"The Elsa," she said to him; "which ship is it?"
"Come along with me, Mademoiselle," the man replied; "though I was not told to look for a woman."
He spoke in English, which Desiree hardly understood; for she had never heard it from English lips, and looked for the first time on one of that race upon which all the world waited now for salvation. For the English, of all the nations, were the only men who from the first had consistently defied Napoleon.
The sailor led the way towards the river. As he pa.s.sed the lamp burning dimly above some steps, Desiree saw that he was little more than a boy.
He turned and offered her his hand with a shy laugh, and together they stood at the bottom of the steps with the water lapping at their feet.
"Have you a letter," he said, "or will you come on board?"
Then perceiving that she did not understand, he repeated the question in German.
"I will come on board," she answered.
The Elsa was lying in the middle of the river, and the boat into which Desiree stepped shot across the water without sound of oars. The sailor was paddling it noiselessly at the stern. Desiree was not unused to boats, and when they came alongside the Elsa she climbed on board without help.
"This way," said the sailor, leading her towards the deckhouse where a light burned dimly behind red curtains. He knocked at the door and opened it without awaiting a reply. In the little cabin two men sat at a table, and one of them was Louis d"Arragon dressed in the rough clothes of a merchant seaman. He seemed to recognize Desiree at once, though she still stood without the door, in the darkness.
"You?" he said in surprise. "I did not expect you, madame. You want me?"
"Yes," answered Desiree, stepping over the combing. Louis"s companion, who was also a sailor, coa.r.s.ely clad, rose and, awkwardly taking off his cap, hurried to the door, murmuring some vague apology. It is not always the roughest men who have the worst manners towards women.
He closed the door behind him, leaving Desiree and Louis looking at each other by the light of an oil lamp that flickered and gave forth a greasy smell. The little cabin was smoke-ridden, and smelt of ancient tar. It was no bigger than the table in the drawing-room in the Frauenga.s.se, across which he had bowed to her in farewell a few days earlier, little knowing when and where they were to meet again. For fate can always turn a surprise better than the human fancy.
Behind the curtain, the window stood open, and the high, clear song of the wind through the rigging filled the little cabin with a continuous minor note of warning which must have been part of his life; for he must have heard it, as all sailors do, sleeping or waking, night and day.
He was probably so accustomed to it that he never heeded it. But it filled Desiree"s ears, and whenever she heard it in after-life, in memory this moment came again to her, and she looked back to it, as a traveller may look back to a milestone at a cross-road, and wonder where his journey might have ended had he taken another turning.
"My father," she said quickly, "is in danger. There is no one else in Dantzig to whom we can turn, and--"
She paused. What was she going to add? She hesitated, and then was silent. There was no reason why she should have elected to come to him.
At all events she gave none.
"I am glad I was in Dantzig when it happened," he said, turning to take up his cap, which was of rough dark fur, such as seamen wear even in summer at night in the Northern seas.
"Come," he added, "you can tell me as we go ash.o.r.e."
But they did not speak while the sailor sculled the boat to the steps.
On the quay they would probably pa.s.s unnoticed, for there were many strange sailors at this time in Dantzig, and Louis d"Arragon might easily be mistaken for one of the French seamen who had brought stores by sea from Bordeaux and Brest and Cherbourg.
"Now tell me," he said, as they walked side by side; and in voluble French, Desiree launched into her story. It was rather incoherent, by reason, perhaps, of its frankness.
"Stop--stop," he interrupted gravely, "who is Barlasch?"
Louis walked rather slowly in his stiff sea-boots at her side, and she instinctively spoke less rapidly as she explained the part that Barlasch had played.
"And you trust him?"
"Of course," she answered.
"But why?"
"Oh, you are so matter-of-fact," she exclaimed; "I do not know. Because he is trustworthy, I suppose."
She continued the story, but suddenly stopped and looked up at him under the shadow of her hood.
"You are silent," she said. "Do you know something about my father of which I am ignorant? Is that it?"
"No," he answered, "I am trying to follow--that is all. You leave so much to my imagination."
"But I have no time to explain things," she protested. "Every moment is of value. I will explain all those things some other time. At this moment all I can think of is my father and the danger he is in. If it had not been for Barlasch, he would have been in prison by now. And as it is, the danger is only half averted. For he, himself, is so little help. All must be done for him. He will do nothing for himself while this humour is upon him; you understand?"
"Partly," he answered slowly.
"Oh!" she exclaimed half-impatiently, "one sees that you are an Englishman."
And she found time, even in her hurry, to laugh. For she was young enough to float buoyant upon that sea of hope which ebbs in the course of years and leaves men stranded on the hard facts of life.
"You forget," he said in self-defence.
"I forget what?"
"That a week ago I had never seen Dantzig, or your father, or your sister, or the Frauenga.s.se. A week ago I did not know that there was anybody called Sebastian in the world--and did not care."
"Yes," she admitted thoughtfully, "I had forgotten that."
And they walked on in silence, a long way, till they came to the Gate of the Holy Ghost.
"But you can help him to escape?" she said at length, as if following the course of her own thoughts.
"Yes," he answered, and that was all.
They pa.s.sed through the smaller streets in silence, and Desiree led the way into a narrow alley running between the street of the Holy Ghost and the Frauenga.s.se.
"There is the wall to be climbed," she said; but, as she spoke, the door giving exit to the alley was cautiously opened by Barlasch.
"A little oil," he whispered, "and it was soon done."
The yard was dark within, for there might be watchers at any of the windows above them in the pointed gables that made patterns against the star-lit sky.
"All is well," said Barlasch; "those sons of dogs have not returned, and the patron is waiting in the kitchen, cloaked and ready for a journey.
He has collected himself--the patron."
He led the way through his own room, which was dark, save for a shaft of lamp-light coming from the kitchen. He looked back keenly at Louis d"Arragon.
"Salut!" he growled, scowling at his boots. "A sailor," he muttered after a pause. "Good. She has her wits at the top of the basket--that child."
Desiree was throwing back her hood and looking at her father with a rea.s.suring smile.