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<h2> VI. </h2>
<p>They set sail early in the afternoon, and ran down the coast under a fair
breeze that made the canvas play until the sea hissed. The day was wet and
cheerless; a thick mist enshrouded the land, and going by Laxey they could
just descry the top arc of the great wheel like a dun-coloured ghost of a
rainbow in a grey sky. As they came to Douglas the mist was lifting, but
the rain was coming down in a soaking drizzle. A band was playing dance
tunes on the iron pier, which shot like a serpent's tongue out of the
mouth of the bay. The steamer from England was coming round the head, and
her sea-sick passengers were dense as a crowd on her forward deck, the men
with print handkerchiefs tied over their caps, the women with their skirts
over their drooping feathers. A harp and a violin were scraping lively
airs amidships. The town was like a cock with his tail down crowing
furiously in the wet.</p>
<p>When they came to Port St. Mary the mist had risen and the rain was gone,
but the fishing-town looked black and sullen under a lowering cloud. The
tide was down, and many boats lay on the beach and in the shallow water
within the rocks.</p>
<p>Pete was put ashore; his Nickey went round the Calf to the herring ground
beyond the shoulder; a number of fishermen were waiting for him on the
quay, with heavy looks and hands deep in their trousers-pockets.</p>
<p>"No need for much praiching at all," said Pete, pointing to the boats
lying aground. "There you are, boys, fifty of you at the least, with no
room to warp for the rocks. Yet they're for taxing you for dues for a
harbour."</p>
<p>"Go ahead, Capt'n," said one of the fishermen; "there's five hundred men
here to back you up through thick and thin."</p>
<p>Pete posted his brown paper parcel as stealthily as he had posted his
letter, and left Port St. Mary the same night for Douglas. The roads were
thick with coaches, choked full with pleasure-seekers from Port Erin.
These cheerful souls were still wearing the clothes which had been
drenched through in the morning; their boots were damp and cold; they were
chill with the night-air, but they did not repine. They sang and laughed
and ate oranges, drew up frequently at wayside houses, and handed round
bottles of beer with the corks drawn. In their own way they were bright
and cheerful company. Sometimes "Hold the Fort," sung in a brake going
ahead, mingled with "Molly and I and the Baby," from lusty throats coming
behind. Battling through Castletown, they shouted wild chaff at the
redcoats lounging by the Castle, and when the darkness fell they dropped
asleep—the men usually on the women's shoulders; and then the
horses' hoofs were heard splashing along the muddy road, and every rider
cracked his whip over a chorus of stertorous snores.</p>
<p>Douglas was ablaze with light as they dipped down to it from the dark
country. Long sinuous tails of light where the busy streets were, running
in and out, this way and that, and belching into the wide squares and
market-places like the race of a Curragh fire. The sleepers awoke and
shook themselves. "Going to the Castle to-night?" said one. "What do you
think?" said another, and they all laughed at the foolish question.</p>
<p>"I'll sleep here," thought Pete. "I've not searched Douglas yet."</p>
<p>The driver found him a bed at his mother's house. It was a lodging-house
in Church Street, overlooking the churchyard. Finding himself so near to
Athol Street, Pete thought he would look at the outside of Philip's
chambers. He lit on the house easily, though the street was dark. It was
one of a line of houses having brass plates, each with its name, and
always the word <i>Advocate</i>. Philip's house bore one plate only, a
small one, with the name hardly legible in the uneertain light. It ran—<i>The
Deemster Christian</i>.</p>
<p>Having spelt out this inscription, Pete crept away. That was the last
house in the island at which he wished to call. He was almost afraid of
being seen in the same town. Philip might think he was in Douglas to look
for Kate.</p>
<p>Pete rambled through the narrow thoroughfares of Post-Office Place,
Heywood Lane, and Fancy Street, until he came to the sea front. It was now
full tide of busy night, and the holiday town seemed to be given over to
enjoyment. The steps of the terraces were thronged; itinerant
photographers pitched their cameras on the curb-stones; every open window
had its dark heads with the light behind; pianos were clashing in the
houses, harps were twanging in the street, tinkling tram-cars, like
toast-racks, were sweeping the curve of the bay; there was a steady flow
of people on the pavement, and from water's edge to cliff top, three parts
round like a horse's shoe, the town flashed and fizzed and sparkled and
blazed under its thousand lights with the splendour of a forest fire.</p>
<p>Pete called to mind the blinking and groping of the dear old half-lit town
to the north; he remembered the dark village at the foot of the lonely
hills, with its trout-stream burrowing under the low bridge, and he
thought, "She may have tired of it all, poor thing!"</p>
<p>He looked at every woman's face as she went by him, hungering for one
glimpse of a face he feared to see. He did not see it, and he wandered
like a lost soul through the little gay town until he drifted with the
wave that flowed around the bay into the place that was known as the
Castle.</p>
<p>It was a dancing palace in a garden, built in the manner of a
conservatory, with the ground level for those who came to dance, and the
galleries for such as came to see. Seated by the front rail of the
gallery, Pete peered down into the faces below. Three thousand young men
and young women were dancing, the men in flannels and coloured scarves,
the women in light muslins and straw hats. Sometimes the white lights in
the glass roof were coloured with red and blue and yellow. The low buzz of
the dancers' feet, the clang and clash of the brass instruments, the boom
of the big drum, the quake of the glass house itself, and the low rumble
of the hollow floor beneath—it was like a battle-field set to music.</p>
<p>"She may have tired, poor thing; God knows she may," thought Pete.</p>
<p>His eyes were growing hazy and his head dizzy, when he became conscious of
a waft of perfume behind him, and a soft voice saying at his ear, "Were
you looking for anybody, then?"</p>
<p>He turned with a start, and looked at the speaker. It was a young girl
with a pretty face, thick with powder. He could not be angry with the
little thing; she was so young, and she was smiling.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said, "I <i>was</i> looking for somebody;" and then he tried to
shake her off.</p>
<p>"Is it Maudie, you mane, dear? Are you the young man from Dublin?"</p>
<p>"Lave me, my girl; lave me," said Pete, patting her hand, and twisting
about.</p>
<p>The girl looked at him with a sort of pity, and then close at his neck she
said, "A fine boy like you shouldn't be going fretting his heart about the
best girl that's in."</p>
<p>He looked at the pretty face again, and the little knowing airs began to
break down. "You're a Manx girl, aren't you?"</p>
<p>The smile vanished like a flash. "How do you know that? My tongue doesn't
tell you, does it?" And the little thing was ashamed.</p>
<p>Pete took the tight-gloved fingers in his big palm. "So you're my lil
countrywoman, then?" he said. "How old are you?"</p>
<p>The painted lips began to tremble. "Sixteen for harvest," she answered.</p>
<p>"My God!" exclaimed Pete.</p>
<p>The darkened eyelids blinked; she was beginning to cry. "It wasn't my
fault. He was a visitor with my mother at Ballaugh, and he left me to it."</p>
<p>Pete took a sovereign out of his pocket, and shut it in the girl's hand.</p>
<p>"Go home to-night, my dear," he whispered, and then he clambered out of
the place.</p>
<p>"Not there!" cried Pete in his heart; "not there—I swear to God she
is not there."</p>
<p>That ended his search. He resolved to go home the same night, and he went
back to his lodgings to pay his bill. Turning out of Athol Street, Pete
was almost overrun by a splendid equipage, with two men in buff on the
box-seat, and one man behind. "The Governor's carriage," said somebody. At
the next moment it drew up at Philip's door, its occupant alighted, and
then it swung about and moved away. "It was the young Deemster," said a
girl to her companion, as she went skipping past.</p>
<p>Pete had seen the tall, dark figure, bent and feeble, as it walked heavily
up the steps. "Truth enough," he thought, "there's nothing got in this
world without paying the price of it."</p>
<p>It was three in the morning when Pete reached Ramsey, Elm Cottage was dark
and silent. He had to knock again and again before awakening Nancy. "Now,
if this had been Kate!" he thought, and a new fear took hold of him. His
poor darling, his wandering lamb, could she have knocked twice? Where was
she to-night? He had been picturing her in happiness and plenty—was
she in poverty and distress? All the world was sleeping—was she
asleep? His hope was slipping away; his great faith was breaking down.
"Lord, do not forsake me! Master, strengthen me! My poor lost love, where
is she? What is she? Shall I see her face again?"</p>
<p>Something cold touched his hand. It was the dog. Without a bark he had put
his nose into Pete's palm. "What, Dempster, man, Dempster!" The bat's ears
were cocked—Pete felt them—the scut of a tail was wagged, and
Pete got comfort from the battered old friend that had tramped the world
at his heels.</p>
<p>Nancy unchained the door, opened it an inch, held a candle over her head,
and peered out. "My goodness, is it the man himself? However did you come
home?"</p>
<p>"By John the Flayer's pony," said Pete; and he laughed and made light of
his night-long walk.</p>
<p>But next morning, when Nancy came downstairs with the child, Pete was busy
with a screwdriver taking the chain off the door. "Ter'ble ould-fashioned,
these chains—must be moving with the times, you know."</p>
<p>"Then what are you putting in its place?" said Nancy.</p>
<p>"You'll see, you'll see," said Pete.</p>
<p>At seven that night Pete was smoking over the gate when Kelly the Thief
came up with a brown paper parcel. "Parcel for you, Mr. Quilliam," said
the postman, with the air of a man who knew something he should not know.</p>
<p>Pete blinked and looked bewildered. "You don't say!" he said.</p>
<p>"Well, if that's your name," began the postman, holding the address for
Pete to read.</p>
<p>Pete gave it a searching look. "Cap'n Peatr Quilliam, that's it sartenly,
<i>Lm Cottig</i>—yes, it must be right," he said, taking the parcel
gingerly. Then with a prolonged "O——o!" shutting his eyes and
nodding his head, "I know—a bit of a present from the mother to the
lil one. Wonderful thoughtful a woman is about a baby when she's a mother,
Mr. Kelly."</p>
<p>The postman giggled, threw his finger seaward over one shoulder, and said,
"Why aren't you writing back to her, then?"</p>
<p>"What's that?" said Pete sharply, making the parcel creak.</p>
<p>"Why aren't you writing to tell her how the lil one is, I'm saying?"</p>
<p>Pete looked at the postman as if the idea had dropped from heaven. "I must
have a head as thick as a mooring-post, Mr. Kelly. Do you know, I never
once thought of it. I'm like Goliath when he got little David's stone at
his forehead—such a thing never entered my head before."</p>
<p>"Do it for all, Mr. Quilliam," said the postman, moving off.</p>
<p>"I will, I will," said Pete; and then he turned into the house.</p>
<p>"Scissors, Nancy," he shouted, throwing the parcel on the table.</p>
<p>"My sakes, a parcel!" cried Nancy.</p>
<p>"Aisy to tell where it comes from, too. See that knot, woman?" said Pete,
with a knowing wink.</p>
<p>"What in the world is it, Pete?" said Nancy.</p>
<p>"I wonder!" said Pete. "Papers enough round it, anyway. A letter? We'll
look at that after," he said loftily, and then out came the scarlet hood.
"Gough bless mee what's this thing at all?" and he held it up by the
crown.</p>
<p>Nancy made a cry of alarm, took the hood out of his hand, and scolded him
roundly. "These men, they're fit to spoil an angel's wings."</p>
<p>Then she whipped up the baby out of the cradle, tried the hood on the
little round head, and shouted with delight.</p>
<p>"Now I was thinking of that, d'ye know?" she said. "I was, yes, I was;
believe me or not, I was. 'Kirry will be sending something for the lil one
the next time she writes,' I was thinking, and behould ye—here it
is."</p>
<p>"Something spakes to us, Nancy," said Pete. "'Deed it does, though."</p>
<p>The child gurgled and purred, and for all her fine headgear she was
absorbed in her bare toes.</p>
<p>"And there's yourself, Pete—going to Peel and to Douglas, and I
don't know where—and you've never once thought of the lil one—and
knowing we were for shortening her, too."</p>
<p>Pete cast down his head and looked ashamed.</p>
<p>"Well, no—of coorse—I never have—that's truth enough,"
he faltered.</p>
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