A REPORTED TALE OF TWO SMUGGLERS.
CHAPTER I.
My mother’s grandfather, Dan’l
Leggo, was the piousest man that ever went smuggling,
and one of the peaceablest, and scrupulous to an extent
you wouldn’t believe. He learnt his business
among the Cove boys at Porthleah or Prussia
Cove as it came to be called, after John Carter, the
head of the gang, that was nicknamed the King o’
Prussia. Dan’l was John Carter’s
own sister’s son, trained under his eye; and
when the Carters retired he took over the business
in partnership with young Phoby Geen, a nephew by
marriage to Bessie Bussow that still kept the Kiddlywink
at Porthleah, and had laid by a stockingful of money.
These two, Dan’l Leggo
and Phoby Geen (which was short for Deiphobus), lived
together and worked the business for five years in
boundless harmony; until, as such things happen, they
both fell in love with one maid, which brought out
the differences in their natures to a surprising degree,
converting Dan’l into an Early Christian for
all to behold, while Phoby turned to envy and spite,
and to a disgraceful meanness of spirit. The
reason of this to some extent was that the girl Amelia
Sanders by name couldn’t abide him
because of the colour of his hair and his splay feet:
yet I believe she would have married him (her father
being a boat-builder in a small way at Porthleven,
and beholden to the Cove for most of his custom) if
Dan’l hadn’t come along first and cast
eyes on her; whereby she clave to Dan’l and
liked him better and better as time brought out the
beautiful little odds-and-ends of his character; and
when Phoby made up, she took and told him, in all
the boldness of affection, to make himself scarce,
for she wouldn’t have him no, not
if he was the last man in the world and she the last
woman. I daresay she overstated the case, as
women will. But what appeared marvellous to all
observers was that the girl had no particular good
looks that wouldn’t have passed anywhere in a
crowd, and yet these two had singled her out for their
addresses.
Dan’l (that had been the first
in the field) pointed this out to his partner in a
very reasonable spirit; but somehow it didn’t
take effect. “If she’s as plain-featured
as you allow,” said Phoby, “why the dickens
can’t you stand aside?”
“Because of her affectionate
natur’,” answered Dan’l, “and
likewise for her religious disposition, for the latter
o’ which you’ve got no more use than a
toad for side-pockets.”
“We’ll see about that,”
grumbled Phoby; and Dan’l, taking it for a threat,
lost no time in putting up the banns.
Apart from this he went on his way
peaceably never doubting at all that, when the knot
was tied, Phoby would let be bygones and pick up with
another maid; whereby he made the mistake of judging
other folks’ dispositions by his own.
The smuggling, too, was going on more comfortably
than ever it had in John Carter’s time, by reason
that a new Collector had come to Penzance a
Mr. Pennefather, a nice little, pleasant-spoken, round-bellied
man that asked no better than to live and let live.
Fifteen years this Pennefather held the collectorship,
with five-and-twenty men under him, besides a call
on the military whenever he wanted ’em; and
in all that time he never made an enemy. Every
night of his life he stepped over from his lodgings
in Market Jew Street for a game of cards with old
Dr. Chegwidden, who lived whereabouts they’ve
built the Esplanade since then, on the Newlyn side
of Morrab Gardens; and after their cards at
which one would lose and t’other win half a crown,
maybe the doctor would out with a decanter
of pineapple rum, and the pair would drink together
and have a crack upon Natural History, which was a
hobby with both. Being both unmarried, they
had no one to call bedtime; but the Collector was
always back at his lodgings before the stroke of twelve.
With such a Collector, as you may
suppose, the free trade in Mount’s Bay found
itself in easy circumstances; and the Covers (as they
were called) took care in return to give Mr. Pennefather
very little trouble. In particular, Dan’l
had invented a contrivance which saved no end of worry
and suspicion, and was worked in this way: Of
their two principal boats Dan’l as a rule commanded
the Black Joke, a Porthleven-built lugger of
about forty tons, as we measure nowadays (but upon
the old plan she would work out nearer a hundred and
forty); and Phoby a St. Ives ketch, the Nonesuch,
of about the same size. But which was the Black
Joke and which the Nonesuch you never could
be sure, for the lugger carried fids, topmast, crosstrees,
and a spare suit of sails to turn her into a ketch
at twenty minutes’ notice; and likewise the ketch
could ship topmast, shift her rigging, and hoist a
spare suit of lug-sails in no longer time. The
pair of them, too, had false quarter-pieces to ship
and unship for disguise, and each was provided with
movable boards painted with the other’s name,
to cover up her own. The tale went that once
when the pair happened to be lying together in New
Grimsby Sound in the Scillies, during an eclipse of
the sun, Dan’l and Phoby took it into their
heads to change rigs in the darkness, just for fun;
and that the Revenue Officer, that had gone over to
the island of Bryher to get a better view of the eclipse,
happening to lower his telescope on the vessels as
the light began to grow again, took fright, waded
across to Tresco for his life (the tide being low),
and implored the Lord Proprietor’s agent to
lock him up; “for,” said he, “either
the world or my head has turned round in the last
twenty minutes, and whichever ’tis, I want to
be put in a cool place out of temptation.”
But the usual plan was, of course, for the two to
change rigs at night-time when on a trip, and by agreement,
and for the one to slock off suspicion while the other
ran the cargo. Yes, yes; Dan’l Leggo
and Phoby Geen were both very ingenious young men,
though by disposition so different: and when
John Carter in his retirement heard of the trick,
he slapped his leg and said in his large-hearted way
that dammy he couldn’t have invented a neater;
and at the same time fined himself sixpence for swearing,
which had been his rule when he was Cove-master.
I once saw a bill of his made out in form, and this
was how it ran:
John CARTER in account
with ROGER TRISCOTT otherwise CLICKPAW.
To I weeks arnins
ten shillin
Item share on 40 ankers at sixpence
per anker one
pound less two dams at 6d. and a worse word
at (say) 1s. but more if it hapn again. two
shillin
Balance due to R.T.
One pound eight or value
recd,
as per margin.
But the mildest of men will have their
whimsies; and for some reason or other this same trick
of the two boats though designed, as you
might argue, to save him trouble made Pennefather
as mad as a sheep. He couldn’t hear tell
of the Black Joke or the Nonesuch but
the blood rushed into his head. He swore to
old Dr. Chegwidden that the Covers, by making him
an object of derision, were breaking all bounds of
neighbourly understanding: and at last one day,
getting information that Dan’l Leggo was
at Roscoff and loading-up to run a cargo into St. Austell
Bay on the east side of the Blackhead, he so far let
his temper get the better of him as to sit down and
warn the Collector at Fowey, telling him the when and
how of the randivoo, and bidding him look out as per
description for that notorious lugger the Black
Joke.
The letter was scarcely sent before
the good soul began to repent. He had an honest
liking for Dan’l Leggo, and would be sorry
(even in the way of duty) to see him in Bodmin Gaol.
He believed in Mount’s Bay keeping its troubles
to itself; and in short, knowing the Collector at Fowey
to be a pushing fellow, he had passed two days in
a proper sweat of remorse, when to his great relief
he ran up against Phoby Geen, that was walking the
pavement with a scowl on his face and both hands deep
in his trousers, he having been told that very morning
by Amelia Sanders, and for the twentieth time of asking,
that sooner than marry him she would break stones
on the road.
’Tis a good job, I reckon, that
folks in a street can’t read one another’s
inside. Old Pennefather pulled up in a twitter,
tapping his stick on the pavement. What he wanted
to say was, “Your partner, Dan’l Leggo,
has a cargo for St. Austell Bay. He’ll
get into trouble there, and I’m responsible
for it; but I want you to warn him before ’tis
too late.” What he did was to put on a
frown, and, said he, “Looky here, Mr. Geen,
I’ve been wanting to see you or Leggo for
some days, to give you fair notice. I happen
to have lost sight of the Nonesuch for some
days; though I conclude, from meeting you, that she’s
back at Porthleah at her moorings. But I know
the movements of the Black Joke, and I’ve
the best reason to warn you that she had best give
up her latest game, or she must look out for squalls.”
Well, this was a plain hint, and in
an ordinary way Phoby Geen would have taken it.
But the devil stirred him up to remember the insult
he’d received from Amelia Sanders that very
day; and by and by, as he walked home to Porthleah,
there came into his mind a far wickeder thought.
Partners though he and Dan’l were, each owned
the boat he commanded, or all but a few shares in
her. The shares in the Black Joke stood
in Dan’l’s name, and if anything went
wrong with her the main loss would be Dan’l’s.
All the way home he kept thinking what a faithful
partner he’d been to Dan’l in the past,
and this was Dan’l’s gratitude, to cut
him out with Amelia Sanders and egg the girl on to
laugh at the colour of his hair. She would laugh
to another tune if he chose to hold his tongue on
Mr. Pennefather’s warning, and let Dan’l
run his head into the trap. The Fowey Collector
was a smart man, capable of using his information.
(Phoby, who could see a hole through a ladder as quick
as most men, guessed at once that Pennefather had
laid the trap, and then repented and spoken to him
in hope to undo the mischief.) Like as not, St. Austell
Bay would be patrolled by half a dozen man-of-war’s
boats in addition to the water-guard: and this
meant Dan’l’s losing the lugger, losing
his life too, maybe, or at the least being made prisoner.
Well, and why not? Wasn’t one man master
enough for Porthleah Cove? And hadn’t Dan’l
and the girl deserved it?
I believe the miserable creature wrestled
against his temptation: and I believe that when
he weighed next morning and hoisted sail in the Nonesuch
for Guernsey, where the Black Joke was to
meet him in case of accident, he had two minds to
play fair after all. ’Twas told afterwards
that, pretty well all the way, he locked himself in
his cabin, and for hours the crew heard him groaning
there. But it seems that Satan was too strong
for him; for instead of bearing straight up for Guernsey,
where he well knew the Black Joke would be
waiting, he stood over towards the French coast, and
there dodged forth and back, under pretence of picking
her up as she came out of Roscoff. His crew took
it for granted he was following out the plan agreed
upon. All they did was to obey orders, and of
course they knew naught of Mr. Pennefather’s
warning.
To be short, Dan’l Leggo,
after waiting the best part of two days at St. Peter’s
Port and getting no news to the contrary, judged that
the coast must be clear, and stood across with a light
sou’-westerly breeze, timing it so as to make
his landfall a little before sunset: which he
did, and speaking the crew of a Mevagissey boat some
miles off the Deadman, was told he might take the
lugger in and bring her up to anchor without fear
of interruption. (But whether or no they had been
bribed to give this information he never discovered.)
They told him, too, that his clients a
St. Austell company had the boats ready
at Rope Hauen under the Blackhead, and would
be out as soon as ever he dropped anchor. So
he crept in under darkness and brought up under the
loom of the shore having shifted his large
lug for a trysail and leaving that set, with his jib
and mizzen and gave orders at once to cast
off the hatches. While this was doing, sure enough
he heard the boats putting off from the beach a cable’s
length away, and was just congratulating himself on
having to deal with such business-like people, when
his mate, Billy Tregaskis, caught hold of him by the
elbow.
“Hark to them oars, sir!” he whispered.
“I hear ’em,” said Dan’l.
“You never heard that stroke
pulled by fishermen,” said Billy, straining
to look into the darkness. “They’re
man-o’-war’s boats, sir, or you may call
me a Dutchman!”
“Cut the cable!” ordered Dan’l,
sharp and prompt.
Billy whipped out his knife, ran forward,
and cut loose in a jiffy; but before the Black
Joke could gather headway the two boats had run
up close under her stern. The bow-man of the
first sheared through the mizzen-sheet with his cutlass,
and boarding over the stern with three or four others,
made a rush upon Dan’l as he let go the helm
and turned to face them; while the second boat’s
crew opened with a dozen musket-shots, firing high
at the sails and rigging. In this they succeeded:
for the second or third shot cut through the trysail
tack and brought the sail down with a run; and almost
at the same moment the boarders overpowered Dan’l
and bore him down on deck, where they beat him silly
with the flat of their cutlasses and so passed on
to drive the rest of the lugger’s crew, that
were running below in a panic.
The struggle had carried Dan’l
forward, so that when he dropped ’twas across
the fallen trysail. This served him an ill turn:
for one of the cutlasses, catching in a fold of it,
turned aslant and cut him cruelly over the bridge
of the nose. But the sail being tanned, and therefore
almost black in the darkness, it served him a good
turn too; for after his enemies had passed on and
were busy making prisoners of the rest of the crew,
he lay there unperceived for a great while, listening
to the racket, but faint and stunned, so that he could
make neither head nor tail of it. At length a
couple of men came aft and began handling the sail;
and “Hullo!” says one of them, discovering
him, “here’s one as dead as a haddock!”
“Put him below,” says the other.
“What’s the use?”
asks the other, pulling Dan’l out by the legs
and examining him; “the poor devil’s head
is all jelly.” Just then a cry was raised
that one of the boats had gone adrift, the boarders
having forgotten to make her fast in their hurry,
and someone called out an order to man the other and
pull in search of her. The two fellows that had
been handling Dan’l dropped him and ran aft,
and Dan’l all sick and giddy as he
was crawled into the scuppers and, pulling
himself up till his eyes were level with the bulwarks,
tried to measure the distance between him and shore.
Now the lugger (you’ll remember) was adrift
when the Navymen first boarded her, through Billy
Tregaskis having cut the cable; and with the set of
the tide she must been carried close in-shore during
the scrimmage before they brought her up: for,
to Dan’l’s amazement, she lay head-to-beach,
and so close you could toss a biscuit ashore.
There the shingle spread, a-glimmering under his
nose, as you might say; and he put up a thanksgiving
when he remembered that a minute ago his only hope
had been to swim ashore a thing impossible
in his weak state; but now, if he could only drop
overside without being observed, he verily believed
he could wade for it that is, after the
first few yards for the Black Joke
drew from five to six feet of water, and since she
lay afloat ’twas certain the water right under
him must be beyond his depth. Having made up
his mind to the risk for anything was better
than Bodmin prison he heaved a leg across
the bulwarks, and so very cautious-like rolled over
and dropped. His toes for he went
down pretty plump touched bottom for a
moment: but when he came to strike out he found
he’d over-calculated his strength, and gave
himself up for lost. He swallowed some water,
too, and was on the point of crying out to be taken
aboard again and not left to drown, when the set of
the tide swept him forward, so that he fetched up
with his breast against a shore-line that someone
had carried out from the bows: and hauling on
this he dragged himself along till the water reached
no higher than his knees. Twice he tried to
run, and twice he fell through weakness, but he came
ashore at last at a place where the beach ended in
a low ridge of rock covered with ore-weed. Between
the rocks ran stretches of whity-grey shingle, and
he lay still for a while and panted, considering how
on earth he could cross these without being spied
by the Navymen, that had recovered their boat by this
time and were pulling back with her to the lugger.
While he lay there flat on his stomach, thinking
as hard as his bruised head would let him, a voice
spoke out of the darkness close by his ear, and said
the voice, “You belong aboard the lugger, if
I’m not mistook?” which so terrified
Dan’l that he made no answer, but lifted himself
and stared, with all his teeth chattering. “You
stay still where you are,” the voice went on,
“till the coast is a bit clearer, as ’twill
be in a minute or two. There’s a two-three
friends up the beach, that were hired for this business;
but the Preventive men have bested us this time.
Hows’ever, you’ve had luck to get ashore ’tis
better be lucky than rich, they say. Hutted,
are ’ee?” The boats being gone by this
time, the man that owned the voice stepped out of
the darkness, lifted him big-boned man though
he was and hefted him over the rocks.
A little higher up the foreshore he was joined by
two others, and the three between ’em took hold
of Dan’l and helped him up the cliff and through
a furze-drake till they brought him to a cottage,
where, in a kitchen full of people, he found half a
dozen of the Cove-boys that had dropped overboard
at the first alarm and swam for shore the
lot gathered about a young doctor from St. Austell
that was binding up a man whose shoulder had been
ripped open by a musket-ball.
Poor Dan’l’s injury being
more serious, and his face a clot of blood from the
cutlass-wound over his nose, the doctor turned to him
at once and plastered him up for dear life; after
which his friends, well knowing that a price would
be set on him as skipper of the Black Joke,
carried him off to St. Austell in a cart that had
been brought for the tubs; and at St. Austell hired
a chaise to carry him home to Marazion, taking the
precaution to wrap his head round with bandages, so
that the post-boys might not be able to swear to his
looks. A Cover called Tummels drove with him,
bandaged also; and stopping the chaise a mile outside
Marazion, lifted Dan’l out, managed to hire
a cart from a farm handy-by the road, and so brought
him, more dead than alive, home to Porthleah.
But though more dead than alive, Dan’l
had not lost his wits. Except for the faithful
Tummels and Bessie Bussow at the Kiddlywink, the Cove
was all deserted the Nonesuch and
her crew being yet on the high seas. The very
next day he sent Tummels over to Porthleven to tell
Amelia Sanders of his mishap, and that he was going
into hiding for a time, but would send her word of
his movements; and on Tummels’ return the pair
sat down and cast about where the hiding had best be,
Dan’l being greatly uplifted by Tummels’
report that the girl had showed herself as plucky as
ginger, in spite of the loss of the lugger, declaring
that, come what might, she would rather have Dan’l
with all his Christian virtues than a fellow like
Phoby Geen with all his riches and splay feet.
Moreover and such is the wondrous insight
of woman she maintained that Phoby Geen
must be at the bottom of the whole mischief.
Dan’l didn’t pay much
heed to this, but set it down to woman’s prejudice.
After talking the matter well out, he and Tummels decided
on a very pretty hiding-place and a fairly comfortable
one. This was a tenantless house on the coast
near St. Ives. A Bristol merchant had built it,
meaning to retire there as soon as he’d made
his fortune: but either the cost had outrun his
plans or the fortune didn’t come quite so soon
as he expected. At any rate, neither he nor his
family had ever taken up abode there. A fine
house it was, too, and went in the neighbourhood by
the name of Stack’s Folly. It stood in
the middle of a small farm of about a hundred and
fifty acres, besides moor and waste; and, as luck would
have it, a brother-in-law of Tummels, by name William
Sleep, rented the farm and kept the keys of the house,
being supposed to look after it in the family’s
absence.
Across to Stack’s Folly, then,
Dan’l was driven in a cart, under a great pile
of ore-weed; and William Sleep not only gave over the
keys and helped to rig up a bed of straw for him for
the house hadn’t a stick of furniture but
undertook to keep watch against surprise and get a
supply of food carried up to him daily from the farmhouse,
which stood in the valley below, three-quarters of
a mile away. So far so good: yet now a
new trouble arose owing to Dan’l’s wounds
showing signs of inflammation and threatening to set
up wildfire. Tummels and Sleep put their heads
together, and determined that a doctor must be fetched.
Now Dr. Chegwidden, who was getting
up in years, had engaged an assistant to take over
the St. Ives part of his practice; a young fellow called
Martyn, a little on the right side of thirty, clever
in his profession, and very well spoken of by all.
(Indeed, Dr. Chegwidden, that had taken a fancy to
him first-along for his knowledge of Natural History,
in due time promoted him to be partner, so that when
the old man died, five or six years later, Dr. Martyn
stepped into the whole practice.) William Sleep at
first was for fetching this young doctor boldly; but
Tummels argued that he was a new-comer from the east
part of the Duchy, if not from across Tamar, and they
didn’t know enough of him to warrant the risk.
So in the end, after many pros and cons,
they decided to trust themselves first to Dr. Chegwidden.
That same night, as the old doctor,
after his game of cards with Mr. Pennefather, sat
finishing his second glass of rum and thinking of bed,
there came a ring at the night-bell, which of all sounds
on earth was the one he most abominated. He
went to the front door and opened it in a pretty bad
temper, when in walked Tummels and William Sleep together
and told their business. “A man no
need to give names was lying hurt and in
danger no matter where. They had a
horse and trap waiting, a little above Chyandour,
and, if the doctor would come and ask no questions,
the same horse and trap should bring him home before
morning.”
The old doctor asked no questions
at all, but fetched his greatcoat, tobacco-pouch,
tinder-box, and case of instruments, and walked with
them to the hill over Chyandour, where he found the
trap waiting, with a boy at the horse’s head.
Tummels dismissed the boy, and in they all climbed;
but before they had driven half a mile the doctor
was asked very politely if he’d object to have
his eyes blindfolded.
He chuckled for a moment. “Of
course I object,” said he; “for you
may believe it or not if a man can’t
see that his pipe’s alight he loses half
the enjoyment of it. But two is stronger than
one,” said he; “and if you insist I shall
submit.” So they blindfolded him.
In this way they brought him to Stack’s
Folly, helped him down from the cart, and led him
into the bare room where Dan’l lay in the straw;
and there by lantern-light the old man did his job
very composedly.
“You’re not altogether
a pair of fools,” said he, speaking for the first
time as he tied the last bandage. “If you
hadn’t fetched someone, this man would have
been dead in three days from now. But you’re
fools enough if you think I’m going to take
this jaunt every night for a week and more as
someone must, if Dan’l’s to recover; and
you’re bigger fools if you imagine I don’t
know the inside of Stack’s Folly. My advice
is that in future you save yourselves trouble and
call up my assistant from St. Ives; and further, that
you don’t try his temper with any silly blindfolding,
but trust him for the gentleman and good sportsman
I know him to be. If ’tis any help to
you, he’ll be stepping over to Penzance to-day
on business, and I’ll take the opportunity to
drop him a hint of warning.”
They thanked him, of course.
“And sorry we are, doctor,” said Tummels,
“to have put you to this inconvenience.
But there’s no friend like an old friend.”
“Talking of friends,”
answered Dr. Chegwidden, “I think it well to
set you on your guard.” He pulled out
a handbill from his pocket. “I had this
from Mr. Pennefather to-night,” said he; “and
by to-morrow it will be posted all over the country:
an offer for the apprehension of Daniel Leggo;
the reward, two hundred and fifty pounds.”
“Two hundred and fifty pounds!”
Weak as he was, Dan’l sat upright in the straw,
and the other two stared at the doctor with their jaws
dropping which Dan’l’s jaw
couldn’t, by reason of the bandages.
“And you ask us to trust this
young furriner, with two hundred and fifty pounds
for his hand to close on!” groaned Tummels.
“I do,” said the doctor.
“The man I would warn you against is a man you’d
be ten times apter to trust; and that is your partner,
Deiphobus Geen. I understand he’s away
from home just now; but reward or no reward when
he returns I advise you to watch that fellow closer
than any of the Preventive men: for to my certain
knowledge he had ample warning of what was to happen,
and I leave you to judge if ’twas by accident
he let his friend Dan’l, here, run into the
trap.”
Tummels made a motion to draw out
a musket from under the straw where Dan’l lay.
“If I thought that,” he growled, “I’d
walk straight over to Porthleah, wait for him, and
blow his scheming brains out.”
“You’d be a bigger fool,
then, than I take ye for,” answered the doctor
quietly, “and I know you’ve but wits enough
for one thing at a time. Your business now is
to keep Dan’l hidden till you can smuggle him
out of the country: and if Dr. Martyn or I can
help, you may count on us, for I hate such foul play
as Deiphobus Geen’s, and so, I believe, does
my assistant.”
With that the doctor took his leave
of Dan’l and was driven home by Tummels, William
Sleep remaining to stand guard: and next day,
according to promise, Dr. Martyn was told the secret
and trusted with the case.
CHAPTER II.
Sure enough, Dr. Martyn turned out
to be most clever and considerate; a man that Dan’l
took to and trusted from the first. His one fault
was that when Dan’l began to converse with him
on religious matters, he showed himself a terrible
free-thinker. The man was not content to be a
doctor: night after night he’d sit up and
tend Dan’l like a nurse, and would talk by the
hour together when the patient lay wakeful. But
his opinions were enough to cut a religious man to
the heart.
Dan’l had plenty of time to
think over them, too. From daybreak (when the
young doctor took his leave), till between ten and
eleven at night (when he came again) was a terrible
lonely while for a man shut in an empty house and
unable to move for pain. As the days wore on
and his wound bettered, he’d creep to the door
and sit watching the fields and the ships out at sea
and William Sleep moving about the slope below.
Sometimes he would spend an hour in thinking out
plans for his escape; but his money had gone with
the lugger, and without money no plan seemed workable.
Sometimes he’d think upon the girl Amelia Sanders.
But that was crueller pain; for if he could not even
escape, how on earth was he to get married? So
he fell back on thoughts of religion and in making
up answers to the doctor’s terrible arguments;
and these he would muster up at night, tackling the
young man finely, till the two were at it like a pair
of wrestlers. But when Dan’l began to
grow flushed and excited, and stammered in his speech,
the talk would be turned off somehow to smuggling,
or sport, or natural history in all of which
the doctor had a hundred questions to ask. I
believe these discussions worked the cure faster than
any ointments or lotions: but Dan’l used
to say afterwards that the long days came nigh to
driving him mad; and mad they would have driven him
but for a small bird a wheatear that
perched itself every day on the wall of the court
and chittered to him by the hour together like an
angel.
Tummels, all this while, kept quiet
at Porthleah, like a wise man, and sat watching Phoby
Geen like a cat before a mousehole. Phoby had
turned up at the Cove in the Nonesuch on the
fourth day after the lugger was lost, and at once
began crying out, as innocent as you please, upon the
mess that Dan’l had made through his wrongheadedness.
Also the crew of the Nonesuch couldn’t
make out where the plan had broken down. But
Tummels, piecing their information with what Dr. Chegwidden
had told him, saw clearly enough what trick had been
played. Also by pumping old Bessie Bussow (who
had already been pumped by Phoby) he learned that Phoby
knew of Dan’l’s return to the Cove and
disappearance into hiding. Tummels scratched
his head. “The fellow knows that Dan’l
is alive,” he reasoned. “He knows,
too, there’s a price on his head. Moreover
he knows my share in hiding the man away. Then
why, if he’s playing honest even now, doesn’t
he speak to me? . . . But no: he’s
watching to catch me off my guard, in the hope that
I’ll give him the clue to Dan’l’s
hiding.” Thus Tummels reasoned, and, though
it went hard with him to get no news, he decided that
’twas safer to trust in no news being good news
than, by making the smallest move, to put Phoby Geen
on the track. In this he did wisely; but he’d
have done wiser by not breathing a word to Amelia
Sanders of where he’d stowed her sweetheart.
For what must the lovesick woman do after
a week’s waiting and no news but pack
a basket and set out for St. Ives, under the pretence
of starting for Penzance market? She carried
out the deception very neatly, too; actually went into
Penzance and sold two couple of fowls, besides eggs
of her own raising; and then, having spent the money
in a few odds-and-ends her sweetheart would relish,
slipped out of the town and struck away north.
What mischief would have followed
but for a slant of luck, there’s no knowing:
for Master Phoby had caught sight of her on the Helston
Road (where he kept a watch), pushed after her hot-foot,
worked her through the market like a stoat after a
rabbit, and more than half-way to St. Ives (laughing
up his sleeve), when his little design went pop! and
all through the untying of a shoe-lace!
On the road after you pass Halsetown
there’s a sharp turn; and, a little way farther,
another sharp turn. For no reason that ever she
discovered, ’twas just as she passed the first
of these that her shoe-string came untied, and she
sat down by the hedge to tie it; and here in tying
it she broke the lace, and, while mending it, looked
up into Phoby Geen’s face that had
come round the corner like the sneak he was and pulled
up as foolish as a sheep.
In my experience a woman may be a
fool, but ’tis within limits. Amelia Sanders,
looking Phoby Geen in the face, went on tying her shoe;
and, while she looked, she saw not only how terrible
rash she had been, but also without a guess
at the particulars that this man had been
at the bottom of the whole mischief and meant to be
at the bottom of more. So, said she, very innocent-like
“Aw, good-afternoon, Mr. Geen!”
“Good-afternoon!” responded
Phoby. “Who’d ever ha’ thought
to meet you here, Miss Sanders?”
“’Tis a tiring way from Porthleah to St.
Ives, Mr. Geen.”
“Or from Porthleven, for that matter, Miss Sanders.”
“Especially when you walk it
on tippy-toe, which must be extra-wearisome to a body
on feet shaped like yours, Mr. Geen.”
Phoby saw that he was fairly caught.
“Look here,” said he roughly, “you’re
bound on a randivoo with Dan’l Leggo, and
you can’t deny it.”
“I don’t intend to,”
she answered. “And you be bound on much
the same errand, though you’d deny it if your
face could back up your tongue.”
“Dan’l Leggo has
a-been my partner in business for five years, Miss
Sanders. Isn’t it nat’ral enough
I should want to visit and consult him?”
“Nothing more natural,”
answered the girl cheerfully. “I was just
wonderin’ where they’d hidden him:
but since you know, my trouble’s at an end.
You can show me the way. Which is it, Mr. Geen north,
south, east, or west?”
Phoby understood that she was laughing
at him. “Don’t you think, Miss Sanders,”
he suggested, “that ’twas pretty rash of
you to give folks a clue as you’ve a-done to-day,
and everybody knowing that you’ve been asked
in church with Dan’l?”
“I do,” said she.
“I’ve behaved foolish, Mr. Geen, and thank
you for reminding me. He won’t thank a
second partner for putting him in a trap,”
she went on, speaking at a venture; but her words caught
Phoby Geen like a whip across the face, and, seeing
him blanch, she dropped a curtsey. “I’ll
be going home, Mr. Geen,” she announced.
“I might ha’ walked farther without finding
out so much as you’ve told me; and you may walk
twenty miles farther without finding out half so much.”
He glowered at her and let out a curse;
but the girl was his match, though timmersome enough
in an ordinary way.
“Iss, iss,” she said scornful-like;
“I know the kind of coward you are, Mr. Phoby
Geen. But I bless this here corner of the road
twice over; first because it has given me a look into
your sneaking heart, and next because ’tis within
earshot of Halsetown, where I’ve a brace of tall
cousins living that would beat you to a jelly if you
dared lift a hand against me. I’m turning
back to ask one of them to see me home; and he’ll
not deny me, as he’ll not be backward to pound
every bone in your ill-shapen body if he hears what
I’ve to tell.”
Phoby Geen glowered at her for half
a minute longer, and then snapped his fingers.
“As it happens,” said
he, “you’re doing me a cruel injustice;
but we needn’t talk of that. A man o’
my savings though you’ve sneezed at
’em doesn’t want to be searching
the country for two-hundred-and-fifty pound.”
He swung on his heel and walked off
towards St. Ives. Amelia Sanders watched him
round the next bend, and turning, began to run homewards
for dear life, when, just at the corner, she fell
into the arms of Tummels.
“A nice dance you’ve led
me,” grunted Tummels, as she fought down her
hysterics. “I’ve been pulling hot-foot
after the man all the way from Penzance. I tracked
him there; but you and he between you gave me the
slip in the crowd. ‘Tis the Lord’s
mercy you didn’ lead him all the way to Stack’s
Folly: for if I’d a-caught up with him there
I must have committed murder upon him.”
“Oh, take me home!” sobbed Amelia Sanders.
“Take you home? How the
dickens be I to take you home?” Tummels demanded.
“I’ve got to follow that villain into St.
Ives if he goes so far, and stick to him like a shadow.”
So Amelia Sanders trudged it back
to Porthleven, calling herself every name but what
she was christened: and Phoby Geen trudged it
fore to St. Ives, cursing his luck, but working out
a problem in his wicked little mind. At the
top of the hill over the town he stood quiet for a
minute and snapped his fingers again. Since
’twas near St. Ives that Dan’l lay in
hiding, what could the hiding-place be but Stack’s
Folly! Tummels had hidden him: Tummels’
brother-in-law rented the farm of Stack’s Folly
and kept the keys of the house. Why, the thing
fitted in like a child’s puzzle! Why hadn’t
he thought of it before?
None the less he did not turn aside
towards the great desolate barrack, though he eyed
it as he went down the slope between it and the sea.
He had not yet begun to think out a plan of action.
He wanted Dan’l disposed of without showing
his hand in the business. As it was, the girl
(and he cursed her) had guessed him to blame for the
loss of the lugger. Was it more than a guess
of hers? He couldn’t say. He had
told her at parting that he was walking to St. Ives
on business. On a sudden thought he halted in
the main street and turned to walk up towards Tregenna,
the great house overlooking the town. Its owner,
Squire Stephens, was an old client of his.
Squire Stephens was at home, and Phoby
Geen sat closeted with him for an hour and more.
Nothing was talked of save business, and when the
Squire mentioned Dan’l Leggo and the price
on his head, Phoby waved a hand mute-like, as much
as to beg off being questioned.
Twilight was falling as he took the
road back to Porthleah; and Tummels, who had been
waiting behind a hedge above the town, dogged him home
through the dusk and through the dark.
Phoby’s call on the Squire had
begun and ended with business. The Nonesuch
had made another trip to Roscoff, and he had one hundred
and fifty pounds’ worth of white cognac to dispose
of, all sunk for Mr. Pennefather had put
on a sudden activity off Old Lizard Head.
He had reason to believe that the Preventive men
were watching his usual routes inland. Since
the accident to Dan’l he had felt, in his cunning
way, a new watchfulness in the air.
The day after his journey to St. Ives,
the Nonesuch sailed again for Roscoff.
At the last moment he decided not to command her this
trip; but turned the business over to his mate, Seth
Rogers a very dependable man, though not
clever at all. So away she went, leaving the
Cove empty but for himself only and Bessie Bussow
and Tummels, that lived in a freehold cottage on his
savings and didn’t draw a regular wage, but only
took a hand in a run when he chose. Moreover,
Tummels had never sailed for years past but in the
Black Joke, and the Black Joke was taken
and her crew in prison or in hiding.
Phoby would lief enough have seen
Tummels’ back. For the job he meditated
the man was not only worse than useless, but might
even spy on him and carry warning. His plan
was to get the sunk crop of brandy round to St. Ives,
deliver it to Squire Stephens, and, at the same time,
under cover of the business, make sure of Dan’l’s
being at Stack’s Folly, and treat with him,
under threats, to give up claim upon his sweetheart.
To this end, one night while Tummels was sleeping,
he unmoored the Fly tender a twenty-foot
open boat carrying two sprit-sails, owned by him and
Dan’l in common, and used for all manner of
odd jobs worked her down to Old Lizard
Head single-handed, and crept up to the sunk crop of
brandy. Back-breaking work it was to heave the
kegs on board; but in an hour before midnight he had
stowed the lot and was steering for St. Ives with a
stiffish breeze upon his port quarter. The weather
couldn’t have served him better. By daylight
the Fly was rounding in for St. Ives Quay,
having sunk her crop again off the mouth of a handy
cave on the town side of Treryn Dinas; and Phoby Geen
stepped ashore and ordered breakfast at the George
and Dragon before stepping up to talk with Squire Stephens.
In the meantime, Tummels, waking up
at four in the morning, as his custom was, and taking
a look out of window, missed the Fly from her
moorings, which caused him to scratch his head and
think hard for ten minutes. Then he washed and
titivated himself and walked down to the Kiddlywink.
“Hullo, Tummels!” said
Bessie Bussow, hearing his footstep on the pebbles,
and popping her old head out of window, nightcap and
all. “What fetches you abroad so early?”
“Dress yourself, that’s
a dear woman! Dress yourself and come down!”
Tummels waited in a sweat of impatience till the old
woman opened her front door.
“What’s the matter with
the man?” she asked. “Thee’rt
lookin’ like a thing hurried in mind.”
“I wants the loan of your horse
and trap, missus,” said Tummels.
“Sakes alive, is that
all? Why on the wide earth couldn’t you
ha’ gone fore to stable an’ fetched ’em,
without spoilin’ my beauty-sleep?” asked
Bessie.
“No, missus. To be honest
with ’ee that’s not nearly all.”
Tummels rubbed the back of his head. “Fact
is, I’m off in s’arch of your nephew Phoby
Geen, that has taken the Fly round to St. Ives,
unless I be greatly mistaken; and what’s more,
unless I be greatly mistaken, he means to lay information
against Dan’l.”
“If you can prove that to me,”
says Bessie, “he’s no nephew o’ mine,
and out he goes from my will as soon as you bring
back the trap, and I can drive into Helston an’
see Lawyer Walsh.”
“Well, I’m uncommon glad
you look at it in that reasonable light,” says
Tummels; “for, the man being your own nephew,
so to speak, I didn’ like to borry your horse
an’ trap to use against ‘en without lettin’
’ee know the whole truth.”
“I wish,” says Bessie,
“you wouldn’ keep castin’ it in my
teeth or what does dooty for ’em that
the man’s my nephew. You’ll see how
much of a nephew he is if you can prove what you charge
against ’en. But family is family until
proved otherwise; and so, Mr. Tummels, you shall harness
up the horse and bring him around, and I’ll
go with you to St. Ives to get to the bottom o’
this. On the way you shall tell me what you do
know.”
She was a well-plucked woman for seventy-five,
was Bessie Bussow; and had a head on her shoulders
too. While Tummels was harnessing, she fit and
boiled a dish o’ tea to fortify herself, and
after drinking it nipped into the cart as spry as
a two-year-old. Off they drove, and came within
sight of Stack’s Folly just about the time when
Phoby Geen was bringing the Fly into St. Ives
harbour.
They pulled up at the farmhouse under
the hill, and out came William Sleep to welcome them.
He listened to their errand and stood for a minute
considering.
“There’s only one thing
to be done,” he announced; “and that is
to fetch up Dr. Martyn. We’re workin’
that young man hard,” said he; “for he
only left the patient a couple of hours ago.”
He invited Bessie to step inside and make herself
at home; and while Tummels stalled the horse, he posted
down in search of the doctor.
About an hour later the two came walking
back together, William Sleep with news that the Fly
was lying alongside St. Ives Quay. He had seen
nothing of Phoby Geen, and hadn’t risked inquiring.
The young doctor, though grey in the cheeks and worn
with nursing, rang cheerful as a bell.
“If you’d told me this
a month ago,” said he, “I might have pulled
a long face about it; but now the man’s strong
enough to bear moving. You, Mr. Sleep, must
lend me a suit of clothes, with that old wideawake
of yours. There’s not the fellow to it
in this parish. After that, all you can do at
present is to keep watch here while I get Dan’l
down to the sea. You, Mr. Tummels, by hook or
crook, must beg, borrow, or steal a boat in St. Ives,
and one that will keep the sea for three or four days
at a push.”
“If the fellow comes sneaking
round the Folly here, William Sleep and I can knock
him on the head and tie him up. And then what’s
to prevent my making use of the Fly hersel’?”
“That’s not a bad notion,
though we’ll avoid violence if we can.
The point is, you must bring along a boat, and as soon
after nightfall as may be.”
“You may count on it,”
Tummels promised. “Next question is, where
be I to take the poor chap aboard? There’s
good landing, and quiet too, at Cawse Ogo, a little
this side of Treryn Dinas.” Tummels suggested
it because he knew the depths there close in-shore,
the spot being a favourite one with the Cove boys
for a straight run of goods.
“Cawse Ogo be it,” said
the doctor. “I know the place, and I think
the patient can walk the distance. Unless I’m
mistaken it has a nice handy cave, too; though I may
think twice about using it. I don’t like
hiding with only one bolt-hole.”
“You haven’t found any
part for me in your little plans,” put in Bessie
Bussow. “Now, I’m thinkin’
that when he finds himself on the high seas and wants
to speak a foreign-bound ship, this here may come in
handy.” She pulled out a bag from her under-pocket
and passed it over to Tummels.
“Gold?” said he.
“Gold an’ notes? ’Tis you have
a head on your shoulders, missus.”
“Thank ’ee,” said
she. “There’s twenty pound, if you’ll
count it. An’ ’tis only a first instalment;
for the lad shall have the rest in time, if I live
to alter my will.”
From the farmhouse Dr. Martyn walked
boldly up to Stack’s Folly with the bundle under
his arm: and in twenty minutes had Dan’l
rigged up in William Sleep’s clothes.
The day was turning bright and clear, and away over
the waste land towards Zennor you could see for miles.
Tis the desolatest land almost in all Cornwall, and
by keeping to the furze-brakes and spying from one
to the next, he steered his patient down for the coast
and brought him safe to the cliffs over Cawse Ogo.
There in a lew place in the middle of the bracken-fern
they seated themselves, and the doctor pulled out
his pocket spyglass and searched the coast to left
and right. By and by he lowered the glass with
a start, seemed to consider for a moment, and looked
again.
“See here,” said he, passing
over the spyglass, “if you can keep comfortable
I’ve a notion that a bathe would do me good.”
Dan’l let him go. Ten
minutes later, without help of the glass his
hand being too shaky to hold it steady he
saw the doctor in the water below him, swimming out
to sea with a strong breast-stroke. Three hundred
yards, maybe, he swam out in a straight line, appeared
to float and tread water for a minute or two, and
so made back for shore. In less than half an
hour he was back again at Dan’l’s side,
and his face changed from its grey look to the picture
of health.
“I want you to answer me a question
if you can,” said he. “Does your
friend, Mr. Phoby Geen, wear a peewit’s wing-feather
in his hat?”
“He does, or did,” answered
Dan’l; “in one of his hats, at least.
Did you meet the man down there?”
“No; and I’ve never set
eyes on him in my life,” said the doctor.
“I just guessed.” He laughed cheerful-like,
enjoying Dan’l’s wonder. “But
this guess,” he went on, “changes the campaign
a little; and I’ll have to ask you to lie here
alone for some while longer maybe an hour
and more.”
He nodded and walked off, cautious
at first, but with great strides as soon as he struck
into the cliff-path. When he came in sight of
the Folly he spied a man’s figure on the slope
there among the furze, and the man was working up
towards the Folly on the side of the hill hidden from
William Sleep’s farm.
“Lend me a gun,” panted
the doctor, running into the farmhouse. “A
gun and a powder-horn, quick! And a lantern
and wads, and a spare flint or two never
mind the shot-flask ” He told what
he had seen. “I’ll keep the fellow
under my eye now, and all you have to do, Mr. Tummels,
is to take out his boat after sunset and bring her
down to Cawse Ogo.”
He caught up the gun and ran out of
the cottage, clucking under the hedges until he came
round again to the farther side of the hill; and there
he saw Master Phoby Geen come slamming out of the
empty Folly and post down the slope at a swinging
pace towards Cawse Ogo. “And a pretty rage
he’s carrying with him I’ll wager,”
said the doctor to himself. “The Lord send
he doesn’t stumble upon Dan’l, or I may
have to hurt him, which I don’t want, and lose
the fun of this. I wouldn’t miss it now
for five pounds.”
His heart jumped for joy when, still
following, he saw the man turn down towards the shore
by a track a good quarter of a mile to the right of
the spot where Dan’l lay. He was satisfied
now; and creeping back to Dan’l, he dropped
his full length in the bracken and lay and laughed.
“But what’s the gun for?” Dan’l
demanded.
“You’ve told me often
enough about the seals on this bit of coast.
Well, to-night, my friend, we’re going to have
some fun with them.”
“Doctor, doctor, think of the
risk! Besides, I ben’t strong enough for
seal-hunting.”
“There’s no risk,”
the doctor promised him; “and all the hunting
you’ll be called upon to do is to sit still
and smile. Have I been a good friend to you,
or have I not?”
“The best friend in the world,”
Dan’l answered fervent-like.
“On the strength of that you’ll
have to trust me a little longer. I can’t
afford you more than a little while longer, for my
practice is going to the dogs already. I’ve
sent word home by Tummels that if anyone in St. Ives
falls sick to-day he’ll have to send over to
Penzance.”
The greater part of the afternoon
Dan’l slept, and the doctor smoked his pipe
and kept watch. At six o’clock they finished
the loaf that had been packed up with William Sleep’s
clothes, emptied the doctor’s flask, and fell
to discoursing for the last time upon religion.
They talked of it till the sun went down in their
faces, and then, just before darkness came up over
the sea, the doctor rose.
There was just light enough for them
to pick their way down over the cliff, treading softly;
and just light enough to show that the beach beneath
them was empty. On the edge of the sand the doctor
chose a convenient rock and called a halt behind it.
Peering round, he had the mouth of the cave in full
view till the darkness hid it.
“Now’s the time!”
said he. He took off his coat and lit the lantern
under it, muffling the light. “Seals?
Come along, man; I promise you the cave is just full
of sport!”
He crept for the cave, and Dan’l
at his heels, the sand deadening all sound of their
footsteps. Close by the cave’s mouth he
crouched for a moment, felt the hammer of his gun,
and, uncovering the lantern with a quick turn of the
hand, passed it to Dan’l and marched boldly in.
The soft sand made a floor for the
cave for maybe sixty feet within the entrance.
It ended on the edge of a rock-pool a dozen yards
across, and deep enough to reach above a man’s
knees. As the doctor and Dan’l reached
the pool they heard a sudden splashing on the far side
of it.
“Hold the lantern high!”
sang out the doctor. Dan’l obeyed, and
the light fell full not only on his face, but on the
figure of a man that cowered down before it on the
patch of shingle where the cave ended.
“Seals?” cried the doctor,
lifting his gun. “What did I promise you?”
With a scream, the poor creature flung
himself on his knees.
“Don’t shoot! Oh,
don’t shoot!” His voice came across the
pool to them in a squeal like a rabbit’s.
“Eh? Hullo!” said
the doctor, but without lowering his gun. “Mr.
Deiphobus Geen, I believe?”
“Don’t shoot! Oh, don’t shoot
me!”
“Be so good as to step across here,” the
doctor commanded.
“You won’t hurt me? Dan’l,
make him promise he won’t hurt me!”
“Come!” the doctor commanded
again, and Phoby Geen came to them through the pool
with his knees knocking together. “Put
out your hands, please. Thank you. Dan’l,
search, and you’ll find a piece of cord in my
pocket. Take it, and tie up his wrists.”
“I never meant you no harm,” whined Phoby;
but he submitted.
“And now,” the
doctor turned to Dan’l “leave
him to me, step outside and bring word as soon as
you hear or glimpse a boat in the offing. At
what time, Mr. Geen, are the carriers coming for the
tubs out yonder? Answer me: and if I find
after that you’ve answered me false, I’ll
blow your brains out.”
“Two in the morning,” answered Phoby.
“And Tummels will be here in
an hour,” sighed the doctor, relieved in his
mind on the one point he had been forced to leave to
chance. “Step along, Dan’l; and don’t
you strain yourself in your weak state by handling
the tubs: Tummels can manage them single-handed.
You see, Mr. Geen, plovers don’t shed their
feathers hereabouts in the summer months; and a feather
floating on a tideway doesn’t, as a rule, keep
moored to one place. I took a swim this morning
and cleared up those two points for myself.
Step along, Dan’l, my friend; I seemed to hear
Tummels outside, lowering sail.”
Twelve hours later, Dan’l, with
a pocketful of money, was shipped on the high seas
aboard a barque bound out of Bristol for Georgia; and
there, six months later, Amelia Sanders followed him
out and married him. Not for years did they
return to Porthleven and live on Aunt Bussow’s
money, no man molesting them. The Cove had given
up business, and Government let bygones be bygones,
behaving very handsome for once.