The Adventures of Harry Revel
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Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller Couch >> The Adventures of Harry Revel
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For many months I heard nothing of this dear lady, and it seemed that
I had parted from her for ever, when one evening as I returned from
carrying a bag of soot out to Mutley Plain (where a market-gardener
wanted some for his beds), Mrs. Trapp put into my hands a letter
addressed in the familiar Italian hand to "H. Revel, residing with
Mr. S. Trapp, House Renovator, near the Barbican." It ran:
"My dearest Harry,--I wonder if, amid your new avocations, you
will take the pleasure in the handwriting of an _old friend_?
I remember you many times daily, and often when I wake in the
night; and commend you to God morning and evening, kneeling on
the place where your cot used to stand, for I have no one now to
care for in my room. There is little change in our life here;
though Mr. Scougall, as I foreboded, takes less heart in his
ministrations, and I should not wonder if he retired before
long. But this is between ourselves. Punctual as ever in his
duties, he rarely spends the night here, but departs at six p.m.
for his wife's farm, where Mrs. S. very naturally prefers to
reside. Indeed, I wish she would absent herself altogether; for
when she comes, it is to criticise the housekeeping, in which I
regret to say she does not maintain that generous spirit of
which she gave promise in the veal pies, etc., of that _ever
memorable_ morning. I never condescended to be a bride: yet I
feel sure, that had I done so, it would have given me an extra
compassion for the fatherless."
"But enough of myself. My object in writing is to tell you that
my birthday falls on Wednesday next (May 1st, dedicated by the
Ancient Romans to the Goddess of Flowers, as I was yearly
reminded in my happy youth. But how often Fate withholds from
us her seeming promises!). It might be a bond between us, my
dear boy, if you will take that day for your birthday too.
Pray humour me in this; for indeed your going has left a void
which I cannot fill, and perhaps do not wish to, except with
thoughts of you. I trust there used to be no _partiality_; but
for some reason you were dearer to me than the others; and I
feel as if God, in His mysterious way, sent you into my life
_with meaning_. Do you think that Mr. Trapp, if you asked him
politely (and I trust you have not forgotten your politeness),
would permit you to meet me at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, in Mr.
Tucker's Bun Shop, in Bedford Street, to celebrate your birthday
with an affectionate friend? Such ever is,"
"Amelia Plinlimmon."
"Oh, very well," said Mr. Trapp when I showed him the letter and put
my request; "only don't let her swell you out of shape. Chimbleys is
narrower than they used to be. May-day is Sweeps' Holiday, too,
though we don't keep it up in Plymouth: I dare say the lady thought
'pon that. In my bachelor days I used to be Jack in the Green
reggilar."
"It's just as well I never saw ye, then," said his wife tartly.
"And to imagine that a lady like Miss Plinlimmon would concern
herself with your deboshes! But you'd lower the King on his throne."
Indeed, Mr. Trapp went on to give some colour to this. "I wonder
what she means, talking about Roman goddesses?" he mused. "I seen
one, once, in a penny show; and it was marked outside 'Men only
Admitted.'"
Mrs. Trapp swept me from the room.
On May-day, then, I entered Mr. Tucker's Bun Shop with a beating
heart, a scrubbed face and a sprig of southernwood in my button-hole,
and Miss Plinlimmon fell on my neck and kissed me. All the formality
of the Genevan Hospital dropped away from her as a garment, and left
only the tender formality of her own nature, so human that it amazed
me. I had never really known her until now. She had prepared a
feast, including Mr. Tucker's famous cheese-cakes, "as patronised by
Queen Charlotte," and cakes called "maids of honour." "To my mind,"
said Miss Plinlimmon, taking one, "there is always an air of
refinement about this shop." She praised my growth, and the
cleanliness of my skin, and the care with which Mrs. Trapp kept my
clothes; and laughed when I reported some of Mrs. Trapp's sayings--
but tremulously: indeed, more than once her eyes brimmed as she gazed
across the table. "You cannot think how happy I am!" she almost
whispered, and broke off to draw my attention to a young officer who
had entered the shop, with two ladies in fresh summer gowns of
sprigged muslin, and who stood by the counter buying sweetmeats.
"If you can do so without staring, Harry, always make a point of
observing such people as that. You will be surprised at the little
hints you pick up." I told her, growing bold, that I knew no finer
lady than she, and never wanted to--which I still think a happy and
highly creditable speech for a boy of eleven. She flushed with
pleasure. "I have birth, I hope," she said, and with that her colour
deepened, perhaps with a suspicion that this might hurt my feelings.
"But since our reverses," she went on hurriedly, "we Plinlimmons have
stood still; and one should move with the times. I am not with those
who think good manners need be old-fashioned ones." She recurred to
Mrs. Trapp. "I feel sure she must be an excellent woman.
Your clothes are well kept, and I read more in needlework than you
think. Also folks cannot neglect their cleanliness and then furbish
themselves up in a day. I see by your complexion that she attends to
you. I hope you are careful not to laugh at her when she makes those
ludicrous speeches?"
But I shifted the talk from Mrs. Trapp.
"What did you mean, just now, by 'we,' Miss Plinlimmon?" I asked.
"Did I say 'we'?"
"You talked about your reverses--'our reverses,' you said. I wish
you would tell me about it: I never heard, before, of anyone
belonging to you."
"'We' means 'my brother and I,'" she said, and said no more until she
had paid the bill and we walked up to the Hoe together. There she
chose a seat overlooking the Sound and close above the amphitheatre
(in those days used as a bull-ring) where Corineus the Trojan had
wrestled, ages before, with the giant Gogmagog and defeated him.
"My brother Arthur--Captain Arthur Plinlimmon of the King's Own--is
the soul of honour. I do not believe a nobler gentleman lives in the
whole wide world: but then we are descended from the great Glendower,
King of Wales (I will show you the pedigree, some day), and have
Tudor blood, too, in our veins. When dear papa died and we
discovered he had been speculating unfortunately in East India
Stock--'buying for a fall' was, I am told, his besetting weakness,
though I could never understand the process--Arthur offered me a home
and maintenance for life. Of course I refused: for the blow reduced
him, too, to bitter poverty, and he was married. And, besides, I
could never bear his wife, who was a woman of fashion and
extravagant. She is dead now, poor thing, so we will not talk of
her: but she could never be made to understand that their
circumstances were altered, and died leaving some debts and one
child, a boy called Archibald, who is now close on twenty years old.
So there is my story, Harry; and a very ordinary one, is it not?"
"Where does Captain Plinlimmon live?" I asked.
"He is quartered in Lancaster just now, with his regiment: and Archie
lives with him. He had hoped to buy the poor boy a commission before
this, but could not do so honourably until all the debts were paid.
'The sins of the fathers--'" She broke off and glanced at me
nervously.
But I was not of an age to suspect why, or to understand my own lot
at all. "I suppose you love this Archibald better than anybody,"
said I with a twinge of jealousy.
"Oh, no," she exclaimed quickly, and at once corrected herself.
"Not so much as I ought. I love him, of course, for his father's
sake: but in features he takes after his mother very strikingly, and
that--on the few occasions I have seen him--chilled me. It is wrong,
I know; and no doubt with more opportunity I should have grown very
fond of him. Sometimes I tax myself, Harry, with being frail in my
affections: they require renewing with a sight of--of their object.
That is why we are keeping our birthdays together to-day."
She smiled at me, almost archly, putting out a hand to rest it on
mine, which lay on my knee; then suddenly the smile wavered, and her
eyes began to brim; I saw in them, as in troubled water, broken
images of a hundred things I had known in dreams; and her arm was
about my neck and I nestled against her.
"Dear Harry! Dear boy!"
I cannot tell how long we sat there: certainly until the ships
hung out their riding-lights and the May stars shone down on us.
At whiles we talked, and at whiles were silent: and both the talk and
the silences (if you will not laugh) held some such meanings as they
hold for lovers. More than ever she was not the Miss Plinlimmon I
remembered, but a strange woman, coming forth and revealing herself
with the stars. She actually confessed that she loathed porridge!--
"though for example's sake, you know, I force myself to eat it.
I think it unfair to compel children to a discipline you cannot
endure with them."
She parted with me under the moonlit Citadel, at the head of a
by-lane leading to the Trapps' cottage. "I shall not write often, or
see you," she said. "It is seldom that I get a holiday or even an
hour to myself, and we will not unsettle ourselves"--mark, if the
child could not, the noble condescension--"in our duties that are
perhaps the more blessed for being stern. But a year hence for
certain, if spared, we will meet. Until then be a gentleman always
and--I may ask it now--for my sake."
So we parted, and for a whole year I saw nothing of her, nor heard
except at Christmas, when she sent me a closely written letter of six
sheets, of which I will transcribe only the poetical conclusion:
"Christmas comes but once a year:
And why? we well may ask.
Repine not. We are probably unequal
To a severer task."
CHAPTER V.
THE SHADOW OF ARCHIBALD.
It is not only children who, having once tasted bliss, suppose fondly
that one has only to prepare a time and place for it again and it can
be repeated. But he must be a queer child who starts with expecting
any less. Certainly no doubts assailed me when the anniversary came
round and I made my way to Mr. Tucker's Bun Shop; nor did Miss
Plinlimmon's greeting lack anything of tenderness. She began at once
to talk away merrily: but children are demons to detect something
amiss, and there was a note in her gaiety which somehow did not sound
in key. After a while she broke off in the middle of a sentence and
sat stirring her tea, as with a mind withdrawn; recovered herself,
and catching at her last words, continued--but on a different
subject; then, reading some puzzlement in my eyes, exclaimed
abruptly, "My dear Harry, you have grown beyond knowledge!"
"Were you thinking of that?" I asked, for I had heard it twice
already.
She answered one question with another. "Of what were _you_
thinking?"
I hesitated, for in truth I had been thinking how much older she had
grown. A year is a long time to a child, but it did not account to
me for a curious wanness in her colour. Her hair was greyer, too,
and there were dark rings under her eyes. "You seem different
somehow, Miss Plinlimmon."
"Do I? The Hospital has been wearing me out, of late. I have
thought sometimes of resigning and trying my fortune elsewhere: but
the thought of the children restrains me. I make many mistakes with
them--perhaps more as the years go on: they love me, however, for
they know that I mean well, and it would haunt me if they fell into
bad hands. Now I am not sure that Mr. Scougall would choose the best
successor. Before he married I could have trusted his judgment."
She fell a-musing again. "Archibald is here in Plymouth," she added
inconsequently. "My nephew, you know."
I nodded, and asked, "Is he quartered here?"
"Why, how did you know he was in the Army?"
"You told me Major Arthur was saving up to buy him a commission."
"How well you remember!" she sighed. "Alas! no: the debts were too
heavy. Archibald is in the Army, but he has enlisted as a private,
in the 105th, the North Wilts Regiment. His father advised it: he
says that, in these days, commissions are to be won by young men
content to begin in the ranks; and the lad has (I believe) a good
friend in Colonel Festonhaugh, who commands the North Wilts. He and
Arthur are old comrades in arms. But garrison life does not suit the
poor boy, or so he complains. He is a little sore with his father
for subjecting him to it, and cannot take his stern view about paying
the debts. That is natural enough, perhaps." She heaved another
sigh. "His regiment--or rather the second battalion, to which he
belongs--was ordered down to Plymouth last January, and since then
has been occupied with drill and petty irritating duties at which he
grumbles sorely--though I believe there is a prospect of their being
ordered out to Portugal before long."
"You see him often?" I asked.
She seemed to pause a moment. "Yes; oh, yes to be sure, I see him
frequently. That is only natural, is it not?"
We left the shop and strolled towards the Hoe. I felt that something
was interfering to spoil our day; and felt unreasonably sure of it on
finding our old seat occupied by three soldiers--two of them
supporting a drunken comrade. We made disconsolately for an empty
bench, some fifty yards away.
"They belong to Archibald's regiment," said Miss Plinlimmon as we
settled ourselves to talk. I had noted that she scanned them
narrowly. "Why, here _is_ Archibald!" she exclaimed: and I looked up
and saw a young red-coat sauntering towards us.
Her tone, I was jealously glad to observe, had not been entirely
joyous. And Master Archibald, as he drew near, did not seem in the
best of tempers. He was beyond all doubt a handsome youth, and
straight-limbed; but apparently a sullen one. He kept his eyes on
the ground and only lifted them for a moment when close in front of
us.
"Good afternoon, aunt."
"Good afternoon, Archibald. This is Harry--my friend of whom you
have heard me speak."
He glanced at me with a curt nod. I could see that he considered me
a nuisance. An awkward silence fell between the three of us, broken
at length by a start and a smothered exclamation from Miss
Plinlimmon.
Archibald glanced over his shoulder carelessly. "Oh, yes," said he,
"they are baiting a bull down yonder."
The ridge hid the bull-ring from us. Dogs had been barking there
when we seated ourselves, but the noise held no meaning for us.
It was the bull's roar which had startled Miss Plinlimmon.
"Pray let us go!" She gathered her shawl about her in a twitter.
"This is quite horrible!"
"There's nothing to be afraid of," he assured her. "The brute's tied
fast enough. Don't go, aunt: I want a word with you."
He glowered at me again, and this time with meaning. I saw that he
wished me gone, and I moved to go.
"This is Harry's birthday. I am keeping it with him: his birthday as
well as mine, Archibald."
"Gad, I forgot! I'm sorry, aunt--Many happy returns of the day!"
"Thank you," said she drily. "And now if you particularly wish to
speak to me, I will walk with you, but only a short way. Harry shall
find another seat."
As they walked away side by side, I turned my head to look for a
bench farther removed from the bull-ring; and so became aware of
another soldier, in uniform similar to Mr. Archibald's, stretched
prone on the turf a few paces behind me.
When I stood up and turned to have a look at him, his head had
dropped on his arms and he appeared to be sleeping. But I could have
sworn that when I first caught sight of him he had been gazing after
the pair.
Well, there was nothing in this (you will say) to disturb me; yet for
some reason it made me alert, if not uneasy. I chose another seat,
but at no great distance, and kept him in view. He raised his head
once, stared around like one confused and not wholly awake, and
dropped into slumber again. Miss Plinlimmon and Archibald turned and
came pacing back; turned again and repeated this quarter-deck walk
three or four times. He was talking, and now and then using a slight
gesture. I could not see that she responded. At any rate, she did
not turn to him. But the man on the grass occupied most of my
attention, and I missed the parting. An odd fancy took me to watch
if he stirred again while I counted a hundred. He did not, and I
shifted my gaze to find Miss Plinlimmon coming towards me unescorted.
Archibald had disappeared.
Her eyes were red, and her voice trembled a little. "And now," said
she, "that's enough of my affairs, please God!" She began to put
questions about the Trapps. And while I answered them I happened
to look along the flat stretch of turf to the right, in time to see,
at perhaps a hundred yards' distance, a soldier cross it from behind
and go hurrying down the slope towards the bull-ring. I recognised
him at a glance. He was the black-avised man who had pretended to be
sleeping.
Almost at once, as I remember it--but I dare say some minutes had
passed--a furious hubbub arose below us, mixed with the yelling of
dogs and a few sharp screams. And, before we knew what it meant, at
the point where the black-avised man had disappeared, he came
scrambling back, found his legs and headed desperately towards us,
with a bull behind him in full chase.
I managed to drag Miss Plinlimmon off the bench, thrust her like a
bundle beneath it, and scrambled after her into shelter but a second
or two before the pair came thundering by; for the bull's hooves
shook the ground; and so small a space--ten or twelve yards at the
most--divided him from the man, that they passed in one rush, and
with them half a dozen bulldogs hanging at the brute's heels as if
trailed along by an invisible cord. Next after these pelted Master
Archibald, shouting and tugging at his side-arm; and after him again,
but well in the rear, a whole rabble of bull-baiters, butchers,
soldiers, boys and mongrels, all yelping together with excitement and
terror, the men flourishing swords and pitchforks.
To speak of the man first.--I have since seen soldiers crazed and
running in battle, but never such a face as passed me in that brief
vision. His lips were wide, his eyes strained and almost starting
from his head, the pupils turned a little backward as if fascinated
by the terror at his heels, imploring help, seeking a chance to
double--all three together--and yet absolutely fixed and rigid.
The bull made no account of us, though below the seat I caught the
light of his red eye as he plunged past, head to ground and so close
that his hot breath smote in our faces and the broken end of rope
about the base of his horns whipped the grass by my fingers.
Perhaps the red coat attracted his rage. But he seemed to nurse a
special grudge against the man.
This appeared when, a stone's-throw beyond our seat, the man sprang
sideways to the left of his course--in the nick of time, too, for as
he sprang he seemed to clear the horns by a bare foot. The bull's
heavier rush carried him forward for several yards before he swerved
himself on to the new line of pursuit; and this let up Master
Archibald, who by this time had his side-arm loose.
"Ham-string 'en!" yelled a blue-shirted butcher, pausing beside us
and panting. "Quick, you fool--ham-string 'en!"
For some reason the young man seemed to hesitate. Likely enough he
did not hear; perhaps had lost presence of mind. At any rate, for a
second or so, his arm hung on the stroke, and as the bull swerved
again he jabbed his bayonet feebly at the haunch.
The butcher swore furiously. "Murdered by folly if ever man was!
Ye bitter fool," he shouted, "it's pricked him on, ye've done!"
The black-faced man, having gained maybe a dozen yards by his
manoeuvre, was now heading for the Citadel gate; beside which--so far
away that we saw them as toys--stood a sentry-box and the figure of a
sentry beside it. Could he reach this gate? His altered course had
taken him a little downhill, to the left of the ridge, and to regain
it by the Citadel he must fetch a slight loop. Luckily the bull
could not reason: he followed his enemy. But there was just a chance
that by running along the ridge the chase might be headed off.
The crowd saw this and set off anew, with Master Archibald still a
little in front and increasing his lead. I scrambled from under the
seat and followed.
But almost at once it became plain that we were out-distanced.
Alone of us Master Archibald had a chance; and if the man were to be
saved, it lay either with him or with the sentry at the gate.
I can yet remember the look on the sentry's face as we drew closer
and his features grew distinct. He stood in the middle of the short
roadway which led to the drawbridge, and clearly it had within a few
moments dawned upon him that _he_ was the point upon which these
fatal forces were converging. A low wall fenced him on either hand,
and as he braced himself, grasping his Brown Bess--a fine picture of
Duty triumphing over Irresolution--into this narrow passage poured
the chase, rolled as it were in a flying heap; the hunted man just
perceptibly first, the bull and Archibald Plinlimmon cannoning
against each other at the entrance. Master Archibald was hurled
aside by the impact of the brute's hindquarters and shot, at first on
all fours, then prone, alongside the base of the wall; but he had
managed to get his thrust home, and this time with effect. The bull
tossed his head with a mighty roar, ducked it again and charged on
his prey, who flung up both arms and fell spent by the sentry-box.
The sentry sprang to the other side of the roadway and let fly his
charge at random as box, man, and bull crashed to earth together, and
a dreadful bellow mingled with the sharper notes of splintered wood.
It was the end. The bullet had cut clean through the bull's spine at
the neck, and the crowd dragged him lifeless, a board of the
sentry-box still impaled on his horns, off the legs of the
black-avised man--who, at first supposed to be dead also, awoke out
of his swoon to moan feebly for water.
While this was fetching, the butcher knelt and lifted him against his
knee. He struck me as ill-favoured enough--not to say ghastly--with
the dust and blood on his face (for a splinter had laid open his
cheek), and its complexion an unhealthy white against his matted
hair. I took note that he wore sergeant's stripes.
"What's the poor thing called?" someone inquired of the sentry.
The sentry, being an Irishman, mistook the idiom. "He's called a
Bull," said he, stroking the barrel of his rifle. "H'what the divvle
else?"
"But 'tis the man we mean."
"Oh, _he's_ called Letcher; sergeant; North Wilts."
Letcher gulped down a mouthful of water and managed to sit up,
pushing the butcher's arm aside.
"Where's Plinlimmon?" he asked hoarsely. "Hurt?"
"Here I am, old fellow," answered Archibald, reeling rather than
stepping forward. "A crack on the skull, that's all. Hope you're
none the worse?" His own face was bleeding from a nasty graze on the
right temple.
"H'm?" said Letcher. "Mean it? You'd better mean it by--!" he
snarled suddenly, his face twisted with pain or malice. "You weren't
too smart, the first go. Why the deuce didn't you hamstring the
brute? You heard them shouting?"
"That's asackly what I told 'en," put in the butcher.
"Oh, stow your fat talk, you silly Devonshire-man!" The butcher's
tongue was too big for his mouth, and Letcher mimicked him
ferociously and with an accuracy quite wonderful, his exhaustion
considered. He leaned back and panted. "The brute touched me--under
the thigh, here. I doubt I'm bleeding." He closed his eyes and
fainted away.
They found, on lifting him, that he spoke truth. The bull had gored
him in the leg: a nasty wound beginning at the back of the knee,
running upward and missing the main artery by a bare inch. A squad
of soldiers had run out, hearing the shot, and these bore him into
the Citadel, Master Archibald limping behind.
The crowd began to disperse, and I made my way back to Miss
Plinlimmon.
"A providential escape!" said she on hearing my report. "I am glad
that Archibald acquitted himself well." She went on to tell me of a
youthful adventure of her own with a mountain bull, in her native
Wales.
Some days later she sent me a poem on the occurrence:
"Lo, as he strides his native scene,
The bull--how dignified his mien!
When tethered, otherwise!
Yet _one_ his tether broke and ran
After a military man
Before these very eyes!"
"I feel that I have been more successful with the metre than usual,"
she added, "having been guided by a little poem, a favourite of mine,
which, as it also inculcates kindness to the brute creation, you will
do well, Harry, to commit to memory. It runs:
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