He shut the telescope with a snap.
"We"re beat," he sobbed.
The other gripped his arm.
"If we"re beat, England"s beat. If England"s beat, the Devil"s won, and the world"s lost--which is absurd."
The man"s stern enthusiasm fired the boy afresh.
"If you"ll tell me what to do I"ll do it," he said a little tremulously. "But I don"t see the way."
"There is a way, Kit. There must be. And we shall find it."
The man was indomitable. There seemed no ghost of a chance; still no shadow of despair clouded that clear spirit. As the sea of difficulties rose about him, his soul rose to meet it on triumphant wings.
Yet the problem before him seemed insoluble.
Nelson there: they here: one boat between, and that boat guarded by the pick of the Army of England.
He turned those good blue eyes of his upon the boy with a drolling baffled look.
"How"s it to be done?--what says the Commodore?"
The light had fled from the boy"s face. Pale and still, he looked like a young saint about to be martyred.
"There"s only one way I can think of, sir."
"What"s that?"
The lad lifted the eyes of a woman.
"Pray."
A darkness drove across the Parson"s face.
"You pray," he growled. "I"ll sharpen my sword."
Turning to the corner he bowed to Polly shining among the cobwebs.
"A sweet morning, my lady," he cried. "And promise of a fair day"s work."
The boy turned his face to the wall.
II
"Mr. Joy, sir!"
"Well, Piper."
"There"s a man on a horse."
"Where?"
"Rithe away oop a-top o th" hill over Willingdon--on the old drove- road from Lewes."
The Parson sprang to his feet.
"Sharp work!" he said with a grin at Kit"s back.
"Well done you, boy!"
Kit leapt to the window.
"Theer!" said Blob, pointing.
Far away on the rim of the world stood a tiny horseman.
What was he, that little speck of blackness on the horse without legs?--ploughboy or dragoon?--alone or the leader of a troop?
"Wave!" cried the Parson at his elbow.
Sobbing and frantic, the lad fluttered his handkerchief.
As though in answer a bugle-call rang echoing down to them.
"The soldiers!" gasped Kit, his knees fainting beneath him. "O, thank G.o.d!"
Close at hand another bugle rang out merrily.
"Nipper Knapp!" cried Piper. "b.u.t.ter my wig, if it ain"t!"
A shoal of silver minnows flashed and twinkled above the crest.
"Bayonets, by G.o.d!" roared the Parson. "Here they come, the little darlings!" as a black trickle of figures poured over the crest.
Others too had seen and heard.
A shot rang out in the stillness: the Grenadier under the thorn came back on his picquet at the double. The shot was answered ironically from the hill-side by the English Last Post. Here in the dawn France and England challenged each other tauntingly.
It was splendid. Kit"s blood danced to it. He thought of old-time tournays, the champion riding into the ring at the last moment. He was half sob, half song. The wine of glory flushed his veins as at the moment when he stormed with the crew of the _Tremendous_ at the heels of Lushy. His eyes ran; his voice broke. Now it was a shrill treble, now a hoa.r.s.e ba.s.s.
The Parson was chewing his lip.
"Horse or foot, I wonder?"
"Foot," cried Kit, stamping up and down.