Part 73 (1/2)

”The tide will flow at noon; she will have it against her.”

”But she will have the wind,” answered the lad.

”Boy,” said Mess Lethierry, pointing with his forefinger at the engine in the sloop, ”do you see that? There is something which laughs at winds and tides.”

The boy put the letters in his pocket, took up the handles of the barrow again, and went on his way towards the town. Mess Lethierry called ”Douce! Grace!”

Grace opened the door a little way.

”What is it, Mess?”

”Come in and wait a moment.”

Mess Lethierry took a sheet of paper, and began to write. If Grace, standing behind him, had been curious, and had leaned forward while he was writing, she might have read as follows:--

”I have written to Breme for the timber. I have appointments all the morning with carpenters for the estimate. The rebuilding will go on fast. You must go yourself to the Deanery for a licence. It is my wish that the marriage should take place as soon as possible; immediately would be better. I am busy about the Durande. Do you be busy about Deruchette.”

He dated it and signed ”Lethierry.” He did not take the trouble to seal it, but merely folded it in four, and handed it to Grace, saying:

”Take that to Gilliatt.”

”To the Bu de la Rue?”

”To the Bu de la Rue.”

BOOK III

THE DEPARTURE OF THE _CASHMERE_

I

THE HAVELET NEAR THE CHURCH

When there is a crowd at St. Sampson, St. Peter's Port is soon deserted.

A point of curiosity at a given place is like an air-pump. News travel fast in small places. Going to see the funnel of the Durande under Mess Lethierry's window had been, since sunrise, the business of the Guernsey folks. Every other event was eclipsed by this. The death of the Dean of St. Asaph was forgotten, together with the question of the Rev. Mr.

Caudray, his sudden riches, and the departure of the _Cashmere_. The machinery of the Durande brought back from the Douvres rocks was the order of the day. People were incredulous. The s.h.i.+pwreck had appeared extraordinary, the salvage seemed impossible. Everybody hastened to a.s.sure himself of the truth by the help of his own eyes. Business of every kind was suspended. Long strings of townsfolk with their families, from the ”Vesin” up to the ”Mess,” men and women, gentlemen, mothers with children, infants with dolls, were coming by every road or pathway to see ”the thing to be seen” at the Bravees, turning their backs upon St. Peter's Port. Many shops at St. Peter's Port were closed. In the Commercial Arcade there was an absolute stagnation in buying and selling. The Durande alone obtained attention. Not a single shopkeeper had had a ”handsell” that morning, except a jeweller, who was surprised at having sold a wedding-ring to ”a sort of man who appeared in a great hurry, and who asked for the house of the Dean.” The shops which remained open were centres of gossip, where loiterers discussed the miraculous salvage. There was not a foot-pa.s.senger at the ”Hyvreuse,”

which is known in these days, n.o.body knows why, as Cambridge Park; no one was in the High Street, then called the Grande Rue; nor in Smith Street, known then only as the Rue des Forges; n.o.body in Hauteville. The Esplanade itself was deserted. One might have guessed it to be Sunday. A visit from a Royal personage to review the militia at the Ancresse could not have emptied the town more completely. All this hubbub about ”a n.o.body” like Gilliatt, caused a good deal of shrugging of the shoulders among persons of grave and correct habits.

The church of St. Peter's Port, with its three gable-ends placed side by side, its transept and its steeple, stands at the water's side at the end of the harbour, and nearly on the landing place itself, where it welcomes those who arrive, and gives the departing ”G.o.d speed.” It represents the capital letter at the beginning of that long line which forms the front of the town towards the sea.

It is both the parish church of St. Peter's Port and the chief place of the Deanery of the whole island. Its officiating minister is the surrogate of the bishop, a clergyman in full orders.

The harbour of St. Peter's Port, a very fine and large port at the present day, was at that epoch, and even up to ten years ago, less considerable than the harbour of St. Sampson. It was enclosed by two enormous thick walls, beginning at the water's edge on both sides, and curving till they almost joined again at the extremities, where there stood a little white lighthouse. Under this lighthouse, a narrow gullet, bearing still the two rings of the chain with which it was the custom to bar the pa.s.sage in ancient times, formed the entrance for vessels. The harbour of St. Peter's Port might be well compared with the claws of a huge lobster opened a little way. This kind of pincers took from the ocean a portion of the sea, which it compelled to remain calm. But during the easterly winds the waves rolled heavily against the narrow entrance, the port was agitated, and it was better not to enter. This is what had happened with the _Cashmere_ that day, which had accordingly anch.o.r.ed in the roads.

The vessels, during the easterly winds, preferred this course, which besides saved them the port dues. On these occasions the boatmen of the town, a hardy race of mariners whom the new port has thrown out of employment, came in their boats to fetch pa.s.sengers at the landing-place or at stations on the sh.o.r.e, and carried them with their luggage, often in heavy seas, but always without accident, to the vessels about to sail. The east wind blows off the sh.o.r.e, and is very favourable for the pa.s.sage to England; the vessel at such times rolls, but does not pitch.

When a vessel happened to be in the port, everybody embarked from the quay. When it was in the roads they took their choice, and embarked from any point of the coast near the moorings. The ”Havelet” was one of these creeks. This little harbour (which is the signification of the word) was near the town, but was so solitary that it seemed far off.