Evan’s talk with Corinna did
not help him at all with the brotherhood. Whether
they knew or not that he had had his five minutes with
her, the fact that Corinna had ordered him put ashore
and had then countermanded the order, was enough to
rouse their jealous suspicions. One and all
they sent Evan to Coventry. Let him work as willingly
and cheerfully as he might, they ignored him:
when they met they looked straight through him or
over his head. Evan told himself he didn’t
care and devoted his time to the children;
but he was a man, and the heart in his breast was
hot against them. With the children his popularity
grew apace.
To-day the Ernestina was bound
for Sandy Hook to give the small passengers a sight
of the real ocean. They saw the ocean, and were
not much impressed. Apparently they had expected
the waves to come rolling in mountains high, whereas
the ocean was as flat as Central Park lake. To
be sure there was a slow swell that mysteriously heaved
the Ernestina and troubled squeamish tummies,
but it was not at all spectacular.
Later they lay in calm water inside
the Hook while everybody ate. As the day wore
on the weather began to thicken. The wind veered
to the East and blew chill, and banks of white fog
gathered on the horizon. Evan wondered why no
one gave the word to return. It was hardly his
place to interfere, but in the end he felt obliged
to.
Tenterden happened to be the one that
he spoke to. “We’re going to have
some dirty weather,” Evan said lightly, “and
we’re a long way from the Bowery.”
Tenterden looked him up and down.
“Say, are you going to tell us how to run this
show?” he asked. “That’s good.”
Evan shrugged and left him.
“I owe you one for that, old man,” he
thought. “All right, my time will come.”
It came sooner than he expected.
Someone did give the word, and the
little Ernestina started back up the lower
Bay at her customary head-long rate of eight miles
an hour. And none too soon; the white wall of
fog was creeping fast on her trail.
Evan was doing duty on the forward
deck where the largest crowd of children was gathered.
These were the healthiest and most obstreperous of
their passengers. With his back in the point
of the bow he could survey all his charges at once.
No other helper was in that part of the boat at the
moment. All was serene; the children for the
most part swinging their legs in camp chairs and amiably
disputing.
Suddenly from the very bowels of the
vessel there came a horrifying report. The Ernestina
staggered sickeningly, listed to port, and commenced
to limp around in a circle like a wounded bird.
Terrible smashing and rending sounds succeeded the
first crash. It seemed as if the frail little
vessel must fly asunder under such blows.
After a second’s frozen silence
on deck a dreadful chorus broke forth. Only those
who have witnessed a panic at sea will know.
On land one may always run from a horror; at sea there
is nothing between horror and horror. When the
majority of passengers are helpless children the scene
surpasses horror. With sharp animal cries of
fright, they ran around in blind circles, or charged
in a body from side to side of the deck.
An icy hand was laid on Evan’s
breast. He expected to see little bodies with
flying skirts drop into the water. How could
he be everywhere at once? He sprang on a seat.
“Sit down, children!”
he cried. “She’s broken her engine,
that’s all. The danger’s over now.”
They were deaf to his voice.
The most frantic of them all was not a child but
a woman, who half lay on a bench with limbs stiffened
out, screaming continuously like a maniac. Evan’s
voice was powerless against those cries. He
was obliged to silence her. She fell over on
the bench limply. Evan sprang up into sight of
all again.
“Sit still!” he cried.
“The danger’s over. Sing with me!”
He raised his voice in Suwanee River,
the song every child knew. A few joined in,
some of the mothers helped. The frantic cries
were stilled a little. The crashing sounds had
ceased, but presently the roar of escaping steam renewed
the confusion. Panic broke out afresh.
Evan sang louder.
They looked in his steady face and
ceased their aimless running about. Many joined
in. The chorus swelled louder and louder.
It was extraordinary what reassurance there was in
the sound. The children sat down again, and
presently like children, many of them were laughing
at their late terrors.
The situation was saved on the forward
deck, but Evan sang on with a sick anxiety in his
breast. He looked up at the pilot-house.
It was empty. Under the chorus he could hear
ominous sounds from below, and from the saloon.
And Corinna, what of her?
In a moment Corinna herself came out
on deck, deathly pale but mistress of herself.
Her eyes sought Evan’s eyes. His heart
swelled that she had thought of him in her extremity.
Amazement filled her eyes at the sight of the laughing,
singing children, amazement and a passion of relief.
She closed her eyes, and swayed, clinging to the door-handle.
“Sing!” cried Evan quickly. “That’s
your job!”
She quickly pulled herself together,
and throwing back her head let her full voice go out.
It gathered up the ragged chorus, and gave the song
a fresh start. Fog began to creep around the
vessel.
“Inside with you!” cried
Evan. “Show those crazy kids in there how
to sing!”
He and Corinna herded them in by the
two doors. The singing procession streaming
into the cabin had an effect little short of magical
on the bedlam within. Corinna changed the tune
to Annie Laurie. The cabin roof rang with it.
Little Domville was rushing to and
fro in well-meant but futile efforts to reassure the
children. Evan seized him and planted him at
one of the doors.
“Let no one go out!” he commanded.
“And sing!”
Another youth rushed up. “Corinna, are
you all right?”
“Sure, she’s all right!
Everybody’s all right!” cried Evan.
He put him at the other door. “Stand
there and sing!”
The young man yielded instinctive obedience to the
commanding voice.
Evan and Corinna passed down the saloon,
Corinna singing and Evan beating time with extravagant
gestures like an Italian bandmaster. Even the
children who were still weeping had to laugh.
They met Dordess on the way. Denton and Anway
were bringing in the children from the after deck.
As far as the passengers were concerned the crisis
was passed but ominous sounds still rose
from below.
Evan whispered to Dordess: “Put
a man at each door and at the stairway and keep the
kids together. I’ll go below and see what’s
the matter.”
Dordess nodded. There was that
in Evan’s eye which caused all the men to look
to him. Their late animosity was forgotten.
He was avenged.
Evan hastened down the stairway.
Below there was nobody in the after part of the vessel.
Up forward he found a scene of dire confusion.
Alongside the engine room the engineer lay prone on
the deck with his second bending over him. Up
in the nose of the vessel the remainder of the ship’s
company it appeared was engaged in a free-for-all fist
fight with oaths and stamping.
At first Evan could not make head
or tail of the fracas. Then he saw that it was
the mate, a manly, up-standing young fellow and Tenterden
against the four deckhands and the two firemen.
But the two were more than holding their own; the
six cringed and sought to escape their blows.
Evan rushed between them.
“Leave off! Leave off!”
he cried. “You’ll start the kids
off again.”
“These
cowards won’t work!” cried the mate.
“Let them be. We’ve enough without
them.”
The mate and Tenterden reluctantly drew off.
“First of all is there any immediate danger?”
asked Evan.
“No, she’s not taking water,” said
the mate.
“Go up to the pilot-house. There’s
nobody there.”
“I left the Captain there,” the mate said,
surprised.
“He’s gone. Sound
a distress signal on the whistle. Tenterden,
you go with him to help keep a look-out.”
The two hastened up the forward hatch.
Even the truculent Tenterden made no bones about
taking orders from Evan now.
Evan returned to the second engineer,
leaving the sulky crew to their own devices.
“What’s the damage?” he asked.
The second waved a tragic hand towards
the engine, and Evan saw for himself what had happened.
The main shaft on the port side had broken clean
through. The sudden shifting of the strain had
thrown the walking-beam out of plumb, and the connecting
rods had snapped off and threshed wildly about.
The ruin was complete, but fortunately, all above
the water-line.
“Is the chief badly hurt?” asked Evan.
“I don’t think so.
Got a side swipe from the connecting rod. I
can’t find any fracture.”
“Leave him to me. Get
the fires banked so you can shut off that infernal
steam. Just keep steam enough to blow the whistle.”
“Come on, boys,” said the Second to his
firemen.
They did not budge.
“Come on, boys!” said
Evan. “Don’t let the kids shame you!
Listen to the little beggars singing up there.”
The two firemen slunk aft and disappeared down their
ladder.
Evan presently had the satisfaction
of seeing the engineer open his eyes. He was
apparently not seriously injured. Two of the
deckhands carried him to his berth which was on the
same deck.
Evan returned to the saloon.
“All straightened out below,” he said
cheerfully. “The old flivver has made a
complete job of her engine. We’ll have
to get a horse.”
The children laughed. Evan said
aside to Dordess: “When they’re tired
of singing, get up a show.”
He went on up to the pilot-house.
The mate and Tenterden were anxiously straining their
eyes through the fog. At minute intervals the
mate sounded the distress signal of five short blasts
on the Ernestina’s whistle.
“Where’s the Captain?” asked Evan.
“In his room,” was the curt reply.
“What’s the matter with him?”
The mate made a significant gesture of turning his
hand up at his mouth.
Evan whistled noiselessly. “Has he been
that way all day?”
“No, he took a dram when the crash came to steady
his nerves.”
“Well, let him be,” said
Evan. “What chance have we of being picked
up here?”
“Not very good,” said
the mate. “We’re on the flats inside
the Hook. Few small vessels come down here, and
a big vessel couldn’t come to us even if she
heard us. I’m afraid it’s a case
of wait till the fog lifts.”
“We can’t keep this gang out all night,”
said Evan. “That’s flat.”
“What do you propose?”
“Somebody must go ashore in a boat to telephone
for a tug.”
“No easy matter to take a boat ashore in this
fog.”
“It can be done. Just
before the fog came down on us I marked that Atlantic
Highlands was due south of us, and not above a mile
distant. The wind has just come in from the east,
and she’ll hold there a while. By keeping
the wind abeam on the port side you’d hit the
shore somewhere near the pier.”
“Well, I’ll try it.”
“No; you’re our only qualified
seaman. You must stand by the vessel. I’ll
go.”
“How will you get back?”
“I’ll borrow or beg a
compass ashore. You keep the whistle going, and
if the steam gives out, ring your bell.”
“I doubt if you’ll get
the deckhands to bring you back. They’ll
go quick enough.”
“I’ll get boatmen from the shore if they
desert.”
The deckhands were brought up through
the forward hatch, and one of the Ernestina’s
boats was lowered away. As Evan stepped in he
said:
“Don’t tell them below
that I’ve gone ashore unless you have to.”
It was a ghostly trip. At a
hundred yards’ distance the Ernestina
was swallowed up entire in the fog, and thereafter
they proceeded blindly in a grey void. Only
a little circle of leaden water was visible around
them, which travelled with them as they went.
At minute intervals the sound of her whistle reached
them, but it was only confusing for it seemed to come
now from this side, now from that. Fog plays
strange tricks with acoustics. Evan steered,
keeping the wake of his boat straight and the wind
in his left ear.
Finally to his relief the shapes of
trees swam out ahead, and he had the comfortable sensation
of touching reality again. It is a thickly settled
shore, and he was quickly directed to the pier and
the village. Here Evan’s story quickly
won him help from the water-farers. To be sure,
two of his men incontinently walked off, but a dozen
volunteers offered to replace them. After patient
telephoning he succeeded in getting the promise of
a tug from Perth Amboy, and stopping only to buy out
the greater part of a grocer’s stock, he started
back.
Within an hour of leaving the Ernestina
he was back on board. The mate and Tenterden
were still on deck. For a single moment the latter
looked at Evan with friendly eyes. No vessel
had come within hail, they reported.
Evan hastened down to the saloon.
Corinna and her aides had the children pretty well
in hand but a cry of welcome went up at
the sight of Evan. Somehow the smallest toddler
on board had gathered that Evan was the man of the
hour.
“A tug will be along in half
an hour to pick us up,” Evan announced.
Cheers from the crowd.
“Why, how do you know that?” Corinna demanded
of him privately.
“Oh, I just stepped ashore to telephone,”
said Evan airily.
Corinna sat down suddenly. “You went ashore,
and left us!”
Within the promised time they heard
a deep-toned whistle searching for them in the fog.
“Wh-e-e-re?”
To which the Ernestina agitatedly
responded: “Here! Here! Here!
Here! Here!”
This duet was carried on for upwards
of ten minutes. The tug appeared to be travelling
around them in a circle. It was like a game of
Blind Man’s Buff with both sides blinded.
All of a sudden she came charging out of the fog,
as if a magician had evoked her. The children
swarmed out on the deck with cheers. Their elders
let themselves relax with thankful hearts. A
furtive tear or two stole down Corinna’s cheeks.
Ropes were passed to and fro, and
with the tug alongside, the slow homeward journey
began.
As soon as all danger was over Evan
received another lesson in the curious workings of
human nature. Once more the brotherhood drew
away from Evan as if the latter had the plague.
Evan had them in an uncomfortable hole now, for all
were conscious of being under an obligation to him.
That only made matters worse, for when a person is
resolved to hate you, to put him under an obligation
only obliges him to be more hateful. As for
Corinna, she retired into herself and was inscrutable.
It was a weary journey. The
supper, materials for which Evan had brought from
shore, created a welcome diversion; but supper over,
they were still miles from home, and the helpers were
hard put to it to keep the small passengers even moderately
contented. Fortunately during the last hour
the greater part fell asleep where they were, on the
sofas, on the floor, on a couple of camp-stools placed
together.
Evan and Corinna happened to meet
beside one child draped over the arm of a chair in
an excruciating attitude. They straightened her
out together. Corinna did not look at Evan nor
speak, but from her to him he thought he felt a warm
current pass or perhaps it was only because
he wished to believe it. None of the other helpers
were near. The child was sleeping soundly.
“Corinna, I love you,” whispered Evan.
“Please!” she murmured
distressfully. “You make it so hard for
me!”
He would not remind her of what he
had done for her, but he felt that it would be only
decent of her to show some recognition of it.
“Is nothing changed?” he asked.
“Nothing can be changed.”
“After all we’ve been through?”
“I’m deeply grateful to
you, but I suppose that’s another story, isn’t
it?”
“What do you mean?”
“Well would you be satisfied with
my gratitude?”
“No!” he said promptly.
“It’s all I can give you.”
“Corinna, you drive me mad!”
“Ah, don’t begin that again. Think
of my position. Be generous!”
“You’re always appealing
to my better feelings,” he grumbled. “I
tell you, they won’t stand the strain.”
So absorbed were they in this little
exchange that they did not hear footsteps approaching
down the carpeted saloon. Looking up, they beheld
Dordess approaching with the whole brotherhood at his
heels: Anway, Tenterden, Domville, Burgess, and
the blonde youth whose name Evan never knew.
Corinna flushed up at the sight of
them, but it was impossible to say for sure what her
feelings were mixed, probably. She
looked guilty at being surprised in talk with Evan,
and she was certainly angry; angry at the men, or
angry at herself for betraying the blush. Evan,
on the alert for trouble, smiled grimly.
Dordess was no less cynical and bland
than usual, but he could not conceal the angry glitter
in his eye. As for the others, they betrayed
their feelings more or less according to their natures;
Anway was hard and composed; Tenterden vicious and
truculent; little Domville apologetic and reproachful,
and the other two, youths of no particular character,
merely self-conscious and inclined to bluster.
“May we have a few words with
you?” said Dordess to Corinna.
“Certainly,” she said stiffly. “What’s
the matter?”
“I speak for all of us,”
said Dordess, “to save time. We wish to
convey to Mr. Weir our appreciation of the fine way
he acted at the time of the accident.”
Evan was not deceived by these honeyed
words. He saw that there was more to follow.
He spoke up. “Not at all. Every
one of us did his darnedest, I’m sure.”
Dordess went on: “We willingly
grant that he’s a fine fellow. Unfortunately
we don’t like him any better than we did before.
And his fine conduct does not make it any more possible
for us to work with him in future.”
An involuntary exclamation of indignant
reproach broke from Corinna: “Oh!”
Evan was not displeased at the turn things were taking.
“They’re pushing her too far,” he
thought. “They’ll drive her into
my arms.”
Dordess resumed: “You got
us on board this boat. We look to you as our
head. So we felt we ought to tell you at once
how we felt, and leave it to you to act as you thought
best.”
Evan was conscious that there was
a good deal more in this than appeared on the surface.
He watched them keenly. Dordess’ eyes
held Corinna’s unflinchingly, and Corinna’s
were the first to fall. Evan, seeing this, felt
a sinking in his breast. “What hold has
he over her?” he asked himself.
“What do you wish me to do?”
asked Corinna in a muffled voice.
Evan was amazed. He had thought
these men were Corinna’s slaves, and here was
Dordess visibly wielding the whip hand over her.
“Tell him,” said Dordess,
“that we very much regret it will be impossible
for us to have him with us on future trips of our
Association.”
“You are ungenerous!”
cried Corinna. “After he has saved us all!”
The six faces changed. Evan
imagined that he could feel their hate like a wave.
Dordess’ voice was still smooth.
“I can’t tell you how sorry we are.
He has put us in a difficult position. But there
is no help for it.”
“Suppose you address me directly
instead of through Miss Playfair,” said Evan,
careful to keep his voice as smooth as the other man’s.
“Don’t let the trifling service that I
am supposed to have done you trouble you, but tell
me what’s the nature of your objection to me.”
“I think you know that,”
said Dordess. “You have been pleased to
refer to us jokingly as the ‘brotherhood.’
All right, we accept that word. We are a brotherhood
working under a certain understood rule. Well,
you’ve had your chance, and you refuse to be
governed by our rule. You insist on playing
your own hand. That’s all right.
But if every one of us was working for himself it
would make these trips impossible. Surely you
can see that.”
“And if I refuse to tell him
what you ask me to?” Corinna burst out angrily.
“Then the rest of us will go,”
said Dordess instantly. “Our minds are
made up as to that.”
“A strike of the brotherhood!” cried Evan
mockingly.
Corinna kept her head down, and traced
a pattern with the toe of her slipper.
Evan became anxious at her silence.
“Let them go!” he cried. “I’ll
undertake to fill their places before the next trip.”
To his astonishment all six men laughed
scornfully. Surely there was something going
on here that he did not know. He scowled.
Finally Corinna raised her head.
She ignored Evan’s offer. She appeared
to be looking at him, but her eyes did not quite meet
his. “I am sorry to appear ungenerous
and ungrateful,” she said like a child repeating
a lesson, “but it is true, as Mr. Dordess says,
notwithstanding your brave conduct to-day, it will
be impossible for us to have you with us in future.”
“Corinna!” cried Evan in dismay.
The six men triumphed. In the
faces of the weaker ones it showed offensively; the
stronger hid it, but Evan was none the less conscious
of it. His self-love suffered a ghastly wound.
Dordess relentlessly resumed:
“We wish to be courteous, but there must be
no misunderstanding. Please tell him that if
in spite of this friendly warning he persists in forcing
himself on board, you will authorise us to put him
ashore.”
A flash from under Corinna’s
lowered lids suggested that Dordess would have to
pay for this later on; nevertheless she repeated tonelessly:
“If in spite of this friendly warning you persist
in forcing yourself on board I will have to authorize
them to put you ashore.”
Evan stared at her in angry incredulity.
He simply could not take in the fact that she was
putting so public an affront on him.
Dordess could no longer make believe
to hide his real feelings. He went on, sneering:
“Tell him further that if he continues to force
his unwelcome attentions on you, you will feel justified
in appealing to us to protect you.”
Corinna repeated: “If you
continue to force your attentions on me, I shall be
obliged to appeal to these gentlemen to protect me.”
Evan suddenly went cold. His
lip curled. He told himself she had killed his
love dead, and he didn’t give a damn anyhow.
He bowed to her.
“Oh, I assure you that won’t
be necessary,” he said ironically.
Corinna walked away down the saloon.
The brotherhood straggled after, victors perhaps,
but secretly uneasy in the moment of victory.
Evan was left standing alone, looking after them
scornfully. The Ernestina blew for the
pier.