<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVI. THE WRITING ON THE SAND. </h2>
<p>Having got out of eye-shot of the ungrateful creatures he had befriended,
Rufus Dawes threw himself upon the ground in an agony of mingled rage and
regret. For the first time for six years he had tasted the happiness of
doing good, the delight of self-abnegation. For the first time for six
years he had broken through the selfish misanthropy he had taught himself.
And this was his reward! He had held his temper in check, in order that it
might not offend others. He had banished the galling memory of his
degradation, lest haply some shadow of it might seem to fall upon the fair
child whose lot had been so strangely cast with his. He had stifled the
agony he suffered, lest its expression should give pain to those who
seemed to feel for him. He had forborne retaliation, when retaliation
would have been most sweet. Having all these years waited and watched for
a chance to strike his persecutors, he had held his hand now that an
unlooked-for accident had placed the weapon of destruction in his grasp.
He had risked his life, forgone his enmities, almost changed his nature—and
his reward was cold looks and harsh words, so soon as his skill had paved
the way to freedom. This knowledge coming upon him while the thrill of
exultation at the astounding news of his riches yet vibrated in his brain,
made him grind his teeth with rage at his own hard fate. Bound by the
purest and holiest of ties—the affection of a son to his mother—he
had condemned himself to social death, rather than buy his liberty and
life by a revelation which would shame the gentle creature whom he loved.
By a strange series of accidents, fortune had assisted him to maintain the
deception he had practised. His cousin had not recognized him. The very
ship in which he was believed to have sailed had been lost with every soul
on board. His identity had been completely destroyed—no link
remained which could connect Rufus Dawes, the convict, with Richard
Devine, the vanished heir to the wealth of the dead ship-builder.</p>
<p>Oh, if he had only known! If, while in the gloomy prison, distracted by a
thousand fears, and weighed down by crushing evidence of circumstance, he
had but guessed that death had stepped between Sir Richard and his
vengeance, he might have spared himself the sacrifice he had made. He had
been tried and condemned as a nameless sailor, who could call no witnesses
in his defence, and give no particulars as to his previous history. It was
clear to him now that he might have adhered to his statement of ignorance
concerning the murder, locked in his breast the name of the murderer, and
have yet been free. Judges are just, but popular opinion is powerful, and
it was not impossible that Richard Devine, the millionaire, would have
escaped the fate which had overtaken Rufus Dawes, the sailor. Into his
calculations in the prison—when, half-crazed with love, with terror,
and despair, he had counted up his chances of life—the wild
supposition that he had even then inherited the wealth of the father who
had disowned him, had never entered. The knowledge of that fact would have
altered the whole current of his life, and he learnt it for the first time
now—too late. Now, lying prone upon the sand; now, wandering
aimlessly up and down among the stunted trees that bristled white beneath
the mist-barred moon; now, sitting—as he had sat in the prison long
ago—with the head gripped hard between his hands, swaying his body
to and fro, he thought out the frightful problem of his bitter life. Of
little use was the heritage that he had gained. A convict-absconder, whose
hands were hard with menial service, and whose back was scarred with the
lash, could never be received among the gently nurtured. Let him lay claim
to his name and rights, what then? He was a convicted felon, and his name
and rights had been taken from him by the law. Let him go and tell Maurice
Frere that he was his lost cousin. He would be laughed at. Let him
proclaim aloud his birth and innocence, and the convict-sheds would grin,
and the convict overseer set him to harder labour. Let him even, by dint
of reiteration, get his wild story believed, what would happen? If it was
heard in England—after the lapse of years, perhaps—that a
convict in the chain-gang in Macquarie Harbour—a man held to be a
murderer, and whose convict career was one long record of mutiny and
punishment—claimed to be the heir to an English fortune, and to own
the right to dispossess staid and worthy English folk of their rank and
station, with what feeling would the announcement be received? Certainly
not with a desire to redeem this ruffian from his bonds and place him in
the honoured seat of his dead father. Such intelligence would be regarded
as a calamity, an unhappy blot upon a fair reputation, a disgrace to an
honoured and unsullied name. Let him succeed, let him return again to the
mother who had by this time become reconciled, in a measure, to his loss;
he would, at the best, be to her a living shame, scarcely less degrading
than that which she had dreaded.</p>
<p>But success was almost impossible. He did not dare to retrace his steps
through the hideous labyrinth into which he had plunged. Was he to show
his scarred shoulders as a proof that he was a gentleman and an innocent
man? Was he to relate the nameless infamies of Macquarie Harbour as a
proof that he was entitled to receive the hospitalities of the generous,
and to sit, a respected guest, at the tables of men of refinement? Was he
to quote the horrible slang of the prison-ship, and retail the filthy
jests of the chain-gang and the hulks, as a proof that he was a fit
companion for pure-minded women and innocent children? Suppose even that
he could conceal the name of the real criminal, and show himself guiltless
of the crime for which he had been condemned, all the wealth in the world
could not buy back that blissful ignorance of evil which had once been
his. All the wealth in the world could not purchase the self-respect which
had been cut out of him by the lash, or banish from his brain the memory
of his degradation.</p>
<p>For hours this agony of thought racked him. He cried out as though with
physical pain, and then lay in a stupor, exhausted with actual physical
suffering. It was hopeless to think of freedom and of honour. Let him keep
silence, and pursue the life fate had marked out for him. He would return
to bondage. The law would claim him as an absconder, and would mete out to
him such punishment as was fitting. Perhaps he might escape severest
punishment, as a reward for his exertions in saving the child. He might
consider himself fortunate if such was permitted to him. Fortunate!
Suppose he did not go back at all, but wandered away into the wilderness
and died? Better death than such a doom as his. Yet need he die? He had
caught goats, he could catch fish. He could build a hut. In here was,
perchance, at the deserted settlement some remnant of seed corn that,
planted, would give him bread. He had built a boat, he had made an oven,
he had fenced in a hut. Surely he could contrive to live alone savage and
free. Alone! He had contrived all these marvels alone! Was not the boat he
himself had built below upon the shore? Why not escape in her, and leave
to their fate the miserable creatures who had treated him with such
ingratitude?</p>
<p>The idea flashed into his brain, as though someone had spoken the words
into his ear. Twenty strides would place him in possession of the boat,
and half an hour's drifting with the current would take him beyond
pursuit. Once outside the Bar, he would make for the westward, in the
hopes of falling in with some whaler. He would doubtless meet with one
before many days, and he was well supplied with provision and water in the
meantime. A tale of shipwreck would satisfy the sailors, and—he
paused—he had forgotten that the rags which he wore would betray
him. With an exclamation of despair, he started from the posture in which
he was lying. He thrust out his hands to raise himself, and his fingers
came in contact with something soft. He had been lying at the foot of some
loose stones that were piled cairnwise beside a low-growing bush; and the
object that he had touched was protruding from beneath these stones. He
caught it and dragged it forth. It was the shirt of poor Bates. With
trembling hands he tore away the stones, and pulled forth the rest of the
garments. They seemed as though they had been left purposely for him.
Heaven had sent him the very disguise he needed.</p>
<p>The night had passed during his reverie, and the first faint streaks of
dawn began to lighten in the sky. Haggard and pale, he rose to his feet,
and scarcely daring to think about what he proposed to do, ran towards the
boat. As he ran, however, the voice that he had heard encouraged him.
"Your life is of more importance than theirs. They will die, but they have
been ungrateful and deserve death. You will escape out of this Hell, and
return to the loving heart who mourns you. You can do more good to mankind
than by saving the lives of these people who despise you. Moreover, they
may not die. They are sure to be sent for. Think of what awaits you when
you return—an absconded convict!"</p>
<p>He was within three feet of the boat, when he suddenly checked himself,
and stood motionless, staring at the sand with as much horror as though he
saw there the Writing which foretold the doom of Belshazzar. He had come
upon the sentence traced by Sylvia the evening before, and glittering in
the low light of the red sun suddenly risen from out the sea, it seemed to
him that the letters had shaped themselves at his very feet,</p>
<p>GOOD MR. DAWES.</p>
<p>"Good Mr. Dawes"! What a frightful reproach there was to him in that
simple sentence! What a world of cowardice, baseness, and cruelty, had not
those eleven letters opened to him! He heard the voice of the child who
had nursed him, calling on him to save her. He saw her at that instant
standing between him and the boat, as she had stood when she held out to
him the loaf, on the night of his return to the settlement.</p>
<p>He staggered to the cavern, and, seizing the sleeping Frere by the arm,
shook him violently. "Awake! awake!" he cried, "and let us leave this
place!" Frere, starting to his feet, looked at the white face and
bloodshot eyes of the wretched man before him with blunt astonishment.
"What's the matter with you, man?" he said. "You look as if you'd seen a
ghost!"</p>
<p>At the sound of his voice Rufus Dawes gave a long sigh, and drew his hand
across his eyes.</p>
<p>"Come, Sylvia!" shouted Frere. "It's time to get up. I am ready to go!"</p>
<p>The sacrifice was complete. The convict turned away, and two great
glistening tears rolled down his rugged face, and fell upon the sand.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />