EDITH’S LAST JOURNEY
Skipper Brandelaar had given Edith
the name of the inn near the harbour, where he expected
a message from Heideck in the course of the night;
for he felt certain that the Major would be anxious
to speak to him as soon as possible.
But he was considerably surprised
when, instead of the messenger he expected, he saw
his beautiful disguised passenger enter the low, smoke-begrimed
taproom. He went to meet Edith with a certain
clumsy gallantry, to shield her from the curiosity
and importunities of the men seated with him at the
table, whose weatherbeaten faces inspired as little
confidence as their clothing, which smelt of tar and
had suffered badly from wind and weather.
Utterly surprised, he was going to
question Edith, but she anticipated him.
“I must get back to Dover to-night,”
she said hurriedly, in a low tone. “Will
you take me across? I will pay you what you ask.”
The skipper shook his head slowly, but resolutely.
“Impossible. Even if I
could leave again, it couldn’t be done in such
weather.”
“It must be done. The weather
is not so bad, and I know you are not the man to be
afraid of a storm.”
“Afraid no!
Very likely I have weathered a worse storm than this
with my smack. But there is a difference between
the danger a man has to go through when he cannot
escape it, and that to which he foolishly exposes
himself. When I am on a journey, then come what
pleases God, but ”
“No more, Brandelaar,”
interrupted Edith impatiently. “If you cannot,
or will not go yourself, surely one of your acquaintances
here is brave and smart enough to earn a couple of
hundred pounds without any difficulty.”
The skipper’s little eyes twinkled.
“A couple of hundred pounds?
Is it really so important for you to leave Flushing
to-day? We have hardly landed!”
“Yes, it is very important.
And I have already told you that I don’t care
how much it costs.”
The skipper, who had evidently begun
to waver, rubbed his chin thoughtfully.
“H’m! Anyhow, I couldn’t
do it myself. I have important information for
the Herr major, and he would have a right to blame
me, if I went away without even so much as speaking
to him. But perhaps perhaps I might
find out a skipper who would take the risk, provided
that I got something out of it for myself.”
“Of course, of course!
I don’t want a favour from you for nothing.
You shall have fifty pounds the moment I set foot
in the boat.”
“Good! And two hundred
for the skipper and his men? The men are risking
their lives, you mustn’t forget that. Besides,
they will have to manage confoundedly cleverly to
get past the German guardships unnoticed.”
“Yes, yes! Why waste so
much time over this useless bargaining? Here is
the money now get me a boat.”
“Go in there,” said Brandelaar,
pointing to the door of a little dark side room.
“I will see whether my friend Van dem
Bosch will do it.”
Before complying with Brandelaar’s
suggestion, Edith glanced at the man whom he had indicated
with a movement of his head. Externally this
robust old sea-dog was certainly not attractive, but
his alarming appearance did not make Edith falter
in her resolution for a moment.
“Good talk to your
friend, Brandelaar! And mind that I don’t
have to wait too long for his consent.”
The gallant Brandelaar must have found
a very effective means of persuasion, for in less
than ten minutes he was able to inform Edith that
Van dem Bosch was ready to risk the
journey on the terms offered. He said nothing
more about the danger of the undertaking, as if he
were afraid of frightening the young Englishwoman from
her plan, so profitable to himself. From this
moment nothing more was said about the matter.
It was not far to the place where the cutter lay at
anchor, and Edith struggled on bravely between the
two men, who silently walked along by her side, in
the face of the hurricane from the north, roaring
in fitful gusts from the sea. They rowed across
to the vessel in a yawl, and when Brandelaar returned
to the quay he had his fifty pounds all right in his
pocket.
“If the Herr major asks after
me, you may tell him the whole truth with confidence,”
Edith had said to him. “And greet him from
me greet him heartily. Don’t
forget that, Brandelaar.”
The skipper’s two men, who had
been lying fast asleep below deck in the cutter, were
considerably astonished and certainly far from pleased
at the idea of the nocturnal passage. But a few
words from the skipper in a language unintelligible
to Edith speedily removed their discontent. They
now readily set to work to set sail and weigh anchor.
The skipper’s powerful hands grasped the helm;
the small, strongly-built vessel tacked a little and
then, heeling over, shot out into the darkness.
It passed close by the Gefion, and
had it by accident been shown up by the electric light
which from time to time searched the disturbed surface
of the water, the nocturnal trip would in any case
have experienced a very disagreeable interruption.
But chance favoured the rash undertaking. No
signal was made, no shout raised from the guardship,
and the lights of Flushing were soon lost in the darkness.
Since the start Edith had been standing
by the mast, looking fixedly backwards to the place
where she was leaving everything which had hitherto
given all its value and meaning to her life. The
skipper and his two men, whom the varying winds kept
fully occupied with their sails, did not seem to trouble
about her, and it was not till a suddenly violent
squall came on that Van dem Bosch shouted
to her that she had better go below, where she would
at least be protected against the wind and weather.
But Edith did not stir. For her
mind, racked by all the torments of infinite despair,
the raging of the storm, the noise of the rain rattling
down, and the hissing splash of the waves as they dashed
against the planks of the boat, made just the right
music. The tumult of the night around her harmonised
so exactly with the tumult within her that she almost
felt it a relief. The close confinement of a low
cabin would have been unbearable. She could only
hold out by drinking in deep draughts of air saturated
with the briny odour of the sea, and by exposing her
face to the storm, the rain, and the foam of the waves.
It was a kind of physical struggle with the brute
forces of Nature, and its stirring effect upon her
nerves acted as a tonic to a mind lacerated with sorrow.
She had no thought for time or space.
Only the hurricane-like rising of the storm, the increasingly
violent breaking of the waves, and the wilder rocking
of the boat, told her that she must be on the open
sea. In spite of her oilskin cape, she was completely
wet through, and a chill, which gradually spread over
her whole body from below, numbed her limbs.
Nevertheless, she never for a moment thought of retiring
below. She had no idea of danger. She heard
the sailors cursing, and twice the skipper’s
voice struck her ears, uttering what seemed to be an
imperious command. But she did not trouble herself
about this. As if already set free from everything
earthly, she remained completely indifferent to everything
that was going on around her. The more insensible
her body became, paralysed by the penetrating damp
and chill, the more indefinite and dreamlike became
all the impressions of her senses. She seemed
to have lost all foothold, to be flying on the wings
of the storm, free from all restrictions of corporeal
gravity, through unlimited space. All the rushing,
howling, rattling, and splashing of the unchained elements
seemed to her to unite in one monotonous, majestic
roar, which had no terrors for her, but a wonderfully
soothing influence. As her senses slowly failed,
the tumult became a lofty harmony; she felt so entirely
one with mighty, all-powerful Nature that the last
feeling of which she was conscious was a fervent,
ardent longing to dissolve in this mighty Nature,
like one of the innumerable waves, whose foam wetted
her feet in passing.
A loud sound, like the sharp report
of a gun, was heard above the confusion of noises a
loud crash some wild curses from rough sailors’
throats! The boat suddenly danced and tossed upon
the waves like a piece of cork, while the big sail
flapped in the wind as if it would be torn the next
minute into a thousand pieces.
The peak-halyard was broken, and the
gaff, deprived of its hold, struck with fearful force
downwards. With all the might of his arms, strong
as those of a giant, the skipper pulled at the helm
to bring the vessel to the wind. The two other
men worked desperately to make the sail fast.
In these moments of supreme danger
none of the three gave a thought to the disguised
woman in the oilskin cape, who had stood so long motionless
as a statue by the mast. Not till their difficult
task was successfully finished did they notice that
she had disappeared. They looked at each other
with troubled faces. The skipper at the helm said
“She has gone overboard.
The gaff must have hit her on the head. There
is no more to be done. Why would she stay on deck?”
He cleared his throat and spat into
the sea, after the fashion of sailors.
The other two said nothing. Silently
they obeyed the orders of the skipper, who made for
the mouth of the Schelde again.
They made no attempt to save her.
It would have been a useless task.