CHANCE
PART II — THE KNIGHT
CHAPTER THREE
DEVOTED SERVANTS
AND THE LIGHT OF
A FLARE
Young Powell thought to himself: “The men, too, are
noticing it.” Indeed, the captain’s behaviour to his
wife and to his wife’s father was noticeable enough. It was
as if they had been a pair of not very congenial passengers. But
perhaps it was not always like that. The captain might have been
put out by something.
When the aggrieved Franklin came on deck Mr. Powell made a
remark to that effect. For his curiosity was aroused.
The mate grumbled “Seems to you? . . . Putout? . . .
eh?” He buttoned his thick jacket up to the throat, and only
then added a gloomy “Aye, likely enough,” which
discouraged further conversation. But no encouragement would have
induced the newly-joined second mate to enter the way of
confidences. His was an instinctive prudence. Powell did not know
why it was he had resolved to keep his own counsel as to his
colloquy with Mr. Smith. But his curiosity did not slumber. Some
time afterwards, again at the relief of watches, in the course of a
little talk, he mentioned Mrs. Anthony’s father quite
casually, and tried to find out from the mate who he was.
“It would take a clever man to find that out, as things
are on board now,” Mr. Franklin said, unexpectedly
communicative. “The first I saw of him was when she brought
him alongside in a four-wheeler one morning about half-past eleven.
The captain had come on board early, and was down in the cabin that
had been fitted out for him. Did I tell you that if you want the
captain for anything you must stamp on the port side of the deck?
That’s so. This ship is not only unlike what she used to be,
but she is like no other ship, anyhow. Did you ever hear of the
captain’s room being on the port side? Both of them stern
cabins have been fitted up afresh like a blessed palace. A gang of
people from some tip-top West-End house were fussing here on board
with hangings and furniture for a fortnight, as if the Queen were
coming with us. Of course the starboard cabin is the bedroom one,
but the poor captain hangs out to port on a couch, so that in case
we want him on deck at night, Mrs. Anthony should not be startled.
Nervous! Phoo! A woman who marries a sailor and makes up her mind
to come to sea should have no blamed jumpiness about her, I say.
But never mind. Directly the old cab pointed round the corner of
the warehouse I called out to the captain that his lady was coming
aboard. He answered me, but as I didn’t see him coming, I
went down the gangway myself to help her alight. She jumps out
excitedly without touching my arm, or as much as saying
“thank you” or “good morning” or anything,
turns back to the cab, and then that old joker comes out slowly. I
hadn’t noticed him inside. I hadn’t expected to see
anybody. It gave me a start. She says: “My father — Mr.
Franklin.” He was staring at me like an owl. “How do
you do, sir?” says I. Both of them looked funny. It was as if
something had happened to them on the way. Neither of them moved,
and I stood by waiting. The captain showed himself on the poop; and
I saw him at the side looking over, and then he disappeared; on the
way to meet them on shore, I expected. But he just went down below
again. So, not seeing him, I said: “Let me help you on board,
sir.” “On board!” says he in a silly fashion.
“On board!” “It’s not a very good ladder,
but it’s quite firm,” says I, as he seemed to be afraid
of it. And he didn’t look a broken-down old man, either. You
can see yourself what he is. Straight as a poker, and life enough
in him yet. But he made no move, and I began to feel foolish. Then
she comes forward. “Oh! Thank you, Mr. Franklin. I’ll
help my father up.” Flabbergasted me — to be choked off
like this. Pushed in between him and me without as much as a look
my way. So of course I dropped it. What do you think? I fell back.
I would have gone up on board at once and left them on the quay to
come up or stay there till next week, only they were blocking the
way. I couldn’t very well shove them on one side. Devil only
knows what was up between them. There she was, pale as death,
talking to him very fast. He got as red as a turkey-cock —
dash me if he didn’t. A bad-tempered old bloke, I can tell
you. And a bad lot, too. Never mind. I couldn’t hear what she
was saying to him, but she put force enough into it to shake her.
It seemed — it seemed, mind! — that he didn’t
want to go on board. Of course it couldn’t have been that. I
know better. Well, she took him by the arm, above the elbow, as if
to lead him, or push him rather. I was standing not quite ten feet
off. Why should I have gone away? I was anxious to get back on
board as soon as they would let me. I didn’t want to overhear
her blamed whispering either. But I couldn’t stay there for
ever, so I made a move to get past them if I could. And
that’s how I heard a few words. It was the old chap —
something nasty about being “under the heel” of
somebody or other. Then he says, “I don’t want this
sacrifice.” What it meant I can’t tell. It was a
quarrel — of that I am certain. She looks over her shoulder,
and sees me pretty close to them. I don’t know what she found
to say into his ear, but he gave way suddenly. He looked round at
me too, and they went up together so quickly then that when I got
on the quarter-deck I was only in time to see the inner door of the
passage close after them. Queer — eh? But if it were only
queerness one wouldn’t mind. Some luggage in new trunks came
on board in the afternoon. We undocked at midnight. And may I be
hanged if I know who or what he was or is. I haven’t been
able to find out. No, I don’t know. He may have been
anything. All I know is that once, years ago when I went to see the
Derby with a friend, I saw a pea-and-thimble chap who looked just
like that old mystery father out of a cab.”
All this the goggle-eyed mate had said in a resentful and
melancholy voice, with pauses, to the gentle murmur of the sea. It
was for him a bitter sort of pleasure to have a fresh pair of ears,
a newcomer, to whom he could repeat all these matters of grief and
suspicion talked over endlessly by the band of Captain
Anthony’s faithful subordinates. It was evidently so
refreshing to his worried spirit that it made him forget the
advisability of a little caution with a complete stranger. But
really with Mr. Powell there was no danger. Amused, at first, at
these plaints, he provoked them for fun. Afterwards, turning them
over in his mind, he became impressed, and as the impression grew
stronger with the days his resolution to keep it to himself grew
stronger too.
What made it all the easier to keep — I mean the
resolution — was that Powell’s sentiment of amused
surprise at what struck him at first as mere absurdity was not
unmingled with indignation. And his years were too few, his
position too novel, his reliance on his own opinion not yet firm
enough to allow him to express it with any effect. And then —
what would have been the use, anyhow — and where was the
necessity?
But this thing, familiar and mysterious at the same time,
occupied his imagination. The solitude of the sea intensifies the
thoughts and the facts of one’s experience which seems to lie
at the very centre of the world, as the ship which carries one
always remains the centre figure of the round horizon. He viewed
the apoplectic, goggle-eyed mate and the saturnine, heavy-eyed
steward as the victims of a peculiar and secret form of lunacy
which poisoned their lives. But he did not give them his sympathy
on that account. No. That strange affliction awakened in him a sort
of suspicious wonder.
Once — and it was at night again; for the officers of the
Ferndale keeping watch and watch as was customary in those days,
had but few occasions for intercourse — once, I say, the
thick Mr. Franklin, a quaintly bulky figure under the stars, the
usual witnesses of his outpourings, asked him with an abruptness
which was not callous, but in his simple way:
“I believe you have no parents living?”
Mr. Powell said that he had lost his father and mother at a very
early age.
“My mother is still alive,” declared Mr. Franklin in
a tone which suggested that he was gratified by the fact.
“The old lady is lasting well. Of course she’s got to
be made comfortable. A woman must be looked after, and, if it comes
to that, I say, give me a mother. I dare say if she had not lasted
it out so well I might have gone and got married. I don’t
know, though. We sailors haven’t got much time to look about
us to any purpose. Anyhow, as the old lady was there I
haven’t, I may say, looked at a girl in all my life. Not that
I wasn’t partial to female society in my time,” he
added with a pathetic intonation, while the whites of his goggle
eyes gleamed amorously under the clear night sky. “Very
partial, I may say.”
Mr. Powell was amused; and as these communications took place
only when the mate was relieved off duty he had no serious
objection to them. The mate’s presence made the first
half-hour and sometimes even more of his watch on deck pass away.
If his senior did not mind losing some of his rest it was not Mr.
Powell’s affair. Franklin was a decent fellow. His intention
was not to boast of his filial piety.
“Of course I mean respectable female society,” he
explained. “The other sort is neither here nor there. I blame
no man’s conduct, but a well-brought-up young fellow like you
knows that there’s precious little fun to be got out of
it.” He fetched a deep sigh. “I wish Captain
Anthony’s mother had been a lasting sort like my old lady. He
would have had to look after her and he would have done it well.
Captain Anthony is a proper man. And it would have saved him from
the most foolish — ”
He did not finish the phrase which certainly was turning bitter
in his mouth. Mr. Powell thought to himself: “There he goes
again.” He laughed a little.
“I don’t understand why you are so hard on the
captain, Mr. Franklin. I thought you were a great friend of
his.”
Mr. Franklin exclaimed at this. He was not hard on the captain.
Nothing was further from his thoughts. Friend! Of course he was a
good friend and a faithful servant. He begged Powell to understand
that if Captain Anthony chose to strike a bargain with Old Nick
to-morrow, and Old Nick were good to the captain, he (Franklin)
would find it in his heart to love Old Nick for the captain’s
sake. That was so. On the other hand, if a saint, an angel with
white wings came along and — ”
He broke off short again as if his own vehemence had frightened
him. Then in his strained pathetic voice (which he had never
raised) he observed that it was no use talking. Anybody could see
that the man was changed.
“As to that,” said young Powell, “it is
impossible for me to judge.”
“Good Lord!” whispered the mate. “An educated,
clever young fellow like you with a pair of eyes on him and some
sense too! Is that how a happy man looks? Eh? Young you may be, but
you aren’t a kid; and I dare you to say
‘Yes!’”
Mr. Powell did not take up the challenge. He did not know what
to think of the mate’s view. Still, it seemed as if it had
opened his understanding in a measure. He conceded that the captain
did not look very well.
“Not very well,” repeated the mate mournfully.
“Do you think a man with a face like that can hope to live
his life out? You haven’t knocked about long in this world
yet, but you are a sailor, you have been in three or four ships,
you say. Well, have you ever seen a shipmaster walking his own deck
as if he did not know what he had underfoot? Have you? Dam’me
if I don’t think that he forgets where he is. Of course he
can be no other than a prime seaman; but it’s lucky, all the
same, he has me on board. I know by this time what he wants done
without being told. Do you know that I have had no order given me
since we left port? Do you know that he has never once opened his
lips to me unless I spoke to him first? I? His chief officer; his
shipmate for full six years, with whom he had no cross word —
not once in all that time. Aye. Not a cross look even. True that
when I do make him speak to me, there is his dear old self, the
quick eye, the kind voice. Could hardly be other to his old
Franklin. But what’s the good? Eyes, voice,
everything’s miles away. And for all that I take good care
never to address him when the poop isn’t clear. Yes! Only we
two and nothing but the sea with us. You think it would be all
right; the only chief mate he ever had — Mr. Franklin here
and Mr. Franklin there — when anything went wrong the first
word you would hear about the decks was ‘Franklin!’
— I am thirteen years older than he is — you would
think it would be all right, wouldn’t you? Only we two on
this poop on which we saw each other first — he a young
master — told me that he thought I would suit him very well
— we two, and thirty-one days out at sea, and it’s no
good! It’s like talking to a man standing on shore. I
can’t get him back. I can’t get at him. I feel
sometimes as if I must shake him by the arm: “Wake up! Wake
up! You are wanted, sir . . . !”
Young Powell recognized the expression of a true sentiment, a
thing so rare in this world where there are so many mutes and so
many excellent reasons even at sea for an articulate man not to
give himself away, that he felt something like respect for this
outburst. It was not loud. The grotesque squat shape, with the knob
of the head as if rammed down between the square shoulders by a
blow from a club, moved vaguely in a circumscribed space limited by
the two harness-casks lashed to the front rail of the poop, without
gestures, hands in the pockets of the jacket, elbows pressed
closely to its side; and the voice without resonance, passed from
anger to dismay and back again without a single louder word in the
hurried delivery, interrupted only by slight gasps for air as if
the speaker were being choked by the suppressed passion of his
grief.
Mr. Powell, though moved to a certain extent, was by no means
carried away. And just as he thought that it was all over, the
other, fidgeting in the darkness, was heard again explosive,
bewildered but not very loud in the silence of the ship and the
great empty peace of the sea.
“They have done something to him! What is it? What can it
be? Can’t you guess? Don’t you know?”
“Good heavens!” Young Powell was astounded on
discovering that this was an appeal addressed to him. “How on
earth can I know?”
“You do talk to that white-faced, black-eyed . . .
I’ve seen you talking to her more than a dozen
times.”
Young Powell, his sympathy suddenly chilled, remarked in a
disdainful tone that Mrs. Anthony’s eyes were not black.
“I wish to God she had never set them on the captain,
whatever colour they are,” retorted Franklin. “She and
that old chap with the scraped jaws who sits over her and stares
down at her dead-white face with his yellow eyes — confound
them! Perhaps you will tell us that his eyes are not
yellow?”
Powell, not interested in the colour of Mr. Smith’s eyes,
made a vague gesture. Yellow or not yellow, it was all one to
him.
The mate murmured to himself. “No. He can’t know.
No! No more than a baby. It would take an older head.”
“I don’t even understand what you mean,”
observed Mr. Powell coldly.
“And even the best head would be puzzled by such
devil-work,” the mate continued, muttering. “Well, I
have heard tell of women doing for a man in one way or another when
they got him fairly ashore. But to bring their devilry to sea and
fasten on such a man! . . . It’s something I can’t
understand. But I can watch. Let them look out — I
say!”
His short figure, unable to stoop, without flexibility, could
not express dejection. He was very tired suddenly; he dragged his
feet going off the poop. Before he left it with nearly an hour of
his watch below sacrificed, he addressed himself once more to our
young man who stood abreast of the mizzen rigging in an unreceptive
mood expressed by silence and immobility. He did not regret, he
said, having spoken openly on this very serious matter.
“I don’t know about its seriousness, sir,” was
Mr. Powell’s frank answer. “But if you think you have
been telling me something very new you are mistaken. You
can’t keep that matter out of your speeches. It’s the
sort of thing I’ve been hearing more or less ever since I
came on board.”
Mr. Powell, speaking truthfully, did not mean to speak
offensively. He had instincts of wisdom; he felt that this was a
serious affair, for it had nothing to do with reason. He did not
want to raise an enemy for himself in the mate. And Mr. Franklin
did not take offence. To Mr. Powell’s truthful statement he
answered with equal truth and simplicity that it was very likely,
very likely. With a thing like that (next door to witchcraft
almost) weighing on his mind, the wonder was that he could think of
anything else. The poor man must have found in the restlessness of
his thoughts the illusion of being engaged in an active contest
with some power of evil; for his last words as he went lingeringly
down the poop ladder expressed the quaint hope that he would get
him, Powell, “on our side yet.”
Mr. Powell — just imagine a straightforward youngster
assailed in this fashion on the high seas — answered merely
by an embarrassed and uneasy laugh which reflected exactly the
state of his innocent soul. The apoplectic mate, already half-way
down, went up again three steps of the poop ladder. Why, yes. A
proper young fellow, the mate expected, wouldn’t stand by and
see a man, a good sailor and his own skipper, in trouble without
taking his part against a couple of shore people who — Mr.
Powell interrupted him impatiently, asking what was the
trouble?
“What is it you are hinting at?” he cried with an
inexplicable irritation.
“I don’t like to think of him all alone down there
with these two,” Franklin whispered impressively. “Upon
my word I don’t. God only knows what may be going on there .
. . Don’t laugh . . . It was bad enough last voyage when Mrs.
Brown had a cabin aft; but now it’s worse. It frightens me. I
can’t sleep sometimes for thinking of him all alone there,
shut off from us all.”
Mrs. Brown was the steward’s wife. You must understand
that shortly after his visit to the Fyne cottage (with all its
consequences), Anthony had got an offer to go to the Western
Islands, and bring home the cargo of some ship which, damaged in a
collision or a stranding, took refuge in St. Michael, and was
condemned there. Roderick Anthony had connections which would put
such paying jobs in his way. So Flora de Barral had but a five
months’ voyage, a mere excursion, for her first trial of
sea-life. And Anthony, dearly trying to be most attentive, had
induced this Mrs. Brown, the wife of his faithful steward, to come
along as maid to his bride. But for some reason or other this
arrangement was not continued. And the mate, tormented by
indefinite alarms and forebodings, regretted it. He regretted that
Jane Brown was no longer on board — as a sort of
representative of Captain Anthony’s faithful servants, to
watch quietly what went on in that part of the ship this fatal
marriage had closed to their vigilance. That had been excellent.
For she was a dependable woman.
Powell did not detect any particular excellence in what seemed a
spying employment. But in his simplicity he said that he should
have thought Mrs. Anthony would have been glad anyhow to have
another woman on board. He was thinking of the white-faced girlish
personality which it seemed to him ought to have been cared for.
The innocent young man always looked upon the girl as immature;
something of a child yet.
“She! glad! Why it was she who had her fired out. She
didn’t want anybody around the cabin. Mrs. Brown is certain
of it. She told her husband so. You ask the steward and hear what
he has to say about it. That’s why I don’t like it. A
capable woman who knew her place. But no. Out she must go. For no
fault, mind you. The captain was ashamed to send her away. But that
wife of his — aye the precious pair of them have got hold of
him. I can’t speak to him for a minute on the poop without
that thimble-rigging coon coming gliding up. I’ll tell you
what. I overheard once — God knows I didn’t try to
— only he forgot I was on the other side of the skylight with
my sextant — I overheard him — you know how he sits
hanging over her chair and talking away without properly opening
his mouth — yes I caught the word right enough. He was
alluding to the captain as “the jailer.” The jail . . .
!”
Franklin broke off with a profane execration. A silence reigned
for a long time and the slight, very gentle rolling of the ship
slipping before the N.E. trade-wind seemed to be a soothing device
for lulling to sleep the suspicions of men who trust themselves to
the sea.
A deep sigh was heard followed by the mate’s voice asking
dismally if that was the way one would speak of a man to whom one
wished well? No better proof of something wrong was needed.
Therefore he hoped, as he vanished at last, that Mr. Powell would
be on their side. And this time Mr. Powell did not answer this hope
with an embarrassed laugh.
That young officer was more and more surprised at the nature of
the incongruous revelations coming to him in the surroundings and
in the atmosphere of the open sea. It is difficult for us to
understand the extent, the completeness, the comprehensiveness of
his inexperience, for us who didn’t go to sea out of a small
private school at the age of fourteen years and nine months.
Leaning on his elbow in the mizzen rigging and so still that the
helmsman over there at the other end of the poop might have (and he
probably did) suspect him of being criminally asleep on duty, he
tried to “get hold of that thing” by some side which
would fit in with his simple notions of psychology. “What the
deuce are they worrying about?” he asked himself in a dazed
and contemptuous impatience. But all the same “jailer”
was a funny name to give a man; unkind, unfriendly, nasty. He was
sorry that Mr. Smith was guilty in that matter because, the truth
must be told, he had been to a certain extent sensible of having
been noticed in a quiet manner by the father of Mrs. Anthony. Youth
appreciates that sort of recognition which is the subtlest form of
flattery age can offer. Mr. Smith seized opportunities to approach
him on deck. His remarks were sometimes weird and enigmatical.
He was doubtless an eccentric old gent. But from that to calling
his son-in-law (whom he never approached on deck) nasty names
behind his back was a long step.
And Mr. Powell marvelled . . . ”
“While he was telling me all this,” — Marlow
changed his tone — “I marvelled even more. It was as if
misfortune marked its victims on the forehead for the dislike of
the crowd. I am not thinking here of numbers. Two men may behave
like a crowd, three certainly will when their emotions are engaged.
It was as if the forehead of Flora de Barral were marked. Was the
girl born to be a victim; to be always disliked and crushed as if
she were too fine for this world? Or too luckless — since
that also is often counted as sin.
Yes, I marvelled more since I knew more of the girl than Mr.
Powell — if only her true name; and more of Captain Anthony
— if only the fact that he was the son of a delicate erotic
poet of a markedly refined and autocratic temperament. Yes, I knew
their joint stories which Mr. Powell did not know. The chapter in
it he was opening to me, the sea-chapter, with such new personages
as the sentimental and apoplectic chief-mate and the morose
steward, however astounding to him in its detached condition was
much more so to me as a member of a series, following the chapter
outside the Eastern Hotel in which I myself had played my part. In
view of her declarations and my sage remarks it was very
unexpected. She had meant well, and I had certainly meant well too.
Captain Anthony — as far as I could gather from little Fyne
— had meant well. As far as such lofty words may be applied
to the obscure personages of this story we were all filled with the
noblest sentiments and intentions. The sea was there to give them
the shelter of its solitude free from the earth’s petty
suggestions. I could well marvel in myself, as to what had
happened.
I hope that if he saw it, Mr. Powell forgave me the smile of
which I was guilty at that moment. The light in the cabin of his
little cutter was dim. And the smile was dim too. Dim and fleeting.
The girl’s life had presented itself to me as a tragi-comical
adventure, the saddest thing on earth, slipping between frank
laughter and unabashed tears. Yes, the saddest facts and the most
common, and, being common perhaps the most worthy of our unreserved
pity.
The purely human reality is capable of lyrism but not of
abstraction. Nothing will serve for its understanding but the
evidence of rational linking up of characters and facts. And
beginning with Flora de Barral, in the light of my memories I was
certain that she at least must have been passive; for that is of
necessity the part of women, this waiting on fate which some of
them, and not the most intelligent, cover up by the vain
appearances of agitation. Flora de Barral was not exceptionally
intelligent but she was thoroughly feminine. She would be passive
(and that does not mean inanimate) in the circumstances, where the
mere fact of being a woman was enough to give her an occult and
supreme significance. And she would be enduring which is the
essence of woman’s visible, tangible power. Of that I was
certain. Had she not endured already? Yet it is so true that the
germ of destruction lies in wait for us mortals, even at the very
source of our strength, that one may die of too much endurance as
well as of too little of it.
Such was my train of thought. And I was mindful also of my first
view of her — toying or perhaps communing in earnest with the
possibilities of a precipice. But I did not ask Mr. Powell
anxiously what had happened to Mrs. Anthony in the end. I let him
go on in his own way feeling that no matter what strange facts he
would have to disclose, I was certain to know much more of them
than he ever did know or could possibly guess . . . ”
Marlow paused for quite a long time. He seemed uncertain as
though he had advanced something beyond my grasp. Purposely I made
no sign. “You understand?” he asked.
“Perfectly,” I said. “You are the expert in
the psychological wilderness. This is like one of those Red-skin
stories where the noble savages carry off a girl and the honest
backwoodsman with his incomparable knowledge follows the track and
reads the signs of her fate in a footprint here, a broken twig
there, a trinket dropped by the way. I have always liked such
stories. Go on.”
Marlow smiled indulgently at my jesting. “It is not
exactly a story for boys,” he said. “I go on then. The
sign, as you call it, was not very plentiful but very much to the
purpose, and when Mr. Powell heard (at a certain moment I felt
bound to tell him) when he heard that I had known Mrs. Anthony
before her marriage, that, to a certain extent, I was her confidant
. . . For you can’t deny that to a certain extent . . . Well
let us say that I had a look in . . . A young girl, you know, is
something like a temple. You pass by and wonder what mysterious
rites are going on in there, what prayers, what visions? The
privileged men, the lover, the husband, who are given the key of
the sanctuary do not always know how to use it. For myself, without
claim, without merit, simply by chance I had been allowed to look
through the half-opened door and I had seen the saddest possible
desecration, the withered brightness of youth, a spirit neither
made cringing nor yet dulled but as if bewildered in quivering
hopelessness by gratuitous cruelty; self-confidence destroyed and,
instead, a resigned recklessness, a mournful callousness (and all
this simple, almost naive) — before the material and moral
difficulties of the situation. The passive anguish of the
luckless!
I asked myself: wasn’t that ill-luck exhausted yet?
Ill-luck which is like the hate of invisible powers interpreted,
made sensible and injurious by the actions of men?
Mr. Powell as you may well imagine had opened his eyes at my
statement. But he was full of his recalled experiences on board the
Ferndale, and the strangeness of being mixed up in what went on
aboard, simply because his name was also the name of a
shipping-master, kept him in a state of wonder which made other
coincidences, however unlikely, not so very surprising after
all.
This astonishing occurrence was so present to his mind that he
always felt as though he were there under false pretences. And this
feeling was so uncomfortable that it nerved him to break through
the awe-inspiring aloofness of his captain. He wanted to make a
clean breast of it. I imagine that his youth stood in good stead to
Mr. Powell. Oh, yes. Youth is a power. Even Captain Anthony had to
take some notice of it, as if it refreshed him to see something
untouched, unscarred, unhardened by suffering. Or perhaps the very
novelty of that face, on board a ship where he had seen the same
faces for years, attracted his attention.
Whether one day he dropped a word to his new second officer or
only looked at him I don’t know; but Mr. Powell seized the
opportunity whatever it was. The captain who had started and
stopped in his everlasting rapid walk smoothed his brow very soon,
heard him to the end and then laughed a little.
“Ah! That’s the story. And you felt you must put me
right as to this.”
“Yes, sir.”
“It doesn’t matter how you came on board,”
said Anthony. And then showing that perhaps he was not so utterly
absent from his ship as Franklin supposed: “That’s all
right. You seem to be getting on very well with everybody,”
he said in his curt hurried tone, as if talking hurt him, and his
eyes already straying over the sea as usual.
“Yes, sir.”
Powell tells me that looking then at the strong face to which
that haggard expression was returning, he had the impulse, from
some confused friendly feeling, to add: “I am very happy on
board here, sir.”
The quickly returning glance, its steadiness, abashed Mr. Powell
and made him even step back a little. The captain looked as though
he had forgotten the meaning of the word.
“You — what? Oh yes . . . You . . . of course . . .
Happy. Why not?”
This was merely muttered; and next moment Anthony was off on his
headlong tramp his eyes turned to the sea away from his ship.
A sailor indeed looks generally into the great distances, but in
Captain Anthony’s case there was — as Powell expressed
it — something particular, something purposeful like the
avoidance of pain or temptation. It was very marked once one had
become aware of it. Before, one felt only a pronounced strangeness.
Not that the captain — Powell was careful to explain —
didn’t see things as a ship-master should. The proof of it
was that on that very occasion he desired him suddenly after a
period of silent pacing, to have all the staysails sheets eased
off, and he was going on with some other remarks on the subject of
these staysails when Mrs. Anthony followed by her father emerged
from the companion. She established herself in her chair to leeward
of the skylight as usual. Thereupon the captain cut short whatever
he was going to say, and in a little while went down below.
I asked Mr. Powell whether the captain and his wife never
conversed on deck. He said no — or at any rate they never
exchanged more than a couple of words. There was some constraint
between them. For instance, on that very occasion, when Mrs.
Anthony came out they did look at each other; the captain’s
eyes indeed followed her till she sat down; but he did not speak to
her; he did not approach her; and afterwards left the deck without
turning his head her way after this first silent exchange of
glances.
I asked Mr. Powell what did he do then, the captain being out of
the way. “I went over and talked to Mrs. Anthony. I was
thinking that it must be very dull for her. She seemed to be such a
stranger to the ship.”
“The father was there of course?”
“Always,” said Powell. “He was always there
sitting on the skylight, as if he were keeping watch over her. And
I think,” he added, “that he was worrying her. Not that
she showed it in any way. Mrs. Anthony was always very quiet and
always ready to look one straight in the face.”
“You talked together a lot?” I pursued my inquiries.
“She mostly let me talk to her,” confessed Mr. Powell.
“I don’t know that she was very much interested —
but still she let me. She never cut me short.”
All the sympathies of Mr. Powell were for Flora Anthony nee de
Barral. She was the only human being younger than himself on board
that ship since the Ferndale carried no boys and was manned by a
full crew of able seamen. Yes! their youth had created a sort of
bond between them. Mr. Powell’s open countenance must have
appeared to her distinctly pleasing amongst the mature, rough,
crabbed or even inimical faces she saw around her. With the warm
generosity of his age young Powell was on her side, as it were,
even before he knew that there were sides to be taken on board that
ship, and what this taking sides was about. There was a girl. A
nice girl. He asked himself no questions. Flora de Barral was not
so much younger in years than himself; but for some reason, perhaps
by contrast with the accepted idea of a captain’s wife, he
could not regard her otherwise but as an extremely youthful
creature. At the same time, apart from her exalted position, she
exercised over him the supremacy a woman’s earlier maturity
gives her over a young man of her own age. As a matter of fact we
can see that, without ever having more than a half an hour’s
consecutive conversation together, and the distances duly
preserved, these two were becoming friends — under the eye of
the old man, I suppose.
How he first got in touch with his captain’s wife Powell
relates in this way. It was long before his memorable conversation
with the mate and shortly after getting clear of the channel. It
was gloomy weather; dead head wind, blowing quite half a gale; the
Ferndale under reduced sail was stretching close-hauled across the
track of the homeward bound ships, just moving through the water
and no more, since there was no object in pressing her and the
weather looked threatening. About ten o’clock at night he was
alone on the poop, in charge, keeping well aft by the weather rail
and staring to windward, when amongst the white, breaking seas,
under the black sky, he made out the lights of a ship. He watched
them for some time. She was running dead before the wind of course.
She will pass jolly close — he said to himself; and then
suddenly he felt a great mistrust of that approaching ship.
She’s heading straight for us — he thought. It was not
his business to get out of the way. On the contrary. And his
uneasiness grew by the recollection of the forty tons of dynamite
in the body of the Ferndale; not the sort of cargo one thinks of
with equanimity in connection with a threatened collision. He gazed
at the two small lights in the dark immensity filled with the angry
noise of the seas. They fascinated him till their plainness to his
sight gave him a conviction that there was danger there. He knew in
his mind what to do in the emergency, but very properly he felt
that he must call the captain out at once.
He crossed the deck in one bound. By the immemorial custom and
usage of the sea the captain’s room is on the starboard side.
You would just as soon expect your captain to have his nose at the
back of his head as to have his stateroom on the port side of the
ship. Powell forgot all about the direction on that point given him
by the chief. He flew over as I said, stamped with his foot and
then putting his face to the cowl of the big ventilator shouted
down there: “Please come on deck, sir,” in a voice
which was not trembling or scared but which we may call fairly
expressive. There could not be a mistake as to the urgence of the
call. But instead of the expected alert “All right!”
and the sound of a rush down there, he heard only a faint
exclamation — then silence.
Think of his astonishment! He remained there, his ear in the
cowl of the ventilator, his eyes fastened on those menacing
sidelights dancing on the gusts of wind which swept the angry
darkness of the sea. It was as though he had waited an hour but it
was something much less than a minute before he fairly bellowed
into the wide tube “Captain Anthony!” An agitated
“What is it?” was what he heard down there in Mrs.
Anthony’s voice, light rapid footsteps . . . Why didn’t
she try to wake him up! “I want the captain,” he
shouted, then gave it up, making a dash at the companion where a
blue light was kept, resolved to act for himself.
On the way he glanced at the helmsman whose face lighted up by
the binnacle lamps was calm. He said rapidly to him: “Stand
by to spin that helm up at the first word.” The answer
“Aye, aye, sir,” was delivered in a steady voice. Then
Mr. Powell after a shout for the watch on deck to “lay
aft,” ran to the ship’s side and struck the blue light
on the rail.
A sort of nasty little spitting of sparks was all that came. The
light (perhaps affected by damp) had failed to ignite. The time of
all these various acts must be counted in seconds. Powell confessed
to me that at this failure he experienced a paralysis of thought,
of voice, of limbs. The unexpectedness of this misfire positively
overcame his faculties. It was the only thing for which his
imagination was not prepared. It was knocked clean over. When it
got up it was with the suggestion that he must do something at once
or there would be a broadside smash accompanied by the explosion of
dynamite, in which both ships would be blown up and every soul on
board of them would vanish off the earth in an enormous flame and
uproar.
He saw the catastrophe happening and at the same moment, before
he could open his mouth or stir a limb to ward off the vision, a
voice very near his ear, the measured voice of Captain Anthony
said: “Wouldn’t light — eh? Throw it down! Jump
for the flare-up.”
The spring of activity in Mr. Powell was released with great
force. He jumped. The flare-up was kept inside the companion with a
box of matches ready to hand. Almost before he knew he had moved he
was diving under the companion slide. He got hold of the can in the
dark and tried to strike a light. But he had to press the
flare-holder to his breast with one arm, his fingers were damp and
stiff, his hands trembled a little. One match broke. Another went
out. In its flame he saw the colourless face of Mrs. Anthony a
little below him, standing on the cabin stairs. Her eyes which were
very close to his (he was in a crouching posture on the top step)
seemed to burn darkly in the vanishing light. On deck the
captain’s voice was heard sudden and unexpectedly sardonic:
“You had better look sharp, if you want to be in
time.”
“Let me have the box,” said Mrs. Anthony in a
hurried and familiar whisper which sounded amused as if they had
been a couple of children up to some lark behind a wall. He was
glad of the offer which seemed to him very natural, and without
ceremony —
“Here you are. Catch hold.”
Their hands touched in the dark and she took the box while he
held the paraffin soaked torch in its iron holder. He thought of
warning her: “Look out for yourself.” But before he had
the time to finish the sentence the flare blazed up violently
between them and he saw her throw herself back with an arm across
her face. “Hallo,” he exclaimed; only he could not stop
a moment to ask if she was hurt. He bolted out of the companion
straight into his captain who took the flare from him and held it
high above his head.
The fierce flame fluttered like a silk flag, throwing an angry
swaying glare mingled with moving shadows over the poop, lighting
up the concave surfaces of the sails, gleaming on the wet paint of
the white rails. And young Powell turned his eyes to windward with
a catch in his breath.
The strange ship, a darker shape in the night, did not seem to
be moving onwards but only to grow more distinct right abeam,
staring at the Ferndale with one green and one red eye which swayed
and tossed as if they belonged to the restless head of some
invisible monster ambushed in the night amongst the waves. A
moment, long like eternity, elapsed, and, suddenly, the monster
which seemed to take to itself the shape of a mountain shut its
green eye without as much as a preparatory wink.
Mr. Powell drew a free breath. “All right now,” said
Captain Anthony in a quiet undertone. He gave the blazing flare to
Powell and walked aft to watch the passing of that menace of
destruction coming blindly with its parti-coloured stare out of a
blind night on the wings of a sweeping wind. Her very form could be
distinguished now black and elongated amongst the hissing patches
of foam bursting along her path.
As is always the case with a ship running before wind and sea
she did not seem to an onlooker to move very fast; but to be
progressing indolently in long leisurely bounds and pauses in the
midst of the overtaking waves. It was only when actually passing
the stern within easy hail of the Ferndale, that her headlong speed
became apparent to the eye. With the red light shut off and soaring
like an immense shadow on the crest of a wave she was lost to view
in one great, forward swing, melting into the lightless space.
“Close shave,” said Captain Anthony in an
indifferent voice just raised enough to be heard in the wind.
“A blind lot on board that ship. Put out the flare
now.”
Silently Mr. Powell inverted the holder, smothering the flame in
the can, bringing about by the mere turn of his wrist the fall of
darkness upon the poop. And at the same time vanished out of his
mind’s eye the vision of another flame enormous and fierce
shooting violently from a white churned patch of the sea, lighting
up the very clouds and carrying upwards in its volcanic rush flying
spars, corpses, the fragments of two destroyed ships. It vanished
and there was an immense relief. He told me he did not know how
scared he had been, not generally but of that very thing his
imagination had conjured, till it was all over. He measured it (for
fear is a great tension) by the feeling of slack weariness which
came over him all at once.
He walked to the companion and stooping low to put the flare in
its usual place saw in the darkness the motionless pale oval of
Mrs. Anthony’s face. She whispered quietly:
“Is anything going to happen? What is it?”
“It’s all over now,” he whispered back.
He remained bent low, his head inside the cover staring at that
white ghostly oval. He wondered she had not rushed out on deck. She
had remained quietly there. This was pluck. Wonderful
self-restraint. And it was not stupidity on her part. She knew
there was imminent danger and probably had some notion of its
nature.
“You stayed here waiting for what would come,” he
murmured admiringly.
“Wasn’t that the best thing to do?” she
asked.
He didn’t know. Perhaps. He confessed he could not have
done it. Not he. His flesh and blood could not have stood it. He
would have felt he must see what was coming. Then he remembered
that the flare might have scorched her face, and expressed his
concern.
“A bit. Nothing to hurt. Smell the singed hair?”
There was a sort of gaiety in her tone. She might have been
frightened but she certainly was not overcome and suffered from no
reaction. This confirmed and augmented if possible Mr.
Powell’s good opinion of her as a “jolly girl,”
though it seemed to him positively monstrous to refer in such terms
to one’s captain’s wife. “But she doesn’t
look it,” he thought in extenuation and was going to say
something more to her about the lighting of that flare when another
voice was heard in the companion, saying some indistinct words. Its
tone was contemptuous; it came from below, from the bottom of the
stairs. It was a voice in the cabin. And the only other voice which
could be heard in the main cabin at this time of the evening was
the voice of Mrs. Anthony’s father. The indistinct white oval
sank from Mr. Powell’s sight so swiftly as to take him by
surprise. For a moment he hung at the opening of the companion and
now that her slight form was no longer obstructing the narrow and
winding staircase the voices came up louder but the words were
still indistinct. The old gentleman was excited about something and
Mrs. Anthony was “managing him” as Powell expressed it.
They moved away from the bottom of the stairs and Powell went away
from the companion. Yet he fancied he had heard the words
“Lost to me” before he withdrew his head. They had been
uttered by Mr. Smith.
Captain Anthony had not moved away from the taffrail. He
remained in the very position he took up to watch the other ship go
by rolling and swinging all shadowy in the uproar of the following
seas. He stirred not; and Powell keeping near by did not dare speak
to him, so enigmatical in its contemplation of the night did his
figure appear to his young eyes: indistinct — and in its
immobility staring into gloom, the prey of some incomprehensible
grief, longing or regret.
Why is it that the stillness of a human being is often so
impressive, so suggestive of evil — as if our proper fate
were a ceaseless agitation? The stillness of Captain Anthony became
almost intolerable to his second officer. Mr. Powell loitering
about the skylight wanted his captain off the deck now. “Why
doesn’t he go below?” he asked himself impatiently. He
ventured a cough.
Whether the effect of the cough or not Captain Anthony spoke. He
did not move the least bit. With his back remaining turned to the
whole length of the ship he asked Mr. Powell with some brusqueness
if the chief mate had neglected to instruct him that the captain
was to be found on the port side.
“Yes, sir,” said Mr. Powell approaching his back.
“The mate told me to stamp on the port side when I wanted
you; but I didn’t remember at the moment.”
“You should remember,” the captain uttered with an
effort. Then added mumbling “I don’t want Mrs. Anthony
frightened. Don’t you see? . . .”
“She wasn’t this time,” Powell said
innocently: “She lighted the flare-up for me, sir.”
“This time,” Captain Anthony exclaimed and turned
round. “Mrs. Anthony lighted the flare? Mrs. Anthony! . . .
“ Powell explained that she was in the companion all the
time.
“All the time,” repeated the captain. It seemed
queer to Powell that instead of going himself to see the captain
should ask him:
“Is she there now?”
Powell said that she had gone below after the ship had passed
clear of the Ferndale. Captain Anthony made a movement towards the
companion himself, when Powell added the information. “Mr.
Smith called to Mrs. Anthony from the saloon, sir. I believe they
are talking there now.”
He was surprised to see the captain give up the idea of going
below after all.
He began to walk the poop instead regardless of the cold, of the
damp wind and of the sprays. And yet he had nothing on but his
sleeping suit and slippers. Powell placing himself on the break of
the poop kept a look-out. When after some time he turned his head
to steal a glance at his eccentric captain he could not see his
active and shadowy figure swinging to and fro. The second mate of
the Ferndale walked aft peering about and addressed the seaman who
steered.
“Captain gone below?”
“Yes, sir,” said the fellow who with a quid of
tobacco bulging out his left cheek kept his eyes on the compass
card. “This minute. He laughed.”
“Laughed,” repeated Powell incredulously. “Do
you mean the captain did? You must be mistaken. What would he want
to laugh for?”
“Don’t know, sir.”
The elderly sailor displayed a profound indifference towards
human emotions. However, after a longish pause he conceded a few
words more to the second officer’s weakness. “Yes. He
was walking the deck as usual when suddenly he laughed a little and
made for the companion. Thought of something funny all at
once.”
Something funny! That Mr. Powell could not believe. He did not
ask himself why, at the time. Funny thoughts come to men, though,
in all sorts of situations; they come to all sorts of men.
Nevertheless Mr. Powell was shocked to learn that Captain Anthony
had laughed without visible cause on a certain night. The
impression for some reason was disagreeable. And it was then, while
finishing his watch, with the chilly gusts of wind sweeping at him
out of the darkness where the short sea of the soundings growled
spitefully all round the ship, that it occurred to his
unsophisticated mind that perhaps things are not what they are
confidently expected to be; that it was possible that Captain
Anthony was not a happy man . . . In so far you will perceive he
was to a certain extent prepared for the apoplectic and sensitive
Franklin’s lamentations about his captain. And though he
treated them with a contempt which was in a great measure sincere,
yet he admitted to me that deep down within him an inexplicable and
uneasy suspicion that all was not well in that cabin, so unusually
cut off from the rest of the ship, came into being and grew against
his will.