My dandy-rigged yacht, the Spitfire,
of twenty-six tons, lay in Boulogne harbour, hidden
in the deep shadow of the wall against which she floated.
It was a breathless night, dark despite the wide spread
of cloudless sky that was brilliant with stars.
It was hard upon the hour of midnight, and low down
where we lay we heard but dimly such sounds of life
as was still abroad in the Boulogne streets.
Ahead of us loomed the shadow of a double-funnelled
steamer an inky dye of scarcely determinable
proportions upon the black and silent waters of the
harbour. The Capecure pier made a faint, phantom-like
line of gloom as it ran seawards on our left, with
here and there a lump of shadow denoting some collier
fast to the skeleton timbers.
The stillness was impressive; from
the sands came a dull and distant moan of surf; the
dim strains of a concertina threaded the hush which
seemed to dwell like something material upon the black,
vague shape of a large brig almost directly abreast
of us. We were waiting for the hour of midnight
to strike and our ears were strained.
“What noise is that?” I exclaimed.
“The dip of sweeps, sir,”
answered my captain, Aaron Caudel; “some smack
a-coming along ay, there she is,”
and he shadowily pointed to a dark, square heap betwixt
the piers, softly approaching to the impulse of her
long oars, the rhythmic grind of which in the thole-pins
made a strange, wild ocean music of the far-off roar
of the surf, and the sob of water alongside, and the
delicate wash of the tide in the green piles and timbers
of the two long, narrow, quaint old piers.
“How is your pluck now, Caudel?”
said I in a low voice, sending a glance up at the
dark edge of the harbour-wall above us, where stood
the motionless figure of a douanier, with a
button or two of his uniform faintly glimmering to
the gleam of a lamp near him.
“Right for the job, sir right
as your honour could desire it. There’s
but one consideration which ain’t like a feeling
of sartinty and that I must say consarns
the dawg.”
“Smother the dog! But
you are right, Caudel. We must leave our boots
in the ditch.”
“Ain’t there plenty of grass, sir?”
said he.
“I hope so; but a fathom of
gravel will so crunch under those hoofs of yours that
the very dead buried beneath might turn in their coffins let
alone a live dog wide awake from the end of his beastly
cold snout to the tip of his tail. Does the ladder
chafe you?”
“No, sir. Makes me feel
a bit asthmatic-like, and if them duniers get a sight
of me they’ll reckon I’ve visited the Continent
to make a show of myself,” he exclaimed, with
a low, deep-sea laugh, whilst he spread his hands
upon his breast, around which, under cover of a large,
loose, long pea-coat, he had coiled a length of rope-ladder
with two iron hooks at one end of it, which made a
hump under either shoulder-blade. There was no
other way, however, of conveying the ladder ashore.
In the hand it would instantly have challenged attention,
and a bag would have been equally an object of curiosity
to the two or three Custom-House phantoms flitting
about in triangular-shaped trousers and shako-like
headgear.
“There goes midnight, sir!” cried Caudel.
As I listened to the chimes a sudden fit of excitement
set me trembling.
“Are ye there, Job?” called my captain.
“Ay, sir,” responded a voice from the
bows of the yacht.
“Jim?”
“Here, sir,” answered a second voice out
of the darkness forward.
“Dick?”
“Here, sir.”
“Bobby?”
“Here, sir,” responded the squeaky note
of a boy.
“Lay aft all you ship’s
company and don’t make no noise,” growled
Caudel.
I looked up; the figure of the douanier
had vanished. The three men and the boy came
sneaking out of the yacht’s head.
“Now, what ye’ve got to
do,” said Caudel, “is to keep awake.
You’ll see all ready for hoisting and gitting
away the hinstant Mr. Barclay and me arrives aboard.
You onderstand that?”
“It’s good English, cap’n,”
said one of the sailors.
“No skylarking, mind. You’re a listening,
Bobby?”
“Ay, sir.”
“You’ll just go quietly
to work and see all clear, and then tarn to and loaf
about in the shadows. Now, Mr. Barclay, sir,
if you’re ready, I am.”
“Have you the little bull’s-eye in your
pocket?” said I.
He felt and answered, “Yes.”
“Matches?”
“Two boxes.”
“Stop a minute,” said
I, and I descended into the cabin to read my darling’s
letter for the last time, that I might make sure of
all details of our romantic plot, ere embarking on
as hare-brained an adventure as was ever attempted
by a lover and his sweetheart.
The cabin lamp burned brightly.
I see the little interior now and myself standing
upright under the skylight, which found me room for
my stature, for I was six feet high. The night-shadow
came black against the glass, and made a mirror of
each pane. My heart was beating fast, and my
hands trembled as I held my sweetheart’s letter
to the light. I had read it twenty times before you
might have known that by the creases in it and the
frayed edges, as though, forsooth, it had been a love-letter
fifty years old but my nervous excitement
obliged me to go through it once more for the last
time, as I have said, to make sure.
The handwriting was girlish how
could it be otherwise, seeing that the sweet writer
was not yet eighteen? The letter consisted of
four sheets, and on one of them was very cleverly
drawn, in pen and ink, a tall, long, narrow, old-fashioned
chateau, with some shrubbery in front of it, a short
length of wall, then a tall hedge with an arrow pointing
at it, under which was written, “Here is
the hole.” Under another arrow
indicating a big, square door to the right of the house,
where a second short length of wall was sketched in,
were written the words, “Here is the
dog.” Other arrows quite
a flight of them, indeed, causing the sketch to resemble
a weather-chart pointed to windows, doors,
a little balcony, and so forth, and against them were
written, “MAM’SELLE’S room,”
“The German GOVERNESS’S room,”
“Four girls sleep here,” with
other hints of a like kind.
I carefully read the letter.
Suppose the ladder which Caudel had wound around
his broad breast should prove too short? No!
the height from the balcony to the ground was exactly
ten feet. She had measured it herself, and that
there might be no error, had enclosed me the length
of pack-thread with which with a little
weight at the end of it she had plumbed
the trifling distance. She hoped it would be
a fine night. If there should be thunder I must
not come. She would rather die than leave the
house in a thunderstorm. Neither must I come
if the sea was rough. She was acting very wrongly why
did she love me so? why was I so impatient?
Could I not wait until she was twenty-one? Then
she would be of age and her own mistress: three
years and a month or two would soon pass, and, meanwhile,
our love for each other would be growing deeper and
deeper at least hers would.
She could not answer for mine. She was content
to have faith.
All this was very much underlined,
and here and there was a little smudge as though she
had dropped a tear.
But she had plucked up as she drew
towards the close of her letter, and, mere child as
she was, there was a quality of decision in her final
sentence which satisfied me that she would not fail
me when the moment came. I put the letter in
my pocket and went on deck.
“Where are you, Caudel?”
“Here, sir,” cried a shadow in the starboard
gangway.
“Let us start,” said I;
“there is half-an-hour’s walk before us,
and though the agreed time is one, there is a great
deal to be done when we arrive.”
“I’ve been a-thinking,
Mr. Barclay,” he exclaimed, “that the young
lady’ll never be able to get aboard this yacht
by that there up and down ladder,” meaning the
perpendicular steps affixed to the harbour wall.
“No!” cried I, needlessly
startled by an insignificant oversight on the very
threshold of the project.
“The boat,” he continued,
“had better be in waiting at them stairs, just
past the smack, astarn of us there.”
“Give the necessary orders,” said I.
He did so swiftly, bidding two of
the men to be at the stairs by one o’clock,
the others to have the port gangway unshipped that
we might step aboard in a moment, along with sails
loosed and gear all seen to, ready for a prompt start.
We then ascended the ladder and gained the top of
the quay.
A douanier stood at a little
distance. As we rose over the edge of the wall
he approached, and by the aid of the lamp burning strongly
close at hand, he recognised us as persons who had
been coming and going throughout the day. Caudel
called out “Bong swore,” and moved
off that his bulky frame might not be visible.
The man in a civil voice asked in French if we had
any fire-arms on us.
“No, no,” I responded,
“we are going to fetch a friend who has consented
to take a little cruise with us. The tide is
making, and we hope to be under way before two o’clock.”
“You English love the sea,”
said he, good-naturedly; “all hours of the day
and night are the same to you. For my part, give
me my bed at night.”
“Here is something to furnish
you with a pleasant dream when you get to bed,”
said I, giving him a franc. “When are you
off duty?”
“I am here till four o’clock,” he
answered.
“Good,” said I, and carelessly
strolled after the portly figure of my captain.
We said little until we had cleared
the Rue de l’Ecu and were marching up the broad
Grande Rue, with the church of St. Nicholas soaring
in a dusky mass out of the market-place, and the few
lights of the wide, main street rising in fitful twinklings
to the shadow of the rampart walls. A mounted
gendarme passed; the stroke of his horse’s hoofs
sounded hollow in the broad thoroughfare and accentuated
the deserted appearance of the street. Here
and there a light showed in a window; from a distance
came a noise of chorusing: a number of fellows,
no doubt, arm-in-arm, singing “Mourir pour
la Patrie,” to the inspiration of
several glasses of sugar and water.
“I sha’n’t be sorry
when we’re there,” said Caudel. “This
here ladder makes my coat feel a terrible tight fit.
I suppose it’ll be the first job of the sort
ye was ever engaged in, sir?”
“The first,” said I, “and
the last too, believe me. It is nervous work.
I would rather have to deal with an armed burglar
than with an elopement. I wish the business
was ended, and we were heading for Penzance.”
“And I don’t suppose the
young lady feels extray comfortable, either,”
he exclaimed. “Let me see: I’ve
got to be right in my latitude and longitude, or we
shall be finding ourselves ashore. It’s
for us to make the signal, ain’t it, sir?”
“Yes,” said I, puffing,
for the road was steep and we were walking rapidly;
“first of all you’ll have to prepare the
ladder. You haven’t forgotten the rungs,
I hope?” referring to three brass pieces to keep
the ropes extended, contrivances which had been made
to my order, resembling stair rods with forks and
an arrangement of screws by which they could be disconnected
into pieces convenient for the pocket.
“They’re here, sir,” he exclaimed,
slapping his breast.
“Well, we proceed thus:
The bull’s-eye must be cautiously lighted and
darkened. We have then to steal noiselessly to
abreast of the window on the left of the house and
flash the lantern. This will be answered by
the young lady striking a match at the window.”
“Won’t the scraping of
the lucifer be heard?” inquired Caudel.
“No, Miss Bellassys writes to
me that no one sleeps within several corridors of
that room.”
“Well, and then I think you
said, sir,” observed Caudel, “that the
young lady’ll slip out on to the balcony, and
lower away a small length of line to which this here
ladder,” he said, giving his breast a thump,
“is to be bent on, she hauling of it up?”
“Quite right,” said I;
“you must help her to descend whilst I hold the
ladder taut at the foot of it. No fear of the
ropes breaking, I hope?”
“Lord love ’ee,”
he said heartily, “it’s brand new rattline-stuff,
strong enough to hoist the mainmast out of a first-rate.”
By this time we had gained the top
of the Grande Rue. Before us stretched an open
space dark with lines of trees; at long intervals the
gleam of an oil lamp dotted that space of gloom; on
our right lay the dusky mass of the rampart walls,
the yawning gateway dully illuminated by the trembling
flame of a lantern into a picture which carried the
imagination back into heroic times, when elopements
were exceedingly common, when gallant knights were
to be met with galloping away with women of beauty
and distinction clinging to them, when the midnight
air was vocal with guitars, and nearly every other
darkling lattice framed some sweet, pale, listening
face.
“Which’ll be the road,
sir?” broke in Caudel’s tempestuous voice.
I had explored the district that afternoon,
had observed all that was necessary, and discovered
that the safest, if not the shortest, way to the Rue
de Maquetra where my sweetheart, Grace Bellassys, was
at school, lay through the Haute Ville or Upper Town
as the English called it. The streets were utterly
deserted; not so much as a cat stirred. One motionless
figure we passed, hard by the Cathedral a
policeman or gendarme he might have been
a statue; it was like pacing the streets of a town
that had been sacked, in which nothing lived to deliver
so much as a groan; and the fancy was not a little
improved by our emergence into what resembled a tract
of country through a gateway similar to that by which
we had entered, over which there faintly glimmered
out to the sheen of a near lamp the figure of Our Lady
of Boulogne erect in some carving of a boat.
“Foreigners is a queer lot,”
exclaimed Caudel. “I dunno as I should
much relish living between them walls. How much
farther off is it, sir?”
“About ten minutes,” said I.
“A blooming walk, Mr. Barclay,
sir, begging your pardon. Wouldn’t it
have been as well if you’d had ordered a fee-hacre
to stand by ready to jump aboard of?”
“A fee what?” said I.
“What’s the French for a cab, sir?”
“Oh, I see what you mean.
No. It’s all down-hill for the lady.
A carriage makes a noise; then there is the cabman
to be left behind to tell all that he knows.”
Caudel grunted an assent, and we strode
onwards in silence. It was an autumn night,
but the air was very soft, and the largest of the
luminaries shone with the mellow glory of a summer
that was yet rich and beautiful in its decay.
From afar, in the direction of the Calais Road, came
the dim rumbling noise of a heavy vehicle, like the
sound of a diligence in full trot; otherwise the dark
and breezeless atmosphere was of an exquisite serenity too
placid indeed to please me; for though the yacht was
to be easily towed out of Boulogne harbour, I had
no fancy for finding myself becalmed close off the
pier-heads when the dawn broke.
The Rue de Maquetra was is,
I may say; I presume it still exists a
long, narrow lane leading to a pretty valley.
Something more than half-way up it, on the left-hand
side, stands a tall convent wall, the shadow of which,
dominated as the heights were by trees on such a motionless
midnight as this, plunged the roadway into deepest
gloom. The whole length of the lane, to the best
of my remembrance, was illuminated by two, at the
outside by three, lamps which revealed nothing but
their own flames, and so bewildered instead of assisting
the eye.
Directly opposite the convent wall
stood the old chateau, darkened and thickened in front
by a profusion of shrubbery, with a short length of
wall, as I have already said, at both extremities of
it. The grounds belonging to the house, as they
rose with the hill, were divided from the lane by
a thick hedge which terminated at a distance of some
two hundred feet.
We came to a stand and listened, staring
our hardest with all our eyes. The house was
in blackness; the line of the roof ran in a clear sweep
of ink against the stars, and not the faintest sound
came from it or its grounds, save the delicate tinkling
murmur of a fountain playing somewhere amongst the
shrubbery in front.
“Where’ll be the dawg?”
exclaimed Caudel in a hoarse whisper.
“Behind the wall there,”
I answered, “yonder, where the great square
door is. Hark! Did not that sound like
the rattle of a chain?”
We listened; then said I:
“Let us make for the hole in
the hedge. I have its bearings. It directly
fronts the third angle of that convent wall.”
We crept soundlessly past the house,
treading the verdure that lay in dark streaks upon
the glimmering ground of this little-frequented lane.
The clock of the convent opposite struck half-past
twelve.
“One bell, sir,” said
Caudel; “it’s about time we tarned to,
and no mistake. Lord, how I’m a-perspiring!
Yet it ben’t so hot neither. Which side
of the house do the lady descend from?”
“From this side,” I answered.
“Well clear of the dawg anyhow,” said
he, “and that’s a good job.”
“Here’s the hole,”
I cried, with my voice shrill beyond recognition of
my own hearing through the nervous excitement I laboured
under.
The hole was a neglected gap in the
hedge, a rent originally made probably by donkey-boys,
several of whose cattle I had remarked that afternoon
browsing along the ditch and bank-side. We squeezed
through, and found ourselves in a sort of kitchen
garden, as I might imagine from the aspect of the
shadowy vegetation; it seemed to run clear to the
very wall of the house on this side in dwarf bushes
and low-ridged growths.
“There’ll be a path I
hope,” growled Caudel. “What am I
atreading on? Cabbages? They crackle worse
nor gravel, Mr. Barclay.”
“Clear yourself of the rope-ladder,
and then I’ll smother you in your big pea-coat
whilst you light the lamp,” said I. “Let
us keep well in the shadow of the hedge. Who
knows what eyes may be star-gazing yonder?”
The hedge flung a useful dye upon
the blackness of the night; and our figures against
it, even though they should have been viewed close
to, must have been indistinguishable. With a
seaman’s alacrity Caudel slipped off his immense
coat, and in a few moments had unwound the length
of ladder from his body. He wore a coloured flannel
shirt I had dreaded to find him figuring
in white calico! He dropped the ladder to the
ground, and the iron hooks clanked as they fell together.
I hissed a sea blessing at him through my teeth.
“Have you no wick in those tallow-candle
fingers of yours? Hush! Stand motionless.”
As I spoke the dog began to bark.
That it was the dog belonging to the house I could
not swear. The sound, nevertheless, proceeded
from the direction of the yard in which my sweetheart
had told me the dog was chained. The deep and
melancholy note was like that of a bloodhound giving
tongue. It was reverberated by the convent wall
and seemed to penetrate to the farthest distance,
awaking the very echoes of the sleeping river Liane,
and it filled the breathless pause that had fallen
upon us with a torment of inquietude and expectation.
After a few minutes the creature ceased.
“He’ll be a whopper, sir.
Big as a pony, sir, if his voice don’t belie
him,” said Caudel, fetching a deep breath.
“I was once bit by a dawg ”
he was about to spin a yarn.
“For heaven’s sake! now
bear a hand and get your bull’s eye alight,”
I angrily whispered, at the same moment snatching
up his coat and so holding it as to effectually screen
his figure from the house.
Feeling over the coat he pulled out
the little bull’s-eye lamp and a box of matches,
and catching with oceanic dexterity the flame of the
lucifer in the hollow of his hands, he kindled
the wick, and I immediately closed the lantern with
its glass eclipsed. This done, I directed my
eyes at the black smears of growths for
thus they showed lying round about us,
in search of a path; but apparently we were on the
margin of some wide tract of vegetables, through which
we should have to thrust to reach the stretch of sward
that, according to the description in my pocket, lay
immediately under the balcony from which my sweetheart
was to descend.
“Pick up that ladder by
the hooks see they don’t clank crouch
low; make a bush of yourself as I do, and come along,”
said I.
Foot by foot we groped our way towards
the tall, thin shadow of the house through the cabbages to
give the vegetation a name and presently
arrived at the edge of the sward; and now we had to
wait until the clock struck one. Fortunately
there were some bushes here, but none that rose higher
than our girth, and this obliged us to maintain a
posture of stooping which in a short time began to
tell upon Caudel’s rheumatic knees, as I knew
by his snuffling and uneasy movements, though the
heart of oak suffered in silence.