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Major Vigoureux, a novel by Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch |
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Chapter 6. How Vashti Came To The Islands |
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_ CHAPTER VI. HOW VASHTI CAME TO THE ISLANDS
The Commandant looked at her, across the lantern's ray. Something in her voice, vibrating like the rich, full note of a bell, touched his memory ... but only to elude it. The face that challenged him was not girlish; the face, rather, of a beautiful woman of thirty; its shape a short oval, with a slight squareness at the point of the jaw to balance the broad forehead over which her hair (damp now, but rippled with a natural wave, defying the fog) lay parted in two heavy bands--the brow of a goddess. Her eyes, too, would have become a goddess, though just now they condescended to be merry. Tall she was, for certain, and commanding. Her cloak hid the lines of her body, whether they were thin or ample; but, where the collar opened, her throat showed like a pillar, carrying her chin upon a truly noble poise. It was inconceivable (the Commandant said to himself) that he had met this woman before and forgotten her. He came back to her eyes. They challenged him fearlessly. He could not have described their colour; but he saw amusement lurking deep in their glooms while she waited. "I am sorry. It is unpardonable in me, of course----" "And I, on the contrary, am glad," she interrupted, with a laugh that reminded him of the liquid chuckle in a thrush's song, or of water swirling down a deep pool; "for it tells me I have grown out of recognition, and that is just what I wanted." This puzzled him, and he frowned a little. "You know the Islands?" he asked. "This is not your first visit?" "You shall judge if in this darkness I steer you straight for St. Lide's Quay; and I take you to witness--look over your shoulder--there is no lamp on the quay-head to guide me, or at least none visible." She laughed again, but on the instant grew serious. "Yes," she added, "I can find my way among the Islands, I thank God." And this puzzled him yet more. "You know the Islands; you are glad to return to them?" She nodded. "Yet you do not wish to be recognised?" She nodded again. "I came, you see, sooner than I intended. The _Milo_ was clean out of her course." "That goes without saying," said he, gravely. "She was bound for Plymouth. So, you see, this little misadventure has shortened my journey by days." She paused. "No; I ought not to speak of it flippantly. I shall be very thankful in my prayers to-night ... all those women and children...." Again she paused. "Is my hand trembling?" she asked, lifting it and laying it again on the tiller, where it rested firm as a rock. Only the jewels quivered on her rings and bracelets, and their beauty, arresting the Commandant's gaze, held him silent. "To be frank with you," she went on, "I left the ship in a hurry, because I was afraid of being thanked. I don't like publicity--much; and just now it would have spoiled everything." This explanation enlightened the Commandant not at all. "Besides," she added with a practical air, "I left a note with my maid, to be given to the captain; so he won't imagine that I've tumbled overboard; and she can send my boxes ashore to-morrow, if you will be kind enough to fetch them before the _Milo_ weighs." "But, meanwhile?" he hazarded. "Oh, meanwhile, I must manage somehow for the night. I slipped a few things into my hand-bag here." She drew her fur cloak a little aside, and displayed it--a small satchel hanging from her waist by a silver chain. The Commandant had a glimpse at the same moment of a skirt of rose-coloured silk, brocaded in a pattern of silver. "And when we land," he asked, "where am I to take you?" "I am in your hands." He stared at her, dismayed. "But you have friends?" "None who would remember me; not a soul, at least, in St. Lide's." "There is the Plume of Feathers Inn, to be sure----" "If you recommend it," she said, demurely, as he hesitated. He almost lost his temper. "Recommend it? Of course I don't." "Well, from what I remember of the Plume of Feathers--unless it has altered----" "Wouldn't it be wiser to turn back?" he suggested, desperately, staring into the fog, in which the lights of the _Milo_ had long since disappeared. "What? When we have this moment opened the quay-light? There!... didn't I promise you that I knew my way among the Islands?" In the basin of the harbour the fog lay thicker than in the roads, and they had scarcely made sure that this was indeed the quay-light before their boat grated against the landing-steps of the quay itself. The Commandant, after he had shipped his oars and checked the way on her, pressing both hands against the dripping wall, put up one of them and passed the back of it slowly across his forehead. He was considering; and, while he considered, his companion stepped lightly ashore. "Forgive me," he pleaded, recollecting himself. "At least, I should have offered you my hand." "Thank you, I did not need it." "But listen, please," he protested, scrambling out upon the steps, painter in hand, and groping for a ring-bolt. "You cannot possibly stay the night at the Plume of Feathers----" He heard her laugh, as he stooped, having found the ring, to make fast the rope. "Commandant, have you ever travelled across Wyoming--in winter, in a waggon? Very well, then; I have." "Surely not in the clothes you are wearing?" The Commandant, as any one in the Council of Twelve could tell you, was no debater; yet sometimes he had been known to triumph even in debate, by sheer simplicity. "The only course that I can see," he continued, "is to seek some private house, and throw ourselves upon the--er--" "Front door?" she suggested, mischievously. "--hospitality--upon the hospitality of the inmates. To them, of course, I can explain the situation----" "Can you?" The Commandant stood for a moment peering at her, and rubbing the back of his head--a trick of his in perplexity. "Upon my word, now you come to mention it," he confessed, "I don't know that I can." "Whom shall we try first? Miss Gabriel?" ("Now, how in the world," wondered the Commandant, "does she know anything of Miss Gabriel?") "Very well; we go together to Alma Cottage--she still lives at Alma Cottage?--and knock. The hour is two in the morning, or thereabouts. Miss Gabriel, overcoming her first fear of robbery or murder, will parley with us from her bedroom window. To her you introduce me, by the light of your lantern; a strange female in an evening frock; a female grossly overladen with jewels (that, I think, would be Miss Gabriel's way of putting it), but without a portmanteau." "We might try the Popes, next door," suggested the Commandant flinching. "Mr. Pope is a man of the world." "Is he?" she asked, after a pause, in which he felt that she struggled with some inward mirth. "But we cannot so describe Mrs. Pope, can we? Also we cannot knock up Mr. and Mrs. Pope without disturbing Miss Gabriel next door." "Nor, for that matter, can we knock up Miss Gabriel without disturbing Mr. and Mrs. Pope." "Quite so; we may reckon that all three will be listening. Therefore, when Mr. Pope or Miss Gabriel (as the case may be) begins by demanding my name--which, by an oversight, you have forgotten to ask----" "Pardon me," said the Commandant, simply, "I did not forget. I waited, supposing that if you wished me to know it, you would tell me." "Ah!" she drew close to him, with a happy exclamation. "Then I was not mistaken: You are the man I have counted to find.... And you are a brave man, too. But we will not push bravery too far and disturb Miss Gabriel." "If you can suggest a better plan----" "A far better plan. I suggest that you offer me a room to-night at the garrison." "My dear madam!" the Commandant gasped. "It will be far better in every way," she went on composedly; that is, if you are willing. To begin with, you have rooms and to spare. Next, there will be no bother in introducing me, except to Mrs. Treacher." "Ah, to be sure, there is Mrs. Treacher!" the Commandant murmured. "But, madam, all the rooms in the Castle are unfurnished, ruinous, and have been ruinous for fifty years. The Treachers occupy the only two in which it were possible to swing a cat." "Then we must borrow Mrs. Treacher and take her along to the Barracks for chaperon. You may leave it to me to persuade her." Without waiting for his answer she ran lightly up the steps, the heels of her rose-coloured satin shoes twinkling in the light of the Commandant's lantern as he blundered after her. The pavement of the quay had not been laid for satin shoes. Much traffic had worn the surface into depressions, and these depressions were fast collecting water from the drenched air. But although the fog lay almost as thick here as at the foot of the steps, she picked her way among these pitfalls, avoiding them as though by instinct. Beyond the quay came a cobbled causeway; and beyond the causeway a narrow street wound up towards the garrison gate. Past rains, pouring down the hill, had worn a deep rut along this street, ploughing it here and there to the native rock, zig-zagging from centre to side of the roadway and back again obedient to the trend of the slope. But over the causeway, and up the channelled street she found her footing with the same confidence, steering far more cleverly than the Commandant, who followed as in a dream, amazed, oppressed with forebodings. It was all very well for her to talk lightly of persuading Mrs. Treacher. If she could, why then she must be possessed of a secret as yet unrevealed to Mrs. Treacher's husband after thirty-odd years of married life. The Commandant, too, knew something of Mrs. Treacher ... an obstinate woman, not to say pig-headed. Was she a witch--this stranger in silk and jewels who walked in darkness so confidently up the tortuous unpaved street?--this apparition who, coming out of the seas and the dumb fog, talked of the Islands and the Islanders as though she had known them all her life? As if to prove she was a witch, she paused before the very cottage which once already to-night had given pause to his steps and to his thoughts. The fog had been thinning little by little as they mounted the hill, and at a few paces' distance he recognized the closed door, daubed over with that same staring paint which your true Islander uses for choice upon his boat. "You remember this door?" she asked, pointing to it as he overtook her. Witch she might be, but why should he give away to her this innocent small secret? "Of course I remember it," he answered; "passing it as I do, half-a-dozen times a day." "Yes," she said, almost as if speaking to herself; but her voice, for the first time since their meeting, seemed to be touched with a faint shade of dejection. "Naturally you would not remember it for any other reason." He was silent. "Yet," she went on, "you really ought to remember that door, Major Vigoureux, if only for old sake's sake; for it was, I believe, the first you entered when you came to the Islands. That was in the year----" "Never mind the year," interrupted the Commandant, hastily. "I remember it well. I almost never pass the door without remembering it." "Ah!" she cried, putting her jewelled hands together, and the Commandant took it for an exclamation of triumph at her cleverness. "But other tenants have the house. The man who was master of it is dead." "You know everything, it seems to me. Yes; he was a widower, and late that evening at the fishing. It was an evening when he should not have been late; for the door stood open for him, and his daughters--he had two daughters--sat expecting him. It was the open door that drew me to ask my way." Here he paused. "Go on, please." "One of the girls was to leave the Islands next morning for the mainland, which she had never seen. She told me this. And she sat reading aloud to her sister, there by the fire." "Go on." "That is all. Yes, that is all--except that the book was Shakespeare, and the girl--" He paused again, staring at her between sudden enlightenment and stark incredulity. "You--you don't mean to tell me _you_ were that girl!" She nodded; and as, forgetting politeness, he held the lantern close to her face, he saw two large tears brim up, tremble, and hang for a second before they fell. "You?" he murmured. She nodded again. "I am Vashti--Vazzy Cara, they called me, Philip Cara's daughter. I daresay, though, you never heard my name? No, there is no reason why you should. And my sister, Ruth----" "She is married and lives on Saaron Island. But you know this, of course? You who seem to know everything about us." "My sister writes me all the news.... So now," she added smiling, "it is all explained, and there is no mystery about me after all. Are you so very much disappointed?" But the Commandant continued to stare. No mystery? That the fisherman's daughter with the Island lilt in her voice--well he recalled it!--should have turned into this apparition of furs and jewels?... And yet the metamorphosis lay not in the furs and jewels, but in her careless air of command, of reliance upon her power, beauty, charm--whatever her woman's secret might be; an air of one accustomed to move in courts, maybe, or to control great audiences, or to live habitually with lofty thoughts; an air of one, above all, sure of herself. The poor Commandant had lived the better part of his life in exile, but by instinct of breeding he recognised this air at once. Vashti, however, seemed to mistake his astonishment, for she frowned. "Well?" she asked, a trifle impatiently. "Your sister never told us," he stammered. "At least--that is to say----" "Do you suppose she was ashamed of me?" "Ashamed?" he echoed, for indeed no such thought had occurred to him. If ever a man could have taken _honi soit qui mal y pense_ for his motto, it was our Commandant. "Ah, to be sure!" she said slowly, but less in indignation (it seemed) than in disappointment with him. "Naturally that would be the explanation to occur to you, living so long in such a place." She turned on her heel, half contemptuously, and resumed her way, walking with a yet quicker step than before. The Commandant, aware that he had offended, but not in the least understanding how, toiled after her up the steep incline to the garrison gate. They reached the door of the Barracks. To his surprise it was standing open, and from behind the ragged blind of his sitting-room--to the left of the entrance hall--a light shone feebly out upon the fog. He could not remember that he had lit the lamp there, nor that he had left the front door open. Vashti paused upon the doorstep and turned to him: "My good sir," she said curtly, "run and fetch Mrs. Treacher to me, for goodness' sake." He hesitated, on the point of stepping past her to open the door of the lighted room. Her manner forbade him, and he stood still, there by the doorstep, gazing after her a moment as she disappeared into the dark hall. Then, as he heard the door latch rattle gently, he turned to hurry in search of Mrs. Treacher. He had taken but a dozen steps, however, when her light footfall sounded again close behind him. She, too, had turned and was following him almost at a run. "Why didn't you tell me?" she gasped. He swung up his lantern. Her eyes were wide with a kind of horror; and yet she seemed to be laughing, or ready to laugh. "Tell you?" he echoed. "Oh, but it was unkind!" "But--but, excuse me--what on earth----" "Why, that you were entertaining ladies!" "Ladies!" She nodded, still round-eyed, reproachful. "Two of them--sitting on your sofa! And, I think--I rather think--one of them is Miss Gabriel!" _ |