The third of October had broken auspiciously
with a bright sun and a cloudless sky. There
had in the morning been a slight breeze, and a few
little white wreaths of vapour drifted here and there
like the scattered feathers of some gigantic bird,
but, as the day wore on, such wind as there was fell
completely away, and the air became close and stagnant.
The sun blazed down with a degree
of heat which was remarkable so late in the season,
and a shimmering haze lay upon the upland moors and
concealed the Irish mountains on the other side of
the Channel.
The sea itself rose and fell in a
long, heavy, oily roll, sweeping slowly landward,
and breaking sullenly with a dull, monotonous booming
upon the rock-girt shore. To the inexperienced
all seemed calm and peaceful, but to those who are
accustomed to read Nature’s warnings there was
a dark menace in air and sky and sea.
My sister and I walked out in the
afternoon, sauntering slowly along the margin of the
great, sandy spit which shoots out into the Irish Sea,
flanking upon one side the magnificent Bay of Luce,
and on the other the more obscure inlet of Kirkmaiden,
on the shores of which the Branksome property is situated.
It was too sultry to go far, so we
soon seated ourselves upon one of the sandy hillocks,
overgrown with faded grass-tufts, which extend along
the coast-line, and which form Nature’s dykes
against the encroachments of the ocean.
Our rest was soon interrupted by the
scrunching of heavy boots upon the shingle, and Jamieson,
the old man-o’-war’s man whom I have already
had occasion to mention, made his appearance, with
the flat, circular net upon his back which he used
for shrimp-catching. He came towards us upon
seeing us, and said in his rough, kindly way that he
hoped we would not take it amiss if he sent us up
a dish of shrimps for our tea at Branksome.
“I aye make a good catch before a storm,”
he remarked.
“You think there is going to be a storm, then?”
I asked.
“Why, even a marine could see
that,” he answered, sticking a great wedge of
tobacco into his cheek. “The moors over
near Cloomber are just white wi’ gulls and kittiewakes.
What d’ye think they come ashore for except
to escape having all the feathers blown out o’
them? I mind a day like this when I was wi’
Charlie Napier off Cronstadt. It well-nigh blew
us under the guns of the forts, for all our engines
and propellers.”
“Have you ever known a wreck in these parts?”
I asked.
“Lord love ye, sir, it’s
a famous place for wrecks. Why, in that very
bay down there two o’ King Philip’s first-rates
foundered wi’ all hands in the days o’
the Spanish war. If that sheet o’ water
and the Bay o’ Luce round the corner could tell
their ain tale they’d have a gey lot to speak
of. When the Jedgment Day comes round that water
will be just bubbling wi’ the number o’
folks that will be coming up frae the bottom.”
“I trust that there will be
no wrecks while we are here,” said Esther earnestly.
The old man shook his grizzled head
and looked distrustfully at the hazy horizon.
“If it blows from the west,”
he said, “some o’ these sailing ships may
find it no joke to be caught without sea-room in the
North Channel. There’s that barque out
yonder I daresay her maister would be glad
enough to find himsel’ safe in the Clyde.”
“She seems to be absolutely
motionless,” I remarked, looking at the vessel
in question, whose black hull and gleaming sails rose
and fell slowly with the throbbing of the giant pulse
beneath her. “Perhaps, Jamieson, we are
wrong, and there will be no storm after all.”
The old sailor chuckled to himself
with an air of superior knowledge, and shuffled away
with his shrimp-net, while my sister and I walked
slowly homewards through the hot and stagnant air.
I went up to my father’s study
to see if the old gentleman had any instructions as
to the estate, for he had become engrossed in a new
work upon Oriental literature, and the practical management
of the property had in consequence devolved entirely
upon me.
I found him seated at his square library
table, which was so heaped with books and papers that
nothing of him was visible from the door except a
tuft of white hair.
“My dear son,” he said
to me as I entered, “it is a great grief to me
that you are not more conversant with Sanscrit.
When I was your age, I could converse not only in
that noble language, but also in the Tamulic, Lohitic,
Gangelic, Taic, and Malaic dialects, which are all
offshoots from the Turanian branch.”
“I regret extremely, sir,”
I answered, “that I have not inherited your
wonderful talents as a polyglot.”
“I have set myself a task,”
he explained, “which, if it could only be continued
from generation to generation in our own family until
it was completed, would make the name of West immortal.
This is nothing less than to publish an English translation
of the Buddhist Djarmas, with a preface giving an
idea of the position of Brahminism before the coming
of Sakyamuni. With diligence it is possible that
I might be able myself to complete part of the preface
before I die.”
“And pray, sir,” I asked,
“how long would the whole work be when it was
finished?”
“The abridged edition in the
Imperial Library of Pekin,” said my father,
rubbing his hands together, “consists of 325
volumes of an average weight of five pounds.
Then the preface, which must embrace some account
of the Rig-veda, the Sama-veda, the
Yagur-veda, and the Atharva-veda, with the
Brahmanas, could hardly be completed in less than
ten volumes. Now, if we apportion one volume to
each year, there is every prospect of the family coming
to an end of its task about the date 2250, the twelfth
generation completing the work, while the thirteenth
might occupy itself upon the index.”
“And how are our descendants
to live, sir,” I asked, with a smile, “during
the progress of this great undertaking:’”
“That’s the worst of you,
Jack,” my father cried petulantly. “There
is nothing practical about you. Instead of confining
your attention to the working out of my noble scheme,
you begin raising all sorts of absurd objections.
It is a mere matter of detail how our descendants live,
so long as they stick to the Djarmas. Now, I
want you to go up to the bothy of Fergus McDonald
and see about the thatch, and Willie Fullerton has
written to say that his milk-cow is bad. You might
took in upon your way and ask after it.”
I started off upon my errands, but
before doing so I took a look at the barometer upon
the wall. The mercury had sunk to the phenomenal
point of twenty-eight inches. Clearly the old
sailor had not been wrong in his interpretation of
Nature’s signs.
As I returned over the moors in the
evening, the wind was blowing in short, angry puffs,
and the western horizon was heaped with sombre clouds
which stretched their long, ragged tentacles right
up to the zenith.
Against their dark background one
or two livid, sulphur-coloured splotches showed up
malignant and menacing, while the surface of the sea
had changed from the appearance of burnished quicksilver
to that of ground glass. A low, moaning sound
rose up from the ocean as if it knew that trouble
was in store for it.
Far out in the Channel I saw a single
panting, eager steam vessel making ifs way to
Belfast Lough, and the large barque which I had observed
in the morning still beating about in the offing,
endeavouring to pass to the northward.
At nine o’clock a sharp breeze
was blowing, at ten it had freshened into a gale,
and before midnight the most furious storm was raging
which I can remember upon that weather-beaten coast.
I sat for some time in our small,
oak-panelled sitting-room listening to the screeching
and howling of the blast and to the rattle of the gravel
and pebbles as they pattered against the window.
Nature’s grim orchestra was playing its world-old
piece with a compass which ranged from the deep diapason
of the thundering surge to the thin shriek of the
scattered shingle and the keen piping of frightened
sea birds.
Once for an instant I opened the lattice
window, but a gust of wind and rain came blustering
through, bearing with it a great sheet of seaweed,
which flapped down upon the table. It was all
I could do to close it again with a thrust of my shoulder
in the face of the blast.
My sister and father had retired to
their rooms, but my thoughts were too active for sleep,
so I continued to sit and to smoke by the smouldering
fire.
What was going on in the Hall now,
I wondered? What did Gabriel think of the storm,
and how did it affect the old man who wandered about
in the night? Did he welcome these dread forces
of Nature as being of the same order of things as
his own tumultuous thoughts?
It was only two days now from the
date which I had been assured was to mark a crisis
in his fortunes. Would he regard this sudden tempest
as being in any way connected with the mysterious
fate which threatened him?
Over all these things and many more
I pondered as I sat by the glowing embers until they
died gradually out, and the chill night air warned
me that it was time to retire.
I may have slept a couple of hours
when I was awakened by some one tugging furiously
at my shoulder. Sitting up in bed, I saw by the
dim light that my father was standing half-clad by
my bedside, and that it was his grasp which I felt
on my night-shirt.
“Get up, Jack, get up!”
he was crying excitedly. “There’s
a great ship ashore in the bay, and the poor folk
will all be drowned. Come down, my boy, and let
us see what we can do.”
The good old man seemed to be nearly
beside himself with excitement and impatience.
I sprang from my bed, and was huddling on a few clothes,
when a dull, booming sound made itself heard above
the howling of the wind and the thunder of the breakers.
“There it is again!” cried
my father. “It is their signal gun, poor
creatures! Jamieson and the fishermen are below.
Put your oil-skin coat on and the Glengarry hat.
Come, come, every second may mean a human life!”
We hurried down together and made
our way to the beach, accompanied by a dozen or so
of the inhabitants of Branksome.
The gale had increased rather than
moderated, and the wind screamed all round us with
an infernal clamour. So great was its force that
we had to put our shoulders against it, and bore our
way through it, while the sand and gravel tingled
up against our faces.
There was just light enough to make
out the scudding clouds and the white gleam of the
breakers, but beyond that all was absolute darkness.
We stood ankle deep in the shingle
and seaweed, shading our eyes with our hands and peering
out into the inky obscurity.
It seemed to me as I listened that
I could hear human voices loud in intreaty and terror,
but amid the wild turmoil of Nature it was difficult
to distinguish one sound from another.
Suddenly, however, a light glimmered
in the heart of the tempest, and next instant the
beach and sea and wide, tossing bay were brilliantly
illuminated by the wild glare of a signal light.
The ship lay on her beam-ends right
in the centre of the terrible Hansel reef, hurled
over to such an angle that I could see all the planking
of her deck. I recognised her at once as being
the same three-masted barque which I had observed
in the Channel in the morning, and the Union Jack
which was nailed upside down to the jagged slump of
her mizzen proclaimed her nationality.
Every spar and rope and writhing piece
of cordage showed up hard and clear under the vivid
light which spluttered and flickered from the highest
portion of the forecastle. Beyond the doomed ship,
out of the great darkness came the long, rolling lines
of big waves, never ending, never tiring, with a petulant
tuft of foam here and there upon their crests.
Each as it reached the broad circle of unnatural light
appeared to gather strength and volume and to hurry
on more impetuously until with a roar and a jarring
crash it sprang upon its victim.
Clinging to the weather shrouds we
could distinctly see ten or a dozen frightened seamen
who, when the light revealed our presence, turned
their white faces towards us and waved their hands
imploringly. The poor wretches had evidently
taken fresh hope from our presence, though it was
clear that their own boats had either been washed away
or so damaged as to render them useless.
The sailors who clung to the rigging
were not, however, the only unfortunates on board.
On the breaking poop there stood three men who appeared
to be both of a different race and nature from the
cowering wretches who implored our assistance.
Leaning upon the shattered taff-rail
they seemed to be conversing together as quietly and
unconcernedly as though they were unconscious of the
deadly peril which surrounded them.
As the signal light flickered over
them, we could see from the shore that these immutable
strangers wore red fezes, and that their faces were
of a swarthy, large-featured type, which proclaimed
an Eastern origin.
There was little time, however, for
us to take note of such details. The ship was
breaking rapidly, and some effort must be made to save
the poor, sodden group of humanity who implored our
assistance.
The nearest lifeboat was in the Bay
of Luce, ten long miles away, but here was our own
broad, roomy craft upon the shingle, and plenty of
brave fisher lads to form a crew. Six of us sprang
to the oars, the others pushed us off, and we fought
our way through the swirling, raging waters, staggering
and recoiling before the great, sweeping billows, but
still steadily decreasing the distance between the
barque and ourselves.
It seemed, however, that our efforts
were fated to be in vain.
As we mounted upon a surge I saw a
giant wave, topping all the others, and coming after
them like a driver following a flock, sweep down upon
the vessel, curling its great, green arch over the
breaking deck.
With a rending, riving sound the ship
split in two where the terrible, serrated back of
the Hansel reef was sawing into her keel. The
after-part, with the broken mizzen and the three Orientals,
sank backwards into deep water and vanished, while
the fore-half oscillated helplessly about, retaining
its precarious balance upon the rocks.
A wail of fear went up from the wreck
and was echoed from the beach, but by the blessing
of Providence she kept afloat until we made our way
under her bowsprit and rescued every man of the crew.
We had not got half-way upon our return,
however, when another great wave swept the shattered
forecastle off the reef, and, extinguishing the signal
light, hid the wild denouement from our view.
Our friends upon the shore were loud
in congratulation and praise, nor were they backward
in welcoming and comforting the castaways. They
were thirteen in all, as cold and cowed a set of mortals
as ever slipped through Death’s fingers, save,
indeed, their captain, who was a hardy, robust man,
and who made light of the affair.
Some were taken off to this cottage
and some to that, but the greater part came back to
Branksome with us, where we gave them such dry clothes
as we could lay our hands on, and served them with
beef and beer by the kitchen fire. The captain,
whose name was Meadows, compressed his bulky form
into a suit of my own, and came down to the parlour,
where he mixed himself some grog and gave my father
and myself an account of the disaster.
“If it hadn’t been for
you, sir, and your brave fellows,” he said,
smiling across at me, “we should be ten fathoms
deep by this time. As to the Belinda,
she was a leaky old tub and well insured, so neither
the owners nor I are likely to break our hearts over
her.”
“I am afraid,” said my
father sadly, “that we shall never see your three
passengers again. I have left men upon the beach
in case they should be washed up, but I fear it is
hopeless. I saw them go down when the vessel
split, and no man could have lived for a moment among
that terrible surge.”
“Who were they?” I asked.
“I could not have believed that it was possible
for men to appear so unconcerned in the face of such
imminent peril.”
“As to who they are or were,”
the captain answered, puffing thoughtfully at his
pipe, “that is by no means easy to say.
Our last port was Kurrachee, in the north of India,
and there we took them aboard as passengers for Glasgow.
Ram Singh was the name of the younger, and it is only
with him that I have come in contact, but they all
appeared to be quiet, inoffensive gentlemen.
I never inquired their business, but I should judge
that they were Parsee merchants from Hyderabad whose
trade took them to Europe. I could never see
why the crew should fear them, and the mate, too,
he should have had more sense.”
“Fear them I!” I ejaculated in surprise.
“Yes, they had some preposterous
idea that they were dangerous shipmates. I have
no doubt if you were to go down into the kitchen now
you would find that they are all agreed that our passengers
were the cause of the whole disaster.”
As the captain was speaking the parlour
door opened and the mate of the barque, a tall, red-bearded
sailor, stepped in. He had obtained a complete
rig-out from some kind-hearted fisherman, and looked
in his comfortable jersey and well-greased seaboots
a very favourable specimen of a shipwrecked mariner.
With a few words of grateful acknowledgment
of our hospitality, he drew a chair up to the fire
and warmed his great, brown hands before the blaze.
“What d’ye think now,
Captain Meadows?” he asked presently, glancing
up at his superior officer. “Didn’t
I warn you what would be the upshot of having those
niggers on board the Belinda?”
The captain leant back in his chair and laughed heartily.
“Didn’t I tell you?” he cried, appealing
to us. “Didn’t I tell you?”
“It might have been no laughing
matter for us,” the other remarked petulantly.
“I have lost a good sea-kit and nearly my life
into the bargain.”
“Do I understand you to say,”
said I, “that you attribute your misfortunes
to your ill-fated passengers?”
The mate opened his eyes at the adjective.
“Why ill-fated, sir?” he asked.
“Because they are most certainly drowned,”
I answered.
He sniffed incredulously and went on warming his hands.
“Men of that kind are never
drowned,” he said, after a pause. “Their
father, the devil, looks after them. Did you see
them standing on the poop and rolling cigarettes at
the time when the mizzen was carried away and the
quarter-boats stove? That was enough for me.
I’m not surprised at you landsmen not being
able to take it in, but the captain here, who’s
been sailing since he was the height of the binnacle,
ought to know by this time that a cat and a priest
are the worst cargo you can carry. If a Christian
priest is bad, I guess an idolatrous pagan one is
fifty times worse. I stand by the old religion,
and be d d to it!”
My father and I could not help laughing
at the rough sailor’s very unorthodox way of
proclaiming his orthodoxy. The mate, however,
was evidently in deadly earnest, and proceeded to
state his case, marking off the different points upon
the rough, red fingers of his left hand.
“It was at Kurrachee, directly
after they come that I warned ye,” he said reproachfully
to the captain. “There was three Buddhist
Lascars in my watch, and what did they do when
them chaps come aboard? Why, they down on their
stomachs and rubbed their noses on the deck that’s
what they did. They wouldn’t ha’
done as much for an admiral of the R’yal Navy.
They know who’s who these niggers
do; and I smelt mischief the moment I saw them on
their faces. I asked them afterwards in your
presence, Captain, why they had done it, and they answered
that the passengers were holy men. You heard
’em yourself.”
“Well, there’s no harm
in that, Hawkins,” said Captain Meadows.
“I don’t know that,”
the mate said doubtfully. “The holiest Christian
is the one that’s nearest God, but the holiest
nigger is, in my opinion, the one that’s nearest
the devil. Then you saw yourself, Captain Meadows,
how they went on during the voyage, reading books that
was writ on wood instead o’ paper, and sitting
up right through the night to jabber together on the
quarter-deck. What did they want to have a chart
of their own for and to mark the course of the vessel
every day?”
“They didn’t,” said the captain.
“Indeed they did, and if I did
not tell you sooner it was because you were always
ready to laugh at what I said about them. They
had instruments o’ their own when
they used them I can’t say but every
day at noon they worked out the latitude and longitude,
and marked out the vessel’s position on a chart
that was pinned on their cabin table. I saw them
at it, and so did the steward from his pantry.”
“Well, I don’t see what
you prove from that,” the captain remarked,
“though I confess it is a strange thing.”
“I’ll tell you another
strange thing,” said the mate impressively.
“Do you know the name of this bay in which we
are cast away?”
“I have learnt from our kind
friends here that we are upon the Wigtownshire coast,”
the captain answered, “but I have not heard the
name of the bay.”
The mate leant forward with a grave face.
“It is the Bay of Kirkmaiden,” he said.
If he expected to astonish Captain
Meadows he certainly succeeded, for that gentleman
was fairly bereft of speech for a minute or more.
“This is really marvellous,”
he said, after a time, turning to us. “These
passengers of ours cross-questioned us early in the
voyage as to the existence of a bay of that name.
Hawkins here and I denied all knowledge of one, for
on the chart it is included in the Bay of Luce.
That we should eventually be blown into it and destroyed
is an extraordinary coincidence.”
“Too extraordinary to be a coincidence,”
growled the mate. “I saw them during the
calm yesterday morning, pointing to the land over our
starboard quarter. They knew well enough that
that was the port they were making for.”
“What do you make of it all,
then, Hawkins?” asked the captain, with a troubled
face. “What is your own theory on the matter?”
“Why, in my opinion,”
the mate answered, “them three swabs have no
more difficulty in raising a gale o’ wind than
I should have in swallowing this here grog. They
had reasons o’ their own for coming to this
God-forsaken saving your presence, sirs this
God-forsaken bay, and they took a short cut to it
by arranging to be blown ashore there. That’s
my idea o’ the matter, though what three Buddhist
priests could find to do in the Bay of Kirkmaiden
is clean past my comprehension.”
My father raised his eyebrows to indicate
the doubt which his hospitality forbade him from putting
into words.
“I think, gentlemen,”
he said, “that you are both sorely in need of
rest after your perilous adventures. If you will
follow me I shall lead you to your rooms.”
He conducted them with old-fashioned
ceremony to the laird’s best spare bedroom,
and then, returning to me in the parlour, proposed
that we should go down together to the beach and learn
whether anything fresh had occurred.
The first pale light of dawn was just
appearing in the east when we made our way for the
second time to the scene of the shipwreck. The
gale had blown itself out, but the sea was still very
high, and all inside the breakers was a seething,
gleaming line of foam, as though the fierce old ocean
were gnashing its white fangs at the victims who had
escaped from its clutches.
All along the beach fishermen and
crofters were hard at work hauling up spars and barrels
as fast as they were tossed ashore. None of them
had seen any bodies, however, and they explained to
us that only such things as could float had any chance
of coming ashore, for the undercurrent was so strong
that whatever was beneath the surface must infallibly
be swept out to sea.
As to the possibility of the unfortunate
passengers having been able to reach the shore, these
practical men would not hear of it for a moment, and
showed us conclusively that if they had not been drowned
they must have been dashed to pieces upon the rocks.
“We did all that could be done,”
my father said sadly, as we returned home. “I
am afraid that the poor mate has had his reason affected
by the suddenness of the disaster. Did you hear
what he said about Buddhist priests raising a gale?”
“Yes, I heard him,” said
I. “It was very painful to listen to him,”
said my father. “I wonder if he would object
to my putting a small mustard plaster under each of
his ears. It would relieve any congestion of
the brain. Or perhaps it would be best to wake
him up and give him two antibilious pills. What
do you think, Jack?”
“I think,” said I, with
a yawn, “that you had best let him sleep, and
go to sleep yourself. You can physic him in the
morning if he needs it.”
So saying I stumbled off to my bedroom,
and throwing myself upon the couch was soon in a dreamless
slumber.