“What a horrid smell,
Hamish! What is it?” cried Steve, going
forward.
“Bear’s grease, sir.
They’re chust cooking the fat we got yesterday.
Like to ha’e some in a pot for your hair?”
“What? Nonsense!”
“Mak’ your whiskers grow,
sir,” said the man, grinning. “Look
yonder; Watty Links has been for some. Leuk
at his head.”
Steve did look, to see that the boy’s
red hair was streaky, gummy, and shining, as he had
been applying the grease wholesale that
is, with more liberality than care.
For the bear’s fat some
three hundred and fifty pounds’ weight was
in the great caldron surrounded by steam, which hissed
beneath it from the engine-boiler as the Hvalross
glided slowly along about half a mile from the low,
regular ice cliff, which stretched away apparently
without end, glittering and displaying its lovely
delicate tints of pale blue wherever it was shattered
or riven at the edge.
“It does seem rum,” said
Steve to himself, “for the sun to be always
up let’s see, what do you call it? above
the horizon.”
As he reached the caldron he found
Jakobsen, with his sleeves rolled above his brawny
elbows, busily at work superintending the rendering
down, and he looked up and gave the boy a friendly
nod.
“Well, opposition cook!”
cried Steve, laughing; “breakfast ready?
What is it, bear-soup?”
“No, sir,” said the man seriously, “only
the fat.”
“Ah, well, I won’t taste
that,” said Steve; and he went on to where his
comrades Andersen and Petersen were busy over the great
outstretched bear’s skin, which they were cleaning
and dressing so that it should be perfectly preserved.
Johannes was seated on a stool with a keg between
his legs, the little tub being turned up to form a
table, on which rested the great grinning head of
the slain animal, whose skull he was carefully cleaning
from every particle of flesh and fat, throwing the
scraps overboard to the great cloud of sea-birds which
wheeled and darted and pounced down upon every morsel
thrown into the sea.
“Ugh! what a disgusting job!” said Steve.
“Think so, sir? Oh no,
it’s clean enough quite fresh.”
And he threw over a handful of bear-flesh, after
cutting it in small pieces.
“Why did you do that?” asked Steve.
“To give all the birds a chance.”
“Oh! I say, how hungry they seem!”
“Yes, they do, sir. I
often wonder how they live at all in the stormy times.”
Steve watched till the last scrap
had been snatched from the crystal clear water, and
then looked round as the Norseman flung in some more
fragments which he had scraped from the massive skull.
“Seems only fair, sir, eh?
The bears get fat on the young birds when they can
reach them on the cliffs, and now the birds can get
fat on the bear.”
“Why, it’s like making
cannibals of them,” said Steve, “eating
their own children second-hand.”
“Yes, sir,” said Johannes,
pausing to whet his curious knife; “but that’s
how things are. One lives upon another.
Birds, beasts, and fishes, they’re all alike.
But this will make a noble head when the skin’s
dressed, and a pair of glass eyes put in, and the whole
stuffed out a little. It will make you think
about killing it when you get home.”
“I don’t want to think
about killing the poor brute,” said Steve shortly.
“Here, where’s my dog? Skeny!”
There was a sharp bark in answer, but no dog appeared.
“Where is he? Here, Skeny, Skeny!”
The dog answered with another sharp
bark, and, directed by the sound, the boy advanced
to find the collie curled up on a tarpaulin right
forward under the bowsprit.
“Hullo, old chap! why don’t
you come out?” cried Steve; but the dog only
gave his tail a few short raps on the tarpaulin without
moving his head, his eyes twinkling up from the furry
hair in which his nose was buried.
“Not ill, are you?” continued
Steve, bending down to pat his companion, but eliciting
a whine, as if the caress had given pain.
“He’s only trying to sleep
it off, sir,” said Johannes, scattering some
more food to the gulls, which dashed at it screaming.
“I felt him over this morning. He’s
a good bit bruised, but no bones broken.”
“Did he let you didn’t he try
to bite?”
“Oh no,” said the man
with quiet confidence; “a dog won’t bite
you when he’s hurt, if he knows you want to
do him good. We’re friends, aren’t
we, Skene?”
The dog rapped the tarpaulin with
his tail, and then lay curled up a little closer,
perfectly still.
“It’s wonderful, sir,
how soon animals mend up again without doctoring.
A few licks, a little going on short food, and plenty
of sleep, and they soon come round. One may
do worse than imitate them sometimes.”
Steve made no reply, for the simple
reason that he had nothing to say; but he could not
help wondering what Mr Handscombe would think, as he
got up on the bowsprit just where it passed out over
the vessel’s prow, held on by the rigging, and
had a good look round. But on his left there
was nothing but the long, low ice cliff; on his right
the glittering sea, flecked with grey sea-birds floating
above or calmly sitting on the blue water.
He leaped down, gave Skene a pat,
promised him some breakfast, and was going aft toward
the galley, but just then Johannes had turned the skin
back over the bare skull, pretty well restoring the
shape of the head, and he held it up.
“Make a grand ornament, sir,
when it’s done. Fine ivory teeth, hasn’t
it?”
“Yes. Lend it to me a moment.”
He took hold of the head, and at that
moment became conscious of the fact that Watty’s
greasy shock head was thrust outside of the galley,
and that the lad was watching him with a sneering grin
upon his countenance. There was not the slightest
occasion to take any notice, but these derisive grins
made Steve feel hot, and as if he must punch that
head as hard as ever he could, for if he did not he
told himself that the annoyance would grow worse.
He paid no further heed to the boy then, but carried
the heavy head to where Skene lay curled up to try
the effect upon the dog. That was visible directly
in the ruffling up of the thick frill and a low, deep
growl; but the next minute Skene gave a short bark,
and curled his tail over his nose again, as if quite
satisfied that he was only being played with, and Steve
bore back the trophy.
“Knows better,” said Johannes,
smiling in his grave way; “dogs have got more
sense than we think for.”
“Cooks’ boys haven’t,”
said Steve shortly, as he heard a low, jeering chuckle,
and saw that Watty had been watching him all the time,
and now drew in his head for a few moments, but thrust
it out again to indulge in another grin, which made
Steve writhe and show his annoyance so plainly that
the Norseman said quietly:
“Don’t take any notice of his sauce.”
“No, I won’t,” said
Steve shortly, as the head was withdrawn. But
the next moment the cook being apparently
too much engaged to notice the conduct of his help Watty
thrust out his head again, and, seeing the annoyance
he gave, uttered another low, derisive chuckle.
Steve, unable to control himself,
made an angry gesture, and the boy withdrew his grinning
face.
“He’ll do it again directly,”
thought Steve; and, acting on the impulse of the moment,
he caught up the bear’s head, ran sharply the
few steps to the galley door, stood ready close up
to the side waiting; and as Watty thrust out his face
again grinning, it was into another so fierce and
horrible-looking that he stood for a moment petrified,
and then uttered a loud yell, darted back, and slammed
to the door.
Steve felt better after that, and
hurriedly returned the bear’s head prior to
seeing about breakfast, for another odour saluted his
nostrils, that of frizzling bacon so suggestive
a smell to a hungry lad that he made for the cabin
at once, to find the captain, Mr Lowe, and Mr Handscombe
just gathered for their morning meal.
The breakfast was hardly over when
there was a hail from aloft, where Andrew McByle was
occupying the crow’s-nest.
“There she spouts!” he
cried; and Steve was the first on deck to see the
whale, for he knew the meaning of the sailor’s
cry.
Running to the main-mast he mounted
the shrouds for some twenty feet, and then, with his
arm thrust through the ratlines and embracing one of
the taut stays of the mast, he stood gazing in astonishment
at the sight before him. For he had hurried
on deck fully expecting to see one of the great dark
Greenland whales diving down after food, coming to
the surface again to blow, and then throw its flukes
high in the air with a flourish as it dived once more.
But, instead of a single whale, the sea appeared
to be alive with them, playing about in the water,
gambolling on the surface or diving under. Then
they were up again, making the sea foam as they flourished
their tails, uttered a strange, faint, snorting sound
as they blew and whistled, and dived down once more.
But it was not playing, for they were in chase of
an enormous shoal of small fish, upon which they were
feasting.
There was quite an excitement amongst
the men, who, without waiting for orders, saw to the
tackle in the boats, Johannes and Petersen hastening
to add white whale harpoons to the rest of the implements.
“Well, Steve, my lad,”
cried the doctor, “what do you think of the
shoal? You ought to have brought your fishing-rod
and line.”
“Nonsense!” said the lad
shortly; “but I say, Mr Handscombe, you don’t
call these whales?”
“What, then, my lad? They’re white
whales.”
“Young ones? Then that’s why they
are white.”
“No, my lad, old ones.
Look; plenty of them have got their two young ones
with them.”
“Oh, but surely these are not
full-grown whales! Why, the biggest can’t
be sixteen feet long.”
“Quite right; about fourteen,
I should say. Come down; you’ll want to
go in one of the boats. Look; they’ve got
in the lines.”
Steve looked down, and saw that the
men were carefully stowing two tubs in the fore part
of the boats, each tub containing, in carefully laid-down
rings, about a hundred and fifty yards of strong line.
“But surely they’re not
going to harpoon those baby whales like they do the
big ones?”
“Yes, just the same, lad.
Come down if you want to have some of the sport.”
The captain stepped into one boat,
and Steve followed, the doctor going off in the other
with Jakobsen and the crew.
The next minute the word was given
to sit fast and be silent, and the boats were rowed
rapidly toward the great shoal, which must have numbered
a thousand or fifteen hundred, while the water was
one mass of foam.
“Are these good, these white
whales?” said Steve to the captain, as the boat
cut through the water, and Johannes stood ready with
his harpoon, a very different implement from that
provided for the walrus, being barbed so as to form
a kind of hook, and, once through, could not be withdrawn
from the gutta-percha-like side, of which it would
take up a loop tough enough to hold the stoutest sea-horse
they could strike. The harpoon used for the
white whale was lighter, and had a head which somewhat
resembled a half-moon, fitted to work at the end of
the shaft, and slight, so that one point of the half-moon
would stand in a line with the pole, while the other
was secured by a band to the shaft. When the
harpoon was driven into the whale, the band which held
the second point of the head down to the pole was
pushed off in passing through the skin and flesh,
while at the first tug upon the line attached to the
harpoon the loose head would be drawn crosswise, forming
instead of a spear a double barb, which was strong
enough to hold in the flesh without being drawn out.
The captain was too intent upon the
shoal to answer Steve’s question, which he repeated.
“Good, my lad? Yes.
The oil is the purest and best to be had, and very
valuable; but of course not to be obtained in such
quantities as are procured from the larger whales.
I hope we shall get three or four, though.
They will help to fill up our tanks.”
“I wish he’d think more
of finding the Ice Blink than of filling the
tanks,” thought Steve; but the next moment he,
too, was thinking of nothing but the shoal of fish,
as the men called them, though they were air-breathing
animals instead; for now the chase became exciting.
The bélugas seemed to take no notice of the
boats, but they were going rapidly through the water
in chase of their prey, and when a fine one was selected
it dived and went away swiftly beneath the water, so
that it was difficult to tell where the creature would
rise again.
Johannes gave his orders to the men,
so that they might row toward the spot where the whale
was likely to rise, and so give him a chance to hurl
his harpoon before the animal had time to dive again.
But this was not easy. Whether the curious
blunt-nosed, white-skinned, active creature, with
its back clear of all fish-like fin, was on the alert
for the coming harpoon or for the meal it was seeking
it is impossible to say, but certainly it showed a
remarkable activity in keeping just out of reach.
It would rise just exactly where not expected, and
the whole business of the chase had to be gone through
again and again.
Steve was too much occupied with the
efforts of their own harpooner to pay any heed to
what was going on aboard the other boat, and divided
his time between watching the tall, active Norseman
and the spot where it was anticipated that the whale
would rise.
At last, after hard pulling, fortune
favoured the men’s efforts. They had had
a long tug, and there being no sign of the quarry they
sought Johannes bade the rowers rest, while he stood
with one foot resting upon the gunwale expectant.
“It’s of no use,”
said the captain; “it must have gone right on.
Look, Steve, how plentiful they are yonder.
That’s where we ought to have the boat.”
He pointed to where pretty well a
hundred of the great creatures were flapping in and
out of the water; but Steve shook his head.
“Be too dangerous,” he said. “Ah,
look!”
He started to one side, for at that
moment something of a creamy-white suddenly shot out
of the water close to the bows of the boat, rose high
with a graceful bend, and was curving over to make
a plunge down into the depths, when whish!
thud! the harpoon was thrown; it
stuck a short distance behind the creature’s
head, and then with one blow the water was sent flying
over the occupants of the boat, while the line was
running rapidly out of the tub as the white whale disappeared
from sight.
Like its relative the leviathan, of
fifty or sixty feet in length, which boasts of a mouth
big enough to hold a jollyboat and crew, who would
doubtless find their quarters exceedingly uncomfortable
on account of the forest of whalebone hanging down
from the roof, the white whale cannot keep under water
long without coming up to breathe; but the one Johannes
had so cleverly struck nearly carried out the whole
of the line, which Steve watched darting out ring
by ring over the bows, till, in spite of the riskiness
of the proceeding, the second Norseman seized the
end which lay outside the tub, and gave it a hitch
round a block in the bows left for the purpose.
“Be ready for a ride, Steve,”
said the captain, “if he does not pull us under
before they can cut the rope; in that case be ready
for a swim.”
“The first for preference,”
thought Steve; but neither event occurred, for the
rope suddenly ceased running, and as Johannes armed
himself with one of the great lances which lay along
the thwarts, his companion rapidly hauled in the slack
line and laid it in rings once more.
Practice had made the man wonderfully
perfect in this duty, and fathom after fathom was
laid in, while the whale remained under so long that
the captain shouted to Johannes:
“Has the harpoon come out?”
“I don’t know yet, sir;
I’m afraid so,” was the reply. “These
fish are so tender; they are often lost in this way.”
And all the time the second man kept
on hauling in the line, and the others lay on their
oars, for the rope came up straight out of the deep
water.
“Yes, sir, he has gone, I fear,” said
Johannes.
“No!” cried the other,
for the slack line suddenly tightened and was jerked
out of his hand; then the water parted about a dozen
yards from the boat, the head of the whale appeared,
and then the whole of the creature, as it rose higher,
curved right over, and descended head first again,
its tail giving a peculiar wave in the air before it
disappeared, while all had a glimpse of the harpoon
shaft, which directly after was seen floating on the
surface of the water.
“Gone this time!” cried Steve in disappointed
tones.
“Yes, he has gone almost straight down.”
“And we have lost him?”
“I hope not, sir,” said
Johannes, leaning over the side, as the boat glided
on, and picking up the long shaft of the harpoon.
“And you’ve lost the head of the harpoon,
too.”
“Oh no, that’s fast to
the line,” replied the man; “the shaft
is meant to come out, so that it shall not be broken.”
“I did not understand that,”
muttered the boy, as the line that had been recovered
now began to run out again as rapidly as before, hissing
over the gunwale, and judging from the speed looking
as if the last ring would soon be out and the whale
dragging at the boat.
The captain was evidently of the same
opinion, for he spoke to Johannes, who was standing
like a statue with his lance ready.
“Will he snap the line, do you think?”
“No, sir. If he runs all
out, we shall have a sharp tug; but the rope will
hold.”
“He won’t pull us under water, will he?”
cried Steve.
“Oh no, sir; no fear of that.
He’ll swim near to the top after this run,
and keep on coming up to breathe. He may give
us a ride. Here he comes again.”
For the rope ceased running once more,
showing how accurately the length of line was calculated
for giving the creatures the full extent of their
rush and no more.
Once more it was rapidly hauled in,
and laid down in rings in the tub; but before half
was recovered there was a movement, which was seized
upon as a signal how to act, for the whale was not
to have more line, the latter being rapidly twisted
round the block, after which there was a tremendous
jerk, and the boat’s head was dragged down till
it seemed as if it must admit the water, but the next
minute it was rushing rapidly along sending a line
of foam on either side. This lasted for a time,
and then ceased, the whale rising and curving over
once more, flourishing its tail in the air, and then
apparently diving straight down.
More line was gained and ringed this
time, when the tension ceased, and again the whale
appeared, curved over, and dived down again.
Then once more there was the shock, and the boat was
dragged along again. But this was by no means
so sturdy a tugging as the last, and before long the
rope slackened, the whale came up for breath, and dived
slowly.
In a few minutes more there ceased
to be any idea of danger, for the captive was nearly
exhausted, and the end was coming; for each dive was
shorter in depth as well as time. The whale then
tried fresh tactics, rising to the surface and rolling
over and beating the water heavily with its tail;
but all in vain: it could not rid itself of the
deeply plunged harpoon, and lay for a few moments
perfectly quiet.
All at once it seemed to become aware
of the fact that the boat which was approaching it
rapidly had something to do with its trouble, and
diving suddenly it made a rush for it; but the oars
were cleverly managed, and its aim frustrated, while
as it passed close by the bows Johannes’ great
lance struck it full, penetrating deeply before it
was snatched out, and the next minute the whale was
a dozen yards astern lashing the water with its tail.
An order or two rapidly executed,
and the boat was pulled to within safe distance; Johannes
made two tremendous lunges with his lance, and the
whale turned slowly over and lay quivering for a few
minutes; then it was still, and the men gave a cheer.
“Poor whale,” thought
Steve, who was far from being hardened over such matters;
but he tried to think that this capture meant so many
gallons of beautifully clear oil, and money for defraying
the expenses of their search, and he now stood up
to have a good long look at their prize, which was
fully fifteen feet long and proportionately heavy.
And now, the excitement of the chase
being over, the question arose where was the Hvalross,
and where was the other boat? These questions
were answered by the two vessels, which formed with
them a triangle, whose sides were about a mile in
length; while, to add to the satisfaction of the adventure,
the other boat was showing a signal, and they could
see that it was towing something astern.
Meanwhile Johannes and his fellow-harpooners
were busily securing a rope to their prize and drawing
in and laying up their line. Next the harpoon
was carefully cut out from where it was deeply imbedded
in the animal’s back; and then the boat’s
head was turned for the ship, which was steaming slowly
towards them as they rowed on towing their carefully
secured prize astern.
“I’m glad they’ve
had good luck, too,” said Steve; “but,
I say, what has become of the shoal?”
“Gone right away, sir,”
replied Johannes. “We startled them, and
they smelt danger. We may catch up to them by-and-by.”
“Not to-day,” said Captain
Marsham quietly. “Pull, my lads;”
and he steered so that they might get nearer to their
companions’ boat and the Hvalross be
reached by them both at once.
“You are right, sir,”
said Johannes in his quiet, independent, but respectful
manner; “we shall not see the whales again to-day,
and we must make haste if we are to reach the ship
before it comes.”
“Before what comes?” said
Steve, wondering at the man’s manner.
“Look,” he said, pointing to the north-west.
“What at?” replied Steve; “the long
line of ice?”
“No,” said Captain Marsham.
“Look right beyond the ire. Another of
those pests troubles of arctic voyaging,
my boy,” he continued, correcting himself.
“What, that silvery-looking cloud over the ice?
Does that mean wind?”
“I wish it did, Steve, so as
to save our coal. No, boy; it means another
of those dense mists. I hope only a passing one;
but you have had a taste of what an arctic fog can
be like. We must make haste; these mists creep
on so swiftly. Make a signal, Johannes.
The Hvalross must come on and pick us up,
or we shall have to cast off our fish.”
The next minute a little flag was
hoisted in the bows to the end of one of the lance-poles,
with the result that there was soon after a cloud of
black smoke rolling out of the steamer’s funnel
and an increase in the white water at her stern; but
the boat went no faster, for the white whale was heavy,
although the men pulled with a will.
“They ought to see the fog coming
on in the other boat,” said the captain impatiently.
“Of course if we are shut in we shall be able
to reach the Hvalross. We could do that
by listening for their signals, which they would be
sure to make; but I hate unnecessary anxiety, Steve,
and it is very awkward to be caught by one of these
dense mists everything is so puzzling.”
He ceased speaking, and sat watching
the other boat making, like themselves, slowly for
the same point. And now, seeing the urgency,
Johannes and his brother Norsemen seated themselves
and put out spare oars to help on the speed.
But the whale they were towing seemed to anchor them
in one place; and at last, just as the steamer was
still quite half a mile away, a peculiar change came
over the sea. The sun was still shining brightly,
but the other boat grew dim and enlarged-looking,
as if it were magnified and set in a bluish opal.
There was the long range of ice cliff, but it was curiously
blue and undefined.
“I say,” cried Steve suddenly,
“what’s the matter with the Hvalross?”
He started from his seat as he spoke,
for the steamer was no longer upon the blue water, there
was no blue water, but apparently twenty
feet up in the air, and gradually rising higher till
it was double the height, while the funnel, masts,
and hull looked soft and swollen out of all proportion.
“An optical illusion, my boy,”
said the captain quietly. “Sit down.
You have heard of refraction. It is a peculiar
state of the air. I daresay we look the same
to them. Pull, my lads. I’m afraid
the mist will be down upon us before we can reach
the ship. Look at that.”
Steve was already looking at the peculiar
way in which their companion boat was dying out of
sight, till it was perfectly invisible; and yet it
was clear about where they were, only for a few minutes,
though. Then there was a faint, gauzy film close
by, into which they rowed, and as they passed completely
in, the Hvalross was almost hidden; five minutes
later it was not to be seen.
The mist was upon them, thickening
each moment, and a curiously depressing chill came
over the boy. It was as if the cold were attacking
his mind as well as his body, and he quite started
as the deep voice of Johannes said, the words sounding
muffled:
“Keep your helm fast, sir. We mustn’t
miss the ship.”
“Mustn’t miss the ship,”
thought Steve, with a strange sense of dread creeping
over him now like another and darker mist. “If
we did miss her, what then?”