In Mr. Knox's Country Part 8
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A pause, punctuated by heavy grunts of effort--then Bill's voice.
"What the blazes is holding it? Come on, Chichester, and put your back into it!"
Chichester's back, ample as it would seem, had no appreciable effect on the situation.
"You ought to go and help them, Sinclair," said my wife, with that readiness to offer a vicarious sacrifice that is so characteristic of wives.
I said I would wait till I was asked. I had not to wait long.
I took my turn at the warm handle-bar of the windla.s.s, and grunted and strove as strenuously as my predecessors. The sun poured down in undesired geniality, the mainsail lurched and flapped; the boom tugged at its tether; the water jabbered and gurgled past the bows.
"I think we're in the _consomme_!" remarked Bill, putting his hands in his pockets.
"Here," said Lord Derryclare, with a very red face; "confound her!
we'll sail her off it!"
Chichester sat down in a deck-chair as remote as possible from his kind, and once again consulted his watch. Bill took the tiller; ropes were hauled, slacked, made fast; the boom awoke to devastating life; the _Sheila_ swung, tilted over to the breeze, and made a rush for freedom. The rush ended in a jerk, the anchor remained immovable, and the process was repeated in the opposite direction, with a vigour that restored Chichester abruptly to the bosom of society--in point of fact, my bosom. He said nothing, or at least nothing to signify, as I a.s.sisted him to rise, but I felt as if I were handling a live sh.e.l.l.
During the succeeding quarter of an hour the _Sheila_, so it seemed to my untutored mind, continued to sail in tangents towards all the points of the compa.s.s, and at the end of each tangent was brought up with an uncompromising negative from the anchor. By that time my invariable yacht-headache was established, and all the other men in the s.h.i.+p were advancing, at a varying rate of progress, into a frame of mind that precluded human intercourse, and was entirely removed from perceiving any humour in the situation.
Through all these affairs the sound of conversation ascended steadily through the main-hatch. Lady Derryclare and my wife were playing Patience in the cabin, and were at the same time discussing intricate matters in connection with District Nurses, with that strange power of doing one thing and talking about another that I have often noticed in women. It was at about this period that the small, rat-like head of Bill's kitchen-maid, Jimmy, appeared at the fore-hatch (accompanied by a reek of such potency that I immediately a.s.signed it to the pig's face), and made the suggestion about the Congested Diver. That the Diver, however congested, was a public official, engaged at the moment in laying the foundations of the Eyries Pier, did not, this being Ireland, complicate the situation. The punt, with Bill, hot and taciturn, in the stern, sprang forth on her errand, smas.h.i.+ng and bouncing through the sharpened edges of the little waves. As I faced that dainty and appetising breeze, I felt the first pang of the same hunger that was, I knew, already gnawing Chichester like a wolf.
"We must have fouled some old moorings," said Derryclare, coming up from the cabin, with a large slice of bread and honey in his hand, and an equanimity somewhat restored by a working solution of the problem.
"d.a.m.n nuisance, but it can't be helped. Better get something to eat, Chichester; you won't get to Ecclestown before three o'clock at the best."
"No, thank you," said Chichester, without raising his eyes from the four-day-old paper that he was affecting to read.
I strolled discreetly away, and again looked down through the skylight into the cabin. The ladies were no longer there, and, in defiance of all nautical regulations, a spirit-lamp with a kettle upon it was burning on the table, a sufficient indication to a person of my experience that Philippa and Lady Derryclare had abandoned hope of the Ecclestown lunch and were making tea. The prospect of something to eat, of any description, was not unpleasing; in the meantime I took the field-gla.s.ses, and went forward to follow, pessimistically, the progress of the punt in its search for the Diver.
There was no one on the pier. Bill landed, went up the beach, and was lost to sight in the yard of the public-house.
"It must be he's at his dinner," said Jimmy at my elbow, descrying these movements with a vision that appeared to be equal to mine plus the field-gla.s.ses. There was an interval, during which I transferred my attention to Ecclestown; its white hotel basked in suns.h.i.+ne, settled and balmy, as of the land of Beulah. Its comfortable aspect suggested roast chicken, tingling gla.s.ses of beer, even of champagne. A torpedo-boat, with a thread of smoke coming quietly from its foremost funnel, lay in front of the hotel. It seemed as though it were enjoying an after-luncheon cigarette.
"They're coming out now!" said Jimmy, with excitement; "it must be they were within in the house looking at the motor."
I turned the field-gla.s.ses on Eyries; a fair proportion of its population was emerging from the yard of the public-house, and the length to which their scientific interest had carried them formed a pleasing subject for meditation.
"There's the ha'past-one mail-car coming in," said Jimmy; "it's likely he'll wait for the letters now."
The mirage of the Ecclestown lunch here melted away, as far as I was concerned, and with a resignation perfected in many Petty Sessions courts, I turned my appet.i.te to humbler issues. To those who have breakfasted at eight, and have motored over thirty miles of moorland, tea and sardines at two o'clock are a mere affair of outposts, that leave the heart of the position untouched. Yet a temporary glow of achievement may be attained by their means, and the news brought back by Bill, coupled with a fresh loaf, that the Diver was coming at once, flattered the hope that the game was still alive. Bill had also brought a telegram for Chichester.
"Who has the nerve to tell Mr. Chichester that there's something to eat here?" said Lady Derryclare, minutely examining the b.u.t.ter.
"Philippa is obviously indicated," I said malignly. "She is the Friend of his Youth!"
"You're all odious," said Philippa, sliding from beneath the flap of the table with the light of the lion-tamer in her eye.
What transpired between her and the lion we shall never know. She returned almost immediately, with a heightened colour, and the irrelevant information that the Diver had come on board. The news had the lifting power of a high explosive. We burst from the cabin and went on deck as one man, with the exception of my wife, who, with a forethought that did her credit, turned back to improvise a cosy for the teapot.
The Diver was a large person, of few words, with a lowering brow and a heavy moustache. He did not minimise the greatness of his condescension in coming aboard the yacht; he listened gloomily to the explanations of Lord Derryclare. At the conclusion of the narrative he moved in silence to the bows and surveyed the situation. His boat, containing the apparatus of his trade, was alongside; a stalwart underling, clad in a brown jersey, sat in the bows; in the stern was enthroned the helmet, goggling upon us like a decapitated motorist. It imparted a thrill that I had not experienced since I read Jules Verne at school.
"Here, Jeremiah," said the Diver.
The satellite came on deck with the single sinuous movement of a salmon.
The Diver motioned him to the windla.s.s. "We'll take a turn at this first," he said.
They took each a handle, they bent to their task, and the anchor rose at their summons like a hot knife out of b.u.t.ter.
Every man present, with the exception of the Diver and the satellite, made the simple declaration that he was d.a.m.ned, and it was in the period of paralysis following on this that a fresh ingredient was added to the situation.
A giant voice filled the air, and in a windy bellow came the words:
"Nice lot you are!"
We faced about and saw "Ronnie's torpedo-boat" executing a sweeping curve in the mouth of Eyries Harbour.
"Couldn't wait any longer!" proceeded the voice of the Megaphone.
"We've got to pick up the others outside. Thanks awfully for luncheon!
Top-hole!"
T.B. No. 1000 completed the curve and headed for the open sea with a white mane of water rising above her bows. There was something else white fluttering at the stern. I put up the field-gla.s.ses, and with their aid perceived upon the deck a party of four ladies, one of whom was waving a large pocket handkerchief. The gla.s.ses were here taken out of my hand by Chichester, but not before I had identified the Flapper.
What Chichester said of Ronnie was heard only by me, and possibly by Jimmy, who did not count. I think it may have saved his life, being akin to opening a vein. That I was the sole recipient of these confidences was perhaps due to the fact that the _Sheila_, so swiftly and amazingly untethered, here began to fall away to leeward, with all the wilful helplessness of her kind, and instant and general confusion was the result. There were a few moments during which ropes, spars, and human beings pursued me wherever I went. Then I heard Lord Derryclare's voice--"Let go that anchor again!"
The sliding rattle of the chain followed, the anchor plunged; the _status quo_ was re-established.
Chichester went ash.o.r.e with the Diver to catch the outgoing mail-car.
The telegram that had arrived with Bill was brought into action flagrantly, and was as flagrantly accepted. (It was found, subsequently, on his cabin floor, and was to the effect that the cartridges had been forwarded as directed.) The farewells were made, the parting regrets very creditably accomplished, and we stood on the deck and saw him go, with his suit-case, his rods, his gun-case, heaped imposingly in the bow, his rug, and his coats, the greater and the less, piled beside him in the stern.
The wind had freshened; the Diver and Jeremiah drove the boat into it with a will, and the heavy oars struck spray off the crests of the waves. We saw Chichester draw forth the greater coat, and stand up and put it on. The boat lurched, and he sat down abruptly, only to start to his feet again as if he had been stung by a wasp. He thrust his hand into the pocket, and Philippa clutched my arm.
"Could it have been into the pocket of his coat that I put the teapot----?" she breathed.
IV
HARRINGTON'S
Breakfast was over; Philippa was feeding the dogs. Philippa's cousin, Captain Andrew Larpent, R.E., was looking out of the window with that air of unemployment that touches the conscience of a host like a spur.
Andrew did not smoke, a serious matter in a male guest, which means that there are, for him, no moments of lethargy, and that, when he idles, his idleness stands stark in the foreground against a clear sky, a reproach and a menace to his entertainers.
It was a cold day about the middle of September, and there was an unrest among the trees that commemorated a night of storm; the gravel was wet, the lawn-tennis ground was strewn with sycamore leaves.
"I suppose you'll say I'm drunk," said Andrew, "but the fact remains that I see two Natives coming up the drive."
In the green tunnel that was the avenue at Shreelane were two dark figures; both were dressed in frock-coats, of which the tails fluttered meagrely in the wind; their faces were black; with the half-hearted blackness of a leg in a black silk stocking; one of them wore a tall hat.
In Mr. Knox's Country Part 8
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In Mr. Knox's Country Part 8 summary
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