Ten days since this uttermost corner of England had stirred to the strange music of men making ready for battle: bugle-calling Cavalry in the new barracks in Eastbourne on the hill; thundering Artillery in the Circular Redoubt at Langney Point; Sea-Fencibles in the martello- towers along Pevensey Levels. Now all was still and dead again. A concentration in force had taken place at Lewes. The Cavalry had been withdrawn to the camp there. A case of cholera had emptied Langney Fort. The Sea-Fencibles had run away. Black Diamond had swept up the blockademen.
Darkness, darkness, everywhere.
Kit stole to his side.
"We _must_ get a message through to Nelson," he chattered. "We _must_."
The boy felt himself at war with destiny, and crushed by it. He recalled the Man of Despair in the Iron Cage in Pilgrim"s Progress.
The fate of the country was in his hands. He alone had the knowledge that could save her, and he could not use it. He was a dumb thing, possessed of a vast world-secret, which he could not impart for lack of voice.
"If there"s no other way, we must cut our way through."
The Parson met him with a rough,
"Nonsense."
"Why?" hotly.
"Impossible--that"s why."
It was the first time he had thrown that dead-wall word across the lad"s path, and it maddened the boy.
After all, _he_ was responsible, not this beefy soldier.
"That"s a word we don"t know in _our_ Service, sir," he cried with scornful nostrils.
The taunt touched the Parson on the raw.
He swung round savagely.
"_Your_ Service!" he stormed. "At a time such as this, there is only one Service for loyal hearts, and that"s the Service of his country."
The lad quailed before the thunder-and-lightning of the man"s wrath.
"Why can"t we sally?" sullenly.
The Parson shot a hand toward the window.
The boy followed his pointing finger.
In the open, behind the wall, was a camp-fire, a group of soldiers squatting round it, arms piled. To right and left, embracing the cottage, a chain of sentries ran, tall men all in tall-plumed bear- skins.
Old Piper was right. A cordon indeed!
"Grenadiers of the Guard!" rumbled the Parson in the boy"s ear, rolling his r"s like a _feu de joie_. "Marksmen to a man; veterans all; and half of them decorated."
Grenadiers of the Guard! the men of the Bridge of Lodi, of the Battle of the Pyramids and Mount Tabor, of Hochstadt and Hohenlinden.
Kit recalled the tops of the _Cocotie_ swarming with riflemen, and old Ding-dong"s surprised disgust.
Now he understood.
On the success of this venture hung Napoleon"s world-projects.
_Coute que coute_, he had told Mouche, he must bring off this coup. So he was employing on it the pick of the first Army the world had ever seen.
As he thought of the issues at stake, the boy"s soul fainted within him.
How could he, Kit Caryll, aged fifteen, and hovering on the brink of tears, stand up against the Victor of Marengo?
CHAPTER XLVIII
THE DOXIE"S DAUGHTER
I
The boy"s long face, anxious before, grew haggard now.
It wore the look of one with the enthusiasms of a saint across whose path Sin, the Insurmountable, has fallen suddenly.
"We"re done," he said, husky and white.
His words revived the other. True man that he was, despair in the boy"s heart quickened the courage in his own.
"Never say die till you"re dead," he cried, squaring his shoulders-- "that"s the Englishman"s motto."
His spirit rose to meet the occasion.
"Our theatrical friend outside there"s no fool. But--but--but! there"s just one element he"s not reckoned with."
"What?" cried Kit, hanging on his words.
The Parson dropped head and voice.
"Who saved you from the _Tremendous_?" he whispered. "Who handed you up a cliff a goat couldn"t climb?--who brought you to this house?
--who put the flag-idea into your head, and brought it off?"
The Parson"s words made sudden confusion in the lad"s mind. It came to him with a shock of surprise to find such triumphant faith in this ruddy fighting-man.
"And why d"you think of all the houses in the world He sent you to this one?" the other continued.
"Because of you, sir."