<h2> CHAPTER XIX </h2>
<p>Now, hoist the anchor, mates—and let the sails<br/>
Give their broad bosom to the buxom wind,<br/>
Like lass that woos a lover.<br/>
—ANONYMOUS.<br/></p>
<p>The presence of the Countess dispelled the superstitious feeling, which,
for an instant, had encroached on Julian’s imagination, and compelled him
to give attention to the matters of ordinary life. “Here are your
credentials,” she said, giving him a small packet, carefully packed up in
a sealskin cover; “you had better not open them till you come to London.
You must not be surprised to find that there are one or two addressed to
men of my own persuasion. These, for all our sakes, you will observe
caution in delivering.”</p>
<p>“I go your messenger, madam,” said Peveril; “and whatever you desire me to
charge myself with, of that I undertake the care. Yet allow me to doubt
whether an intercourse with Catholics will at this moment forward the
purposes of my mission.”</p>
<p>“You have caught the general suspicion of this wicked sect already,” said
the Countess, smiling, “and are the fitter to go amongst Englishmen in
their present mood. But, my cautious friend, these letters are so
addressed, and the persons to whom they are addressed so disguised, that
you will run no danger in conversing with them. Without their aid, indeed,
you will not be able to obtain the accurate information you go in search
of. None can tell so exactly how the wind sets, as the pilot whose vessel
is exposed to the storm. Besides, though you Protestants deny our
priesthood the harmlessness of the dove, you are ready enough to allow us
a full share of the wisdom of the serpent; in plain terms, their means of
information are extensive, and they are not deficient in the power of
applying it. I therefore wish you to have the benefit of their
intelligence and advice, if possible.”</p>
<p>“Whatever you impose upon me as a part of my duty, madam, rely on its
being discharged punctually,” answered Peveril. “And, now, as there is
little use in deferring the execution of a purpose when once fixed, let me
know your ladyship’s wishes concerning my departure.”</p>
<p>“It must be sudden and secret,” said the Countess; “the island is full of
spies; and I would not wish that any of them should have notice that an
envoy of mine was about to leave Man for London. Can you be ready to go on
board to-morrow?”</p>
<p>“To-night—this instant if you will,” said Julian,—“my little
preparations are complete.”</p>
<p>“Be ready, then, in your chamber, at two hours after midnight. I will send
one to summon you, for our secret must be communicated, for the present,
to as few as possible. A foreign sloop is engaged to carry you over; then
make the best of your way to London, by Martindale Castle, or otherwise,
as you find most advisable. When it is necessary to announce your absence,
I will say you are gone to see your parents. But stay—your journey
will be on horseback, of course, from Whitehaven. You have bills of
exchange, it is true; but are you provided with ready money to furnish
yourself with a good horse?”</p>
<p>“I am sufficiently rich, madam,” answered Julian; “and good nags are
plenty in Cumberland. There are those among them who know how to come by
them good and cheap.”</p>
<p>“Trust not to that,” said the Countess. “Here is what will purchase for
you the best horse on the Borders.—Can you be simple enough to
refuse it?” she added, as she pressed on him a heavy purse, which he saw
himself obliged to accept.</p>
<p>“A good horse, Julian,” continued the Countess, “and a good sword, next to
a good heart and head, are the accomplishments of a cavalier.”</p>
<p>“I kiss your hands, then, madam,” said Peveril, “and humbly beg you to
believe, that whatever may fail in my present undertaking, my purpose to
serve you, my noble kinswoman and benefactress, can at least never swerve
or falter.”</p>
<p>“I know it, my son, I know it; and may God forgive me if my anxiety for
your friend has sent you on dangers which should have been his! Go—go—May
saints and angels bless you! Fenella shall acquaint him that you sup in
your own apartment. So indeed will I; for to-night I should be unable to
face my son’s looks. Little will he thank me for sending you on his
errand; and there will be many to ask, whether it was like the Lady of
Latham to trust her friend’s son on the danger which should have been
braved by her own. But oh! Julian, I am now a forlorn widow, whom sorrow
has made selfish!”</p>
<p>“Tush, madam,” answered Peveril; “it is more unlike the Lady of Latham to
anticipate dangers which may not exist at all, and to which, if they do
indeed occur, I am less obnoxious than my noble kinsman. Farewell!—All
blessings attend you, madam. Commend me to Derby, and make him my excuses.
I shall expect a summons at two hours after midnight.”</p>
<p>They took an affectionate leave of each other; the more affectionate,
indeed, on the part of the Countess, that she could not entirely reconcile
her generous mind to exposing Peveril to danger on her son’s behalf; and
Julian betook himself to his solitary apartment.</p>
<p>His servant soon afterwards brought him wine and refreshments; to which,
notwithstanding the various matters he had to occupy his mind, he
contrived to do reasonable justice. But when this needful occupation was
finished, his thoughts began to stream in upon him like a troubled tide—at
once recalling the past, and anticipating the future. It was in vain that
he wrapped himself in his riding cloak, and, lying down on his bed,
endeavoured to compose himself to sleep. The uncertainty of the prospect
before him—the doubt how Bridgenorth might dispose of his daughter
during his absence—the fear that the Major himself might fall into
the power of the vindictive Countess, besides a numerous train of vague
and half-formed apprehensions, agitated his blood, and rendered slumber
impossible. Alternately to recline in the old oaken easy-chair, and listen
to the dashing of the waves under the windows, mingled, as the sound was,
with the scream of the sea-birds; or traverse the apartment with long and
slow steps, pausing occasionally to look out on the sea, slumbering under
the influence of a full moon, which tipped each wave with silver—such
were the only pastimes he could invent, until midnight had passed for one
hour; the next was wasted in anxious expectation of the summons of
departure.</p>
<p>At length it arrived—a tap at his door was followed by a low murmur,
which made him suspect that the Countess had again employed her mute
attendant as the most secure minister of her pleasure on this occasion. He
felt something like impropriety in this selection; and it was with a
feeling of impatience alien to the natural generosity of his temper, that,
when he opened the door, he beheld the dumb maiden standing before him.
The lamp which he held in his hand showed his features distinctly, and
probably made Fenella aware of the expression which animated them. She
cast her large dark eyes mournfully on the ground; and, without again
looking him in the face, made him a signal to follow her. He delayed no
longer than was necessary to secure his pistols in his belt, wrap his
cloak closer around him, and take his small portmanteau under his arm.
Thus accoutred, he followed her out of the Keep, or inhabited part of the
Castle, by a series of obscure passages leading to a postern gate, which
she unlocked with a key, selected from a bundle which she carried at her
girdle.</p>
<p>They now stood in the castle-yard, in the open moonlight, which glimmered
white and ghastly on the variety of strange and ruinous objects to which
we have formerly alluded, and which gave the scene rather the appearance
of some ancient cemetery, than of the interior of a fortification. The
round and elevated tower—the ancient mount, with its quadrangular
sides facing the ruinous edifices which once boasted the name of Cathedral—seemed
of yet more antique and anomalous form, when seen by the pale light which
now displayed them. To one of these churches Fenella took the direct
course, and was followed by Julian; although he at once divined, and was
superstitious enough to dislike, the path which she was about to adopt. It
was by a secret passage through this church that in former times the
guard-room of the garrison, situated at the lower and external defences,
communicated with the Keep of the Castle; and through this passage were
the keys of the Castle every night carried to the Governor’s apartment, so
soon as the gates were locked, and the watch set. The custom was given up
in James the First’s time, and the passage abandoned, on account of the
well-known legend of the <i>Mauthe Dog</i>—a fiend, or demon, in the
shape of a large, shaggy, black mastiff, by which the church was said to
be haunted. It was devoutly believed, that in former times this spectre
became so familiar with mankind, as to appear nightly in the guard-room,
issuing from the passage which we have mentioned at night, and retiring to
it at daybreak. The soldiers became partly familiarised to its presence;
yet not so much so as to use any licence of language while the apparition
was visible; until one fellow, rendered daring by intoxication, swore he
would know whether it was dog or devil, and, with his drawn sword,
followed the spectre when it retreated by the usual passage. The man
returned in a few minutes, sobered by terror, his mouth gaping, and his
hair standing on end, under which horror he died; but, unhappily for the
lovers of the marvellous, altogether unable to disclose the horrors which
he had seen. Under the evil repute arising from this tale of wonder, the
guard-room was abandoned, and a new one constructed. In like manner, the
guards after that period held another and more circuitous communication
with the Governor or Seneschal of the Castle; and that which lay through
the ruinous church was entirely abandoned.</p>
<p>In defiance of the legendary terrors which tradition had attached to the
original communication, Fenella, followed by Peveril, now boldly traversed
the ruinous vaults through which it lay—sometimes only guided over
heaps of ruins by the precarious light of the lamp borne by the dumb
maiden—sometimes having the advantage of a gleam of moonlight,
darting into the dreary abyss through the shafted windows, or through
breaches made by time. As the path was by no means a straight one, Peveril
could not but admire the intimate acquaintance with the mazes which his
singular companion displayed, as well as the boldness with which she
traversed them. He himself was not so utterly void of the prejudices of
the times, but that he contemplated, with some apprehension, the
possibility of their intruding on the lair of the phantom hound, of which
he had heard so often; and in every remote sight of the breeze among the
ruins, he thought he heard him baying at the mortal footsteps which
disturbed his gloomy realm. No such terrors, however, interrupted their
journey; and in the course of a few minutes, they attained the deserted
and now ruinous guard-house. The broken walls of the little edifice served
to conceal them from the sentinels, one of whom was keeping a drowsy watch
at the lower gate of the Castle; whilst another, seated on the stone steps
which communicated with the parapet of the bounding and exterior wall, was
slumbering, in full security, with his musket peacefully grounded by his
side. Fenella made a sign to Peveril to move with silence and caution, and
then showed him, to his surprise, from the window of the deserted
guard-room, a boat, for it was now high water, with four rowers, lurking
under the cliff on which the castle was built; and made him farther
sensible that he was to have access to it by a ladder of considerable
height placed at the window of the ruin.</p>
<p>Julian was both displeased and alarmed by the security and carelessness of
the sentinels, who had suffered such preparations to be made without
observation or alarm given; and he hesitated whether he should not call
the officer of the guard, upbraid him with negligence, and show him how
easily Holm-Peel, in spite of its natural strength, and although reported
impregnable, might be surprised by a few resolute men. Fenella seemed to
guess his thoughts with that extreme acuteness of observation which her
deprivations had occasioned her acquiring. She laid one hand on his arm,
and a finger of the other on her own lips, as if to enjoin forbearance;
and Julian, knowing that she acted by the direct authority of the
Countess, obeyed her accordingly; but with the internal resolution to lose
no time in communicating his sentiments to the Earl, concerning the danger
to which the Castle was exposed on this point.</p>
<p>In the meantime, he descended the ladder with some precaution, for the
steps were unequal, broken, wet, and slippery; and having placed himself
in the stern of the boat, made a signal to the men to push off, and turned
to take farewell of his guide. To his utter astonishment, Fenella rather
slid down, than descended regularly, the perilous ladder, and, the boat
being already pushed off, made a spring from the last step of it with
incredible agility, and seated herself beside Peveril, ere he could
express either remonstrance or surprise. He commanded the men once more to
pull in to the precarious landing-place; and throwing into his countenance
a part of the displeasure which he really felt, endeavoured to make her
comprehend the necessity of returning to her mistress. Fenella folded her
arms, and looked at him with a haughty smile, which completely expressed
the determination of her purpose. Peveril was extremely embarrassed; he
was afraid of offending the Countess, and interfering with her plan, by
giving alarm, which otherwise he was much tempted to have done. On
Fenella, it was evident, no species of argument which he could employ was
likely to make the least impression; and the question remained, how, if
she went on with him, he was to rid himself of so singular and
inconvenient a companion, and provide, at the same time, sufficiently for
her personal security.</p>
<p>The boatmen brought the matter to a decision; for, after lying on their
oars for a minute, and whispering among themselves in Low Dutch or German,
they began to pull stoutly, and were soon at some distance from the
Castle. The possibility of the sentinels sending a musket-ball, or even a
cannon-shot, after them, was one of the contingencies which gave Peveril
momentary anxiety; but they left the fortress, as they must have
approached it, unnoticed, or at least unchallenged—a carelessness on
the part of the garrison, which, notwithstanding that the oars were
muffled, and that the men spoke little, and in whispers, argued, in
Peveril’s opinion, great negligence on the part of the sentinels. When
they were a little way from the Castle, the men began to row briskly
towards a small vessel which lay at some distance. Peveril had, in the
meantime, leisure to remark, that the boatmen spoke to each other
doubtfully, and bent anxious looks on Fenella, as if uncertain whether
they had acted properly in bringing her off.</p>
<p>After about a quarter of an hour’s rowing, they reached the little sloop,
where Peveril was received by the skipper, or captain, on the
quarter-deck, with an offer of spirits or refreshments. A word or two
among the seamen withdrew the captain from his hospitable cares, and he
flew to the ship’s side, apparently to prevent Fenella from entering the
vessel. The men and he talked eagerly in Dutch, looking anxiously at
Fenella as they spoke together; and Peveril hoped the result would be,
that the poor woman should be sent ashore again. But she baffled whatever
opposition could be offered to her; and when the accommodation-ladder, as
it is called, was withdrawn, she snatched the end of a rope, and climbed
on board with the dexterity of a sailor, leaving them no means of
preventing her entrance, save by actual violence, to which apparently they
did not choose to have recourse. Once on deck, she took the captain by the
sleeve, and led him to the head of the vessel, where they seemed to hold
intercourse in a manner intelligible to both.</p>
<p>Peveril soon forgot the presence of the mute, as he began to muse upon his
own situation, and the probability that he was separated for some
considerable time from the object of his affections. “Constancy,” he
repeated to himself,—“Constancy.” And, as if in coincidence with the
theme of his reflections, he fixed his eyes on the polar star, which that
night twinkled with more than ordinary brilliancy. Emblem of pure passion
and steady purpose—the thoughts which arose as he viewed its clear
and unchanging light, were disinterested and noble. To seek his country’s
welfare, and secure the blessings of domestic peace—to discharge a
bold and perilous duty to his friend and patron—to regard his
passion for Alice Bridgenorth, as the loadstar which was to guide him to
noble deeds—were the resolutions which thronged upon his mind, and
which exalted his spirits to that state of romantic melancholy, which
perhaps is ill exchanged even for feelings of joyful rapture.</p>
<p>He was recalled from those contemplations by something which nestled
itself softly and closely to his side—a woman’s sigh sounded so near
him, as to disturb his reverie; and as he turned his head, he saw Fenella
seated beside him, with her eyes fixed on the same star which had just
occupied his own. His first emotion was that of displeasure; but it was
impossible to persevere in it towards a being so helpless in many
respects, so interesting in others; whose large dark eyes were filled with
dew, which glistened in the moonlight; and the source of whose emotions
seemed to be in a partiality which might well claim indulgence, at least
from him who was the object of it. At the same time, Julian resolved to
seize the present opportunity, for such expostulations with Fenella on the
strangeness of her conduct, as the poor maiden might be able to
comprehend. He took her hand with great kindness, but at the same time
with much gravity, pointed to the boat, and to the Castle, whose towers
and extended walls were now scarce visible in the distance; and thus
intimated to her the necessity of her return to Holm-Peel. She looked
down, and shook her head, as if negativing his proposal with obstinate
decision. Julian renewed his expostulation by look and gesture—pointed
to his own heart, to intimate the Countess—and bent his brows, to
show the displeasure which she must entertain. To all which the maiden
only answered by her tears.</p>
<p>At length, as if driven to explanation by his continued remonstrances, she
suddenly seized him by the arm, to arrest his attention—cast her eye
hastily around, as if to see whether she was watched by any one—then
drew the other hand, edge-wise, across her slender throat—pointed to
the boat, and to the Castle, and nodded.</p>
<p>On this series of signs, Peveril could put no interpretation, excepting
that he was menaced with some personal danger, from which Fenella seemed
to conceive that her presence was a protection. Whatever was her meaning,
her purpose seemed unalterably adopted; at least it was plain he had no
power to shake it. He must therefore wait till the end of their short
voyage, to disembarrass himself of his companion; and, in the meanwhile,
acting on the idea of her having harboured a misplaced attachment to him,
he thought he should best consult her interest, and his own character, in
keeping at as great a distance from her as circumstances admitted. With
this purpose, he made the sign she used for going to sleep, by leaning his
head on his palm; and having thus recommended to her to go to rest, he
himself desired to be conducted to his berth.</p>
<p>The captain readily showed him a hammock, in the after-cabin, into which
he threw himself, to seek that repose which the exercise and agitation of
the preceding day, as well as the lateness of the hour, made him now feel
desirable. Sleep, deep and heavy, sunk down on him in a few minutes, but
it did not endure long. In his sleep he was disturbed by female cries; and
at length, as he thought, distinctly heard the voice of Alice Bridgenorth
call on his name.</p>
<p>He awoke, and starting up to quit his bed, became sensible, from the
motion of the vessel, and the swinging of the hammock, that his dream had
deceived him. He was still startled by its extreme vivacity and
liveliness. “Julian Peveril, help! Julian Peveril!” The sounds still rung
in his ears—the accents were those of Alice—and he could
scarce persuade himself that his imagination had deceived him. Could she
be in the same vessel? The thought was not altogether inconsistent with
her father’s character, and the intrigues in which he was engaged; but
then, if so, to what peril was she exposed, that she invoked his name so
loudly?</p>
<p>Determined to make instant inquiry, he jumped out of his hammock,
half-dressed as he was, and stumbling about the little cabin, which was as
dark as pitch, at length, with considerable difficulty, reached the door.
The door, however, he was altogether unable to open; and was obliged to
call loudly to the watch upon deck. The skipper, or captain, as he was
called, being the only person aboard who could speak English, answered to
the summons, and replied to Peveril’s demand, what noise that was?—that
a boat was going off with the young woman—that she whimpered a
little as she left the vessel—and “dat vaas all.”</p>
<p>His dream was thus fully explained. Fancy had caught up the inarticulate
and vehement cries with which Fenella was wont to express resistance or
displeasure—had coined them into language, and given them the
accents of Alice Bridgenorth. Our imagination plays wilder tricks with us
almost every night.</p>
<p>The captain now undid the door, and appeared with a lantern; without the
aid of which Peveril could scarce have regained his couch, where he now
slumbered secure and sound, until day was far advanced, and the invitation
of the captain called him up to breakfast.</p>
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