<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XLV" id="CHAPTER_XLV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLV</h2>
<p class="subhead">OF CONRAD VEREKER'S REVISION OF PARADISE, AND OF FENWICK'S HIGH
FEVER. OF AN ENGLISH OFFICER WHO WAVERED AT BOMBAY, AND OF FENWICK'S
SURPRISE-BATH IN THE BRITISH CHANNEL. WHY HE DID NOT SINK. THE ELLEN
JANE OF ST. SENNANS. ONLY SALLY IS IN THE WATER STILL. MORE BOATS. FOUND!</p>
<p>Fenwick, haunted by the phantoms of his own past—always, as his
fever grew, assuming more and more the force of realities—but
convinced of their ephemeral nature, and that the crisis of this
fever would pass and leave him free, had walked quickly along the
sea front towards the cliff pathway. Had Dr. Conrad seen him as he
passed below his window and looked up at it, he would probably have
suspected something and followed him. And then the events of this
story would have travelled a different road. But Vereker, possessed
by quite another sort of delirium, had risen even earlier—almost
with the dawn—and, taking Sally's inaccessibility at that unearthly
hour for granted, had gone for a long walk over what was now to him
a land of enchantment—the same ground he and Sally had passed over
on the previous evening. He and his mother would be on their way to
London in a few hours, and he would like to see the landmarks that
were to be a precious memory for all time yet once more while he had
the chance. Who could say that he would ever visit St. Sennans
again?</p>
<p>If Fenwick, in choosing this direction first, had a half-formed idea
of attracting the doctor's attention, the appearance of Mrs.
Iggulden's shuttered parlour-window would have discouraged him. It
told a tale of a household still asleep, and quite truly as far as
she herself was concerned. For Dr. Conrad, as might have been
expected, was very late in coming home the night before; and his
mother's peculiarity of not being able to sleep if kept up till
eleven, combined with the need of a statement of her position, a
declaration of policy, and almost a budget, if
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not quite, on the
subject of her son's future housekeeping, having resulted in what
threatened to become an all-night sitting, the good woman's dozes
and repentances, with jerks, on the stairs overnight, had produced
their consequences in the morning. Fenwick passed the house, and
walked on as far as where the path rose to the cliffs; then turned
back, and, pausing a moment, as we have seen, under Sally's window,
failed in his dreamy state to see her as she looked over the
cross-bar at him, and then went on towards the old town. It may be
she was not very visible; the double glasses of an open sash-window
are almost equal to opacity. But even with that, the extreme
aberration of Fenwick's mind at the moment is the only way to
account for his not seeing her.</p>
<p>In fact, his mental perturbation came and went by gusts, as his
memory caught at or relinquished agitating points of reminiscence,
always dwelling on that parting from Rosalind at Umballa. His brain
and nervous system were in a state that involved a climax and
reaction; and, unhappily, this climax, during which his
identification of his present self with his memory of its past was
intensified to the point of absolute hallucination, came at an
inopportune moment. If he could only have kept the phantoms of his
imagination at bay until he met Sally! But, really, speculation on
so strange a frame of mind is useless; we can only accept the facts
as they stand.</p>
<p>He had no recollection afterwards of what followed when he passed
the house and failed to see Sally or hear her call out to him. For
the time being he was back again in his life of twenty years ago.
Those who find this hard to believe may see no way of accounting for
what came about but by ascribing to Fenwick an intention of suicide.
For our part we believe him to have been absolutely incapable of
such an act from a selfish impulse; and, moreover, it is absurd to
impute to him such a motive, at this time, however strongly he might
have been impelled towards it by discovering the injustice and
cruelty of his own unforgiveness towards his young wife at some
previous time—as, for instance, in America—when she herself was
beyond his reach, and a recantation of his error impossible. Unless
we accept his conduct as the result of a momentary dementia,
produced by overstrain, it must remain inexplicable.</p>
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<p>It appeared to him, so far as he was afterwards able to define or
record it, that he was no longer walking on the familiar track
between the few lodging-houses that made up the old St. Sennans, and
the still older fishing-quarter near the jetty, but that he was
again on his way from Lahore to Kurachi, from which he was to embark
for a new land where his broken heart might do its best to heal; for
if ever a man was utterly broken-hearted it was he when he came away
from Lahore, after his futile attempt to procure a divorce. He no
longer saw the cold northern sea under its great blue cloud-curtain
that had shrouded the coming day; nor the line of fishing-smacks,
beached high and dry, and their owners' dwellings near at hand, a
little town of tar and timber in behind the stowage-huts of nets and
tackle, nor the white escarpment of the cliffs beyond, that the sea
had worked so many centuries to plunder from the rounded pastures of
the sheep above. He no longer heard the music of the waves on the
shingle, nor the cry of the sea-bird that swept over them, nor the
tinkle of the sheep-bell the wind knows how to carry so far in the
stillness of the morning, nor the voices of the fisher-children
playing in the boats that one day may bear them to their death. His
mind was far away in the Indian heat, parching and suffocated on the
long railway journey from Lahore to Kurachi, scarcely better when he
had reached his first boat that was to take him to Bombay, to embark
again a day or two later for Australia. How little he had forgotten
of the short but tedious delay in that chaotic emporium of all
things European and Asiatic, that many-coloured meeting-ground of a
thousand nationalities! How little, that the whole should come back
to him now, and fill his brain with its reality, till the living
present grew dim and vanished; reviving now and again, as fiction,
read in early years, revives with a suggested doubt—is it true or
false?</p>
<p>He sat again on the Esplanade at Bombay, as the sun vanished in a
flood of rosy gold, and released the world from his heat. He felt
again the relief of the evening wind; heard again the chat of a
group of English officers who sipped sherry-cobblers at a table a
few paces off. "I always change my mind," said one of them,
"backwards and forwards till the last minute; then I make it the
last one." He quite understood this man's speech, and
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thought how
like himself! For from the time he left Lahore he, too, had gone
backwards and forwards, now resolving to return, come what might,
now telling himself firmly there was no remedy but in distance
apart, and all there might be of oblivion. Was there not yet time?
He could still go back, even now. But no; the old obduracy was on
him. Rosey had deceived him!</p>
<p>Then he seemed to have come again to <i>his</i> last minute. Once he was
fairly on the ship that was even now coaling for her voyage, once
the screw was on the move and the shore-lights vanishing, the die
would be cast. The stars that he and Rosey had seen in that cool
English garden that night he met her first would vanish, too, and a
world would be between them. Still, the hour had not come; it was
not too late yet. But still the inveterate thought came back—she
<i>had</i> deceived him.</p>
<p>So his delirium ended as its prototype of over twenty years ago had
ended. He hardened his heart, thrust aside all thought of
forgiveness and repentance, and went resolutely down to the quay, as
he thought, to embark on the little boat for the ship, and so
practically put all thought of hesitation and return out of his
mind. This moment was probably what would have been the crisis of
his fever, and it was an evil hour for him in which the builder of
the pier at St. Sennans made it so like the platform of that
experience of long ago. But the boat that he saw before him as he
stepped unhesitatingly over its edge was only the image of a
distempered brain, and in an instant he was struggling with the
cold, dark water. A sudden shock of chill, an intolerable choking
agony of breath involuntarily held, an instantaneous dissipation of
his dream, the natural result of the shock, and Fenwick knew himself
for what he was, and fought the cruel water in his despair. Even so
a drowning man fights who in old failures to learn swimming has just
mastered its barest rudiments. A vivid pageant rushed across his
mind of all the consequences of what seemed to him now his
inevitable death, clearest of all a sad vision of Sally and Rosalind
returning to their home alone—the black dresses and the silence. He
found voice for one long cry for help, without a hope that it could
be heard or that help could be at hand.</p>
<p>But he was neither unseen nor unheard, as you will know if we
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have
not failed in showing the succession of events. Sally never
hesitated an instant as she caught sight of the delirious man's
involuntary plunge into the green waves that had no terrors for
<i>her</i>. She threw off as she ran, fast, fast down the wooden
stairway, the only clothes she could get rid of—her hat and light
summer cloak—and went straight, with a well-calculated dive, to
follow him and catch him as he rose. If only she did not miss him!
Let her once pinion his arms from behind, and she would get him
ashore even if no help came. Why, there was no sea to speak of!</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>The man Jacob Tracy, the father of Benjamin, saw something to
quicken his speed as he walked along the pier to help in the
discovery of the life-belt. Why did the swimming young lady from
Lobjoit's want to be rid of her wrap-up at that rate as she turned
so sharp round to run down the ladder? He increased a brisk walk to
a run as the lad, who had followed the young lady down the steps,
came running up again; for there was hysterical terror in his
voice—he was a mere boy—as he shouted something that became, as
distance lessened, "In t' wa-ater! in t' wa-ater! in t' wa-ater! in
t' wa-ater!" And he was waving something in his hand—a lady's hat
surely; for with an instinct of swift presence of mind—a quality
that is the breath of life to all that go down to the sea in ships,
mariners or fisher-folk—he had seen that the headgear Sally threw
away would tell its tale quicker than any words he could rely on
finding.</p>
<p>"Roon smart, yoong Benjamin—roon for the bo'ats and call out
'oars'! Roon, boy—you've no time to lose!" And as the father dashes
down the steps he spoke of as "the ladder" the son runs for all he
is worth to carry the alarm to the shore. He shouts, "Oars, oars,
oars!" as he was told. But it is not needed, for his thought of
bringing up the hat has done his work already for him. The
coastguard, though the pier itself hid the two immersions from him,
is quick of apprehension and ready with his glass, and has seen the
boy's return from below; and at the same time heard, not his words,
but the terror in them, and by some mysterious agency has sent a
flying word along the beach that has brought a population out to
help.</p>
<p>A bad time of the tide to get a boat off sharp, and a long shelving
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run of sandy shingle before we reach the sea; for all the boats are
on the upper strand of the beach, above the last high-water mark,
and the flow of the tide is scarcely an hour old. There is a short
squat cobble, flat-bottomed and of intolerable weight, down near the
waters, and its owner makes for it. Another man drives him out
seawards, against the constant lift of breaking waves, large enough
to be troublesome, small enough to be numerous. They give no chance
to the second man to leap into the boat, so deep has he to go,
pushing on until the pads are out and the boat controlled; but he
has barely time to feel the underdraw of the recoiling wave when the
straight scour of a keel comes down along the sand and pebbles—the
Ellen Jane, St. Sennans—half-pushed, half-borne by a crew three
minutes have extemporised. You two in the bows, and you two astarn,
and the spontaneous natural leader—the man the emergency makes—at
the tiller-ropes, and Ellen Jane is off, well drenched at the
outset. An oar swings round high in the air, not to knock one of you
two astarn into the water, and then, "Give way!" and then the short,
quick rhythm of the stroke, and four men at their utmost stress,
each knowing life and death may hang upon the greatness of his
effort.</p>
<p>The cobble is soon outshot, but its owner will not give in. He bears
away from the course of the boat that has passed him, to seek their
common object where the tide-drift may have swept it, beyond some
light craft at their moorings which would have hidden it for a
while. He has the right of it this time, for as he passes, straining
at his sculls, under the stern of a pleasure-yacht at anchor, his
eye is caught by a black spot rising on a wave, and he makes for it.
Not too fast at the last, though, but cautiously, so as to grasp the
man with the life-belt and hold him firm till help shall come to get
him on board. He might easily have overshot him; but he has him now,
and the four-oar sights him as she swings round between the
last-moored boat and the pier; and comes apace, the quicker for the
tide.</p>
<p>"What is it ye say, master? What do ye make it out the gentleman
says, Peter?" For Fenwick, hauled on board the cobble with the help
of a man from the other boat, who returns to his oar, is alive and
conscious, but not much more. A brandy-flask comes from somewhere in
the steerage, where a mop and a tin
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pot and a boathook live, and
its effect is good. The half-drowned man becomes articulate enough
to justify the report. "It's his daughter he's asking
for—overboard, too!" and then the man who spoke first says: "You be
easy in your mind, master; we'll find her. Bear away a bit, and lie
to, Tom." Tom is the man in the cobble, and he does as he is bidden.
He ships his sculls and drifts, watching round on all sides for what
may be just afloat near the surface. The four-oar remains, and the
eyes of her crew are straining hard to catch a sight of anything
that is not mere lift and ripple of a wave.</p>
<p>Then more boats one after another, and more, and the gathering crowd
that lines the shore sees them scatter and lie to, some way apart,
to watch the greater space of water. All drift, because they know
that what they seek is drifting, too, and that if they move they
lose their only chance; for the thing they have to find is so small,
so small, and that great waste of pitiless sea is so large. It is
their only chance.</p>
<p>The crowd, always growing, moves along the beach as the flotilla of
drifting boats move slowly with the tide. They can hear the shouting
from boat to boat, but catch but little of the words. They follow
on, with little speech among themselves, and hope dying slowly out
of their hearts. Gradually towards the jetty, where the girl they
are seeking sat, only a few days since, beside the man whose heart
the memory of yesterday is still rejoicing; the only trouble of
whose unconscious soul is the thought that he and she must soon be
parted, however short the term of their separation may be. He will
know more soon.</p>
<p>Suddenly the shouting increases in the boats, and excited voices
break the silence on the shore. It won't do to hope too much, but
surely all the boats are thickening to one spot.... No, it's
nothing!... Yes, it <i>is</i>—it <i>is</i> something—one knows what—sighted
abaft the Ellen Jane, whose steersman catches it with a boathook as
the oars we on the beach saw suddenly drop back water—slowly,
cautiously—and only wait for him to drag the light weight athwart
the gunwale to row for the dear life towards the town. The scattered
crowd turns and comes back, trampling the shingle, to meet the boat
as she lands, and follow what she brings to the nearest haven.</p>
<hr class="major" />
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