from behind! So we
+sat still on our horses, and I asked them how they dared attack white
+ladies. I asked them if they had never thought what vengeance the
+governor would take. They did not understand my words, but they grasped
+the meaning, and one of them, the leader, who understood English, was
+inclined to have reason. As it was, we stopped what might have been our
+murder by saying it would be wiser to hold us as hostages, and that we
+were Americans. That man was killed--by you. A shot from your pistol
+brought him down as he rushed forward to enter the ruins. But he took
+care of us as we went forward, and when I shot one of his followers for
+laying his hand upon me in the saddle--he caught me by the leg under my
+skirt--he would allow no retaliation. I knew boldness was the safe part
+to play.
+
+"But in the end we were bound with ropes as you found us, while they
+waited for more of their people to come, those, no doubt, you found
+ambushed on the hill. As we lay, bound as you saw us, the leader said
+to us we should be safe if he could have his way, but there were bad
+elements among the Maroons, and he could not guarantee it. Yet he knew
+the government would pay for our release, would perhaps give the land
+for which they had asked with no avail. We must, therefore, remain
+prisoners. If we made no efforts to escape, it would be better in the
+end. 'Keep your head steady, missy, try no tricks, and all may go well;
+but I have bad lot, and they may fly at you.' That was the way he spoke.
+It made our blood run cold, for he was one man, with fair mind, and he
+had around him men, savage and irresponsible. Black and ruthless, they
+would stop at nothing except the sword at their throats or the teeth in
+their flesh."
+
+"The teeth in their flesh!" said Dyck with a grim smile. "Yes, that is
+the only way with them. Naught can put the fear of God into them except
+bloodhounds, and that Lord Mallow will not have. He has been set against
+it until now. But this business will teach him. He may change his mind
+now, since what he cares for is in danger--his place and his ladies!"
+
+Mrs. Llyn roused herself to say: "No, no, Mr. Calhoun, you must not say
+that of him. His place may be in danger, but not his ladies. He has no
+promise of that.... And see, Mr. Calhoun, I want to say that, in any
+case, you have paid your debt, if you owe one to us. For a life taken
+you have given two lives--to me and my girl. I speak as one who has
+a right to say it! Erris Boyne was naught to me at all, but he was my
+daughter's father, and that made everything difficult. I could make him
+cease to be my husband, and I did; but I could not make him cease to be
+her father."
+
+"I had no love for Erris Boyne," said Sheila. Misery was heavy on her.
+"None at all, but he was my father."
+
+"See, all's well still at Salem," said Dyck waving a hand as though to
+change the talk. "All's as we left it."
+
+There in the near distance lay Salem, serene. All tropical life about
+seemed throbbing with life and soaking with leisure.
+
+"We were in time," he added. "The Maroons are still in ambush. The sun
+is beginning to set though, and the trouble may begin. We shall get
+there about sundown--safe, thank God!"
+
+"Safe, thank God--and you," said Sheila's mother.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+
+In the King's House at Spanish Town the governor was troubled. All his
+plans and prophecies had come to naught. He had been sure there would
+be no rebellion of the Maroons, and he was equally sure that his career
+would be made hugely successful by marriage with Sheila Llyn--but the
+Maroons had revolted, and the marriage was not settled!
+
+Messages had been coming from the provost-marshal-general of reports
+from the counties of Middlesex and Cornwall, that the Maroons were
+ravaging everywhere and that bands of slaves had joined them with
+serious disasters to the plantation people. Planters, their wives and
+children had been murdered, and in some districts the natives were in
+full possession and had destroyed, robbed and ravaged. He had summoned
+his commander of the militia forces, had created special constables, and
+armed them, and had sent a ship to the Bahamas to summon a small British
+fleet there. He had also mapped out a campaign against the Maroons,
+which had one grave demerit--it was planned on a basis of ordinary
+warfare and not with Jamaica conditions in mind. The provost-marshal
+warned him of the futility of these plans, but he had persisted in
+them. He had later been shocked, however, by news that the best of his
+colonels had been ambushed and killed, and that others had been made
+prisoners and treated with barbarity. From everywhere, except one, had
+come either news of defeat or set-back.
+
+One good thing he immediately did: he threw open King's House to the
+wounded, and set the surgeons to work, thereby checking bitter criticism
+and blocking the movement rising against him. For it was well known he
+had rejected all warnings, had persisted in his view that trust in the
+Maroons and fair treatment of themselves and the slaves were all that
+was needed.
+
+As he walked in the great salon or hall of audience where the wounded
+lay--over seventy feet long and thirty wide, with great height, to which
+beds and conveniences had been hastily brought--it seemed to him that he
+was saving, if barely saving, his name and career. Standing beside one
+of the Doric pillars which divided the salon from an upper and lower
+gallery of communications, he received the Custos of Kingston. As the
+Custos told his news the governor's eyes were running along the line of
+busts of ancient and modern philosophers on the gilt brackets between
+the Doric pilasters. They were all in bronze, and his mind had the
+doleful imagination of brown slave heroes placed there in honour for
+services given to the country. The doors at the south end of the great
+salon opened now and then into the council chambers beyond, and he could
+see the surgeons operating on the cases returned from the plantations.
+
+"Your honour," said the Custos, "things have suddenly improved. The
+hounds have come from Cuba and in the charge of ten men--ten men with
+sixty hounds. That is the situation at the moment. All the people at
+Kingston are overjoyed. They see the end of the revolt."
+
+"The hounds!" exclaimed the governor. "What hounds?"
+
+"The hounds sent for by Dyck Calhoun--surely your honour remembers!"
+
+Surely his honour did, and recalled also that he forbade the importation
+of the hounds; but he could not press that prohibition now. "The
+mutineer and murderer, Dyck Calhoun!" he exclaimed. "And they have
+come!"
+
+"Yes, your honour, and gone with Calhoun's man, Michael Clones, to
+Salem."
+
+"To Salem--why Salem?"
+
+"Because Calhoun is there fighting the Maroons in that district. The
+Maroons first captured the ladies of Salem as they rode in the woods.
+They were beaten at that game by Calhoun and four men; the ladies
+then were freed and taken back to Salem. Then the storm burst on
+Salem--burst, but did not overwhelm. Calhoun saved the situation
+there; and when his hounds arrive at Salem he will range over the whole
+country. It is against the ideas of the people of England, but it does
+our work in Jamaica as nothing else could. It was a stroke of genius,
+the hounds, your honour!"
+
+Lord Mallow was at once relieved and nonplussed. No doubt the policy of
+the hounds was useful, and it might save his own goose, but it was, in
+a sense, un-English to hunt the wild man with hounds. Yet was it
+un-English? What was the difference between a sword and a good sharp
+tooth save that the sword struck and let go and the tooth struck and
+held on? It had been said in England that to hunt negroes with hounds
+was barbarous and cowardly; but criminals were hunted with bloodhounds
+in all civilized countries; and as for cowardice, the man who had sent
+for these hounds was as brave as any old crusader! No, Dyck Calhoun
+could not be charged with cowardice, and his policy of the hounds might
+save the island and the administration in the end. They had arrived in
+the very hour of Jamaica's and Lord Mallow's greatest peril. They had
+gone on to the man who had been sane enough to send for them.
+
+"Tell me about the landing of the hounds," said Lord Mallow.
+
+"It was last night about dusk that word came from the pilot's station
+at Port Royal that the vessel Vincent was making for port, and that she.
+came from Cuba. Presently Michael Clones, the servant of Dyck Calhoun,
+came also to say that the Vincent was the ship bringing Calhoun's
+hounds from Cuba, and asking permit for delivery. This he did because
+he thought you were opposed to the landing. In the light of our position
+here, we granted the delivery.
+
+"When the vessel came to anchor, the hounds with their drivers were
+landed. The landing was the signal for a great display on the part of
+the people and the militia--yes, the militia shared in the applause,
+your honour! They had had a taste of war with the Maroons and the
+slaves, and they were well inclined to let the hounds have their chance.
+Resolutions were then passed to approach your honour and ask that full
+powers be given to Calhoun to pursue the war without thought of military
+precedent or of Calhoun's position. He has no official place in the
+public life here, but he is powerful with the masses. It is rumoured you
+have an order to confine him to his plantation; but to apply it would
+bring revolution in Jamaica. There are great numbers of people who love
+his courage, what he did for the King's navy, and for his commercial
+success here, and they would resent harsh treatment of him. They are
+aware, your honour, that he and you knew each other in Ireland, and they
+think you are hard on him. People judge not from all the facts, but from
+what they see and hear."
+
+During the Custos' narrative, Lord Mallow was perturbed. He had the
+common sense to know that Dyck Calhoun, ex-convict and mutineer as he
+was, had personal power in the island, which he as governor had not been
+able to get, and Dyck had not abused that power. He realized that Dyck's
+premonition of an outbreak and sending for the hounds was a stroke
+of genius. He recalled with anger Dyck's appearance, in spite of
+regulations, in trousers at the King's ball and his dancing with a black
+woman, and he also realized that it was a cool insult to himself. It was
+then he had given the home authorities information which would poison
+their mind against Dyck, and from that had come the order to confine him
+to his plantation.
+
+Yet he felt the time had come when he might use Dyck for his own
+purposes. That Dyck should be at Salem was a bitter dose, but that could
+amount to nothing, for Sheila could never marry the man who had killed
+her father, however bad and mad her father was. Yet it gravelled his
+soul that Dyck should be doing service for the lady to whom he had
+offered his own hand and heart, and from whom he had had no word of
+assent. It angered him against himself that he had not at once sent
+soldiers to Salem to protect it. He wished to set himself right with
+Sheila and with the island people, and how to do so was the question.
+
+First, clearly, he must not apply the order to confine Dyck to his
+plantation; also he must give Dyck authority to use the hounds in
+hunting down the Maroons and slaves who were committing awful crimes.
+He forthwith decided to write, asking Dyck to send him outline of his
+scheme against the rebels. That he must do, for the game was with Dyck.
+
+"How long will it take the hounds to get to Salem?" he asked the Custos
+presently in his office, with deepset lines in his face and a determined
+look in his eyes. He was an arrogant man, but he was not insane, and he
+wished to succeed. It could only be success if he dragged Jamaica out of
+this rebellion with flying colours, and his one possible weapon was the
+man whom he detested.
+
+"Why, your honour, as we sent them by wagons and good horses they should
+be in Dyck Calhoun's hands this evening. They should be there by now
+almost, for they've been going for hours, and the distance is not
+great."
+
+The governor nodded, and began to write. A halfhour later he handed to
+the Custos what he had written.
+
+"See what you think of that, Custos," he said. "Does it, in your mind,
+cover the ground as it should?"
+
+The Custos read it all over slowly and carefully, weighing every word.
+Presently he handed back the paper. "Your honour, it is complete and
+masterly," he said. "It puts the crushing of the revolt into the hands
+of Mr. Calhoun, and nothing could be wiser. He has the gifts of a
+leader, and he will do the job with no mistake, and in a time of crisis
+like this, that is essential. You have given him the right to order the
+militia to obey him, and nothing could be better. He will organize like
+a master. We haven't forgotten his fight on the Ariadne. Didn't the
+admiral tell the story at the dinner we gave him of how this ex-convict
+and mutineer, by sheer genius, broke the power of the French at the
+critical moment and saved our fleet, though it was only three-fourths
+that of the French?"
+
+"You don't think the French will get us some day?" asked the governor
+with a smile.
+
+"I certainly don't since our defences have been improved. Look at the
+sixty big cannon on Fort Augusta! They'd be knocked to smithereens
+before they could get into the quiet waters of the harbour. Don't forget
+the narrows, your honour. Then there's the Apostle's Battery with its
+huge shot, and the guns of Fort Royal would give them a cross-fire that
+would make them sick. Besides, we could stop them within the shoals
+and reefs and narrow channels before they got near the inner circle.
+It would only be the hand of God that would get them in, and it doesn't
+work for Frenchmen these days, I observe. No, this place is safe, and
+King's House will be the home of British governors for many a century."
+
+"Ah, that's your gallant faith, and no doubt you are right, but go on
+with your tale of the hounds," said Lord Mallow.
+
+"Your honour, as the hounds went away with Michael Clones there was
+greater applause than I have ever seen in the island except when Rodney
+defeated De Grasse. Imagine a little sloop in the wash of the seas and
+the buccaneers piling down on him, and no chance of escape, and then a
+great British battleship appearing, and the situation saved--that was
+how we were placed here till the hounds arrived.
+
+"Your honour, this morning's--this early morning's exit of the hounds
+was like a procession of veterans to Walhalla. There was the sun
+breaking over the tops of the hills, a crimsonish, greyish, opaline
+touch of soft sprays or mists breaking away from the onset of the
+sunrise; and all the trees with night-lips wet sucking in the sun and
+drinking up the light like an overseer at a Christmas breakfast; and you
+know what that is. And all the shore, rocky and sandy, rough and smooth,
+happy and homely, shimmering in the radiance. And hundreds of Creoles
+and coloured folk beating the ground in agitation, and slaves a-plenty
+carrying boxes to the ships that are leaving, and white folk crowding
+the streets, and bugles blowing, and the tramp of the militia, and the
+rattle of carts on the cobble-stones, and the voices of the officers
+giving orders, and turmoil everywhere.
+
+"Then, suddenly, the sharp sound of a long whip and a voice calling, and
+there rises out of the landing place the procession--the sixty dogs in
+three wagons, their ten drivers with their whips, but keeping order by
+the sound of their voices, low, soft, and peculiar, and then the horses
+starting into a quick trot which presently would become a canter--and
+the hounds were off to Salem! There could be no fear with the hounds
+loose to do the hunting."
+
+"But suppose when they get to Salem their owner is no more."
+
+The Custos laughed. "Him, your honour--him no more! Isn't he the man of
+whom the black folk say: 'Lucky buckra--morning, lucky new-comer!' If
+that's his reputation, and the coming of his hounds just when the island
+most needed them is good proof of it, do you think he'll be killed by
+a lot of dirty Maroons! Ah, Calhoun's a man with the luck of the devil,
+your honour! He has the pull--as sure as heaven's above he'll make
+success. If you command your staff to have this posted as a proclamation
+throughout the island, it will do as much good as a thousand soldiers.
+The military officers will not object, they know how big a man he is,
+and they have had enough. The news is not good from all over the island,
+for there are bad planters and bad overseers, and they've poisoned large
+fields of men in many quarters of the island, and things are wrong.
+
+"But this proclamation will put things right. It will stop the slaves
+from revolting; it will squelch the Maroons, and I'm certain sure
+Calhoun will have Maroons ready to fight for us, not against us,
+before this thing is over. I tell you, your honour, it means the way
+out--that's what it means. So, if you'll give me your order, keeping
+a copy of it for the provost-marshal, I'll see it's delivered to Dyck
+Calhoun before morning--perhaps by midnight. It's not more than a six
+hours' journey in the ordinary way."
+
+At that moment an aide-de-camp entered, and with grave face presented to
+the governor the last report from the provost-marshal-general. Then he
+watched the governor read the report.
+
+"Ten more killed and twenty wounded!" said the governor. "It must be
+stopped."
+
+He gave the Custos the letter to Dyck Calhoun, and a few moments later
+handed the proclamation to his aide-de-camp.
+
+"That will settle the business, your honour," said the aide-de-camp as
+he read the proclamation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+
+"Then, tell me please, what you know of the story," said the governor to
+Sheila at King's House one afternoon two weeks later. "I only get meagre
+reports from the general commanding. But you close to the intimate
+source of the events must know all."
+
+Sheila shrank at the suggestion in the governor's voice, but she did not
+resent it. She had purposes which she must carry out, and she steeled
+herself. She wanted to get from Lord Mallow a pledge concerning Dyck
+Calhoun, and she must be patient.
+
+"I know nothing direct from Mr. Calhoun, your honour!" she said, "but
+only through his servant, Michael Clones, who is a friend of my Darius
+Boland, and they have met often since the first outbreak. You know,
+of course, what happened at Port Louise--how the Maroons seized and
+murdered the garrison, how families were butchered when they armed
+first, how barbarism broke loose and made all men combine to fight the
+rebels. Even before Mr. Calhoun came they had had record of a sack of
+human ears, cut from the dead rebel-slaves, when they had been killed
+by faithful slaves, and good progress was made. But the revolters fixed
+their camps on high rocks, and by blowing of shells brought many fresh
+recruits to the struggle. It was only when Mr. Calhoun came with his
+hounds that anything decisive was done. For the rebels--Maroons and
+slaves--were hid, well entrenched and cautious, and the danger was
+becoming greater every day. On Mr. Calhoun's arrival, he was almost
+caught in ambush, being misled, and saved himself only by splendid
+markmanship. He was attacked by six rebels of whom he killed four, and
+riding his wounded horse over the other two he escaped. Then he set the
+hounds to work and the rebellion in that district was soon over."
+
+"It was gathering strength with increasing tragedy elsewhere," remarked
+the governor. "Some took refuge in hidden places, and came out only to
+steal, rob, and murder--and worse. In one place, after a noted slave,
+well known for his treachery, had been killed--Khoftet was his name--his
+head was cut off by slaves friendly to us and his heart roasted and
+eaten. There is but one way to deal with these people. No gaming or
+drinking must be allowed, blowing of shells or beating of drums must
+be forbidden, and every free negro or mulatto must wear on his arm a
+sign--perhaps a cross in blue or red."
+
+"Slavery is doomed," said Sheila firmly. "Its end is not far off."
+
+"Well, they still keep slaves in the land of Washington and Alexander
+Hamilton. They are better off here at any rate than in their own
+country, where they were like animals among whom they lived. Here they
+are safe from poverty, cared for in sickness, and have no fear of
+being handed over to the keepers of carrion, or being the food of the
+gallinaso. They can feed their fill on fricasees of macaca worms and
+steal without punishment teal or ring-tailed pigeons and black crabs
+from the massa."
+
+"But they are not free. They are atoms in heaps of dust. They have no
+rights--no liberties."
+
+Sheila was agitated, but she showed no excitement.
+
+She seemed to Lord Mallow like one who had perfect control of herself,
+and was not the victim of anticipation. She seemed, save for her dark
+searching eyes, like one who had gone through experience which had
+disciplined her to control. Only her hands were demonstrative--yet
+quietly so. Any one watching her closely would have seen that her hands
+were sensitive, expressed even more markedly than her eyes or lips what
+were her feelings. Her tragedy had altered her in one sense. She was
+paler and thinner than ever she had been, but there was enough of her,
+and that delicately made, which gave the governor a thrill of desire
+to make her his own for the rest of his life or hers. He had also gone
+through much since they had last met, and he had seen his own position
+in the balance--uncertain, troubled, insecure. He realized that he had
+lost reputation, which had scarcely been regained by his consent to the
+use of the hounds and giving Dyck Calhoun a free hand, as temporary head
+of the militia. He could not put him over the regular troops, but as the
+general commanding was, in effect, the slave of Dyck Calhoun, there was
+no need for anxiety.
+
+Dyck Calhoun had smashed the rebellion, had quieted the island, had
+risen above all the dark disturbances of revolt like a master. He had
+established barracks and forts at many points in the island, and had
+stationed troops in them; he had subdued Maroons and slaves by the
+hounds. Yet he had punished only the chief of those who had been in
+actual rebellion, and had repressed the violent punishments of the
+earlier part of the conflict. He had forbidden any one to be burned
+alive, and had ordered that no one should be executed without his first
+judging--with the consent of the governor!--the facts of the case.
+
+Dyck had built up for himself a reputation as no one in all the history
+of the island had been able to do. He commanded by more than official
+authority--by personality and achievement. There was no one in the
+island but knew they had been saved by his prudence, foresight and
+skill. It was to their minds stupendous and romantic. Fortunately they
+showed no strong feeling against Lord Mallow. By placing King's House
+at disposal as a hospital, and by gifts of food and money to wives and
+children of soldiers and civilians, the governor had a little eradicated
+his record of neglect.
+
+Lord Mallow had a way with him when he chose to use it. He was not
+without the gift for popularity, and he saw now that he could best
+attain it by treating Dyck Calhoun well. He saw troops come and go, he
+listened to grievances, he corrected abuses, he devised a scheme for
+nursing, he planned security for the future, he gave permission for
+buccaneer trading with the United States, he had by legislative order
+given the Creoles a better place in the civic organism. This was a time
+for broad policy--for distribution of cassavi bread, yams and papaws,
+for big, and maybe rough, display of power and generosity. He was not
+blind to the fact that he might by discreet courses impress favourably
+his visitor. All he did was affected by that thought. He could not but
+think that Sheila would judge of him by what he did as much as by what
+he said.
+
+He looked at her now with interest and longing. He loved to hear her
+talk, and she had information which was no doubt truer than most he
+received--was closer to the brine, as it were.
+
+"What more can you tell me of Mr. Calhoun and his doings?" he asked
+presently. "He is lucky in having so perfect a narrator of his
+histories--yet so unexpected a narrator."
+
+A flush stole slowly up Sheila's face, and gave a glow even to the roots
+of her hair. She could not endure these references to the dark gulf
+between her and Dyck Calhoun.
+
+"My lord," she said sharply, "it is not meet that you should say such
+things. Mr. Calhoun was jailed for killing my father--let it be at that.
+The last time you saw me you offered me your hand and heart. Well, do
+you know I had almost made up my mind to accept your hand, when the news
+of this trouble was brought to you, and you left us--to ourselves and
+our dangers!"
+
+The governor started. "You are as unfriendly as a 'terral garamighty,'
+you make me draw my breath thick as the blackamoors, as they say. I
+did what I thought best," he said. "I did not think you would be in any
+danger. I had not heard of the Maroons being so far south as Salem."
+
+"Yet it is the man who foresees chances that succeeds, as you should
+know by now, your honour. I was greatly touched by the offer you made
+me--indeed, yes," she added, seeing the rapt eager look in his face. "I
+had been told what had upset me, that Dyck Calhoun was guilty of killing
+my father, and all the world seemed dreadful. Yes, in the reaction, it
+was almost on my tongue to say yes to you, for you are a good talker,
+you had skill in much that you did, and with honest advice from a wife
+might do much more. So I was in a mind to say yes. I had had much to
+try me, indeed, so very much. Ever since I first saw Dyck Calhoun he had
+been the one man who had ever influenced me. He was for ever in my mind
+even when he was in prison--oh, what is prison, what is guilt even to a
+girl when she loves! Yes, I loved him. There it was. He was ever in
+my mind, and I came here to Jamaica--he was here--for what else? Salem
+could have been restored by Darius Boland or others, or I could have
+sold it. I came to Jamaica to find him here--unwomanly, perhaps, you
+will say."
+
+"Unusual only with a genius--like you."
+
+"Then you do not speak what is in your mind, your honour. You say what
+you feel is the right thing to say--the slave of circumstances. I will
+be wholly frank with you. I came here to see Dyck Calhoun, for I knew he
+would not come to see me. Yes, there it was, a real thing in his heart.
+If he had been a lesser man than he is, he would have come to America
+when he was freed from prison. But he did not, would not, come. He knew
+he had been found guilty of killing my father, and that for him and me
+there could be no marriage--indeed he never asked me to marry him.
+
+"Yet I know he would have done so if he could. When I came to know
+what he was jailed for doing, I felt there was no place for him and me
+together in the world. Yet my heart kept crying out to him, and I felt
+there was but one thing left for me to do, and that was to make it
+impossible for me to think of him even, or for him to think of me. Then
+you came and offered me your hand. It was a hand most women might have
+been glad to accept from the standpoint of material things. And you were
+Irish like myself, and like the boy I loved. I was sick of the robberies
+of life and time, and I wanted to be out of it all in some secure place.
+What place so secure from the sorrow that was eating at my heart as
+marriage! It said no to every stir of feeling that was vexing me, to
+every show of love or remembrance. So I listened to you. It was not
+because you were a governor or a peer--no, not that! For even in
+Virginia I had offers from one higher than yourself--and younger, and a
+peer also. No, it was not material things that influenced me, but your
+own intellectual eminence; for you have more brains than most men, as
+you know so well."
+
+The governor interrupted her with a gesture. "No, no, I am not so vain
+as you think. If I were I should have seen at Salem that you meant to
+say yes."
+
+"Yet you know well you have gifts, though you have made sad mistakes
+here. Do not think it was your personality, your looks that induced me
+to think of you, to listen to you. When Mr. Calhoun told me the truth,
+and gave me a letter he had written to me--"
+
+"A letter--to you?"
+
+There was surprise in the governor's voice--surprise and chagrin, for
+the thing had moved him powerfully. "Yes, a letter to me which he
+never meant me to have. It was a kind of diary of his heart, and it was
+written even while I was landing on the island on Christmas Day. It was
+the most terribly truthful thing, opening his whole soul to the girl
+whom he had always loved, but from whom he was separated by a thing
+not the less tragical because it was merely technical. He gave it me to
+read, and when I read it I saw there was no place for me in the world
+except a convent or marriage. The convent could not be, for I was no
+Catholic, and marriage seemed the only thing possible. That day you came
+I saw only one thing to do--one mad, hopeless thing to do."
+
+"Mad and hopeless!" burst out Lord Mallow. "How so? Your very reason
+shows that it was sane, well founded in the philosophy of the heart."
+
+He was eager to win her yet, and he did not see the end at which she
+aimed. He felt he must tell her all the passion and love he felt. But
+her look gave no encouragement, her eyes were uninviting.
+
+Sheila smiled painfully. "Yes, mad and hopeless, for be sure of this: we
+cannot kill in one day the growth of years. I could not cure myself of
+loving him by marrying you. There had to be some other cure for that. I
+never knew and never loved my father. But he was my father, and if Mr.
+Calhoun killed him, I could not marry him. But at last I came to know
+that your love and affection could not make me forget him--no, never.
+I realize that now. He and I can never come together, but I owe him so
+much--I owe him my life, for he saved it; he must ever have a place
+in my heart, be to me more than any one else can be. I want you to do
+something for him."
+
+"What do you wish?"
+
+"I want you to have removed from him the sentence of the British
+Government. I want him to be free to come and go anywhere in the
+world--to return to England if he wishes it, to be a free man, and not a
+victim Off Outlawry. I want that, and you ought to give it to him."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Indignation filled her eyes. "You ask why. He has saved your
+administration and the island from defeat and horrible loss. He has
+prevented most of the slaves from revolting, and he conquered the
+Maroons. The empire is his debtor. Will you do this for one who has done
+so much for you?"
+
+Lord Mallow was disconcerted, but he did not show it. "I can do no
+more than I have done. I have not confined him to his plantation as the
+Government commanded; I cannot go beyond that."
+
+"You can put his case from the standpoint of a patriot."
+
+For a moment the governor hesitated, then he said: "Because you ask
+me--"
+
+"I want it done for his sake, not for mine," she returned with decision.
+"You owe it to yourself to see that it is done. Gratitude is not dead in
+you, is it?"
+
+Lord Mallow flushed. "You press his case too hard. You forget what he
+is--a mutineer and a murderer, and no one should remember that as you
+should."
+
+"He has atoned for both, and you know it well. Besides, he was not a
+murderer. Even the courts did not say he was. They only said he was
+guilty of manslaughter. Oh, your honour, be as gallant as your name and
+place warrant."
+
+He looked at her for a moment with strange feelings in his heart. Then
+he said: "I will give you an answer in twenty-four hours. Will that do,
+sweet persuader?"
+
+"It might do," she answered, and, strange to say, she had a sure feeling
+that he would say yes, in spite of her knowledge that, in his heart of
+hearts, he hated Calhoun.
+
+As she left the room, Lord Mallow stood for a moment looking after her.
+
+"She loves the rogue in spite of all!" he said bitterly. "But she must
+come with me. They are apart as the poles. Yet I shall do as she wishes
+if I am to win her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+
+The next day came a new element in the situation: a ship arrived from
+England. On it was one who had come to Jamaica to act as governess to
+two children of the officer commanding the regular troops in the island.
+She had been ill for a week before nearing Kingston, and when the
+Regent reached the harbour she was in a bad way. The ship's doctor
+was despondent about her; but he was a second-rate man, and felt that
+perhaps an island doctor might give her some hope. When she was carried
+ashore she was at once removed to the home of the general commanding at
+Spanish Town, and there a local doctor saw her.
+
+"What is her history?" he asked, after he had seen the haggard face of
+the woman.
+
+The ship's doctor did not know; and the general commanding was in the
+interior at the head of his troops. There was no wife in the general's
+house, as he was a widower; and his daughters, of twelve and fourteen,
+under a faithful old housekeeper, had no knowledge of the woman's life.
+
+When she was taken to the general's house she was in great dejection,
+and her face had a look of ennui and despair. She was thin and worn, and
+her eyes only told of the struggle going on between life and death.
+
+"What is her name?" asked the resident doctor. "Noreen Balfe," was the
+reply of the ship's doctor.
+
+"A good old Irish name, though you can see she comes of the lower ranks
+of life."
+
+"Married?"
+
+The ship's doctor pointed to her hand which had a wedding-ring. "Ah,
+yes, certainly... what hope have you of her?"
+
+"I don't know what to say. The fever is high. She isn't trying to live;
+she's got some mental trouble, I believe. But you and I would be of no
+use in that kind of thing."
+
+"I don't take to new-fangled ideas of mental cure," said the ship's
+doctor. "Cure the body and the mind will cure itself."
+
+A cold smile stole to the lips of the resident doctor. Those were
+days of little scientific medical skill, and no West Indian doctor had
+knowledge enough to control a discussion of the kind. "But I'd like to
+see some one with brains take an interest in her," he remarked.
+
+"I leave her in your hands," was the reply. "I'm a ship's medico, and
+she's now ashore."
+
+"It's a pity," said the resident doctor reflectively, as he watched a
+servant doing necessary work at the bedside. "She hasn't long to go as
+she is, yet I've seen such cases recover."
+
+As they left the room together they met Sheila and one of the daughters
+of the house. "I've come to see the sick woman from the ship, if I may,"
+Sheila said. "I've just heard about her, and I'd like to be of use."
+
+The resident doctor looked at her with admiration. She was the most
+conspicuous figure in the island, and her beauty was a fine support to
+her wealth and reputation. It was like her to be kind in this frank way.
+
+"You can be of great use if you will," he said. "The fever is not
+infectious, I'm glad to say. So you need have no fear of being with
+her--on account of others."
+
+"I have no fear," responded Sheila with a friendly smile, "and I will go
+to her now--no, if you don't mind, I'd prefer to go alone," she added as
+she saw the doctor was coming with her.
+
+The other bowed and nodded approvingly. "The fewer the better," he said.
+"I think you ought to go in alone--quite alone," he said with gentle
+firmness, for he saw the girl with Sheila was also going with her.
+
+So it was that Sheila entered alone, and came to the bed and looked at
+the woman in the extreme depression of fever. "Prepare some lime-juice,
+please," she said to the servant on the other side of the bed. "Keep it
+always beside the bed--I know what these cases are."
+
+The servant disappeared, and the eyes of the sick woman opened and
+looked at Sheila. There shot into them a look of horror and relief in
+one, if such a thing might be. A sudden energy inspired her, and she
+drew herself up in bed, her face gone ghastly.
+
+"You are Sheila Boyne, aren't you?" she asked in a low half-guttural
+note.
+
+"I am Sheila Llyn," was the astonished reply. "It's the same thing,"
+came the response. "You are the daughter of Erris Boyne."
+
+Sheila turned pale. Who was this woman that knew her and her history?
+
+"What is your name?" she asked--"your real name--what is it?"
+
+"My name is Noreen Balfe; it was Noreen Boyne." For a moment Sheila
+could not get her bearings. The heavy scent of the flowers coming in at
+the window almost suffocated her. She seemed to lose a grip of herself.
+Presently she made an effort at composure. "Noreen Boyne! You were then
+the second wife of Erris Boyne?"
+
+"I was his second wife. His first wife was your mother--you are like
+your mother!" Noreen said in agitation.
+
+The meaning was clear. Sheila laid a sharp hand on herself. "Don't get
+excited," she urged with kindly feeling. "He is dead and gone."
+
+"Yes, he is dead and gone."
+
+For a moment Noreen seemed to fight for mastery of her emotion, and
+Sheila said: "Lie still. It is all over. He cannot hurt us now."
+
+The other shook her head in protest. "I came here to forget, and I find
+you--his daughter."
+
+"You find more than his daughter; you find his first wife, and you find
+the one that killed him."
+
+"The one that killed him!" said the woman greatly troubled. "How did you
+know that?"
+
+"All the world knows it. He was in prison four years, and since then
+he has been a mutineer, a treasure-hunter, a planter, and a saviour of
+these islands!"
+
+The sick woman fell back in exhaustion. At that moment the servant
+entered with a pitcher of lime-juice. Sheila took it from her and
+motioned her out of the room; then she held a glass of the liquid to the
+stark lips.
+
+"Drink," she said in a low, kind voice, and she poured slowly into
+the patient's mouth the cooling draught. A moment later Noreen raised
+herself up again.
+
+"Mr. Dyck Calhoun is here?" she asked.
+
+"He is here, and none to-day holds so high a place in the minds of all
+who live here. He has saved the island."
+
+"All are here that matter," said Noreen. "And I came to forget!"
+
+"What do you remember?" asked Sheila. "I remember all--how he died!"
+
+Suddenly Sheila had a desire to shriek aloud. This woman--did this woman
+then see Erris Boyne die? Was she present when the deed was done? If so,
+why was she not called to give evidence at the trial. But yes, she was
+called to give evidence. She remembered it now, and the evidence had
+been that she was in her own home when the killing took place.
+
+"How did he die?" she asked in a whisper.
+
+"One stroke did it--only one, and he fell like a log." She made a motion
+as of striking, and shuddered, covering her eyes with trembling hands.
+
+"You tell me you saw Dyck Calhoun do this to an undefended man--you tell
+me this!"
+
+Sheila's anger was justified in her mind. That Dyck Calhoun should
+
+"I did not see Dyck Calhoun strike him," gasped the woman. "I did not
+say that. Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne!"
+
+"My God!--oh, my God!" said Sheila with ashen lips, but a great light
+breaking in her eyes. "Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne! Then who
+killed him?"
+
+There was a moment's pause, then--"I killed him," said the woman in
+agony. "I killed him."
+
+A terrible repugnance seized Sheila. After a moment she said in
+agitation: "You killed him--you struck him down! Yet you let an innocent
+man go to prison, and be kept there for years, and his father go to his
+grave with shame, with estates ruined and home lost--and you were the
+guilty one--you--all the time."
+
+"It was part of my madness. I was a coward and I thought then there were
+reasons why I should feel no pity for Dyck Calhoun. His father injured
+mine--oh, badly! But I was a coward, and I've paid the price."
+
+A kinder feeling now took hold of Sheila. After all, what this woman had
+done gave happiness into her--Sheila's-hands. It relieved Dyck Calhoun
+of shame and disgrace. A jail-bird he was still, but an innocent
+jail-bird. He had not killed Erris Boyne. Besides, it wiped out forever
+the barrier between them. All her blind devotion to the man was now
+justified. His name and fame were clear. Her repugnance of the woman was
+as nothing beside her splendid feeling of relief. It was as though the
+gates of hell had been closed and the curtains of heaven drawn for the
+eyes to see. Six years of horrible shame wiped out, and a new world was
+before her eyes.
+
+This woman who had killed Erris Boyne must now suffer. She must bear the
+ignominy which had been heaped upon Dyck Calhoun's head. Yet all at once
+there came to her mind a softening feeling. Erris Boyne had been rightly
+killed by a woman he had wronged, for he was a traitor as well as an
+adulterer--one who could use no woman well, who broke faith with all
+civilized tradition, and reverted to the savage. Surely the woman's
+crime was not a dark one; it was injured innocence smiting depravity,
+tyranny and lust.
+
+Suddenly, as she looked at the woman who had done this thing, she, whose
+hand had rid the world of a traitor and a beast, fell back on the pillow
+in a faint. With an exclamation Sheila lifted up the head. If the
+woman was dead, then there was no hope for Dyck Calhoun; any story
+that she--Sheila--might tell would be of no use. Yet she was no longer
+agitated in her body. Hands and fingers were steady, and she felt for
+the heart with firm fingers. Yes, the heart was still beating, and the
+pulse was slightly drumming. Thank God, the woman was alive! She rang a
+bell and lifted up the head of the sick woman.
+
+A moment later the servant was in the room. Sheila gave her orders
+quickly, and snatched up a pencil from the table. Then, on a piece of
+paper, she wrote the words: "I, not Dyck Calhoun, killed Erris Boyne."
+
+A few moments later, Noreen's eyes opened, and Sheila spoke to her. "I
+have written these words. Here they are--see them. Sign them."
+
+She read the words, and put a pencil in the trembling fingers, and, on
+the cover of a book Noreen's fingers traced her name slowly but clearly.
+Then Sheila thrust the paper in her bosom, and an instant later a nurse,
+sent by the resident doctor, entered.
+
+"They cannot hang me or banish me, for my end has come," whispered
+Noreen before Sheila left.
+
+In the street of Spanish Town almost the first person Sheila saw was
+Dyck Calhoun. With pale, radiant look she went to him. He gazed at her
+strangely, for there was that in her face he could not understand. There
+was in it all the faith of years, all the truth of womanhood, all the
+splendour of discovery, all that which a man can see but once in a human
+face and be himself.
+
+"Come with me," she said, and she moved towards King's House. He obeyed.
+For some moments they walked in silence, then all at once under a
+magnolia tree she stopped.
+
+"I want you to read what a woman wrote who has just arrived in the
+island from England. She is ill at the house of the general commanding."
+
+Taking from her breast the slip of paper, she handed it to him. He read
+it with eyes and senses that at first could hardly understand.
+
+"God in heaven--oh, merciful God!" he said in great emotion, yet with a
+strange physical quiet.
+
+"This woman was his wife," Sheila said.
+
+He handed the paper back. He conquered his agitation. The years of
+suffering rolled away. "They'll put her in jail," he said with a strange
+regret. He had a great heart.
+
+"No, I think not," was the reply. Yet she was touched by his compassion
+and thoughtfulness.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because she is going to die--and there is no time to lose. Come, we
+will go to Lord Mallow."
+
+"Mallow!" A look of bitter triumph came into Dyck's face. "Mallow--at
+last!" he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+
+Lord Mallow frowned on his secretary. "Mr. Calhoun to see me! What's his
+business?"
+
+"One can guess, your honour. He's been fighting for the island."
+
+"Why should he see me? There is the general commanding."
+
+The secretary did not reply, he knew his chief; and, after a moment,
+Lord Mallow said: "Show him in." When Dyck Calhoun entered the governor
+gave him a wintry smile of welcome, but did not offer to shake hands.
+"Will you sit down?" he said, with a slow gesture.
+
+Calhoun made a dissenting motion. "I prefer to stand, your honour."
+
+This was the first time the two men had met alone since Dyck had
+arrived in Jamaica, or since his trial. Calhoun was dressed in planter's
+costume, and the governor was in an officer's uniform. They were in
+striking contrast in face and figure--the governor long, lanky, ascetic
+in appearance, very intellectual save for the riotous mouth, and very
+spick and span--as though he had just stepped out of Almack's; while
+Calhoun was tough and virile, and with the air of a thorough outdoor
+man. There was in his face the firm fighting look of one who had done
+things and could tackle big affairs--and something more; there was in
+it quiet exultation. Here he was now at last alone with the man who had
+done him great harm, and for whom he had done so much; who had sought to
+wipe him off the slate of life and being; who had tried to win the girl
+from whom he himself had been parted.
+
+In spite of it all--of his life in jail, of his stark mutiny, of
+the oppression of the governor, he had not been beaten down, but had
+prospered in spite of all. He had by his will, wisdom and military
+skill, saved the island in its hour of peril, saved its governor from
+condemnation; and here he was facing the worst enemy of his life with
+the cards of success in his hands.
+
+"You have done the island and England great service, Mr. Calhoun," said
+the governor at last.
+
+"It is the least I could do for the land where I have made my home,
+where I have reaped more than I have sown."
+
+"We know your merit, sir."
+
+A sharp satirical look came into Calhoun's face and his voice rang out
+with vigour. "And because you knew my merit you advised the crown to
+confine me to my estate, and you would have had me shot if you could.
+I am what I am because there was a juster man than yourself in Jamaica.
+Through him I got away and found treasure, and I bought land and have
+helped to save this island and your place. What do I owe you, your
+honour? Nothing that I can see--nothing at all."
+
+"You are a mutineer, and but that you showed your courage would have
+been hung at the yard-arm, as many of your comrades in England were."
+
+A cold smile played at Calhoun's lips. "My luck was as great as my
+courage, I know. I have the luck of Enniscorthy!"
+
+At the last words the governor winced, for it was by that touch Calhoun
+had defeated him in the duel long ago. It galled him that this man whom
+he detested could say such things to him with truth. Yet in his heart of
+hearts he had for Calhoun a great respect. Calhoun's invincible will
+had conquered the worst in Mallow's nature, had, in spite of himself,
+created a new feeling in him. There was in Mallow the glimmer of
+greatness, and only his supreme selfishness had made him what he was. He
+laid a hand on himself now, though it was not easy to do so.
+
+"It was not the luck of Enniscorthy that sent Erris Boyne to his doom,"
+he said, however, with anger in his mind, for Dyck's calm boldness
+stirred the worst in him. He thought he saw in him an exultancy which
+could only come from his late experiences in the field. It was as though
+he had come to triumph over the governor. Mallow said what he had said
+with malice. He looked to see rage in the face of Dyck Calhoun, and was
+nonplussed to find that it had only a stern sort of pleasure. The eyes
+of Calhoun met his with no trace of gloom, but with a valour worthy of a
+high cause--their clear blue facing his own with a constant penetration.
+Their intense sincerity gave him a feeling which did not belong to
+authority. It was not the look of a criminal, whatever the man might
+be--mutineer and murderer. As for mutineer, all that Calhoun had fought
+for had been at last admitted by the British Government, and reforms had
+been made that were due to the mutiny at the Nore. Only the technical
+crime had been done by Calhoun, and he had won pardon by his bravery in
+the battle at sea. Yes, he was a man of mark, even though a murderer.
+
+Calhoun spoke slowly. "Your honour, you have said what you have a right
+to say to a man who killed Erris Boyne. But this man you accuse did
+not do it." The governor smiled, for the assumption was ridiculous. He
+shrugged a shoulder and a sardonic curl came to his lip.
+
+"Who did it then?"
+
+"If you will come to the house of the general commanding you will see."
+
+The governor was in a great quandary. He gasped. "The general
+commanding--did he kill Erris Boyne, then?"
+
+"Not he, yet the person that did it is in this house. Listen, your
+honour. I have borne the name of killing Erris Boyne, and I ought to
+have killed him, for he was a traitor. I had proofs of it; but I did
+not kill him, and I did not betray him, for he had alive a wife and
+daughter, and something was due to them. He was a traitor, and was in
+league with the French. It does not matter that I tell you now, for his
+daughter knows the truth. I ought to have told it long ago, and if I had
+I should not have been imprisoned."
+
+"You were a brave man, but a fool--always a fool," said the governor
+sharply.
+
+"Not so great a fool that I can't recover from it," was the calm reply.
+"Perhaps it was the best thing that ever happened to me, for now I can
+look the world in the face. It's made a man of me. It was a woman killed
+him," was Calhoun's added comment. "Will your honour come with me and
+see her?"
+
+The governor was thunderstruck. "Where is she?"
+
+"As I have told you-in the house of the general commanding."
+
+The governor rose abashed. "Well, I can go there now. Come."
+
+"Perhaps you would prefer I should not go with you in the street. The
+world knows me as a mutineer, thinks of me as a murderer! Is it fair to
+your honour?"
+
+Something in Calhoun's voice roused the rage of Lord Mallow, but he
+controlled it, and said calmly: "Don't talk nonsense, sir; we shall walk
+together, if you will."
+
+At the entrance to the house of the general, the man to whom this visit
+meant so much stopped and took a piece of paper from his pocket. "Your
+honour, here is the name of the slayer of Erris Boyne. I give it to you
+now to see, so you may not be astonished when you see her."
+
+The governor stared at the paper. "Boyne's wife, eh?" he said in a
+strange mood. "Boyne's wife--what is she doing here?"
+
+Calhoun told him briefly as he took the paper back, and added: "It was
+accident that brought us all together here, your honour, but the hand of
+God is in it."
+
+"Is she very ill?"
+
+"She will not live, I think."
+
+"To whom did she tell her story?"
+
+"To Miss Sheila Llyn."
+
+The governor was nettled.
+
+"Oh, to Miss Llyn When did you see her?"
+
+"Just before I came to you."
+
+"What did the woman look like--this Noreen Boyne?"
+
+"I do not know; I have not seen her."
+
+"Then how came you by the paper with her signature?"
+
+"Miss Llyn gave it to me."
+
+Anger filled Lord Mallow's mind. Sheila--why now the way would be open
+to Calhoun to win--to marry her! It angered him, but he held himself
+steadily.
+
+"Where is Miss Llyn?"
+
+"She is here, I think. She came back when she left me at your door."
+
+"Oh, she left you at my door, did she?... But let me see the woman
+that's come so far to put the world right."
+
+A few moments later they stood in the bedroom of Noreen Boyne, they two
+and Sheila Llyn, the nurse having been sent out.
+
+Lord Mallow looked down on the haggard, dying woman with no emotion.
+Only a sense of duty moved him.
+
+"What is it you wished to say to me?" he asked the patient.
+
+"Who are you?" came the response in a frayed tone.
+
+"I am the governor of the island--Lord Mallow."
+
+"Then I want to tell you that I killed Erris Boyne--with this hand I
+killed him." She raised her skinny hand up, and her eyes became glazed.
+"He had used me vilely and I struck him down. He was a bad man."
+
+"You let an innocent man bear punishment, you struck at one who did you
+no harm, and you spoiled his life for him. You can see that, can't you?"
+
+The woman's eyes sought the face of Dyck Calhoun, and Calhoun said: "No,
+you did not spoil my life, Noreen Boyne. You have made it. Not that I
+should have chosen the way of making it, but there it is, as God's in
+heaven, I forgive you."
+
+Noreen's face lost some of its gloom. "That makes it easier," she said
+brokenly. "I can't atone by any word or act, but I'm sorry. I've kept
+you from being happy, and you were born to be happy. Your father had
+hurt mine, had turned him out of our house for debt, and I tried to pay
+it all back. When they suspected you I held my peace. I was a coward;
+I could not say you were innocent without telling the truth, and that
+I could not do then. But now I'll tell it--I think I'd have told it
+whether I was dying or not, though. Yes, if I'd seen you here I'd have
+told it, I'm sure. I'm not all bad."
+
+Sheila leaned over the bed. "Never mind about the past. You can help a
+man back to the good opinion of the world now."
+
+"I hurt you too," said Noreen with hopeless pain. "You were his friend."
+
+"I believed in him always--even when he did not deny the crime," was the
+quiet reply.
+
+"There's no good going on with that," said the governor sharply. "We
+must take down her statement in writing, and then--"
+
+"Look, she is sinking!" said Calhoun sharply. The woman's head had
+dropped forward, her chin was on her breast, and her hands became
+clenched.
+
+"The doctor at once-bring in the nurse," said Calhoun. "She's dying."
+
+An instant later, the nurse entered with Sheila, and in a short time the
+doctor came.
+
+When later the doctor saw Lord Mallow alone he said: "She can't live
+more than two days."
+
+"That's good for her in a way," answered the governor, and in reply to
+the doctor's question why, he said: "Because she'd be in prison."
+
+"In prison--has she broken the law?"
+
+"She is now under arrest, though she doesn't know it.
+
+"What was her crime, your honour?"
+
+"She killed a man."
+
+"What man?"
+
+"Him for whom Dyck Calhoun was sent to prison--Erris Boyne."
+
+"Mr. Calhoun was not guilty, then?"
+
+"No. As soon as the woman is dead, I mean to announce the truth."
+
+"Not till then, your honour?"
+
+"Not till then."
+
+"It's hard on Calhoun."
+
+"Is it? It's years since he was tried and condemned. Two days cannot
+matter now."
+
+"Perhaps not. Last night the woman said to me: 'I'm glad I'm going to
+die.'" Then he added: "Calhoun will be more popular than ever now."
+
+The governor winced.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+An hour after Noreen Boyne had been laid in her grave, there was a
+special issue of the principal paper telling all the true facts of the
+death of Erris Boyne. Thus the people of Jamaica came to know that Dyck
+Calhoun was innocent of the crime of killing Erris Boyne, and he was
+made the object of splashing admiration, and was almost mobbed by
+admirers in the street. It all vexed Lord Mallow; but he steeled himself
+to urbanity, and he played his part well. He was clever enough to see it
+would pay him to be outwardly gracious to Calhoun. So it was he made a
+speech in the capital on the return of the general commanding and the
+troops from subduing the Maroons, in which he said: "No one in all the
+King's dominions had showed greater patriotism and military skill
+than their friend Mr. Dyck Calhoun, who had been harshly treated by a
+mistaken Government."
+
+A few hours later, in the sweet garden of the house where Sheila and
+her mother lodged, Calhoun came upon the girl whose gentle dignity and
+beauty seemed to glow.
+
+At first all she said to him was, "Welcome, old friend," and at last she
+said, "Now you can come to the United States, Dyck, and make a new life
+there."
+
+Presently he said: "I ought to go where you wish me to go, for you came
+to me here when I was rejected of men. I owe you whatever I am that's
+worth while, if anything I am is worth while. Your faith kept me alive
+in my darkest days--even when I thought I had wronged you."
+
+"Then you will come to Virginia with me--as my husband, Dyck?" She
+blushed and laughed. "You see I have to propose to you, for you've
+never asked me to marry you. I'm throwing myself at your head, sir, you
+observe!"
+
+He gave an honest smile of adoration. "I came to-day to ask you to be
+my wife--for that reason only. I could not do it till the governor had
+declared my innocence. The earth is sweeter to-day than it has been
+since time began."
+
+He held out his arms, and an instant later the flowers she carried were
+crushed to her breast, with her lips given to his.
+
+A little later she drew from her pocket a letter. "You must read that,"
+she said. "It is from the great Alexander Hamilton--yes, he will be
+great, he will play a wondrous part in the life of my new country. Read
+it Dyck."
+
+After he had read it, he said: "He was born a British subject here in
+these islands, and he goes to help Americans live according to British
+principles. With all my sane fellow-countrymen I am glad the Americans
+succeeded. Do you go to your Virginia, and I will come as soon as I have
+put my affairs in order."
+
+"I will not go without you--no, I will not go," she persisted.
+
+"Then we shall be married at once," he declared. And so it was, and all
+the island was en fete, and when Sheila came to Dyck's plantation the
+very earth seemed to rejoice. The slaves went wild with joy, and ate and
+drank their fill, and from every field there came the song:
+
+ "Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey!
+ De big bees is a singin',
+ My heart is held up and de bells is a ringin';
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands!"
+
+And sweetly solitary the two lived their lives, till one day, three
+months later, there came to the plantation the governor and his suite.
+
+When they had dismounted, Lord Mallow said: "I bring you the pay of the
+British Government for something of what you have suffered, sir, and
+what will give your lady pleasure too, I hope. I come with a baronetcy
+given by the King. News of it came to me only this morning."
+
+Calhoun smiled. "Your honour, I can take no title, receive no honour. I
+have ended my life under the British flag. I go to live under the Stars
+and Stripes."
+
+The governor was astounded. "Your lady, sir, do you forget your lady?"
+
+But Sheila answered: "The life of the new world has honours which have
+naught to do with titles."
+
+"I sail for Virginia by the first ship that goes," said Calhoun. "It is
+good here, but I shall go to a place where things are better, and where
+I shall have work to do. I must decline the baronetcy, your honour. I go
+to a land where the field of life is larger, where Britain shall remake
+herself."
+
+"It will take some time," said the governor tartly. "They'll be long
+apart."
+
+"But they will come together at last--for the world's sake."
+
+There was silence for a moment, and through it came the joy-chant from
+the fields:
+
+ "Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey."
+
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Beginning of a lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy
+ Wit is always at the elbow of want
+ Without the money brains seldom win alone
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of No Defense, Complete, by Gilbert Parker
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook No Defense, by Gilbert Parker, Complete
+#122 in our series by Gilbert Parker
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
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+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+Title: No Defense, Complete
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: August, 2004 [EBook #6295]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 12, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NO DEFENSE, BY PARKER, ENTIRE ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
+
+
+
+
+
+NO DEFENSE
+
+By Gilbert Parker
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+BOOK I.
+I. THE TWO MEET
+II. THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+III. THE QUARREL
+IV. THE DUEL
+V. THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+VI. DYCK IN PRISON
+VII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+VIII. DYCK'S FATHER VISITS HIM
+IX. A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+
+BOOK II
+X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+XI. WHITHER NOW?
+XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+BOOK III
+XVI. A LETTER
+XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+XVIII. AT SALEM
+XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE TWO MEET
+
+"Well, good-bye, Dyck. I'll meet you at the sessions, or before that at
+the assizes."
+
+It was only the impulsive, cheery, warning exclamation of a wild young
+Irish spirit to his friend Dyck Calhoun, but it had behind it the humour
+and incongruity of Irish life.
+
+The man, Dyck Calhoun, after whom were sent the daring words about the
+sessions and the assizes, was a year or two older than his friend, and,
+as Michael Clones, his servant and friend, said, "the worst and best
+scamp of them all"--just up to any harmless deviltry.
+
+Influenced by no traditions or customs, under control of no stern records
+of society, Calhoun had caused some trouble in his time by the harmless
+deeds of a scapegrace, but morally--that is, in all relations of life
+affected by the ten commandments--he was above reproach. Yet he was of
+the sort who, in days of agitation, then common in Ireland, might
+possibly commit some act which would bring him to the sessions or the
+assizes. There never was in Ireland a cheerier, braver, handsomer
+fellow, nor one with such variety of mind and complexity of purpose.
+
+He was the only child of a high-placed gentleman; he spent all the money
+that came his way, and occasionally loaded himself with debt, which his
+angry father paid. Yet there never was a gayer heart, a more generous
+spirit, nor an easier-tempered man; though, after all, he was only
+twenty-five when the words with which the tale opens were said to him.
+
+He had been successful--yet none too successful--at school and Trinity
+College, Dublin. He had taken a pass degree, when he might have captured
+the highest honours. He had interested people of place in the country,
+but he never used promptly the interest he excited. A pretty face, a
+fishing or a shooting expedition, a carouse in some secluded tavern, were
+parts of his daily life.
+
+At the time the story opens he was a figure of note among those who
+spent their time in criticizing the government and damning the Irish
+Parliament. He even became a friend of some young hare-brained rebels of
+the time; yet no one suspected him of anything except irresponsibility.
+His record was clean; Dublin Castle was not after him.
+
+When his young friend made the remark about the sessions and assizes,
+Calhoun was making his way up the rocky hillside to take the homeward
+path to his father's place, Playmore. With the challenge and the
+monstrous good-bye, a stone came flying up the hill after him and stopped
+almost at his feet. He made no reply, however, but waved a hand
+downhill, and in his heart said:
+
+"Well, maybe he's right. I'm a damned dangerous fellow, there's no doubt
+about that. Perhaps I'll kill a rebel some day, and then they'll take me
+to the sessions and the assizes. Well, well, there's many a worse fate
+than that, so there is."
+
+After a minute he added:
+
+"So there is, dear lad, so there is. But if I ever kill, I'd like it to
+be in open fight on the hills like this--like this, under the bright sun,
+in the soft morning, with all the moor and valleys still, and the larks
+singing--the larks singing! Hooray, but it's a fine day, one of the best
+that ever was!"
+
+He laughed, and patted his gun gently.
+
+"Not a feather, not a bird killed, not a shot fired; but the looking was
+the thing--stalking the things that never turned up, the white heels we
+never saw, for I'm not killing larks, God love you!"
+
+He raised his head, looking up into the sky at some larks singing above
+him in the heavens.
+
+"Lord love you, little dears," he added aloud. "I wish I might die with
+your singing in my ears, but do you know what makes Ireland what it is?
+Look at it now. Years ago, just when the cotton-mills and the linen-
+mills were doing well, they came over with their English legislation, and
+made it hard going. When we begin to get something, over the English
+come and take the something away. What have we done, we Irish people,
+that we shouldn't have a chance in our own country? Lord knows, we
+deserve a chance, for it's hard paying the duties these days. What with
+France in revolution and reaching out her hand to Ireland to coax her
+into rebellion; what with defeat in America and drink in Scotland; what
+with Fox and Pitt at each other's throats, and the lord-lieutenant a
+danger to the peace; what with poverty, and the cow and children and
+father and mother living all in one room, with the chickens roosting in
+the rafters; what with pointing the potato at the dried fish and gulping
+it down as if it was fish itself; what with the smell and the dirt and
+the poverty of Dublin and Derry, Limerick and Cork--ah, well!" He threw
+his eyes up again.
+
+"Ah, well, my little love, sing on! You're a blessing among a lot of
+curses; but never mind, it's a fine world, and Ireland's the best part of
+it. Heaven knows it--and on this hill, how beautiful it is!"
+
+He was now on the top of a hill where he could look out towards the bog
+and in towards the mellow, waving hills. He could drink in the yellowish
+green, with here and there in the distance a little house; and about two
+miles away smoke stealing up from the midst of the plantation where
+Playmore was--Playmore, his father's house--to be his own one day.
+
+How good it was! There, within his sight, was the great escarpment of
+rock known as the Devil's Ledge, and away to the east was the black spot
+in the combe known as the Cave of Mary. Still farther away, towards the
+south, was the great cattle-pasture, where, as he looked, a thousand
+cattle roamed. Here and there in the wide prospect were plantations
+where Irish landlords lived, and paid a heavy price for living. Men did
+not pay their rents. Crops were spoiled, markets were bad, money was
+scarce, yet--
+
+"Please God, it will be better next year!" Michael Clones said, and
+there never was a man with a more hopeful heart than Michael Clones.
+
+Dyck Calhoun had a soul of character, originality, and wayward
+distinction. He had all the impulses and enthusiasms of a poet, all the
+thirst for excitement of the adventurer, all the latent patriotism of the
+true Celt; but his life was undisciplined, and he had not ordered his
+spirit into compartments of faith and hope. He had gifts. They were
+gifts only to be borne by those who had ambitions.
+
+Now, as he looked out upon the scene where nature was showing herself at
+her best, some glimmer of a great future came to him. He did not know
+which way his feet were destined to travel in the business of life. It
+was too late to join the navy; but there was still time enough to be a
+soldier, or to learn to be a lawyer.
+
+As he gazed upon the scene, his wonderful deep blue eyes, his dark brown
+hair thick upon his head, waving and luxuriant like a fine mattress, his
+tall, slender, alert figure, his bony, capable hands, which neither sun
+nor wind ever browned, his nervous yet interesting mouth, and his long
+Roman nose, set in a complexion rich in its pink-and-cream hardness and
+health--all this made him a figure good to see.
+
+Suddenly, as he listened to the lark singing overhead, with his face
+lifted to the sky, he heard a human voice singing; and presently there
+ran up a little declivity to his left a girl--an Irish girl of about
+seventeen years of age.
+
+Her hat was hanging on her arm by a green ribbon. Her head was covered
+with the most wonderful brown, waving hair. She had a broad, low
+forehead, Greek in its proportions and lines. The eyes were bluer even
+than his own, and were shaded by lashes of great length, which slightly
+modified the firm lines of the face, with its admirable chin, and mouth
+somewhat large with a cupid's bow.
+
+In spite of its ardent and luscious look, it was the mouth of one who
+knew her own mind and could sustain her own course. It was open when
+Dyck first saw it, because she was singing little bits of wild lyrics of
+the hills, little tragedies of Celtic life--just bursts of the Celtic
+soul, as it were, cheerful yet sad, buoyant and passionate, eager yet
+melancholy. She was singing in Irish too. They were the words of songs
+taught her by her mother's maid.
+
+She had been tramping over the hills for a couple of hours, virile,
+beautiful, and alone. She wore a gown of dark gold, with little green
+ribbons here and there. The gown was short, and her ankles showed. In
+spite of the strong boots she wore they were alert, delicate, and
+shapely, and all her beauty had the slender fullness of a quail.
+
+When she saw Dyck, she stopped suddenly, her mouth slightly open. She
+gave him a sidelong glance of wonder, interest, and speculation. Then
+she threw her head slightly back, and all the curls gathered in a bunch
+and shook like bronze flowers. It was a head of grace and power, of
+charm and allurement--of danger.
+
+Dyck was lost in admiration. He looked at her as one might look at a
+beautiful thing in a dream. He did not speak; he only smiled as he gazed
+into her eyes. She was the first to speak.
+
+"Well, who are you?" she asked with a slightly southern accent in her
+voice, delicate and entrancing. Her head gave a little modest toss, her
+fine white teeth caught her lower lip with a little quirk of humour; for
+she could see that he was a gentleman, and that she was safe from
+anything that might trouble her.
+
+He replied to her question with the words:
+
+"My name? Why, it's Dyck Calhoun. That's all."
+
+Her eyes brightened. "Isn't that enough?" she asked gently.
+
+She knew of his family. She was only visiting in the district with her
+mother, but she had lately heard of old Miles Calhoun and his wayward
+boy, Dyck; and here was Dyck, with a humour in his eyes and a touch of
+melancholy at his lips. Somehow her heart went out to him.
+
+Presently he said to her: "And what's your name?"
+
+"I'm only Sheila Llyn, the daughter of my mother, a widow, visiting at
+Loyland Towers. Yes, I'm only Sheila!"
+
+She laughed.
+
+"Well, just be 'only Sheila,"' he answered admiringly, and he held out a
+hand to her. "I wouldn't have you be anything else, though it's none of
+my business."
+
+For one swift instant she hesitated; then she laid her hand in his.
+
+"There's no reason why we should not," she said. "Your father's
+respectable."
+
+She looked at him again with a sidelong glance, and with a whimsical,
+reserved smile at her lips.
+
+"Yes, he's respectable, I agree, but he's dull," answered Dyck. "For an
+Irishman, he's dull--and he's a tyrant, too. I suppose I deserve that,
+for I'm a handful."
+
+"I think you are, and a big handful too!"
+
+"Which way are you going?" he asked presently.
+
+"And you?"
+
+"Oh, I'm bound for home." He pointed across the valley. "Do you see
+that smoke coming up from the plantation over there?"
+
+"Yes, I know," she answered. "I know. That's Playmore, your father's
+place. Loyland Towers is between here and there. Which way were you
+going there?"
+
+"Round to the left," he said, puzzled, but agreeable.
+
+"Then we must say good-bye, because I go to the right. That's my nearest
+way."
+
+"Well, if that's your nearest way, I'm going with you," he said,
+"because--well, because--because--"
+
+"If you won't talk very much!" she rejoined with a little air of
+instinctive coquetry.
+
+"I don't want to talk. I'd like to listen. Shall we start?"
+
+A half-hour later they suddenly came upon an incident of the road.
+
+It was, alas, no uncommon incident. An aged peasant, in a sudden fit of
+weakness, had stumbled on the road, and, in falling, had struck his head
+on a stone and had lost consciousness. He was an old peasant of the
+usual Irish type, coarsely but cleanly dressed. Lying beside him was a
+leather bag, within which were odds and ends of food and some small books
+of legend and ritual. He was a peasant of a superior class, however.
+
+In falling, he had thrown over on his back, and his haggard face was
+exposed to the sun and sky. At sight of him Dyck and Sheila ran forward.
+Dyck dropped on one knee and placed a hand on the stricken man's heart.
+
+"He's alive, all right," Dyck said. "He's a figure in these parts. His
+name's Christopher Dogan."
+
+"Where does he live?"
+
+"Live? Well, not three hundred yards from here, when he's at home, but
+he's generally on the go. He's what the American Indians would call a
+medicine-man."
+
+"He needs his own medicine now."
+
+"He's over eighty, and he must have gone dizzy, stumbled, fallen, and
+struck a stone. There's the mark on his temple. He's been lying here
+unconscious ever since; but his pulse is all right, and we'll soon have
+him fit again."
+
+So saying, Dyck whipped out a horn containing spirit, and, while Sheila
+lifted the injured head, he bathed the old man's face with the spirit,
+then opened the mouth and let some liquor trickle down.
+
+"He's the cleanest peasant I ever saw," remarked Sheila; "and he's coming
+to. Look at him!"
+
+Yes, he was coming to. There was a slight tremor of the eyelids, and
+presently they slowly opened. They were eyes of remarkable poignancy and
+brightness--black, deep-set, direct, full of native intelligence. For an
+instant they stared as if they had no knowledge, then understanding came
+to them.
+
+"Oh, it's you, sir," his voice said tremblingly, looking at Dyck. "And
+very kind it is of ye !" Then he looked at Sheila. "I don't know ye,"
+he said whisperingly, for his voice seemed suddenly to fail. "I don't
+know ye," he repeated, "but you look all right."
+
+"Well, I'm Sheila Llyn," the girl said, taking her hand from the old
+man's shoulder.
+
+"I'm Sheila Llyn, and I'm all right in a way, perhaps."
+
+The troubled, piercing eyes glanced from one to the other.
+
+"No relation?"
+
+"No--never met till a half-hour ago," remarked Dyck.
+
+The old man drew himself to a sitting posture, then swayed slightly. The
+hands of the girl and Dyck went out behind his back. As they touched his
+back, their fingers met, and Dyck's covered the girl's. Their eyes met,
+too, and the story told by Dyck in that moment was the beginning of a
+lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy.
+
+He thought her fingers were wonderfully soft, warm, and full of life; and
+she thought that his was the hand of a master-of a master in the field of
+human effort. That is, if she thought at all, for Dyck's warm, powerful
+touch almost hypnotized her.
+
+The old peasant understood, however. He was standing on his feet now.
+He was pale and uncertain. He lifted up his bag, and threw it over his
+shoulder.
+
+"Well, I'm not needing you any more, thank God!" he said.
+
+"So Heaven's blessing on ye, and I bid ye good-bye. You've been kind to
+me, and I won't forget either of ye. If ever I can do ye a good turn,
+I'll do it."
+
+"No, we're not going to leave you until you're inside your home," said
+Dyck.
+
+The old man looked at Sheila in meditation. He knew her name and her
+history. Behind the girl's life was a long prospect of mystery. Llyn
+was her mother's maiden name. Sheila had never known her father. Never
+to her knowledge had she seen him, because when she was yet an infant her
+mother had divorced him by Act of Parliament, against the wishes of her
+church, and had resumed her maiden name.
+
+Sheila's father's name was Erris Boyne, and he had been debauched,
+drunken, and faithless; so at a time of unendurable hurt his wife had
+freed herself. Then, under her maiden name, she had brought up her
+daughter without any knowledge of her father; had made her believe
+he was dead; had hidden her tragedy with a skilful hand.
+
+Only now, when Sheila was released from a governess, had she moved out of
+the little wild area of the County Limerick where she lived; only now had
+she come to visit an uncle whose hospitality she had for so many years
+denied herself. Sheila was two years old when her father disappeared,
+and fifteen years had gone since then.
+
+One on either side of the old man, they went with him up the hillside for
+about three hundred yards, to the door of his house, which was little
+more than a cave in a sudden lift of the hill. He swayed as he walked,
+but by the time they reached his cave-house he was alert again.
+
+The house had two windows, one on either side of the unlocked doorway;
+and when the old man slowly swung the door open, there was shown an
+interior of humble character, but neat and well-ordered. The floor was
+earth, dry and clean. There was a bed to the right, also wholesome and
+dry, with horse-blankets for cover. At the back, opposite the doorway,
+was a fireplace of some size, and in it stood a kettle, a pot, and a few
+small pans, together with a covered saucepan. On either side of the
+fireplace was a three-legged stool, and about the middle of the left-hand
+wall of the room was a chair which had been made out of a barrel, some of
+the staves having been sawn away to make a seat.
+
+Once inside the house, Christopher Dogan laid his bag on the bed and
+waved his hands in a formula of welcome.
+
+"Well, I'm honoured," he said, "for no one has set foot inside this place
+that I'd rather have here than the two of ye; and it's wonderful to me,
+Mr. Calhoun, that ye've never been inside it before, because there's been
+times when I've had food and drink in plenty. I could have made ye
+comfortable then and stroked ye all down yer gullet. As for you, Miss
+Llyn, you're as welcome as the shining of the stars of a night when
+there's no moon. I'm glad you're here, though I've nothing to give ye,
+not a bite nor sup. Ah, yes--but yes," he suddenly cried, touching his
+head. "Faith, then, I have! I have a drap of somethin' that's as good
+as annything dhrunk by the ancient kings of Ireland. It's a wee cordial
+that come from the cellars of the Bishop of Dunlany, when I cured his
+cook of the evil-stone that was killing her. Ah, thank God!"
+
+He went into a corner on the left of the fireplace, opened an old jar,
+thrust his arm down, and drew out a squat little bottle of cordial. The
+bottle was beautifully made. It was round and hunched, and of glass,
+with an old label from which the writing had faded.
+
+With eyes bright now, Christopher uncorked the bottle and smelled the
+contents. As he did so, a smile crinkled his face.
+
+"Thank the Lord! There's enough for the two of ye--two fine
+tablespoonfuls of the cordial that'd do anny man good, no matter how bad
+he was, and turn an angel of a woman into an archangel. Bless yer Bowl!"
+
+When Christopher turned to lift down two pewter pots, Calhoun reached up
+swiftly and took them from the shelf. He placed them in the hands of the
+old man, who drew a clean towel of coarse linen from a small cupboard in
+the wall above his head.
+
+She and Dyck held the pots for the old man to pour the cordial into them.
+As he said, there was only a good porridge-spoon of liqueur for each. He
+divided it with anxious care.
+
+"There's manny a man," he said, "and manny and manny a lady, too, born in
+the purple, that'd be glad of a dhrink of this cordial from the cellar of
+the bishop.
+
+"Alpha, beta, gamma, delta is the code, and with the word delta," he
+continued, "dhrink every drop of it, as if it was the last thing you were
+dhrinking on earth; as if the Lord stooped down to give ye a cup of
+blessing from His great flagon of eternal happiness. Ye've got two kind
+hearts, but there's manny a day of throuble will come between ye and the
+end; and yet the end'll be right, God love ye! Now-alpha, beta, gamma,
+delta!"
+
+With a merry laugh Dyck Calhoun turned up his cup and drained the liquid
+to the last drop. With a laugh not quite so merry, Sheila raised her mug
+and slowly drained the green happiness away.
+
+"Isn't it good--isn't it like the love of God?" asked the old man.
+"Ain't I glad I had it for ye? Why I said I hadn't annything for ye to
+dhrink or eat, Lord only knows. There's nothing to eat, and there's only
+this to dhrink, and I hide it away under the bedclothes of time, as one
+might say. Ah, ye know, it's been there for three years, and I'd almost
+forgot it. It was a little angel from heaven whispered it to me whir ye
+stepped inside this house. I dunno why I kep' the stuff. Manny's the
+time I was tempted to dhrink it myself, and manny's the time something
+said to me, 'Not yet.' The Lord be praised, for I've had out of it more
+than I deserve!"
+
+He took the mugs from their hands, and for a minute stood like some
+ancient priest who had performed a noble ritual. As Sheila looked at
+him, she kept saying to herself:
+
+"He's a spirit; he isn't a man!"
+
+Dyck's eye met that of Sheila, and he saw with the same feeling what was
+working in her heart.
+
+"Well, we must be going," he said to Christopher Dogan. "We must get
+homeward, and we've had a good drink--the best I ever tasted. We're
+proud to pay our respects to you in your own house; and goodbye to you
+till we meet again."
+
+His hand went out to the shoulder of the peasant and rested there for a
+second in friendly feeling. Then the girl stretched out her hand also.
+The old man took the two cups in one hand, and, reaching out the other,
+let Sheila's fingers fall upon his own. He slowly crooked his neck, and
+kissed her fingers with that distinction mostly to be found among those
+few good people who live on the highest or the lowest social levels, or
+in native tents.
+
+"Ah, please God we meet again! and that I be let to serve you, Miss
+Sheila Llyn. I have no doubt you could do with a little help some time
+or another, the same as the rest of us. For all that's come between us
+three, may it be given me, humble and poor, to help ye both that's helped
+me so!"
+
+Dyck turned to go, and as he did so a thought came to him.
+
+"If you hadn't food and drink for us, what have you for yourself,
+Christopher?" he asked. "Have you food to eat?"
+
+"Ah, well--well, do ye think I'm no provider? There was no food cooked
+was what I was thinking; but come and let me show you."
+
+He took the cover off a jar standing in a corner. "Here's good flour,
+and there's water, and there's manny a wild shrub and plant on the
+hillside to make soup, and what more does a man want? With the scone
+cooked and inside ye, don't ye feel as well as though ye'd had a pound of
+beef or a rasher of bacon? Sure, ye do. I know where there's clumps of
+wild radishes, and with a little salt they're good--the best. God bless
+ye!"
+
+A few moments later, as he stood in his doorway and looked along the
+road, he saw two figures, the girl's head hardly higher than the man's
+shoulder. They walked as if they had much to get and were ready for it.
+
+"Well, I dunno," he said to himself. "I dunno about you, Dyck Calhoun.
+You're wild, and ye have too manny mad friends, but you'll come all right
+in the end; and that pretty girl--God save her!--she'll come with a smile
+into your arms by and by, dear lad. But ye have far to go and much to do
+before that."
+
+His head fell, his eyes stared out into the shining distance.
+
+"I see for ye manny and manny a stroke of bad luck, and manny a wrong
+thing said of ye, and she not believing wan of them. But oh, my God, but
+oh!"--his clenched hands went to his eyes. "I wouldn't like to travel
+the path that's before ye--no!"
+
+Down the long road the two young people travelled, gossiping much, both
+of them touched by something sad and mysterious, neither knowing why;
+both of them happy, too, for somehow they had come nearer together than
+years of ordinary life might have made possible. They thought of the old
+man and his hut, and then broke away into talk of their own countryside,
+of the war with France, of the growing rebellious spirit in Ireland, of
+riots in Dublin town, of trouble at Limerick, Cork, and Sligo.
+
+At the gate of the mansion where Sheila was visiting, Dyck put into her
+hands the wild flowers he had picked as they passed, and said:
+
+"Well, it's been a great day. I've never had a greater. Let's meet
+again, and soon! I'm almost every day upon the hill with my gun, and
+it'd be worth a lot to see you very soon."
+
+"Oh, you'll be forgetting me by to-morrow," the girl said with a little
+wistfulness at her lips, for she had a feeling they would not meet on the
+morrow. Suddenly she picked from the bunch of wild flowers he had given
+her a little sprig of heather.
+
+"Well, if we don't meet--wear that," she said, and, laughing over her
+shoulder, turned and ran into the grounds of Loyland Towers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE COMING OF A MESSENGER
+
+When Dyck entered the library of Playmore, the first words he heard were
+these:
+
+"Howe has downed the French at Brest. He's smashed the French fleet and
+dealt a sharp blow to the revolution. Hurrah!"
+
+The words were used by Miles Calhoun, Dyck's father, as a greeting to him
+on his return from the day's sport.
+
+Now, if there was a man in Ireland who had a narrow view and kept his
+toes pointed to the front, it was Miles Calhoun. His people had lived in
+Connemara for hundreds of years; and he himself had only one passion in
+life, which was the Protestant passion of prejudice. He had ever been a
+follower of Burke--a passionate follower, one who believed the French
+Revolution was a crime against humanity, a danger to the future of
+civilization.
+
+He had resisted more vigorously than most men the progress of
+revolutionary sentiments in Ireland. He was aware that his son had far
+less rigid opinions than himself; that he even defended Wolfe Tone and
+Thomas Emmet against abuse and damnation. That was why he had delight in
+slapping his son in the face, whenever possible, with the hot pennant of
+victory for British power.
+
+He was a man of irascible temperament and stern views, given to fits of
+exasperation. He was small of stature, with a round face, eyes that
+suddenly went red with feeling, and with none of the handsomeness of his
+son, who resembled his mother's family.
+
+The mother herself had been a beautiful and remarkable woman. Dyck was,
+in a sense, a reproduction of her in body and mind, for a more cheerful
+and impetuous person never made a household happier or more imperfect
+than she made hers.
+
+Her beauty and continual cheerfulness had always been the joy of Dyck's
+life, and because his mother had married his father--she was a woman of
+sense, with all her lightsome ways--he tried to regard his father with
+profound respect. Since his wife's death, however, Miles Calhoun had
+deteriorated; he had become unreasonable.
+
+As the elder Calhoun made his announcement about the battle of Brest and
+the English victory, a triumphant smile lighted his flushed face, and
+under his heavy grey brows his eyes danced with malicious joy.
+
+"Howe's a wonder!" he said. "He'll make those mad, red republicans hunt
+their holes. Eh, isn't that your view, Ivy?" he asked of a naval captain
+who had evidently brought the news.
+
+Captain Ivy nodded.
+
+"Yes, it's a heavy blow for the French bloodsuckers. If their ideas
+creep through Europe and get hold of England, God only knows what the
+end will be! In their view, to alter everything is the only way to put
+things right. No doubt they'll invent a new way to be born before
+they've finished."
+
+"Well, that wouldn't be a bad idea," remarked Dyck. "The present way has
+its demerits."
+
+"Yes, it throws responsibility upon the man, and gives a heap of trouble
+to the woman," said Captain Ivy with a laugh; "but they'll change it all,
+you'll see."
+
+Dyck poured himself a glass of port, held it up, sniffed the aroma, and
+looked through the beautiful red tinge of the wine with a happy and
+critical eye.
+
+"Well, the world could be remade in a lot of ways," he declared. "I
+shouldn't mind seeing a bit of a revolution in Ireland--but in England
+first," he hastened to add. "They're a more outcast folk than the
+Irish." His father scoffed.
+
+"Look out, Dyck, or they'll drop you in jail if you talk like that!" he
+chided, his red face growing redder, his fingers nervously feeling the
+buttons on his picturesque silk waistcoat. "There's conspiracy in
+Ireland, and you never truly know if the man that serves you at your
+table, or brings you your horse, or puts a spade into your ground, isn't
+a traitor."
+
+At that moment the door opened, and a servant entered the room. In his
+hand he carried a letter which, with marked excitement, he brought to
+Miles Calhoun.
+
+"Sure, he's waiting, sir," he said.
+
+"And who's he?" asked his master, turning the letter over, as though to
+find out by looking at the seal.
+
+"Oh, a man of consequence, if we're to judge by the way he's clothed."
+
+"Fit company, then?" his master asked, as he opened the heavily sealed
+letter.
+
+"Well, I'm not saying that, for there's no company good enough for us,"
+answered the higgledy-piggledy butler, with a quirk of the mouth; "but,
+as messengers go, I never seen one with more style and point."
+
+"Well, bring him to me," said Miles Calhoun. "Bring him to me, and I'll
+form my own judgment--though I have some confidence in yours."
+
+"You could go further and fare worse, as the Papists say about
+purgatory," answered the old man with respectful familiarity.
+
+Captain Ivy and Dyck grinned, but the head of the house seemed none too
+pleased at the freedom of the old butler.
+
+"Bring him as he is," said Miles Calhoun. "Good God!" he added, for he
+just realized that the stamp of the seal was that of the Attorney-General
+of Ireland.
+
+Then he read the letter and a flush swept over his face, making its red
+almost purple.
+
+"Eternal damnation--eternal damnation!" he declared, holding the paper
+at arm's length a moment, inspecting it. He then handed it to Dyck.
+"Read that, lad. Then pack your bag, for we start for Dublin by daylight
+or before."
+
+Dyck read the brief document and whistled softly to himself.
+
+"Well, well, you've got to obey orders like that, I suppose," Dyck said.
+"They want to question us as to the state of the country here."
+
+"I think we can tell them something. I wonder if they know how wide your
+travel is, how many people you see; and if they know, how did they come
+to know? There's spies all over the place. How do I know but the man
+who's just left this room isn't a spy, isn't the enemy of all of us
+here?"
+
+"I'd suspect Michael Clones," remarked Dyck, "just as soon as Mulvaney."
+
+"Michael Clones," said his father, and he turned to Captain Ivy, "Michael
+Clones I'd trust as I'd trust His blessed Majesty, George III. He's a
+rare scamp, is Michael Clones! He's no thicker than a cardboard, but he
+draws the pain out of your hurt like a mustard plaster. A man of better
+sense and greater roguery I've never met. You must see him, Captain Ivy.
+He's only about twelve years older than my son, but, like my son, there's
+no holding him, there's no control of him that's any good. He does what
+he wants to do in his own way--talks when he wants to talk, fights when
+he wants to fight. He's a man of men, is Michael Clones."
+
+At that moment the door opened and the butler entered, followed by a
+tall, thin, Don Quixote sort of figure.
+
+"His excellency," said Mulvaney, with a look slightly malevolent, for the
+visitor had refused his name. Then he turned and left the room.
+
+At Mulvaney's words, an ironical smile crossed the face of the newcomer.
+Then he advanced to Miles Calhoun. Before speaking, however, he glanced
+sharply at Captain Ivy, threw an inquisitive look at Dyck, and said:
+
+"I seem to have hurt the feelings of your butler, sir, but that cannot be
+helped. I have come from the Attorney-General. My name is Leonard
+Mallow--I'm the eldest son of Lord Mallow. I've been doing business in
+Limerick, and I bring a message from the Attorney-General to ask you to
+attend his office at the earliest moment."
+
+Dyck Calhoun, noting his glance at a bottle of port, poured out a glass
+of the good wine and handed it over, saying:
+
+"It'll taste better to you because you've been travelling hard, but it's
+good wine anyhow. It's been in the cellar for forty years, and that's
+something in a land like this."
+
+Mallow accepted the glass of port, raised it with a little gesture of
+respect, and said:
+
+"Long life to the King, and cursed be his enemies!" So saying he flung
+the wine down his throat--which seemed to gulp it like a well--wiped his
+lips with a handkerchief, and turned to Miles Calhoun again.
+
+"Yes, it's good wine," he said; "as good as you'd get in the cellars of
+the Viceroy. I've seen strange things as I came. I've seen lights on
+the hills, and drunken rioters in the roads and behind hedges, and once a
+shot was fired at me; but here I am, safe and sound, carrying out my
+orders. What time will you start?" he added.
+
+He took it for granted that the summons did not admit of rejection, and
+he was right. The document contained these words:
+
+ Trouble is brewing; indeed, it is at hand. Come, please, at once to
+ Dublin, and give the Lord-Lieutenant and the Government a report
+ upon your district. We do not hear altogether well of it, but no
+ one has the knowledge you possess. In the name of His Majesty you
+ are to present yourself at once at these offices in Dublin, and be
+ assured that the Lord-Lieutenant will give you warm welcome through
+ me. Your own loyalty gives much satisfaction here. I am, sir,
+ Your obedient servant,
+ JOHN MCNOWELL.
+
+"You have confidence in the people's loyalty here?" asked Mallow.
+
+"As great as in my own," answered Dyck cheerily. "Well, you ought to
+know what that is. At the same time, I've heard you're a friend of one
+or two dark spirits in the land."
+
+"I hold no friendships that would do hurt to my country," answered Dyck
+sharply.
+
+Mallow smiled satirically. "As we're starting at daylight, I suppose, I
+think I'll go to bed, if it may be you can put me up."
+
+"Oh, Lord, yes! We can put you up, Mr. Mallow," said the old man.
+"You shall have as good a bed as you can find outside the Viceregal
+Lodge--a fourposter, wide and long. It's been slept in by many a man of
+place and power. But, Mr. Mallow, you haven't said you've had no dinner,
+and you'll not be going to bed in this house without your food. Did you
+shoot anything to-day, Dyck?" he asked his son.
+
+"I didn't bring home a feather. There were no birds to-day, but there
+are the ducks I shot yesterday, and the quail."
+
+"Oh, yes," said his father, "and there's the little roast pig, too. This
+is a day when we celebrate the anniversary of Irish power and life."
+
+"What's that?" asked Mallow.
+
+"That's the battle of the Boyne," answered his host with a little
+ostentation.
+
+"Oh, you're one of the Peep-o'-Day Boys, then," remarked Mallow.
+
+"I'm not saying that," answered the old man. "I'm not an Ulsterman, but
+I celebrate the coming of William to the Boyne. Things were done that
+day that'll be remembered when Ireland is whisked away into the Kingdom
+of Heaven. So you'll not go to bed till you've had dinner, Mr. Mallow!
+By me soul, I think I smell the little porker now. Dinner at five, to
+bed at eight, up before daylight, and off to Dublin when the light
+breaks. That's the course!" He turned to Captain Ivy. "I'm sorry,
+captain, but there's naught else to do, and you were going to-morrow at
+noon, anyhow, so it won't make much difference to you."
+
+"No difference whatever," replied the sailorman. "I have to go to
+Dublin, too, and from there to Queenstown to join my ship, and from
+Queenstown to the coast of France to do some fighting."
+
+"Please God!" remarked Miles Calhoun. "So be it!" declared Mallow.
+
+"Amen!" said Dyck.
+
+Once again Dyck looked the visitor straight in the eyes, and back in the
+horizon of Mallow's life-sky there shone the light of an evil star.
+
+"There's the call to dinner," remarked Miles Calhoun, as a bell began
+ringing in the tower outside. "Come with me, Mr. Mallow, and I'll show
+you your room. You've had your horse put up, I hope?"
+
+"Yes, and my bag brought in."
+
+"Well, come along, then. There's no time to lose. I can smell the
+porker crawling from the oven."
+
+"You're a master of tempting thoughts," remarked Mallow enthusiastically.
+
+"Sheila--Sheila!" said Dyck Calhoun to himself where he stood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE QUARREL
+
+The journey to Dublin was made by the Calhouns, their two guests, and
+Michael Clones, without incident of note. Arrived there, Miles Calhoun
+gave himself to examination by Government officials and to assisting the
+designs of the Peep-o'-Day Boys; and indeed he was present at the
+formation of the first Orange Lodge.
+
+His narrow nature, his petty craft and malevolence, were useful in a time
+of anxiety for the State. Yet he had not enough ability to develop his
+position by the chances offered him. He had not a touch of genius; he
+had only bursts of Celtic passion, which he had not mind enough to
+control.
+
+Indeed, as days, weeks and months went on, his position became less
+valuable to himself, and his financial affairs suffered from his own and
+his agent's bad management. In his particular district he was a power;
+in Dublin he soon showed the weaker side of his nature. He had a bad
+habit of making foes where he could easily have made friends. In his
+personal habits he was sober, but erratic.
+
+Dyck had not his father's abstention from the luxuries of life. He
+drank, he gamed, he went where temptation was, and fell into it. He
+steadily diminished his powers of resistance to self-indulgence until one
+day, at a tavern, he met a man who made a great impression upon him.
+
+This man was brilliant, ebullient, full of humour, character and life,
+knowing apparently all the lower world of Dublin, and moving with an
+assured step. It was Erris Boyne, the divorced husband of Mrs. Llyn and
+the father of Sheila Llyn; but this fact was not known to Dyck. There
+was also a chance of its not becoming known, because so many years had
+passed since Erris Boyne was divorced.
+
+One day Erris Boyne said to Dyck:
+
+"There's a supper to-night at the Breakneck Club. Come along and have a
+skinful. You'll meet people worth knowing. They're a damned fine lot of
+fellows for you to meet, Calhoun !"
+
+"The Breakneck Club isn't a good name for a first-class institution,"
+remarked Dyck, with a pause and a laugh; "but I'll come, if you'll fetch
+me."
+
+Erris Boyne, who was eighteen years older than Dyck, laughed, flicked a
+little pinch of snuff at his nose with his finger.
+
+"Dear lad, of course I'll come and fetch you," he said. "There's many a
+man has done worse than lead a gay stripling like you into pleasant ways.
+Bring along any loose change you have, for it may be a night of nights."
+
+"Oh, they play cards, do they, at the Breakneck Club?" said Dyck, alive
+with interest.
+
+"Well, call it what you like, but men must do something when they get
+together, and we can't be talking all the time. So pocket your
+shillings."
+
+"Are they all the right sort?" asked Dyck, with a little touch of
+malice. "I mean, are they loyal and true?"
+
+Erris Boyne laid a hand on Dyck's arm.
+
+"Come and find out. Do you think I'd lead you into bad company? Of
+course Emmet and Wolfe Tone won't be there, nor any of that lot; but
+there'll be some men of the right stamp." He watched Dyck carefully out
+of the corner of his eye. "It's funny," he added, "that in Ireland the
+word loyal always means being true to the Union Jack, standing by King
+George and his crowd."
+
+"Well, what would you have?" said Dyck. "For this is a day and age when
+being loyal to the King is more than aught else in all the Irish world.
+We're never two days alike, we Irish. There are the United Irishmen and
+the Defenders on one side, and the Peepo'-Day Boys, or Orangemen, on the
+other--Catholic and Protestant, at each other's throats. Then there's a
+hand thrust in, and up goes the sword, and the rifles, pikes, and
+bayonets; and those that were ready to mutilate or kill each other fall
+into each other's arms."
+
+Erris Boyne laughed. "Well, there'll soon be an end to that. The Irish
+Parliament is slipping into disrepute. It wouldn't surprise me if the
+astute English bribe them into a union, to the ruin of Irish
+Independence. Yet maybe, before that comes, the French will have a try
+for power here. And upon my word, if I have to live under foreign rule,
+I'd as leave have a French whip over me as an English!" He came a step
+nearer, his voice lowered a little. "Have you heard the latest news from
+France? They're coming with a good-sized fleet down to the south coast.
+Have you heard it?"
+
+"Oh, there's plenty one hears one doesn't believe is gospel," answered
+Dyck, his eyes half closing. "I'm not believing all I hear, as if it was
+a prayer-meeting. Anything may happen here; Ireland's a woman--very
+uncertain."
+
+Dyck flicked some dust from his waistcoat, and dropped his eyes, because
+he was thinking of two women he had known; one of them an angel now in
+company of her sister angels--his mother; the other a girl he had met on
+the hills of Connemara, a wonderfully pretty girl of seventeen. How
+should he know that the girl was Erris Boyne's daughter?--although there
+were times when some gesture of Boyne, some quick look, some lifting of
+the eyebrows, brought back the memory of Sheila Llyn, as it did now.
+
+Since Dyck left his old home he had seen her twice; once at Loyland
+Towers, and once at her home in Limerick. The time he had spent with her
+had been very brief, but full of life, interest, and character. She was
+like some piquant child, bold, beautiful, uncertain, caressing in her
+manner one instant, and distant at another.
+
+She had said radiant things, had rallied him, had shown him where a
+twenty-nine-pound salmon had been caught in a stream, and had fired at
+and brought down a pheasant outside the covert at Loyland Towers.
+Whether at Loyland Towers, or at her mother's house in Limerick, there
+was no touch of forwardness in her, or in anything she said or did. She
+was the most natural being, the freest from affectation, he had ever
+known.
+
+As Erris Boyne talked to him, the memory of Sheila flooded his mind,
+and on the flood his senses swam like swans. He had not her careful
+composure. He was just as real, but he had the wilfulness of man. She
+influenced him as no woman had ever yet done; but he saw no happy ending
+to the dream. He was too poor to marry; he had no trade or profession;
+his father's affairs were in a bad way. He could not bring himself to
+join the army or the navy; and yet, as an Irishman moved by political
+ideals, with views at once critical and yet devoted to the crown, he was
+not in a state to settle down.
+
+He did not know that Erris Boyne was set to capture him for the rebel
+cause. How could he know that Boyne was an agent of the most evil forces
+in Ireland--an agent of skill and address, prepossessing, with the face
+of a Celtic poet and the eye of an assassin?
+
+Boyne's object was to bring about the downfall of Dyck Calhoun--that is,
+his downfall as a patriot. At the Breakneck Club this bad business
+began. Dyck had seen many people, representing the gaiety and deviltry
+of life; but it was as though many doubtful people, many reckless ones,
+all those with purposes, fads, and fancies, were there. Here was an
+irresponsible member of a Government department; there an officer of His
+Majesty's troops; beyond, a profligate bachelor whose reputation for
+traitorous diplomacy was known and feared. Yet everywhere were men known
+in the sporting, gaming, or political world, in sea life or land life,
+most of whom had a character untouched by criticism.
+
+It was at this club that Dyck again met that tall, ascetic messenger from
+the Attorney-General, who had brought the message to Miles Calhoun. It
+was with this man--Leonard Mallow, eldest son of Lord Mallow--that Dyck,
+with three others, played cards one afternoon.
+
+The instinctive antipathy which had marked their first introduction was
+carried on to this later meeting. Dyck distrusted Mallow, and allowed
+his distrust exercise. It was unfortunate that Mallow won from him
+three-fourths of the money he had brought to the club, and won it with a
+smile not easy to forgive.
+
+Dyck had at last secured sudden success in a scheme of his cards when
+Mallow asked with a sneer:
+
+"Did you learn that at your home in heaven?"
+
+"Don't they teach it where you live in hell?" was Dyck's reply.
+
+At this Mallow flicked Dyck across the face with his handkerchief.
+
+"That's what they teach where I belong."
+
+"Well, it's easy to learn, and we'll do the sum at any time or place you
+please." After a moment Dyck continued: "I wouldn't make a fuss over it.
+Let's finish the game. There's no good prancing till the sport's ready;
+so I'll sit and learn more of what they teach in hell!"
+
+Dyck had been drinking, or he would not have spoken so; and when he was
+drunk daring was strong in him. He hated profoundly this man-so self-
+satisfied and satanic.
+
+He kept a perfect coolness, however. Leonard Mallow should not see that
+he was upset. His wanton wordiness came to his rescue, and until the end
+of the game he played with sang-froid, daring, and skill. He loved
+cards; he loved the strife of skill against skill, of trick against
+trick, of hand against hand. He had never fought a duel in his life,
+but he had no fear of doing so.
+
+At length, having won back nearly all he had lost, he rose to his feet
+and looked round.
+
+"Is there any one here from whom I can ask a favour?"
+
+Several stepped forward. Dyck nodded. One of them he knew. It was Sir
+Almeric Foyle.
+
+"Thank you, Sir Almeric," he said; "thank you. Shall it be swords or
+pistols?" he asked his enemy, coolly.
+
+"Swords, if you please," remarked Mallow grimly, for he had a gift with
+the sword.
+
+Dyck nodded again.
+
+"As you will. As you will!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE DUEL
+
+It was a morning such as could only be brought into existence by the
+Maker of mornings in Ireland. It was a day such as Dublin placed away
+carefully into the pantechnicon of famous archives.
+
+The city of Dublin was not always clean, but in the bright, gorgeous sun
+her natural filth was no menace to the eye, no repulse to the senses.
+Above the Liffey, even at so early an hour, the heat shimmers like a
+silver mist. The bells of churches were ringing, and the great cathedral
+bells boomed in thrilling monotony over the peaceful city. Here and
+there in the shabby yet renowned streets, horsemen moved along; now and
+then the costermonger raised his cry of fresh fruit, flowers, and
+"distinguished vegetables."
+
+People moved into church doorways on their way to mass or confession--
+some bright and rather gorgeous beings, some in deep mourning, shy,
+reserved, and obscure. Here and there, also, in certain streets--where
+officials lived or worked--were soldiers afoot; soldiers with carbines
+and long bayonets, with tall, slightly peaked hats, smart red coats,
+belts crossing their breasts, knee-breeches and leggings, and all with
+epaulets shining. They were in marked contrast to the peasant folk with
+the high-peaked soft hat, knee-breeches, rough tail-coat, and stockings,
+some with rifles, some with pikes, some with powder-horns slung under
+their arms or in the small of the back.
+
+Besides this show of foot-soldiers--that is, regulars and irregulars of
+the Cornwallis Regiment, and men of the Defenders and the Peep-o'-Day
+Boys--there were little groups of cavalry making their way to the parade-
+ground, the castle, the barracks, or the courts.
+
+Beyond these there was the jaunting-car trundling over the rough
+cobblestone street, or bumping in and out of dangerous holes. Whips
+cracked, and the loud voices of jarveys shouted blatant humour and Irish
+fun at horse and passenger. Here and there, also, some stately coach,
+bedizened with arms of the quality, made its way through the chief
+streets, or across the bridges of the Liffey.
+
+Then came the general population, moving cheerfully in the inspiriting
+sun; for Irishmen move so much in a moist atmosphere that on a sunshiny
+day all tristesse of life seems changed, as in a flash, into high spirits
+and much activity. Not that the country, at its worst, is slow-footed or
+depressed; for wit is always at the elbow of want.
+
+Never in all Ireland's years had she a more beautiful day than that
+in which Dyck Calhoun and the Hon. Leonard Mallow met to settle their
+account in a secluded corner of Phoenix Park. It was not the usual place
+for duels. The seconds had taken care to keep the locale from the
+knowledge of the public; especially as many who had come to know of
+the event at the Breakneck Club were eager to be present.
+
+The affair began an hour after sunrise. Neither Dyck nor Leonard Mallow
+slept at home the night before, but in separate taverns near Phoenix
+Park. Mallow came almost jauntily to the obscure spot. Both men had
+sensitiveness, and both entered the grounds with a certain sense of
+pleasure.
+
+Dyck moved and spoke like a man charged with some fluid which had
+abstracted him from life's monotonous routine. He had to consider the
+chance of never leaving the grounds alive; yet as he entered the place,
+where smooth grass between the trees made good footing for the work to be
+done, the thrill of the greenery, the sound of the birds, the flick of a
+lizard across the path, and the distant gay leap of a young deer, brought
+to his senses a gust of joyous feeling.
+
+"I never smelled such air!" he said to one of the seconds. "I never saw
+the sun so beautiful!" He sniffed the air and turned his face towards
+the sun. "Well, it's a day for Ireland," he added, in response to a
+gravely playful remark of Sir Almeric Foyle. "Ireland never was so
+sweet. Nature's provoking us!"
+
+"Yes, it's a pity," said Sir Almeric. "But I'm not thinking of bad luck
+for you, Calhoun."
+
+Dyck's smile seemed to come from infinite distance. He was not normal;
+he was submerged. He was in the great, consuming atmosphere of the
+bigger world, and the greater life. He even did not hate Mallow at the
+moment. The thing about to be done was to him a test of manhood. It was
+a call upon the courage of the soul, a challenge of life, strength, and
+will.
+
+As Mallow entered the grounds, the thought of Sheila Llyn crossed Dyck's
+mind, and the mental sight of her gladdened the eyes of his soul. For
+one brief instant he stood lost in the mind's look; then he stepped
+forward, saluted, shook hands with Mallow, and doffed his coat and
+waistcoat.
+
+As he did so, he was conscious of a curious coldness, even of dampness,
+in the hand which had shaken that of Mallow. Mallow's hand had a clammy
+touch--clammy, but firm and sure. There was no tremor in the long, thin
+fingers nor at the lips--the thin, ascetic lips, as of a secret-service
+man--but in his eyes was a dark fire of purpose. The morning had touched
+him, but not as it had thrown over Dyck its mantle of peace. Mallow also
+had enjoyed the smell and feeling of it all, but with this difference--it
+had filled him with such material joy that he could not bear the thought
+of leaving it. It gave him strength of will, which would add security to
+his arm and wrist. Yet, as he looked at Dyck, he saw that his work was
+cut out for him; for in all his days he had never seen a man so well-
+possessed, so surely in hand.
+
+Dyck had learned swordsmanship with as skilled a master as Ireland had
+known, and he had shown, in getting knowledge of the weapon, a natural
+instinct and a capacity worthy of the highest purpose. He had handled
+the sword since he was six, and his play was better than that of most
+men; but this was, in fact, his first real duel. In the troubled state
+of Ireland, with internal discord, challenge, and attack, he had more
+than once fought, and with success; but that was in the rough-and-tumble
+of life's chances, as it were, with no deliberate plan to fight according
+to the rules. Many times, of course, in the process of his training, he
+had fought as men fight in duels, but with this difference--that now he
+was permitted to disable or kill his foe.
+
+It was clear that one or the other would not leave this ground--this
+verdant, beautiful piece of mother earth--exactly as he entered it. He
+would leave it wounded, incapable, or dead. Indeed, both might leave it
+wounded, and the chances of success were with the older man, Mallow,
+whose experience would give him an advantage.
+
+Physically, there was not a vast deal to choose between the two men.
+Mallow was lank and tall, nervously self-contained, finely concentrated,
+and vigorous. Dyck was broad of shoulder, well set up, muscular, and
+with a steadier eye than that of his foe. Also, as the combat developed,
+it was clear that he had a hand as steady as his eye. What was more, his
+wrist had superb strength and flexibility; it was as enduring and vital
+as the forefoot and ankle of a tiger. As a pair they were certainly
+notable, and would give a good account of themselves.
+
+No one of temperament who observed the scene could ever forget it. The
+light was perfect--evenly distributed, clear enough to permit accuracy of
+distance in a stroke. The air was still, gently bracing, and, like most
+Irish air, adorably sweet.
+
+The spot chosen for the fight was a sort of avenue between great trees,
+whose broad leaves warded off the direct sun, and whose shade had as yet
+no black shadows. The turf was as elastic to the foot as a firm
+mattress. In the trees, birds were singing with liveliness; in the
+distance, horned cattle browsed, and a pair of horses stood gazing at
+the combatants, startled, no doubt, by this invasion of their pasturage.
+From the distance came the faint, mellow booming of church-bells.
+
+The two men fighting had almost the air of gladiators. Their coats were
+off, and the white linen of their shirts looked gracious; while the
+upraised left hand of the fighters balancing the sword-thrust and the
+weight of the body had an almost singular beauty. Of the two, Dyck was
+the more graceful, the steadier, the quicker in his motions.
+
+Vigilant Dyck was, but not reckless. He had made the first attack, on
+the ground that the aggressor gains by boldness, if that boldness is
+joined to skill; and Dyck's skill was of the best. His heart was warm.
+His momentary vision of Sheila Llyn remained with him--not as a vision,
+rather as a warmth in his inmost being, something which made him
+intensely alert, cheerful, defiant, exactly skilful.
+
+He had need of all his skill, for Mallow was set to win the fight.
+He felt instinctively what was working in Dyck's mind. He had fought a
+number of duels, and with a certain trick or art he had given the end to
+the lives of several. He became conscious, however, that Dyck had a
+particular stroke in mind, which he himself was preventing by masterful
+methods. It might be one thing or another, but in view of Dyck's
+training it would perhaps be the Enniscorthy touch.
+
+Again and again Dyck pressed his antagonist backward, seeking to muddle
+his defence and to clear an opening for his own deadly stroke; but the
+other man also was a master, and parried successfully.
+
+Presently, with a quick move, Mallow took the offensive, and tried to
+unsettle Dyck's poise and disorganize his battle-plan. For an instant
+the tempestuous action, the brilliant, swift play of the sword, the
+quivering flippancy of the steel, gave Dyck that which almost
+disconcerted him. Yet he had a grip of himself, and preserved his
+defence intact; though once his enemy's steel caught his left shoulder,
+making it bleed. The seconds, however, decided that the thrust was not
+serious, and made no attempt to interrupt the combat.
+
+Dyck kept singularly cool. As Mallow's face grew flushed, his own grew
+paler, but it was the paleness of intensity and not of fear. Each man's
+remarkable skill in defence was a good guarantee against disaster due to
+carelessness. Seldom have men fought so long and accomplished so little
+in the way of blood-letting. At length, however, Dyck's tactics changed.
+Once again he became aggressive, and he drove his foe to a point where
+the skill of both men was tried to the uttermost. It was clear the time
+had come for something definite. Suddenly Dyck threw himself back with
+an agile step, lunged slightly to one side, and then in a gallant foray
+got the steel point into the sword-arm of his enemy. That was the
+Enniscorthy stroke, which had been taught him by William Tandy, the
+expert swordsman, and had been made famous by Lord Welling, of
+Enniscorthy. It succeeded, and it gave Dyck the victory, for Mallow's
+sword dropped from his hand.
+
+A fatigued smile came to Mallow's lips. He clasped the wounded arm with
+his left hand as the surgeon came forward.
+
+"Well, you got it home," he said to Dyck; "and it's deftly done."
+
+"I did my best," answered Dyck. "Give me your hand, if you will."
+
+With a wry look Mallow, now seated on the old stump of a tree, held out
+his left hand. It was covered with blood.
+
+"I think we'll have to forego that courtesy, Calhoun," he said. "Look at
+the state of my hand! It's good blood," he added grimly. "It's damned
+good blood, but--but it won't do, you see."
+
+"I'm glad it was no worse," said Dyck, not touching the bloody hand.
+"It's a clean thrust, and you'll be better from it soon. These great
+men"--he smiled towards the surgeons--"will soon put you right. I got my
+chance with the stroke, and took it, because I knew if I didn't you'd
+have me presently."
+
+"You'll have a great reputation in Dublin town now, and you'll deserve
+it," Mallow added adroitly, the great paleness of his features, however,
+made ghastly by the hatred in his eyes.
+
+Dyck did not see this look, but he felt a note of malice--a distant note
+--in Mallow's voice. He saw that what Mallow had said was fresh evidence
+of the man's arrogant character. It did not offend him, however, for he
+was victor, and could enter the Breakneck Club or Dublin society with a
+tranquil eye.
+
+Again Mallow's voice was heard.
+
+"I'd have seen you damned to hell, Calhoun, before I'd have apologized at
+the Breakneck Club; but after a fight with one of the best swordsmen in
+Ireland I've learned a lot, and I'll apologize now--completely."
+
+The surgeon had bound up the slight wound in Dyck's shoulder, had stopped
+the bleeding, and was now helping him on with his coat. The operation
+had not been without pain, but this demonstration from his foe was too
+much for him. It drove the look of pain from his face; it brought a
+smile to his lips. He came a step nearer.
+
+"I'm as obliged to you as if you'd paid for my board and lodging,
+Mallow," he said; "and that's saying a good deal in these days. I'll
+never have a bigger fight. You're a greater swordsman than your
+reputation. I must have provoked you beyond reason," he went on
+gallantly. "I think we'd better forget the whole thing."
+
+"I'm a Loyalist," Mallow replied. "I'm a Loyalist, and if you're one,
+too, what reason should there be for our not being friends?"
+
+A black cloud flooded Calhoun's face.
+
+"If--if I'm a Loyalist, you say! Have you any doubt of it?
+If you have--"
+
+"You wish your sword had gone into my heart instead of my arm, eh?"
+interrupted Mallow. "How easily I am misunderstood! I meant nothing by
+that 'if.'" He smiled, and the smile had a touch of wickedness. "I
+meant nothing by it-nothing at all. As we are both Loyalists, we must be
+friends. Good-bye, Calhoun!"
+
+Dyck's face cleared very slowly. Mallow was maddening, but the look of
+the face was not that of a foe. "Well, let us be friends," Dyck answered
+with a cordial smile. "Good-bye," he added. "I'm damned sorry we had to
+fight at all. Good-bye!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE KILLING OF ERRIS BOYNE
+
+"There's many a government has made a mess of things in Ireland," said
+Erris Boyne; "but since the day of Cromwell the Accursed this is the
+worst. Is there a man in Ireland that believes in it, or trusts it?
+There are men that support it, that are served by it, that fill their
+pockets out of it; but by Joseph and by Mary, there's none thinks there
+couldn't be a better! Have a little more marsala, Calhoun?"
+
+With these words, Boyne filled up the long glass out of which Dyck
+Calhoun had been drinking--drinking too much. Shortly before Dyck had
+lost all his cash at the card-table. He had turned from it penniless and
+discomfited to see Boyne, smiling, and gay with wine, in front of him.
+
+Boyne took him by the arm.
+
+"Come with me," said he. "There's no luck for you at the tables to-day.
+Let's go where we can forget the world, where we can lift the banner of
+freedom and beat the drums of purpose. Come along, lad!"
+
+Boyne had ceased to have his earlier allurement for Dyck Calhoun, but his
+smile was friendly, his manner was hospitable, and he was on the spot.
+The time was critical for Dyck--critical and dangerous. He had lost
+money heavily; he had even exhausted his mother's legacy.
+
+Of late he had seen little of his father, and the little he had seen was
+not fortunate. They had quarrelled over Dyck's wayward doings. Miles
+Calhoun had said some hard things to him, and Dyck had replied that he
+would cut out his own course, trim his own path, walk his own way.
+He had angered his father terribly, and Miles, in a burst of temper,
+had disclosed the fact that his own property was in peril. They had
+been, estranged ever since; but the time had come when Dyck must at least
+secure the credit of his father's name at his bank to find the means of
+living.
+
+It was with this staring him in the face that Erris Boyne's company
+seemed to offer at least a recovery of his good spirits. Dissipated as
+Boyne's look was, he had a natural handsomeness which, with good care of
+himself personally, well-appointed clothes, a cheerful manner, and witty
+talk, made him palatable to careless-living Dublin.
+
+This Dublin knew little of Boyne's present domestic life. It did not
+know that he had injured his second wife as badly as he had wronged his
+first--with this difference, however, that his first wife was a lady,
+while his second wife, Noreen, was a beautiful, quick-tempered, lovable
+eighteen-year-old girl, a graduate of the kitchen and dairy, when he took
+her to himself. He had married her in a mad moment after his first wife
+--Mrs. Llyn, as she was now called--had divorced him; and after the first
+thrill of married life was over, nothing remained with Boyne except
+regret that he had sold his freedom for what he might, perhaps, have had
+without marriage.
+
+Then began a process of domestic torture which alienated Noreen from him,
+and roused in her the worst passions of human nature. She came to know
+of his infidelities, and they maddened her. They had no children, and in
+the end he had threatened her with desertion. When she had retorted in
+strong words, he slapped her face, and left her with an ugly smile.
+
+The house where they lived was outside Dublin, in a secluded spot, yet
+not far from stores and shops. There was this to be said for Noreen--
+that she kept her home spotlessly clean, even with two indifferent
+servants. She had a gift for housewifery, which, at its best, was as
+good as anything in the world, and far better than could be found in most
+parts of Ireland.
+
+Of visitors they had few, if any, and the young wife was left alone to
+brood upon her wrongs. Erris Boyne had slapped her face on the morning
+of the day when he met Dyck Calhoun in the hour of his bad luck. He did
+not see the look in her face as he left the house.
+
+Ruthless as he was, he realized the time had come when by bold effort he
+might get young Calhoun wholly into his power. He began by getting Dyck
+into the street. Then he took him by an indirect route to what was,
+reputedly, a tavern of consequence. There choice spirits met on
+occasion, and dark souls, like Boyne, planned adventures. Outwardly it
+was a tavern of the old class, superficially sedate, and called the Harp
+and Crown. None save a very few conspirators knew how great a part it
+played in the plan to break the government of Ireland and to ruin
+England's position in the land.
+
+The entrance was by two doors--one the ordinary public entrance, the
+other at the side of the house, which was on a corner. This could be
+opened by a skeleton key owned by Erris Boyne.
+
+He and Dyck entered, however, by the general entrance, because Boyne had
+forgotten his key. They passed through the bar-parlour, nodding to one
+or two habitues, and presently were bestowed in a room, not large, but
+well furnished. It was quiet and alluring on this day when the world
+seemed disconcerting. So pleasantly did the place affect Dyck's spirits
+that, as he sat down in the room which had often housed worse men than
+himself, he gave a sigh of relief.
+
+They played cards, and Dyck won. He won five times what he had lost at
+the club. This made him companionable.
+
+"It's a poor business-cards," he said at last. "It puts one up in the
+clouds and down in the ditch all at the same time. I tell you this,
+Boyne--I'm going to stop. No man ought to play cards who hasn't a
+fortune; and my fortune, I'm sorry to say, is only my face!" He laughed
+bitterly.
+
+"And your sword--you've forgotten that, Calhoun. You've a lot of luck in
+your sword."
+
+"Well, I've made no money out of it so far," Dyck retorted cynically.
+
+"Yet you've put men with reputations out of the running, men like
+Mallow."
+
+"Oh, that was a bit of luck and a few tricks I've learned. I can't start
+a banking-account on that."
+
+"But you can put yourself in the way of winning what can't be bought."
+
+"No--no English army for me, thank you--if that's what you mean."
+
+"It isn't what I mean. In the English army a man's a slave. He can
+neither eat, nor drink, nor sleep without being under command. He has to
+do a lot of dirty work without having voice in the policy. He's a child
+of discipline and order."
+
+"And a damned good thing that would be for most of us!" retorted Dyck.
+"But I'm not one of the most."
+
+"I know that. Try a little more of this marsala, Calhoun. It's the best
+in the place, and it's got a lot of good stuff. I've been coming to the
+Harp and Crown for many years, and I've never had a bad drink all that
+time. The old landlord is a genius. He doesn't put on airs. He's a
+good man, is old Swinton, and there's nothing good in the drink of France
+that you can't get here."
+
+"Well, if that's true, how does it happen?" asked Dyck, with a little
+flash of interest. "Why should this little twopenny, one-horse place--
+I mean in size and furnishments--have such luck as to get the best there
+is in France? It means a lot of trouble, eh?"
+
+"It means some trouble. But let me tell you"--he leaned over the table
+and laid a hand on Dyck's, which was a little nervous--"let me speak as
+an old friend to you, if I may. Here are the facts. For many a year,
+you know as well as I do, ships have been coming from France to Ireland
+with the very best wines and liquors, and taking back the very best wool-
+-smuggled, of course. Well, our little landlord here is the damnedest
+rogue of all. The customs never touch him. From the coast
+the stuff comes up to Dublin without a check, and, as he's a special
+favourite, he gets the best to be had in la belle France."
+
+"Why is he such a favourite?" asked Dyck.
+
+Erris Boyne laughed, not loudly, but suggestively. "When a lady kisses a
+man on the lips, of her own free will, and puts her arm around his neck,
+is it done, do you think, because it's her duty to do it or die? No,
+it's because she likes the man; because the man is a good friend to her;
+because it's money in her pocket. That's the case with old Swinton.
+France kisses him, as it were, because"--he paused, as though debating
+what to say--"because France knows he'd rather be under her own
+revolutionary government than under the monarchy of England."
+
+His voice had resonance, and, as he said these words, it had insistence.
+
+"Do you know, Calhoun, I think old Swinton is right. We suffer here
+because monarchy, with its cruel hand of iron, mistrusts us, brutalizes
+us."
+
+He did not see enlightenment come into the half-drunken eyes of Dyck. He
+only realized that Dyck was very still, and strangely, deeply interested.
+
+"I tell you, Calhoun, we need in Ireland something of the spirit that's
+alive in France to-day. They've cleaned out the kings--Louis's and
+Marie's heads have dropped into the basket. They're sweeping the dirt
+out of France; they're cleaning the dark places; they're whitewashing
+Versailles and sawdusting the Tuileries; they're purging the aristocratic
+guts of France; they're starting for the world a reformation which will
+make it clean. Not America alone, but England, and all Europe, will
+become republics."
+
+"England?" asked Dyck in a low, penetrating voice. "Aye, England,
+through Ireland. Ireland will come first, then Wales, Scotland, and
+England. Dear lad, the great day is come--the greatest the world has
+ever known. France, the spirit of it, is alive. It will purge and
+cleanse the universe!"
+
+The suspicious, alert look passed from Dyck's eyes, but his face had
+become flushed. He reached out and poured himself another glass of wine.
+
+"What you say may be true, Boyne. It may be true, but I wouldn't put
+faith in it--not for one icy minute. I don't want to see here in Ireland
+the horrors and savagery of France. I don't want to see the guillotine
+up on St. Stephen's Green."
+
+Boyne felt that he must march carefully. He was sure of his game; but
+there were difficulties, and he must not throw his chances away. Dyck
+was in a position where, with his inflammable nature, he could be
+captured.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you, Calhoun. I don't know which is worse--Ireland
+bloody with shootings and hangings, Ulster up in the north and Cork in
+the south, from the Giant's Causeway to Tralee; no two sets of feet
+dancing alike, with the bloody hand of England stretching out over the
+Irish Parliament like death itself; or France ruling us. How does the
+English government live here? Only by bribery and purchases. It buys
+its way. Isn't that true?"
+
+Dyck nodded. "Yes, it's true in a way," he replied. "It's so, because
+we're what we are. We've never been properly put in our places. The
+heel on our necks--that's the way to do it."
+
+Boyne looked at the flushed, angry face. In spite of Dyck's words, he
+felt that his medicine was working well.
+
+"Listen to me, Calhoun," he said softly. "You've got to do something.
+You're living an idle life. You're in debt. You've ruined your
+independent fortune at the tables. There are but two courses open to
+you. One is to join the British forces--to be a lieutenant, a captain,
+a major, a colonel, or a general, in time; to shoot and cut and hang and
+quarter, and rule with a heavy rod. That's one way."
+
+"So you think I'm fit for nothing but the sword, eh?" asked Dyck with
+irony. "You think I've got no brains for anything except the army."
+
+Boyne laughed. "Have another drink, Calhoun." He poured out more wine.
+"Oh, no, not the army alone; there's the navy--and there's the French
+navy! It's the best navy in the world, the freest and the greatest,
+and with Bonaparte going at us, England will have enough to do--too much,
+I'm thinking. So there's a career in the French navy open. And listen--
+before you and I are two months older, the French navy will be in the
+harbours of Ireland, and the French army will land here." He reached out
+and grasped Dyck's arm. "There's no liberty of freedom under the Union
+Jack. What do you think of the tricolour? It's a great flag, and under
+it the world is going to be ruled--England, Spain, Italy, Holland,
+Prussia, Austria, and Russia--all of them. The time is ripe. You've got
+your chance. Take it on, dear lad, take it on."
+
+Dyck did not raise his head. He was leaning forward with both arms on
+the table, supporting himself firmly; his head was bowed as though with
+deep interest in what Boyne said. And, indeed, his interest was great--
+so great that all his manhood, vigour, all his citizenship, were vitally
+alive. Yet he did not lift his head.
+
+"What's that you say about French ships in the harbours of Ireland?" he
+said in a tone that showed interest. "Of course, I know there's been a
+lot of talk of a French raid on Ireland, but I didn't know it was to be
+so soon."
+
+"Oh, it's near enough! It's all been arranged," replied Boyne.
+"There'll be ships-war-ships, commanded by Hoche. They'll have orders
+to land on the coast, to join the Irish patriots, to take control of
+the operations, and then to march on--"
+
+He was going to say "march on Dublin," but he stopped. He was playing a
+daring game. If he had not been sure of his man, he would not have been
+so frank and fearless.
+
+He did not, however, mislead Dyck greatly. Dyck had been drinking a good
+deal, but this knowledge of a French invasion, and a sense of what Boyne
+was trying to do, steadied his shaken emotions; held him firmly in the
+grip of practical common sense. He laughed, hiccuped a little, as though
+he was very drunk, and said:
+
+"Of course the French would like to come to Ireland; they'd like to seize
+it and hold it. Why, of course they would! Don't we know all that's
+been and gone? Aren't Irishmen in France grown rich in industry there
+after having lost every penny of their property here? Aren't there
+Irishmen there, always conniving to put England at defiance here by
+breaking her laws, cheating her officers, seducing her patriots? Of
+course; but what astounds me is that a man of your standing should
+believe the French are coming here now to Ireland. No, no, Boyne; I'm
+not taking your word for any of these things. You're a gossip; you're a
+damned, pertinacious, preposterous gossip, and I'll say it as often as
+you like."
+
+"So it's proof you want, is it? Well, then, here it is."
+
+Boyne drew from his pocket a small leather-bound case and took from it a
+letter, which he laid on the table in front of Dyck.
+
+Dyck looked at the document, then said:
+
+"Ah, that's what you are, eh?--a captain in the French artillery! Well,
+that'd be a surprise in Ireland if it were told."
+
+"It isn't going to be told unless you tell it, Calhoun, and you're too
+much of a sportsman for that. Besides:
+
+"Why shouldn't you have one of these if you want it--if you want it!"
+
+"What'd be the good of my wanting it? I could get a commission here in
+the army of George III, if I wanted it, but I don't want it; and any man
+that offers it to me, I'll hand it back with thanks and be damned to
+you!"
+
+"Listen to me, then, Calhoun," remarked Boyne, reaching out a hand to lay
+it on Dyck's arm.
+
+Dyck saw the motion, however, and carefully drew back in his chair. "I'm
+not an adventurer," he said; "but if I were, what would there be in it
+for me?"
+
+Boyne misunderstood the look on Dyck's face. He did not grasp the
+meaning behind the words, and he said to him:
+
+"Oh, a good salary--as good as that of a general, with a commission and
+the spoils of war! That's the thing in the French army that counts for
+so much--spoils of war. When they're out on a country like this, they
+let their officers loose--their officers and men. Did you ever hear tell
+of a French army being pinched for fodder, or going thirsty for drink, or
+losing its head for poverty or indigence?"
+
+"No, I never did."
+
+"Well, then, take the advice of an officer of the French army resident
+now in Dublin," continued Boyne, laughing, "who has the honour of being
+received as the friend of Mr. Dyck Calhoun of Playmore! Take your hand
+in the game that's going on! For a man as young as you, with brains and
+ambition, there's no height he mightn't reach in this country. Think of
+it--Ireland free from English control; Ireland, with all her dreams,
+living her own life, fearless, independent, as it was in days of yore.
+Why, what's to prevent you, Dyck Calhoun, from being president of the
+Irish Republic? You have brains, looks, skill, and a wonderful tongue.
+None but a young man could take on the job, for it will require boldness,
+skill, and the recklessness of perfect courage. Isn't it good enough for
+you?"
+
+"What's the way to do it?" asked Dyck, still holding on to his old self
+grimly. "How is it to be done?" He spoke a little thickly, for, in
+spite of himself, the wine was clogging his senses. It had been
+artistically drugged by Boyne.
+
+"Listen to me, Calhoun," continued Boyne. "I've known you now some time.
+We've come in and gone out together. This day was inevitable. You were
+bound to come to it one way or another. Man, you have a heart of iron;
+you have the courage of Caesar or Alexander; you have the chance of doing
+what no Englishman could ever do--Cromwell, or any other. Well, then,
+don't you see the fateful moment has come in Irish life and history?
+Strife everywhere! Alone, what can we do? Alone, if we try to shake off
+the yoke that binds us we shall be shattered, and our last end be worse
+than our first. But with French ships, French officers and soldiers,
+French guns and ammunition, with the trained men of the French army to
+take control here, what amelioration of our weakness, what confidence and
+skill on our side! Can you doubt what the end will be? Answer me, man,
+don't you see it all? Isn't it clear to you? Doesn't such a cause
+enlist you?"
+
+With a sudden burst of primitive anger, Dyck got to his feet, staggering
+a little, but grasping the fatal meaning of the whole thing. He looked
+Erris Boyne in the eyes. His own were bloodshot and dissipated, but
+there was a look in them of which Boyne might well take heed.
+
+Boyne had not counted on Dyck's refusal; or, if it had occurred to him,
+the remedy, an ancient one, was ready to his fingers. The wine was
+drugged. He had watched the decline of Dyck's fortunes with an eye of
+appreciation; he had seen the clouds of poverty and anxiety closing in.
+He had known of old Miles Calhoun's financial difficulties. He had
+observed Dyck's wayside loitering with revolutionists, and he had taken
+it with too much seriousness. He knew the condition of Dyck's purse.
+
+He was not prepared for Dyck's indignant outburst.
+
+"I tell you this, Erris Boyne, there's none has ever tried me as you have
+done! What do you think I am--a thing of the dirty street-corner,
+something to be swept up and cast into the furnace of treason? Look you,
+after to-day you and I will never break bread or drink wine together.
+No--by Heaven, no! I don't know whether you've told me the truth or not,
+but I think you have. There's this to say--I shall go from this place to
+Dublin Castle, and shall tell them there--without mentioning your name--
+what you've told about the French raid. Now, by God, you're a traitor!
+You oughtn't to live, and if you'll send your seconds to me I'll try and
+do with you as I did with Leonard Mallow. Only mark me, Erris Boyne,
+I'll put my sword into your heart. You understand--into your filthy
+heart!"
+
+At that moment the door of the room opened, and a face looked in for an
+instant-the face of old Swinton, the landlord of the Harp and Crown.
+Suddenly Boyne's look changed. He burst into a laugh, and brought his
+fists down on the table between them with a bang.
+
+"By Joseph and by Mary, but you're a patriot, Calhoun! I was trying to
+test you. I was searching to find the innermost soul of you. The French
+fleet, my commission in the French army, and my story about the landlord
+are all bosh. If I meant what I told you, do you think I'd have been so
+mad as to tell you so much, damn it? Have you no sense, man? I wanted
+to find out exactly how you stood-faithful or unfaithful to the crown--
+and I've found out. Sit down, sit down, Calhoun, dear lad. Take your
+hand off your sword. Remember, these are terrible days. Everything I
+said about Ireland is true. What I said about France is false. Sit
+down, man, and if you're going to join the king's army--as I hope and
+trust you will--then here's something to help you face the time between."
+He threw on the table a packet of notes. "They're good and healthy, and
+will buy you what you need. There's not much. There's only a hundred
+pounds, but I give it to you with all my heart, and you can pay it back
+when the king's money comes to you, or when you marry a rich woman."
+
+He said it all with a smile on his face. It was done so cleverly, with
+so much simulated sincerity, that Dyck, in his state of semi-drunkenness,
+could not, at the instant, place him in his true light. Besides, there
+was something handsome and virile in Boyne's face--and untrue; but the
+untruth Dyck did not at the moment see.
+
+Never in his life had Boyne performed such prodigies of dissimulation.
+He was suddenly like a schoolboy disclosing the deeds of some adventurous
+knight. He realized to the full the dangers he had run in disclosing the
+truth; for it was the truth that he had told.
+
+So serious was the situation, to his mind, that one thing seemed
+inevitable. Dyck must be kidnapped at once and carried out of Ireland.
+It would be simple. A little more drugged wine, and he would be asleep
+and powerless--it had already tugged at him. With the help of his
+confreres in the tavern, Dyck could be carried out, put on a lugger, and
+sent away to France.
+
+There was nothing else to do. Boyne had said truly that the French fleet
+meant to come soon. Dyck must not be able to give the thing away before
+it happened. The chief thing now was to prime him with the drugged wine
+till he lost consciousness, and then carry him away to the land of the
+guillotine. Dyck's tempestuous nature, the poetry and imagination of
+him, would quickly respond to French culture, to the new orders of the
+new day in France. Meanwhile, he must be soaked in drugged drink.
+
+Already the wine had played havoc with him; already stupefaction was
+coming over his senses. With a good-natured, ribald laugh, Boyne poured
+out another glass of marsala and pushed it gently over to Dyck's fingers.
+
+"My gin to your marsala," he said, and he raised his own glass of gin,
+looking playfully over the top to Dyck.
+
+With a sudden loosening of all the fibres of his nature, Dyck raised the
+glass of marsala to his lips and drained it off almost at a gulp.
+
+"You're a prodigious liar, Boyne," he said. "I didn't think any one
+could lie so completely."
+
+"I'll teach you how, Calhoun. It's not hard. I'll teach you how."
+
+He passed a long cigar over the table to Dyck, who, however, did not
+light it, but held it in his fingers. Boyne struck a light and held it
+out across the small table. Dyck leaned forward, but, as he did so, the
+wine took possession of his senses. His head fell forward in sleep, and
+the cigar dropped from his fingers.
+
+"Ah, well--ah, well, we must do some business now!" remarked Boyne. He
+leaned over Dyck for a moment. "Yes, sound asleep," he said, and laughed
+scornfully to himself. "Well, when it's dark we must get him away.
+He'll sleep for four or five hours, and by that time he'll be out on the
+way to France, and the rest is easy."
+
+He was about to go to the door that led into the business part of the
+house, when the door leading into the street opened softly, and a woman
+stepped inside. She had used the key which Boyne had forgotten at his
+house.
+
+At first he did not hear her. Then, when he did turn round, it was too
+late. The knife she carried under her skirt flashed out and into Boyne's
+heart. He collapsed on the floor without a sound, save only a deep sigh.
+
+Stooping over, Noreen drew the knife out with a little gurgling cry--a
+smothered exclamation. Then she opened the door again--the side-door
+leading into the street-closed it softly, and was gone.
+
+Two hours afterwards the landlord opened the door. Erris Boyne lay in
+his silence, stark and still. At the table, with his head sunk in his
+arms, sat Dyck Calhoun, snoring stertorously, his drawn sword by his
+side.
+
+With a cry the old man knelt on the floor beside the body of Erris Boyne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+DYCK IN PRISON
+
+When Dyck Calhoun waked, he was in the hands of the king's constables,
+arrested for the murder of Erris Boyne. It was hard to protest his
+innocence, for the landlord was ready to swear concerning a quarrel he
+had seen when he opened the door for a moment. Dyck, with sudden
+caution, only said he would make all clear at the trial.
+
+Dublin and Ireland were shocked and thrilled; England imagined she had
+come upon one of the most violent episodes of Irish history. One journal
+protested that it was not possible to believe in Dyck Calhoun's guilt;
+that his outward habits were known to all, and were above suspicion,
+although he had collogued--though never secretly, so far as the world
+knew--with some of the advanced revolutionary spirits. None of the loyal
+papers seemed aware of Erris Boyne's treachery; and while none spoke of
+him with approval, all condemned his ugly death.
+
+Driven through the streets of Dublin in a jaunting-car between two of the
+king's police, Dyck was a mark for abuse by tongue, but was here and
+there cheered by partizans of the ultra-loyal group to which his father
+adhered. The effect of his potations was still upon him, and his mind
+was bemused. He remembered the quarrel, Boyne's explanation, and the
+subsequent drinking, but he could recall nothing further. He was sure
+the wine had been drugged, but he realized that Swinton, the landlord,
+would have made away with any signs of foul play, as he was himself an
+agent of active disloyalty and a friend of Erris Boyne. Dyck could not
+believe he had killed Boyne; yet Boyne had been found with a wound in his
+heart, and his own naked sword lying beside him on the table. The
+trouble was he could not absolutely swear innocence of the crime.
+
+The situation was not eased by his stay in jail. It began with a
+revelation terribly repugnant to him. He had not long been lodged in the
+cell when there came a visit from Michael Clones, who stretched out his
+hands in an agony of humiliation.
+
+"Ah, you didn't do it--you didn't do it, sir!" he cried. "I'm sure you
+never killed him. It wasn't your way. He was for doing you harm if he
+could. An evil man he was, as all the world knows. But there's one
+thing that'll be worse than anything else to you. You never knew it, and
+I never knew it till an hour ago. Did you know who Erris Boyne was?
+Well, I'll tell you. He was the father of Miss Sheila Llyn. He was
+divorced by Mrs. Llyn many years ago, for having to do with other women.
+She took to her maiden name, and he married again.
+
+"Good God! Good God!" Dyck Calhoun made a gesture of horror. "He
+Sheila Llyn's father! Good God!"
+
+Suddenly a passion of remorse roused him out of his semi-stupefaction.
+
+"Michael, Michael!" he said, his voice hoarse, broken. "Don't say such
+a thing! Are you sure?" Michael nodded.
+
+"I'm sure. I got it from one that's known Erris Boyne and his first wife
+and girl--one that was a servant to them both in past days. He's been
+down to Limerick to see Mrs. Llyn and the beautiful daughter. I met him
+an hour ago, and he told me. He told me more. He told me Mrs. Llyn
+spoke to him of your friendship with Erris Boyne, and how she meant to
+tell you who and what he was. She said her daughter didn't even know her
+father's name. She had been kept in ignorance."
+
+Dyck seated himself on the rough bed of the cell, and stared at Michael,
+his hands between his knees, his eyes perturbed.
+
+"Michael," he said at last, "if it's true--what you've told me--I don't
+see my way. Every step in front of me is black. To tell the whole truth
+is to bring fresh shame upon Mrs. Llyn and her daughter, and not to tell
+the whole truth is to take away my one chance of getting out of this
+trouble. I see that!"
+
+"I don't know what you mean, sir, but I'll tell you this--none that knows
+you would believe you'd murder Erris Boyne or anny other man."
+
+Dyck wiped the sweat from his forehead.
+
+"I suppose you speak the truth, Michael, but it isn't people who've known
+me that'll try me; and I can't tell all."
+
+"Why not, if it'll help you?"
+
+"I can't--of course I can't. It would be disgrace eternal."
+
+"Why? Tell me why, sir!"
+
+Dyck looked closely, firmly, at the old servant and friend. Should he
+tell the truth--that Boyne had tried to induce him to sell himself to the
+French, to invoke his aid against the English government, to share in
+treason? If he could have told it to anybody, he would have done so to
+Michael; but if it was true that in his drunken blindness he had killed
+Boyne, he would not seek to escape by proving Boyne a traitor.
+
+He believed Boyne was a servant of the French; but unless the facts came
+out in the trial, they should not have sure origin in himself. He would
+not add to his crime in killing the father of the only girl who had ever
+touched his heart, the shame of proving that father to be one who should
+have been shot as a traitor.
+
+He had courage and daring, but not sufficient to carry him through that
+dark chapter. He would not try to save himself by turning public opinion
+against Erris Boyne. The man had been killed by some one, perhaps--and
+the thing ached in his heart--by himself; but that was no reason why the
+man's death should not be full punishment for all the wrong he had done.
+
+Dyck had a foolish strain in him, after all. Romance was his deadly foe;
+it made him do a stupid, if chivalrous, thing. Meanwhile he would warn
+the government at once about the projected French naval raid.
+
+"Michael," said Dyck, rising again, "see my father, but you're not to say
+I didn't kill Boyne, for, to tell the truth, I don't know. My head"--
+he put his hand to it with a gesture of despair--"my head's a mass of
+contradictions. It seems a thousand years since I entered that tavern!
+I can't get myself level with all that's happened. That Erris Boyne
+should be the father of the sweet girl at Limerick shakes me. Don't you
+see what it means? If I killed him, it spoils everything--everything.
+If I didn't kill him, I can only help myself by blackening still more the
+life of one who gave being to--"
+
+"Aye, to a young queen!" interrupted Michael.
+
+"God knows, there's none like her in Ireland, or in any other country at
+all!"
+
+Suddenly Dyck regained his composure; and it was the composure of one who
+had opened the door of hell and had realized that in time--perhaps not
+far off--he also would dwell in the infernal place.
+
+"Michael, I have no money, but I'm my father's heir. My father will not
+see me starve in prison, nor want for defence, though my attitude shall
+be 'no defence.' So bring me decent food and some clothes, and send to
+me here Will McCormick, the lawyer. He's as able a man as there is in
+Dublin. Listen, Michael, you're not to speak of Mrs. Llyn and Miss Llyn
+as related to Erris Boyne. What will come of what you and I know and
+don't know, Heaven only has knowledge; but I'll see it through. I've
+spoiled as good chances as ever a young man had that wants to make his
+way; but drink and cards, Michael, and the flare of this damned life at
+the centre--it got hold of me. It muddled, drowned the best that was in
+me. It's the witch's kitchen, is Dublin. Ireland's the only place in
+the world where they make saints of criminals and pray to them; where
+they lose track of time and think they're in eternity; where emotion is
+saturnine logic and death is the touchstone of life. Michael, I don't
+see any way to safety. Those fellows down at the tavern were friends of
+Erris Boyne. They're against me. They'll hang me if they can!"
+
+"I don't believe they can do it, master. Dublin and Ireland think more
+of you than they did of Erris Boyne. There's nothing behind you except
+the wildness of youth--nothing at all. If anny one had said to me at
+Playmore that you'd do the things you've done with drink and cards since
+you come to Dublin,
+
+"I'd have swore they were liars. Yet when all's said and done, I'd give
+my last drop of blood as guarantee you didn't kill Erris Boyne!"
+
+Dyck smiled. "You've a lot of faith in me, Michael--but I'll tell you
+this--I never was so thirsty in my life. My mouth's like a red-hot iron.
+Send me some water. Give the warder sixpence, if you've got it, and send
+me some water. Then go to Will McCormick, and after that to my father."
+
+Michael shook his head dolefully.
+
+"Mr. McCormick's aisy--oh, aisy enough," he said. "He'll lep up at the
+idea of defendin' you, but I'm not takin' pleasure in goin' to Miles
+Calhoun, for he's a hard man these days. Aw, Mr. Dyck, he's had a lot
+of trouble. Things has been goin' wrong with Playmore. 'Pon honour, I
+don't know whether anny of it'll last as long as Miles Calhoun lasts.
+There'll be little left for you, Mr. Dyck. That's what troubles me. I
+tell you it'd break my heart if that place should be lost to your father
+and you. I was born on it. I'd give the best years of the life that's
+left me to make sure the old house could stay in the hands of the
+Calhouns. I say to you that while I live all I am is yours, fair and
+foul, good and bad." He touched his breast with his right hand. "In
+here is the soul of Ireland that leps up for the things that matter.
+There's a song--but never mind about a song; this is no place for songs.
+It's a prison-house, and you're a prisoner charged--"
+
+"Not charged yet, not charged," interrupted Dyck; "but suspected of and
+arrested for a crime. I'll fight--before God, I'll fight to the last!
+Good-bye, Michael; bring me food and clothes, and send me cold water at
+once."
+
+When the door closed softly behind Michael Clones, Dyck sat down on the
+bed where many a criminal patriot had lain. He looked round the small
+room, bare, unfurnished, severe-terribly severe; he looked at the blank
+walls and the barred window, high up; he looked at the floor--it was
+discoloured and damp. He reached out and touched it with his hand. He
+looked at the solitary chair, the basin and pail, and he shuddered.
+
+"How awful--how awful!" he murmured. "But if it was her father, and if
+I killed him"--his head sank low--"if I killed her father!"
+
+"Water, sir."
+
+He looked up. It was the guard with a tin of water and a dipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+"I don't believe he's guilty, mother."
+
+The girl's fine eyes shone with feeling--with protest, indignation,
+anguish. As she spoke, she thrust her head forward with the vigour of a
+passionate counsel. Sheila Llyn was a champion who would fight to the
+last gasp for any cause she loved.
+
+A few moments before, she had found her mother, horror-stricken, gazing
+at a newspaper paragraph sent from Dublin.
+
+Sheila at once thought this to be the cause of her mother's agitation,
+and she reached out a hand for it. Her mother hesitated, then handed the
+clipping to her. Fortunately it contained no statement save the bare
+facts connected with the killing of Erris Boyne, and no reference to the
+earlier life of the dead man. It said no more than that Dyck Calhoun
+must take his trial at the sessions.
+
+It also stated that Dyck, though he pleaded "not guilty," declared
+frankly, through Will McCormick, the lawyer, that he had no memory of
+aught that happened after he had drunk wine given him by Erris Boyne. He
+said that he and Boyne had quarrelled, but had become reconciled again,
+and that the drink was a pledge of their understanding. From the time he
+had taken the drink until he waked in the hands of the king's constables,
+he had no memory; but he was sure he had not killed Boyne. The fact that
+there was no blood on his sword was evidence. Nevertheless, he had been
+committed for trial.
+
+Mrs. Llyn was sorely troubled. She knew of her daughter's interest in
+Dyck Calhoun, and of Dyck's regard for Sheila. She had even looked
+forward to marriage, and she wished for Sheila no better fate, because
+nearly all she knew of Dyck was to his credit. She was unaware that his
+life in Dublin had been dissipated.
+
+If Dyck was guilty--though she could not believe it--there would be an
+end of romance between him and Sheila, and their friendship must be
+severed for ever. Her daughter did not know that Erris Boyne was her
+father, and she must not know--in any case not yet; but if Dyck was
+condemned, it was almost sure he would be hanged.
+
+She wondered about Boyne's widow, whose name did not appear in the
+paragraph she had seen. She knew that Noreen was beautiful, but that he
+had married far beneath him socially. She had imagined Erris Boyne
+living in suburban quiet, not drawing his wife into his social scheme.
+
+That is what had happened. The woman had lived apart from the daily
+experiences of her husband's life in Dublin; and it had deepened her
+bitterness against him. When she had learned that Erris Boyne was no
+more faithful to her than he had been to his previous wife, she had gone
+mad; and Dyck Calhoun was paying the price of her madness.
+
+Mrs. Llyn did not know this. She was a woman of distinguished bearing,
+though small, with a wan, sad look in her eyes always, but with a
+cheerful smile. She was not poor, but well-to-do, and it was not
+necessary to deny herself or her daughter ordinary comforts, and even
+many of the luxuries of life.
+
+Her hair was darker than her daughter's, black and wavy, with here and
+there streaks of grey. These, however, only added dignity to a head
+beautifully balanced, finely moulded, and, in the language of the day,
+most genteelly hung. She was slender, buoyant in movement yet composed,
+and her voice was like her daughter's, clear, gentle, thrilling.
+
+Her mind and heart were given up to Sheila and Sheila's future. That was
+why a knowledge of the tragedy that had come to Dyck Calhoun troubled her
+as she had not been troubled since the day she first learned of Erris
+Boyne's infidelity to herself.
+
+"Let us go to Dublin, mother," said Sheila with a determined air, after
+reading the clipping.
+
+"Why, my dear?"
+
+The woman's eyes, with their long lashes, looked searchingly into her
+daughter's face. She felt, as the years went on, that Sheila had gifts
+granted to few. She realized that the girl had resources which would
+make her a governing influence in whatever sphere of life she should be
+set. Quietly, Sheila was taking control of their movements, and indeed
+of her own daily life. The girl had a dominating skill which came in
+part from herself, and also to a degree from her father; but her
+disposition was not her father's-it was her mother's.
+
+Mrs. Llyn had never known Sheila to lie or twist the truth in all her
+days. No one was more obedient to wise argument; and her mother had a
+feeling that now, perhaps, the time had come when they two must have a
+struggle for mastery. There was every reason why they should not go to
+Dublin. There Sheila might discover that Erris Boyne was her father, and
+might learn the story of her mother's life.
+
+Sheila had been told by her mother that her father had passed away abroad
+when she was a little child. She had never seen her father's picture,
+and her mother had given her the impression that their last days together
+had not been happy. She had always felt that it was better not to
+inquire too closely into her father's life.
+
+The years had gone on and then had come the happy visit to Loyland
+Towers, where she had met Dyck Calhoun. Her life at that moment had been
+free from troublesome emotions; but since the time she had met Dyck at
+the top of the hill, a new set of feelings worked in her.
+
+She was as bonny a lass as ever the old world produced--lithe, with a
+body like that of a boy, strong and pleasant of face, with a haunting
+beauty in the eyes, a majesty of the neck and chin, and a carriage which
+had made Michael Clones call her a queen.
+
+She saw Dyck only as, a happy, wild son of the hilltop. To her he was a
+man of mettle and worth, and irresponsible because he had been given no
+responsibility. He was a country gentleman of Ireland, with all the
+interest and peril of the life of a country gentleman.
+
+"Yes, we ought to go to Dublin, mother. We could help him, perhaps,"
+Sheila insisted.
+
+The mother shook her head mournfully.
+
+"My child, we could do him no good at all--none whatever. Besides, I
+can't afford to visit Dublin now. It's an expensive journey, and the
+repairs we've been doing here have run me close."
+
+A look of indignation, almost of scorn, came into the girl's face.
+
+"Well, if I were being tried for my life, as Dyck Calhoun is going to be,
+and if I knew that friends of mine were standing off because of a few
+pounds, shillings, and pence, I think I'd be a real murderer!"
+
+The mother took her daughter's hand. She found it cold.
+
+"My dear," she said, clasping it gently, "you never saw him but three
+times, and I've never seen him but twice except in the distance; but I
+would do anything in my power to help him, if I could, for I like him.
+The thing for us to do--"
+
+"Yes, I know--sit here, twist our thumbs, and do nothing!"
+
+"What more could we do if we went to Dublin, except listen to gossip,
+read the papers and be jarred every moment? My dear, our best place is
+here. If the spending of money could be of any use to him, I'd spend it
+--indeed I would; but since it can't be of any use, we must stay in our
+own home. Of one thing I'm sure--if Dyck Calhoun killed Erris Boyne,
+Boyne deserved it. Of one thing I'm certain beyond all else--it was no
+murder. Mr. Calhoun wasn't a man to murder any one. I don't believe"--
+her voice became passionate--"he murdered, and I don't believe he will be
+hanged."
+
+The girl looked at her mother with surprise. "Oh, dearest, dearest!"
+she said. "I believe you do care for him. Is it because he has no
+mother, and you have no son."
+
+"It may be so, beloved."
+
+Sheila swept her arms around her mother's neck and drew the fine head to
+her breast.
+
+At that moment they heard the clatter of hoofs, and presently they saw a
+horse and rider pass the window.
+
+"It's a government messenger, mother," Sheila said.
+
+As Sheila said, it was a government messenger, bearing a packet to Mrs.
+Llyn--a letter from her brother in America, whom she had not seen for
+many years.
+
+The brother, Bryan Llyn, had gone out there as a young man before the
+Revolutionary War. He had prospered, taking sides against England in the
+war, and become a man of importance in the schemes of the new republican
+government. Only occasionally had letters come from him to his sister,
+and for nearly eleven years she had not had a single word from him.
+
+When she opened the packet now, she felt it would help to solve--she knew
+not how--the trouble between herself and her daughter. The letter had
+been sent to a firm in Dublin with which Bryan Llyn had done business,
+with instructions that it should be forwarded to his sister. It had
+reached the hands of a government official, who was a brother of a member
+of the firm, and he had used the government messenger, who was going upon
+other business to Limerick, to forward it with a friendly covering note,
+which ended with the words:
+
+ The recent tragedy you have no doubt seen in the papers must have
+ shocked you; but to those who know the inside the end was
+ inevitable, though there are many who do not think Calhoun is
+ guilty. I am one of them. Nevertheless, it will go hard with him,
+ as the evidence is strong against him. He comes from your part of
+ the country, and you will be concerned, of course.
+
+Sheila watched her mother reading, and saw that great emotion possessed
+her, though the girl could not know the cause. Presently, however, Mrs.
+Llyn, who had read the letter from her brother, made a joyful
+exclamation.
+
+"What is it, mother dear?" Sheila asked eagerly. "Tell me!"
+
+The mother made a passionate gesture of astonishment and joy; then she
+leaned back in her chair and closed her eyes, with the letter--which was
+closely written, in old-fashioned punctiliousness--in her hands.
+
+"Oh, my dear, my dear!" she said. "How strange it all is! Your Uncle
+Bryan is immensely rich. He has no children and no family; his health is
+failing."
+
+She seemed able to get no further.
+
+"Well, what is it, mother?" asked Sheila again.
+
+For an instant Mrs. Llyn hesitated; then she put the letter into Sheila's
+hands.
+
+"Read it, my child," she said. "It's for you as much as for me--indeed,
+more for you than for me." Sheila took the letter. It ran as follows:
+
+ DEAREST SISTER:
+
+ It is eleven years since I wrote to you, and yet, though it may seem
+ strange, there have not been eleven days in all that time in which I
+ have not wished you and Sheila were here. Sheila--why, she is a
+ young woman! She's about the age you were when I left Ireland, and
+ you were one of the most beautiful and charming creatures God ever
+ gave life to. The last picture I have of you was a drawing made
+ soon after your marriage--sad, bad, unhappy incident. I have kept
+ it by me always. It warms my heart in winter; it cools my eyes in
+ summer.
+
+ My estate is neither North nor South, but farther South than North.
+ In a sense it is always summer, but winter on my place would be like
+ summer in Norway--just bitingly fresh, happily alert. I'm writing
+ in the summer now. I look out of the window and see hundreds of
+ acres of cotton-fields, with hundreds upon hundreds of negroes at
+ work. I hear the songs they sing, faint echoes of them, even as I
+ write. Yes, my black folk do sing, because they are well treated.
+
+ Not that we haven't our troubles here. You can't administer
+ thousands of acres, control hundreds of slaves, and run an estate
+ like a piece of clockwork without creaks in the machinery. I've
+ built it all up out of next to nothing. I landed in this country
+ with my little fortune of two thousand pounds. This estate is worth
+ at least a quarter of a million now. I've an estate in Jamaica,
+ too. I took it for a debt. What it'll be worth in another twenty
+ years I don't know. I shan't be here to see. I'm not the man I was
+ physically, and that's one of the reasons why I'm writing to you
+ to-day. I've often wished to write and say what I'm going to say
+ now; but I've held back, because I wanted you to finish your girl's
+ education before I said it
+
+ What I say is this: I want you and Sheila to come here to me, to
+ make my home your home, to take control of my household, and to let
+ me see faces I love about me as the shadows enfold me.
+
+ Like your married life, mine was unsuccessful, but not for the same
+ reason. The woman I married did not understand--probably could not
+ understand. She gave me no children. We are born this way, or
+ that. To understand is pain and joy in one; to misconceive is to
+ scatter broken glass for bare feet. Yet when I laid her away, a few
+ years ago, I had terrible pangs of regret, which must come to the
+ heart that has striven in vain. I did my best; I tried to make her
+ understand, but she never did. I used at first to feel angry; then
+ I became patient. But I waked up again, and went smiling along,
+ active, vigorous, getting pleasure out of the infinitely small
+ things, and happy in perfecting my organization.
+
+ This place, which I have called Moira, is to be yours--or, rather,
+ Sheila's. So, in any case, you will want to come and see the home I
+ have made this old colonial mansion, with its Corinthian pillars and
+ verandah, high steps, hard-wood floors polished like a pan, every
+ room hung in dimity and chintz, and the smell of fruit and flowers
+ everywhere. You will want to see it all, and you'll want to live
+ here.
+
+ There's little rain here, so it's not like Ireland, and the green is
+ not so green; but the flowers are marvellously bright, and the birds
+ sing almost as well as they sing in Ireland, though there's no lark.
+ Strange it is, but true, the only things that draw me back to
+ Ireland in my soul are you, and Sheila, whom I've never seen, and
+ the lark singing as he rises until he becomes a grey-blue speck, and
+ then vanishing in the sky.
+
+ Well, you and the lark have sung in my heart these many days, and
+ now you must come to me, because I need you. I have placed to your
+ credit in the Bank of Ireland a thousand pounds. That will be the
+ means of bringing you here--you and Sheila--to my door, to Moira.
+ Let nothing save death prevent your coming. As far as Sheila's eye
+ can see-north, south, east, and west--the land will be hers when I'm
+ gone. Dearest sister, sell all things that are yours, and come to
+ me. You'll not forget Ireland here. Whoever has breathed her air
+ can never forget the hills and dells, the valleys and bogs, the
+ mountains, with their mists of rain, the wild girls, with their bare
+ ankles, their red petticoats, and their beautiful, reckless air.
+ None who has ever breathed the air of Ireland can breathe in another
+ land without memory of the ancient harp of Ireland. But it is as a
+ memory-deep, wonderful, and abiding, yet a memory. I sometimes
+ think I have forgotten, and then I hear coming through this Virginia
+ the notes of some old Irish melody, the song of some wayfarer of
+ Mayo or Connemara, and I know then that Ireland is persuasive and
+ perpetual; but only as a memory, because it speaks in every pulse
+ and beats in every nerve.
+
+ Oh, believe me, I speak of what I know! I have been away from
+ Ireland for a long time, and I'm never going back, but I'll bring
+ Ireland to me. Come here, colleen, come to Virginia. Write to me,
+ on the day you get this letter, that you're coming soon. Let it be
+ soon, because I feel the cords binding me to my beloved fields
+ growing thinner. They'll soon crack, but, please God, they won't
+ crack before you come here.
+
+ Now with my love to you and Sheila I stretch out my hand to you.
+ Take it. All that it is has worked for is yours; all that it wants
+ is you.
+
+ Your loving brother,
+
+ BRYAN.
+
+As Sheila read, the tears started from her eyes; and at last she could
+read no longer, so her mother took the letter and read the rest of it
+aloud. When she had finished, there was silence--a long warm silence;
+then, at last, Mrs. Llyn rose to her feet.
+
+"Sheila, when shall we go?"
+
+With frightened eyes Sheila sprang up.
+
+"I said we must go to Dublin!" she murmured.
+
+"Yes, we will go to Dublin, Sheila, but it will be on our way to Uncle
+Bryan's home."
+
+Sheila caught her mother's hands.
+
+"Mother," she said, after a moment of hesitation, "I must obey you."
+
+"It is the one way, my child-the one thing to do. Some one in prison
+calls--perhaps; some one far away who loves you, and needs us, calls--
+that we know. Tell me, am I not right? I ask you, where shall we go?"
+
+"To Virginia, mother."
+
+The girl's head dropped, and her eyes filled with tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+DYCK'S FATHER VISITS HIM
+
+In vain Dyck's lawyer, Will McCormick, urged him to deny absolutely
+the killing of Erris Boyne. Dyck would not do so. He had, however,
+immediately on being jailed, written to the government, telling of the
+projected invasion of Ireland by the French fleet, and saying that it had
+come to him from a sure source. The government had at once taken action.
+
+Regarding the death of Boyne, the only thing in his favour was that his
+own sword-point was free from stain. His lawyer made the utmost of this,
+but to no avail. The impression in the court was that both men had been
+drinking; that they had quarrelled, and that without a duel being fought
+Dyck had killed his enemy.
+
+That there had been no duel was clear from the fact that Erris Boyne's
+sword was undrawn. The charge, however, on the instigation of the
+Attorney-General, who was grateful for the information about France, had
+been changed from murder to manslaughter; though it seemed clear that
+Boyne had been ruthlessly killed by a man whom he had befriended.
+
+On one of the days of the trial, Dyck's father, bowed, morose, and
+obstinate, came to see him. That Dyck and Boyne had quarrelled had been
+stated in evidence by the landlord, Swinton, and Dyck had admitted it.
+Miles Calhoun was bent upon finding what the story of the quarrel was;
+for his own lawyer had told him that Dyck's refusal to give the cause of
+the dispute would affect the jury adversely, and might bring him
+imprisonment for life. After the formalities of their meeting, Miles
+Calhoun said:
+
+"My son, things are black, but they're not so black they can't be
+brightened. If you killed Erris Boyne, he deserved it. He was a bad
+man, as the world knows. That isn't the point. Now, there's only one
+kind of quarrel that warrants non-disclosure."
+
+"You mean about a woman?" remarked Dyck coldly.
+
+The old man took a pinch of snuff nervously. "That's what I mean. Boyne
+was older than you, and perhaps you cut him out with a woman."
+
+A wry smile wrinkled the corners of Dyck's mouth. "You mean his wife?"
+he asked with irony. "Wife--no!" retorted the old man. "Damn it, no!
+He wasn't the man to remain true to his wife."
+
+"So I understand," remarked Dyck; "but I don't know his wife. I never
+saw her, except at the trial, and I was so sorry for her I ceased to be
+sorry for my self. She had a beautiful, strange, isolated face."
+
+"But that wouldn't influence Boyne," was the reply. "His first wife had
+a beautiful and interesting face, but it didn't hold him. He went
+marauding elsewhere, and she divorced him by act of parliament. I don't
+think you knew it, but his first wife was one of your acquaintances--
+Mrs. Llyn, whose daughter you saw just before we left Playmore.
+He wasn't particular where he made love--a barmaid or a housekeeper,
+it was all the same to him."
+
+"I hope the daughter doesn't know that Erris Boyne was her father," said
+Dyck.
+
+"There's plenty can tell her, and she'll hear it sooner or later."
+
+Miles Calhoun looked at his son with dejection.
+
+His eyes wandered over the grimly furnished cell. His nose smelled the
+damp of it, and suddenly the whole soul of him burst forth.
+
+"You don't give yourself a chance of escape, Dyck You know what Irish
+juries are. Why don't you tell the truth about the quarrel? What's the
+good of keeping your mouth shut, when there's many that would profit by
+your telling it?"
+
+"Who would profit?" asked Dyck.
+
+"Who would profit!" snarled the old man. "Well, you would profit first,
+for it might break the dark chain of circumstantial evidence. Also, your
+father would profit. I'd be saved shame, perhaps; I'd get relief from
+this disgrace. Oh, man, think of others beside yourself!
+
+"Think of others!" said Dyck, and a queer smile lighted his haggard
+face. "I'd save myself if I honourably could."
+
+"The law must prove you guilty," the old man went on. "It's not for you
+to prove yourself innocent. They haven't proved you guilty yet."
+
+The old man fumbled with a waistcoat button. His eyes blinked hard.
+
+"You don't see," he continued, "the one thing that's plain to my eyes,
+and it's this--that your only chance of escape is to tell the truth about
+the quarrel. If the truth were told, whatever it is, I believe it would
+be to your credit--I'll say that for you. If it was to your credit,
+even if they believe you guilty of killing Erris Boyne, they'd touch you
+lightly. Ah, in the name of the mother you loved, I ask you to tell the
+truth about that quarrel! Give it into the hands of the jury, and let
+them decide. Haven't you got a heart in you? In the name of God--"
+
+"Don't speak to me like that," interrupted Dyck, with emotion. "I've
+thought of all those things. I hold my peace because--because I hold my
+peace. To speak would be to hurt some one I love with all my soul."
+
+"And you won't speak to save me--your father--because you don't love me
+with all your soul! Is that it?" asked Miles Calhoun.
+
+"It's different--it's different."
+
+"Ah, it's a woman!"
+
+"Never mind what it is. I will not tell. There are things more shameful
+than death."
+
+"Yes," snarled the other. "Rather than save yourself, you bring
+dishonour upon him who gave you birth."
+
+Dyck's face was submerged in colour.
+
+"Father," said he, "on my honour I wouldn't hurt you if I could help it,
+but I'll not tell the world of the quarrel between that man and myself.
+My silence may hurt you, but some one else would be hurt far more if I
+told."
+
+"By God, I think you're some mad dreamer slipped out of the ancient fold!
+Do you know where you are? You're in jail. If you're found guilty,
+you'll be sent to prison at least for the years that'll spoil the making
+of your life; and you do it because you think you'll spare somebody.
+Well, I ask you to spare me. I don't want the man that's going to
+inherit my name, when my time comes, to bring foulness on it. We've been
+a rough race, we Calhouns; we've done mad, bad things, perhaps, but none
+has shamed us before the world--none but you."
+
+"I have never shamed you, Miles Calhoun," replied his son sharply. "As
+the ancients said, 'alis volat propriis'--I will fly with my own wings.
+Come weal, come woe, come dark, come light, I have fixed my mind, and
+nothing shall change it. You loved my mother better than the rest of the
+world. You would have thought it no shame to have said so to your own
+father. Well, I say it to you--I'll stand by what my conscience and my
+soul have dictated to me. You call me a dreamer. Let it be so. I'm
+Irish; I'm a Celt. I've drunk deep of all that Ireland means. All
+that's behind me is my own, back to the shadowy kings of Ireland, who
+lost life and gave it because they believed in what they did. So will I.
+If I'm to walk the hills no more on the estate where you are master, let
+it be so. I have no fear; I want no favour. If it is to be prison, then
+it shall be prison. If it is to be shame, then let it be shame. These
+are days when men must suffer if they make mistakes. Well, I will
+suffer, fearlessly if helplessly, but I will not break the oath which I
+have taken. And so I will not do it--never--never--never!"
+
+He picked up the cloak which the old man had dropped on the floor, and
+handed it to him.
+
+"There is no good in staying longer. I must go into court again
+to-morrow. I have to think how my lawyer shall answer the evidence
+given."
+
+"But of one thing have you thought?" asked his father. "You will not
+tell the cause of the quarrel, for the reason that you might hurt
+somebody. If you don't tell the cause, and you are condemned, won't that
+hurt somebody even more?"
+
+For a moment Dyck stood silent, absorbed. His face looked pinched,
+his whole appearance shrivelled. Then, with deliberation, he said:
+
+"This is not a matter of expediency, but of principle. My heart tells
+me what to do, and my heart has always been right."
+
+There was silence for a long time. At last the old man drew the cloak
+about his shoulders and turned towards the door.
+
+"Wait a minute, father," said Dyck. "Don't go like that. You'd better
+not come and see me again. If I'm condemned, go back to Playmore; if I'm
+set free, go back to Playmore. That's the place for you to be. You've
+got your own troubles there."
+
+"And you--if you're acquitted?"
+
+"If I'm acquitted, I'll take to the high seas--till I'm cured."
+
+A moment later, without further words, Dyck was alone. He heard the door
+clang.
+
+He sat for some time on the edge of his bed, buried in dejection.
+Presently, however, the door opened. "A letter for you, sir," said the
+jailer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+A LETTER FROM SHEILA
+
+The light of the cell was dim, but Dyck managed to read the letter
+without great difficulty, for the writing was almost as precise as print.
+The sight of it caught his heart like a warm hand and pressed it. This
+was the substance of the letter:
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ I have wanted to visit you in prison, but my mother has forbidden
+ it, and so, even if I could be let to enter, I must not disobey her.
+ I have not read the papers giving an account of your trial. I only
+ know you are charged with killing a bad man, notorious in Dublin
+ life, and that many think he got his just deserts in being killed.
+
+ I saw Christopher Dogan only a week ago, before we came to Dublin.
+ His eyes, as he talked of you, shone like the secret hill-fires
+ where the peasants make illegal drink.
+
+ "Look you," he said to me, "I care not what a jury decides. I know
+ my man; and I also know that if the fellow Boyne died by his hand,
+ it was in fair fight. I have read Dyck Calhoun's story in the
+ stars; and I know what his end will be. It will be fair, not foul;
+ good, not bad; great, not low. Tell him that from me, miss," was
+ what he said.
+
+ I also will not believe that your fate is an evil one, that the law
+ will grind you between the millstones of guilt and dishonour; but if
+ the law should call you guilty, I still will not believe. Far away
+ I will think of you, and believe in you, dear, masterful, madman
+ friend. Yes, you are a madman, for Michael Clones told me--faith,
+ he loves you well!--that you've been living a gay life in Dublin
+ since you came here, and that the man you are accused of killing
+ was in great part the cause of it.
+
+ I think I never saw my mother so troubled in spirit as she is at
+ this time. Of course, she could not feel as I do about you. It
+ isn't that which makes her sad and haggard; it is that we are
+ leaving Ireland behind.
+
+ Yes, she and I are saying good-bye to Ireland. That's why I think
+ she might have let me see you before we went; but since it must not
+ be, well, then, it must not. But we shall meet again. In my soul
+ I know that on the hills somewhere far off, as on the first day we
+ met, we shall meet each other once more. Where are we going? Oh,
+ very far! We are going to my Uncle Bryan--Bryan Llyn, in Virginia.
+ A letter has come from him urging us to make our home with him. You
+ see, my friend--
+
+Then followed the story which Bryan Llyn had told her mother and herself,
+and she wrote of her mother's decision to go out to the new, great home
+which her uncle had made among the cotton-fields of the South. When she
+had finished that part of the tale, she went on as follows:
+
+ We shall know your fate only through the letters that will follow
+ us, but I will not believe in your bad luck. Listen to me--why
+ don't you come to America also? Oh, think it over! Don't believe
+ the worst will come. When they release you from prison, innocent
+ and acquitted, cross the ocean and set up your tent under the Stars
+ and Stripes. Think of it! Nearly all those men in America who
+ fought under Washington and won were born in these islands. They
+ took with them to that far land the memory and love of these old
+ homes. You and I would have fought for England and with the British
+ troops, because we detest revolution. Here, in Ireland, we have
+ seen its evils; and yet if we had fought for the Union Jack beyond
+ the mountains of Maine and in the lonely woods, we should, I
+ believe, in the end have said that the freedom fought for by the
+ American States was well won.
+
+ So keep this matter in your mind, for my mother and I will soon be
+ gone. She would not let me come to you,--I think I have never seen
+ her so disturbed as when I asked her, and she forbade me to write to
+ you; but I disobey her. Well, this is a sad business. I know my
+ mother has suffered. I know her married life was unhappy, and that
+ her husband--my father-died many a year ago, leaving a dark trail of
+ regret behind him; but, you see, I never knew my father. That was
+ all long ago, and it is a hundred times best forgotten.
+
+ Our ship sails for Virginia in three days, and I must go. I will
+ keep looking back to the prison where lies, charged with an evil
+ crime, of which he is not guilty, a young man for whom I shall
+ always carry the spirit of good friendship.
+
+ Do not believe all will not go well. Let us keep the courage of
+ our hearts and the faith of our souls--and I hope I always shall!
+ I believe in you, and, believing, I say good-bye. I say farewell in
+ the great hope that somehow, somewhere, we shall help each other on
+ the way of life. God be with you!
+ I am your friend,
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.--I beg you to remember that America is a good place for a
+ young man to live in and succeed.
+
+Dyck read the letter with a wonderful slowness. He realized that by
+happy accident--it could be nothing else--Mrs. Llyn had been able to keep
+from her daughter the fact that the man who had been killed in the tavern
+by the river was her father. It was clear that the girl was kept much to
+herself, read no newspapers, and saw few people, and that those whom she
+saw had been careful to hold their peace about her close relationship to
+Erris Boyne. None but the evil-minded would recall the fact to her.
+
+Sheila's ignorance must not be broken by himself. He had done the right
+thing--he had held his peace for the girl's sake, and he would hold it to
+the end. Slowly he folded up the letter, pressed it to his lips, and put
+it in the pocket over his heart.
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Beginning of a lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy
+Wit is always at the elbow of want
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NO DEFENSE
+
+By Gilbert Parker
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+X. DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+XI. WHITHER NOW?
+XII. THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+XIII. TO THE WEST INDIES
+XIV. IN THE NICK OF TIME
+XV. THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+DYCK CALHOUN ENTERS THE WORLD AGAIN
+
+"Is it near the time?" asked Michael Clones of his friend, as they stood
+in front of the prison.
+
+His companion, who was seated on a stone, wrapped in dark-green coverings
+faded and worn, and looking pinched with cold in the dour November day,
+said, without lifting his head:
+
+"Seven minutes, an' he'll be out, God bless him!" "And save him and
+protect him!" said Michael. "He deserved punishment no more than I did,
+and it's broke him. I've seen the grey gather at his temples, though
+he's only been in prison four years. He was condemned to eight, but
+they've let him free, I don't know why. Perhaps it was because of what
+he told the government about the French navy. I've seen the joy of life
+sob itself down to the sour earth. When I took him the news of his
+father's death, and told him the creditors were swallowing what was left
+of Playmore, what do you think he did?"
+
+Old Christopher Dogan smiled; his eyes twinkled with a mirth which had
+more pain than gaiety. "God love you, I know what he did. He flung out
+his hands, and said: 'Let it go! It's nothing to me.' Michael, have I
+said true?"
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+"Almost his very words you've used, and he flung out his hands, as you
+said.
+
+"Aye, he'll be changed; but they've kept the clothes he had when he went
+to prison, and he'll come out in them, I'm thinking--"
+
+"Ah, no!" interrupted Michael. "That can't be, for his clothes was
+stole. Only a week ago he sent to me for a suit of my own. I wouldn't
+have him wear my clothes--he a gentleman! It wasn't fitting. So I sent
+him a suit I bought from a shop, but he wouldn't have it. He would leave
+prison a poor man, as a peasant in peasant's clothes. So he wrote to me.
+Here is the letter." He drew from his pocket a sheet of paper, and
+spread it out. "See-read it. Ah, well, never mind," he added, as old
+Christopher shook his head. "Never mind, I'll read it to you!"
+Thereupon he read the note, and added: "We'll see him of the Calhouns
+risin' high beyant poverty and misfortune some day."
+
+Old Christopher nodded.
+
+"I'm glad Miles Calhoun was buried on the hilltop above Playmore. He had
+his day; he lived his life. Things went wrong with him, and he paid the
+price we all must pay for work ill-done."
+
+"There you're right, Christopher Dogan, and I remember the day the
+downfall began. It was when him that's now Lord Mallow, Governor of
+Jamaica, came to summon Miles Calhoun to Dublin. Things were never the
+same after that; but I well remember one talk I had with Miles Calhoun
+just before his death. 'Michael,' he said to me, 'my family have had
+many ups and downs, and some that bear my name have been in prison before
+this, but never for killing a man out of fair fight.' 'One of your name
+may be in prison, sir,' said I, 'but not for killing a man out of fair
+fight. If you believe he did, there's no death bad enough for you!'
+He was silent for a while; then at last he whispered Mr. Dyck's name, and
+said to me: 'Tell him that as a Calhoun I love him, and as his father I
+love him ten times more. For look you, Michael, though we never ran
+together, but quarrelled and took our own paths, yet we are both
+Calhouns, and my heart is warm to him. If my son were a thousand
+times a criminal, nevertheless I would ache to take him by the hand.'"
+
+"Hush! Look at the prison gate," said his companion, and stood up.
+
+As the gates of the prison opened, the sun broke through the clouds and
+gave a brilliant phase to the scene. Out of the gates there came slowly,
+yet firmly, dressed in peasant clothes, the stalwart but faded figure of
+Dyck Calhoun.
+
+Terribly changed he was. He had entered prison with the flush upon his
+cheek, the lilt of young manhood in his eyes, with hair black and hands
+slender and handsome. There was no look of youth in his face now. It
+was the face of a middle-aged man from which the dew of youth had
+vanished, into which life's storms had come and gone. Though the body
+was held erect, yet the head was thrust slightly forward, and the heavy
+eyebrows were like a pent-house. The eyes were slightly feverish, and
+round the mouth there crept a smile, half-cynical but a little happy.
+All freshness was gone from his hands. One hung at his side, listless,
+corded; the other doffed his hat in reply to the salute of his two humble
+friends.
+
+As the gates closed behind him he looked gravely at the two men, who were
+standing not a foot apart. There swept slowly into his eyes, enlarging,
+brightening them, the glamour of the Celtic soul. Of all Ireland, or all
+who had ever known him, these two were the only ones welcoming him into
+the world again! Michael Clones, with his oval red face, big nose,
+steely eye, and steadfast bearing, had in him the soul of great kings.
+His hat was set firmly on his head. His knee-breeches were neat, if
+coarse; his stockings were clean. His feet were well shod, his coat
+worn, and he had still the look that belongs to the well-to-do peasant.
+He was a figure of courage and endurance. Dyck's hand went out to him,
+and a warm smile crept to his lips.
+
+"Michael--ever--faithful Michael!"
+
+A moisture came to Michael's eyes. He did not speak as he clasped the
+hand Dyck offered him. Presently Dyck turned to old Christopher with a
+kindly laugh.
+
+"Well, old friend! You, too, come to see the stag set loose again?
+You're not many, that's sure." A grim, hard look came into his face, but
+both hands went out and caught the old man's shoulders affectionately.
+"This is no day for you to be waiting at prison's gates, Christopher; but
+there are two men who believe in me--two in all the world. It isn't the
+killing," he added after a moment's silence--"it isn't the killing that
+hurts so. If it's true that I killed Erris Boyne, what hurts most is the
+reason why I killed him."
+
+"One way or another--does it matter now?" asked Christopher gently.
+
+"Is it that you think nothing matters since I've paid the price, sunk
+myself in shame, lost my friends, and come out with not a penny left?"
+asked Dyck. "But yes," he added with a smile, wry and twisted, "yes, I
+have a little left!"
+
+He drew from his pocket four small pieces of gold, and gazed ironically
+at them in his palm.
+
+"Look at them!" He held out his hand, so that the two men could see the
+little coins. "Those were taken from me when I entered prison. They've
+been in the hands of the head of the jail ever since. They give them to
+me now--all that's left of what I was."
+
+"No, not all, sir," declared Michael. "There's something left from
+Playmore--there's ninety pounds, and it's in my pocket. It was got from
+the sale of your sporting-kit. There was the boat upon the lake, the
+gun, and all kinds of riffraff stuff not sold with Playmore."
+
+Dyck nodded and smiled. "Good Michael!"
+
+Then he drew himself up stiffly, and blew in and out his breath as if
+with the joy of living. For four hard years he had been denied the free
+air of free men. Even when walking in the prison-yard, on cold or fair
+days, when the air was like a knife or when it had the sun of summer in
+it, it still had seemed to choke him.
+
+In prison he had read, thought, and worked much. They had at least done
+that for him. The Attorney-General had given him freedom to work with
+his hands, and to slave in the workshop like one whose living depended on
+it. Some philanthropic official had started the idea of a workshop, and
+the officials had given the best of the prisoners a chance to learn
+trades and make a little money before they went out into the world. All
+that Dyck had earned went to purchase things he needed, and to help his
+fellow prisoners or their families.
+
+Where was he now? The gap between the old life of nonchalance,
+frivolity, fantasy, and excitement was as great as that between heaven
+and hell. Here he was, after four years of prison, walking the highway
+with two of the humblest creatures of Ireland, and yet, as his soul said,
+two of the best.
+
+Stalking along in thought, he suddenly became conscious that Michael and
+Christopher had fallen behind. He turned round.
+
+"Come on. Come on with me." But the two shook their heads.
+
+"It's not fitting, you a Calhoun of Playmore!" Christopher answered.
+
+"Well, then, list to me," said Dyck, for he saw the men could not bear
+his new democracy. "I'm hungry. In four years I haven't had a meal that
+came from the right place or went to the right spot. Is the little
+tavern, the Hen and Chickens, on the Liffeyside, still going? I mean the
+place where the seamen and the merchant-ship officers visit."
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+"Well, look you, Michael--get you both there, and order me as good a meal
+of fish and chops and baked pudding as can be bought for money. Aye, and
+I'll have a bottle of red French wine, and you two will have what you
+like best. Mark me, we'll sit together there, for we're one of a kind.
+I've got to take to a life that fits me, an ex-jailbird, a man that's
+been in prison for killing!"
+
+"There's the king's army," said Michael. "They make good officers in
+it."
+
+A strange, half-sore smile came to Dyck's thin lips.
+
+"Michael," said he, "give up these vain illusions. I was condemned for
+killing a man not in fair fight.
+
+"I can't enter the army as an officer, and you should know it. The king
+himself could set me up again; but the distance between him and me is ten
+times round the world and back again!" But then Dyck nodded kindly. It
+was as if suddenly the martyr spirit had lifted him out of rigid, painful
+isolation, and he was speaking from a hilltop. "No, my friends, what is
+in my mind now is that I'm hungry. For four years I've eaten the bread
+of prison, and it's soured my mouth and galled my belly. Go you to that
+inn and make ready a good meal."
+
+The two men started to leave, but old Christopher turned and stretched a
+hand up and out.
+
+"Son of Ireland, bright and black and black and bright may be the picture
+of your life, but I see for you brightness and sweet faces, and music and
+song. It's not Irish music, and it's not Irish song, but the soul of the
+thing is Irish. Grim things await you, but you will conquer where the
+eagle sways to the shore, where the white mist flees from the hills,
+where heroes meet, where the hand of Moira stirs the blue and the witches
+flee from the voice of God. There is honour coming to you in the world."
+
+Having said his say, with hand outstretched, having thrilled the air with
+the voice of one who had the soul of a prophet, the old man turned. Head
+bent forward, he shuffled away with Michael Clones along the stony
+street.
+
+Dyck watched them go, his heart beating hard, his spirit overwhelmed.
+
+It was not far to the Castle, yet every footstep had a history. Now and
+again he met people who knew him. Some bowed a little too profoundly,
+some nodded; but not one stopped to speak to him, though a few among them
+were people he had known well in days gone by. Was it the clothes he
+wore, or was it that his star had sunk so low that none could keep it
+company? He laughed to himself in scorn, and yet there kept ringing
+through his brain all the time the bells of St. Anselm's, which he was
+hearing:
+
+ "Oh, God, who is the sinner's friend,
+ Make clean my soul once more!"
+
+When he arrived at the Castle walls he stood and looked long at them.
+
+"No, I won't go in. I won't try to see him," he said at last. "God, how
+strange Ireland is to me! The soil of it, the trees of it, the grass of
+it, are dearer than ever, but--I'll have no more of Ireland. I'll ask
+for nothing. I'll get to England. What's Ireland to me? I must make my
+way somewhere. There's one in there"--he nodded towards the Castle--
+"that owes me money at cards. He should open his pockets to me, and see
+me safe on a ship for Australia; but I've had my fill of every one in
+Ireland. There's nothing here for me but shame. Well, back I'll go to
+the Hen and Chickens, to find a good dinner there."
+
+He turned and went back slowly along the streets by which he had come,
+looking not to right nor left, thinking only of where he should go and
+what he should do outside of Ireland.
+
+At the door of the inn he sniffed the dinner Michael had ordered.
+
+"Man alive!" he said as he entered the place and saw the two men with
+their hands against the bright fire. "There's only one way to live, and
+that's the way I'm going to try."
+
+"Well, you'll not try it alone, sir, if you please," said Michael. "I'll
+be with you, if I may."
+
+"And I'll bless you as you go," said Christopher Dogan.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+WHITHER NOW?
+
+England was in a state of unrest. She had, as yet, been none too
+successful in the war with France. From the king's castle to the poorest
+slum in Seven Dials there was a temper bordering on despair. Ministries
+came and went; statesmen rose and fell. The army was indifferently
+recruited and badly paid. England's battles were fought by men of whom
+many were only mercenaries, with no stake in England's rise or fall.
+
+In the army and navy there were protests, many and powerful, against
+the smallness of the pay, while the cost of living had vastly increased.
+In more than one engagement on land England had had setbacks of a serious
+kind, and there were those who saw in the blind-eyed naval policy, in
+the general disregard of the seamen's position, in the means used for
+recruiting, the omens of disaster. The police courts furnished the navy
+with the worst citizens of the country. Quota men, the output of the
+Irish prisons--seditious, conspiring, dangerous--were drafted for the
+king's service.
+
+The admiralty pursued its course of seizing men of the mercantile marine,
+taking them aboard ships, keeping them away for months from the harbours
+of the kingdom, and then, when their ships returned, denying them the
+right of visiting their homes. The press-gangs did not confine their
+activities to the men of the mercantile marine. From the streets after
+dusk they caught and brought in, often after ill-treatment, torn from
+their wives and sweethearts, knocked on the head for resisting, tradesmen
+with businesses, young men studying for the professions, idlers, debtors,
+out-of-work men. The marvel is that the British fleets fought as well as
+they did.
+
+Poverty and sorrow, loss and bereavement, were in every street, peeped
+mournfully out of every window, lurked at street corners. From all parts
+of the world adventurers came to renew their fortunes in the turmoil of
+London, and every street was a kaleidoscope of faces and clothes and
+colours, not British, not patriot, not national.
+
+Among these outlanders were Dyck Calhoun and Michael Clones. They had
+left Ireland together in the late autumn, leaving behind them the
+stirrings of the coming revolution, and plunging into another revolt
+which was to prove the test and trial of English character.
+
+Dyck had left Ireland with ninety pounds in his pocket and many tons'
+weight of misery in his heart. In his bones he felt tragedies on foot in
+Ireland which concession and good government could not prevent. He had
+fled from it all. When he set his face to Holyhead, he felt that he
+would never live in Ireland again. Yet his courage was firm as he made
+his way to London, with Michael Clones--faithful, devoted, a friend and
+yet a servant, treated like a comrade, yet always with a little
+dominance.
+
+The journey to London had been without event, yet as the coach rolled
+through country where frost silvered the trees; where, in the early
+morning, the grass was shining with dew; where the everlasting green
+hedges and the red roofs of villages made a picture which pleased the eye
+and stirred the soul, Dyck Calhoun kept wondering what would be his
+future. He had no profession, no trade, no skill except with his sword;
+and as he neared London Town--when they left Hendon--he saw the smoke
+rising in the early winter morning and the business of life spread out
+before him, brave and buoyant.
+
+As from the heights of Hampstead he looked down on the multitudinous area
+called London, something throbbed at his heart which seemed like hope;
+for what he saw was indeed inspiring. When at last, in the Edgware Road,
+he drew near to living London, he turned to Michael Clones and said:
+
+"Michael, my lad, I think perhaps we'll find a footing here."
+
+So they reached London, and quartered themselves in simple lodgings in
+Soho. Dyck walked the streets, and now and then he paid a visit to the
+barracks where soldiers were, to satisfy the thought that perhaps in the
+life of the common soldier he might, after all, find his future. It was,
+however, borne in upon him by a chance remark of Michael one day--"I'm
+not young enough to be a recruit, and you wouldn't go alone without me,
+would you?"--that this way to a livelihood was not open to him.
+
+His faithful companion's remark had fixed Dyck's mind against entering
+the army, and then, towards the end of the winter, a fateful thing
+happened. His purse containing what was left of the ninety pounds--two-
+fifths of it--disappeared. It had been stolen, and in all the bitter
+days to come, when poverty and misery ground them down, no hint of the
+thief, no sign of the robber, was ever revealed.
+
+Then, at last, a day when a letter came from Ireland. It was from the
+firm in which Bryan Llyn of Virginia had been interested, for the letter
+had been sent to their care, and Dyck had given them his address in
+London on this very chance. It reached Dyck's hands on the day after
+the last penny had been paid out for their lodgings, and they faced the
+streets, penniless, foodless--one was going to say friendless. The
+handwriting was that of Sheila Llyn.
+
+At a street corner, by a chemist's shop where a red light burned, Dyck
+opened and read the letter. This is what Sheila had written to him.
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ The time is near (I understand by a late letter to my mother from an
+ official) when you will be freed from prison and will face the world
+ again. I have not written you since your trial, but I have never
+ forgotten and never shall. I have been forbidden to write to you or
+ think of you, but I will take my own way about you. I have known
+ all that has happened since we left Ireland, through the letters my
+ mother has received. I know that Playmore has been sold, and I am
+ sorry.
+
+ Now that your day of release is near, and you are to be again a free
+ man, have you decided about your future? Is it to be in Ireland?
+ No, I think not. Ireland is no place for a sane and level man to
+ fight for honour, fame, and name. I hear that things are worse
+ there in every way than they have been in our lifetime.
+
+ After what has happened in any case, it is not a field that offers
+ you a chance. Listen to me. Ireland and England are not the only
+ places in the world. My uncle came here to Virginia a poor man.
+ He is now immensely rich. He had little to begin with, but he was
+ young like you--indeed, a little older than you--when he first came.
+ He invested wisely, worked bravely, and his wealth grew fast. No
+ man needs a fortune to start the business of life in this country.
+ He can get plenty of land for almost nothing; he can get credit for
+ planting and furnishing his land, and, if he has friends, the credit
+ is sure.
+
+ All America is ready for "the likes of you." Think it over, and
+ meanwhile please know there has been placed with the firm in Dublin
+ money enough to bring you here with comfort. You must not refuse
+ it. Take it as a loan, for I know you will not take it as a gift.
+
+ I do not know the story of the killing, even as it was told in
+ court. Well, some one killed the man, but not you, and the truth
+ will out in time. If one should come to me out of the courts of
+ heaven, and say that there it was declared you were a rogue, I
+ should say heaven was no place for me. No, of one thing I am sure--
+ you never killed an undefended man. Wayward, wanton, reckless,
+ dissipated you may have been, but you were never depraved--never!
+
+ When you are free, lift up your shoulders to all the threats of
+ time, then go straight to the old firm where the money is, draw it,
+ take ship, and come here. If you let me know you are coming, I will
+ be there to meet you when you step ashore, to give you a firm hand-
+ clasp; to tell you that in this land there is a good place for you,
+ if you will win it.
+
+ Here there is little crime, though the perils of life are many.
+ There is Indian fighting; there are Indian depredations; and not a
+ dozen miles from where I sit men have been shot for crimes
+ committed. The woods are full of fighters, and pirates harry the
+ coast. On the wall of the room where I write there are carbines
+ that have done service in Indian wars and in the Revolutionary War;
+ and here out of the window I can see hundreds of black heads-slaves,
+ brought from Africa and the Indies, slaves whose devotion to my
+ uncle is very great. I hear them singing now; over the white-tipped
+ cotton-fields there flows the sound of it.
+
+ This plantation has none of the vices that belong to slavery. Here
+ life is complete. The plantation is one great workshop where trades
+ are learned and carried out-shoeing, blacksmithing, building,
+ working in wood and metal.
+
+ I am learning here--you see I am quite old, for I am twenty-one now
+ --the art of management. They tell me that when my uncle's day is
+ done--I grieve to think it is not far off--I must take the rod of
+ control. I work very, very hard. I have to learn figures and
+ finance; I have to see how all the work is done, so that I shall
+ know it is done right. I have had to discipline the supervisors and
+ bookkeepers, inspect and check the output, superintend the packing,
+ and arrange for the sale of the crop-yes, I arranged for the sale of
+ this year's crop myself. So I live the practical life, and when I
+ say that you could make your home here and win success, I do it with
+ some knowledge.
+
+ I beg you take ship for the Virginian coast. Enter upon the new
+ life here with faith and courage. Have no fear. Heaven that has
+ thus far helped you will guide you to the end.
+
+ I write without my mother's permission, but my uncle knows, and
+ though he does not approve, he does not condemn.
+
+ Once more good-bye, my dear friend, and God be with you.
+
+ SHEILA LLYN.
+
+ P. S.--I wonder where you will read this letter. I hope it will
+ find you before your release. Please remember that she who wrote it
+ summons you from the darkness where you are to light and freedom
+ here.
+
+
+Slowly Dyck folded up the letter, when he had read it, and put it in his
+pocket. Then he turned with pale face and gaunt look to Michael Clones.
+
+"Michael," said he, "that letter is from a lady. It comes from her new
+home in Virginia."
+
+Michael nodded.
+
+"Aye, aye, sir, I understand you," he said. "Then she doesn't know the
+truth about her father?" Dyck sighed heavily. "No, Michael, she doesn't
+know the truth."
+
+"I don't believe it would make any difference to her if she did know."
+
+"It would make all the difference to me, Michael. She says she wishes to
+help me. She tells me that money's been sent to the big firm in Dublin-
+money to take me across the sea to Virginia."
+
+Michael's face clouded.
+
+"Yes, sir. To Virginia--and what then?"
+
+"Michael, we haven't a penny in the world, you and I, but if I took one
+farthing of that money I should hope you would kill me. I'm hungry;
+we've had nothing to eat since yesterday; but if I could put my hands
+upon that money here and now I wouldn't touch it. Michael, it looks as
+if we shall have to take to the trade of the footpad."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE HOUR BEFORE THE MUTINY
+
+In the days when Dyck Calhoun was on the verge of starvation in London,
+evil naval rumours were abroad. Newspapers reported, one with
+apprehension, another with tyrannous comment, mutinous troubles in the
+fleet.
+
+At first the only demand at Spithead and the Nore had been for an
+increase of pay, which had not been made since the days of Charles II.
+Then the sailors' wages were enough for comfortable support; but in 1797
+through the rise in the cost of living, and with an advance of thirty per
+cent. on slops, their families could barely maintain themselves. It was
+said in the streets, and with truth, that seamen who had fought with
+unconquerable gallantry under Howe, Collingwood, Nelson, and the other
+big sea-captains, who had borne suffering and wounds, and had been in the
+shadow of death--that even these men damned a system which, in its stern
+withdrawal of their class for long spaces of time from their own
+womenfolk, brought evil results to the forecastle.
+
+The soldier was always in touch with his own social world, and he had
+leave sufficient to enable him to break the back of monotony. He drank,
+gambled, and orated; but his indulgences were little compared with the
+debauches of able-bodied seamen when, after months of sea-life, they
+reached port again. A ship in port at such a time was not a scene of
+evangelical habits. Women of loose class, flower-girls, fruit-sellers,
+and costermongers turned the forecastle into a pleasure-house where the
+pleasures were not always secret; where native modesty suffered no
+affright, and physical good cheer, with ribald paraphrase, was notable
+everywhere.
+
+"How did it happen, Michael?"
+
+As he spoke, Dyck looked round the forecastle of the Ariadne with a
+restless and inquisitive expression. Michael was seated a few feet away,
+his head bent forward, his hands clasped around his knees.
+
+"Well, it don't matter one way or 'nother," he replied; "but it was like
+this. The night you got a letter from Virginia we was penniless; so at
+last I went with my watch to the pawnbroker's. You said you'd wait till
+I got back, though you knew not where I was goin'. When I got back, you
+were still broodin'. You were seated on a horse-block by the chemist's
+lamp where you had read the letter. It's not for me to say of what you
+were thinkin'; but I could guess. You'd been struck hard, and there had
+come to you a letter from one who meant more to you than all the rest of
+the world; and you couldn't answer it because things weren't right.
+As I stood lookin' at you, wonderin' what to do, though, I had twelve
+shillin's in my pocket from the watch I'd pawned, there came four men,
+and I knew from their looks they were recruitin' officers of the navy.
+I saw what was in their eyes. They knew--as why shouldn't they, when
+they saw a gentleman like you in peasant clothes?--that luck had been
+agin' us.
+
+"What the end would have been I don't know. It was you that solved the
+problem, not them. You looked at the first man of them hard. Then you
+got to your feet.
+
+"'Michael,' says you quietly, 'I'm goin' to sea. England's at war, and
+there's work to do. So let's make for a king's ship, and have done with
+misery and poverty.'
+
+"Then you waved a hand to the man in command of the recruitin' gang, and
+presently stepped up to him and his friends.
+
+"'Sir,' I said to you, 'I'm not going to be pressed into the navy.'
+
+"'There's no pressin', Michael,' you answered. 'We'll be quota men.
+We'll do it for cash--for forty pounds each, and no other. You let them
+have you as you are. But if you don't want to come,' you added, 'it's
+all the same to me.'
+
+"Faith, I knew that was only talk. I knew you wanted me. Also I knew
+the king's navy needed me, for men are hard to get. So, when they'd paid
+us the cash--forty pounds apiece--I stepped in behind you, and here we
+are--here we are! Forty pounds apiece--equal to three years' wages of
+an ordinary recruit of the army. It ain't bad, but we're here for three
+years, and no escape from it. Yes, here we are!"
+
+Dyck laughed.
+
+"Aye, here we're likely to remain, Michael. There's only this to be
+said--we'll be fighting the French soon, and it's easy to die in the
+midst of a great fight. If we don't die, Michael, something else will
+turn up, maybe."
+
+"That's true, sir! They'll make an officer of you, once they see you
+fight. This is no place for you, among the common herd. It's the dregs
+o' the world that comes to the ship's bottom in time of peace or war."
+
+"Well, I'm the dregs of the world, Michael. I'm the supreme dregs."
+
+Somehow the letter from Virginia had decided Dyck Calhoun's fate for him.
+Here he was--at sea, a common sailor in the navy. He and Michael Clones
+had eaten and drunk as sailors do, and they had realized that, as they
+ate and drank on the River Thames, they would not eat and drink on the
+watery fairway. They had seen the tank foul with age, from which water
+was drawn for men who could not live without it, and the smell of it had
+revolted Dyck's senses. They had seen the kegs of pickled meat, and they
+had been told of the evil rations given to the sailors at sea.
+
+The Ariadne had been a flag-ship in her day, the home of an admiral and
+his staff. She carried seventy-four guns, was easily obedient to her
+swift sail, and had a reputation for gallantry. From the first hour on
+board, Dyck Calhoun had fitted in; with a discerning eye he had
+understood the seamen's needs and the weaknesses of the system.
+
+The months he had spent between his exit from prison and his entrance
+into the Ariadne had roughened, though not coarsened, his outward
+appearance. From his first appearance among the seamen he had set
+himself to become their leader. His enlistment was for three years, and
+he meant that these three should prove the final success of this naval
+enterprise, or the stark period in a calendar of tragedy.
+
+The life of the sailor, with its coarseness and drudgery, its inadequate
+pay, its evil-smelling food, its maggoty bread, its beer drawn from casks
+that once had held oil or fish, its stinking salt-meat barrels, the
+hideous stench of the bilge-water--all this could in one sense be no
+worse than his sufferings in jail. In spite of self-control, jail had
+been to him the degradation of his hopes, the humiliation of his manhood.
+
+He had suffered cold, dampness, fever, and indigestion there, and it had
+sapped the fresh fibre of life in him. His days in London had been
+cruel. He had sought work in great commercial concerns, and had almost
+been grateful when rejected. When his money was stolen, there seemed
+nothing to do, as he said to Michael Clones, but to become a footpad or a
+pirate. Then the stormy doors of the navy had opened wide to him; and as
+many a man is tempted into folly or crime by tempestuous nature, so he,
+forlorn, spiritually unkempt, but physically and mentally well-composed,
+in a spirit of bravado, flung himself into the bowels of the fleet.
+
+From the moment Dyck arrived on board the Ariadne he was a marked man.
+Ferens, a disfranchised solicitor, who knew his story, spread the
+unwholesome truth about him among the ship's people, and he received
+attentions at once offensive and flattering. The best-educated of the
+ship's hands approached him on the grievances with which the whole navy
+was stirring.
+
+Something had put a new spirit into the life of his majesty's ships; it
+was, in a sense, the reflection of the French Revolution and Tom Paine's
+Age of Reason. What the Americans had done in establishing a republic,
+what France was doing by her revolution, got into the veins and minds of
+some men in England, but it got into the veins and minds of the sailor
+first; for, however low his origin, he had intercourse not given to the
+average landsman. He visited foreign ports, he came in touch with other
+elements than those of British life and character.
+
+Of all the ships in the navy the Ariadne was the best that Dyck Calhoun
+could have entered. Her officers were humane and friendly, yet firm; and
+it was quite certain that if mutiny came they would be treated well. The
+agitation on the Ariadne in support of the grievances of the sailors was
+so moderate that, from the first, Dyck threw in his lot with it. Ferens,
+the former solicitor, first came to him with a list of proposals, which
+only repeated the demands made by the agitators at Spithead.
+
+"You're new among us," said Ferens to Dyck. "You don't quite know what
+we've been doing, I suppose. Some of us have been in the navy for two
+years, and some for ten. There are men on this ship who could tell
+you stories that would make your blood run cold--take my word for it.
+There's a lot of things goin' on that oughtn't to be goin' on. The time
+has come for reform. Have a look at this paper, and tell me what you
+think."
+
+Dyck looked at the pockmarked face of Ferens, whose record in the courts
+was a bad one, and what he saw did not disgust him. It was as though
+Ferens had stumbled and been badly hit in his fall, but there were no
+signs of permanent evil in his countenance. He was square-headed,
+close-cropped, clear-eyed, though his face was yellow where it was not
+red, and his tongue was soft in his head.
+
+Dyck read the paper slowly and carefully. Then he handed it back without
+a word.
+
+"Well, what have you got to say?" asked Ferens. "Nothing? Don't you
+think that's a strong list of grievances and wrongs?"
+
+Dyck nodded. "Yes, it's pretty strong," he said, and he held up his
+hand. "Number One, wages and cost of living. I'm sure we're right
+there. Cost of living was down in King Charles's time, and wages were
+down accordingly. Everything's gone up, and wages should go up. Number
+Two, the prize-money scandal. I'm with you there. I don't see why an
+officer should get two thousand five hundred times as much as a seaman.
+There ought to be a difference, but not so much. Number Three, the food
+ought to be better; the water ought to be better. We can't live on rum,
+maggoty bread, and foul water--that's sure. The rum's all right; it's
+powerful natural stuff, but we ought to have meat that doesn't stink,
+and bread that isn't alive. What's more, we ought to have lots of lime-
+juice, or there's no protection for us when we're out at sea with the
+best meat taken by the officers and the worst left to us; and with foul
+water and rotten food, there's no hope or help. But, if we're going in
+for this sort of thing, we ought to do it decently. We can't slap a
+government in the mouth, and we can't kick an admiral without paying
+heavy for it in the end. If it's wholesome petitioning you're up to,
+I'm with you; but I'm not if there's to be knuckle-dusting."
+
+Ferens shrugged a shoulder.
+
+"Things are movin', and we've got to take our stand now when the time is
+ripe for it, or else lose it for ever. Over at Spithead they're gettin'
+their own way. The government are goin' to send the Admiralty Board down
+here, because our admiral say to them that it won't be safe goin' unless
+they do."
+
+"And what are we going to do here?" asked Dyck. "What's the game of the
+fleet at the Nore?"
+
+Ferens replied in a low voice:
+
+"Our men are goin' to send out petitions--to the Admiralty and to the
+House of Commons."
+
+"Why don't you try Lord Howe?"
+
+"He's not in command of a fleet now. Besides, petitions have been sent
+him, and he's taken no notice."
+
+"Howe? No notice--the best admiral we ever had! I don't believe it,"
+declared Dyck savagely. "Why, the whole navy believes in Howe. They
+haven't forgotten what he did in '94. He's as near to the seaman as the
+seaman is to his mother. Who sent the petitions to him?"
+
+"They weren't signed by names--they were anonymous."
+
+Dyck laughed.
+
+"Yes, and all written by the same hand, I suppose." Ferens nodded.
+
+"I think that's so."
+
+"Can you wonder, then, that Lord Howe didn't acknowledge them? But I'm
+still sure he acted promptly. He's a big enough friend of the sailor to
+waste no time before doing his turn."
+
+Ferens shook his head morosely.
+
+"That may be," he said; "but the petitions were sent weeks ago, and
+there's no sign from Lord Howe. He was at Bath for gout. My idea is he
+referred them to the admiral commanding at Portsmouth, and was told that
+behind the whole thing is conspiracy--French socialism and English
+politics. I give you my word there's no French agent in the fleet,
+and if there were, it wouldn't have any effect. Our men's grievances
+are not new. They're as old as Cromwell."
+
+Suddenly a light of suspicion flashed into Ferens's face.
+
+"You're with us, aren't you? You see the wrongs we've suffered, and how
+bad it all is! Yet you haven't been on a voyage with us. You've only
+tasted the life in harbour. Good God, this life is heaven to what we
+have at sea! We don't mind the fightin'. We'd rather fight than eat."
+An evil grin covered his face for a minute. "Yes, we'd rather fight than
+eat, for the stuff we get to eat is hell's broil, God knows! Did you
+ever think what the life of the sailor is, that swings at the top of a
+mast with the frost freezin' his very soul, and because he's slow, owin'
+to the cold, gets twenty lashes for not bein' quicker? Well, I've seen
+that, and a bad sight it is. Did you ever see a man flogged? It ain't a
+pretty sight. First the back takes the click of the whip like a damned
+washboard, and you see the ridges rise and go purple and red, and the man
+has his breath knocked clean out of him with every blow. Nearly every
+stroke takes off the skin and draws the blood, and a dozen will make the
+back a ditch of murder. Then the whipper stops, looks at the lashes,
+feels them tender like, and out and down it comes again. When all the
+back is ridged and scarred, the flesh, that looked clean and beautiful,
+becomes a bloody mass. Some men get a hundred lashes, and that's torture
+and death.
+
+"A man I knew was flogged told me once that the first blow made his flesh
+quiver in every nerve from his toe-nails to his finger-nails, and stung
+his heart as if a knife had gone through his body. There was agony in
+his lungs, and the time between each stroke was terrible, and yet the
+next came too soon. He choked with the blood from his tongue, lacerated
+with his teeth, and from his lungs, and went black in the face. I saw
+his back. It looked like roasted meat; yet he had only had eighty
+strokes.
+
+"The punishments are bad. Runnin' the gauntlet is one of them. Each
+member of the crew is armed with three tarry rope-yarns, knotted at the
+ends. Then between the master-at-arms with a drawn sword and two
+corporals with drawn swords behind, the thief, stripped to the waist, is
+placed. The thing is started by a boatswain's mate givin' him a dozen
+lashes. Then he's slowly marched down the double line of men, who flog
+him as he passes, and at the end of the line he receives another dose of
+the cat from the boatswain's mate. The poor devil's body and head are
+flayed, and he's sent to hospital and rubbed with brine till he's healed.
+
+"But the most horrible of all is flogging through the fleet. That's
+given for strikin' an officer, or tryin' to escape. It's a sickenin'
+thing. The victim is lashed by his wrists to a capstan-bar in the ship's
+long-boat, and all the ship's boats are lowered also, and each ship in
+harbour sends a boat manned by marines to attend. Then, with the master-
+at-arms and the ship's surgeon, the boat is cast off. The boatswain's
+mate begins the floggin', and the boat rows away to the half-minute bell,
+the drummer beatin' the rogue's march. From ship to ship the long-boat
+goes, and the punishment of floggin' is repeated. If he faints, he gets
+wine or rum, or is taken back to his ship to recover. When his back is
+healed he goes out to get the rest of his sentence. Very few ever live
+through it, or if they do it's only for a short time. They'd better have
+taken the hangin' that was the alternative. Even a corpse with its back
+bare of flesh to the bone has received the last lashes of a sentence, and
+was then buried in the mud of the shore with no religious ceremony.
+
+"Mind you, there's many a man gets fifty lashes that don't deserve them.
+There's many men in the fleet that's stirred to anger at ill-treatment,
+until now, in these days, the whole lot is ready to see the thing
+through--to see the thing through--by heaven and by hell!"
+
+The pockmarked face had taken on an almost ghastly fervour, until it
+looked like a distorted cartoon-vindictive, fanatical; but Dyck, on the
+edge of the river of tragedy, was not ready to lose himself in the stream
+of it.
+
+As he looked round the ship he felt a stir of excitement like nothing he
+had ever known, though he had been brought up in a country where men were
+by nature revolutionists, and where the sword was as often outside as
+inside the scabbard. There was something terrible in a shipboard
+agitation not to be found in a land-rising. On land there were a
+thousand miles of open country, with woods and houses, caves and cliffs,
+to which men could flee for hiding; and the danger of rebellion was less
+dominant. At sea, a rebellion was like some beastly struggle in one
+room, beyond the walls of which was everlasting nothingness. The thing
+had to be fought out, as it were, man to man within four walls, and God
+help the weaker!
+
+"How many ships in the fleet are sworn to this agitation?" Dyck asked
+presently.
+
+"Every one. It's been like a spread of infection; it's entered at every
+door, looked out of every window. All the ships are in it, from the
+twenty-six-hundred-tonners to the little five-hundred-and-fifty-tonners.
+Besides, there are the Delegates."
+
+He lowered his voice as he used these last words. "Yes, I know," Dyck
+answered, though he did not really know. "But who is at the head?"
+
+"Why, as bold a man as can be--Richard Parker, an Irishman. He was once
+a junior naval officer, and left the navy and went into business; now he
+is a quotaman, and leads the mutiny. Let me tell you that unless there's
+a good round answer to what we demand, the Nore fleet'll have it out with
+the government. He's a man of character, is Richard Parker, and the
+fleet'll stand by him."
+
+"How long has he been at it?" asked Dyck.
+
+"Oh, weeks and weeks! It doesn't all come at once, the grip of the
+thing. It began at Spithead, and it worked right there; and now it's
+workin' at the Nore, and it'll work and work until there isn't a ship and
+there isn't a man that won't be behind the Delegates. Look. Half the
+seamen on this ship have tasted the inside of a jail; and the rest come
+from the press-gang, and what's left are just the ragged ends of street
+corners. But"--and here the man drew himself up with a flush--"but
+there's none of us that wouldn't fight to the last gasp of breath for the
+navy that since the days of Elizabeth has sailed at the head of all the
+world. Don't think we mean harm to the fleet. We mean to do it good.
+All we want is that its masters shall remember we're human flesh and
+blood; that we're as much entitled to good food and drink on sea as on
+land; and that, if we risk our lives and shed our blood, we ought to have
+some share in the spoils. We're a great country and we're a great
+people, but, by God, we're not good to our own! Look at them there."
+
+He turned and waved a hand to the bowels of the ship where sailors traded
+with the slop-sellers, or chaffered with women, or sat in groups and
+sang, or played rough games which had no vital meaning; while here and
+there in groups, with hands gesticulating, some fanatics declared their
+principles. And the principles of every man in the Nore fleet so far
+were embraced in the four words--wages, food, drink, prize-money.
+
+Presently Ferens stopped short. "Listen!" he said.
+
+There was a cry from the ship's side not far away, and then came little
+bursts of cheering.
+
+"By Heaven, it's the Delegates comin' here!" he said. He held up a
+warning palm, as though commanding silence, while he listened intently.
+"Yes, it's the Delegates. Now look at that crowd of seamen!" He swung
+his hand towards the bowels of the ship. Scores of men were springing to
+their feet. Presently there came a great shouting and cheers, and then
+four new faces appeared on deck. They were faces of intelligence, but
+one of them had the enlightened look of leadership.
+
+"By Judas, it's our leader, Richard Parker!" declared Ferens.
+
+What Dyck now saw was good evidence of the progress of the agitation.
+There were officers of the Ariadne to be seen, but they wisely took no
+notice of the breaches of regulation which followed the arrival of the
+Delegates. Dyck saw Ferens speak to Richard Parker after the men had
+been in conference with Parker and the Delegates, and then turn towards
+himself. Richard Parker came to him.
+
+"We are fellow countrymen," he said genially. "I know your history.
+We are out to make the navy better--to get the men their rights. I
+understand you are with us?"
+
+Dyck bowed. "I will do all possible to get reforms in wages and food put
+through, sir."
+
+"That's good," said Parker. "There are some petitions you can draft,
+and some letters also to the Admiralty and to the Houses of Lords and
+Commons."
+
+"I am at your service," said Dyck.
+
+He saw his chance to secure influence on the Ariadne, and also to do good
+to the service. Besides, he felt he might be able to check the worst
+excesses of the agitation, if he got power under Parker. He was free
+from any wish for mutiny, but he was the friend of an agitation which
+might end as successfully as the trouble at Spithead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+TO THE WEST INDIES
+
+A fortnight later the mutiny at the Nore shook and bewildered the British
+Isles. In the public journals and in Parliament it was declared that
+this outbreak, like that at Spithead, was due partly to political strife,
+but more extensively to agents of revolution from France and Ireland.
+
+The day after Richard Parker visited the Ariadne the fleet had been put
+under the control of the seamen's Delegates, who were men of standing in
+the ships, and of personal popularity. Their first act was to declare
+that the fleet should not leave port until the men's demands were
+satisfied.
+
+The King, Prime Minister, and government had received a shock greater
+than that which had come with the announcement of American independence.
+The government had armed the forts at Sheerness, had sent troops and guns
+to Gravesend and Tilbury, and had declared war upon the rebellious fleet.
+
+At the head of the Delegates, Richard Parker, with an officer's
+knowledge, became a kind of bogus admiral, who, in interview with the
+real admirals and the representatives of the Admiralty Board, talked like
+one who, having power, meant to use it ruthlessly. The government had
+yielded to the Spithead mutineers, giving pardon to all except the
+ringleaders, and granting demands for increased wages and better food,
+with a promise to consider the question of prize-money; but the Nore
+mutineers refused to accept that agreement, and enlarged the Spithead
+demands. Admiral Buckner arrived on board his flag-ship, the Sandwich,
+without the deference due to an admiral, and then had to wait three hours
+for Parker and the Delegates on the quarter-deck. At the interview that
+followed, while apologizing to the admiral for his discourtesy, Parker
+wore his hat as quasi-admiral of the fleet. The demands of the Delegates
+were met by reasoning on the part of Buckner, but without effect: for the
+seamen of the Nore believed that what Spithead could get by obstinacy the
+Nore could increase by contumacy; and it was their firm will to bring the
+Lords of the Admiralty to their knees.
+
+The demands of the Nore Delegates, however, were rejected by the
+Admiralty, and with the rejection two regiments of militia came from
+Canterbury to reinforce the Sheerness garrison. The mutineers were
+allowed to parade the town, so long as their conduct was decent, as
+Admiral Buckner admitted it to be; but Parker declared that the presence
+of the militia was an insult to the seamen in the Nore fleet.
+
+Then ensued the beginning of the terror. When Buckner presented the
+Admiralty's refusal to deal with the Delegates, there came quick
+response. The reply of the mutineers was to row into Sheerness harbour
+and take away with them eight gunboats lying there, each of which fired a
+shot at the fort, as if to announce that the mutineers were now the
+avowed enemies of the government.
+
+Thereupon the rebels ordered all their ships together at the Great Nore,
+ranging them into two crescents, with the newly acquired gunboats at the
+flanks. The attitude of the authorities gave the violent mutineers their
+opportunity. Buckner's flag was struck from the mainmast-head of the
+Sandwich, and the red flag was hoisted in its place.
+
+The Delegates would not accept an official pardon for their mutiny
+through Buckner. They demanded a deputation from the Admiralty, Parker
+saying that no accommodation could occur without the appearance of the
+Lords of the Admiralty at the Nore. Then followed threatening
+arrangements, and the Delegates decided to blockade the Thames and the
+Medway.
+
+It was at this time that Dyck Calhoun--who, by consent of Richard Parker,
+had taken control of the Ariadne--took action which was to alter the
+course of his own life and that of many others.
+
+Since the beginning of the mutiny he had acted with decision, judgment,
+and strength. He had agreed to the Ariadne joining the mutinous ships,
+and he had skilfully constructed petitions to the Admiralty, the House of
+Commons, and the King. His habit of thought, his knowledge of life, made
+him a power. He believed that the main demands of the seamen were just,
+and he made a useful organization to enforce them. It was only when he
+saw the mutineers would not accept the terms granted to the Spithead
+rebels that a new spirit influenced him.
+
+He had determined to get control of the Ariadne. His gift as a speaker
+had conquered his fellow-sailors, and the fact that he was an ex-convict
+gave them confidence that he was no friend of the government.
+
+One of the first things he did, after securing his own pre-eminence on
+the ship, was to get the captain and officers safely ashore. This he did
+with skill, and the crew of the ship even cheered them as they left.
+
+None of the regular officers of the Ariadne were left upon her, except
+Greenock, the master of the ship, whose rank was below that of
+lieutenant, and whose duties were many and varied under the orders of the
+captain. Greenock chose to stay, though Dyck said he could go if he
+wished. Greenock's reply was that it was his duty to stay, if the ship
+was going to remain at sea, for no one else could perform his duties or
+do his work.
+
+Then, by vote, Dyck became captain of the ship. He did not, however,
+wear a captain's uniform--blue coat, with white cuffs, flat gold buttons;
+with lace at the neck, a white-sleeved waistcoat, knee-breeches, white
+silk stockings, and a three-cornered black hat edged with gold lace and
+ornamented with a cockade; with a black cravat, a straight dress sword,
+a powdered cue tied with a black-silk ribbon, and epaulets of heavy gold
+stuff completing the equipment. Dyck, to the end of his career at sea,
+wore only the common seaman's uniform.
+
+Dyck would not have accepted the doubtful honour had he not had long
+purposes in view. With Ferens, Michael Clones, and two others whom
+Ferens could trust, a plan was arranged which Dyck explained to his
+fellow-seamen on the Ariadne.
+
+"We've come to the parting of the ways, brothers," he said. "We've all
+become liable to death for mutiny. The pardon offered by the King has
+been refused, and fresh demands are made. There, I think, a real wrong
+has been done by our people. The Ariadne is well supplied with food and
+water. It is the only ship with sufficiency. And why? Because at the
+beginning we got provisions from the shore in time; also we got
+permission from Richard Parker to fill our holds from two stopped
+merchant-ships. Well, the rest of the fleet know what our food and drink
+fitment is. They know how safe we are, and to-day orders have come to
+yield our provisions to the rest of the fleet. That is, we, who have
+taken time by the forelock, must yield up our good gettings to bad
+receivers. I am not prepared to do it.
+
+"On shore the Admiralty have stopped the supply of provisions to us and
+to all the fleet. Our men have been arrested at Gravesend, Tilbury, and
+Sheerness. The fleet could not sail now if it wished; but one ship can
+sail, and it is ours. The fleet hasn't the food to sail. On Richard
+Parker's ship, the Sandwich, there is food only for a week. The others
+are almost as bad. We are in danger of being attacked. Sir Erasmus
+Gower, of the Neptune, has a fleet of warships, gunboats, and amateur
+armed vessels getting ready to attack us. The North Sea fleet has come
+to help us, but that doesn't save us. I'll say this--we are loyal men in
+this fleet, otherwise our ships would have joined the enemy in the waters
+of France or Holland. They can't go now, in any case. The men have lost
+heart. Confidence in our cause has declined. The government sent Lords
+of the Admiralty here, and they offered pardon if we accepted the terms
+of the Spithead settlement. We declined the terms. That was a bad day
+for us, and put every one of our heads in a noose.
+
+"For the moment we have a majority in men and ships; but we can't renew
+our food or drink, or ammunition. The end is sure against us. Our
+original agitation was just; our present obduracy is madness. This ship
+is suspected. It is believed by the rest of the fleet--by ships like the
+Invincible--that we're weak-kneed, selfish, and lacking in fidelity to
+the cause. That's not true; but we have either to fight or to run, and
+perhaps to do both.
+
+"Make no mistake. The government are not cowards; the Admiralty are
+gentlemen of determination. If men like Admiral Howe support the
+Admiralty--Howe, one of the best friends the seaman ever had--what do you
+think the end will be? Have you heard what happened at Spithead? The
+seamen chivvied Admiral Alan Gardner and his colleagues aboard a ship.
+He caught hold of a seaman Delegate by the collar and shook him. They
+closed in on him. They handled him roughly. He sprang on the hammock-
+nettings, put the noose of the hanging-rope round his neck, and said to
+the men who advanced menacingly:
+
+"'If you will return to your duty, you may hang me at the yard-arm!'
+
+"That's the kind of stuff our admirals are made of. We have no quarrel
+with the majority of our officers. They're straight, they're honest, and
+they're true to their game. Our quarrel is with Parliament and the
+Admiralty; our struggle is with the people of the kingdom, who have not
+seen to it that our wrongs are put right, that we have food to eat, water
+to drink, and money to spend."
+
+He waved a hand, as though to sweep away the criticisms he felt must be
+rising against him.
+
+"Don't think because I've spent four years in prison under the sternest
+discipline the world offers, and have never been a seaman before, that
+I'm not fitted to espouse your cause. By heaven, I am--I am--I am--
+I know the wrongs you've suffered. I've smelled the water you drink.
+I've tasted the rotten meat. I've seen the honest seaman who has been
+for years upon the main--I've seen the scars upon his back got from a
+brutal officer who gave him too big a job to do, and flogged him for not
+doing it. I know of men who, fevered with bad food, have fallen, from
+the mainmast-head, or have slipped overboard, glad to go, because of the
+wrongs they'd suffered.
+
+"I'll tell you what our fate will be, and then I'll put a question to
+you. We must either give up our stock of provisions or run for it.
+Parker and the other Delegates proclaim their comradeship; yet they have
+hidden from us the king's proclamation and the friendly resolutions of
+the London merchants. I say our only hope is to escape from the Thames.
+I know that skill will be needed, but if we escape, what then? I say if
+we escape, because, as we sail out, orders will be given for the other
+mutiny ships to attack us. We shall be fired on; we shall risk our
+lives. You've done that before, however, and will do it again.
+
+"We have to work out our own problem and fight our own fight. Well,
+what I want to know is this--are we to give in to the government, or do
+we stand to be hammered by Sir Erasmus Gower? Remember what that means.
+It means that if we fight the government ships, we must either die in
+battle, or die with the ropes round our necks. There is another way.
+I'm not inclined to surrender, or to stand by men who have botched our
+business for us. I'm for making for the sea, and, when I get there, I'm
+for striking for the West Indies, where there's a British fleet fighting
+Britain's enemies, and for joining in and fighting with them. I'm for
+getting out of this river and away from England. It's a bold plan, but
+it's a good one. I want to know if you're with me. Remember, there's
+danger getting out, and there's danger when and if we get out. The other
+ships may pursue us. The Portsmouth fleet may nab us. We may be caught,
+and, if we are, we must take the dose prepared for us; but I'm for making
+a strong rush, going without fear, and asking no favour. I won't
+surrender here; it's too cowardly. I want to know, will you come
+to the open sea with me?"
+
+There were many shouts of assent from the crowd, though here and there
+came a growl of dissent.
+
+"Not all of you are willing to come with me," Dyck continued vigorously.
+"Tell me, what is it you expect to get by staying here? You're famished
+when you're not poisoned; you're badly clothed and badly fed; you're kept
+together by flogging; you're treated worse than a convict in jail or a
+victim in a plague hospital. You're not paid as well as your
+grandfathers were, and you're punished worse. Here, on the Ariadne,
+we're not skulkers. We don't fear our duty; we are loyal men. Many of
+you, on past voyages, fighting the enemy, lived on burgoo and molasses
+only, with rum and foul water to drink. On the other ships there have
+been terrible cruelty and offence. Surgeons have neglected and ill-
+treated sick men and embezzled provisions and drinks intended for the
+invalids. Many a man has died because of the neglect of the ship's
+surgeons; many have been kicked about the head and beaten, and haven't
+dared to go on the sick list for fear of their officers. The Victualling
+Board gets money to supply us with food and drink according to measure.
+They get the money for a full pound and a full gallon, and we get
+fourteen ounces of food and seven pints of liquor, or less. Well, what
+do you say, friends, to being our own Victualling Board out in the open
+sea, if we can get there?
+
+"We may have to fight when we get out; but I'm for taking the Ariadne
+into the great world battle when we can find it. This I want to ask--
+isn't it worth while making a great fight in our own way, and showing
+that British seamen can at once be mutineers and patriots? We have a
+pilot who knows the river. We can go to the West Indian Islands, to the
+British fleet there. It's doom and death to stay here; and it may be
+doom and death to go. If we try to break free, and are fired on, the
+Admiralty may approve of us, because we've broken away from the rest.
+See now, isn't that the thing to do? I'm for getting out. Who's coming
+with me?"
+
+Suddenly a burly sailor pushed forward. He had the head of a viking.
+His eyes were strong with enterprise. He had a hand like a ham, with
+long, hairy fingers.
+
+"Captain," said he, "you've put the thing so there can be only one answer
+to it. As for me, I'm sick of the way this mutiny has been bungled from
+first to last. There's been one good thing about it only--we've got
+order without cruelty, we've rebelled without ravagement; but we've
+missed the way, and we didn't deal with the Admiralty commissioners as
+we ought. So I'm for joining up with the captain here"--he waved a hand
+towards Dyck--"and making for open sea. As sure as God's above, they'll
+try to hammer us; but it's the only way."
+
+He held a handkerchief-a dirty, red silk thing. "See," he continued,
+"the wind is right to take us out. The other ships won't know what we're
+going to do until we start. I'm for getting off. I'm a pressed man. I
+haven't seen my girl for five years, and they won't let me free in port
+to go and see her. Nothing can be worse than what we have to suffer now,
+so let's make a break for it. That's what I say. Come, now, lads, three
+cheers for Captain Calhoun!"
+
+A half-hour later, on the captain's deck, Dyck gave the order to pass
+eastward. It was sunset when they started, and they had not gone a
+thousand yards before some of the mutineering ships opened fire on the
+Ariadne. The breeze was good, however, and she sailed bravely through
+the leaden storm. Once twice--thrice she was hit, but she sped on. Two
+men were killed and several were wounded. Sails were torn, and the high
+bulkheads were broken; but, without firing a shot in reply, the Ariadne
+swung clear at last of the hostile ships and reached safe water.
+
+On the edge of the open sea Dyck took stock of the position. The Ariadne
+had been hit several times, and the injury done her was marked. Before
+morning the dead seamen were sunk in watery graves, and the wounded were
+started back to health again. By daylight the Ariadne was well away from
+the land.
+
+The first thing Dyck had done, after escaping from the river, was to
+study the wants of the Ariadne and make an estimate for the future with
+Greenock, the master. He calculated they had food and water enough to
+last for three months, even with liberal provisioning. Going among the
+crew, he realized there was no depression among them; that they seemed to
+care little where they were going. It was, however, quite clear they
+wished to fight--to fight the foes of England.
+
+He knew his task was a hard one, and that all efforts at discipline
+would have dangers. He knew, also, that he could have no authority,
+save personality and success. He set himself, therefore, to win the
+confidence of Greenock and the crew, and he began discipline at once.
+He knew that a reaction must come; that the crew, loose upon their own
+trail, would come to regret the absence of official command. He realized
+that many of them would wish to return to the fleet at the Nore, but
+while the weather was good he did not fear serious trouble. The danger
+would come in rough weather or on a becalmed sea.
+
+They had passed Beachy Head in the mist. They had seen no battle-ship,
+and had sighted no danger, as they made their way westward through the
+Channel. There had been one moment of anxiety. That was when they
+passed Portsmouth, and had seen in the far distance, to the right of
+them, the mastheads of Admiral Gardner's fleet.
+
+It was here that Dyck's orderly, Michael Clones, was useful. He brought
+word of murmuring among the more brutish of the crew, that some of them
+wished to join Gardner's fleet. At this news, Dyck went down among the
+men. It was an unusual thing to do, but it brought matters to an issue.
+
+Among the few dissatisfied sailors was one Nick Swaine, who had been
+the cause of more trouble on the Ariadne than any other. He had a
+quarrelsome mind; he had been influenced by the writings of Wolfe Tone,
+the Irish rebel. One of the secrets of Dyck's control of the crew was
+the fact that he was a gentleman, and was born in the ruling class, and
+this was anathema to Nick Swaine. His view of democracy was ignorance
+controlling ignorance.
+
+By nature he was insolent, but under the system of control pursued by the
+officers of the Ariadne, previous to the mutiny, he had not been able to
+do much. The system had bound him down. He had been the slave of habit,
+custom, and daily duty. His record, therefore, was fairly clean until
+two days after the escape from the Thames and the sighting of the
+Portsmouth fleet. Then all his revolutionary spirit ran riot in him.
+Besides, the woman to whom he had become attached at the Nore had been
+put ashore on the day Dyck gained control. It roused his enmity now.
+
+When Dyck came down, he had the gunners called to him, admonishing them
+that drill must go on steadily, and promising them good work to do. Then
+he turned to the ordinary seamen.
+
+At this moment Nick Swaine strode forward within a dozen feet of Dyck.
+
+"Look there!" he said, and he jerked a finger towards the distant
+Portsmouth fleet. "Look there! You've passed that."
+
+Dyck shrugged a shoulder.
+
+"I meant to pass it," he said quietly.
+
+"Give orders to make for it," said Nick with a sullen eye.
+
+"I shall not. And look you, my man, keep a civil tongue to me, who
+command this ship, or I'll have you put in irons."
+
+"Have me put in irons!" Swaine cried hotly. "This isn't Dublin jail.
+You can't do what you like here. Who made you captain of this ship?"
+
+"Those who made me captain will see my orders carried out. Now, get you
+back with the rest, or I'll see if they still hold good." Dyck waved a
+hand. "Get back when I tell you, Swaine !"
+
+"When you've turned the ship to the Portsmouth fleet I'll get back, and
+not till then."
+
+Dyck made a motion of the hand to some boatswains standing by. Before
+they could arrest him, Swaine flung himself towards Dyck with a knife in
+his hand.
+
+Dyck's hand was quicker, however. His pistol flung out, a shot was
+fired, and the knife dropped from the battered fingers of Nick Swaine.
+
+"Have his wounds dressed, then put him in irons," Dyck commanded.
+
+From that moment, in good order and in good weather, the Ariadne sped on
+her way westward and southward.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IN THE NICK OF TIME
+
+Perhaps no mutineer in the history of the world ever succeeded, as did
+Dyck Calhoun, in holding control over fellow-mutineers on the journey
+from the English Channel to the Caribbean Sea. As a boy, Dyck had been
+an expert sailor, had studied the machinery of a man-of-war, and his love
+of the sea was innate and deep-seated; but his present success was based
+upon more than experience. Quite apart from the honour of his nature,
+prison had deepened in him the hatred of injustice. In soul he was
+bitter; in body he was healthy, powerful, and sane.
+
+Slowly, sternly, yet tactfully, he had broken down the many customs of
+ship life injurious to the welfare of the men. Under his system the
+sailors had good coffee for breakfast, instead of a horrible mixture made
+of burnt biscuits cooked in foul water. He gave the men pea-soup and
+rice instead of burgoo and the wretched oatmeal mess which was the staple
+thing for breakfast. He saw to it that the meat was no longer a hateful,
+repulsive mass, two-thirds bone and gristle, and before it came into the
+cook's hands capable of being polished like mahogany. He threatened the
+cook with punishment if he found the meals ill-cooked.
+
+In all the journey to the West Indian seas there had been only three
+formal floggings. His attitude was not that of the commander who
+declared:
+
+"I will see the man's backbone, by God!"
+
+He wished to secure discipline without cruelty. His greatest difficulty,
+at the start, was in making lieutenants. That he overcame by appointing
+senior midshipmen before the Ariadne was out of the Channel. He offered
+a lieutenancy to Ferens, who had the courage to decline it.
+
+"Make me purser," remarked Ferens. "Make me purser, and I'll do the job
+justly."
+
+As the purser of the Ariadne had been sent to the sick-bay and was likely
+to die (and did die subsequently), Ferens was put into his uniform-three-
+cornered cocked hat, white knee-breeches, and white stockings. The
+purser of a man-of-war was generally a friend of the captain, going with
+him from ship to ship.
+
+Of the common sailors, on the whole, Dyck had little doubt. He had
+informed them that, whatever happened, they should not be in danger; that
+the ship should not join the West Indian fleet unless every man except
+himself received amnesty. If the amnesty was not granted, then one of
+two things should happen--the ship must make for a South American port,
+or she must fight. Fighting would not frighten these men.
+
+It was rather among the midshipmen that Dyck looked for trouble.
+Sometimes, with only two years' training at Gosport, a youngster became a
+midshipman on first going to sea, and he could begin as early as eleven
+years of age. A second-rate ship like the Ariadne carried eighteen
+midshipmen; and as six lieutenants were appointed from them, only twelve
+remained. From these twelve, in the dingy after-cockpit, where the
+superficial area was not more than twelve square feet; where the air was
+foul, and the bilges reeked with a pestilential stench; where the
+purser's store-room near gave out the smell of rancid butter and
+poisonous cheese; where the musty taint of old ropes came to them, there
+was a spirit of danger.
+
+Dyck was right in thinking that in the midshipmen's dismal berth the
+first flowers of revolt to his rule would bloom.
+
+Sailors, even as low as the pig-sty men, had some idea of fair play; and
+as the weeks that had passed since they left the Thames had given them
+better food and drink, and lessened the severity of those above them,
+real obedience had come.
+
+It was not strange that the ship ran well, for all the officers under the
+new conditions, except Dyck himself, had had previous experience. The
+old lieutenants had gone, but midshipmen, who in any case were trained,
+had taken their places. The rest of the ship's staff were the same,
+except the captain; and as Dyck had made a friend of Greenock the master,
+a man of glumness, the days were peaceful enough during the voyage to the
+Caribbean Sea.
+
+The majority saw that every act of Dyck had proved him just and capable.
+He had rigidly insisted on gun practice; he had keyed up the marines to a
+better spirit, and churlishness had been promptly punished. He was, in
+effect, what the sailors called a "rogue," or a "taut one"--seldom
+smiling, gaunt of face but fearless of eye, and with a body free from
+fatigue.
+
+As the weather grew warmer and the days longer, and they drew near to the
+coast of Jamaica, a stir of excitement was shown.
+
+"You'd like to know what I'm going to do, Michael, I suppose?" said Dyck
+one morning, as he drank his coffee and watched the sun creeping up the
+sky.
+
+"Well, in three days we shall know what's to become of us, and I have no
+doubt or fear. This ship's a rebel, but it's returning to duty. We've
+shown them how a ship can be run with good food and drink and fair
+dealing, and, please God, we'll have some work to do now that belongs to
+a man-of-war!"
+
+"Sir, I know what you mean to do," replied Michael. "You mean to get all
+of us off by giving yourself up."
+
+"Well, some one has to pay for what we've done, Michael." A dark,
+ruthless light came into Dyck's eyes. "Some one's got to pay." A grim
+smile crossed his face. "We've done the forbidden thing; we've mutinied
+and taken to the open sea. We were fired on by the other mutiny ships,
+and that will help our sailors, but it won't help me. I'm the leader.
+We ought, of course, to have taken refuge with the nearest squadron of
+the king's ships. Well, I've run my luck, and I'll have to pay."
+
+He scratched his chin with a thumb-nail-a permanent physical trait. "You
+see, the government has pardoned all the sailors, and will hang only the
+leaders. I expect Parker is hung already. Well, I'm the leader on the
+Ariadne. I'm taking this ship straight to his majesty's West Indian
+fleet, in thorough discipline, and I'll hand it over well-found, well-
+manned, well-officered, on condition that all go free except myself. I
+came aboard a common sailor, a quota man, a prison-bird, penniless.
+Well, have I shown that I can run a ship? Have I learned the game of
+control? During the weeks we've been at sea, bursting along, have I
+proved myself?"
+
+Michael smiled. "What did I say to you the first night on board, sir?
+Didn't I say they'd make an officer of you when they found out what
+brains you had? By St. Patrick, you've made yourself captain with the
+good-will of all, and your iron hand has held the thing together. You've
+got a great head, too, sir."
+
+Dyck looked at him with a face in which the far future showed.
+
+"Michael, I've been lucky. I've had good men about me. God only knows
+what would have happened to me if the master hadn't been what he is--a
+gentleman who knows his job-aye, a gentleman through and through! If he
+had gone against me, Michael"--he flicked a finger to the sky--"well,
+that much for my chances! I'd have been dropped overboard, or stabbed in
+my cabin, as was that famous Captain Pigot, son of an admiral, who had as
+much soul as you'd find in a stone-quarry. When two men had dropped from
+the masts, hurrying to get down because of his threat that the last man
+should be thrashed--when the two men lay smashed to pieces at his feet,
+Pigot said: 'Heave the lubbers overboard.' That night, Michael, the
+seamen rose, crept to his cabin, stabbed him to death, pitched his body
+overboard, put his lieutenants to sea in open boats, and then ran away to
+South America. Well, I've escaped that fate, because this was a good
+ship, and all the officers knew their business, and did it without
+cruelty. I've been well served. It was a great thing making the new
+lieutenants from the midshipmen. There never was a better lot on board a
+ship."
+
+Michael's face clouded. "Sir, that's true. The new lieutenants have
+done their work well, but them that's left behind in the midshipmen's
+berth--do you think they're content? No, sir. The only spot on board
+this ship where there lurks an active spirit against you is in the
+midshipmen's berth. Mischief's there, and that's what's brought me to
+you now."
+
+Dyck smiled. "I know that. I've had my eye on the midshipmen. I've
+never trusted them. They're a hard lot; but if the rest of the ship is
+with me, I'll deal with them promptly. They're not clever or bold enough
+to do their job skilfully. They've got some old hands down there--
+hammock-men, old stagers of the sea that act as servants to them. What
+line do they take?"
+
+Michael laughed softly.
+
+"What I know I've got from two of them, and it is this--the young
+gentlemen'll try to get control of the ship."
+
+The cynicism deepened in Dyck's face.
+
+"Get control of the ship, eh? Well, it'll be a new situation on a king's
+ship if midshipmen succeed where the rest dare not try. Now, mark what
+I'm going to do."
+
+He called, and a marine showed himself.
+
+"The captain's compliments to the master, and his presence here at once.
+Michael," he continued presently, "what fools they are! They're scarcely
+a baker's dozen, and none of them has skill to lead. Why, the humblest
+sailor would have more sense than to start a revolt, the success of which
+depends upon his personal influence, and the failure of which must end in
+his own ruin. Does any one think they're the kind to lead a mutiny
+within a mutiny? Listen to me I'm not cruel, but I'll put an end to this
+plot. We're seven hundred on this ship, and she's a first-class sailer.
+I warrant no ship ever swam the seas that looks better going than she
+does. So we've got to see that her, record is kept clean as a mutineer."
+
+At that moment the master appeared. He saluted. "Greenock," said Dyck,
+"I wonder if you've noticed the wind blowing chilly from the midshipmen's
+berth." A lurking devilish humour shot from Greenock's eyes.
+
+"Aye, I've smelled that wind."
+
+"Greenock, we're near the West Indian Islands. Before we eat many meals
+we'll see land. We may pass French ships, and we may have to fight.
+Well, we've had a good running, master; so I'll tell you what I mean to
+do."
+
+He then briefly repeated what he had said to Michael, and added
+
+"Greenock, in this last to-do, I shall be the only man in danger. The
+king's amnesty covers every one except the leaders--that lets you off.
+The Delegate of the Ariadne is aboard the Invincible, if he's not been
+hanged. I'm the only one left on the Ariadne. I've had a good time,
+Greenock--thanks to you, chiefly. I think the men are ready for anything
+that'll come; but I also think we should guard against a revolt of the
+midshipmen by healthy discipline now. Therefore I'll instruct the
+lieutenants to spread-eagle every midshipman for twelve hours. There's a
+stiff wind; there's a good stout spray, and the wind and spray should
+cool their hot souls. Meanwhile, though without food, they shall have
+water as they need it. If at the end of the twelve hours any still seems
+to be difficult, give him another twelve. Look!"
+
+He stretched out a hand to the porthole on his right. "Far away in front
+are islands. You cannot see them yet, but those little thickening mists
+in the distance mean land. Those are the islands in front of the
+Windward Passage. I think it would be a good lesson for the young
+gentlemen to be spread-eagled against the mists of their future. It
+shall be' done at once; and pass the word why it's done."
+
+An hour later there was laughter in every portion of the ship, for the
+least popular members of the whole personnel were being dragooned into
+discipline. The sailors had seen individual midshipmen spread-eagled and
+mastheaded, while all save those they could bribe were forbidden to bring
+them drink or food; but here was a whole body of junior officers,
+punished en masse, as it were, lashed to the rigging and taking the wind
+and the spray in their teeth.
+
+Before the day was over, the whole ship was alive with anticipation, for,
+in the far distance, could be seen the dark blue and purplish shadows
+which told of land; and this brought the minds of all to the end of their
+journey, with thoughts of the crisis near.
+
+Word had been passed that all on board were considered safe--all except
+the captain who had manoeuvred them to the entrance of the Caribbean Sea.
+Had he been of their own origin, they would not have placed so much
+credence in the rumour; but coming as he did of an ancient Irish family,
+although he had been in jail for killing, the traditional respect for the
+word of a gentleman influenced them. When a man like Ferens, on the one
+hand, and the mutineer whose fingers had been mutilated by Dyck in the
+Channel, on the other--when these agreed to bend themselves to the rule
+of a usurper, some idea of Calhoun's power may be got.
+
+On this day, with the glimmer of land in the far distance, the charges of
+all the guns were renewed. Also word was passed that at any moment the
+ship must be cleared for action. Down in the cockpit the tables were got
+ready by the surgeon and the loblolly-boys; the magazines were opened,
+and the guards were put on duty.
+
+Orders were issued that none should be allowed to escape active share in
+the coming battle; that none should retreat to the orlop deck or the
+lower deck; that the boys should carry the cartridge-cases handed to them
+from the magazine under the cover of their coats, running hard to the
+guns. The twenty-four-pounders-the largest guns in use at the time-the
+eighteen-pounders, and the twelve-pounder guns were all in good order.
+
+The bags of iron balls called grape-shot-the worst of all--varying in
+size from sixteen to nine balls in a bag, were prepared. Then the
+canister, which produced ghastly murder, chain-shot to bring down masts
+and spars, langrel to fire at masts and rigging, and the dismantling shot
+to tear off sails, were all made ready. The muskets for the marines, the
+musketoons, the pistols, the cutlasses, the boarding-pikes, the axes or
+tomahawks, the bayonets and sailors' knives, were placed conveniently for
+use. A bevy of men were kept busy cleaning the round shot of rust, and
+there was not a man on the ship who did not look with pride at the guns,
+in their paint of grey-blue steel, with a scarlet band round the muzzle.
+
+To the right of the Ariadne was the coast of Cuba; to the left was the
+coast of Haiti, both invisible to the eye. Although the knowledge that
+they were nearing land had already given the officers and men a feeling
+of elation, the feeling was greatly intensified as they came through the
+Turk Island Passage, which is a kind of gateway to the Windward Passage
+between Cuba and Haiti. The glory of the sunny, tropical world was upon
+the ship and upon the sea; it crept into the blood of every man, and the
+sweet summer weather gave confidence to their minds. It was a day which
+only those who know tropical and semitropical seas can understand. It
+had the sense of soaking luxury.
+
+In his cabin, with the ship's chart on the table before him, Dyck Calhoun
+studied the course of the Ariadne. The wind was fair and good, the sea-
+birds hovered overhead. From a distant part of the ship came the sound
+of men's voices in song. They were singing "Spanish Ladies":
+
+ "We hove our ship to when the wind was sou'west, boys,
+ We hove our ship to for to strike soundings clear;
+ Then we filled our main tops'l and bore right away, boys,
+ And right up the Channel our course did we steer.
+
+ "We'll rant and we'll roar like true British sailors,
+ We'll range and we'll roam over all the salt seas,
+ Until we strike soundings in the Channel of old England
+ From Ushant to Scilly 'tis thirty-five leagues."
+
+Dyck raised his head, and a smile came to his lips.
+
+"Yes, you sing of a Channel, my lads, but it's a long way there, as
+you'll find. I hope to God they give us some fighting! . . . Well,
+what is it?" he asked of a marine who appeared in his doorway.
+
+"The master of the ship begs to see you, sir," was the reply.
+
+A moment afterwards Greenock entered. He asked Dyck several questions
+concerning the possible fighting, the disposition of ammunition and all
+that, and said at last:
+
+"I think we shall be of use, sir. The ship's all right now."
+
+"As right as anything human can be. I've got faith in my star, master."
+
+A light came into the other man's dour face. "I wish you'd get into
+uniform, sir."
+
+"Uniform? No, Greenock! No, I use the borrowed power, but not the
+borrowed clothes. I'm a common sailor, and I wear the common sailor's
+clothes. You've earned your uniform, and it suits you. Stick to it; and
+when I've earned a captain's uniform I'll wear it. I owe you the success
+of this voyage so far, and my heart is full of it, up to the brim. Hark,
+what's that?"
+
+"By God, it's guns, sir! There's fighting on!"
+
+"Fighting!"
+
+Dyck stood for a minute with head thrust forward, eyes fixed upon the
+distant mists ahead. The rumble of the guns came faintly through the
+air. An exultant look came into his face.
+
+"Master, the game's with us--it is fighting! I know the difference
+between the two sets of guns, English and French. Listen--that quick,
+spasmodic firing is French; the steady-as-thunder is English. Well,
+we've got all sail on. Now, make ready the ship for fighting."
+
+"She's almost ready, sir."
+
+An hour later the light mist had risen, and almost suddenly the Ariadne
+seemed to come into the field of battle. Dyck Calhoun could see the
+struggle going on. The two sets of enemy ships had come to close
+quarters, and some were locked in deadly conflict. Other ships, still
+apart, fired at point-blank range, and all the horrors of slaughter were
+in full swing. From the square blue flag at the mizzen top gallant
+masthead of one of the British ships engaged, Dyck saw that the admiral's
+own craft was in some peril. The way lay open for the Ariadne to bear
+down upon the French ship, engaged with the admiral's smaller ship, and
+help to end the struggle successfully for the British cause.
+
+While still too far away for point-blank range, the Ariadne's guns began
+upon the French ships distinguishable by their shape and their colours.
+Before the first shot was fired, however, Dyck made a tour of the decks
+and gave some word of cheer to the men, The Ariadne lost no time in
+getting into the thick of the fight. The seamen were stripped to the
+waist, and black silk handkerchiefs were tightly bound round their heads
+and over their ears.
+
+What the French thought of the coming of the Ariadne was shown by the
+reply they made presently to her firing. The number of French ships in
+action was greater than the British by six, and the Ariadne arrived just
+when she could be of greatest service. The boldness of her seamanship,
+and the favour of the wind, gave her an advantage which good fortune
+helped to justify.
+
+As she drew in upon the action, she gave herself up to great danger; she
+was coming in upon the rear of the French ships, and was subject to
+fierce attack. To the French she seemed like a fugitive warrior
+returning to his camp just when he was most needed, as was indeed the
+case. Two of her shots settled one of the enemy's vessels; and before
+the others could converge upon her, she had crawled slowly up against the
+off side of the French admiral's ship, which was closely engaged with the
+Beatitude, the British flagship, on the other side.
+
+The canister, chain-shot, and langrel of the French foe had caused much
+injury to the Ariadne, and her canvas was in a sore plight. Fifty of her
+seamen had been killed, and a hundred and fifty were wounded by the time
+she reached the starboard side of the Aquitaine. She would have lost
+many more were it not that her onset demoralized the French gunners,
+while the cheers of the British sailors aboard the Beatitude gave
+confidence to their mutineer comrades.
+
+On his own deck, Dyck watched the progress of the battle with the joy of
+a natural fighter. He had carried the thing to an almost impossible
+success. There had only been this in his favour, that his was an
+unexpected entrance--a fact which had been worth another ship at least.
+He saw his boarders struggle for the Aquitaine. He saw them discharge
+their pistols, and then resort to the cutlass and the dagger; and the
+marines bringing down their victims from the masts of the French flag-
+ship.
+
+Presently he heard the savagely buoyant shouts of the Beatitude men, and
+he realized that, by his coming, the admiral of the French fleet had been
+obliged to yield up his sword, and to signal to his ships--such as could
+--to get away. That half of them succeeded in doing so was because the
+British fleet had been heavily handled in the fight, and would have been
+defeated had it not been for the arrival of the Ariadne.
+
+Never, perhaps, in the history of the navy had British ships clamped the
+enemy as the Aquitaine was clamped by the Beatitude and the Ariadne.
+Certain it is that no admiral of the British fleet had ever to perform
+two such acts in one day as receiving the submission of a French admiral
+and offering thanks to the captain of a British man-of-war whom, while
+thanking, he must at once place under arrest as a mutineer. What might
+have chanced further to Dyck's disadvantage can never be known, because
+there appeared on the deck of the Beatitude, as its captain under the
+rear-admiral, Captain Ivy, who, five years before, had visited Dyck and
+his father at Playmore, and had gone with them to Dublin.
+
+The admiral had sent word to the Ariadne for its captain to come to the
+Beatitude. When the captain's gig arrived, and a man in seaman's clothes
+essayed to climb the side of the flag-ship, he was at first prevented.
+Captain Ivy, however, immediately gave orders for Dyck to be admitted,
+but without honours.
+
+On the deck of the Beatitude, Dyck looked into the eyes of Captain Ivy.
+He saluted; but the captain held out a friendly hand.
+
+"You're a mutineer, Calhoun, but your ship has given us victory. I'd
+like to shake hands with one that's done so good a stroke for England."
+
+A queer smile played about Calhoun's lips.
+
+"I've brought the Ariadne back to the fleet, Captain Ivy. The men have
+fought as well as men ever did since Britain had a navy. I've brought
+her back to the king's fleet to be pardoned."
+
+"But you must be placed under arrest, Calhoun. Those are the orders--
+that wherever the Ariadne should be found she should be seized, and that
+you should be tried by court-martial."
+
+Dyck nodded. "I understand. When did you get word?"
+
+"About forty-eight hours ago. The king's mail came by a fast frigate."
+
+"We took our time, but we came straight from the Channel to find this
+fleet. At the mouth of the Thames we willed to find it, and to fight
+with it--and by good luck so we have done."
+
+"Let me take you to the admiral," said Captain Ivy.
+
+He walked beside Dyck to the admiral's cabin. "You've made a terrible
+mess of things, Calhoun, but you've put a lot right to-day," he said at
+the entrance to the cabin. "Tell me one thing honestly before we part
+now--did you kill Erris Boyne?" Dyck looked at him long and hard.
+
+"I don't know--on my honour I don't know! I don't remember--I was drunk
+and drugged."
+
+"Calhoun, I don't believe you did; but if you did, you've paid the price
+--and the price of mutiny, too." In the clear blue eyes of Captain Ivy
+there was a look of friendliness. "I notice you don't wear uniform,
+Calhoun," he added. "I mean a captain's uniform." Dyck smiled. "I
+never have."
+
+The next moment the door of the admiral's cabin was opened.
+
+"Mr. Dyck Calhoun of the Ariadne, sir," said Captain Ivy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE ADMIRAL HAS HIS SAY
+
+The admiral's face was naturally vigorous and cheerful, but, as he looked
+at Dyck Calhoun, a steely hardness came into it, and gave a cynical twist
+to the lips. He was a short man, and spare, but his bearing had dignity
+and every motion significance.
+
+He had had his high moment with the French admiral, had given his
+commands to the fleet and had arranged the disposition of the captured
+French ships. He was in good spirits, and the wreckage in the fleet
+seemed not to shake his nerve, for he had lost in men far less than the
+enemy, and had captured many ships--a good day's work, due finally to the
+man in sailor's clothes standing there with Captain Ivy. The admiral
+took in the dress of Calhoun at a glance--the trousers of blue cloth, the
+sheath-knife belt, the stockings of white silk, the white shirt with the
+horizontal stripes, the loose, unstarched, collar, the fine black silk
+handkerchief at the throat, the waistcoat of red kerseymere, the shoes
+like dancing-pumps, and the short, round blue jacket, with the flat gold
+buttons--a seaman complete. He smiled broadly; he liked this mutineer
+and ex-convict.
+
+"Captain Calhoun, eh!" he remarked mockingly, and bowed satirically.
+"Well, you've played a strong game, and you've plunged us into great
+difficulty."
+
+Dyck did not lose his opportunity. "Happily, I've done what I planned to
+do when we left the Thames, admiral," he said. "We came to get the
+chance of doing what, by favour of fate, we have accomplished. Now, sir,
+as I'm under arrest, and the ship which I controlled has done good
+service, may I beg that the Ariadne's personnel shall have amnesty, and
+that I alone be made to pay--if that must be--for the mutiny at the
+Nore."
+
+The admiral nodded. "We know of your breaking away from the mutinous
+fleet, and of their firing on you as you passed, and that is in your
+favour. I can also say this: that bringing the ship here was masterly
+work, for I understand there were no officers on the Ariadne. She always
+had the reputation of being one of the best-trained ships in the navy,
+and she has splendidly upheld that reputation. How did you manage it,
+Mr. Calhoun?"
+
+Dyck briefly told how the lieutenants were made, and how he himself had
+been enormously indebted to Greenock, the master of the ship, and all the
+subordinate officers.
+
+The admiral smiled sourly. "I have little power until I get instructions
+from the Admiralty, and that will take some time. Meanwhile, the Ariadne
+shall go on as she is, and as if she were--and had been from the first, a
+member of my own squadron."
+
+Dyck bowed, explained what reforms he had created in the food and
+provisions of the Ariadne, and expressed a hope that nothing should be
+altered. He said the ship had proved herself, chiefly because of his
+reforms.
+
+"Besides, she's been badly hammered. She's got great numbers of wounded
+and dead, and for many a day the men will be busy with repairs."
+
+"For a man without naval experience, for a mutineer, an ex-convict and a
+usurper, you've done quite well, Mr. Calhoun; but my instructions were,
+if I captured your ship, and you fell into my hands, to try you, and hang
+you."
+
+At this point Captain Ivy intervened.
+
+"Sir," he said, "the instructions you received were general. They could
+not anticipate the special service which the Ariadne has rendered to the
+king's fleet. I have known Mr. Calhoun; I have visited at his father's
+house; I was with him on his journey to Dublin, which was the beginning
+of his bad luck. I would beg of you, sir, to give Mr. Calhoun his parole
+on sea and land until word comes from the Admiralty as to what, in the
+circumstances, his fate shall be."
+
+"To be kept on the Beatitude on parole!" exclaimed the admiral.
+
+"Land or sea, Captain Ivy said. I'm as well-born as any man in the
+king's fleet," declared Dyck. "I've as clean a record as any officer in
+his majesty's navy, save for the dark fact that I was put in prison for
+killing a man; and I will say here, in the secrecy of an admiral's cabin,
+that the man I killed--or was supposed to kill--was a traitor. If I did
+kill him, he deserved death by whatever hand it came. I care not what
+you do with me"--his hands clenched, his shoulders drew up, his eyes
+blackened with the dark fire of his soul--"whether you put me on parole,
+or try me by court-martial, or hang me from the yard-arm. I've done a
+piece of work of which I'm not ashamed. I've brought a mutinous ship out
+of mutiny, sailed her down the seas for many weeks, disciplined her,
+drilled her, trained her, fought her; helped to give the admiral of the
+West Indian squadron his victory. I enlisted; I was a quota man. I
+became a common sailor--I and my servant and friend, Michael Clones. I
+shared the feelings of the sailors who mutinied. I wrote petitions and
+appeals for them. I mutinied with them. Then at last, having been made
+leader of the ship, with the captain and the lieutenants sent safely
+ashore, and disagreeing with the policy of the Delegates in not accepting
+the terms offered, I brought the ship out, commanding it from the
+captain's cabin, and have so continued until to-day. If I'm put ashore
+at Jamaica, I'll keep my parole; if I stay a prisoner here, I'll keep my
+parole. If I've done you service, admiral, be sure of this, it was done
+with clear intent. My object was to save the men who, having mutinied
+and fled from Admiralty control, are subject to capital punishment."
+
+"Your thinking came late. You should have thought before you mutinied,"
+was the sharp reply.
+
+"As a common sailor I acted on my conscience, and what we asked for the
+Admiralty has granted. Only by mutiny did the Admiralty yield to our
+demands. What I did I would do again! We took our risks in the Thames
+against the guns that were levelled at us; we've taken our risks down
+here against the French to help save your squadron, and we've done it.
+The men have done it, because they've been loyal to the flag, and from
+first to last set to make the Admiralty and the people know they have
+rights which must be cherished. If all your men were as faithful to the
+Crown as are the men on the Ariadne, then they deserve well of the King.
+But will you put for me on paper the written word that every man now
+aboard the Ariadne shall be held guiltless in the eyes of the admiral of
+this fleet; that the present officers shall remain officers, that the
+reforms I have made shall become permanent? For myself, I care not; but
+for the men who have fought under me, I want their amnesty. And I want
+Michael Clones to be kept with me, and Greenock, the master, and Ferens,
+the purser, to be kept where they are. Admiral, I think you know my
+demands are just. Over there on the Ariadne are a hundred and fifty
+wounded at least, and fifty have been killed. Let the living not
+suffer."
+
+"You want it all on the nail, don't you?"
+
+"I want it at this moment when the men who have fought under me have
+helped to win your battle, sir." There was something so set in Dyck's
+voice that the admiral had a sudden revulsion against him, yet, after a
+moment of thought, he made a sign to Captain Ivy. Then he dictated the
+terms which Dyck had asked, except as to the reforms he had made, which
+was not in his power to do, save for the present.
+
+When the document had been signed by the admiral, Dyck read the contents
+aloud. It embodied nearly all he had asked.
+
+"Now I ask permission for one more thing only, sir--for the new captain
+of the Ariadne to go with me to her, and there I will read this paper to
+the crew. I will give a copy of it to the new captain, whoever he may
+be."
+
+The admiral stood for a moment in thought. Then he said:
+
+"Ivy, I transfer you to the Ariadne. It's better that some one who
+understands, as you do, should be in control after Calhoun has gone.
+Go with him now, and have your belongings sent to you. I appoint you
+temporary captain of the Ariadne, because I think no one could deal with
+the situation there so wisely. Ivy, every ship in the squadron must
+treat the Ariadne respectfully. Within two days, Mr. Calhoun, you shall
+be landed at Jamaica, there to await the Admiralty decree. I will say
+this: that as the sure victory of our fleet has come through you, you
+shall not suffer in my report. Fighting is not an easy trade, and to
+fight according to the rules is a very hard trade. Let me ask you to
+conduct yourself as a prisoner of war on parole."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NO DEFENSE
+
+By Gilbert Parker
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+XVI. A LETTER
+XVII. STRANGERS ARRIVE
+XVIII. AT SALEM
+XIX. LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+XX. OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+XXI. THE CLASH OF RACE
+XXII. SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+XXIII. THE COMING OF NOREEN
+XXIV. WITH THE GOVERNOR
+XXV. THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A LETTER
+
+With a deep sigh, the planter raised his head from the table where he was
+writing, and looked out upon the lands he had made his own. They lay on
+the Thomas River, a few hours' horseback travelling from Spanish Town,
+the capital, and they had the advantage of a plateau formation, with
+mountains in the far distance and ravines everywhere.
+
+It was Christmas Day, and he had done his duty to his slaves and the folk
+on his plantation. He had given presents, had attended a seven o'clock
+breakfast of his people, had seen festivities of his negroes, and the
+feast given by his manager in Creole style to all who came--planting
+attorneys, buccras, overseers, bookkeepers, the subordinates of the local
+provost-marshal, small planters, and a few junior officers of the army
+and navy.
+
+He had turned away with cynicism from the overladen table, with its
+shoulder of stewed wild boar in the centre; with its chocolate, coffee,
+tea, spruce-beer, cassava-cakes, pigeon-pies, tongues, round of beef,
+barbecued hog, fried conchs, black crab pepper-pod, mountain mullet, and
+acid fruits. It was so unlike what his past had known, so "damnable
+luxurious!" Now his eyes wandered over the space where were the
+grandilla, with its blossom like a passion-flower, the black Tahiti plum,
+with its bright pink tassel-blossom, and the fine mango trees, loaded
+half with fruit and half with bud. In the distance were the guinea
+cornfields of brownish hue, the cotton-fields, the long ranges of negro
+houses like thatched cottages, the penguin hedges, with their beautiful
+red, blue, and white convolvuluses; the lime, logwood, and breadfruit
+trees, the avocado-pear, the feathery bamboo, and the jack-fruit tree;
+and between the mountains and his own sugar-estates, negro settlements
+and pens. He heard the flight of parrots chattering, he watched the
+floating humming-bird, and at last he fixed his eyes upon the cabbage
+tree down in the garden, and he had an instant desire for it. It was a
+natural and human taste--the cabbage from the tree-top boiled for a
+simple yet sumptuous meal.
+
+He liked simplicity. He did not, as so many did in Jamaica, drink claret
+or punch at breakfast soon after sunrise. In a land where all were bon-
+vivants, where the lowest tradesmen drank wine after dinner, and rum,
+brandy and water, or sangaree in the forenoon, a somewhat lightsome view
+of table-virtues might have been expected of the young unmarried planter.
+For such was he who, from the windows of his "castle," saw his domain
+shimmering in the sun of a hot December day.
+
+It was Dyck Calhoun.
+
+With an impatient air he took up the sheets that he had been reading.
+Christmas Day was on his nerves. The whole town of Kingston, with its
+twenty to thirty thousand inhabitants, had but one church. If he entered
+it, even to-day, he would have seen no more than a hundred and fifty to
+two hundred people; mostly mulattoes--"bronze ornaments"--and peasants in
+shag trousers, jackets of coarse blue cloth, and no waistcoats, with one
+or two magistrates, a dozen gentlemen or so, and probably twice that
+number of ladies. It was not an island given over to piety, or to
+religious habits.
+
+Not that this troubled Dyck Calhoun; nor, indeed, was he shocked by the
+fact that nearly every unmarried white man in the island, and many
+married white men, had black mistresses and families born to the black
+women, and that the girls had no married future. They would become the
+temporary wives of white men, to whom they were on the whole faithful and
+devoted. It did not even vex him that a wretched mulatto might be
+whipped in the market-square for laying his hands upon a white man, and
+that if he was a negro-slave he could be shot for the same liberty.
+
+It all belonged to the abnormal conditions of an island where black and
+white were in relations impossible in the countries from which the white
+man had come. It did not even startle Dyck that all the planters, and
+the people generally in the island, from the chief justice and custos
+rotulorum down to the deckswabber, cultivated amplitude of living.
+
+But let Dyck tell his own story. The papers he held were sheets of a
+letter he was writing to one from whom he had heard nothing since the
+night he enlisted in the navy, and that was nearly three years before.
+This was the letter:
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ You will see I address you as you have done me in the two letters I
+ have had from you in the past. You will never read this letter, but
+ I write it as if you would. For you must know I may never hope for
+ personal intercourse with you. I was imprisoned for killing your
+ father, Erris Boyne, and that separates us like an abysss. It
+ matters little whether I killed him or not; the law says I did, and
+ the law has taken its toll of me. I was in prison for four years,
+ and when freed I enlisted in the king's navy, a quota man, with my
+ servant-friend, Michael Clones. That was the beginning of painful
+ and wonderful days for me. I was one of the mutineers of the Nore,
+ and--
+
+Here followed a description of the days he had spent on the Ariadne and
+before, and of all that happened down to the time when he was arrested by
+the admiral in the West Indian Sea. He told how he was sent over to the
+Ariadne with Captain Ivy to read the admiral's letter to the seamen, and
+then, by consent of the admiral, to leave again with Michael Clones for
+Jamaica, where he was set ashore with twenty pounds in his pocket--and
+not on parole, by the admiral's command. Here the letter shall again
+take up the story, and be a narrative of Dyck Calhoun's life from that
+time until this Christmas Day.
+
+ What to do was the question. I knew no one in Jamaica--no one at
+ all except the governor, Lord Mallow, and him I had fought with
+ swords in Phoenix Park five years before. I had not known he was
+ governor here. I came to know it when I first saw him riding over
+ the unpaved street into Kingston from Spanish Town with his suite,
+ ornate with his governorship. He was a startling figure in scarlet,
+ with huge epaulets on his lieutenant-general's uniform, as big a pot
+ as ever boiled on any fire-chancellor, head of the government and of
+ the army, master of the legislature, judging like one o'clock in the
+ court of chancery, controller of the affairs of civil life, and
+ maker of a policy of which he alone can judge who knows what
+ interests clash in the West Indies.
+
+ English, French, Spanish, and Dutch are all hereabout. All struggle
+ for place above the other in the world of commerce and society,
+ though chiefly it is the English versus the French in these days;
+ and the policy of the governor is the policy of the country. He
+ never knows whether there will be a French naval descent or whether
+ the blacks in his own island will do as the blacks in St. Domingo
+ did--massacre the white people in thousands. Or whether the free
+ blacks, the Maroons, who got their freedom by treaty with Governor
+ Trelawney, when the British commander changed hats with Cudjoe, the
+ Maroon chief, as the sealing of the bargain--whether they will rise
+ again, as they before have risen, and bring terror into the white
+ settlement; and whether, in that case, all negro-slaves will join
+ them, and Jamaica become a land of revolution.
+
+ Of what good, then, will be the laws lately passed regulating the
+ control of slaves, securing them rights never given before, even
+ forbidding lashes beyond forty-nine! Of what use, then, the
+ punishment of owners who have ill-used the slaves? The local
+ councils who have power to punish never proceed against white men
+ with rigour; and to preserve a fair balance between the white man up
+ above and the black down below is the responsibility of the fair-
+ minded governor. If, like Mallow, he is not fair-minded, then is
+ the lash the heavier, and the governor has burdens greater than
+ could easily be borne in lands where the climate is more friendly.
+
+ Lord Mallow did not see me when I passed him in the street, but he
+ soon came to know of me from the admiral and Captain Ivy, who told
+ him all my story since I was freed from jail. Then he said I should
+ be confined in a narrow space near to Kingston, and should have no
+ freedom; but the admiral had his way, and I was given freedom of the
+ whole island till word should come from the Admiralty what should be
+ done with me. To the governor's mind it was dangerous allowing me
+ freedom, a man convicted of crime, who had been imprisoned, had been
+ a mutineer, had stolen one of his majesty's ships, and had fled to
+ the Caribbean Sea. He thought I should well be at the bottom of the
+ ocean, where he would soon have put me, I make no doubt, if it had
+ not been for the admiral, and Captain Ivy--you do not know him, I
+ think--who played a good part to me, when men once close friends
+ have deserted me.
+
+ Well, we had, Michael and I, but twenty pounds between us; and if
+ there was not plenty of free food in the island, God knows what
+ would have become of us! But there it was, fresh in every field, by
+ every wayside, at every doorway. We could not starve, or die of
+ thirst, or faint for lack of sleep, since every bush was a bed in
+ spite of the garapatos or wood-ticks, the snore of the tree-toad,
+ the hoarse shriek of the macaw, and the shrill gird of the guinea-
+ fowl. Every bed was thus free, and there was land to be got for a
+ song, enough to grow what would suffice for two men's daily wants.
+ But we did not rest long upon the land--I have it still, land which
+ cost me five pounds out of the twenty, and for the rest there was an
+ old but on the little place--five acres it was, and good land too,
+ where you could grow anything at all. Heaven knows what we might
+ have become in that tiny plantation, for I was sick of life, and the
+ mosquitos and flying ants, and the chattering parroquets, the grim
+ gallinazo, and the quatre, or native bed--a wooden frame and canvas;
+ but one day at Kingston I met a man, one Cassandro Biatt, who had an
+ obsession for adventure, and he spoke to me privately. He said he
+ knew me from people's talk, and would I listen to him? What was
+ there to do? He was a clean-cut rogue, if ever there was one, but
+ a rogue of parts, as he proved; and I lent an ear.
+
+ Now, what think you was his story? Well, but this--that off the
+ coast of Haiti, there was a ship which had been sunk with every man
+ on board, and with the ship was treasure without counting-jewels
+ belonging once to a Spaniard of high place, who was taking them to
+ Paris. His box had been kept in the captain's cabin, and it could
+ be found, no doubt, and brought to the surface. Even if that were
+ not possible, there was plenty of gold on the ship, and every piece
+ of it was good money. There had been searching for the ship, but
+ none had found it; but he, Cassandro Biatt, had sure knowledge, got
+ from an obi-man, of the place where it lay. It would not be an
+ expensive business, but, cheap as it was, he had no means of raising
+ cash for the purpose; while I could, no doubt, raise the needed
+ money if I set about it. That was how he put it to me. Would I do
+ it? It was not with me a case of "no shots left in the locker, no
+ copper to tinkle on a tombstone." I was not down to my last
+ macaroni, or quarter-dollar; but I drank some sangaree and set about
+ to do it. I got my courage from a look towards Rodney's statue in
+ its temple--Rodney did a great work for Jamaica against Admiral de
+ Grasse.
+
+ Why should I tell Biatt the truth about myself? He knew it.
+ Cassandro was an accomplished liar, and a man of merit of his kind.
+ This obi-man's story I have never believed; yet how Biatt came to
+ know where that treasure-ship was I do not know now.
+
+ Yes, out we went through the harbour of Kingston, beyond the
+ splendid defences of Port Royal and the men-of-war there, past the
+ Palisadoes and Rock Fort, and away to the place of treasure-trove.
+ We found it--that lost galleon; and we found the treasure-box of the
+ captain's cabin. We found gold too; but the treasure-box was the
+ chief thing; and we made it ours after many a hard day. Three
+ months it was from the day Biatt first spoke to me to the day when,
+ with an expert diver, we brought the box to the surface and opened
+ it.
+
+ How I induced one of the big men of Jamaica to be banker and skipper
+ for us need not be told; but he is one of whom men have dark
+ sayings--chiefly, I take it, because he does bold, incomprehensible
+ things. That business paid him well, for when the rent of the ship
+ was met, and the few men on it paid--slaves they were chiefly--he
+ pocketed ten thousand pounds, while Biatt and I each pouched forty
+ thousand, and Michael two thousand. Aye, to be sure, Michael was in
+ it! He is in all I do, and is as good as men of ten times his birth
+ and history. Michael will be a rich man one day. In two years his
+ two thousand have grown to four, and he misses no chance.
+
+ But those days when Biatt and I went treasure-ship hunting were not
+ without their trials. If we had failed, then no more could this
+ land have been home or resting-place for us. We should only have
+ been sojourners with no name, in debt, in disgrace, a pair of
+ braggart adventurers, who had worked a master-man of the island for
+ a ship, and money and men, and had lost all except the ship! Though
+ to be sure, the money was not a big thing--a, few hundred pounds;
+ but the ship was no flea-bite. It was a biggish thing, for it could
+ be rented to carry sugar--it was, in truth, a sugar-ship of four
+ hundred tons--but it never carried so big a cargo of sugar as it did
+ on the day when that treasure-box was brought to the surface of the
+ sea.
+
+ I'm bound to say this--one of the straightest men I ever met, liar
+ withal, was Cassandro Biatt. He took his jewels and vanished up the
+ seas in a flourish. He would not even have another try at the gold
+ in the bowels of the ship.
+
+ "I've got plenty to fill my paunch, and I'll go while I've enough.
+ It's the men not going in time that get left in the end"--that's
+ what he said.
+
+ And he was right; for other men went after the gold and got some of
+ it, and were caught by French and South American pirates and lost
+ all they had gained. Still another group went and brought away ten
+ thousand pounds, and lost it in fighting with Spanish buccaneers.
+ So Biatt was right, and went away content, while I stayed here--
+ because I must--and bought the land and house where I have my great
+ sugar-plantation. It is an enterprise of volume, and all would be
+ well if I were normal in mind and body; but I am not. I have a past
+ that stinks to heaven, as Shakespeare says, and I am an outlaw of
+ the one land which has all my soul and name and heritage. Yes, that
+ is what they have done to me--made a convict, an outlaw of me. I
+ may live--but not in the British Isles; and if any man kills me, he
+ is not liable to the law.
+
+ Men do not treat me badly here, for I have property and money, and
+ this is a land where these two things mean more than anywhere else,
+ even more than in a republic like that where you live. Here men
+ live according to the law of the knife, fork, and bottle, yet
+ nowhere in the world is there deeper national morality or wider
+ faith or endurance. It is a land where the sea is master, where
+ naval might is the chief factor, and weighs down all else.
+
+ Here the navies of the great powers meet and settle their disputes,
+ and every being in the island knows that life is only worth what a
+ hundred-ton brig-of-war permits. I have seen here in Jamaica the
+ off-scourings of the French and Spanish fleets on parole; have seen
+ them entering King's House like loyal citizens; have even known of
+ French prisoners being used as guards at the entrance of King's
+ House, and I have informed the chief justice of dismal facts which
+ ought to have moved him. But what can you expect of a chief justice
+ who need not be a lawyer, as this one is not, and has other means of
+ earning income which, though not disloyal, are lowering to the
+ status of a chief justice? And not the chief justice alone. I have
+ seen French officers entertained at Government House who were guilty
+ of shocking inhumanities and cruelties. The governor, Lord Mallow,
+ is much to blame. On him lies the responsibility; to him must go
+ the discredit. For myself, I feel his enmity on every hand. I
+ suffer from his suggestions; I am the victim of his dark moods.
+
+ If I want a concession from a local council, his hand is at work
+ against me; if I see him in the street, I get a courtesy tossed, as
+ you would toss a bone to a dog. If I appear at the king's ball,
+ which is open to all on the island who are respectable, I am treated
+ with such disdain by the viceroy of the king that all the island is
+ agog. I went one day to the king's ball the same as the rest of the
+ world, and I went purposely in dress contrary to the regulations.
+ Here was the announcement of the affair in the Royal Gazette, which
+ was reproduced in the Chronicle, the one important newspaper in the
+ island:
+
+ KING'S HOUSE,
+ October 27th, 1797.
+
+ KING'S BALL.
+
+ There will be a Ball given by His Honour the Lieutenant-
+ Governor, on Tuesday evening, the 6th day of December next,
+ in honour of
+
+ HIS MAJESTY'S BIRTHDAY.
+
+ To prevent confusion, Ladies and Gentlemen are requested to
+ order their carriages to come by the Old Court House, and go
+ off by the Long Room.
+
+ N.B.--No gentlemen can possibly be admitted in boots, or
+ otherwise improperly dressed.
+
+
+ Well, in a spirit of mutiny--in which I am, in a sense, an expert--
+ I went in boots and otherwise "improperly dressed," for I wore my
+ hair in a queue, like a peasant. What is more, I danced with a
+ negress in the great quadrille, and thereby offended the governor
+ and his lady aunt, who presides at his palace. It matters naught to
+ me. On my own estate it was popular enough, and that meant more to
+ me than this goodwill of Lord Mallow.
+
+ He does not spare me in his recitals to his friends, who carry his
+ speech abroad. His rancour against me is the greater, I know,
+ because of the wealth I got in the treasure-ship, to prevent which
+ he tried to prohibit my leaving the island, through the withholding
+ of a leave-ticket to me. His argument to the local authorities was
+ that I had no rights, that I am a murderer and a mutineer, and
+ confined to the island, though not on parole. He almost succeeded;
+ but the man to whom I went, the big rich man intervened,
+ successfully--how I know not--and I was let go with my permit-
+ ticket.
+
+ What big things hang on small issues! If my Lord Mallow had
+ prevented me leaving the island, I shouldn't now own a great
+ plantation and three hundred negroes. I shouldn't be able to pay
+ my creditors in good gold Portuguese half-johannes and Spanish
+ doubloons, and be free of Spanish silver, and give no heed to the
+ bitt, which, as you perhaps know, is equal to fivepence in British
+ money, such as you and I used to spend when you were Queen of
+ Ireland and I was your slave.
+
+ Then I worshipped you as few women have been worshipped in all the
+ days of the world--oh, cursed spite of life and time that I should
+ have been jailed for killing your bad father! Aye, he was a bad
+ man, and he is better in his grave than out of it, but it puts a
+ gulf between you and me which nothing will ever bridge--unless it
+ should some day be known I did not kill him, and then, no doubt, it
+ will be too late.
+
+ On my soul, I don't believe I put my sword into him; but if I did,
+ he well deserved it, for he was worse than faithless to your mother,
+ he was faithless to his country--he was a traitor! I did not tell
+ that story of his treachery in court--I did not tell it because of
+ you. You did not deserve such infamy, and the truth came not out at
+ the trial. I, in my view, dared not, lest it might injure you, and
+ you had suffered enough--nay, more than enough--through him.
+
+ I wonder how you are, and if you have changed--I mean in appearance.
+ I am sure you are not married; I should have felt it in my bones,
+ if you were. No, no, my sweet lass, you are not married. But
+ think--it is more than seven long years since we met on the hills
+ above Playmore, and you put your hand in mine and said we should be
+ friends for all time. It is near three years since a letter came to
+ me from you, and in the time I have made progress.
+
+ I did not go to the United States, as you asked me to do. Is it not
+ plain I could not? My only course was to avoid you. You see, your
+ mother knows the truth--knows that I was jailed for killing your
+ father and her divorced husband. Therefore, the only way to do was
+ as I did. I could not go where you were. There should be hid from
+ you the fact that Erris Boyne was a traitor. This is your right, in
+ my mind. Looking back, I feel sure I could have escaped jail if I
+ had told what I knew of Erris Boyne; and perhaps it would have been
+ better, for I should, no doubt, have been acquitted. Yet I could
+ not have gone to you, for I am not sure I did not kill him.
+
+ So it is best as it is. We are as we are, and nothing can make all
+ different for us. I am a dissolute planter of Jamaica who has
+ snatched from destiny a living and some riches. I have a bad name
+ in the world. Yet by saving the king's navy from defeat out here I
+ did a good turn for my country and the empire.
+
+ So much to the good. It brought me freedom from the rope and pardon
+ for my chief offence. Then, in company with a rogue, I got wealth
+ from the depths of the sea, and here I am in the bottom of my
+ luxury, drunken and obscene--yes, obscene, for I permit my overseers
+ and my manager to keep black women and have children by them. That
+ I do not do so myself is no virtue on my part, but the virtue of a
+ girl whom I knew in Connemara. I fill myself with drink. I have a
+ bottle of madeira or port every night, and pints of beer or claret.
+ I am a creature of low habits, a man sodden with self-indulgence.
+ And when I am in drink, no slaver can be more cruel and ruthless.
+
+ Yet I am moderate in eating. The meals that people devour here
+ almost revolt me. They eat like cormorants and drink like dry
+ ground; but at my table I am careful, save with the bottle. This
+ is a land of wonderful fruits, and I eat in quantities pineapple,
+ tamarind, papaw, guava, sweet-sop, star-apple, granadilla, hog-plum,
+ Spanish-gooseberry, and pindal-nut. These are native, but there are
+ also the orange, lemon, lime, shaddock, melon, fig, pomegranate,
+ cinnamon, and mango, brought chiefly from the Spanish lands of South
+ America. The fruit-market here is good, Heaven knows, and I have my
+ run of it. Perhaps that is why my drink does not fatten me greatly.
+ Yes, I am thin--thinner even than when you saw me last. How
+ wonderful a day it was! You remember it, I'm sure.
+
+ We stood on the high hills, you and I, looking to the west. It was
+ a true Irish day. A little in front of us, in the sky, were great
+ clusters of clouds, and beyond them, as far as eye could see, were
+ hills so delicately green, so spotted with settlements, so misty and
+ full of glamour, and so cheerful with the western light. And the
+ storm broke--do you remember it? It broke, but not on us. It fell
+ on the middle of the prospect before us, and we saw beyond it the
+ bright area of sunny country where men work and prophesy and slave,
+ and pray to the ancient gods and acclaim the saints, and die and
+ fructify the mould; where such as Christopher Dogan live, and men a
+ thousand times lower than he. Christopher came to the jail the day
+ I was released--with Michael Clones he came. He read me my bill of
+ life's health--what was to become of me--the black and the white of
+ it, the good and the bad, the fair and the foul. Even the good
+ fortune of the treasure from the sea he foresaw, and much else that
+ has not come to me, and, as I think, will never come; for it is too
+ full a cup for me so little worthy of it.
+
+ It seems strange to me that I am as near to the United States here
+ in Jamaica, or almost as near, as one in London is to one in Dublin;
+ and yet one might as well be ten thousand leagues distant for all it
+ means to her one loves in the United States. Yes, dear Sheila, I
+ love you, and I would tear out the heart of the world for you. I
+ bathe my whole being in your beauty and your charm. I hunger for
+ you--to stand beside you, to listen to your voice, to dip my prison
+ fingers into the pure cauldron of your soul and feel my own soul
+ expand. I wonder why it is that to-day I feel more than I ever felt
+ before the rare splendour of your person.
+
+ I have always admired you and loved you, always heard you calling
+ me, as if from some sacred corner of a perfect world. Is it that
+ yesterday's dissipation--yes, I was drunk yesternight, drunk in a
+ new way. I was drunk with the thought of you, the longing for you.
+ I picked a big handful of roses, and in my mind gave them into your
+ hands. And I thought you smiled and said:
+
+ "Well done, good and faithful servant. Enter Paradise." So I
+ followed you to your home there in the Virginian country. It was a
+ dream, all except the roses, and those I laid in front of the box
+ where I keep your letters and a sketch I made of you when we were
+ young and glad--when I was young and glad. For I am an old man,
+ Sheila, in all that makes men old. My step is quick still, my eye
+ is sharp, and my brain beats fast, but my heart is ancient. I am an
+ ancient of days, without hope or pleasure, save what pleasure comes
+ in thinking of one whom I worship, yet must ever worship from afar.
+
+ I wonder why I seem to feel you very near to-day! Perhaps it's
+ because 'tis Christmas Day. I am not a religious man but Christmas
+ is a day of memories.
+
+ Is it because of the past in Ireland? Am I only--God, am I only to
+ be what I am for the rest of my days, a planter denied the pleasure
+ of home by his own acts! Am I only a helpless fragment of a world
+ of lost things?
+
+ I have no friends--but yes, I have. I have Michael Clones and
+ Captain Ivy, though he's far away-aye, he's a friend of friends, is
+ Captain Ivy. These naval folk have had so much of the world, have
+ got the bearings of so many seas, that they lose all littleness, and
+ form their own minds. They are not like the people who knew me in
+ Ireland--the governor here is one of them--and who believe the worst
+ of me. The governor--faugh, he was made for bigger and better
+ things! He is one of the best swordsmen in the world, and he is
+ out against me here as if I was a man of importance, and not a
+ commonplace planter on an obscure river. I have no social home
+ life, and yet I live in what is called a castle. A Jamaica castle
+ has none of the marks of antiquity, chivalry, and distinction which
+ castles that you and I know in the old land possess.
+
+ What is my castle like? Well, it is a squarish building, of
+ bungalow type, set on a hill. It has stories and an attic, with a
+ jutting dormer-window in the front of the roof; and above the lowest
+ story there is a great verandah, on which the livingrooms and
+ bedrooms open. It is commodious, and yet from a broad standpoint it
+ is without style or distinction. It has none of those Corinthian
+ pillars which your homesteads in America have. Yet there is in it a
+ simple elegance. It has no carpets, but a shining mahogany floor,
+ for there are few carpets in this land of heat. It is a place where
+ music and mirth and family voices would be fitting; but there are no
+ family voices here, save such as speak with a negro lisp and
+ oracularly.
+
+ I can hear music at this moment, and inside my castle. It comes
+ from the irrepressible throats of my cook and my housemaid, who have
+ more joy in the language of the plantation than you could have in
+ the songs of St. Angelus. The only person in this castle out of
+ spirits is its owner.
+
+ My castle is embowered in a loose grove of palms and acacias,
+ pimento shrubs, spendid star-apples, and bully-trees, with wild
+ lemon, mahogany, dogwood, Jerusalem-thorn, and the waving plumes of
+ bamboo canes. There is nothing British in it--nothing at all. It
+ stands on brick pillars, is reached by a stair of marble slabs, and
+ has a great piazza on the front. You enter a fine, big hall, dark-
+ you will understand that, though it is not so hot in Virginia, for
+ the darkness makes for coolness. From the hall the bedrooms open
+ all round. We are not so barbaric here as you might think, for my
+ dining-room, which lies beyond the hall, with jalousies or movable
+ blinds, exposed to all the winds, is comfortable, even ornate.
+ There you shall see waxlights on the table, and finger-glasses with
+ green leaves, and fine linen and napkins, and plenty of silver--even
+ silver wine-coolers, and beakers of fame and beauty, and flowers,
+ flowers everywhere, and fruit of exquisite charm. I have to live
+ in outward seeming as do my neighbours, even to keeping a black
+ footman, gorgeously dressed, with bare legs.
+
+ Here at my window grows a wild aloe, and it is in flower. Once only
+ in fifty years does this aloe flower, and I pick its sweet verdure
+ now and offer it to you. There it lies, beside this letter that I
+ am writing. It is typical of myself, for only once has my heart
+ flowered, and it will be only once in fifty years. The perfume of
+ the flower is like an everlasting bud from the last tree of Time.
+ See, my Sheila, your drunken, reckless lover pulls this sweet
+ offering from his garden and offers it to you. He has no virtues;
+ and yet he would have been a thousand times worse, if you had not
+ come into his life. He had in him the seeds of trouble, the
+ sproutings of shame, for even in the first days of his love there in
+ Dublin he would not restrain himself. He drank, he played cards, he
+ fought and went with bad company--not women, never that; but he kept
+ the company of those through whom he came at last to punishment for
+ manslaughter.
+
+ Yet, without you, who can tell what he might have been? He might
+ have fallen so low that not the wealth of ten thousand treasure-
+ boxes could give him even the appearance of honesty. And now he
+ offers you what you cannot accept--can never accept--a love as deep
+ as the life from which he came; a love that would throttle the world
+ for you, that would force the doors of hell to bring you what you
+ want.
+
+ What do you want? I know not. Perhaps you have inherited the vast
+ property to which you were the heir. If you have, what can you want
+ that you have not means to procure? Ah, I have learned one thing,
+ my friend 'one can get nearly everything with money. It is the
+ hidden machinery which makes the world of success go round. With
+ brains, you say? Yes, money and brains, but without the money
+ brains seldom win alone. Do not I know? When I was in prison, with
+ estate vanished and home gone and my father in his grave, who was
+ concerned about me?
+
+ Only the humblest of all God's Irish people; but with them I have
+ somehow managed to win back lost ground. I am a stronger man than I
+ was in all that men count of value in the world. I have an estate
+ where I work like any youth who has everything before him. I have
+ nothing before me, yet I shall go on working to the end. Why?
+ Because I have some faculties which are more than bread and butter,
+ and I must give them opportunity.
+
+ Yet I am not always sane. Sometimes I feel I could march out and
+ sweep into the sea one of the towns that dot the coast of this
+ island. I have the bloody thirst, as said the great Spanish
+ conquistador. I would like--yes, sometimes I would like to sweep
+ to a watery grave one of the towns that are a glory to this island,
+ as Savanna la Mar was swept to oblivion in the year 1780 by a
+ hurricane. You can still see the ruins of the town at the bottom of
+ the sea--I have sailed over it in what is now the harbour, and there
+ beneath, on the deep sands, lost to time and trouble, is the slain
+ and tortured town of Savanna la Mar. Was the Master of the World
+ angry that day when, with a besom of wind and a tidal wave, He swept
+ the place into the sea? Or was it some devil's work while the Lord
+ of All slept? As the Spanish say, Quien sabe?
+
+ Then there was that other enormous incident which made a man to be
+ swallowed by an earthquake, then belched out again into the sea and
+ picked up and restored to life again, and to live for many years.
+ Indeed, yes, it is so. His tombstone may be seen even at this day
+ at Green Bay, Kingston. His name was Lewis Galdy, and he is held in
+ high repute in this land.
+
+ I feel sometimes as Beelzebub may feel, and I long to do what
+ Beelzebub might do as part of his mission. Sometimes a madness
+ of revolt comes over me, and I long to ravage all the places I see,
+ all the people I know--or nearly all. Why I do not have negroes
+ thrashed and mutilated, as some do, I know not. Over against the
+ southern shore in the parish of St. Elizabeth is an estate called
+ Salem, owned, it is said, by an American, where the manager does
+ such things. I am told that savageries are found there. There
+ are too many absentee owners of land in this island, and the wrongs
+ done by agents who have no personal honour at stake are all too
+ plentiful. If I could, I would have no slavery, would set all the
+ blacks free, making full compensation to the owners, and less to the
+ absentee owners.
+
+ I look out on a world of summer beauty and of heat. I see the sheep
+ in hundreds on the far hills of pasturage--sheep with short hair,
+ small and sweet as any that ever came from the South Downs. I see
+ the natives in their Madras handkerchiefs. I see upon the road some
+ planter in his ketureen--a sort of sedan chair; I see a negro
+ funeral, with its strange ceremony and its gumbies of African drums.
+ I see yam-fed planters, on their horses, making for the burning,
+ sandy streets of the capital. I see the Scots grass growing five
+ and six feet high, food unsurpassed for horses--all the foliage too
+ --beautiful tropical trees and shrubs, and here and there a huge
+ breeding-farm. Yet I know that out beyond my sight there is the
+ region known as Trelawney, and Trelawney Town, the headquarters of
+ the Maroons, the free negroes--they who fled after the Spanish had
+ been conquered and the British came, and who were later freed and
+ secured by the Trelawney Treaty. I know that now they are ready to
+ rise, that they are working among the slaves; and if they rise the
+ danger is great to the white population of the island, who are
+ outnumbered ten to one.
+
+ The governor has been warned, but he gives no heed, or treats it all
+ lightly, pointing out how few the Maroons are. He forgets that a
+ few determined men can demoralize a whole state, can fight and
+ murder and fly to dark coverts in the tropical woods, where they
+ cannot be tracked down and destroyed; and, if they have made
+ supporters of the slaves, what consequences may not follow!
+
+ What do the Maroons look like? They are ferocious and isolated,
+ they are proud and overbearing, they are horribly cruel, but they
+ are potent, and are difficult to reach. They are not small and
+ meagre, but are big, brawny fellows, clothed in wide duck trousers
+ and shirts, and they are well-armed--cutlass, powder-horn,
+ haversack, sling, shot-gun, and pouch for ball. They dress as the
+ country requires, and they are strong fighters against our soldiers
+ who are burdened with heavy muskets, and who defy the climate, with
+ their stuffed coats, their weighty caps, and their tight cross-
+ belts. The Maroons are not to be despised. They have brains, the
+ insolence of freedom among natives who are not free, and vast
+ cruelty. They can be mastered and kept in subjection, can be made
+ allies, if properly handled; but Lord Mallow goes the wrong way
+ about it all. He permits things that inflame the Maroons.
+
+ One thing is clear to me--only by hounds can these people be
+ defeated. So sure am I upon this point, that I have sent to Cuba
+ for sixty hounds, with which, when the trouble comes--and it is not
+ far off--we shall be able to hunt the Maroons with the only weapon
+ they really fear--the dog's sharp tooth. It may be the governor may
+ intervene on the arrival of the dogs; but I have made friends with
+ the provost-marshal-general and some members of the Jamaica
+ legislature; also I have a friend in the deputy of the provost-
+ marshal-general in my parish of Clarendon here, and I will make a
+ good bet that the dogs will be let come into the island, governor
+ or no governor.
+
+ When one sets oneself against the Crown one must be sure of one's
+ ground, and fear no foe, however great and high. Well, I have won
+ so far, and I shall win in the end. Mallow should have some respect
+ for one that beat him at Phoenix Park with the sword; that beat him
+ when he would have me imprisoned here; that beat him in the matter
+ of the ship for Haiti, and that will beat him on every hazard he
+ sets, unless he stoops to underhand acts, which he will not do.
+ That much must be said for him. He plays his part in no small way,
+ and he is more a bigot and a fanatic loyalist than a rogue.
+ Suppose--but no, I will not suppose. I will lay my plans, I will
+ keep faith with people here who trust me, and who know that if I am
+ stern I am also just, and I will play according to the rules made by
+ better men than myself.
+
+But what is this I see? Michael Clones--in his white jean waistcoat,
+white neckcloth and trousers, and blue coat--is coming up the drive in
+hot haste, bearing a letter. He rides too hard. He has never carried
+himself easily in this climate. He treats it as if it was Ireland. He
+will not protect himself, and, if penalty followed folly, should now be
+in his grave. I like you, Michael. You are a boon, but--
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+STRANGERS ARRIVE
+
+Dyck Calhoun's letter was never ended. It was only a relic of the years
+spent in Jamaica, only a sign of his well-being, though it gave no real
+picture of himself. He did not know how like a tyrant he had become in
+some small ways, while in the large things he remained generous, urbane,
+and resourceful. He was in appearance thin, dark-favoured, buoyant in
+manner, and stern of face, with splendid eyes. Had he dwelt on Olympus,
+he might have been summoned to judge and chastise the sons of men.
+
+When Michael Clones came to the doorway, Dyck laid down his quill-pen and
+eyed the flushed servant in disapproval.
+
+"What is it, Michael? Wherefore this starkness? Is some one come from
+heaven?"
+
+"Not precisely from heaven, y'r honour, but--"
+
+"But--yes, Michael! Have done with but-ing, and come to the real
+matter."
+
+"Well, sir, they've come from Virginia."
+
+Dyck Calhoun slowly got to his feet, his face paling, his body
+stiffening. From Virginia! Who should be come from Virginia, save she
+to whom he had just been writing?
+
+"Who has come from Virginia?" He knew, but he wanted it said.
+
+"Sure, you knew a vessel came from America last night. Well, in her was
+one that was called the Queen of Ireland long ago."
+
+"Queen of Ireland--well, what then?" Dyck's voice was tuneless, his
+manner rigid, his eyes burning. "Well, she--Miss Sheila Llyn and her
+mother are going to the Salem Plantation, down by the Essex Valley
+Mountain. It is her plantation now. It belonged to her uncle, Bryan
+Llyn. He got it in payment of a debt. He's dead now, and all his lands
+and wealth have come to her. Her mother, Mrs. Llyn, is with her, and
+they start to-morrow or the next day for Salem. There'll be different
+doings at Salem henceforward, y'r honour. She's not the woman to see
+slaves treated as the manager at Salem treated 'em."
+
+Dyck Calhoun made an impatient gesture at this last remark.
+
+"Yes, yes, Michael. Where are they now?"
+
+"They're at Charlotte Bedford's lodgings in Spanish Town. The governor
+waited on them this morning. The governor sent them flowers and--"
+
+"Flowers--Lord Mallow sent them flowers! Hell's fiend, man, suppose he
+did?"
+
+"There are better flowers here than in any Spanish Town."
+
+"Well, take them, Michael; but if you do, come here again no more while
+you live, for I'll have none of you. Do you think I'm entering the lists
+against the king's governor?"
+
+"You've done it before, sir, and there's no harm in doing it again. One
+good turn deserves another. I've also to tell you, sir, that Lord Mallow
+has asked them to stay at King's House."
+
+
+"Lord Mallow has asked Americans to stay at King's House!"
+
+"But they're Irish, and he knew them in Ireland, y 'r honour."
+
+"Well, he knew me in Ireland, and I'm proscribed!"
+
+"Ah, that's different, as you know. There's no war on now, and they're
+only good American citizens who own land in this dominion of the king; so
+why shouldn't he give them courtesy?"
+
+"From whom do you get your information?" asked Dyck Calhoun with an air
+of suspicion.
+
+"From Darius Boland, y'r honour," answered Michael, with a smile. "Who
+is Darius Boland, you're askin' in y'r mind? Well, he's the new manager
+come from the Llyn plantations in Virginia; and right good stuff he is,
+with a tongue that's as dry as cut-wheat in August. And there's humour
+in him, plenty-aye, plenty. When did I see him, and how? Well, I saw
+him this mornin', on the quay at Kingston. He was orderin' the porters
+about with an air--oh, bedad, an air! I saw the name upon the parcels--
+Miss Sheila Llyn, of Moira, Virginia, and so I spoke to him. The rest
+was aisy. He looked me up and down in a flash, like a searchlight
+playin' on an enemy ship, and then he smiled. 'Well,' said he, 'who
+might you be? For there's queer folks in Jamaica, I'm told.' So I said
+I was Michael Clones, and at that he doffed his hat and held out a hand.
+'Well, here's luck,' said he. 'Luck at the very start! I've heard of
+you from my mistress. You're servant to Mr. Dyck Calhoun--ain't that
+it?' And I nodded, and he smiled again--a smile that'd cost money
+annywhere else than in Jamaica. He smiled again, and give a slow hitch
+to his breeches as though they was fallin' down. Why, sir, he's the
+longest bit of man you ever saw, with a pointed beard, and a nose that's
+as long as a midshipman's tongue-dry, lean, and elastic. He's quick and
+slow all at once. His small eyes twinkle like stars beatin' up against
+bad weather, and his skin's the colour of Scots grass in the dead of
+summer-yaller, he'd call it if he called it anything, and yaller was what
+he called the look of the sky above the hills. Queer way of talk he has,
+that man, as queer as--"
+
+"I understand, Michael. But what else? How did you come to talk about
+the affairs of Mrs. and Miss Llyn? He didn't just spit it out, did he?"
+
+"Sure, not so quick and free as spittin', y'r honour; but when he'd
+sorted me out, as it were, he said Miss Llyn had come out here to take
+charge of Salem; her own estate in Virginia bein' in such good runnin'
+order, and her mind bein' active. Word had come of the trouble with the
+manager here, and one of the provost-marshal's deputies had written
+accounts of the flogging and ill-treatment of slaves, and that's why
+she come--to put things right at Salem!"
+
+"To put things wrong in Jamaica, Michael, that's why she's come. To
+loose the ball of confusion and free the flood of tragedy--that's why
+she's come! Man, Michael, you know her history--who she was and what
+happened to her father. Well, do you think there's no tragedy in her
+coming here? I killed her father, they say, Michael. I was punished for
+it. I came here to be free of all those things--lifted out and away from
+them all. I longed to forget the past, which is only shame and torture;
+and here it is all spread out at my door again like a mat, which I must
+see as I go in and out. Essex Valley--why, it's less than a day's ride
+from here, far less than a day's ride! It can be ridden in four or five
+hours at a trot. Michael, it's all a damnable business. And here she is
+in Jamaica with her Darius Boland! There was no talk on Boland's part of
+their coming here, was there Michael?"
+
+"None at all, sir, but there was that in the man's eye, and that in his
+tone, which made me sure he thought Miss Llyn and you would meet."
+
+"That would be strange, wouldn't it, in this immense continent!" Dyck
+remarked cynically.
+
+"She knew I was here before she came?"
+
+"Aye, she knew. She had seen your name in the papers--English and
+Jamaican. She knew you had regained your life and place, and was a man
+of mark here."
+
+"A marked man, you mean, Michael--a man whom the king has had to pardon
+of a crime because of an act done that served the State. I am forbidden
+to return to the British Isles or to the land of my birth, forbidden free
+traffic as a citizen, hammered out of recognition by the strokes of
+enmity. A man of mark, indeed! Aye, with the broad arrow on me, with
+the shame of prison and mutiny on my name!"
+
+"But if she don't believe?"
+
+"If she don't believe! Well, she must be told the truth at last. I
+wonder her mother let her come here. Her mother knew part of the truth.
+She hid it all from the girl--and now they are here! I must see it
+through, but it's a wretched fate, Michael."
+
+"Perhaps her mother didn't know you were here, sir."
+
+Dyck laughed grimly. "Michael, you've a lawyer's mind. Perhaps you're
+right. The girl may have hid from her mother all newspapers referring to
+me. That may well be; but it's not the way that will bring
+understanding."
+
+"I think it's the truth, sir, for Darius Boland spoke naught of the
+mother--indeed, he said only what would make me think the girl came with
+her own ends in view. Faith, I'm sure the mother did not know."
+
+"She will know now. Your Darius Boland will tell her."
+
+"By St. Peter, it doesn't matter who tells her, sir. The business must
+be faced."
+
+"Michael, order my horse, and I will go to Spanish Town. This matter
+must be brought to a head. The truth must be told. Order my horse!"
+"It is the very heat of the day, sir."
+
+"Then at five o'clock, after dinner, have my horse here."
+
+"Am I to ride with you, sir?"
+
+Dyck nodded. "Yes, Michael. There's only one thing to do--face all the
+facts with all the evidence, and you are fact and evidence too. You know
+more of the truth than any one else."
+
+Several hours later, when the sun was abating its force a little, after
+travelling the burning roads through yams and cocoa, grenadillas and all
+kinds of herbs and roots and vagrant trees, Dyck Calhoun and Michael
+Clones came into Spanish Town. Dyck rode the unpaved streets on his
+horse with its high demipicque Spanish saddle, with its silver stirrups
+and heavy bit, and made his way towards Charlotte Bedford's lodgings.
+
+Dyck looked round upon the town with new eyes. He saw it like one for
+the first time visiting it. He saw the people passing through the wide
+verandahs of the houses, like a vast colonnade, down the street, to be
+happily sheltered from the fierce sun. As he had come down from the
+hills he thought he had never seen the houses look more beautiful in
+their gardens of wild tamarinds, kennips, cocoa-nuts, pimentos, and
+palms, backed by negro huts. He had seen all sorts of people at the
+draw-wells of the houses-British, Spanish, French, South American,
+Creoles, and here and there a Maroon, and the everlasting negro who sang
+as he worked:
+
+ "Come along o' me, my buccra brave,
+ You see de shild de Lord he gave:
+ You drink de sangaree,
+ I make de frichassee--"
+
+Here a face peeped out from the glazed sash of the jalousies of the
+balconies above--a face that could never be said to be white, though it
+had only a tinge of black in its coaxing beauty. There a workman with
+long hair and shag trousers painted the prevailing two-storied house the
+prevailing colour, white and green. There was a young naval officer in
+full dress, gold-buckled shoes, white trousers, short jacket with gold
+swab on shoulders, dress-sword and smart gait making for supper at King's
+House.
+
+A long-legged "son of a gun" of a Yankee had a "clapper-claw," or
+handshake, with a planting attorney in a kind of four-posted gig,
+canopied in leather and curtained clumsily. The Yankee laughed at the
+heavy straight shafts and the mule that drew the volante, as the gig was
+called, and the vehicle creaked and cried as it rolled along over the
+road, which was like a dry river-bed. There a French officer in Hessian
+boots, white trousers, blue uniform, and much-embroidered scarlet cuffs
+watched with amusement a slave carrying a goglet, or earthen jar, upon
+his head like an Egyptian, untouched by the hand, so adding dignity to
+carriage. He was holding a "round-aboutation" with an old hag who was
+telling his fortune.
+
+As they passed King's House, they saw troops of the viceroy's guests
+issuing from the palace-officers of the king's navy and army, officers
+and men of the Jamaica militia, pale-faced, big-eyed men of the Creole
+class, mulattoes, quadroons and octoroons, Samboes with their wives in
+loose skirts, white stockings, and pinnacle hats. There also passed, in
+the streets, black servants with tin cases on their heads, or carrying
+parcels in their arms, and here and there processions of servants, each
+with something that belonged to their mistresses, who would presently be
+attending the king's ball.
+
+Snatches of song were heard, and voices of men who had had a full meal
+and had "taken observations"--as looking through the bottom of a glass of
+liquor was called by people with naval spirit--were mixed in careless
+carousal.
+
+All this jarred on Dyck Calhoun and gave revolt to his senses. Yet he
+was only half-conscious of the great sensuousness of the scene as he
+passed through it. Now and then some one doffed a hat to him, and very
+occasionally some half-drunken citizen tossed at him a remark meant to
+wound; but he took no notice, and let things pleasant and provocative
+pass down the long ranges of indifference.
+
+All was brought to focus at last, however, by their arrival at Charlotte
+Bedford's lodgings, which, like most houses in the town, had a lookout or
+belfry fitted with green blinds and a telescope, and had a green-painted
+wooden railing round it.
+
+At the very entrance, inside the gate, in the garden, they saw Sheila
+Llyn, her mother, and Darius Boland, who seemed to be enduring from the
+mother some sharp reprimand, to the amusement of the daughter. As the
+gate closed behind Dyck and Michael, the three from Virginia turned round
+and faced them. As Dyck came forward, Sheila flushed and trembled. She
+was no longer a young girl, but her slim straightness and the soft lines
+of her figure, gave her a dignity and charm which made her young
+womanhood distinguished--for she was now twenty-five, and had a carriage
+of which a princess might have been proud. Yet it was plain that the
+entrance of Dyck at this moment was disturbing. It was not what she had
+foreseen.
+
+She showed no hesitation, however, but came forward to meet her visitor,
+while Michael fell back, as also did Darius Boland. Both these seemed to
+realize that the less they saw and heard the better; and they presently
+got together in another part of the garden, as Dyck Calhoun came near
+enough almost to touch Sheila.
+
+Surely, he thought, she was supreme in appearance and design. She was
+like some rare flower of the field, alert, gentle, strong, intrepid, with
+buoyant face, brown hair, blue eyes and cream-like skin. She was touched
+by a rose on each cheek and made womanly by firm and yet generous
+breasts, tenderly imprisoned by the white chiffon of her blouse in which
+was one bright sprig of the buds of a cherry-tree-a touch of modest
+luxuriance on a person sparsely ornamented. It was not tropical, this
+picture of Sheila Llyn; it was a flick of northern life in a summer sky.
+It was at once cheerful and apart. It had no August in it; no oil and
+wine. It was the little twig that grew by a running spring. It was
+fresh, dominant and serene. It was Connemara on the Amazon! It was
+Sheila herself, whom time had enriched with far more than years and
+experience. It was a personality which would anywhere have taken place
+and held it. It was undefeatable, persistent and permanent; it was the
+spirit of Ireland loose in a world that was as far apart from Ireland as
+she was from her dead, dishonoured father.
+
+And Dyck? At first she felt she must fly to him--yes, in spite of the
+fact that he had suffered prison for manslaughter. But a nearer look at
+him stopped the impulse at its birth. Here was the Dyck Calhoun she had
+known in days gone by, but not the Dyck she had looked to see; for this
+man was like one who had come from a hanging, who had seen his dearest
+swinging at the end of a rope. His face was set in coldness; his hair
+was streaked with grey; his forehead had a line in the middle; his manner
+was rigid, almost frigid, indeed. Only in his eyes was there that which
+denied all that his face and manner said--a hungry, absorbing, hopeless
+look, the look of one who searches for a friend in the denying desert.
+
+Somehow, when he bowed low to her, and looked her in the eyes as no one
+in all her life had ever done, she had an almost agonized understanding
+of what a man feels who has been imprisoned--that is, never the same
+again. He was an ex-convict, and yet she did not feel repelled by him.
+She did not believe he had killed Erris Boyne. As for the later crime
+of mutiny, that did not concern her much. She was Irish; but, more than
+that, she was in sympathy with the mutineers. She understood why Dyck
+Calhoun, enlisting as a common sailor, should take up their cause and run
+risk to advance it. That he had advanced it was known to all the world;
+that he had paid the price of his mutiny by saving the king's navy with
+a stolen ship had brought him pardon for his theft of a ship and mutiny;
+and that he had won wealth was but another proof of the man's power.
+
+"You would not come to America, so I came here, and--" She paused, her
+voice trembling slightly. "There is much to do at Salem," he added
+calmly, and yet with his heart beating, as it had not beaten since the
+day he had first met her at Playmore.
+
+"You would not take the money I sent to Dublin for you--the gift of a
+believing friend, and you would not come to America!"
+
+"I shall have to tell you why one day," he answered slowly, "but I'll pay
+my respects to your mother now." So saying he went forward and bowed low
+to Mrs. Llyn. Unlike her daughter, Mrs. Llyn did not offer her hand.
+She was pale, distraught, troubled--and vexed. She, however, murmured
+his name and bowed. "You did not expect to see me here in Jamaica," he
+said boldly.
+
+"Frankly, I did not, Mr. Calhoun," she said.
+
+"You resent my coming here to see you? You think it bold, at least."
+
+She looked at him closely and firmly. "You know why I cannot welcome
+you."
+
+"Yet I have paid the account demanded by the law. And you had no regard
+for him. You divorced him."
+
+Sheila had drawn near, and Dyck made a gesture in her direction. "She
+does not know," he said, "and she should not hear what we say now?"
+
+Mrs. Llyn nodded, and in a low tone told Sheila that she wished to be
+alone with Dyck for a little while. In Dyck's eyes, as he watched Sheila
+go, was a thing deeper than he had ever known or shown before. In her
+white gown, and with her light step, Sheila seemed to float away--a
+picture graceful, stately, buoyant, "keen and small." As she was about
+to pass beyond a clump of pimento bushes, she turned her head towards the
+two, and there was that in her eyes which few ever see and seeing are
+afterwards the same. It was a look of inquiry, or revelation, of emotion
+which went to Dyck's heart.
+
+"No, she does not know the truth," Mrs. Llyn said. "But it has been hard
+hiding it from her. One never knew whether some chance remark, some
+allusion in the papers, would tell her you had killed her father."
+
+"Did I kill her father?" asked Dyck helplessly. "Did I? I was found
+guilty of it, but on my honour, Mrs. Llyn, I do not know, and I do not
+think I did. I have no memory of it. We quarrelled. I drew my sword on
+him, then he made an explanation and I madly, stupidly drank drugged wine
+in reconciliation with him, and then I remember nothing more--nothing at
+all."
+
+"What was the cause of your quarrel?"
+
+Dyck looked at her long before answering. "I hid that from my father
+even, and hid it from the world--did not even mention it in court at the
+trial. If I had, perhaps I should not have gone to jail. If I had,
+perhaps I should not be here in Jamaica. If I had--" He paused, a flood
+of reflection drowning his face, making his eyes shine with black sorrow.
+
+"Well, if you had! . . . Why did you not? Wasn't it your duty to
+save yourself and save your friends, if you could? Wasn't that your
+plain duty?"
+
+"Yes, and that was why I did not tell what the quarrel was. If I had,
+even had I killed Erris Boyne, the jury would not have convicted me.
+Of that I am sure. It was a loyalist jury."
+
+"Then why did you not?"
+
+"Isn't it strange that now after all these years, when I have settled the
+account with judge and jury, with state and law--that now I feel I must
+tell you the truth. Madam, your ex-husband, Erris Boyne, was a traitor.
+He was an officer in the French army, and he offered to make me an
+officer also and pay me well in French Government money, if I would break
+my allegiance and serve the French cause--Ah, don't start! He knew I was
+on my last legs financially. He knew I had acquaintance with young rebel
+leaders like Emmet, and he felt I could be won. So he made his proposal.
+Because of your daughter I held my peace, for she could bear it less than
+you. I did not tell the cause of the quarrel. If I had, there would
+have been for her the double shame. That was why I held my peace--a
+fool, but so it was!"
+
+The woman seemed almost robbed of understanding. His story overwhelmed
+her. Yet what the man had done was so quixotic, so Celtic, that her
+senses were almost paralysed.
+
+"So mad--so mad and bad and wild you were," she said. "Could you not see
+it was your duty to tell all, no matter what the consequences. The man
+was a villain. But what madness you were guilty of, what cruel madness!
+Only you could have done a thing like that. Erris Boyne deserved death
+--I care not who killed him--you or another. He deserved death, and it
+was right he should die. But that you should kill him, apart from all
+else--why, indeed, oh, indeed, it is a tragedy, for you loved my
+daughter, and the killing made a gulf between you! There could be
+no marriage in such a case. She could not bear it, nor could you. But
+please know this, Mr. Calhoun, that she never believed you killed Erris
+Boyne. She has said so again and again. You are the only man who has
+ever touched her mind or her senses, though many have sought her.
+Wherever she goes men try to win her, but she has no thought for any.
+Her mind goes back to you. Just when you entered the garden I learned--
+and only then-that you were here. She hid it from me, but Darius Boland
+knew, and he had seen your man, Michael Clones, and she had then made him
+tell me. I was incensed. I was her mother, and yet she had hid the
+thing from me. I thought she came to this island for the sake of Salem,
+and I found that she came not for Salem, but for you. . . . Ah, Mr.
+Calhoun, she deserves what you did to save her, but you should not have
+done it."
+
+"She deserves all that any better man might do. Why don't you marry her
+to some great man in your Republic? It would settle my trouble for me
+and free her mind from anxiety. Mrs. Llyn, we are not children, you and
+I. You know life, and so do I, and--"
+
+She interrupted him. "Be sure of this, Mr. Calhoun, she knows life even
+better than either of us. She is, and has always been, a girl of sense
+and judgment. When she was a child she was my master, even in Ireland.
+Yet she was obedient and faithful, and kept her head in all vexed things.
+She will have her way, and she will have it as she wants it, and in no
+other manner. She is one of the world's great women. She is unique.
+Child as she is, she still understands all that men do, and does it.
+Under her hands the estates in Virginia have developed even more than
+under the hands of my brother. She controls like another Elizabeth.
+She has made those estates run like a spool of thread, and she will
+do the same here with Salem. Be sure of that."
+
+"Why does she not marry? Is there no man she can bear? She could have
+the highest, that's sure." He spoke with passion and insistence. If she
+were married his trouble would be over. The worst would have come to
+him--like death. His eyes were only two dark fires in a face that was as
+near to tragic pain crystallized as any the world has seen. Yet there
+was in it some big commanding thing, that gave it a ghastly handsomeness
+almost; that bathed his look in dignity and power, albeit a reckless
+power, a thing that would not be stayed by any blandishments. He had the
+look of a lost angel, one who fell with Belial in the first days of sin.
+
+"There is no man she can bear--except here in Jamaica. It is no use.
+Your governor, Lord Mallow, whom she knew in Ireland, who is distant kin
+of mine, he has already made advances here to her, as he did in Ireland
+--you did not know that. Even before we left for Virginia he came to see
+us, and brought her books and flowers, and here, on our arrival, he
+brought her choicest blooms of his garden. She is rich, and he would be
+glad of an estate that brings in scores of thousands of pounds yearly.
+He has asked us to stay at King's House, but we have declined. We start
+for Salem in a few hours. She wants her hand on the wheel."
+
+"Lord Mallow--he courts her, does he?" His face grew grimmer. "Well,
+she might do worse, though if she were one of my family I would rather
+see her in her grave than wedded to him. For he is selfish--aye, as few
+men are! He would eat and keep his apple too. His theory is that life
+is but a game, and it must be played with steel. He would squeeze the
+life out of a flower, and give the flower to his dog to eat. He thinks
+first and always of himself. He would--but there, he would make a good
+husband as husbands go for some women, but not for this woman! It is not
+because he is my enemy I say this. It is because there is only one woman
+like your daughter, and that is herself; and I would rather see her
+married to a hedger that really loved her than to Lord Mallow, who loves
+only one being on earth--himself. But see, Mrs. Llyn, now that you know
+all, now that we three have met again, and this island is small and
+tragedy is at our doors, don't you think your daughter should be told the
+truth. It will end everything for me. But it would be better so. It is
+now only cruelty to hide the truth, harsh to continue a friendship which
+will only appal her in the end. If we had not met again like this, then
+silence might have been best; but as she is not cured of her tender
+friendship made upon the hills at Playmore, isn't it well to end it all?
+Your conscience will be clearer, and so will mine. We shall have done
+the right thing at last. Why did you not tell her who her father was?
+Then why blame me! You held your peace to save your daughter, as you
+thought. I held my tongue for the same reason; but she is so much a
+woman now, that she will understand, as she could not have understood
+years ago in Limerick. In God's name, let us speak. One of us should
+tell her, and I think it should be you. And see, though I know I did
+right in withholding the facts about the quarrel with Erris Boyne, yet I
+favour telling her that he was a traitor. The whole truth now, or
+nothing. That is my view."
+
+He saw how lined and sunken was her face, he noted the weakness of her
+carriage, he realized the task he was putting on her, and his heart
+relented. "No, I will do it," he added, with sudden will, "and I will do
+it now, if I may."
+
+"Oh, not to-day-not to-day!" she said with a piteous look. "Let it
+not be to-day. It is our first day here, and we are due at King's House
+to-night, even in an hour from now."
+
+"You want her at her glorious best, is that it?" It seemed too strange
+that the pure feminine should show at a time of crisis like this, but
+there it was. It was this woman's way. But he added presently: "When
+she asks you what we have talked about, what will you say?"
+
+"Is it not easy? I am a mother," she said meaningly.
+
+"And I am an ex-convict, and a mutineer--is that it?"
+
+She inclined her head. "It should not be difficult to explain. When you
+came I was speaking as I felt, and she will not think it strange if I
+give that as my reason."
+
+"But is it wise? Isn't it better to end it all now? Suppose Lord Mallow
+tells her."
+
+"He did not before. He is not likely now," was the vexed reply. "Is it
+a thing a gentleman will speak of to a lady?"
+
+"But you do not know Mallow. If he thought she had seen me to-day, he
+would not hesitate. What would you do if you were Lord Mallow?"
+
+"No, not to-day," she persisted. "It is all so many years ago. It can
+hurt naught to wait a little longer."
+
+"When and where shall it be?" he asked gloomily. "At Salem--at Salem.
+We shall be settled then--and steady. There is every reason why you
+should consider me. I have suffered as few women have suffered,
+and I do not hate you. I am only sorry."
+
+Far down at the other end of the garden he saw Sheila. Her face was in
+profile--an exquisite silhouette. She moved slowly among the pimento
+bushes.
+
+"As you wish," he said with a heavy sigh. The sight of the girl
+anguished his soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+AT SALEM
+
+The plantation of Salem was in a region below the Pedro Plains in the
+parish of St. Elizabeth, where grow the aloe, and torch-thistle, and
+clumps of wood which alter the appearance of the plain from the South
+Downs of England, but where thousands of cattle and horses even in those
+days were maintained. The air of the district was dry and elastic, and
+it filtered down to the valleys near like that where Salem was with its
+clusters of negro huts and offices, its mills and distilleries where
+sugar and rum were made. Salem was situated on the Black River,
+accessible by boats and canoes. The huts of negro slaves were near the
+sugar mills, without regard to order, but in clusters of banana, avocado-
+pear, limes and oranges, and with the cultivated land round their huts
+made an effective picture.
+
+One day every fortnight was allowed the negroes to cultivate their crops,
+and give them a chance to manufacture mats for beds, bark-ropes, wicker-
+chairs and baskets, earthen jars, pans, and that kind of thing. The huts
+themselves were primitive to a degree, the floor being earth, the roof,
+of palm-thatch or the leaves of the cocoa-nut tree, the sides hard-posts
+driven in the ground and interlaced with wattle and plaster, and inside
+scarcely high enough for its owner to walk upright. The furniture was
+scant--a quatre, or bed, made of a platform of boards, with a mat and a
+blanket, some low stools, a small table, an earthen water-jar, and some
+smaller ones, a pail and an iron pot, and calabashes which did duty for
+plates, dishes and bowls. In one of the two rooms making the hut, there
+were always the ashes of the night-fire, without which negroes could not
+sleep in comfort.
+
+These were the huts of the lowest grade of negro-slaves of the fields.
+The small merchants and the domestics had larger houses with boarded
+floors, some even with linen sheets and mosquito nets, and shelves with
+plates and dishes of good ware. Every negro received a yearly allowance
+of Osnaburgh linen, woollen, baize and checks for clothes, and some
+planters also gave them hats and handkerchiefs, knives, needles and
+thread, and so on.
+
+Every plantation had a surgeon who received a small sum for attendance on
+every slave, while special cases of midwifery, inoculation, etc., had a
+particular allowance. The surgeon had to attend to about four hundred to
+five hundred negroes, on an income of L150 per annum, and board and
+lodging and washing, besides what he made from his practice with the
+whites.
+
+Salem was no worse than some other plantations on the island, but it was
+far behind such plantations as that owned by Dyck Calhoun, and had been
+notorious for the cruelties committed on it. To such an estate a lady
+like Sheila Llyn would be a boon. She was not on the place a day before
+she started reforms which would turn the plantation into a model scheme.
+Houses, food, treatment of the negroes, became at once a study to her,
+and her experience in Virginia was invaluable. She had learned there not
+to work the slaves too hard in the warm period of the day; and she showed
+her interest by having served at her own table the favourite olio the
+slaves made of plantains, bananas, yams, calalue, eddoes, cassavi, and
+sweet potatoes boiled with salt fish and flavoured with cayenne pepper.
+This, with the unripe roasted plantain as bread, was a native relish and
+health-giving food.
+
+Ever since the day when she had seen Dyck Calhoun at Spanish Town she had
+been disturbed in mind. Dyck had shown a reserve which she felt was not
+wholly due to his having been imprisoned for manslaughter. In one way he
+looked little older. His physique was as good, or better than when she
+first saw him on the hills of Playmore. It was athletic, strenuous,
+elastic. Yet there was about it the abandonment of despair--at least
+of recklessness. The face was older, the head more powerful, the hair
+slightly touched with grey-rather there was one spot in the hair almost
+pure white; a strand of winter in the foliage of summer. It gave a touch
+of the bizarre to a distinguished head, it lent an air of the singular to
+a personality which had flare and force--an almost devilish force. That
+much was to be said for him, that he had not sought to influence her to
+his own advantage. She was so surrounded in America by men who knew her
+wealth and prized her beauty, she was so much a figure in Virginia, that
+any reserve with regard to herself was noticeable. She was enough
+feminine to have pleasure in the fact that she was thought desirable
+by men; yet it played an insignificant part in her life.
+
+It did not give her conceit. It was only like a frill on the skirts
+of life. It did not play any part in her character. Certainly Dyck
+Calhoun had not flattered her. That one to whom she had written, as she
+had done, should remove himself so from the place of the deserving
+friend, one whom she had not deserted while he was in jail as a criminal
+--that he should treat her so, gave every nerve a thrill of protest.
+Sometimes she trembled in indignation, and then afterwards gave herself
+to the work on the estate or in the household--its reform and its
+rearrangement; though the house was like most in Jamaica, had adequate
+plate, linen, glass and furniture. At the lodgings in Spanish Town,
+after Dyck Calhoun had left, her mother had briefly said that she had
+told Dyck he could not expect the conditions of the Playmore friendship
+should be renewed; that, in effect, she had warned him off. To this
+Sheila had said that the killing of a man whose life was bad might be
+punishable. In any case, that was in another land, under abnormal
+conditions; and, with lack of logic, she saw no reason why he should be
+socially punished in Jamaica for what he had been legally punished for
+in Ireland. As for the mutiny, he had done what any honest man of spirit
+would do; also, he had by great bravery and skill brought victory to the
+king's fleet in West Indian waters.
+
+Then it was she told her mother how she had always disobeyed her commands
+where Dyck was concerned, that she had written to him while he was in
+jail; that she had come to Jamaica more to see him than to reform Salem;
+that she had the old Celtic spirit of brotherhood, and she would not be
+driven from it. In a sudden burst of anger her mother had charged her
+with deceit; but the girl said she had followed her conscience, and she
+dismissed it all with a gesture as emphatic as her mother's anger.
+
+That night they had dined with Lord Mallow, and she saw that his
+attentions had behind them the deep purpose of marriage. She had not
+been overcome by the splendour of his retinue and table, or by the
+magnificence of his guests; though the military commander-in-chief and
+the temporary admiral on the station did their utmost to entertain her,
+and some of the local big-wigs were pompous. Lord Mallow had ability and
+knew how to use it; and he was never so brilliant as on this afternoon,
+for they dined while it was still daylight and hardly evening. He told
+her of the customs of the country, of the people; and slyly and
+effectively he satirized some of his grandiloquent guests. Not unduly,
+for one of them, the most renowned in the island, came to him after
+dinner as he sat talking to Sheila, and said: "I'm very sorry, your
+honour, but good Almighty God, I must go home and cool coppers." Then he
+gave Sheila a hot yet clammy hand, and bade her welcome as a citizen to
+the island, "alien but respected, beautiful but capable!" Sheila had
+seen a few of the Creole ladies present at their best-large-eyed, simple,
+not to say primitive in speech, and very unaffected in manner. She had
+learned also that the way to the Jamaican heart was by a full table and a
+little flattery.
+
+One incident at dinner had impressed her greatly. Not far away from
+her was a young lady, beautiful in face and person, and she had seen a
+scorpion suddenly shoot into her sleeve and ruthlessly strike and strike
+the arm of the girl, who gave one cry only and then was still. Sheila
+saw the man next to the girl--he was a native officer--secure the
+scorpion, and then whip from his pocket a little bag of indigo, dip it in
+water, and apply the bag to the wounded arm, immediately easing the
+wound. This had all been done so quickly that it was over before the
+table had been upset, almost.
+
+"That is the kind of thing we have here," said Lord Mallow. "There is a
+lady present who has seen in one day a favourite black child bitten by a
+congereel, a large centipede in her nursery, a snake crawl from under her
+child's pillow, and her son nearly die from a bite of the black spider
+with the red spot on its tail. It is a life that has its trials--and its
+compensations."
+
+"I saw a man's head on a pole on my way to King's House. You have to use
+firm methods here," Sheila said in reply. "It is not all a rose-garden.
+You have to apply force."
+
+Lord Mallow smiled grimly. "C'est la force morale toujours."
+
+"Ah, I should not have thought it was moral force always," was the
+ironical reply.
+
+"We have criminals here," declared the governor with aplomb, "and they
+need some handling, I assure you. We have in this island one of the
+worst criminals in the British Empire."
+
+"Ah, I thought he was in the United States!" answered the girl sedately.
+
+"You mean General George Washington," remarked the governor. "No, it is
+one who was a friend and fellow-countryman of yours before he took to
+killing unarmed men."
+
+"You refer to Mr. Dyck Calhoun, I doubt not, sir? Well, he is still a
+friend of mine, and I saw him today--this afternoon, before I came here.
+I understood that the Crown had pardoned his mutiny."
+
+The governor started. He was plainly annoyed.
+
+"The crime is there just the same," he replied. "He mutinied, and he
+stole a king's ship, and took command of it, and brought it out here."
+
+"And saved you and your island, I understand."
+
+"Ah, he said that, did he?"
+
+"He said nothing at all to me about it. I have been reading the Jamaica
+Cornwall Chronicle the last three years."
+
+"He is ever a source of anxiety to me," declared the governor.
+
+"I knew he was once in Phoenix Park years ago," was the demure yet sharp
+reply, "but I thought he was a good citizen here--a good and well-to-do
+citizen."
+
+Lord Mallow flushed slightly. "Phoenix Park--ah, he was a capable fellow
+with the sword! I said so always, and I'd back him now against a
+champion; but many a bad man has been a good swordsman."
+
+"So, that's what good swordsmanship does, is it? I wondered what it was
+that did it. I hear you fight him still--but with a bludgeon, and he
+dodges it."
+
+"I do not understand," declared Lord Mallow tartly. "Ah, wasn't there
+some difference over his going for the treasure to Haiti? Some one told
+me, I think, that you were not in favour of his getting his ticket-of-
+leave, or whatever it is called, and that the provost-marshal gave it to
+him, as he had the right to do."
+
+"You have wide sources of information in this case. I wonder--"
+
+"No, your honour need not wonder. I was told that by a gentleman on the
+steamer coming here. He was a native of the island, I think--or perhaps
+it was the captain, or the mate, or the boatswain. I can't recall. Or
+maybe it came to me from my manager, Darius Boland, who hears things
+wherever he is, one doesn't know how; but he hears them. He is to me
+what your aide-de-camp is to you," she nodded towards a young man near by
+at the table.
+
+"And do you dress your Darius Boland as I dress my aide in scarlet, with
+blue facings and golden embroidery, and put a stiff hat with a feather on
+his head?"
+
+"But no, he does not need such things. I am a Republican now. I am a
+citizen of the United States, where men have no need of uniform to tell
+the world what they are. You shall see my Darius Boland--indeed, you
+have seen him. He was there to-day when you gave me the distinction of
+your presence."
+
+"That dry, lean, cartridge of a fellow, that pair of pincers with a
+face!"
+
+"And a tongue, your honour. If you did not hear it yet, you will hear
+it. He is to be my manager here. So he will be under your control--
+if I permit him."
+
+"If you permit him, mistress?"
+
+"If I permit him, yes. You are a power, but you are not stronger than
+the laws and rules you make. For instance, there was the case of Mr.
+Dyck Calhoun. When he came, you were for tying him up in one little
+corner of this island--the hottest part, I know, near to Kingston, where
+it averages ninety degrees in the shade at any time of the year. But the
+King you represent had not restricted his liberties so, and you being the
+King, that is, yourself, were forced to abide by your own regulations.
+So it may be the same with Darius Boland. He may want something, and
+you, high up, looking down, will say, "What devilry is here!" and
+decline. He will then turn to your chief-justice or provost-marshal-
+general, or a deputy of the provost-marshal, and they will say that
+Darius Boland shall have what he wants, because it is the will of the
+will you represent."
+
+Almost the last words the governor used to her were these: "Those only
+live at peace here who are at peace with me"; and her reply had been:
+"But Mr. Dyck Calhoun lives at peace, does he not, your honour?"
+
+To that he had replied: "No man is at peace while he has yet desires."
+He paused a minute and then added: "That Erris Boyne killed by Dyck
+Calhoun--did you ever see him that you remember?"
+
+"Not that I remember," she replied quickly. "I never lived in Dublin."
+
+"That may be. But did you never know his history?" She shook her head
+in negation. His eyes searched her face carefully, and he was astonished
+when he saw no sign of confusion there. "Good God, she doesn't know.
+She's never been told!" he said to himself. "This is too startling.
+I'll speak to the mother."
+
+A little later he turned from the mother with astonishment. "It's
+madness," he remarked to himself. "She will find out. Some one will
+tell her. . . . By heaven, I'll tell her first," he hastily said.
+"When she knows the truth, Calhoun will have no chance on earth. Yes,
+I'll tell her myself. But I'll tell no one else," he added; for he felt
+that Sheila, once she knew the truth, would resent his having told abroad
+the true story of the Erris Boyne affair.
+
+So Sheila and her mother had gone to their lodgings with depression, but
+each with a clear purpose in her mind. Mrs. Llyn was determined to tell
+her daughter what she ought to have known long before; and Sheila was
+firm to make the one man who had ever interested her understand that he
+was losing much that was worth while keeping.
+
+Then had followed the journey to Salem. Yet all the while for Sheila
+one dark thought kept hovering over everything. Why should life be so
+complicated? Why should this one man who seemed capable and had the
+temperament of the Irish hills and vales be the victim of punishment and
+shame--why should he shame her?
+
+Suddenly, without her mother's knowledge, she sent Darius Boland through
+the hills in the early morning to Enniskillen, Dyck Calhoun's place, with
+a letter which said only this: "Is it not time that you came to wish us
+well in our new home? We shall expect you to-morrow."
+
+When Dyck read this note he thought it was written by Sheila, but
+inspired by the mother; and he lost no time in making his way down across
+the country to Salem, which he reached a few hours after sunrise. At the
+doorway of the house he met Mrs. Llyn.
+
+"Have you told her?" he asked in anxiety. Astonished at his presence
+she could make no reply for a moment. "I have told her nothing," she
+answered. "I meant to do so this morning. I meant to do it--I must."
+
+"She sent me a letter asking if it was not time I came to wish you well
+in your house, and you and she would expect me to-day."
+
+"I knew naught of her writing you," was the reply--"naught at all. But
+now that you are here, will you not tell her all?"
+
+Dyck smiled grimly. "Where is she?" he asked. "I will tell her."
+
+The mother pointed down the garden. "Yonder by the clump of palms I saw
+her a moment ago. If you go that way you will find her."
+
+In another moment Dyck Calhoun was on his way to the clump of palms, and
+before he reached it, the girl came out into the path. She was dressed
+in a black silk skirt with a white bodice and lace, as he had seen her on
+her arrival in Kingston, and at her throat was a sprig of the wild pear-
+tree. When she saw him, she gave a slight start, then stood still, and
+he came to her.
+
+"I have your letter," he said, "and I came to say what I ought to say
+about your living here: you will bring blessings to the place."
+
+She looked at him steadfastly. "Shall we talk here," she said,
+"or inside the house? There is a little shelter here in the trees"--
+pointing to the right--"a shelter built by the late manager. It has the
+covering of a hut, but it is open at two sides. Will you come?" As she
+went on ahead, he could not fail to notice how slim and trim she was, how
+perfectly her figure seemed to fit her gown-as though she had been poured
+into it; and yet the folds of her skirt waved and floated like silky
+clouds around her! Under cover of the shelter, she turned and smiled at
+him.
+
+"You have seen my mother?"
+
+"I have just come from her," he answered. "She bade me tell you what
+ought to have been told long ago, and you were not, for there seemed no
+reason that you should. You were young and ignorant and happy. You had
+no cares, no sorrows. The sorrows that had come to your mother belonged
+to days when you were scarce out of the cradle. But you did not know.
+You were not aware that your mother had divorced your father for crime
+against marital fidelity and great cruelty. You did not know even who
+that father was. Well, I must tell you. Your father was a handsome man,
+a friend of mine until I knew the truth about him, and then he died--I
+killed him, so the court said."
+
+Her face became ghastly pale. After a moment of anguished bewilderment,
+she said: "You mean that Erris Boyne was my father?"
+
+"Yes, I mean that. They say I killed him. They say that he was found
+with no sword drawn, but that my open sword lay on the table beside me
+while I was asleep, and that it had let out his life-blood."
+
+"Why was he killed?" she asked, horror-stricken and with pale lips.
+
+"I do not know, but if I killed him, it was because I revolted from the
+proposals he made to me. I--" He paused, for the look on her face was
+painful to see, and her body was as that of one who had been struck by
+lightning. It had a crumpled, stricken look, and all force seemed to be
+driven from it. It had the look of crushed vitality. Her face was set
+in paleness, her eyes were frightened, her whole person was, as it were,
+in ghastly captivity. His heart smote him, and he pulled himself
+together to tell her all.
+
+"Go on," she said. "I want to hear. I want--to know all. I ought to
+have known--long ago; but that can't be helped now. Continue--please."
+
+Her words had come slowly, in gasps almost, and her voice was so frayed
+he could scarcely recognize it. All the pride of her nature seemed
+shattered.
+
+"If I killed him," he said presently, "it was because he tried to tempt
+me from my allegiance to the Crown to become a servant of France, to--"
+
+He stopped short, for a cry came from her lips which appalled him.
+
+"My God--my God!" she said with bloodless lips, her eyes fastened on his
+face, her every look and motion the inflection of despair. "Go on--tell
+all," she added presently with more composure.
+
+Swiftly he described what happened in the little room at the traitor's
+tavern, of the momentary reconciliation and the wine that he drank,
+drugged wine poured out but not drunk by Erris Boyne, and of his later
+unconsciousness. At last he paused.
+
+"Why did these things not come out at the trial?" she asked in hushed
+tones.
+
+He made a helpless gesture. "I did not speak of them because I thought
+of you. I hid it--I did not want you to know what your father was."
+
+Something like a smile gathered at her pale lips. "You saved me for the
+moment, and condemned yourself for ever," she said in a voice of torture.
+"If you had told what he was--if you had told that, the jury would not
+have condemned you, they would not have sent you to prison."
+
+"I believe I did the right thing," he said. "If I killed your father,
+prison was my proper punishment. But I can't remember. There was no
+other clue, no other guide to judgment. So the law said I killed him,
+and--he had evidently not drawn his sword. It was clear he was killed
+defenceless."
+
+"You killed a defenceless man!" Her voice was sharp with agony. "That
+was mentioned at the trial--but I did not believe it then--in that long
+ago." She trembled to her feet from the bench where she was sitting.
+"And I do not believe it now--no, on my soul, I do not."
+
+"But it makes no difference, you see. I was condemned for killing your
+father, and the world knows that Erris Boyne was your father, and here
+Lord Mallow, the governor, knows it; and there is no chance of friendship
+between you and me. Since the day he was found dead in the room, there
+was no hope for our friendship, for anything at all between us that I had
+wished to be there. You dare not be friends with me--"
+
+Her face suddenly suffused and she held herself upright with an effort.
+She was about to say, "I dare, Dyck--I do dare!" but he stopped her with
+a reproving gesture.
+
+"No, no, you dare not, and I would not let you if you would. I am an
+ex-convict. They say I killed your father, and the way to understanding
+between us is closed."
+
+She made a protesting gesture. "Closed! Closed!--But is it closed? No,
+no, some one else killed him, not you. You couldn't have done it. You
+would have fought him--fought him as you did Lord Mallow, and in fighting
+you might have killed him, but your sword never let out his life when he
+was defenceless--never."
+
+A look of intense relief, almost of happiness, came to Dyck's face.
+"That is like you, Sheila, but it does not cure the trouble. You and I
+are as far apart as noon and midnight. The law has said the only thing
+that can be said upon it."
+
+She sank down again upon the wooden bench. "Oh, how mad you were, not to
+tell the whole truth long ago! You would not have been condemned, and
+then--"
+
+She paused overcome, and his self-control almost deserted him. With
+strong feeling he burst out: "And then, we might have come together?
+No, your mother--your friends, myself, could not have let that be. See,
+Sheila, I will tell you the whole truth now--aye, the whole absolute
+truth. I have loved you since the first day I saw you on the hills when
+you and I rescued Christopher Dogan. Not a day has passed since then
+when you were not more to me than any other woman in all the world."
+
+A new light came into her face, the shadows left her eyes, and the pallor
+fled from her lips. "You loved me?" she said in a voice grown soft-
+husky still, but soft as the light in a summer heaven. "You loved me
+--and have always loved me since we first met?"
+
+Her look was so appealing, so passionate and so womanly, that he longed
+to reach out his arms to her, and say, "Come--come home, Sheila," but the
+situation did not permit that, and only his eyes told the story of what
+was in his mind.
+
+"I have always loved you, Sheila, and shall do so while I have breath and
+life. I have always given you the best that is in me, tried to do what
+was good for us both, since my misfortune--crime, Lord Mallow calls it,
+as does the world. Never a sunrise that does not find you in the
+forefront of all the lighted world; never a flower have I seen that does
+not seem sweeter--it brings thoughts of you; never a crime that does not
+deepen its shame because you are in the world. In prison, when I used to
+mop my floor and clean down the walls; when I swept the dust from the
+corners; when I folded up my convict clothes; when I ate the prison food
+and sang the prison hymns; when I placed myself beside the bench in the
+workshop to make things that would bring cash to my fellow-prisoners in
+their need; when I saw a minister of religion or heard the Litany; when I
+counted up the days, first that I had spent in jail and then the days I
+had still to spend in jail; when I read the books from the prison library
+of the land where you had gone, and of the struggle there; when I saw
+you, in my mind's eye, in the cotton-fields or on the verandah of your
+house in Virginia--I had but one thought, and that was the look in your
+face at Playmore and Limerick, the sound of your voice as you came
+singing up the hill just before I first met you, the joyous beauty of
+your body."
+
+"And at sea?" she whispered with a gesture at once beautiful and
+pathetic, for it had the motion of helplessness and hopelessness. What
+she had heard had stirred her soul, and she wanted to hear more--or was
+it that she wished to drain the cup now that it was held to her lips?
+-drain it to the last drop of feeling.
+
+"At sea," he answered, with his eyes full of intense feeling--"at sea, I
+was free at last, doomed as I thought, anguished in spirit, and yet with
+a wild hope that out of it would come deliverance. I expected to lose my
+life, and I lived each day as though it would be my last. I was chief
+rogue in a shipful of rogues, chief sinner in a hell of sinners, and yet
+I had no remorse and no regret. I had done all with an honest purpose,
+with the good of the sailors in my mind; and so I lived in daily touch
+with death, honour, and dishonour. Yet I never saw a sailor in the
+shrouds, or heard the night watch call 'All's well!' in the midst of
+night and mutiny, that I did not long for a word from you that would take
+away the sting of death. Those days at sea for ten long weeks were never
+free from anxiety, not anxiety for myself, only for the men who had put
+me where I was, had given me captain's rank, had--"
+
+Suddenly he stopped, and took from his pocket the letter he was writing
+on the very day she landed in Jamaica. He opened it and studied it for a
+moment with a dark look in his face.
+
+"This I wrote even as you were landing in Jamaica, and I knew naught of
+your coming. It was an outbreak of my soul. It was the truth written
+to you and for you, and yet with the feeling that you would never see it.
+I was still writing it when Michael Clones came up the drive to tell me
+you and your mother were here. Now, I know not what Christopher Dogan
+would say of it, but I say it is amazing that in the hour you were first
+come to this land I should be moved to tell you the story of my life
+since I left prison; since, on receiving your letter in London, forwarded
+from Dublin, I joined the navy. But here it is with all the truth and
+terror in it.--Aye, there was terror, for it gave the soul of my life to
+one I never thought to see again; and, if seeing, should be compelled to
+do what I have done--tell her the whole truth at once and so have it
+over.
+
+"But do not think that in telling it now I repent of my secrecy.
+I repent of nothing; I would not alter anything. What was to be is, and
+what is has its place in the book of destiny. No, I repent nothing, yet
+here now I give you this to read while still my story of the days of
+which you know is in your ears. Here it is. It will tell the whole
+story; for when you have read it and do understand, then we part to meet
+no more as friends. You will go back to Virginia, and I will stay here.
+You will forgive the unwilling wrong I have done you, but you will make
+your place in life without thought of me. You will marry some one--not
+worthy of you, for that could not be; but you will take to yourself some
+man from among the men of this world. You will set him apart from all
+other men as yours, and he will be happy, having been blessed beyond
+deserving. You will not regret coming here; but you will desire our
+friendship to cease; and what has been to be no more, while the tincture
+of life is in your veins. Sheila, read this thing, for it is the rest of
+the story until now."
+
+He handed her the papers, and she took them with an inclination of the
+head which said: "Give it to me. I will read it now while my eyes can
+still bear to read it. I have laid on my heart the nettle of shame, and
+while it is still burning there I will read all that you have to teach
+me."
+
+"I will go out in the garden while you read it," he said. "In a half-
+hour I will come back, and then we can say good-bye," he added, with pain
+in his voice, but firmly.
+
+"No, do not go," she urged. "Sit here on the bench--at the end of it
+here," she said, motioning with her hand.
+
+He shook his head in negation. "No, I will go and say to your mother
+that I have told you, and ease her mind, for I know she herself meant to
+tell you."
+
+As he went he looked at her face closely. It was so young, so pathetic,
+so pale, yet so strangely beautiful, and her forehead was serene. That
+was one of her characteristics. In all her life, her forehead remained
+untroubled and unlined. Only at her mouth and in her eyes did misery or
+sorrow show. He looked into her eyes now, and he was pleased with what
+he saw; for they had in them the glow of understanding and the note of
+will which said: "You and I are parted, but I believe in you, and I will
+not show I am a weak woman by futile horror. We shall meet no more, but
+I shall remember you."
+
+That was what he saw, and it was what he wished to see. He knew her
+character would stand the test of any trial, and it had done so. Horror
+had struck her, but had not overwhelmed her. She had cried out in her
+agony, but she had not been swept out into chaos. She had no weak
+passions and no futilities. But as he turned away now, it was with the
+sharp conviction that he had dealt a blow from which the girl would
+recover, but would never be the same again. She was rich "beyond the
+dreams of avarice," but that would not console her. She had resources
+within herself, had what would keep her steady. Her real power and
+force, her real hope, were in her regnant soul which was not to be
+cajoled by life's subterfuges. Her lips opened now, as though she would
+say something, but nothing came from them. She only shook her head
+sadly, as if to say: "You understand. Go, and when you come again, it
+will be for us to part in peace--at least in peace."
+
+Out in the garden he found her mother. After the first agitated
+greeting-agitated on her part, he said: "The story has been told, and she
+is now reading--"
+
+He told her the story of the manuscript, and added that Sheila had
+carried herself with courage. Presently the woman said to him: "She
+never believed you killed Erris Boyne. Well, it may not help the
+situation, but I say too, that I do not believe you did. I cannot
+understand why you did not deny having killed him."
+
+"I could not deny. In any case, the law punished me for it, and the book
+is closed for ever."
+
+"Have you never thought that some one--"
+
+"Yes, I have thought, but who is there? The crowd at the Dublin hotel
+where the thing was done were secret, and they would lie the apron off a
+bishop. No, there is no light, and, to tell the truth, I care not now."
+
+"But if you are not guilty--it is not too late; there is my girl! If the
+real criminal should appear--can you not see?"
+
+The poor woman, distressedly pale, her hair still abundant, her eyes
+still bright, her pulses aglow, as they had ever been, made a gesture of
+appeal with hands that were worn and thin. She had charm still, in a way
+as great as her daughter's.
+
+"I can see--but, Mrs. Llyn, I have no hope. I am a man whom some men
+fear--"
+
+"Lord Mallow!" she interjected.
+
+"He does not fear me. Why do you say that?"
+
+"I speak with a woman's intuition. I don't know what he fears, but he
+does fear you. You are a son of history; you had a duel with him, and
+beat him; you have always beaten him, even here where he has been supreme
+as governor--from first to last, you have beaten him."
+
+"I hope I shall be even with him at the last--at the very last," was Dyck
+Calhoun's reply. "We were made to be foes. We were from the first. I
+felt it when I saw him at Playmore. Nothing has changed since then. He
+will try to destroy me here, but I will see it through. I will try and
+turn his rapier-points. I will not be the target of his arrows without
+making some play against him. The man is a fool. I could help him here,
+but he will have none of it, and he is running great risks. He has been
+warned that the Maroons are restive, that the black slaves will rise if
+the Maroons have any initial success, and he will listen to no advice.
+He would not listen to me, but, knowing that, I got the provost-marshal
+to approach him, and when he knew my hand was in it, he stiffened. He
+would have naught to do with it, and so no preparations are made. And up
+there"--he turned and pointed--"up there in Trelawney the Maroons are
+plotting and planning, and any day an explosion may occur. If it occurs
+no one will be safe, especially if the blacks rise too--I mean the black
+slaves. There will be no safety then for any one."
+
+"For us as well, you mean?"
+
+"For you as well as all others, and you are nearer to Trelawney than most
+others. You are in their path. So be wise, Mrs. Llyn, and get back to
+Virginia as soon as may be. It is a better place than this."
+
+"My daughter is mistress here," was the sorrowful reply. "She will have
+her own way."
+
+"Your daughter will not care to stay here now," he answered firmly.
+
+"She will do what she thinks her duty in spite of her own feelings, or
+yours, or mine. It is her way, and it has always been her way."
+
+"I will tell her what I fear, and she may change her mind."
+
+"But the governor may want her to stay," answered Mrs. Llyn none too
+sagely, but with that in her mind which seemed to justify her.
+
+"Lord Mallow--oh, if you think there is any influence in him to keep
+her, that is another question," said Dyck with a grim smile. "But,
+nevertheless, I think you should leave here and go back to Virginia.
+It is no safe place for two ladies, in all senses. Whatever Lord Mallow
+thinks or does, this is no place for you. This place is your daughter's
+for her to do what she chooses with it, and I think she ought to sell it.
+There would be no trouble in getting a purchaser. It is a fine
+property."
+
+"But the governor might not think as you do; he might not wish it sold."
+
+Mrs. Llyn was playing a bold, indeed a reckless game. She wanted to show
+Dyck there were others who would interest themselves in Sheila even if
+he, Dyck, were blotted from the equation; that the girl could look high,
+if her mind turned towards marriage. Also she felt that Dyck should know
+the facts before any one else, so that he would not be shocked in the
+future, if anything happened. Yet in her deepest heart she wished him
+well. She liked him as she had never liked any of Sheila's admirers, and
+if the problem of Erris Boyne had been solved, she would gladly have seen
+him wedded to Sheila.
+
+"What has the governor to do with it!" he declared. "It is your
+daughter's own property, and she is free to hold or to part with it.
+There is no Crown consent to ask, no vice-regal approval needed."
+
+Suddenly he became angry, almost excited. His blood pounded in his
+veins. Was this man, Mallow, to come between his and her fate always,
+come into his problem at the most critical moment? "God in heaven!" he
+said in a burst of passion, "is this a land of the British Empire or is
+it not? Why should that man break in on every crisis? Why should he do
+this or that--say yea or nay, give or take away! He is the king's
+representative, but he is bound by laws as rigid as any that bind you or
+me. What has he to do with your daughter or what concerns her? Is there
+not enough trouble in the world without bringing in Lord Mallow?
+If he--"
+
+He stopped short, for he saw coming from the summerhouse, Sheila with his
+paper in her hand. She walked slowly and with dignity. She carried her
+head high and firmly, and the skin of her face was shining with light
+as she came on. Dyck noticed how her wide skirts flicked against the
+flowers that bordered the path, and how her feet seemed scarcely to touch
+the ground as she walked--a spirit, a regnant spirit of summer she
+seemed. But in her face there was no summer, there was only autumn and
+winter, only the bright frost of purpose. As she came, her mother turned
+as though to leave Dyck Calhoun. She called to her to wait, and Mrs.
+Llyn stood still, anxious. As Sheila came near she kept her eyes fixed
+on Dyck. When she reached them, she held out the paper to him.
+
+"It is wonderful," she said quietly, "that which you have written, but it
+does not tell all; it does not say that you did not kill my father. You
+are punished for the crime, and we must abide by it, even though you did
+not kill Erris Boyne. It is the law that has done it, and we cannot
+abash the law."
+
+"We shall meet no more then!" said Dyck with decision.
+
+Her lips tightened, her face paled. "There are some things one may not
+do, and one of them is to be openly your friend--at present."
+
+He put the letter carefully away in his pocket, his hand shaking, then
+flicking an insect from the collar of his coat, he said gently, yet with
+an air of warning: "I have been telling Mrs. Llyn about the Maroons up
+there"--he pointed towards Trelawney--"and I have advised your going back
+to Virginia. The Maroons may rise at any moment, and no care is being
+taken by Lord Mallow to meet the danger. If they rise, you, here, would
+be in their way, and I could not guarantee your safety. Besides,
+Virginia is a better place--a safer place than this," he added with
+meaning.
+
+"You wish to frighten me out of Jamaica," she replied with pain in her
+voice. "Well, I will not go till I have put this place in order and
+brought discipline and good living here. I shall stay here in Jamaica
+till I have done my task. There is no reason why we should meet. This
+place is not so large as Ireland or America, but it is large enough to
+give assurance we shall not meet. And if we meet, there is no reason why
+we should talk. As for the Maroons, when the trouble comes, I shall not
+be unprepared." She smiled sadly. "The governor may not take your
+advice, but I shall. And remember that I come from a land not without
+its dangers. We have Red Indians and black men there, and I can shoot."
+
+He waved a hand abruptly and then made a gesture--such as an ascetic
+might make-of reflection, of submission. "I shall remember every word
+you have said, and every note of your voice will be with me in all the
+lonely years to come. Good-bye--but no, let me say this before I go:
+I did not know that Erris Boyne was your father until after he was dead.
+So, if I killed him, it was in complete ignorance. I did not know. But
+we have outlived our friendship, and we must put strangeness in its
+place. Good-bye--God protect you!" he added, looking into Sheila's
+eyes.
+
+She looked at him with sorrow. Her lips opened but no words came forth.
+He passed on out of the garden, and presently they heard his horse's
+hoofs on the sand.
+
+"He is a great gentleman," said Mrs. Llyn.
+
+Her daughter's eyes were dry and fevered. Her lips were drawn. "We must
+begin the world again," she said brokenly. Then suddenly she sank upon
+the ground. "My God--oh, my God!" she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+LORD MALLOW INTERVENES
+
+Two months went by. In that time Sheila and Dyck did not meet, though
+Dyck saw her more than once in the distance at Kingston. Yet they had
+never met since that wonderful day at Salem, when they had parted, as
+it might seem, for ever. Dyck had had news of her, however, for Darius
+Boland had come and gone between the two plantations, and had won Michael
+Clones' confidence. He knew more perhaps than he ever conveyed to Dyck,
+who saw him and talked with him, gave him advice as to the customs of
+Jamaica, and let him see the details in the management of Enniskillen.
+
+Yet Dyck made no inquiries as to how Mrs. Llyn and Sheila were; first
+because he chose not to do so, and also because Darius Boland, at one
+time or another, would of his own accord tell what Mrs. Llyn and Sheila
+were doing. One day Boland brought word that the governor had, more than
+once, visited Salem with his suite; that he had sat in judgment on a case
+in Kingston concerning the estate of Salem, and had given decision in its
+favour; and that Mrs. Llyn and Sheila visited him at Spanish Town and
+were entertained at King's House at second breakfast and dinner--in
+short, that Lord Mallow was making hay in Salem Plantation. This was no
+surprise to Dyck. He had full intuition of the foray the governor would
+make on Sheila, her estate and wealth.
+
+Lord Mallow had acted with discretion, and yet with sufficient passion to
+warrant some success. He was trying to make for himself a future which
+might mean the control of a greater colony even. If he had wealth, that
+would be almost a certainty, and he counted Sheila's gold as a guarantee
+of power. He knew well how great effect could be produced at Westminster
+and at the Royal Palace by a discreet display of wealth. He was also
+aware that no scandal could be made through an alliance with Sheila, for
+she had inherited long after the revolutionary war and with her skirts
+free from responsibility. England certainly would welcome wealth got
+through an Irish girl inheriting her American uncle's estates. So,
+steadily and happily, he pressed his suit. At his dinner-parties he
+gave her first place nearly always, and even broke the code controlling
+precedence when his secretary could be overruled. Thus Sheila was given
+honour when she did not covet it, and so it was that one day at Salem
+when the governor came to court her she was able to help Dyck Calhoun.
+
+"Then you go to Enniskillen?" Lord Mallow said to Darius Boland, as he
+entered the plantation, being met by the astute American.
+
+"Sometimes, your honour," was the careful reply. "I suppose you know
+what Mr. Calhoun's career has been, eh?"
+
+"Oh, in a way, your honour. They tell me he is a good swordsman."
+
+The governor flushed. "He told you that, did he?"
+
+"No, no, your honour, never. He told me naught. He does not boast.
+He's as modest as a man from Virginia. He does not brag at all."
+
+"Who told you, then?"
+
+"Ah, well, I heard it in the town! They speak of him there. They all
+know that Kingston and Spanish Town, and all the other places, would have
+been French by now, if it hadn't been for him. Oh, they talk a lot about
+him in Kingston and thereabouts!"
+
+"What swordsmanship do they speak of that was remarkable?"
+
+"Has your honour forgotten, then? Sure, seven years is a poor limit for
+a good memory." The blow was a shrewd one, for Darius Boland knew that
+Phoenix Park must be a galling memory to his honour. But Darius did not
+care. He guessed why the governor was coming to Salem, and he could not
+shirk having his hand in it. He had no fear of the results.
+
+"Aye, seven years is a poor limit," he repeated.
+
+The governor showed no feeling. He had been hit, and he took it as part
+of the game. "Ah, you mean the affair in Phoenix Park?" he said with no
+apparent feeling.
+
+Darius tossed his head a little. "Wasn't it a clever bit of work?
+Didn't he get fame there by defeating one of the best swordsmen--in
+Ireland?"
+
+Lord Mallow nodded. "He got fame, which he lost in time," he answered.
+
+"You mean he put the sword that had done such good work against a
+champion into a man's bowels, without 'by your leave,' or 'will you draw
+and fight'?"
+
+"Something like that," answered the governor sagely.
+
+"Is it true you believed he'd strike a man that wasn't armed, sir?"
+
+The governor winced, but showed nothing. "He'd been drinking--he is a
+heavy drinker. Do you never drink with him?"
+
+Darius Boland's face took on a strange look. Here was an intended insult
+to Dyck Calhoun. Right well the governor knew their relative social
+positions. Darius pulled at the hair on his chin reflectively. "Yes,
+I've drunk his liquor, but not as you mean, your honour. He'd drink with
+any man at all: he has no nasty pride. But he doesn't drink with me."
+"Modest enough he is to be a good republican, eh, Boland?"
+
+"Since your honour puts it so, it must stand. I'll not dispute it, me
+being what I am and employed by whom I am."
+
+Darius Boland had a gift of saying the right thing in the right way, and
+he had said it now. The governor was not so dense as to put this man
+against him, for women were curious folk. They often attach importance
+to the opinion of a faithful servant and let it weigh against great men.
+He had once lost a possible fortune by spurning a little terrier of the
+daughter of the Earl of Shallow, and the lesson had sunk deep into his
+mind. He was high-placed, but not so high as to be sure of success where
+a woman was concerned, and he had made up his mind to capture Sheila
+Llyn, if so be she could be caught flying, or settled, or sleeping.
+
+"Ah, well, he has drunk with worse men than republicans. Boland. He was
+a common sailor. He drank what was given him with whom it chanced in the
+fo'castle."
+
+Darius sniffed a little, and kept his head. "But he changed all that,
+your honour, and gave sailormen better drink than they ever had, I hear.
+In Jamaica he treats his slaves as though they were men and not
+Mohicans."
+
+"Well, he'll have less freedom in future, Boland, for word has come from
+London that he's to keep to his estate and never leave it."
+
+Darius looked concerned, and his dry face wrinkled still more. "Ah, and
+when was this word come, your honour?"
+
+"But yesterday, Boland, and he'll do well to obey, for I have no choice
+but to take him in hand if he goes gallivanting."
+
+"Gallivanting--here, in Jamaica! Does your honour remember where we
+are?"
+
+"Not in a bishop's close, Boland."
+
+"No, not in a bishop's close, nor in an archdeacon's garden. For of all
+places on earth where they defy religion, this is the worst, your honour.
+There's as much religion here as you'll find in a last year's bird's-
+nest. Gallivanting--where should he gallivant?"
+
+The governor waved a contemptuous hand. "It doesn't need ingenuity to
+find a place, for some do it on their own estate. I have seen it."
+
+Darius spoke sharply. "Your honour, there's naught on Mr. Calhoun's
+estate that's got the taint, and he's not the man to go hunting for it.
+Drink--well, suppose a gentleman does take his quartern, is it a crime?
+I ask your honour, is that a crime in Jamaica?"
+
+"It's no crime, Boland; nevertheless, your Mr. Calhoun will have to take
+his fill on his own land from the day I send him the command of the
+London Government."
+
+"And what day will that be, your honour?"
+
+To be questioned by one who had been a revolutionary was distasteful to
+the governor. "That day will be when I find the occasion opportune, my
+brave Boland," he said sourly.
+
+"Why 'brave,' your honour?" There was an ominous light in Darius' eye.
+
+"Did you not fight with George Washington against the King of England--
+against King George? And if you did, was that not brave?"
+
+"It was true, your honour," came the firm reply. "It was the one right
+good thing to do, as we proved it by the victory we had. We did what we
+set out to do. But see, if you will let a poor man speak his mind, if I
+were you I'd not impose the command on Mr. Calhoun."
+
+"Why, Boland?"
+
+Darius spoke courageously. "Your honour, he has many friends in Jamaica,
+and they won't stand it. Besides, he won't stand it. And if he contests
+your honour, the island will be with him."
+
+"Is he popular here as all that?" asked the governor with a shrug of the
+shoulders.
+
+"They don't give their faith and confidence to order, your honour,"
+answered Darius with a dry inflection.
+
+The burr in the voice did not escape the other's attentive ear. He swung
+a glance sharply at Darius. "What is the secret of his popularity--how
+has it been made?" he asked morosely.
+
+Darius' face took on a caustic look. "He's only been in the island a
+short time, your honour, and I don't know that I'm a good judge, but I'll
+say the people here have great respect for bravery and character."
+
+"Character! Character!" sniffed the governor. "Where did he get that?"
+
+"Well, I don't know his age, but it's as old as he is--his character.
+Say, I'm afraid I'm talking too much, your honour. We speak our minds
+in Virginia; we never count the cost."
+
+The governor waved a deprecating hand. "You'll find the measure of your
+speech in good time, Boland, I've no doubt. Meanwhile, you've got the
+pleasure of hunting it. Character, you say. Well, that isn't what the
+judge and jury said."
+
+Darius took courage again. Couldn't Lord Mallow have any decency?
+
+"Judge and jury be damned, your honour," he answered boldly. "It was an
+Irish verdict. It had no sense. It was a bit of ballyhack. He did not
+kill an unarmed man. It isn't his way. Why, he didn't kill you when he
+had you at his mercy in Phoenix Park, now, did he, governor?"
+
+A flush stole up the governor's face from his chin. Then he turned to
+Boland and looked him straight in the eyes. "That's true. He had me at
+his mercy, and he did not take my life."
+
+"Then, why do you head the cabal against him? Why do you take joy in
+commanding him to stay on his estate? Is that grateful, your honour?"
+
+The governor winced, but he said: "It's what I am ordered to do, my man.
+I'm a servant of the Crown, and the Crown has ordained it."
+
+Again Darius grew stronger in speech. "But why do you have pleasure in
+it? Is nothing left to your judgment? Do you say to me that if he keeps
+the freedom such as he has enjoyed, you'd punish him? Must the governor
+be as ruthless as his master? Look, your honour, I wouldn't impose that
+command--not till I'd taken his advice about the Maroons anyway. There's
+trouble brewing, and Mr. Calhoun knows it. He has warned you through the
+provost-marshal. I'd heed his warning, your honour, or it may injure
+your reputation as a ruler. No, I'd see myself in nethermost hell before
+I'd meddle with Mr. Calhoun. He's a dangerous man, when he's moved."
+
+"Boland, you'll succeed as a schoolmaster, when all else fails. You
+teach persistently."
+
+"Your honour is clever enough to know what's what, but I'd like to see
+the Maroons dealt with. This is not my country, but I've got interests
+here, or my mistress has, and that's the same to me. . . . Does your
+honour travel often without a suite?"
+
+The governor waved a hand behind him. "I left them at the last
+plantation, and rode on alone. I felt safe enough till I saw you,
+Boland."
+
+He smiled grimly, and a grimmer smile stole to the lean lips of the
+manager of Salem. "Fear is a good thing for forward minds, your honour,"
+he said with respect in the tone of his voice and challenge in the words.
+
+"I'll say this, Boland, your mistress has been fortunate in her staff.
+You have a ready tongue."
+
+"Oh, I'm readier in other things, your honour, as you'd find on occasion.
+But I thank you for the compliment in a land where compliments are few.
+For a planter's country it has few who speak as well as they entertain.
+I'll say this for the land you govern, the hospitality is rich and rare."
+
+"In what way, Boland?"
+
+"Why, your honour, it is the custom for a man and his whole family to go
+on a visit to a neighbour, perhaps twenty or forty miles away, bring
+their servants--maybe a dozen or more--and sit down on their neighbour's
+hearthstone. There they eat his food, drink his wine, exhaust his fowl-
+yard and debilitate his cook--till all the resources of the place are
+played out; then with both hands round his friend's neck the man and his
+people will say adieu, and go back to their own accumulated larder and
+await the return visit. The wonder is Jamaica is so rich, for truly the
+waste is harmful. We have the door open in Virginia, but not in that
+way. We welcome, but we don't debauch."
+
+The governor smiled. "As you haven't old friends here, you should make
+your life a success--ah, there is the open door, Boland, and your
+mistress standing in it. But I come without my family, and with no fell
+purposes. I will not debilitate the cook; I will not exhaust the fowl-
+yard. A roasted plantain is good enough for me."
+
+Darius' looks quickened, and he jerked his chin up. "So, your honour,
+so. But might I ask that you weigh carefully the warning of Mr. Calhoun.
+There's trouble at Trelawny. I have it from good sources, and Mr.
+Calhoun has made preparations against the sure risings. I'd take heed of
+what he says. He knows. Your honour, it is not my mistress in the
+doorway, it is Mrs. Llyn; she is shorter than my mistress."
+
+The governor shaded his brow with his hands. Then he touched up his
+horse. "Yes, you are right, Boland. It is Mrs. Llyn. And look you,
+Boland, I'll think over what you've said about the Maroons and Mr.
+Calhoun. He's doing no harm as he is, that's sure. So why shouldn't he
+go on as he is? That's your argument, isn't it?"
+
+Boland nodded. "It's part of my argument, not all of it. Of course he's
+doing no harm; he's doing good every day. He's got a stiff hand for the
+shirker and the wanton, but he's a man that knows his mind, and that's a
+good thing in Jamaica."
+
+"Does he come here-ever?"
+
+"He has been here only once since our arrival. There are reasons why he
+does not come, as your honour kens, knowing the history of Erris Boyne."
+
+A quarter of an hour later Darius Boland said to Sheila: "He's got an
+order from England to keep Mr. Calhoun to his estate and to punish him,
+if he infringes the order."
+
+Sheila started. "He will infringe the order if it's made, Boland. But
+the governor will be unwise to try and impose it. I will tell him so."
+
+"But, mistress, he should not be told that this news comes from me."
+
+"No, he should not, Boland. I can tempt him to speak of it, I think.
+He hates Mr. Calhoun, and will not need much prompting."
+
+Sheila had changed since she saw Dyck Calhoun last. Her face was
+thinner, but her form was even fuller than it was when she had bade him
+good-bye, as it seemed to him for ever, and as it at first seemed to her.
+Through anxious days and nights she had fought with the old passion; and
+at last it seemed the only way to escape from the torture was by making
+all thought of him impossible. How could this be done? Well, Lord
+Mallow would offer a way. Lord Mallow was a man of ancient Irish family,
+was a governor, had ability, was distinguished-looking in a curious lean
+way; and he had a real gift with his tongue. He stood high in the
+opinion of the big folk at Westminster, and had a future. He had a
+winning way with women--a subtle, perniciously attractive way with her
+sex, and to herself he had been delicately persuasive. He had the
+ancient gift of picturesqueness without ornamentation. He had a strong
+will and a healthy imagination. He was a man of mettle and decision.
+
+Of all who had entered her field outside of Dyck Calhoun he was the most
+attractive; he was the nearest to the possible husband which she must one
+day take. And if at any day at all, why not now when she needed a man as
+she had never done--when she needed to forget? The sardonic critic might
+ask why she did not seek forgetfulness in flight; why she remained in
+Jamaica where was what she wished to forget. There was no valid reason,
+save a business one, why she should remain in Jamaica, and she was in a
+quandary when she put the question. There were, however, other reasons
+which she used when all else failed to satisfy her exigeant mind. There
+was the question of vessels to Virginia or New York. They were few and
+not good, and in any case they could have no comfortable journey to the
+United States for several weeks at least, for, since the revolutionary
+war, commerce with the United States was sparse.
+
+Also, there was the question of Salem. She did not feel she ought to
+waste the property which her Uncle Bryan had nurtured with care. In
+justice to his memory, and in fairness to Darius Boland, she felt she
+ought to stay--for a time. It did not occur to her that these reasons
+would vanish like mist--that a wilful woman would sweep them into the
+basket of forgetfulness, and do what she wished in spite of reason: that
+all else would be sacrificed, if the spirit so possessed her. Truth was
+that, far back in her consciousness, there was a vision of better days
+and things. It was as though some angel touched the elbow of her spirit
+and said: "Stay on, for things will be better than they seem. You will
+find your destiny here. Stay on."
+
+So she had stayed. She was deluding herself to believe that what she was
+doing was all for the best; that the clouds were rising; that her fate
+had fairer aspects than had seemed possible when Dyck Calhoun told her
+the terrible tale of the death of her father, Erris Boyne. Yet memory
+gave a touch of misery and bitterness to all she thought and did. For
+twenty-five years she had lived in ignorance as to her paternity. It
+surely was futile that her mother should have suffered all those years,
+with little to cheer her, while her daughter should be radiant in health
+and with a mind free from care or sadness. Yet the bitterest thing of
+all was the thought that her father was a traitor, and had died
+sacrificing another man. When Dyck had told her first, she had shivered
+with anger and shame--but anger and shame had gone. Only one thing gave
+her any comfort--the man who knew Erris Boyne was a traitor, and could
+profit by telling it, held his tongue for her own sake, kept his own
+counsel, and went to prison for four years as the price of his silence.
+He was now her neighbour and he loved her, and, if the shadow of a grave
+was not between them, would offer himself in marriage to her. This she
+knew beyond all doubt. He had given all a man can give--had saved her
+and killed her father--in ignorance had killed her father; in love had
+saved herself. What was to be done?
+
+In a strange spirit Sheila entered the room where the governor sat with
+her mother. She had reached the limit of her powers of suffering. Soon
+after her mother had left the room, the governor said:
+
+"Why do you think I have come here to-day?"
+
+He added to the words a note of sympathy, even of passion in his voice.
+
+"It was to visit my mother and myself, and to see how Salem looks after
+our stay on it, was it not?"
+
+"Yes, to see your mother and yourself, but chiefly the latter. As for
+Salem, it looks as though a mastermind had been at work, I see it in
+everything. The slaves are singing. Listen!"
+
+He held up a finger as though to indicate attention and direction.
+
+ "One, two, three,
+ All de same;
+ Black, white, brown,
+ All de same;
+ All de same.
+ One, two, three--"
+
+They could hear the words indistinctly.
+
+"What do the words mean?" asked Sheila. "I don't understand them."
+
+"No more do I, but I think they refer to the march of pestilence or
+plague. Numbers, colour, race, nothing matters, the plague sweeps all
+away. Ah, then, I was right," he added. "There is the story in other
+words. Listen again."
+
+To clapping of hands in unison, the following words were sung:
+
+ "New-come buckra,
+ He get sick,
+ He tak fever,
+ He be die;
+ He be die.
+ New-come buckra--"
+
+"Well, it may be a chant of the plague, but it's lacking in poetry," she
+remarked. "Doesn't it seem so to you?"
+
+"No, I certainly shouldn't go so far as that. Think of how much of a
+story is crowded into those few words. No waste, nothing thrown away.
+It's all epic, or that's my view, anyhow," said the governor. "If you
+look out on those who are singing it, you'd see they are resting from
+their labours; that they are fighting the ennui which most of us feel
+when we rest from our labours. Let us look at them."
+
+The governor stood up and came to the open French windows that faced the
+fields of sugar-cane. In the near distance were clumps of fruit trees,
+of hedges of lime and flowering shrubs, rows of orange trees, mangoes,
+red and purple, forbidden-fruit and grapefruit, the large scarlet fruit
+of the acqui, the avocado-pear, the feathering bamboo, and the Jack-fruit
+tree, with its enormous fruit like pumpkins. Parrots were chattering in
+the acacia and in the Otaheite plum tree, with its bright pink blossoms
+like tassels, and flanking the negro huts by the river were bowers of
+grenadilla fruit. Around the negro huts were small individual
+plantations kept by the slaves, for which they had one day a fortnight,
+besides Sundays, free to work on their own account. Here and there also
+were patches of "ground-fruit," as the underground vegetables were
+called, while there passed by on their way to the open road leading to
+Kingston wains loaded with sugar-casks, drawn by oxen, and in two cases
+by sumpter mules.
+
+"Is there anything finer than that in Virginia?" asked the governor.
+"I have never been in Virginia, but I take this to be in some ways like
+that state. Is it?"
+
+"In some ways only. We have not the same profusion of wild fruits and
+trees, but we have our share--and it is not so hot as here. It is a
+better country, though."
+
+"In what way is it better?" the governor asked almost acidly.
+
+"It is better governed."
+
+"What do you mean by that? Isn't Jamaica well governed?"
+
+"Not so well that it couldn't be improved," was Sheila's reply.
+
+"What improvements would you suggest?" Lord Mallow asked urbanely, for
+he was set to play his cards carefully to-day.
+
+"More wisdom in the governor," was the cheerful and bright reply.
+
+"Is he lacking in wisdom?"
+
+"In some ways, yes."
+
+"Will you mind specifying some of the things?"
+
+"I think he is careless."
+
+"Careless--as to what?"
+
+Sheila smiled. "He is indifferent to good advice. He has been told of
+trouble among the Maroons, that they mean to rise; he has been advised to
+make preparations, and he makes none, and he is deceived by a show of
+loyalty on the part of the slaves. Lord Mallow, if the free Maroons
+rise, why should not the black slaves rise at the same time? Why do you
+not act?"
+
+"Is everybody whose good opinion is worth having mad?" answered the
+governor. "I have sent my inspectors to Trelawney. I have had reports
+from them. I have used every care--what would you have me do?"
+
+"Used every care? Why don't you ensure the Maroons peaceableness by
+advancing on them? Why don't you take them prisoners? They are enraged
+that two of their herdsmen should be whipped by a negro-slave under the
+order of one of your captains. They are angry and disturbed and have
+ambushed the roads to Trelawney, so I'm told."
+
+"Did Mr. Calhoun tell you that when he was here?"
+
+"It was not that which Mr. Calhoun told me the only time he came here.
+But who Erris Boyne was. I never knew till, in his honour, he told me,
+coming here for that purpose. I never knew who my father was till he
+told me. My mother had kept it from me all my life."
+
+The governor looked alert. "And you have not seen him since that day?"
+
+"I have seen him, but I have not spoken to him. It was in the distance
+only."
+
+"I understand your manager, Mr. Boland, sees him."
+
+"My manager does not share my private interests--or troubles. He is free
+to go where he will, to speak to whom he chooses. He visits Enniskillen,
+I suppose--it is a well-managed plantation on Jamaican lines, and its
+owner is a man of mark."
+
+Sheila spoke without agitation of any kind; her face was firm and calm,
+her manner composed, her voice even. As she talked, she seemed to be
+probing the centre of a flower which she had caught from a basket at the
+window, and her whole personality was alight and vivifying, her good
+temper and spirit complete. As he looked at her, he had an overmastering
+desire to make her his own--his wife. She was worth hundreds of
+thousands of pounds; she had beauty, ability and authority. She was the
+acme of charm and good bearing. With her he could climb high on the
+ladder of life. He might be a really great figure in the British world-
+if she gave her will to help him, to hold up his hands. It had never
+occurred to him that Dyck Calhoun could be a rival, till he had heard of
+Dyck's visit to Sheila and her mother, till he had heard Sheila praise
+him at the first dinner he had given to the two ladies on Christmas Day.
+
+On that day it was clear Sheila did not know who her father was; but
+stranger things had happened than that she should take up with, and even
+marry, a man imprisoned for killing another, even one who had been
+condemned as a mutineer, and had won freedom by saving the king's navy.
+But now that Sheila knew the truth there could be no danger! Dyck
+Calhoun would be relegated to his proper place in the scheme of things.
+Who was there to stand between him and his desire? What was there to
+stay the great event? He himself was a peer and high-placed, for it
+was a time when the West Indian Islands were a centre of the world's
+fighting, where men like Rodney had made everlasting fame; where the
+currents of world-controversy challenged, met and fought for control.
+
+The West Indies was as much a cock-pit of the fighting powers as ever
+Belgium was; and in those islands there was wealth and the power which
+wealth buys; the clash of white and black and coloured peoples; the naval
+contests on the sea; the horrible massacres and enslavement of free white
+peoples, as in St. Domingo and Grenada; the dominating attacks of people
+fighting for control--peoples of old empires like France and Spain, and
+new empires like that of Britain. These were a centre of colonial life
+as important as had been the life in Virginia and New York and the New
+England States and Canada--indeed, more important than Canada in one
+sense, for the West Indies brought wealth to the British Isles, and had a
+big export trade. He lost no time in bringing matters to an issue.
+
+He got to his feet and came near to her. His eyes were inflamed with
+passion, his manner was impressive. He had a distinguished face, become
+more distinguished since his assumption of governorship, and authority
+had increased his personality.
+
+"A man of mark!" he said. "You mean a marked man. Let me tell you I
+have an order from the British Government to confine him to his estate;
+not to permit him to leave it; and, if he does, to arrest him. That is
+my commanded duty. You approve, do you not? Or are you like most women,
+soft at heart to bold criminals?"
+
+Sheila did not reply at once. The news was no news to her, for Darius
+Boland had told her; but she thought it well to let the governor think
+he had made a new, sensational statement.
+
+"No," she said at last, looking him calmly in the eyes. "I have no soft
+feelings for criminals as criminals, none at all. And there is every
+reason why I should be adamant to this man, Dyck Calhoun. But, Lord
+Mallow, I would go carefully about this, if I were you. He is a man who
+takes no heed of people, high or low, and has no fear of consequences.
+Have you thought of the consequences to yourself? Suppose he resists,
+what will you do?"
+
+"If he resists I will attack him with due force."
+
+"You mean you will send your military and police to attack him?" The
+gibe was covered, but it found the governor's breast. He knew what she
+was meaning.
+
+"You would not expect me to do police work, would you? Is that what your
+president does? What your great George Washington does? Does he make
+the state arrests with his own hand?"
+
+"I have no doubt he would if the circumstances were such as to warrant
+it. He has no small vices, and no false feelings. He has proved
+himself," she answered boldly.
+
+"Well, in that case," responded Lord Mallow irritably, "the event will be
+as is due. The man is condemned by my masters, and he must submit to my
+authority. He is twice a criminal, and--"
+
+"And yet a hero and a good swordsman, and as honest as men are made in a
+dishonest world. Your Admiralty and your government first pardoned the
+man, and then gave him freedom on the island which you tried to prevent;
+and now they turn round and confine him to his acres. Is that pardon in
+a real sense? Did you write to the government and say he ought not to be
+free to roam, lest he should discover more treasure-chests and buy
+another estate? Was it you?"
+
+The governor shook his head. "No, not I. I told the government in
+careful and unrhetorical language the incident of his coming here, and
+what I did, and my reasons for doing it--that was all."
+
+"And you being governor they took your advice. See, my lord, if this
+thing is done to him it will be to your own discomfiture. It will hurt
+you in the public service."
+
+"Why, to hear you speak, mistress, it would almost seem you had a
+fondness for the man who killed your father, who went to jail for it,
+and--"
+
+"And became a mutineer," intervened the girl flushing. "Why not say all?
+Why not catalogue his offences? Fondness for the man who killed my
+father, you say! Yes, I had a deep and sincere fondness for him ever
+since I met him at Playmore over seven years ago. Yes, a fondness which
+only his crime makes impossible. But in all that really matters I am
+still his friend. He did not know he was killing my father, who had no
+claims upon me, none at all, except that through him I have life and
+being; but it is enough to separate us for ever in the eyes of the world,
+and in my eyes. Not morally, of course, but legally and actually. He
+and I are as far apart as winter and summer; we are parted for ever and
+ever and ever."
+
+Now at last she was inflamed. Every nerve in her was alive. All she had
+ever felt for Dyck Calhoun came rushing to the surface, demanding
+recognition, reasserting itself. As she used the words, "ever and ever
+and ever," it was like a Cordelia bidding farewell to Lear, her father,
+for ever, for there was that in her voice which said: "It is final
+separation, it is the judgment of Jehovah, and I must submit. It is the
+last word."
+
+Lord Mallow saw his opportunity, and did not hesitate. "No, you are
+wrong, wholly wrong," he said. "I did not bias what I said in my report
+--a report I was bound to make--by any covert prejudice against Mr.
+Calhoun. I guarded myself especially"--there he lied, but he was an
+incomparable liar--"lest it should be used against him. It would appear,
+however, that the new admiral's report with mine were laid together, and
+the government came to its conclusion accordingly. So I am bound to do
+my duty."
+
+"If you--oh, if you did your duty, you would not obey the command of the
+government. Are there not times when to obey is a crime, and is not this
+one of them? Lord Mallow, you would be doing as great a crime as Mr.
+Dyck Calhoun ever committed, or could commit, if you put this order into
+actual fact. You are governor here, and your judgment would be accepted
+--remember it is an eight weeks' journey to London at the least, and what
+might not happen in that time! Are you not given discretion?"
+
+The governor nodded. "Yes, I am given discretion, but this is an order."
+
+"An order!" she commented. "Then if it should not be fulfilled, break
+it and take the consequences. The principle should be--Do what is right,
+and have no fear."
+
+"I will think it over," answered the governor. "What you say has immense
+weight with me--more even than I have words to say. Yes, I will think it
+over--I promise you. You are a genius--you prevail."
+
+Her face softened, a new something came into her manner. "You do truly
+mean it?" she asked with lips that almost trembled.
+
+It seemed to her that to do this thing for Dyck Calhoun was the least
+that was possible, and it was perhaps the last thing she might ever be
+able to do. She realized how terrible it would be for him to be shorn of
+the liberty he had always had; how dangerous it might be in many ways;
+and how the people of the island might become excited by it--and
+troublesome.
+
+"Yes, I mean it," answered Lord Mallow. "I mean it exactly as I say it."
+
+She smiled. "Well, that should recommend you for promotion," she said
+happily. "I am sure you will decide not to enforce the order, if you
+think about it. You shall be promoted, your honour, to a better place,"
+she repeated, half-satirically.
+
+"Shall I then?" he asked with a warm smile and drawing close to her.
+"Shall I? Then it can only be by your recommendation. Ah, my dear, my
+beautiful dear one," he hastened to add, "my life is possible
+henceforward only through you. You have taught me by your life and
+person, by your beauty and truth, by your nobility of mind and character
+how life should be lived. I have not always deserved your good opinion
+nor that of others. I have fought duels and killed men; I have aspired
+to place; I have connived at appointment; I have been vain, overbearing
+and insistent on my rights or privileges; I have played the dictator here
+in Jamaica; I have not been satisfied save to get my own way; but you
+have altered all that. Your coming here has given me a new outlook.
+Sheila, you have changed me, and you can change me infinitely more.
+I who have been a master wish to become your slave. I want you--beloved,
+I want you for my wife."
+
+He reached out as though to take her hand, but she drew back from him.
+His thrilling words had touched her, as she had seldom been touched, as
+she had never been touched by any one save the man that must never be
+hers; she was submerged for the moment in the flood of his eloquence, and
+his yielding to her on the point of Dyck's imprisonment gave fresh accent
+to his words. Yet she could not, she dared not yet say yes to his
+demand.
+
+"My lord," she said, "oh, you have stirred me! Yet I dare not reply to
+you as you wish. Life is hard as it is, and you have suddenly made it
+harder. What is more, I do not, I cannot, believe you. You have loved
+many. Your life has been a covert menace. Oh, I know what they said of
+you in Ireland. I know not of your life here. I suppose it is
+circumspect now; but in Ireland it was declared you were notorious with
+women."
+
+"It is a lie," he answered. "I was not notorious. I was no better and
+no worse than many another man. I played, I danced attendance, I said
+soft nothings, but I was tied to no woman in all Ireland. I was
+frolicsome and adventurous, but no more. There is no woman who can
+say I used her ill or took from her what I did not--"
+
+"Atone for, Lord Mallow?"
+
+"Atone--no. What I did not give return for, was what I was going to
+say."
+
+The situation was intense. She was in a place from which there was no
+escape except by flight or refusal. She did not really wish to refuse.
+Somehow, there had come upon her the desire to put all thought of Dyck
+Calhoun out of her mind by making it impossible for her to think of him;
+and marriage was the one sure and complete way--marriage with this man,
+was it possible? He held high position, he was her fellow countryman and
+an Irish peer, and she was the daughter of an evil man, who was, above
+all else, a traitor to his country, though Lord Mallow did not know that.
+The only one she knew possessed of the facts was the man she desired to
+save herself from in final way--Dyck Calhoun. Her heart was for the
+moment soft to Lord Mallow, in spite of his hatred of Dyck Calhoun. The
+governor was a man of charm in conversation. He was born with rare
+faculties. Besides, he had knowledge of humanity and of women. He knew
+how women could be touched. He had appealed to Sheila more by ability
+than by aught else. His concessions to her were discretion in a way.
+They opened the route to her affections, as his place and title could not
+do.
+
+"No, no, no, believe me, Sheila, I was a man who had too many temptations
+--that was all. But I did not spoil my life by them, and I am here a
+trusted servant of the government. I am a better governor than your
+first words to me would make you seem to think."
+
+Her eyes were shining, her face was troubled, her tongue was silent. She
+knew not what to say. She felt she could not say yes--yet she wanted to
+escape from him. Her good fortune did not desert her. Suddenly the door
+of the room opened and her mother entered.
+
+"There is a member of your suite here, your honour, asking for you. It
+is of most grave importance. It is urgent. What shall I say?"
+
+"Say nothing. I am coming," said the governor. "I am coming now."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+OUT OF THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES
+
+That night the Maroons broke loose upon Jamaica, and began murder and
+depredation against which the governor's activities were no check.
+Estates were invaded, and men, women and children killed, or carried into
+the mountains and held as hostages. In the middle and western part of
+the island the ruinous movements went on without being stayed; planters
+and people generally railed at the governor, and said that through his
+neglect these dark things were happening. It was said he had failed to
+punish offences by the Maroons, and this had given them confidence,
+filling them with defiance. They had one advantage not possessed by the
+government troops and militia--they were masters of every square rod of
+land in the middle and west of the island. Their plan was to raid, to
+ambush, to kill and to excite the slaves to rebel.
+
+The first assault and repulse took place not far from Enniskillen, Dyck
+Calhoun's plantation, and Michael Clones captured a Maroon who was
+slightly wounded.
+
+Michael challenged him thus: "Come now, my blitherin' friend, tell us
+your trouble--why are you risin'? You don't do this without cause--
+what's the cause?"
+
+The black man, naked except for a cloth about his loins, and with a small
+bag at his hip, slung from a cord over his shoulder, showed his teeth in
+a stark grimace.
+
+"You're a newcomer here, massa, or you'd know we're treated bad," he
+answered. "We're robbed and trod on and there's no word kept with us.
+We asked the governor for more land and he moved us off. We warned him
+against having one of our head young men flogged by a slave in the
+presence of slaves--for we are free men, and he laughs. So, knowing a
+few strong men can bring many weak men to their knees, we rose. I say
+this--there's plenty weak men in Jamaica, men who don't know right when
+they see it. So we rose, massa, and we'll make Jamaica sick before we've
+done. They can't beat us, for we can ambush here, and shoot those that
+come after us. We hide, one behind this rock and one behind that, two or
+three together, and we're safe. But the white soldiers come all together
+and beat drums and blow horns, and we know where they are, and so we
+catch 'em and kill 'em. You'll see, we'll capture captains and generals,
+and we'll cut their heads off and bury them in their own guts."
+
+He made an ugly grimace, and a loathsome gesture, and Michael Clones felt
+the man ought to die. He half drew his sword, but, thinking better of
+it, he took the Maroon to the Castle and locked him up in a slave's hut,
+having first bound him and put him in the charge of one he could trust.
+But as he put the man away, he said:
+
+"You talk of your people hiding, and men not being able to find you; but
+did you never hear of bloodhounds, that can hunt you down, and chew you
+up? Did you never hear of them?"
+
+The man's face wrinkled like a rag, for there is one thing the native
+fears more than all else, and that is the tooth of the hound. But he
+gathered courage, and said: "The governor has no hounds. There ain't
+none in Jamaica. We know dat--all of us know dat--all of us know dat,
+massa."
+
+Michael Clones laughed, and it was not pleasant to hear. "It may be the
+governor has no bloodhounds, and would not permit their being brought
+into the island, but my master is bringing them in himself--a lot with
+their drivers from Cuba, and you Maroons will have all you can do to
+hide. Sure, d'ye think every wan in the island is as foolish as the
+governor? If you do, y'are mistaken, and that's all there is to say."
+
+"The hounds not here--in de island, massa!" declared the Maroon
+questioningly.
+
+"They'll be here within the next few hours, and then where will you and
+your pals be? You'll be caught between sharp teeth--nice, red, sharp,
+bloody teeth; and you'll make good steak-better than your best olio."
+
+The native gave a moan--it was the lament of one whose crime was come
+tete-a-tete with its own punishment.
+
+"That's the game to play," said Michael to himself as he fastened the
+door tight. "The hounds will settle this fool-rebellion quicker than
+aught else. Mr. Calhoun's a wise man, and he ought to be governor here.
+Criminal? As much as the angel Gabriel! He must put down this
+rebellion--no wan else can. They're stronger, the Maroons, than ever
+they've been. They've planned this with skill, and they'll need a lot of
+handlin'. We're safe enough here, but down there at Salem--well, they
+may be caught in the bloody net. Bedad, that's sure."
+
+A few moments afterwards he met Dyck Calhoun. "Michael," said Dyck,
+"things are safe enough here, but we've prepared! The overseers,
+bookkeepers and drivers are loyal enough. But there are others not so
+safe. I'm going to Salem-riding as hard as I can, with six of our best
+men. They're not so daft at Salem as we are, Michael. They won't know
+how to act or what to do. Darius Boland is a good man, but he's only had
+Virginian experience, and this is different. A hundred Maroons are as
+good as a thousand white soldiers in the way the Maroons fight. There
+are a thousand of them, and they can lay waste this island, if they get
+going. So I shall stop them. The hounds are outside the harbour now,
+Michael. The ship Vincent, bringing them, was sighted by a sloop two
+days ago, making slowly for Kingston. She should be here before we've
+time to turn round. Michael, the game is in our hands, if we play it
+well. Do you go down to Kingston and--"
+
+He detailed what Michael was to do on landing the hounds, and laid out
+plans for the immediate future. "They're in danger at Salem, Michael, so
+we must help them. The hounds will settle this whole wretched business."
+
+Michael told him of his prisoner, and what effect the threat about the
+hounds had had. A look of purpose came into Dyck's face.
+
+"A hound is as fair as a gun, and hounds shall be used here in Jamaica.
+The governor can't refuse their landing now. The people would kill him
+if he did. It was I proposed it all."
+
+"Look, sir--who's that?" asked Michael, as they saw a figure riding
+under the palms not far away.
+
+It was very early morning, and the light was dim yet, but there was
+sufficient to make even far sight easy. Dyck shaded his forehead with
+his hand.
+
+"It's not one of our people, Michael. It's a stranger."
+
+As the rider came on he was stopped by two of the drivers of the estate.
+Dyck and Michael saw him hold up a letter, and a moment later he was on
+his way to Dyck, galloping hard. Arrived, he dropped to the ground, and
+saluted Dyck.
+
+"A letter from Salem, sir," he said, and handed it over to Dyck.
+
+Dyck nodded, broke the seal of the letter and read it quickly. Then he
+nodded again and bade the man eat a hearty breakfast and return with him
+on one of the Enniskillen horses, as his own would be exhausted. "We'll
+help protect Salem, my man," said Dyck.
+
+The man grinned. "That's good," he answered. "They knew naught of the
+rising when I left. But the governor was there yesterday, and he'd
+protect us."
+
+"Nonsense, fellow, the governor would go straight to Spanish Town where
+he belongs, when there is trouble."
+
+When the man had gone, Dyck turned to his servant. "Michael," he said,
+"the news in the letter came from Darius Boland. He says the governor
+told him he had orders from England to confine me here at Enniskillen,
+and he meant to do it. We'll see how he does it. If he sends his
+marshals, we'll make Gadarene swine of them."
+
+There was a smile at his lips, and it was contemptuous, and the lines of
+his forehead told of resolve. "Michael," he added, "we'll hunt Lord
+Mallow with the hounds of our good fortune, for this war is our war.
+They can't win it without me, and they shan't. Without the hounds it may
+be a two years' war--with the hounds it can't go beyond a week or so."
+
+"If the hounds get here, sir! But if they don't?"
+
+Dyck laid his hand upon the sword at his side. "If they don't get here,
+Michael, still the war will be ours, for we understand fighting, and the
+governor does not. Confine me here, will he? If he does, he'll be a
+better man than I have ever known him, Michael. In a few hours I shall
+be at Salem, to do what he could not, and would not, do if he could. His
+love is as deep as water on a roof, no deeper. He'll think first of
+himself, and afterwards of the owner of Salem or any other. Let me show
+you what I mean to do once we've Salem free from danger. Come and have a
+look at my chart."
+
+Some hours later Dyck Calhoun, with his six horsemen, was within a mile
+or so of Salem. They had ridden hard in the heat and were tired, but
+there was high spirit in the men, for they were behind a trusted leader
+--a man who ate little, but who did not disdain a bottle of Madeira or
+a glass of brandy, and who made good every step of the way he went--
+watchful, alert, careful, determined. They cared little what his past
+had been. Jamaica was not a heaven for the good, but it was a haven for
+many who had been ill-used elsewhere; where each man, as though he were
+really in a new world, was judged by his daily actions and not by any
+history of a hidden or an open past. As they came across country, Dyck
+always ahead, they saw how he responded to every sign of life in the
+bush, how he moved always with discretion where ambush seemed possible.
+They knew how on his own estate he never made mistakes of judgment;
+that he held the balance carefully, and that his violences, rare and
+tremendous, were not outbursts of an unregulated nature. "You can't fool
+Calhoun," was a common phrase in the language of Enniskillen, and there
+were few in the surrounding country who would not have upheld its truth.
+
+Now, to-day, he was almost moodily silent, reserved and watchful. None
+knew the eddies of life which struggled for mastery in him, nor of his
+horrible disappointments. None knew of his love for Sheila. Yet all
+knew that he had killed--or was punished for killing--Erris Boyne. None
+of them had seen Sheila, but all had heard of her, and the governor's
+courtship of her, and all wondered why Dyck Calhoun should be doing what
+clearly the governor should do.
+
+Somehow, in spite of the criminal record with which Calhoun's life was
+stained, they had a respect for him they did not have for Lord Mallow.
+Dyck's life in Jamaica was clean; and his progress as a planter had been
+free from black spots. He even kept no mistress, and none had ever known
+him to have to do with women, black, brown, or white. He had never gone
+a-Maying, as the saying was, and his only weakness or fault--if it was a
+fault--was a fondness for the bottle of good wine which was ever open on
+his table, and for tobacco in the smoking-leaf. To-day he smoked
+incessantly and carefully. He threw no loose ends of burning tobacco
+from cigar or pipe into the loose dry leaves and stiff-cut ground. Yet
+they knew the small clouds floating away from his head did not check his
+observation. That was proved beyond peradventure when they were within
+sight of the homestead of Salem on an upland well-wooded. It was in
+apparently happy circumstances, for they could see no commotion about the
+homestead; they saw men with muskets, evidently keeping guard--yet too
+openly keeping guard, and so some said to each other.
+
+Presently Dyck reined his horse. Each man listened attentively, and eyed
+the wood ahead of them, for it was clear Dyck suspected danger there.
+For a moment there seemed doubt in Dyck's mind what to do, but presently
+he had decided.
+
+"Ride slow for Salem," he said. "It's Maroons there in the bush. They
+are waiting for night. They won't attack us now. They're in ambush--of
+that I'm sure. If they want to capture Salem, they'll not give alarm by
+firing on us, so if we ride on they'll think we haven't sensed them. If
+they do attack us, we'll know they are in good numbers, for they'll be
+facing us as well as the garrison of Salem. But keep your muskets ready.
+Have a drink," he added, and handed his horn of liquor. "If they see us
+drink, and they will, they'll think we've only stopped to refresh, and
+we'll be safe. In any case, if they attack, fire your muskets at them
+and ride like the devil. Don't dismount and don't try to find them in
+the rocks. They'll catch us that way, as they've caught others. It's a
+poor game fighting hidden men. I want to get them into the open down
+below, and that's where they'll be before we're many hours older."
+
+With this he rode on slightly ahead, and presently put his horse at a
+gentle canter which he did not increase as they neared the place where
+the black men ambushed. Every man of the group behaved well. None
+showed nervousness, even when one of the horses, conscious of hidden
+Maroons in the wood, gave a snort and made a sharp movement out of the
+track, in an attempt to get greater speed.
+
+That was only for an instant, however. Yet every man's heart beat
+faster as they came to the place where the ambush was. Indeed, Dyck saw
+a bush move, and had a glimpse of a black, hideous face which quickly
+disappeared. Dyck's imperturbable coolness kept them steady. They even
+gossiped of idle things loud enough for the hidden Maroons to hear. No
+face showed suspicion or alarm, as they passed, while all felt the
+presence of many men in the underbrush. Only when they had passed the
+place, did they realize the fulness of the danger through which they had
+gone. Dyck talked to them presently without turning round, for that
+might have roused suspicion, and while they were out of danger now,
+there was the future and Dyck's plan which he now unfolded.
+
+"They'll come down into the open before it's dark," he said quietly,
+"and when they do that, we'll have 'em. They've no chance to ambush in
+the cane-fields now. We'll get them in the open, and wipe them out.
+Don't look round. Keep steady, and we'll ride a little more quickly
+soon."
+
+A little later they cantered to the front door of the Salem homestead.
+
+The first face they saw there was that of Darius Boland. It had a look
+of trouble. Dyck explained. "We thought you might not have heard of the
+rise of the Maroons. We have no ladies at Enniskillen. We prepared, and
+we're safe enough there, as things are. Your ladies must go at once to
+Spanish Town, unless--"
+
+"Unless they stay here! Well, they would not be unwise, for though the
+slaves under the old management might have joined the Maroons, they will
+not do so now. We have got them that far. But, Mr. Calhoun, the ladies
+aren't here. They rode away into the hills this morning, and they've not
+come back.
+
+"I was just sending a search party for them. I did not know of the rise
+of the Maroons."
+
+"In what direction did they go?" asked Dyck with anxiety, though his
+tone was even.
+
+Darius Boland pointed. "They went slightly northwest, and if they go as
+I think they meant to do, they would come back the way you came in."
+
+"They were armed?" Dyck asked sharply.
+
+"Yes, they were armed," was the reply. "Miss Llyn had a small pistol.
+She learned to carry one in Virginia, and she has done so ever since we
+came here."
+
+"Listen, Boland," said Dyck with anxiety. "Up there in the hills by
+which we came are Maroons hidden, and they will invade this place to-
+night. We were ready to fight them, of course, as we came, but it's a
+risky business, and we wanted to get them all if possible. We couldn't
+if we had charged them there, for they were well-ambushed. My idea was
+to let them get into the open between there and here, and catch them as
+they came. It would save our own men, and it would probably do for them.
+If Mrs. and Miss Llyn come back that way, they will be in greater danger
+than were we, for the Maroons were coming here to capture the ladies and
+hold them as hostages; and they would not let them pass. In any case,
+the risk is immense. The ladies must be got to Spanish Town, for the
+Maroons are desperate. They know we have no ships of the navy here now,
+and they rely on their raiding powers and the governor's weakness. They
+have placed their men in every part of the middle and western country,
+and they came upon my place last evening and were defeated. Several were
+killed and one taken prisoner. They can't be marched upon like an army.
+Their powers of ambush are too great. They must be run down by
+bloodhounds. It's the only way."
+
+"Bloodhounds--there are no bloodhounds here!" said Darius Boland. "And
+if there were, wouldn't pious England make a fuss?"
+
+Dyck Calhoun was about to speak sharply, but he caught sarcasm in Darius
+Boland's face, and he said: "I have the bloodhounds. They're outside the
+harbour now, and I intend to use them."
+
+"If the governor allows you!" remarked Darius Boland ironically. "He
+does not like you or your bloodhounds. He has his orders, so he says."
+
+Dyck made an impatient gesture. "I will not submit to his orders.
+I have earned my place in this is land, and he shall not have his way.
+The ladies must be brought to Spanish Town, and placed where the
+governor's men can protect them."
+
+"The governor's men! Indeed. They might as well stay here; we can
+surely protect them."
+
+"Perhaps, for you have skill, Boland, and you are cautious, but is it
+fair for ladies to stay in this isolated spot with murderers about? When
+the ladies come back, they must be sent at once to Spanish Town. Can't
+you see?"
+
+Darius Boland bowed. "What you say goes always," he remarked, "but tell
+me, sir, who will take the ladies to Spanish Town?"
+
+Dyck Calhoun read the inner meaning of Darius Boland's words. They did
+not put him out of self-control. It was not a time to dwell on such
+things. It was his primary duty to save the ladies.
+
+"Come, Boland," he said sharply, "I shall start now. We must find the
+ladies. What sort of a country is it through which they pass?" He
+pointed.
+
+"Bad enough in some ways. There's an old monastery of the days of the
+Spaniards up there"--he pointed or the ruins of one, and it is a pleasant
+place to rest. I doubt not they rested there, if--"
+
+"If they reached it!" remarked Dyck with crisp inflection. "Yes, they
+would rest there--and it would be a good place for ambush by the Maroons,
+eh?"
+
+"Good enough from the standpoint of the Maroons," was the reply, the
+voice slightly choked.
+
+"Then we must go there. It's a damnable predicament--no, you must not
+come with me! You must keep command here."
+
+He hastily described the course to be followed by those of his own men
+who stayed to defend, and then said: "Our horses are fagged. If you loan
+us four I'll see they are well cared for, and returned in kind or cash.
+I'll take three of my men only, and loan you three of the best. We'll
+fill our knapsacks and get away, Boland."
+
+A few moments later, Calhoun and his three men, with a guide added by
+Boland, had started away up the road which had been ridden by Mrs. Llyn
+and Sheila. One thing was clear, the Maroons on the hill did not know of
+the absence of Sheila and her mother, or they would not be waiting. He
+did not like the long absence of the ladies. It was ominous at such a
+time.
+
+Dyck and his small escort got away by a road unseen from where the
+Maroons were, and when well away put their horses to a canter and got
+into the hills. Once in the woods, however, they rode alertly, and
+Dyck's eyes were everywhere. He was quick to see a bush move, to observe
+the flick of a branch, to catch the faintest sound of an animal origin.
+He was obsessed with anxiety, for he had a dark fear that some ill had
+happened to the two. His blood almost dried in his veins when he thought
+of the fate which had followed the capture of ladies in other islands
+like Haiti or Grenada.
+
+It did not seem possible that these beautiful women should have fallen
+into the outrageous hands of savages. He knew the girl was armed, and
+that before harm might come to her she would end her own life and her
+mother's also; but if she was caught from behind, and the opportunity of
+suicide should not be hers--what then?
+
+Yet he showed no agitation to his followers. His eyes were, however,
+intensely busy, and every nerve was keen to feel. Life in the open had
+developed in him the physical astuteness of the wild man, and he had all
+the gifts that make a supreme open-air fighter. He sensed things; but
+with him it was feeling, and not scent or hearing; his senses were such
+perfect listeners. He had the intense perception of a delicate plant,
+those wonderful warnings which only come to those who live close to
+nature, who study from feeling the thousand moods and tenses of living
+vegetables and animal life. He was a born hunter, and it was not easy to
+surprise him when every nerve was sharp with premonition. He saw the
+marks of the hoofs of Sheila's and her mother's horses in the road,
+knowing them by the freshness of the indentations. An hour, two hours
+passed, and they then approached the monasterial ruin of which Boland had
+spoken. Here, suddenly, Dyck dropped to the ground, for he saw
+unmistakable signs of fright or flurry in the hoofmarks.
+
+He quickly made examination, and there were signs of women's feet and
+also a bare native foot, but no signs of struggle or disturbance. The
+footprints, both native and white, were firmly placed, but the horses'
+hoof-prints showed agitation. Presently the hoofmarks became more
+composed again. Suddenly one of Dyck's supporters exclaimed he had
+picked up a small piece of ribbon, evidently dropped to guide those who
+might come searching. Presently another token was found in a loose bit
+of buckle from a shoe. Then, suddenly, upon the middle of the road was a
+little pool of blood and signs that a body had lain in the dust.
+
+"She shot a native here," said Dyck to his men coolly. "There are no
+signs of a struggle," remarked the most observant.
+
+"We must go carefully here, for they may have been imprisoned in the
+ruin. You stay here, and I'll go forward," he added, with a hand on his
+sword. "I've an idea they're here. We have one chance, my lads, and
+let's keep our heads. If anything should happen to me, have a try
+yourselves, and see what you can do. The ladies must be freed, if
+they're there. There's not one of you that won't stand by to the last,
+but I want your oath upon it. By the heads or graves of your mothers,
+lads, you'll see it through? Up with your hands!"
+
+Their hands went up. "By our mothers' heads or graves!" they said in low
+tones.
+
+"Good!" he replied. "I'll go on ahead. If you hear a call, or a shot
+fired, forward swiftly."
+
+An instant later he plunged into the woods to the right of the road, by
+which he would come upon the ruins from the rear. He held a pistol as he
+stole carefully yet quickly forward. He was anxious there should be no
+delay, but he must not be rash. Without meeting anyone he came near the
+ruins. They showed serene in the shade of the trees.
+
+Then suddenly came from the ruin a Maroon of fierce, yet not cruel
+appearance, who laid a hand behind his ear, and looked steadfastly
+towards that part of the wood where Dyck was. It was clear he had heard
+something. Dyck did not know how many Maroons there might be in the
+ruins, or near it, and he did not attack. It was essential he should
+know the strength of his foe; and he remained quiet. Presently the
+native turned as though to go back into the ruins, but changed his mind,
+and began to tour the stony, ruined building. Dyck waited, and presently
+saw more natives come from the ruins, and after a moment another three.
+These last were having an argument of some stress, for they pulled at
+each other's arms and even caught at the long cloths of their
+headdresses.
+
+"They've got the ladies there," thought Dyck, "but they've done them no
+harm yet." He waited moments longer to see if more natives were coming
+out, then said to himself: "I'll make a try for it now. It won't do to
+run the risk of going back to bring my fellows up. It's a fair risk, but
+it's worth taking."
+
+With that he ran softly to the entrance from which he had seen the men
+emerge. Looking in he saw only darkness. Then suddenly he gave a soft
+call, the call of an Irish bird-note which all people in Ireland--in the
+west and south of Ireland--know. If Sheila was alive and in the place
+she would answer it, he was sure. He waited a moment, and there was no
+answer. Then he called again, and in an instant, as though from a great
+distance, there came the reply of the same note, clearer and more bell-
+like than his own.
+
+"She's there!" he said, and boldly entered the place. It was dark and
+damp, but ahead was a break in the solid monotony of ruined wall, and he
+saw a clear stream of light beyond. He stole ahead, got over the stone
+obstructions, and came on to a biggish room which once had been a
+refectory. Looking round it he saw three doors--one evidently led into
+the kitchen, one into a pantry, and one into a hall. It was clear the
+women were alone, or some one would have come in answer to his call. Who
+could tell when they would come? There was no time to be lost. With an
+instinct, which proved correct, he opened the door leading into the old
+kitchen, and there, tied, and with pale faces, but in no other sense
+disordered, were Sheila and her mother. He put his fingers to his lips,
+then hastily cut them loose from the ropes of bamboo, and helped them to
+their feet.
+
+"Can you walk?" he whispered to Mrs. Llyn. She nodded assent, and
+braced herself. "Then here," he said, "is a pistol. Come quickly. We
+may have to fight our way out. Don't be afraid to fire, but take good
+aim first. I have some men in the wood beyond where you shot the
+native," he added to Sheila. "They'll come at once if I call, or a shot
+is fired. Keep your heads, and we shall be all right. They're a
+dangerous crew, but we'll beat them this time. Come quickly."
+
+Presently they were in the refectory, and a moment after that they were
+over the stones, and near the entrance, and then a native appeared,
+armed. Without an instant's hesitation Dyck ran forward, and as he
+entered, put his sword into the man's vitals, and he fell, calling out as
+he fell.
+
+"The rest will be on us now," said Dyck, "and we must keep going."
+
+Three more natives appeared, and he shot two.
+
+Catching a pistol from Sheila he aimed at the third native and wounded
+him, but did not kill him. The man ran into the wood. Presently more
+Maroons came--a dozen or more, and rushed for the entrance. They were
+met by Dyck's fire, and now also Sheila fired and brought down her man.
+Dyck wounded another, and in great skill loaded again, but at that moment
+three of the Maroons rushed down into the ruins.
+
+They were astonished to see Dyck there, and more astonished to receive--
+first one and then another--his iron in their bowels. The third man made
+a stroke at Dyck with his lance, and only gashed Dyck's left arm. Then
+he turned and fled out into the open, and was met by a half-dozen others.
+They all were about to rush the entrance when suddenly four shots behind
+them brought three of them down, and the rest fled into the wood
+shouting. In another moment Dyck and the ladies were in the open, and
+making for the woods, the women in front, the men behind, loading their
+muskets as they ran, and alive to the risks of the moment.
+
+The dresses of the ladies were stained and soiled with dust and damp, but
+otherwise they seemed little the worse for the adventure, save that Mrs.
+Llyn was shaken, and her face was pale.
+
+"How did you know where we were, and why did you come?" she said, after
+they had got under way, having secured the horses which Sheila and her
+mother had ridden.
+
+Briefly Dyck explained how as soon as he had dealt with the revolt of the
+Maroons at his own place he came straight to Salem.
+
+"I knew you were unused to the ways of the country and to our sort of
+native here, and I felt sure you would not refuse to take help--even mine
+at a pinch. But what happened to you?" he added, turning to Sheila.
+
+It was only yesterday Sheila had determined to cut him wholly out of her
+life by assenting to marry Lord Mallow. Yet here he was, and she could
+scarcely bear to look into his face. He was shut off from her by every
+fact of human reason. These were days when the traditions of family life
+were more intense than now; when to kill one's own father was not so bad
+as to embrace, as it were, him or her who had killed that father. Sheila
+felt if she were normal she ought to feel abhorrence against Dyck; yet
+she felt none at all, and his saving them had given a new colour to
+their relations. If he had killed her father, the traitor, he had saved
+themselves from death or freed them from a shameful captivity which might
+have ended in black disaster. She kept herself in hand, and did not show
+confusion.
+
+"We had not heard of the rising of the Maroons," she said. "The governor
+was at Salem yesterday and a message came from his staff to say would he
+come at once. His staff were not at Salem, but at the next plantation
+nearer to Spanish Town. Lord Mallow went. If he suspected the real
+trouble he said naught, but was gone before you could realize it. The
+hours went by, night came and passed, then my mother and I, this morning,
+resolved to ride to the monastery, and then round by the road you
+travelled back to Salem."
+
+"There are Maroons now on that hill above your place. They were in
+ambush when we passed, but we took no notice. It was not wise to invite
+trouble. Some of us would have been killed, but--"
+
+He then told what had been in his mind, and what might be the outcome--
+the killing or capture of the whole group, and safety for all at Salem.
+
+When he had finished, she continued her story. "We rode for an hour
+unchallenged, and then came the Maroons. At first I knew not what to do.
+We were surrounded before we could act. I had my pistol ready, and there
+was the chance of escape--the faint chance--if we drove our horses on;
+but there was also the danger of being fired at from behind! So we sat
+still on our horses, and I asked them how they dared attack white ladies.
+I asked them if they had never thought what vengeance the governor would
+take. They did not understand my words, but they grasped the meaning,
+and one of them, the leader, who understood English, was inclined to have
+reason. As it was, we stopped what might have been our murder by saying
+it would be wiser to hold us as hostages, and that we were Americans.
+That man was killed--by you. A shot from your pistol brought him down as
+he rushed forward to enter the ruins. But he took care of us as we went
+forward, and when I shot one of his followers for laying his hand upon me
+in the saddle--he caught me by the leg under my skirt--he would allow no
+retaliation. I knew boldness was the safe part to play.
+
+"But in the end we were bound with ropes as you found us, while they
+waited for more of their people to come, those, no doubt, you found
+ambushed on the hill. As we lay, bound as you saw us, the leader said to
+us we should be safe if he could have his way, but there were bad
+elements among the Maroons, and he could not guarantee it. Yet he knew
+the government would pay for our release, would perhaps give the land for
+which they had asked with no avail. We must, therefore, remain
+prisoners. If we made no efforts to escape, it would be better in the
+end. "Keep your head steady, missy, try no tricks, and all may go well;
+but I have bad lot, and they may fly at you." That was the way he spoke.
+It made our blood run cold, for he was one man, with fair mind, and he
+had around him men, savage and irresponsible. Black and ruthless, they
+would stop at nothing except the sword at their throats or the teeth in
+their flesh."
+
+"The teeth in their flesh!" said Dyck with a grim smile. "Yes, that is
+the only way with them. Naught can put the fear of God into them except
+bloodhounds, and that Lord Mallow will not have. He has been set against
+it until now. But this business will teach him. He may change his mind
+now, since what he cares for is in danger--his place and his ladies!"
+
+Mrs. Llyn roused herself to say: "No, no, Mr. Calhoun, you must not say
+that of him. His place may be in danger, but not his ladies. He has no
+promise of that. . . . And see, Mr. Calhoun, I want to say that, in
+any case, you have paid your debt, if you owe one to us. For a life
+taken you have given two lives--to me and my girl. I speak as one who
+has a right to say it! Erris Boyne was naught to me at all, but he was
+my daughter's father, and that made everything difficult. I could make
+him cease to be my husband, and I did; but I could not make him cease to
+be her father."
+
+"I had no love for Erris Boyne," said Sheila. Misery was heavy on her.
+"None at all, but he was my father."
+
+"See, all's well still at Salem," said Dyck waving a hand as though to
+change the talk. "All's as we left it."
+
+There in the near distance lay Salem, serene. All tropical life about
+seemed throbbing with life and soaking with leisure.
+
+"We were in time," he added. "The Maroons are still in ambush. The sun
+is beginning to set though, and the trouble may begin. We shall get
+there about sundown--safe, thank God!"
+
+"Safe, thank God--and you," said Sheila's mother.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE CLASH OF RACE
+
+In the King's House at Spanish Town the governor was troubled. All his
+plans and prophecies had come to naught. He had been sure there would be
+no rebellion of the Maroons, and he was equally sure that his career
+would be made hugely successful by marriage with Sheila Llyn--but the
+Maroons had revolted, and the marriage was not settled!
+
+Messages had been coming from the provost-marshal-general of reports from
+the counties of Middlesex and Cornwall, that the Maroons were ravaging
+everywhere and that bands of slaves had joined them with serious
+disasters to the plantation people. Planters, their wives and children
+had been murdered, and in some districts the natives were in full
+possession and had destroyed, robbed and ravaged. He had summoned his
+commander of the militia forces, had created special constables, and
+armed them, and had sent a ship to the Bahamas to summon a small British
+fleet there. He had also mapped out a campaign against the Maroons,
+which had one grave demerit--it was planned on a basis of ordinary
+warfare and not with Jamaica conditions in mind. The provost-marshal
+warned him of the futility of these plans, but he had persisted in them.
+He had later been shocked, however, by news that the best of his colonels
+had been ambushed and killed, and that others had been made prisoners and
+treated with barbarity. From everywhere, except one, had come either
+news of defeat or set-back.
+
+One good thing he immediately did: he threw open King's House to the
+wounded, and set the surgeons to work, thereby checking bitter criticism
+and blocking the movement rising against him. For it was well known he
+had rejected all warnings, had persisted in his view that trust in the
+Maroons and fair treatment of themselves and the slaves were all that was
+needed.
+
+As he walked in the great salon or hall of audience where the wounded
+lay--over seventy feet long and thirty wide, with great height, to which
+beds and conveniences had been hastily brought--it seemed to him that he
+was saving, if barely saving, his name and career. Standing beside one
+of the Doric pillars which divided the salon from an upper and lower
+gallery of communications, he received the Custos of Kingston. As the
+Custos told his news the governor's eyes were running along the line of
+busts of ancient and modern philosophers on the gilt brackets between the
+Doric pilasters. They were all in bronze, and his mind had the doleful
+imagination of brown slave heroes placed there in honour for services
+given to the country. The doors at the south end of the great salon
+opened now and then into the council chambers beyond, and he could see
+the surgeons operating on the cases returned from the plantations.
+
+"Your honour," said the Custos, "things have suddenly improved. The
+hounds have come from Cuba and in the charge of ten men--ten men with
+sixty hounds. That is the situation at the moment. All the people at
+Kingston are overjoyed. They see the end of the revolt."
+
+"The hounds!" exclaimed the governor. "What hounds?"
+
+"The hounds sent for by Dyck Calhoun--surely your honour remembers!"
+
+Surely his honour did, and recalled also that he forbade the importation
+of the hounds; but he could not press that prohibition now. "The
+mutineer and murderer, Dyck Calhoun!" he exclaimed. "And they have
+come!"
+
+"Yes, your honour, and gone with Calhoun's man, Michael Clones, to
+Salem."
+
+"To Salem--why Salem?"
+
+"Because Calhoun is there fighting the Maroons in that district. The
+Maroons first captured the ladies of Salem as they rode in the woods.
+They were beaten at that game by Calhoun and four men; the ladies then
+were freed and taken back to Salem. Then the storm burst on Salem--
+burst, but did not overwhelm. Calhoun saved the situation there; and
+when his hounds arrive at Salem he will range over the whole country.
+It is against the ideas of the people of England, but it does our work
+in Jamaica as nothing else could. It was a stroke of genius, the hounds,
+your honour!"
+
+Lord Mallow was at once relieved and nonplussed. No doubt the policy of
+the hounds was useful, and it might save his own goose, but it was, in a
+sense, un-English to hunt the wild man with hounds. Yet was it un-
+English? What was the difference between a sword and a good sharp tooth
+save that the sword struck and let go and the tooth struck and held on?
+It had been said in England that to hunt negroes with hounds was
+barbarous and cowardly; but criminals were hunted with bloodhounds
+in all civilized countries; and as for cowardice, the man who had sent
+for these hounds was as brave as any old crusader! No, Dyck Calhoun
+could not be charged with cowardice, and his policy of the hounds might
+save the island and the administration in the end. They had arrived in
+the very hour of Jamaica's and Lord Mallow's greatest peril. They had
+gone on to the man who had been sane enough to send for them.
+
+"Tell me about the landing of the hounds," said Lord Mallow.
+
+"It was last night about dusk that word came from the pilot's station
+at Port Royal that the vessel Vincent was making for port, and that she.
+came from Cuba. Presently Michael Clones, the servant of Dyck Calhoun,
+came also to say that the Vincent was the ship bringing Calhoun's hounds
+from Cuba, and asking permit for delivery. This he did because he
+thought you were opposed to the landing. In the light of our position
+here, we granted the delivery.
+
+"When the vessel came to anchor, the hounds with their drivers were
+landed. The landing was the signal for a great display on the part of
+the people and the militia--yes, the militia shared in the applause, your
+honour! They had had a taste of war with the Maroons and the slaves, and
+they were well inclined to let the hounds have their chance. Resolutions
+were then passed to approach your honour and ask that full powers be
+given to Calhoun to pursue the war without thought of military precedent
+or of Calhoun's position. He has no official place in the public life
+here, but he is powerful with the masses. It is rumoured you have an
+order to confine him to his plantation; but to apply it would bring
+revolution in Jamaica. There are great numbers of people who love his
+courage, what he did for the King's navy, and for his commercial success
+here, and they would resent harsh treatment of him. They are aware, your
+honour, that he and you knew each other in Ireland, and they think you
+are hard on him. People judge not from all the facts, but from what they
+see and hear."
+
+During the Custos' narrative, Lord Mallow was perturbed. He had the
+common sense to know that Dyck Calhoun, ex-convict and mutineer as he
+was, had personal power in the island, which he as governor had not been
+able to get, and Dyck had not abused that power. He realized that Dyck's
+premonition of an outbreak and sending for the hounds was a stroke
+of genius. He recalled with anger Dyck's appearance, in spite of
+regulations, in trousers at the King's ball and his dancing with a black
+woman, and he also realized that it was a cool insult to himself. It was
+then he had given the home authorities information which would poison
+their mind against Dyck, and from that had come the order to confine him
+to his plantation.
+
+Yet he felt the time had come when he might use Dyck for his own
+purposes. That Dyck should be at Salem was a bitter dose, but that could
+amount to nothing, for Sheila could never marry the man who had killed
+her father, however bad and mad her father was. Yet it gravelled his
+soul that Dyck should be doing service for the lady to whom he had
+offered his own hand and heart, and from whom he had had no word of
+assent. It angered him against himself that he had not at once sent
+soldiers to Salem to protect it. He wished to set himself right with
+Sheila and with the island people, and how to do so was the question.
+
+First, clearly, he must not apply the order to confine Dyck to his
+plantation; also he must give Dyck authority to use the hounds in
+hunting down the Maroons and slaves who were committing awful crimes.
+He forthwith decided to write, asking Dyck to send him outline of his
+scheme against the rebels. That he must do, for the game was with Dyck.
+
+"How long will it take the hounds to get to Salem?" he asked the Custos
+presently in his office, with deepset lines in his face and a determined
+look in his eyes. He was an arrogant man, but he was not insane, and he
+wished to succeed. It could only be success if he dragged Jamaica out of
+this rebellion with flying colours, and his one possible weapon was the
+man whom he detested.
+
+"Why, your honour, as we sent them by wagons and good horses they should
+be in Dyck Calhoun's hands this evening. They should be there by now
+almost, for they've been going for hours, and the distance is not great."
+
+The governor nodded, and began to write. A halfhour later he handed to
+the Custos what he had written.
+
+"See what you think of that, Custos," he said. "Does it, in your mind,
+cover the ground as it should?"
+
+The Custos read it all over slowly and carefully, weighing every word.
+Presently he handed back the paper. "Your honour, it is complete and
+masterly," he said. "It puts the crushing of the revolt into the hands
+of Mr. Calhoun, and nothing could be wiser. He has the gifts of a
+leader, and he will do the job with no mistake, and in a time of crisis
+like this, that is essential. You have given him the right to order the
+militia to obey him, and nothing could be better. He will organize like
+a master. We haven't forgotten his fight on the Ariadne. Didn't the
+admiral tell the story at the dinner we gave him of how this ex-convict
+and mutineer, by sheer genius, broke the power of the French at the
+critical moment and saved our fleet, though it was only three-fourths
+that of the French?"
+
+"You don't think the French will get us some day?" asked the governor
+with a smile.
+
+"I certainly don't since our defences have been improved. Look at the
+sixty big cannon on Fort Augusta! They'd be knocked to smithereens
+before they could get into the quiet waters of the harbour. Don't forget
+the narrows, your honour. Then there's the Apostle's Battery with its
+huge shot, and the guns of Fort Royal would give them a cross-fire that
+would make them sick. Besides, we could stop them within the shoals and
+reefs and narrow channels before they got near the inner circle. It
+would only be the hand of God that would get them in, and it doesn't work
+for Frenchmen these days, I observe. No, this place is safe, and King's
+House will be the home of British governors for many a century."
+
+"Ah, that's your gallant faith, and no doubt you are right, but go on
+with your tale of the hounds," said Lord Mallow.
+
+"Your honour, as the hounds went away with Michael Clones there was
+greater applause than I have ever seen in the island except when Rodney
+defeated De Grasse. Imagine a little sloop in the wash of the seas and
+the buccaneers piling down on him, and no chance of escape, and then a
+great British battleship appearing, and the situation saved--that was how
+we were placed here till the hounds arrived.
+
+"Your honour, this morning's--this early morning's exit of the hounds was
+like a procession of veterans to Walhalla. There was the sun breaking
+over the tops of the hills, a crimsonish, greyish, opaline touch of soft
+sprays or mists breaking away from the onset of the sunrise; and all the
+trees with night-lips wet sucking in the sun and drinking up the light
+like an overseer at a Christmas breakfast; and you know what that is.
+And all the shore, rocky and sandy, rough and smooth, happy and homely,
+shimmering in the radiance. And hundreds of Creoles and coloured folk
+beating the ground in agitation, and slaves a-plenty carrying boxes to
+the ships that are leaving, and white folk crowding the streets, and
+bugles blowing, and the tramp of the militia, and the rattle of carts on
+the cobble-stones, and the voices of the officers giving orders, and
+turmoil everywhere.
+
+"Then, suddenly, the sharp sound of a long whip and a voice calling, and
+there rises out of the landing place the procession--the sixty dogs in
+three wagons, their ten drivers with their whips, but keeping order by
+the sound of their voices, low, soft, and peculiar, and then the horses
+starting into a quick trot which presently would become a canter--and the
+hounds were off to Salem! There could be no fear with the hounds loose
+to do the hunting."
+
+"But suppose when they get to Salem their owner is no more."
+
+The Custos laughed. "Him, your honour--him no more! Isn't he the man
+of whom the black folk say: "Lucky buckra--morning, lucky new-comer!"
+If that's his reputation, and the coming of his hounds just when the
+island most needed them is good proof of it, do you think he'll be killed
+by a lot of dirty Maroons! Ah, Calhoun's a man with the luck of the
+devil, your honour! He has the pull--as sure as heaven's above he'll
+make success. If you command your staff to have this posted as a
+proclamation throughout the island, it will do as much good as a thousand
+soldiers. The military officers will not object, they know how big a man
+he is, and they have had enough. The news is not good from all over the
+island, for there are bad planters and bad overseers, and they've
+poisoned large fields of men in many quarters of the island, and things
+are wrong.
+
+"But this proclamation will put things right. It will stop the slaves
+from revolting; it will squelch the Maroons, and I'm certain sure Calhoun
+will have Maroons ready to fight for us, not against us, before this
+thing is over. I tell you, your honour, it means the way out--that's
+what it means. So, if you'll give me your order, keeping a copy of it
+for the provost-marshal, I'll see it's delivered to Dyck Calhoun before
+morning--perhaps by midnight. It's not more than a six hours' journey
+in the ordinary way."
+
+At that moment an aide-de-camp entered, and with grave face presented to
+the governor the last report from the provost-marshal-general. Then he
+watched the governor read the report.
+
+"Ten more killed and twenty wounded!" said the governor. "It must be
+stopped."
+
+He gave the Custos the letter to Dyck Calhoun, and a few moments later
+handed the proclamation to his aide-de-camp.
+
+"That will settle the business, your honour," said the aide-de-camp as he
+read the proclamation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+SHEILA HAS HER SAY
+
+"Then, tell me please, what you know of the story," said the governor to
+Sheila at King's House one afternoon two weeks later. "I only get meagre
+reports from the general commanding. But you close to the intimate
+source of the events must know all."
+
+Sheila shrank at the suggestion in the governor's voice, but she did not
+resent it. She had purposes which she must carry out, and she steeled
+herself. She wanted to get from Lord Mallow a pledge concerning Dyck
+Calhoun, and she must be patient.
+
+"I know nothing direct from Mr. Calhoun, your honour!" she said, "but
+only through his servant, Michael Clones, who is a friend of my Darius
+Boland, and they have met often since the first outbreak. You know, of
+course, what happened at Port Louise--how the Maroons seized and murdered
+the garrison, how families were butchered when they armed first, how
+barbarism broke loose and made all men combine to fight the rebels. Even
+before Mr. Calhoun came they had had record of a sack of human ears, cut
+from the dead rebel-slaves, when they had been killed by faithful slaves,
+and good progress was made. But the revolters fixed their camps on high
+rocks, and by blowing of shells brought many fresh recruits to the
+struggle. It was only when Mr. Calhoun came with his hounds that
+anything decisive was done. For the rebels--Maroons and slaves--were
+hid, well entrenched and cautious, and the danger was becoming greater
+every day. On Mr. Calhoun's arrival, he was almost caught in ambush,
+being misled, and saved himself only by splendid markmanship. He was
+attacked by six rebels of whom he killed four, and riding his wounded
+horse over the other two he escaped. Then he set the hounds to work and
+the rebellion in that district was soon over."
+
+"It was gathering strength with increasing tragedy elsewhere," remarked
+the governor. "Some took refuge in hidden places, and came out only to
+steal, rob, and murder--and worse. In one place, after a noted slave,
+well known for his treachery, had been killed--Khoftet was his name--
+his head was cut off by slaves friendly to us and his heart roasted and
+eaten. There is but one way to deal with these people. No gaming or
+drinking must be allowed, blowing of shells or beating of drums must be
+forbidden, and every free negro or mulatto must wear on his arm a sign--
+perhaps a cross in blue or red."
+
+"Slavery is doomed," said Sheila firmly. "Its end is not far off."
+
+"Well, they still keep slaves in the land of Washington and Alexander
+Hamilton. They are better off here at any rate than in their own
+country, where they were like animals among whom they lived. Here they
+are safe from poverty, cared for in sickness, and have no fear of being
+handed over to the keepers of carrion, or being the food of the
+gallinaso. They can feed their fill on fricasees of macaca worms and
+steal without punishment teal or ring-tailed pigeons and black crabs from
+the massa."
+
+"But they are not free. They are atoms in heaps of dust. They have no
+rights--no liberties."
+
+Sheila was agitated, but she showed no excitement.
+
+She seemed to Lord Mallow like one who had perfect control of herself,
+and was not the victim of anticipation. She seemed, save for her dark
+searching eyes, like one who had gone through experience which had
+disciplined her to control. Only her hands were demonstrative--yet
+quietly so. Any one watching her closely would have seen that her hands
+were sensitive, expressed even more markedly than her eyes or lips what
+were her feelings. Her tragedy had altered her in one sense. She was
+paler and thinner than ever she had been, but there was enough of her,
+and that delicately made, which gave the governor a thrill of desire to
+make her his own for the rest of his life or hers. He had also gone
+through much since they had last met, and he had seen his own position in
+the balance--uncertain, troubled, insecure. He realized that he had lost
+reputation, which had scarcely been regained by his consent to the use of
+the hounds and giving Dyck Calhoun a free hand, as temporary head of the
+militia. He could not put him over the regular troops, but as the
+general commanding was, in effect, the slave of Dyck Calhoun, there was
+no need for anxiety.
+
+Dyck Calhoun had smashed the rebellion, had quieted the island, had
+risen above all the dark disturbances of revolt like a master. He had
+established barracks and forts at many points in the island, and had
+stationed troops in them; he had subdued Maroons and slaves by the
+hounds. Yet he had punished only the chief of those who had been in
+actual rebellion, and had repressed the violent punishments of the
+earlier part of the conflict. He had forbidden any one to be burned
+alive, and had ordered that no one should be executed without his first
+judging--with the consent of the governor!--the facts of the case.
+
+Dyck had built up for himself a reputation as no one in all the history
+of the island had been able to do. He commanded by more than official
+authority--by personality and achievement. There was no one in the
+island but knew they had been saved by his prudence, foresight and skill.
+It was to their minds stupendous and romantic. Fortunately they showed
+no strong feeling against Lord Mallow. By placing King's House at
+disposal as a hospital, and by gifts of food and money to wives and
+children of soldiers and civilians, the governor had a little eradicated
+his record of neglect.
+
+Lord Mallow had a way with him when he chose to use it. He was not
+without the gift for popularity, and he saw now that he could best attain
+it by treating Dyck Calhoun well. He saw troops come and go, he listened
+to grievances, he corrected abuses, he devised a scheme for nursing, he
+planned security for the future, he gave permission for buccaneer trading
+with the United States, he had by legislative order given the Creoles a
+better place in the civic organism. This was a time for broad policy--
+for distribution of cassavi bread, yams and papaws, for big, and maybe
+rough, display of power and generosity. He was not blind to the fact
+that he might by discreet courses impress favourably his visitor. All he
+did was affected by that thought. He could not but think that Sheila
+would judge of him by what he did as much as by what he said.
+
+He looked at her now with interest and longing. He loved to hear her
+talk, and she had information which was no doubt truer than most he
+received--was closer to the brine, as it were.
+
+"What more can you tell me of Mr. Calhoun and his doings?" he asked
+presently. "He is lucky in having so perfect a narrator of his
+histories--yet so unexpected a narrator."
+
+A flush stole slowly up Sheila's face, and gave a glow even to the roots
+of her hair. She could not endure these references to the dark gulf
+between her and Dyck Calhoun.
+
+"My lord," she said sharply, "it is not meet that you should say such
+things. Mr. Calhoun was jailed for killing my father--let it be at that.
+The last time you saw me you offered me your hand and heart. Well, do
+you know I had almost made up my mind to accept your hand, when the news
+of this trouble was brought to you, and you left us--to ourselves and our
+dangers!"
+
+The governor started. "You are as unfriendly as a 'terral garamighty,'
+you make me draw my breath thick as the blackamoors, as they say. I did
+what I thought best," he said. "I did not think you would be in any
+danger. I had not heard of the Maroons being so far south as Salem."
+
+"Yet it is the man who foresees chances that succeeds, as you should know
+by now, your honour. I was greatly touched by the offer you made me--
+indeed, yes," she added, seeing the rapt eager look in his face. "I had
+been told what had upset me, that Dyck Calhoun was guilty of killing my
+father, and all the world seemed dreadful. Yes, in the reaction, it was
+almost on my tongue to say yes to you, for you are a good talker, you had
+skill in much that you did, and with honest advice from a wife might do
+much more. So I was in a mind to say yes. I had had much to try me,
+indeed, so very much. Ever since I first saw Dyck Calhoun he had been
+the one man who had ever influenced me. He was for ever in my mind even
+when he was in prison--oh, what is prison, what is guilt even to a girl
+when she loves! Yes, I loved him. There it was. He was ever in my
+mind, and I came here to Jamaica--he was here--for what else? Salem
+could have been restored by Darius Boland or others, or I could have sold
+it. I came to Jamaica to find him here--unwomanly, perhaps, you will
+say."
+
+"Unusual only with a genius--like you."
+
+"Then you do not speak what is in your mind, your honour. You say what
+you feel is the right thing to say--the slave of circumstances. I will
+be wholly frank with you. I came here to see Dyck Calhoun, for I knew he
+would not come to see me. Yes, there it was, a real thing in his heart.
+If he had been a lesser man than he is, he would have come to America
+when he was freed from prison. But he did not, would not, come. He knew
+he had been found guilty of killing my father, and that for him and me
+there could be no marriage--indeed he never asked me to marry him.
+
+"Yet I know he would have done so if he could. When I came to know
+what he was jailed for doing, I felt there was no place for him and me
+together in the world. Yet my heart kept crying out to him, and I felt
+there was but one thing left for me to do, and that was to make it
+impossible for me to think of him even, or for him to think of me. Then
+you came and offered me your hand. It was a hand most women might have
+been glad to accept from the standpoint of material things. And you were
+Irish like myself, and like the boy I loved. I was sick of the robberies
+of life and time, and I wanted to be out of it all in some secure place.
+What place so secure from the sorrow that was eating at my heart as
+marriage! It said no to every stir of feeling that was vexing me, to
+every show of love or remembrance. So I listened to you. It was not
+because you were a governor or a peer--no, not that! For even in
+Virginia I had offers from one higher than yourself--and younger, and a
+peer also. No, it was not material things that influenced me, but your
+own intellectual eminence; for you have more brains than most men, as you
+know so well."
+
+The governor interrupted her with a gesture. "No, no, I am not so vain
+as you think. If I were I should have seen at Salem that you meant to
+say yes."
+
+"Yet you know well you have gifts, though you have made sad mistakes
+here. Do not think it was your personality, your looks that induced me
+to think of you, to listen to you. When Mr. Calhoun told me the truth,
+and gave me a letter he had written to me--"
+
+"A letter--to you?"
+
+There was surprise in the governor's voice--surprise and chagrin, for the
+thing had moved him powerfully. "Yes, a letter to me which he never
+meant me to have. It was a kind of diary of his heart, and it was
+written even while I was landing on the island on Christmas Day. It was
+the most terribly truthful thing, opening his whole soul to the girl whom
+he had always loved, but from whom he was separated by a thing not the
+less tragical because it was merely technical. He gave it me to read,
+and when I read it I saw there was no place for me in the world except
+a convent or marriage. The convent could not be, for I was no Catholic,
+and marriage seemed the only thing possible. That day you came I saw
+only one thing to do--one mad, hopeless thing to do."
+
+"Mad and hopeless!" burst out Lord Mallow. "How so? Your very reason
+shows that it was sane, well founded in the philosophy of the heart."
+
+He was eager to win her yet, and he did not see the end at which she
+aimed. He felt he must tell her all the passion and love he felt. But
+her look gave no encouragement, her eyes were uninviting.
+
+Sheila smiled painfully. "Yes, mad and hopeless, for be sure of this: we
+cannot kill in one day the growth of years. I could not cure myself of
+loving him by marrying you. There had to be some other cure for that.
+I never knew and never loved my father. But he was my father, and if
+Mr. Calhoun killed him, I could not marry him. But at last I came to
+know that your love and affection could not make me forget him--
+no, never. I realize that now. He and I can never come together,
+but I owe him so much--I owe him my life, for he saved it; he must ever
+have a place in my heart, be to me more than any one else can be. I want
+you to do something for him."
+
+"What do you wish?"
+
+"I want you to have removed from him the sentence of the British
+Government. I want him to be free to come and go anywhere in the world
+--to return to England if he wishes it, to be a free man, and not a
+victim Off Outlawry. I want that, and you ought to give it to him."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Indignation filled her eyes. "You ask why. He has saved your
+administration and the island from defeat and horrible loss. He has
+prevented most of the slaves from revolting, and he conquered the
+Maroons. The empire is his debtor. Will you do this for one who has
+done so much for you?"
+
+Lord Mallow was disconcerted, but he did not show it. "I can do no more
+than I have done. I have not confined him to his plantation as the
+Government commanded; I cannot go beyond that."
+
+"You can put his case from the standpoint of a patriot."
+
+For a moment the governor hesitated, then he said: "Because you ask me--"
+
+"I want it done for his sake, not for mine," she returned with decision.
+"You owe it to yourself to see that it is done. Gratitude is not dead in
+you, is it?"
+
+Lord Mallow flushed. "You press his case too hard. You forget what he
+is--a mutineer and a murderer, and no one should remember that as you
+should."
+
+"He has atoned for both, and you know it well. Besides, he was not a
+murderer. Even the courts did not say he was. They only said he was
+guilty of manslaughter. Oh, your honour, be as gallant as your name and
+place warrant."
+
+He looked at her for a moment with strange feelings in his heart. Then
+he said: "I will give you an answer in twenty-four hours. Will that do,
+sweet persuader?"
+
+"It might do," she answered, and, strange to say, she had a sure feeling
+that he would say yes, in spite of her knowledge that, in his heart of
+hearts, he hated Calhoun.
+
+As she left the room, Lord Mallow stood for a moment looking after her.
+
+"She loves the rogue in spite of all!" he said bitterly. "But she must
+come with me. They are apart as the poles. Yet I shall do as she wishes
+if I am to win her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE COMING OF NOREEN
+
+The next day came a new element in the situation: a ship arrived from
+England. On it was one who had come to Jamaica to act as governess to
+two children of the officer commanding the regular troops in the island.
+She had been ill for a week before nearing Kingston, and when the Regent
+reached the harbour she was in a bad way. The ship's doctor was
+despondent about her; but he was a second-rate man, and felt that perhaps
+an island doctor might give her some hope. When she was carried ashore
+she was at once removed to the home of the general commanding at Spanish
+Town, and there a local doctor saw her.
+
+"What is her history?" he asked, after he had seen the haggard face of
+the woman.
+
+The ship's doctor did not know; and the general commanding was in the
+interior at the head of his troops. There was no wife in the general's
+house, as he was a widower; and his daughters, of twelve and fourteen,
+under a faithful old housekeeper, had no knowledge of the woman's life.
+
+When she was taken to the general's house she was in great dejection, and
+her face had a look of ennui and despair. She was thin and worn, and her
+eyes only told of the struggle going on between life and death.
+
+"What is her name?" asked the resident doctor. "Noreen Balfe," was the
+reply of the ship's doctor.
+
+"A good old Irish name, though you can see she comes of the lower ranks
+of life."
+
+"Married?"
+
+The ship's doctor pointed to her hand which had a wedding-ring. "Ah,
+yes, certainly . . . what hope have you of her?"
+
+"I don't know what to say. The fever is high. She isn't trying to live;
+she's got some mental trouble, I believe. But you and I would be of no
+use in that kind of thing."
+
+"I don't take to new-fangled ideas of mental cure," said the ship's
+doctor. "Cure the body and the mind will cure itself."
+
+A cold smile stole to the lips of the resident doctor. Those were days
+of little scientific medical skill, and no West Indian doctor had
+knowledge enough to control a discussion of the kind. "But I'd like to
+see some one with brains take an interest in her," he remarked.
+
+"I leave her in your hands," was the reply. "I'm a ship's medico, and
+she's now ashore."
+
+"It's a pity," said the resident doctor reflectively, as he watched a
+servant doing necessary work at the bedside. "She hasn't long to go as
+she is, yet I've seen such cases recover."
+
+As they left the room together they met Sheila and one of the daughters
+of the house. "I've come to see the sick woman from the ship, if I may,"
+Sheila said. "I've just heard about her, and I'd like to be of use."
+
+The resident doctor looked at her with admiration. She was the most
+conspicuous figure in the island, and her beauty was a fine support to
+her wealth and reputation. It was like her to be kind in this frank way.
+
+"You can be of great use if you will," he said. "The fever is not
+infectious, I'm glad to say. So you need have no fear of being with her
+--on account of others."
+
+"I have no fear," responded Sheila with a friendly smile, "and I will go
+to her now--no, if you don't mind, I'd prefer to go alone," she added as
+she saw the doctor was coming with her.
+
+The other bowed and nodded approvingly. "The fewer the better," he said.
+"I think you ought to go in alone--quite alone," he said with gentle
+firmness, for he saw the girl with Sheila was also going with her.
+
+So it was that Sheila entered alone, and came to the bed and looked at
+the woman in the extreme depression of fever. "Prepare some lime-juice,
+please," she said to the servant on the other side of the bed. "Keep it
+always beside the bed--I know what these cases are."
+
+The servant disappeared, and the eyes of the sick woman opened and looked
+at Sheila. There shot into them a look of horror and relief in one, if
+such a thing might be. A sudden energy inspired her, and she drew
+herself up in bed, her face gone ghastly.
+
+"You are Sheila Boyne, aren't you?" she asked in a low half-guttural
+note.
+
+"I am Sheila Llyn," was the astonished reply. "It's the same thing,"
+came the response. "You are the daughter of Erris Boyne."
+
+Sheila turned pale. Who was this woman that knew her and her history?
+
+"What is your name?" she asked--"your real name--what is it?"
+
+"My name is Noreen Balfe; it was Noreen Boyne." For a moment Sheila
+could not get her bearings. The heavy scent of the flowers coming in at
+the window almost suffocated her. She seemed to lose a grip of herself.
+Presently she made an effort at composure. "Noreen Boyne! You were then
+the second wife of Erris Boyne?"
+
+"I was his second wife. His first wife was your mother--you are like
+your mother!" Noreen said in agitation.
+
+The meaning was clear. Sheila laid a sharp hand on herself. "Don't get
+excited," she urged with kindly feeling. "He is dead and gone."
+
+"Yes, he is dead and gone."
+
+For a moment Noreen seemed to fight for mastery of her emotion, and
+Sheila said: "Lie still. It is all over. He cannot hurt us now."
+
+The other shook her head in protest. "I came here to forget, and I find
+you--his daughter."
+
+"You find more than his daughter; you find his first wife, and you find
+the one that killed him."
+
+"The one that killed him!" said the woman greatly troubled. "How did
+you know that?"
+
+"All the world knows it. He was in prison four years, and since then he
+has been a mutineer, a treasure-hunter, a planter, and a saviour of these
+islands!"
+
+The sick woman fell back in exhaustion. At that moment the servant
+entered with a pitcher of lime-juice. Sheila took it from her and
+motioned her out of the room; then she held a glass of the liquid to the
+stark lips.
+
+"Drink," she said in a low, kind voice, and she poured slowly into the
+patient's mouth the cooling draught. A moment later Noreen raised
+herself up again.
+
+"Mr. Dyck Calhoun is here?" she asked.
+
+"He is here, and none to-day holds so high a place in the minds of all
+who live here. He has saved the island."
+
+"All are here that matter," said Noreen. "And I came to forget!"
+
+"What do you remember?" asked Sheila. "I remember all--how he died!"
+
+Suddenly Sheila had a desire to shriek aloud. This woman--did this woman
+then see Erris Boyne die? Was she present when the deed was done? If
+so, why was she not called to give evidence at the trial. But yes, she
+was called to give evidence. She remembered it now, and the evidence had
+been that she was in her own home when the killing took place.
+
+"How did he die?" she asked in a whisper.
+
+"One stroke did it--only one, and he fell like a log." She made a motion
+as of striking, and shuddered, covering her eyes with trembling hands.
+
+"You tell me you saw Dyck Calhoun do this to an undefended man--you tell
+me this!"
+
+Sheila's anger was justified in her mind. That Dyck Calhoun should
+
+"I did not see Dyck Calhoun strike him," gasped the woman. "I did not
+say that. Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne!"
+
+"My God!--oh, my God!" said Sheila with ashen lips, but a great light
+breaking in her eyes. "Dyck Calhoun did not kill Erris Boyne! Then who
+killed him?"
+
+There was a moment's pause, then--"I killed him," said the woman in
+agony. "I killed him."
+
+A terrible repugnance seized Sheila. After a moment she said in
+agitation: "You killed him--you struck him down! Yet you let an innocent
+man go to prison, and be kept there for years, and his father go to his
+grave with shame, with estates ruined and home lost--and you were the
+guilty one--you--all the time."
+
+"It was part of my madness. I was a coward and I thought then there were
+reasons why I should feel no pity for Dyck Calhoun. His father injured
+mine--oh, badly! But I was a coward, and I've paid the price."
+
+A kinder feeling now took hold of Sheila. After all, what this woman had
+done gave happiness into her--Sheila's-hands. It relieved Dyck Calhoun
+of shame and disgrace. A jail-bird he was still, but an innocent jail-
+bird. He had not killed Erris Boyne. Besides, it wiped out forever the
+barrier between them. All her blind devotion to the man was now
+justified. His name and fame were clear. Her repugnance of the woman
+was as nothing beside her splendid feeling of relief. It was as though
+the gates of hell had been closed and the curtains of heaven drawn for
+the eyes to see. Six years of horrible shame wiped out, and a new world
+was before her eyes.
+
+This woman who had killed Erris Boyne must now suffer. She must bear the
+ignominy which had been heaped upon Dyck Calhoun's head. Yet all at once
+there came to her mind a softening feeling. Erris Boyne had been rightly
+killed by a woman he had wronged, for he was a traitor as well as an
+adulterer--one who could use no woman well, who broke faith with all
+civilized tradition, and reverted to the savage. Surely the woman's
+crime was not a dark one; it was injured innocence smiting depravity,
+tyranny and lust.
+
+Suddenly, as she looked at the woman who had done this thing, she, whose
+hand had rid the world of a traitor and a beast, fell back on the pillow
+in a faint. With an exclamation Sheila lifted up the head. If the woman
+was dead, then there was no hope for Dyck Calhoun; any story that she--
+Sheila--might tell would be of no use. Yet she was no longer agitated in
+her body. Hands and fingers were steady, and she felt for the heart with
+firm fingers. Yes, the heart was still beating, and the pulse was
+slightly drumming. Thank God, the woman was alive! She rang a bell and
+lifted up the head of the sick woman.
+
+A moment later the servant was in the room. Sheila gave her orders
+quickly, and snatched up a pencil from the table. Then, on a piece of
+paper, she wrote the words: "I, not Dyck Calhoun, killed Erris Boyne."
+
+A few moments later, Noreen's eyes opened, and Sheila spoke to her.
+"I have written these words. Here they are--see them. Sign them."
+
+She read the words, and put a pencil in the trembling fingers, and, on
+the cover of a book Noreen's fingers traced her name slowly but clearly.
+Then Sheila thrust the paper in her bosom, and an instant later a nurse,
+sent by the resident doctor, entered.
+
+"They cannot hang me or banish me, for my end has come," whispered Noreen
+before Sheila left.
+
+In the street of Spanish Town almost the first person Sheila saw was
+Dyck Calhoun. With pale, radiant look she went to him. He gazed at her
+strangely, for there was that in her face he could not understand. There
+was in it all the faith of years, all the truth of womanhood, all the
+splendour of discovery, all that which a man can see but once in a human
+face and be himself.
+
+"Come with me," she said, and she moved towards King's House. He obeyed.
+For some moments they walked in silence, then all at once under a
+magnolia tree she stopped.
+
+"I want you to read what a woman wrote who has just arrived in the island
+from England. She is ill at the house of the general commanding."
+
+Taking from her breast the slip of paper, she handed it to him. He read
+it with eyes and senses that at first could hardly understand.
+
+"God in heaven--oh, merciful God!" he said in great emotion, yet with a
+strange physical quiet.
+
+"This woman was his wife," Sheila said.
+
+He handed the paper back. He conquered his agitation. The years of
+suffering rolled away. "They'll put her in jail," he said with a strange
+regret. He had a great heart.
+
+"No, I think not," was the reply. Yet she was touched by his compassion
+and thoughtfulness.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because she is going to die--and there is no time to lose. Come, we
+will go to Lord Mallow."
+
+"Mallow!" A look of bitter triumph came into Dyck's face. "Mallow--at
+last!" he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+WITH THE GOVERNOR
+
+Lord Mallow frowned on his secretary. "Mr. Calhoun to see me! What's
+his business?"
+
+"One can guess, your honour. He's been fighting for the island."
+
+"Why should he see me? There is the general commanding."
+
+The secretary did not reply, he knew his chief; and, after a moment, Lord
+Mallow said: "Show him in." When Dyck Calhoun entered the governor gave
+him a wintry smile of welcome, but did not offer to shake hands. "Will
+you sit down?" he said, with a slow gesture.
+
+Calhoun made a dissenting motion. "I prefer to stand, your honour."
+
+This was the first time the two men had met alone since Dyck had arrived
+in Jamaica, or since his trial. Calhoun was dressed in planter's
+costume, and the governor was in an officer's uniform. They were in
+striking contrast in face and figure--the governor long, lanky, ascetic
+in appearance, very intellectual save for the riotous mouth, and very
+spick and span--as though he had just stepped out of Almack's; while
+Calhoun was tough and virile, and with the air of a thorough outdoor man.
+There was in his face the firm fighting look of one who had done things
+and could tackle big affairs--and something more; there was in it quiet
+exultation. Here he was now at last alone with the man who had done him
+great harm, and for whom he had done so much; who had sought to wipe him
+off the slate of life and being; who had tried to win the girl from whom
+he himself had been parted.
+
+In spite of it all--of his life in jail, of his stark mutiny, of the
+oppression of the governor, he had not been beaten down, but had
+prospered in spite of all. He had by his will, wisdom and military
+skill, saved the island in its hour of peril, saved its governor from
+condemnation; and here he was facing the worst enemy of his life with the
+cards of success in his hands.
+
+"You have done the island and England great service, Mr. Calhoun," said
+the governor at last.
+
+"It is the least I could do for the land where I have made my home, where
+I have reaped more than I have sown."
+
+"We know your merit, sir."
+
+A sharp satirical look came into Calhoun's face and his voice rang out
+with vigour. "And because you knew my merit you advised the crown to
+confine me to my estate, and you would have had me shot if you could.
+I am what I am because there was a juster man than yourself in Jamaica.
+Through him I got away and found treasure, and I bought land and have
+helped to save this island and your place. What do I owe you, your
+honour? Nothing that I can see--nothing at all."
+
+"You are a mutineer, and but that you showed your courage would have been
+hung at the yard-arm, as many of your comrades in England were."
+
+A cold smile played at Calhoun's lips. "My luck was as great as my
+courage, I know. I have the luck of Enniscorthy!"
+
+At the last words the governor winced, for it was by that touch Calhoun
+had defeated him in the duel long ago. It galled him that this man whom
+he detested could say such things to him with truth. Yet in his heart of
+hearts he had for Calhoun a great respect. Calhoun's invincible will had
+conquered the worst in Mallow's nature, had, in spite of himself, created
+a new feeling in him. There was in Mallow the glimmer of greatness, and
+only his supreme selfishness had made him what he was. He laid a hand on
+himself now, though it was not easy to do so.
+
+"It was not the luck of Enniscorthy that sent Erris Boyne to his doom,"
+he said, however, with anger in his mind, for Dyck's calm boldness
+stirred the worst in him. He thought he saw in him an exultancy which
+could only come from his late experiences in the field. It was as though
+he had come to triumph over the governor. Mallow said what he had said
+with malice. He looked to see rage in the face of Dyck Calhoun, and was
+nonplussed to find that it had only a stern sort of pleasure. The eyes
+of Calhoun met his with no trace of gloom, but with a valour worthy of a
+high cause--their clear blue facing his own with a constant penetration.
+Their intense sincerity gave him a feeling which did not belong to
+authority. It was not the look of a criminal, whatever the man might be-
+-mutineer and murderer. As for mutineer, all that Calhoun had fought for
+had been at last admitted by the British Government, and reforms had been
+made that were due to the mutiny at the Nore. Only the technical crime
+had been done by Calhoun, and he had won pardon by his bravery in the
+battle at sea. Yes, he was a man of mark, even though a murderer.
+
+Calhoun spoke slowly. "Your honour, you have said what you have a right
+to say to a man who killed Erris Boyne. But this man you accuse did not
+do it." The governor smiled, for the assumption was ridiculous. He
+shrugged a shoulder and a sardonic curl came to his lip.
+
+"Who did it then?"
+
+"If you will come to the house of the general commanding you will see."
+
+The governor was in a great quandary. He gasped. "The general
+commanding--did he kill Erris Boyne, then?"
+
+"Not he, yet the person that did it is in this house. Listen, your
+honour. I have borne the name of killing Erris Boyne, and I ought to
+have killed him, for he was a traitor. I had proofs of it; but I did not
+kill him, and I did not betray him, for he had alive a wife and daughter,
+and something was due to them. He was a traitor, and was in league with
+the French. It does not matter that I tell you now, for his daughter
+knows the truth. I ought to have told it long ago, and if I had I should
+not have been imprisoned."
+
+"You were a brave man, but a fool--always a fool," said the governor
+sharply.
+
+"Not so great a fool that I can't recover from it," was the calm reply.
+"Perhaps it was the best thing that ever happened to me, for now I can
+look the world in the face. It's made a man of me. It was a woman
+killed him," was Calhoun's added comment. "Will your honour come with me
+and see her?"
+
+The governor was thunderstruck. "Where is she?"
+
+"As I have told you-in the house of the general commanding."
+
+The governor rose abashed. "Well, I can go there now. Come."
+
+"Perhaps you would prefer I should not go with you in the street. The
+world knows me as a mutineer, thinks of me as a murderer! Is it fair to
+your honour?"
+
+Something in Calhoun's voice roused the rage of Lord Mallow, but he
+controlled it, and said calmly: "Don't talk nonsense, sir; we shall walk
+together, if you will."
+
+At the entrance to the house of the general, the man to whom this visit
+meant so much stopped and took a piece of paper from his pocket. "Your
+honour, here is the name of the slayer of Erris Boyne. I give it to you
+now to see, so you may not be astonished when you see her."
+
+The governor stared at the paper. "Boyne's wife, eh?" he said in a
+strange mood. "Boyne's wife--what is she doing here?"
+
+Calhoun told him briefly as he took the paper back, and added: "It was
+accident that brought us all together here, your honour, but the hand of
+God is in it."
+
+"Is she very ill?"
+
+"She will not live, I think."
+
+"To whom did she tell her story?"
+
+"To Miss Sheila Llyn."
+
+The governor was nettled.
+
+"Oh, to Miss Llyn When did you see her?"
+
+"Just before I came to you."
+
+"What did the woman look like--this Noreen Boyne?"
+
+"I do not know; I have not seen her."
+
+"Then how came you by the paper with her signature?"
+
+"Miss Llyn gave it to me."
+
+Anger filled Lord Mallow's mind. Sheila--why now the way would be open
+to Calhoun to win--to marry her! It angered him, but he held himself
+steadily.
+
+"Where is Miss Llyn?"
+
+"She is here, I think. She came back when she left me at your door."
+
+"Oh, she left you at my door, did she? . . . But let me see the woman
+that's come so far to put the world right."
+
+A few moments later they stood in the bedroom of Noreen Boyne, they two
+and Sheila Llyn, the nurse having been sent out.
+
+Lord Mallow looked down on the haggard, dying woman with no emotion.
+Only a sense of duty moved him.
+
+"What is it you wished to say to me?" he asked the patient.
+
+"Who are you?" came the response in a frayed tone.
+
+"I am the governor of the island--Lord Mallow."
+
+"Then I want to tell you that I killed Erris Boyne--with this hand I
+killed him." She raised her skinny hand up, and her eyes became glazed.
+"He had used me vilely and I struck him down. He was a bad man."
+
+"You let an innocent man bear punishment, you struck at one who did you
+no harm, and you spoiled his life for him. You can see that, can't you?"
+
+The woman's eyes sought the face of Dyck Calhoun, and Calhoun said: "No,
+you did not spoil my life, Noreen Boyne. You have made it. Not that I
+should have chosen the way of making it, but there it is, as God's in
+heaven, I forgive you."
+
+Noreen's face lost some of its gloom. "That makes it easier," she said
+brokenly. "I can't atone by any word or act, but I'm sorry. I've kept
+you from being happy, and you were born to be happy. Your father had
+hurt mine, had turned him out of our house for debt, and I tried to pay
+it all back. When they suspected you I held my peace. I was a coward;
+I could not say you were innocent without telling the truth, and that I
+could not do then. But now I'll tell it--I think I'd have told it
+whether I was dying or not, though. Yes, if I'd seen you here I'd have
+told it, I'm sure. I'm not all bad."
+
+Sheila leaned over the bed. "Never mind about the past. You can help a
+man back to the good opinion of the world now."
+
+"I hurt you too," said Noreen with hopeless pain. "You were his friend."
+
+"I believed in him always--even when he did not deny the crime," was the
+quiet reply.
+
+"There's no good going on with that," said the governor sharply. "We
+must take down her statement in writing, and then--"
+
+"Look, she is sinking!" said Calhoun sharply. The woman's head had
+dropped forward, her chin was on her breast, and her hands became
+clenched.
+
+"The doctor at once-bring in the nurse," said Calhoun. "She's dying."
+
+An instant later, the nurse entered with Sheila, and in a short time the
+doctor came.
+
+When later the doctor saw Lord Mallow alone he said: "She can't live more
+than two days."
+
+"That's good for her in a way," answered the governor, and in reply to
+the doctor's question why, he said: "Because she'd be in prison."
+
+"In prison--has she broken the law?"
+
+"She is now under arrest, though she doesn't know it.
+
+"What was her crime, your honour?"
+
+"She killed a man."
+
+"What man?"
+
+"Him for whom Dyck Calhoun was sent to prison--Erris Boyne."
+
+"Mr. Calhoun was not guilty, then?"
+
+"No. As soon as the woman is dead, I mean to announce the truth."
+
+"Not till then, your honour?"
+
+"Not till then."
+
+"It's hard on Calhoun."
+
+"Is it? It's years since he was tried and condemned. Two days cannot
+matter now."
+
+"Perhaps not. Last night the woman said to me: 'I'm glad I'm going to
+die.'" Then he added: "Calhoun will be more popular than ever now."
+
+The governor winced.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THEN WHAT HAPPENED
+
+An hour after Noreen Boyne had been laid in her grave, there was a
+special issue of the principal paper telling all the true facts of the
+death of Erris Boyne. Thus the people of Jamaica came to know that Dyck
+Calhoun was innocent of the crime of killing Erris Boyne, and he was made
+the object of splashing admiration, and was almost mobbed by admirers in
+the street. It all vexed Lord Mallow; but he steeled himself to
+urbanity, and he played his part well. He was clever enough to see it
+would pay him to be outwardly gracious to Calhoun. So it was he made a
+speech in the capital on the return of the general commanding and the
+troops from subduing the Maroons, in which he said: "No one in all the
+King's dominions had showed greater patriotism and military skill than
+their friend Mr. Dyck Calhoun, who had been harshly treated by a mistaken
+Government."
+
+A few hours later, in the sweet garden of the house where Sheila and her
+mother lodged, Calhoun came upon the girl whose gentle dignity and beauty
+seemed to glow.
+
+At first all she said to him was, "Welcome, old friend," and at last she
+said, "Now you can come to the United States, Dyck, and make a new life
+there."
+
+Presently he said: "I ought to go where you wish me to go, for you came
+to me here when I was rejected of men. I owe you whatever I am that's
+worth while, if anything I am is worth while. Your faith kept me alive
+in my darkest days--even when I thought I had wronged you."
+
+"Then you will come to Virginia with me--as my husband, Dyck?" She
+blushed and laughed. "You see I have to propose to you, for you've never
+asked me to marry you. I'm throwing myself at your head, sir, you
+observe!"
+
+He gave an honest smile of adoration. "I came to-day to ask you to be
+my wife--for that reason only. I could not do it till the governor had
+declared my innocence. The earth is sweeter to-day than it has been
+since time began."
+
+He held out his arms, and an instant later the flowers she carried were
+crushed to her breast, with her lips given to his.
+
+A little later she drew from her pocket a letter. "You must read that,"
+she said. "It is from the great Alexander Hamilton--yes, he will be
+great, he will play a wondrous part in the life of my new country.
+Read it Dyck."
+
+After he had read it, he said: "He was born a British subject here in
+these islands, and he goes to help Americans live according to British
+principles. With all my sane fellow-countrymen I am glad the Americans
+succeeded. Do you go to your Virginia, and I will come as soon as I have
+put my affairs in order."
+
+"I will not go without you--no, I will not go," she persisted.
+
+"Then we shall be married at once," he declared. And so it was, and all
+the island was en fete, and when Sheila came to Dyck's plantation the
+very earth seemed to rejoice. The slaves went wild with joy, and ate
+and drank their fill, and from every field there came the song:
+
+ "Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey!
+ De big bees is a singin',
+ My heart is held up and de bells is a ringin';
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands!"
+
+And sweetly solitary the two lived their lives, till one day, three
+months later, there came to the plantation the governor and his suite.
+
+When they had dismounted, Lord Mallow said: "I bring you the pay of the
+British Government for something of what you have suffered, sir, and what
+will give your lady pleasure too, I hope. I come with a baronetcy given
+by the King. News of it came to me only this morning."
+
+Calhoun smiled. "Your honour, I can take no title, receive no honour.
+I have ended my life under the British flag. I go to live under the
+Stars and Stripes."
+
+The governor was astounded. "Your lady, sir, do you forget your lady?"
+
+But Sheila answered: "The life of the new world has honours which have
+naught to do with titles."
+
+"I sail for Virginia by the first ship that goes," said Calhoun. "It is
+good here, but I shall go to a place where things are better, and where I
+shall have work to do. I must decline the baronetcy, your honour. I go
+to a land where the field of life is larger, where Britain shall remake
+herself."
+
+"It will take some time," said the governor tartly. "They'll be long
+apart."
+
+"But they will come together at last--for the world's sake."
+
+There was silence for a moment, and through it came the joy-chant from
+the fields:
+
+ "Hold up yo hands,
+ Hold up yo hands,
+ Bress de Lord for de milk and honey."
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Without the money brains seldom win alone
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS FOR THE ENTIRE "NO DEFENSE":
+
+Beginning of a lifetime of experience, comedy, and tragedy
+Wit is always at the elbow of want
+Without the money brains seldom win alone
+
+
+
+
+
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