The orgy was finished. The last
sea-song had resounded over the smooth waters of the
bay; the last drunken shout, oath, and challenge were
voiced; the last fight ended in helplessness and maudlin
amity, and the red-shirted men were sprawled around
on the moonlit deck, snoring. Though the barrel
of rum broached on the main-hatch was but slightly
lowered, their sleep was heavy; scurvy-tainted men
at the end of a Cape Horn passage may not drink long
or deeply. Some lay as they fell-face
upward; others on their sides for a while, then to
roll over on their backs and so remain until the sleep
was done; for in no other position may the human body
rest easy on a hard bed with no pillow. And as
they slept through the tropic night the full moon
in the east rose higher and higher, passed overhead
and disappeared behind a thickening haze in the western
sky; but before it had crossed the meridian its cold,
chemical rays had worked disastrously on the eyes of
the sleeping men.
Captain Swarth, prone upon the poop-deck,
was the first to waken. There was pain in his
head, pain in his eyes,-which were swollen,-and
a whistling tumult of sound in his ears coming from
the Plutonian darkness surrounding him, while a jarring
vibration of the deck beneath him apprised his awakening
brain that the anchor was dragging. As he staggered
to his feet a violent pressure of wind hurled him against
the wheel, to which he clung, staring into the blackness
to windward.
“All hands, there!” he
roared! “Up with you all! Go forward
and pay out on the chain!”
Shouts, oaths, and growls answered
him, and he heard the nasal voice of his mate repeating
his order. “Angel,” he called, “get
the other anchor over and give her all of both chains.”
“Aye, aye, sir,” answered
the mate. “Send a lantern forrard, Bill.
Can’t see our noses.”
“Steward,” yelled the
captain, “where are you? Light up a deck-lantern
and the binnacle. Bear a hand.”
He heard the steward’s voice
close to him, and the sound of the binnacle lights
being removed from their places, then the opening and
closing of the cabin companionway. He could see
nothing, but knew that the steward had gone below
to his store-room. In a minute more a shriek
came from the cabin. It rang out again and again,
and soon sounded from the companionway: “I’m
blind, I’m blind, capt’n. I can’t
see. I lit the lantern and burned my fingers;
but I can’t see the light. I’m blind.”
The steward’s voice ended in a howl.
“Shut up, you blasted fool,”
answered Captain Swarth; “get down there and
light up.”
“Where’s that light?”
came the mate’s voice in a yell from amidships.
“Shank-painter’s jammed, Bill. Can’t
do a thing without a light.”
“Come aft here and get it. Steward’s
drunk.”
The doors in the forward part of the
cabin slammed, and the mate’s profanity mingled
with the protest of the steward in the cabin.
Then shouts came from forward, borne on the gale,
and soon followed by the shuffling of feet as the
men groped their way aft and climbed the poop steps.
“We’re stone-blind, cappen,”
they wailed. “We lit the fo’c’sle
lamp, an’ it don’t show up. We can’t
see it. Nobody can see it. We’re all
blind.”
“Come down here, Bill,” called the mate
from below.
As Captain Swarth felt his way down
the stairs a sudden shock stilled the vibrations caused
by the dragging anchor, and he knew that the chain
had parted.
“Stand by on deck, Angel; we’re
adrift,” he said. “It’s darker
than ten thousand black cats. What’s the
matter with you?”
“Can you see the light, Bill?
I can’t. I’m blind as the steward,
or I’m drunker.”
“No. Is it lit? Where? The men
say they’re blind, too.”
“Here, forrard end o’ the table.”
The captain reached this end, searched
with his hands, and burned them on the hot glass of
a lantern. He removed the bowl and singed the
hair on his wrists. The smell came to his nostrils.
“I’m blind, too,”
he groaned. “Angel, it’s the moon.
We’re moonstruck-moon-blind.
And we’re adrift in a squall. Steward,”
he said as he made his way toward the stairs, “light
the binnacle, and stop that whining. Maybe some
one can see a little.”
When he reached the deck he called
to the men, growling, cursing, and complaining on
the poop. “Down below with you all!”
he ordered. “Pass through and out the forrard
door. If any man sees the light on the cabin
table, let that man sing out.”
They obeyed him. Twenty men passed
through the cabin and again climbed the poop stairs,
their lamentations still troubling the night.
But not one had seen the lantern. Some said that
they could not open their eyes at all; some complained
that their faces were swollen; others that their mouths
were twisted up to where their ears should be; and
one man averred that he could not breathe through
his nose.
“It’ll only last a few
days, boys,” said the captain, bravely; “we
shouldn’t have slept in the moonlight in these
latitudes. Drop the lead over, one of you-weather
side. The devil knows where we’re drifting,
and the small anchor won’t hold now; we’ll
save it.” Captain Swarth was himself again.
But not so his men. They had
become children, with children’s fear of the
dark. Even the doughty Angel Todd was oppressed
by the first horror of the situation, speaking only
when spoken to. Above the rushing sound of wind
and the smacking of short seas could be heard the voice
of the steward in the cabin, while an occasional heart-borne
malediction or groan-according to temperament-added
to the distraction on deck. One man, more self-possessed
than the rest, had dropped the lead over the side.
An able seaman needs no eyes to heave the lead.
“A quarter six,” he sang
out, and then, plaintively: “We’ll
fetch up on the Barrier, capt’n. S’pose
we try an’ get the other hook over.”
“Yes, yes,” chorused some
of the braver spirits. “It may hold.
We don’t want to drown on the reef. Let’s
get it over. Chain’s overhauled.”
“Let the anchor alone,”
roared the captain. “No anchor-chain’ll
hold in this. Keep that lead a-going, Tom Plate,
if it’s you. What bottom do you find?”
“Quarter less six,” called
the leadsman. “Soft bottom. We’re
shoaling.”
“Angel,” said the captain
to his mate, who stood close to him, “we’re
blowing out the south channel. We’ve been
drifting long enough to fetch up on the reef if it
was in our way. There’s hard bottom in the
north channel, and the twenty-fathom lead wouldn’t
reach it half a length from the rocks.”
The mate had nothing to say.
“And the south channel lay due
southeast from our moorings,” continued the
captain. “Wind’s nor’west, I
should say, right down from the hilltops; and I’ve
known these blasted West India squalls to last three
days, blowing straight and hard. This has the
smell of a gale in it already. Keep that lead
a-going, there.”
“No bottom,” answered the leadsman.
“Good enough,” said the captain, cheerfully.
“No bottom,” was called
repeatedly, until the captain sang out: “That’ll
do the lead.” Then the leadsman coiled up
the line, and they heard his rasping, unpleasant voice,
cursing softly but fiercely to himself. Captain
Swarth descended the stairs, silenced the steward with
a blow, felt of the clock hands, secured his pistols,
and returned to the deck.
“We’re at sea,”
he said. “Two hands to the wheel. Loose
and set the foretopmast-staysails and the foretopsail.
Staysail first. Let a man stay in the slings
to square the yard by the feel as it goes up.”
“What for?” they answered
complainingly. “What ye goin’ to do?
We can’t see. Why didn’t you bring
to when you had bottom under you?”
“No arguments!” yelled
Swarth. “Forrard with you. What are
you doing on the poop, anyway? If you can’t
see, you can feel, and what more do you want?
Jump, now. Set that head-sail and get her ’fore
the wind-quick, or I’ll drop some
of you.”
They knew their captain, and they
knew the ropes-on the blackest of dark
nights. Blind men climbed aloft, and felt for
foot-ropes and gaskets. Blind men on deck felt
for sheets, halyards, and braces, and in ten minutes
the sails were set, and the brig was charging wildly
along before the gale, with two blind men at the wheel
endeavoring to keep her straight by the right and
left pressure of the wind on their faces.
“Keep the wind as much on the
port quarter as you can without broaching to,”
yelled the captain in their ears, and they answered
and did their best. She was a clean-lined craft
and steered easily; yet the off-shore sea which was
rising often threw her around until nearly in the trough.
The captain remained by them, advising and encouraging.
“Where’re ye goin’,
Bill?” asked the mate, weakly, as he scrambled
up to him.
“Right out to sea, and, unless
we get our eyes back soon, right across to the Bight
of Benin, three thousand miles from here. We’ve
no business on this coast in this condition.
What ails you, Angel? Lost your nerve?”
“Mebbe, Bill.” The
mate’s voice was hoarse and strained. “This
is new to me. I’m falling-falling-all
the time.”
“So am I. Brace up. We’ll
get used to it. Get a couple of hands aft and
heave the log. We take our departure from Kittredge
Point, Barbados Island, at six o’clock this
morning of the 10th October. We’ll keep
a Geordie’s log-book-with a jack-knife
and a stick.”
They hove the log for him. It
was marked for a now useless 28-second sand-glass,
which Captain Swarth replaced by a spare chronometer,
held to his ear in the companionway. It ticked
even seconds, and when twenty-eight of them had passed
he called, “Stop.” The markings on
the line that had slipped through the mate’s
fingers indicated an eight-knot speed.
“Seven, allowing for wild steering,”
said the captain when he had stowed away his chronometer
and returned to the deck. “Angel, we know
we’re going about sou’east by east, seven
knots. There’s practically no variation
o’ the compass in these seas, and that course’ll
take us clear of Cape St. Roque. Just as fast
as the men can stand it at the wheel, we’ll
pile on canvas and get all we can out o’ this
good wind. If it takes us into the southeast
trades, well and good. We can feel our way across
on the trade-wind-unless we hit something,
of course. You see, it blows almost out of the
east on this side, and ’ll haul more to the
sou’east and south’ard as we get over.
By the wind first, then we’ll square away as
we need to. We’ll know the smell o’
the trades-nothing like it on earth-and
the smell o’ the Gold Coast, Ivory Coast, Slave
Coast, and the Kameruns. And I’ll lay odds
we can feel the heat o’ the sun in the east
and west enough to make a fair guess at the course.
But it won’t come to that. Some of us ’ll
be able to see pretty soon.”
It was wild talk, but the demoralized
mate needed encouraging. He answered with a steadier
voice: “Lucky we got in grub and water
yesterday.”
“Right you are, Angel.
Now, in case this holds on to us, why, we’ll
find some of our friends over in the Bight, and they’ll
know by our rig that something’s wrong.
Flanders is somewhere on the track,-you
know he went back to the nigger business,-and
Chink put a slave-deck in his hold down Rio way last
spring. And old man Slack-I did him
a service when I crippled the corvette that was after
him, and he’s grateful. Hope we’ll
meet him. I’d rather meet Chink than Flanders
in the dark, and I’d trust a Javanese trader
before either. If either of them come aboard
we’ll be ready to use their eyes for our benefit,
not let ’em use ours for theirs. Flanders
once said he liked the looks of this brig.”
“S’pose we run foul of a bulldog?”
“We’ll have to chance
it. This coast’s full o’ them, too.
Great guns, man! Would you drift around and do
nothing? Anywhere east of due south there’s
no land nearer than Cape Orange, and that’s three
hundred and fifty miles from here. Beginning
to-morrow noon, we’ll take deep-sea soundings
until we strike the trade-wind.”
The negro cook felt his way through
the preparing of meals and served them on time.
The watches were set, and sail was put on the brig
as fast as the men became accustomed to the new way
of steering, those relieved always imparting what
they had learned to their successors. Before
nightfall on that first day they were scudding under
foresail, topsail and topgallantsail and maintopsail,
with the spanker furled as useless, and the jib adding
its aid to the foretopmast-staysail in keeping the
brig before the quartering seas which occasionally
climbed aboard. The bowsprit light was rigged
nightly; they hove the log every two hours; and Captain
Swarth made scratches and notches on the sliding-hood
of the companionway, while careful to wind his chronometer
daily.
But, in spite of the cheer of his
indomitable courage and confidence, his men, with
the exception of a few, dropped into a querulous, whining
discontent. Mr. Todd, spurred by his responsibility,
gradually came around to something like his old arbitrary
self. Yank Tate, the carpenter, maintained through
it all a patient faith in the captain, and, in so
far as his influence could be felt, acted as a foil
to the irascible, fault-finding Tom Plate, the forecastle
lawyer, the man who had been at the lead-line at Barbados.
But the rest of them were dazed and nerveless, too
shaken in brain and body to consider seriously Tom’s
proposition to toss the afterguard overboard and beach
the brig on the South American coast, where they could
get fresh liver of shark, goat, sheep, or bullock,
which even a “nigger” knew was the only
cure for moon-blindness.
They had not yet recovered from the
unaccustomed debauch; their clouded brains seemed
too large for their skulls, and their eyeballs ached
in their sockets, while they groped tremblingly from
rope to rope at the behest of the captain or mate.
So Tom marked himself for future attention
by insolent and disapproving comments on the orders
of his superiors, and a habit of moving swiftly to
another part of the deck directly he had spoken, which
prevented the blind and angry captain from finding
him in the crowd.
Dim as must have been the light of
day through the pelting rain and storm-cloud, it caused
increased pain in their eyes, and they bound them
with their neckerchiefs, applying meanwhile such remedies
as forecastle lore could suggest. The captain
derided these remedies, but frankly confessed his
ignorance of anything but time as a means of cure.
And so they existed and suffered through a three days’
damp gale and a fourth day’s dead calm, when
the brig rolled scuppers under with all sail set,
ready for the next breeze. It came, cool, dry,
and faint at first, then brisker-the unmistakable
trade-wind. They boxed the brig about and braced
sharp on the starboard tack, steering again by the
feel of the wind and the rattling of shaking leeches
aloft. The removal of bandages to ascertain the
sun’s position by sense of light or increase
of pain brought agonized howls from the experimenters,
and this deterred the rest. Not even by its warmth
could they locate it. It was overhead at noon
and useless as a guide. In the early morning and
late afternoon, when it might have indicated east and
west, its warmth was overcome by the coolness of the
breeze. So they steered on blindly, close-hauled
on the starboard tack, nearly as straight a course
as though they were whole men.
They took occasional deep-sea soundings
with the brig shaking in the wind, but found no bottom,
and at the end of fifteen days a longer heave to the
ground-swell was evidence to Captain Swarth’s
mind that he was passing Cape St. Roque, and the soundings
were discontinued.
“No use bothering about St.
Paul Rocks or the Rocas, Angel,” said he.
“They rise out o’ the deep sea, and if
we’re to hit, soundings won’t warn us
in time. I take it we’ll pass between them
and well north of Ascension.” So he checked
in the yards a little and brought the wind more abeam.
One day Yank Tate appeared at the
captain’s elbow, and suggested, in a low voice,
that he examine the treasure-chests in the ’tween-deck.
“I was down stowing away some oakum,”
he said, “an’ I was sure I heard the lid
close; but nobody answered me, an’ I couldn’t
feel anybody.”
Captain Swarth descended to his cabin
and found his keys missing; then he and the carpenter
visited the chests. They were locked tight, and
as heavy as ever.
“Some one has the keys, Yank,
and has very likely raided the diamonds. We can’t
do anything but wait. He can’t get away.
Keep still about it.”
The air became cooler as they sailed
on; and judging that the trade-wind was blowing more
from the south than he had allowed for, the captain
brought the wind squarely abeam, and the brig sailed
faster. Still, it was too cool for the latitude,
and it puzzled him, until a man came aft and groaned
that he had lifted his bandage to bathe his eyes,
and had unmistakably seen the sun four points off the
port quarter; but his eyes were worse now, and he
could not do it again.
“Four points off!” exclaimed
Swarth. “Four o’clock in the afternoon.
That’s just about where the sun ought to be heading
due east, and far enough south o’ the line to
bring this cool weather. We’re not far from
Ascension. Never knew the sou’east trade
to act like this before. Must ha’ been
blowing out o’ the sou’west half the time.”
A week later they were hove to on
the port tack under double-reefed topsails, with a
cold gale of wind screaming through the rigging and
cold green seas boarding their weather bow. It
was the first break in the friendly trade-wind, and
Swarth confessed to himself-though not to
his men-that he was out of his reckoning;
but one thing he was sure of-that this
was a cyclone with a dangerous center.
The brig labored heavily during the
lulls as the seas rose, and when the squalls came,
flattening them to a level, she would lie down like
a tired animal, while the aeolian song aloft prevented
orders being heard unless shouted near by. Captain
Swarth went below and smashed the glass of an aneroid
barometer (newly invented and lately acquired from
an outward-bound Englishman), in which he had not
much confidence, but which might tell him roughly
of the air-density. Feeling of the indicator,
and judging by the angle it made with the center,-marked
by a ring at the top,-he found a measurement
which startled him. Setting the adjustable hand
over the indicator for future reference, he returned
to the deck, ill at ease, and ordered the topsails
goose-winged. By the time the drenched and despairing
blind men had accomplished this, a further lowering
of the barometer induced him to furl topsails and
foretopmast-staysail, and allow the brig to ride under
a storm-spanker. Then the increasing wind required
that this also should be taken in, and its place filled
by a tarpaulin lashed to the weather main-rigging.
“Angel,” said the captain,
shouting into the mate’s ear, “there’s
only one thing to account for this. We’re
on the right tack for the Southern Ocean; but the
storm-center is overtaking us faster than we can drift
away from it. We must scud out of its way.”
So they took in the tarpaulin and
set the foretopmast-staysail again, and, with the
best two helmsmen at the wheel, they sped before the
tempest for four hours, during which there was no increase
of the wind and no change in the barometer; it still
remained at its lowest reading.
“Keep the wind as much on the
port quarter as you dare,” ordered Swarth.
“We’re simply sailing around the center,
and perhaps in with the vortex.”
They obeyed him as they could, and
in a few hours more there was less fury in the blast
and a slight rise in the barometer.
“I was right,” said the
captain. “The center will pass us now.
We’re out of its way.”
They brought the brig around amid
a crashing of seas over the port rail, and stowing
the staysail, pinned her again on the port tack with
the tarpaulin. But a few hours of it brought an
increase of wind and a fall of the barometer.
“What in d-nation
does it mean, Angel?” cried the captain, desperately.
“By all laws of storms we ought to drift away
from the center.”
The mate could not tell; but a voice
out of the night, barely distinguishable above the
shrieking wind, answered him.
“You-all-fired-fool-don’t-you-know-any-more-than-to-heave-to
-in-the-Gulf-Stream?”
Then there was the faintest disturbance
in the sounds of the sea, indicating the rushing by
of a large craft.
“What!” roared Swarth.
“The Gulf Stream? I’ve lost my reckoning.
Where am I? Ship ahoy! Where am I?”
There was no answer, and he stumbled
down to the main-deck among his men, followed by the
mate.
“Draw a bucket of water, one of you,”
he ordered.
This was done, and he immersed his hand. The
water was warm.
“Gulf-Stream,” he yelled
frantically, “Gulf Stream-how in h -l
did we get up here? We ought to be down near
St. Helena. Angel, come here. Let’s
think. We sailed by the wind on the southeast
trade for-no, we didn’t. It
was the northeast trade. We caught the northeast
trade, and we’ve circled all over the Western
Ocean.”
“You’re a bully full-rigged
navigator, you are,” came the sneering, rasping
voice of Tom Plate from the crowd. “Why
didn’t you drop your hook at Barbados, and give
us a chance for our eyes?”
The captain lunged toward him on the
reeling deck; but Tom moved on.
“Your time is coming, Tom Plate,”
he shouted insanely; then he climbed to the poop,
and when he had studied the situation awhile, called
his bewildered mate up to him.
“We were blown out of the north
entrance o’ the bay, Angel, instead of the south,
as we thought. I was fooled by the soundings.
At this time o’ the year Barbados is about on
the thermal equator-half-way between the
trades. This is a West India cyclone, and we’re
somewhere around Hatteras. No wonder the port
tack drifted us into the center. Storms revolve
against the sun north o’ the line, and with the
sun south of it. Oh, I’m the two ends and
the bight of a d-d fool! Wear ship!”
he added in a thundering roar.
They put the brig on the starboard
tack, and took hourly soundings with the deep-sea
lead. As they hauled it in for the fourth time,
the men called that the water was cold; and on the
next sounding the lead reached bottom at ninety fathoms.
“We’re inside the Stream
and the hundred-fathom curve, Angel. The barometer’s
rising now. The storm-center’s leaving us,
and we’re drifting ashore,” said the captain.
“I know pretty well where I am. These storms
follow an invariable track, and I judge the center
is to the east of us, moving north. That’s
why we didn’t run into it when we thought we
were dodging it. We’ll square away with
the wind on the starboard quarter now, and if we pick
up the Stream and the glass don’t rise, I’ll
be satisfied to turn in. I’m about fagged
out.”
“It’s too much for me,
Bill,” answered Mr. Todd, wearily. “I
can navigate; but this ain’t navigation.
This is blindman’s-buff.”
But he set the head-sail for his captain,
and again the brig fled before the wind. Only
once did they round to for soundings, and this time
found no bottom; so they squared away, and when, a
few hours later, the seas came aboard warm, Swarth
was confident enough of his position to allow his
mind to dwell on pettier details of his business.
It was nearly breakfast-time now,
and the men would soon be eating. With his pistols
in his coat pockets he stationed himself beside the
scuttle of the fore-hatch,-the entrance
to the forecastle,-and waited long and
patiently, listening to occasional comments on his
folly and bad seamanship which ascended from below,
until the harsh voice of Tom Plate on the stairs indicated
his coming up. He reached toward Tom with one
hand, holding a cocked pistol with the other; but Tom
slid easily out of his wavering grasp and fled along
the deck. He followed his footsteps until he
lost them, and picked up instead the angry plaint of
the negro cook in the galley amidships.
“I do’ know who you are,
but you want to git right out o’ my galley,
now. You heah me? I’se had enough o’
dis comin’ inter my galley. Gwan,
now! Is you de man dat’s all time stealin’
my coffee? I’ll gib you coffee, you trash!
Take dat!”
Captain Swarth reached the galley
door in time to receive on the left side of his face
a generous share of a pot of scalding coffee.
It brought an involuntary shriek of agony from him;
then he clung to the galley-lashings and spoke his
mind. Still in torment, he felt his way through
the galley; but the cook and the intruder had escaped
by the other door and made no sound.
All that day and the night following
he chose to lie in his darkened state-room, with his
face bandaged in oily cloths, while Yank Tate stood
his watch. In the morning he removed the bandages
and took in the sight of his state-room fittings:
the bulkhead, his desk, chronometer, cutlass, and
clothing hanging on the hooks. It was a joyous
sight, and he shouted in gladness. He could not
see with his right eye and but dimly with his left,
but a scrutiny of his face in a mirror disclosed deep
lines that had not been there, distorted eyelids, and
the left side where the coffee had scalded puffed
to a large, angry blister. He tied up his face,
leaving his left eye free, and went on deck.
The wind had moderated, but on all
sides was a wild gray waste of heaving, white-crested
combers, before which the brig was still scudding
under the staysail. Three miles off on the port
bow was a large, square-bowed, square-yarded ship,
hove to and heading away from them, which might be
a frigate or a subsidized Englishman with painted
ports; but in either case she could not be investigated
now. He looked at the compass. The brig
was heading about southeast, and his judgment was
confirmed. Two haggard-faced men with bandaged
eyes were grinding the wheel to starboard and port,
and keeping the brig’s yaws within two points
each way-good work for blind men. Angel
Todd stood near, his chin resting in his hand and
his elbow on the companionway. Forward the watch
sat about in coils of rope and sheltered nooks or walked
the deck unsteadily, and a glance aloft showed the
captain his rigging hanging in bights and yards pointed
every way. She was unkempt as a wreck. The
same glance apprised him of an English ensign, union
down, tattered and frayed to half its size, at the
end of the standing spanker-gaff, with the halyards
made fast high on the royal-backstay, above the reach
of bungling blind fingers. Tom Plate was coming
aft with none of the hesitancy of the blind, and squinting
aloft at the damaged distress-signal. He secured
another ensign-American-from
the flag-locker in the booby-hatch, mounted the rail,
and hoisted it, union down, in place of the other.
Then he dropped to the deck and looked into the glaring
left eye and pepper-box pistol of Captain Swarth, who
had descended on him.
“Hands up, Tom Plate, over your
head-quick, or I’ll blow your brains
out!”
White in the face and open-mouthed, Tom obeyed.
“Mr. Todd,” called the captain, “come
down here-port main-rigging.”
The mate came quickly, as he always
did when he heard the prefix to his name. It
was used only in emergencies.
“What soundings did you get
at the lead when we were blowing out?” asked
the captain. “What water did you have when
you sang out ’a quarter six’ and ’a
quarter less six’?”
“N-n-one, capt’n.
There warn’t any bottom. I jess wanted to
get you to drop the other anchor and hold her off
the reef.”
“Got him tight, cappen?”
asked the mate. “Shall I help you hold ’im?”
“I’ve got my sight back.
I’ve got Tom Plate under my gun. How long
have you been flying signals of distress, Tom Plate?”
“Ever since I could see, capt’n,”
answered the trembling sailor.
“How long is that?”
“Second day out, sir.”
“What’s your idea in keeping
still about it? What could you gain by being
taken aboard a man-of-war?”
“I didn’t want to have
all the work piled on me jess ’cause I could
see, capt’n. I never thought anybody could
ever see again. I slept partly under N gun
that night, and didn’t get it so bad.”
“You sneaked into my room, got
my keys, and raided the treasure-chests. You
know what the rules say about that? Death without
trial.”
“No, I didn’t, capt’n; I didn’t.”
“Search him, Mr. Todd.”
The search brought to light a tobacco-pouch
in which were about fifty unset diamonds and a few
well-jeweled solid-gold ornaments, which the captain
pocketed.
“Not much of a haul, considering
what you left behind,” he said calmly.
“I suppose you only took what you could safely
hide and swim with.”
“I only took my share, sir;
I did no harm; I didn’t want to be driftin’
round wi’ blind men. How’d I know
anybody could ever see any more?”
“Sad mistake, Tom. All
we wanted, it seems, was a good scalding with hot
coffee.” He mused a few moments, then continued:
“There must be some medical virtue in hot coffee
which the doctors haven’t learned, and-well-Tom,
you’ve earned your finish.”
“You won’t do it, capt’n;
you can’t do it. The men won’t have
it; they’re with me,” stuttered the man.
“Possibly they are. I heard
you all growling down the hatch yesterday morning.
You’re a pack of small-minded curs. I’ll
get another crew. Mr. Todd,” he said to
the listening mate, “steward told me he was out
of coffee, so we’ll break a bag out o’
the lazarette. It’s a heavy lift-two
hundred pounds and over-’bout the
weight of a man; so we’ll hoist it up.
Let Tom, here, rig a whip to the spanker-gaff.
He can see.”
“Aye, aye, sir,” answered
the mate. “Get a single block and a strap
and a gant-line out o’ the bo’s’n’s
locker, Tom.”
“Is it all right, capt’n?”
asked Tom, lowering his hands with a deep sigh of
relief. “I did what seemed right, you know.”
“Rig that whip,” said
Swarth, turning his back and ascending the poop.
Tom secured the gear, and climbing
aloft and out the gaff, fastened the block directly
over the lazarette-hatch, just forward of the binnacle.
Then he overhauled the rope until it reached the deck,
and descended.
“Come up here on the poop,”
called the captain; and he came.
“Shall I go down and hook on, sir?” he
asked zealously.
“Make a hangman’s noose in the end of
the rope,” said Swarth.
“Eh-what-a
runnin’ bowline-a timber-hitch?
No, no,” he yelled, as he read the captain’s
face. “You can’t do it. The men -”
“Make a hangman’s knot
in the end of the rope,” thundered the captain,
his pistol at Tom’s ear.
With a face like that of a death’s-head he tied
the knot.
“Pass it round your neck and draw it tight.”
Hoarse, inarticulate screams burst
from the throat of the man, ended by a blow on the
side of his face by the captain’s iron-hard fist.
He fell, and lay quiet, while Swarth himself adjusted
the noose and bound the hands with his own handkerchief.
The men at the wheel strained their necks this way
and that, with tense waves of conflicting expressions
flitting across their weary faces, and the men forward,
aroused by the screams, stood about in anxious expectancy
until they heard Swarth’s roar: “Lay
aft here, the watch!”
They came, feeling their way along by rail and hatch.
“Clap on to that gant-line
at the main fife-rail, and lift this bag of coffee
out o’ the lazarette,” sang out the captain.
They found the loose rope, tautened
it, hooked the bight into an open sheave in the stanchion,
and listlessly walked forward with it. When they
had hoisted the unconscious Tom to the gaff, Swarth
ordered: “Belay, coil up the fall, and
go forrard.”
They obeyed, listlessly as ever, with
no wondering voice raised to inquire why they had
not lowered the coffee they had hoisted.
Captain Swarth looked at the square-rigged
ship, now on the port quarter-an ill-defined
blur to his imperfect vision. “Fine chance
we’d have had,” he muttered, “if
that happened to be a bulldog. Angel,” he
said, as the mate drew near, “hot coffee is good
for moon-blindness, taken externally, as a blistering
agent-a counter-irritant. We have no
fly-blisters in the medicine-chest, but smoking-hot
grease must be just as good, if not better than either.
Have the cook heat up a potful, and you get me out
a nice small paint-brush.”
Forty-eight hours later, when the
last wakening vision among the twenty men had taken
cognizance of the grisly object aloft, the gaff was
guyed outboard, the rope cut at the fife-rail, and
the body of Tom Plate dropped, feet first, to the
sea.
Then when Captain Swarth’s eyes
permitted he took an observation or two, and, after
a short lecture to his crew on the danger of sleeping
in tropic moonlight, shaped his course for Barbados
Island, to take up the burden of his battle with fate
where the blindness had forced him to lay it down;
to scheme and to plan, to dare and to do, to war and
to destroy, against the inevitable coming of the time
when fate should prove the stronger-when
he would lose in a game where one must always win
or die.