PEBBLESEA was dull, and Mr. Frederick
Dix, mate of the ketch Starfish, after a long
and unsuccessful quest for amusement, returned to the
harbor with an idea of forgetting his disappointment
in sleep. The few shops in the High Street were
closed, and the only entertainment offered at the
taverns was contained in glass and pewter. The
attitude of the landlord of the “Pilots’
Hope,” where Mr. Dix had sought to enliven the
proceedings by a song and dance, still rankled in his
memory.
The skipper and the hands were still
ashore and the ketch looked so lonely that the mate,
thinking better of his idea of retiring, thrust his
hands deep in his pockets and sauntered round the harbor.
It was nearly dark, and the only other man visible
stood at the edge of the quay gazing at the water.
He stood for so long that the mate’s easily
aroused curiosity awoke, and, after twice passing,
he edged up to him and ventured a remark on the fineness
of the night.
“The night’s all right,” said the
young man, gloomily.
“You’re rather near the edge,” said
the mate, after a pause.
“I like being near the edge,” was the
reply.
Mr. Dix whistled softly and, glancing
up at the tall, white-faced young man before him,
pushed his cap back and scratched his head.
“Ain’t got anything on your mind, have
you?” he inquired.
The young man groaned and turned away,
and the mate, scenting a little excitement, took him
gently by the coat-sleeve and led him from the brink.
Sympathy begets confidence, and, within the next ten
minutes, he had learned that Arthur Heard, rejected
by Emma Smith, was contemplating the awful crime of
self-destruction.
“Why, I’ve known ’er
for seven years,” said Mr. Heard; “seven
years, and this is the end of it.”
The mate shook his head.
“I told ’er I was coming
straight away to drownd myself,” pursued Mr.
Heard. “My last words to ’er was,
’When you see my bloated corpse you’ll
be sorry.’”
“I expect she’ll cry and
carry on like anything,” said the mate, politely.
The other turned and regarded him.
“Why, you don’t think I’m going to,
do you?” he inquired, sharply. “Why,
I wouldn’t drownd myself for fifty blooming
gells.”
“But what did you tell her you
were going to for, then?” demanded the puzzled
mate.
“’Cos I thought it would
upset ’er and make ’er give way,”
said the other, bitterly; “and all it done was
to make ’er laugh as though she’d ’ave
a fit.”
“It would serve her jolly well
right if you did drown yourself,” said Mr. Dix,
judiciously. “It ’ud spoil her life
for her.”
“Ah, and it wouldn’t spoil
mine, I s’pose?” rejoined Mr. Heard, with
ferocious sarcasm.
“How she will laugh when she
sees you to-morrow,” mused the mate. “Is
she the sort of girl that would spread it about?”
Mr. Heard said that she was, and,
forgetting for a moment his great love, referred to
her partiality for gossip in the most scathing terms
he could muster. The mate, averse to such a tame
ending to a promising adventure, eyed him thoughtfully.
“Why not just go in and out
again,” he said, seductively, “and run
to her house all dripping wet?”
“That would be clever, wouldn’t
it?” said the ungracious Mr. Heard. “Starting
to commit suicide, and then thinking better of it.
Why, I should be a bigger laughing-stock than ever.”
“But suppose I saved you against
your will?” breathed the tempter; “how
would that be?”
“It would be all right if I
cared to run the risk,” said the other, “but
I don’t. I should look well struggling in
the water while you was diving in the wrong places
for me, shouldn’t I?”
“I wasn’t thinking of
such a thing,” said Mr. Dix, hastily; “twenty
strokes is about my mark with my clothes
off. My idea was to pull you out.”
Mr. Heard glanced at the black water
a dozen feet below. “How?” he inquired,
shortly.
“Not here,” said the mate.
“Come to the end of the quay where the ground
slopes to the water. It’s shallow there,
and you can tell her that you jumped in off here.
She won’t know the difference.”
With an enthusiasm which Mr. Heard
made no attempt to share, he led the way to the place
indicated, and dilating upon its manifold advantages,
urged him to go in at once and get it over.
“You couldn’t have a better
night for it,” he said, briskly. “Why,
it makes me feel like a dip myself to look
at it.”
Mr. Heard gave a surly grunt, and
after testing the temperature of the water with his
hand, slowly and reluctantly immersed one foot.
Then, with sudden resolution, he waded in and, ducking
his head, stood up gasping.
“Give yourself a good soaking
while you’re about it,” said the delighted
mate.
Mr. Heard ducked again, and once more
emerging stumbled towards the bank.
“Pull me out,” he cried, sharply.
Mr. Dix, smiling indulgently, extended
his hands, which Mr. Heard seized with the proverbial
grasp of a drowning man.
“All right, take it easy, don’t
get excited,” said the smiling mate, “four
foot of water won’t hurt anyone. If Here!
Let go o’ me, d’ye hear? Let go!
If you don’t let go I’ll punch your head.”
“You couldn’t save me
against my will without coming in,” said Mr.
Heard. “Now we can tell ’er you dived
in off the quay and got me just as I was sinking for
the last time. You’ll be a hero.”
The mate’s remarks about heroes
were mercifully cut short. He was three stone
lighter than Mr. Heard, and standing on shelving ground.
The lat-ter’s victory was so sudden that he
over-balanced, and only a commotion at the surface
of the water showed where they had disappeared.
Mr. Heard was first up and out, but almost immediately
the figure of the mate, who had gone under with his
mouth open, emerged from the water and crawled ashore.
“You wait till I get
my breath back,” he gasped.
“There’s no ill-feeling,
I ’ope?” said Mr. Heard, anxiously.
“I’ll tell everybody of your bravery.
Don’t spoil everything for the sake of a little
temper.”
Mr. Dix stood up and clinched his
fists, but at the spectacle of the dripping, forlorn
figure before him his wrath vanished and he broke into
a hearty laugh.
“Come on, mate,” he said,
clapping him on the back, “now let’s go
and find Emma. If she don’t fall in love
with you now she never will. My eye I you are
a picture!”
He began to walk towards the town,
and Mr. Heard, with his legs wide apart and his arms
held stiffly from his body, waddled along beside him,
Two little streamlets followed.
They walked along the quay in silence,
and had nearly reached the end of it, when the figure
of a man turned the corner of the houses and advanced
at a shambling trot towards them.
“Old Smith!” said Mr.
Heard, in a hasty whisper. “Now, be careful.
Hold me tight.”
The new-comer thankfully dropped into
a walk as he saw them, and came to a standstill with
a cry of astonishment as the light of a neighboring
lamp revealed their miserable condition.
“Wot, Arthur!” he exclaimed.
“Halloa,” said Mr. Heard, drearily.
“The idea o’ your being
so sinful,” said Mr. Smith, severely. “Emma
told me wot you said, but I never thought as you’d
got the pluck to go and do it. I’m surprised
at you.”
“I ain’t done it,”
said Mr. Heard, in a sullen voice; “nobody can
drownd themselves in comfort with a lot of interfering
people about.”
Mr. Smith turned and gazed at the
mate, and a broad beam of admiration shone in his
face as he grasped that gentleman’s hand.
“Come into the ’ouse both of you and get
some dry clothes,” he said, warmly.
He thrust his strong, thick-set figure
between them, and with a hand on each coat-collar
propelled them in the direction of home. The mate
muttered something about going back to his ship, but
Mr. Smith refused to listen, and stopping at the door
of a neat cottage, turned the handle and thrust his
dripping charges over the threshold of a comfortable
sitting-room.
A pleasant-faced woman of middle age
and pretty girl of twenty rose at their entrance,
and a faint scream fell pleasantly upon the ears of
Mr. Heard.
“Here he is,” bawled Mr.
Smith; “just saved at the last moment.”
“What, two of them?” exclaimed
Miss Smith, with a faint note of gratification in
her voice. Her gaze fell on the mate, and she
smiled approvingly.
“No; this one jumped in and saved ’im,”
said her father.
“Oh, Arthur!” said Miss
Smith. “How could you be so wicked!
I never dreamt you’d go and do such a thing never!
I didn’t think you’d got it in you.”
Mr. Heard grinned sheepishly.
“I told you I would,” he muttered.
“Don’t stand talking here,”
said Mrs. Smith, gazing at the puddle which was growing
in the centre of the carpet; “they’ll catch
cold. Take ’em upstairs and give ’em
some dry clothes. And I’ll bring some hot
whisky and water up to ’em.”
“Rum is best,” said Mr.
Smith, herding his charges and driving them up the
small staircase. “Send young Joe for some.
Send up three glasses.”
They disappeared upstairs, and Joe
appearing at that moment from the kitchen, was hastily
sent off to the “Blue Jay” for the rum.
A couple of curious neighbors helped him to carry
it back, and, standing modestly just inside the door,
ventured on a few skilled directions as to its preparation.
After which, with an eye on Miss Smith, they stood
and conversed, mostly in head-shakes.
Stimulated by the rum and the energetic
Mr. Smith, the men were not long in changing.
Preceded by their host, they came down to the sitting-room
again; Mr. Heard with as desperate and unrepentant
an air as he could assume, and Mr. Dix trying to conceal
his uneasiness by taking great interest in a suit
of clothes three sizes too large for him.
“They was both as near drownded
as could be,” said Mr. Smith, looking round;
“he ses Arthur fought like a madman to prevent
’imself from being saved.”
“It was nothing, really,”
said the mate, in an almost inaudible voice, as he
met Miss Smith’s admiring gaze.
“Listen to ’im,”
said the delighted Mr. Smith; “all brave men
are like that. That’s wot’s made
us Englishmen wot we are.”
“I don’t suppose he knew
who it was he was saving,” said a voice from
the door.
“I didn’t want to be saved,” said
Mr. Heard defiantly.
“Well, you can easy do it again,
Arthur,” said the same voice; “the dock
won’t run away.”
Mr. Heard started and eyed the speaker
with same malevolence.
“Tell us all about it,”
said Miss Smith, gazing at the mate, with her hands
clasped. “Did you see him jump in?”
Mr. Dix shook his head and looked
at Mr. Heard for guidance. “N not
exactly,” he stammered; “I was just taking
a stroll round the harbor before turning in, when
all of a sudden I heard a cry for help ”
“No you didn’t,” broke in Mr. Heard,
fiercely.
“Well, it sounded like it,” said the mate,
somewhat taken aback.
“I don’t care what it
sounded like,” said the other. “I
didn’t say it. It was the last thing I
should ’ave called out. I didn’t
want to be saved.”
“P’r’aps he cried ‘Emma,’”
said the voice from the door.
“Might ha’ been that,”
admitted the mate. “Well, when I heard it
I ran to the edge and looked down at the water, and
at first I couldn’t see anything. Then
I saw what I took to be a dog, but, knowing that dogs
can’t cry ’help!’ ”
“Emma,” corrected Mr. Heard.
“Emma,” said the mate,
“I just put my hands up and dived in. When
I came to the surface I struck out for him and tried
to seize him from behind, but before I could do so
he put his arms round my neck like like ”
“Like as if it was Emma’s,” suggested
the voice by the door.
Miss Smith rose with majestic dignity
and confronted the speaker. “And who asked
you in here, George Harris?” she inquired, coldly.
“I see the door open,”
stammered Mr. Harris “I see the door
open and I thought ”
“If you look again you’ll
see the handle,” said Miss Smith.
Mr. Harris looked, and, opening the
door with extreme care, melted slowly from a gaze
too terrible for human endurance.
“We went down like a stone,”
continued the mate, as Miss Smith resumed her seat
and smiled at him. “When we came up he tried
to get away again. I think we went down again
a few more times, but I ain’t sure. Then
we crawled out; leastways I did, and pulled him after
me.”
“He might have drowned you,”
said Miss Smith, with a severe glance at her unfortunate
admirer. “And it’s my belief that
he tumbled in after all, and when you thought he was
struggling to get away he was struggling to be saved.
That’s more like him.”
“Well, they’re all right
now,” said Mr. Smith, as Mr. Heard broke in
with some vehemence. “And this chap’s
going to ’ave the Royal Society’s
medal for it, or I’ll know the reason why.”
“No, no,” said the mate,
hurriedly; “I wouldn’t take it, I couldn’t
think of it.”
“Take it or leave it,”
said Mr. Smith; “but I’m going to the police
to try and get it for you. I know the inspector
a bit.”
“I can’t take it,”
said the horrified mate; “it it besides,
don’t you see, if this isn’t kept quiet
Mr. Heard will be locked up for trying to commit suicide.”
“So he would be,” said
the other man from his post by the door; “he’s
quite right.”
“And I’d sooner lose fifty
medals,” said Mr. Dix. “What’s
the good of me saving him for that?”
A murmur of admiration at the mate’s
extraordinary nobility of character jarred harshly
on the ears of Mr. Heard. Most persistent of all
was the voice of Miss Smith, and hardly able to endure
things quietly, he sat and watched the tender glances
which passed between her and Mr. Dix. Miss Smith,
conscious at last of his regards, turned and looked
at him.
“You could say you tumbled in,
Arthur, and then he would get the medal,” she
said, softly.
“Say!” shouted the overwrought
Mr. Heard. “Say I tum ”
Words failed him. He stood swaying
and regarding the company for a moment, and then,
flinging open the door, closed it behind him with a
bang that made the house tremble.
The mate followed half an hour later,
escorted to the ship by the entire Smith family.
Fortified by the presence of Miss Smith, he pointed
out the exact scene of the rescue without a tremor,
and, when her father narrated the affair to the skipper,
whom they found sitting on deck smoking a last pipe,
listened undismayed to that astonished mariner’s
comments.
News of the mate’s heroic conduct
became general the next day, and work on the ketch
was somewhat impeded in consequence. It became
a point of honor with Mr. Heard’s fellow-townsmen
to allude to the affair as an accident, but the romantic
nature of the transaction was well understood, and
full credit given to Mr. Dix for his self-denial in
the matter of the medal. Small boys followed
him in the street, and half Pebblesea knew when he
paid a visit to the Smith’s, and discussed his
chances. Two nights afterwards, when he and Miss
Smith went for a walk in the loneliest spot they could
find, conversation turned almost entirely upon the
over-crowded condition of the British Isles.
The Starfish was away for three
weeks, but the little town no longer looked dull to
the mate as she entered the harbor one evening and
glided slowly towards her old berth. Emma Smith
was waiting to see the ship come in, and his taste
for all other amusements had temporarily disappeared.
For two or three days the course of
true love ran perfectly smooth; then, like a dark
shadow, the figure of Arthur Heard was thrown across
its path. It haunted the quay, hung about the
house, and cropped up unexpectedly in the most distant
solitudes. It came up behind the mate one evening
just as he left the ship and walked beside him in silence.
“Halloa,” said the mate, at last.
“Halloa,” said Mr. Heard. “Going
to see Emma?”
“I’m going to see Miss Smith,” said
the mate.
Mr. Heard laughed; a forced, mirthless laugh.
“And we don’t want you
following us about,” said Mr. Dix, sharply.
“If it’ll ease your mind, and do you any
good to know, you never had a chance She told me so.”
“I sha’n’t follow
you,” said Mr. Heard; “it’s your
last evening, so you’d better make the most
of it.”
He turned on his heel, and the mate,
pondering on his last words, went thoughtfully on
to the house.
Amid the distraction of pleasant society
and a long walk, the matter passed from his mind,
and he only remembered it at nine o’clock that
evening as a knock sounded on the door and the sallow
face of Mr. Heard was thrust into the room.
“Good-evening all,” said the intruder.
“Evening, Arthur,” said Mr. Smith, affably.
Mr. Heard with a melancholy countenance
entered the room and closed the door gently behind
him. Then he coughed slightly and shook his head.
“Anything the matter, Arthur?”
inquired Mr. Smith, somewhat disturbed by these, manifestations.
“I’ve got something on
my mind,” said Mr. Heard, with a diabolical
glance at the mate “something wot’s
been worrying me for a long time. I’ve
been deceiving you.”
“That was always your failing,
Arthur deceit-fulness,” said Mrs.
Smith. “I remember ”
“We’ve both been deceiving
you,” interrupted Mr. Heard, loudly. “I
didn’t jump into the harbor the other night,
and I didn’t tumble in, and Mr. Fred Dix didn’t
jump in after me; we just went to the end of the harbor
and walked in and wetted ourselves.”
There was a moment’s intense
silence and all eyes turned on the mate. The
latter met them boldly.
“It’s a habit o’
mine to walk into the water and spoil my clothes for
the sake of people I’ve never met before,”
he said, with a laugh.
“For shame, Arthur!” said
Mr. Smith, with a huge sigh of relief.
“’Ow can you?” said Mrs. Smith.
“Arthur’s been asleep
since then,” said the mate, still smiling.
“All the same, the next time he jumps in he
can get out by himself.”
Mr. Heard, raising his voice, entered
into a minute description of the affair, but in vain.
Mr. Smith, rising to his feet, denounced his ingratitude
in language which was seldom allowed to pass unchallenged
in the presence of his wife, while that lady contributed
examples of deceitfulness in the past of Mr. Heard,
which he strove in vain to refute, Meanwhile, her
daughter patted the mate’s hand.
“It’s a bit too thin,
Arthur,” said the latter, with a mocking smile;
“try something better next time.”
“Very well,” said Mr.
Heard, in quieter tones; “I dare you to come
along to the harbor and jump in, just as you are,
where you said you jumped in after me. They’ll
soon see who’s telling the truth.”
“He’ll do that,” said Mr. Smith,
with conviction.
For a fraction of a second Mr. Dix
hesitated, then, with a steady glance at Miss Smith,
he sprang to his feet and accepted the challenge.
Mrs. Smith besought him not to be foolish, and, with
a vague idea of dissuading him, told him a slanderous
anecdote concerning Mr. Heard’s aunt. Her
daughter gazed at the mate with proud confidence, and,
taking his arm, bade her mother to get some dry clothes
ready and led the way to the harbor.
The night was fine but dark, and a
chill breeze blew up from the sea. Twice the
hapless mate thought of backing out, but a glance at
Miss Smith’s profile and the tender pressure
of her arm deterred him. The tide was running
out and he had a faint hope that he might keep afloat
long enough to be washed ashore alive. He talked
rapidly, and his laugh rang across the water.
Arrived at the spot they stopped, and Miss Smith looking
down into the darkness was unable to repress a shiver.
“Be careful, Fred,” she
said, laying her hand upon his arm.
The mate looked at her oddly.
“All right,” he said, gayly, “I’ll
be out almost before I’m in. You run back
to the house and help your mother get the dry clothes
ready for me.”
His tones were so confident, and his
laugh so buoyant, that Mr. Heard, who had been fully
expecting him to withdraw from the affair, began to
feel that he had under-rated his swimming powers.
“Just jumping in and swimming out again is not
quite the same as saving a drownding man,” he
said, with a sneer.
In a flash the mate saw a chance of escape.
“Why, there’s no satisfying
you,” he said, slowly. “If I do go
in I can see that you won’t own up that you’ve
been lying.”
“He’ll ’ave
to,” said Mr. Smith, who, having made up his
mind for a little excitement, was in no mind to lose
it.
“I don’t believe he would,”
said the mate. “Look here!” he said,
suddenly, as he laid an affectionate arm on the old
man’s shoulder. “I know what we’ll
do.”
“Well?” said Mr. Smith.
“I’ll save you,” said the
mate, with a smile of great relief.
“Save me?” said
the puzzled Mr. Smith, as his daughter uttered a faint
cry. “How?”
“Just as I saved him,”
said the other, nodding. “You jump in, and
after you’ve sunk twice same as he
did I’ll dive in and save you.
At any rate I’ll do my best; I promise you I
won’t come ashore without you.”
Mr. Smith hastily flung off the encircling
arm and retired a few paces inland. “’Ave
you ever been in a lunatic asylum
at any time?” he inquired, as soon as he could
speak.
“No,” said the mate, gravely.
“Neither ’ave I,” said Mr.
Smith; “and, what’s more, I’m not
going.”
He took a deep breath and stood simmering.
Miss Smith came forward and, with a smothered giggle,
took the mate’s arm and squeezed it.
“It’ll have to be Arthur
again, then,” said the latter, in a resigned
voice.
“Me?” cried Mr. Heard, with a start.
“Yes, you!” said the mate,
in a decided voice. “After what you said
just now I’m not going in without saving somebody.
It would be no good. Come on, in you go.”
“He couldn’t speak fairer
than that, Arthur,” said Mr. Smith, dispassionately,
as he came forward again.
“But I tell you he can’t
swim,” protested Mr.. Heard, “not
properly. He didn’t swim last time; I told
you so.”
“Never mind; we know what you
said,” retorted the mate. “All you’ve
got to do is to jump in and I’ll follow and save
you same as I did the other night.”
“Go on, Arthur,” said
Mr. Smith, encouragingly. “It ain’t
cold.”
“I tell you he can’t swim,”
repeated Mr. Heard, passionately. “I should
be drownded before your eyes.”
“Rubbish,” said Mr. Smith. “Why,
I believe you’re afraid.”
“I should be drownded, I tell
you,” said Mr. Heard. “He wouldn’t
come in after me.”
“Yes, he would,” said
Mr. Smith, passing a muscular arm round the mate’s
waist; “’cos the moment you’re overboard
I’ll drop ’im in. Are you ready?”
He stood embracing the mate and waiting,
but Mr. Heard, with an infuriated exclamation, walked
away. A parting glance showed him that the old
man had released the mate, and that the latter was
now embracing Miss Smith.