XI
"And what special business brings you to Sark, Pixley?" asked Graeme, as they passed through the tunnel of rock and climbed the steep way of the Creux—its high banks masses of ferns, its hedges ablaze with honeysuckle and roses, its trees interwoven into a thick canopy overhead,—a living green tunnel shot with quivering sunbeams. All of which was lost on Charles Svendt, whose chest was going like a steam-pump and whose legs were quivering with the unusual strain. Graeme regretted that he had not been landed on the ladders at Havre Gosselin, where he himself came ashore. He would dearly have liked to follow the portly one up those ladders and heard his comments.
In reply to Graeme's question he shook his head mutely and staggered on—past the upper reaches, where the corded roots of the overhanging trees came thrusting through the banks like twisting serpents; past the wells of sweet water that lay dark and still below, and ran over into the road, and trickled away down the sides in little streams; out into the sunshine and the quickening of the breeze;—till he dropped exhausted into a chair outside the door of the Bel-Air.
He sat there panting for close on five minutes, with unaccustomed perspiration streaming down his red face, and then he said "Demn!" and proceeded to mop himself up with his handkerchief.
Then he held up a finger to a distant waiter in the dining-room, and when he came, murmured, "Whisky—soda—two," and fanned himself vigorously till they came.
"Better?" asked Graeme, as they nodded and drank.
"Heap better! What a demnable place to get into!"
"There are one or two other entrances—"
"Better?"
"No, worse."
"Demn!"
"Now," he said presently, when his heart had got back to normal and he had lit a cigarette. "Let's talk business. Am I in time?"
"For the wedding? Just in time. It's tomorrow."
"Aw—er—you know what I've come for, I suppose?"
"I can imagine, but you may as well save yourself useless trouble. You can't do anything."
"Think not?"
"Sure. English—I should say, British—law doesn't run here, and you've no locus standi if it did."
"She's under age and her guardian objects. I represent him."
"He can object all he wants to, and you can represent him all you want to. It won't make the slightest difference."
"I can appear at the ceremony and show cause why it should not proceed."
"What cause?"
"Her guardian objects. The parson would hardly proceed in face of my objection."
"I think you'll find he would. However, we'll go and ask him presently. We'll pay a visit to the Seigneur also."
"Who's the Seigneur?"
"Lord Paramount of the island. His word goes. If he chooses, as he probably will, to tell you to go also, you'll have to go."
"Demn'd if I will!"
"He'll see to that. He'll put the Sénéchal and the Greffier and the Prévôt and the two constables and the Vingténier on to you, and bundle you out like a sack of potatoes."
"Oh, come, Graeme! This is the twentieth century!"
"That's another of your little mistakes, my friend. I can't tell you just exactly what year it is here, but it's somewhere between 1066 and, say, 1200 A.D."
"Afraid I don't quite catch on."
"Exactly! That's why you'll be off in this scene. We're under feudal law here, with a mixture of Home Rule. We don't care twopence for your English courts, and as for English lawyers, they're not much liked here, I believe."
"Rum hole!" mused Charles Svendt.
"Rum hole to make yourself a nuisance in. Jolly place to be happy in."
"H'm!" And presently he asked, "Where are you stopping?"
"I'll go along and tell the girls you're here—"
"Girls?"
"Miss Penny came with Margaret—"
"Aw—Miss Penny!"
"You'd better have your lunch here. They'll give you lobsters fresh from the kettle, and I'll stroll round later on and we'll get this matter settled up. So long!" and he went away up the Avenue and across the fields home.
And he went thoughtfully. It was annoying this man cropping up like this at the eleventh hour. Nothing, he felt sure, would come of his interference, but it might disturb Margaret and the general harmony of to-morrow's proceedings.
Her wedding-day is a somewhat nervous time for a girl, under the best of circumstances, he supposed. And though Margaret was as little given to nerves as anyone he had ever met, the possibility of a public attempt to stop her wedding might be fairly calculated to upset her.
Feudal as were the laws of the island, he could hardly knock Pixley on the head, as would have happened in less anachronistic times. And so he went thoughtfully.