To John Snow’s home in Gloucester
came the tale this night of how Arthur Snow was washed
from the deck of Hugh Glynn’s vessel and lost
at sea; and it was Saul Haverick, his sea clothes
still on him, who brought the word.
“I’m telling you, John
Snow,” said Saul-and he out of breath
almost with the telling-“and others
than me will by an’ by be telling you, what
a black night it was, with a high-running sea and wind
to blow the last coat o’ paint off the vessel,
but o’ course he had to be the first
o’ the fleet-nothing less would do
him-to make the market with his
big ketch. It was for others, not for him, to
show the way to take in sail, he said, and not a full
hour before it happened that was.” Such
was Saul Haverick’s ending.
John Snow said nothing; Mrs. Snow
said nothing. Saul looked to me, but I gave no
sign that I had heard him. Only John Snow’s
niece, Mary, looking up from her hands folded in her
lap, said: “Surely you must find it painful,
Saul Haverick, to ship with such a wicked man and take
the big shares of money that fall to his crew?”
“Eh!” said Saul, frightened-like
at her. “I’m not denying that he is
a great fish killer, Mary Snow, and that we haven’t
shared some big trips with him; but it is like his
religion, I’m telling you, to be able to say
how he allowed no man ever he crossed tacks with to
work to wind’ard of him. He’s that
vain he’d drive vessel, himself, and all hands
to the bottom afore he’d let some folks think
anything else of him.”
“He lost my boy-we’ll
say no more of him,” said John Snow.
“Ay,” said Saul Haverick,
“we’ll speak no more of him. But I
was Arthur’s dory mate, John Snow, as you well
know, and my heart is sick to think of it. I’ll
be going now,” and go he did, softly and by way
of the back stairs; and he no more than gone when
a knock came to the door.
After a time, the clock on the mantel
ticking loud among us, John Snow called out:
“Come in!”