I.
The house known as Vellan’s
Rents stands in the Chy-pons over the waterside, a
stone’s throw beyond the ferry and the archway
where the toll-keeper used to live. You may know
it by its exceeding dilapidation and by the clouds
of steam that issue on the street from one of its
windows. The sill of this window stands a bare
foot above the causeway, and glancing down into the
room as you pass, you will see the shoulders of a
woman stooping over a wash-tub. When first I
used to pass this window the woman was called Naomi
Bricknell; later it was Sarah Ann Polgrain; and now
it is (euphemistically) Pretty Alice. One goes
and makes way for another, but the wash-tub is always
there and the rheumatic fever; and while these remain
they will never lack, as they have never lacked yet,
for a woman to do battle for dear life between them.
But my story concerns the first of
these only, Naomi Bricknell. She and her mother
occupied two rooms in Vellan’s Rents as far back
as I can remember, and were twisted with the fever
about once in every six months. For this they
paid one shilling a week rent. If you lift the
latch and push the front door open, you seem at first
to be looking down a well; for a flight of thirty-two
steps plunges straight from the threshold to the quay
door and a square of green water there. And when
the sun is on the water at the bottom of this funnel,
the effect is pretty. But taking note of the
cold wind that rushes up this stairway and into the
steaming room where the wash-tub stands, you will
understand how it comes that each new tenant takes
over the rheumatic fever as one of the fixtures.
In a room to the right of the stairway,
and facing Naomi’s, lived a middle-aged man
who was always known as Long Oliver. This man
was a native of the port, and it was understood that
he and Naomi had been well acquainted, years ago,
before he started on his first voyage and some time
before Naomi married. Tiring of the sea in time,
he had found work on the jetties and rented this room
for sixpence a week. In these days he and Naomi
rarely spoke to each other beyond exchanging a “Good-morning”
when they met on the stairway, nor did he show any
friendliness beyond tapping at her mother’s door
and inquiring about her once a day whenever she happened
to be down with the fever. I have made researches
and find that the rest of the house was tenanted at
that time by a working block-maker, with his wife and
four children; a widow and her son just returned from
sea with an injured spine; a young couple without
children. But these do not come into the tale.
Now the history of Naomi was this.
She was married at three-and-twenty to Abe Bricknell,
a young sailor of the port, and as steady as a woman
could wish. In the third year of their married
life, and a week after obtaining his certificate,
he sailed out of Troy as mate of a fruit-ship, a barque,
that never came back, nor was sighted again after
passing the Lizard lights.
Naomi - a tall up-standing
woman with deep, gentle eyes, like a cow’s,
and a firm mouth that seldom spoke - took
her affliction oddly. She neither wailed nor
put on mourning. She looked upon it as a matter
between herself and her Maker, and said:
“God has done this thing to
me; therefore I have finished with Him. I am
no man to go and revenge myself by breaking all the
Commandments. But I am a woman and can suffer.
Let Him do His worst: I defy Him.”
So she never set foot inside church
again, nor offered any worship. The week long
she worked as a laundress, and sat through the Sundays
with her arms folded, gloomily fighting her duel.
When the fever wrenched her arms and lips as she stood
by the wash-tub, she set her teeth and said, “I
can stand it. I can match all this with contempt.
He can kill, but that’s not beating me.”
Her mother, a large and pale-faced
woman of sixty, with an apparently thoughtful contraction
of the lips, in reality due to a habit of carrying
pins in her mouth, watched Naomi anxiously during this
period of her life. And Long Oliver watched her
too, though secretly, with eyes screwed up after the
fashion of men who have followed the sea.
One day he stopped her on the stairs
and asked, abruptly:
“When be you thinkin’ to marry again?”
“Never,” she answered,
straight and at once, halting with a hand on her hip
and eyeing him.
“Dear me; but you will, I hope.”
“Not to you, anyway.”
“Laws me, no! I don’t
want ’ee; haven’t wanted ’ee these
ten years. But I’d a reason for askin’.”
“Then I’m sure I don’t know what
it can be.”
“True - true.
Look’ee here, my dear; ’tis ordained for
you to marry agen.”
“Aw? Who by?”
“Providence.”
Naomi had treated Long Oliver badly
in days gone by, but could still talk to him with
more freedom than to other men. Still standing
with a hand on her hip, she let fall a horrible sentence
about the Almighty - all the more horrible
in that it came deliberately, without emphasis, and
from quiet lips.
“Woman!” cried a voice above them.
They turned, looked up, and saw the
bent figure of a man framed in the street doorway.
This was William Geake, who walked in from Gantick
every Saturday to collect the sixpences and shillings
of Vellan’s Rents for its landlord, a well-to-do
wine and spirit merchant at Tregarrick. As a
man of indisputable probity and an unwearying walker,
Geake was entrusted with many odd jobs of this kind
in the country round, filling in with them such idle
corners as his trade of carpenter and undertaker to
Gantick village might leave in the six working days.
On Sundays he put on a long black coat, and became
a Rounder, or Methodist local-preacher, walking sometimes
twenty miles there and back to terrify the inhabitants
of outlying hamlets about their future state.
“Woman!” cried William
Geake, “Down ‘pon your knees an’
pray God the roof don’t fall on ’ee for
your vile words.”
“I reckon,” retorted Naomi
quietly, with a glance up at the worm-riddled rafters,
“you’d do more good by speakin’ to
the landlord.”
William Geake had a high brow and
bright, nervous eyes, betokening enthusiasm; but he
had also a long and square jaw that meant stubbornness.
This jaw now began to protrude and his lips to straighten.
“Down ’pon your knees!” he repeated.
Naomi turned her eyes from him to
Long Oliver, who leant against the staircase wall
with his arms crossed and a veiled amusement in his
face. With a slightly heightened colour, but no
flutter of the voice, she repeated her blasphemy;
and then, pulling a shilling from her worn purse,
tendered it to Geake. This, of course, meant “Mind
your own business”; but he waved her hand aside.
“Down ’pon your knees,
woman!” he shouted thunderously. Then, as
she showed no disposition to obey, he added, grimly,
“Eh? but somebody shall intercede for thee afore
thou’rt a minute older.”
And pulling off his hat there and
then, he knelt down on the doorstep, with the soles
of his hob-nailed boots showing to the street.
“Get up, an’ don’t
make yoursel’ a may-game,” said Naomi hurriedly,
as one or two children stopped their play, and drew
around to stare.
“Father in heaven,” began
William Geake, in a voice that fetched the women-folk,
all up and down the Chy-pons, to their doors, “Thou,
whose property is ever to have mercy, forgive this
blaspheming woman! Suffer one who is Thy servant,
though a grievous sinner, to intercede for her afore
she commits the sin that cannot be forgiven; to pluck
her as a brand from the burning -
By this, the women and a loafing man
or two had clustered round, and Colliver’s coal-cart
had rattled up and come to a standstill. The
Chy-pons is the narrowest street in Troy, and Colliver’s
driver could hardly pass now, except over William
Geake’s legs.
“Draw in your feet, brother
Geake,” he called out, “or else pray short.”
One or two women giggled at this.
But Geake did not seem to hear. For five good
minutes he prayed vociferously, as was his custom in
meeting-house; then rose, replaced his hat, dusted
his knees, held out his hand for Naomi’s shilling,
and wrote her the customary voucher in his most business-like
manner, and without another word. But there was
a triumphant look in his eyes that dared Naomi to repeat
her offence, and she very nearly wept as she felt
that the words would not come. This and the shame
of publicity drove her back into her room as Geake
passed down the stairs to collect the other rents.
A few women still hung about the doorway as he emerged,
some twenty minutes later. But he marched down
Chy-pons with head erect and eyes fixed straight ahead.
II.
On the following Saturday, when Geake
called, Naomi was standing at her wash-tub. She
had seen him pass the window, and, hurriedly wiping
her hands, and pulling out her shilling, placed it
ostentatiously in the very centre of the deal table
by the door; then had just time to plunge her hands
in the soap-suds again before he knocked. Try
as she would, she could not keep back a blush at the
remembrance of last week’s scene, and half looked
for him to make some allusion to it.
His extremely business-like air reassured
her. She nodded towards the shilling without
removing her hands from the tub. He took it,
including in a polite good-morning both Naomi and her
mother, who was huddled in an arm-chair before the
fire and recovering from an attack of the fever, wrote
out his voucher solemnly, set it in the exact spot
where the shilling had stood, took up his hat, hesitated
for less than a second, replaced his hat on the table,
and, pulling a chair towards him, dropped on his knees,
and began to pray aloud.
The old woman by the fire slewed her
head painfully round and stared at him, then at Naomi.
But Naomi was standing with her back to them both,
and her hands soaping the linen in the tub - gently,
however, and without any splashing. She therefore
let her head sink back on the cushion, and assumed
that peculiarly dejected air, commonly reserved by
her for the consolations of religion.
On this occasion William Geake prayed
in a low and level tone, and very briefly. He
made no allusion to last Saturday, but put up an earnest
petition for blessings upon “our two sisters
here,” and that they might learn to accept their
appointed portion with resignation, yea, even with
a holy joy. At the end of two minutes he rose,
and was about to dust his knees, after his usual custom,
but, becoming suddenly aware of the difference in
cleanliness between Naomi’s lime-ash and the
floors of the various meeting-houses of his acquaintance,
refrained. This little piece of delicacy did not
escape Naomi, though her shoulders were still bent
over the tub, to all seeming as resolutely as ever.
“Well, I swow that was very
friendly of Mister Geake!” the old woman ejaculated,
as the door closed behind him. “‘Tisn’t
everybody’d ha’ thought what a comfort
a little scrap o’ religion can be to an old
woman in my state.”
“He took a great liberty,” said Naomi
snappishly.
“Well, he might ha’ said
as much as ‘By your leave,’ to be sure;
an’ now you say so, ‘twas makin’
a bit free to talk about our dependence - an’
in my own kitchen too.”
“He meant our dependence on
th’ Almighty,” Naomi corrected, still more
snappishly. “William Geake’s an odd-fangled
man, but you might give ‘en credit for good-feelin’.
An’, what’s more, though I don’t
hold wi’ Christian talk, if a man have a got
beliefs, I respect ’en for standin’ to
’em without shame.”
“But I thought, a moment ago - ”
her mother began, and then subsided. She was
accustomed to small tangles in her own processes of
thought, and quite incapable, after years of blind
acceptance, of correcting Naomi’s logic.
No more was said on the matter.
The next Saturday, after receiving his shilling, Mr.
Geake knelt down without any hesitation. It was
clear he wished this prayer to be a weekly institution,
and an institution it became.
The women never knelt. Naomi,
indeed, had never sanctioned the innovation, unless
by her silence, and her mother assisted only with a
very lugubrious “Amen,” being too weak
to stir from her chair. As the months passed,
it became evident to Geake that her strength would
never come back. The fever had left her, apparently
for good; but the rheumatism remained, and closed
slowly upon the heart. The machine was worn out.
When the end came, Naomi had been
doing the work single-handed for close upon twelve
months. She could always get a plenty of work,
and now took in a deal too much for her strength,
to settle the doctor’s and undertaker’s
bills, and buy herself a black gown, cape, and bonnet.
The funeral, of course, took place on a Sunday.
Geake, on the Saturday afternoon, knocked gently at
Naomi’s door. His single intent was to
speak a word or two of sympathy, if she would listen.
Remembering her constant attitude under the Divine
scourge, he felt a trifle nervous.
But there lay the shilling in the
centre of the table, and there stood Naomi in a cloud
of steam, hard at work on an immoderate pile of washing - even
a man’s miscalculating eye could see that it
was immoderate.
“I didn’t call - ”
he began, with a glance towards the shilling.
“No; I know you didn’t.
But you may so well take it all the same.”
Geake had rehearsed a small speech,
but found himself making out and signing the voucher
as usual; and, as usual, when it was signed, he drew
over a chair, and dropped on his knees. In prayer-meeting
he was a great hand at “improving” an
occasion of bereavement; but here again his will to
speak impressively suddenly failed him. His words
were:
“Lord, there were two women
grinding at a mill; the one was taken, and t’other
left. She that you took, you’ve a-carr’d
beyond our prayers; but O, be gentle, be gentle, to
her that’s left!”
He arose, and looked shyly, almost
shamefacedly, at Naomi. She had not turned.
But her head was bowed; and, drawing near, he saw that
the scalding tears were falling fast into the wash-tub.
She had not wept when her husband was lost, nor since.
“Go away!” she commanded,
before he could speak, turning her shoulders resolutely
towards him.
He took up his hat, and went out softly,
closing the door softly behind him.
His eye, which was growing quick to
read Naomi’s face, saw at once, as he entered
the room a week later, that she deprecated even the
slightest reference to her weakness. It also told
him - he had not guessed it before - that
her emotional breakdown had probably more to do with
physical exhaustion than with any eloquence of his.
The pile of washing had grown, and the woman’s
face was grey with fatigue.
Geake, as he made out the voucher,
cast about for a polite mode of hinting that this
kind of thing must not go on. Nevertheless it
was Naomi who began.
“Look here,” she said,
as he put down the voucher; “there ain’t
goin’ to be no more prayin’, eh?”
“Why, to be sure there is,”
he answered with a show of great cheerfulness; and
reached for a chair.
“I’d liefer you didn’t.
I don’t want it. I don’t hold by any
o’t. You’m very kind,” she
went on, her voice trembling for an instant and then
recovering its firmness, “and I reckon it soothed
mother. But I reckon it don’t soothe me.
I reckon it rubs me the wrong way. There’s
times, when I hears a body prayin’, that I wishes
we was Papists again and worshipped images, that I
might throw stones at ’em!”
She paused, looked up into Geake’s
devouring eyes, and added, with a poor attempt at
a laugh:
“So you see, I’m wicked, an’ don’t
want to be saved.”
Then the man broke forth:
“Saved? No, I reckon you
don’t! Wicked? Iss, I reckon you be!
But saved you shall be - ay, if you was twice
so wicked. Who’ll do it? I’ll
do it - I alone. I don’t want your
help. I want to do it in spite of ‘ee:
an’ I’ll lay that I do! Be your wickedness
deep as hell, an’ I’ll reach down a hand
to the roots and pluck it up: be your salvation
stubborn as Death, I’ll wrestle wi’ the
Lord for it. If I sell my own soul for’t,
yours shall be redeemed!”
He slammed down his fist on the rickety
deal table, which promptly collapsed flat on the floor,
with its four legs splayed under the circular cover.
“Bein’ a carpenter - ”
Geake began to stammer apologetically, and in a totally
different tone.
For a second - two seconds - the
issue hung between tears and laughter. An hysterical
merriment twinkled in Naomi’s eyes.
But the strength of Geake’s
passion saved the situation. He stepped up to
Naomi, laid a hand on each shoulder, and shook her
gently to and fro.
“Listen to me! As I hold
’ee now, so I take your fate in my hands.
Naomi Bricknell, you’ve got to be my wife, so
make up your mind to that.”
She cowered a little under his grasp;
put out a hand to push him off; drew it back; and
broke into helpless sobbing. But this time she
did not command him to go away.
Fifteen minutes later William Geake
left Vellan’s Rents with joy on his face and
a broken table under his arm.
And two days later Naomi’s face
wore a look of demure happiness when Long Oliver stopped
her on the staircase and asked,
“Is it true, what I hear?”
“It is true,” she answered.
“An’ when be the banns called?”
“There ain’t goin’ to be no banns.”
“Hey?”
“There ain’t goin’
to be no banns; leastways, there ain’t goin’
to be none called. We’m goin’ to
the Registry Office. You look all struck of a
heap. Was you hopin’ to be best man?”
“Well, I reckoned I’d
take a hand in the responses,” he answered; and
seemed about to say more, but turned on his heel and
went back to his room, shutting the door behind him.
III.
We pass to a Saturday morning, two
years later, and to William Geake’s cottage
at the western end of Gantick village.
Naomi had plucked three fowls and
trussed them, and wrapping each in a white napkin,
had packed them in her basket with a dozen and a half
of eggs, a few pats of butter, and a nosegay or two
of garden-flowers - Sweet Williams, marigolds,
and heart’s-ease: for it was market-day
at Tregarrick. Then she put on boots and shawl,
tied her bonnet, and slung a second pair of boots
across her arm: for the roads were heavy and
she would leave the muddy pair with a friend who lived
at the entrance of the town, not choosing to appear
untidy as she walked up the Fore Street. These
arrangements made, she went to seek her husband, who
was busy planing a coffin-lid in the workshop behind
the cottage, and ruminating upon to-morrow’s
sermon.
“You’ll be about startin’,”
he said, lifting his head and pushing his spectacles
up over his eye-brows.
Naomi set her basket down on his work-table,
and drew her breath back between her teeth - which
is the Cornish mode of saying “Yes.”
“I want you to make me a couple of skivers,”
she said. “Aun’ Hambly sent over
word she’d a brace o’ chicken for me to
sell, an’ I was to call for ‘em:
an’ I’d be ashamed to sell a fowl the way
she skivers it.”
William set down his plane, picked
up an odd scrap of wood and cut out the skewers with
his pocket-knife; while Naomi watched with a smile
on her face. Whether or no William had recovered
her soul, as he promised, she had certainly given
her heart into his keeping. The love of such
a widow, he found, is as the surrender of a maid, with
wisdom added.
The skewers finished, he walked out
through the house with her and down the garden-path,
carrying the basket as far as the gate. The scent
of pine-shavings came with him. Half-way down
the path Naomi turned aside and picking a sprig of
Boy’s Love, held it up for him to smell.
The action was trivial, but as he took the sprig they
both laughed, looking in each other’s eyes.
Then they kissed; and the staid woman went her way
down the road, while the staid man loitered for a
moment by the gate and watched her as she went.
Now as he took his eyes away and glanced
for an instant in the other direction, he was aware
of a man who had just come round the angle of the
garden hedge and, standing in the middle of the road,
not a dozen yards off, was also staring after his
wife.
This stranger was a broad-shouldered
fellow in a suit of blue seaman’s cloth, the
trousers of which were tucked inside a pair of Wellington
boots. His complexion was brown as a nut, and
he wore rings in his ears: but the features were
British enough. A perplexed, ingratiating and
rather silly smile overspread them.
The two men regarded each other for
a bit, and then the stranger drew nearer.
“I do believe that was Na’mi,”
he said, nodding his head after the woman’s
figure, that had not yet passed out of sight.
William Geake opened his eyes wide
and answered curtly, “Yes: that’s
my wife - Naomi Geake. What then?”
The man scratched his head, contemplating
William as he might some illegible sign-post set up
at an unusually bothersome cross-road.
“She keeps very han’some,
I will say.” His smile grew still more
ingratiating.
“Was you wishin’ to speak wi’ her?”
“Well, there! I was an’
yet I wasn’t. ‘Tis terrible puzzlin’.
You don’t know me, I dessay.”
“No, I don’t.”
“I be called Abe Bricknell - A-bra-ham
Bricknell. I used to be Na’mi’s husband,
one time. There now” - with an
accent of genuine contrition - “I felt
sure ’twould put you out.”
The tongue grew dry in William Geake’s
mouth, and the sunlight died off the road before him.
He stared at a blister in the green paint of the garden-gate
and began to peel it away slowly with his thumb-nail:
then, pulling out his handkerchief, picked away at
the paint that had lodged under the nail, very carefully,
while he fought for speech.
“I be altered a brave bit,”
said Naomi’s first husband, still with his silly
smile.
“Come into th’ house,”
William managed to say at last; and turning, led the
way to the door. On his way he caught himself
wondering why the hum of the bees had never sounded
so loudly in the garden before: and this was
all he could think about till he reached the doorstep.
Then he turned.
“Th’ Lord’s ways
be past findin’ out,” he said, passing
a hand over his eyes.
“That’s so: that’s
what I say mysel’,” the other assented
cheerfully, as if glad to find their wits jumping together.
“Man!” William rounded
on him fiercely. “What’s kept ’ee,
all these years? Aw, man, man! do ’ee know
what you’ve done?”
“I’d a sun-stroke,”
said the wanderer, tapping his head and still wearing
his deprecatory smile; “a very bad sun-stroke.
I sailed in the John S. Hancock. I dessay
Na’mi told you about that, eh?”
“Get on wi’ your tale.”
“Pete Hancock was cap’n.
The vessel was called after his uncle, you know, an’
the Hancocks had a-bought up most o’ the shares
in her. That’s how Pete came to be cap’n.
We sailed on a Friday - unlucky, I’ve
heard that is. But Pete said them that laid th’
Atlantic cable had started that day an’ broke
the spell. Pete had a lot o’ tales, but
he made a poor cap’n; no head.”
“Look here,” put in “William
with desperate calm,” I don’t want to
know about Peter Hancock.”
“There’s not much to know
if you did. He made a very poor cap’n,
though it don’t become one to say so, now he’s
gone. An affectionate man, though, for all his
short-comin’s. The last time he brought
his vessel home from New Orleans he was in that pore
to get back to his wife an’ childer, he ripped
along the Gulf Stream and pretty well ribbed the keelson
out of her. Thought, I reckon, that since all
the shareholders belonged to his family th’
expense wouldn’ be grudged. But I guess
it made her tender. That’s how she came
to go down so suddent.”
“She foundered?”
“I’m comin’ to that.
We’d just run our nose into the tropics an’
was headin’ down for Kingston Harbour - slippin’
along at five knots easy an’ steady, an’
not a sign of trouble. The time, so far as I can
tell, was somewhere near five bells in the middle
watch. I’d turned in, leavin’ Pete
on deck, an’ was fast asleep; when all of a suddent
a great jolt sent me flyin’ out o’ the
berth. As soon as I got my legs an’ wits
again I was up on deck, and already the barque was
settlin’ by the head like a burst crock.
She’d crushed her breastbone in on a sunken
tramp of a derelict - a dismasted water-logged
lump, that maybe had been washin’ about the
Atlantic for twenty year’ an’ more before
her app’inted time came to drift across our fair-way
an’ settle the hash o’ the John S.
Hancock. Sir, I reckon she went down inside
o’ five minutes. We’d but bare time
to get out one boat and push clear o’ the whirl
of her. All hands jumped in; she was but a sixteen
foot boat, an’ we loaded her down to the gun’l
a’most. There was a brave star-shine, but
no moon. Cruel things happen ’pon the sea.”
He passed a hand over his eyes, as
if to brush off the film his sufferings had drawn
across them. Then he pursued:
“Cruel things happen ‘pon
the sea. We’d no food nor drink but a tin
o’ preserved pears; Lord knows how that got
there; but ’twas soon done. Pete had a
small compass, a gimcrack affair hangin’ to his
watch-chain, an’ we pulled by it west-sou’-west
towards the nighest land, which we made out must be
some one or another o’ the Leeward Islands; but
’twas more to keep ourselves busy than for aught
else: the boat was so low in the water that even
with the Trade to help us, we made but a mile an hour,
an’ had to be balín’ all day and all
night. The third day, as the sun grew hot, two
o’ the men went mad. We had to pitch ’em
overboard an’ beat ’em off wi’ the
oars till they drowned: else they’d ha’
sunk the boat. This seemed to hang on Pete’s
mind, in a way. All the next night he talked
light-headed; said he could hear the dead men hailin’
their names. About midnight he jumped after ’em - to
fetch ’em, he said - an’ was
drowned. He took his compass with him, but that
didn’t make much odds. The boat was lighter
now, an’ we hadn’ to bale. Pretty
soon I got too weak to notice how the men went.
I was lyin’ wi’ my head under the stern
sheets an’ only pulled mysel’ up, now an’
then, to peer out over the gun’l. I s’pose
’twas the splashes as the men went over that
made me do this. I don’t know for certain.
There was sharks about: cruel things happen ’pon
the sea. The boat was in a gashly cauch of blood
too. One chap - Jeff Tresawna it was:
his mother lived over to Looe - had tried
to open a vein, to drink, an’ had made a mess
o’t an’ bled to death. Far as I know
there was no fightin’ to eat one another, same
as one hears tell of now an’ then. The
men just went mad and jumped like sheep: ’twas
a reg’lar disease. Two would go quick,
one atop of t’other; an’ then there’d
be a long stillness, an’ then a yellin’
again an’ two more splashes, maybe three.
All through it I was dozin’, off an’ on;
an’ I reckon these things got mixed up an’
repeated in my head: for our crew was only sixteen
all told, an’ it seemed to me I’d heard
scores go over. Anyway I opened my eyes at last - night
it was, an’ all the stars blazin’ - an’
the boat was empty all except me an’ Jeff Tresawna,
him that had bled to death. He was lying up high
in the bows, wi’ his legs stretched Out towards
me along the bottom-boards. There was a twinkle
o’ dew ‘pon the thwarts an’ gun’l,
an’ I managed to suck my shirt-sleeve, that
was wringin’ wet, an’ dropped off dozin’
again belike. The nex’ thing I minded
was a sort o’ dream that I was home to Carne
again, over Pendower beach - that’s
where my father an’ mother lived. I heard
the breakers quite plain. The sound of ’em
woke me up. This was a little after daybreak.
The sound kept on after I’d opened my eyes, though
not so loud. I took another suck at my shirt-sleeve
an’ pulled myself up to my knees by the thwart
an’ looked over. ‘Twas the sound o’
broken water, sure enough, that I’d been hearing;
an’ ‘twas breakin’ round half a
dozen small islands, to leeward, between me an’
the horizon. I call ’em islands; but they
was just rocks stickin’ up from the sea, and
birds on ’em in plenty; but otherwise, if you’ll
excuse the liberty, as bare as the top o’ your
head.”
Geake nodded gravely, with set face.
“I’ve heard since,”
went on the seaman, “that these were bits, so
to say, belongin’ to the Leeward Islands, about
eighty miles sou’west o’ St. Kitt’s.
Our boat must ha’ driven past St. Kitt’s,
but just out o’ sight; or perhaps we’d
passed a peep of it in the night-time. Well, as
you’ll be guessin’ the boat was pretty
nigh to one o’ these islands, or I shouldn’
ha’ heard the wash. Half a mile off it was,
I dessay, an’ a pretty big wash. This was
caused by the current, no doubt, for the wind was
nex’ to nothin’, an’ no swell
around the boat. What’s more, the current
was takin’ us, broadside on, pretty well straight
for the rocks. There was no rudder an’ only
one oar left i’ the boat; an’ that was
broke off short at the blade. But I managed to
slip it over the starn an’ made shift to keep
her head straight. Her nose went bump on the
shore, an’ then she swung round an’ went
drivin’ past: me not havin’ strength
left to put out a hand, much less to catch hold an’
stop the way on us. We might ha’ driven
past an’ off to sea again, if it hadn’
been for a spit o’ rock that reached out ahead.
This brought us up short, an’ there we lay an’
bump’d for a bit. I dessay it took me half
an hour to get out over the side: an’ all
the time I kept hold o’ the broken oar.
I dunno why I did this: but it saved my life
afterwards. Hav’ee got such a thing as a
drop o’ cider in the house?”
“We go upon temperance principles
here,” said Geake. He rose and brought
a jug of water and a glass.
“That’ll do,” said
the wanderer, and helped himself. “Na’mi
used to take a glass o’ beer wi’ her meals,
I remember. Well, as I was agoin’ to tell
you, havin’ got out o’ the boat, I’d
just sense enough left to clamber up above high-water
mark, an’ there I sat starin’ stupid-like
an’ wonderin’ how I’d done it.
Down below, the boat was heavin’ i’ the
wash an’ joltin’ ‘pon the rocks,
an’ I watched her - bump, bump, up an’
down, up an’ down - wi’ Jeff jamm’d
by the shoulders i’ the bows, and glazin’
up at me wi’ a silly blank face, like as if he
couldn’ make it all out. As the tide rose
him up nearer, I crawled away further up. Seemed
to me he an’ the boat was after me like a sick
dream, an’ I grinned every time the timbers
gave an extry loud crack. At last her bottom
was stove, an’ she filled very quiet an’
went down. The wind was fresher by this an’
some heavy clouds comin’ up. Then it rained.
I don’t rightly know if this was the same day
or no: can’t fit in the days an’
nights. But it rained heavy. There was a
quill-feather lyin’ close by my hand - the
rock was strewed wi’ feathers an’ the birds’
droppin’s - an’ with it I tried
to get at the rain-water that was caught in the crannies
o’ the rocks. While I was searchin’
about I came across an egg. It was stinkin’,
but I ate it. After that, feelin’ a bit
stronger, I’d a mind to fix up the oar for a
mark, in case any vessel passed near an’ me
asleep or too weak to make a signal. I found
a handy chink i’ the rock to plant it in, an’
a rovin’ pain I had in my stomach while I was
fixin’ it. That was the egg, I dessay.
An’ my head in a maze, too: but I’d
sense enough to think now what a fool I was not to
have took Jeff’s shirt off’n, to serve
me for a flag. Hows’ever, my own bein’
wringin’ wet, an’ the sun pretty strong
just then, I slipped it off an’ hitched it atop
o’ the oar to dry an’ be a flag at the
same time, till I could rig up some kind o’ streamer,
out o’ the seaweed. An’ then I was
forced to vomit. And that’s about the last
thing, Mister Geake, I can mind doin’. ’Tis
all foolishness after that. They tell me that
a ’Merican schooner, the Shawanee, sighted
my shirt flappin’, an’ sent a boat an’
took me off an’ landed me at New Orleens.
My head was bad - oh, very bad - an’
they put me in a ‘sylum an’ cured me.
But they took eight year’ over it, an’
I doubt if ‘tis much of a job after all.
I wasn’ bad all the time, I must tell you, sir;
but ’tis only lately my mem’ry would work
any further back ‘n the wreck o’ the barque.
Everything seemed to begin an’ end wi’
that. ’Tis about a year back that some visitors
came to the ’sylum. There was a lady in
the party, an’ something in her face, when she
spoke to me, put me in mind o’ Na’mi, an’
I remembered I was a married man. Inside of a
fortnight, part by thinkin’ - ’tis
hard work still for me to think - part by
dreamin’, I’d a-worried it all out.
I was betterin’ fast by that. Soon as I
was well enough to be discharged, I worked my passage
home in a grain ship, the Druid, o’ Liverpool.
I was reckonin’ all the way back that Na’mi’d
be main glad to see me agen. But now I s’pose
she won’t.”
“It’ll come nigh to killin’ her.”
“I dessay, now, you two have
got to be very fond? She used to be a partic’lar
lovin’ sort o’ woman.”
“I love her more ’n heaven!”
William broke out; and then cowered as if he half
expected to be struck with lightning for the words.
“I heard of her havin’
married, down at the Fifteen Balls, at Troy. I
dropped in there to pick up the news.”
“What! You’ve been tellin’
folks who you be!”
“Not a word. First of all
I was minded to play off a little surprise ‘pon
old Toms, the landlord, who didn’ know me from
Adam. But hearin’ this, just as I was a-leadin’
up to my little joke, I thought maybe ’twould
annoy Na’mi. She used to be very strict
in some of her notions.”
William Geake took two hasty turns
up and down the little parlour. His Bible, in
which before breakfast he had been searching for a
text, lay open on the side table. Behind its
place on the shelf was a small skivet he had let into
the wall; and in that drawer was stored something
over twenty-five pounds, the third of his savings.
Geake kept a bank-account, and the balance lay at
interest with Messrs. Climo and Hodges, of St. Austell.
But he had the true countryman’s aversion to
putting all his eggs in one basket; and although Messrs.
Climo and Hodges were safe as the Bank of England,
preferred to keep this portion of his wealth in his
own stocking. He closed the Bible hastily; rammed
it back, upside down, in its place; then took it out
again, and stood holding it in his two hands and trembling.
He was living in sin: he was minded to sin yet
deeper. And yet what had he done to deserve Naomi
in comparison with the unspeakable tribulations this
simple mariner had suffered? Sure, God must have
preserved the fellow with especial care, and of wise
purpose brought him through shipwreck, famine, and
madness home to his lawful wife. The man had
made Naomi a good husband. Had William Geake made
her a better? (Husband?) - here he dropped
the Bible down on the table again as if it burned
his fingers. Whatever had to be done must be done
quickly. Here was the innocent wrecker of so
much happiness hanging on his lips for the next word,
watching wistfully for his orders, like any spaniel
dog. And Naomi would be back before nightfall.
God was giving him no time: it was unfair to
hustle a man in this way. In the whirl of his
thoughts he seemed to hear Naomi’s footfall drawing
nearer and nearer home. He could almost upbraid
the Almighty here for leaving him and Naomi childless.
A child would have made the temptation irresistible.
“I wish a’most that I’d
never called, if it puts you out so terrible,”
was the wanderer’s plaintive remark after two
minutes of silent waiting.
This sentence settled it. The
temptation was irresistible. Geake unlocked
the skivet, plunged a hand in and banged down a fistful
of notes on the table.
“Here,” said he; “here’s
five-an’-twenty pound’. You shall
have it all if you’ll go straight out o’
this door an’ back to America.”
IV.
Half-an-hour later, William Geake
was standing by his garden-gate again. Every
now and then he glanced down the road towards St.
Austell, and after each glance resumed his nervous
picking at the blister of green paint that had troubled
him earlier in the day. He was face to face with
a new and smaller, but sufficiently vexing, difficulty.
Abe Bricknell had gone, taking with him the five five-pound
notes. So far so good, and cheap at the price.
But the skivet was empty: and the day was Saturday:
and every Saturday evening, as regularly as he wound
up the big eight-day clock in the kitchen, Naomi and
he would sit down and count over the money. True
he had only to go to St. Austell and Messrs. Climo
and Hodges would let him draw five new notes.
The numbers would be different, and Naomi (prudent
woman) always took note of the numbers: but some
explanation might be invented. The problem was:
How to get to St. Austell and back before Naomi’s
return? The distance was too great to be walked
in the time; and besides, the coffin must be ready
by nightfall. He had promised it; he was known
for a man of his word; and owing to the morning’s
interruption it would be a tough job to finish, at
the best. There was no help for it; and - so
easy is the descent of Avernus - Geake’s
unaccustomed wits were already wandering in a wilderness
of improbable falsehoods, when he heard the sound of
wheels up the road, and Long Oliver came along in
Farmer Lear’s red-wheeled trap and behind Farmer
Lear’s dun-coloured mare. As he drew near
at a trot he eyed Geake curiously, and for a moment
seemed inclined to pull up, but thought better of
it, and was passing with no more than a nod of the
head and “good-day.”
It was unusual, though, to see Long
Oliver driving a horse and trap; and Geake, moreover,
had a sudden notion.
“Good-mornin’,” he answered; “whither
bound?”
“St. Austell. I’ve
a bit of business to do, so I’m takin’
a holiday; in style, as you see.”
“I wonder now,” Geake
suggested, forgetting all about the coffin, “if
you’d give me a lift. I was just thinkin’
this moment that I’d a bit o’ business
there that had clean slipped my mind this week.”
This was transparently false to any
one acquainted with Geake’s methodical habits.
Long Oliver screwed up his eyes.
“Can’t, I’m afraid.
I’m engaged to take up old Missus Oke an’
her niece at Tippet’s corner; an’ the
niece’s box. The gal’s goin’
in to St. Austell, into service. So there’s
no room. But if there’s any little message
I can take -
“When’ll you be back?”
“Somewhere’s about five I’ll be
passin’.”
“Would ‘ee mind waitin’
a moment? I’ve a cheque I want cashed at
Climo and Hodges for a biggish sum: but you’m
a man I can trust to bring back the money safe.”
“Sutt’nly,” said Long Oliver.
Geake went into the house and wrote
a short letter to the bankers. He asked them
to send back by messenger, and in return for cheque
enclosed, the sum of twenty-five pounds, in five new
five-pound notes. He was aware (he said) that
the balance of his running account was but a pound
or two: but as they held something over fifty
pounds of his on deposit, he felt sure they would
oblige him and enable him to meet a sudden call.
Twenty-five pounds is the sum, he explained; an you must
be sure to get it in five-pound notes - new five-pound
notes. You’ll not forget that?”
He closed the envelope and handed it up to Long Oliver,
who buttoned it in his breast-pocket.
“You shall have it, Mr. Geake,
by five o’clock this evenin’,” said
he, giving the reins a shake on the mare’s back;
“so ’long!” and he rattled off.
A mile, and a trifle more, beyond Geakes cottage, he came in
sight of a man clad in blue sailors cloth, trudging briskly ahead. Long
Olivers lips shaped themselves as if to whistle; but he made no sound until he
overtook the pedestrian, when he pulled up, looked round in the mans face, and
said -
“Abe Bricknell!”
The sailor came to a sudden halt, and went very white
in the face.
“How do you know my name?” he asked, uneasily.
“’Recognised ‘ee
back in Troy, an’ borrowed this here trap to
drive after ’ee. Get up alongside.
I’ve summat to say to ’ee.”
Bricknell climbed up without a word, and they drove
along together.
“Where was you goin’?” Long Oliver
asked, after a bit.
“To Charlestown.”
“To look for a ship?”
“Yes.”
“Goin’ back to America?”
“Yes.”
“You’ve been callin’
on William Geake: an’ you didn’ find
Naomi at home.”
“Geake don’t want it known.”
“That’s likely enough.
You’ve got twenty-five pound’ o’
his in your pocket.”
Abe Bricknell involuntarily put up a hand to his breast.
“Ay, it’s there,”
said Long Oliver, nodding. “It’s odd
now, but I’ve got twenty-five pound in gold
in my pocket; an’ I want you to swop.”
“I don’t take ye, Mister -
“Long Oliver, I’m called in common.
Maybe you remembers me?”
“Why, to be sure! I thought
I minded your face. But still I don’t take
your meanin’ azactly.”
“I didn’ suppose you would.
So I’m goin’ to tell ‘ee. Fourteen
year’ back I courted Naomi, an’ she used
me worse ‘n a dog. Twelve year’ back
she married you. Nine year’ back you went
to sea in the John S. Hancock, an’ was
wrecked off the Leeward Isles an’ cast up on
a spit o’ rock. I’d been hangin’
about New Orleens, just then, at a loose end, an’
bein’ in want o’ cash, took a scamper in
the Shawanee, a dirty tramp of a schooner knockin’
in an’ out and peddlin’ notions among
the West Indy Islanders. As you know we caught
sight o’ your signal an’ took you off,
an’ you went to a mad-house. You was clean
off your head an’ didn’ know me from Adam;
an’ I never let on that I knew you or the ship
you’d sailed in. ‘Seemed to me the
hand o’ God was in it, an’ I saw my way
to cry quits wi’ Naomi.”
“I don’t see.”
“I don’t suppose you do.
But ’twas this way: - Naomi (thinks
I) ’ll be givin’ this man up afore long.
She’s a takeable woman, an’ by-’n-bye,
some new man’ll set eyes on her. Then, thinks
I, her banns’ll be called in Church, an’
I’ll be there an’ forbid ’em.
Do ’ee see now?”
“That was very clever o’
you,” replied the simple seaman, and added with
obvious sincerity, “I’m sure I should never
ha’ thought ’pon anything so clever as
that. But why didn’ you carry it out?”
Because God Almighty was cleverer. Times an times Id
pictured it up in my head how twould all work out; an the parson in his
surplice stuck all of a heap; an the heads turnin to look; an the women
faintin. An when the moment came for a man to claim her, what dye think
she did? But there, a head like yours d never guess - why she went to a Registry Office,
an’ there weren’t no banns at all.
That overcame me. I seed the wisdom o’
Providence from that hour. I be a converted man.
An’ I’m damned if I’ll let you come
along an’ upset the apple-cart after all these
years. Can ’ee write?”
“Tolerable, though I’m no hand at spellin’.”
“Very well. We’ll
have a drink together at St. Austell, an’ while
we’re there you shall do up Geake’s notes
in an envelope with a note sayin’ your compliments,
but on second thoughts you couldn’t think o’
takin’ his money.”
Bricknell’s face fell somewhat.
“You gowk! You’ll
have twenty-five pound’ o’ mine in exchange:
solid money, an’ my own earnin’s.
I’ve more ’n that in my pocket here.”
“But I don’t see why you
should want to give me money.”
“An’ you’m too mad
to see if I explained. ‘Tis a matter o’
conscience, an’ you may take it at that.
When the letter’s wrote - best not sign
it, by the way, for fear of accidents - you
give it to me an’ I’ll see Geake gets
it to-night. After that’s written I’ll
pay your fare to Liverpool, an’ then you’ll
get a vessel easy. Now I see your mouth openin’
and makin’ ready to argue -
“I was goin’ to say, Long
Oliver, that you seem to be actin’ very noble,
now: but ‘twas a bit hard on me,
your holdin’ your tongue as you did.”
“So ’twas, so ’twas.
I reckon some folks is by nature easy forgotten, an’
you’m one. If that’s your character,
I hope to gracious you’m goin’ to keep
it up. An’ twenty-five pound’ is a
heap o’ money for such a man as you.”
“It is,” the wanderer asserted. “Ay,
I feel that.”
At twenty minutes to five that evening,
Long Oliver pulled up again by the green garden-gate.
William Geake from his workshop had caught the sound
of the mare’s hoofs three minutes before, and
awaited him.
“One, two, three, four, five.”
The notes were counted out deliberately. Long
Oliver, having been thanked, gathered up his reins
and suddenly set them down again.
“Dear me,” said he, “if
I hadn’ almost forgot! I’ve a letter
for ’ee, too.”
“Eh?”
“Iss. A kind of a sailor-like
lookin’ chap came up to me i’ the Half
Moon yard as I was a takin’ out the mare.
‘Do you come from Gantick?’ says he, seein’
no doubt Farmer Lear’s name ’pon the cart.
’There or thereabouts,’ says I. ‘Know
Mister W. Geake?’ says he. ‘Well,’
says I. ‘Then, if you’re passin’,
I wish you’d give ‘en this here letter,’
says he, an’ that’s all ’e said.”
“I wonder who ’twas,”
said Geake. But his face was white.
“Don’t know ’en
by sight. Said ’e was in a great hurry for
to catch the up train. Which puts me i’
mind I must be movin’ on. Good-night t’ye,
neighbour!”
As soon as he had turned the corner,
Geake opened the letter.
When Naomi returned, half-an-hour
later, she found him standing at the gate as if he
had spent the day there: as, indeed, he might
have, for all the work done to the coffin.
“I must bide up to-night an’
finish that job,” he said, when they were indoors
and she began asking how in the world he had been spending
his time. “I’ve been worryin’
mysel’ all day.”
“It’s those sermons agen,”
Naomi decided. “They do your head no good,
an’ I wish you’d give up preachin’.”
“Now that’s just what
I’m goin’ to do,” he answered, pushing
the Bible far into the shelf till its edges knocked
on the wood of the skivet-drawer.