The schooner Seamew, of London,
Captain Wilson master and owner, had just finished
loading at Northfleet with cement for Brittlesea.
Every inch of space was packed. Cement, exuded
from the cracks, imparted to the hairy faces of honest
seamen a ghastly appearance sadly out of keeping with
their characters, and even took its place, disguised
as thickening, among the multiple ingredients of a
sea-pie that was cooking for dinner.
It was not until the decks were washed
and the little schooner was once more presentable
that the mate gave a thought to his own toilet.
It was a fine, warm morning in May, and some of the
cargo had got into his hair and settled in streaks
on his hot, good-humored face. The boy had brought
aft a wooden bucket filled with fair water, and placed
upon the hatch by its side a piece of yellow soap
and a towel. Upon these preparations the mate
smiled pleasantly, and throwing off his shirt and
girding his loins with his braces, he bent over and
with much zestful splashing began his ablutions.
Twice did the ministering angel, who
was not of an age to be in any great concern about
his own toilet, change the water before the mate was
satisfied; after which the latter, his face and neck
aglow with friction, descended to the cabin for a
change of raiment.
He did not appear on deck again until
after dinner, which, in the absence of the skipper,
he ate alone. The men, who had also dined, were
lounging forward, smoking, and the mate, having filled
his own pipe, sat down by himself and smoked in silence.
“I’m keeping the skipper’s
dinner ’ot in a small sorsepan, sir,” said
the cook, thrusting his head out of the galley.
“All right,” said the mate.
“It’s a funny thing where
the skipper gets to these times,” said the cook,
addressing nobody in particular, but regarding the
mate out of the corner of his eye.
“Very rum,” said the mate,
who was affably inclined just then.
The cook came out of the galley, and,
wiping his wet hands on his dirty canvas trousers,
drew near and gazed in a troubled fashion ashore.
“E’s the best cap’n
I ever sailed under,” he said slowly. “Ain’t
it struck you, sir, he’s been worried like these
’ere last few trips? I told ’im as
‘e was goin’ ashore as there was sea-pie
for dinner, and ’e ses, ‘All right,
Joe’ ’e ses, just as if I’d
said boiled beef and taters, or fine mornin’,
sir, or anythink like that!”
The mate shook his head, blew out
a cloud of smoke and watched it lazily as it disappeared.
“It strikes me as ’ow
’e’sarter fresh cargo or something,”
said a stout old seaman who had joined the cook.
“Look ’ow ’e’s dressing nowadays!
Why, the cap’n of a steamer ain’t smarter!”
“Not so smart, Sam,” said
the remaining seaman, who, encouraged by the peaceful
aspect of the mate had also drawn near. “I
don’t think it’s cargo he’s after,
though cement pays all right.”
“It ain’t cargo,” said a
small but confident voice.
“You clear out!” said
old Sam. “A boy o’ your age shovin’
his spoke in when ‘is elders is talkin’!
What next, I wonder!”
“Where am I to clear to?
I’m my own end of the ship anyway,” said
the youth vindictively.
The men started to move, but it was
too late. The mate’s latent sense of discipline
was roused and he jumped up in a fury.
“My !”
he said, “if there ain’t the whole blasted
ship’s company aft every man Jack
of ’em! Come down in the cabin, gentlemen,
come down and have a drop of Hollands and a cigar
apiece. All the riffraff o’ the foc’sle
sitting aft and prattling about the skipper like a
parcel o’ washerwomen. And smoking, by
–! smoking! Well, when the skipper
comes aboard he’ll have to get a fresh crew or
a fresh mate. I’m sick of it. Why,
it might be a barge for all the discipline that’s
kept! The boy’s the only sailor among you.”
He strode furiously up and down the
deck; the cook disappeared into the galley, and the
two seamen began to bustle about forward. The
small expert who had raised the storm, by no means
desirous of being caught in the tail of it, put his
pipe in his pocket and looked round for a job.
“Come here!” said the mate sternly.
The boy came towards him.
“What was that you were saying about the skipper?”
demanded the other.
“I said it wasn’t cargo he was after,”
said Henry.
“Oh, a lot you know about it!” said the
mate.
Henry scratched his leg, but said nothing.
“A lot you know about it!”
repeated the mate in rather a disappointed tone.
Henry scratched the other leg.
“Don’t let me hear you
talking about your superior officer’s affairs
again,” said the mate sharply. “Mind
that!”
“No, sir,” said the boy humbly. “It
ain’t my business, o; course.”
“What isn’t your business?” said
the mate carelessly. “His,” said Henry.
The mate turned away seething, and
hearing a chuckle from the galley, went over there
and stared at the cook a wretched being
with no control at all over his feelings for
quite five minutes. In that short space of time
he discovered that the galley was the dirtiest hole
under the sun and the cook the uncleanest person that
ever handled food. He imparted his discoveries
to the cook, and after reducing him to a state of
perspiring imbecility, turned round and rated the men
again. Having charged them with insolence when
they replied, and with sulkiness when they kept silent,
he went below, having secured a complete victory,
and the incensed seamen, after making sure that he
had no intention of returning, went towards Henry
to find fault with him.
“If you was my boy,” said
Sam, breathing heavily, “I’d thrash you
to within a inch of your life.”
“If I was your boy I should drown myself,”
said Henry very positively.
Henry’s father had frequently
had occasion to remark that his son favored his mother,
and his mother possessed a tongue which was famed
throughout Wapping, and obtained honorable mention
in distant Limehouse.
“You can’t expect discipline
aboard a ship where the skipper won’t let you
’it the boy,” said Dick moodily. “It’s
bad for ’im too.”
“Don’t you worry about
me, my lads,” said Henry with offensive patronage.
“I can take care of myself all right. You
ain’t seen me come aboard so drunk that
I’ve tried to get down the foc’sle without
shoving the scuttle back. You never knew me
to buy a bundle o’ forged pawn-tickets.
You never ”
“Listen to ’im,”
said Sam, growing purple; “I’ll be ’ung
for ’im yet.”
“If you ain’t, I will,”
growled Dick, with whom the matter of the pawn-tickets
was a sore subject.
“Boy!” yelled the mate,
thrusting his head out at the companion.
“Coming, sir!” said Henry.
“Sorry I can’t stop any longer,”
he said politely; “but me an’ the mate’s
going to have a little chat.”
“I’ll have to get another
ship,” said Dick, watching the small spindly
figure as it backed down the companion-ladder.
“I never was on a ship afore where the boy could
do as he liked.”
Sam shook his head and sighed.
“It’s the best ship I was ever on, barrin’
that,” he said sternly.
“What’ll ’e be like
when he grows up?” demanded Dick, as he lost
himself in the immensity of the conjecture. “It
ain’t right t’ the boy to let him go on
like that. One good hidin’ a week would
do ’im good and us too.”
Meantime the object of their care
had reached the cabin, and, leaning against the fireplace,
awaited the mate’s pleasure.
“Where’s the cap’n?”
demanded the latter, plunging at once into the subject.
Henry turned and looked at the small clock.
“Walkin’ up and down a street in Gravesend,”
he said deliberately.
“Oh, you’ve got the second-sight,
I s’pose,” said the mate reddening.
“And what’s he doing that for?”
“To see ’er come out,” said the
boy.
The mate restrained himself, but with difficulty.
“And what’ll he do when she does come
out?” he demanded.
“Nothin’,” replied
the seer with conviction. “What are you
lookin’ for?” he inquired, with a trace
of anxiety in his voice, as the mate rose from the
locker, and, raising the lid, began groping for something
in the depths.
“Bit o’ rope,” was the reply.
“Well, what did yer ask me for?”
said Henry with hasty tearfulness. “It’s
the truth. ‘E won’t do nothin’;
’e never does only stares.”
“D’you mean to say you
ain’t been gammoning me?” demanded the
mate, seizing him by the collar.
“Come and see for yourself,” said Henry.
The mate released him, and stood eyeing
him with a puzzled expression as a thousand-and-one
little eccentricities on the part of the skipper suddenly
occurred to him.
“Go and make yourself tidy,”
he said sharply; “and mind if I find you’ve
been doing me I’ll flay you alive.”
The boy needed no second bidding.
He dashed up on deck and, heedless of the gibes of
the crew, began a toilet such as he had never before
been known to make within the memory of man.
“What’s up, kiddy?”
inquired the cook, whose curiosity became unbearable.
“Wot d’you mean?” demanded Henry
with dignity.
“Washin’, and all that,” said the
cook, who was a plain creature.
“Don’t you ever wash yourself,
you dirty pig?” said Henry elegantly. “I
s’pose you think doin’ the cookin’
keeps you clean, though.”
The cook wrung his hands, and, unconscious
of plagiarism, told Sam he’d be ’ung for
’im.
“Me and the mate are goin’
for a little stroll, Sam,” observed the youth
as he struggled into his jersey. “Keep your
eyes open, and don’t get into mischief.
You can give Slushy a ’and with the sorsepans
if you’ve got nothin’ better to do.
Don’t stand about idle.”
The appearance of the mate impeded
Sam’s utterance, and he stood silently by the
others, watching the couple as they clambered ashore.
It was noticed that Henry carried his head very erect,
but whether this was due to the company he was keeping
or the spick-and-span appearance he made, they were
unable to determine.
“Easy go easy,”
panted the mate, mopping his red face with a handkerchief.
“What are you in such a hurry for?”
“We shall be too late if we
don’t hurry,” said Henry; “then you’ll
think I’ve been tellin’ lies.”
The mate made no further protest,
and at the same rapid pace they walked on until they
reached a quiet road on the outskirts of Gravesend.
“There he is!” said Henry
triumphantly, as he stopped and pointed up the road
at the figure of a man slowly pacing up and down.
“She’s at a little school up at the other
end. A teacher or somethin’. Here they
come.”
As he spoke a small damsel with a
satchel and a roll of music issued from a house at
the other end of the road, the advanced guard of a
small company which in twos and threes now swarmed
out and went their various ways.
“Nice girls, some of ’em!”
said Henry, glancing approvingly at them as they passed.
“Oh, here she comes! I can’t say I
see much in her myself.”
The mate looked up and regarded the
girl as she approached with considerable interest.
He saw a pretty girl with nice gray eyes and a flush,
which might be due to the master of the Seamew who
was following at a respectful distance behind her trying
to look unconcerned at this unexpected appearance.
“Halloa, Jack!” he said carelessly.
“Halloa!” said the mate,
with a great attempt at surprise. “Who’d
ha’ thought o’ seeing you here!”
The skipper, disdaining to reply to
this hypocrisy, stared at Henry until an intelligent
and friendly grin faded slowly from that youth’s
face and left it expressionless. “I’ve
just been having a quiet stroll,” he said, slowly
turning to the mate.
“Well, so long!” said the latter, anxious
to escape.
The other nodded, and turned to resume
his quiet stroll at a pace which made the mate hot
to look at him. “He’ll have to look
sharp if he’s going to catch her now,”
he said thoughtfully.
“He won’t catch her,”
said Henry; “he never does leastways
if he does he only passes and looks at her out of
the corner of his eye. He writes letters to her
of a night, but he never gives ’em to her.”
“How do you know?” demanded the other.
“Cos I look at ‘im over
his shoulder while I’m puttin’ things in
the cupboard,” said Henry.
The mate stopped and regarded his
hopeful young friend fixedly.
“I s’pose you look over
my shoulder too, sometimes?” he suggested.
“You never write to anybody
except your wife,” said Henry carelessly, “or
your mother. Leastways I’ve never known
you to.”
“You’ll come to a bad
end, my lad,” said the mate thickly; “that’s
what you’ll do.”
“What ’e does with ’em
I can’t think,” continued Henry, disregarding
his future. “’E don’t give ’em
to ’er. Ain’t got the pluck, I s’pose.
Phew! Ain’t it ’ot!”
They had got down to the river again,
and he hesitated in front of a small beer-shop whose
half open door and sanded floor offered a standing
invitation to passers-by.
“Could you do a bottle o’
ginger-beer?” inquired the mate, attracted in
his turn.
“No,” said Henry shortly,
“I couldn’t. I don’t mind having
what you’re going to have.”
The mate grinned, and, leading the
way in, ordered refreshment for two, exchanging a
pleasant wink with the proprietor as that humorist
drew the lad’s half-pint in a quart pot.
“Ain’t you goin’
to blow the head off, sir?” inquired the landlord
as Henry, after glancing darkly into the depths and
nodding to the mate, buried his small face in the
pewter. “You’ll get your moustache
all mussed up if you don’t.”
The boy withdrew his face, and, wiping
his mouth with the back of his hand, regarded the
offender closely. “So long as it don’t
turn it red I don’t mind,” he said patiently,
“and I don’t think as ’ow your swipes
would hurt anythin’.”
He went out, followed by the mate,
leaving the landlord wiping down the counter with
one hand while he mechanically stroked his moustache
with the other. By the time a suitable retort
occurred to him the couple were out of earshot.