Dodging in from the rain-swept street,
I exchanged a smile and a glance with Miss Blank in
the bar of the Three Crows. This exchange was
effected with extreme propriety. It is a shock
to think that, if still alive, Miss Blank must be
something over sixty now. How time passes!
Noticing my gaze directed inquiringly
at the partition of glass and varnished wood, Miss
Blank was good enough to say, encouragingly:
“Only Mr. Jermyn and Mr. Stonor
in the parlour with another gentleman I’ve never
seen before.”
I moved towards the parlour door.
A voice discoursing on the other side (it was but
a matchboard partition), rose so loudly that the concluding
words became quite plain in all their atrocity.
“That fellow Wilmot fairly dashed
her brains out, and a good job, too!”
This inhuman sentiment, since there
was nothing profane or improper in it, failed to do
as much as to check the slight yawn Miss Blank was
achieving behind her hand. And she remained gazing
fixedly at the window-panes, which streamed with rain.
As I opened the parlour door the same
voice went on in the same cruel strain:
“I was glad when I heard she
got the knock from somebody at last. Sorry enough
for poor Wilmot, though. That man and I used to
be chums at one time. Of course that was the
end of him. A clear case if there ever was one.
No way out of it. None at all.”
The voice belonged to the gentleman
Miss Blank had never seen before. He straddled
his long legs on the hearthrug. Jermyn, leaning
forward, held his pocket-handkerchief spread out before
the grate. He looked back dismally over his shoulder,
and as I slipped behind one of the little wooden tables,
I nodded to him. On the other side of the fire,
imposingly calm and large, sat Mr. Stonor, jammed tight
into a capacious Windsor armchair. There was
nothing small about him but his short, white side-whiskers.
Yards and yards of extra superfine blue cloth (made
up into an overcoat) reposed on a chair by his side.
And he must just have brought some liner from sea,
because another chair was smothered under his black
waterproof, ample as a pall, and made of three-fold
oiled silk, double-stitched throughout. A man’s
hand-bag of the usual size looked like a child’s
toy on the floor near his feet.
I did not nod to him. He was
too big to be nodded to in that parlour. He was
a senior Trinity pilot and condescended to take his
turn in the cutter only during the summer months.
He had been many times in charge of royal yachts in
and out of Port Victoria. Besides, it’s
no use nodding to a monument. And he was like
one. He didn’t speak, he didn’t budge.
He just sat there, holding his handsome old head up,
immovable, and almost bigger than life. It was
extremely fine. Mr. Stonor’s presence reduced
poor old Jermyn to a mere shabby wisp of a man, and
made the talkative stranger in tweeds on the hearthrug
look absurdly boyish. The latter must have been
a few years over thirty, and was certainly not the
sort of individual that gets abashed at the sound
of his own voice, because gathering me in, as it were,
by a friendly glance, he kept it going without a check.
“I was glad of it,” he
repeated, emphatically. “You may be surprised
at it, but then you haven’t gone through the
experience I’ve had of her. I can tell
you, it was something to remember. Of course,
I got off scot free myself as you can see.
She did her best to break up my pluck for me tho’.
She jolly near drove as fine a fellow as ever lived
into a madhouse. What do you say to that eh?”
Not an eyelid twitched in Mr. Stonor’s
enormous face. Monumental! The speaker looked
straight into my eyes.
“It used to make me sick to
think of her going about the world murdering people.”
Jermyn approached the handkerchief
a little nearer to the grate and groaned. It
was simply a habit he had.
“I’ve seen her once,”
he declared, with mournful indifference. “She
had a house ”
The stranger in tweeds turned
to stare down at him, surprised.
“She had three houses,”
he corrected, authoritatively. But Jermyn was
not to be contradicted.
“She had a house, I say,”
he repeated, with dismal obstinacy. “A great,
big, ugly, white thing. You could see it from
miles away sticking up.”
“So you could,” assented
the other readily. “It was old Colchester’s
notion, though he was always threatening to give her
up. He couldn’t stand her racket any more,
he declared; it was too much of a good thing for him;
he would wash his hands of her, if he never got hold
of another and so on. I daresay he
would have chucked her, only it may surprise
you his missus wouldn’t hear of it.
Funny, eh? But with women, you never know how
they will take a thing, and Mrs. Colchester, with her
moustaches and big eyebrows, set up for being as strong-minded
as they make them. She used to walk about in
a brown silk dress, with a great gold cable flopping
about her bosom. You should have heard her snapping
out: ‘Rubbish!’ or ‘Stuff and
nonsense!’ I daresay she knew when she was well
off. They had no children, and had never set up
a home anywhere. When in England she just made
shift to hang out anyhow in some cheap hotel or boarding-house.
I daresay she liked to get back to the comforts she
was used to. She knew very well she couldn’t
gain by any change. And, moreover, Colchester,
though a first-rate man, was not what you may call
in his first youth, and, perhaps, she may have thought
that he wouldn’t be able to get hold of another
(as he used to say) so easily. Anyhow, for one
reason or another, it was ‘Rubbish’ and
’Stuff and nonsense’ for the good lady.
I overheard once young Mr. Apse himself say to her
confidentially: ’I assure you, Mrs. Colchester,
I am beginning to feel quite unhappy about the name
she’s getting for herself.’ ‘Oh,’
says she, with her deep little hoarse laugh, ’if
one took notice of all the silly talk,’ and
she showed Apse all her ugly false teeth at once.
’It would take more than that to make me lose
my confidence in her, I assure you,’ says she.”
At this point, without any change
of facial expression, Mr. Stonor emitted a short,
sardonic laugh. It was very impressive, but I
didn’t see the fun. I looked from one to
another. The stranger on the hearthrug had an
ugly smile.
“And Mr. Apse shook both Mrs.
Colchester’s hands, he was so pleased to hear
a good word said for their favourite. All these
Apses, young and old you know, were perfectly infatuated
with that abominable, dangerous ”
“I beg your pardon,” I
interrupted, for he seemed to be addressing himself
exclusively to me; “but who on earth are you
talking about?”
“I am talking of the Apse family,”
he answered, courteously.
I nearly let out a damn at this.
But just then the respected Miss Blank put her head
in, and said that the cab was at the door, if Mr. Stonor
wanted to catch the eleven three up.
At once the senior pilot arose in
his mighty bulk and began to struggle into his coat,
with awe-inspiring upheavals. The stranger and
I hurried impulsively to his assistance, and directly
we laid our hands on him he became perfectly quiescent.
We had to raise our arms very high, and to make efforts.
It was like caparisoning a docile elephant. With
a “Thanks, gentlemen,” he dived under
and squeezed himself through the door in a great hurry.
We smiled at each other in a friendly way.
“I wonder how he manages to
hoist himself up a ship’s side-ladder,”
said the man in tweeds; and poor Jermyn, who was
a mere North Sea pilot, without official status or
recognition of any sort, pilot only by courtesy, groaned.
“He makes eight hundred a year.”
“Are you a sailor?” I
asked the stranger, who had gone back to his position
on the rug.
“I used to be till a couple
of years ago, when I got married,” answered
this communicative individual. “I even went
to sea first in that very ship we were speaking of
when you came in.”
“What ship?” I asked,
puzzled. “I never heard you mention a ship.”
“I’ve just told you her
name, my dear sir,” he replied. “The
Apse Family. Surely you’ve heard of the
great firm of Apse & Sons, shipowners. They had
a pretty big fleet. There was the Lucy Apse, and
the Harold Apse, and Anne, John, Malcolm, Clara, Juliet,
and so on no end of Apses. Every brother,
sister, aunt, cousin, wife and grandmother,
too, for all I know of the firm had a ship
named after them. Good, solid, old-fashioned
craft they were, too, built to carry and to last.
None of your new-fangled, labour-saving appliances
in them, but plenty of men and plenty of good salt
beef and hard tack put aboard and off you
go to fight your way out and home again.”
The miserable Jermyn made a sound
of approval, which sounded like a groan of pain.
Those were the ships for him. He pointed out in
doleful tones that you couldn’t say to labour-saving
appliances: “Jump lively now, my hearties.”
No labour-saving appliance would go aloft on a dirty
night with the sands under your lee.
“No,” assented the stranger,
with a wink at me. “The Apses didn’t
believe in them either, apparently. They treated
their people well as people don’t
get treated nowadays, and they were awfully proud of
their ships. Nothing ever happened to them.
This last one, the Apse Family, was to be like the
others, only she was to be still stronger, still safer,
still more roomy and comfortable. I believe they
meant her to last for ever. They had her built
composite iron, teak-wood, and greenheart,
and her scantling was something fabulous. If ever
an order was given for a ship in a spirit of pride
this one was. Everything of the best. The
commodore captain of the employ was to command her,
and they planned the accommodation for him like a
house on shore under a big, tall poop that went nearly
to the mainmast. No wonder Mrs. Colchester wouldn’t
let the old man give her up. Why, it was the best
home she ever had in all her married days. She
had a nerve, that woman.
“The fuss that was made while
that ship was building! Let’s have this
a little stronger, and that a little heavier; and
hadn’t that other thing better be changed for
something a little thicker. The builders entered
into the spirit of the game, and there she was, growing
into the clumsiest, heaviest ship of her size right
before all their eyes, without anybody becoming aware
of it somehow. She was to be 2,000 tons register,
or a little over; no less on any account. But
see what happens. When they came to measure her
she turned out 1,999 tons and a fraction. General
consternation! And they say old Mr. Apse was so
annoyed when they told him that he took to his bed
and died. The old gentleman had retired from
the firm twenty-five years before, and was ninety-six
years old if a day, so his death wasn’t, perhaps,
so surprising. Still Mr. Lucian Apse was convinced
that his father would have lived to a hundred.
So we may put him at the head of the list. Next
comes the poor devil of a shipwright that brute caught
and squashed as she went off the ways. They called
it the launch of a ship, but I’ve heard people
say that, from the wailing and yelling and scrambling
out of the way, it was more like letting a devil loose
upon the river. She snapped all her checks like
pack-thread, and went for the tugs in attendance like
a fury. Before anybody could see what she was
up to she sent one of them to the bottom, and laid
up another for three months’ repairs. One
of her cables parted, and then, suddenly you
couldn’t tell why she let herself
be brought up with the other as quiet as a lamb.
“That’s how she was.
You could never be sure what she would be up to next.
There are ships difficult to handle, but generally
you can depend on them behaving rationally. With
that ship, whatever you did with her you never knew
how it would end. She was a wicked beast.
Or, perhaps, she was only just insane.”
He uttered this supposition in so
earnest a tone that I could not refrain from smiling.
He left off biting his lower lip to apostrophize me.
“Eh! Why not? Why
couldn’t there be something in her build, in
her lines corresponding to What’s
madness? Only something just a tiny bit wrong
in the make of your brain. Why shouldn’t
there be a mad ship I mean mad in a ship-like
way, so that under no circumstances could you be sure
she would do what any other sensible ship would naturally
do for you. There are ships that steer wildly,
and ships that can’t be quite trusted always
to stay; others want careful watching when running
in a gale; and, again, there may be a ship that will
make heavy weather of it in every little blow.
But then you expect her to be always so. You take
it as part of her character, as a ship, just as you
take account of a man’s peculiarities of temper
when you deal with him. But with her you couldn’t.
She was unaccountable. If she wasn’t mad,
then she was the most evil-minded, underhand, savage
brute that ever went afloat. I’ve seen
her run in a heavy gale beautifully for two days, and
on the third broach to twice in the same afternoon.
The first time she flung the helmsman clean over the
wheel, but as she didn’t quite manage to kill
him she had another try about three hours afterwards.
She swamped herself fore and aft, burst all the canvas
we had set, scared all hands into a panic, and even
frightened Mrs. Colchester down there in these beautiful
stern cabins that she was so proud of. When we
mustered the crew there was one man missing.
Swept overboard, of course, without being either seen
or heard, poor devil! and I only wonder more of us
didn’t go.
“Always something like that.
Always. I heard an old mate tell Captain Colchester
once that it had come to this with him, that he was
afraid to open his mouth to give any sort of order.
She was as much of a terror in harbour as at sea.
You could never be certain what would hold her.
On the slightest provocation she would start snapping
ropes, cables, wire hawsers, like carrots. She
was heavy, clumsy, unhandy but that does
not quite explain that power for mischief she had.
You know, somehow, when I think of her I can’t
help remembering what we hear of incurable lunatics
breaking loose now and then.”
He looked at me inquisitively.
But, of course, I couldn’t admit that a ship
could be mad.
“In the ports where she was
known,” he went on,’ “they dreaded
the sight of her. She thought nothing of knocking
away twenty feet or so of solid stone facing off a
quay or wiping off the end of a wooden wharf.
She must have lost miles of chain and hundreds of
tons of anchors in her time. When she fell aboard
some poor unoffending ship it was the very devil of
a job to haul her off again. And she never got
hurt herself just a few scratches or so,
perhaps. They had wanted to have her strong.
And so she was. Strong enough to ram Polar ice
with. And as she began so she went on. From
the day she was launched she never let a year pass
without murdering somebody. I think the owners
got very worried about it. But they were a stiff-necked
generation all these Apses; they wouldn’t admit
there could be anything wrong with the Apse Family.
They wouldn’t even change her name. ‘Stuff
and nonsense,’ as Mrs. Colchester used to say.
They ought at least to have shut her up for life in
some dry dock or other, away up the river, and never
let her smell salt water again. I assure you,
my dear sir, that she invariably did kill someone
every voyage she made. It was perfectly well-known.
She got a name for it, far and wide.”
I expressed my surprise that a ship
with such a deadly reputation could ever get a crew.
“Then, you don’t know
what sailors are, my dear sir. Let me just show
you by an instance. One day in dock at home, while
loafing on the forecastle head, I noticed two respectable
salts come along, one a middle-aged, competent, steady
man, evidently, the other a smart, youngish chap.
They read the name on the bows and stopped to look
at her. Says the elder man: ‘Apse
Family. That’s the sanguinary female dog’
(I’m putting it in that way) ’of a ship,
Jack, that kills a man every voyage. I wouldn’t
sign in her not for Joe, I wouldn’t.’
And the other says: ’If she were mine,
I’d have her towed on the mud and set on fire,
blame if I wouldn’t.’ Then the first
man chimes in: ’Much do they care!
Men are cheap, God knows.’ The younger one
spat in the water alongside. ‘They won’t
have me not for double wages.’
“They hung about for some time
and then walked up the dock. Half an hour later
I saw them both on our deck looking about for the mate,
and apparently very anxious to be taken on. And
they were.”
“How do you account for this?” I asked.
“What would you say?”
he retorted. “Recklessness! The vanity
of boasting in the evening to all their chums:
’We’ve just shipped in that there Apse
Family. Blow her. She ain’t going to
scare us.’ Sheer sailorlike perversity!
A sort of curiosity. Well a little
of all that, no doubt. I put the question to
them in the course of the voyage. The answer
of the elderly chap was:
“‘A man can die but once.’
The younger assured me in a mocking tone that he wanted
to see ‘how she would do it this time.’
But I tell you what; there was a sort of fascination
about the brute.”
Jermyn, who seemed to have seen every
ship in the world, broke in sulkily:
“I saw her once out of this
very window towing up the river; a great black ugly
thing, going along like a big hearse.”
“Something sinister about her
looks, wasn’t there?” said the man in
tweeds, looking down at old Jermyn with a friendly
eye. “I always had a sort of horror of
her. She gave me a beastly shock when I was no
more than fourteen, the very first day nay,
hour I joined her. Father came up
to see me off, and was to go down to Gravesend with
us. I was his second boy to go to sea. My
big brother was already an officer then. We.
got on board about eleven in the morning, and found
the ship ready to drop out of the basin, stern first.
She had not moved three times her own length when,
at a little pluck the tug gave her to enter the dock
gates, she made one of her rampaging starts, and put
such a weight on the check rope a new six-inch
hawser that forward there they had no chance
to ease it round in time, and it parted. I saw
the broken end fly up high in the air, and the next
moment that brute brought her quarter against the
pier-head with a jar that staggered everybody about
her decks. She didn’t hurt herself.
Not she! But one of the boys the mate had sent
aloft on the mizzen to do something, came down on the
poop-deck thump right in front
of me. He was not much older than myself.
We had been grinning at each other only a few minutes
before. He must have been handling himself carelessly,
not expecting to get such a jerk. I heard his
startled cry Oh! in a high treble
as he felt himself going, and looked up in time to
see him go limp all over as he fell. Ough!
Poor father was remarkably white about the gills when
we shook hands in Gravesend. ‘Are you all
right?’ he says, looking hard at me. ‘Yes,
father.’ ‘Quite sure?’ ‘Yes,
father.’ ’Well, then good-bye, my
boy.’ He told me afterwards that for half
a word he would have carried me off home with him
there and then. I am the baby of the family you
know,” added the man in tweeds, stroking
his moustache with an ingenuous smile.
I acknowledged this interesting communication
by a sympathetic murmur. He waved his hand carelessly.
“This might have utterly spoiled
a chap’s nerve for going aloft, you know utterly.
He fell within two feet of me, cracking his head on
a mooring-bitt. Never moved. Stone dead.
Nice looking little fellow, he was. I had just
been thinking we would be great chums. However,
that wasn’t yet the worst that brute of a ship
could do. I served in her three years of my time,
and then I got transferred to the Lucy Apse, for a
year. The sailmaker we had in the Apse Family
turned up there, too, and I remember him saying to
me one evening, after we had been a week at sea:
Isn’t she a meek little ship?’ No wonder
we thought the Lucy Apse a dear, meek, little ship
after getting clear of that big, rampaging savage
brute. It was like heaven. Her officers seemed
to me the restfullest lot of men on earth. To
me who had known no ship but the Apse Family, the
Lucy was like a sort of magic craft that did what you
wanted her to do of her own accord. One evening
we got caught aback pretty sharply from right ahead.
In about ten minutes we had her full again, sheets
aft, tacks down, decks cleared, and the officer of
the watch leaning against the weather rail peacefully.
It seemed simply marvellous to me. The other
would have stuck for half-an-hour in irons, rolling
her decks full of water, knocking the men about spars
cracking, braces snapping, yards taking charge, and
a confounded scare going on aft because of her beastly
rudder, which she had a way of flapping about fit
to raise your hair on end. I couldn’t get
over my wonder for days.
“Well, I finished my last year
of apprenticeship in that jolly little ship she
wasn’t so little either, but after that other
heavy devil she seemed but a plaything to handle.
I finished my time and passed; and then just as I
was thinking of having three weeks of real good time
on shore I got at breakfast a letter asking me the
earliest day I could be ready to join the Apse Family
as third mate. I gave my plate a shove that shot
it into the middle of the table; dad looked up over
his paper; mother raised her hands in astonishment,
and I went out bare-headed into our bit of garden,
where I walked round and round for an hour.
“When I came in again mother
was out of the dining-room, and dad had shifted berth
into his big armchair. The letter was lying on
the mantelpiece.
“’It’s very creditable
to you to get the offer, and very kind of them to
make it,’ he said. ’And I see also
that Charles has been appointed chief mate of that
ship for one voyage.’
“There was, over leaf, a P.S.
to that effect in Mr. Apse’s own handwriting,
which I had overlooked. Charley was my big brother.
“I don’t like very much
to have two of my boys together in one ship,’
father goes on, in his deliberate, solemn way.
’And I may tell you that I would not mind writing
Mr. Apse a letter to that effect.’
“Dear old dad! He was a
wonderful father. What would you have done?
The mere notion of going back (and as an officer,
too), to be worried and bothered, and kept on the
jump night and day by that brute, made me feel sick.
But she wasn’t a ship you could afford to fight
shy of. Besides, the most genuine excuse could
not be given without mortally offending Apse & Sons.
The firm, and I believe the whole family down to the
old unmarried aunts in Lancashire, had grown desperately
touchy about that accursed ship’s character.
This was the case for answering ‘Ready now’
from your very death-bed if you wished to die in their
good graces. And that’s precisely what
I did answer by wire, to have it over and
done with at once.
“The prospect of being shipmates
with my big brother cheered me up considerably, though
it made me a bit anxious, too. Ever since I remember
myself as a little chap he had been very good to me,
and I looked upon him as the finest fellow in the
world. And so he was. No better officer
ever walked the deck of a merchant ship. And that’s
a fact. He was a fine, strong, upstanding, sun-tanned,
young fellow, with his brown hair curling a little,
and an eye like a hawk. He was just splendid.
We hadn’t seen each other for many years, and
even this time, though he had been in England three
weeks already, he hadn’t showed up at home yet,
but had spent his spare time in Surrey somewhere making
up to Maggie Colchester, old Captain Colchester’s
niece. Her father, a great friend of dad’s,
was in the sugar-broking business, and Charley made
a sort of second home of their house. I wondered
what my big brother would think of me. There
was a sort of sternness about Charley’s face
which never left it, not even when he was larking in
his rather wild fashion.
“He received me with a great
shout of laughter. He seemed to think my joining
as an officer the greatest joke in the world.
There was a difference of ten years between us, and
I suppose he remembered me best in pinafores.
I was a kid of four when he first went to sea.
It surprised me to find how boisterous he could be.
“‘Now we shall see what
you are made of,’ he cried. And he held
me off by the shoulders, and punched my ribs, and
hustled me into his berth. ’Sit down, Ned.
I am glad of the chance of having you with me.
I’ll put the finishing touch to you, my young
officer, providing you’re worth the trouble.
And, first of all, get it well into your head that
we are not going to let this brute kill anybody this
voyage. We’ll stop her racket.’
“I perceived he was in dead
earnest about it. He talked grimly of the ship,
and how we must be careful and never allow this ugly
beast to catch us napping with any of her damned tricks.
“He gave me a regular lecture
on special seamanship for the use of the Apse Family;
then changing his tone, he began to talk at large,
rattling off the wildest, funniest nonsense, till
my sides ached with laughing. I could see very
well he was a bit above himself with high spirits.
It couldn’t be because of my coming. Not
to that extent. But, of course, I wouldn’t
have dreamt of asking what was the matter. I had
a proper respect for my big brother, I can tell you.
But it was all made plain enough a day or two afterwards,
when I heard that Miss Maggie Colchester was coming
for the voyage. Uncle was giving her a sea-trip
for the benefit of her health.
“I don’t know what could
have been wrong with her health. She had a beautiful
colour, and a deuce of a lot of fair hair. She
didn’t care a rap for wind, or rain, or spray,
or sun, or green seas, or anything. She was a
blue-eyed, jolly girl of the very best sort, but the
way she cheeked my big brother used to frighten me.
I always expected it to end in an awful row.
However, nothing decisive happened till after we had
been in Sydney for a week. One day, in the men’s
dinner hour, Charley sticks his head into my cabin.
I was stretched out on my back on the settee, smoking
in peace.
“‘Come ashore with me, Ned,’ he
says, in his curt way.
“I jumped up, of course, and
away after him down the gangway and up George Street.
He strode along like a giant, and I at his elbow,
panting. It was confoundedly hot. ’Where
on earth are you rushing me to, Charley?’ I
made bold to ask.
“‘Here,’ he says.
“‘Here’ was a jeweller’s
shop. I couldn’t imagine what he could want
there. It seemed a sort of mad freak. He
thrusts under my nose three rings, which looked very
tiny on his big, brown palm, growling out
“‘For Maggie! Which?’
“I got a kind of scare at this.
I couldn’t make a sound, but I pointed at the
one that sparkled white and blue. He put it in
his waistcoat pocket, paid for it with a lot of sovereigns,
and bolted out. When we got on board I was quite
out of breath. ‘Shake hands, old chap,’
I gasped out. He gave me a thump on the back.
’Give what orders you like to the boatswain
when the hands turn-to,’ says he; ’I am
off duty this afternoon.’
“Then he vanished from the deck
for a while, but presently he came out of the cabin
with Maggie, and these two went over the gangway publicly,
before all hands, going for a walk together on that
awful, blazing hot day, with clouds of dust flying
about. They came back after a few hours looking
very staid, but didn’t seem to have the slightest
idea where they had been. Anyway, that’s
the answer they both made to Mrs. Colchester’s
question at tea-time.
“And didn’t she turn on
Charley, with her voice like an old night cabman’s!
’Rubbish. Don’t know where you’ve
been! Stuff and nonsense. You’ve walked
the girl off her legs. Don’t do it again.’
“It’s surprising how meek
Charley could be with that old woman. Only on
one occasion he whispered to me, ’I’m jolly
glad she isn’t Maggie’s aunt, except by
marriage. That’s no sort of relationship.’
But I think he let Maggie have too much of her own
way. She was hopping all over that ship in her
yachting skirt and a red tam o’ shanter like
a bright bird on a dead black tree. The old salts
used to grin to themselves when they saw her coming
along, and offered to teach her knots or splices.
I believe she liked the men, for Charley’s sake,
I suppose.
“As you may imagine, the fiendish
propensities of that cursed ship were never spoken
of on board. Not in the cabin, at any rate.
Only once on the homeward passage Charley said, incautiously,
something about bringing all her crew home this time.
Captain Colchester began to look uncomfortable at
once, and that silly, hard-bitten old woman flew out
at Charley as though he had said something indecent.
I was quite confounded myself; as to Maggie, she sat
completely mystified, opening her blue eyes very wide.
Of course, before she was a day older she wormed it
all out of me. She was a very difficult person
to lie to.
“‘How awful,’ she
said, quite solemn. ’So many poor fellows.
I am glad the voyage is nearly over. I won’t
have a moment’s peace about Charley now.’
“I assured her Charley was all
right. It took more than that ship knew to get
over a seaman like Charley. And she agreed with
me.
“Next day we got the tug off
Dungeness; and when the tow-rope was fast Charley
rubbed his hands and said to me in an undertone
“‘We’ve baffled her, Ned.’
“‘Looks like it,’
I said, with a grin at him. It was beautiful weather,
and the sea as smooth as a millpond. We went up
the river without a shadow of trouble except once,
when off Hole Haven, the brute took a sudden sheer
and nearly had a barge anchored just clear of the fairway.
But I was aft, looking after the steering, and she
did not catch me napping that time. Charley came
up on the poop, looking very concerned. ‘Close
shave,’ says he.
“‘Never mind, Charley,’
I answered, cheerily. ‘You’ve tamed
her.’
“We were to tow right up to
the dock. The river pilot boarded us below Gravesend,
and the first words I heard him say were: ’You
may just as well take your port anchor inboard at
once, Mr. Mate.’
“This had been done when I went
forward. I saw Maggie on the forecastle head
enjoying the bustle and I begged her to go aft, but
she took no notice of me, of course. Then Charley,
who was very busy with the head gear, caught sight
of her and shouted in his biggest voice: ’Get
off the forecastle head, Maggie. You’re
in the way here.’ For all answer she made
a funny face at him, and I saw poor Charley turn away,
hiding a smile. She was flushed with the excitement
of getting home again, and her blue eyes seemed to
snap electric sparks as she looked at the river.
A collier brig had gone round just ahead of us, and
our tug had to stop her engines in a hurry to avoid
running into her.
“In a moment, as is usually
the case, all the shipping in the reach seemed to
get into a hopeless tangle. A schooner and a ketch
got up a small collision all to themselves right in
the middle of the river. It was exciting to watch,
and, meantime, our tug remained stopped. Any
other ship than that brute could have been coaxed to
keep straight for a couple of minutes but
not she! Her head fell off at once, and she began
to drift down, taking her tug along with her.
I noticed a cluster of coasters at anchor within a
quarter of a mile of us, and I thought I had better
speak to the pilot. ‘If you let her get
amongst that lot,’ I said, quietly, ’she
will grind some of them to bits before we get her
out again.’
“‘Don’t I know her!’
cries he, stamping his foot in a perfect fury.
And he out with his whistle to make that bothered
tug get the ship’s head up again as quick as
possible. He blew like mad, waving his arm to
port, and presently we could see that the tug’s
engines had been set going ahead. Her paddles
churned the water, but it was as if she had been trying
to tow a rock she couldn’t get an
inch out of that ship. Again the pilot blew his
whistle, and waved his arm to port. We could see
the tug’s paddles turning faster and faster
away, broad on our bow.
“For a moment tug and ship hung
motionless in a crowd of moving shipping, and then
the terrific strain that evil, stony-hearted brute
would always put on everything, tore the towing-chock
clean out. The tow-rope surged over, snapping
the iron stanchions of the head-rail one after another
as if they had been sticks of sealing-wax. It
was only then I noticed that in order to have a better
view over our heads, Maggie had stepped upon the port
anchor as it lay flat on the forecastle deck.
“It had been lowered properly
into its hardwood beds, but there had been no time
to take a turn with it. Anyway, it was quite secure
as it was, for going into dock; but I could see directly
that the tow-rope would sweep under the fluke in another
second. My heart flew up right into my throat,
but not before I had time to yell out: ’Jump
clear of that anchor!’
“But I hadn’t time to
shriek out her name. I don’t suppose she
heard me at all. The first touch of the hawser
against the fluke threw her down; she was up on her
feet again quick as lightning, but she was up on the
wrong side. I heard a horrid, scraping sound,
and then that anchor, tipping over, rose up like something
alive; its great, rough iron arm caught Maggie round
the waist, seemed to clasp her close with a dreadful
hug, and flung itself with her over and down in a terrific
clang of iron, followed by heavy ringing blows that
shook the ship from stem to stern because
the ring stopper held!”
“How horrible!” I exclaimed.
“I used to dream for years afterwards
of anchors catching hold of girls,” said the
man in tweeds, a little wildly. He shuddered.
“With a most pitiful howl Charley was over after
her almost on the instant. But, Lord! he didn’t
see as much as a gleam of her red tam o’ shanter
in the water. Nothing! nothing whatever!
In a moment there were half-a-dozen boats around us,
and he got pulled into one. I, with the boatswain
and the carpenter, let go the other anchor in a hurry
and brought the ship up somehow. The pilot had
gone silly. He walked up and down the forecastle
head wringing his hands and muttering to himself:
’Killing women, now! Killing women, now!’
Not another word could you get out of him.
“Dusk fell, then a night black
as pitch; and peering upon the river I heard a low,
mournful hail, ‘Ship, ahoy!’ Two Gravesend
watermen came alongside. They had a lantern in
their wherry, and looked up the ship’s side,
holding on to the ladder without a word. I saw
in the patch of light a lot of loose, fair hair down
there.”
He shuddered again.
“After the tide turned poor
Maggie’s body had floated clear of one of them
big mooring buoys,” he explained. “I
crept aft, feeling half-dead, and managed to send
a rocket up to let the other searchers know,
on the river. And then I slunk away forward like
a cur, and spent the night sitting on the heel of
the bowsprit so as to be as far as possible out of
Charley’s way.”
“Poor fellow!” I murmured.
“Yes. Poor fellow,”
he repeated, musingly. “That brute wouldn’t
let him not even him cheat her
of her prey. But he made her fast in dock next
morning. He did. We hadn’t exchanged
a word not a single look for that matter.
I didn’t want to look at him. When the last
rope was fast he put his hands to his head and stood
gazing down at his feet as if trying to remember something.
The men waited on the main deck for the words that
end the voyage. Perhaps that is what he was trying
to remember. I spoke for him. ‘That’ll
do, men.’
“I never saw a crew leave a
ship so quietly. They sneaked over the rail one
after another, taking care not to bang their sea chests
too heavily. They looked our way, but not one
had the stomach to come up and offer to shake hands
with the mate as is usual.
“I followed him all over the
empty ship to and fro, here and there, with no living
soul about but the two of us, because the old ship-keeper
had locked himself up in the galley both
doors. Suddenly poor Charley mutters, in a crazy
voice: ‘I’m done here,’ and
strides down the gangway with me at his heels, up
the dock, out at the gate, on towards Tower Hill.
He used to take rooms with a decent old landlady in
America Square, to be near his work.
“All at once he stops short,
turns round, and comes back straight at me. ‘Ned,’
says he, I am going home.’ I had the good
luck to sight a four-wheeler and got him in just in
time. His legs were beginning to give way.
In our hall he fell down on a chair, and I’ll
never forget father’s and mother’s amazed,
perfectly still faces as they stood over him.
They couldn’t understand what had happened to
him till I blubbered out, ‘Maggie got drowned,
yesterday, in the river.’
“Mother let out a little cry.
Father looks from him to me, and from me to him, as
if comparing our faces for, upon my soul,
Charley did not resemble himself at all. Nobody
moved; and the poor fellow raises his big brown hands
slowly to his throat, and with one single tug rips
everything open collar, shirt, waistcoat a
perfect wreck and ruin of a man. Father and I
got him upstairs somehow, and mother pretty nearly
killed herself nursing him through a brain fever.”
The man in tweeds nodded at me significantly.
“Ah! there was nothing that
could be done with that brute. She had a devil
in her.”
“Where’s your brother?”
I asked, expecting to hear he was dead. But he
was commanding a smart steamer on the China coast,
and never came home now.
Jermyn fetched a heavy sigh, and the
handkerchief being now sufficiently dry, put it up
tenderly to his red and lamentable nose.
“She was a ravening beast,”
the man in tweeds started again. “Old
Colchester put his foot down and resigned. And
would you believe it? Apse & Sons wrote to ask
whether he wouldn’t reconsider his decision!
Anything to save the good name of the Apse Family.’
Old Colchester went to the office then and said that
he would take charge again but only to sail her out
into the North Sea and scuttle her there. He was
nearly off his chump. He used to be darkish iron-grey,
but his hair went snow-white in a fortnight.
And Mr. Lucian Apse (they had known each other as young
men) pretended not to notice it. Eh? Here’s
infatuation if you like! Here’s pride for
you!
“They jumped at the first man
they could get to take her, for fear of the scandal
of the Apse Family not being able to find a skipper.
He was a festive soul, I believe, but he stuck to
her grim and hard. Wilmot was his second mate.
A harum-scarum fellow, and pretending to a great
scorn for all the girls. The fact is he was really
timid. But let only one of them do as much as
lift her little finger in encouragement, and there
was nothing that could hold the beggar. As apprentice,
once, he deserted abroad after a petticoat, and would
have gone to the dogs then, if his skipper hadn’t
taken the trouble to find him and lug him by the ears
out of some house of perdition or other.
“It was said that one of the
firm had been heard once to express a hope that this
brute of a ship would get lost soon. I can hardly
credit the tale, unless it might have been Mr. Alfred
Apse, whom the family didn’t think much of.
They had him in the office, but he was considered a
bad egg altogether, always flying off to race meetings
and coming home drunk. You would have thought
that a ship so full of deadly tricks would run herself
ashore some day out of sheer cussedness. But not
she! She was going to last for ever. She
had a nose to keep off the bottom.”
Jermyn made a grunt of approval.
“A ship after a pilot’s
own heart, eh?” jeered the man in tweeds.
“Well, Wilmot managed it. He was the man
for it, but even he, perhaps, couldn’t have
done the trick without the green-eyed governess, or
nurse, or whatever she was to the children of Mr.
and Mrs. Pamphilius.
“Those people were passengers
in her from Port Adelaide to the Cape. Well,
the ship went out and anchored outside for the day.
The skipper hospitable soul had
a lot of guests from town to a farewell lunch as
usual with him. It was five in the evening before
the last shore boat left the side, and the weather
looked ugly and dark in the gulf. There was no
reason for him to get under way. However, as he
had told everybody he was going that day, he imagined
it was proper to do so anyhow. But as he had
no mind after all these festivities to tackle the
straits in the dark, with a scant wind, he gave orders
to keep the ship under lower topsails and foresail
as close as she would lie, dodging along the land
till the morning. Then he sought his virtuous
couch. The mate was on deck, having his face
washed very clean with hard rain squalls. Wilmot
relieved him at midnight.
“The Apse Family had, as you
observed, a house on her poop . . .”
“A big, ugly white thing, sticking
up,” Jermyn murmured, sadly, at the fire.
“That’s it: a companion
for the cabin stairs and a sort of chart-room combined.
The rain drove in gusts on the sleepy Wilmot.
The ship was then surging slowly to the southward,
close hauled, with the coast within three miles or
so to windward. There was nothing to look out
for in that part of the gulf, and Wilmot went round
to dodge the squalls under the lee of that chart-room,
whose door on that side was open. The night was
black, like a barrel of coal-tar. And then he
heard a woman’s voice whispering to him.
“That confounded green-eyed
girl of the Pamphilius people had put the kids to
bed a long time ago, of course, but it seems couldn’t
get to sleep herself. She heard eight bells struck,
and the chief mate come below to turn in. She
waited a bit, then got into her dressing-gown and
stole across the empty saloon and up the stairs into
the chart-room. She sat down on the settee near
the open door to cool herself, I daresay.
“I suppose when she whispered
to Wilmot it was as if somebody had struck a match
in the fellow’s brain. I don’t know
how it was they had got so very thick. I fancy
he had met her ashore a few times before. I couldn’t
make it out, because, when telling the story, Wilmot
would break off to swear something awful at every
second word. We had met on the quay in Sydney,
and he had an apron of sacking up to his chin, a big
whip in his hand. A wagon-driver. Glad to
do anything not to starve. That’s what he
had come down to.
“However, there he was, with
his head inside the door, on the girl’s shoulder
as likely as not officer of the watch!
The helmsman, on giving his evidence afterwards, said
that he shouted several times that the binnacle lamp
had gone out. It didn’t matter to him, because
his orders were to ‘sail her close.’
‘I thought it funny,’ he said, ’that
the ship should keep on falling off in squalls, but
I luffed her up every time as close as I was able.
It was so dark I couldn’t see my hand before
my face, and the rain came in bucketfuls on my head.’
“The truth was that at every
squall the wind hauled aft a little, till gradually
the ship came to be heading straight for the coast,
without a single soul in her being aware of it.
Wilmot himself confessed that he had not been near
the standard compass for an hour. He might well
have confessed! The first thing he knew was the
man on the look-out shouting blue murder forward there.
“He tore his neck free, he says,
and yelled back at him: ’What do you say?’
“‘I think I hear breakers
ahead, sir,’ howled the man, and came rushing
aft with the rest of the watch, in the ’awfullest
blinding deluge that ever fell from the sky,’
Wilmot says. For a second or so he was so scared
and bewildered that he could not remember on which
side of the gulf the ship was. He wasn’t
a good officer, but he was a seaman all the same.
He pulled himself together in a second, and the right
orders sprang to his lips without thinking. They
were to hard up with the helm and shiver the main
and mizzen-topsails.
“It seems that the sails actually
fluttered. He couldn’t see them, but he
heard them rattling and banging above his head.
’No use! She was too slow in going off,’
he went on, his dirty face twitching, and the damn’d
carter’s whip shaking in his hand. ‘She
seemed to stick fast.’ And then the flutter
of the canvas above his head ceased. At this critical
moment the wind hauled aft again with a gust, filling
the sails and sending the ship with a great way upon
the rocks on her lee bow. She had overreached
herself in her last little game. Her time had
come the hour, the man, the black night,
the treacherous gust of wind the right woman
to put an end to her. The brute deserved nothing
better. Strange are the instruments of Providence.
There’s a sort of poetical justice ”
The man in tweeds looked hard at me.
“The first ledge she went over
stripped the false keel off her. Rip! The
skipper, rushing out of his berth, found a crazy woman,
in a red flannel dressing-gown, flying round and round
the cuddy, screeching like a cockatoo.
“The next bump knocked her clean
under the cabin table. It also started the stern-post
and carried away the rudder, and then that brute ran
up a shelving, rocky shore, tearing her bottom out,
till she stopped short, and the foremast dropped over
the bows like a gangway.”
“Anybody lost?” I asked.
“No one, unless that fellow,
Wilmot,” answered the gentleman, unknown to
Miss Blank, looking round for his cap. “And
his case was worse than drowning for a man. Everybody
got ashore all right. Gale didn’t come
on till next day, dead from the West, and broke up
that brute in a surprisingly short time. It was
as though she had been rotten at heart.” . .
. He changed his tone, “Rain left off?
I must get my bike and rush home to dinner. I
live in Herne Bay came out for a spin this
morning.”
He nodded at me in a friendly way,
and went out with a swagger.
“Do you know who he is, Jermyn?” I asked.
The North Sea pilot shook his head,
dismally. “Fancy losing a ship in that
silly fashion! Oh, dear! oh dear!” he groaned
in lugubrious tones, spreading his damp handkerchief
again like a curtain before the glowing grate.
On going out I exchanged a glance
and a smile (strictly proper) with the respectable
Miss Blank, barmaid of the Three Crows.