“O, who lives on the Island,
Betwix’ the sea an’ the sky?
I think it must be a lady, a lady,
I think it must be a genuwine lady,
She carries her head so high.” OLD
BALLAD.
In the moonlit garden of the Casino
at Monte Carlo Miles Chandon smoked a cigar pensively,
leaning against the low wall that overlooks the pigeon-shooters’
enclosure, the railway station and the foreshore.
He was alone, as always. That a man who, since
the great folly of his life, had obstinately cultivated
solitude should make holiday in Monte Carlo, of all
places, is paradoxical enough; but in truth the crowd
around the tables, the diners at the hotel, the pigeon-shooters,
the whole cosmopolitan gathering of idle rich and
predatory poor, were a Spectacle to him and no more.
If once or twice a day he staked a few napoléons
on black or red in the inner room of the Casino, it
was as a man, finding himself at Homburg or Marienbad,
might take a drink of the waters from curiosity and
to fill up the time. He made no friends in the
throng. He found no pleasure in it. But
when he grew weary at home in his laboratory, or when
his doctor advised that confinement and too much poring
over chemicals were telling on his health, he packed
up and made for Monte Carlo, or some other expensive
place popularly supposed to be a “pleasure-resort.”
As a matter of fact, he did not understand pleasure,
or what it means.
Finding him in this pensive attitude
in the moonlit garden by the sea, you might guess
that he was sentimentalising over his past. He
was doing nothing of the sort. He was watching
a small greyish-white object the moon revealed on
the roof of the railway station below, just within
the parapet. He knew it to be a pigeon that had
escaped, wounded, from the sportsmen in the enclosure.
Late that afternoon he had seen the poor creature
fluttering. He wondered that the officials (at
Monte Carlo they clean up everything) had not seen
it before and removed it. He watched it, curious
to know if it were still alive. He had a fancy
at the back of his head that if the small
body fluttered again he would go back to his rooms,
fetch a revolver, and give the coup de grace.
And he smiled as he played with the fancy, foreseeing
the rush of agitated officials that a revolver-shot
in the gardens would instantly bring upon him.
It would be great fun, explaining; but the offence
no doubt would be punishable. By what?
Banishment, probably.
He turned for a moment at the sound
of a footstep, and was aware of his man Louis.
“A telegram, sir.”
“Eh? Now who in the world Matters
hasn’t burnt down Meriton, I hope?”
He opened the telegram and walked
with it to the nearest of the electric lamps; read
it, and stood pondering.
“Louis, when does the new night-express leave
for Paris?”
“In twenty-five minutes, sir.”
“Then I’ve a mind to catch
it. Put up a travelling-suit in my bag.
I can get out of these clothes in the train.
You had better pack the rest, pay the bill, and follow
to-morrow.”
“If you wish it, sir. But if I may suggest ”
“Yes?”
“In twenty minutes I can do
all that easily, and book the sleeping-berths too.
I suggest, sir, you will find it more comfortable,
having me on the train.”
“Admirable man hurry up, then!”
The admirable man saluted respectfully
and retired “hurt,” as they say in the
cricket reports. He never hurried; it was part
of the secret by which he was always punctual.
At the station he even found time to suggest that
his master might wish to send a telegram, and to dispatch
it.
This was on Sunday. They reached
London late on Monday evening, and there Louis
having telegraphed from Paris Sir Miles
found his favourite room ready for him at Claridge’s.
Next morning, as his hansom drew up a few minutes
after eleven o’clock by the entrance to Paddington
Station, he observed that the porter who stepped forward
from the rank to attend on him, did so with a preoccupied
air. The man was grinning, and kept glancing
along the pavement to his right.
“Luggage on the cab just behind,”
said Sir Miles, alighting. “Never mind
me; my man will take the tickets and get me a seat.
But what’s the excitement here?”
“Lady along there, sir offering
to fight her cabby. Says he can’t drive
for nuts ”
“Hullo!”
Sir Miles looked, recognised Miss
Sally, and walked briskly towards her. She caught
sight of him and nodded.
“Thought you would come. Excuse me a moment.”
She lifted her voice and addressed the cabby again
“Oh, you can talk. They
taught you that at the Board School, no doubt.
But drive you cannot; and talk you would not, if you
knew the respect due to a mouth your own
or your horse’s.”
With this parting shot she turned
to Sir Miles again, and held out her hand.
“Tell your man he needn’t
trouble about a seat for you. I’ve engaged
a compartment where we can talk.”
“Well?” he asked, ten
minutes later, lowering his newspaper as the train
drew out of the station.
“Well, in the first place, it’s
very good of you to come.”
“Oh, as for that . . .
You know that if I can ever do you any service ”
“But you can’t. It was for your
own sake I telegraphed.”
“Mine? Is Meriton really
burnt to the ground, then? But even that news
wouldn’t gravely afflict me.”
“It isn’t and
it would. At any rate, it might now, I hope,”
said Miss Sally enigmatically.
He waited for her to continue.
“Your wife’s dead!” she said.
She heard him draw a quick breath.
“Indeed?” he asked indifferently.
“But your son isn’t at least,
I hope not.”
He looked up and met her eyes.
“But I had word,” he said
slowly, “word from her, and in her own handwriting.
A boy was born, and died six or seven weeks later as
I remember, the letter said within a week after his
christening.”
Miss Sally nodded.
“That settles it,” she
said; “being untrue, as I happen to know.
The child was alive and hearty a year after the christening,
when they left Cawsand and moved to the East coast.
The fact is, my friend, you had run up if
not in your wife, then in the coastguardsman Ned Commins against
a pride as stubborn as your own. They wrote you
a lie that’s certain; and I’m
as hard as most upon liars; but, considering all,
I don’t blame ’em. They weren’t
mercenary, anyway. They only wanted to have no
more truck with you.”
“Have you seen the boy?”
Again Miss Sally nodded.
“Yes, and there’s no doubting
the parentage. I never saw that cross-hatched
under-lip in any but a Chandon, though you do
hide it with a beard: let alone that he carries
the four lozenges tattooed on his shoulder.
Ned Commins did that. There was a moment, belike,
when they weakened either he or the woman.
But you had best hear the story, and then you can
judge the evidence for yourself.”
She told it. He listened with
set face, interposing here and there to ask a question,
or to weigh one detail of her narrative against another.
“If the children should be lost which
God forbid!” she wound up, “ and
if I never did another good day’s work in my
life, I’ll remember that they started me to
clear that infernal Orphanage. It’s by
the interposition of Heaven that you didn’t
find me on Paddington platform with three-and-twenty
children under my wing. ’Interposition
of Heaven,’ did I say? You may call it,
if you will, the constant and consistent foolishness
of my brother Elphinstone. In every tight corner
of my life I’ve learnt to trust in Elphinstone
for a fool, and he has never betrayed me yet.
There I was in the hotel with these twenty-three
derelicts, all underfed, and all more or less mentally
defective through Glasson’s ill-treatment.
Two or three were actually crying, in a feeble way,
to be ‘taken home,’ as they called it.
They were afraid afraid of their kind,
afraid of strange faces, afraid of everything but
to be starved and whipped. I was forced to send
out and buy new clothes for some, there and then;
and their backs, when I stripped ’em, were criss-crossed
with weals not quite fresh, you understand,
for Glasson had been kept busy of late, and the woman
Huggins hadn’t his arm. Well, there I was,
stranded, with these creatures on my hands, all of
’em, as you may say, looking up at me in a dumb
way, and wanting to know why I couldn’t have
let ’em alone and if ever I smash
up another Orphanage you may call me a Turk, and put
me in a harem when all of a sudden it occurred
to me to look up the names of the benevolent parties
backing the institution. The woman had given
me a copy of the prospectus, intending to impress
me. I promised myself I’d rattle these
philanthropists as they ’d never been rattled
before in their lives. And then why
had I ever doubted him? half-way down the
list I lit on Elphinstone’s name. . . .
His place is at Henley-in-Arden, you see, and not
far from Bursfield. . . . So I rattled the others
(I spent three-quarters of an hour in the telegraph
office, and before eleven last night I had thirty-two
answers. They are all in my bag, and you shall
look ’em over by and by, if you want to be tickled),
but I sent Elphinstone what the girl Tilda would call
a cough-drop. It ran to five sheets or thereabouts,
and cost four-and-eightpence; and I wound up by telling
him I meant every word I’d said. He’s
in Bursfield at this moment, you may bet, carting
those orphans around into temporary quarters.
And Elphinstone is a kind-hearted man, but orphans
are not exactly his line not what he’d
call congenial to him.”
“But these two? You seem
to me pretty sure about finding them on Holmness:
too sure, I suggest. Either you’ve forgotten
to say why you’re certain, or I may have missed ”
“You are getting keen, I see.
No, I have no right to be sure, except that I rely
on the girl and on Hucks. (You ought to
know Hucks, by the way; he is a warrior.) But I am
sure: so sure that I have wired for a steam-launch
to be ready by Clatworthy pier. . . . Will you
come?”
“I propose to see this affair
through,” he said deliberately.
Miss Sally gave him a sharp look,
and once again nodded approval.
“And, moreover, so sure,”
she went on, “that I have not wired to send
Chichester in search. That’s worrying me,
I confess; for although Hucks is positive the girl
would not start for Holmness without provisions
and on my reading of her, he’s right this
is Tuesday, and they have been missing ever since
Saturday night, or Sunday morning at latest.”
“If that is worrying you,”
said Chandon, “it may ease your mind to know
that there is food and drink on the Island. I
built a cottage there two years ago, with a laboratory;
I spent six weeks in it this summer; and
well, ships have been wrecked On Holmness, and,
as an old naval officer, I’ve provided for that
sort of thing.”
Miss Sally slapped her knee. (Her
gestures were always unconventional.)
“We shall find ’em there!”
she announced. “I’m willing to lay
you five to one in what you like.”
They changed at Taunton for Fair Anchor.
At Fair Anchor Station Sir Miles’s motor awaited
them. It had been ordered by Parson Chichester,
instructed by telegram from Taunton.
The parson himself stood on the platform,
but he could give no news of the missing ones.
“We’ll have ’em
before nightfall,” promised Miss Sally.
“Come with us, if you will.”
So all three climbed into the motor,
and were whirled across the moor, and down the steep
descent into Clatworthy village, and by Clatworthy
pier a launch lay ready for them with a full head of
steam.
During the passage few words were
said; and indeed the eager throb of the launch’s
engine discouraged conversation. Chandon steered,
with his eyes fixed on the Island. Miss Sally,
too, gazed ahead for the most part; but from time
to time she contrived a glance at his weary face
grey even in the sunset towards which they were speeding.
Sunset lay broad and level across
the Severn Sea, lighting its milky flood with splashes
of purple, of lilac, of gold. The sun itself,
as they approached the Island, dropped behind its
crags, silhouetting them against a sky of palest blue.
They drove into its chill shadow,
and landed on the very beach from which the children
had watched the stag swim out to meet his death.
They climbed up by a pathway winding between thorn
and gorse, and on the ridge met the flaming sunlight
again.
Miss Sally shielded her eyes.
“They will be here, if anywhere,”
said Sir Miles, and led the way down the long saddle-back
to the entrance of the gully.
“Hullo!” exclaimed he,
coming to a halt as the chimneys of the bungalow rose
into view above the gorse bushes. From one of
them a steady stream of smoke was curling.
“It’s a hundred to one!” gasped
Miss Sally triumphantly.
They hurried down to use
her own expression like a pack in full cry.
It was Parson Chichester who claimed afterwards that
he won by a short length, and lifting the latch, pushed
the door open. And this was the scene he opened
on, so far as it has since been reconstructed:
Tilda stood with her back to the doorway
and a couple of paces from it, surveying a table laid so
far as Sir Miles’s stock of glass and cutlery
allowed for a dinner-party of eight.
She was draped from the waist down in a crimson window-curtain,
which spread behind her in a full-flowing train.
In her hand she held her recovered book the
Lady’s Vade-Mecum; and she read from it,
addressing Arthur Miles, who stood and enacted butler
by the side-table, in a posture of studied subservience
“Dinner bein’ announced,
the ’ostess will dismiss all care, or at
least appear to do so: and, ‘avin’
marshalled ’er guests in order of precedence
(see page 67 supra) will take the arm of the gentleman
favoured to conduct ’er. Some light
and playful remark will ’ere be not out
of place, such as ”
“Well, I’m d d,
if you’ll excuse me,” ejaculated Miss Sally.
Late that night, in his smoking-room
at Meriton, Sir Miles Chandon knocked out the ashes
of his pipe against the bars of the grate, rose, stretched
himself, and looked about him. Matters had left
a bedroom candle ready to hand on a side-table, as
his custom was. But Sir Miles took up the lamp
instead.
Lamp in hand, he went up the great
staircase, and along the unlit fifty yards of corridor
to the room where his son lay. In all the great
house he could hear no sound, scarcely even the tread
of his own foot on the thick carpeting.
He opened the door almost noiselessly
and stood by the bed, holding the lamp high.
But noiselessly though Sir Miles had
come, the boy was awake. Nor was it in his nature,
being awake, to feign sleep. He looked up, blinking
a little, but with no fear in his gentle eyes.
His father had not counted on this.
He felt an absurd bashfulness tying his tongue.
At length he struggled to say
“’Thought I’d make
sure you were comfortable. That’s all.”
“Oh, yes thank you.
Comfortable and and only just
thinking a bit.”
“We’ll have a long talk
to-morrow. That girl she’s a
good sort, eh?”
“Tilda? . . . Why, of course,
she did it all. She’s the best in
the world!”