The Wings of the Morning - Page 21/21

What man could have served me as he did? He has given me

Iris. He gained for me at her father's hands a concession such as

mortal has seldom wrested from black-browed fate. He brought my uncle

to my side in the hour of my adversity. Hate him! I would have his

statue carved in marble, and set on high to tell all who passed how

good may spring out of evil--how God's wisdom can manifest itself by

putting even the creeping and crawling things of the earth to some

useful purpose."

"Dash it all, lad," vociferated the elder Anstruther, "what ails thee?

I never heard you talk like this before!"

The old gentleman's amazement was so comical that further tension was

out of the question.

Robert, in calmer mood, informed them of the manner in which he hit

upon the mine. The story sounded like wildest romance--this finding of

a volcanic dyke guarded by the bones of "J.S." and the poison-filled

quarry--but the production of the ore samples changed wonder into

certainty.

Next day a government metallurgist estimated the value of the contents

of the two oil-tins at about £500, yet the specimens brought from the

island were not by any means the richest available.

And now there is not much more to tell of Rainbow Island and its

castaways. On the day that Captain Robert Anstruther's name appeared in

the Gazette, reinstating him to his rank and regiment, Iris and

he were married in the English Church at Hong Kong, for it was his

wife's wish that the place which witnessed his ignominy should also

witness his triumph.

A good-natured admiral decided that the urgent requirements of the

British Navy should bring H.M.S. Orient to the island before the

date fixed for the ceremony. Lieutenant Playdon officiated as best man,

whilst the Orient was left so scandalously short-handed for many

hours that a hostile vessel, at least twice her size, might have

ventured to attack her.

Soon afterwards, Robert resigned his commission. He regretted the

necessity, but the demands of his new sphere in life rendered this step

imperative. Mining engineers, laborers, stores, portable houses,

engines, and equipment were obtained with all haste, and the whole

party sailed on one of Sir Arthur Deane's ships to convoy a small

steamer specially hired to attend to the wants of the miners.

At last, one evening, early in July, the two vessels anchored outside

Palm-tree Rock, and Mir Jan could be seen running frantically about the

shore, for no valid reason save that he could not stand still. The

sahib brought him good news. The Governor of Hong Kong felt that any

reasonable request made by Anstruther should be granted if possible. He

had written such a strong representation of the Mahommedan's case to

the Government of India that there was little doubt the returning mail

would convey an official notification that Mir Jan, formerly

naik in the Kumaon Rissala--he who once killed a man--had been

granted a free pardon.

The mining experts verified Robert's most sanguine views after a very

brief examination of the deposit. Hardly any preliminary work was

needed. In twenty-four hours a small concentrating plant was erected,

and a ditch made to drain off the carbonic anhydride in the valley.

After dusk a party of coolies cleared the quarry of its former

occupants. Towards the close of the following day, when the great

steamer once more slowly turned her head to the north-west, Iris could

hear the steady thud of an engine at work on the first consignment of

ore.

Robert had been busy up to the last moment. There was so much to be

done in a short space of time. The vessel carried a large number of

passengers, and he did not wish to detain them too long, though they

one and all expressed their willingness to suit his convenience in this

respect.

Now his share of the necessary preparations was concluded. His wife,

Sir Arthur and his uncle were gathered in a corner of the promenade

deck when he approached and told them that his last instruction ashore

was for a light to be fixed on Summit Rock as soon as the dynamo was in

working order.

"When we all come back in the cold weather," he explained gleefully,

"we will not imitate the Sirdar by running on to the reef,

should we arrive by night."

Iris answered not. Her blue eyes were fixed on the fast-receding

cliffs.

"Sweetheart," said her husband, "why are you so silent?"

She turned to him. The light of the setting sun! illumined her face

with its golden radiance.

"Because I am so happy," she said. "Oh, Robert, dear, so happy and

thankful."

* * * * *

POSTSCRIPT

The latest news of Col. and Mrs. Anstruther is contained in a letter

written by an elderly maiden lady, resident in the North Riding of

Yorkshire, to a friend in London. It is dated some four years after the

events already recorded.

Although its information is garbled and, to a certain extent,

inaccurate, those who have followed the adventures of the young couple

under discussion will be able to appreciate its opinions at their true

value. When the writer states facts, of course, her veracity is

unquestionable, but occasionally she flounders badly when she depends

upon her own judgment.

Here is the letter:

"MY DEAR HELEN:

"I have not seen or heard of you during so long a time that I am

simply dying to tell you all that is happening here. You

will remember that some people named Anstruther bought the Fairlawn

estate near our village some three years ago. They are, as you

know, enormously rich. The doctor tells me that when they

are not squeezing money out of the wretched Chinese, they dig it in

barrow-loads out of some magic island in the Atlantic or the

Pacific--I really forget which.

"Anyhow, they could afford to entertain much more than they

do. Mrs. Anstruther is very nice looking, and could be a leader of

society if she chose, but she seems to care for no one but

her husband and her babies. She has a boy and a girl, very charming

children, I admit, and you seldom see her without them. They have a

French bonne apiece, and a most murderous-looking

person--a Mahommedan native, I believe--stalks alongside and

behaves as if he would instantly decapitate any person who

as much as looked at them. Such a procession you never saw! Mrs.

Anstruther's devotion to her husband is too absurd. He is a

tall, handsome man, of distinguished appearance, but on the few

occasions I have spoken to him he impressed me as somewhat

taciturn. Yet to see the way in which his wife even

looks at him you would imagine that he had not his equal in

the world!

"I believe there is some secret in their lives. Colonel

Anstruther used to be in the army--he is now in command of our

local yeomanry--and although his name is 'Robert,' tout

court, I have often heard Mrs. Anstruther call him 'Jenks.'

Their boy, too, is christened Robert Jenks Anstruther.' Now,

my dear Helen, do make inquiries about them in town circles.

I particularly wish you to find out who is this person

'Jenks'--a most vulgar name. I am sure you will unearth something

curious, because Mrs. Anstruther was a Miss Deane, daughter of the

baronet, and Anstruther's people are well known in Yorkshire. There

are absolutely no Jenkses connected with them on either side.

"I think I can help you by another clue, as a very

odd incident occurred at our hunt ball last week. The

Anstruthers, I must tell you, usually go away for the winter, to

China, or to their fabulous island. This year they remained at

home, and Colonel Anstruther became M.F.H., as he is certainly a

most liberal man so far as sport and charity are

concerned.

"Well, dear, the Dodgsons--you remember the Leeds clothier

people--having contrived to enter county society, invited

the Earl of Ventnor down for the ball. He, it seems, knew nothing

about Anstruther being M.F.H., and of course Mrs. Anstruther

received. The moment Lord Ventnor heard her name he was very

angry. He said he did not care to meet her, and left for London by

the next train. The Dodgsons were awfully annoyed with him,

and Mrs. Dodgson had the bad taste to tell Mrs, Anstruther all

about it. And what do you think she said--'Lord Ventnor need

not have been so frightened. My husband has not brought his

hunting-crop with him!'

"I was not there, but young Barker told me that Mrs. Anstruther

looked very impressive as she said this. 'Stunning!' was the

word he used, but young Barker is a fool, and thinks Mrs. A.

is the most beautiful woman in Yorkshire. Her dress, they say, was

magnificent, which I can hardly credit, as she usually goes

about in the plainest tailor-made clothes. By the way. I

forgot to mention that the Anstruthers have restored our parish

church. The vicar, of course, is enraptured with them. I dislike

people who are so free with their money and yet reserved in their

friendship. It is a sure sign, when they court popularity,

that they dread something leaking out about the past.

"Do write soon. Don't forget 'Jenks' and 'Lord Ventnor';

those are the lines of inquiry.

"Yours,

"MATILDA.

"PS.--Perhaps I am misjudging them. Mrs. Anstruther has just sent

me an invitation to an 'At Home' next Thursday.--M.

"PPS.--Dear me, this letter will never get away, I have just

destroyed another envelope to tell you that the vicar came in to

tea. From what he told me about Lord Ventnor, I imagine that Mrs.

Anstruther said no more than he deserved.--M."

NOTE.--Colonel Anstruther's agents discovered, after long and costly

inquiry, that a Shields man named James Spence, a marine engineer,

having worked for a time as a miner in California, shipped as third

engineer on a vessel bound for Shanghai. There be quitted her. He

passed some time ashore in dissipation, took another job on a Chinese

river steamer, and was last heard of some eighteen months before the

Sirdar was wrecked. He then informed a Chinese boarding-house

keeper that he was going to make his fortune by accompanying some

deep-sea fishermen, and he bought some stores and tools from a

marine-store dealer. No one knew when or where he went, but from that

date all trace of him disappeared. The only persons who mourned his

loss were his mother and sister. The last letter they received from him

was posted in Shanghai. Though the evidence connecting him with the

recluse of Rainbow Island was slight, and purely circumstantial,

Colonel Anstruther provided for the future of his relatives in a manner

that secured their lasting gratitude.