<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. JASPER LEIGH </h2>
<p>If that Christmas was one of sorrow at Godolphin Court, it was nothing
less at Penarrow.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver was moody and silent in those days, given to sit for long hours
staring into the heart of the fire and repeating to himself again and
again every word of his interview with Rosamund, now in a mood of bitter
resentment against her for having so readily believed his guilt, now in a
gentler sorrowing humour which made full allowance for the strength of the
appearances against him.</p>
<p>His half-brother moved softly about the house now in a sort of
self-effacement, never daring to intrude upon Sir Oliver's abstractions.
He was well acquainted with their cause. He knew what had happened at
Godolphin Court, knew that Rosamund had dismissed Sir Oliver for all time,
and his heart smote him to think that he should leave his brother to bear
this burden that rightly belonged to his own shoulders.</p>
<p>The thing preyed so much upon his mind that in an expansive moment one
evening he gave it tongue.</p>
<p>"Noll," he said, standing beside his brother's chair in the firelit gloom,
and resting a hand upon his brother's shoulder, "were it not best to tell
the truth?"</p>
<p>Sir Oliver looked up quickly, frowning. "Art mad?" quoth he. "The truth
would hang thee, Lal."</p>
<p>"It might not. And in any case you are suffering something worse than
hanging. Oh, I have watched you every hour this past week, and I know the
pain that abides in you. It is not just." And he insisted—"We had
best tell the truth."</p>
<p>Sir Oliver smiled wistfully. He put out a hand and took his brother's.</p>
<p>"'Tis noble in you to propose it, Lal."</p>
<p>"Not half so noble as it is in you to bear all the suffering for a deed
that was my own."</p>
<p>"Bah!" Sir Oliver shrugged impatiently; his glance fell away from Lionel's
face and returned to the consideration of the fire. "After all, I can
throw off the burden when I will. Such knowledge as that will enhearten a
man through any trial."</p>
<p>He had spoken in a harsh, cynical tone, and Lionel had turned cold at his
words. He stood a long while in silence there, turning them over in his
mind and considering the riddle which they presented him. He thought of
asking his brother bluntly for the key to it, for the precise meaning of
his disconcerting statement, but courage failed him. He feared lest Sir
Oliver should confirm his own dread interpretation of it.</p>
<p>He drew away after a time, and soon after went to bed. For days thereafter
the phrase rankled in his mind—"I can throw off the burden when I
will." Conviction grew upon him that Sir Oliver meant that he was
enheartened by the knowledge that by speaking if he choose he could clear
himself. That Sir Oliver would so speak he could not think. Indeed, he was
entirely assured that Sir Oliver was very far from intending to throw off
his burden. Yet he might come to change his mind. The burden might grow
too heavy, his longings for Rosamund too clamorous, his grief at being in
her eyes her brother's murderer too overwhelming.</p>
<p>Lionel's soul shuddered to contemplate the consequences to himself. His
fears were self-revelatory. He realized how far from sincere had been his
proposal that they should tell the truth; he perceived that it had been no
more than the emotional outburst of the moment, a proposal which if
accepted he must most bitterly have repented. And then came the reflection
that if he were guilty of emotional outbursts that could so outrageously
play the traitor to his real desires, were not all men subject to the
same? Might not his brother, too, come to fall a prey to one of those
moments of mental storm when in a climax of despair he would find his
burden altogether too overwhelming and in rebellion cast it from him?</p>
<p>Lionel sought to assure himself that his brother was a man of stern
fibres, a man who never lost control of himself. But against this he would
argue that what had happened in the past was no guarantee of what might
happen in the future; that a limit was set to the endurance of every man
be he never so strong, and that it was far from impossible that the limit
of Sir Oliver's endurance might be reached in this affair. If that
happened in what case should he find himself? The answer to this was a
picture beyond his fortitude to contemplate. The danger of his being sent
to trial and made to suffer the extreme penalty of the law would be far
greater now than if he had spoken at once. The tale he could then have
told must have compelled some attention, for he was accounted a man of
unsmirched honour and his word must carry some weight. But now none would
believe him. They would argue from his silence and from his having
suffered his brother to be unjustly accused that he was craven-hearted and
dishonourable, and that if he had acted thus it was because he had no good
defence to offer for his deed. Not only would he be irrevocably doomed,
but he would be doomed with ignominy, he would be scorned by all upright
men and become a thing of contempt over whose end not a tear would be
shed.</p>
<p>Thus he came to the dread conclusion that in his endeavours to screen
himself he had but enmeshed himself the more inextricably. If Oliver but
spoke he was lost. And back he came to the question: What assurance had he
that Oliver would not speak?</p>
<p>The fear of this from occurring to him occasionally began to haunt him day
and night, and for all that the fever had left him and his wound was
entirely healed, he remained pale and thin and hollow-eyed. Indeed the
secret terror that was in his soul glared out of his eyes at every moment.
He grew nervous and would start up at the least sound, and he went now in
a perpetual mistrust of Oliver, which became manifest in a curious
petulance of which there were outbursts at odd times.</p>
<p>Coming one afternoon into the dining-room, which was ever Sir Oliver's
favourite haunt in the mansion of Penarrow, Lionel found his half-brother
in that brooding attitude, elbow on knee and chin on palm, staring into
the fire. This was so habitual now in Sir Oliver that it had begun to
irritate Lionel's tense nerves; it had come to seem to him that in this
listlessness was a studied tacit reproach aimed at himself.</p>
<p>"Why do you sit ever thus over the fire like some old crone?" he growled,
voicing at last the irritability that so long had been growing in him.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver looked round with mild surprise in his glance. Then from Lionel
his eyes travelled to the long windows.</p>
<p>"It rains," he said.</p>
<p>"It was not your wont to be driven to the fireside by rain. But rain or
shine 'tis ever the same. You never go abroad."</p>
<p>"To what end?" quoth Sir Oliver, with the same mildness, but a wrinkle of
bewilderment coming gradually between his dark brows. "Do you suppose I
love to meet lowering glances, to see heads approach one another so that
confidential curses of me may be muttered?"</p>
<p>"Ha!" cried Lionel, short and sharp, his sunken eyes blazing suddenly. "It
has come to this, then, that having voluntarily done this thing to shield
me you now reproach me with it."</p>
<p>"I?" cried Sir Oliver, aghast.</p>
<p>"Your very words are a reproach. D'ye think I do not read the meaning that
lies under them?"</p>
<p>Sir Oliver rose slowly, staring at his brother. He shook his head and
smiled.</p>
<p>"Lal, Lal!" he said. "Your wound has left you disordered, boy. With what
have I reproached you? What was this hidden meaning of my words? If you
will read aright you will see it to be that to go abroad is to involve
myself in fresh quarrels, for my mood is become short, and I will not
brook sour looks and mutterings. That is all."</p>
<p>He advanced and set his hands upon his brother's shoulders. Holding him so
at arm's length he considered him, what time Lionel drooped his head and a
slow flush overspread his cheeks. "Dear fool!" he said, and shook him.
"What ails you? You are pale and gaunt, and not yourself at all. I have a
notion. I'll furnish me a ship and you shall sail with me to my old
hunting-grounds. There is life out yonder—life that will restore
your vigour and your zest, and perhaps mine as well. How say you, now?"</p>
<p>Lionel looked up, his eye brightening. Then a thought occurred to him; a
thought so mean that again the colour flooded into his cheeks, for he was
shamed by it. Yet it clung. If he sailed with Oliver, men would say that
he was a partner in the guilt attributed to his brother. He knew—from
more than one remark addressed him here or there, and left by him
uncontradicted—that the belief was abroad on the countryside that a
certain hostility was springing up between himself and Sir Oliver on the
score of that happening in Godolphin Park. His pale looks and hollow eyes
had contributed to the opinion that his brother's sin was weighing heavily
upon him. He had ever been known for a gentle, kindly lad, in all things
the very opposite of the turbulent Sir Oliver, and it was assumed that Sir
Oliver in his present increasing harshness used his brother ill because
the lad would not condone his crime. A deal of sympathy was consequently
arising for Lionel and was being testified to him on every hand. Were he
to accede to such a proposal as Oliver now made him, assuredly he must
jeopardize all that.</p>
<p>He realized to the full the contemptible quality of his thought and hated
himself for conceiving it. But he could not shake off its dominion. It was
stronger than his will.</p>
<p>His brother observing this hesitation, and misreading it drew him to the
fireside and made him sit.</p>
<p>"Listen," he said, as he dropped into the chair opposite. "There is a fine
ship standing in the road below, off Smithick. You'll have seen her. Her
master is a desperate adventurer named Jasper Leigh, who is to be found
any afternoon in the alehouse at Penycumwick. I know him of old, and he
and his ship are to be acquired. He is ripe for any venture, from
scuttling Spaniards to trading in slaves, and so that the price be high
enough we may buy him body and soul. His is a stomach that refuses
nothing, so there be money in the venture. So here is ship and master
ready found; the rest I will provide—the crew, the munitions, the
armament, and by the end of March we shall see the Lizard dropping astern.
What do you say, Lal? 'Tis surely better than to sit, moping here in this
place of gloom."</p>
<p>"I'll...I'll think of it," said Lionel, but so listlessly that all Sir
Oliver's quickening enthusiasm perished again at once and no more was said
of the venture.</p>
<p>But Lionel did not altogether reject the notion. If on the one hand he was
repelled by it, on the other he was attracted almost despite himself. He
went so far as to acquire the habit of riding daily over to Penycumwick,
and there he made the acquaintance of that hardy and scarred adventurer of
whom Sir Oliver had spoken, and listened to the marvels the fellow had to
tell—many of them too marvellous to be true—of hazards upon
distant seas.</p>
<p>But one day in early March Master Jasper Leigh had a tale of another kind
for him, news that dispelled from Lionel's mind all interest in the
captain's ventures on the Spanish Main. The seaman had followed the
departing Lionel to the door of the little inn and stood by his stirrup
after he had got to horse.</p>
<p>"A word in your ear, good Master Tressilian," said he. "D'ye know what is
being concerted here against our brother?"</p>
<p>"Against my brother?"</p>
<p>"Ay—in the matter of the killing of Master Peter Godolphin last
Christmas. Seeing that the Justices would not move of theirselves, some
folk ha' petitioned the Lieutenant of Cornwall to command them to grant a
warrant for Sir Oliver's arrest on a charge o' murder. But the Justices
ha' refused to be driven by his lordship, answering that they hold their
office direct from the Queen and that in such a matter they are answerable
to none but her grace. And now I hear that a petition be gone to London to
the Queen herself, begging her to command her Justices to perform their
duty or quit their office."</p>
<p>Lionel drew a sharp breath, and with dilating eyes regarded the mariner,
but made him no answer.</p>
<p>Jasper laid a long finger against his nose and his eyes grew cunning. "I
thought I'd warn you, sir, so as you may bid Sir Oliver look to hisself.
'Tis a fine seaman and fine seamen be none so plentiful."</p>
<p>Lionel drew his purse from his pocket and without so much as looking into
its contents dropped it into the seaman's ready hand, with a muttered word
of thanks.</p>
<p>He rode home in terror almost. It was come. The blow was about to fall,
and his brother would at last be forced to speak. At Penarrow a fresh
shock awaited him. He learnt from old Nicholas that Sir Oliver was from
home, that he had ridden over to Godolphin Court.</p>
<p>The instant conclusion prompted by Lionel's terror was that already the
news had reached Sir Oliver and that he had instantly taken action; for he
could not conceive that his brother should go to Godolphin Court upon any
other business.</p>
<p>But his fears on that score were very idle. Sir Oliver, unable longer to
endure the present state of things, had ridden over to lay before Rosamund
that proof with which he had taken care to furnish himself. He could do so
at last without any fear of hurting Lionel. His journey, however, had been
entirely fruitless. She had refused point-blank to receive him, and for
all that with a humility entirely foreign to him he had induced a servant
to return to her with a most urgent message, yet he had been denied. He
returned stricken to Penarrow, there to find his brother awaiting him in a
passion of impatience.</p>
<p>"Well?" Lionel greeted him. "What will you do now?"</p>
<p>Sir Oliver looked at him from under brows that scowled darkly in
reflection of his thoughts.</p>
<p>"Do now? Of what do you talk?" quoth he.</p>
<p>"Have you not heard?" And Lionel told him the news.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver stared long at him when he had done, then his lips tightened
and he smote his brow.</p>
<p>"So!" he cried. "Would that be why she refused to see me? Did she conceive
that I went perhaps to plead? Could she think that? Could she?"</p>
<p>He crossed to the fireplace and stirred the logs with his boot angrily.
"Oh! 'Twere too unworthy. Yet of a certainty 'tis her doing, this."</p>
<p>"What shall you do?" insisted Lionel, unable to repress the question that
was uppermost in his mind; and his voice shook.</p>
<p>"Do?" Sir Oliver looked at him over his shoulder. "Prick this bubble, by
heaven! Make an end of it for them, confound them and cover them with
shame."</p>
<p>He said it roughly, angrily, and Lionel recoiled, deeming that roughness
and anger aimed at himself. He sank into a chair, his knees loosened by
his sudden fear. So it seemed that he had had more than cause for his
apprehensions. This brother of his who boasted such affection for him was
not equal to bearing this matter through. And yet the thing was so unlike
Oliver that a doubt still lingered with him.</p>
<p>"You... you will tell them the truth?" he said, in small, quavering voice.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver turned and considered him more attentively.</p>
<p>"A God's name, Lal, what's in thy mind now?" he asked, almost roughly.
"Tell them the truth? Why, of course—but only as it concerns myself.
You're not supposing that I shall tell them it was you? You'll not be
accounting me capable of that?"</p>
<p>"What other way is there?"</p>
<p>Sir Oliver explained the matter. The explanation brought Lionel relief.
But this relief was ephemeral. Further reflection presented a new fear to
him. It came to him that if Sir Oliver cleared himself, of necessity his
own implication must follow. His terrors very swiftly magnified a risk
that in itself was so slender as to be entirely negligible. In his eyes it
ceased to be a risk; it became a certain and inevitable danger. If Sir
Oliver put forward this proof that the trail of blood had not proceeded
from himself, it must, thought Lionel, inevitably be concluded that it was
his own. As well might Sir Oliver tell them the whole truth, for surely
they could not fail to infer it. Thus he reasoned in his terror,
accounting himself lost irrevocably.</p>
<p>Had he but gone with those fears of his to his brother, or had he but been
able to abate them sufficiently to allow reason to prevail, he must have
been brought to understand how much further they carried him than was at
all justified by probability. Oliver would have shown him this, would have
told him that with the collapsing of the charge against himself no fresh
charge could be levelled against any there, that no scrap of suspicion had
ever attached to Lionel, or ever could. But Lionel dared not seek his
brother in this matter. In his heart he was ashamed of his fears; in his
heart he knew himself for a craven. He realized to the full the
hideousness of his selfishness, and yet, as before, he was not strong
enough to conquer it. In short, his love of himself was greater than his
love of his brother, or of twenty brothers.</p>
<p>The morrow—a blustering day of late March found him again at that
alehouse at Penycumwick in the company of Jasper Leigh. A course had
occurred to him, as the only course now possible. Last night his brother
had muttered something of going to Killigrew with his proofs since
Rosamund refused to receive him. Through Killigrew he would reach her, he
had said; and he would yet see her on her knees craving his pardon for the
wrong she had done him, for the cruelty she had shown him.</p>
<p>Lionel knew that Killigrew was absent from home just then; but he was
expected to return by Easter, and to Easter there was but a week.
Therefore he had little time in which to act, little time in which to
execute the project that had come into his mind. He cursed himself for
conceiving it, but held to it with all the strength of a weak nature.</p>
<p>Yet when he came to sit face to face with Jasper Leigh in that little
inn-parlour with the scrubbed table of plain deal between them, he lacked
the courage to set his proposal forth. They drank sherry sack stiffly
laced with brandy by Lionel's suggestion, instead of the more customary
mulled ale. Yet not until he had consumed the best part of a pint of it
did Lionel feel himself heartened to broaching his loathsome business.
Through his head hummed the words his brother had said some time ago when
first the name of Jasper Leigh had passed between them—"a desperate
adventurer ripe for anything. So the price be high enough you may buy him
body and soul." Money enough to buy Jasper Leigh was ready to Lionel's
hand; but it was Sir Oliver's money—the money that was placed at
Lionel's disposal by his half-brother's open-handed bounty. And this money
he was to employ for Oliver's utter ruin! He cursed himself for a filthy,
contemptible hound; he cursed the foul fiend that whispered such
suggestions into his mind; he knew himself, despised himself and reviled
himself until he came to swear to be strong and to go through with
whatever might await him sooner than be guilty of such a baseness; the
next moment that same resolve would set him shuddering again as he viewed
the inevitable consequences that must attend it.</p>
<p>Suddenly the captain set him a question, very softly, that fired the train
and blew all his lingering self-resistance into shreds.</p>
<p>"You'll ha' borne my warning to Sir Oliver?" he asked, lowering his voice
so as not to be overheard by the vintner who was stirring beyond the thin
wooden partition.</p>
<p>Master Lionel nodded, nervously fingering the jewel in his ear, his eyes
shifting from their consideration of the seaman's coarse, weather-tanned
and hairy countenance.</p>
<p>"I did," he said. "But Sir Oliver is headstrong. He will not stir."</p>
<p>"Will he not?" The captain stroked his bushy red beard and cursed
profusely and horribly after the fashion of the sea. "Od's wounds! He's
very like to swing if he bides him here."</p>
<p>"Ay," said Lionel, "if he bides." He felt his mouth turn dry as he spoke;
his heart thudded, but its thuds were softened by a slight insensibility
which the liquor had produced in him.</p>
<p>He uttered the words in so curious a tone that the sailor's dark eyes
peered at him from under his heavy sandy eyebrows. There was alert inquiry
in that glance. Master Lionel got up suddenly.</p>
<p>"Let us take a turn outside, captain," said he.</p>
<p>The captain's eyes narrowed. He scented business. There was something
plaguily odd about this young gentleman's manner. He tossed off the
remains of his sack, slapped down the pot and rose.</p>
<p>"Your servant, Master Tressilian," said he.</p>
<p>Outside our gentleman untethered his horse from the iron ring to which he
had attached the bridle; leading his horse he turned seaward and strode
down the road that wound along the estuary towards Smithick.</p>
<p>A sharp breeze from the north was whipping the water into white peaks of
foam; the sky was of a hard brightness and the sun shone brilliantly. The
tide was running out, and the rock in the very neck of the haven was
thrusting its black crest above the water. A cable's length this side of
it rode the black hull and naked spars of the Swallow—Captain
Leigh's ship.</p>
<p>Lionel stepped along in silence, very gloomy and pensive, hesitating even
now. And the crafty mariner reading this hesitation, and anxious to
conquer it for the sake of such profit as he conceived might lie in the
proposal which he scented, paved the way for him at last.</p>
<p>"I think that ye'll have some matter to propose to me." said he slyly.
"Out with it, sir, for there never was a man more ready to serve you."</p>
<p>"The fact is," said Lionel, watching the other's face with a sidelong
glance, "I am in a difficult position, Master Leigh."</p>
<p>"I've been in a many," laughed the captain, "but never yet in one through
which I could not win. Strip forth your own, and haply I can do as much
for you as I am wont to do for myself."</p>
<p>"Why, it is this wise," said the other. "My brother will assuredly hang as
you have said if he bides him here. He is lost if they bring him to trial.
And in that case, faith, I am lost too. It dishonours a man's family to
have a member of it hanged. 'Tis a horrible thing to have happen."</p>
<p>"Indeed, indeed!" the sailor agreed encouragingly.</p>
<p>"I would abstract him from this," pursued Lionel, and at the same time
cursed the foul fiend that prompted him such specious words to cloak his
villainy. "I would abstract him from it, and yet 'tis against my
conscience that he should go unpunished for I swear to you, Master Leigh,
that I abhor the deed—a cowardly, murderous deed!"</p>
<p>"Ah!" said the captain. And lest that grim ejaculation should check his
gentleman he made haste to add—"To be sure! To be sure!"</p>
<p>Master Lionel stopped and faced the other squarely, his shoulders to his
horse. They were quite alone in as lonely a spot as any conspirator could
desire. Behind him stretched the empty beach, ahead of him the ruddy
cliffs that rise gently to the wooded heights of Arwenack.</p>
<p>"I'll be quite plain and open with you, Master Leigh. Peter Godolphin was
my friend. Sir Oliver is no more than my half-brother. I would give a deal
to the man who would abstract Sir Oliver secretly from the doom that hangs
over him, and yet do the thing in such a way that Sir Oliver should not
thereby escape the punishment he deserves."</p>
<p>It was strange, he thought, even as he said it, that he could bring his
lips so glibly to utter words that his heart detested.</p>
<p>The captain looked grim. He laid a finger upon Master Lionel's velvet
doublet in line with that false heart of his.</p>
<p>"I am your man," said he. "But the risk is great. Yet ye say that ye'ld
give a deal...."</p>
<p>"Yourself shall name the price," said Lionel quickly, his eyes burning
feverishly, his cheeks white.</p>
<p>"Oh I can contrive it, never fear," said the captain. "I know to a nicety
what you require. How say you now: if I was to carry him overseas to the
plantations where they lack toilers of just such thews as his?" He lowered
his voice and spoke with some slight hesitation, fearing that he proposed
perhaps more than his prospective employer might desire.</p>
<p>"He might return," was the answer that dispelled all doubts on that score.</p>
<p>"Ah!" said the skipper. "What o' the Barbary rovers, then! They lack
slaves and are ever ready to trade, though they be niggardly payers. I
never heard of none that returned once they had him safe aboard their
galleys. I ha' done some trading with them, bartering human freights for
spices and eastern carpets and the like."</p>
<p>Master Lionel breathed hard. "'Tis a horrible fate, is't not?"</p>
<p>The captain stroked his beard. "Yet 'tis the only really safe bestowal,
and when all is said 'tis not so horrible as hanging, and certainly less
dishonouring to a man's kin. Ye'ld be serving Sir Oliver and yourself."</p>
<p>"'Tis so, tis so," cried Master Lionel almost fiercely. "And the price?"</p>
<p>The seaman shifted on his short, sturdy legs, and his face grew pensive.
"A hundred pound?" he suggested tentatively.</p>
<p>"Done with you for a hundred pounds," was the prompt answer—so
prompt that Captain Leigh realized he had driven a fool's bargain which it
was incumbent upon him to amend.</p>
<p>"That is, a hundred pound for myself," he corrected slowly. "Then there be
the crew to reckon for—to keep their counsel and lend a hand; 'twill
mean another hundred at the least."</p>
<p>Master Lionel considered a moment. "It is more than I can lay my hands on
at short notice. But, look you, you shall have a hundred and fifty pounds
in coin and the balance in jewels. You shall not be the loser in that, I
promise you. And when you come again, and bring me word that all is done
as you now undertake there shall be the like again."</p>
<p>Upon that the bargain was settled. And when Lionel came to talk of ways
and means he found that he had allied himself to a man who understood his
business thoroughly. All the assistance that the skipper asked was that
Master Lionel should lure his gentleman to some concerted spot
conveniently near the waterside. There Leigh would have a boat and his men
in readiness, and the rest might very safely be left to him.</p>
<p>In a flash Lionel bethought him of the proper place for this. He swung
round, and pointed across the water to Trefusis Point and the grey pile of
Godolphin Court all bathed in sunshine now.</p>
<p>"Yonder, at Trefusis Point in the shadow of Godolphin Court at eight
to-morrow night, when there will be no moon. I'll see that he is there.
But on your life do not miss him."</p>
<p>"Trust me," said Master Leigh. "And the money?"</p>
<p>"When you have him safely aboard come to me at Penarrow," he replied,
which showed that after all he did not trust Master Leigh any further than
he was compelled.</p>
<p>The captain was quite satisfied. For should his gentleman fail to disburse
he could always return Sir Oliver to shore.</p>
<p>On that they parted. Lionel mounted and rode away, whilst Master Leigh
made a trumpet of his hands and hallooed to the ship.</p>
<p>As he stood waiting for the boat that came off to fetch him, a smile
slowly overspread the adventurer's rugged face. Had Master Lionel seen it
he might have asked himself how far it was safe to drive such bargains
with a rogue who kept faith only in so far as it was profitable. And in
this matter Master Leigh saw a way to break faith with profit. He had no
conscience, but he loved as all rogues love to turn the tables upon a
superior rogue. He would play Master Lionel most finely, most poetically
false; and he found a deal to chuckle over in the contemplation of it.</p>
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