1
The Negro Boy tavern is known
by few people in its own parish, for it is a house
with nothing about it to distinguish its fame to those
who do not know that a man may say to his friend,
when their ships go different ways out of Callao,
“I may meet you at the Negro Boy some
day.” It is in a road which returns to
the same point, or near to it, after a fatiguing circuit
of the Isle of Dogs. No part of the road is better
than the rest. It is merely a long road.
That day when I first heard of Bill Purdy I was going
to the tavern hoping to meet Macandrew, Chief of the
Medea. His ship was in again. But
there was nobody about. There was nothing in
sight but the walls, old, sad, and discreet, of the
yards where ships are repaired. The dock warehouses
opposite the tavern offered me their high backs in
a severer and apparently an endless obduracy.
The Negro Boy, as usual, was lost and forlorn,
but resigned to its seclusion from the London that
lives, having stood there long enough to learn that
nothing can control the ways of changing custom.
Its windows were modest and prim in green curtains.
Its only adornment was the picture, above its principal
door, of what once was a negro boy. This picture
now was weathered into a faded plum-coloured suit and
a pair of silver shoe-buckles there was
nothing left of the boy himself but the whites of
his eyes. The tavern is placed where men moving
in the new ways of a busy and adventurous world would
not see it, for they would not be there. Its
dog Ching was asleep on the mat of the portico to the
saloon bar; a Chinese animal, in colour and mane resembling
a lion whose dignity has become sullenness through
diminution. He could doze there all day, and
never scare away a chance customer. None would
come. But men who had learned to find him there
through continuing to trade to the opposite dock,
would address him with some familiar and insulting
words, and stride over him.
The tavern is near one of the wicket
gates of the irregular intrusion into the city of
a maze of dock basins, a gate giving those who know
the district a short cut home from the ships and quays;
the tavern was sited not altogether without design.
And there came Macandrew through that gate, just
as I had decided I must try again soon. His second,
Hanson, was with him. They crossed to the public-house,
and we stooped over the yellow lump of Chinese apathy
to talk to him, and went through the swing doors into
the saloon. The saloon was excluded from the
gaze of the rest of the house by little swinging screens
of frosted glass above the bar, for that was where
old friends of the landlord met, who had known him
all the time their house-flags had been at home in
the neighbouring docks; and perhaps had even sailed
with him when be himself went to sea. A settee
in red plush, salvage from the smoke-room of a liner,
ran round the walls, with the very mahogany tables
before it which it knew when afloat. Some men
in dingy uniforms and dungarees were at the tables.
Two men I did not know stood leaning over the bar talking
confidentially across it to a woman who was only a
laugh, for she was hidden. One of the men turned
from the counter to see who had come in.
“Hullo Mac,” he cried,
in a voice hearty with the abandon of one who, perhaps,
had been there long enough; “look here, here’s
Jessie says she’s going to leave us.”
A woman’s hand, spoiled by many
heavy rings, moved across the counter and shook his
arm in warning. The youngster merely closed his
own hand over it. “Isn’t it hard.
Really going to forsake us. Won’t mix
your whiskey or uncork my lemonade any more.
What are we going to do when we come home now?”
There was an impatient muttering beyond
him, and he made public a soothing and exaggerated
apology. All the men in the room, even the group
bent over a diagram of a marine engine they had drawn
in chalk on their table, looked up in surprise, first
at the youngster who had raised his voice, and then
to watch the tall shadow of a woman pass quickly down
the counter-screen and vanish. Still laughing,
the young man, with his uniform cap worn a little
too carelessly, nodded to the company, and went out
with his companion.
Macandrew stared in contempt at the
back of the fellow as he went. “A nice
boy that. Too bright and bonny for my ship.
What’s that he was saying about Jessie?”
He tried to see where she was, and lowered his voice.
“I know his kind. I saw them together
last night, in the Dock Road. What does she
have anything to do with him for? We know her
of course . . . but even then. . . . She’s
really not a bad sort. She’s like that
with all those young dogs. Can’t help it,
I suppose.”
He moved to the bar, a massive figure,
beyond the age of a sea-going engineer, but still
as light on his feet as a girl. “Where’s
she gone?” He pushed open one of the little
glass screens, and put his petulant face, with its
pale eyes set like aquamarines in bronze, into an opening
too small to frame it. “Can you see her,
Hanson?”
Hanson winked at me, adjusted the
spectacles on his nose, and grinned. With that
grin, and his spectacles, he was as surprising as a
handsome gargoyle. His height compelled him
to lean forward and to grin downward, even when speaking
to a big man like Macandrew. He turned to his
chief now, and both hands went up to his spectacles.
In the way the corners of his mouth turned up before
he spoke, whimsically wrinkling his nose, and in his
intent and amused regard, there was a suggestion of
the mockery of a low immortal for beings who are fated
earnestly to frustrate themselves. His grin
gave you the uncomfortable feeling that it was useless
to pretend you were keeping nothing from him.
“Here goes,” said Hanson.
“Never mind Jessie. I’ve got something
to tell you, Chief. I’m leaving you this
voyage.”
Macandrew was instantly annoyed.
“Going? Dammit, you can’t.
Look at the crowd I’ve got now. You mustn’t
do it.”
“I must. They are a thin
lot, but you could push the old Medea along
with anything. I’ve got another ship.
My reason is very good, from the way I look at it.”
Hanson turned his grin to me.
He was going to enjoy the privilege of seeing his
reasons deemed unreasonable. “Don’t
think it’s a better job I’ve got.
It’s worse. It’s a very rummy voyage.
We may complete it, with luck. It’s a
boat-running lunacy, and some mining gear. She’s
called the Cygnet. I’ve been over
her, and we shall call her something different before
we see the last of her.”
“Then why are you going?” I asked him.
“To see what will happen. . . .”
Macandrew interrupted him. “What?
And you next on the list for Chief? You’re
romantic, young man, and that means you’re no
engineer. Is there a lot of money in it?”
“There isn’t, but there’s
some life. I want to know what I’m made
of. Shall I ever learn it under you? Down
below in the Medea is like winding up a clock
and going to sleep. Do you know the Cygnet
has six inches of freeboard?” He was talking
to me, but kept glancing sideways to see what effect
this had on Macandrew. But Macandrew’s
broad back was impassive.
“Six inches of freeboard, barring
her false bulwarks of deal boards, and she’s
going out to I forget the name of the place,
but I could show you where it is within a hundred
miles on a map that doesn’t give its name.
It’s up the Pondurucu.”
Macandrew made no sign, and Hanson,
his humour a little damped, spoke more seriously.
“I don’t think she’ll ever get there,
but it will be interesting to see where she stops,
and why.”
Macandrew heaved round on his junior.
“There’s drivel. It sounds well
from an engineer and a mathematician, doesn’t
it?” He turned away again. “Supposing,”
he said, over his shoulder, “supposing you pull
this ship through all right, then where will you be?
Any better off?”
“I think so,” said Hanson.
He couldn’t talk to Macandrew’s back,
so he bent over me and pointed a challenging finger
at my necktie. “I’ve never risked
anything yet, not even my job. This is where
I do it. It’ll be nice to attempt something
when the odds are that you can’t finish it, and
there’s nothing much in it if you do. Why,”
he said, grinning at his Chief’s back, “if
I were to stay with him I’d become so normal
that I’d slip into marriage and safety as a
matter of course, and have to give up everything.”
“Who’s in charge of this
lunacy?” asked Macandrew. His voice was
a little truculent.
“All right, Chief. I shan’t
remember his name any the better because you’re
annoyed with me. I haven’t seen the skipper
yet. I think I heard him called Purdy.”
“Purdy? Bill Purdy?”
Macandrew was incredulous. “Do you know
what you’ve let yourself in for? If Purdy’s
got the job, I know why. Nobody else would take
it, and he’s the last man, anyway, who ought
to have it.”
“What, drink?” asked Hanson.
“Lord, no. Not Purdy.
No. It’s the man himself. I’ve
known him a long time, and I like him, but he’ll
never do. He can’t make up his mind to
a course. Don’t you remember the Campeachy
case? I expect it was before your time.
Purdy had her. He was coming up-Channel, and
got nervous over the weather, and put into Portland
for a pilot. There was no pilot. So he
decided to put out again and go on. It never
occurred to him that as he was in shelter he’d
better stay there till a pilot arrived, because getting
out of that was exactly when he’d want one.
He put her ashore. That was like Purdy, to play
for safety and make a wreck. When he got over
the fuss Lloyd’s raised about it he refused to
take command again for some time. He couldn’t
even make up his mind whether he wanted a ship at
all.”
Hanson listened to this with the air
of one who was being reassured in a doubtful enterprise.
“You mistake me, Chief,”
he said. “You are only improving my reasons
for going. Not only is the ship crank, but so
is her skipper. Now tell me . . .”
Macandrew frowned at his junior, and
his curiously pale eyes became distinctly inhuman.
I believe he thought his counsel was being laughed
at. But the door opened, and he touched Hanson’s
arm. A little man of middle age stood there,
who turned, and actually prevented the doors from
swinging together with their usual announcement of
another customer. For only a moment he raised
his downcast eyes to see who was there, and then nodded
sadly to Macandrew. His drooping moustache conformed
to the downward lines of his face, which was that
of a man who had been long observing life with understanding,
and had not a lively opinion of it.
Macandrew’s demeanour changed.
It was now mild and almost affectionate as he greeted
the little man. “Come over here, Purdy,
and tell us what you’ve been doing. Here’s
Hanson, this young fellow. I hear he’s
sailing with you. He’s your Chief.
You’d better know him.”
Purdy raised his eyes in a grave and
momentary survey, made to shake hands with Hanson,
but hesitated, and did so only because Hanson put out
his own great fist with decision. Purdy did not
speak, except to say to Hanson: “We’re
signing-on tomorrow. I’ll meet you at the
shipping office then.” He seemed to forget
the pair of them, paused, and went to a far vacant
corner of the bar. The barmaid, as he got there,
returned, and stopped to say something to him.
“Well, I’m damned,”
muttered Macandrew. “Look here, Jessie,”
he cried, “here’s all us young men been
waiting for nearly twenty minutes, and you take no
notice of us, but as soon as a captain looks across
the counter, there you are. But how did you
know he was a captain? That’s what I’d
like to know. He’s only wearing a bowler
hat.”
2
The Medea had been ordered
unexpectedly to Barry for loading, to take the place
of an unready sister-ship; and Macandrew, of whom I
have had much experience, would be active, critical
of what a dog must put up with in life, and altogether
unfit for intimate, amiable, and reminiscent conversation.
Yet I wanted to see him again before he left, and
went past the Board of Trade Office hoping for signs
of the Medea, for I had heard she was assembling
a crew that morning. But the marine-store shops,
with their tarpaulin suits hanging outside open-armed
and oscillating, looked across to the men lounging
against the shipping-office railings, and the idlers
stared across at the tarpaulins. It did not appear
to be a place where anything was destined to happen.
It merely looked like rain.
Macandrew might be inside with his
crowd of firemen and greasers. Behind the brass
grille there a clerk, solitary and absorbed in his
duties, bent over a pile of ships’ articles,
and presented to the seamen in the public space beyond
him only the featureless shine of a bald head.
The seamen, scattered about in groups, shabby and
listless, with a few of their officers among them,
were as sombre and subdued as though they had learned
life had nothing more to offer them, and they were
present only because they might as well use up the
salvage of their days. The clerk raised his
head and questioned the men before him with a quick,
inclusive glance. “Any men here of the
Cygnet?” he demanded. His voice,
raised in certainty above the casual murmuring of
the repressed, made them all as self-conscious and
furtive as though discovered in guilt. Hanson’s
head appeared above the crowd, as he rose from a bench
and went to the official. “I’m the
engineer of the Cygnet. We’re waiting
for Captain Purdy.”
The clerk complained. He pulled
out his watch. “He said he would be ready
for me at ten this morning. Now you’ve
lost your turn, and there are three other ships.”
He turned away in a manner which told every one that
Hanson had now become non-existent, pushed aside the
Cygnet’s papers, and searched the room
once more. “Ah, good morning, Captain
Hudson. You ready for me? Then I’ll
take you next.” The captain went around
to stand beside the official, and his crew clustered
on their side of the bars, with their caps in their
hands.
“A good start that,” said
Hanson to me. “Perhaps, after all, we never
shall start. Must be a rum chap, that Purdy.”
He told me the Medea’s
crowd was there, but perhaps Macandrew had already
signed, and so would not appear. That meant I
might not see him for another year; but as I left
the office I found him coming up its steps outside,
and not as though there were the affairs of a month
to be got into two days, but in leisurely abstraction.
He might have been making up his mind that, after
all, there was no need to call there, for he was studying
each step as if he were looking for the bottom of a
mystery. His fingers were twirling the little
ivory pig he carries as a charm on his watchguard.
The pig is supposed to assist him when he is in a
difficulty. He raised his eyes.
“Anyhow,” he despaired
to me with irrelevance, “I can’t do anything
for him.”
I waited for the chance of a clue.
“I thought,” Macandrew quietly soliloquized,
“he knew better than that. He’s been
a failure, but all the same, he’s got a better
head than most of us. She’s sure to bring
him to grief.”
“What’s all this about?” I ventured.
“I’ve just been talking
to Purdy. You remember what Hanson said of that
voyage he’s making? Purdy is taking Jessie
with him. You don’t know Purdy, but I
do. And I know Jessie; but that’s nothing.”
“Taking her with him?” I asked; “but
how. . . .”
“Oh, cook, of course.
That’ll be it. She’ll be steward,
naturally. That’s reasonable. You’ve
seen her. Jessie’s the sort of woman would
jump at the chance of such a pleasant trip, as cook.”
“I don’t understand. . . .”
“Who said you did? Nobody
does but the pair of them. I know what another
man might see in Purdy. But a woman! He’s
middle-aged, quiet, and looks tired. That woman
is young and lively, and she’ll be bored to
death with him on such a trip.”
“But I thought you said . . .”
“What have I said? I’ve
said nothing. Jessie’s away to sea as cook.
Why not? I’m going inside. Are you
coming in?”
Crossing the floor of the office,
Hanson caught Macandrew’s arm. “Your
lot are signing-on now.” The master of
the Medea was round with the official tallying
the men by the ship’s papers. “I
see it,” Macandrew answered. “I’ve
signed. I wanted to catch the old man before
he began that job.”
“We’re hung up for Purdy,”
Hanson told him. “Nobody seems to know
where he is.” Hanson was amused.
“Yes. Well . . . he’ll
be here all right . . . and now this new job which
you think so funny, young Hanson. See it goes
through. Presently it won’t be so funny.
Hang on to it then.”
Hanson was surprised by this, and
a trifle hurt. He was beginning to speak, making
the usual preliminary adjustment of his spectacles,
when a movement near the door checked him. His
hands remained at his glasses, as if aiding his sight
to certify the unbelievable.
“What’s this?” he
murmured. “Here’s Purdy. Isn’t
that the Negro Boy’s barmaid with him
. . . is she with him?” He continued to watch,
apparently for some sign that this coincidence of his
captain and a barmaid in a public office was designed.
The bent gaze of the master of the
Cygnet might have noticed the boots of his
engineer, for he took in the room no higher than that.
Then he came forward with his umbrella, still in
contemplation. It might have been no more than
a coincidence. She, too, approached, a little
behind him, but obscuring his dull meagreness, for
she was a head taller, and a bold and challenging
figure. Her blond hair distinguished her even
more than the emphasis of her florid hat. Her
pallor that morning refined the indubious coarseness
of her face, and changed vulgarity into the attractive
originality of a spirited character. Many there
knew her, but she recognized nobody. She yawned
once, in a fair piece of acting, and in her movements
and the poise of her head there was a disdain almost
plain enough to be insolence. Purdy turned to
her, and the strange pair conferred. I heard
Hanson say to himself: “What on earth.”
She left Purdy, bent her head with a gracious but
stressed smile to Macandrew, and went to the bench
by the wall, where she sat, waiting, with her legs
crossed in a way that was a defiance and an attraction
in such a place, where a woman is rarely seen.
She read a newspaper, perhaps because that acted
as a screen, though she turned its pages with a nervous
abruptness which betrayed her imitation of indifference.
3
The Medea and the Cygnet,
and the other ships I knew which carried those whose
fortunes were some concern of mine, might have sailed
over the edge of the world. My only communication
was with an occasional familiar name in the reports
of the Shipping List. Then Macandrew came
home again. But it was difficult to meet him.
Mrs. Macandrew told me he was working by his ship
in drydock. They had had trouble with the engines
that voyage, and she herself had seen little of him,
except to find him, when she came down of a morning,
asleep in the drawing-room. Just flung himself
down in the first place, you know. In those greasy
overalls, too. He had told her the engine-room
looked like a scrap-heap, but the ship had to be ready
for sea in ten days. Once he had worked thirty-two
hours on end. Think of that, and he had not been
home for six months. She would strongly advise
any girl not to marry a man who went to sea, and if
I met Macandrew I was to bring him home at once.
Did I hear?
When I found the Medea it was
late in the day, for she was not in the dry-dock that
had been named. Her Chief had just gone ashore.
There was a chance that he would have called at the
Negro Boy, but he had not been seen there.
Except for the landlord, who was at a table talking
to a stranger, the saloon was empty. A silk
hat was on the table before the stranger, beside a
tankard, and the hat was surmounted by a pair of neatly
folded kid gloves. “Come over here,”
said the landlord. “Sit here for a bit,
Macandrew may come in. This is Dr. Maslin.”
A monocle fell its length of black cord from the
doctor’s eye, and he nodded to me.
“The doctor used to be with
me when I was running out East,” explained the
landlord. “Where did you say you had come
from now, Doctor? Oh, yes, Tabacol. Funny
name. I was never on the South American coast.
After I left you sick at Macassar, the last trip we
had together the old Siwalik I
left the sea to younger men. But there you are,
Doctor. Still at it. Why don’t you
give it up?”
The doctor did not answer, except
to make a bubbling noise in his tankard. He
placed it on the table again delicately and deliberately,
and wiped his grizzled moustache with a crimson silk
handkerchief. He put up his monocle, and seemed
to be intently inspecting a gas globe over the counter.
I thought his grimace in this concentration came from
an effort to reinforce his will against all curiosity
on our part. But it appeared he was really looking
at what showed, at an angle, of a portrait on the
wall of an inner room. He could just see it,
from where he sat. Anyhow, the landlord imagined
it was the portrait which had caught his friend’s
interest. “Looking at that crayon portrait,
Doctor? Ah, showy woman, isn’t she?
Used to be barmaid here. The Lord knows where
she is now. Went to sea, like a fool.
Stewardess, or something worse. Much more useful
here.”
The doctor’s seamed face, sour
and ironic, made it impossible to know whether his
expression was one of undisguised boredom, or only
his show of conventional politeness. I began
to feel I had broken into the intimacy of two men
whose minds were dissimilar, but friendly through old
associations, and that the doctor’s finer wit
was reproving me for an intrusion. So I rose,
and asked indifferently what sort of a place was Tabacol.
Had he been there before?
“Never,” said the doctor,
“nor is it the kind of place one wishes to see
twice. We were kept at Tabacol because so many
of our men were down with fever. It is a little
distance up the Pondurucu River . . . maybe two hundred
miles. Did you say. . . ? No. It
is not really out of the way. An ocean steamer
calls at Tabacol once a month or six weeks. It
is only on the edge of what romantic people call the
unknown.”
It was evident he thought I could
be one of the romantic. He looked at me for
the first time, twisting the cord of his eyeglass with
his finger and thumb in a fastidious way, and I thought
his glance was to dissipate some doubt he had that
he ought to be speaking to me at all. He dropped
the cord suddenly as if letting go his reserve, and
said slyly, with a grave smile: “Perhaps
the romantic think the unknown is worth looking into
because it may be better than what they know.
At Tabacol I used to think the unknown country beyond
it looked even duller than usual. There was
a forest, a river, a silence, and it was either day
or night. That was all. If the voice of
Nature is the voice of God. . . .”
The landlord was observing in surprise
this conversational excursion by his old friend, as
if it were altogether new to him. He laughed
aloud, and, putting a consoling hand on his friend’s
shoulder as he rose, he told us he must leave us for
a few minutes, for he had business. “Look
more cheerful before I get back, Doctor.”
The doctor chuckled, and stretched
across to give his gloves a more satisfactory position
on his hat. “I don’t understand what
it can be that attracts people to such a place.
Young men, maybe yourself even, wish to go there.
Isn’t that so? Yes. I’ve met
such men in such places. Then they did not give
me the impression that they were satisfied with their
romance. Impossible, of course. Romance
is never in the place unless we put it there, and
who would put even a sentimental dream into such a
hole as Tabacol? Tropical squalor. Broken
people! I’ve never seen romance in such
a place, and don’t expect to. . . .”
Several cabs, on their way to a ship
outward bound, made an increasing noise in the night,
rattled by on the cobbles outside, their occupants
roaring a sentimental chorus, and drowned what the
doctor was saying.
“. . . folly. Worse than
folly.” He was holding his gloves now,
and was lightly flicking the edge of the table with
them in place of verbal emphasis. He suddenly
regarded me again as if he strongly suspected me of
being his antipathy. “Who but a fool would
take a woman to such a country as that? Any
romantic sentimentalist, I suppose. I forget
the name of the ship. There was, you might say,
hardly sufficient room to paint a name on her.
She was no more than a tug. It was a miracle
she survived to get there at all, for she had crossed
from England. Crossed the Western ocean in such
a craft, and brought a woman with him. Did ever
you hear of such folly?”
Now I was certain of our whereabouts,
and felt a weak inclination to show an elder that
I, too, knew something about it; but when I leaned
forward eagerly and was about to speak, the doctor
screwed in that devastating monocle, and I felt I
was only a curious example of the sort of thing he
especially disliked. For a minute, in which I
wondered if I had quite stopped his guarded flow,
he said no more. Then he addressed his eyeglass
to a panel of the partition, and flicked his gloves
at that.
“I had noticed for some days
that little craft lying near us, but gave her no attention.
I had sixteen men to attend to with complexions
like lemons, and one died. There was no time
to bother with other folk’s troubles.
Our skipper, one breakfast-time, told me there was
a woman aboard that little thing, and he’d been
asked whether I’d go over. She was ill.
“I’ve seen some queer
packets of misery at sea, but never one that touched
that ship. Her skipper seemed a regular fool.
I had to ask him to speak up, for he mumbled like
a boy who has been caught out, and knows it is useless
to pretend. I learned from him that he was only
just beginning his voyage. You understand?
He was just beginning it, there. He was going
up-river, to a point not on the chart. I cannot
make out now whether he wanted to put that woman ashore
to get home in comfort at the first opportunity, or
whether . . . it’s impossible to say. One
would sooner believe the best of another man, with
half a chance. After all,” said the doctor
bitterly, “as long as the woman survived I suppose
she was some consolation in misery.
“I scrambled over the deck lumber.
There was hardly room to move. I found her
in a cabin where she could get little seclusion from
the crew. Hardly any privacy at all, I should
say. As soon as I saw her I could make a guess
. . . however, I told the fellow afterwards what I
thought, and he gave me no answer. He even turned
his back on me. He must have known well enough
that that river was no place for any sort of white
woman. He was condemning her perhaps to death
just to make an ugly job more attractive.
“I admit,” said the doctor,
with a sly glance, “that she could make it attractive,
for a sort of man. She was wrapped in a rosy
dressing-gown. She held it together with her
hands. I noticed them . . . anybody might .
. . they were covered with rings. She had character,
too. She made me feel, the way she looked at
me, that I was indiscreet in asking personal questions.
I could see what was wrong with her. It was
debility, but all the same the beginning of an end
not far off, in that country.
“‘You’ll have to get out of this,’
I told her.
“‘Can’t be done, Doctor,’
she said coolly.
“’It can. A liner
for England will be here in another week, and you must
take it.’
“‘I don’t,’
she said. She was quiet enough, but she seemed
a very wilful woman. ‘I’ve got my
job here.’
“I told her that the skipper
of her ship would never carry out his orders, because
they could not be carried out. I told her, what
was perfectly true, that their craft would rot on
a sandbar, or find cataracts, or that they’d
all get eaten by cannibals, or die of something nasty.
I admit I tried to frighten her.
“‘It’s no good,
Doctor,’ she said. ’You can’t
worry me. I’ve got my work to do in this
ship, like the others.’
“‘Pooh!’ I said
to her. ’Cooking and that. Anybody
could do it. Let the men do it. It’s
not a woman’s job.’
“‘You’re wrong,’ she said.
‘It’s mine. You don’t know.’
“I began to get annoyed with
this stubborn creature. I told her she would
die, if she didn’t leave the working of that
ship to those who ought to do it.
“‘Who ought?’ she
asked me, in a bit of a temper. ’I know
what I have to do. I’m going through with
it. It’s no good talking. I’ll
take my chance, like the rest.’
“So I had to tell her that I
was there because the master of her ship had sent
for me to give my advice. My business was to
say what she ought to do.
“‘I don’t want to
be told. I know,’ she said. ’The
captain sent for you. Talk to him.’
“My temper was going, and I
told her that it was something to know the captain
himself had enough sense to send for me.
“‘Look here,’ she
told me. ’I’ve had enough of this.
I want to be alone. Thank you for troubling
to come over.’”
The doctor lifted his shoulders, and
made a wry face, that might have been disdain or pity.
“I was leaving her, but she
called to me, and I went back. She held out
her hand. ’I do thank you for troubling
about me. Of course I do. But I want to
stay on here I must.’
“‘Well, you know the penalty,’
I said. ‘I was bound to tell you that.’
“‘What of it?’ she
said, and laughed at me. ’We musn’t
bother about penalties. Good-bye!’
“I must say she made me feel
that if the skipper of that ship had been of different
metal, she might almost have pulled him through.
But what a man. What a man! I saw his
miserable little figure standing not far from where
my boat was when I was going. He made as if he
were coming to me, and then stopped. I was going
to take no notice of him, but went up and explained
a thing or two. I’ll bet he’ll remember
them. All he said was: ‘I was afraid
you’d never change her mind,’ and turned
away. What a man! There was a pair for
you. I could understand him, but what could
have been in her mind? Whatever made her talk
like that? That’s the way of it.
There’s your romance of the tropics, and your
squalid Garden of Eden, when you know it. A
monotonous and dreary job, and a woman.”
The landlord returned. The monocle
fixedly and significantly regarded me. “Have
another, Doctor,” said the landlord, pointing
to the empty tankard. “How long were you
in Macassar?” The doctor turned briskly to
his old friend, and began some chaff.
4
Ferguson, who had just come into port
with a damaged propeller shaft, was telling us how
it was. This was his first expansive experience,
and there could be no doubt the engine-room staff
of the Torrington had behaved very well.
The underwriters had recognized that, and handsomely,
at a special meeting at Cornhill. Though Ferguson
was young for a chief engineer, his professional elders,
who were listening to him, showed some critical appreciation
of the way he solved his problem. He was sitting
at a table of the Negro Boy, drawing a diagram
on it, and they stood round.
“There. That was where
it was. You see what we had to do. It would
not have been so bad in calm weather, but we were
labouring heavily, all the way from Savannah.
Our old man did not think it possible to do it.
But it was no good waiting for something worse to
happen.”
The matter grew too technical for
me. There was cargo jettisoned, and ballast
tanks emptied aft. The stern of the Torrington
was lifted so that her propeller at intervals was
clear. Ferguson then went overside on life-lines.
When he was not submerged, he was trying to put his
ship right again; and when he became exhausted, one
of his colleagues took his place, to see whether,
while escaping drowning, he could continue the work
of salvation. They all escaped, and the Torrington
put back to Tampa for repairs, which her own engineers
accomplished.
The demonstration was over, and Ferguson’s
story was lapsing into general gossip. The party
of men began to dissolve.
“Who do you think I saw at Tampa?”
Ferguson asked Macandrew. “Old Purdy.”
“What?” cried Macandrew. “Is
he alive?”
Ferguson laughed. “Just
about. What’s he been doing? I thought
he had chucked the sea. It was in the Customs
Office. I’d been there to make a declaration,
and in one of those long corridors there he stood,
all alone, with his hat in his hand, perhaps cooling
his head. I hardly knew him. He’s
more miserable than ever.”
“Did he say anything?” asked Macandrew.
“About as much as usual.
I didn’t know him at first. He seemed
rather ill. The temples of that high forehead
of his were knotted with veins. It nearly gave
me a headache to look at him.”
Several of us were impelled to ask
a number of questions, but Ferguson was listening
now, with the detachment of youth, to the end of a
bawdy story that two men were laughing over.
This had already displaced Purdy in his mind.
“Didn’t he say anything
at all? Didn’t he mention Hanson?”
we asked Ferguson.
“Eh? What, old Purdy?
I don’t think so. I don’t remember.
Now you mention it, I think I did hear somewhere
that Hanson was with Purdy. But I don’t
believe he said anything about him. I was just
going to ask him to come and have a drink, when he
said good-bye. All I know is I saw him standing
there like a sorrowful saint. Then he walked
off slowly down the corridor. He’s a sociable
beggar. I couldn’t help laughing at him.”
5
There was a notice in the window of
the Negro Boy, and I discovered that the tavern
was under Entirely New Management. The picture
sign over the principal door had been renewed.
The mythical little figure which had given the public-house
its name was no longer lost in the soot of half a
century. He was now an obvious negro boy, resplendent
in a golden coat. The reticence of the green
window-curtains had become a bright vacancy of mirrors,
and the tavern was modern within. Reform had
destroyed the exclusiveness of the saloon bar; instead
of privacy, distant mirrors astonished you with glimpses
of your own head which were incredible and embarrassing
in their novelty. The table-tops were of white
marble supported on gilded iron. The prints and
lithographs of ships had gone from the walls, and
were replaced by real pictures converted to the advertisement
of various whiskies pictures of battleships,
bull-dogs, Scotsmen, and figures in armour tempted
from their ancient posts in baronial halls, after
midnight, to finish the precious drink forgotten by
the guests. In accordance with this transformation
the young lady in attendance at the bar was in neat
black and white, with her hair as compact and precise
as a resolution at a public meeting which had been
passed even by the women present. She was severe
and decisive, and without recognition of anything there
but the tariff of the house, and sold her refreshments
as in a simple yet exacting ritual which she despised,
but knew to be righteous.
It was many months since I had been
there. Macandrew was no nearer than Rotterdam,
and perhaps would not see London that voyage.
There had been a long period in which change had
been at work at the docks, even to their improvement,
but through it all not one of my old friends had returned
home. They had approached no nearer than Falmouth,
the Hartlepools, or Antwerp, with a slender chance
that they would come to the Thames, and next we heard
of them when they were bound outwards once more, and
for a period known not even to their wives. The
new Negro Boy had not the appearance of a place
where I could expect to find a friend, and I was leaving
it again, instantly, when a tall figure rose in a
corner waving a reassuring hand. I did not recognize
the man, but thought I knew his smile, which made
me look at him in dawning hope. The grin, evidently
knowing its power, was maintained till I saw it indubitably
as Hanson’s. He made a remembered gesture
with his spectacles. “I was just about
sick of this place,” he said. “I’ve
waited here for an hour hoping somebody would turn
up. Where’s Macandrew now?”
“In Rotterdam. I don’t
think he will be home this voyage.”
“And what’s happened to
this house? Where’s the old man?”
“You know all I know about it.
I haven’t been here for nearly a year.
We must expect progress to make things better than
they were. Where have you come from?”
“I’m running between Liverpool
and Baltimore now, in the Planets. They’re
comfortable ships, but I don’t admire the Western
ocean. It’s too savage and cold.
How is Macandrew? I came up from Liverpool because
I felt I must see him again. I heard he was here.”
From the way he talked, I thought
he preferred those subjects requiring the least effort
for a casual occasion. “Now and then,”
I had to tell him, “some of us have wondered
what happened to the Cygnet.”
Hanson’s smile became effulgent.
My remark might have reminded him of a most enjoyable
joke, but he made no sign, while enjoying it privately,
that he intended to share it with me at any time.
“There was a Cygnet,
wasn’t there?” he asked, when my patience
had nearly gone. “I should like somebody
to confirm it. The reason I came to this house
tonight, to be candid, was just to see this room again,
to settle a doubt I had. Didn’t Macandrew
stand over there, and show concern because a fair,
plump woman wasn’t quick enough with his beer?”
I admitted this, as an encouragement.
“But when I got here tonight,” continued
Hanson, “the change made me feel my mind had
lost hold. I must say it’s a relief to
see you.”
“Has this anything to do with the Cygnet?”
I asked.
“Everything. I had the
time of my life. I wouldn’t have missed
it for anything. But somehow, now and then,
I want to be quite sure I had it myself, and not some
other fellow.” He beamed with the very
remembrance of the experience, and nodded his head
at me. He leaned over the table to me in confidence.
“Have you ever been to the tropics? I
don’t mean calling at Colombo or Rio.
I mean the back of things where there’s a remarkable
sun experimenting with low life and hardly anybody
looking on. If ever you get the chance, you take
it. It alters all your ideas of time and space.
You begin to learn what stuff life is made of when
you see a tropical forest, and see nothing else for
months. On the other hand,” he said, “you
become nothing. You see it doesn’t matter
to others what happens to you, and you don’t
care much what happens to others.”
“You don’t care?
It doesn’t matter?” I said in doubt to
this young mathematician and philosopher, who had
been experimenting with life. “Isn’t
that merely romantic?”
“Romance romance be damned!
I got down to the facts.”
“Well, get me down to them.
I should like the facts. I want to hear what
this strange voyage was like.”
“As you know,” Hanson
assured me, “I went out merely to see what would
happen to myself, in certain circumstances. I
knew I was going to be scared, and I was. There
is a place called Tabacol on the river, and we anchored
there after our ocean passage for more than a week.
I don’t know why, and it was no use asking
Purdy. Probably he didn’t know. I
had made up my mind to make the engines move and stop,
whenever ordered, and then see where we are.
Anyway, after the racket of the sea voyage, when
the engines stopped at Tabacol the utter silence was
as if something which had been waiting there for you
at once pounced. The quiet was of an awful weight.
I could hardly breathe, and chanced to look at the
thermometer. It stood at 132 degrees. I
don’t know how I got outside, but when I came
to I was on my back on deck, and Jessie was looking
after me. I remember wondering then how a big,
fleshy woman like her could stand it, and felt almost
as sorry for her as I did for myself.”
“Did she look ill?”
“Jessie? Oh, I don’t
know. She looked as if she might have been having
a merrier time. Well, we left Tabacol, and I
felt we were leaving everything we knew behind us.
I got the idea, in the first day on the river, that
we were quite lost, and were only pushing the old Cygnet
along to keep up our spirits. We crawled close
under the walls of the forest. Our vessel looked
about as large and important as a leaf adrift.
That place is so immense that I saw we were going to
make no impression on it. It wouldn’t
matter to anybody but ourselves if it swallowed us
up. On the first day I saw a round head and two
yellow eyes in it, watching us go by. The thought
went through my mind: ‘a jaguar.’
The watching face vanished on the instant, and I
always felt afterwards that the forest knew all about
us, but wouldn’t let us know anything.
I got the idea that it wasn’t of the least use
going on, unless we didn’t intend to treat the
job seriously. If we were serious about it then
it was evident we ought to turn back.”
“Didn’t the skipper ever say what he thought
of it?”
“What could Purdy think, or
do? There was that river, and the forest on
both sides of it, and the sun over us. Nothing
else but the quiet; and we didn’t know where
our destination was. We anchored every evening,
close to the bank. One evening, as we anchored,
a shower of arrows clattered about us. There
was just one shower, out of the trees, or out of the
clouds.”
“What was Jessie doing all this
time?” I ventured to ask him.
“Why, what was any one doing?
She wasn’t an anxiety of my department.
I suppose she was there for the only reason I had because
she asked for it. It was the same next day,
except that instead of more arrows we found a python
in the bunkers. Came aboard over the hawsers,
I suppose. We were a lively lunatic asylum below
while killing it with fire-shovels and crowbars.
That was what the voyage was like. The whole
lot of it was the same, and you knew quite well that
the farther you went the less anything mattered.
There were slight variations each day of snakes,
mosquitoes, and fevers, to keep you from feeling dead
already.”
“I’ve often wondered,”
I confessed, thinking to bring Hanson to something
I wanted to hear, “what happened to your company.
Once we had a word of Purdy, but never of Jessie
or of you.”
“Well, now I’m telling
you. But you’d have been past wondering
if you’d been with us. Purdy wasn’t
companionable. He’d tell me it was hot.
And it was. You could feel that yourself.
Jessie cooked our meals. Her galley could have
been only a shade better than the engine-room.
She began to look rather faded. At last I was
the only one who hadn’t been down with fever.
We crawled on and on, and the only question was where
we ourselves would end, for the forest and the river
were never going to. But you didn’t care.
I’d never been better in my life, and here was
the thing I’d always wanted to see. I
could have gone on for ever like that, wondering what
we should see round the next corner.
“Our big troubles were to come.
Up to then, we hadn’t run into anything really
drastic after turning a corner. I suppose we
had had about a month of it, and God knows where we
were, but we had nobody to ask; and then we ran on
a sandbar. The jungle met overhead. We
were in what was only a dark drain through the forest.
So this, I thought, is where we throw in our hand.
We might as well have been in another planet for all
the chance we had of getting away from that place.
We were aground for two days; the river then rose
a foot, and we came off. The men were complaining
among themselves by then. I heard them talking
to each other about chucking it. It was bound
to come. This day they went aft in a body to
Purdy. There stood Purdy, a little object in
white against the gloom of the forest, and he looked
about as futile as the last match in a wind at night.
He stood fingering a beard he had grown. One
of the men was beginning to talk truculently at him.
Just then Jessie appeared from below, between me
and the group. She had been down with fever for
some days, and she surprised me as much as a ghost.
She looked rather like one, too. She stood
watching Purdy, without moving. He didn’t
look at her, though he must have known she was there.
I’m pretty sure we had to thank her for what
happened to us afterwards, for it was then that Purdy
began shaking his finger at that big stoker who was
shouting. I’d never seen him with such
an expression before. As near as he could be
wild, he was. ‘We’re going on,’
said Purdy to them very distinctly. ’This
ship continues her voyage. If you want to leave
her here, I’ll put you ashore.’
He walked away some paces, and came back to the men.
Then he said something more in his usual voice.
’Do you men tell me you’re afraid of
the job? I don’t believe it. It can
be done. We’ll do it. We’ll
do it. Mr. Hanson,’ he called out, ’we
are ready to get under way. Would you please
stand by?’
“The men never said another
word. They went for’ard. It was very
curious, but after that they behaved as though they
had another skipper. Yet they were properly frightened
by what they thought was ahead of them. My lot
below were always asking me about it, and I handed
them the usual ornamental and soothing lies, in which
they believed long enough to keep the steam up.
What more could you ask of human nature? So
we kept her plugging along, getting nearer and nearer
nowhere. We turned another of those dramatic
corners, later on, though I forget how much later,
and ahead of us the river was piled high with rocks,
and was tumbling from above. The Cygnet
had had her fair share of luck, but luck could not
get her over that. We were all looking at the
white water ahead, and feeling at least
I was that we were being laughed at, when
I heard Purdy call me, and turned round. He
was hurrying towards me round the gear, and I thought
from the look of him that this complete frustration
had turned his mind. He signed for me to follow
him, and I did it, wondering what we should do with
a lunatic added to all the rest of it. I followed
him into his cabin. ‘What can I do?’
he said, and bent over his berth, ‘what can
I do?’
“Jessie was curled up on her
side in his berth, and there was nothing anyone could
do. I didn’t know she was alive.
But she half opened her eyes, without looking up,
and her hand began moving towards Purdy. ’That
you, Bill?’ she said. Purdy flopped down
beside her. I got out.
“So I took over for a bit the
mate was no good and waited for the next
thing. That affair disheartened the men a lot,
and I took it for granted, from their faces as they
stood round that figure in a tarpaulin under a tree
in the forest, that we were witnessing the end.
There was Purdy, too . . . you couldn’t expect
much from him after a funeral.”
Hanson bent over the table, and began
tapping it with a finger, and spoke slowly through
a surprise he still felt. “Old Purdy came
to me the following morning, and told me what he intended
to do. What do you think? He reckoned
that, though we were still a hundred miles from the
headquarters of the consignees, an outpost was probably
no farther than just above the falls. He himself
was going to prospect, for there should be a native
trail through the woods, past the rapids; and he left
me in charge.
“Macandrew was all wrong about
that fellow. In two days he was back. He
had found an outpost, four miles above, but nobody
was there, so we could get no help. He was going
to land our cargo of a ton and a half of machinery,
and place it on the company’s territory above
the falls. ’You can see for yourself,’
Purdy said to me pathetically, ’that I can’t
deliver the Cygnet there. But I think
I am right in making her secure and leaving her here,
and reporting it. What else can I do? They
ought to give me a clean receipt.’
“It was funny enough, that anxiety
about a ship and machinery where there was nothing
but monkeys and parrots, but I agreed with him, and
we got to work landing those packages of mining gear,
which only an expert could understand, in a place
where nothing was likely to happen till the Last Day.
The way we sweated over it! And then warped
the stuff with snatch blocks through four miles of
jungle. Yes; and buried two men of our company
on the way. But we did get the cargo on to the
company’s damned land at last, and a nice lot
of half-naked scarecrows we looked, with nothing to
fill our hollow cheeks but whiskers. There the
name of the place was all right, ‘Très
Irmaos,’ painted over a shed. The shed
was falling to pieces. There was nobody about.
Nothing but a little open space, and the forest around,
and the sun blazing down at us.
“We pushed on for headquarters,
Purdy leading us. A hundred miles to go!
I don’t know how we did it. Three more
died, including the mate, but we didn’t bury
those. Purdy kept on the move. He told
me, after an eternity, that it was just ahead of us,
and at last we did come to some other men. They
were Colombians. We astonished them, but nothing
could astonish us any more. Purdy learned that
he had got to our ultimate destination all right.
Then some fellow appeared, in a gaudy uniform and
a sword, who spoke English. When Purdy asked
to be taken to the manager of the company, this gay
chap laughed fiercely, and kept looking at Purdy in
triumph. ‘Him?’ he shouted, when
he had got enough fun out of it, ’im?
He’s dead. We execute him. All those
people they go. No more company.
All finish. No good.’ He was very
bright about it.
“Purdy never said a word.
All he did was to turn to me, and then stare beyond
me with big eyes at something which couldn’t
possibly have been there.”