In my early days I was a man, the
most wedded to his idols of my generation. I
was a dweller under roofs; the gull of that which we
call civilisation; a superstitious votary of the plastic
arts; a cit, and a prop of restaurants. I had
a comrade in those days, somewhat of an outsider,
though he moved in the company of artists, and a man
famous in our small world for gallantry, knee-breeches,
and dry and pregnant sayings. He, looking on
the long meals and waxing bellies of the French, whom
I confess I somewhat imitated, branded me as “a
cultivator of restaurant fat.” And I believe
he had his finger on the dangerous spot; I believe,
if things had gone smooth with me, I should be now
swollen like a prize-ox in body, and fallen in mind
to a thing perhaps as low as many types of bourgeois the
implicit or exclusive artist. That was a home
word of Pinkerton’s, deserving to be writ in
letters of gold on the portico of every school of
art: “What I can’t see is why you
should want to do nothing else.” The dull
man is made, not by the nature, but by the degree
of his immersion in a single business. And all
the more if that be sedentary, uneventful, and ingloriously
safe. More than one half of him will then remain
unexercised and undeveloped; the rest will be distended
and deformed by over-nutrition, over-cerebration, and
the heat of rooms. And I have often marvelled
at the impudence of gentlemen who describe and pass
judgment on the life of man, in almost perfect ignorance
of all its necessary elements and natural careers.
Those who dwell in clubs and studios may paint excellent
pictures or write enchanting novels. There is
one thing that they should not do: they should
pass no judgment on man’s destiny, for it is
a thing with which they are unacquainted. Their
own life is an excrescence of the moment, doomed,
in the vicissitude of history, to pass and disappear.
The eternal life of man, spent under sun and rain
and in rude physical effort, lies upon one side, scarce
changed since the beginning.
I would I could have carried along
with me to Midway Island all the writers and the prating
artists of my time. Day after day of hope deferred,
of heat, of unremitting toil; night after night of
aching limbs, bruised hands, and a mind obscured with
the grateful vacancy of physical fatigue. The
scene, the nature of my employment, the rugged speech
and faces of my fellow-toilers, the glare of the day
on deck, the stinking twilight in the bilge, the shrill
myriads of the ocean-fowl; above all, the sense of
our immitigable isolation from the world and from
the current epoch keeping another time,
some eras old; the new day heralded by no daily paper,
only by the rising sun; and the State, the churches,
the peopled empires, war, and the rumours of war, and
the voices of the arts, all gone silent as in the
days ere they were yet invented. Such were the
conditions of my new experience in life, of which
(if I had been able) I would have had all my confrères
and contemporaries to partake, forgetting, for that
while, the orthodoxies of the moment, and devoted
to a single and material purpose under the eye of
heaven.
Of the nature of our task I must continue
to give some summary idea. The forecastle was
lumbered with ship’s chandlery, the hold nigh
full of rice, the lazarette crowded with the teas
and silks. These must all be dug out; and that
made but a fraction of our task. The hold was
ceiled throughout; a part, where perhaps some delicate
cargo was once stored, had been lined, in addition,
with inch boards; and between every beam there was
a movable panel into the bilge. Any of these,
the bulkheads of the cabins, the very timbers of the
hull itself, might be the place of hiding. It
was therefore necessary to demolish, as we proceeded,
a great part of the ship’s inner skin and fittings,
and to auscultate what remained, like a doctor sounding
for a lung disease. Upon the return, from any
beam or bulkhead, of a doubtful sound, we must up axe
and hew into the timber: a violent and from
the amount of dry rot in the wreck a mortifying
exercise. Every night saw a deeper inroad into
the bones of the Flying Scud more
beams tapped and hewn in splinters, more planking
peeled away and tossed aside and every night
saw us as far as ever from the end and object of our
arduous devastation. In this perpetual disappointment,
my courage did not fail me, but my spirits dwindled;
and Nares himself grew silent and morose. At night,
when supper was done, we passed an hour in the cabin,
mostly without speech: I, sometimes dozing over
a book; Nares, sullenly but busily drilling sea-shells
with the instrument called a Yankee fiddle. A
stranger might have supposed we were estranged; as
a matter of fact, in this silent comradeship of labour,
our intimacy grew.
I had been struck, at the first beginning
of our enterprise upon the wreck, to find the men
so ready at the captain’s lightest word.
I dare not say they liked, but I can never deny that
they admired him thoroughly. A mild word from
his mouth was more valued than flattery, and half
a dollar from myself; if he relaxed at all from his
habitual attitude of censure, smiling alacrity surrounded
him; and I was led to believe his theory of captainship,
even if pushed to excess, reposed upon some ground
of reason. But even terror and admiration of the
captain failed us before the end. The men wearied
of the hopeless, unremunerative quest and the long
strain of labour. They began to shirk and grumble.
Retribution fell on them at once, and retribution
multiplied the grumblings. With every day it took
harder driving to keep them to the daily drudge; and
we, in our narrow boundaries, were kept conscious
every moment of the ill-will of our assistants.
In spite of the best care, the object
of our search was perfectly well known to all on board;
and there had leaked out, besides, some knowledge
of those inconsistencies that had so greatly amazed
the captain and myself. I could overhear the
men debate the character of Captain Trent, and set
forth competing theories of where the opium was stowed;
and, as they seemed to have been eavesdropping on
ourselves, I thought little shame to prick up my ears
when I had the return chance of spying upon them.
In this way I could diagnose their temper and judge
how far they were informed upon the mystery of the
Flying Scud. It was after having thus
overheard some almost mutinous speeches that a fortunate
idea crossed my mind. At night I matured it in
my bed, and the first thing the next morning broached
it to the captain.
“Suppose I spirit up the hands
a bit,” I asked, “by the offer of a reward?”
“If you think you’re getting
your month’s wages out of them the way it is,
I don’t,” was his reply. “However,
they are all the men you’ve got, and you’re
the supercargo.”
This, from a person of the captain’s
character, might be regarded as complete adhesion;
and the crew were accordingly called aft. Never
had the captain worn a front more menacing. It
was supposed by all that some misdeed had been discovered,
and some surprising punishment was to be announced.
“See here, you!” he threw
at them over his shoulder as he walked the deck.
“Mr. Dodd here is going to offer a reward to
the first man who strikes the opium in that wreck.
There’s two ways of making a donkey go both
good, I guess: the one’s kicks and the other’s
carrots. Mr. Dodd’s going to try the carrots.
Well, my sons” and here he faced the
men for the first time with his hands behind him “if
that opium’s not found in five days you
can come to me for the kicks.”
He nodded to the present narrator,
who took up the tale. “Here is what I propose,
men,” said I: “I put up one hundred
and fifty dollars. If any man can lay hands on
the stuff right away, and off his own club, he shall
have the hundred and fifty down. If any one can
put us on the scent of where to look, he shall have
a hundred and twenty-five, and the balance shall be
for the lucky one who actually picks it up. We’ll
call it the Pinkerton Stakes, captain,” I added,
with a smile.
“Call it the Grand Combination
Sweep, then,” cries he. “For I go
you better. Look here, men, I make up this
jack-pot to two hundred and fifty dollars, American
gold coin.”
“Thank you, Captain Nares,”
said I; “that was handsomely done.”
“It was kindly meant,” he returned.
The offer was not made in vain; the
hands had scarce yet realised the magnitude of the
reward, they had scarce begun to buzz aloud in the
extremity of hope and wonder, ere the Chinese cook
stepped forward with gracious gestures and explanatory
smiles.
“Captain,” he began, “I
serv-um two year Melican navy; serv-um six
year mail-boat steward. Savvy plenty.”
“Oho!” cried Nares, “you
savvy plenty, do you? (Beggar’s seen this trick
in the mail-boat, I guess.) Well, why you no savvy
a little sooner, sonny?”
“I think bimeby make-um
reward,” replied the cook, with smiling dignity.
“Well, you can’t say fairer
than that,” the captain admitted; “and
now the reward’s offered you’ll talk?
Speak up then. Suppose you speak true you get
reward. See?”
“I think long time,” replied
the Chinaman. “See plenty litty mat lice;
too muchy plenty litty mat lice; sixty ton litty mat
lice. I think all-e-time perhaps plenty opium
plenty litty mat lice.”
“Well, Mr. Dodd, how does that
strike you?” asked the captain. “He
may be right, he may be wrong. He’s likely
to be right, for if he isn’t where can the stuff
be? On the other hand, if he’s wrong we
destroy a hundred and fifty tons of good rice for
nothing. It’s a point to be considered.”
“I don’t hesitate,”
said I. “Let’s get to the bottom of
the thing. The rice is nothing; the rice will
neither make nor break us.”
“That’s how I expected
you to see it,” returned Nares. And we called
the boat away and set forth on our new quest.
The hold was now almost entirely emptied;
the mats (of which there went forty to the short ton)
had been stacked on deck, and now crowded the ship’s
waist and forecastle. It was our task to disembowel
and explore six thousand individual mats, and incidentally
to destroy a hundred and fifty tons of valuable food.
Nor were the circumstances of the day’s business
less strange than its essential nature. Each man
of us, armed with a great knife, attacked the pile
from his own quarter, slashed into the nearest mat,
burrowed in it with his hands, and shed forth the rice
upon the deck, where it heaped up, overflowed, and
was trodden down, poured at last into the scuppers,
and occasionally spouted from the vents. About
the wreck thus transformed into an overflowing granary,
the sea-fowl swarmed in myriads and with surprising
insolence. The sight of so much food confounded
them; they deafened us with their shrill tongues,
swooped in our midst, dashed in our faces, and snatched
the grain from between our fingers. The men their
hands bleeding from these assaults turned
savagely on the offensive, drove their knives into
the birds, drew them out crimsoned, and turned again
to dig among the rice, unmindful of the gawking creatures
that struggled and died among their feet. We
made a singular picture the hovering and
diving birds; the bodies of the dead discolouring
the rice with blood; the scuppers vomiting breadstuff;
the men, frenzied by the gold hunt, toiling, slaying,
and shouting aloud; over all the lofty intricacy of
rigging and the radiant heaven of the Pacific.
Every man there toiled in the immediate hope of fifty
dollars, and I of fifty thousand. Small wonder
if we waded callously in blood and food.
It was perhaps about ten in the forenoon
when the scene was interrupted. Nares, who had
just ripped open a fresh mat, drew forth and slung
at his feet, among the rice, a papered tin box.
“How’s that?” he shouted.
A cry broke from all hands. The
next moment, forgetting their own disappointment in
that contagious sentiment of success, they gave three
cheers that scared the sea-birds; and the next they
had crowded round the captain, and were jostling together
and groping with emulous hands in the new-opened mat.
Box after box rewarded them, six in all; wrapped,
as I have said, in a paper envelope, and the paper
printed on in Chinese characters.
Nares turned to me and shook my hand.
“I began to think we should never see this day,”
said he. “I congratulate you, Mr. Dodd,
on having pulled it through.”
The captain’s tones affected
me profoundly; and when Johnson and the men pressed
round me in turn with congratulations, the tears came
in my eyes.
“These are five-tael boxes,
more than two pounds,” said Nares, weighing
one in his hand. “Say two hundred and fifty
dollars to the mat. Lay into it, boys! We’ll
make Mr. Dodd a millionaire before dark.”
It was strange to see with what a
fury we fell to. The men had now nothing to expect;
the mere idea of great sums inspired them with disinterested
ardour. Mats were slashed and disembowelled, the
rice flowed to our knees in the ship’s waist,
the sweat ran in our eyes and blinded us, our arms
ached to agony; and yet our fire abated not. Dinner
came; we were too weary to eat, too hoarse for conversation;
and yet dinner was scarce done, before we were afoot
again and delving in the rice. Before nightfall
not a mat was unexplored, and we were face to face
with the astonishing result.
For of all the inexplicable things
in the story of the Flying Scud, here was the
most inexplicable. Out of the six thousand mats,
only twenty were found to have been sugared; in each
we found the same amount, about twelve pounds of drug;
making a grand total of two hundred and forty pounds.
By the last San Francisco quotation, opium was selling
for a fraction over twenty dollars a pound; but it
had been known not long before to bring as much as
forty in Honolulu, where it was contraband.
Taking, then, this high Honolulu figure,
the value of the opium on board the Flying Scud
fell considerably short of ten thousand dollars, while
at the San Francisco rate it lacked a trifle of five
thousand. And fifty thousand was the price that
Jim and I had paid for it. And Bellairs had been
eager to go higher! There is no language to express
the stupor with which I contemplated this result.
It may be argued we were not yet sure:
there might be yet another cache; and you may
be certain in that hour of my distress the argument
was not forgotten. There was never a ship more
ardently perquested; no stone was left unturned, and
no expedient untried; day after day of growing despair,
we punched and dug in the brig’s vitals, exciting
the men with promises and presents; evening after
evening Nares and I sat face to face in the narrow
cabin, racking our minds for some neglected possibility
of search. I could stake my salvation on the certainty
of the result: in all that ship there was nothing
left of value but the timber and the copper nails.
So that our case was lamentably plain; we had paid
fifty thousand dollars, borne the charges of the schooner,
and paid fancy interest on money; and if things went
well with us, we might realise fifteen per cent, of
the first outlay. We were not merely bankrupt,
we were comic bankrupts a fair butt for
jeering in the streets. I hope I bore the blow
with a good countenance; indeed, my mind had long
been quite made up, and since the day we found the
opium I had known the result. But the thought
of Jim and Mamie ached in me like a physical pain,
and I shrank from speech and companionship.
I was in this frame of mind when the
captain proposed that we should land upon the island.
I saw he had something to say, and only feared it
might be consolation, for I could just bear my grief,
not bungling sympathy; and yet I had no choice but
to accede to his proposal.
We walked a while along the beach
in silence. The sun overhead reverberated rays
of heat; the staring sand, the glaring lagoon, tortured
our eyes; and the birds and the boom of the far-away
breakers made a savage symphony.
“I don’t require to tell you the game’s
up?” Nares asked.
“No,” said I.
“I was thinking of getting to sea to-morrow,”
he pursued.
“The best thing you can do,” said I.
“Shall we say Honolulu?” he inquired.
“O, yes; let’s stick to the programme,”
I cried. “Honolulu be it!”
There was another silence, and then Nares cleared
his throat.
“We’ve been pretty good
friends, you and me, Mr. Dodd,” he resumed.
“We’ve been going through the kind of thing
that tries a man. We’ve had the hardest
kind of work, we’ve been badly backed, and now
we’re badly beaten. And we’ve fetched
through without a word of disagreement. I don’t
say this to praise myself: it’s my trade;
it’s what I’m paid for, and trained for,
and brought up to. But it was another thing for
you; it was all new to you; and it did me good to
see you stand right up to it and swing right into
it day in, day out. And then see how
you’ve taken this disappointment, when everybody
knows you must have been tautened up to shying-point!
I wish you’d let me tell you, Mr. Dodd, that
you’ve stood out mighty manly and handsomely
in all this business, and made every one like you
and admire you. And I wish you’d let me
tell you, besides, that I’ve taken this wreck
business as much to heart as you have; something kind
of rises in my throat when I think we’re beaten;
and if I thought waiting would do it, I would stick
on this reef until we starved.”
I tried in vain to thank him for these
generous words, but he was beforehand with me in a
moment.
“I didn’t bring you ashore
to sound my praises,” he interrupted. “We
understand one another now, that’s all; and I
guess you can trust me. What I wished to speak
about is more important, and it’s got to be
faced. What are we to do about the Flying Scud
and the dime novel?”
“I really have thought nothing
about that,” I replied; “but I expect I
mean to get at the bottom of it, and if the bogus Captain
Trent is to be found on the earth’s surface,
I guess I mean to find him.”
“All you’ve got to do
is talk,” said Nares; “you can make the
biggest kind of boom; it isn’t often the reporters
have a chance at such a yarn as this; and I can tell
you how it will go. It will go by telegraph, Mr.
Dodd; it’ll be telegraphed by the column, and
headlined, and frothed up, and denied by authority,
and it’ll hit bogus Captain Trent in a Mexican
bar-room, and knock over bogus Goddedaal in a slum
somewhere up the Baltic, and bowl down Hardy and Brown
in sailors’ music-halls round Greenock.
O, there’s no doubt you can have a regular domestic
Judgment Day. The only point is whether you deliberately
want to.”
“Well,” said I, “I
deliberately don’t want one thing: I deliberately
don’t want to make a public exhibition of myself
and Pinkerton: so moral smuggling
opium; such damned fools paying fifty thousand
for a ’dead horse’!”
“No doubt it might damage you
in a business sense,” the captain agreed; “and
I’m pleased you take that view, for I’ve
turned kind of soft upon the job. There’s
been some crookedness about, no doubt of it; but, law
bless you! if we dropped upon the troupe, all the premier
artists would slip right out with the boodle in their
grip-sacks, and you’d only collar a lot of old
mutton-headed shell-backs that didn’t know the
back of the business from the front. I don’t
take much stock in mercantile Jack, you know that,
but, poor devil, he’s got to go where he’s
told; and if you make trouble, ten to one it’ll
make you sick to see the innocents who have to stand
the racket. It would be different if we understood
the operation; but we don’t, you see: there’s
a lot of queer corners in life, and my vote is to
let the blame’ thing lie.”
“You speak as if we had that in our power,”
I objected.
“And so we have,” said he.
“What about the men?”
I asked. “They know too much by half, and
you can’t keep them from talking.”
“Can’t I?” returned
Nares. “I bet a boarding-master can!
They can be all half-seas-over when they get ashore,
blind drunk by dark, and cruising out of the Golden
Gate in different deep-sea ships by the next morning.
Can’t keep them from talking, can’t I?
Well, I can make ’em talk separate, leastways.
If a whole crew came talking, parties would listen;
but if it’s only one lone old shell-back, it’s
the usual yarn. And at least, they needn’t
talk before six months, or if we have luck,
and there’s a whaler handy three
years. And by that time, Mr. Dodd, it’s
ancient history.”
“That’s what they call
Shanghaiing, isn’t it?” I asked. “I
thought it belonged to the dime novel.”
“O, dime novels are right enough,”
returned the captain. “Nothing wrong with
the dime novel, only that things happen thicker than
they do in life, and the practical seamanship is off
colour.”
“So we can keep the business to ourselves,”
I mused.
“There’s one other person
that might blab,” said the captain. “Though
I don’t believe she has anything left to tell.”
“And who is she?” I asked.
“The old girl there,”
he answered, pointing to the wreck; “I know
there’s nothing in her; but somehow I’m
afraid of some one else it’s the
last thing you’d expect, so it’s just the
first that’ll happen some one dropping
into this God-forgotten island where nobody drops in,
waltzing into that wreck that we’ve grown old
with searching, stooping straight down, and picking
right up the very thing that tells the story.
What’s that to me? you may ask, and why am I
gone Soft Tommy on this Museum of Crooks? They’ve
smashed up you and Mr. Pinkerton; they’ve turned
my hair grey with conundrums they’ve been up
to larks, no doubt; and that’s all I know of
them you say. Well, and that’s
just where it is. I don’t know enough;
I don’t know what’s uppermost it’s
just such a lot of miscellaneous eventualities as
I don’t care to go stirring up; and I ask you
to let me deal with the old girl after a patent of
my own.”
“Certainly what you
please,” said I, scarce with attention, for a
new thought now occupied my brain. “Captain,”
I broke out, “you are wrong: we cannot
hush this up. There is one thing you have forgotten.”
“What is that?” he asked.
“A bogus Captain Trent, a bogus
Goddedaal, a whole bogus crew, have all started home,”
said I. “If we are right, not one of them
will reach his journey’s end. And do you
mean to say that such a circumstance as that can pass
without remark?”
“Sailors,” said the captain,
“only sailors! If they were all bound for
one place in a body, I don’t say so; but they’re
all going separate to Hull, to Sweden,
to the Clyde, to the Thames. Well, at each place,
what is it? Nothing new. Only one sailor-man
missing: got drunk, or got drowned, or got left the
proper sailor’s end.”
Something bitter in the thought and
in the speaker’s tones struck me hard.
“Here is one that has got left!” I cried,
getting sharply to my feet, for we had been some time
seated. “I wish it were the other.
I don’t don’t relish going
home to Jim with this!”
“See here,” said Nares,
with ready tact, “I must be getting aboard.
Johnson’s in the brig annexing chandlery and
canvas, and there’s some things in the Norah
that want fixing against we go to sea. Would you
like to be left here in the chicken-ranch? I’ll
send for you to supper.”
I embraced the proposal with delight.
Solitude, in my frame of mind, was not too dearly
purchased at the risk of sunstroke or sand-blindness;
and soon I was alone on the ill-omened islet.
I should find it hard to tell of what I thought of
Jim, of Mamie, of our lost fortune, of my lost hopes,
of the doom before me: to turn to some mechanical
occupation in some subaltern rank, and to toil there,
unremarked and unamused, until the hour of the last
deliverance. I was, at least, so sunk in sadness
that I scarce remarked where I was going; and chance
(or some finer sense that lives in us, and only guides
us when the mind is in abeyance) conducted my steps
into a quarter of the island where the birds were
few. By some devious route, which I was unable
to retrace for my return, I was thus able to mount,
without interruption, to the highest point of land.
And here I was recalled to consciousness by a last
discovery.
The spot on which I stood was level,
and commanded a wide view of the lagoon, the bounding
reef, the round horizon. Nearer hand I saw the
sister islet, the wreck, the Norah Creina, and
the Norah’s boat already moving shoreward.
For the sun was now low, flaming on the sea’s
verge; and the galley chimney smoked on board the schooner.
It thus befell that though my discovery
was both affecting and suggestive, I had no leisure
to examine further. What I saw was the blackened
embers of fire of wreck. By all the signs, it
must have blazed to a good height and burned for days;
from the scantling of a spar that lay upon the margin
only half consumed, it must have been the work of
more than one; and I received at once the image of
a forlorn troop of castaways, houseless in that lost
corner of the earth, and feeding there their fire
of signal. The next moment a hail reached me from
the boat; and bursting through the bushes and the
rising sea-fowl, I said farewell (I trust for ever)
to that desert isle.