In the fog.
By noon of the following day the coast
of the Peninsula of California had been sighted to
leeward. The lower temperature of the northwest
Trades had driven Mrs. Brimmer and Miss Chubb into
their state-rooms to consult their wardrobes in view
of an impending change from the light muslins and
easy languid toilets of the Tropics. That momentous
question for the moment held all other topics in abeyance;
and even Mrs. Markham and Miss Keene, though they
still kept the deck, in shawls and wraps, sighed over
this feminine evidence of the gentle passing of their
summer holiday. The gentlemen had already mounted
their pea-jackets and overcoats, with the single exception
of Senor Perkins, who, in chivalrous compliment to
the elements, still bared his unfettered throat and
forehead to the breeze. The aspect of the coast,
as seen from the Excelsior’s deck, seemed to
bear out Mr. Banks’ sweeping indictment of the
day before. A few low, dome-like hills, yellow
and treeless as sand dunes, scarcely raised themselves
above the horizon. The air, too, appeared to
have taken upon itself a dry asperity; the sun shone
with a hard, practical brilliancy. Miss Keene
raised her eyes to Senor Perkins with a pretty impatience
that she sometimes indulged in, as one of the privileges
of accepted beauty and petted youth.
“I don’t think much of
your peninsula,” she said poutingly. “It
looks dreadfully flat and uninteresting. It was
a great deal nicer on the other coast, or even at
sea.”
“Perhaps you are judging hastily,
my dear young friend,” said Senor Perkins, with
habitual tolerance. “I have heard that behind
those hills, and hidden from sight in some of the
canyons, are perfect little Edens of beauty and fruitfulness.
They are like some ardent natures that cover their
approaches with the ashes of their burnt-up fires,
but only do it the better to keep intact their glowing,
vivifying, central heat.”
“How very poetical, Mr. Perkins!”
said Mrs. Markham, with blunt admiration. “You
ought to put that into verse.”
“I have,” returned Senor
Perkins modestly. “They are some reflections
on I hardly dare call them an apostrophe
to the crater of Colima. If you will
permit me to read them to you this evening, I shall
be charmed. I hope also to take that opportunity
of showing you the verses of a gifted woman, not yet
known to fame, Mrs. Euphemia M’Corkle, of Peoria,
Illinois.”
Mrs. Markham coughed slightly.
The gifted M’Corkle was already known to her
through certain lines quoted by the Senor; and the
entire cabin had one evening fled before a larger
and more ambitious manuscript of the fair Illinoisian.
Miss Keene, who dreaded the reappearance of this poetical
phantom that seemed to haunt the Senor’s fancy,
could not, however, forget that she had been touched
on that occasion by a kindly moisture of eye and tremulousness
of voice in the reader; and, in spite of the hopeless
bathos of the composition, she had forgiven him.
Though she did not always understand Senor Perkins,
she liked him too well to allow him to become ridiculous
to others; and at the present moment she promptly
interposed with a charming assumption of coquetry.
“You forget that you promised
to let me read the manuscript first, and in private,
and that you engaged to give me my revenge at chess
this evening. But do as you like. You are
all fast becoming faithless. I suppose it is
because our holiday is drawing to a close, and we shall
soon forget we ever had any, or be ashamed we ever
played so long. Everybody seems to be getting
nervous and fidgety and preparing for civilization
again. Mr. Banks, for the last few days, has dressed
himself regularly as if he were going down town to
his office, and writes letters in the corner of the
saloon as if it were a counting-house. Mr. Crosby
and Mr. Winslow do nothing but talk of their prospects,
and I believe they are drawing up articles of partnership
together. Here is Mr. Brace frightening me by
telling me that my brother will lock me up, to keep
the rich miners from laying their bags of gold dust
at my feet; and Mrs. Brimmer and Miss Chubb assure
me that I haven’t a decent gown to go ashore
in.”
“You forget Mr. Hurlstone,”
said Brace, with ill-concealed bitterness; “he
seems to have time enough on his hands, and I dare
say would sympathize with you. You women like
idle men.”
“If we do, it’s because
only the idle men have the time to amuse us,”
retorted Miss Keene. “But,” she added,
with a laugh, “I suppose I’m getting nervous
and fidgety myself; for I find myself every now and
then watching the officers and men, and listening to
the orders as if something were going to happen again.
I never felt so before; I never used to have the least
concern in what you call ’the working of the
ship,’ and now” her voice, which
had been half playful, half pettish, suddenly became
grave, “and now look at
the mate and those men forward. There certainly
is something going on, or is going to happen.
What are they looking at?”
The mate had clambered halfway up
the main ratlines, and was looking earnestly to windward.
Two or three of the crew on the forecastle were gazing
in the same direction. The group of cabin-passengers
on the quarterdeck, following their eyes, saw what
appeared to be another low shore on the opposite bow.
“Why, there’s another coast there!”
said Mrs. Markham.
“It’s a fog-bank,”
said Senor Perkins gravely. He quickly crossed
the deck, exchanged a few words with the officer,
and returned. Miss Keene, who had felt a sense
of relief, nevertheless questioned his face as he
again stood beside her. But he had recovered his
beaming cheerfulness. “It’s nothing
to alarm you,” he said, answering her glance,
“but it may mean delay if we can’t get
out of it. You don’t mind that, I know.”
“No,” replied the young
girl, smiling. “Besides, it would be a new
experience. We’ve had winds and calms we
only want fog now to complete our adventures.
Unless it’s going to make everybody cross,”
she continued, with a mischievous glance at Brace.
“You’ll find it won’t
improve the temper of the officers,” said Crosby,
who had joined the group. “There’s
nothing sailors hate more than a fog. They can
go to sleep in a hurricane between the rolls of a ship,
but a fog keeps them awake. It’s the one
thing they can’t shirk. There’s the
skipper tumbled up, too! The old man looks wrathy,
don’t he? But it’s no use now; we’re
going slap into it, and the wind’s failing!”
It was true. In the last few
moments all that vast glistening surface of metallic
blue which stretched so far to windward appeared to
be slowly eaten away as if by some dull, corroding
acid; the distant horizon line of sea and sky was
still distinct and sharply cut, but the whole water
between them had grown gray, as if some invisible shadow
had passed in mid-air across it. The actual fog
bank had suddenly lost its resemblance to the shore,
had lifted as a curtain, and now seemed suspended over
the ship. Gradually it descended; the top-gallant
and top-sails were lost in this mysterious vapor,
yet the horizon line still glimmered faintly.
Then another mist seemed to rise from the sea and meet
it; in another instant the deck whereon they stood
shrank to the appearance of a raft adrift in a faint
gray sea. With the complete obliteration of all
circumambient space, the wind fell. Their isolation
was complete.
It was notable that the first and
most peculiar effect of this misty environment was
the absolute silence. The empty, invisible sails
above did not flap; the sheets and halyards hung limp;
even the faint creaking of an unseen block overhead
was so startling as to draw every eye upwards.
Muffled orders from viewless figures forward were obeyed
by phantoms that moved noiselessly through the gray
sea that seemed to have invaded the deck. Even
the passengers spoke in whispers, or held their breath,
in passive groups, as if fearing to break a silence
so replete with awe and anticipation. It was
next noticed that the vessel was subjected to some
vague motion; the resistance of the water had ceased,
the waves no longer hissed under her bows, or nestled
and lapped under her counter; a dreamy, irregular,
and listless rocking had taken the place of the regular
undulations; at times, a faint and half delicious
vertigo seemed to overcome their senses; the ship was
drifting.
Captain Bunker stood near the bitts,
where his brief orders were transmitted to the man
at the almost useless wheel. At his side Senor
Perkins beamed with unshaken serenity, and hopefully
replied to the captain’s half surly, half anxious
queries.
“By the chart we should be well
east of Los Lobos island, d’ye see?” he
said impatiently. “You don’t happen
to remember the direction of the current off shore
when you were running up here?”
“It’s five years ago,”
said the Senor modestly; “but I remember we kept
well to the west to weather Cape St. Eugenio.
My impression is that there was a strong northwesterly
current setting north of Ballenos Bay.”
“And we’re in it now,”
said Captain Bunker shortly. “How near St.
Roque does it set?”
“Within a mile or two.
I should keep away more to the west,” said Senor
Perkins, “and clear”
“I ain’t asking you to
run the ship,” interrupted Captain Bunker sharply.
“How’s her head now, Mr. Brooks?”
The seamen standing near cast a rapid
glance at Senor Perkins, but not a muscle of his bland
face moved or betrayed a consciousness of the insult.
Whatever might have been the feeling towards him, at
that moment the sailors after their fashion admired
their captain; strong, masterful, and imperious.
The danger that had cleared his eye, throat, and brain,
and left him once more the daring and skillful navigator
they knew, wiped out of their shallow minds the vicious
habit that had sunk him below their level.
It had now become perceptible to even
the inexperienced eyes of the passengers that the
Excelsior was obeying some new and profound impulse.
The vague drifting had ceased, and in its place had
come a mysterious but regular movement, in which the
surrounding mist seemed to participate, until fog
and vessel moved together towards some unseen but
well-defined bourne. In vain had the boats of
the Excelsior, manned by her crew, endeavored with
a towing-line to check or direct the inexplicable
movement; in vain had Captain Bunker struggled, with
all the skilled weapons of seamanship, against his
invincible foe; wrapped in the impenetrable fog, the
ship moved ghost-like to what seemed to be her doom.
The anxiety of the officers had not
as yet communicated itself to the passengers; those
who had been most nervous in the ordinary onset of
wind and wave looked upon the fog as a phenomenon whose
only disturbance might be delay. To Miss Keene
this conveyed no annoyance; rather that placid envelopment
of cloud soothed her fancy; she submitted herself to
its soft embraces, and to the mysterious onward movement
of the ship, as if it were part of a youthful dream.
Once she thought of the ship of Sindbad, and that
fatal loadstone mountain, with an awe that was, however,
half a pleasure.
“You are not frightened, Miss
Keene?” said a voice near her.
She started slightly. It was
the voice of Mr. Hurlstone. So thick was the
fog that his face and figure appeared to come dimly
out of it, like a part of her dreaming fancy.
Without replying to his question, she said quickly,
“You are better then, Mr. Hurlstone?
We we were all so frightened for you.”
An angry shadow crossed his thin face,
and he hesitated. After a pause he recovered
himself, and said,
“I was saying you were taking
all this very quietly. I don’t think there’s
much danger myself. And if we should go ashore
here”
“Well?” suggested Miss
Keene, ignoring this first intimation of danger in
her surprise at the man’s manner.
“Well, we should all be separated
only a few days earlier, that’s all!”
More frightened at the strange bitterness
of his voice than by the sense of physical peril,
she was vaguely moving away towards the dimly outlined
figures of her companions when she was arrested by
a voice forward. There was a slight murmur among
the passengers.
“What did he say?” asked
Miss Keene, “What are ’Breakers ahead’?”
Hurlstone did not reply.
“Where away?” asked a second voice.
The murmur still continuing, Captain
Bunker’s hoarse voice pierced the gloom, “Silence
fore and aft!”
The first voice repeated faintly,
“On the larboard bow.”
There was another silence. Again
the voice repeated, as if mechanically,
“Breakers!”
“Where away?”
“On the starboard beam.”
“We are in some passage or channel,” said
Hurlstone quietly.
The young girl glanced round her and
saw for the first time that, in one of those inexplicable
movements she had not understood, the other passengers
had been withdrawn into a limited space of the deck,
as if through some authoritative orders, while she
and her companion had been evidently overlooked.
A couple of sailors, who had suddenly taken their
positions by the quarter-boats, strengthened the accidental
separation.
“Is there some one taking care
of you?” he asked, half hesitatingly; “Mr.
Brace Perkins or”
“No,” she replied quickly. “Why?”
“Well, we are very near the
boat in an emergency, and you might allow me to stay
here and see you safe in it.”
“But the other ladies? Mrs. Markham, and”
“They’ll take their turn
after you,” he said grimly, picking up a
wrap from the railing and throwing it over her shoulders.
“But I don’t
understand!” she stammered, more embarrassed
by the situation than by any impending peril.
“There is very little danger,
I think,” he added impatiently. “There
is scarcely any sea; the ship has very little way
on; and these breakers are not over rocks. Listen.”
She tried to listen. At first
she heard nothing but the occasional low voice of
command near the wheel. Then she became conscious
of a gentle, soothing murmur through the fog to the
right. She had heard such a murmuring accompaniment
to her girlish dreams at Newport on a still summer
night. There was nothing to frighten her, but
it increased her embarrassment.
“And you?” she said awkwardly, raising
her soft eyes.
“Oh, if you are all going off
in the boats, by Jove, I think I’ll stick to
the ship!” he returned, with a frankness that
would have been rude but for its utter abstraction.
Miss Keene was silent. The ship
moved gently onward. The monotonous cry of the
leadsman in the chains was the only sound audible.
The soundings were indicating shoaler water, although
the murmuring of the surf had been left far astern.
The almost imperceptible darkening of the mist on
either beam seemed to show that the Excelsior was entering
some land-locked passage. The movement of the
vessel slackened, the tide was beginning to ebb.
Suddenly a wave of far-off clamor, faint but sonorous,
broke across the ship. There was an interval of
breathless silence, and then it broke again, and more
distinctly. It was the sound of bells!
The thrill of awe which passed through
passengers and crew at this spiritual challenge from
the vast and intangible void around them had scarcely
subsided when the captain turned to Senor Perkins with
a look of surly interrogation. The Senor brushed
his hat further back on his head, wiped his brow,
and became thoughtful.
“It’s too far south for
Rosario,” he said deprecatingly; “and the
only other mission I know of is San Carlos, and that’s
far inland. But that is the Angelus, and those
are mission bells, surely.”
The captain turned to Mr. Brooks.
The voice of invisible command again passed along
the deck, and, with a splash in the water and the rattling
of chains, the Excelsior swung slowly round on her
anchor on the bosom of what seemed a placid bay.
Miss Keene, who, in her complete absorption,
had listened to the phantom bells with an almost superstitious
exaltation, had forgotten the presence of her companion,
and now turned towards him. But he was gone.
The imminent danger he had spoken of, half slightingly,
he evidently considered as past. He had taken
the opportunity offered by the slight bustle made
by the lowering of the quarter-boat and the departure
of the mate on a voyage of discovery to mingle with
the crowd, and regain his state-room. With the
anchoring of the vessel, the momentary restraint was
relaxed, the passengers were allowed to pervade the
deck, and Mrs. Markham and Mr. Brace simultaneously
rushed to Miss Keene’s side.
“We were awfully alarmed for
you, my dear,” said Mrs. Markham, “until
we saw you had a protector. Do tell me what
did he say? He must have thought the danger
great to have broken the Senor’s orders and come
upon deck? What did he talk about?”
With a vivid recollection in her mind
of Mr. Hurlstone’s contemptuous ignoring of
the other ladies, Miss Keene became slightly embarrassed.
Her confusion was not removed by the consciousness
that the jealous eyes of Brace were fixed upon her.
“Perhaps he thought it was night,
and walked upon deck in his sleep,” remarked
Brace sarcastically. “He’s probably
gone back to bed.”
“He offered me his protection
very politely, and begged to remain to put me in the
boat in case of danger,” said Miss Keene, recovering
herself, and directing her reply to Mrs. Markham.
“I think that others have made me the same kind
of offer who were wide awake,” she
added mischievously to Brace.
“I wouldn’t be too sure
that they were not foolishly dreaming too,”
returned Brace, in a lower voice.
“I should think we all were
asleep or dreaming here,” said Mrs. Markham
briskly. “Nobody seems to know where we
are, and the only man who might guess it Senor
Perkins has gone off in the boat with the
mate.”
“We’re not a mile from
shore and a Catholic church,” said Crosby, who
had joined them. “I just left Mrs. Brimmer,
who is very High Church, you know, quite overcome
by these Angelus bells. She’s been entreating
the captain to let her go ashore for vespers.
It wouldn’t be a bad idea, if we could only
see what sort of a place we’ve got to. It
wouldn’t do to go feeling round the settlement
in the dark would it? Hallo! what’s
that? Oh, by Jove, that’ll finish Mrs. Brimmer,
sure!”
“Hush!” said Miss Keene impulsively.
He stopped. The long-drawn cadence
of a chant in thin clear soprano voices swept through
the fog from the invisible shore, rose high above
the ship, and then fell, dying away with immeasurable
sweetness and melancholy. Even when it had passed,
a lingering melody seemed to fill the deck. Two
or three of the foreign sailors crossed themselves
devoutly; the other passengers withheld their speech,
and looked at each other. Afraid to break the
charm by speech, they listened again, but in vain
an infinite repose followed that seemed to pervade
everything.
It was broken, at last, by the sound
of oars in their rowlocks; the boat was returning.
But it was noticed that the fog had slightly lifted
from the surface of the water, for the boat was distinctly
visible two cables’ length from the ship as
she approached; and it was seen that besides the first
officer and Senor Perkins there were two strangers
in the boat. Everybody rushed to the side for
a nearer view of those strange inhabitants of the
unknown shore; but the boat’s crew suddenly
ceased rowing, and lay on their oars until an indistinct
hail and reply passed between the boat and ship.
There was a bustle forward, an unexpected thunder
from the Excelsior’s eight-pounder at the bow
port; Captain Bunker and the second mate ranged themselves
at the companionway, and the passengers for the first
time became aware that they were participating at
the reception of visitors of distinction, as two strange
and bizarre figures stepped upon the deck.