Part 22 (2/2)
”Hout, sir--hout,” exclaimed that faithful attendant--”Captain Cleveland has a grip of Mr. Mordaunt--just let the twa strangers help ilk other, and stand by the upshot. The light of the country is not to be quenched for the like of them. Bide still, sir, I say--Bredness Voe is not a bowl of punch, that a man can be fished out of like a toast with a long spoon.”
This sage remonstrance would have been altogether lost upon Magnus, had he not observed that Cleveland had in fact jumped out of the boat, and swum to Mertoun's a.s.sistance, and was keeping him afloat till the boat came to the aid of both. As soon as the immediate danger which called so loudly for a.s.sistance was thus ended, the honest Udaller's desire to render aid terminated also; and recollecting the cause of offence which he had, or thought he had, against Mordaunt Mertoun, he shook off his butler's hold, and turning round scornfully from the beach, called Eric an old fool for supposing that he cared whether the young fellow sank or swam.
Still, however, amid his a.s.sumed indifference, Magnus could not help peeping over the heads of the circle, which, surrounding Mordaunt as soon as he was brought on sh.o.r.e, were charitably employed in endeavouring to recall him to life; and he was not able to attain the appearance of absolute unconcern, until the young man sat up on the beach, and showed plainly that the accident had been attended with no material consequences. It was then first that, cursing the a.s.sistants for not giving the lad a gla.s.s of brandy, he walked sullenly away, as if totally unconcerned in his fate.
The women, always accurate in observing the telltale emotions of each other, failed not to remark, that when the sisters of Burgh-Westra saw Mordaunt immersed in the waves, Minna grew as pale as death, while Brenda uttered successive shrieks of terror. But though there were some nods, winks, and hints that auld acquaintance were not easily forgot, it was, on the whole, candidly admitted, that less than such marks of interest could scarce have been expected, when they saw the companion of their early youth in the act of peris.h.i.+ng before their eyes.
Whatever interest Mordaunt's condition excited while it seemed perilous, began to abate as he recovered himself; and when his senses were fully restored, only Claud Halcro, with two or three others, were standing by him. About ten paces off stood Cleveland--his hair and clothes dropping water, and his features wearing so peculiar an expression, as immediately to arrest the attention of Mordaunt. There was a suppressed smile on his cheek, and a look of pride in his eye, that implied liberation from a painful restraint, and something resembling gratified scorn. Claud Halcro hastened to intimate to Mordaunt, that he owed his life to Cleveland; and the youth, rising from the ground, and losing all other feelings in those of grat.i.tude, stepped forward with his hand stretched out, to offer his warmest thanks to his preserver. But he stopped short in surprise, as Cleveland, retreating a pace or two, folded his arms on his breast, and declined to accept his proffered hand. He drew back in turn, and gazed with astonishment at the ungracious manner, and almost insulting look, with which Cleveland, who had formerly rather expressed a frank cordiality, or at least openness of bearing, now, after having thus rendered him a most important service, chose to receive his thanks.
”It is enough,” said Cleveland, observing his surprise, ”and it is unnecessary to say more about it. I have paid back my debt, and we are now equal.”
”You are more than equal with me, Captain Cleveland,” answered Mertoun, ”because you endangered your life to do for me what I did for you without the slightest risk;--besides,” he added, trying to give the discourse a more pleasant turn, ”I have your rifle-gun to boot.”
”Cowards only count danger for any point of the game,” said Cleveland.
”Danger has been my consort for life, and sailed with me on a thousand worse voyages;--and for rifles, I have enough of my own, and you may see, when you will, which can use them best.”
There was something in the tone with which this was said, that struck Mordaunt strongly; it was miching malicho, as Hamlet says, and meant mischief. Cleveland saw his surprise, came close up to him, and spoke in a low tone of voice:--”Hark ye, my young brother. There is a custom among us gentlemen of fortune, that when we follow the same chase, and take the wind out of each other's sails, we think sixty yards of the sea-beach, and a brace of rifles, are no bad way of making our odds even.”
”I do not understand you, Captain Cleveland,” said Mordaunt.
”I do not suppose you do,--I did not suppose you would,” said the Captain; and, turning on his heel, with a smile that resembled a sneer, Mordaunt saw him mingle with the guests, and very soon beheld him at the side of Minna, who was talking to him with animated features, that seemed to thank him for his gallant and generous conduct.
”If it were not for Brenda,” thought Mordaunt, ”I almost wish he had left me in the voe, for no one seems to care whether I am alive or dead.--Two rifles and sixty yards of sea-beach--is that what he points at?--It may come,--but not on the day he has saved my life with risk of his own.”
While he was thus musing, Eric Scambester was whispering to Halcro, ”If these two lads do not do each other a mischief, there is no faith in freits. Master Mordaunt saves Cleveland,--well.--Cleveland, in requital, has turned all the suns.h.i.+ne of Burgh-Westra to his own side of the house; and think what it is to lose favour in such a house as this, where the punch-kettle is never allowed to cool! Well, now that Cleveland in his turn has been such a fool as to fish Mordaunt out of the voe, see if he does not give him sour sillocks for stock-fish.”
”Pshaw, pshaw!” replied the poet, ”that is all old women's fancies, my friend Eric; for what says glorious Dryden--sainted John,--
'The yellow gall that in your bosom floats, Engenders all these melancholy thoughts.'”
”Saint John, or Saint James either, may be mistaken in the matter,” said Eric; ”for I think neither of them lived in Zetland. I only say, that if there is faith in old saws, these two lads will do each other a mischief; and if they do, I trust it will light on Mordaunt Mertoun.”
”And why, Eric Scambester,” said Halcro, hastily and angrily, ”should you wish ill to that poor young man, that is worth fifty of the other?”
”Let every one roose the ford as he finds it,” replied Eric; ”Master Mordaunt is all for wan water, like his old dog-fish of a father; now Captain Cleveland, d'ye see, takes his gla.s.s, like an honest fellow and a gentleman.”
”Rightly reasoned, and in thine own division,” said Halcro; and breaking off their conversation, took his way back to Burgh-Westra, to which the guests of Magnus were now returning, discussing as they went, with much animation, the various incidents of their attack upon the whale, and not a little scandalized that it should have baffled all their exertions.
”I hope Captain Donderdrecht of the Eintracht of Rotterdam will never hear of it,” said Magnus; ”he would swear, donner and blitzen, we were only fit to fish flounders.”[46]
FOOTNOTES:
[46] The contest about the whale will remind the poetical reader of Waller's Battle of the Summer Islands.
CHAPTER XVIII.
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