All hands were filled with joy.
It was betrayed in their alacrity and easy faces:
Johnson smiling broadly at the wheel, Nares studying
the sketch chart of the island with an eye at peace,
and the hands clustered forward, eagerly talking and
pointing: so manifest was our escape, so wonderful
the attraction of a single foot of earth after so many
suns had set and risen on an empty sea! To add
to the relief, besides, by one of those malicious
coincidences which suggest for Fate the image of an
underbred and grinning schoolboy, we had no sooner
worn ship than the wind began to abate.
For myself, however, I did but exchange
anxieties. I was no sooner out of one fear than
I fell upon another; no sooner secure that I should
myself make the intended haven, than I began to be
convinced that Trent was there before me. I climbed
into the rigging, stood on the board, and eagerly
scanned that ring of coral reef and bursting breaker,
and the blue lagoon which they enclosed. The
two islets within began to show plainly Middle
Brooks and Lower Brooks Island, the Directory named
them: two low, bush-covered, rolling strips of
sand, each with glittering beaches, each perhaps a
mile or a mile and a half in length, running east
and west, and divided by a narrow channel. Over
these, innumerable as maggots, there hovered, chattered,
and screamed millions of twinkling sea-birds; white
and black; the black by far the largest. With
singular scintillations, this vortex of winged
life swayed to and fro in the strong sunshine, whirled
continually through itself, and would now and again
burst asunder and scatter as wide as the lagoon:
so that I was irresistibly reminded of what I had
read of nebular convulsions. A thin cloud overspread
the area of the reef and the adjacent sea the
dust, as I could not but fancy, of earlier explosions.
And, a little apart, there was yet another focus of
centrifugal and centripetal flight, where, hard by
the deafening line of breakers, her sails (all but
the tattered topsail) snugly furled down, and the red
rag that marks Old England on the seas beating, union
down, at the main the Flying Scud,
the fruit of so many toilers, a recollection of so
many lives of men, whose tall spars had been mirrored
in the remotest corners of the sea lay
stationary at last and for ever, in the first stage
of naval dissolution. Towards her the taut Norah
Creina, vulture-wise, wriggled to windward:
come from so far to pick her bones. And, look
as I pleased, there was no other presence of man or
of man’s handiwork; no Honolulu schooner lay
there crowded with armed rivals, no smoke rose from
the fire at which I fancied Trent cooking a meal of
sea-birds. It seemed, after all, we were in time,
and I drew a mighty breath.
I had not arrived at this reviving
certainty before the breakers were already close aboard,
the leadsman at his station, and the captain posted
in the fore cross-trees to con us through the coral
lumps of the lagoon. All circumstances were in
our favour, the light behind, the sun low, the wind
still fresh and steady, and the tide about the turn.
A moment later we shot at racing speed betwixt two
pier heads of broken water; the lead began to be cast,
the captain to bawl down his anxious directions, the
schooner to tack and dodge among the scattered dangers
of the lagoon; and at one bell in the first dog-watch
we had come to our anchor off the north-east end of
Middle Brooks Island, in five fathoms water.
The sails were gasketed and covered, the boats emptied
of the miscellaneous stores and odds and ends of sea-furniture,
that accumulate in the course of a voyage, the kedge
sent ashore, and the decks tidied down: a good
three-quarters of an hour’s work, during which
I raged about the deck like a man with a strong toothache.
The transition from the wild sea to the comparative
immobility of the lagoon had wrought strange distress
among my nerves: I could not hold still whether
in hand or foot; the slowness of the men, tired as
dogs after our rough experience outside, irritated
me like something personal; and the irrational screaming
of the seabirds saddened me like a dirge. It
was a relief when, with Nares, and a couple of hands,
I might drop into the boat and move off at last for
the Flying Scud.
“She looks kind of pitiful,
don’t she?” observed the captain, nodding
towards the wreck, from which we were separated by
some half a mile. “Looks as if she didn’t
like her berth, and Captain Trent had used her badly. Give
her ginger, boys,” he added to the hands, “and
you can all have shore liberty to-night to see the
birds and paint the town red.”
We all laughed at the pleasantry,
and the boat skimmed the faster over the rippling
face of the lagoon. The Flying Scud would
have seemed small enough beside the wharves of San
Francisco, but she was some thrice the size of the
Norah Creina, which had been so long our continent;
and as we craned up at her wall-sides, she impressed
us with a mountain magnitude. She lay head to
the reef, where the huge blue wall of the rollers
was for ever ranging up and crumbling down; and to
gain her starboard side, we must pass below the stern.
The rudder was hard aport, and we could read the legend
FLYING SCUD
HULL
On the other side, about the break
of the poop, some half a fathom of rope-ladder trailed
over the rail, and by this we made our entrance.
She was a roomy ship inside, with
a raised poop standing some three feet higher than
the deck, and a small forward house, for the men’s
bunks and the galley, just abaft the foremast.
There was one boat on the house, and another and larger
one, in beds on deck, on either hand of it. She
had been painted white, with tropical economy, outside
and in; and we found, later on, that the stanchions
of the rail, hoops of the scuttle-butt, etc.,
were picked out with green. At that time, however,
when we first stepped aboard, all was hidden under
the droppings of innumerable sea-birds.
The birds themselves gyrated and screamed
meanwhile among the rigging; and when we looked into
the galley, their outrush drove us back. Savage-looking
fowl they were, savagely beaked, and some of the black
ones great as eagles. Half-buried in the slush,
we were aware of a litter of kegs in the waist; and
these, on being somewhat cleaned, proved to be water-beakers
and quarter-casks of mess beef with some colonial
brand, doubtless collected there before the Tempest
hove in sight, and while Trent and his men had no
better expectation than to strike for Honolulu in
the boats. Nothing else was notable on deck, save
where the loose topsail had played some havoc with
the rigging, and there hung, and swayed, and sang
in the declining wind, a raffle of intorted cordage.
With a shyness that was almost awe,
Nares and I descended the companion. The stair
turned upon itself and landed us just forward of a
thwart-ship bulkhead that cut the poop in two.
The fore part formed a kind of miscellaneous store-room,
with a double-bunked division for the cook (as Nares
supposed) and second mate. The after part contained,
in the midst, the main cabin, running in a kind of
bow into the curvature of the stern; on the port side,
a pantry opening forward and a stateroom for the mate;
and on the starboard, the captain’s berth and
water-closet. Into these we did but glance, the
main cabin holding us. It was dark, for the sea-birds
had obscured the skylight with their droppings; it
smelt rank and fusty: and it was beset with a
loud swarm of flies that beat continually in our faces.
Supposing them close attendants upon man and his broken
meat, I marvelled how they had found their way to Midway
Reef; it was sure at least some vessel must have brought
them, and that long ago, for they had multiplied exceedingly.
Part of the floor was strewn with a confusion of clothes,
books, nautical instruments, odds and ends of finery,
and such trash as might be expected from the turning
out of several seamen’s chests, upon a sudden
emergency and after a long cruise. It was strange
in that dim cabin, quivering with the near thunder
of the breakers and pierced with the screaming of
the fowls, to turn over so many things that other
men had coveted, and prized, and worn on their warm
bodies frayed old underclothing, pyjamas
of strange design, duck suits in every stage of rustiness,
oil-skins, pilot coats, embroidered shirts, jackets
of Ponjee silk clothes for the night watch
at sea or the day ashore in the hotel verandah:
and mingled among these, books, cigars, bottles of
scent, fancy pipes, quantities of tobacco, many keys,
a rusty pistol, and a sprinkling of cheap curiosities Benares
brass, Chinese jars and pictures, and bottles of odd
shells in cotton, each designed, no doubt, for somebody
at home perhaps in Hull, of which Trent
had been a native and his ship a citizen.
Thence we turned our attention to
the table, which stood spread, as if for a meal, with
stout ship’s crockery and the remains of food a
pot of marmalade, dregs of coffee in the mugs, unrecognisable
remains of food, bread, some toast, and a tin of condensed
milk. The table-cloth, originally of a red colour,
was stained a dark brown at the captain’s end,
apparently with coffee; at the other end it had been
folded back, and a pen and ink-pot stood on the bare
table. Stools were here and there about the table,
irregularly placed, as though the meal had been finished
and the men smoking and chatting; and one of the stools
lay on the floor, broken.
“See! they were writing up the
log,” said Nares, pointing to the ink-bottle.
“Caught napping, as usual. I wonder if there
ever was a captain yet that lost a ship with his log-book
up to date? He generally has about a month to
fill up on a clean break, like Charles Dickens and
his serial novels. What a regular lime-juicer
spread!” he added contemptuously. “Marmalade and
toast for the old man! Nasty, slovenly pigs!”
There was something in this criticism
of the absent that jarred upon my feelings. I
had no love indeed for Captain Trent or any of his
vanished gang; but the desertion and decay of this
once habitable cabin struck me hard. The death
of man’s handiwork is melancholy, like the death
of man himself; and I was impressed with an involuntary
and irrational sense of tragedy in my surroundings.
“This sickens me,” I said;
“let’s go on deck and breathe.”
The captain nodded. “It
is kind of lonely, isn’t it?” he said;
“but I can’t go up till I get the code
signals. I want to run up ‘Got Left’
or something, just to brighten up this island home.
Captain Trent hasn’t been here yet, but he’ll
drop in before long; and it’ll cheer him up to
see a signal on the brig.”
“Isn’t there some official
expression we could use?” I asked, vastly taken
by the fancy. “’Sold for the benefit of
the underwriters: for further particulars apply
to J. Pinkerton, Montana Block, S.F.’”
“Well,” returned Nares,
“I won’t say but what an old navy quartermaster
might telegraph all that, if you gave him a day to
do it in and a pound of tobacco for himself.
But it’s above my register. I must try something
short and sweet: KB, urgent signal, ‘Heave
all aback’; or LM, urgent, ‘The berth
you’re now in is not safe’; or what do
you say to PQH? ’Tell my owners the
ship answers remarkably well.’”
“It’s premature,”
I replied; “but it seems calculated to give pain
to Trent. PQH for me.”
The flags were found in Trent’s
cabin, neatly stored behind a lettered grating; Nares
chose what he required, and (I following) returned
on deck, where the sun had already dipped, and the
dusk was coming.
“Here! don’t touch that,
you fool!” shouted the captain to one of the
hands, who was drinking from the scuttle-butt.
“That water’s rotten!”
“Beg pardon, sir,” replied the man.
“Tastes quite sweet.”
“Let me see,” returned
Nares, and he took the dipper and held it to his lips.
“Yes, it’s all right,” he said.
“Must have rotted and come sweet again. Queer,
isn’t it, Mr. Dodd? Though I’ve known
the same on a Cape Horner.”
There was something in his intonation
that made me look him in the face; he stood a little
on tiptoe to look right and left about the ship, like
a man filled with curiosity, and his whole expression
and bearing testified to some suppressed excitement.
“You don’t believe what you’re saying!”
I broke out.
“O, I don’t know but what
I do!” he replied, laying a hand upon me soothingly.
“The thing’s very possible. Only,
I’m bothered about something else.”
And with that he called a hand, gave
him the code flags, and stepped himself to the main
signal halliards, which vibrated under the weight of
the ensign overhead. A minute later, the American
colours, which we had brought in the boat, replaced
the English red, and PQH was fluttering at the fore.
“Now, then,” said Nares,
who had watched the breaking out of his signal with
the old-maidish particularity of an American sailor,
“out with those handspikes, and let’s
see what water there is in the lagoon.”
The bars were shoved home; the barbarous
cacophony of the clanking pump rose in the waist;
and streams of ill-smelling water gushed on deck and
made valleys in the slab guano. Nares leaned on
the rail, watching the steady stream of bilge as though
he found some interest in it.
“What is it that bothers you?” I asked.
“Well, I’ll tell you one
thing shortly,” he replied. “But here’s
another. Do you see those boats there, one on
the house and two on the beds? Well, where is
the boat Trent lowered when he lost the hands?”
“Got it aboard again, I suppose,” said
I.
“Well, if you’ll tell me why!” returned
the captain.
“Then it must have been another,” I suggested.
“She might have carried another
on the main hatch, I won’t deny,” admitted
Nares, “but I can’t see what she wanted
with it, unless it was for the old man to go out and
play the accordion in on moonlight nights.”
“It can’t much matter, anyway,”
I reflected.
“O, I don’t suppose it
does,” said he, glancing over his shoulders at
the spouting of the scuppers.
“And how long are we to keep
up this racket?” I asked. “We’re
simply pumping up the lagoon. Captain Trent himself
said she had settled down and was full forward.”
“Did he?” said Nares,
with a significant dryness. And almost as he spoke
the pumps sucked, and sucked again, and the men threw
down their bars. “There, what do you make
of that?” he asked. “Now, I’ll
tell, Mr. Dodd,” he went on, lowering his voice,
but not shifting from his easy attitude against the
rail, “this ship is as sound as the Norah
Creina. I had a guess of it before we came
aboard, and now I know.”
“It’s not possible!”
I cried. “What do you make of Trent?”
“I don’t make anything
of Trent; I don’t know whether he’s a liar
or only an old wife; I simply tell you what’s
the fact,” said Nares. “And I’ll
tell you something more,” he added: “I’ve
taken the ground myself in deep-water vessels; I know
what I’m saying; and I say that, when she first
struck and before she bedded down, seven or eight hours’
work would have got this hooker off, and there’s
no man that ever went two years to sea but must have
known it.”
I could only utter an exclamation.
Nares raised his finger warningly.
“Don’t let them get hold of it,”
said he. “Think what you like, but say nothing.”
I glanced round; the dusk was melting
into early night; the twinkle of a lantern marked
the schooner’s position in the distance; and
our men, free from further labour, stood grouped together
in the waist, their faces illuminated by their glowing
pipes.
“Why didn’t Trent get
her off?” inquired the captain. “Why
did he want to buy her back in ’Frisco for these
fabulous sums, when he might have sailed her into
the bay himself?”
“Perhaps he never knew her value
until then,” I suggested.
“I wish we knew her value now,”
exclaimed Nares. “However, I don’t
want to depress you; I’m sorry for you, Mr.
Dodd; I know how bothering it must be to you, and
the best I can say’s this: I haven’t
taken much time getting down, and now I’m here
I mean to work this thing in proper style. I
just want to put your mind at rest; you shall have
no trouble with me.”
There was something trusty and friendly
in his voice; and I found myself gripping hands with
him, in that hard, short shake that means so much
with English-speaking people.
“We’ll do, old fellow,”
said he. “We’ve shaken down into pretty
good friends, you and me; and you won’t find
me working the business any the less hard for that.
And now let’s scoot for supper.”
After supper, with the idle curiosity
of the seafarer, we pulled ashore in a fine moonlight,
and landed on Middle Brooks Island. A flat beach
surrounded it upon all sides; and the midst was occupied
by a thicket of bushes, the highest of them scarcely
five feet high, in which the sea-fowl lived.
Through this we tried at first to strike; but it were
easier to cross Trafalgar Square on a day of demonstration
than to invade these haunts of sleeping sea-birds.
The nests sank, and the eggs burst under footing;
wings beat in our faces, beaks menaced our eyes, our
minds were confounded with the screeching, and the
coil spread over the island and mounted high into
the air.
“I guess we’ll saunter
round the beach,” said Nares, when we had made
good our retreat.
The hands were all busy after sea-birds’
eggs, so there were none to follow us. Our way
lay on the crisp sand by the margin of the water; on
one side, the thicket from which we had been dislodged;
on the other, the face of the lagoon, barred with
a broad path of moonlight, and beyond that the line,
alternately dark and shining, alternately hove high
and fallen prone, of the external breakers. The
beach was strewn with bits of wreck and drift; some
redwood and spruce logs, no less than two lower masts
of junks, and the stern-post of a European ship all
of which we looked on with a shade of serious concern,
speaking of the dangers of the sea and the hard case
of castaways. In this sober vein we made the
greater part of the circuit of the island; had a near
view of its neighbour from the southern end; walked
the whole length of the westerly side in the shadow
of the thicket; and came forth again into the moonlight
at the opposite extremity.
On our right, at the distance of about
half a mile, the schooner lay faintly heaving at her
anchors. About half a mile down the beach, at
a spot still hidden from us by the thicket, an upboiling
of the birds showed where the men were still (with
sailor-like insatiability) collecting eggs. And
right before us, in a small indentation of the sand,
we were aware of a boat lying high and dry, and right
side up.
Nares crouched back into the shadow of the bushes.
“What the devil’s this?” he whispered.
“Trent,” I suggested, with a beating heart.
“We were damned fools to come
ashore unarmed,” said he. “But I’ve
got to know where I stand.” In the shadow,
his face looked conspicuously white, and his voice
betrayed a strong excitement. He took his boat’s
whistle from his pocket. “In case I might
want to play a tune,” said he grimly, and thrusting
it between his teeth, advanced into the moonlit open,
which we crossed with rapid steps, looking guiltily
about us as we went. Not a leaf stirred; and
the boat, when we came up to it, offered convincing
proof of long desertion. She was an eighteen-foot
whaleboat of the ordinary type, equipped with oars
and thole-pins. Two or three quarter-casks lay
on the bilge amidships, one of which must have been
broached, and now stank horribly; and these, upon examination,
proved to bear the same New Zealand brand as the beef
on board the wreck.
“Well, here’s the boat,”
said I; “here’s one of your difficulties
cleared away.”
“H’m,” said he.
There was a little water in the bilge, and here he
stooped and tasted it.
“Fresh,” he said. “Only rain-water.”
“You don’t object to that?” I asked.
“No,” said he.
“Well, then, what ails you?” I cried.
“In plain United States, Mr.
Dodd,” he returned, “a whaleboat, five
ash sweeps, and a barrel of stinking pork.”
“Or, in other words, the whole thing?”
I commented.
“Well, it’s this way,”
he condescended to explain. “I’ve
no use for a fourth boat at all; but a boat of this
model tops the business. I don’t say the
type’s not common in these waters; it’s
as common as dirt; the traders carry them for surf-boats.
But the Flying Scud? a deep-water tramp, who
was lime-juicing around between big ports, Calcutta
and Rangoon and ’Frisco and the Canton River.
No, I don’t see it.”
We were leaning over the gunwale of
the boat as we spoke. The captain stood nearest
the bow, and he was idly playing with the trailing
painter, when a thought arrested him. He hauled
the line in hand over hand, and stared, and remained
staring, at the end.
“Anything wrong with it?” I asked.
“Do you know, Mr. Dodd,”
said he, in a queer voice, “this painter’s
been cut? A sailor always seizes a rope’s
end, but this is sliced short off with the cold steel.
This won’t do at all for the men,” he added.
“Just stand by till I fix it up more natural.”
“Any guess what it all means?” I asked.
“Well, it means one thing,”
said he. “It means Trent was a liar.
I guess the story of the Flying Scud was a
sight more picturesque than he gave out.”
Half an hour later the whaleboat was
lying astern of the Norah Creina; and Nares
and I sought our bunks, silent and half-bewildered
by our late discoveries.