The Gentleman. Alfred Ollivant

The Gentleman - Alfred Ollivant


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he said—"kind o gal-like look—all eyes, and spirit, and long chin. Funny thing!—I've always noticed the best biys to fight are them as got most gal about em."

      The purser's steward tripped up.

      "Mr. Caryll, sir, Commander Harding desires to see you in his cabin."

      "Told you, Sonny," crowed the Gunner. "It's to give you a certificate for valour, and a drop o brandy on a lump o sugar."

      II

      A purser's glim lit the cabin, bare save for a solitary print upon the bulk-head.

      Facing it stood the old Commander, broad as a wall, his hands behind him, and the scent-bottle, unstoppered now, in one of them.

      Kit recognised the face on the wall at once. It was Nelson's.

      "That you, Mr. Caryll?"

      "Yes, sir."

      "Can ye read French?"

      "A little, sir."

      "Then what ye make o this?"

      He thrust a hand behind him, never turning.

      Kit took from it a tiny roll of tissue paper, and unfolded it.

      "Shall I begin, sir? … It's headed Merton, [Footnote: Merton was at this time the seat of Lady Hamilton.] 17th, 2 a.m., and goes on—" he translated, stumbling—

      Everything is going beautifully. There is only one man for England to-day; and for him there is only one woman. She is the absolute master of her N., and he of Barham and the Board. The Victory is due to-morrow. She expects him here on Monday, and will do all. The original plan holds good. He will be off Beachy Head Thursday. The Medusa, 44.

       A.F.

      Keep the frigate cruising. I am off to Dover at dawn to square up there. Diamond calls for me at the old rendezvous on Wednesday, and puts me on board the frigate that I may be in at the death as our friends this side say.

      The boy lifted dark eyes.

      "It looks like a—"

      The other cut him short.

      "In our Service, sir, the Captain speaks when he's the mind; the First

       Lieutenant all the time; and the midshipmen—never."

      He snapped fierce jaws.

      "What date, d'ye say?"

      "Seventeenth."

      "Seventeenth, sir. … That's to-day, ain't it?"

      The old man grunted.

      "Started this morning—sharp work."

      "He was riding a thorough-bred … sir."

      "What's a furrow-bred? … plough-oss?"

      "Plough-horse!" sparkling scorn. "It's the best sort of horse going."

      "What if it be?—I'm a sea-man myself—not a postboy. … How d'ye know he was ridin a what-d'ye-call-it?"

      "He always does."

      "Who does?"

      "The man they call the Gentleman—the Galloping Gentleman."

      "Who told you?"

      "I picked it up, listening to the riding-officer."

      The old man cocked an eye over his shoulder at the boy.

      "I keep on a-listinin for that sir," he said. "Reck'n I'm hard o hearin."

      He resumed his study of the face on the bulk-head. A long while he gazed: then smacked one fist into the other.

      "That gal!" he muttered. "I always know'd how it'd be," and turned at last.

      Taking the paper from the boy, he packed it into the scent-bottle.

      "When I've laid this here in Nelson's hands," he said deliberately,

       "I'll be ready to say what your father said aboord the Don."

      A curious smile made kindly wrinkles about his eyes: it was half mischievous, half wistful: the smile of a child about to gratify an innocent spite, long cherished.

      Then he shoved the bottle into his breast-pocket, and looked up. The light fell on his face; and for the first time Kit saw his Captain fairly.

      Square shoulders; square face; square chin; a square brow, strangely white above the terra-cotta-coloured lower face; and blue eyes that looked squarely into yours. All square, body and soul. A true man, and a born fighter, the blue and white riband for St. Vincent at his breast.

      "When you joomped aboord the lugger, was you scared?" he asked curtly.

      The boy looked him in the eyes.

      "Yes, sir."

      The old man's hand lay for a moment on his shoulder.

      "So'd I ha been," he said, and went out, nodding.

      III

      On deck the dawn glimmered faintly.

      On their lee, high in the heaven, a glowing smother hung in the dark over a snaky brood, darting red tongues hither and thither.

      "What's that?" growled old Ding-dong.

      "The chaps as got away in the long-boat, sir. Set a light to the gorse on Beachy Head. Signal. An old game o their'n."

      The old man swung about.

      As he looked, a blue light spurted seaward, and another answered it.

      "Thought so," he muttered. "Burning flares."

      Then he turned again.

      "Bout ship!" he barked. "Make your course for Newhaven. Send a look-out man aloft. And clear for action."

       Table of Contents

      MAGNIFICENT ARRY

      CHAPTER IX

       Table of Contents

      THE TWO PRIVATEERS

      I

      A roll of thunder woke Kit.

      Starting up on his elbows he looked about him.

      Where was he?

      Yesterday he had waked in the blue room at the White Cellar, the sparrows chirping under the eaves, the smiling chamber-maid at the door saying, "Half-past seven, sir," and the rumble of the Lewes coach in the yard beneath.

      It was an altogether different rumble that he heard now. He had never heard it before; yet how well he knew it.

      It was the roll of the drum, beating to quarters.

      Across the sea a bugle answered it.

      The boy thrust his head out of the port.

      All about him lay a shining floor of sea, gently undulating and six cable lengths away, bearing down upon the sloop, a black ship flying the tricolour.

      Across the bulk-head a sudden roaring voice boomed out an order.

      There was the scuffle and scamper of naked feet; the noise of tackle running, shot trundling along the deck, and the roll of guns.

      Then all was silence but


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