Collected Works of Rafael Sabatini

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by Rafael Sabatini


  “He turned to her. ‘Damaris!’ he cried. ‘Hear me! Wait! You do not understand.’

  “‘I think that I understand at last,’ she answered, and her voice was like a knife. I could have wept for the poor child.

  “And Pauncefort still sought to reason with her, to explain that which was clear already beyond all words. ‘Don’t you see, Damaris,’ was his plea, ‘that if we do this, we give Sir John the victory — that it is the very thing he desires since ‘twill be to his benefit.’

  “It was true enough, though I had not given the matter a thought. And yet he could not have employed an argument that must more surely have completed his damnation.

  “‘To his benefit?’ she questioned, snatching at a straw of hope. ‘How to his benefit?’

  “‘Why, of the inheritance that is to be dispersed under such circumstances, ten thousand pounds will go into his own coffers.’

  “‘It shall go instead,’ said I, ‘to Chelsea Hospital.’

  “But not even so much defence was needed to such an imputation. She looked at him, and never have I seen a deadlier smile on living face.

  “‘You are marvellous well acquainted with the terms of this will,’ said she, and struck him breathless by the unexpectedness of that overwhelming blow. ‘You must have given it some hours of study.’ With that and a little laugh, she turned again, and left us here together.”

  Once more Sir John paused. He looked at his companion with a wan smile. Captain Gaynor met the look with eyes that were gleaming oddly; his lips were very tightly pressed. He had listened intently to every word, and he was reflecting that the questionable game he had played at Pauncefort’s had been still more questionable than he had deemed it since; for Pauncefort, it seemed, had staked something that could not be called his own. And what faith can be reposed in a man who stoops to a practice so dishonourable? But Sir John’s story had not yet reached the end.

  “It was after she had gone that he revealed himself,” he resumed. “He stormed and raged, and finally he threatened me.”

  “Threatened?” echoed the Captain, haled suddenly out of his musings by that word.

  “Ay, threatened — covertly. He swore that I should bitterly repent me of that day’s work. I ask you, Harry: To what could his threats have reference? What could be in his mind?”

  The Captain expressed his disgust and amazement in an oath. “You think he would prove such a dastard?”

  “At least he considered it — that is quite plain. Between considering a villainy and performing it there is but a step. But there is little occasion for alarm on my behalf. I have been too cautious; there is not a scrap of evidence against me in existence. I am well viewed by the Government; any story of my defection must be discredited, and any man that bears it must place his own neck in a noose. So do not give it thought. But give thought, I beg of you, to a man who stoops to consider such means of vengeance, and ask yourself whether, being dishonourable, as this proves him, and desperate — more desperate than ever now — he would hesitate to use such means for profit, to extricate himself from his difficulties, to save him from the spunging-house.”

  Aghast, the Captain looked at Sir John. Then his expression changed; he frowned in perplexity. He was considering something — considering Lord Pauncefort’s assertion that his difficulties were less desperate than he had feared. Could this mean, wondered the Captain, that to resolve them he had already taken some such measure as the baronet was suggesting?

  “I have made a long tale of it,” said Sir John, “that you may judge for yourself whether my warning was well-advised or not.”

  “I thank you, Sir John,” replied the Captain. “Indeed, indeed, I fear me the grounds for your suspicions are most just.” Then his face cleared, and he smiled. “Be assured that I shall move with caution — with more than caution, where his lordship is concerned.”

  And upon that they parted at last, and Sir John rode away, attended by a couple of grooms, to seek his brother who lay ill at Bath.

  Chapter 6. THE ENCHANTED GARDEN

  Through the grounds of Priory Close a brook winds its course on its way to the Abbey River. It flows in a little ravine, which, moat-like, almost completely encircles a wonderful old garden. You approach it by a path that runs through a plantation of firs on the south side of the mansion.

  By this path, through the green shade that was shot here and there by golden sunlight, Captain Gaynor took his idle way on the following morning. It brought him to a rustic bridge, some twenty paces long, spanning the gap at a height of fifteen feet or more above the stream. Over this he sauntered leisurely. He paused midway, and leaning upon the rail, he admired the dense tunnel of foliage formed by the intertwining of the trees that stood on either side of the ravine.

  It was a cool, sequestered spot, fragrant with the perfume the sun was drawing from the pines. Somewhere near him throbbed the full-throated song of a thrush; below him was the murmur and babble of the brook as it glided swiftly over the mossy boulders of its bed. Never had the Captain lingered in a spot more peaceful. To his senses it seemed invested with an air almost of enchantment. He could understand that to one dwelling there the world and the affairs of men must shrink to infinitesimal proportions, must seem puny and unworthy, and ambition the emptiest of human bubbles.

  He could understand, he thought, Sir John’s own lukewarmness towards the Cause. The baronet, no doubt, would judge the country’s peace from the ineffable peace of these surroundings, and would tremble at the thought of its being disturbed, at the thought of all the bloodshed and misery that must come ere the upheaval was complete and the erstwhile tranquillity restored.

  Captain Gaynor sighed thoughtfully, and went on across that enchanted bridge into the enchanted garden beyond. Through another, lesser plantation on the farther side, over a carpet of pine-needles, he came into the blazing sunlight and a riot of colour, backed by colossal boxwood hedges. These hedges were the gardens pride. It was divided by them into a series of quadrangular courts on his right, and they stood at a height of some ten feet, each with an entrance in the form of an arched gap so narrow that but one person could enter at a time.

  On the left of the pathway which he followed, and which ran the garden’s full length to the distant redbrown wall, was spread an orchard, all pink and white with blossom, and through the trees in the distance he espied his host’s niece and daughter.

  They stood near the brook, in a conversation that the Captain might have accounted earnest had not the high, trilling note of Evelyn’s laughter reached him across the distance. Thereupon he took his way towards them, never dreaming that he came to interrupt an argument whereof he was himself the subject.

  It had sprung from Damaris’ desire to make an end of the deceit which had been practised yesterday upon their visitor. She had come to Evelyn that morning with expressions of regret for her own share in it, for having consented to it; she had urged the unworthiness of the thing, the loss of dignity that must attend its ultimate dissipation, especially if this were now delayed.

  “Let us tell Captain Gaynor,” she ended, “that in jest we permitted him to persist in the error into which of his own accord he fell.”

  “We can tell him tomorrow or the next day,” answered Evelyn airily. “Besides, I do not admit that the error was originally his own. That is the incense you offer to your vanity.” And thereupon had trilled out that flute-noted laugh which had caught the sauntering Captains ears.

  A little colour showed in Damaris’ cheeks.

  “Confess,” Evelyn mocked her, “confess now that your concern is reluctance to show yourself without your gilding.”

  “You are vastly, cruelly unkind, Evelyn,” answered Damaris in gentle rebuke, and this answer took her cousin by surprise. For neither Evelyn nor her mother knew of that happening in the library a week ago, knew or guessed of the wound, the deep, cruel wound that Damaris had sustained in her affection and her pride. Damaris was not of those who wring their hands and cry ou
t their wrongs in public or in private. She had kept her chamber for two days upon the pretext of a passing ailment, and in that time she had schooled herself to the dissimulation of her feelings. Contempt had come to her rescue, the coldly fierce contempt that is the offspring of disillusion. She was conscious even of a certain thankfulness that circumstances had vouchsafed her a glimpse of the real man into whose keeping she would so trustingly have delivered up her life, a thankfulness for the timeliness of that revelation. In time, no doubt, this thankfulness would come to be the only abiding feeling so far as my Lord Pauncefort was concerned. But for the present it had not yet come to dominance over her pain and her sense of utter loss.

  Desolation and listlessness were her present portion. But of this the unpercipient Evelyn had no suspicion, for Evelyn studied no countenance searchingly save her own.

  “Unkind?” quoth Evelyn. “La! In what now am I unkind?”

  “In your estimate of me. If Captain—”

  A rustle behind her caused her to turn her head, and thus they became aware of the Captain’s approach.

  Last night he had come to table in a dove-coloured suit and with heavily powdered hair, looking — save for his bronzed face — the very perfect courtier. This morning he had resumed his military exterior. He wore his laced blue coat, uncompromisingly buttoned from chin to waistband, disdaining the pigeon-breasted mode which left the upper part to gape and reveal a bulging mass of lace and linen. White buckskins and spurred jack-boots encased his legs. He even wore his sword.

  Coming up with them he doffed his feathered hat and made a leg with a certain distinct stiffness, craving their leave to bear them company.

  It was granted him by Evelyn, with a flutter of eyelids and the demure air of challenge that most men knew in her. And then, with mischievous intent to perpetuate the confusion of identities —

  “Evelyn,” said she, indicating Damaris, “is all pride in her garden.”

  “Then,” said the Captain, “pride is well placed for once. I have seen many gardens ‘twixt here and far Cathay, but never one in which there dwelt a peace so joyous. Madam,” he addressed himself to Damaris, and the serious sincerity of his speech robbed it of any construable impertinence, “your garden repays your pride, for I think that it does justice to its mistress.”

  The brown eyes of Damaris met his own a moment, as if she were appraising the full value of his words; then they passed on; a faint smile crossed her face, which was of the warm, lustreless pallor of old ivory, and slightly she bowed her head as if in courteous acknowledgment.

  Now although her eyes had met his own for but a moment, yet in that fleeting glimpse Captain Gaynor had caught the wistfulness that inhabited them, and something within him had leapt in response to something that was near akin to an appeal. This appeal, he knew, was not to himself; it was to nature, to the world, to heal her of a sorrow or to satisfy a longing, he knew not which. But it touched him and in touching seared him and branded him her servant, to heal or satisfy as her need might be when he should come to understand it, and if so be that she would accept the service that should be hers.

  Evelyn had looked on with slightly parted lips, a straining anxiety in her glance, born of fear lest Damaris should there and then repudiate the identity once more thrust upon her. With her cousin’s silence and its tacit acknowledgment her anxiety passed, and her rippling, ever-ready laugh expressed her pleasure and relief. Also it served to dissemble her vexation that the first compliment to fall from this somewhat chill and distant soldier’s lips should, in spite of all, have been addressed to her cousin.

  A more sweet and fragrant picture of maidenhood than Evelyn presented this morning it were not easy to discover. She was arrayed in palest lilac, and her waist, amazingly slender in its firm encasement, sprang from a white furbelow that hung about her lightly as a cloud of vapour. The flimsiest of lace tuckers discreetly veiled the white beauties of neck and bosom, which the low cut bodice must otherwise reveal. Her hair, very carefully massed and curled, was of the colour of ripe corn; her eyes, questing, unrestful and provoking, reflected the flawless sky of June; her cheeks put to shame the apple blossom under which they stood. She was soft and silky and very insistently feminine; the very maid, you would suppose, to compel response in a man so very masculine as the Captain. Yet it was to Damaris that he chiefly addressed himself, upon Damaris that his eyes would linger. She stood a full half-head taller than her cousin, who was small and of an exquisite roundness. She was dressed now for riding, in a brown, high-necked habit laced with gold, than which no raiment could have done more justice to her graceful height, and she wore a looped hat of black beaver, from which a golden feather trailed over, to mingle with her dark brown hair. There was in every line of her something cool, determined and well-knit, as Captain Gaynor noted, for all that it was not his way to note the points of any woman.

  Their talk was still of that garden and of other gardens which the Captain in his travels had beheld, to all of which Damaris contributed but little, and that little only when she was, herself, directly addressed.

  “I knew,” he said, “when I stepped upon that bridge that I was coming at last into the enchanted garden that we have all heard of in our early youth, and of whose real existence the bitter, all-desecrating knowledge of later years has made us sceptical.”

  “And you have discovered its enchantment?” murmured Evelyn, scenting here the prologue to a speech of gallantry.

  “I think I have,” he answered, with an amazing seriousness, looking straight ahead. He sighed. “The spell of it is already upon me, I think. Did I unwisely linger I fear that it must overwhelm me utterly.”

  He was so sober, so solemn, that Damaris glanced at him, her keen ears informing her that behind these words of his lay prepared no such trifling speech as her cousin still expected.

  “What is it?” she asked. It was the first time she had spontaneously addressed him, and his glance met hers again, held it a moment, and then, still meeting it, seemed to look beyond and away. Thus may the poet or the fanatic look.

  “It is,” he said, and his voice sank reverently, “it is that God’s peace — God’s disregarded, priceless gift to man — is here. Somewhere here, too, is the tree of true knowledge, for its essences hang heavily upon the air. To inhale them is to achieve perception of the true meanness of worldly things, the horror of strife and bloodshed, the contempt of ambition, which is but a euphemism for striving selfishness and vainglory. Who that could dwell here would dwell elsewhere? Who that once has breathed deep of this fragrance would ever again suffer the world’s stews to offend his nostrils?”

  Evelyn — disappointed Evelyn — laughed on her high note, a little mockingly. “I vow, sir,” she minced, “that you are vastly poetical!”

  His eye, cold and inscrutable, rested upon her for a moment. He bowed.

  “I thank you, Miss Hollinstone,” said he, “for having broke the spell. Had it persisted it might well have proved the undoing of a poor soldier.”

  “What is your regiment, sir?” she asked him. She had something of her mother’s inconsequence.

  “I have had many; but I have none now,” was his reply. “My last commission was in the Sultan’s army.”

  “The Sultan?” cried both girls together, so taken aback were they.

  “The Grand Turk,” he explained easily. “His cavalry was all disjointed, and I undertook the office of instructing it. Also I saw some service against Venice.”

  Damaris looked at him with incredulous eyes. “You fought against Christians in the service of the Infidel!” she cried.

  “I fought against rogues in the service of rogues, ma’am. That is the pure truth of it. For the rest, it is not the mercenary’s to do more than choose the service that offers the best pay.” He saw the scorn gathering in her glance. But he did not know upon what bitter pastures it had been nourished. He did not know that in his own case, it was the sharper because she accounted that she had been mistaken in him a momen
t ago when he had talked of the garden.

  “And do you always,” she asked him, “fight for the side that pays you best?”

  “By your leave, ma’am, I should account myself a fool to fight for the other.”

  He had not winced before her cool, appraising eye, nor the half-veiled contempt of her question. He had his part to play — for the sake of that master to whose service was to be yielded up the fruit of all other services. It wounded him — unreasonably, he held — to appear before her in this light. But the necessities demanded it.

  “I have made arms my trade,” he explained. “I am a soldier of fortune, and in all my seeming inconsistencies of service I have been consistent at least in that I have served Fortune always — more stoutly,” he added ruefully, “than Fortune has served me.”

  “How odd!” sighed Damaris; for his bold frankness had beaten down much of her nascent scorn, yet not quite all. “How very strange!”

  “In what is’t strange?” quoth Evelyn, as if defending him.

  “Strange that men should sacrifice their best for gold, imperil their lives and pawn their very honour for the sake of profit.”

  “Not all men,” said the Captain, with his wry smile. “There is no lack of those who sacrifice all this to dreams and moonshine — the gratitude of princes, the favour of the people, the love of country, immortal renown and other such intangibilities.”

  “Do you scorn them?” she challenged him.

  “As soldiers, yes,” he quibbled. “Their ardour detracts from their value, robs them of the proper calm, and I have found that they make but poor opponents to the trained mercenary, who in battle is all calculation and no heat.”

 

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