Gold and Roses.
The Pilot’s daughter was walking in her garden.
The clematis which shaded the
verandah was a rich mass of purple flowers, where
bees sucked their store of honey; the rose bushes,
in the glory of their second blooming, scented the
air, while about their roots grew masses of mignonette.
Along the winding paths the girl walked;
a pair of garden scissors in one hand and a basket
in the other. She passed under a latticed arch
over which climbed a luxuriant Cloth of Gold, heavy
with innumerable flowers. Standing on tip-toe,
with her arms above her head, she cut half-a-dozen
yellow buds, which she placed in the basket. Passing
on, she came to the pink glory of the garden, Maria
Pare, a mass of brown shoots and clusters of opening
buds whose colour surpassed in delicacy the softest
tint of the pink sea-shell. Here she culled barely
a dozen roses where she might have gathered thirty.
“Yellow and pink,” she mused. “Now
for something bright.” She walked along
the path till she came to M’sieu Cordier, brilliant
with the reddest of blooms. She stole but six
of the best, and laid them in the basket. “We
want more scent,” she said. There was La
France growing close beside; its great petals, pearly
white on the inside and rich cerise without, smelling
deliciously. She robbed the bush of only its most
perfect flowers, for though there were many buds but
few were developed.
Next, she came to the type of her
own innocence, The Maiden Blush, whose half-opened
buds are the perfect emblem of maidenhood, but whose
full-blown flowers are, to put it bluntly, symbolical
of her who, in middle life, has developed extravagantly.
But here again was no perfume. The mistress passed
on to the queen of the garden, La Rosiere, fragrant
beyond all other roses, its reflexed, claret-coloured
petals soft and velvety, its leaves when
did a rose’s greenery fail to be its perfect
complement? tinged underneath with a faint
blush of its own deep colour.
She looked at the yellow, red, and
pink flowers in her basket, and said, “There’s
no white.” Now white roses are often papery,
but there was at least one in the garden worthy of
being grouped with the beauties in the basket.
It was The Bride, typical, in its snowy chastity and
by reason of a pale green tint at the base of its
petals, of that purity and innocence which are the
bride’s best dowry.
Rose cut a dozen long-stemmed flowers
from this lovely bush, and then whether
it was because of the sentiment conveyed by the blooms
she had gathered, or the effect of the landscape, is
a mystery unsolved her eyes wandered from
the garden to the far-off hills. With the richly-laden
basket on her arm, she gazed at the blue haze which
hung over mountain and forest. Regardless of her
pleasant occupation, forgetful that the fragrant flowers
in the basket would wither in the glaring sun, she
stood, looking sadly at the landscape, as though in
a dream.
What were her thoughts? Perhaps
of the glorious work of the Master-Builder; perhaps
of the tints and shades where the blue of the forest,
the brown of the fern-clad foot-hills, the buff of
the sun-dried grass, mottled the panorama which lay
spread before her. But if so, why did she sigh?
Does the contour of a hill suffuse the eye? Not
a hundred-thousand hills could in themselves cause
a sob, not even the gentle sob which amounted to no
more than a painful little catch in Rose’s creamy
throat.
She was standing on the top of the
bank, which was surmounted by a white fence; her knee
resting on the garden-seat upon which she had placed
her basket, whilst in reverie her spirit was carried
beyond the blue mountains. But there appeared
behind her the bulky form of her father, who walked
in carpet slippers upon the gravel of the path.
“Rosebud, my gal.”
The stentorian tones of the old sailor’s voice
woke her suddenly from her day-dream. “There’s
a party in the parlour waitin’ the pleasure
of your company, a party mighty anxious for to converse
with a clean white woman by way of a change.”
The girl quickly took up her flowers.
“Who can it possibly be, father?”
“Come and see, my gal; come and see.”
The old fellow went before, and his
daughter followed him into the house. There,
in the parlour, seated at the table, was Captain Sartoris.
Rose gave way to a little exclamation
of surprise and pleasure; and was advancing to greet
her visitor, when he arrested her with a gesture of
his hand.
“Don’t come too nigh,
Miss Summerhayes,” he said, with mock gravity.
“I might ha’ got the plague or the yaller
fever. A man out o’ currantine is to be
approached with caution. Jest stand up agin’
the sideboard, my dear, and let me look at you.”
The girl put down her roses, and posed as desired.
“Very pretty,” said Sartoris.
“Pink-and-white, pure bred, English which,
after being boxed in with a menag’ry o’
Chinamen and Malays, is wholesome and reassuring.”
“Are you out for good, Captain?”
“They can put me aboard who
can catch me, my dear. I’d run into the
bush, and live like a savage. I’m not much
of a mountaineer, but you would see how I could travel.”
“But what was the disease?” asked the
Pilot.
“Some sort of special Chinese
fever; something bred o’ dirt and filth and
foulness; a complaint you have to live amongst for
weeks, before you’ll get it; a kind o’
beri-beri or break-bone, which was new to the doctors
here. I’ve been disinfected and fumigated
till I couldn’t hardly breathe. Races has
their special diseases, just the same as they has
their special foods: this war’n’t
an English sickness; all its characteristics were
Chinee, and it killed the Captain because he’d
lived that long with Chinamen that, I firmly believe,
his pigtail had begun to shoot. Furrin crews,
furrin crews! Give me the British sailor, an’
I’ll sail my ship anywhere.”
“And run her on the rocks, at
the end of the voyage,” growled the Pilot.
“I never came ashore to argify,”
retorted the Captain. “But if it comes
to a matter of navigation, there are points
I could give any man, even pilots.”
Seeing that the bone of contention
was about to be gnawed by the sea-dogs, Rose interposed
with a question.
“Have you just come ashore, Captain?”
“In a manner o’ speakin’
he has,” answered her father, who took the words
out of his friend’s mouth, “and in a manner
o’ speakin’ he hasn’t. You
see, my dear, we went for a little preliminary cruise.”
“The first thing your father
told me was about this here robbery of mails.
‘When was that?’ I asked. ’On
the night of the 8th or early morning of the 9th,’
he says. That was when the captain of the barque
died. I remembered it well. ‘Summerhayes,’
I said, ‘I have a notion.’ And this
is the result, my dear.”
From the capacious pocket of his thick
pilot-jacket he pulled a brown and charred piece of
canvas.
“What’s that?” he asked.
“I haven’t the least idea,” replied
Rose.
“Does it look as though it might
be a part of a mail-bag?” asked Sartoris.
“Look at the sealing-wax sticking to it.
Now look at that.” He drew from
the deep of another pocket a rusty knife.
“It was found near the other,”
he said. “Its blade was open. And what’s
that engraved on the name-plate? your eyes
are younger than mine, my dear.” The sailor
handed the knife to Rose, who read the name, and exclaimed,
“B. Tresco!”
“That’s what the Pilot
made it,” said Sartoris. “And it’s
what I made it. We’re all agreed that B.
Tresco, whoever he may be, was the owner of that knife.
Now this is evidence: that knife was found in
conjunction with this here bit of brown canvas, which
I take to be part of a mail-bag; and the two of ’em
were beside the ashes of a fire, above high water-mark.
On a certain night I saw a fire lighted at that spot:
that night was the night the skipper of the barque
died and the night when the mails were robbed.
You see, when things are pieced together it looks
bad for B. Tresco.”
“I know him quite well,”
said Rose: “he’s the goldsmith.
What would he have to do with the delivery of mails?”
“Things have got this far,”
said the Pilot. “The postal authorities
say all the bags weren’t delivered on board.
They don’t accuse anyone of robbery as yet,
but they want the names of the boat’s crew.
These Mr. Crookenden says he can’t give, as
the crew was a special one, and the man in charge
of the boat is away. But from the evidence that
Sartoris has brought, it looks as if Tresco could
throw light on the matter.”
“It’s for the police to
take the thing up,” said Sartoris. “I’m
not a detective meself; I’m just a plain sailor I
don’t pretend to be good at following up clues.
But if the police want this here clue, they can have
it. It’s the best one of its kind I ever
come across: look at it from whatever side you
please. It’s almost as perfect a clue as
you could have, if you had one made to order.
A policeman that couldn’t follow up that clue ’Tresco’
on the knife, and, alongside of it, the bit of mail-bag why,
he ought to be turned loose in an unsympathising world,
and break stones for a living. It’s a beautiful
clue. It’s a clue a man can take a pride
in; found all ready on the beach; just a-waitin’
to be picked up, and along comes a chuckle-headed
old salt and grabs it. Now, that clue ought to
be worth a matter of a hundred pound to the Government.
What reward is offered, Pilot?”
“There’s none, as I’m
aware of,” answered Summerhayes. “But
if the post-master is a charitable sort of chap, he
might be inclined to recommend, say, fifty; you bein’
a castaway sailor in very ’umble circumstances.
I’ll see what I can do. I’ll see the
Mayor.”
“Oh, you will!” exclaimed
Sartoris. “You’d better advertise:
’Poor, distressed sailor. All contributions
thankfully received.’ No, sir, don’t
think you can pauperise me. A man who can
find a clue like that” he brought
the palm of his right hand down with a smack upon the
table, where Tresco’s knife lay “a
man who can find that, sir, can make his way in any
community!”
Just at that moment there were heavy
footsteps upon the verandah, and a knocking at the
front door.
Rose, who was sitting near the window,
made a step or two towards the passage, but the old
Pilot, who from where he stood could see through the
glass of the front door, forestalled her, and she seated
herself opposite the skipper and his clues.
“So you think of visiting the
police sergeant?” she asked, by way of keeping
up the conversation.
But the skipper’s whole attention
was fixed on the voices in the next room, into which
the Pilot had conducted his visitor.
“H’m,” said Sartoris,
“I had an idea I knew the voice, but I must have
been mistaken. Who is the party, Miss Rose?”
“I haven’t the slightest
clue,” replied the girl, smiling. “Father
has such a number of strange friends in the port that
I’ve long given up trying to keep count of them.
They come at all hours, about all sorts of things.”
The words were hardly out of her mouth,
when the Pilot, wearing a most serious expression
of face, entered the room.
“Well, well,” he said,
“well, well. Who’d ha’ thought
it? Dear, dear. Of all the extraordinary
things! Now, Cap’n Sartoris, if you’d
‘a’ asked me, I’d ‘a’
said the thing was impossible, impossible. Such
things goes in streaks, and his, to all intents and
purposes, was a bad ’n; and then it turns out
like this. It’s most remarkable, most extraordinary.
It’s beyond me. I don’t fathom it.”
“What the deuce an’ all
are you talkin’ about, Summerhayes?” Sartoris
spoke most deprecatingly. “A man would think
you’d buried a shipmate, or even lost your ship.”
“Eh? What?” the Pilot
thundered. “Lost my ship? No, no.
I’ve bin wrecked in a fruiter off the coast
of Sardinia, an’ I’ve bin cast away on
the island of Curacoa, but it was always in another
man’s vessel. No, sir, I never failed
to bring the owners’ property safe into port.
Any fool can run his ship on shore, and litter her
cargo along half-a-mile of sea coast.”
“We’ve heard that argyment
before,” said Sartoris. “We quite
understand you couldn’t do such a
thing if you tried. You’re a most exceptional
person, and I’m proud to know you; but what’s
this dreadful thing that’s redooced you to such
a state of bad temper, that your best friends ’d
hardly know you? I ask you that, Summerhayes.
Is it anything to do with these clues that’s
on the table?”
“Clues be!”
It is sad to relate that the Pilot of Timber Town
was about to use a strong expression, which only the
presence of his daughter prevented. “Come
out of that room there,” he roared. “Come,
an’ show yourself.”
There was a heavy tread in the passage,
and presently there entered the room a very shabby
figure of a man. A ruddy beard obscured his face;
his hair badly needed cutting; his boots were dirty
and much worn; his hands bore marks of hard work,
but his eyes were bright, and the colour of his cheek
was healthy, and for all the noise he made as he walked
there was strength in his movements and elasticity
in his steps.
Without a word of introduction, he
held out his hand to Miss Summerhayes, who took it
frankly.
Captain Sartoris had risen to his feet.
“How d’y do, sir,”
he said, as he shook hands. “I hope I see
you well, sir. Have you come far, or do you live
close handy?”
“I’ve come a matter of
twenty miles or so to-day,” said the tall stranger.
“Farming in the bush, I suppose,”
said Sartoris. “Very nice occupation, farming,
I should think.” He closely eyed the ragged
man. “Or perhaps you fell down a precipice
of jagged stones which tore you considerable.
Anyhow, I’m glad I see you well, sir, very
glad I see you well.”
There was a rumbling noise like the
echo of distant thunder reverberating through the
hills. Rose and Sartoris almost simultaneously
fixed their eyes upon the Pilot.
Summerhayes’s huge person was
heaving with suppressed merriment, his face was red,
and his mouth was shut tight lest he should explode
with laughter. But when he saw the two pairs
of bewildered eyes staring at him, he burst into a
laugh such as made the wooden walls of the house quiver.
Sartoris stood, regarding the Pilot
as though he trembled for his friend’s senses;
and a look of alarm showed itself in Rose’s face.
“You don’t know him!”
cried the Pilot, pulling himself together. But
the Titanic laughter again took hold of him, and shook
his vast frame. “You’ve travelled
with him, you’ve sailed with him, you’ve
known him, Sartoris you’ve bin shipwrecked
with him!” Here the paroxysm seized the Pilot
anew; and when it had subsided it left him exhausted
and feeble. He sank limply upon the old-fashioned
sofa, and said, almost in a whisper, “It’s
Jack Scarlett, and you didn’t know him; Jack
Scarlett, back from the diggings, with his swag full
of gold and you thought him a stranger.”
It was now the turn of Rose and the
skipper to laugh. Jack, who up to this point
had kept a straight face, joined his merriment to theirs,
and rushing forward they each shook him by the hand
again, but in a totally different manner from that
of their former greeting.
Out of his “jumper” the
fortunate digger pulled a long chamois-leather bag,
tied at the neck with a boot-lace. Taking a soup-plate
from the sideboard, he emptied the contents of the
bag into it, and before the astonished eyes of the
onlookers lay a heap of yellow gold.
They stared, and were speechless.
From about his waist Scarlett untied
a long leather belt, which proved to be lined with
gold. But the soup-plate would hold no more, and
so the lucky digger poured the residue in a heap upon
the polished table. Next, he went out to the
verandah, and undoing his swag, he returned with a
tin canister which had been wrapped in his blankets.
This also was full of gold, and taking off its lid,
he added its contents to the pile upon the table.
“And there’s some left
in camp,” he said. “I couldn’t
carry it all to town.”
“Well, well,” said Sartoris,
“while I’ve been boxed up in that stinking
plague-ship, I might ha’ been on God A’mighty’s
earth, picking up stuff like this. Well, well,
what luck!”
“There must be a matter o’
two thousand pound,” said the Pilot. “Two
thousand pound!”
“More,” said Jack.
“There should be about 800 ozs., valued at something
like L3000; and this is the result of but our first
washing-up.”
“Good lord, what luck!”
exclaimed the Pilot. “As I always have said,
it comes in streaks. Now, Jack, here, has had
his streak o’ bad luck, and now he’s got
into a new streak, and it’s so good that it’s
like to turn him crazy before he comes to the end
of it. If you want to know the real truth about
things, ask an old sailor he won’t
mislead you.”
But all that Rose said was, “How
nice it must be to meet with such success.”
“By George, I was almost forgetting
our bargain,” exclaimed Scarlett. He took
from his pocket a little linen bag, which he handed
to Rose. “Those are the nuggets you wanted glad
to be able to keep my promise.”
The girl untied the neck of the small
bag, and three heavy pieces of gold tumbled on the
table.
“I can’t take them,”
she exclaimed. “They’re worth too
much. I can’t make any adequate return.”
“I hope you won’t try. Pilot, she
must take them.”
“Take ’em? Of course.
Why, Rosebud, his luck would leave him to-morrer,
if you was to stop him keeping his promise. You’re
bound to take ’em.”
Rose weighed the bits of virgin gold
in the palm of her little hand.
“Of course, I never really meant
you to give me any of your gold,” she said.
“I only spoke in joke.”
“Then it’s a joke I should
make pretty often, if I were you,” said Sartoris.
“You don’t seem to know when you’re
well off.”
“I take it under compulsion;
hoping that you’ll find so much more that you
won’t feel the loss of this.”
“There’s no fear of that,”
said Jack. “As for repayment, I hope you
won’t mention it again.”
“I’ll have to give it you in good wishes.”
The basket of roses stood on the table.
Jack looked at the beautifully blended colours, and
stooped to smell the sweet perfume. “I’ll
take one of these,” he said, “ the
one you like the best.”
The girl took a bud of La Rosiere,
dark, velvety, fragrant, perfect. “I’m
in love with them all,” she said, “but
this is my favourite.”
She handed the bud to Jack, who put
it in the button-hole of his worn and shabby coat.
“Thanks,” he said, “I’m more
than repaid.”
Sartoris burst out laughing.
“Don’t you feel a bit
in the way, Summerhayes?” he said. “I
do. When these young things exchange love-tokens,
it’s time we went into the next room.”
“No,” laughed the Pilot,
“we won’t budge. The gal gets twenty-pound
worth of gold, and offers a rose in return. It’s
a beautiful flower, no doubt; but how would a slice
of mutton go, after ‘damper’ and ‘billy’
tea? Rosebud, my gal, go and get Mr. Scarlett
something to eat.”
Joining in the laugh, Rose went into
her kitchen, and Jack commenced to pack up his gold,
in order that the table might be laid for dinner.
But if you come to think of it, there
may have been a great deal in his request, and even
more in the girl’s frank bestowal.