Inside the cabin Hungerford closed
the door, gripped me by the arm, and then handed me
a cheroot, with the remark: “My pater gave
them to me last voyage home. Have kept ’em
in tea.” And then he added, with no appearance
of consecutiveness: “Hang the bally ship,
anyhow!”
I shall not attempt to tone down the
crudeness of Hungerford’s language. It
contents me to think that the solidity of his character
and his worth will appear even through the crust of
free-and-easy idioms, as they will certainly be seen
in his acts; he was sound at heart and true
as steel.
“What is the matter, Hungerford?”
I asked lighting the cheroot.
“Everything’s the matter.
Captain, with his nose in the air, and trusting all
round to his officers. First officer, no good never
any use since they poured the coal on him. Purser,
ought to be on a Chinese junk. Second, third,
fourth officers, first-rate chaps, but so-so sailors.
Doctor, frivolling with a lovely filly, pedigree not
known. Why, confound it! nobody takes this business
seriously except the captain, and he sits on a golden
throne. He doesn’t know that in any real
danger this swagger craft would be filled with foolishness.
There isn’t more than one good boat’s crew
on board sailors, lascars, stewards,
and all. As for the officers, if the surgeon would
leave the lovely ladies to themselves, he’d
find cases worth treating, and duties worth doing.
He should keep himself fit for shocks. And he
can take my word for it for I’ve
been at sea since I was a kid, worse luck! that
a man with anything to do on a ship ought to travel
every day nose out for shipwreck next day, and so
on, port to port. Ship-surgeons, as well as all
other officers, weren’t ordained to follow after
cambric skirts and lace handkerchiefs at sea.
Believe me or not as you like, but, for a man having
work to do, woman, lovely woman, is rocks. Now,
I suppose you’ll think I’m insolent, for
I’m younger than you are, Marmion, but you know
what a rough-and-tumble fellow I am, and you’ll
not mind.”
“Well, Hungerford,” I said, “to
what does this lead?”
“To Number 116 Intermediate,
for one thing. It’s letting off steam for
another. I tell you, Marmion, these big ships
are too big. There are those canvas boats.
They won’t work; you can’t get them together.
You couldn’t launch one in an hour. And
as for the use of the others, the lascars would
melt like snow in any real danger. There’s
about one decent boat’s crew on the ship, that’s
all. There! I’ve unburdened myself;
I feel better.”
Presently he added, with a shake of
the head: “See here: now-a-days we
trust too much to machinery and chance, and not enough
to skill of hand and brain stuff. I’d like
to show you some of the crews I’ve had in the
Pacific and the China Sea but I’m
at it again! I’ll now come, Marmion, to
the real reason why I brought you here.... Number
116 Intermediate is under the weather; I found him
fainting in the passage. I helped him into his
cabin. He said he’d been to you to get medicine,
and you’d given him some. Now, the strange
part of the business is, I know him. He didn’t
remember me, however perhaps because he
didn’t get a good look at me. Coincidence
is a strange thing. I can point to a dozen in
my short life, every one as remarkable, if not as
startling, as this. Here, I’ll spin you
a yarn:
“It happened four years ago.
I had no moustache then, was fat like a whale, and
first mate on the ‘Dancing Kate’, a pearler
in the Indian Ocean, between Java and Australia.
That was sailing, mind you real seamanship,
no bally nonsense; a fight every weather, interesting
all round. If it wasn’t a deadly calm, it
was a typhoon; if it wasn’t either, it was want
of food and water. I’ve seen us with pearls
on board worth a thousand quid, and not a drop of
water nor three square meals in the caboose.
But that was life for men and not Miss Nancys.
If they weren’t saints, they were sailors, afraid
of nothing but God Almighty and they do
respect Him, even when they curse the winds and the
sea. Well, one day we were lying in the open sea,
about two hundred and fifty miles from Port Darwin.
There wasn’t a breath of air. The sea was
like glass; the sun was drawing turpentine out of every
inch of the ‘Dancing Kate’. The world
was one wild blister. There wasn’t a comfortable
spot in the craft, and all round us was that staring,
oily sea. It was too hot to smoke, and I used
to make a Sede boy do my smoking for me. I got
the benefit of the smell without any work. I was
lying under the droop of a dingey, making the Sede
boy call on all his gods for wind, with interludes
of smoke, when he chucked his deities and tobacco,
and, pointing, shouted, ‘Man! man!’
“I snatched a spy-glass.
Sure enough, there was a boat on the water. It
was moving ever so slowly. It seemed to stop,
and we saw something lifted and waved, and then all
was still again. I got a boat’s crew together,
and away we went in that deadly smother. An hour’s
row and we got within hail of the derelict as
one of the crew said, ‘feelin’ as if the
immortal life was jerked out of us.’ The
dingey lay there on the glassy surface, not a sign
of life about her. Yet I had, as I said, seen
something waved. The water didn’t even lap
its sides. It was ghostly, I can tell you.
Our oars licked the water; they didn’t attack
it. Now, I’m going to tell you something,
Marmion, that’ll make you laugh. I don’t
think I’ve got any poetry in me, but just then
I thought of some verses I learned when I was a little
cove at Wellington a devilishly weird thing.
It came to me at that moment like a word in my ear.
It made me feel awkward for a second. All sailors
are superstitious, you know. I’m superstitious
about this ship. Never mind; I’ll tell you
the verses, to show you what a queer thing memory
is. The thing was called ’No Man’s
Sea’:
“’The days are dead
in the No Man’s Sea,
And God has left it alone;
The angels cover their heads and flee,
And the wild four winds have flown.
“’There’s
never a ripple upon the tide,
There’s never a word or sound;
But over the waste the white wraiths glide,
To look for the souls of the drowned.
“’The No Man’s
Sea is a gaol of souls,
And its gate is a burning sun,
And deep beneath it a great bell tolls
For a death that never is done.
“’Alas! for any
that comes anear,
That lies on its moveless breast;
The grumbling water shall be his bier,
And never a place of rest."’
“There are four of the verses.
Well, I made a motion to stop the rowing, and was
mum for a minute. The men got nervous. They
looked at the boat in front of us, and then turned
round, as though to see if the ’Dancing Kate’
was still in sight. I spoke, and they got more
courage. I stood up in the boat, but could see
nothing in the dingey. I gave a sign to go on,
and soon we were alongside. In the bottom of the
dingey lay a man, apparently dead, wearing the clothes
of a convict. One of the crew gave a grunt of
disgust, the others said nothing. I don’t
take to men often, and to convicts precious seldom;
but there was a look in this man’s face which
the prison clothes couldn’t demoralise a
damned pathetic look, which seemed to say, ‘Not
guilty.’
“In a minute I was beside him,
and found he wasn’t dead. Brandy brought
him round a little; but he was a bit gone in the head,
and muttered all the way back to the ship. I
had unbuttoned his shirt, and I saw on his breast
a little ivory portrait of a woman. I didn’t
let the crew see it; for the fellow, even in his delirium,
appeared to know I had exposed the thing, and drew
the linen close in his fingers, and for a long time
held it at his throat.”
“What was the woman’s face like, Hungerford?”
I asked.
He parried, remarking only that she
had the face of a lady, and was handsome.
I pressed him. “But did
it resemble any one you had ever seen?”
With a slight droop of his eyelids,
he said: “Don’t ask foolish questions,
Marmion. Well, the castaway had a hard pull for
life. He wouldn’t have lived at all, if
a breeze hadn’t come up and let us get away
to the coast. It was the beginning of the monsoon,
and we went bowling down towards Port Darwin, a crowd
of Malay proas in our wake. However, the
poor beggar thought he was going to die, and one night
he told me his story. He was an escaped convict
from Freemantle, Western Australia. He had, with
others, been taken up to the northern coast to do
some Government work, and had escaped in the dingey.
His crime was stealing funds belonging to a Squatting
and Mining Company. There was this extenuating
circumstance: he could have replaced the money,
which, as he said, he’d only intended to use
for a few weeks. But a personal enemy threw suspicion
on him, accounts were examined, and though he showed
he’d only used the money while more of his own
was on the way to him, the Company insisted on prosecuting
him. For two reasons: because it was itself
in bad odour, and hoped by this trial to divert public
attention from its own dirty position; and because
he had against him not only his personal enemy, but
those who wanted to hit the Company through him.
He’d filched to be able to meet the large expenses
of his wife’s establishment. Into this
he didn’t enter minutely, and he didn’t
blame her for having so big a ménage; he only
said he was sorry that he hadn’t been able to
support it without having to come, even for a day,
to the stupidity of stealing. After two years
he escaped. He asked me to write a letter to
his wife, which he’d dictate. Marmion, you
or I couldn’t have dictated that letter if we’d
taken a year to do it. There was no religion
in it, no poppy-cock, but straightforward talk, full
of sorrow for what he’d done, and for the disgrace
he’d brought on her. I remember the last
few sentences as if I’d seen them yesterday.
’I am dying on the open sea, disgraced, but
free,’ he said. ’I am not innocent
in act, but I was not guilty of intentional wrong.
I did what I did that you should have all you wished,
all you ought to have. I ask but this and
I shall soon ask for nothing that you will
have a kind thought, now and then, for the man who
always loved you, and loves you yet. I have never
blamed you that you did not come near me in my trouble;
but I wish you were here for a moment before I go away
for ever. You must forgive me now, for you will
be free. If I were a better man I would say,
God bless you. In my last conscious moments I
will think of you, and speak your name. And now
good-bye an everlasting good-bye.
I was your loving husband, and am your lover until
death.’ And it was signed, ‘Boyd
Madras.’
“However, he didn’t die.
Between the captain and myself, we kept life in him,
and at last landed him at Port Darwin; all of us, officers
and crew, swearing to let no one know he was a convict.
And I’ll say this for the crew of the ‘Dancing
Kate’ that, so far as I know, they kept their
word. That letter, addressed in care of a firm
of Melbourne bankers, I gave back to him before we
landed. We made him up a purse of fifty pounds, for
the crew got to like him, and left him at
Port Darwin, sailing away again in a few days to another
pearl-field farther east. What happened to him
at Port Darwin and elsewhere, I don’t know;
but one day I found him on a fashionable steamer in
the Indian Ocean, looking almost as near to Kingdom
Come as when he starved in the dingey on No Man’s
Sea. As I said before, I think he didn’t
recognise me; and he’s lying now in 116 Intermediate,
with a look on him that I’ve seen in the face
of a man condemned to death by the devils of cholera
or equatorial fever. And that’s the story,
Marmion, which I brought you to hear told,
as you notice, in fine classical style.”
“And why do you tell me
this, Hungerford a secret you’ve kept
all these years? Knowledge of that man’s
crime wasn’t necessary before giving him belladonna
or a hot bath.”
Hungerford kept back the whole truth
for reasons of his own. He said: “Chiefly
because I want you to take a decent interest in the
chap. He looks as if he might go off on the long
voyage any tick o’ the clock. You are doctor,
parson, and everything else of the kind on board.
I like the poor devil, but anyhow I’m not in
a position to be going around with ginger-tea in a
spoon, or Ecclesiastes under my arm, very
good things. Your profession has more or less
to do with the mind as well as the body, and you may
take my word for it that Boyd Madras’s mind is
as sick as his torso. By the way, he calls himself
‘Charles Boyd,’ so I suppose we needn’t
recall to him his former experiences by adding the
‘Madras.’”
Hungerford squeezed my arm again violently,
and added: “Look here, Marmion, we understand
each other in this, don’t we? To do what
we can for the fellow, and be mum.”
Some of this looks rough and blunt,
but as it was spoken there was that in it which softened
it to my ear. I knew he had told all he thought
I ought to know, and that he wished me to question
him no more, nor to refer to Mrs. Falchion, whose
relationship to Boyd Madras or Charles
Boyd both of us suspected.
“It was funny about those verses
coming to my mind, wasn’t it, Marmion?”
he continued. And he began to repeat one of them,
keeping time to the wave-like metre with his cheroot,
winding up with a quick, circular movement, and putting
it again between his lips:
“’There’s
never a ripple upon the tide,
There’s never a breath or sound;
But over the waste the white wraiths glide,
To look for the souls of the drowned."’
Then he jumped off the berth where
he had been sitting, put on his jacket, said it was
time to take his turn on the bridge, and prepared
to go out, having apparently dismissed Number 116 Intermediate
from his mind.
I went to Charles Boyd’s cabin,
and knocked gently. There was no response.
I entered. He lay sleeping soundly the
sleep that comes after nervous exhaustion. I
had a good chance to study him as he lay there.
The face was sensitive and well fashioned, but not
strong; the hands were delicate, yet firmly made.
One hand was clinched upon that portion of his breast
where the portrait hung.