PART I. THE MAN AND THE
BRIG
The shallow sea that foams and
murmurs on the shores of the thousand islands, big and little,
which make up the Malay Archipelago has been for centuries the
scene of adventurous undertakings. The vices and the virtues of
four nations have been displayed in the conquest of that region
that even to this day has not been robbed of all the mystery and
romance of its past--and the race of men who had fought against the
Portuguese, the Spaniards, the Dutch and the English, has
not been changed by the unavoidable defeat. They have kept to this
day their love of liberty, their fanatical devotion to their
chiefs, their blind fidelity in friendship and hate--all their
lawful and unlawful instincts. Their country of land and water--for
the sea was as much their country as the earth of their islands--
has fallen a prey to the western race--the reward of superior
strength if not of superior virtue. To-morrow the advancing
civilization will obliterate the marks of a long struggle in the
accomplishment of its inevitable victory.
The adventurers who began that
struggle have left no descendants. The ideas of the world changed
too quickly for that. But even far into the present century they
have had successors. Almost in our own day we have seen one of
them--a true adventurer in his devotion to his impulse--a man of
high mind and of pure heart, lay the foundation of a flourishing
state on the ideas of pity and justice. He recognized chivalrously
the claims of the conquered; he was a disinterested adventurer, and
the reward of his noble instincts is in the veneration with which a
strange and faithful race cherish his memory.
Misunderstood and traduced in
life, the glory of his achievement has vindicated the purity of his
motives. He belongs to history. But there were others--obscure
adventurers who had not his advantages of birth, position, and
intelligence; who had only his sympathy with the people of forests
and sea he understood and loved so well. They can not be said to
be forgotten since they have not been known at all. They were lost
in the common crowd of seamen-traders of the Archipelago, and if
they emerged from their obscurity it was only to be condemned as
law-breakers. Their lives were thrown away for a cause that had no
right to exist in the face of an irresistible and orderly
progress--their thoughtless lives guided by a simple feeling.
But the wasted lives, for the few
who know, have tinged with romance the region of shallow waters and
forest-clad islands, that lies far east, and still mysterious
between the deep waters of two oceans.
I
Out of the level blue of a
shallow sea Carimata raises a lofty barrenness of grey and
yellow tints, the drab eminence of its arid heights. Separated
by a narrow strip of water, Suroeton, to the west, shows a curved
and ridged outline resembling the backbone of a stooping giant.
And to the eastward a troop of insignificant islets stand effaced,
indistinct, with vague features that seem to melt into the
gathering shadows. The night following from the eastward the
retreat of the setting sun advanced slowly, swallowing the land
and the sea; the land broken, tormented and abrupt; the sea
smooth and inviting with its easy polish of continuous surface to
wanderings facile and endless.
There was no wind, and a small
brig that had lain all the afternoon a few miles to the northward
and westward of Carimata had hardly altered its position half a
mile during all these hours. The calm was absolute, a dead,
flat calm, the stillness of a dead sea and of a dead atmosphere.
As far as the eye could reach there was nothing but an impressive
immobility. Nothing moved on earth, on the waters, and above them
in the unbroken lustre of the sky. On the unruffled surface of
the straits the brig floated tranquil and upright as if bolted
solidly, keel to keel, with its own image reflected in the unframed
and immense mirror of the sea. To the south and east the double
islands watched silently the double ship that seemed fixed
amongst them forever, a hopeless captive of the calm, a
helpless prisoner of the shallow sea.
Since midday, when the light and
capricious airs of these seas had abandoned the little brig
to its lingering fate, her head had swung slowly to the westward
and the end of her slender and polished jib-boom, projecting boldly
beyond the graceful curve of the bow, pointed at the setting sun,
like a spear poised high in the hand of an enemy. Right aft by the
wheel the Malay quartermaster stood with his bare, brown feet
firmly planted on the wheel-grating, and holding the spokes at
right angles, in a solid grasp, as though the ship had been
running before a gale. He stood there perfectly motionless, as if
petrified but ready to tend the helm as soon as fate would
permit the brig to gather way through the oily sea.
The only other human being then
visible on the brig's deck was the person in charge: a white man of
low stature, thick-set, with shaven cheeks, a grizzled moustache,
and a face tinted a scarlet hue by the burning suns and by the
sharp salt breezes of the seas. He had thrown off his light jacket,
and clad only in white trousers and a thin cotton singlet, with his
stout arms crossed on his breast-- upon which they showed like
two thick lumps of raw flesh--he prowled about from side to side of
the half-poop. On his bare feet he wore a pair of straw
sandals, and his head was
protected by an enormous pith hat--once white but now very
dirty--which gave to the whole man the aspect of a phenomenal and
animated mushroom. At times he would interrupt his uneasy shuffle
athwart the break of the poop, and stand motionless with a vague
gaze fixed on the image of the brig in the calm water. He could
also see down there his own head and shoulders leaning out over the
rail and he would stand long, as if interested by his own
features, and mutter vague curses on the calm which lay upon the
ship like an immovable burden, immense and burning.
At last, he sighed profoundly,
nerved himself for a great effort, and making a start away from the
rail managed to drag his slippers as far as the binnacle. There he
stopped again, exhausted and bored. From under the lifted glass
panes of the cabin skylight near by came the feeble chirp of a
canary, which appeared to give him some satisfaction. He listened,
smiled faintly muttered "Dicky, poor Dick--" and fell back into the
immense silence of the world. His eyes closed, his head hung
low over the hot brass of the binnacle top. Suddenly he stood up
with a jerk and said sharply in a hoarse voice:
"You've been sleeping--you. Shift
the helm. She has got stern way on her."
The Malay, without the least
flinch of feature or pose, as if he had been an inanimate object
called suddenly into life by some hidden magic of the words, spun
the wheel rapidly, letting the spokes pass through his hands; and
when the motion had stopped with a grinding noise, caught hold
again and held on grimly. After a while, however, he turned his
head slowly over his shoulder, glanced at the sea, and said in an
obstinate tone:
"No catch wind--no get
way."
"No catch--no catch--that's all
you know about it," growled the red-faced seaman. "By and by catch
Ali--" he went on with sudden condescension. "By and by catch, and
then the helm will be the right way. See?"
The stolid seacannie appeared to
see, and for that matter to hear, nothing. The white man looked at
the impassive Malay with disgust, then glanced around the
horizon--then again at the helmsman and ordered curtly:
"Shift the helm back again. Don't
you feel the air from aft? You are like a dummy standing
there."
The Malay revolved the spokes
again with disdainful obedience, and the red-faced man was moving
forward grunting to himself, when through the open skylight the
hail "On deck there!" arrested him short, attentive, and with a
sudden change to
amiability in the expression of
his face.
"Yes, sir," he said, bending his
ear toward the opening. "What's the matter up there?" asked a deep
voice from below.
The red-faced man in a tone of
surprise said:
"Sir?"
"I hear that rudder grinding hard
up and hard down. What are you up to, Shaw? Any wind?"
"Ye-es," drawled Shaw, putting
his head down the skylight and speaking into the gloom of the
cabin. "I thought there was a light air, and--but it's gone now.
Not a breath anywhere under the heavens."
He withdrew his head and waited a
while by the skylight, but heard only the chirping of the
indefatigable canary, a feeble twittering that seemed to ooze
through the drooping red blossoms of geraniums growing in
flower-pots under the glass panes. He strolled away a step or two
before the voice from down below called hurriedly:
"Hey, Shaw? Are you there?"
"Yes, Captain Lingard," he
answered, stepping back. "Have we drifted anything this
afternoon?"
"Not an inch, sir, not an inch.
We might as well have been at anchor."
"It's always so," said the
invisible Lingard. His voice changed its tone as he moved in the
cabin, and directly afterward burst out with a clear intonation
while his head appeared above the slide of the cabin
entrance:
"Always so! The currents don't
begin till it's dark, when a man can't see against what confounded
thing he is being drifted, and then the breeze will come. Dead on
end, too, I don't doubt."
Shaw moved his shoulders
slightly. The Malay at the wheel, after making a dive to see the
time by the cabin clock through the skylight, rang a double stroke
on the small bell aft. Directly forward, on the main deck, a shrill
whistle arose long drawn, modulated, dying away softly. The master
of the brig stepped out of the companion upon the deck of his
vessel, glanced aloft at the yards laid dead square; then, from the
door-step, took a long, lingering look round the horizon.
He was about thirty-five, erect
and supple. He moved freely, more like a man accustomed to stride
over plains and hills, than like one who from his earliest youth
had been used to counteract by sudden swayings of his body the rise
and roll of cramped decks of small craft, tossed by the caprice of
angry or playful seas.
He wore a grey flannel shirt, and
his white trousers were held by a blue silk scarf wound tightly
round his narrow waist. He had come up only for a moment, but
finding the poop shaded by the main-topsail he remained on deck
bareheaded.
The light chestnut hair curled
close about his well-shaped head, and the clipped beard glinted
vividly when he passed across a narrow strip of sunlight, as if
every hair in it had been a wavy and attenuated gold wire. His
mouth was lost in the heavy moustache; his nose was straight,
short, slightly blunted at the end; a broad band of deeper
red stretched under the eyes, clung to the cheek bones. The eyes
gave the face its remarkable expression. The eyebrows, darker than
the hair, pencilled a straight line below the wide and unwrinkled
brow much whiter than the sunburnt face. The eyes, as if glowing
with the light of a hidden fire, had a red glint in their greyness
that gave a scrutinizing ardour to the steadiness of their
gaze.
That man, once so well known, and
now so completely forgotten amongst the charming and heartless
shores of the shallow sea, had amongst his fellows the nickname of
"Red-Eyed Tom." He was proud of his luck but not of his good sense.
He was proud of his brig, of the speed of his craft, which was
reckoned the swiftest country vessel in those seas, and proud of
what she represented.
She represented a run of luck on
the Victorian goldfields; his sagacious moderation; long days of
planning, of loving care in building; the great joy of his youth,
the incomparable freedom of the seas; a perfect because a
wandering home; his independence, his love--and his anxiety. He had
often heard men say that Tom Lingard cared for nothing on earth but
for his brig--and in his thoughts he would smilingly correct the
statement by adding that he cared for nothing living but the
brig.
To him she was as full of life as
the great world. He felt her live in every motion, in every roll,
in every sway of her tapering masts, of those masts whose painted
trucks move forever, to a seaman's eye, against the clouds or
against the stars. To him she was always precious--like old love;
always desirable--like a strange woman; always tender--like a
mother; always faithful--like the favourite daughter of a man's
heart.
For hours he would stand elbow on
rail, his head in his hand and listen--and
listen in dreamy stillness to the
cajoling and promising whisper of the sea, that slipped past in
vanishing bubbles along the smooth black-painted sides of his
craft. What passed in such moments of thoughtful solitude through
the mind of that child of generations of fishermen from the coast
of Devon, who like most of his class was dead to the subtle voices,
and blind to the mysterious aspects of the world--the man ready for
the obvious, no matter how startling, how terrible or menacing, yet
defenceless as a child before the shadowy impulses of his own
heart; what could have been the thoughts of such a man, when once
surrendered to a dreamy mood, it is difficult to say.
No doubt he, like most of us,
would be uplifted at times by the awakened lyrism of his heart
into regions charming, empty, and dangerous. But also, like most of
us, he was unaware of his barren journeys above the interesting
cares of this earth. Yet from these, no doubt absurd and wasted
moments, there remained on the man's daily life a tinge as that of
a glowing and serene half-light. It softened the outlines of his
rugged nature; and these moments kept close the bond between him
and his brig.
He was aware that his little
vessel could give him something not to be had from anybody or
anything in the world; something specially his own. The dependence
of that solid man of bone and muscle on that obedient thing of wood
and iron, acquired from that feeling the mysterious dignity of
love. She--the craft--had all the qualities of a living thing:
speed, obedience, trustworthiness, endurance, beauty, capacity to
do and to suffer--all but life. He--the man--was the inspirer of
that thing that to him seemed the most perfect of its kind. His
will was its will, his thought was its impulse, his breath was the
breath of its existence. He felt all this confusedly, without ever
shaping this feeling into the soundless formulas of thought. To him
she was unique and dear, this brig of three hundred and
fourteen tons register--a kingdom!
And now, bareheaded and burly, he
walked the deck of his kingdom with a regular stride. He stepped
out from the hip, swinging his arms with the free motion of a man
starting out for a fifteen-mile walk into open country; yet at
every twelfth stride he had to turn about sharply and pace back the
distance to the taffrail.
Shaw, with his hands stuck in his
waistband, had hooked himself with both elbows to the rail, and
gazed apparently at the deck between his feet. In reality he was
contemplating a little house with a tiny front garden, lost in a
maze of riverside streets in the east end of London. The
circumstance that he had not, as yet, been able to make the
acquaintance of his son--now aged eighteen months-- worried him
slightly, and was the cause of that flight of his fancy into the
murky atmosphere of his home. But it was a placid flight followed
by a quick return. In
less than two minutes he was back
in the brig. "All there," as his saying was. He was proud of being
always "all there."
He was abrupt in manner and
grumpy in speech with the seamen. To his successive captains, he
was outwardly as deferential as he knew how, and as a rule inwardly
hostile--so very few seemed to him of the "all there" kind. Of
Lingard, with whom he had only been a short time--having been
picked up in Madras Roads out of a home ship, which he had to leave
after a thumping row with the master--he generally approved,
although he recognized with regret that this man, like most others,
had some absurd fads; he defined them as "bottom- upwards
notions."
He was a man--as there were
many--of no particular value to anybody but himself, and of no
account but as the chief mate of the brig, and the only white man
on board of her besides the captain. He felt himself immeasurably
superior to the Malay seamen whom he had to handle, and treated
them with lofty toleration, notwithstanding his opinion that at a
pinch those chaps would be found emphatically "not there."
As soon as his mind came back
from his home leave, he detached himself from the rail and, walking
forward, stood by the break of the poop, looking along the port
side of the main deck. Lingard on his own side stopped in his walk
and also gazed absentmindedly before him. In the waist of the brig,
in the narrow spars that were lashed on each side of the hatchway,
he could see a group of men squatting in a circle around a wooden
tray piled up with rice, which stood on the just swept deck. The
dark-faced, soft-eyed silent men, squatting on their hams, fed
decorously with an earnestness that did not exclude reserve.
Of the lot, only one or two wore
sarongs, the others having submitted--at least at sea--to the
indignity of European trousers. Only two sat on the spars. One, a
man with a childlike, light yellow face, smiling with fatuous
imbecility under the wisps of straight coarse hair dyed a mahogany
tint, was the tindal of the crew--a kind of boatswain's or serang's
mate. The other, sitting beside him on the booms, was a man nearly
black, not much bigger than a large ape, and wearing on his
wrinkled face that look of comical truculence which is often
characteristic of men from the southwestern coast of Sumatra.
This was the kassab or
store-keeper, the holder of a position of dignity and ease. The
kassab was the only one of the crew taking their evening meal who
noticed the presence on deck of their commander. He muttered
something to the tindal who directly cocked his old hat on one
side, which senseless action invested him with an altogether
foolish appearance. The others heard, but went on somnolently
feeding with spidery movements of their lean arms.
The sun was no more than a degree
or so above the horizon, and from the heated surface of the waters
a slight low mist began to rise; a mist thin, invisible to the
human eye; yet strong enough to change the sun into a mere glowing
red disc, a disc vertical and hot, rolling down to the edge of the
horizontal and cold-looking disc of the shining sea. Then the edges
touched and the circular expanse of water took on suddenly a tint,
sombre, like a frown; deep, like the brooding meditation of
evil.
The falling sun seemed to be
arrested for a moment in his descent by the sleeping waters, while
from it, to the motionless brig, shot out on the polished and dark
surface of the sea a track of light, straight and shining,
resplendent and direct; a path of gold and crimson and purple, a
path that seemed to lead dazzling and terrible from the earth
straight into heaven through the portals of a glorious death. It
faded slowly. The sea vanquished the light. At last only a vestige
of the sun remained, far off, like a red spark floating on the
water. It lingered, and all at once--without warning--went out as
if extinguished by a treacherous hand.
"Gone," cried Lingard, who had
watched intently yet missed the last moment. "Gone! Look at the
cabin clock, Shaw!"
"Nearly right, I think, sir.
Three minutes past six."
The helmsman struck four bells
sharply. Another barefooted seacannie glided on the far side of the
poop to relieve the wheel, and the serang of the brig came up the
ladder to take charge of the deck from Shaw. He came up to the
compass, and stood waiting silently.
"The course is south by east when
you get the wind, serang," said Shaw, distinctly.
"Sou' by eas'," repeated the
elderly Malay with grave earnestness. "Let me know when she begins
to steer," added Lingard.
"Ya, Tuan," answered the man,
glancing rapidly at the sky. "Wind coming," he muttered.
"I think so, too," whispered
Lingard as if to himself.
The shadows were gathering
rapidly round the brig. A mulatto put his head out of the companion
and called out:
"Ready, sir."
"Let's get a mouthful of
something to eat, Shaw," said Lingard. "I say, just take a look
around before coming below. It will be dark when we come up
again."
"Certainly, sir," said Shaw,
taking up a long glass and putting it to his eyes. "Blessed thing,"
he went on in snatches while he worked the tubes in and out, "I
can't--never somehow--Ah! I've got it right at last!"
He revolved slowly on his heels,
keeping the end of the tube on the sky-line. Then he shut the
instrument with a click, and said decisively:
"Nothing in sight, sir."
He followed his captain down
below rubbing his hands cheerfully.
For a good while there was no
sound on the poop of the brig. Then the seacannie at the wheel
spoke dreamily:
"Did the malim say there was no
one on the sea?"
"Yes," grunted the serang without
looking at the man behind him. "Between the islands there was a
boat," pronounced the man very softly.
The serang, his hands behind his
back, his feet slightly apart, stood very straight and stiff by the
side of the compass stand. His face, now hardly visible, was as
inexpressive as the door of a safe.
"Now, listen to me," insisted the
helmsman in a gentle tone.
The man in authority did not
budge a hair's breadth. The seacannie bent down a little from the
height of the wheel grating.
"I saw a boat," he murmured with
something of the tender obstinacy of a lover begging for a favour.
"I saw a boat, O Haji Wasub! Ya! Haji Wasub!"
The serang had been twice a
pilgrim, and was not insensible to the sound of his rightful title.
There was a grim smile on his face.
"You saw a floating tree, O
Sali," he said, ironically.
"I am Sali, and my eyes are
better than the bewitched brass thing that pulls out
to a great length," said the
pertinacious helmsman. "There was a boat, just clear of the
easternmost island. There was a boat, and they in her could see
the ship on the light of the west--unless they are blind men lost
on the sea. I have seen her. Have you seen her, too, O Haji
Wasub?"
"Am I a fat white man?" snapped
the serang. "I was a man of the sea before you were born, O Sali!
The order is to keep silence and mind the rudder, lest evil befall
the ship."
After these words he resumed his
rigid aloofness. He stood, his legs slightly apart, very stiff and
straight, a little on one side of the compass stand. His eyes
travelled incessantly from the illuminated card to the shadowy
sails of the brig and back again, while his body was motionless as
if made of wood and built into the ship's frame. Thus, with a
forced and tense watchfulness, Haji Wasub, serang of the brig
Lightning, kept the captain's watch unwearied and wakeful, a slave
to duty.
In half an hour after sunset the
darkness had taken complete possession of earth and heavens. The
islands had melted into the night. And on the smooth water of the
Straits, the little brig lying so still, seemed to sleep
profoundly, wrapped up in a scented mantle of star light and
silence.
II
It was half-past eight o'clock
before Lingard came on deck again. Shaw--now with a coat
on--trotted up and down the poop leaving behind him a smell of
tobacco smoke. An irregularly glowing spark seemed to run by
itself in the darkness before the rounded form of his head.
Above the masts of the brig the dome of the clear heaven was full
of lights that flickered, as if some mighty breathings high up
there had been swaying about the flame of the stars. There was no
sound along the brig's decks, and the heavy shadows that lay on it
had the aspect, in that silence, of secret places concealing
crouching forms that waited in perfect stillness for some
decisive event. Lingard struck a match to light his cheroot, and
his powerful face with narrowed eyes stood out for a moment in the
night and vanished suddenly. Then two shadowy forms and two red
sparks moved backward and forward on the poop. A larger, but a
paler and oval patch of light from the compass lamps lay on the
brasses of the wheel and on the breast of the Malay standing by the
helm. Lingard's voice, as if unable altogether to master the
enormous silence of the sea, sounded muffled, very calm--without
the usual deep ring in it.
"Not much change, Shaw," he
said.
"No, sir, not much. I can just
see the island--the big one--still in the same place. It strikes
me, sir, that, for calms, this here sea is a devil of
locality."
He cut "locality" in two with an
emphatic pause. It was a good word. He was pleased with himself for
thinking of it. He went on again:
"Now--since noon, this big
island--" "Carimata, Shaw," interrupted Lingard.
"Aye, sir; Carimata--I mean. I
must say--being a stranger hereabouts--I haven't got the run of
those--"
He was going to say "names" but
checked himself and said, "appellations," instead, sounding every
syllable lovingly.
"Having for these last fifteen
years," he continued, "sailed regularly from London in
East-Indiamen, I am more at home over there--in the Bay."
He pointed into the night toward
the northwest and stared as if he could see from
where he stood that Bay of Bengal
where--as he affirmed--he would be so much more at home.
"You'll soon get used--" muttered
Lingard, swinging in his rapid walk past his mate. Then he turned
round, came back, and asked sharply.
"You said there was nothing
afloat in sight before dark? Hey?"
"Not that I could see, sir. When
I took the deck again at eight, I asked that serang whether there
was anything about; and I understood him to say there was no more
as when I went below at six. This is a lonely sea at times--ain't
it, sir? Now, one would think at this time of the year the
homeward-bounders from China would be pretty thick here."
"Yes," said Lingard, "we have met
very few ships since we left Pedra Branca over the stern. Yes; it
has been a lonely sea. But for all that, Shaw, this sea, if lonely,
is not blind. Every island in it is an eye. And now, since our
squadron has left for the China waters--"
He did not finish his sentence.
Shaw put his hands in his pockets, and propped his back against the
sky-light, comfortably.
"They say there is going to be a
war with China," he said in a gossiping tone, "and the French are
going along with us as they did in the Crimea five years ago. It
seems to me we're getting mighty good friends with the French. I've
not much of an opinion about that. What do you think, Captain
Lingard?"
"I have met their men-of-war in
the Pacific," said Lingard, slowly. "The ships were fine and the
fellows in them were civil enough to me--and very curious about my
business," he added with a laugh. "However, I wasn't there to
make war on them. I had a rotten old cutter then, for trade,
Shaw," he went on with animation.
"Had you, sir?" said Shaw without
any enthusiasm. "Now give me a big ship--a ship, I say, that one
may--"
"And later on, some years ago,"
interrupted Lingard, "I chummed with a French skipper in
Ampanam--being the only two white men in the whole place. He was a
good fellow, and free with his red wine. His English was difficult
to understand, but he could sing songs in his own language about
ah-moor--Ah-moor means love, in French--Shaw."
"So it does, sir--so it does.
When I was second mate of a Sunderland barque, in forty-one, in the
Mediterranean, I could pay out their lingo as easy as you
would
a five-inch warp over a ship's
side--"
"Yes, he was a proper man,"
pursued Lingard, meditatively, as if for himself only. "You could
not find a better fellow for company ashore. He had an affair with
a Bali girl, who one evening threw a red blossom at him from within
a doorway, as we were going together to pay our respects to the
Rajah's nephew. He was a good- looking Frenchman, he was--but the
girl belonged to the Rajah's nephew, and it was a serious matter.
The old Rajah got angry and said the girl must die. I don't think
the nephew cared particularly to have her krissed; but the old
fellow made a great fuss and sent one of his own chief men to see
the thing done--and the girl had enemies--her own relations
approved! We could do nothing. Mind, Shaw, there was absolutely
nothing else between them but that unlucky flower which the
Frenchman pinned to his coat--and afterward, when the girl was
dead, wore under his shirt, hung round his neck in a small box.
I suppose he had nothing else to put it into."
"Would those savages kill a woman
for that?" asked Shaw, incredulously.
"Aye! They are pretty moral
there. That was the first time in my life I nearly went to war on
my own account, Shaw. We couldn't talk those fellows over. We
couldn't bribe them, though the Frenchman offered the best he had,
and I was ready to back him to the last dollar, to the last rag of
cotton, Shaw! No use--they were that blamed respectable. So, says
the Frenchman to me: 'My friend, if they won't take our gunpowder
for a gift let us burn it to give them lead.' I was armed as you
see now; six eight-pounders on the main deck and a long eighteen on
the forecastle-- and I wanted to try 'em. You may believe me!
However, the Frenchman had nothing but a few old muskets; and the
beggars got to windward of us by fair words, till one morning a
boat's crew from the Frenchman's ship found the girl lying dead on
the beach. That put an end to our plans. She was out of her trouble
anyhow, and no reasonable man will fight for a dead woman. I
was never vengeful, Shaw, and--after all--she didn't throw that
flower at me. But it broke the Frenchman up altogether. He
began to mope, did no business, and shortly afterward sailed away.
I cleared a good many pence out of that trip, I remember."
With these words he seemed to
come to the end of his memories of that trip. Shaw stifled a
yawn.
"Women are the cause of a lot of
trouble," he said, dispassionately. "In the Morayshire, I remember,
we had once a passenger--an old gentleman--who was telling us a
yarn about them old-time Greeks fighting for ten years about some
woman. The Turks kidnapped her, or something. Anyway, they fought
in Turkey; which I may well believe. Them Greeks and Turks were
always fighting. My father was master's mate on board one of the
three-deckers at the battle of Navarino--
and that was when we went to help
those Greeks. But this affair about a woman was long before that
time."
"I should think so," muttered
Lingard, hanging over the rail, and watching the fleeting gleams
that passed deep down in the water, along the ship's bottom.
"Yes. Times are changed. They
were unenlightened in those old days. My grandfather was a preacher
and, though my father served in the navy, I don't hold with
war. Sinful the old gentleman called it--and I think so, too.
Unless with Chinamen, or niggers, or such people as must be kept in
order and won't listen to reason; having not sense enough to know
what's good for them, when it's explained to them by their
betters--missionaries, and such like au-tho-ri-ties. But to fight
ten years. And for a woman!"
"I have read the tale in a book,"
said Lingard, speaking down over the side as if setting his words
gently afloat upon the sea. "I have read the tale. She was very
beautiful."
"That only makes it worse,
sir--if anything. You may depend on it she was no good. Those
pagan times will never come back, thank God. Ten years of murder
and unrighteousness! And for a woman! Would anybody do it now?
Would you do it, sir? Would you--"
The sound of a bell struck
sharply interrupted Shaw's discourse. High aloft, some dry block
sent out a screech, short and lamentable, like a cry of pain. It
pierced the quietness of the night to the very core, and seemed to
destroy the reserve which it had imposed upon the tones of the two
men, who spoke now loudly.
"Throw the cover over the
binnacle," said Lingard in his duty voice. "The thing shines like a
full moon. We mustn't show more lights than we can help, when
becalmed at night so near the land. No use in being seen if you
can't see yourself-
-is there? Bear that in mind, Mr.
Shaw. There may be some vagabonds prying about--"
"I thought all this was over and
done for," said Shaw, busying himself with the cover, "since Sir
Thomas Cochrane swept along the Borneo coast with his squadron
some years ago. He did a rare lot of fighting--didn't he? We heard
about it from the chaps of the sloop Diana that was refitting in
Calcutta when I was there in the Warwick Castle. They took some
king's town up a river hereabouts.
The chaps were full of it."
"Sir Thomas did good work,"
answered Lingard, "but it will be a long time before these seas are
as safe as the English Channel is in peace time. I spoke about
that
light more to get you in the way
of things to be attended to in these seas than for anything else.
Did you notice how few native craft we've sighted for all these
days we have been drifting about--one may say--in this sea?"
"I can't say I have attached any
significance to the fact, sir."
"It's a sign that something is
up. Once set a rumour afloat in these waters, and it will make its
way from island to island, without any breeze to drive it
along."
"Being myself a deep-water man
sailing steadily out of home ports nearly all my life," said Shaw
with great deliberation, "I cannot pretend to see through the
peculiarities of them out-of-the-way parts. But I can keep a
lookout in an ordinary way, and I have noticed that craft of any
kind seemed scarce, for the last few days: considering that we had
land aboard of us--one side or another--nearly every day."
"You will get to know the
peculiarities, as you call them, if you remain any time with me,"
remarked Lingard, negligently.
"I hope I shall give
satisfaction, whether the time be long or short!" said Shaw,
accentuating the meaning of his words by the distinctness of his
utterance. "A man who has spent thirty-two years of his life on
saltwater can say no more. If being an officer of home ships for
the last fifteen years I don't understand the heathen ways of them
there savages, in matters of seamanship and duty, you will find me
all there, Captain Lingard."
"Except, judging from what you
said a little while ago--except in the matter of fighting," said
Lingard, with a short laugh.
"Fighting! I am not aware that
anybody wants to fight me. I am a peaceable man, Captain Lingard,
but when put to it, I could fight as well as any of them flat-
nosed chaps we have to make shift with, instead of a proper crew of
decent Christians. Fighting!" he went on with unexpected pugnacity
of tone, "Fighting! If anybody comes to fight me, he will find me
all there, I swear!"
"That's all right. That's all
right," said Lingard, stretching his arms above his head and
wriggling his shoulders. "My word! I do wish a breeze would come to
let us get away from here. I am rather in a hurry, Shaw."
"Indeed, sir! Well, I never yet
met a thorough seafaring man who was not in a hurry when a
con-demned spell of calm had him by the heels. When a breeze comes
. . . just listen to this, sir!"
"I hear it," said Lingard.
"Tide-rip, Shaw."
"So I presume, sir. But what a
fuss it makes. Seldom heard such a--"
On the sea, upon the furthest
limits of vision, appeared an advancing streak of seething foam,
resembling a narrow white ribbon, drawn rapidly along the level
surface of the water by its two ends, which were lost in the
darkness. It reached the brig, passed under, stretching out on each
side; and on each side the water became noisy, breaking into
numerous and tiny wavelets, a mimicry of an immense agitation.
Yet the vessel in the midst of this sudden and loud
disturbance remained as motionless and steady as if she had been
securely moored between the stone walls of a safe dock. In a few
moments the line of foam and ripple running swiftly north passed at
once beyond sight and earshot, leaving no trace on the
unconquerable calm.
"Now this is very curious--"
began Shaw.
Lingard made a gesture to command
silence. He seemed to listen yet, as if the wash of the ripple
could have had an echo which he expected to hear. And a man's voice
that was heard forward had something of the impersonal ring of
voices thrown back from hard and lofty cliffs upon the empty
distances of the sea. It spoke in Malay--faintly.
"What?" hailed Shaw. "What is
it?"
Lingard put a restraining hand
for a moment on his chief officer's shoulder, and moved forward
smartly. Shaw followed, puzzled. The rapid exchange of
incomprehensible words thrown backward and forward through the
shadows of the brig's main deck from his captain to the lookout man
and back again, made him feel sadly out of it, somehow.
Lingard had called out
sharply--"What do you see?" The answer direct and quick was--"I
hear, Tuan. I hear oars."
"Whereabouts?"
"The night is all around us. I
hear them near." "Port or starboard?"
There was a short delay in answer
this time. On the quarter-deck, under the poop, bare feet shuffled.
Somebody coughed. At last the voice forward said doubtfully:
"Kanan."
"Call the serang, Mr. Shaw,"
said Lingard, calmly, "and have the hands turned up. They are
all lying about the decks. Look sharp now. There's something near
us. It's annoying to be caught like this," he added in a vexed
tone.
He crossed over to the starboard
side, and stood listening, one hand grasping the royal back-stay,
his ear turned to the sea, but he could hear nothing from there.
The quarter-deck was filled with subdued sounds. Suddenly, a long,
shrill whistle soared, reverberated loudly amongst the flat
surfaces of motionless sails, and gradually grew faint as if the
sound had escaped and gone away, running upon the water. Haji Wasub
was on deck and ready to carry out the white man's commands. Then
silence fell again on the brig, until Shaw spoke quietly.
"I am going forward now, sir,
with the tindal. We're all at stations."
"Aye, Mr. Shaw. Very good. Mind
they don't board you--but I can hear nothing. Not a sound. It can't
be much."
"The fellow has been dreaming, no
doubt. I have good ears, too, and--"
He went forward and the end of
his sentence was lost in an indistinct growl. Lingard stood
attentive. One by one the three seacannies off duty appeared on the
poop and busied themselves around a big chest that stood by the
side of the cabin companion. A rattle and clink of steel weapons
turned out on the deck was heard, but the men did not even whisper.
Lingard peered steadily into the night, then shook his head.
"Serang!" he called, half
aloud.
The spare old man ran up the
ladder so smartly that his bony feet did not seem to touch the
steps. He stood by his commander, his hands behind his back; a
figure indistinct but straight as an arrow.
"Who was looking out?" asked
Lingard.
"Badroon, the Bugis," said Wasub,
in his crisp, jerky manner. "I can hear nothing. Badroon heard the
noise in his mind." "The night hides the boat."
"Have you seen it?"
"Yes, Tuan. Small boat. Before
sunset. By the land. Now coming here--near. Badroon heard
him."
"Why didn't you report it, then?"
asked Lingard, sharply.
"Malim spoke. He said: 'Nothing
there,' while I could see. How could I know what was in his mind or
yours, Tuan?"
"Do you hear anything now?"
"No. They stopped now. Perhaps
lost the ship--who knows? Perhaps afraid--"
"Well!" muttered Lingard, moving
his feet uneasily. "I believe you lie. What kind of boat?"
"White men's boat. A four-men
boat, I think. Small. Tuan, I hear him now! There!"
He stretched his arm straight
out, pointing abeam for a time, then his arm fell slowly.
"Coming this way," he added
with decision. From forward Shaw called out in a startled
tone:
"Something on the water, sir!
Broad on this bow!" "All right!" called back Lingard.
A lump of blacker darkness
floated into his view. From it came over the water English
words--deliberate, reaching him one by one; as if each had made its
own difficult way through the profound stillness of the
night.
"What--ship--is--that--pray?"
"English brig," answered Lingard,
after a short moment of hesitation.
"A brig! I thought you were
something bigger," went on the voice from the sea with a tinge of
disappointment in its deliberate tone. "I am coming
alongside--if--you-- please."
"No! you don't!" called Lingard
back, sharply. The leisurely drawl of the invisible
speaker seemed to him offensive,
and woke up a hostile feeling. "No! you don't if you care for your
boat. Where do you spring from? Who are you--anyhow? How many of
you are there in that boat?"
After these emphatic questions
there was an interval of silence. During that time the shape of the
boat became a little more distinct. She must have carried some way
on her yet, for she loomed up bigger and nearly abreast of where
Lingard stood, before the self-possessed voice was heard
again:
"I will show you."
Then, after another short pause,
the voice said, less loud but very plain:
"Strike on the gunwale. Strike
hard, John!" and suddenly a blue light blazed out, illuminating
with a livid flame a round patch in the night. In the smoke and
splutter of that ghastly halo appeared a white, four-oared gig with
five men sitting in her in a row. Their heads were turned toward
the brig with a strong expression of curiosity on their faces,
which, in this glare, brilliant and sinister, took on a deathlike
aspect and resembled the faces of interested corpses. Then the
bowman dropped into the water the light he held above his head
and the darkness, rushing back at the boat, swallowed it with a
loud and angry hiss.
"Five of us," said the composed
voice out of the night that seemed now darker than before. "Four
hands and myself. We belong to a yacht--a British yacht--"
"Come on board!" shouted Lingard.
"Why didn't you speak at once? I thought you might have been some
masquerading Dutchmen from a dodging gunboat."
"Do I speak like a blamed
Dutchman? Pull a stroke, boys--oars! Tend bow, John."
The boat came alongside with a
gentle knock, and a man's shape began to climb at once up the
brig's side with a kind of ponderous agility. It poised itself for
a moment on the rail to say down into the boat--"Sheer off a
little, boys," then jumped on deck with a thud, and said to Shaw
who was coming aft: "Good evening . . . Captain, sir?"
"No. On the poop!" growled
Shaw.
"Come up here. Come up," called
Lingard, impatiently.
The Malays had left their
stations and stood clustered by the mainmast in a silent group. Not
a word was spoken on the brig's decks, while the stranger made
his way to the waiting captain. Lingard saw approaching him a
short, dapper man,
who touched his cap and repeated
his greeting in a cool drawl: "Good evening. . . Captain,
sir?"
"Yes, I am the master--what's the
matter? Adrift from your ship? Or what?"
"Adrift? No! We left her four
days ago, and have been pulling that gig in a calm, nearly ever
since. My men are done. So is the water. Lucky thing I sighted
you."
"You sighted me!" exclaimed
Lingard. "When? What time?"
"Not in the dark, you may be
sure. We've been knocking about amongst some islands to the
southward, breaking our hearts tugging at the oars in one channel,
then in another--trying to get clear. We got round an islet--a
barren thing, in shape like a loaf of sugar--and I caught sight
of a vessel a long way off. I took her bearing in a hurry and we
buckled to; but another of them currents must have had hold of us,
for it was a long time before we managed to clear that islet. I
steered by the stars, and, by the Lord Harry, I began to think I
had missed you somehow--because it must have been you I saw."
"Yes, it must have been. We had
nothing in sight all day," assented Lingard. "Where's your vessel?"
he asked, eagerly.
"Hard and fast on middling soft
mud--I should think about sixty miles from here. We are the second
boat sent off for assistance. We parted company with the other on
Tuesday. She must have passed to the northward of you to-day. The
chief officer is in her with orders to make for Singapore. I am
second, and was sent off toward the Straits here on the chance of
falling in with some ship. I have a letter from the owner. Our
gentry are tired of being stuck in the mud and wish for
assistance."
"What assistance did you expect
to find down here?"
"The letter will tell you that.
May I ask, Captain, for a little water for the chaps in my boat?
And I myself would thank you for a drink. We haven't had a mouthful
since this afternoon. Our breaker leaked out somehow."
"See to it, Mr. Shaw," said
Lingard. "Come down the cabin, Mr.--" "Carter is my name."
"Ah! Mr. Carter. Come down, come
down," went on Lingard, leading the way down the cabin
stairs.
The steward had lighted the
swinging lamp, and had put a decanter and bottles on the table. The
cuddy looked cheerful, painted white, with gold mouldings
round the panels. Opposite the curtained recess of the stern
windows there was a sideboard with a marble top, and, above it, a
looking-glass in a gilt frame. The semicircular couch round the
stern had cushions of crimson plush. The table was covered with a
black Indian tablecloth embroidered in vivid colours. Between the
beams of the poop-deck were fitted racks for muskets, the
barrels of which glinted in the light. There were twenty-four of
them between the four beams. As many sword-bayonets of an old
pattern encircled the polished teakwood of the rudder-casing with a
double belt of brass and steel. All the doors of the state- rooms
had been taken off the hinges and only curtains closed the
doorways. They seemed to be made of yellow Chinese silk, and
fluttered all together, the four of them, as the two men entered
the cuddy.
Carter took in all at a glance,
but his eyes were arrested by a circular shield hung slanting above
the brass hilts of the bayonets. On its red field, in relief
and brightly gilt, was represented a sheaf of conventional
thunderbolts darting down the middle between the two capitals T. L.
Lingard examined his guest curiously.
He saw a young man, but looking
still more youthful, with a boyish smooth face much sunburnt,
twinkling blue eyes, fair hair and a slight moustache. He noticed
his arrested gaze.
"Ah, you're looking at that
thing. It's a present from the builder of this brig. The best man
that ever launched a craft. It's supposed to be the ship's name
between my initials--flash of lightning--d'you see? The brig's
name is Lightning and mine is Lingard."
"Very pretty thing that: shows
the cabin off well," murmured Carter, politely. They drank, nodding
at each other, and sat down.
"Now for the letter," said
Lingard.
Carter passed it over the table
and looked about, while Lingard took the letter out of an open
envelope, addressed to the commander of any British ship in the
Java Sea. The paper was thick, had an embossed heading:
"Schooner-yacht Hermit" and was dated four days before. The
message said that on a hazy night the yacht had gone ashore upon
some outlying shoals off the coast of Borneo. The land was low. The
opinion of the sailing-master was that the vessel had gone ashore
at the top of high water, spring tides. The coast was completely
deserted to all appearance. During the four days they had been
stranded there they had sighted in the distance two small native
vessels, which did not approach. The owner
concluded by asking any commander
of a homeward-bound ship to report the yacht's position in Anjer on
his way through Sunda Straits--or to any British or Dutch
man-of-war he might meet. The letter ended by anticipatory thanks,
the offer to pay any expenses in connection with the sending of
messages from Anjer, and the usual polite expressions.
Folding the paper slowly in the
old creases, Lingard said--"I am not going to Anjer--nor anywhere
near."
"Any place will do, I fancy,"
said Carter.
"Not the place where I am bound
to," answered Lingard, opening the letter again and glancing at it
uneasily. "He does not describe very well the coast, and his
latitude is very uncertain," he went on. "I am not clear in my mind
where exactly you are stranded. And yet I know every inch of that
land--over there."
Carter cleared his throat and
began to talk in his slow drawl. He seemed to dole out facts, to
disclose with sparing words the features of the coast, but every
word showed the minuteness of his observation, the clear vision of
a seaman able to master quickly the aspect of a strange land and of
a strange sea. He presented, with concise lucidity, the picture
of the tangle of reefs and sandbanks, through which the yacht had
miraculously blundered in the dark before she took the
ground.
"The weather seems clear enough
at sea," he observed, finally, and stopped to drink a long draught.
Lingard, bending over the table, had been listening with eager
attention. Carter went on in his curt and deliberate manner:
"I noticed some high trees on
what I take to be the mainland to the south--and whoever has
business in that bight was smart enough to whitewash two of them:
one on the point, and another farther in. Landmarks, I guess.
What's the
matter, Captain?"
Lingard had jumped to his feet,
but Carter's exclamation caused him to sit down again.
"Nothing, nothing
Tell me, how many men have
you in that yacht?"
"Twenty-three, besides the
gentry, the owner, his wife and a Spanish gentleman-- a friend they
picked up in Manila."
"So you were coming from
Manila?"
"Aye. Bound for Batavia. The
owner wishes to study the Dutch colonial system. Wants to expose
it, he says. One can't help hearing a lot when keeping watch aft--
you know how it is. Then we are going to Ceylon to meet the
mail-boat there. The owner is going home as he came out, overland
through Egypt. The yacht would return round the Cape, of
course."
"A lady?" said Lingard. "You say
there is a lady on board. Are you armed?" "Not much," replied
Carter, negligently. "There are a few muskets and two
sporting guns aft; that's about
all--I fancy it's too much, or not enough," he added
with a faint smile.
Lingard looked at him
narrowly.
"Did you come out from home in
that craft?" he asked.
"Not I! I am not one of them
regular yacht hands. I came out of the hospital in Hongkong. I've
been two years on the China coast."
He stopped, then added in an
explanatory murmur:
"Opium clippers--you know.
Nothing of brass buttons about me. My ship left me behind, and I
was in want of work. I took this job but I didn't want to go home
particularly. It's slow work after sailing with old Robinson in the
Ly-e-moon. That was my ship. Heard of her, Captain?"
"Yes, yes," said Lingard,
hastily. "Look here, Mr. Carter, which way was your chief officer
trying for Singapore? Through the Straits of Rhio?"
"I suppose so," answered Carter
in a slightly surprised tone; "why do you ask?" "Just to know . . .
What is it, Mr. Shaw?"
"There's a black cloud rising to
the northward, sir, and we shall get a breeze directly," said Shaw
from the doorway.
He lingered there with his eyes
fixed on the decanters.
"Will you have a glass?" said
Lingard, leaving his seat. "I will go up and have a look."
He went on deck. Shaw approached
the table and began to help himself, handling the bottles in
profound silence and with exaggerated caution, as if he had
been
measuring out of fragile vessels
a dose of some deadly poison. Carter, his hands in his pockets, and
leaning back, examined him from head to foot with a cool stare. The
mate of the brig raised the glass to his lips, and glaring above
the rim at the stranger, drained the contents slowly.
"You have a fine nose for finding
ships in the dark, Mister," he said, distinctly, putting the glass
on the table with extreme gentleness.
"Eh? What's that? I sighted you
just after sunset."
"And you knew where to look,
too," said Shaw, staring hard.
"I looked to the westward where
there was still some light, as any sensible man would do," retorted
the other a little impatiently. "What are you trying to get
at?"
"And you have a ready tongue to
blow about yourself--haven't you?"
"Never saw such a man in my
life," declared Carter, with a return of his nonchalant manner.
"You seem to be troubled about something."
"I don't like boats to come
sneaking up from nowhere in particular, alongside a ship when I am
in charge of the deck. I can keep a lookout as well as any man out
of home ports, but I hate to be circumvented by muffled oars and
such ungentlemanlike tricks. Yacht officer--indeed. These seas must
be full of such yachtsmen. I consider you played a mean trick on
me. I told my old man there was nothing in sight at sunset--and no
more there was. I believe you blundered upon us by chance--for all
your boasting about sunsets and bearings. Gammon! I know you came
on blindly on top of us, and with muffled oars, too. D'ye call that
decent?"
"If I did muffle the oars it was
for a good reason. I wanted to slip past a cove where some native
craft were moored. That was common prudence in such a small boat,
and not armed--as I am. I saw you right enough, but I had no
intention to startle anybody. Take my word for it."
"I wish you had gone somewhere
else," growled Shaw. "I hate to be put in the wrong through
accident and untruthfulness--there! Here's my old man calling
me--"
He left the cabin hurriedly and
soon afterward Lingard came down, and sat again facing Carter
across the table. His face was grave but resolute.
"We shall get the breeze
directly," he said.
"Then, sir," said Carter, getting
up, "if you will give me back that letter I shall go on cruising
about here to speak some other ship. I trust you will report us
wherever you are going."
"I am going to the yacht and I
shall keep the letter," answered Lingard with decision. "I know
exactly where she is, and I must go to the rescue of those people.
It's most fortunate you've fallen in with me, Mr. Carter. Fortunate
for them and fortunate for me," he added in a lower tone.
"Yes," drawled Carter,
reflectively. "There may be a tidy bit of salvage money if you
should get the vessel off, but I don't think you can do much. I had
better stay out here and try to speak some gunboat--"
"You must come back to your ship
with me," said Lingard, authoritatively. "Never mind the
gunboats."
"That wouldn't be carrying out my
orders," argued Carter. "I've got to speak a homeward-bound ship or
a man-of-war--that's plain enough. I am not anxious to knock about
for days in an open boat, but--let me fill my fresh-water breaker,
Captain, and I will be off."
"Nonsense," said Lingard,
sharply. "You've got to come with me to show the place and--and
help. I'll take your boat in tow."
Carter did not seem convinced.
Lingard laid a heavy hand on his shoulder.
"Look here, young fellow. I am
Tom Lingard and there's not a white man among these islands, and
very few natives, that have not heard of me. My luck brought you
into my ship--and now I've got you, you must stay. You must!"
The last "must" burst out loud
and sharp like a pistol-shot. Carter stepped back. "Do you mean you
would keep me by force?" he asked, startled.
"Force," repeated Lingard. "It
rests with you. I cannot let you speak any vessel. Your yacht has
gone ashore in a most inconvenient place--for me; and with your
boats sent off here and there, you would bring every infernal
gunboat buzzing to a spot that was as quiet and retired as the
heart of man could wish. You stranding just on that spot of the
whole coast was my bad luck. And that I could not help.
You coming upon me like this is
my good luck. And that I hold!"
He dropped his clenched fist, big
and muscular, in the light of the lamp on the
black cloth, amongst the glitter
of glasses, with the strong fingers closed tight upon the firm
flesh of the palm. He left it there for a moment as if showing
Carter that luck he was going to hold. And he went on:
"Do you know into what hornet's
nest your stupid people have blundered? How much d'ye think their
lives are worth, just now? Not a brass farthing if the breeze fails
me for another twenty-four hours. You may well open your eyes. It
is so! And it may be too late now, while I am arguing with you
here."
He tapped the table with his
knuckles, and the glasses, waking up, jingled a thin, plaintive
finale to his speech. Carter stood leaning against the sideboard.
He was amazed by the unexpected turn of the conversation; his jaw
dropped slightly and his eyes never swerved for a moment from
Lingard's face. The silence in the cabin lasted only a few seconds,
but to Carter, who waited breathlessly, it seemed very long. And
all at once he heard in it, for the first time, the cabin clock
tick distinctly, in pulsating beats, as though a little heart of
metal behind the dial had been started into sudden
palpitation.
"A gunboat!" shouted Lingard,
suddenly, as if he had seen only in that moment, by the light of
some vivid flash of thought, all the difficulties of the
situation. "If you don't go back with me there will be nothing
left for you to go back to--very soon. Your gunboat won't find a
single ship's rib or a single corpse left for a landmark. That she
won't. It isn't a gunboat skipper you want. I am the man you want.
You don't know your luck when you see it, but I know mine, I
do--and--look here--"
He touched Carter's chest with
his forefinger, and said with a sudden gentleness of tone:
"I am a white man inside and out;
I won't let inoffensive people--and a woman, too--come to harm if I
can help it. And if I can't help, nobody can. You
understand--nobody! There's no time for it. But I am like any other
man that is worth his salt: I won't let the end of an undertaking
go by the board while there is a chance to hold on--and it's like
this--"
His voice was persuasive--almost
caressing; he had hold now of a coat button and tugged at it
slightly as he went on in a confidential manner:
"As it turns out, Mr. Carter, I
would--in a manner of speaking--I would as soon shoot you where
you stand as let you go to raise an alarm all over this sea about
your confounded yacht. I have other lives to consider--and
friends--and promises-
-and--and myself, too. I shall
keep you," he concluded, sharply.
Carter drew a long breath. On the
deck above, the two men could hear soft footfalls, short murmurs,
indistinct words spoken near the skylight. Shaw's voice rang out
loudly in growling tones:
"Furl the royals, you
tindal!"
"It's the queerest old go,"
muttered Carter, looking down on to the floor. "You are a strange
man. I suppose I must believe what you say--unless you and that fat
mate of yours are a couple of escaped lunatics that got hold of a
brig by some means. Why, that chap up there wanted to pick a
quarrel with me for coming aboard, and now you threaten to shoot me
rather than let me go. Not that I care much about that; for some
time or other you would get hanged for it; and you don't look like
a man that will end that way. If what you say is only half true, I
ought to get back to the yacht as quick as ever I can. It strikes
me that your coming to them will be only a small mercy, anyhow--and
I may be of some use-- But this is the queerest
May I go in my boat?"
"As you like," said Lingard.
"There's a rain squall coming."
"I am in charge and will get wet
along of my chaps. Give us a good long line, Captain."
"It's done already," said
Lingard. "You seem a sensible sailorman and can see that it would
be useless to try and give me the slip."
"For a man so ready to shoot, you
seem very trustful," drawled Carter. "If I cut adrift in a squall,
I stand a pretty fair chance not to see you again."
"You just try," said Lingard,
drily. "I have eyes in this brig, young man, that will see your
boat when you couldn't see the ship. You are of the kind I like,
but if you monkey with me I will find you--and when I find you I
will run you down as surely as I stand here."
Carter slapped his thigh and his
eyes twinkled.
"By the Lord Harry!" he cried.
"If it wasn't for the men with me, I would try for sport. You are
so cocksure about the lot you can do, Captain. You would aggravate
a saint into open mutiny."
His easy good humour had
returned; but after a short burst of laughter, he became
serious.
"Never fear," he said, "I won't
slip away. If there is to be any throat-cutting--as
you seem to hint--mine will be
there, too, I promise you, and.
"
He stretched his arms out,
glanced at them, shook them a little.
"And this pair of arms to take
care of it," he added, in his old, careless drawl.
But the master of the brig
sitting with both his elbows on the table, his face in his hands,
had fallen unexpectedly into a meditation so concentrated and
so profound that he seemed neither to hear, see, nor breathe.
The sight of that man's complete absorption in thought was to
Carter almost more surprising than any other occurrence of that
night. Had his strange host vanished suddenly from before his eyes,
it could not have made him feel more uncomfortably alone in that
cabin where the pertinacious clock kept ticking off the useless
minutes of the calm before it would, with the same steady beat,
begin to measure the aimless disturbance of the storm.
III
After waiting a moment, Carter
went on deck. The sky, the sea, the brig itself had disappeared in
a darkness that had become impenetrable, palpable, and
stifling. An immense cloud had come up running over the heavens, as
if looking for the little craft, and now hung over it, arrested. To
the south there was a livid trembling gleam, faint and sad,
like a vanishing memory of destroyed starlight. To the north, as if
to prove the impossible, an incredibly blacker patch outlined on
the tremendous blackness of the sky the heart of the coming
squall. The glimmers in the water had gone out and the invisible
sea all around lay mute and still as if it had died suddenly of
fright.
Carter could see nothing. He felt
about him people moving; he heard them in the darkness whispering
faintly as if they had been exchanging secrets important or
infamous. The night effaced even words, and its mystery had
captured everything and every sound--had left nothing free but the
unexpected that seemed to hover about one, ready to stretch out its
stealthy hand in a touch sudden, familiar, and appalling. Even the
careless disposition of the young ex-officer of an opium- clipper
was affected by the ominous aspect of the hour. What was this
vessel?
What were those people? What
would happen to-morrow? To the yacht? To himself? He felt suddenly
without any additional reason but the darkness that it was a poor
show, anyhow, a dashed poor show for all hands. The irrational
conviction made him falter for a second where he stood and he
gripped the slide of the companionway hard.
Shaw's voice right close to his
ear relieved and cleared his troubled thoughts.