The ship which thus appeared before
the castaways had long “tramped” the ocean,
wandering from one port to another as freights offered.
She was two years out from London, by the Cape of
Good Hope, India, and the Archipelago; and was now
bound for San Francisco in the hope of working homeward
round the Horn. Her captain was one Jacob Trent.
He had retired some five years before to a suburban
cottage, a patch of cabbages, a gig, and the conduct
of what he called a Bank. The name appears to
have been misleading. Borrowers were accustomed
to choose works of art and utility in the front shop;
loaves of sugar and bolts of broadcloth were deposited
in pledge; and it was a part of the manager’s
duty to dash in his gig on Saturday evenings from
one small retailer’s to another, and to annex
in each the bulk of the week’s takings.
His was thus an active life, and, to a man of the
type of a rat, filled with recondite joys. An
unexpected loss, a lawsuit, and the unintelligent commentary
of the judge upon the bench, combined to disgust him
of the business. I was so extraordinarily fortunate
as to find, in an old newspaper, a report of the proceedings
in Lyall v. The Cardiff Mutual Accommodation
Banking Co. “I confess I fail entirely
to understand the nature of the business,” the
judge had remarked, while Trent was being examined
in chief; a little after, on fuller information “They
call it a bank,” he had opined, “but it
seems to me to be an unlicensed pawn-shop”; and
he wound up with this appalling allocution: “Mr.
Trent, I must put you on your guard; you must be very
careful, or we shall see you here again.”
In the inside of a week the captain disposed of the
bank, the cottage, and the gig and horse; and to sea
again in the Flying Scud, where he did well,
and gave high satisfaction to his owners. But
the glory clung to him; he was a plain sailor-man,
he said, but he could never long allow you to forget
that he had been a banker.
His mate, Elias Goddedaal, was a huge
Viking of a man, six feet three, and of proportionate
mass, strong, sober, industrious, musical, and sentimental.
He ran continually over into Swedish melodies, chiefly
in the minor. He had paid nine dollars to hear
Patti; to hear Nilsson, he had deserted a ship and
two months’ wages; and he was ready at any time
to walk ten miles for a good concert or seven to a
reasonable play. On board he had three treasures:
a canary bird, a concertina, and a blinding copy of
the works of Shakespeare. He had a gift, peculiarly
Scandinavian, of making friends at sight; and elemental
innocence commended him; he was without fear, without
reproach, and without money or the hope of making
it.
Holdorsen was second mate, and berthed
aft, but messed usually with the hands.
Of one more of the crew some image
lives. This was a foremast hand out of the Clyde,
of the name of Brown. A small, dark, thick-set
creature, with dog’s eyes, of a disposition
incomparably mild and harmless, he knocked about seas
and cities, the uncomplaining whiptop of one vice.
“The drink is my trouble, ye see,” he said
to Carthew shyly; “and it’s the more shame
to me because I’m come of very good people at
Bowling, down the wa’er.” The letter
that so much affected Nares, in case the reader should
remember it, was addressed to this man Brown.
Such was the ship that now carried
joy into the bosoms of the castaways. After the
fatigue and the bestial emotions of their night of
play, the approach of salvation shook them from all
self-control. Their hands trembled, their eyes
shone, they laughed and shouted like children as they
cleared their camp: and some one beginning to
whistle “Marching Through Georgia,” the
remainder of the packing was conducted, amidst a thousand
interruptions, to these martial strains. But the
strong head of Wicks was only partly turned.
“Boys,” he said, “easy
all! We’re going aboard of a ship of which
we don’t know nothing; we’ve got a chest
of specie, and seeing the weight, we can’t turn
to and deny it. Now, suppose she was fishy; suppose
it was some kind of a Bully Hayes business! It’s
my opinion we’d better be on hand with the pistols.”
Every man of the party but Hemstead
had some kind of a revolver; these were accordingly
loaded and disposed about the persons of the castaways,
and the packing was resumed and finished in the same
rapturous spirit as it was begun. The sun was
not yet ten degrees above the eastern sea, but the
brig was already close in and hove-to, before they
had launched the boat and sped, shouting at the oars,
towards the passage.
It was blowing fresh outside with
a strong send of sea. The spray flew in the oarsmen’s
faces. They saw the Union Jack blow abroad from
the Flying Scud, the men clustered at the rail,
the cook in the galley-door, the captain on the quarter-deck
with a pith helmet and binoculars. And the whole
familiar business, the comfort, company, and safety
of a ship, heaving nearer at each stroke, maddened
them with joy.
Wicks was the first to catch the line,
and swarm on board, helping hands grabbing him as
he came and hauling him across the rail.
“Captain, sir, I suppose?”
he said, turning to the hard old man in the pith helmet.
“Captain Trent, sir,” returned the old
gentleman.
“Well, I’m Captain Kirkup,
and this is the crew of the Sydney schooner Currency
Lass, dismasted at sea January 28th.”
“Ay, ay,” said Trent.
“Well, you’re all right now. Lucky
for you I saw your signal. I didn’t know
I was so near this beastly island, there must be a
drift to the south’ard here; and when I came
on deck this morning at eight bells, I thought it
was a ship afire.”
It had been agreed that, while Wicks
was to board the ship and do the civil, the rest were
to remain in the whaleboat and see the treasure safe.
A tackle was passed down to them; to this they made
fast the invaluable chest, and gave the word to heave.
But the unexpected weight brought the hand at the
tackle to a stand; two others ran to tail on and help
him, and the thing caught the eye of Trent.
“’Vast heaving!”
he cried sharply; and then to Wicks: “What’s
that? I don’t ever remember to have seen
a chest weigh like that.”
“It’s money,” said Wicks.
“It’s what?” cried Trent.
“Specie,” said Wicks; “saved from
the wreck.”
Trent looked at him sharply.
“Here, let go that chest again, Mr. Goddedaal,”
he commanded, “shove the boat off, and stream
her with a line astern.”
“Ay, ay, sir!” from Goddedaal.
“What the devil’s wrong?” asked
Wicks.
“Nothing, I daresay,”
returned Trent. “But you’ll allow
it’s a queer thing when a boat turns up in mid-ocean
with half a ton of specie and everybody armed,”
he added, pointing to Wicks’s pocket. “Your
boat will lay comfortably astern, while you come below
and make yourself satisfactory.”
“O, if that’s all!”
said Wicks. “My log and papers are as right
as the mail; nothing fishy about us.” And
he hailed his friends in the boat, bidding them have
patience, and turned to follow Captain Trent.
“This way, Captain Kirkup,”
said the latter. “And don’t blame
a man for too much caution; no offence intended; and
these China rivers shake a fellow’s nerve.
All I want is just to see you’re what you say
you are; it’s only my duty, sir, and what you
would do yourself in the circumstances. I’ve
not always been a ship-captain: I was a banker
once, and I tell you that’s the trade to learn
caution in. You have to keep your weather-eye
lifting Saturday nights.” And with a dry,
business-like cordiality, he produced a bottle of
gin.
The captains pledged each other; the
papers were overhauled; the tale of Topelius and the
trade was told in appreciative ears and cemented their
acquaintance. Trent’s suspicions, thus finally
disposed of, were succeeded by a fit of profound thought,
during which he sat lethargic and stern, looking at
and drumming on the table.
“Anything more?” asked Wicks.
“What sort of a place is it
inside?” inquired Trent, sudden as though Wicks
had touched a spring.
“It’s a good enough lagoon a
few horses’ heads, but nothing to mention,”
answered Wicks.
“I’ve a good mind to go
in,” said Trent. “I was new rigged
in China; it’s given very bad, and I’m
getting frightened for my sticks. We could set
it up as good as new in a day. For I daresay your
lot would turn to and give us a hand?”
“You see if we don’t!” said Wicks.
“So be it, then,” concluded Trent.
“A stitch in time saves nine.”
They returned on deck; Wicks cried
the news to the Currency Lasses; the foretopsail was
filled again, and the brig ran into the lagoon lively,
the whaleboat dancing in her wake, and came to single
anchor off Middle Brooks Island before eight.
She was boarded by the castaways, breakfast was served,
the baggage slung on board and piled in the waist,
and all hands turned to upon the rigging. All
day the work continued, the two crews rivalling each
other in expense of strength. Dinner was served
on deck, the officers messing aft under the slack
of the spanker, the men fraternising forward.
Trent appeared in excellent spirits, served out grog
to all hands, opened a bottle of Cape wine for the
after-table, and obliged his guests with many details
of the life of a financier in Cardiff. He had
been forty years at sea, had five times suffered shipwreck,
was once nine months the prisoner of a pepper rajah,
and had seen service under fire in Chinese rivers;
but the only thing he cared to talk of, the only thing
of which he was vain, or with which he thought it
possible to interest a stranger, was his career as
a money-lender in the slums of a seaport town.
The afternoon spell told cruelly on
the Currency Lasses. Already exhausted as they
were with sleeplessness and excitement, they did the
last hours of this violent employment on bare nerves;
and, when Trent was at last satisfied with the condition
of his rigging, expected eagerly the word to put to
sea. But the captain seemed in no hurry.
He went and walked by himself softly, like a man in
thought. Presently he hailed Wicks.
“You’re a kind of company,
ain’t you, Captain Kirkup?” he inquired.
“Yes, we’re all on board on lays,”
was the reply.
“Well, then, you won’t
mind if I ask the lot of you down to tea in the cabin?”
asked Trent.
Wicks was amazed, but he naturally
ventured no remark; and a little after, the six Currency
Lasses sat down with Trent and Goddedaal to a spread
of marmalade, butter, toast, sardines, tinned tongue,
and steaming tea. The food was not very good,
and I have no doubt Nares would have reviled it, but
it was manna to the castaways. Goddedaal waited
on them with a kindness far before courtesy, a kindness
like that of some old, honest countrywoman in her
farm. It was remembered afterwards that Trent
took little share in these attentions, but sat much
absorbed in thought, and seemed to remember and forget
the presence of his guests alternately.
Presently he addressed the Chinaman.
“Clear out,” said he,
and watched him till he had disappeared in the stair. “Now,
gentlemen,” he went on, “I understand you’re
a joint-stock sort of crew, and that’s why I’ve
had you all down; for there’s a point I want
made clear. You see what sort of a ship this is a
good ship, though I say it, and you see what the rations
are good enough for sailor-men.”
There was a hurried murmur of approval,
but curiosity for what was coming next prevented an
articulate reply.
“Well,” continued Trent,
making bread pills and looking hard at the middle
of the table, “I’m glad of course to be
able to give you a passage to ’Frisco; one sailor-man
should help another, that’s my motto. But
when you want a thing in this world, you generally
always have to pay for it.” He laughed
a brief, joyless laugh. “I have no idea
of losing by my kindness.”
“We have no idea you should, captain,”
said Wicks.
“We are ready to pay anything in reason,”
added Carthew.
At the words, Goddedaal, who sat next
to him, touched him with his elbow, and the two mates
exchanged a significant look. The character of
Captain Trent was given and taken in that silent second.
“In reason?” repeated
the captain of the brig. “I was waiting
for that. Reason’s between two people,
and there’s only one here. I’m the
judge; I’m reason. If you want an advance
you have to pay for it” he hastily
corrected himself “If you want a passage
in my ship, you have to pay my price,” he substituted.
“That’s business, I believe. I don’t
want you; you want me.”
“Well, sir,” said Carthew, “and
what is your price?”
The captain made bread pills.
“If I were like you,” he said, “when
you got hold of that merchant in the Gilberts, I might
surprise you. You had your chance then; seems
to me it’s mine now. Turn about’s
fair play. What kind of mercy did you have on
that Gilbert merchant?” he cried, with a sudden
stridency. “Not that I blame you. All’s
fair in love and business,” and he laughed again,
a little frosty giggle.
“Well, sir?” said Carthew gravely.
“Well, this ship’s mine, I think?”
he asked sharply.
“Well, I’m of that way of thinking myself,”
observed Mac.
“I say it’s mine, sir!”
reiterated Trent, like a man trying to be angry.
“And I tell you all if I was a driver like what
you are, I would take the lot. But there’s
two thousand pounds there that don’t belong to
you, and I’m an honest man. Give me the
two thousand that’s yours, and I’ll give
you a passage to the coast, and land every man-jack
of you in ’Frisco with fifteen pounds in his
pocket, and the captain here with twenty-five.”
Goddedaal laid down his head on the table like a man
ashamed.
“You’re joking,” cried Wicks, purple
in the face.
“Am I?” said Trent.
“Please yourselves. You’re under no
compulsion. This ship’s mine, but there’s
that Brooks Island don’t belong to me, and you
can lay there till you die for what I care.”
“It’s more than your blooming brig’s
worth!” cried Wicks.
“It’s my price anyway,” returned
Trent.
“And do you mean to say you would land us there
to starve?” cried Tommy.
Captain Trent laughed the third time.
“Starve? I defy you to,” said he.
“I’ll sell you all the provisions you want
at a fair profit.”
“I beg your pardon, sir,”
said Mac, “but my case is by itself. I’m
working me passage; I got no share in that two thousand
pounds, nor nothing in my pockut; and I’ll be
glad to know what you have to say to me?”
“I ain’t a hard man,”
said Trent; “that shall make no difference.
I’ll take you with the rest, only of course
you get no fifteen pound.”
The impudence was so extreme and startling
that all breathed deep, and Goddedaal raised up his
face and looked his superior sternly in the eye.
But Mac was more articulate.
“And you’re what ye call a British sayman,
I suppose? the sorrow in your guts!” he cried.
“One more such word, and I clap
you in irons!” said Trent, rising gleefully
at the face of opposition.
“And where would I be the while
you were doin’ ut?” asked Mac.
“After you and your rigging, too! Ye ould
puggy, ye haven’t the civility of a bug, and
I’ll learn ye some.”
His voice did not even rise as he
uttered the threat; no man present, Trent least of
all, expected that which followed. The Irishman’s
hand rose suddenly from below the table, an open clasp-knife
balanced on the palm; there was a movement swift as
conjuring; Trent started half to his feet, turning
a little as he rose so as to escape the table, and
the movement was his bane. The missile struck
him in the jugular; he fell forward, and his blood
flowed among the dishes on the cloth.
The suddenness of the attack and the
catastrophe, the instant change from peace to war,
and from life to death, held all men spellbound.
Yet a moment they sat about the table staring open-mouthed
upon the prostrate captain and the flowing blood.
The next, Goddedaal had leaped to his feet, caught
up the stool on which he had been sitting, and swung
it high in air, a man transfigured, roaring (as he
stood) so that men’s ears were stunned with
it. There was no thought of battle in the Currency
Lasses; none drew his weapon; all huddled helplessly
from before the face of the baresark Scandinavian.
His first blow sent Mac to ground with a broken arm.
His second dashed out the brains of Hemstead.
He turned from one to another, menacing and trumpeting
like a wounded elephant, exulting in his rage.
But there was no counsel, no light of reason, in that
ecstasy of battle; and he shied from the pursuit of
victory to hail fresh blows upon the supine Hemstead,
so that the stool was shattered and the cabin rang
with their violence. The sight of that post-mortem
cruelty recalled Carthew to the life of instinct, and
his revolver was in hand and he had aimed and fired
before he knew. The ear-bursting sound of the
report was accompanied by a yell of pain; the colossus
paused, swayed, tottered, and fell headlong on the
body of his victim.
In the instant silence that succeeded,
the sound of feet pounding on deck and in the companion
leaped into hearing; and a face, that of the sailor
Holdorsen, appeared below the bulkheads in the cabin
doorway. Carthew shattered it with a second shot,
for he was a marksman.
“Pistols!” he cried, and
charged at the companion, Wicks at his heels, Tommy
and Amalu following. They trod the body of Holdorsen
under foot, and flew upstairs and forth into the dusky
blaze of a sunset red as blood. The numbers were
still equal, but the Flying Scuds dreamed not of defence,
and fled with one accord for the forecastle scuttle.
Brown was first in flight; he disappeared below unscathed;
the Chinaman followed head-foremost with a ball in
his side; and the others shinned into the rigging.
A fierce composure settled upon Wicks
and Carthew, their fighting second wind. They
posted Tommy at the fore and Amalu at the main to guard
the masts and shrouds, and going themselves into the
waist, poured out a box of cartridges on deck and
filled the chambers. The poor devils aloft bleated
aloud for mercy. But the hour of any mercy was
gone by; the cup was brewed and must be drunken to
the dregs; since so many had fallen all must fall.
The light was bad, the cheap revolvers fouled and carried
wild, the screaming wretches were swift to flatten
themselves against the masts and yards, or find a
momentary refuge in the hanging sails. The fell
business took long, but it was done at last. Hardy
the Londoner was shot on the fore-royal yard, and
hung horribly suspended in the brails. Wallen,
the other, had his jaw broken on the maintop-gallant
crosstrees, and exposed himself, shrieking, till a
second shot dropped him on the deck.
This had been bad enough, but worse
remained behind. There was still Brown in the
forepeak. Tommy, with a sudden clamour of weeping,
begged for his life. “One man can’t
hurt us,” he sobbed. “We can’t
go on with this. I spoke to him at dinner.
He’s an awful decent little cad. It can’t
be done. Nobody can go into that place and murder
him. It’s too damned wicked.”
The sound of his supplications
was perhaps audible to the unfortunate below.
“One left and we all hang,”
said Wicks. “Brown must go the same road.”
The big man was deadly white and trembled like an aspen;
and he had no sooner finished speaking than he went
to the ship’s side and vomited.
“We can never do it if we wait,”
said Carthew. “Now or never,” and
he marched towards the scuttle.
“No, no, no!” wailed Tommy, clutching
at his jacket.
But Carthew flung him off, and stepped
down the ladder, his heart rising with disgust and
shame. The Chinaman lay on the floor, still groaning;
the place was pitch dark.
“Brown!” cried Carthew; “Brown,
where are you?”
His heart smote him for the treacherous apostrophe,
but no answer came.
He groped in the bunks: they
were all empty. Then he moved towards the forepeak,
which was hampered with coils of rope and spare chandlery
in general.
“Brown!” he said again.
“Here, sir,” answered
a shaking voice; and the poor invisible caitiff called
on him by name, and poured forth out of the darkness
an endless, garrulous appeal for mercy. A sense
of danger, of daring, had alone nerved Carthew to
enter the forecastle; and here was the enemy crying
and pleading like a frightened child. His obsequious
“Here, sir,” his horrid fluency of obtestation,
made the murder tenfold more revolting. Twice
Carthew raised the pistol, once he pressed the trigger
(or thought he did) with all his might, but no explosion
followed; and with that the lees of his courage ran
quite out, and he turned and fled from before his
victim.
Wicks sat on the fore hatch, raised
the face of a man of seventy, and looked a wordless
question. Carthew shook his head. With such
composure as a man displays marching towards the gallows,
Wicks arose, walked to the scuttle, and went down.
Brown thought it was Carthew returning, and discovered
himself, half-crawling from his shelter, with another
incoherent burst of pleading. Wicks emptied his
revolver at the voice, which broke into mouse-like
whimperings and groans. Silence succeeded, and
the murderer ran on deck like one possessed.
The other three were now all gathered
on the fore hatch, and Wicks took his place beside
them without question asked or answered. They
sat close like children in the dark, and shook each
other with their shaking. The dusk continued
to fall; and there was no sound but the beating of
the surf and the occasional hiccup of a sob from Tommy
Hadden.
“God, if there was another ship!”
cried Carthew of a sudden.
Wicks started and looked aloft with
the trick of all seamen, and shuddered as he saw the
hanging figure on the royal-yard.
“If I went aloft, I’d
fall,” he said simply. “I’m
done up.”
It was Amalu who volunteered, climbed
to the very truck, swept the fading horizon, and announced
nothing within sight.
“No odds,” said Wicks. “We
can’t sleep....”
“Sleep!” echoed Carthew;
and it seemed as if the whole of Shakespeare’s
Macbeth thundered at the gallop through his
mind.
“Well, then, we can’t
sit and chitter here,” said Wicks, “till
we’ve cleaned the ship; and I can’t turn
to till I’ve had gin, and the gin’s in
the cabin, and who’s to fetch it?”
“I will,” said Carthew, “if any
one has matches.”
Amalu passed him a box, and he went
aft and down the companion and into the cabin, stumbling
upon bodies. Then he struck a match, and his looks
fell upon two living eyes.
“Well?” asked Mac, for
it was he who still survived in that shambles of a
cabin.
“It’s done; they’re all dead,”
answered Carthew.
“Christ!” said the Irishman, and fainted.
The gin was found in the dead captain’s
cabin; it was brought on deck, and all hands had a
dram, and attacked their further task. The night
was come, the moon would not be up for hours; a lamp
was set on the main hatch to light Amalu as he washed
down decks; and the galley lantern was taken to guide
the others in their graveyard business. Holdorsen,
Hemstead, Trent, and Goddedaal were first disposed
of, the last still breathing as he went over the side;
Wallen followed; and then Wicks, steadied by the gin,
went aloft with the boathook and succeeded in dislodging
Hardy. The Chinaman was their last task; he seemed
to be light-headed, talked aloud in his unknown language
as they brought him up, and it was only with the splash
of his sinking body that the gibberish ceased.
Brown, by common consent, was left alone. Flesh
and blood could go no further.
All this time they had been drinking
undiluted gin like water; three bottles stood broached
in different quarters; and none passed without a gulp.
Tommy collapsed against the mainmast; Wicks fell on
his face on the poop ladder and moved no more; Amalu
had vanished unobserved. Carthew was the last
afoot: he stood swaying at the break of the poop,
and the lantern, which he still carried, swung with
his movement. His head hummed; it swarmed with
broken thoughts; memory of that day’s abominations
flared up and died down within him like the light of
a lamp in a strong draught. And then he had a
drunkard’s inspiration.
“There must be no more of this,”
he thought, and stumbled once more below.
The absence of Holdorsen’s body
brought him to a stand. He stood and stared at
the empty floor, and then remembered and smiled.
From the captain’s room he took the open case
with one dozen and three bottles of gin, put the lantern
inside, and walked precariously forth. Mac was
once more conscious, his eyes haggard, his face drawn
with pain and flushed with fever; and Carthew remembered
he had never been seen to, had lain there helpless,
and was so to lie all night, injured, perhaps dying.
But it was now too late; reason had now fled from
that silent ship. If Carthew could get on deck
again, it was as much as he could hope; and casting
on the unfortunate a glance of pity, the tragic drunkard
shouldered his way up the companion, dropped the case
overboard, and fell in the scuppers helpless.