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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. GETTING READY FOR SEA. </h2>
<p>Maurice Frere's passion had spent itself in that last act of violence. He
did not return to the prison, as he promised himself, but turned into the
road that led to the Cascades. He repented him of his suspicions. There
was nothing strange in the presence of the chaplain. Sylvia had always
liked the man, and an apology for his conduct had doubtless removed her
anger. To make a mountain out of a molehill was the act of an idiot. It
was natural that she should release Dawes—women were so
tender-hearted. A few well-chosen, calmly-uttered platitudes anent the
necessity for the treatment that, to those unaccustomed to the desperate
wickedness of convicts, must appear harsh, would have served his turn far
better than bluster and abuse. Moreover, North was to sail in the Lady
Franklin, and might put in execution his threats of official complaint,
unless he was carefully dealt with. To put Dawes again to the torture
would be to show to Troke and his friends that the "Commandant's wife" had
acted without the "Commandant's authority", and that must not be shown. He
would now return and patch up a peace. His wife would sail in the same
vessel with North, and he would in a few days be left alone on the island
to pursue his "discipline" unchecked. With this intent he returned to the
prison, and gravely informed poor Troke that he was astonished at his
barbarity. "Mrs. Frere, who most luckily had appointed to meet me this
evening at the prison, tells me that the poor devil Dawes had been on the
stretcher since seven o'clock this morning."</p>
<p>"You ordered it fust thing, yer honour," said Troke.</p>
<p>"Yes, you fool, but I didn't order you to keep the man there for nine
hours, did I? Why, you scoundrel, you might have killed him!" Troke
scratched his head in bewilderment. "Take his irons off, and put him in a
separate cell in the old gaol. If a man is a murderer, that is no reason
you should take the law into your own hands, is it? You'd better take
care, Mr. Troke." On the way back he met the chaplain, who, seeing him,
made for a by-path in curious haste. "Halloo!" roared Frere. "Hi! Mr.
North!" Mr. North paused, and the Commandant made at him abruptly. "Look
here, sir, I was rude to you just now—devilish rude. Most
ungentlemanly of me. I must apologize." North bowed, without speaking, and
tried to pass.</p>
<p>"You must excuse my violence," Frere went on. "I'm bad-tempered, and I
didn't like my wife interfering. Women, don't you know, don't see these
things—don't understand these scoundrels." North again bowed. "Why,
d—n it, how savage you look! Quite ghastly, bigod! I must have said
most outrageous things. Forget and forgive, you know. Come home and have
some dinner."</p>
<p>"I cannot enter your house again, sir," said North, in tones more agitated
than the occasion would seem to warrant.</p>
<p>Frere shrugged his great shoulders with a clumsy affectation of good
humour, and held out his hand. "Well, shake hands, parson. You'll have to
take care of Mrs. Frere on the voyage, and we may as well make up our
differences before you start. Shake hands."</p>
<p>"Let me pass, sir!" cried North, with heightened colour; and ignoring the
proffered hand, strode savagely on.</p>
<p>"You've a d—d fine temper for a parson," said Frere to himself.
"However, if you won't, you won't. Hang me if I'll ask you again." Nor,
when he reached home, did he fare better in his efforts at reconciliation
with his wife. Sylvia met him with the icy front of a woman whose pride
has been wounded too deeply for tears.</p>
<p>"Say no more about it," she said. "I am going to my father. If you want to
explain your conduct, explain it to him."</p>
<p>"Come, Sylvia," he urged; "I was a brute, I know. Forgive me."</p>
<p>"It is useless to ask me," she said; "I cannot. I have forgiven you so
much during the last seven years."</p>
<p>He attempted to embrace her, but she withdrew herself loathingly from his
arms. He swore a great oath at her, and, too obstinate to argue farther,
sulked. Blunt, coming in about some ship matters, the pair drank rum.
Sylvia went to her room and occupied herself with some minor details of
clothes-packing (it is wonderful how women find relief from thoughts in
household care), while North, poor fool, seeing from his window the light
in hers, sat staring at it, alternately cursing and praying. In the
meantime, the unconscious cause of all of this—Rufus Dawes—sat
in his new cell, wondering at the chance which had procured him comfort,
and blessing the fair hands that had brought it to him. He doubted not but
that Sylvia had interceded with his tormentor, and by gentle pleading
brought him ease. "God bless her," he murmured. "I have wronged her all
these years. She did not know that I suffered." He waited anxiously for
North to visit him, that he might have his belief confirmed. "I will get
him to thank her for me," he thought. But North did not come for two whole
days. No one came but his gaolers; and, gazing from his prison window upon
the sea that almost washed its walls, he saw the schooner at anchor,
mocking him with a liberty he could not achieve. On the third day,
however, North came. His manner was constrained and abrupt. His eyes
wandered uneasily, and he seemed burdened with thoughts which he dared not
utter.</p>
<p>"I want you to thank her for me, Mr. North," said Dawes.</p>
<p>"Thank whom?"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Frere."</p>
<p>The unhappy priest shuddered at hearing the name.</p>
<p>"I do not think you owe any thanks to her. Your irons were removed by the
Commandant's order."</p>
<p>"But by her persuasion. I feel sure of it. Ah, I was wrong to think she
had forgotten me. Ask her for her forgiveness."</p>
<p>"Forgiveness!" said North, recalling the scene in the prison. "What have
you done to need her forgiveness?"</p>
<p>"I doubted her," said Rufus Dawes. "I thought her ungrateful and
treacherous. I thought she delivered me again into the bondage from whence
I had escaped. I thought she had betrayed me—betrayed me to the
villain whose base life I saved for her sweet sake."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" asked North. "You never spoke to me of this."</p>
<p>"No, I had vowed to bury the knowledge of it in my own breast—it was
too bitter to speak."</p>
<p>"Saved his life!"<br/></p>
<p>"Ay, and hers! I made the boat that carried her to freedom. I held her in
my arms, and took the bread from my own lips to feed her!"</p>
<p>"She cannot know this," said North in an undertone.</p>
<p>"She has forgotten it, perhaps, for she was but a child. But you will
remind her, will you not? You will do me justice in her eyes before I die?
You will get her forgiveness for me?"</p>
<p>North could not explain why such an interview as the convict desired was
impossible, and so he promised.</p>
<p>"She is going away in the schooner," said he, concealing the fact of his
own departure. "I will see her before she goes, and tell her."</p>
<p>"God bless you, sir," said poor Dawes. "Now pray with me"; and the
wretched priest mechanically repeated one of the formulae his Church
prescribes.</p>
<p>The next day he told his penitent that Mrs. Frere had forgiven him. This
was a lie. He had not seen her; but what should a lie be to him now? Lies
were needful in the tortuous path he had undertaken to tread. Yet the
deceit he was forced to practise cost him many a pang. He had succumbed to
his passion, and to win the love for which he yearned had voluntarily
abandoned truth and honour; but standing thus alone with his sin, he
despised and hated himself. To deaden remorse and drown reflection, he had
recourse to brandy, and though the fierce excitement of his hopes and
fears steeled him against the stupefying action of the liquor, he was
rendered by it incapable of calm reflection. In certain nervous conditions
our mere physical powers are proof against the action of alcohol, and
though ten times more drunk than the toper, who, incoherently stammering,
reels into the gutter, we can walk erect and talk with fluency. Indeed, in
this artificial exaltation of the sensibilities, men often display a
brilliant wit, and an acuteness of comprehension, calculated to delight
their friends, and terrify their physicians. North had reached this
condition of brain-drunkenness. In plain terms, he was trembling on the
verge of madness.</p>
<p>The days passed swiftly, and Blunt's preparations for sea were completed.
There were two stern cabins in the schooner, one of which was appropriated
to Mrs. Frere, while the other was set apart for North. Maurice had not
attempted to renew his overtures of friendship, and the chaplain had not
spoken. Mindful of Sylvia's last words, he had resolved not to meet her
until fairly embarked upon the voyage which he intended should link their
fortunes together. On the morning of the 19th December, Blunt declared
himself ready to set sail, and in the afternoon the two passengers came on
board.</p>
<p>Rufus Dawes, gazing from his window upon the schooner that lay outside the
reef, thought nothing of the fact that, after the Commandant's boat had
taken away the Commandant's wife another boat should put off with the
chaplain. It was quite natural that Mr. North should desire to bid his
friends farewell, and through the hot, still afternoon he watched for the
returning boat, hoping that the chaplain would bring him some message from
the woman whom he was never to see more on earth. The hours wore on,
however, and no breath of wind ruffled the surface of the sea. The day was
exceedingly close and sultry, heavy dun clouds hung on the horizon, and it
seemed probable that unless a thunder-storm should clear the air before
night, the calm would continue. Blunt, however, with a true sailor's
obstinacy in regard to weather, swore there would be a breeze, and held to
his purpose of sailing. The hot afternoon passed away in a sultry sunset,
and it was not until the shades of evening had begun to fall that Rufus
Dawes distinguished a boat detach itself from the sides of the schooner,
and glide through the oily water to the jetty. The chaplain was returning,
and in a few hours perhaps would be with him, to bring him the message of
comfort for which his soul thirsted. He stretched out his unshackled
limbs, and throwing himself upon his stretcher, fell to recalling the past—his
boat-building, the news of his fortune, his love, and his self-sacrifice.</p>
<p>North, however, was not returning to bring to the prisoner a message of
comfort, but he was returning on purpose to see him, nevertheless. The
unhappy man, torn by remorse and passion, had resolved upon a course of
action which seemed to him a penance for his crime of deceit. He
determined to confess to Dawes that the message he had brought was wholly
fictitious, that he himself loved the wife of the Commandant, and that
with her he was about to leave the island for ever. "I am no hypocrite,"
he thought, in his exaltation. "If I choose to sin, I will sin boldly; and
this poor wretch, who looks up to me as an angel, shall know me for my
true self."</p>
<p>The notion of thus destroying his own fame in the eyes of the man whom he
had taught to love him, was pleasant to his diseased imagination. It was
the natural outcome of the morbid condition of mind into which he had
drifted, and he provided for the complete execution of his scheme with
cunning born of the mischief working in his brain. It was desirable that
the fatal stroke should be dealt at the last possible instant; that he
should suddenly unveil his own infamy, and then depart, never to be seen
again. To this end he had invented an excuse for returning to the shore at
the latest possible moment. He had purposely left in his room a
dressing-bag—the sort of article one is likely to forget in the
hurry of departure from one's house, and so certain to remember when the
time comes to finally prepare for settling in another. He had ingeniously
extracted from Blunt the fact that "he didn't expect a wind before dark,
but wanted all ship-shape and aboard", and then, just as darkness fell,
discovered that it was imperative for him to go ashore. Blunt cursed, but,
if the chaplain insisted upon going, there was no help for it.</p>
<p>"There'll be a breeze in less than two hours," said he. "You've plenty of
time, but if you're not back before the first puff, I'll sail without you,
as sure as you're born." North assured him of his punctuality. "Don't wait
for me, Captain, if I'm not here," said he with the lightness of tone
which men use to mask anxiety. "I'd take him at his word, Blunt," said the
Commandant, who was affably waiting to take final farewell of his wife.
"Give way there, men," he shouted to the crew, "and wait at the jetty. If
Mr. North misses his ship through your laziness, you'll pay for it." So
the boat set off, North laughing uproariously at the thought of being
late. Frere observed with some astonishment that the chaplain wrapped
himself in a boat cloak that lay in the stern sheets. "Does the fellow
want to smother himself in a night like this!" was his remark. The truth
was that, though his hands and head were burning, North's teeth chattered
with cold. Perhaps this was the reason why, when landed and out of eyeshot
of the crew, he produced a pocket-flask of rum and eagerly drank. The
spirit gave him courage for the ordeal to which he had condemned himself;
and with steadied step, he reached the door of the old prison. To his
surprise, Gimblett refused him admission!</p>
<p>"But I have come direct from the Commandant," said North.</p>
<p>"Got any order, sir?"</p>
<p>"Order! No."</p>
<p>"I can't let you in, your reverence," said Gimblett.</p>
<p>"I want to see the prisoner Dawes. I have a special message for him. I
have come ashore on purpose."</p>
<p>"I am very sorry, sir—"</p>
<p>"The ship will sail in two hours, man, and I shall miss her," said North,
indignant at being frustrated in his design. "Let me pass."</p>
<p>"Upon my honour, sir, I daren't," said Gimblett, who was not without his
good points. "You know what authority is, sir."</p>
<p>North was in despair, but a bright thought struck him—a thought
that, in his soberer moments, would never have entered his head—he
would buy admission. He produced the rum flask from beneath the sheltering
cloak. "Come, don't talk nonsense to me, Gimblett. You don't suppose I
would come here without authority. Here, take a pull at this, and let me
through." Gimblett's features relaxed into a smile. "Well, sir, I suppose
it's all right, if you say so," said he. And clutching the rum bottle with
one hand, he opened the door of Dawes's cell with the other.</p>
<p>North entered, and as the door closed behind him, the prisoner, who had
been lying apparently asleep upon his bed, leapt up, and made as though to
catch him by the throat.</p>
<p>Rufus Dawes had dreamt a dream. Alone, amid the gathering glooms, his
fancy had recalled the past, and had peopled it with memories. He thought
that he was once more upon the barren strand where he had first met with
the sweet child he loved. He lived again his life of usefulness and
honour. He saw himself working at the boat, embarking, and putting out to
sea. The fair head of the innocent girl was again pillowed on his breast;
her young lips again murmured words of affection in his greedy ear. Frere
was beside him, watching him, as he had watched before. Once again the
grey sea spread around him, barren of succour. Once again, in the wild,
wet morning, he beheld the American brig bearing down upon them, and saw
the bearded faces of the astonished crew. He saw Frere take the child in
his arms and mount upon the deck; he heard the shout of delight that went
up, and pressed again the welcoming hands which greeted the rescued
castaways. The deck was crowded. All the folk he had ever known were
there. He saw the white hair and stern features of Sir Richard Devine, and
beside him stood, wringing her thin hands, his weeping mother. Then Frere
strode forward, and after him John Rex, the convict, who, roughly elbowing
through the crowd of prisoners and gaolers, would have reached the spot
where stood Sir Richard Devine, but that the corpse of the murdered Lord
Bellasis arose and thrust him back. How the hammers clattered in the
shipbuilder's yard! Was it a coffin they were making? Not for Sylvia—surely
not for her! The air grows heavy, lurid with flame, and black with smoke.
The Hydaspes is on fire! Sylvia clings to her husband. Base wretch, would
you shake her off! Look up; the midnight heaven is glittering with stars;
above the smoke the air breathes delicately! One step—another! Fix
your eyes on mine—so—to my heart! Alas! she turns; he catches
at her dress. What! It is a priest—a priest—who, smiling with
infernal joy, would drag her to the flaming gulf that yawns for him. The
dreamer leaps at the wretch's throat, and crying, "Villain, was it for
this fate I saved her?"—and awakes to find himself struggling with
the monster of his dream, the idol of his waking senses—"Mr. North."</p>
<p>North, paralysed no less by the suddenness of the attack than by the words
with which it was accompanied, let fall his cloak, and stood trembling
before the prophetic accusation of the man whose curses he had come to
earn.</p>
<p>"I was dreaming," said Rufus Dawes. "A terrible dream! But it has passed
now. The message—you have brought me a message, have you not? Why—what
ails you? You are pale—your knees tremble. Did my violence——?"</p>
<p>North recovered himself with a great effort. "It is nothing. Let us talk,
for my time is short. You have thought me a good man—one blessed of
God, one consecrated to a holy service; a man honest, pure, and truthful.
I have returned to tell you the truth. I am none of these things." Rufus
Dawes sat staring, unable to comprehend this madness. "I told you that the
woman you loved—for you do love her—sent you a message of
forgiveness. I lied."</p>
<p>"What!"</p>
<p>"I never told her of your confession. I never mentioned your name to her."</p>
<p>"And she will go without knowing—Oh, Mr. North, what have you done?"</p>
<p>"Wrecked my own soul!" cried North, wildly, stung by the reproachful agony
of the tone. "Do not cling to me. My task is done. You will hate me now.
That is my wish—I merit it. Let me go, I say. I shall be too late."</p>
<p>"Too late! For what?" He looked at the cloak—through the open window
came the voices of the men in the boat—the memory of the rose, of
the scene in the prison, flashed across him, and he understood it all.</p>
<p>"Great Heaven, you go together!"</p>
<p>"Let me go," repeated North, in a hoarse voice.</p>
<p>Rufus Dawes stepped between him and the door. "No, madman, I will not let
you go, to do this great wrong, to kill this innocent young soul, who—God
help her—loves you!" North, confounded at this sudden reversal of
their position towards each other, crouched bewildered against the wall.
"I say you shall not go! You shall not destroy your own soul and hers! You
love her! So do I! and my love is mightier than yours, for it shall save
her!"</p>
<p>"In God's name—" cried the unhappy priest, striving to stop his
ears.</p>
<p>"Ay, in God's name! In the name of that God whom in my torments I had
forgotten! In the name of that God whom you taught me to remember! That
God who sent you to save me from despair, gives me strength to save you in
my turn! Oh, Mr. North—my teacher—my friend—my brother—by
the sweet hope of mercy which you preached to me, be merciful to this
erring woman!"</p>
<p>North lifted agonized eyes. "But I love her! Love her, do you hear? What
do you know of love?"</p>
<p>"Love!" cried Rufus Dawes, his pale face radiant. "Love! Oh, it is you who
do not know it. Love is the sacrifice of self, the death of all desire
that is not for another's good. Love is Godlike! You love?—no, no,
your love is selfishness, and will end in shame! Listen, I will tell you
the history of such a love as yours."</p>
<p>North, enthralled by the other's overmastering will, fell back trembling.</p>
<p>"I will tell you the secret of my life, the reason why I am here. Come
closer."</p>
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