The moving waters at their priestlike taskOf pale ablution round earth’s human shore.
But they do not escape without defilement. On the surface of the tide, when it ebbs from the mudbanks, there gathers an iridescent slime. Tiny particles of floating sand catch and reflect the light. Fragments of dead weed, black or brown, are borne along. The tide has stolen across the beaches below the cottages and carried away the garbage cast there. It has passed where a little while before the cattle strayed, and passing has been stained. Here is no breaking of clear green waves against black defiant rocks, no tumultuous pitched battle between the ocean, inspired by the supreme passion of the tide, and the sullen resistance of unyielding cliffs. Instead a dubious sea wanders in and out amid scenes which the experience of many centuries has not made familiar to it.
It was into this shining bay that theTortoisesped, her white sails bellied with the pleasant wind. Priscilla exulted, with flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes.
Frank, yielding a little to the fascination of the sailing, was yet ill at ease. His conscience troubled him, the acutely sensitive conscience of a prefect who had been responsible for the tone of Edmondstone House. He feared that he had done wrong in going with Priscilla in theTortoise, wrong of a particularly flagrant kind. He thought of himself as a man of responsibility placed in the position of trust. Had he been guilty of a breach of trust? It seemed remotely unlikely, so cheerful and sparkling was the sea, that any accident could possibly occur. But with what feelings could he face a broken and reproachful father should anything happen and Priscilla be drowned? The blame would justly rest on him. The fault would be entirely his.
“Priscilla,” he said, “I wish we hadn’t come. I ought not to have come when Uncle Lucius has forbidden you to use this boat.”
“Oh,” said Priscilla, “don’t you fret. Father doesn’t really mind a bit. He only pretends to, has to, you know, on account of Aunt Juliet He knows jolly well that I can sail theTortoise, any one could.”
Frank could not; but Priscilla’s tone comforted him a little. Yet his conscience was ill at ease.
“But Miss Lentaigne,” he said, “your Aunt Juliet——”
“She’ll object, all right, of course,” said Priscilla. “If she knew where we are this minute she’d be dead, cock sure that we’d be drowned. She’d probably spend the afternoon planning out nice warm ways of wrapping up our clammy corpses when she got them back. But she doesn’t know, so that’s all right.”
“She will know, this evening. We shall have to tell her.”
On one point Frank was entirely decided. Priscilla should neither lure nor drive him into any kind of deceit about the expedition. But Priscilla had no such intention.
“We’ll tell her right enough,” she said, “when we get home. She’ll be pretty mad, of course, inwardly; but she can’tsaymuch on account of her principles.”
“I don’t see what her principles have to do with it.”
“Don’t you? Then you must be rather stupid. Can’t you see that if you haven’t really got a sprained ankle, but only believe you have, and wouldn’t have it if you believed you hadn’t, then we shouldn’t really be drowned, supposing we were drowned, I mean, which, of course, we’re not going to be—if we believed we weren’t drowned? And Aunt Juliet, with her principles, would be bound to believe we weren’t, even if we were. We’ve only got to put it to her that way and she won’t have a ghost of a grievance left. It’s the simplest form of Christian Science. But in any case, whatever silliness Aunt Juliet may indulge in, we were simply bound to have theTortoisetoday. It’s a matter of duty. I don’t see how you can get around that, Cousin Frank, no matter how you argue.”
Frank did not want to get behind his duty. He had been brought up with a very high regard for the word. If it had been clearly shown him that it was his duty to take an ocean voyage in theTortoise, with Priscilla as leader of the expedition, he would have bidden a long farewell to his friends and gone forth cheerfully. But he did not see that this particular sail, which seemed, indeed, little better than a humiliating, though agreeable, act of truancy, could possibly be sheltered under the name of duty. Priscilla enlightened him.
“I daresay you don’t know,” she said, “that there is a German spy at the present moment making a chart of this bay. We are hunting him.”
There is something intensely stimulating to every healthy mind in the idea of hunting a spy. No prefect in the world, no master even, not Mr. Dupré himself, not the remote divine head-master in the calm Elysium of his garden, could have escaped a thrill at the mention of such a sport. Frank was conscious of a sudden relapse from the serenity of the grown man’s common sense. For an instant he became a normal schoolboy.
“Rot!” he said. “What spy?”
“It’s not rot,” said Priscilla. “You’ve read ‘The Riddle of the Sands,’ I suppose. You must have. Well, that’s exactly what he’s at, mapping out mud-banks and things so as to be able to run a masked flotilla of torpedo boats in and out when the time comes. There was one of the same lot caught the other day sketching a fortification in Lough Swilly. Father read it to me out of a newspaper.”
Frank had seen a report of that capture. German spies have of late, been appearing with disquieting frequency. They are met with in the most unlikely places. Frank was a little shaken in his scepticism.
“What makes you say there’s a German spy?” he said
“I saw him. So did Peter Walsh. So did Joseph Antony Kinsella. You heard Peter Walsh talking about him this morning. I saw him yesterday. I was bathing at the time and he ran his boat on a rock off the point of Delginish. If it hadn’t been for me he’d have been there still, only drowned, of course, for his boat floated away from him. I wish now that I’d left him there, but, of course, I didn’t know at the time that he was a spy. That idea only came to me afterwards. I say, Cousin Frank, wouldn’t it be absolutely spiffing if it turned out that he really was?”
It was impossible for any one to deny that such a thing would be spiffing in the very highest possible degree.
“If he is,” said Priscilla, “and I don’t see any reason why he shouldn’t—anyhow it’s jolly good sport to pretend—and if he is, it’s our plain duty to hunt him down at any risk. Sylvia Courtney says that Wordsworth’s ‘Ode to Duty’ is quite the most thrillingly impressive poem in the whole ‘Golden Treasury’ so you won’t want to go back on it.”
Frank’s prize had been won for Greek Iambics, not for English literature. He was not in a position to discuss the value of Wordsworth’s “Ode to Duty” as a guide to conduct in ordinary life.
“My plan,” said Priscilla, “is to begin at the south of the bay and work across to the north, investigating every island until we light on the one where he is. That’s the reason I had to take theTortoise. TheBlue Wandererwouldn’t have done it for us. She won’t go to windward. But theTortoiseis a racing boat. Father bought her cheap at Kingstown because she never won any races, which is the reason why he called her theTortoise. But she can sail faster than Flanagan’s old boat, anyhow. And that’s the one which the spy has got.”
Frank was not inclined to discuss the appropriateness of theTortoise’snew name. He was just beginning to recover from the feeling of bewildered annoyance induced by the sudden introduction of Wordsworth’s poem into the conversation.
“But what makes you say he’s a spy?” he said. “I know there are spies, and I saw about the capture of that one in Lough Swilly. But why should this man be one?”
“I don’t say he is,” said Priscilla. “All I say is that until we’ve hunted him down we can’t possibly be sure that he isn’t. You never can be sure about anything until you’ve actually tried it. And, anyway, what else can he be? You can’t deny that there’s some mystery about him. Remember what Peter Walsh said about his looking as innocent as a child. That’s the way spies always look. Besides, I don’t think his clothes really belonged to him. I could see that at a glance. He had a pair of white flannel trousers with creases down the fronts of the legs, quite as swagger as yours, if not swaggerer, and a white sweater. He didn’t look a bit comfortable in them, not as if they were the kind of clothes he was accustomed to wear. That’s Rossmore head on the left there, Cousin Frank. He’s not there. I didn’t expect he would be, and he isn’t. I don’t expect he’s in that bay to the southwest of it either. But we’ll just run in a bit and make sure.”
The breeze had freshened a little, and theTortoisemade good way through the calm water. Frank began to feel some little trust in Priscilla. She handled the boat with an air of confidence which was reassuring. His conscience was troubling him less than it did. There is nothing in the world equal to sailing as a means of quieting anxious consciences. A man may be suffering mental agonies from the recollection of some cruel and cold-blooded murder which he happens to have committed. On land his life would be a burden to him. But let him go down to the sea in a small white sailed ship, and in forty-eight hours or less, he will have ceased to feel any remorse for his victim. This may be the reason why all Protestant nations are maritime powers. Having denied themselves the orthodox anaesthetic of the confessional, these peoples have been obliged to take to the sea as a means of preventing their consciences from harrying them. Driven forth across the waves by the clamorous importunity of the voice within, they, of very necessity, acquire a certain skill in the management of boats, a skill which sooner or later leads to the burdensome possession of a navy and so to maritime importance. It is interesting to see how this curious law works out in quite modern times.
The Italian navy is now considerable, but it has only become so since the people were driven to the sea as a consequence of the anti-clerical feeling which led them to desert the confessional. It is quite possible that the Portuguese, having in their new Republic developed a strong antipathy to sacraments and so laid up for themselves a future of spiritual disquiet, may see their ancient maritime glories revived, and in seeking relief beyond the mouth of the Tagus from the gnawings of their consciences, may give birth to some reincarnation of Vasco da Gama or Prince Henry, the Navigator.
“I don’t think,” said Priscilla, looking round her searchingly, “that he’s anywhere in this bay. How’s your ankle?”
“It’s quite comfortable,” said Frank.
“I asked,” said Priscilla, “because in order to get out of the bay I shall have to jibe, and that means that you’ve got to hop across the centreboard case.”
Frank had not the least idea of what happens when a small boat jibes. He intended to ask for information, but was not given any opportunity. The boom, which had hitherto behaved with dignity and self-possession, suddenly swung across the boat with such swiftness that he had no time to duck his head to avoid it. His straw hat, struck on the brim, was swept over the side of the boat. He found himself thrown down against the gunwale, while a quantity of cold water poured over his legs. He grasped the centreboard case, the nearest stable thing at hand, and pulled himself up again into the middle of the boat. Priscilla, a good deal tangled in a writhing rope, was struggling past the tiller to the windward side.
“What’s happened?” asked Frank.
“Jibed all standing,” said Priscilla. “I didn’t mean to, of course. I must have been sailing her by the lee. But it’s all right. We didn’t ship more than a bucketful. I say, I’m rather sorry about your hat; but that’s a rotten kind of hat in a boat anyway. Would you mind getting up to windward? I’ve got to luff her a bit and she’ll heel over.”
“Is it gone?”
“What? Oh, the hat. Yes, quite. We couldn’t get it without jibing again.”
“Don’t let us do that,” said Frank, “if we can help it.
“I won’t. But do get up to windward. That is to say if your ankle’s not too bad. I must luff a bit or we’ll go ashore. The water’s getting very shallow.”
Frank scrambled over the centreboard case and bumped down on the floor boards on the windward side of the boat Priscilla pushed over the tiller and began to haul vigorously on the main sheet. TheTortoiseswept round, heeled over and rushed through the water on a broad reach. The wind, so it seemed to Frank, began to blow much harder than before. He clung to the weather stay and watched the bubbling water tear past within an inch or two of the lower gunwale. A sudden spasm of extreme nervousness seized him. He looked anxiously at Priscilla. She seemed to be entirely calm and self-possessed. His self-respect reasserted itself. He remembered that she was merely a girl. He set his teeth and determined to show no sign of fear. Gradually the exhilaration of the motion, the coolness of the breeze through his hair, the dancing, impulsive rush of the boat, and the shining white of the sail in front of him conquered his qualms. He began to enjoy himself as he had never in his life enjoyed himself before.
“I say, Priscilla,” he said, “this is fine.”
“Topping,” said Priscilla.
The feel of the cricket ball caught clean in the centre of the bat, sent in one clear flight to square leg across the boundary line, is glorious. Frank knew the exultation of such moments. The dash across the goal line from a swiftly taken pass is a thing to live for. Frank, as a fast three-quarter back, knew that too. But this tearing of a heeling boat through bubbling green water became to him, when he got over the first terror of it, a delirious joy.
“That’s Inishminna ahead of us to windward,” said Priscilla. “Flanagan lives there, who hired him the old boat. He might be there, but he isn’t. I can see the whole slope of the island. We’ll slip under the lee of the end of it past Illaunglos. It’s a likely enough island.”
Frank suddenly remembered that they were in pursuit of a German spy. The remainder of his scepticism forsook him. Amid such surroundings, with the singing of the wind and the gurgling swish of the flying boat in his ears, any adventure seemed possible. The prosaic limitations of ordinary life dropped off from him. Only it seemed a pity to find the spy, since finding him would stop their sailing.
“I say, Priscilla,” he said. “Don’t let us bother about the old spy. Let’s go on sailing.”
“Just hunker down a bit,” said Priscilla, “and look under the foot of the sail. I can’t see to leeward. Is there anything like a tent on that island?”
Frank curled himself into a cramped and difficult attitude. He peered under the sail and made his report.
“There’s nothing there,” he said, “except three bullocks. But I can only see two sides of the island.”
“We’ll open the north side in a minute,” said Priscilla. “He can’t be at the west end of it, for it is all bluff and boulders. If he isn’t on the north shore he’s not there at all.
Frank twisted himself again into the bottom of the boat, and peeped under the sail. The north shore of Illaunglos held no tent.
“Good,” said Priscilla. “Well stand on. The next island is Inishark. He may be there. There’s a well on it, and he’d naturally want to camp somewhere within reach of water.”
Frank, still curled up beside the centreboard case, gazed under the sail at Inishark. The boat, swaying and dipping in a still freshening breeze, sped on.
“Is there any large white stone on the ridge of the island?” he asked.
“No,” said Priscilla. “There isn’t a white stone of any size in the whole bay. It’s most likely a sheep.”
“It’s not a sheep. Nobody ever saw a sheep with a back that went up into a point. I believe it’s the top of a tent. Steer for it, Priscilla.”
Frank was aglow with excitement. The sailing intoxicated him. The sight of the triangular apex of the tent put himself beside himself.
“Turn the boat, Priscilla. Go down to the island.”
Priscilla was cooler.
“We’ll hold on a minute,” she said, “and make sure. There’s no use running all that way down to leeward until we’re certain. We’d only have to beat up again.”
“It is a tent,” said Frank. “I can see now. There are two tents.”
Priscilla caught his excitement She knelt on the floor boards, crooked her elbow over the tiller, leaned over the side of the boat and stared under the sail at the island.
“That’s him,” she said. “Now, Cousin Frank, we’ll have to jibe again to get down there. Do you think you can be a bit nippier in getting over the centreboard than you were last time. It’s blowing harder, and it won’t do to upset. You very nearly had us over before.”
Frank was too excited to notice that she now put the whole blame of the sudden violence of the last jibe on him. Thinking over the matter afterwards, he remembered that she had apologised at the time for her own bad steering. Now she wanted to hold his awkwardness responsible for what might have been a disaster.
“All right,” he said, “All right I’ll do whatever you tell me.”
“I won’t risk it,” said Priscilla. “You’d mean to do all right, but you wouldn’t when the time came. That ankle of yours, you know. After all, it’s just as easy to run her up into the wind and stay her.”
“There’s a man at the door of one of the tents looking at us through a pair of glasses,” said Frank.
“Let him,” said Priscilla.
She was hauling in the main sheet as the boat swept up into the wind.
“Now, Cousin Frank, ready about. You must slack off the jib sheet and haul down the other. That thin rope at your hand. Yes, that’s it.”
The meaning of this new manoeuvre was dim and uncertain to Frank. He grasped the rope indicated to him and then heard a noise as if some one at the bottom of the sea, an angry mermaid perhaps, was striking the keel of the boat hard with a hammer.
“She’s touching,” said Priscilla. “Up centreboard, quick.”
Frank gazed at her in pained bewilderment. He had not the least idea of what she wanted him to do. The knocking at the boat’s bottom became more frequent and violent. Priscilla gave the main sheet a turn round a cleat and stretched forward, holding the tiller with her left hand. She grasped a rope, one out of a tangled web of wet ropes, and tugged. The knocking ceased. The boat swept up into the wind. There was a sudden arrest of movement, a violent list over, a dart forward, a soft crunching sound, and then a dead stop.
“Bother,” said Priscilla, “we’re aground.”
She sprang overboard at once, stood knee deep in the water, and tugged at the stern of the boat The centreboard, when she dropped its rope, fell to the bottom of its case, caught in the mud under the boat, and anchored her immovably. Priscilla tugged in vain.
“It’s no good,” she said at last, “and the tide’s ebbing. We’re here for hours and hours. I hope you didn’t hurt your ankle, Cousin Frank, during that fray.”
“That fellow is still looking at us through his glasses,” said Frank.
“Can’t help it,” said Priscilla, “If it amuses him he can go on looking at us for the next four hours.”
She gathered her dripping skirt round her and stepped into the boat
“Sylvia Courtney,” she said, “told me last term that her favorite poem in English literature, is ‘Gray’s Elegy’ on account of it’s being so full of calm. Sometimes I think that Sylvia Courtney is rather a beast.”
“She must be a rotter,” said Frank, “if she said that.”
“All the same, there’s no use our fretting ourselves into a fuss. We can’t get out of this unless we had the wings of a dove, so we may as well take the sails off the boat.”
She climbed across Frank, loosed the halyard and brought the lug down into the boat with a sudden run. Frank was buried in the folds of it. After some struggling he got his head out and breathed freely.
“I say, Priscilla,” he said, “why didn’t you tell me you were going to do that?”
Priscilla was gathering the foresail in her arms.
“I thought you knew,” she said.
“I didn’t know the beastly thing was going to come down on my head.”
“That fellow on the island,” said Priscilla, “is getting down his tents and seems to be in a mighty hurry. He’s got a woman helping him. Do you think she could be a female spy? There are such things. They carry secret ciphers sewn into their stays and other things of that kind.”
“I don’t believe they’re spies at all,” said Frank, who was feeling dishevelled and uncomfortable after his struggle with the sail.
“Anyhow they seem pretty keen on getting away from Inishark. Just look at them.”
There was no doubt that the people on the island were doing their best to strike their camp as quickly as possible. In their hurry they stumbled over guy ropes, got the fly sheet of one of their tents badly tangled round a packing case, and made the matter worse by trying to free it without proper consideration.
“Let them fuss,” said Priscilla. “We can’t help it if they do get away. If your ankle isn’t too bad we might as well have lunch. You grub out the food when I get off my shoes and stockings, I’m a bit damp about the legs.”
Frank felt under the thwart through which the mast was stepped and drew out one by one the parcel of macaroons, the tongue, the tin of peaches and the bottles. Priscilla wrung out her stockings over the stern of the boat and then hung them on the gunwale to dry. She propped her shoes up against the stern where they would get as much breeze as possible.
“I wish,” said Frank, “that we’d thought of getting some bread.”
“Why? Don’t you like macaroons?”
“I like them all right, but they don’t go very well with tongue.”
“We’ll begin with the tongue, then, and keep the macaroons till afterwards. Hand it over.”
She took a rowlock and shattered the jar which held the tongue. She succeeded in throwing some of the broken glass overboard. A good deal more of it stuck in the tongue.
“What I generally do,” she said, “when I’m out in theBlue Wandererby myself and happen to have a tongue, which isn’t often on account of their being so beastly expensive—but whenever I have I simply bite bits off it as I happen to want them. But I know that’s not polite. If you prefer it, Cousin Frank, you can gouge out a chunk or two with your knife before I gnaw it.”
This seemed to Frank a good suggestion. He got out his knife.
“Sylvia Courtney is always frightfully polite,” said Priscilla.
Frank hesitated. The recollection of Sylvia Courtney’s appreciation of Wordsworth’s “Ode to Duty” and her fondness for “Gray’s Elegy” for the sake of its calm came to him. He would not be classed with her. He put his knife back into his pocket and bit a small bit off the tongue. Then he leaned over the side of the boat and spat out a good deal of broken glass. He also spat out some blood.
“That seems to be rather a glassy bit you’ve got,” said Priscilla. “Are you cut?”
“A little,” said Frank, “but it doesn’t matter.”
Priscilla bit off a large mouthful and handed the tongue back to Frank. Her cheeks bulged a good deal, but she chewed without any appearance of discomfort. Frank had read in books about “the call of the wild.” He now, for the first time, felt the lust for savage life. He took the tongue, tore off a fragment with his teeth, and discovered as he ate it, that he was exceedingly hungry.
“Your lemonade bottle,” he said, a few minutes later, “has one of those glass stoppers in it instead of a cork. How shall I open it?”
“Shank of a rowlock,” said Priscilla. “Those spies on the island have got their tents down at last. They’re packing up now.”
Frank opened the lemonade bottle and then glanced at the island. The female spy was packing a holdall. Her companion was staggering down the beach towards the place where Flanagan’s old boat lay high and dry on her side. He carried the packing case on his shoulder. Priscilla, tilting her head back, drank the lemonade from its bottle in large gulps. Then she opened the parcel of biscuits and munched a macaroon contentedly.
“It’s dashed annoying,” said Frank, “having to sit here and watch them escape, just as we had them cornered too.”
The inside of his lip hurt him a good deal while he ate. He wanted to grumble about something; but the fear of being compared to Sylvia Courtney kept him silent about the broken glass. Priscilla took another macaroon.
“We were doing Wordsworth’s ‘Excursion’ last term,” she said, “in English literature, and there’s a long tract of it called ‘Despondency Corrected.’ I wish I had it here now. It’s just what would do you good.”
Frank nibbled a biscuit with his eyes on the island. The man was carrying down a bundle of rugs to the boat. The woman followed him with one of the tents. Then they went back together to their camping ground and collected a number of small objects which were scattered about. Frank became desperate.
“Priscilla,” he said, “don’t you think you could wade across to that island. There’s only about an inch and a half of water round the boat now. I’d do it myself if it wasn’t for this infernal ankle. I simply can’t walk.”
“I could,” said Priscilla, “and what’s more, I would, only that there’s a deep channel between us and them. If I’d jibed that time instead of trying to stay her I should have kept in the channel and not run on to this bank. I knew it was here all right, but I forgot it just at the moment. That’s the worst of moments. They simply make one forget things, however hard one tries not to. I daresay you’ve noticed that.”
Frank had as a matter of fact noticed this peculiarity of moments very often. It had turned up in the course of his experience both on cricket and football fields. But it seemed to him that the consequences of being entrapped by it were much more serious in sailing boats than elsewhere. He was so far from blaming Priscilla for the plight of theTortoisethat he felt very grateful to her for not blaming him. His moment had come when she gave him the order about the centreboard. Then not only memory, but all power of coherent thought had deserted him.
“Let’s have at the Californian peaches,” said Priscilla. “But we’d better eat a bit slower now that the first pangs of hunger are allayed. If we hurry up too much we’ll have no food left soon and we have absolutely nothing else to do except to eat until five o’clock this afternoon. We can’t expect to get off before that.”
The spies packed their belongings into Flanagan’s old boat and then set to work to push her down to the sea. Frank, with the point of the opener driven through the top of the peach tin, paused to watch them. They shoved and pulled vainly. The boat remained where she was. Frank began to hope that they, too, might have to wait for the rising tide. They sat down on a large stone and consulted together. Then they took everything out of the boat and tried pushing and pulling her again. Her weight was still too great for them. They moved her forward in short jerks, but each time they moved her the keel at her stern buried itself deeper in the soft mud. They sat down, evidently somewhat exhausted, and had another consultation. Then the man got the oars and laid them out as rollers. He lifted the boat’s stern on to the first of them.
“I thought,” said Priscilla, “that they’d hit on that dodge sooner or later. Now they’ll get on a bit. Go on scalping the peach tin, Cousin Frank.”
The peaches had been cut in half by the kindly Californian who preserved them and a half peach fits, with a little squeezing, into any mouth of ordinary size. Priscilla and Frank fished them out with their fingers and ate them. Some juice, but considering the circumstances very little, dripped down the front of Frank’s white flannel coat, the glorious crimson bound coat of the first eleven. He did not care in the least. He had lapsed hopelessly. No urchin in the lower school, brewing cocoa over a form room fire, ladling out condensed milk with the blade of a penknife, would have been more dead to the decencies of life than this degenerate hero of the lower sixth.
“They’re getting the boat down,” said Priscilla, swallowing a lump of peach. “Do you think that you could throw stones far enough to hit them when they get out into the channel? I’d grub up the stones for you. We might frighten them back that way.”
Frank had won second prize in the sports at the end of the Easter term for throwing the cricket ball. He looked across the stretch of water and judged the distance carefully.
“No,” he said, regretfully, “I couldn’t.”
“That’s a pity,” said Priscilla, “for I can’t, either. I never could shy worth tuppence. Curious, isn’t it? Hardly any girls can.”
The spies had got old Flanagan’s boat down to the water’s edge. They went back to the place where she had lain first. By a series of laborious portages they got all their goods down to the beach and packed them into the boat.
“They’re off now,” said Frank, regretfully.
“I wouldn’t be too sure,” said Priscilla. “That fellow’s an extraordinary ass with a boat.”
Her optimism was well founded. By shoving hard the spies ran their boat into the water. The lady spy stopped at the brink. The man, with reckless indifference to wet feet, followed the boat, still shoving. It happens that the shore of the north side of Inishark shelves very rapidly into the deep channel. The boat floated suddenly, and urged by the violence of the last shove, slid rapidly from the shore. The man grasped at her. His fingers slid along the gunwale. He plunged forward knee-deep, snatched at the retreating bow, missed it, stumbled and fell headlong into the water. The boat floated free and swung into the channel on the tide.
Priscilla leaped up excitedly.
“Now they’re done,” she said. “They’re far worse stuck than we are.”
“Oh, do look at him,” said Frank, “Did you ever see anything so funny?”
The man staggered to his feet and floundered towards the shore, squeezing the salt water from his eyes with his knuckles.
“Of course, I’m sorry for the poor beast in a way,” said Priscilla, “but I can’t help feeling that it jolly well serves him right. Oh, look at them now!”
She laughed convulsively. The scene was sufficiently ridiculous. The spy stood dripping forlornly, on the shore. The lady dabbed at various parts of his clothing with her pocket-handkerchief. Flanagan’s old boat, now fairly in mid-channel, bobbed cheerfully along on the ebbing tide.
“I’d give a lot this minute,” said Priscilla, “for a pair of glasses. I can’t think why I was such a fool as not to take father’s when we were starting.”
“I can see well enough,” said Frank. “What I’d like would be to be able to hear what he’s saying.”
“I don’t take any interest in bad language, and in any case I don’t believe he’s capable of it. He looked to me like the kind of man who wouldn’t say anything much worse than ‘Dear me.’”
“Wouldn’t he? Look at him now. If he isn’t cursing I’ll eat my hat.”
The spy had shaken himself free of his companion’s pocket handkerchief. He was waving his arms violently and shouting so loudly that his voice reached theTortoiseagainst the wind.
“I suppose,” said Priscilla, “that that’s his way of trying to get dry without catching a chill. Horrid ass, isn’t he? It’d be far better for him to run. What’s the good of yelling? I expect in reality it’s simply temper.”
But Priscilla underestimated the intelligence of the spy. It appeared very soon that he was not merely giving expression to emotion, but had a purpose in his performance. The lady, too, began to shout, shrilly. She waved her damp pocket handkerchief round and round her head. Priscilla and Frank turned and saw that another boat, a small black boat, with a very dilapidated lug sail, had appeared round the corner of the next island, and was making towards Inishark.
“Bother,” said Priscilla, “that man, whoever he is, will bring them back their boat.”
The steersman in the lug-sailed boat altered his course slightly and reached down towards the derelict. As he neared her he dropped his sail and got out oars.
“That’s young Kinsella,” said Priscilla. “I know him by the red sleeve his mother sewed into that gray shirt of his. No one else has a shirt the least like it. He’s a soft-hearted sort of boy who’d do a good turn to any one. He’s sure to take their boat back to them.”
“He has a lady with him,” said Frank.
“He has. I can’t see who she is; but it doesn’t look like his mother. Can’t be, in fact, for she has a baby to mind. I collared a lot of flannel out of a box in Aunt Juliet’s room last ‘hols’ and gave it to her for the baby. It’s a bit of what I gave her that was made into a sleeve for Jimmy’s shirt. I wonder now who it is he has got with him?”
Jimmy Kinsella overtook the drifting boat, took her painter, and began to tow her towards Inishark.
“That lady,” said Priscilla, “is a black stranger to me. Who can she possibly be?”
Jimmy Kinsella rowed hard, and in about ten minutes ran his own boat aground on Inishark. He disembarked, dragged at the painter of Flanagan’s boat and handed her over to the lady on the island. A long conversation followed. The whole party, Jimmy Kinsella, his lady, the dripping spy, and the original lady with the damp pocket handkerchief, consulted together eagerly. Then they took the hold-all out of Flanagan’s boat. There was another conversation, and it became plain that the two ladies were expostulating with the dripping gentleman. Jimmy Kinsella stood a little apart and gazed placidly at the two boats. Then the hold-all was unpacked and a number of garments laid out on the beach. They were sorted out and a bundle of them handed to the spy. He walked straight up the slope of the island and disappeared over the crest of the hill.
“Gone to change his clothes,” said Priscilla.
The two ladies repacked the hold-all. Jimmy Kinsella stowed it in the bow of Flanagan’s boat. Then the lady of the island got it out again, unpacked it once more, and took something out of it.
“Clean pocket-handkerchief, I expect,” said Priscilla.
The guess was evidently a good one, for she spread the wet handkerchief on a stone. Her companion reappeared over the crest of the island, clad in another pair of white trousers and another sweater. He carried his wet garments at arm’s length. Jimmy Kinsella went to meet him. They talked together as they walked down to the boats. Then the two ladies kissed each other warmly. Priscilla watched the performance with a sneer.
“Awful rot, that kind of thing,” she said.
“All women do it,” said Frank.
Here at last he was unquestionably Priscilla’s superior. Never, to his recollection, had he kissed any one except his mother, and he was generally content to allow her to kiss him.
“I don’t; Sylvia Courtney tried it on with me when we were saying good-bye at the end of last term, but I jolly soon choked her off. Can’t think where the pleasure is supposed to come in.”
Jimmy Kinsella placed the spy lady in the stern of Flanagan’s boat and handed in her companion. He arranged the oars and the rowlocks and then, standing ankle deep in the water, shoved her off. The spy took his oars and pulled away. Priscilla and Frank watched the boat until she disappeared.
“Pretty rough luck on us,” said Priscilla, “Jimmy Kinsella turning up just at that moment. I wonder if that woman is a man in disguise. She might be, you know. They sometimes are.”
“Couldn’t possibly. No man would have been such a fool as to go trying to dry anybody with a pocket handkerchief. Only a woman——”
“If it comes to that,” said Priscilla, “no woman would have been such a fool as to let that boat go the way he did. Girls aren’t the only asses in the world, Cousin Frank.”
“Besides,” said Frank, “she evidently took a lot of trouble to persuade him to change his clothes. That looks as if——”
“It does, rather. I daresay she’s his aunt. It’s just the kind of thing Aunt Juliet would have done before she took to Christian Science. Now, of course, it would be against her principles. Let’s have another Californian peach to fill in the time.”
Frank handed the tin to her and afterwards helped himself.
“Have you drunk all your beer, Cousin Frank?”
“No. Want some?”
“I was only thinking,” said Priscilla, “that perhaps you’d better not. I’ve just recollected King John.”
“What about him?”
“It was peaches and beer that finished him off, after he’d got stuck in crossing the Wash. That’s rather the sort of position we’re in now, and I shouldn’t like anything to happen to you.”
Frank, by way of demonstrating his courage, took a long draught of lager beer, then he looked across at Inishark. Priscilla’s eyes followed his. For a minute or two they gazed in silence.
Jimmy Kinsella’s boat still lay on the shore. Jimmy Kinsella’s lady had taken off her shoes and stockings and rolled up the sleeves of her blouse. Her skirt was kilted high and folded over a broad band which kept it well above her knees. Jimmy Kinsella himself, who was modest as well as chivalrous, sat on a stone with his back to her and gazed at the slope of the island. The lady waded about in the shallow water. Now and then she plunged her arms in and appeared to fish something up from the bottom. Priscilla and Frank looked at each other in amazement.
“I wonder what on earth’s she’s doing,” said Priscilla. “Can she possibly be taking soundings?”
“No,” said Frank. “Soundings aren’t taken that way. You do it with a line and a lead from the deck of a ship.”
“All the same,” said Priscilla, “she’s in league with the other spies. You saw the way they kissed each other.”
“She may,” said Frank, “be taking specimens of the sea bottom. That’s a very important thing, I believe.”
“It is, frightfully; but that’s not the way it’s done. There was a curious old johnny last term who gave us a lecture on hydrography—that’s what he called it—and he said you gather up small bits of the bottom by putting tallow on the end of a lump of lead. I expect he knew what he was talking about, but, of course, he may not. You never can tell about those scientific lecturers. They keep on contradicting each other so.”
“If she’s not doing that, what is she doing?”
“She may possibly be trying to cure her rheumatism,” said Priscilla. “They generally bathe for that; but she may not feel bad enough to go to such extremes. She looks rather fat. Fat people do have rheumatism, don’t they?”
“No, gout.”
“More or less the same thing,” said Priscilla. “Of course, if that’s what she’s at, she’s not a spy, and we oughtn’t to go on treating her as if she was. I don’t think it’s right to suspect people of really bad crimes unless one knows. Do you, Cousin Frank?”
“Of course not. All the same, the way she’s going on is rather queer. She’s just put something that she picked up into that tin box she has slung across her back. That doesn’t look to me as if she had gout.”
“If only Jimmy Kinsella would turn this way,” said Priscilla, “I’d wave at him and make him come over here. It’s perfectly maddening being stuck like this when such a lot of exciting things are going on. What time is it?”
“A little after two.”
“It’s low water then,” said Priscilla. “From this on the tide will be coming in again.”
TheTortoiselay on the top of a grey bank from which the water had entirely receded. Between her and the channel, now a tangle of floating weed, lay a broad stretch of mud, dotted over with large stones and patches of gravel. The wind, which had been veering round to the south since twelve o’clock, had almost entirely died away. The sun shone very warmly. TheTortoise, lying sadly on her side, afforded no shelter at all. Both the beer and the lemonade were finished.
Priscilla drank some peach juice from the tin.