“Wapping Old Stairs?”
said the rough individual, shouldering the bran-new
sea-chest, and starting off at a trot with it; “yus,
I know the place, captin. Fust v’y’ge,
sir?”
“Ay, ay, my hearty,” replied
the owner of the chest, a small, ill-looking lad of
fourteen. “Not so fast with those timbers
of yours. D’ye hear?”
“All right, sir,” said
the man, and, slackening his pace, twisted his head
round to take stock of his companion.
“This ain’t your fust
v’y’ge, captin,” he said admiringly;
“don’t tell me. I could twig that
directly I see you. Ho, what’s the use o’
trying to come it over a poor ’ard-working man
like that?”
“I don’t think there’s
much about the sea I don’t know,” said
the boy in a satisfied voice. “Starboard,
starboard your hellum a bit.”
The man obeying promptly, they went
the remainder of the distance in this fashion, to
the great inconvenience of people coming from the other
direction.
“And a cheap ’arf-crown’s
worth, too, captin,” said the man, as he put
the chest down at the head of the stairs and thoughtfully
sat on it pending payment.
“I want to go off to the Susan
Jane,” said the boy, turning to a waterman
who was sitting in his boat, holding on to the side
of the steps with his hand.
“All right,” said the man, “give
us a hold o’ your box.”
“Put it aboard,” said the boy to the other
man.
“A’ right, captin,”
said the man, with a cheerful smile, “but I’ll
’ave my ’arf-crown fust if you don’t
mind.”
“But you said sixpence at the station,”
said the boy.
“Two an’ sixpence,
captin,” said the man, still smiling, “but
I’m a bit ‘usky, an’ p’raps
you didn’t hear the two ’arf
a crown’s the régler price. We ain’t
allowed to do it under.”
“Well, I won’t tell anybody,” said
the boy.
“Give the man ’is ’arf-crown,”
said the waterman, with sudden heat; “that’s
’is price, and my fare’s eigh-teen pence.”
“All right,” said the
boy readily; “cheap, too. I didn’t
know the price, that’s all. But I can’t
pay either of you till I get aboard. I’ve
only got sixpence. I’ll tell the captain
to give you the rest.”
“Tell ’oo?” demanded
the light-porter, with some violence.
“The captain,” said the boy.
“Look ’ere, you give me
that ’arf-crown,” said the other, “else
I’ll chuck your box overboard, an’ you
after it.”
“Wait a minute, then,”
said the boy, darting away up the narrow alley which
led to the stairs; “I’ll go and get change.”
“‘E’s goin’
to change ’arf a suvren, or p’raps a suvren,”
said the waterman; “you’d better make
it five bob, matey.”
“Ah, an’ you make yours
more,” said the light-porter cordially.
“Well, I’m Well of
all the ”
“Get off that box,” said
the big policeman who had come back with the boy.
“Take your sixpence an’ go. If I catch
you down this way again ”
He finished the sentence by taking
the fellow by the scruff of the neck and giving him
a violent push as he passed him.
“Waterman’s fare is threepence,”
he said to the boy, as the man in the boat, with an
utterly expressionless face, took the chest from him,
“I’ll stay here till he has put you aboard.”
The boy took his seat, and the waterman,
breathing hard, pulled out towards the vessels in
the tier. He looked at the boy and then at the
figure on the steps, and, apparently suppressing a
strong inclination to speak, spat violently over the
side.
“Fine big chap, ain’t he?” said
the boy.
The waterman, affecting not to hear,
looked over his shoulder, and pulled strongly with
his left towards a small schooner, from the deck of
which a couple of men were watching the small figure
in the boat.
“That’s the boy I was
going to tell you about,” said the skipper, “and
remember this ’ere ship’s a pirate.”
“It’s got a lot o’
pirates aboard of it,” said the mate fiercely,
as he turned and regarded the crew, “a set o’
lazy, loafing, idle, worthless ”
“It’s for the boy’s sake,”
interrupted the skipper.
“Where’d you pick him up?” inquired
the other.
“He’s the son of a friend
o’ mine what I’ve brought aboard to oblige,”
replied the skipper. “He’s got a fancy
for being a pirate, so just to oblige his father I
told him we was a pirate. He wouldn’t have
come if I hadn’t.”
“I’ll pirate him,” said the mate,
rubbing his hands.
“He’s a dreadful ’andful,
by all accounts,” continued the other; “got
his ‘ed stuffed full o’ these ’ere
penny dreadfuls till they’ve turned his brain
almost. He started by being an Indian, and goin’
off on ’is own with two other kids. When
’e wanted to turn cannibal the other two objected,
and gave ‘im in charge. After that he did
a bit o’ burgling, and it cost ‘is old
man no end o’ money to hush it up.”
“Well, what did you want him for?”
grumbled the mate.
“I’m goin’ to knock
the nonsense out of him,” said the skipper softly,
as the boat grazed the side. “Just step
for’ard and let the hands know what’s
expected of ’em. When we get to sea it won’t
matter.”
The mate moved off grumbling, as the
small fare stood on the thwarts and scrambled up over
the side. The waterman passed up the chest, and
dropping the coppers into his pocket, pushed off again
without a word.
“Well, you’ve got here
all right, Ralph?” said the skipper. “What
do you think of her?”
“She’s a rakish-looking
craft,” said the boy, looking round the dingy
old tub with much satisfaction; “but where’s
your arms?”
“Hush!” said the skipper,
and laid his finger on his nose.
“Oh, all right,” said
the youth testily, “but you might tell me.”
“You shall know all in good
time,” said the skipper patiently, turning to
the crew, who came shuffling up, masking broad grins
with dirty palms.
“Here’s a new shipmate
for you, my lads. He’s small, but he’s
the right stuff.”
The newcomer drew himself up, and
regarded the crew with some dissatisfaction.
For desperadoes they looked far too good-tempered and
prone to levity.
“What’s the matter with
you, Jem Smithers?” inquired the skipper, scowling
at a huge fair-haired man, who was laughing discordantly.
“I was thinkin’ o’
the last party I killed, sir,” said Jem, with
sudden gravity. “I allers laugh when
I think ’ow he squealed.”
“You laugh too much,”
said the other sternly, as he laid a hand on Ralph’s
shoulder. “Take a lesson from this fine
feller; he don’t laugh. He acts. Take
‘im down below an’ show him ’is bunk.”
“Will you please to follow me,
sir?” said Smithers, leading the way below.
“I dessay you’ll find it a bit stuffy,
but that’s owing to Bill Dobbs. A régler
old sea-dog is Bill, always sleeps in ’is clothes
and never washes.”
“I don’t think the worse
of him for that,” said Ralph, regarding the
fermenting Dobbs kindly.
“You’d best keep a civil
tongue in your ’ed, my lad,” said Dobbs
shortly.
“Never mind ‘im,”
said Smithers cheerfully; “nobody takes any notice
o’ old Dobbs. You can ’it ’im
if you like. I won’t let him hurt you.”
“I don’t want to start
by quarrelling,” said Ralph seriously.
“You’re afraid,”
said Jem tauntingly; “you’ll never make
one of us. ’It ’im; I won’t
let him hurt you.”
Thus aroused, the boy, first directing
Dobbs’ attention to his stomach by a curious
duck of the head, much admired as a feint in his neighbourhood,
struck him in the face. The next moment the forecastle
was in an uproar and Ralph prostrate on Dobbs’
knees, frantically reminding Jem of his promise.
“All right, I won’t let
him ’urt you,” said Jem consolingly.
“But he is hurting me,”
yelled the boy. “He’s hurting me now.”
“Well, wait till I get ’im
ashore,” said Jem, “his old woman won’t
know him when I’ve done with him.”
The boy’s reply to this was
a torrent of shrill abuse, principally directed to
Jem’s facial shortcomings.
“Now don’t get rude,” said the seaman,
grinning.
“Squint-eyes,” cried Ralph fiercely.
“When you’ve done with
that ’ere young gentleman, Dobbs,” said
Jem, with exquisite politeness, “I should like
to ’ave ’im for a little bit to teach
’im manners.”
“’E don’t want to
go,” said Dobbs, grinning, as Ralph clung to
him. “He knows who’s kind to him.”
“Wait till I get a chance at
you,” sobbed Ralph, as Jem took him away from
Dobbs.
“Lord lumme,” said Jem,
regarding him in astonishment. “Why, he’s
actooaly cryin’. I’ve seen a good
many pirates in my time, Bill, but this is a new sort.”
“Leave the boy alone,”
said the cook, a fat, good-natured man. “Here,
come ’ere, old man. They don’t mean
no ’arm.”
Glad to escape, Ralph made his way
over to the cook, grinding his teeth with shame as
that worthy took him between his knees and mopped his
eyes with something which he called a handkerchief.
“You’ll be all right,”
he said kindly. “You’ll be as good
a pirate as any of us before you’ve finished.”
“Wait till the first engagement,
that’s all,” sobbed the boy. “If
somebody don’t get shot in the back it won’t
be my fault.”
The two seamen looked at each other.
“That’s wot hurt my ’and then,”
said Dobbs slowly. “I thought it was a jack-knife.”
He reached over, and unceremoniously
grabbing the boy by the collar, pulled him towards
him, and drew a small cheap revolver from his pocket.
“Look at that, Jem.”
“Take your fingers orf the blessed
trigger and then I will,” said the other, somewhat
sourly.
“I’ll pitch it overboard,” said
Dobbs.
“Don’t be a fool, Bill,”
said Smithers, pocketing it, “that’s worth
a few pints o’ anybody’s money. Stand
out o’ the way, Bill, the Pirit King wants to
go on deck.”
Bill moved aside as the boy went to
the ladder, and allowing him to get up four or five
steps, did the rest for him with his shoulder.
The boy reached the deck on all fours, and, regaining
a more dignified position as soon as possible, went
and leaned over the side, regarding with lofty contempt
the busy drudges on wharf and river.
They sailed at midnight and brought
up in the early dawn in Longreach, where a lighter
loaded with barrels came alongside, and the boy smelt
romance and mystery when he learnt that they contained
powder. They took in ten tons, the lighter drifted
away, the hatches were put on, and they started once
more.
It was his first voyage, and he regarded
with eager interest the craft passing up and down.
He had made his peace with the seamen, and they regaled
him with blood-curdling stories of their adventures,
in the vain hope of horrifying him.
“’E’s a beastly
little rascal, that’s wot ’e is,”
said the indignant Bill, who had surprised himself
by his powers of narration; “fancy larfin’
when I told ‘im of pitchin’ the baby to
the sharks.”
“’E’s all right,
Bill,” said the cook softly. “Wait
till you’ve got seven of ’em.”
“What are you doing here, boy?”
demanded the skipper, as Ralph, finding the seamen’s
yarns somewhat lacking in interest, strolled aft with
his hands in his pockets.
“Nothing,” said the boy, staring.
“Keep the other end o’
the ship,” said the skipper sharply, “an’
go an’ ’elp the cook with the taters.”
Ralph hesitated, but a grin on the
mate’s face decided him.
“I didn’t come here to peel potatoes,”
he said loftily.
“Oh, indeed,” said the
skipper politely; “an’ wot might you ’ave
come for, if it ain’t being too inquisitive?”
“To fight the enemy,” said Ralph shortly.
“Come ’ere,” said the skipper.
The boy came slowly towards him.
“Now look ’ere,”
said the skipper, “I’m going to try and
knock a little sense into that stupid ‘ed o’
yours. I’ve ’eard all about your silly
little games ashore. Your father said he couldn’t
manage you, so I’m goin’ to have a try,
and you’ll find I’m a very different sort
o’ man to deal with to wot ‘e is.
The idea o’ thinking this ship was a pirate.
Why, a boy your age ought to know there ain’t
such things nowadays.”
“You told me you was,” said the boy hotly,
“else I wouldn’t have come.”
“That’s just why I told
you,” said the skipper. “But I didn’t
think you’d be such a fool as to believe it.
Pirates, indeed! Do we look like pirates?”
“You don’t,” said the boy with a
sneer; “you look more like ”
“Like wot?” asked the skipper, edging
closer to him. “Eh, like wot?”
“I forget the word,” said Ralph, with
strong good sense.
“Don’t tell any lies now,”
said the skipper, flushing, as he heard a chuckle
from the mate. “Go on, out with it.
I’ll give you just two minutes.”
“I forget it,” persisted Ralph.
“Dustman?” suggested the
mate, coming to his assistance. “Coster,
chimbley-sweep, mudlark, pickpocket, convict, washer-worn ”
“If you’ll look after
your dooty, George, instead o’ interferin’
in matters that don’t concern you,” said
the skipper in a choking voice, “I shall be
obliged. Now, then, you boy, what were you going
to say I was like?”
“Like the mate,” said Ralph slowly.
“Don’t tell lies,”
said the skipper furiously; “you couldn’t
’ave forgot that word.”
“I didn’t forget it,”
said Ralph, “but I didn’t know how you’d
like it.”
The skipper looked at him dubiously,
and pushing his cap from his brow scratched his head.
“And I didn’t know how
the mate ’ud like it, either,” continued
the boy.
He relieved the skipper from an awkward
dilemma by walking off to the galley and starting
on a bowl of potatoes. The master of the Susan
Jane watched him blankly for some time and then
looked round at the mate.
“You won’t get much change
out of ’im,” said the latter, with a nod;
“insultin’ little devil.”
The other made no reply, but as soon
as the potatoes were finished set his young friend
to clean brass work, and after that to tidy the cabin
up and help the cook clean his pots and pans.
Meantime the mate went below and overhauled his chest.
“This is where he gets all them
ideas from,” he said, coming aft with a big
bundle of penny papers. “Look at the titles
of ’em ’The Lion of the Pacific,’
‘The One-armed Buccaneer,’ ‘Captain
Kidd’s Last Voyage.’”
He sat down on the cabin skylight
and began turning them over, and, picking out certain
gems of phraseology, read them aloud to the skipper.
The latter listened at first with scorn and then with
impatience.
“I can’t make head or
tail out of what you’re reading, George,”
he said snappishly. “Who was Rudolph?
Read straight ahead.”
Thus urged, the mate, leaning forward
so that his listener might hear better, read steadily
through a serial in the first three numbers. The
third instalment left Rudolph swimming in a race with
three sharks and a boat-load of cannibals; and the
joint efforts of both men failed to discover the other
numbers.
“Just wot I should ’ave
expected of ’im,” said the skipper, as
the mate returned from a fruitless search in the boy’s
chest. “I’ll make him a bit more
orderly on this ship. Go an’ lock them other
things up in your drawer, George. He’s
not to ’ave ’em again.”
The schooner was getting into open
water now, and began to feel it. In front of
them was the blue sea, dotted with white sails and
funnels belching smoke, speeding from England to worlds
of romance and adventure. Something of the kind
the cook said to Ralph, and urged him to get up and
look for himself. He also, with the best intentions,
discussed the restorative properties of fat pork from
a medical point of view.
The next few days the boy divided
between seasickness and work, the latter being the
skipper’s great remedy for piratical yearnings.
Three or four times he received a mild drubbing, and,
what was worse than the drubbing, had to give an answer
in the affirmative to the skipper’s inquiry
as to whether he felt in a more wholesome frame of
mind. On the fifth morning they stood in towards
Fairhaven, and to his great joy he saw trees and houses
again.
They stayed at Fairhaven just long
enough to put out a small portion of their cargo,
Ralph, stripped to his shirt and trousers, having to
work in the hold with the rest, and proceeded to Lowport,
a little place some thirty miles distant, to put out
their powder.
It was evening before they arrived,
and, the tide being out, anchored in the mouth of
the river on which the town stands.
“Git in about four o’clock,”
said the skipper to the mate, as he looked over the
side towards the little cluster of houses on the shore.
“Do you feel better now I’ve knocked some
o’ that nonsense out o’ you, boy?”
“Much better, sir,” said Ralph respectfully.
“Be a good boy,” said
the skipper, pausing on the companion-ladder, “and
you can stay with us if you like. Better turn
in now, as you’ll have to make yourself useful
again in the morning working out the cargo.”
He went below, leaving the boy on
deck. The crew were in the forecastle smoking,
with the exception of the cook, who was in the galley
over a little private business of his own.
An hour later the cook went below
to prepare for sleep. The other two men were
already in bed, and he was about to get into his when
he noticed that Ralph’s bunk, which was under
his own, was empty. He went up on deck and looked
round, and, returning below, scratched his nose in
thought.
“Where’s the boy?”
he demanded, taking Jem by the arm and shaking him.
“Eh?” said Jem, rousing. “Whose
boy?”
“Our boy, Ralph,” said
the cook. “I can’t see ’im nowhere.
I ’ope ’e ain’t gone overboard,
pore little chap.”
Jem refusing to discuss the matter,
the cook awoke Dobbs. Dobbs swore at him peacefully,
and resumed his slumbers. The cook went up again
and prowled round the deck, looking in all sorts of
unlikely places for the boy. He even climbed
a little way into the rigging, and, finding no traces
of him, was reluctantly forced to the conclusion that
he had gone overboard.
“Pore little chap,” he
said solemnly, looking over the ship’s side at
the still water.
He walked slowly aft, shaking his
head, and looking over the stern, brought up suddenly
with a cry of dismay and rubbed his eyes. The
ship’s boat had also disappeared.
“Wot?” said the two seamen
as he ran below and communicated the news. “Well,
if it’s gorn, it’s gorn.”
“Hadn’t I better go an’ tell the
skipper?” said the cook.
“Let ’im find it out ’isself,”
said Jem, purring contentedly in the blankets.
“It’s ‘is boat. Go’ night.”
“Time we ’ad a noo ’un
too,” said Dobbs, yawning. “Don’t
you worry your ’ed, cook, about what don’t
consarn you.”
The cook took the advice, and, having
made his few simple preparations for the night, blew
out the lamp and sprang into his bunk. Then he
uttered a sharp exclamation, and getting out again
fumbled for the matches and relit the lamp. A
minute later he awoke his exasperated friends for
the third time.
“S’elp me, cook,” began Jem fiercely.
“If you don’t I will,”
said Dobbs, sitting up and trying to reach the cook
with his clenched fist.
“It’s a letter pinned
to my pillow,” said the cook in trembling tones,
as he held it to the lamp.
“Well, we don’t want to
’ear it,” said Jem. “Shut up,
d’ye hear?”
But there was that in the cook’s manner which
awed him.
“Dear cook,” he read feverishly,
“I have made an infernal machine with clockwork,
and hid it in the hold near the gunpowder when we were
at Fairhaven. I think it will go off between
ten and eleven to-night, but I am not quite sure about
the time. Don’t tell those other beasts,
but jump overboard and swim ashore. I have taken
the boat I would have taken you too, but you told
me you swam seven miles once, so you can eas ”
The reading came to an abrupt termination
as his listeners sprang out of their bunks, and, bolting
on dock, burst wildly into the cabin, and breathlessly
reeled off the heads of the letter to its astonished
occupants.
“Stuck a wot in the hold?” gasped the
skipper.
“Infernal machine,” said
the mate; “one of them things wot you blow up
the ’Ouses of Parliament with.”
“Wot’s the time now?” interrogated
Jem anxiously.
“’Bout ha’-past
ten,” said the cook trembling. “Let’s
give ’em a hail ashore.”
They leaned over the side, and sent
a mighty shout across the water. Most of Lowport
had gone to bed, but the windows in the inn were bright,
and lights showed in the upper windows of two or three
of the cottages.
Again they shouted in deafening chorus,
casting fearful looks behind them, and in the silence
a faint answering hail came from the shore. They
shouted again like madmen, until listening intently
they heard a boat’s keel grate on the beach,
and then the welcome click of oars in the rowlocks.
“Make haste,” bawled Dobbs
vociferously, as the boat came creeping out of the
darkness. “W’y don’t you make
’aste?”
“Wot’s the row?” cried a voice from
the boat.
“Gunpowder!” yelled the
cook frantically; “there’s ten tons of
it aboard just going to explode. Hurry up.”
The sound of the oars ceased and a
startled murmur was heard from the boat; then an oar
was pulled jerkily.
“They’re putting back,”
said Jem suddenly. “I’m going to swim
for it. Stand by to pick me up, mates,”
he shouted, and lowering himself with a splash into
the water struck out strongly towards them.
Dobbs, a poor swimmer, after a moment’s
hesitation, followed his example.
“I can’t swim a stroke,”
cried the cook, his teeth chattering.
The others, who were in the same predicament,
leaned over the side, listening. The swimmers
were invisible in the darkness, but their progress
was easily followed by the noise they made. Jem
was the first to be hauled on board, and a minute
or two later the listeners on the schooner heard him
assisting Dobbs. Then the sounds of strife, of
thumps, and wicked words broke on their delighted ears.
“They’re coming back for
us,” said the mate, taking a deep breath.
“Well done, Jem.”
The boat came towards them, impelled
by powerful strokes, and was soon alongside.
The three men tumbled in hurriedly, their fall being
modified by the original crew, who were lying crouched
up in the bottom of the boat. Jem and Dobbs gave
way with hearty goodwill, and the doomed ship receded
into the darkness. A little knot of people had
gathered on the shore, and, receiving the tidings,
became anxious for the safety of their town.
It was felt that the windows, at least, were in imminent
peril, and messengers were hastily sent round to have
them opened.
Still the deserted Susan Jane
made no sign. Twelve o’clock struck from
the little church at the back of the town, and she
was still intact.
“Something’s gone wrong,”
said an old fisherman with a bad way of putting things.
“Now’s the time for somebody to go and
tow her out to sea.”
There was no response.
“To save Lowport,” said
the speaker feelingly.. “If I was only twenty
years younger ”
“It’s old men’s work,” said
a voice.
The skipper, straining his eyes through
the gloom in the direction of his craft, said nothing.
He began to think that she had escaped after all.
Two o’clock struck, and the
crowd began to disperse..Some of the bolder inhabitants
who were fidgety about draughts closed their windows,
and children who had been routed out of their beds
to take a nocturnal walk inland were led slowly back.
By three o’clock the danger was felt to be over,
and day broke and revealed the forlorn Susan Jane
still riding at anchor.
“I’m going aboard,”
said the skipper suddenly; “who’s coming
with me?”
Jem and the mate and the town policeman
volunteered, and, borrowing the boat which had served
them before, pulled swiftly out to their vessel, and,
taking the hatches off with unusual gentleness, commenced
their search. It was nervous work at first, but
they became inured to it, and, moreover, a certain
suspicion, slight at first, but increasing in intensity
as the search proceeded, gave them some sense of security.
Later still they began to eye each other shamefacedly.
“I don’t believe there’s
anything there,” said the policeman, sitting
down and laughing boisterously; “that boy’s
been making a fool of you.”
“That’s about the size
of it,” groaned the mate. “We’ll
be the laughing-stock o’ the town.”
The skipper, who was standing with
his back towards him, said nothing; but, peering about,
stooped suddenly, and, with a sharp exclamation, picked
up something from behind a damaged case.
“I’ve got it,” he yelled suddenly;
“stand clear!”
He scrambled hastily on deck, and,
holding his find at arm’s length, with his head
averted, flung it far into the water. A loud cheer
from a couple of boats which were watching greeted
his action, and a distant response came from the shore.
“Was that a infernal machine?”
whispered the bewildered Jem to the mate. “Why,
it looked to me just like one o’ them tins o’
corned beef.”
The mate shook his head at him and
glanced at the constable, who was gazing longingly
over the side. “Well, I’ve ’eard
of people being killed by them sometimes,”
he said with a grin.