"I shall get no better--this side of heaven," replied the Parson simply.
"There"s only one thing," continued the other. "I think you should have a peep at those powder-barrels in the sluice. Powder"s a funny thing--especially when it don"t go off."
"I will, sir," said the Parson. "Thank you. I ought to have thought of it myself."
He started down the slope.
A few steps away he paused and plucked a blade of gra.s.s. Then he climbed slowly back, the square face very grave.
At the feet of the dying man he halted, and took the gra.s.s-blade from his mouth.
"Sir," he said, "are you a Christian?"
At that moment, in that light, sudden though it was, the question seemed beautifully fitting.
"All men are when they are dying," came the quiet reply. "They must be.
As the world-tide ebbs, the Christ-tide flows. That is the Law."
"I ask," continued the Parson in labouring voice, "for this reason: I"ve no doubt you"re a better man than I am. Still I"m a clergyman, though I"m not much good at it. And if you"ve got anything on your conscience--anything you care to tell me--I"ll--I"ll--in duty-bound I"ll--"
Kit made a move to rise.
The dying fingers closed round his own.
"I forget nothing," said the Gentleman simply. "I regret nothing."
"Nothing?" asked the Parson, stubborn to do his duty.
The other closed his eyes.
"One thing perhaps."
"What?"
There was a sighing silence.
"Ireland," came the quivering reply.
"Sir," cried Kit, with flashing intuition, "you are dying for her."
The other squeezed his fingers.
"Ah, thank you, thank you! how generous! How kind! how most un-English!"
"We mean well anyway," grunted the Parson.
"Yes," said the other slowly. "You did her to death: but you did it for the best. That"s England to the core!"
The man"s white bitterness struck like a sword. It was something new; it was something terrible.
"Drogheda in the name of G.o.d!"
"What"s done can"t be undone," growled the Parson, all the Englishman coming out in him. "I believe we"re trying now."
He bent over his fading enemy.
A thousand dim emotions troubled his heart. Words surged up like waves in the fog of his mind and were gone again, unuttered.
"Good-bye," he said at last gruffly, and made a stiff little bob.
A hand sought his.
The Parson hugged it between both his own, and turned, dumb still.
CHAPTER Lx.x.xVIII
THE ADVENTURER
The dusk began to shroud them.
Beneath them the Parson was climbing out of the creek, making for the mouth of the drain.
"That"s a dear man," said the Gentleman. "He"s so English--true as steel, and thick as mud."
He rolled his head round. Kit caught the ghost of the old gay twinkle in his eyes.
"Shall I tell you a secret?"
"Yes."
"What d"you think was in those powder-barrels?"
"Beer," flashed the boy.
"Sand, Little Chap--best Eastbourne sand."
The boy rippled off into low laughter.
The Parson, on hands and knees at the mouth of the drain, heard him and looked back. It was not quite his notion of how a dying should be conducted: still, they were both a bit mad, those two on the hill-side, both the poet-y kind, and so must be excused.
"Yes," said the Gentleman, "I think I had the best of you there."
"I think you had."
His comrade"s courage warmed the boy"s heart.