The tide was up in Ramsey Harbour,
and rolling heavily on the shore before a fresh sea-breeze
with a cold taste of the salt in it. A steamer
lying by the quay was getting up steam; trucks were
running on her gangways, the clanking crane over her
hold was working, and there was much shouting of name,
and ordering and protesting, and general tumult.
On the after-deck stood the emigrants for Kimberley,
the Quarks from Glen Rushen, and some of the young
Gills from Castletown stalwart lads, bearing
themselves bravely in the midst of a circle of their
friends, who talked and laughed to make them forget
they were on the point of going.
Pete and Phil came up the quay, and
were received by a shout of incredulity from Quayle,
the harbour-master. “What, are you going,
too, Mr. Philip?” Philip answered him “No,”
and passed on to the ship.
Pete was still in his stocking cap
and Wellington boots, but he had a monkey-jacket over
his blue guernsey. Except for a parcel in a red
print handkerchief, this was all his kit and luggage.
He felt a little lost amid all the bustle, and looked
helpless and unhappy. The busy preparations on
land and shipboard had another effect on Philip.
He sniffed the breeze off the bay and laughed, and
said, “The sea’s calling me, Pete; I’ve
half a mind to go with you.”
Pete answered with a watery smile.
His high spirits were failing him at last. Five
years were a long time to be away, if one built all
one’s hopes on coming back. So many things
might happen, so many chances might befall. Pete
had no heart for laughter.
Philip had small mind for it, either,
after the first rush of the salt in his blood was
over. He felt at some moments as if hell itself
were inside of him. What troubled him most was
that he could not, for the life of him, be sorry that
Pete was leaving the island. Once or twice since
they left Sulby he had been startled by the thought
that he hated Pete. He knew that his lip curled
down hard at sight of Pete’s solemn face.
But Pete never suspected this, and the innocent tenderness
of the rough fellow was every moment beating it down
with blows that cut like ice and burnt like fire.
They were standing by the forecastle
head, and talking above the loud throbbing of the
funnel.
“Good-bye, Phil; you’ve
been wonderful good to me better nor anybody
in the world. I’ve not been much of a chum
for the like of you, either you that’s
college bred and ought to be the first gentry in the
island if everybody had his own. But you shan’t
be ashamed for me, neither no you shan’t,
so help me God! I won’t be long away, Phil maybe
five years, maybe less, and when I come back you’ll
be the first Manxman living. No? But you
will, though; you will, I’m telling you.
No nonsense at all, man. Lave it to me to know.”
Philip’s frosty blue eyes began to melt.
“And if I come back rich, I’ll
be your ould friend again as much as a common man
may; and if I come back poor and disappointed and done
for, I’ll not claim you to disgrace you; and
if I never come back at all, I’ll be saying
to myself in my dark hour somewhere, ’He’ll
spake up for you at home, boy; he’ll
not forget you.’”
Philip could hear no more for the
puffing of the steam and the clanking of the chains.
“Chut! the talk a man will put
out when he’s thinking of ould times gone by!”
The first bell rang on the bridge,
and the harbour-master shouted, “All ashore,
there!”
“Phil, there’s one turn
more I’ll ask of you, and, if it’s the
last, it’s the biggest.”
“What is it?”
“There’s Kate, you know.
Keep an eye on the girl while I’m away.
Take a slieu round now and then, and put a sight on
her. She’ll not give a skute at the heirs
the ould man’s telling of; but them young drapers
and druggists, they’ll plague the life out of
the girl. Bate them off, Phil. They’re
not worth a fudge with their fists. But don’t
use no violence. Just duck the dandy-divils in
the harbour that’ll do.”
“No harm shall come to her while you are away.”
“Swear to it, Phil. Your
word’s your bond, I know that; but give me your
hand and swear to it it’ll be more
surer.”
Philip gave his hand and his oath,
and then tried to turn away, for he knew that his
face was reddening.
“Wait! There’s another
while your hand’s in, Phil. Swear that nothing
and nobody shall ever come between us two.”
“You know nothing ever will.”
“But swear to it, Phil.
There’s bad tongues going, and it’ll make
me more aisier. Whatever they do, whatever they
say, friends and brothers to the last?”
Philip felt a buzzing in his head,
and he was so dizzy that he could hardly stand, but
he took the second oath also. Then the bell rang
again, and there was a great hubbub. Gangways
were drawn up, ropes were let go, the captain called
to the shore from the bridge, and the blustering harbour-master
called to the bridge from the shore.
“Go and stand on the end of
the pier, Phil just aback of the lighthouse and
I’ll put myself at the stern. I want a friend’s
face to be the last thing I see when I’m going
away from the old home.”?
Philip could bear no more. The
hate in his heart was mastered. It was under
his feet. His flushed face was wet.
The throbbing of the funnels ceased,
and all that could be heard was the running of the
tide in the harbour and the wash of the waves on the
shore. Across the sea the sun came up boldly,
“like a guest expected,” and down its
dancing water-path the steamer moved away. Over
the land old Bar-rule rose up like a sea king with
hoar-frost on his forehead, and the smoke began to
lift from the chimneys of the town at his feet.
“Good-bye, little island, good-bye!
I’ll not forget you. I’m getting
kicked out of you, but you’ve been a good ould
mother to me, and, God help me, I’ll come back
to you yet. So long, little Mona, s’long?
I’m laving you, but I’m a Manxman still.”
Pete had meant to take off his stocking
cap as they passed the lighthouse, and to dash the
tears from his eyes like a man. But all that
Philip could see from the end of the pier was a figure
huddled up at the stern on a coil of rope.