It was late into the night when she
at last reached “The Fisherman’s Rest.”
She had done the whole journey in less than eight hours,
thanks to innumerable changes of horses at the various
coaching stations, for which she always paid lavishly,
thus obtaining the very best and swiftest that could
be had.
Her coachman, too, had been indefatigable;
the promise of special and rich reward had no doubt
helped to keep him up, and he had literally burned
the ground beneath his mistress’ coach wheels.
The arrival of Lady Blakeney in the
middle of the night caused a considerable flutter
at “The Fisherman’s Rest.” Sally
jumped hastily out of bed, and Mr. Jellyband was at
great pains how to make his important guest comfortable.
Both of these good folk were far too
well drilled in the manners appertaining to innkeepers,
to exhibit the slightest surprise at Lady Blakeney’s
arrival, alone, at this extraordinary hour. No
doubt they thought all the more, but Marguerite was
far too absorbed in the importance-the
deadly earnestness-of her journey, to stop
and ponder over trifles of that sort.
The coffee-room-the scene
lately of the dastardly outrage on two English gentlemen-was
quite deserted. Mr. Jellyband hastily relit the
lamp, rekindled a cheerful bit of fire in the great
hearth, and then wheeled a comfortable chair by it,
into which Marguerite gratefully sank.
“Will your ladyship stay the
night?” asked pretty Miss Sally, who was already
busy laying a snow-white cloth on the table, preparatory
to providing a simple supper for her ladyship.
“No! not the whole night,”
replied Marguerite. “At any rate, I shall
not want any room but this, if I can have it to myself
for an hour or two.”
“It is at your ladyship’s
service,” said honest Jellyband, whose rubicund
face was set in its tightest folds, lest it should
betray before “the quality” that boundless
astonishment which the very worthy fellow had begun
to feel.
“I shall be crossing over at
the first turn of the tide,” said Marguerite,
“and in the first schooner I can get. But
my coachman and men will stay the night, and probably
several days longer, so I hope you will make them
comfortable.”
“Yes, my lady; I’ll look
after them. Shall Sally bring your ladyship some
supper?”
“Yes, please. Put something
cold on the table, and as soon as Sir Andrew Ffoulkes
comes, show him in here.”
“Yes, my lady.”
Honest Jellyband’s face now
expressed distress in spite of himself. He had
great regard for Sir Percy Blakeney, and did not like
to see his lady running away with young Sir Andrew.
Of course, it was no business of his, and Mr. Jellyband
was no gossip. Still, in his heart, he recollected
that her ladyship was after all only one of them “furriners”;
what wonder that she was immoral like the rest of them?
“Don’t sit up, honest
Jellyband,” continued Marguerite kindly, “nor
you either, Mistress Sally. Sir Andrew may be
late.”
Jellyband was only too willing that
Sally should go to bed. He was beginning not
to like these goings-on at all. Still, Lady Blakeney
would pay handsomely for the accommodation, and it
certainly was no business of his.
Sally arranged a simple supper of
cold meat, wine, and fruit on the table, then with
a respectful curtsey, she retired, wondering in her
little mind why her ladyship looked so serious, when
she was about to elope with her gallant.
Then commenced a period of weary waiting
for Marguerite. She knew that Sir Andrew-who
would have to provide himself with clothes befitting
a lacquey-could not possibly reach Dover
for at least a couple of hours. He was a splendid
horseman of course, and would make light in such an
emergency of the seventy odd miles between London and
Dover. He would, too, literally burn the ground
beneath his horse’s hoofs, but he might not
always get very good remounts, and in any case, he
could not have started from London until at least
an hour after she did.
She had seen nothing of Chauvelin
on the road. Her coachman, whom she questioned,
had not seen anyone answering the description his mistress
gave him of the wizened figure of the little Frenchman.
Evidently, therefore, he had been
ahead of her all the time. She had not dared
to question the people at the various inns, where they
had stopped to change horses. She feared that
Chauvelin had spies all along the route, who might
overhear her questions, then outdistance her and warn
her enemy of her approach.
Now she wondered at what inn he might
be stopping, or whether he had had the good luck of
chartering a vessel already, and was now himself on
the way to France. That thought gripped her at
the heart as with an iron vice. If indeed she
should not be too late already!
The loneliness of the room overwhelmed
her; everything within was so horribly still; the
ticking of the grandfather’s clock-dreadfully
slow and measured-was the only sound which
broke this awful loneliness.
Marguerite had need of all her energy,
all her steadfastness of purpose, to keep up her courage
through this weary midnight waiting.
Everyone else in the house but herself
must have been asleep. She had heard Sally go
upstairs. Mr. Jellyband had gone to see to her
coachman and men, and then had returned and taken
up a position under the porch outside, just where
Marguerite had first met Chauvelin about a week ago.
He evidently meant to wait up for Sir Andrew Ffoulkes,
but was soon overcome by sweet slumbers, for presently-in
addition to the slow ticking of the clock-Marguerite
could hear the monotonous and dulcet tones of the
worthy fellow’s breathing.
For some time now, she had realised
that the beautiful warm October’s day, so happily
begun, had turned into a rough and cold night.
She had felt very chilly, and was glad of the cheerful
blaze in the hearth: but gradually, as time wore
on, the weather became more rough, and the sound of
the great breakers against the Admiralty Pier, though
some distance from the inn, came to her as the noise
of muffled thunder.
The wind was becoming boisterous,
rattling the leaded windows and the massive doors
of the old-fashioned house: it shook the trees
outside and roared down the vast chimney. Marguerite
wondered if the wind would be favourable for her journey.
She had no fear of the storm, and would have braved
worse risks sooner than delay the crossing by an hour.
A sudden commotion outside roused
her from her meditations. Evidently it was Sir
Andrew Ffoulkes, just arrived in mad haste, for she
heard his horse’s hoofs thundering on the flag-stones
outside, then Mr. Jellyband’s sleepy, yet cheerful
tones bidding him welcome.
For a moment, then, the awkwardness
of her position struck Marguerite; alone at this hour,
in a place where she was well known, and having made
an assignation with a young cavalier equally well known,
and who arrived in disguise! What food for gossip
to those mischievously inclined.
The idea struck Marguerite chiefly
from its humorous side: there was such quaint
contrast between the seriousness of her errand, and
the construction which would naturally be put on her
actions by honest Mr. Jellyband, that, for the first
time since many hours, a little smile began playing
round the corners of her childlike mouth, and when,
presently, Sir Andrew, almost unrecognisable in his
lacquey-like garb, entered the coffee-room, she was
able to greet him with quite a merry laugh.
“Faith! Monsieur, my lacquey,”
she said, “I am satisfied with your appearance!”
Mr. Jellyband had followed Sir Andrew,
looking strangely perplexed. The young gallant’s
disguise had confirmed his worst suspicions. Without
a smile upon his jovial face, he drew the cork from
the bottle of wine, set the chairs ready, and prepared
to wait.
“Thanks, honest friend,”
said Marguerite, who was still smiling at the thought
of what the worthy fellow must be thinking at that
very moment, “we shall require nothing more;
and here’s for all the trouble you have been
put to on our account.”
She handed two or three gold pieces
to Jellyband, who took them respectfully, and with
becoming gratitude.
“Stay, Lady Blakeney,”
interposed Sir Andrew, as Jellyband was about to retire,
“I am afraid we shall require something more
of my friend Jelly’s hospitality. I am
sorry to say we cannot cross over to-night.”
“Not cross over to-night?”
she repeated in amazement. “But we must,
Sir Andrew, we must! There can be no question
of cannot, and whatever it may cost, we must get a
vessel to-night.”
But the young man shook his head sadly.
“I am afraid it is not a question
of cost, Lady Blakeney. There is a nasty storm
blowing from France, the wind is dead against us, we
cannot possibly sail until it has changed.”
Marguerite became deadly pale.
She had not foreseen this. Nature herself was
playing her a horrible, cruel trick. Percy was
in danger, and she could not go to him, because the
wind happened to blow from the coast of France.
“But we must go!-we
must!” she repeated with strange, persistent
energy, “you know, we must go!-can’t
you find a way?”
“I have been down to the shore
already,” he said, “and had a talk to one
or two skippers. It is quite impossible to set
sail to-night, so every sailor assured me. No
one,” he added, looking significantly at Marguerite,
“No one could possibly put out of Dover
to-night.”
Marguerite at once understood what
he meant. No one included Chauvelin
as well as herself. She nodded pleasantly to Jellyband.
“Well, then, I must resign myself,”
she said to him. “Have you a room for me?”
“Oh, yes, your ladyship.
A nice, bright, airy room. I’ll see to it
at once. . . . And there is another one for Sir
Andrew-both quite ready.”
“That’s brave now, mine
honest Jelly,” said Sir Andrew, gaily, and clapping
his worth host vigorously on the back. “You
unlock both those rooms, and leave our candles here
on the dresser. I vow you are dead with sleep,
and her ladyship must have some supper before she retires.
There, have no fear, friend of the rueful countenance,
her ladyship’s visit, though at this unusual
hour, is a great honour to thy house, and Sir Percy
Blakeney will reward thee doubly, if thou seest well
to her privacy and comfort.”
Sir Andrew had no doubt guessed the
many conflicting doubts and fears which raged in honest
Jellyband’s head; and, as he was a gallant gentleman,
he tried by this brave hint to allay some of the worthy
innkeeper’s suspicions. He had the satisfaction
of seeing that he had partially succeeded. Jellyband’s
rubicund countenance brightened somewhat, at the mention
of Sir Percy’s name.
“I’ll go and see to it
at once, sir,” he said with alacrity, and with
less frigidity in his manner. “Has her ladyship
everything she wants for supper?”
“Everything, thanks, honest
friend, and as I am famished and dead with fatigue,
I pray you see to the rooms.”
“Now tell me,” she said
eagerly, as soon as Jellyband had gone from the room,
“tell me all your news.”
“There is nothing else much
to tell you, Lady Blakeney,” replied the young
man. “The storm makes it quite impossible
for any vessel to put out of Dover this tide.
But, what seems to you at first a terrible calamity
is really a blessing in disguise. If we cannot
cross over to France to-night, Chauvelin is in the
same quandary.
“He may have left before the storm broke out.”
“God grant he may,” said
Sir Andrew, merrily, “for very likely then he’ll
have been driven out of his course! Who knows?
He may now even be lying at the bottom of the sea,
for there is a furious storm raging, and it will fare
ill with all small craft which happen to be out.
But I fear me we cannot build our hopes upon the shipwreck
of that cunning devil, and of all his murderous plans.
The sailors I spoke to, all assured me that no schooner
had put out of Dover for several hours: on the
other hand, I ascertained that a stranger had arrived
by coach this afternoon, and had, like myself, made
some inquiries about crossing over to France.
“Then Chauvelin is still in Dover?”
“Undoubtedly. Shall I go
waylay him and run my sword through him? That
were indeed the quickest way out of the difficulty.”
“Nay! Sir Andrew, do not
jest! Alas! I have often since last night
caught myself wishing for that fiend’s death.
But what you suggest is impossible! The laws
of this country do not permit of murder! It is
only in our beautiful France that wholesale slaughter
is done lawfully, in the name of Liberty and of brotherly
love.”
Sir Andrew had persuaded her to sit
down to the table, to partake of some supper and to
drink a little wine. This enforced rest of at
least twelve hours, until the next tide, was sure
to be terribly difficult to bear in the state of intense
excitement in which she was. Obedient in these
small matters like a child, Marguerite tried to eat
and drink.
Sir Andrew, with that profound sympathy
born in all those who are in love, made her almost
happy by talking to her about her husband. He
recounted to her some of the daring escapes the brave
Scarlet Pimpernel had contrived for the poor French
fugitives, whom a relentless and bloody revolution
was driving out of their country. He made her
eyes glow with enthusiasm by telling her of his bravery,
his ingenuity, his resourcefulness, when it meant
snatching the lives of men, women, and even children
from beneath the very edge of that murderous, ever-ready
guillotine.
He even made her smile quite merrily
by telling her of the Scarlet Pimpernel’s quaint
and many disguises, through which he had baffled the
strictest watch set against him at the barricades of
Paris. This last time, the escape of the Comtesse
de Tournay and her children had been a veritable masterpiece-Blakeney
disguised as a hideous old market-woman, in filthy
cap and straggling grey locks, was a sight fit to make
the gods laugh.
Marguerite laughed heartily as Sir
Andrew tried to describe Blakeney’s appearance,
whose gravest difficulty always consisted in his great
height, which in France made disguise doubly difficult.
Thus an hour wore on. There were
many more to spend in enforced inactivity in Dover.
Marguerite rose from the table with an impatient sigh.
She looked forward with dread to the night in the bed
upstairs, with terribly anxious thoughts to keep her
company, and the howling of the storm to help chase
sleep away.
She wondered where Percy was now.
The day dream was a strong, well-built sea-going
yacht. Sir Andrew had expressed the opinion that
no doubt she had got in the lee of the wind before
the storm broke out, or else perhaps had not ventured
into the open at all, but was lying quietly at Gravesend.
Briggs was an expert skipper, and
Sir Percy handled a schooner as well as any master
mariner. There was no danger for them from the
storm.
It was long past midnight when at
last Marguerite retired to rest. As she had feared,
sleep sedulously avoided her eyes. Her thoughts
were of the blackest during these long, weary hours,
whilst that incessant storm raged which was keeping
her away from Percy. The sound of the distant
breakers made her heart ache with melancholy.
She was in the mood when the sea has a saddening effect
upon the nerves. It is only when we are very
happy, that we can bear to gaze merrily upon the vast
and limitless expanse of water, rolling on and on
with such persistent, irritating monotony, to the
accompaniment of our thoughts, whether grave or gay.
When they are gay, the waves echo their gaiety; but
when they are sad, then every breaker, as it rolls,
seems to bring additional sadness, and to speak to
us of hopelessness and of the pettiness of all our
joys.