CHAPTER X
DAWN AND THE LAND
A day, a whole day, spent upon that sullen, sunless waste of water,
with the great waves bearing them onwards in one eternal, monotonous
procession, till at length they grew dizzy with looking at them, and
the ceaseless gale piping in their ears. Long ago they had lost sight
of land; even the tall church towers built by our ancestors as beacons
on this stormy coast had vanished utterly. Twice they sighted ships
scudding along under their few rags of canvas, and once a steamer
passed, the smoke from her funnels blowing out like long black
pennons. But all of these were too far off, or too much engaged with
their own affairs to see the little craft tossing hither and thither
like a used-up herring basket upon the endless area of ocean.
Fortunately, from his youth Morris had been accustomed to the
management of boats in all sorts of weather, the occupation of sailing
alone upon the waters being one well suited to his solitary and
reflective disposition. Thus it came about that they survived, when
others, less skilful, might have drowned. Sometimes they ran before
the seas; sometimes they got up a few square feet of sail, and, taking
advantage of a veer in the wind, tried to tack, and once, when it blew
its hardest, fearing lest they should be pooped, for over an hour they
contrived to keep head on to the waves.
Thus, diversified by some necessary bailing, passed the short November
day, long enough for them, till once more the darkness began to
gather. They had still some food and drink left; indeed, had it not
been for these they would have perished. Most happily, also, with the
sun the wind dropped, although for hours the sea remained dangerously
high. Now wet and cold were their enemies, worse than any that they
had been called upon to face. Long ago the driving spray had soaked
them to the skin, and there upon the sea the winter night was very
chill.
While the wind, fortunately for them, by comparison a warm one, still
blew from the west, and the sea remained tempestuous, they found some
shelter by wrapping themselves in a corner of the sail. Towards
midnight, however, it got round to the northeast, enough of it to
moderate the sea considerably, and to enable them to put the boat
about and go before it with a closely reefed sail. Now, indeed, they
were bitterly cold, and longed even for the shelter of the wet canvas.
Still Morris felt, and Stella was of the same mind, that before utter
exhaustion overtook them their best chance for life lay in trying to
make the shore, which was, they knew not how far away.
There, then, for hours they cowered in the stern of the boat, huddled
together to protect themselves as best they might from the weather,
and plunging forward beneath their little stretch of sail. Sleep they
could not, for that icy breath bit into their marrow, and of this
Morris was glad, since he did not dare relax his watch for an instant.
So sometimes they sat silent, and sometimes by fits and starts they
talked, their lips close to each other's face, as though they were
whispering to one another.
To while away the weary time, Morris told his companion about his
invention, the aerophone. Then she in turn told him something of her
previous life--Stella was now a woman of four and twenty. It seemed
that her mother had died when she was fourteen at the rectory in
Northumberland, where she was born. After that, with short intervals,
she had spent five years in Denmark, whither her father came to visit
her every summer. Most of this time she passed at a school in
Copenhagen, going for her holidays to stay with her grandmother, who
was the widow of a small landowner of noble family, and lived in an
ancient, dilapidated house in some remote village. At length the
grandmother died, leaving to Stella the trifle she possessed, after
which, her education being completed, she returned to Northumberland
to keep house for her father. Here, too, it would seem that her life
was very lonely, for the place was but an unvisited coast village, and
they were not rich enough to mix much with the few county families who
lived anywhere within reach.
"Have you no brothers or sisters?" asked Morris.
Even then, numb as was her flesh with cold, he felt her wince at the
question.
"No, no," she answered, "none now--at least, none here. I have--I mean
I had--a sister, my twin, but she died when we were seventeen. This
was the most dreadful thing that ever happened to me, the thing which
made me what I am."
"I don't quite understand. What are you, then?"
"Oh, something very unsatisfactory, I am afraid, quite different from
other people. What Mr. Tomley said /you/ were, Mr. Monk, a mystic and
a dreamer of dreams; a lover of the dead; one who dwells in the past,
and--in the future."
Morris did not pursue the subject; even under their strange
circumstances, favourable as they were to intimacy and confidences, it
seemed impertinent to him to pry into the mysteries of his companion's
life. Only he asked, at hazard almost:
"How did you spend your time up there in Northumberland?"
"In drawing a little, in collecting eggs, moths, and flowers a great
deal; in practising with my violin playing and singing; and during the
long winters in making translations in my spare time of Norse sagas,
which no one will publish."
"I should like to read them; I am fond of the sagas," he said, and
after this, under pressure of their physical misery, the conversation
died away.
Hour succeeded to hour, and the weather moderated so much that now
they were in little danger of being swamped. This, indeed, was
fortunate, since in the event of a squall or other emergency, in their
numbed condition it was doubtful whether they could have found enough
strength to do what might be necessary to save themselves. They drank
what remained of the whiskey, which put life into their veins for a
while, but soon its effects passed off, leaving them, if possible,
more frozen than before.
"What is the time?" asked Stella, after a long silence.
"It should be daybreak in about two hours," he said, in a voice that
attempted cheerfulness.
Then a squall of sleet burst upon them, and after this new misery a
torpor overcame Stella; at least, her shiverings grew less violent,
and her head sank upon his shoulder. Morris put one arm round her
waist to save her from slipping into the water at the bottom of the
boat, making shift to steer with the other. Thus, for a while they
ploughed forward--whither he knew not, across the inky sea, for there
was no moon, and the stars were hidden, driven on slowly by the biting
breath of the winter wind.
Presently she awoke, lifted her head, and spoke, saying:
"We can't last much longer in this cold and wet. You are not afraid,
are you?"
"No, not exactly afraid, only sorry; it is hard to go with so much to
be done, and--to leave behind."
"You shouldn't think like that," she answered, "for what we leave must
follow. She will suffer, but soon she will be with you again, where
everything is understood. Only you ought to have died with her, and
not with me, a stranger."
"Fate settles these things," he muttered, "and if it comes to that,
maybe God will give her strength. But the dawn is near, and by it we
may see land."
"Yes, yes,"--now her voice had sunk to a whisper,--"the dawn is always
near, and by it we shall see land."
Then again Stella's head sank upon his shoulder, and she slept
heavily; nor, although he knew that such slumbers are dangerous, did
he think it worth while to disturb her.
The invisible seas hissed past; the sharp wind bit his bones, and over
him, too, that fatal slumber began to creep. But, although he seldom
exercised it, Morris was a man of strong will, and while any strength
was left he refused to give way. Would this dreadful darkness never
end? For the fiftieth time he glanced back over his shoulder, and now,
he was sure of it, the east grew ashen. He waited awhile, for the
November dawn is slow in breaking, then looked again. Heaven be
thanked! the cold wind had driven away the clouds, and there, upon the
edge of the horizon, peeped up the fiery circle of the sun, throwing
long rays of sickly yellow across the grey, troubled surface of the
waters. In front of him lay a dense bank of fog, which, from its
character, as Morris knew well, must emanate from the reeking face of
earth. They were near shore, it could not be doubted; still, he did
not wake his companion. Perhaps he might be in error, and sleep, even
a death-sleep, is better than the cheatings of disappointed hope.
What was that dim object in front of him? Surely it must be the ruin a
mile or so to the north of Monksland, that was known as the Death
Church? Once a village stood here, but the sea had taken most of it;
indeed, all that remained to-day was this old, deserted fane, which,
having been built upon a breast of rising ground, still remained,
awaiting its destruction by the slow sap of the advancing ocean. Even
now, at times of very high tide, the sea closed in behind, cutting the
fabric off from the mainland, where it looked like a forsaken
lighthouse rather than the tower and chancel of a church. But there,
not much more than a mile away, yes, there it was, and Morris felt
proud to think how straight he had steered homewards through that
stormy darkness.
The sea was still wild and high, but he was familiar with every inch
of the coast, and knew well that there was a spot to the south of the
Dead Church, just where the last rood of graveyard met the sand, upon
which he could beach the boat safely even in worse weather. For this
nook Morris headed with a new energy; the fires of life and hope burnt
up in him, giving him back his strength and judgment.
At last they were opposite to the place, and, watching his chance, he
put the helm down and ran in upon the crest of a wave, till the boat
grounded in the soft sand, and began to wallow there like a dying
thing. Fearing lest the back-wash should suck them off into the surf
again, he rolled himself into the water, for jump he could not;
indeed, it was as much as he could do to stand. With a last effort of
his strength he seized Stella in his arms and struggled with her to
the sandy shore, where he sank down exhausted. Then she woke. "Oh, I
dreamed, I dreamed!" she said, staring round her wildly.
"What?" he asked.
"That it was all over; and afterwards, that I----" and she broke off
suddenly, adding: "But it was all a dream, for we are safe on shore,
are we not?"
"Yes, thank Heaven!" said Morris. "Sit still, and I will make the boat
secure. She has served us a good turn, and I do not want to lose her
after all."
She nodded, and wading into the water, with numbed hands he managed to
lift the little anchor and carry it ashore in his arms.
"There," he said, "the tide is ebbing, and she'll hold fast enough
until I can send to fetch her; or, if not, it can't be helped. Come
on, Miss Fregelius, before you grow too stiff to walk;" and, bending
down, he helped her to her feet.
Their road ran past the nave of the church, which was ruined and
unroofed. At some time during the last two generations, however,
although the parishioners saw that it was useless to go to the cost of
repairing the nave, they had bricked in the chancel, and to within the
last twenty years continued to use it as a place of worship. Indeed,
the old oak door taken from the porch still swung on rusty hinges in
the partition wall of red brick. Stella looked up and saw it.
"I want to look in there," she said.
"Wouldn't it do another time?" The moment did not strike Morris as
appropriate for the examination of ruined churches.
"No; if you don't mind I should like to look now, while I remember,
just for one instant."
So he shrugged his shoulders, and they limped forward up the roofless
nave and through the door. She stared at the plain stone altar, at the
eastern window, of which part was filled with ancient coloured glass
and part with cheap glazed panes; at the oak choir benches, mouldy and
broken; at the few wall-slabs and decaying monuments, and at the roof
still strong and massive.
"I dreamed of a place very like this," she said, nodding her head. "I
thought that I was standing in such a spot in a fearful gale, and that
the sea got under the foundations and washed the dead out of their
graves."
"Really, Miss Fregelius," he said, with some irritation, for the
surroundings of the scene and his companion's talk were uncanny, "do
you think this an occasion to explore ruins and relate nightmares?"
Then he added, "I beg your pardon, but I think that the cold and wet
have affected your nerves; for my part, I have none left."
"Perhaps; at least forgive me, I did so want to look," she answered
humbly as, arm-in-arm, for she needed support, they passed from the
altar to the door.
A grotesque imagination entered the numbed mind of Morris. Their slow
and miserable march turned itself to a vision of a bridal procession
from the altar. Wet, dishevelled, half-frozen, they two were the
bride-groom and the bride, and the bride was a seer of visions, and
the bridegroom was a dreamer of dreams. Yes, and they came up together
out of the bitter sea and the darkness, and they journeyed together to
a vault of the dead----
Thank Heaven! they were out of the place, and above was the sun
shining, and, to the right and left, the grey ocean and the purple
plough-lands, cold-looking, suggesting dangers and labour, but
wholesome all of them, and good to the eye of man. Only why did this
woman see visions, and why did he dream dreams? And what was the
meaning of their strange meeting upon the sea? And what----
"Where are we going?" asked Stella after a while and very faintly.
"Home; to the Abbey, I mean, where your father lies. Now it is not
much more than a mile away."
She sighed; her strength was failing her.
"You had better try to walk, it will warm you," he urged, and she
struggled on.
It was a miserable journey, but they reached the house at length,
passing first through a street of the village in which no one seemed
to be awake. A wretched-looking couple, they stumbled up the steps
into the porch, where Morris rang the bell, for the door was locked.
The time seemed an age, but at last steps were heard, the door was
unbarred, and there appeared a vision of the lad Thomas, yawning, and
clad in a nightshirt and a pair of trousers, with braces attached
which dangled to the floor.
"Oh, Lord!" he said when he saw them, and his jaw dropped.
"Get out of the way, you young idiot," said Morris, "and call the
cook."
It was half-past seven in the evening, that is, dinner time, and
Morris stood in the study waiting for Stella, who had announced
through the housemaid that she was coming down.
After telling the servants to send for the doctor and attend to his
companion, who had insisted upon being led straight to her father's
room, Morris's first act that morning on reaching home was to take a
bath as hot as he could bear. Then he drank several cups of coffee
with brandy in it, and as the office would soon be open, wrote a
telegram to Mary, which ran thus:
"If you hear that I have been drowned, don't believe it. Have
arrived safe home after a night at sea."
This done, for he guessed that all sorts of rumours would be abroad,
he inquired after Mr. Fregelius and Stella. Having learned that they
were both going on well and sent off his telegram, Morris went to bed
and slept for ten hours.
Morris looked round the comfortable sitting-room with its recessed
Tudor windows, its tall bookcases and open hearth, where burned a
bright fire of old ship's timbers supported on steel dogs, and thought
to himself that he was fortunate to be there. Then the door opened, he
heard the housemaid's voice say, "This way please, Miss," and Stella
came in. She wore a plain white dress that seemed to fit her very
well, though where she got it from he never discovered, and her
luxuriant hair was twisted up into a simple knot. On the bosom of her
dress was fixed a spray of brilliant ampelopsis leaves; it was her
only ornament, but none could have been more striking. For the rest,
although she limped and still looked dark and weary about the eyes, to
all appearances she was not much the worse for their terrible
adventure.
Morris glanced at her. Could this dignified and lovely young lady be
that red-cloaked, loose-haired Valkyrie whom he had seen singing at
daybreak upon the prow of the sinking ship, or the piteous bedraggled
person whom he had supported from the altar in the Dead Church?
She guessed his thought--from the beginning Stella had this curious
power of discovering his mind--and said with a smile:
"Fine feathers make fine birds, and even Cleopatra would have looked
dreadful after a November night in an open boat."
"Have you recovered?" he asked.
"Yes, Mr. Monk; that is, I don't think I am going to have inflammation
of the lungs or anything horrid of the sort. The remedies and that
walk stopped it. But my feet are peeling from being soaked so long in
salt water, and my hands are not much better. See," and she held them
towards him.
Then dinner was announced, and for the second time that day they
walked arm-in-arm.
"It seems a little strange, doesn't it?" suggested Morris as he
surveyed the great refectory in which they two, seated at the central
table, looked so lone and small.
"Yes," she answered; "but so it should, anything quite usual would
have been out of place to-day."
Then he asked her how her father was going on, and heard what he had
already learned from the doctor, that he was doing as well as could be
expected.
"By the way, Mr. Monk," she added; "if you can spare a few minutes
after dinner, and are not too tired, he would so much like to see
you."
"Of course," answered Morris a little nervously, for he scented a
display of fervent gratitude.
After this they dropped into desultory conversation, curiously
different from the intimate talk which passed between them in the
boat. Then they had been in danger, and at times in the very shadow of
Death; a condition that favours confidences since those who stand
beneath his wings no longer care to hide their hearts. The reserves
which so largely direct our lives are lifted, their necessity is past,
and in the face of the last act of Nature, Nature asserts herself. Who
cares to continue to play a part when the audience has dispersed, the
curtain is falling, and the pay-box has put up its shutters? Now, very
unexpectedly these two were on the stage again, and each assumed the
allotted role.
Stella admired the room; whereon Morris set to work to explain its
characteristics, to find, to his astonishment, that Miss Fregelius had
more knowledge of architecture than he could boast. He pointed out
certain details, alleging them to be Elizabethan work, to which age
they had been credited for generations, whereon she suggested and,
indeed, proved, that some of them dated from the earlier years of
Henry VIII., and that some were late Jacobean. While Morris was
wondering how he could combat this revolutionary opinion, the servant
brought in a telegram. It was from Mary, at Beaulieu, and ran:
"Had not heard that you were drowned, but am deeply thankful that
you are saved. Why did you pass a night at sea in this weather? Is
it a riddle? Grieved to say my father not so well. Best love, and
please keep on shore. MARY."
At first Morris was angry with this rather flippant message; then he
laughed. As he had already discovered, in fact, his anxieties had been
quite groundless. The page-boy, Thomas, it appeared, when questioned,
had given the inquirers to understand that his master had gone out to
fish, taking his breakfast with him. Later, on his non-appearance, he
amended this statement, suggesting out of the depths of a fertile
imagination, that he had sailed down to Northwold, where he meant to
pass the night. Therefore, although the cook, a far-seeing woman who
knew her Thomas and hated him, had experienced pangs of doubt, nobody
else troubled the least, and even the small community of Monksland
remained profoundly undisturbed as to the fate of one of its principal
inhabitants.
So little is an unsympathetic world concerned in our greatest and most
particular adventures! A birth, a marriage, an inquest, a scandal--
these move it superficially, for the rest it has no enthusiasm to
spare. This cold neglect of events which had seemed to him so
important reacted upon Morris, who, now that he had got over his chill
and fatigue, saw them in their proper proportions. A little adventure
in an open boat at sea which had ended without any mishap, was not
remarkable, and might even be made to appear ridiculous. So the less
said about it, especially to Mary, whose wit he feared, the better.
When dinner was finished Stella left the room, passing down its
shadowed recesses with a peculiar grace of which even her limp could
not rob her. Ten minutes later, while Morris sat sipping a glass of
claret, the nurse came down to tell him that Mr. Fregelius would like
to see him if he were disengaged. Reflecting that he might as well get
the interview over, Morris followed her at once to the Abbot's
chamber, where the sick man lay.
Except for a single lamp near the bed, the place was unlighted, but by
the fire, its glow falling on her white-draped form and pale, uncommon
face, sat Stella. As he entered she rose, and, coming forward,
accompanied him to the bedside, saying, in an earnest voice:
"Father, here is our host, Mr. Monk, the gentleman who saved my life
at the risk of his own."
The patient raised his bandaged head and stretched out a long thin
hand; he could stir nothing else, for his right thigh was in splints
beneath a coffer-like erection designed to keep the pressure of the
blankets from his injured limb.
"Sir, I thank you," he said in a dry, staccato voice; "all the
humanity that is lacking from the hearts of those rude wretches, the
crew of the Trondhjem, must have found its home in you."
Morris looked at the dark, quiet eyes that seemed to express much
which the thin and impassive face refused to reveal; at the grey
pointed beard and the yellowish skin of the outstretched arm. Here
before him, he felt, lay a man whose personality it was not easy to
define, one who might be foolish, or might be able, but of whose
character the leading note was reticence, inherent or acquired. Then
he took the hand, and said simply:
"Pray, say no more about it. I acted on an impulse and some wandering
words of yours, with results for which I could not hope. There is
nothing to thank me for."
"Then, sir, I thank God, who inspired you with that impulse, and may
every blessing reward your bravery."
Stella looked up as though to speak, but changed her mind and returned
to her seat by the fire.
"What is there to reward?" said Morris impatiently; "that your
daughter is still alive is my reward. How are you to-night, Mr.
Fregelius?"