The Parson rose from his knees, and scowled at the lad"s shaking shoulders.
"I suppose they"re too proud to pray in _his_ Service," he sneered. "Pack o pirates!" He took off his coat and folded it with thumps. "Yet I know one sailor who"s not above paying his respects to his Maker--and that"s Lord Nelson, of whom you may have heard. Seen him myself in the trenches at Calvi. I remember a great buck of a Dragoon Guardsman asking him,
""Why d"you pray, little man?" "Why," says Nelson, simple as a child, "because mother taught me." Yes, sir," fiercely, "and that"s why I pray--and jolly good reason too."
"Did she teach you that prayer?" asked Kit demurely.
"Bah! blurry young tarry-breeks!" muttered the other; and curling on the floor, his rolled jacket beneath his head, the old campaigner was off to sleep, Polly fair and faithful beside him.
II
The boy had the house to himself, and the world too. At last he could retire once more upon the Love within him.
He could pray--without words.
The sea was a plain shining beneath the moon. Against the light, inky sycamores ruffled, stars entangled in their leaves. On the shingle- bank the bear-skinn"d sentinel showed black against white waters.
The plain beauty of the night stole upon his mind. All was jewelled silence, save for the jar-r-r of the familiar goat-sucker from the foot of the hills, and the wash of the sea.
How calm it was, how strong, how radiant!
He had been far away. Now he was drawing near again. It was his once more. He possessed it all, all, all, and loved it as his own.
All day he had been the prisoner of his own distraught senses. And how comfortable it was, after the darkness of that life which is death, to resume the large loveliness of Life Unending.
s.p.a.ce and Time had no more meaning for him. He was again eternal and infinite. All this beauty of earth and sky and moon-wan water, it was not outside him, it was himself. He reached out a hand to pluck a handful of stars, and could not--because they were too close. You cannot pluck the jewels of your own heart.
Yet however deep he plunged into Eternity, the ache of Time was still present to his mind, remote indeed, on the farthest sh.o.r.es of memory, but always there, an ache that would not still. He felt the pain of it, and still more the pettiness. To him, sitting at the heart of things, drinking in the great night, they seemed strangely mean and tawdry now, the excitements of the past day.
_Let not your heart be troubled_, came the voice of the Poet of Truth down the ages.
Was it worthy of a Son of G.o.d so to vex himself with the trivialities of this world?
What was war? what victory? what defeat?
True he must do his best for conscience" sake, but G.o.d would swing the stars across the heaven whether Napoleon landed or not. He would still march on His great way, though Nelson were lost.
Smiling to himself, the lad was wondering whether to the Maker of those stars, this earth, that sea, the issue of this business might be more than the issue of a squabble between two sparrows would be to him.
III
He crossed to the northward window.
The Downs surged before him like a wave, dull against the brilliant darkness. Overhead the slow stars trailed by, dipping, one after one, behind the dark curtain of hills. The moon climbed above the sycamores. Out on the plain something sparkled frostily. It was the bayonet of a sentinel, lonely-pacing in the moonlight.
The sight brought the lad back to earth.
How would it all end? Were these few bearskinn"d trespa.s.sers only the spray of seas to follow?
In a little while would England be flooded with them? Aghast, he peered seaward: and seemed to behold a black tide of men sweeping across the moon-drift. They deluged England. The fringe of them lapped about his own northern home. A man in a tree was shooting at Gwen running for her life, her hair behind her, screaming, "Kit!"
Something fell on the floor with a sharp tap, and stopped the shriek on the verge of his lips.
What was it?
Another tap. Something was bobbing briskly across the floor. He picked it up. It was a pebble, and must have come through the window.
c.o.c.king his pistol, he rose.
"Down"t shoot," said a low voice.
CHAPTER LXI
KNAPP"S RETURN
Beneath the window stood the little rifleman, white in the shadow of the house, and grinning up at him.
"How did you get through?"
"Slip through em, sir--h"easy as a h"eel."
"Don"t talk so loud," whispered the boy. "Just hop on to the sill of the lower window. I"ll see if I can haul you in."
"No, sir. I won"t come in. I may be more usefuller outside. Keep em on the Key Whiff as the sayin is."
"Then keep still! don"t jig! hug in here in the shadow of the house!
I"ll call Mr. Joy."
The Parson was at the window in a minute and listening to the man"s story.
According to his own account Knapp had done the twelve miles to Lewes under the hour.
"Went slap away, as your orders was, sir, no foolin nor nothin, just slap bang through em--you ask Mr. Caryll."
"Never mind about your feats," said the Parson shortly. "Did you see the Commandant?"
"O yes, sir. Ran straight away through the camp to his tent, where the flag were flyin, never bothered about no sentries nor nothin. Just as I trot up, a little bit of a b.u.t.terfly lady like bob out o the tent, and when she see me--"Beau, boy!" she squeals. "Beau, boy! ere"s a niked man! _Do_ come and see!" And she jig up and down and tiddle her fingers at me, please as Punch.... Out come ole Whiskers, sword and all. "You something something!" says he, and knocks her back into the tent. Then he run at me, roarin."
The little man was sn.i.g.g.e.ring.